THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23. 1896. The Weekly Gitf oniele 8TATK OFFICIALS. SjTCrnoi W. P. Lord Secretary of State H R Kincaid Treasurer Phillip Metscban Bupt. of ruDllc instruction j. Ai. irwin Attornev-General. C. M. Iclleman u..t. JG. W. McBride Senators jj. h. MitcheU - in. nermann w. R. Ellis State Printer W. H. Leeds ' COUNTY OFFICIALS. County Judge ..Bobt. Mays Sheriff. T. J. Driver Clerk A. M. Kelsav Treasurer C. L. Phillips . . I A. B. Blowers viiiuiuuiiuiicii in. 8. Kimsey Aessor W. H. Whipple Surveyor J. B- ''Oit Superintendent ol Publio Schools. . .C. L. Gilbert Cjroner W. H. Butts NATIONAL REPUBLICAN TICKET For President, " WILLIAM M'KINLEY .Ohio For Vice-President, GARRET A. HOBART . . . .New Jereey For Presidential Electors, T. T. GEER Marion County B. If. YOKAN Lane E. L- SMITH Wasco J. F. CAPLES : Multnomah THE WORK IS NOT COMPLETED. The enthusiastic meeting at the courthcuse last evening indicates that Republicans in this vicinity are in earnest. The success of that meeting must not, however, be mis leading. Securing u large list of members is a good thing; but no one should for a moment think that this ends the work to be done. We have about 350 members enlisted on our side, these members must now be organized for active work in their own and other precincts, and recruits should be added daily to the list. Every voter who expects to vote for McKmley, who has not already united with one of the numerous Re publican clubs in the county, should be influenced to put his name on one of the club rolls and go to work. This is a campaign in which there is no danger of having too large a majority. Every precinct in the county should be thorough can vassed, and in this work our club can and should be of great assist ance. TVe have in The Dalles a number of young men who should be put into active campaign work. There are many communities aay from the railroad which cannot be reached by speakers from abroad, and these should be looked after by our club. The time is short, the work to be done is great, and the result to all is of the utmost import ance. The state of Oregon cannot afford to take its stand with Bryan, Altgeld Till man and Waite, and the outcome in this state may depend upon the work done by the largest and strong est political club in Eastern Oregon the McKinley Club of The Dalles. , Senator Jones was originally an ultra free trader. lie afterward be came an ultra-protectionist. "When asked by Hon. David A. Wells, in a familiar conversation, what was the cause of his conversion, he replied "Don't you see, David ? How could I ask the governmeut to regularly purchase our product of silver and refuse to give the iron manufacturer in Penn. the tariff protection which he needs to maintain his prices?" , Jones was one of the fellows in the senate who recently declared that mere snouia De no tarm legislation which does not provide for free coin age of silver. He is now, and al ways has been, an ultra-protectionist of Jones. was all very veil when the great transcontinental railroads were being built in this country to give them aid by land grants, etc. ; the people then favored that policy. Now it is the most unpopular thing our gov eminent ever did. In Mexico the subsidy is an agreement to pay cash, in some cases from month to month, to continue for years. NOT AN IDLE THREAT. Taking the average prices of labor and commodities in 1860 at 100, the price of labor in 1891 was 160.7. and of commodities 92.2; that is, labor made a gain of 60.7 per cent, and what laborers buy with their wages fell 7.8' per cent. From 1870 to 1891 the gain in wages was 12.9 per cent, and the lowering in prices 30.7 per -cent. ' Our Popocratic cotemporary: re fers to the statement of a prominent sheepman of this county, . recently made, that he will raise no sheep next year if Bryan is elected, as an "idle threat," and proceeds to in quire: "It capital is drawn oui or. active employment by the election of Brvan. where will it eo to? Will it seek iuvestment in other countries where profits are less, or will it be locked up in safe deposits for the next four years, there to lie idle and earn its owner nothing?" This question has been frequently presented, but we have not before known as intelligent an authority as the Mountaineer to consider it worth asking. Bryan asks it over and over again, but he does it to fool people who give the subject no thought. The particular capital of our par ticular sheepman will not go out of the country, unless perchance all or a por tion of the capital he has been using belongs to someone in Europe, as is the -case ' with some of the capital used in Wasco county by sheepmen. If it is owued in Europe,' it will be recalled and will not again be em ployed here to give employment to labor. If he owns all the capital in vested, not the usual case with men engaged in any lanre industry, this particular capital will not go out of the country nor lie idle; but may be used elsewhere to fill' the place of other capital, which will certainly go out ' of the country. There is today considerable amount of capital used in Wasco county which is owned in Europe, not by corporations or banks, but by individuals. This will cer- tainlyvbe called home. The Oregon fitfortgajre Company, the Northern Counties Investment Trust, and per haps a dozen other money lending corporaiions, also have money loaned in this and adjoining counties. These loans will be withdrawn as soon as practicable. The withdrawal of this and other capital for the same condition exists in all the states west of the Mississippi will cause a scar city of money with which to carry on the business in which it was invested ; the rates of interest will increase, and the capital now used in Wasco county by this sheepman ' whl find employ ment elsewhere, or in some other line of business which can pay a rate of interest higher than the profits of sheep raising. But, says the Bryon man, the bor rower of this foreign capital can borrow the silver that is to be coined. The silver is not now coined, and enough to fill the place of this foreign capital could not be in time to aid this industry. The rate of interest will not fall, but is more likely to rise; silver will be depreciated, as most men, even among the silverites, ad mit, and a man will have to pay ten per cent for money less valuable than the gold he is now using. Nei ther farming nor sheep raising will warrant it. The result, as we view it, will be a contraction in business ; a lessening of business enterprises, and conse quently a diminution in demand for labor. Every principle that Republicans have worked and fought for since the issue ot slavery was disposed of, finds an opponent in Wm. J. Bryan. He ieeks to conceal this opposition under a new issue or'what he claims is a new issue. As a matter of fact it is the same issue as that which the American people voted down by an overwhelming majority in 1868. At that time the declaration of the Democrats was: "Where the obliga, tions of the government do not ex pressly state upon their face, or the law under which they were issued does not provide that they shall be paid in coin, they ought, in right and in justice, to be paid in the Law fcl monev of the United States, , ' One currency for the government and the people, the laborer and the office holder, the pensioner and the soldier, the producer and the bond holder." The same arguments were then made for a depreciated cur rency; the same attempts were then made to excite the prejudices of the people against capital and capitalists; the same denunciation of men who have saved a competence from a life of active labor, and who have their savings invested in securities; the same senseless harangue about "Brit- ish gold," as are now being made by Bryan. The same arguments were then used, although there was no "crime of 1873" to point to and use as a scapegoat. The Republicans denounced repudiation then, as it has now, and carried the election by a majority of 111 in the electoral col lege and a large popular majority, just as it will in 1896. NEW . YORK'S DEMOCRACY. YOU YT ILL. The silver miners of Leadyille have forgotten that Bryan is not yet president. They are unsatisfied with $2.50 per day so long as the silvei mines pay large dividends, and they proceed to coerce their employ ers by burning up property and blow ing up buildings and people, who are willing to work at $2.50 per day, with dynamite. The Colorado peo ple are advocating a government which tolerates that kind of "liberty," and thev ought not to complain. "Bloody Bridles,'1 Waite, Altgeld and Bryan are all on the same plat form, and all have the confidence of Colorado people. These riotirg miners should have the good will and support of all who are supporting Bryan, Altgeld and Waite. . - New York's Democracy has left the Democratic voters in that state in a peculiar dilemma. The Buffalo convention declared for free silver and pledged Bryan its support; it nominated a candidate for governor who finds; it necessary to expressly promise to vote for Bryan; but at the same time says he is not in ac cord with the Chicago convention or the convention" which nominated him, on the question of finance. He then, as an apology, for his position, declares that the governor of New York has nothing to do - with the I question of national finances. The inevitable result will be that every honest Democratic voter in New York who is opposed to free coinage of silver at 16 to 1, and who votes his . ticket, must vote for a man who is allied with a cause and stands upon a platform which he .knows to be wrong. By thus voting he must, by implication, endoise what he cannot honestly en- Mr. Geo. T. Prather of Hood River, dorse. In other words, in voting for wno ia in town today, eays that his see the man he believes in, he votes for "on wiU produce two or three times .... large a strawberry crou as the naHt sen. a principle ne believes to De dis-i. T .k . .l . r son. If that is the case strawberries honest. w;l n onl frnm there Kit ha train lo On the other hand, every free next season, for twice during last June silver Democratic voter must be I the output was two fall carloads from working and voting for a man who Hood River. Mr. Prattler's prediction has heretofore, and now savs, that is DtiDg" course, npon the season t a .-. - k a be,DS favorable, which it was not this .jau uU u.a wjuw. .u uc yea, A farther reason is that the acre wrong. He votes for a principle he 8ge has been doubled. So many new believes in, bul for a man who de- plants have been set out that they rose c.'ares that principle wrong. The greatly in price over any former year. result will be that both Thatcher and H8Ua"y there ar.e pIantB t0 Bive awtty- ne states, as an instance of the remark- cican ''fa Nothing BUT THE GENUINE m Ton will find one coupon ' Inside each two ounce bag and two coupons inside each four ounce bagof Black well' Durham. Buy a bag of this celebrated tobacco and read the coupon which gives a list of valuable presents and now to get them. 1 The Immensity of It.' day to come. Tbey were assured that Dnforites would open their hearts and homes to all Christian Endeavorers of the connty who would attend, a good time is assured and everything is now in readiness. Those wishing to attend will send their names to the connty secre tary, Misa Etta Story, The Dalles. O. E. WOBKKB. Little Emma Nelson's Find. Bryan will fail to carry the state. It looks as though Hill and other leaders there were purposely plan ning to throw iiryan. overboard in order to save the state government from the hands of the Republicans. able increase of planting, that within a radius of a half mile the following new patches have been set:- Bateham, 7 acres, Watson and Loy 15 acres, Coe and Stranahan 5 acres, Davenport 6 acres, Jones 4 acres. The fame of the Hood River district is growing rapidly as a The removal of the loose rocks upon the main streets of our city would be highly appreciated by every bicyclist and every other person who uses the streets. A few days of hobo labor, properly , directed, would do the business, and our street commis sioner would thereby confer a great favor upon a long-time and badly- jolted community. ,: It is claimed that Mexico is pros perous because it is adding largely to its railroad mileage. These rail roads are being subsidized by the government, and the day of account ing will come, as it has with us. It Popocrats will get small consola tion from the position of Hoke Smith. Before the Chicago convention he denounced the free coinage of silver, and in a speech at Dalton, Ga., Sat urday he declared that his financial views were unchanged. He will probably, not be invited by Chair man Jones to take the stump outside his own state. Subscribe for Thb Chboniole. Betting is by no means the best criterion of the result of an election but sporting men keep well informed of the conditions in uncertian locali ties, and their conclusions are more frequently correct than otherwise, Betting in Portland is now two to one that McKinley will be elected, In New York City the betting is re ported ' to be ten to seven that Mc Kinley will be elected. The fact is, the opinion is becoming very strong everywhere- that he who desires to vote for the successful candidate must cast his ballot for McKinley and Hobart. If gold goes to a premium of twenty per cent, every man who borrows to meet obligations made under a gold standard will have to borrow $120 for every $100 he has to pay. In other words, he will, in effect, be paying twelve per cent for capital to meet his obligations made under the gold standard. Thos. B. Reed has done most ex cellent service in his own state for the party. If he could be induced to spend ten days or two weeks in California, that state would no longer be in the doubtful column. No one man in this country would have as great an influence with Californians as Speaker Heed. One of our Popocratic contempo raries gets consolation out of the Maine election thus : "Ii is not sur prising that Maine cast so large a Republican vote, because it is the home of the brainiest man in the Republican party." If he had said men" it would have given the tiue reason. The weight of $1000 in standard silver 'dollars is 58.92 lbs., and $34, 000 in these dollars will weigh a little over a ton; The weight of $1000 in gold is 3.68 lbs. Ripe tomatoes for catsup s entsper pound at Dalles Commission Co. s!4-2w. That McKinley will carry New berry producer, and will soon be the York is now settled. subject of as much speculation in trade reviews as the orange groves of Florida. The statement has been repeatedly the Mississippi cotton belt, and the made by Ponulists and Ponocratic grape-growing regions of New York newspapers that a lupee would buy the same amount of wheat m India i A Brym Meeting, now as in 1873. It is like much of Judging from the comparative attend the stuff that is being published, not ance Friday and Saturday evening at the because it is true, but because the court house, The Dalles is safely a Mc- Dublishers of it think it falsitr win- Hunle7 town- At tb0 Bryan meeting J I QnnMAM r l. i i u . l not be shown. The statistics pre- .u.-.j. . ,7 . . xr , 1 thirds the attendance of the McKinlev served Dy me government or JLnaia meeting the evening previous, and show the condition there to be gov- portion even of these were well-known erned, as everywhere, by supply and McKinley supporters. The principal ef- demand. The amount of wheat Iorl WB8 maue D? jun8e nnett, wnoee , , . . argument is already made familiar by pk.. n,, extravaeant claims of the Brvan load was i S.t per cent or ,tie party press. Other features of the even- amount it would purchase in 1872, a ing were a long and labored effort by fall of 22.8. The fall in the United Mr- Thoe- Harlan of Mosier, an unintel- States was about thirty per cent. The fall in price in India from 1872 to 1892 was 31.3. In 1893 India had only 27,950,445 bushels for ex- ligible address by an old - gentleman named Willis living near the city, and a rambling discourse by Mr. Thos. Den ton. The meeting was not marked by the enthusiasm of the night previous, port, whereas in 1892 she had 56,- and we advise those spectators who were t Ac e .u:t. present to attend the meeting next , . . ' . , , Thursday evening, at which Hon. H. LUt uC wOC 0. h, cuu uUU, w Craven of geattle and Hon H L to 1893. There is absolutely, no Wilson of Spokane will expound some foundation for the rupee argument good Republican doctrine, Mr. John Short came up from the Sa- sanville country last night, says the Milton Eagle, and relates that a short time ago little Emma Nelson picked up a small piece of quartz while at play on the hillside above her parents' bouse. The little tot carried her find to her mamma and eagely remarked that she believed it contained gold. Her mamma laughed at her and thought nothing more of the matter until evening, when the father returned home, and Emma lugged forth her find and exhibited it to him. His experienced eye quickly caught indications of the precious metal, and securing a hammer to crush the quartz, he found on closer examination that a solid bar of gold extended through the entire piece. Mr. Nelson separated the gold from the quartz and cleaned up $75. The result of little Emma's find will be invested in a secure place at interest until she is of age, when the principal and accruing interest will be given her. The child mentioned above is the same who was lost for a whole week last July, in the mountains back of Susanville, of which village her father is postmaster, and was found several miles from home tired and hungry, but uninjured. She was evidently born under a lucky star. . Popocratic newspapers quote Mc Kmley'8 declaration of 1890, when he said "I am for the, largest use of silver in the currency of the country. I would not dishonor it. I would A Gritty Tonng One. The 2-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Benton felt from bed about 3 o'clock this morning and broke her collar bone. The little one crawled back into bed and slept till morning without crying, and give it equal credit and value with her injury was not ascertained until gold," and claim that he was then in about 7 o'clock this morning, when she favor of free coinage of silver at 16 cmPlanea P'? "ticting &er sboui- ,, . , aer. uo examination the lagged end ot They may make their readers k . .!,, .. J la bone was eeen to be nushinar nn the believe the construction they put kin. Mr. Benton saw at once that her upon those words, but no intelligent collar bone was broken, and summoned man will find anything in that utter- Dr' Hollister by telephone. The child did not cry or squirm while he set the ance different from latest declaration : lican party) will keep in circulation, mother, "Mamma, where did that coon and as good .as gold, all of the silver I go to?" Tbia is realiy the pluckiest . . , Donee in place ana Danaagea them, and 'It (the KePu- when he lnft. anlemnlv InnnirBd of her and paper money which are now in cluded in the .currency of the coun try. It will maintain their parity; it will preserve their equality in the future, as it has always done in the past." The two statements are not only consistent, but are the cor rest statement of the position of the Re publican party now and always. James Hamilton Lewis keeps his mouth open most of the time nowa days. He, like Bryan, will be fully advised on November 3d that mouth ings count for little with intelligent people. It is an old adage, but a true one, that "empty wagons make the most noise." ' News comes from Butter creek that a vine is again springing up tnat nas caused considerable trouble at different times.' It is said the seed comes with the alfalfa seed, which has been pro cured from Salt Lake. The peculiarity of the weed is that when - above the ground it will leave the root and cling to any vegetation that may be near, from whith it draws its sustenance. child we ever heard of. A Neglected Industry. Though not an ideal bee country, the industry in Wasco county has been almost totally neglected. There could be considerable money made in this business by some one possessing the knowledge and inclination to handle them. C. L. . Johnson, who lives two miles north of Hillsboro, has bees to the number of twenty-four colonies. From these he has taken 1,700 pounds of as nice honey as ever went into market. Mr. Johnson is a skilled and painstak ing apiarist, and the honey from his colonies is sealed by tbe bees in new white-wood boxes, that go to market in fine shape. June and Ju'.y were good honey months. Christian BndesWor. President Alfred Hoering, of the Wasco County Christian Endeavor Union, accompanied by E. H." Merrill drove out to Dufur yesterday to perfect arrangements for the Christian Endeavor convention to be held-at that place October 6th and 7th. They found tbe Endeavorers very enthusiastic in regard to the convention, and anxious for the ( Mr. Henry L. Wilson of Spokane, who will speak, at the conrtbouee Thursday evening, is a brother of Senator John L. Wilson of Washington, and has a repu tation for being one of the best all-around political organizers of that state. Tbe Oregonian today contains an interview with him a column in length, which we would be glad to publish if space per mitted. He talks very encouragingly of the eituation. Mr. Winans' ledge of building stone is but twelve miles from the town of Hood River, instead of twenty-five, as stated the other day in Thk Cheoniclk. He has surveyed a practicable route for a narrow guage railway to it, and some time in the future it will be a valuable addition to tbe resources of Wasco county. Geo. Watson was relieved of the ac cusation against him and the charge of obtaining money under false pretenses by being declared insane at tbe court house today, Dr. Kane conducting the examination. Watson is a reputable citizen 60 years of age, and a property bolder of considerable amount. So far as known be has always previously borne a good character. Last night, at tbe residence of Mr. S. L. Young, a permanent musical club was organized by the members of Fern Lodge, D. of H. This organization will be known as the "Werlin Glee Club." The name is in honor of E. Werlin, G. M. W. of Oregon, who united with Fern Lodge, D. of H., while visiting in our city last week. The club will meet every week and will be an attraction to the lodge. Mr. J. C. Crandall will be mu sical director. , The force at Herrick's cannery has been reduced to about sixteen, tbe sal mon run having become lighter in the past few days. Paying an Obligation. Geo. Watson was tried before Justice . G. T. Prather at Hood River Saturday and committed to jail in the sum of $500 bonds, to await tbe action of the grand jury. ' The complaint was brought' by Lillie Anderson for obtaining money nnder false pretenses. It is alleged that Watson had given Lillie a watch to se cure a debt of $2.50, when it transpired that the watch belonged to Dr. Adams. He claimed tbe property, which was given op, and now the Anderson wants the $2.50. . Kerer was a more grievous wrong done the farmers of our country than tbat so unjustly Inflicted during tbe past three years upon the wool grower. Although among our most useful citizens, their In terests bsTS been practically destroyed. KeBUnley's letter of acceptance.