The Dalles weekly chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1947, October 17, 1900, PART 1, Image 3

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    THE DALLES WEEKLY CHIIONICLE. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 17. 1900.
The Weekly Chronicle.
ArartUlaC KatH.
V - i"er raca.
0:teli.rn or leu Id Daily tl SO
O r mo inctau and warder (our inches 1 00
0 ki four Inches and uudt twelvt Inchea. . 75
0 rt twalra lnc hm SO
ailt Ana WEEKLY.
Jot Inch or less, per Inch 12 50
4)rr one lueh ana uader four lnchea. J 00
Oftt (our iQchos and under twelve luck. . 1 M
OrartwelT lnchea im
DEMOCRATIC RECORD OX
TRUSTS.
THE
Every line of legislation now on
the statute books of the Uoited
States directed against trusts and
unlawful trade combinations was
placed there by the republicans. ;
That there is not more stringent
law against tbem is the fault of the
democratic party.
The last occasion on which the
parties, as represented in congress,
went on record on the trust question
was on June 1, 1900.
"On that day a final Tote was taken
on a constitutional amendment to
grant congress power to "define,
regulate, prohibit and dissolve trusts,
monopolies and combinations, wheth
er existing in the form of corpora
tions or otherwise."
It requires a two-thirds vote of
congress to submit a constitutional
amendment to the state legislatures
for ratification.
The question to so submit it was
lost by a vote of 154 yeas to 132
nays.
Of the yeas 149 were republicans
and only 5 were democrats. The
tire were Campbell of Montana,
Jiapben and Taylor of Massachusetts,
Sciudder of New Yoik, and Sibley of
Pennsylvania.
Of the 132 nays only two were re
publicans, Loud and McCall.
Richardson, Lentz, Sulzer, Rup
pert, Salmon and all the other pro
fessional "trust killers" voted nay.
They declined to give congress the
power to grapple with the trusts.
The democrats indulged in spasms of
virtue for two days, denouncing the
trusts, and then voted to continue
them.
In one of Mr. Bryan's recent
speeches be gave the republican
remedy as the final one he would
alnpt, in case he was elected and all
Other means failed. . (
In other words Mr. Bryan admits
the value of the republican idea, but
wants to try other measures first.
He has not said what those measures
are to be.
Some trusts operate all over the
country; others, like the New York
ice trust, operate in a single city,
The requisite power to reach each
and all and bring them within the
federal law, was denied by a margin
of 86 votes, all democratic.
Denouncing is one thing; doing is
another. Mr. Bryan's trust denunci
ations, in view of bis party's record,
promise no better than the prophecies
he made four years ago; and as a
prophet Mr. Bryan has not succeeded
The democrats made another
brilliant pro-trust record during the
same session of congress. Repre
sentative Richardson of Tennessee,
ile mo:rat, tried to assist the sugar
trust by offering a joint resolution to
admit Cuban and Porto Rican sugar
free of duty.
The remission of that duty would
have amounted to about $23,000,000
a year, and the sugar trust would
have benefited to the amount of at
least 115,000,000 per year. The
controller of the sugar trust Is Mr.
Henry O. Ilaveuieyer, democrat.
Mr. Richardson's proposed gift to
his friend, Mr. Ilaveroeycr, was
smothered in the ways ami means
committee of the house. This was
done by the republican members of
the committee.
It was also proposed by Senator
Jone, democratic national chairman
and Mr. Bryan's manager, to return
tho iluties.pnid on I'orto Rican sugar
and molasses, not to the I'orto Hicans,
but to the persons who paid these
duties.
This amounted at tho time to
l,487,8i;C. Had the schemo suo
cwded. tfle American sugar Refining
Cdmpany and A. S. Lasalles it Co.,
n part of tho same concern, would
have benefited by a direct gift of
1,250,77 1. This Is the first Instance
on record whero a diicct gift was
intended to be made to n trust, and
the democratic manager. Senator f
v . a- - ... 1
James ft.. Jor.es, wished to make it.
This was also prevented by the re
rublicans. The money was not to be returned
to the Porto Ricans, as the duties
paid now are, but to the sugar trust.
All the facts ai printed in the
Congressional Record and are a part
of American history.
A Bryanite editor has a very de
cided advantage over a republican
in the respect that he is never
hampered by regard for candor and
seldom by any regard for truth.
Little things like candor and fairness
never worry bim. Here is the
Times-Mountaineer revamping the
old Bryanite fabrication to the effect
that Governor Roosevelt, in a speech
made at Chicago in 1894, said. "Any
man who engages in a strike should
be shot." The editor of the Mount
aineer knows that Roosevelt has, in
the most public manner, denied that
he made a speech iu Chicago in
1894 or was even there, and has
branded the story as "a malicious
lie." To suppose that the editor of
the Times-Mountaineer had never
heard of Roosevelt's denial would be
an insult to bis intelligence.
"Well sir," said Mr. Dooley, "if
they'se anny wan r-iunnin' in this
campaign but me firind Tlddy Rosen-
felt, I'd like to know who it is. It
isn't Mack for he wint away three
weeks ago lavin' a nolo sayin' that
he'd accipt th' nomynation if 'twas
offered bim, an' be ain't been heerd
fr'm- since. It ain't Bryan f'r he's
visilm' th' tombs iv th' ancesthors iv
th' party, an' if be likes th neighbor
bood he may buy a place there. It
ain't Adly, f'r athletic spoorts ar're
far fr'm his line. 'Tis Tiddy alone
that's r iunnin' an' he ain't r-runnin',
he's gallopin'.
We invite the Times-Mountaineer's
attention to Governor Roosevelt's
second denial that he ever said at
Chicago, or anywhere else, that "any
peison who would join a strike, or go
near one, ought to be shot." The
governoi's denial will be found in
another column of this issue. If it
is not sufficiently explicit we add on
our own responsibility that the story
was concocted by men who knew it
to be a lie, to be circulated by men
who knew it to be a lie, and is now
being circulated by men who know
it is a lie. Do you bear that, Mr.
Times-Mountaineer?
Sixteen to-one Bryanite campaign
ers and editors who find themselves
out of a job after next month could
possibly make a fortune, and at the
same time learn some cold, hard,
commercial facts, that would be
servicable to as many as are mentally
capable of receiving them if they
would emigrate to Pekin where, ac
cording to a late dispatch, American
5 gold pieces are selling for 112
Mexican, and the British sovereign,
which is not worthies mucn as the
American $3 gold piece, sells for $14
Mexican.
If New York is carried by Bryan,
which God fordid, it will be through
tho influence of Tammany, the rot
tenest'political institution that ever
cursed tho earth. If Tammany car
ries New York for Bryan it will be
by its usual method of levying
campaign funds from every brothel,
every gambling den and every dead
fall in the city. Is it any wonder
that the religious papers of the
country are unanimously opposed to
the candidate whose hope of election
is mainly built on Tammany's ability
to carry New York?
The Bryanites have one monopoly
thst is doing a flourishing business
these days, namely, that of endeavor
ing to suppress free speech and
using violence towaid republican
campaign snenKeis. itui wuai cisc
could one expect of a party that
numbers an Altgeld, a Sovereign, a
Bloody Bridles Waite and a Tillman
among its patron saints?
tVMaAaaWaaVJMMWMaaJaaaaV
'Bight here In Klickitat county,"
savs the GoMeiidiilo Ag.icullunat,
"democrats by dozens are going to
vote the republican ticket this year,
the latest prominent acquisition to
the parly being Mr. B. O. Whitbcck,
one of the county's most distinguished
educators and a leading democrat.
HISTORY REPEATS ITSELF.
The New York democratic address
of 184, written by Martin Van
Burcn and Samuel J. Tilden, said, io
referring to those who attacked the
administration while the country wu
involved in war with Mexico:
"However we may differ at home
every lover of his , country must
desire that . we sboald . be known
abroad as one and undivided; that
being at war the only question would
be, bow it might best be brought to
an honorable conclusion."
Further along in this address it
wa$ said the men who attacked the
president in time of war sought to
"wound the executive administration
through. the bleeding sides of the
country."
When Tilden and Van Buren laid
down these doctrines tbey were try
ing to do what many old-fashioned
democrats have sought in vain to
accomplish in recent years save
their party from a destructive ele
ment bent upon rule or ruin. Cal
houn and his tollowinz, in their
effort to push slavery into tho new
territory acquired from Mexico, in
sisted, just as anti-expansionists do
now, that the constitution followed
tht flag. Said Van Buren and Tilden:
"The doctrine is therefore plainly
stated that wherever the fl it of the
union goes, it carries slavery with it
it overturns the local institutions no
matter how strongly intrenched in
the legislation, the habits and u flec
tions of tho. people, if freedom be
their fortunate condition, and estab
lishes in its place slavery ; it repeals
the local laws, if they guarantee
personal freedom to all, and author
izes slavery."
Tilden and Van Buren thereupon
made an exhaustive review of the
question, and utterly repudiated the
doctrine of the constitution following
the flag, and showed that congress
bad full authority to rule new terrl
tory as it thought best. Tilden and
Van Buren said in further review of
the Calhoun dogma:
"Nowhere found in the constitu
tion, repugnaut to its spirit and ab
borrent as we have shown it to be to
tne principles and convictions of the
illustrious men who framed it, we
are called upon to interpolate this
new theory upon tho constitution as
a sort of mystical common law, not
implied in any particular part, but to
be Inferred from the general nature
of that instrument."
Thus the anti-expansion dogma of
today has John C. Calhoun for its
author and originator, while such
Northern democrats as Samuel J,
Tilden and Martin Van Burcn con
demned it then, as thousands of old
fashioned democrats do now
A Walla Walla man is selling fin
ning mills in this way : If Bryan is
elected tho farmer pays nothing; if
McKinley wins the buyer pays toO
for the machine. It looks queer, but
maybe he figures that if the demo
crats win the mill will be like the
rest of the institutions out here in
the west unable to raiso the wind.
Wedding- Bella,
The lunrr.'ago of Mr. Harday Allen
and Miss Daisy Davidson was celebrated
at high noon last Sunday at the home of
the brido's parents, Mr. and Mrs. V. J.
Davidson, of Endersby, llev. Mr. Smith
of Dnfur officiating. The bridegroom
is a prosperous young stockman of tho
MatolrtH, Crook county, and a former
resident of Fairfield, this county.
The niarri.tge was celebrated lu the
presence of about thirty friends and
relatives who subsequently sat down to
an elegant wedding dinner. On account
of the high eeteeiu wi.h which tho young
couple are regarded in tho neighborhood
where they both grew up from child
hood, the wedding presents were both
numerous and valuable, many of them
of mch a character as indicated that the
donors did not want to be soon forgotten.
After spending a delightful afternoon
w ith the young couple most of the guests
retirtd to make room for another crowd
of young folkn who wished to eff-'r their
congraiulatiuna and say good bye to Mr
and Mrs. Allen, in view- of their leaving
for their new home in Crook county.
Card or Thank.
Mr. and Mrs. Shirley Parker, who
were married in the carnival grounds
Saturday night, desire through the
CiiiiOMtLK to exprepa their sincere
thank t- tho people of The Dalles for
the handsome and valuable collection of
wedding presents generously donated
them on that occasion.
You will not have boil if you take
Clarke & Falk's sure cure for boil.
I
CORONER'S INQUEST-
A WoBim'l livsualaa Kl Abo. In
Ur.uad Ta Days After Uaath.
Coroner Butt field an inquest Sun
day at Hood River on the body of a
winow, nam! Maria Sauer, that has
torn eircisatUBce connected with it
altogether out of the ordinary ruo of
things In Oregon. The woman liJ died
oa Friday, Mb instant, ten day previ
ously, and bad not been buried. She
was a native of Germany and had come
to the United State about three year
ago, in company with her five children
and an elder brother named Fred Meyer.
Tbey bad moved from Portland to Hood
River valley a few month ago and were
living on a 4iec ot rented land about
eight mile southeast of the town of
Hood River.
The brother and ton of the dead
woman bad coffined the remain and,
inclosing the coffin in a tin casket which
the eon made, carried the remain to a
vacant (pot a short distance troua the
cabin and covered it with brush. The
Hood River authorities, hearing that
the remain bad not been interred, had
them brought to town Saturday and
immediately notified the coroner.
At the inquest the brother and ion
testified that Ihe reason why they had
not buried tbe woman was because they
intended to remove to Tbe Dalles a
soon as they got f80 that was expected
by mail, and they calculated to take the
remain with them. Dr. Brosius ex
amined tbe remains, which were greatly
emaciated, and testified that an anatom
ical diagnosis indicated that the woman
had died of cancer in the breast and a
verdict' was rendered to this effect.
Meyer's neighbors all say he is crazy
and that his refusal to bury hid sister
was in some way related to his belief
that she bail died from tbe effects of
wiUbcrait inflicted on her by a neigh
bor. They had a cow that died sudden
ly a short time ago and Meyer accuses
a neighbor of having bewitched ber.
He found out the witch by fixing a
horizontal whirling arrangement on the
end of a stick stuck in the ground, with
a nail attached to the wheel and point
ing horizontally. The wheel was given
an impulse and when its motion ceased
the nail pointed directly to the residence
of the witch.
After the inquest Meyer promised to
bury bis sister but during Sunday night
he hired a team and, stealing the body
from the morgue, made off home with
it. It is not known whether he has
buried the body or not, but the chances
are that the remains aro still above
ground. The woman's age was given at
42. The brother was some years older.
Constable's Long Klde.
Speaking of Wasco ccunty a writer in
tbe October number of the Oregon
Native Son says:
"It may not be generally known that
when this region was a portion of Clack
amas county, in the early '50a, Mr. D,
Butler was constable for The Dalles
precinct, and bad occasion to serve a
subpoena on a witness residing near Fort
Hall, now in Idaho. That was then
within tbe limits of tbe county over
which a justice of the pence had juris
diction. Mr. Butler vividly describe
his ride through this wild region with
the judicial .writ iu his inside pocket,
feeling not the least fear of Indians nor
road agents becausn he was armed with
the authority of the law. Me was then
much younger than he is now. and the
country was new to him. Later on,
after he had become accustomed to the
habits of the "wild and woolly west,"
he placed more reliance on Colt's latest
patent or a Henry repeating rifle than
on asubpiunafrom a Dalles jnstice court.
"His story awakened great interest
and chained the attention of hi audi
ence until some inquistive individual
inquired what mileage be was allowed
for doing such service. This elicited no
answer, and the thrilling story of a con
stable serving a civil writ in Oregon ter
territory, a thousand miles distant from
the magistrate's court, came to an
abrupt ending."
Tlia It by Show.
Saturday s Dally.
Next to the school children's proces
sion the most interesting feature at the
carnival yesterday was the bAby show.
Thirty-two white babies contested for
three prizes of six, five ahd four dollar
for the "finest," second "finest" and
fattest baby. N, Whealdon and Mar
tin Donnell gathered up seven Indian
babies and entered them in a special
race for "natives." Thd judges were
selected from the Portland visitors and
their identity was purposely concealed
in the crowd of spectators, whilo their
mimes are known only to tbe executive
committee. s
The first prize for the (attest white
baby was awarded to Kdna Weber,
daughter of Mr. and Mr?. R. II. Weber.
Second prize for finest baby, George
Riiesel Clair Alden, sou of Capt. and
Mrs. C. M. Alden.
Fattest baby, M.ty Cilson, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Gus Cnleen.
Best Indian baby, Teg Louse, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Louse, of Warm Springs.
Fattest Indian baby, Aonio Wasla.
The awards lo the Indian babies wore
fl. 50 for the best an 1 a dollar for tbe
fattest. But the mother of each of the
seven Indian contestants got something
that she valued far more than a mone
tary prize. K..O. McCoy to&k a fancy
to the fat Indian pri-winner and, un-
pinning hi carnival aoavenir medal, he
fa.lened it on the dri of the l.uU nn..
Thi wa a signal for the other six I
IaJian mother and tbere was rru peace 1
in ramp till each ot
their babies wa
similarly decorated.
TIMES-MOUNTAINEER SCORED.
Vetera r the Civil War Think Hryaa
Vaalaadlachaut.
Tiia Dali-m. Oct. 14. lWd.
Kuitok Chkonicli:
Sikj In the Mountaineer of October
Iltb I find under the heading "Patriot
ism and Politic" an editorial in which
ia luet tided aa alleged rpaech by a cer
tain Earl Sander at the meeting of vet
eran In Portland. Thi article is o full
of downright misstatement (I will not
ay falsehoods' that it can hardly be
overlooked by any person who bad any
part In the meeting held here on tbe 8th.
The idea that parties "wearing the collar
of Mr. Hanna" (or Mr. Bryau either)
could "whip into line" any single indi
vidual member of that meeting is an in -suit
to every soldier io tbe land. It is
abominably false, and I thick the editor
of the Mountaineer entirely forgot tbe
dignity ot hi position when he gave ut
terance to uch a sentiment.
The soldier themselves called that
meeting and conducted it also. The
resolutions were their own, dictated by
no outside influence. Many of us served
through the entire civil war and have
for thirty-five years since that time
fought the battles of civil life. We have
learned enough by all this experience to
enable oa to do our own thinking. Wsj
are not in tbe habit of asking advice as
to our political view. If ever we are
obliged to do so, we 'will consult no
green school boy or ex culonels who
have given up the uniform of Uncle Sam
and retired to civil iife seeminglv for
the express purpose of degrading the
service in which they enlisted and villi
lying the government undor which thev
served.
The editor of the Mountaineer de
scribes Mr. Karl Sander aa one whose
"patriotism ia not to be questioned."
do not wish to question the patriotism
of Mr. Sauders, nor of Mr. Bryan ; but
had I enlisted to uphold the government
in a just war, which we could not avoid,
worn the uniform and aided in acquir
ing for the union, as a result of that war,
a great and rich territory, which will
for all time be extremely valuable to us,
I would call it a curious kind of patriot
ism that would allov me, aftar this was
accomplished, to come home, take off
the. uniform and start out on a crusade
to undo all that had baen gained; say to
our soldiers yet in the field "Take down
the flag; you are working and fighting
In a bad cause; retreat from the Philip
pine island and give it all op to a hand
ful of Tagals. Aguinaldo and Mr. Bryan
are not satisfied with what you are doing.
Gather together the bones of j our dead
comrades, collect your sick and wound
ed, and come home, leaving ail the fruit
of your hardship and valor in. the field."
Mr. Editor, this may be patriotism,
but it is badly diluted with ingredient
of a much cheaper commodity. A per
son holding such ideas and trying to
instill (hem into the minds of bin neigh
bors may be patriotic, but he is in great
danger of being mistaken for a lunatic.
' In 1863-64 we had a number of people
in the United States who said "The war
tia failure." They tried every means
to hamper the government, to aid our
enemies, to discourage our soldier in
tbe field and our citizen at home. Van
landingham, the most prominent and
active of this party of "patriots," wa
finally sent across the border into tbe
rebel lines, but tbe latter looked upon
him as a traitor, bad no use for bim and
refused to receive him. This man, Van
landingham, and bis aids never talked
nor wrote more treasonably about the
civil war and the administration of
President Lincoln than Mr. Bryan and
bis friends have about the Spanisli war
and the administration of McKinley.
I do not wish to denounce any person
for his political opinion, but in case of
war or any great danger to our govern
ment, it is our doty to slay with and
uphold that government as it is consti
tuted, no matter what party is in power.
Thip is patriotism. Any other cause
will not stand criticism.
If the editor of tho Mountaineer and
Mr. Sanders can elect Mr. Bryan, the
old veterans w ill etiil cheer for the flag.
My personal opinion, however, is that
some of our school bovs will be in dan
ger of dying cf old age before Mr. Bryan
outers tho white houpe.
A Soldi ik or 1801 to 18(15.
Wanted.
A position by a good all-round me
chanic and general repair man. Can do
carpenter work, paper-hanging, paint
ing, calsouiining, run steam heating
boiler, repair and construct electric
bells, annunciators, and repair work of
all kinds. Can furnish very beet refer
ence from present and past employers
for fourteen years past. Have got all
tools, am 3:1 years eld, sober, an Ameri
can and anxious to come West. Address,
stating all particulars,
A. Howard,
General Repairer,
liiiOl Western Ave. Itunl., Chicago,
III. oclb-lwk
We offer for a limited period the
twicea-week CimoMti.a, price fl.50,
and tho Weekly Oregonian, price fl.iiO,
both papers for f2 a year, Sub;criptions
under this offer must be paid iu ad
vance, tf
CAMPAIGN LIES.
! oalt le.ud M.t.we.t. H.ln
Circulated la Kuik.
The following telegraphic corres
pondence 11 ween Secretary Perry S.
Heath, ot the national republican com
mittee, and Governor Theodore Roose
velt wa given out today at republican
national headquarter:
"Chicago, 111. Theodore Roovelt:
The following matter ia being widely
circulated on handbill in Kansas and
other date :
'Governor Roosevelt said in a epeech
in Cooper Institute, in New York City,
in ISM: "The way to get rid of Bryan
ism and it child-labor trouble is to
land it ap against the wall and shoot it
lo death," and in a speech delivered in
Chicago, just after the strike: "Any
person who would join a (trike, or go
near one, ought to be shot." Will a
man who earn hi bread by labor op
port th Roosevelt ticket?'
"Pteae wire me today, if possible, a
specific answer to the above, to that I
may repeat it by wire wherever it is be
ing used. Pxaay 8. Hutu."
. "Eiiiabeth, Ky. IVrry S. Heath,
Secretary Republican National Com
mittee, Chicago: Both statement are
absolute be, without one particle ot
foundation of any tort, character or
description. I never said anything re
motely resembling either statement in
Chicago or io Cooper Institute, or any
where else. If responsible people cir
culaied them, I would suggest a suit for
criminal libel. I explicitly denied them
in my Kansas Citv speech. They are
slanderous lie, which could only be
circulated by scoundrels, and which
were known to be lie by the people who
invented them and the people who cir
culated them.
"TllEOUOKK RoOHXVaTT."
T. A. Ht-iMtx.
Nolnry Public.
Timothy Brown-hill.
Attorney at Law.
rowiii
Real Estate,
Insurance, Loans,
Conveyancing and
Abstracting.
We represent dome of the largest fire
insbrance companies in the world.
We have a large list of property, both
city and country, for sale and rent.
We have money to loan on real estate
security at reasonable rates of interest.
We do all kinds of conveyancing, and
are the exclusive owners for Kice's sys
tem of abstracting, which precludes the
possibility of mistakes in looking up
title to real estate.
Any one having property for sale or
rent will find it to their advantage to
leave it in our hands.
Collections and all legal business left
in our care will receive prompt atten
tion. Will practise in all the court of
the ttate. Correspondence promptly
answered.
Offices: Washington street, next to
French & Co.'
Dxrx t
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7a. m, ! Will A M vttk and Yam- 3:30 p.m.
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and Sat. Oregon city, iMyton,; aud Frl.
and Wiiy-i :wu!ings. j
I
Snake Kiykk.
Kiparis tu lwis(on.
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H.int on Columbia S'uthrn via Hign, should
tke No. 1, leaving 'I he Dttlles at 1J:4 p. in.
making (1ire t ronpeettoiis ac Heppner junctioii
slid HIkith. KeMirnlng niH.insrdireeieoiiuwtlon
at lleppner junction and Hicgswiiti No. 1. ar
riving at 1 he Dalles at I-.-:jn p. iu.
For full piirttruliirs call on O. . X. Co. a
agent Ihu iialles. or address
W'. II. lU Pi ri KT,
Cell. Fas. Agt., I'uilhi'.ul, Or
WM. MICHELL,
Undertaker and Embalmer
Cor. Third and Washington Sta.
AllTrders attenJed tn promptly. Long
dietance phone 4;3. Local, 102.
i!ieii!