THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE. SATURDAY. AUGUST 11. 1900. The Weekly Chronicle. AdT.rlUInf Kataa. Ptt hc Oieli.chor leu In Daily M O er two inchua and uuder four inches 1 00 O.-er lour luchcn aud under twelve lnchea.. 75 Orer twelve lnchca 4 DAILT AUD WIKKLY. tfnelnch or lew. vet Inch I 50 Over one Inch and under loin Inchee 1 00 Over lour luehea and uudor twelve luchee.. 1 60 Over twelve luchea 1 00 VXFAIR AA'D US REASONABLE. The Astoria News says The Dalles (Chkonicle (Joes not understand tbe flailing situation and has a wrong idea of what is needed for the pro tection of the salmon industry. The Ciikoniclk is not disposed to waste a jsinglo word lu denial of tbe soft lav .peachment. In good sooth Tub iCjmomcle is more disposed to make open', fulr confession that the subject is wrapped in insoluble mystery. lleie is The Cukonicle's difficulty. Ass'.minjr, of course, that the News knows everything worth knowing "about the salmon industry and the cause of its marked decline of late years, The CiiRONiCLE-cannot under stand how the wheels up this way, that altogether did not have an ag gregate catch of more than two and a half tons a day during the month of July and not more than a thousand pounds a day since the first of August, are to be saddled with the crime of destioying the salmon in dustry aud no reckoning whatever he made of the 600 miles of nets that cover every available inch of cpace in the lower river between Astoria and the ocean, and catch more salmon in a week than tbe wheels do in a year. Oh, but "the wheels are situated near the spawn ing grounds," says the News, "and those Osh which run the gauntlet of traps, seines nnd gillnets are taken by the wheels before they spawn." But tbe wheels are not situated near the spawning grounds. They are only relatively nearer the spawning grounds than Astoria is, and if It is a crime for the wheels to catch salmon "before they spawn" what is it for the gillnets to do the same thing? The News says "the trouble with The Chronicle is that the wheels are located near The Dalles and their abolition would effect tbe people of that community." Quite so. And lite trouble with the News is that the gillnets operate near Astoria and cannot be operated here just as the wheels cannot be operated there, and the Astoriansare so sclQsh that if they had their own way they would not allow a fish to be caught in the upper river. This is a hard saying, but it is entirely justified by the position taken by tbe News in this controversy. It tells us, in effect, that it is a question between two communities, Tbe Dalles that has a pack of less than 20,000 cases a year and Astoria that packs 400, 00 cases, and asks that The Dalles wheels may be abolished on tbe ground that their insignificant catch is ruining the whole business! When Astorians get down to some fair and reasonable propositions for preserving the salmon industry they will find tbe people up this way more than willing to meet tbein half way; but so long as they insist on the abolition of every species of gear they cannot, themselves, use with advantage, tbe need expect nothing tout war to the knife and the knife to the hilt. FALSE VROPUETOF me. If the prophesies and predictions made by Mr. Bryau had proven to be true, the gold standard, which has been in operation ever since he uttered them, would have produced the following direful results, to-wit: It would have increased the pur chasing power of toe gold dollar. (Madison Square Garden speech.) It would have been as certain to make prices fall as a stone is to fall when it Is thrown into the air. (Newton, Iowa, speech.) If would have increased the debts of tbe people and lessened their ability to pay them. (Baltimore speech,) 1 It would have made times harder and harder. (Same speech.) It would have starved everybody except tbe money-changers and the tnoney-owners. (New Haven, Conn., speech.) It would have transferred the bread which one man cams to an other man who bad not earned it. (Hartford, Conn., speech.) It would have made the rich richer and the poor poorer. (New. aik, Ohio, speech.) It would have decreased the num ber who are happy and increased the number who are in distress. (Same speech.) It ouId !ave destroyed the hope of tbe toiling masses. (Minneapolis, Minn., speech.) It would have destroyed the op portunity to work. Samo speech.) It would have increased Ike num ber of idle men. (Same speech.) It 'would have decreased the volume of standard money. (Same speech.) It would have encouraged the hoarding of money. (Hornesville, N. Y.. speccb.) It wou'.d have made it more and more difficult for the farmer to live (Madison Square Garden speech.) It would have injured the wage earner. Same speech.) It would haue made employment less certain. (Same speech.) It would have discouraged enter prise. (Same speech.) It would have paralyzed industry. (Same speech.) It would have lessened the ability of savings banks to collect their assects. (Same speech.) It would have increased tbe danger of depositors losing their deposits in savings banks. (Madison Square Garden speech.) It would have compelled depositors in savings banks to withdraw their deposits to pay living expenses, (Same speech) It would have lessened the salaries of those engaged in business occupa tions and would have lessened tbe permanency cf suoh salaries (Same speech.) It would have injured those who have permanent investments in rail road stocks and other like enterprises. (Same speech.) It would have injured or destroyed the manufacturers of agricultural implements, wagons and buggies. (Springfield, Ohio, and Hint, Mich., speeches.) It would have lessened the ability of tbe masses to buy goods and thereby would have lessened tbe number of commercial traveling men. (Indianapolis speech to travel ing men.) It would have made it impossible for husbands and wives to pay off the rr or teases on their homes. (Minneapolis, Minn., speech to ladies.) it would nave made it necessary to advocate the closing up of our public schools. (Monmouth, III., speech.) It would have made it more profit able to loan money or to hoard it than to invest it in enterprise or property. (Syracuse, N. Y speech.) It would have made dearer money, cheaper property, harder times, more people out of work, more people destitute, more people desperate, more crime. (Minneapolis speech to ladies.) It would have lowered the stand ard of civilization in Ibis country. (Madison Square Garden speech.) It would have been writing the future in blood, crushed out by gold. (Erie, Penn., speech.) AM these prophecies and predic tions aoout the evils that would be fall us if the gold standard were adopted have utterly failed. Mr. Bryan said in a speech de livered at Lincoln, Nebraska, July 7, 1900: The fight this year will be to carry out the sentiment of that song we have so often repeated, My Country 'tis of Thee.' If we lose, our children and our children's children will not succeed to the spirit of that song, and celebrations of the Fourth of July will pass away, for the spirit of empire will be upon us." Pass the salt, please. Kefeirlng to the proposed talk of President McKinley and Governor Roosevelt to working men in Chicago on Labor day, an opposition paper asko: "What will hbor say r We do not know what labor will say, but we know what it might say. It would te something like this: "Do not spend much time in speaking, for it is not necessary. We could hardly find the time to come out to day, for we are all at work, at belter wages than ever before, and tbis year we who have been working have not been culled upon to divide with the unemployed." Tbe prospects were never so fair. If all wealth comes from labor, then never before was wealth accumulating so rapidly as it is right now, fur never before was so vast an army of peace assault ing the strongholds of want or build ing such majestic fortunes to plenty. Salt Lake Trihuue. A SENSATIONAL LAW SUIT. O. C. O'B.HI.y a Colambla outh era Railway for IJe.OOO, All(la That taa Praaldaat of tha Road aatf Director, by fraadalaat Coaaplracy, Haa Itofraaded laa Compaay on at That Suae. The democrats favor a stable gov ernment for tbe Philippines. Tbe sultan of Turkey has a stable gov ernment, tbe czar of Russia has a stable government, China has had a stable government for twenty centuries. Which kind does it favor? Not a single Spanish colony that ever threw off tbe Spanish yoke ever possessed a stable government within fifty years after declaring independ ence, lbe l'uiiippines lociay wouin have a peaceable and just govern ment were it not for the encourage ment afforded to tbe insurgents by tbe hostility here in the states to tbe efforts of tbe army to conquer re bellion. Bnt tbe Bryan platform will simply prolong the struggle till Bryanism and the aunties are buried under an avalanche ot American voles. President McKinley, as the con stituted representative of a great republic, has lifted tbe yoke of op pressive imperialism from tbe shoul ders of 850,000 Porto Ricans, from 1,500,000 Cubans, nnd 10,000,000 Filipinos. He has freed more subject colonists from the tyranny of Spain than Washington delivered from the oppression of Great Britain, yet in view of these facts of history Bryan would have tbe country believe that it must choose between him and an emperor. A well-known citizen of The Dalles, while in Astoria last Satur day, saw twenty tens of salmon on the floor of a cannery, tbe catch for that single cannery of tbe previous nigbL He says all tbe canneries were running on full time and some on over time. And we are asked to believe that it is Tbe Dalles wheels, that did not catch a ton, all told, during the same time, that are ruin ing tbe salmon industry. Mr. Bryan says Towne's withdraw al from tbe race for vice-president was a manly and patriotic act History records tbe ''manly and patriotic act" of an Irishman who would not stay where he would not be kept. On tbe same principle Towne withdrew from a race in which be could hope for neither honor nor success. The imports and exports of Porto Rico for the month of May, 1900, were each about 100 per cent greater than for tbe corresponding month of the year 1899. This Is the poverty and distress to which tbe democratic platform said tbe tcpublicans had had doomed the island. Bryan sees danger in our national prosperity, and those wishing to do him justice must admit that, should his opinions prevail, such a source of danger would be speedily removed In one breath tbe democratic orator will assure his hearers that McKinley has no backbone, that be is a creature controlled ty those around him, and with the next breath will accuse him of shaking tbe re public to pieces In order to erect a throne on the ruins thereof.' William J. Bryan has exchanged his lecture called "What I Know About Wheat" for a new one en titled "What I Know About the Republic." A sharp advance in the price of ice in New York city is looked for ia the near future. Tarn man v has contributed 2,500,000 to tbe Bryan campaign fund. E.prcs.lna of Thank. We desire to express our grateful thanks to the many friends for kindness shown ns during the illness and death of our ion and brother. Mb. and Mas. II. F. Bhunc AND ClULURIX. A suit involving- $130,000 was filed yesterday in tbe circuit court for Sher man county In which D. C. O'Beilley is plaintiff and tbe Colombia Southern Railway, a corporation, May Enright, E. E. Lytle, W. H. Moore, A. E. H mond and C. E. Lyt!e are tbe defend ant". Tbe complaint is in substance at follows: The plaintiff, on behalf of Minaelf and all such other shareholders of tbe Columbia Southern Railway Com pany as are similarly situated, complains of the defendants and alleges that E. E. Lytle hat absolute control of tbe de fendant company and that the board of directors are mere dummies that were elected to do hit bidding. Prior to October 11, 1899, the road bad been constructed and was in operation from Biggs, Wasco county, to Moro, Sherman county, a distance of twenty seven miles, and since that time has been extended, at the Instance and di rection af E. E. Lytle, toShaniko, about forty-three miles from Moro, (he con tract! therefor being let to defendant A. E, Hammond, who also procured the right of way. Plaintiff Is informed and believes that prior to tbe awarding of these contracts to Hammond, other and better bids bad been made, the lowest bidder being one Archie Mason, but Lytle refused to let tbe contract to the lowest bidder. Afterward, in pursu ance of a fraudulent scheme between Lytle and the other directors, he and bis wife conveyed by deed said right of way for the sum of $130,000, which sum plaintiff alleges, on information and be lief, was paid by the defendant company to E. E. Lytle; but whether paid di rectly to him, or through A. E. Ham mond, plaintiff does not know, because he is refused access to tbe company's books; and he alleges that if the con struction of said road had been let to the lowest bidder, it could have been constructed for not to exceed $5000 to $6000 per mile. Plaintiff charges that said directors let the contracts to Ham mond at tbe rate of $9000 per mile, which was at least $3000 per mile more than was necessary, for the' purpose of defrauding plaintiff and other share holders; that Hammond was only a dummy for Lytle, who was tbe real ben eficiary and who thus received a large sum of money for which the defendant company received no consideration. In pursuance of tbis fraudulent scheme Lytle, Moore and others in their employ, for tbe purpose of defrauding the Co lumbia Southern Company, deeds for the right of way were taken in the name ofE.E. Lytle, reciting a consideration that was not in fact paid, and were for lands in many instances that were do nated to the company, but they were made in Lytle'a name, reciting a large aggregate consideration, which he re quired the company to pay him, with the knowledge and consent of tbe other defendants, whom be controlled. The complaint- then proceeds to te cite instances of these alleged fraudu lent transactions, and alleges that the total consideration for tbe right of wav for the forty-three miles frjm Moro to Shaniko waa only $4300, and that orly a small part of tbis was paid, whereas it is charged that Lytle required tbe company to pay him $130,000 therefor. Plaintiff further alleges that tbe road it now operating for a distance of eev enty mites; that It traverses a very rich and productive country, and will do a very profitable business; that the cap ital stock ia valuable, and an honest management would pay the stockhold ers dividends after paying all debts, lia bilities, fixed charges and operating ex penses ; and that the fraudulent acts of defendants were for the purpose of pre venting tbe payment of dividends to plaintiff and other shareholders. Wherefore plaintiff prays that the de fendants be required to account to the defendant company for tbe monevt wrongfully taken by E. E. Lytle and W. H. Moore and other defendants; that plaintiff have judgment against taid de fendants for the sum of 130,000, and such further tumt at have been wrong fully and fraudulently taken from the defendant company ; that the company recover against all or such of defendants as shall be shown to have been cogni zant of or participated in or privy to the fraudulent paying out of the $130,000; that upon the final hearing of the suit a receiver be appointed to take charge of and operate said line of railway so that tbe decree of the court against the defendant! may be enforced. The plaintiff's attorneys are O'Day A Tarpley, of Portland, who have been ex amining the facts and the law for lev eral days, which examination resulted in the foregoing complaint. iTO u mm The Kind Yon Have Always Bought, and which has been t a. aTrvaa asta Aa a Tina KAWttA vltA I ' nn1 Vi i a Kaah vat a j . mmmmmmmmm tusij iLru UIOUO UUllCr Dig Turn, Itfrr Ronal saperrislon since Its infaiw Allow no one to deceive you in tM. All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good are bat 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, Para, goric, Drops and Soothing" Syrups. It Is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic Mibstance. Its age Is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverlshness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind, Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach aud Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep, The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Sears the Signature of I The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. tmc etirr.ua eoMMNV. rf aiuaaav araarr. aawveaa atvv. IO o y j Str. Regulator r : DOWH. UP. ' Lv. Dalles Lv. Portland I at 7 A. H. a' 7 k. u. Tuoaiiuv MiiiH.ii. ",.W"7"1 REGULATOR LINE. DALLES, PORTLAND k AS.ORIA KAY. OM (Steamers of the Regulator Line will run a perthelol ow.og schedule, the Company reserving tLe right to chirp schedule without notice. Tk,. 1 I. ' 1 I,, juuiiMiity nuuiit'su.y B Saturday Krldny ! Arr. Portlnud Arr. Dalles E at 4:30 F. M. at 5 P. M. Ship your Freight via Regulator Line. Str. Dalles City. DOWff vt. Lv. Dalles Li.PortUnl at 7 A. a. at 7:00t. a Monday Tuetdiy Wednesday Tburalit Friday Batunliv Arr. Portland Arr. Dilln at4:30r. u. at5M FOR COMFORT ECONOMY AND PLEASURE," J, Travel by the Steamers of the Regulator Line. The Company will endeavor to give 1U pit- rona me best service possible. For further Information address , Portland Office, Oak-Street Dock. W. C. ALL A WAY, Gen. Agt. JEM rAWWMviTiTtVTlvWMiviMttMMMH r tiaejrSjaaJ Ietimng from Business. Closing otit my Entire Stock Regardless of Cost. Dry Goods, Clothing, Boots and Shoes, at ranch lege than wholMili prices. Will sell in bulk or in lots, or sny way to suit purchasers. Entire stock must be closed out before thirty days. All foods will ha aarriflial Th.m..i. niN.fil(inir Cnrietl nd Batterick Patterns. Your prices will be mine. Call early and ecw bargains. - J. P. McINERNY, Corner Second and Court llorsa Lost. Last Wednesday (Ang. lat) a dark hay horse, branded "C. M." on left shoulder and a bottle on hip and left side, was lost. Finder will deliver the same to Charlie Mell, near Ninth street cut, who will pay charges. a9 3tw Healthful drinks are not luxuries, they are necessities. A full line of refreshing porter, ale, mineral water and beers kept on Ice. Take a bottle hoine tor lunch. C. J. Stabling. Phone 234. Wasco Warehouse Company Headquarters for Seed Grain ofaiiwnto Headquarters for Feed Grain oifUWn Headquarters for Rolled Grain, an Headquarters for Bran. Shorts, tffi Headquarters for "Byers' Best" Pendle ton FlOUr Thi loor manufactured expressly for .... . ' use: every sack is guaranteed to give satis all r KOOli lowor thBn ny "WW in the trade, and if you don't tou can and get cur prices and be convinced. Highest Prices Paid for Whoat, Barley and Oats. CLEANLINESS. is being advocated by all parties regardless of race, color or I ....... v, xnunn oi servitude. Kt-mi'mlier we niano " jners plad when they buy or Pure Prepared Paints. There H linish and glo.s to its work that is admired by all. Paints, Oils, Glass, Picture and Room Moldings t our stork of Wall Paper r PJOOon Display H. GLENN & CO. Be sure and inspect our stork of Wall Paper Designs for PJOOon Display Washington fStreet, between Second and Third.