THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 21. 1896. TheWeekly Ghroniele. KOTICK. All eastern foreign advertisers are referred to onr representative, Mr: k. Katz, 230-234 Temple Court, New lork City. Eastern advertising must be con tracted through him. STATIC OFFICIALS. ajrernoi Secretary of State Treasurer Bnpt. of Public Instruction. Attorney-General . . Senators Congressmen . State Printer W. P. Lord H R Kincnid ...Phillip Metscban u. oi . irwin CM. Idleman IG. W. McBri J J.'H. MltcheU I B. Herman " IW. K. Ellis W. H. Leed COUNTY OFFICIALS. County Judge. .R9btsys Sheriff. T. J. Driver Clerk a. in. neiBay Treasurer C. L. Phillips 1,1. (A. S. Blowers Commissioners D. B. Kimsey Assessor W. H. Whipple Surveyor ........J. B. ioit Superintendent of PubUe Schools. . .C. L. Gilbert Coroner W. H. Butts NATIONAL REPUBLICAN . TICKET For President, WILLIAM M'KINLEY Ohio For Vice-President, GARRET A. HOBART ... .New Jersey be closed to all papers which use them, as they are to obscene litera ture. If people must hare such stuff, let them buy the papers which make no pretense of furnishing any thing else, or if they i-.mnot buy them,they can always bonow them at the barber shops. TO OVR WHEAT KAISERS. For Presidential Electors, T. T. UKER Marion County 8. M. YORAN Lane E. L- SMITH Wasco J. F. CAPLES Multnomah SOLD TO THE PIE-EATERS. "The middle-of the-road Populists all over the union have my sympathy and admiration. They have been sold out, and their party made a loot mat for Democratic politicians to wipe their feet on under the hypo critical pretense of patriotism. The fusionists have abandoned principle and gone into a mad scramble for the pie counter. If Mr. Bryan is defeated, it will be the fault of the traitors in his party the ones who hove ignored the St. Louis compro itnise, and tried to force the Populist vote for Sewall, the bond-holder, na tional banker, corporation plutocrat mnd gold clause millionaire." Thus says Mr. Wateon to the Poo "ulist state chairman of Kansas. His words are certainly true and his bitter complaint is well founded Mr. Bryan will find that he canno have two running mates going in op posite directions ana make a very satisfactory race; When Banker Sewall was placed on the ticket Bry an's biggest gun was spiked, and now Watson proposes to scuttle the ship rather than be cast overboard as Jonah. His bitterness is natural, but not very encouraging to the boy who now stands on the sinking ship. The banks are the eje sore of all Populists; they are looked upon as the very enemy of the people be cause of their holding money from circulation, liut aid it ever occur to our Populist friends that the banks own a very small portion of the money in the vaults. A few of our Populist friends themselves own a portion of that, hoarded capital This cannot be said of many Popu lists, it is true, but now and then we find a man in that party who has had business sagacity sufficient to lay by a iew aoiiars. vvnat would you have the banks do? Should they open their vaults to every man who comes along and let go the money which belongs to their patrons? We wish such a course were possible, for some of our delinquent subscrib ers might possibly get a haul and we would have some hope of gathering it in. Newspapers wonld better serve the people and the cause of morality if they would forever banish the car toon and the sensational illustration. The press of Sau Francisco is little Deiier man tne I'oiicc liazette in vuio icocvb, uo ncii its in tue mailer which is daily placed before the peo ple as news; but other papers', mak ing, some claim to decency, are fol lowing the example of these greater, but less useful papers. The cartoon ing business is . becoming absolutely disgusting to decent people; they make no friends for any cause or party ; they cater to a depraved taste, and tne United states mails should Mr. Bryan's cause, so far as wheat farmers iare concerned, had its only standing upon the oft repeated prop osition that the "demonetization of silver" by the act of 1873 has caused the depreciation in the price of wheat. In vain has been the argu ment that the price of wheat was determined by the inexorable laws of supply and demand; in vain have figures and lacts been presented tend ing to show that neither free silver in India or Argentina, nor legisla tion in our own country, had any thing to do with the price of wheat. Men would listen to no argument in support of the claim that over-production and under consumption could effect the price; Ihe fact that the price of wheat and silver bad fallen remained and was quite sufficient to satisfy many that the price of one follows the price of the other. Today an actual demonstration is placed before us; a shortage in the crops in Europe and Asia creates a demand and the piice of wheat rises rapidly and naturally. It is no sud den fluctuation, but a positive and healthy advance in price resulting from a demand. The suppl3' is in adequate to meet the demand, and the thing happens which every Re publican, and many of the Demo cratic papers and statesmen have de clared would happen, regardless of silver, whenever the conditions were right. Our Populist friends cannot avoid the force of the argument, and they do not want to. It is useless to say that it has not been claimed that the price of silver follows every fluctua tion in the price of wheat. The con tention has been, up to within two weeks of this time, that wheat fol lowed the price of silyer, regardless of the laws of supply and demand, and that the price of wheat would not advance until there was legisla tion in favor of silver. But sudden Jy wheat turns its back on silver, leaves it still sinking lower and lower, and its price rises to the natural level fixed by the laws of commerce, which everywhere and at all times govern the price of wheat, silver and all other commodities. BRYAN AND ALTGELD. Altgeld and Henry George spoke for government without federal in terference at Cooper Union, New York, Friday evening. They talked about the four "blighting sisters in our land'" which Altgeld designated as "federal interference, government by injunction, usurpation by the supicme court, and corruption, These, he declared, were allied with the go.'d standard in bringing ruin to onr country. Eveiy man who votes for Bryan on November 3rd will vote to place at the head of our government a man who believes as Altgeld believes, that the punishment of bomb-lhroi ers, car-burners and thugs is a crime,; who believes that the United States government has no right to prevent any interference by a mob with its business, and that any - armed body of men, in,the name of a labor union, may dictate to the United States upon what terms its business shall be conducted. This is what Altgeld teaches, it is what the Chicago plat form demands, and Bryan is in sj-m-pathy with both. ( friends have been promising in silver dollars. Give us 75 cents per bushel for wheat and Bryanism will die a natural, but sudden, death. It will be a genuine case of heart failure. "The bankers caused the financial crash in 1893; now they are seeking to cause another." So say the great prophets of Fopoeracy. The banks were the first and greatest sufferers in 1893, as thej are in every financial disturbance. Then come the manu facturers, merchants, laborers and producers in their turn. If Bryan could be elected every depositor who has funds in the bank, including our Populist friends, who have not al ready drawn out their funds, would draw out their deposits, and every bank which is not rrepared to piy gold or secure gold payment would be placed in the hands of a receiver, and every depositor would then be paid in depreciated silver. Every debtor who had property would be forced to pay, and a crash such as has never been known in this coun toy, would follow. These are just the reasons why every banker, busi ness man, manufacturer, and a ma jority of the farmers and laborers, j are opposed to Bryan's election. A man who claims that congress clothed the creditor with authority to refuse silver in case of a stipula tion in the contract, is simply talking nonsense. As well might it be claimed that the sixth command ment madejt a crime to murder. As the sixth commandment simply de clared what was already an offense against both God and man, so con gress, in the l:tw of 1878, simply de clared what was always the law, and what will, by the courts, always be declaied to be the, law, that where parties agree as to the kind of money in which a contract shall be paid, a judgment shall be given accordingly. A GtRL CARTOONIST. Miss Viola Kent Exhibits Great Natural Talent as an Artist. Tillman never, by any words or acts, made any man a better citizen; patriotism is not in his line. - His whole life has been devoted to stir ring up discontent and bitter hatred. His weapon is a pitchfork, and with it he stirs up the debris which breeds political malaria. He is a coarse and vehement demagogue, whose work in Oregon will hurt the cause of the men who imported him. The national debt, less cash in treasury, on July 1, 1889, was $975,- 939,750.22; on July 1, 1893, it was $838,969,475.75, a decrease during Mr. Harrison's administration of $136,970,274.47. The average rate of decrease in the national debt from June 30, 18C6, to July 1, 1893, the time when the Republican parly was in a majority in congress, was $70,-389,713.70. In anticipation of the. election of McKinley there is a sharp advance in the price of wool in Boston. When Bryan was first nominated and there ' was some anticipation of his electiorr, there was a very rapid ad vance in prices, but the movement whs in the wrong direction. Our Popocratic friends complain because Mr. Schoon maker is assigned to speak at The Dalles the same even ing as Mr. Tillman. The fact is, Mr, Schoonmaker's date was fixed long before Mr. Tillman was expected to visit The Dalles, and while his en gagement here was cancelled,, the cancellation was withdrawn within few hours. Mr. Tillman fixed his date here knowing that Mr. Schoon- maker was to speak here the same evening. But our friends ought to rejoice that .theie will be some ex cuse for people s absenting them selves from Tillman's meeting, for the more of the better class of citi zens who hear meD of Tillman's stamp, the fewer votes Bryan will receive. The per capita consumption of wheat in this country in 1892 was 5.91 bushels, and in 1894 3.41 bush els. Had the people of this country been as able to buy flour in 1894 as in 1892, the entire surplus which was. exported in 1894 would have been used at home. In other words, when the people are employed they live better, the producers have bet ter markets and realize higher prices. Our local consumption of our own products was greater during the three years, 1890, 1891 and 1892, than in any three consecutive years in our nistory, ana lanor was in greater demand. During those three years we were under a Republican administration and . ' a protective tariff. McKinleyism is no experiment. The report that Pennoyer and Bourne have joined hands in com pelling the policemen and gamblers of Portland to contribute to the cam paign fund of the Popocrats would be incredible were it not for the fact that Bourne and Pennoyer have formed a partnership. That Bourne should be taken into the Popocratic camp for any purpose is sufficient evidence to ordinary men that he' went in to do any dirty job neces sary. Pennoyer had some reputa tion for honesty, but Bourne had none, and if he deemed the assess ment of gambling houses a certain method of raising boodle, they would be assessed. . The Popocrals send Coxey, "Cy clone" Davis and Tillman to Oregon to- instruct the people as to their du ties as good citizens. The advice of such men never has and never will result in good citizenship or a safe government. Mr. Tillman boasts that he is from the state which was the "mother of secession." Oregon voteis should have no use for men who thus pride themselves. , All silver coinage, except that of the silver dollar, was, by the act of 1853, placed in the hands of the gov ernmcnt. From that time on up to 1873 there were coined in all $5,528, 848 silver dollars. During the first ten years after the government took charge of the coinage of dollars, 1873 to 1883, we coined on an aver age or lb,'Jle.b02 per annum, or nearly three times as much as was coined in twenty years before the crime. If a large coinage of silver could make us prosperous, we ought to have been about sixty times as prosperous after 1873 as we were from 1853 to 1873. Gold has suddenly depreciated ; it will no longer buy twice as much wheat as it did in 1870. But "where is silver at?" It ought to buy as much wheat as it did in 1872, but it will not. Do the farmers realize that the price of wheat has been put up by Lombard and Wall streets for the purpose or affecting the election in the United States ? The way it was done was this: These plutocrats. who have their clutches upon the throats of the world, simply caused a drouth in India and some similar trouble in Russia, and the business was done. These robber barons have a cinch on the whole world, in cluding the winds and rains, and can fix us whenever they- please. If large audiences would elect any candidate, Palmer and Buckner would stand a show of election. They are listened to at all points in the South by large and enthusiastic audiences. A remarkable cartoon, both in design and execution, has been drawn by a 15-year-old school girl in The Dalles, which shows' a comprehension of the political situation and aptitude for sketching amounting to a revelation as to the edu cation and the capabilities of the child ren who attend our public schools. The picture is a double one, each side reveal ing points that shows much past study npon American politics and? the effect that the different policies of the great parties would have if in operation. The left half is devoted to the situa tion if Bryau was elected president. Ships are arriving from foreign countries loaded with manufactured products and raw materials. Bales of American wool are stacked up ou the wharves, bearing the significant label "no sale." A hat less newsboy is trying to sell bis papers with apparently poor success. An un employed workman is sitting npon a dry goods bor, and a look of hopeless dejec tion is given his features by the talented young artist. A wretched-looking women in rags and tatters is leading a . . . . . uDDgry-iooKing cnna. A cartdriver is urging his dispirited horse along. The cart is empty, so is the horse's stomach. The only thing pleasing abont the pic ture is the look upon Bryan's face, as he stands in the door of the White House, pouring silver dollars into the sack of the silver mine owner in return for the bullion he had taken to the mint. The American flag is furled. The right half of the picture shows a great contrast. Major McKinley has a contemplative cast of countenance as he looks with evident satisfaction over the whole country. He sees American ships laden with American goods leaving our ports for their trans-Atlantic journey ; factories are belching out great clouds of smoke, while the placard appears ou the walls, "Workmen wanted." The news boy has no trouble to sell bis papers; well-fed and well-clothed school child ren are trudging along to school with books under their arm ; the horses hold np their heads and work like their drivers, with spirit; everything betokens active life and employment, and the, flag over the White Honse flies in the breezj. The keystones of the two pictures are found iu the banners respectively over each, "Free Trade," and "High Tariff." The cartoon is an able conception and shows the creator, though a girl of 15, to be possessed of much intelligence and a fair general knowledge of American politics. The gifted young lady, who under proper training, will make forher self an enviable reputation and a good competence, is Miss Viola Kent. She has great natural talent, and should re ceive every encouragement in the pur of this art. the profits of piano or organ sales en- tirely, could undersell any uletman, that has to jockey his pianos from one town to another and "socks" it to the first customer1 be runs across so that it is necessary to more to the next town and hunt other victims. The beat motto to observe, "large sales and small profits," I am afraid cannot be applied to Mr. Toner aud to the contrary, if reports are true, it has been principally all travel end no sale with him. I hope Mr. Toner's wind pipe will last a little longer, as I want walking advertisement during E. Jacobben. some "Fair Week EFFECT OF MUZZLES. the Their Enforced Use Has Changed toreed of London Doffs. The muzzling order has now been so long- in operation that one is able to nee its practical results, at all events so far as London is concerned, says the Lon don News. They are really very remark able, especially from a point of view not likely to be immediately taken. . The supremacy of the fox terrior is gone. One misses the little, vivid white spots tiat moved about so quickly and made streets and thoroughfares gray, and, it must be admitted, noisy. Most of these dogs were mongrels, and. being ot no appreciable value, and probably of no clearly defined ownership, they passed quickly in a wholesale way into the lethal chambers. London is rid of them, but at all our towns the white terrier with the odd markings is still in the ascendant. On the other hand, here in town we have the Irish and the Scotch. These are as yet pretty pure; they keep rather to themselves, after !the manner of the provincials, but in a couple of years mongrelism will. assert itself, and Lon don will.be ovprrun. As it is. the hardy little Aberdeen, with his long body, short legs and nondescript markings of black and gray and mustard, holds the street, and the Irish terrier loafs about, social and easy-going. They are both excellent in their own way, but, for all that, one misses the sharp, quick vitality of the fox terrier. Even as a mongrel he seemed to concen trate in his active little body all doggy qualities, especially fidelity and hatred of cats. A Letter of Interest to Women. As the price of wheat goes up, so will the price of land ascend, and it will not be any cutting-our-dollar-in-two process either. If wheat remains high, as it in all probability will for a year or more, land will bring, in gold dollars, what our Popocratic The General Federation of Women's Clubs has an officer in each state, known as the state chairman of correspondence. This officer's duty is to inform herself concerning women's clubs in the state; to interest them, if possible, in the aims and work of the General Federation ; to aesist in any way she can in forming new clubs; to furnish all clubs, desiring them, with programs of study, copies of constitutions, or any other printed mat ter issued by the General federation. Mrs. U. U. Wade was Oregon's first state chairman, and was reappointed at tne Dienmai meeting ot tne uenerai Federation at Louisville, Ky., last May. There are three clubs in this state be longing to the General Federation, but the state chairman is interested in all clubs, and would welcome a correspond ent from each and every one in the state. She bas thus far been able to learn of only about a dozej, and feels sure that there must be many more to bear from. Many of the states have State Federa tions, and our own great state should not be the last to organize such a federation. Women's clubs, wherever they exist, are helpful in furthering the best in terests of society. The club woman is the better wife and mother for the broadening influence of her club. The state chairman earnestly wishes for and cirdiallv invites the co-operation of all the clubs in the state. Without this she can do very little. ' All letters should be addressed to Mrs. C. B. Wade, Pendleton, Oregon. - Never was a more grieTons wrong done the farmers of onr country than that so ud justly Inflicted during the past three years upon the wool growers. Although smonf onr moat useful citizens,, their in terests have been practically destroyed. McKlnley's letter of acceptance. Noisy Toner. For some time past I have remained silent, thinking that perhaps that jockeying general manager of the Sher man Clay Company, Mr. Toner, would quit telling falsehoods and stones about me. I presume it is the way some managers do business and,, tell a etory any time in oraer 10 sen an organ or piano, but it won't go any longer un noticed, and I want to say to Mr. Toner right here, that he shall have all the free advertising he wants, and by the time I get throngh with him, If the public is unable to see that be is about as big a fake piano or organ salesman that ever landed in the city of The Dalles, it won't he any fault of mine. However it is no wonder, and it don't snrprise the writer that it is rather hard for a man like Toner to do business. Why should people buy away from home when they can get instruments from a home dealer at closer prices than from a man that is jockeying and haul ing bis instruments from one town to another, as Mr. Toner has been doing? ' It stands to reason that a dealer who sells small goods, and don't depend on Bryan's Rotten Egg Argument. - As a contribution to financial and economic thought the following utter ance of Mx. Bryan, made in Kentucky, is the most remarkable yet offered even by him: "If any man in this community would offqr to bny all the eggs produced at 25 cents a dozen and was able to make good the offer, nobody would sell eggs for less, no matter what the cost of production, whether 1 cent or 5 cents a dozen. So with silver. Free coinage wonld establish the market price of ail- . ver at $1.39, and nobody would sell it for a cent less." Why limit the price of eggs to 25 cents and of silver to $1.29? If the rea soning is sound, the price in each case might easily be doubled, and the conse quent benefit to the human race corre spondingly increased. And why stop ' with eggs and silver? Why not mark np the prico of everything yon wish to f bny offer to pay double or treble what is asked for it and keep on paying that price to all comers hold it there? That's all you havo to dohold it there. "Nobody would sell it for a cent less," says Bryan, so long as you held it "So with silver." And the man who is putting forth such thought as this is a candidute for the presidency of 70,000,000 of people in the closing years of the nineteenth century! 0 to 8" Nothing; to Ate. Pat Ikw do you sthand on the silver question, Moike? ) Mike Me? Sixteen to wan is moi platform. Pat 'Tin, is it? Well, me laddybuok, if you and the long phiskered cranks win I'm thinking that by next winter ivrybody's platform will be, "Nothing to ate." Detroit Journal. The farmers complain because they cannot find markets for all their prod note. How would the doubling of prices under free silver enable the working men of the cities and factory towns to buy more than they do now? 00 ft Oh -o D r - (Q P" . For Sale. A lot( of Merino sheep, (bucks) also stock bogs and milk cows, belonging to the estate of S. Hauser. For informa tion inquire of Mrs. S. Hauser, at Tygh Valley, or the undersigned. George A. Liebe, sl6-d(swlm Administrator. m o o r-l U u i P Pi O M ti o I o ' 'Mm o 5 o P i a " P. o a Full Assortment of DRY GOODS, FANCY GOODS, CLOTHING, HATS, " Boots and Shoes. Djn't f aT to examine our new stock, which we personally selected in New York City and Phila delCa. ' ' We guarantee the lowest prices in town. Vogt Block. H. Herbring.