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About The Dalles weekly chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1947 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 19, 1900)
THE DALLES WEEKLY CHKONICLE. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 19. The Weekly Cbroniele. a ii ai i uing Kate. Per tueS O leli.oh or leu In liKily 115" O at two InctaM and under four iurhc. .. . 1 00 'J .er iour Indu-n Hud under twelve luile . 75 Over twelve Inctun SO DAILY AHT) WKEKLT. Jnelucli or lens, i-r Inch M Over one Inch tia under lour iMkM I JJ Over four Inchei ud under twelve liK'ho. 1 H) Over twelve niches 100 eloge advisers tbeinse'ves. I was .Stevenson. He would have made there about Hint lime. I knew what speeches foi Yallan.ligharu in 1803 was KOinij on. 1 could tee bj' the in Ohio, have aided the draft rioters of n WORSE THAN TAXES. Some of the Bryan organs arc in a state of mind on MOM ft! of the war taxes and compl tin that the citizen is "flned" by the government : When he sends a telegram. When he draws :. check. When he becomes a bet corporation. When lie transfers his slock. When he insures his life. When he a-signs his assurance. Wlun he makes a note to nisei money for the payment of other; taxes. When he buys a money order. When lie executes a lease. When he sends a paid telephone message. When an indemnity bond is given, i When a bill of exchange is drawn. I When a citizen executes nn instru ment necessary in the sale of mer chandise on "change. When he ships goods by freight or express. When lie clears vessel and flies a manifest. When he executes a power of at torney. When he buys proprietary medi cines. When he chevs gum. When he uses any perfumes or liis wife indulges in cosmetics. When a note is protested. When a warehouse receipt is given. When nieichandise is insured in a custom house. Well, there was a blissful time when this country was not paying war taxes. Il was from 1893 to 1896: When business men were failing. When banks were suspended. When manufacturer! were closing their shops. When the wheels of machinery were silent. AVhcn factory chimneys were smokeless. When wage-earners were out of jobs. When idle men walked the streets in despair. When women and children went ragged and hungry. When thousands of families, ac customed to prosperity and too proud to beg. suffered in silence. When the cry for bread was heard in the land. When free soup houses kept many people from starving. When many enterprises were at a standstill. When ihe grim specter of want was a familiar sight. This was when the party of "tariff reform" and "free silver" was -jet ting in its deadlv work. It evidences wheu lint question was discussed in the senate, after see ins Mi. Bryan day after day in the cor ! ridors and anterooms of the senate, button holing his men, that were holding back and away from his in-! tlucncc, that he had said that the in New Voik in the same year, and have got himself into Foit Lafayette, "We declare in favor of a stiiet adherence to the naditional policy j of the democratic party iu the matter, of territorial exteusion: that the speedy annexation of Hawaii, the in- Fort Warren or some other place I dependence of Cuba, I'orto Kieo where Mbel sy mpathizeis in the and the Philippines aDd their acquisi- Noith were locked up. When Iiryati made this quotation from Lincoln he ought to have told tions are favoied, if in keeping with enduring peace with the powers of F.urope." This is not an extract treaty must be passed, and it was ibis audience the conditions under j from a republican platform; not at passed. While we of us who had the pleasure and ci. joyed the right of voting from principle and sus taining the strong arm of the admin istration, working from the stand point of duty, felt Uiat we had taken is part of the platform by the democrats at Mt. archy" were Jefferson Davis and his Clemens, Micb., in June, 1898. Ii. fiiends, whom Bryan would have ' contrasts strongly with what these which Lincoln spoke. The persons all. It who were tiying to establish ' inon- adopted been aiding at the time if he had been old enough to attract any at- a prominent part in (bit gl.'iious act tcntion. allandighan-, Stevenson, of ratifying the treaty, and saving Jesse D. Blight, Milligan and thous- same democrats are now asked to : support if they follow the vagaries of Mr. Brvan. ands of other Bryanites then well known or who who were became so the honor and integrity of the Amer ican armv and American navy, and ... .1. . .1 1 t . Amorwiur, nanul. fitill f)fi-l Win W P TO flOinC ttiCii HlLlC II I HI' I I ' I I U UIU llllll.lH.tlll IV" in . oilll. ........... , . . --n house or his i 1 b . to for all that, we were not numerically and level best to brace .IttTerson strong enough to have accomplished j Davis up and to exten that purpose, if it had not been for the cohorts of Mr. Bryan, Did lie and bis cohorts ict fiom the same the archy all over the country, men whom Brvan, for selfish pONt) now in on- motives which Inspired the repub- j denounced and obstructed by Bryan Mean members of that senate? No; I am asharrcd to say no; because we knew that the parpOMI lu bad in view were purely political and in tended to be used just ns they have been used to make an issue; possibly a paramount issue, but at least n The great disaster at (ialvcston is not without Us aftermath of consola tory and admirable results. Toward that stricken city sweet and blessed Charily is speeding as fast as steam The ! an'' e'ectnc'ly can carry her, from every part of the country, from j . . ... , every state, and even from across! lands, would have been J ' me oceans, lue uronen ami oruiac.i hearts she cannot heal, but all that can be done to make life tolerable if j not comfortable for the sufferers,! and to supply all their physical needs, will be done by the great, 1 sympathizing American people. I if Bryan had been on the stump in the war of secession days. Bryan would have hated Lincoln as much as any one did who was ever locked up in a northern military prison. He is !ieachinr Ihe same sort of flair fiirliiia now whir li he BMtaM hftVP ; lelcgram. CAS70RIA ANcgefable Preparationfor As -similaling ihe Food and Reg ula hn the Stomachs and Bowels of Promotes Digeslion.CheerfuP ness and Hest.loniains nejiinr Opium.Morphine nor Mineral Not Hah c otic . IMTORU JW1 ana t'hiiri. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of 9?r offJUO-SAKl ELmOOH MU Sauul -OacUitSml-jiaue .tnrtt -tufx'Trwtt - Hmm4 ' A perfect Remedy forConslioa Tion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions Jeverish ness and Loss of Sleep. collateral issue in the coming cam-j advocated in 1861, and he will have paign. And thai has heen the result, jusi as nine innuence on events to And then Senator llano proceed ed to quote the scathing words of that grand old man, Senator Hoar, of Massachusetts, spoken about a month ago in presence of twenty to thirty prominent business men of Boston, in response to a request that he give bis views on the political questions of the campaign. Senator Hoar said : "Gentlemen, you all know that 1 bftTe not been in harmony with my party upon this Philippine question, but that is only one of the many im portant questions, and as long as rr. y party stands upon the foundation, the principles of which were the be ginning and baptism of its life, I shall stand by my party. But I pro pose to tear ihe mask from the face of that hypocrite, William J. Brpan. I call him a hypocrite because, like ruy fiiends, Senator Lodge and Sen ator Ilannn, I know the motive which inspired the action on his part to ratify the treaty. You told me then, but I could hardly believe it was true, and I now see that it was true, and that he is acting the part of a consummate hypocrite in day as his fellow-copperheads had then. EXCEPTIONAL TREATMEA T I'ORTO RICA MS. OF "The generous- treatment of the Porto Ricans accords with the most liberal thought of our own country and encourages the best aspirations of the people of the island," says the president in his letter of acceptance. And that sums up the I'orto Rican question in one sentence. For the United States has never treated any territory it ever owned with the liberality and generosity it has shown to Porto Rico. Let us mention one particular in proof of this allegation : During the year 1899 there was col lected and paid into the United Slates treasury from the teriitories of Arizona, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Alaska the sum of 2, 154,004. Of this sum there was returned to these territories, for the wages of federal officials and for other federal expenditures, the sum of 11 C,3.'0, leaving a net balance of profit to the trcas'.uy of 11,787,654.18. The profit from Alaska, alone, amounted to The Portland Lantern, the ooject and aim of whose existence has al ways been a mystery to this deponent, has changed beftds md will in future support the Kansas City platform. The diminutive sheet opens its little eampaisn with the appalling an nouncement that "Portland and vicinity will go for Bryan and all that remains is lo count Bryan's majority." The Lantarn's gall is evidently in a vigorous condition. "My baliy was terribly sick with r'ue d iar r I, i e i , " eays J, H. Doek, Williams, Oregon. "We were unable to eure him with the doctor's assistance, and as a last resort we tried Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrl.m Remedy. I am happy to say it gave immediate relief and a complete cure."- For eale at Blukeley's drug store. For Sale. Fine seed wheat for sale; red Russian. Price, 7o cents per bathe). W. W. Raw son, eepll) lm The D.ilies, Or. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. A Air EXACT COFV Or WRAPPER. In Use For Over Thirty Years CASTOR!! TW CNTAUK MIWM1, WIW YQ,, Cm Wasco Warehouse tapq Headquarters for Seed Qtu:u i ... tid& Headquarters for Feed Grain oi p 11 kin Headquarters for Rolled Grai n, ail kind Headquarters for Bran, Shorts, Headquarters for "Byers' Best" Pendle- tOn FlOUr Thi9 lour 1S manufactured expressly for funili use ; every sack is g uarariteed to give eatisfsctiu Wa sell our goods lower than ar.v house iu the trade, and if you don't tnir.k j i;iu mm gei i.ur prices and re convinced. Highest Prices Paid for Wheat, Barley and Oats Mrs. E. Jnlian lias boogftl the Catis wood saff. Parties wanting wood pawed will please loave ordeis at the Julian lodging house, or coiumuncate with 'pfaoneSOl. flO-lw !)27, 132.80. That is to say, we all his advocacy in opposition to the took from Alaska, in the form of im- president on that question. BRYAN ON LINCOLN. The Globe-Democrat, like Iff, Bell in the Oregonian, has been studying Bryan's quotations from Lincoln with results that are not strictly complimentary to either Bryan or his running mate. The G lobe Pe BJMttret says: port taxes and internal revenue, nearly a million dollars more than we paid back in the form of federal expenditure. Thus out of every collected in the four territories less than 1 goes back to be expended in these territories. In other words, over 80 per cent of the money col lected by the (Jilted Stales, is expended for the general purposes of HS I (ill Bryan in his speeches ficquently j the union and is so much ciear profit quotes Lincoln. He did this in his out of those territories. Now let us address in Ohicago on Labor day. i see how we have treated Porlo Rico. Under the law that has been so bitter ly and let us charitably hope, in many cases ignorantly denounced "Monarchy itself is sometimes hinted at as a possible refuge from the was i Power of the people," said Lincoln harder for workirg people to buy a in a message which Bryan refers to. j by the Bryanites, not a single dollar loaf of bread then than it is to buy a roast b'jet now. It took longer to earn a suit of clothes then. In short. In my present position I conld collected from the Porto Ricans trnen scarcely be justified were I to omit i into the United Slates treasury. raising ri warning voice against this; Kvery dollar so collected, whether in United States ports or in those of all the people aie more prosperous , approach of returning despotism, and comfortable in this time of "war j W'0" Lincoln said this he, of course, j Porto Rico, goes into a separate fund and is spent on the islanders. The tax. .'," than they eie in that time of ! na,i BrVan's Pflrt' friends in Jeffer- depression and idleness. Kvervbodv : s"' Davis' government in view. A knows that this is so, and yet the party of calamity is emitting hypo ciitical groans and insincere flap, doodle in an effort to create dis content and advance its political fortunes. We don't think it will tool many eoplp, because memoiy i is not a lost human faculty, anil ex perience is a faitbful teacher. Rochester Democrat. few sentences earlier than those quoted by Bryan, Lincoln said that "it continues to develop that the insurrection is largely, if not ex- pcoplc of a territory pay taxes for the support of the general govern ment, precisely the same as do the people of the states. If a resilient of New Mexico makes cigars he pays clusivcly, a war upon the first prin-1 the same internal revenue taxes as -the ciple of popular government rights of the people." The Confederacy, according Lincoln and every other friend of are paid by a resident of Oregon. j In both cases the money collected to j goes into the United States treastny. In neither case does a dollar of it EE JAN ROASTED TO A TVRS. Senator Hanna lore the. mask of Candidate Bryan in vigorous style behalf of the ratification of Spanish treaty, which gave us pos the Union, made "war upon the first ' ever go back to the siate or territory principle of popular government for the building of roads, making the rights of the people." Some, of sanitary improvement, caring for the Bryan's relatives, however, in 1861 C. were in sympathy with the Con last Saturday at Delphi, Indiana, federates' war, and Bry an, of course, 1 on Porto Rican imports and exports In recounting Bryan's efforts with j would have been if he had been old ' is expended on the Porto Ricans the anti-republicans of the senate in ! enough at the time. They were j themselves, and the most of it is ex- the ' copperheads, and did all they could ! pended on purely local affairs,- such lo obstruct and defeat the Union; as are invariably supported from poor and unfortunate or supporting schools. But every dollar collected session of the Philippine islands, Mr. cause. If Bryan had been twenty direct tnxation in the states and ter- II: una said : or twenty-five years of age during "The position of the democratic the war of secession there is a strong party uj on the Philippine question probability that he would have been was made and fixed up in the city of a member of the Knights of the Washington by Mr. Bryan, and bis Colden Circle, like bis running mate ritories. The only exception, there fore, that we arc making in the case of Porto Rico is in treating her bet ter than we have ever before treated any territory of the United States. The only store it this city where th Genuine Importec Stransky-Steel Ware is sold A little higher ic price, but outlastf a dozen pieces of so called cheap enam eled ware. BEWARE! Other wares look jikeit.butthegenu- ine has the name Stransky Steel ; Ware onearh piece, j Do not be deceived First prize at K ' International Exhi j bitions. Highest ! award at World I Columbian Exhibi I tion. Chicago Pre ferred by the best ' cookingauthorities. certified to by the most famous chem ; ists for purity and durability it tl cheapest because Retiring from Business. Closing otit my Entire Stock Regardless of Cost. Dry Goods, Clothing, Biots and Shoes, at much less than wholesale prices. Will tell in bulk or in lots, or any way to Buit purchasers. Entire stock must be closed out before 30 days. All goods will be sacrilie,., except Thompson's Glove-lilting Coneli and Butterick Patterns. Your prices will be mine. Call earlv and secure bargains. J. P. McINERNY, Corner Second and Court Sts. MT. ANGEL COLLEGE, Conducted by the Benedictine Fathers. The Ideal Place for Your Boys. Will Reopen on Sept. 5th, 1900. BEST. Remember this celebrated enam eled ware- is special ly imported for and sold in this city ex clusively by us It does not rust nor absorb grease, does not discolor nor catch inside, is not affected hyueirj in fruit i or vMBteMee, will boll, ptew, roast and bake W i t b o u t impart in II iv or o previously conked foo I and will last for years. r - ew ee exvevty 1 THE CELEBRATED .. .COIiUfflBlA BREWERY.... AUGUST BUCHLER, Prop. Of the product, of this well-known brewery the PaHed - , Health ..el.. ( - t .. iio r.n . - .....i. Keports for June tS, IMO .... . li a - - - - i l.,..,.. .vit en the labratory of the Unitad St hmH.IiI. .......... r. .. .ilmelv devoid ?' U;R sI'Khlest trace of adulteration, but. on the other baud 11 cotp erf IM best of malt mi l ehoieeel of hops. It. tonic (iniilitie an- ol the Inv est auil it .mi, l. l:ed with the yreatest henetlt and satisfaction hy old .n'1 yonn--. Ite use . nn coneeientiony be preecnbed hv the physleieet Ihe cersaintv that a better, purer or more wholesome bever...' eoeW noi possibly be found." East Second Street, THE DALLES, OREGON. D&ALBKI in All kinds of ? ! Funeral Supplied Crandall & Barget UNDERTAKERS ff EMBALMERS The Dalles. Or. Robes, Burial Shoes Etc. We cau tion the public nifain ,t ialtatlom Subscribe for The Chronicle. Advertise in The Chronicle'