THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY, JULY 25. 1900. The Weekly Cbroniele. itdorllilni Kates. iVr tnck Oieli.cti or lent In Haily II W O er iwu indite and umler tour lnchw 1 lieve that one of tbe causes of the stringency anil shrinkage of- value in this country is because we Lave not gone out over tbe seas with our products as we should have 1one. lo be the emperor of the democratic party. Two-thinls of the convention were opposed to the platform as we adopted it. Eighty per cent of the leaders believed that it was unwise. While there is a demand for our I Itut that fellow had us. He had re- o four inrti- ud under tweiv im.iit. . ; nroducts of t'ie farm and ujonufiic- ceivcl two nominations, one from O.'er Iwt lve Inehej SO , I ' . .., vi 1 tory of this couotry there will always lt:e populists ana one irom uie suver DAI LT AMD Wllill. Jneltirh ur le, iter Inch Over one itu-b and under fuur inrhee (-r (our ttichve aud uutter tweive luchee Over twelve tncbee 1 00 He 8 a id he wouldn't LESSONS FROM NATURE. A UiIlM 1'aitor Tare Hli Iubii Va catloa Into frolllabla Medltatlone for lb t-aldaace of Hi Flock. I,,. nU.i., ,7 n,A...r. Inl avlvon arlirot ' r r ni i bl ics ns I Ijl I UV UlCllkl VI IlllUlt i MM. " " .......... I " and corn and cotton and all kinds of take tLc democratic nomination if TRUSTS .1X0 THE PEOPLE. "The largo trusts and combinations already formed and being formed by aggregations of capital ate considered hurtful to the masses and the com mon people," says tle Kev. Sim P. Jones in the Manufacturers' Kecord. "This is a theory. Theoretically, a thin-; may be so, and practically it may be very untrue. When we speak of trusts and combines we think of the Standard oil trust, the suartiut, and the tobacco trust, etc. When the Standard oil trust was formed I was paying forty cents' a gallon f r kerosene oil; I am get ting it now for ten cents a gallon. I was paying 1 2 J cents for sugar sev eral years ao, but when the combi nations set in we got it at 5 J. When the whit-key trust was organized I was in hopes it would put up whiskey where the poor devils couldn't get it, but they have seemed to cheapen tb:U down to where they can pay the government ifl.lo a gallon revenue on it and ) et sell it for $1.27 j, which demonstrates that lliey are making it and letting the public have it at about 12A cents a gulion. "There Is no doubt about the ag gregation of wealth, with brains con trolling ii, that they can manufacture any article cheaper than it is or has been manufactured on a small scale. The great railroad combinations, manv think, will eat us up blood rare. Occasionally I get on a little jerk-water rond that is not in the combination, and I want to double my accident rolicies and be satisfied with a I.j-milc-un-;hour gait and console myself with the idea that I can ride all day for a dollar, but when 1 get on the Pennsylvania or Vanderbilt system of roads, with "their schedules forty miles an hour, vestibule trains, wilh parlor cars, sleeping cars, dining cars, I have a hotel on wheels carrying me toward my destination, and all this for about two cents a mile. (Jive me the road mat is in Uie combine to carry me where I am going. "'Public sentiment is the safeguard which is thrown around all aggrega- tions of wealth and all combinations f interest. The Standard oil, the railroad combinations, tiie sugar trust are as sensitive to public senti rnent as the snow-bank to the rays of the sun. Trusts and combines will not hurt the public, but stockholders and bondholders may suffer later on, when these great bulky institutions become unwieldly and fall with their own weight. Fifty thousand men in the United States, perhaps not more, are interested in the great trusts of the country. Those fiO.OOO men know that there arc 70.000,000 of other people in America, and their wisdom teaches them where bound ary lines are, over which they can not go without peril to themselves and disaster to their business. No combination now says "damn tbe public," but they have their weather cocks out on every prominent cupola watching how the wind blows. "The successful man or combina tion means the downfall of other men and other combinations. One preaching to 5,000, twenty preachers around him consider 73 a full house, and 100 a perfect jam; one physician making 10,000 a year, and forty little doctors in tbe neighborhood not making their grub. A Wana maker selling 15,000,000 a year means many little merchants apply ing for clerkships in his store. It is tbe survival of the Quest, it may be. When God made tbis world lie made mountains towering into the clouds and valleys below tbe level of tbe sea; He made lakes and oceans; He fptead out the prairies of the west and piled up tbe mountains around tbe little valleys along tbe ranges of tbe Rockies and tbe Allcghenies. In tbe ocean' waters we Dnd whales -and some very small fishes, and -when tbe whales come a'.ong the little fish bare to hide oat. "I am an expansionist, and I be- manufactures are a drug en the ! we dblu't put the silver plank in as le wanted it. lie would have re fused, I have no doubt, and would hive accepted these other nomina tions. Then w here would our demo cratic organization have been ? There was no help for us. We had to do at Lis dictation what eighty per cent of our leaders believed was unwise. If tLat wasn't a case of imperialism, what was it?" market, aud no demand for them, then we have stringency and hard times, liut when the highways over the seas shall be laden with our products into foreign countries, and the gold is brought back in the ships, then we shall llourish perenially. A negro and an old mule can make corn and cotton; a fellow with a .'00 sawmill can make lumber; but only aggregations of wealth can build ships ami open markets in foreign lands." The Constitution, an itinerant democratic journal published at Walla Walla, calls on the Chronicle for "a few explanations" about Spokane bank clearances. Js'o ex planations are needed. Here they are for the fust six months of 1800, the last year of democratic rule, and the first half of 1900, with William McKinley in the White House: .luniiarr Kt'bTiiury March ... April May. ... !,l,Mo . l.l-V.I.IJ'.l . i,7i.-,'.m . 1::.'.MI l,'.'K.',.;t VAi. -,(ll7 I'.l 4, lt.3,1 1'.' ...o-jl.nTtr l.:ill.'.rjx l.rJII.KIi.' i.wwn June .v.u,lia Want any more figures down there in Walla Walla? If jou do, com pare the record of bank deposits in your own town today wilh that of July, 189C and do your own ex plaining. Spokane Chronicle. The CniiONicLK wonders if the parents and guardians of The Dalits young people of both sexes, who go on Sunday excursions to Bonneville, really dream of the orgies that some of them participate in. If this paper told the half of what comes to its ears of these Sunday carousals it would make every self respecting person in The Dalles blush for t-liauic. Suflice it lo say that it is the sober judgment of persons who have reluctantly witnessed some of these drunken and beastly exhibitions that strangers who have also wit nessed them must think The Dalles is a community of drunkards and worse. Our esteemed Ilryunitc contem porary says "the nomination of Hryun aud Stevenson gives general satisfaction to the democrats, popu lists and silver republicans of this vicinity." The reference to silver republicans will do for foreign con sumption but if the immortal soul of our esteemed contemporary were at stake it could not name three liryan ite free silver republicans in all Wasco county. Don 51. Dic kinson, who was a postmaster-general under Cleveland, is out against liryan nud in favor of McKin'ey. Dickinson takes the view of Bryan which is taken by most of the honest money men of the coun try, democrats as well as republicans. He declares he would not trust Bryan on any sort of a platform. Bryan, be says, would be a rcpudiator even if Le stood on a platform which favored the gold standard and de nounced repudiation. Dickinson pre diets that "Bryan will not get within 2.000,000 as many votes as be got in t8yC. The republicans, however, aie not counting on any such drop as this in Bryan's vote. The repub licans believe Bryan will be very far in the rear in the voting, but they do not expect to see his canvass entirely collapse. Cleveland, Dick inson, Carlisle, Fairchild, Btickner, Palrrer and the great body of the honest money element of the democ racy will cast straight republican ballots on November C. We hive had many ridiculous things in American politics but nothing quite so absolutely ridicu lous as a set of able-bodied American citizens working themselves into a frenzy over an imaginary spook that they Lave dubbed imperialism, and with which they think to scare sen sible people into voting for the most absolute political dictator American politics has known since the days of Andrew Jackson. A patent boiler-plate cdkonal squib going the rounds of the Bryan- ite press says: "Bryan and a re public or McKinley and an empire. Which shall it be?" That isn't the alternative The Chronicle figures out. We would put it: "Bryan and free sonp, free silver, free trado and free riot, or McKinley and the best times tbe country has ever known." Within a short time Governor Geer lll be required to name the school book commission provided for In tbe Daly law passed by the last legislature. The appointments will tie one of the most important olTlcia acts tbe governor will be called upon to discharge during Ins term of office. The Colfax Gazelle thinks that "if democratic deserters were shot, the party would have to lay in a great supply of guns and ammunition this year." "Talk about imperialism," a dis gusted democrat said at Kansas City on tbe closing day of the convention, "that fellow at Lincoln sits with Lis legs crossed and needs only n crown "The Philippines are ours and American authority must be supreme throughout the archipelago. There will be amnesty broad and liberal, but no abandonment of our rights, no abandonment of our duty. There must be no scuttling policy. No out side interference blocks the way to peace and a stable government. Obstruct ionists arc here, not else where. They may postpone but they cannot defeat the realization of the high purpose of this nation lo restore order to the islands and establish a just and generous government." President McKinley. "In lime of peace prepare for war." I hat was the "militarism" of the man whom Americans justly honor as the father of his country. MoQdajr' Daily. Kev. Ulysses F. Hawk, pastor of the First Methodist church of tbis city, took for his subject on Sunday morning "Fishers of Men." His text was "Fol low me and I will make you fishery of men;" Matt. iv.l'J. He said in part: It is my purpose to try to take your minds away from this warm room this morning to some cool mountain stream and ask you to study with me the science of trout fishing. In my text Christ In vites some plain lishermea to leave their fishing industry and follow him and he will teach them to be fishers of men. There are many people who cannot fol low Christ because of their imperfect lives. They have no trouble physically. They have strong bodies and good minds, hat they are dead in trespasses and in sins. Christ never speaks to dead peo ple sayiDg "follow me," but to the liv ing. Christ cannot use "sick-a-bed" christians. Tbe church baa often tried to put them to work, but it is a mis take; they disappoint in every instance. They need medicine first; the fever of indifference must he removed first by a itood dose of divine grace. Then they will be able to follow grace. We are not only to follow Christ ; but ; he says "and I will make vouchers of j men." It was three years and a half l after Peter had been converted until he j was fully prepared to follow Christ ac ceptably; until he was filled with the j spirit; but it need not he so with us. i "Received ve the holv soirit when ve ! believed?" If not you must have him before you can do any acceptable Celling. We need not wait until after we are converted to see if God intends iisiiid us in his service. The words come to us the moment we look upon til in, "Couie, follow me, and I will make you fishers of men." Let us for a short tune study the science of fishing. Firet, the fisherman will drees suitably for his occupation. He will not wear a showy aUire that he may look attractive. No, it is his busi ness to entirely keep himself out of sight. The jeweled hand might he the first thing notieable and frighten the fish away, spoiling the catch. So Christ's fishermen must keep self out of sight; they must stand behind the cross of Christ while they are fishing. The necessity for hiding self often renders a cloudy day the best time for fishing; days when the Lore', has hid himseif be hind some cloud of sorrow, when we can say with the poet: rmTTrrviranM J A. . . . . T The Kind Yoa Have Always Bought, and which ha9 been In use for over 3C years, has borne the signatnre of aud has been made under Ids per rVylT; Bonsd supervision since its lnfanev" SLOSy Allow no one to deceive you In this! All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good" are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infanta and Children Experience against Experiment What is CASTORIA Castoria Is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare, gwric, Drops aud Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant, it contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other STurcotio faibstaiice. Its age Is its guarantee. It destroys Worm and allays Fevcrlshness. It cures Diarrhoea and "Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomaeh and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THC CCNTAUR COMMMV. TT MURRAY 9TRCCT. NEW VORK CrrV. PERTINENT PRESS COMMENT. Hon. Abram S. Hewitt, Senator I.ind say, of Kentucky, ex-Governor Waller, of Connecticut, ex-Controller F.ckles, and other prominent and life-long dem Of rat s find themselves unable to support Mr. Bryan for the presidency on the platform lie has constructed for himself. But against the loss of these goldbugs there is the set-off of Mr. Webster Davis. Mr. Davis has but one vote, but lie can roar. Philadelphia Record. Bryan is the only political boss who ever dictated the platform to a national convention while In session and forced it to adopt what it disapproved by a direct threat of declining the nomina tion and running on another ticket. Globe-Democrat. The cry of "imperialism" is an in vention of desperate politicians who would scare the people by a ghost. It is meant solely to deceive the people, whether it is proclaimed from the stump or condensed into print. It is direct insult to the intelligence and patriotism of tbe people, for there Is not one who ntters it who does not know that imperialism never for a moment entered the mind of Mr. Mc Kinley or any one near him ; and more, that were any such purpose to appear from any source it would instantly be stamped into the ground. II Barol III Lr(. P. A. Danforth, of LaUrande, Ga., suffered intensely for six months with a frightful running sore on bis leg, hut writes that Bucklen'a Arnica Salve wholly cured it in ten days. For Ulcers, Wounds, Burns, Bolls, Pain or Piles it's the best salve in the world. Cure fruar anteed. Only 25c. Sold by Blakeley A Houghton druggists. C For Mala. A good second-hand threshing ma chine for sale at L. Lane's blacksmith hop, on Third street. J4-dAwlm Why pay 1.75 per gallon for inferior paints when yoa can bay James E. Pat ton's sun proof paints for $1.50 per gallon, guaranteed for 5 yean. Clark A t alk, agents. mI7 Abide with me! Kmt falls the eventide; The darkness deepens! Lord with me nbirte! When other helpers fail and comforts lice, Help of the helpless, O, abide with ine!; I need Thy presence every pns:-iiig hour; What but Thy grace can foil the tempter's power? ho, like thyself, my guide and stay can be? Through cloud and sunshine, Loid, abide with me. A good line is needed, long enough to reach tbofih; but not too long. The line is an emblem of prayer. Must it be too long? So; hut it must he woven by the spirit, and it must be strong with faith. If it lack thespiritandfuitt.it will break at the firet lining. The line must be thrown where the Can are. Hot often is :he line of prayer misdi rected, and the hook found to sink to the bottom of the stream and is being covered by the sand. Did you ever think how big a fish you can catch with a small hook? It is not so much the size of the hook as the quality. The strong small hook is the best. You are fishing in deep pools of sin ; you need a "sinker." The sinker on the line of prayer is love. Love will lead the line down into the heart and the hook will r.Hke hold. When fishing in the muddy water of this world it is necessary that we use a "float," good judgment, to keep the hook off lh bottom and out of the mud and sand. The wise man said, "Lean not unto thine own understand ing." The bible Is the bait box. I mean no irreverance. Is the bible not full of passages with which we may bait the hook. "For God so loved the world that he gave bis only begotten son that whosoever believeth in him should uot perish, but have everlasting life." But we must dg for the bait; "Kearch the scriptures; they are they which tes tily of me." The fishing tackle is now complete. There are five things the fisherman tries to conceal himself, the line, tbo book, float and sinker; the bait is the only thing he tries to get the fish to see. This is a fact we christians should learn. We must bide ourselves behind the cross; self must be hidden in Christ. Did yoa ever hear the cry "Where is my fishing tackle?" Then there will be searching around the house from the garret to the cellar. Brother, sister, where do you keep the fishing tackle? Can you find it when you wish to use it? Keep the tackle where vou can easily find it, and do not let the bait get stale; bat keep it fresh. When wo fish wo must go where the fish are. Yoa are a poor fisherman if yon do your fishing around the church pew. They are the "slck-a-Led" Chris tians that fish around the church pew. Yon must go out in the highway and by way, to the business house, the work shop, the office; there is where you will find tbe sinner fish. Mountain stream fishing Is done with delight; climbing rocks, crawling over trees and through the thick brush. What cares the fisher man for such difficulties? He is catch ing fish and the banket is being filled. This is the condition of the faithful fish erman. Hardships, he knowns them not. He has "a riifht spirit within." He is catching fiih for his master. My brother, bait the hook quickly ; do not spend the time holding the hook and bait: the opportunities are getting less every day. Throw the line skill fully. Do uot get the line caught in the branches of tho overhanging trees. It is not skillful fis'iing to begin to talk theology ortboclurch; Christ must be our theme; Christ is our salvation. It is our business to help men to see Him in all his goodness and greHlneep, unit then thpy will servo liiiu and crown Him Lord of all. THE JUDGE'S DOUBLE ENTRY, A Style of Ilookkeeiilim the Abiril. Minded llrldeuroiiui l.ramta from llel IteKUtvra, Who Hath Woe? Man who is married to a woman dur ing house-cleaning time, is of a few days and full of carpet tacks. A cloud oh senreth his vision and irreat gobs of da ta brown gloom posseHe'h his soul. He riseth up betimes and eniffeth the morn ing air wilh a heavy heart and ohsciireth nose. H snateheth a few pancake" from the eridile and rnsheth to bin labors depressed in spirit and saturated with dyspepnia. Heretiirnelh f, noon and falleth over a mop. The dull sick ening thud of belarruped curpet is heard in tho land. The (ineen of the house bold crowueth herself with a dirty towel and a fierce look. She renemblelh an angel. Her sceptre is a broom. The carpet fuzz elingeth to tho salvsire of her nose. 1irge quantities of real estate settleth among the dimples of her swan like neck. Her eyes glareth with the fury of Kreat enterprise. She niaketh her s.iouse to eat dinner from the iron ing board in tho kitchen, which reoteth on two chairs. He findelh a caice of soap beside his plate and a portion of the scalp of the scrubbing brush In the bnller. At night he return-th. to his home with a timid halting step. He feareth the worst. The swish of tbe pesch limb is still hoard as it ponndeth a fifty-dollar carpet Into shreds. He drinketh a little cold tea from a tin cup, and prepareth for bed. A live carpel tack btiryeth its fangs in bis foot. He yelleth in agony, and bumps the ceiling in a vain ami futile effirt to jump through the roof. He limb down on his conch and wetteth his pillow with his tears. The family dog howleth beneath his window like the wail of a dammed soul and no one in the house sleepelh. The fetid fragrance of bedluiir srwcilfic smelleth to heaven and thn new-laid moth balls siftoth through the cover of the clothes chest. Who hath woe? Who hath sorrow? Who hath redness of eyes and a stopped y "utB no who inotikeyeth itn house clearning. Who masheth his thumb? Who pol lutein bis lips with blasphemy? Who Irnperileth his lm mortal soul? He - ho tarryeth at home to tack down carpets. Kx. Msinlatlon JSotlm. The copartnership business heretofore conducted at 175 Kecmd street, under the firm name and style of lll.keler & Houghton, is this day dissolved bv mutual consent, F. L. Houghton relir- ng from said firm. Tbe hnsine will bo conducte.l In the future by Geo. O Ilakeley, t the old stand. F. L Houghton will collect all ,wouni, . j pay all liabilities of said firm. me uanes, Uregon, July 2, 1900, Judge James Fitzycrald, of theXen York supreme court, ih an excellent ex ample of what perseverance and sin gk'iiess of purpose wiN accomplish says the I'hiludclphia Saturday Even ing Post. The judge, who is about jphi-s old, supported not only himself but helped bin family vt hi le serving a: a cash boy in u stoic, and at night ht attended Cooper Cuion. Later he read luw al night nud managed to be admit ted to thy bar at die siiuie age that ii'.oat young men begin practice. Tin judge liasi had more than fair suilitip tluiigli, since he became a lawyer. Hi ia .a powerful nuui physically, rudih and lis active as u lynx. To his nativi Irish wit ib added a power of speeeli that nearly uppi'onehcd eloquence, lit soon took u prominent part m politics nnd was for years a member of the leg islature. Several years ago he wan appointed itn additional assistant district attor ney at the comfortable salary of $7,50i Mic year. Before taking ollice he mar ried and went on a prolonged wwldint trip. When he returned u month spa) was due him, und he went to theotfici for it. During his honc.wnoon lie hml traveled over a good part of tl is coun try, and us his funds were low lie went direct from the train lo tlieollife. '"Here is j our money, counwlor," snid the pay elerk, deferentially, after his kind. "AH right," replied Mr. Fitzgerald, nocketinir the roll of bills. . . "Sign the. pay roll, please," continued the clerk. "Of course," responded lite bridf groom, nnd, absentmindedly, he wroU n follows: "James Fitzgerald nnd wife." And the entry is on the city books to this day. ot at Home. Visitor 1 your father at home? Little Daughter What is 7m name, please? "Just tell him it is his old frlrtid, Hill." "Then he isn't, in. I heard him W mamma if nny bills came h" wasn at, liome." Mray Slories. Wnplnltla Hrhool ISeriort. o. C. IJ,..,.BVi t. L. IlOUliHTON, Following is the report ol tlia terniof school taniiht In District u. . tm which eloped July 13th: KAMI JIKroKT- Claude D,v!e I'K Rose Delco 1'H) Lena Dovne !,,r' Ollie Delco ' Annie Delco 'IH) (jertrnde Laiiuhlin llMI Fred LnnKhlin 100 Wayne Iwis 1'H) Win Mcl) Lewis v Day Smith ' It -bertTapp Vincent Tapp 1,KJ fieorir Ward F:tla Ward Names on the roll of honor, Wy ' Lewis. Most Improvement in it'"11 ' E;ta Ward. Excellent in echolrsn.p, Robert Tapp. ... M a by W. LKis,Teaehr. 97 5 DO 95 94 97 98 98 96 97 93 9S orb Wanted. . . ....... j- ..I linu ' A position IO no irrnr. Inquire at Mrs. B.twr'i rlJ" Ninth street, opposite old bntn. cbarcb. -14 - .... . , friliU. C"0'1" iropicaianu iiomeii'"" - gtt vegetables, also that chicken for J Sunday dinner. Call up 27.