THE DALLES WEEKLY CHHONICLE. SATURDAY. JULY 28. 1900. The Weekly Ghroniele. AdvertLIng Kate. per tuek O is ItiCh or lea In !ily II O er two inchwi and uixlor four liirtirt 1 '.)'r lour im'ln-f mid uuiicr twelve inch... 75 O'er twelve inch W DAILY 1ND WCIKLY. ne Inch or kt., ior Inch KTer one inch nJ uiiilrr lour Inche. it" Over lour liu hn nud umlor twelve lnctae... ) VI OTr twelve iucbea 1 w CAXXOT HAVE THE EARTH. The Astoria News makes an earnest appeal to tbo citizen of Astoria to rally for on organized figlit against fish-wheels and trar s. It urges the holding of imss meetings and the framing of resolutions to the legislatures of Oregon and Washing ton and, in the event of these bodies refusing to heed their demands, an ultimate appeal to the general gov eminent for the desired relief. It asks if the people of Oregon are going ' to permit the ruination of their fisheries that "a few trap and wheel-owners nay be enriched," and if the city at the mouth of the Colum bia is "to continue to bo a city or a roere way station for a few trap and whel-owncrs a fishing halinet with out fish." It does not seem to have occurred to the News that the thousands of gill nets and other murdering devices used on the lower river ever do the least bit of injury to the fishing in dustry, or tend to lessen the annual catch, yet in the local column of the same issue of July 21st that demands summary aoolition of the wheels, the News informs its readers that "one gill net man is reported to have caught over a ton," the night befote, "another about half a ton, while others made catches varying all the way from 1"0 to i00 pounds," and "at Crcscott's cold-storage warehouse the deliveries were about twelve tons, including steelheads, up to six o'clock this morning, while at Alter's and Schmidt iSrothers' the receipts were still greater." In etill another paragraph the News informs us that "at his two seining grounds, yester day, W. E. Tallant got four tons of salmon. The Fitzpalrick ground yielded the greater part, beiug cred ited with three tons." Let the News compare its own re port of one night's catch with gill nets and 9eines on the lower river with the fact that scoies of wheel? on the upper river have not made running expenses during the season thai many of them have done prac tically nothing and not one in i score has made money for its owner, ' and then say if it is not possib'.e that the trouble that agitates the minds of the good people of Astoria does not find its cause a liille nearer home? Lei such legislation for the preser vation of the salmon fishing industry as is necessary and equitable be en acted, but let the News be well assured that the legislators of Clat sop county have a big contract on their hands when they undertake to have laws passed that will discrimi Dale against every salmon-killing device that cannot be used with profit by the fishermen of Astoria. justice for himself. We believo it is the first time that a charge of im morality has been urged as a good reason for conferring senatorial hon ors. As well might Mr. Corbett's opponent in this suit ask for vindica tion from the charge of blackmail biought asainsl him by Mr. Corbett, and in Addition ho might ask the ALASKA IX THIS CAMPAIGN. This, from the Mobile Daily Kog ter, is a sample of the arguments we shall bear from the Iiryanite news papers and orators during the cam piu. says tLe New York .Sun: "l'orto Iiico is as much a part of the United States territory as is New Mexico, or Oklahoma, or Alssks, yet legislature to compensate him for i becanse of llje 8Ugar ntcrt, the the loss of his wife's "affections, The charge tlat theie ia any political significance in this suit for damages is worse than foolish. There is none, except such as Mr. Corbett has attempted to make in connection with it. Salem Statesman. VINDICATION WANTED. Hon. II. W. Corbett, of Portland, having been made defendant ia a damage suit charged with alienating some woman's wifely affections, promptly responds by announcing himself as a candidate for the United States senate, and the Oregonian insists that it is the duty of the people of Oregon, by their reprcsen tatires in the legislature, to "vindi cate" Mr. Corbett, and not "strike him down in his old age with calumny and distrust." It is a pitiful and ridiculous appeal, a disgraceful at tempt to play upon the sympathies of the people in order to secure a verdict from an incompetent tribunal. It is the "plain duty" of the legisla ture to put aside all prejudice and send to the Ucitetl States the man best qualified to serve the interests of the slate of Oregon, and not to resolve itself into a committee of the whole to investigate the charges of improper conduct brought by one citizen against another citizen. That is the duty of the courts, and as Mr, Corbett is amply able to employ learned counsel and take every ad vantage of the law, no one can doubt that be will secure at least They do tbings differently oyer in British Columbia. When a party of 1500 fishermen, attached to the forty seven canneries at Steveston, refused the other day to fish or allow any body else to fish, a rtquisition signed by three Steveston magistrates brought promptly to the scene of the strikers three companies of militia whose commanding officer informed the rioters that his men had not come there for amusement, but for business; that each man. had twenty- four rounds of ball cartridges, ami that at the first sign of inlcifcrence with the men who desired to work at the wages offered by the canneries his men would fire, and that the woik would be short and quick. "The strikers," we are told, "were so much surprised at that kind of talk that all idea of violence was temporarily banished from their minds." In this country the author ities would have temporized with the mob till a score or two of in nocent persons had been murdered. The civil officer who would be in btrumental in calling out the militia would be damned by al! the dema gogues from Idaho to. Lincoln, Ne braska, He would bo branded as a tyrant, a subsidized hireling of plu tocracy, an agent of the money power, a usurper and an imperialist. The Sulzers and Lentzes and Townes and Fettigrews and Sovereigns would make the air blue with demagogic appeals on behalf of liberty and human rights; when as a fact the only right involved in tho whole business is the right for a man to sell his labor to whom he pleases, and at what price he pleases; a right, deprived of which, a man is a slave indeed. Senator Hoar, of Massachusetts, has been asked to join the democratic party, and in reply that statesman has had the following published: "If you think you can best help the cause of liberty and true republican ism by voting for the men who are for the free coinage of silver at 16 to 1, by voting for men who are for refusing 10,000,000 American citi zens suffrage at borne, for over throwing the independence of the supreme court, and for destroying the safeguards of property and American labor, very well. Go your way and do your duty as you see it I shall do mine as I see it, and I think I can best do it by speaking as a republican to republicans; by keep ing my right to speak as a counselor and associate of the men who have wrought everything that has been wrought for liberty in this country since the treaty of peace in 1783, and not as the associate or through the instrumentality of the party or men who have been ranged for sixty years on the side of kspotlsm and oppression, of dishonor andoflo wages." fruit interest, the toEacco interest, and other protected industries in this country, the republican party sees Gt to treat the island as if it were ao alien land, to be taxed without representation and, what is worse, without any constitutional authority on our part to levy the tax. "If we can tax these people with out asking their consent, and simply because we have tho power to do so, what is to stand in the way of con gre3s treating a state in the same way ?" Well, what about tho case of Alaska, which is as much a part of United States territory as l'orlo Kico? The same congress which passed tbo l'orto Rico act, imposing tem porarily a tariff there which is not uniform throughout tbo United States, passed also the Alaska net, imposing an elaborate system of excise taxes peculiar to that ter ritory, and consequently not uniform throughout the United States. If one of these two acts is uncon stitutional, so is the other. If one is an' instance of taxation without representation, so is the other. If Porto Rico is treated "as if it were an alien land," so is Alaska. If one territory is subjected to "government without the consent of the governed," so is tho other. If there is any out rage, or departure from American principles, or indication of the deciy of repnhlican institutions iu one case, so is there in the other case. Why not bo honest and denounce the republican party for "imperial ism" in Alaska if you are going to denounce it for "imperialism" in Porto Uico and the Philippines? A democrat exchange learns that Eugene Debbs, the candidate of the socialists for president, will with draw from the race in favor ot Bryan. Why should he not? If there is not enough of socialism and free riot in Bryanism to suit Debbs ho must be might- hnrd to please. lowing wa regarded one that bad temporarily yielded to an emotional de lusion. In l'JOO bit following is seen to comprise those who are collectively as chronically insane, on certain important public subjects, as a solitary inmate of an asylum is individually crazy on some peraonal matter. Mr. Bryan ia now danger. Tbat which follows him and which calls itself the democracy is now the concrete embodiment of tbe danger on tendencies in American Hie. Id 1896 the American people supposed they were fighting a wind storm. In 1900 they realize that tbey are fighting a com pact onion of all the arrant and vicious forces that can be marshaled under the banner of a demagogue and thatcan make politic their pretext, while they really hav revolution as their object. Brooklyn Eagle. NO IMPERIALISM IX Ol'lVX. Our contemporary suggests that if Roosevelt were honest be would fire Van Wyck ou t of the New York mayorship. It may be. But, as suming Roosevelt has the power to fire Van Wyck, which is doubtful, if be made tbe attempt there is not a Bryanite sheet in all this broad land that would not denounce the act as inspired by base, political deviltry and a sample of high-handed im perialism. If there is any firing to be done why docs not tbe Bryanitcs take the initiative and, themselves, Ore this trust magnate from the place of honor that he holds in tbe councils of the party ? Healthful drinks are not luxuries, tbey are necessities. A full line of cool and refreshing porter, ale, mineral water and beers kept on ice. Take a bottle home for lunch. C. J. Stabling. Phone 234. Before next November thoughtful and reasonable men of all parlies will understand how great is the peril to their own and the national prosperity invited by Bryanism, and will govern themselves accordingly. PERTINENT PRESS COMMENT. Bryan and Stevenson are to be form ally notified of their nomination at In dianapolis August 8th. "Won't they be surprised, though?" exclaims tbe Che lan Leader. Tbe Chinese have one regiment of men made up of tigers, who are to ter rify the enemy by howling. This is a base infringement upon the populist mode of campaigning. Washington Post. Chairman Jones advances sixteen rea sons why Mr. Bryan will win. All of tbera are like the sixteen ounces of sil ver to one of gold, not worth over 48 per cent of the one reason why Bryan won't be elected because he can't get votes enough. Telegram. A democratic exchange says that nine ty percent of the commercial travelers are for Bryan this year, whereas 05 per cent of them were for McKinley four years ago. An equally reliable republi can organ says that "tbe traveling men are for McKinley to a man." And there you are. Telegram. The Tacoma ledger observes that "from the president, who believed in preserving the honor and credit of the nation, to the candidate that would sac rifice them; from the man who would not hesitate to suppress riot and insur rection to the demagogue who would in cite; from Cleveland to Bryan Is a long, flying leap. But that acrobatic mug wump, ex revolutionist of '48, Carl Schnrz, has made it." Here is another proof that a secret al liance exists between this country and England. British flags are made in large quantities in this country. The manufacturers, of course, receive their price for tbe (roods, but any democrat can see with ball an eye that onr gov ernment would not permit this manu facture of tbe emblem of British oppres sion and tyranny in this country if there were not some secret alliance in exist ence. Minneapolis Journal. In 1890 Mr. Bryan was regarded as a dreamer and a declalmor. In 1900 be Is seen to be a dictator. Ia 1896 his fol- "To establish a colonisl govern ment in the Philippine Islands will necessitate a vast standing ormy. The army is under the control of the president, and what is there to hinder him turning the army at any time upon his own people, and de claring himself a monarch?" Es teemed Contemporary. Everything is to hinder, you dear, timorous, frightened darling. Every thing is to hinder. McKinley, him self, stands in the way, for there is j not a scintilla of monarch in Lis i make-up. The man w ho bared his I youthful breast to rebel bullets In order that the American Union might be maintained and the flag preserved, without a stripe erased or a star dimmed, is not the material out of which monarchs Arc made. Several hundred thousand, brainy, Gghting, big fisted republican editors, and moulders of public opinion stand in the way; men who love this coun try, Us institutions, its constitution, its declaration of independence and its present and future glory. These stand in the way. And seven million stalwart, republican voters stand in the way; men whose boast it is that they belong to tbo party who pre served the Union that tho fathers founded, and in whose ranks there never breated a traitor to his coun try or its flag. TliC30 stand in the way; and if more were needed, millions of democrats, North and South, and millions of Bryanitcs East and West, who now roll their eyes an.i tear their hair in presence of a phantom of their own creation, could surely bo relied on to cast their javelins at the spook, should it ever evolve itself from airy nothing ness and clothe itself in the trappings and habiliments of reality. J The Kind. You Have Always Bought and whien has been In use for over au years, Has Dorne tne sig-natnre of and Has Deen made under his per 'ffl? J? Bonal supervision sinee its infancy. ccCU'ti Allow no one to deceive you i n this! All Counterfeits, Imitations and ' Just-as-good are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups, It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic fnihstaiice. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishuess. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of 7 Tlie Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THK CCNTAUII COM PAN V, TT MUNHAV STftCCT, NEW VOftft CrTV. MaiattiSiaiSeieieiei k!Lmmzim!mSGZ THE CELEBR'TKD .. . GOMllKfilA fifth AUGUST BUCHLER, Prop. Of the prndnctof this well-known brewery tbe United States Health Reports for June 28, 1900, says: "A more supeiior brew never entered the labratory of the United States Health reports. It is absolutely devoid of the slightest trace of adulteration, but on the other hand is coxposod of tlie best of malt and choicest of hops. Its tonic qualities are of the high est and it can be used with tlie greatest benelit and satisfaction by old and young. Its use can conscientiously be prescribed by tbe physicians with the cersainty that a better, purer or more wholesome beverage could not possibly be found." East Second Street. THE DALLES. OREGON. Toavliera' Examination. Notice is hereby given that the county superintendent of Wasco county will hold the regular examination of appli cants for state and county papers at Tbe D.illes, Oregon, as follows: KOB STATE I'AI'EliS. Commencing Wedneeday, Augtiet 8, at nine o'clock a. m., and continuing nntil Saturday, August 11th, at four o'clock. Wednesday Penmanship, history, al gebra, reading, school law. Thursday Written arithmetic, theory of teaching, grammar, book-keeping, physice, civil government. Friday Physiology, geography, men tal arithmetic, composition, physical geography. Saturday Botany, plane geometry, general history, English literature, psychology. FOB COUNTY l'AIKKH. Commencing Wednesday, August 8th, at nine o'clock a. m., and continuing until Friday, August 10th at four o'clock. 1st, 2nd and 3d grade certificates. Wednesday Penmanship, history, orthography, reading. Thursday Written arithmetic, theory of teaching, grammar, school law. Friday Geography, mental arith metic, physiology, civil government. I'RIMAR Y CERTIFICATES. Wednesday Penmanship, orthogra phy, reading. Thursday Art of questioning, theory of teaching, methods. Dated The Dalles, Or., July 27,1900. C. L, GlLUElIT, j27-10t School Supt. Wasco Co., Or. IMSI 7 i RofnrQ Vnil P'ace anv otlera 'r a tombstone or for UCIUlC jUU curbing, fencing or other cemetery work, call on Louis Comini. I will not only give you all the information you need but 1 will quote you prices you cannot heat anywhere. let no one bluff you. It will take only a few minutes to call and see me. If you have a neighbor who ever did business with me consult him as to the price and quality of ray work I n,,J0 Primim and abide by the result. : LUUlO UUIIIIHI M Spend Hundajr at Honncllla. Put op a lunch and get aboard either of the O. R. & N. trains leaving The Dalles at 4:50 a. in. or 12:30 noon, and spend tbe day in the refreshing shade of the trees at Bonneville. Fare is only GO cents for the round trip. Good music and first-class performance under tha pavilion free to all. Refresh ments can be procuced on the grounds if desired. frdy&sat For Mala. A good second-hand threshing ma chine for sale at L. Lane's blacksmith hop, on Third street. Ji-dAwlm CLEANLINESS. is being advocated by all parties regardlees of race, color or pre vious condition of servitude. It-member we make onr custo mers glad when they buy or Pure Prepared Paints. There is a finish and gloss to its work tbat is admired by all. Paints, Oils, Glass, Picture and Room Moldings Be sure and inspect onr stock of Wall Paper Designs for 1900 on Display H. GLENN & CO. Washington Street, between Second and Third. ffetitung from Business. Closing out my Entire Stock Regardless of Cost. Dry Goods, Clothing, Boots and Shoes, at much less than wholesale prices. Will sell in bulk or in lots, or any way to suit purchasers. Entire stock must he closed out before thirty days. All goods will be sacrificed except Thompson's Glove-fitting Corsets and Bntterick Patterns. Your prices will be mine. Coll early and secure bargains. J. P. McINERNY, Corner Second and Court Sis. int. Angel College and Seminary, Conducted by the Benodlctlne Fathers. Located 40 miles south of Portland on one of the most healthful and ttrlf? m i i V'6 WillBrne Valley. The ideal place for your boys. Frepsrsw'f julyl8-octl8 Classical, Commercial and 8cientifle Course lot particulars apply to the President. Music a specialty. I