THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 24. 1900. The Weekly Gbroniele. O is liieh or le in I'ui'iv O er t wo inouv ht.J cndr four lnrh. Ow fotir 1ucq ami unocr twelve lucaca O'er twelve inrli,- DAILY All EtiLT. One lach or less, tr mch. Over oiwlnch :A ii?i.i-r f.iur iiVchea" 0ar Ir luoht- ui uu.ter telv luetics Over twelve incli.- nce presented by a single man or a committee from a labor organization, I will resign from the United Mate s senate, because since tbe republican party Las called me once more to fttmth. . ... . 1 so icsljuusiuic jxs!uod oi managing J I the Camnaicn. I fpr! Mint I li.vo 6 1 riyht, and that it is my duty, to tell the people of tbis country who call me a labor crusher that it true." . 2 iJ . 1 SO 1 . 100! U not YELLOW VERBOSITY. The yellow j .utr.nls must bo fond of tbe exubeicntly verbose style of rbetoric. rather than plain every day United Stales, if we are to judge from the saffron-hued gush of an ass who calls himself Langdon Smith and reports Bryan's late reception by the Tammany hosts to the San Francisco Examiner. "As of old," says this moon-struck donkey, "all Antioch gathered to gaze upon tbe home-coming of Cambyses, so an other modern conqueror, coming without chariot or irrperial pomp, without leashed slaves or glittering retinue, was met by the myriads of the faith and borne through a living sea of citizens, which roared in w ild surges about bis carriage wheels. It was like nothing so much as the rising of a vast flood. It swept tbe crowd up along the walls of build ings, mounted the pillars and cov ered the entablatures and relieves of the bouses with black drifts of humanity. Here wa3 a distilled and concentrated symbolism of protest against oppression. It represented toe wrongs or a country, uere was democracy and its priesthood; here was labor and its sponsor. And in the voice of liryan as clear and strong as wines from the vines of Sorek there was the crash of the falling of old walls; a protest nay, a prayer to a people brass-collared and yoked against their will. It was a banquet of reason, seasoned with philosophy and cooked without im perial butter. And to the great army of his fellows to the well-to-do rneu wno listened gravely to bis talk; to those grown gaunt and hardened by privation; to tbe men of the furnace and forge, the pick and shovel Dryan spoke as one whose soul is in a tension of fierce resolve." And why shouldn't Bryan have spoken "as one whose soul is in a tension of Gerce resolve?" He had twelvo dollars' worth of Tammany grub in bis belly (exclusive of wines) and the evident mistake of this flam boyant writer is that be didn't locate the tension in some other part of Bryan's anatomy. HISTORY EEFEATS ITSELF. History repeats itself. The in stincts that governed tbe copperheads of tbe civil war period still govern their politicil successors. Tbe fol lowing resolutions adopted at a democratic meeting held in New Yoik September 1, 1864, with slight changes and tbe name of McKicley substituted for that of Lincolu would pass as an extract from cue of IWyan's speeches: DEMOCRAT WHO FLOPPED Why Congressman Sibley Flopped la the Lii;ht of Duty and Concsience, in ibe loiercsi of the Broadest Hnraanitv and for the Sake of the Greatest Number Abandons Bryan ism and Supports McKink-v. lion. Joseph C. S;b'ev was elected as democrat to the 56;h congress from the 27th Pennsylvania diet) ict. He is now a candidate from the same district as a re publican. Ia a speech delivered to bis constituents a short time ago at Bradford he gives the reasons whL-n prompted him to denounce Bryanisru and nil its works. Ho said in part : You charge me with changed opinions, This Is true. Each day of life differs from "Resolved, That the adminietra-1 aay l,ay preceding. The man who stands tion of Abraham Lincoln, by its imbecility in the conduct of the war and its ruinous financial policy Las forfeited the confiderce and respect of the loyal 6tates. It has usurped power not granted by the constitu tion, has endeavored to render the executive, aided by the military, superior to the legislative and ju dicial branches of the government; it has assumed to destroy life and confiscate property by unconstitu tional proclamations; it has caused the arrest and impeachment of per sons without warrant or duo process of law; it has violated the right of ssyluru by surrendering to a despotic power persons entitled to protection under the law of nations, and by its general conduct of public affairs and its notorious extravagance and cor ruption in'every department of the government has created an enormous debt, impairing the credit of tbe nation and seriously diminishing the resources and happiness of everv citizen." I ettll or barks back to the dead past w iH be left in the rear. HERE'S A FUSSY Till SO. "There is no one more desirous than myself to see tbis great city morally pure. Tbe young men and women should be particularly pro tected from trie snares set for them, and I have always done everything in my power for their moral interest and welfare." Kit-hard Croker. Isn't that about the funniest thing that ever camo down the political pike? nsks the Philadelphia Inquirer- There Is not a gambling hell or an immoral den in all of New York that is not under the protection today of Kit-hard Croker through Tammany Hall, and there is not one of them that is not forced to contribute to the fund raised to aid the campaign of William J. Brynn Tammany inteuds to dominate the Ute, and Intends to do it through immorality. Croker nnd purity ! What kind of a dense joke is this tin lion? The Dry unite press that has heaped such abuse on Muik llnnnn as seldom falis to ihe lot of any human being, 'f half they Rl,ut his tyranny towards his employes is true, have a splendid oppoilunity of proving their case and compelling Mr. Han na to resign froin the United States tnate. When at Madison, S. D., Thursday, Senator Hanna. threw out challenge to bis traducers that, it is perfectly safe to say, they will "ever attempt to take tip. Manly "en would, or step lying, but liars are never manly. "If it can be liowii," sal I tbe senator, "that in a S'ngle instance I have denied a hear- "K to ono of my C000 employes, or ''c "fused to consider any griev- . At Arkansas City, Kan., last Tues day, Postmaster General Charles Emory Smith answered Mr. Bryan's well-known querv about past haul ing down of the nag thus: "Mr, Bryan's query about the past hauling down of the Aug is a fair question, and deserves a fair answer. I will try to give it. The flag was carried to Mexico by tbo law of war. It was carried out by the law of peace, for the terms of settlement provided for the cession of California and sur rounding territory, but not of Mex ico. Tbe flag wect up in California and has never come down from there. It was curried to Cuba to free humanity by tbo law of war; and it will be taken from there under the pledge of the law of congress. It was carried to China to rescue our ministers and missionaries, and it will be taken from there, since that is accomplished, nnd because we are not an imperialistic nation. It was carried to the Philippines by the law of war, and will remain there by the law of peace." Senator Ilunna has teen cartooned without mercy and maligned and abused as if be were a public enemy. Mr Bryan has been the chief offend er. In every socecb, in any part of the country, bo has held Senator Hanna up to scorn and ridicule. He did this in bis Salem speech in the June campaign. Every true American will concede Mr. Ilanna's right to defend himself, iu ull fair ness. He icsted under tbe calumnies for four J ears and more, without asserting this tight. But now that he has undertaken the task be Is doin the job very completely. He shows himself fully equal the task. Salem Statesman. We call attention to the speech of Congressman J. C. Sibley, of Penn sylvania, which appears in another column, in which that ijentlcuian gives bis constituents boiiic of the reasons that prompted him to "flo;" from Bryanism to republicanism. It is rare indeed to Cr.d so much solid meat compressed Into so small a space. It will amply repay reading. There arc plenty of good, substan tin!, oM-line democrats who could not vote their sentiments if they would, simply because there is no longer a democratic party iu exist ence In tbis country, says the Eugene Register, "New oeoaslous mate new duties; Tiiu, mak8 ancient 2ood uncouth. They must onward still and upward Who would keep abreast of truth." Yon charge me with being a flopper. Yes, I guess that is so. If a flopper may properly he defined as one who did not know it all yesterday, Is wiser today and aims for proves s tomorrow, then I am a flopper. If a flopper is one who finds a position or yesterday untenable today, aim posi tively wrong tomorrow, who seeks to leave tbe nntenable position llio occupa tion of which would stultify his intelli gence, dwarf his conscience and work an Injury to his fellows, then you may de fine me as a flopper. If looking at the present and trusting for a grander future, rather than facing backward to fan the smoldering embers of tbe past, constitutes one a flopper, please enumerate me as such. Whenever-I see men who have been working for one dollar a day, able to earn two dollars; when the man who earned two dollars can have the oppor tunity to earn three, I will flop as often as it may be necessary to help that con dition for that man to continue. When from 1893 to 1896 47 per cent of the wage earners of this country were unemployed or working on short hours, aud today only three-eighths of one per cent of tbe wage earners are nnem ployed, I will flop to help keep these men em ployed whenever and wherever it is demanded. When under Free-Trade Tariff bill we saw our nation largely importing Its manufactured necessities, and when under this administration, we are manu facturing not only for ourselves, but are supplying the other nations of the world with tbe products fabricated by Ameri can hands in American workshops, you can make a fair guess that I will flop to help that cause along. Last year wo sent from our American workshops to foreign nations $339,000,- 000 worth of manufactured products; this year 1432,000,000, and with the as sured certainty that with the present policy maintained these exports will within six years reach wore than $1,000, 000,000 annually, thereby requiring dpuble the workshops of the present and affording double the'present opportunity for honest labor and honest capital to meet with substantial recompense, I will flop, and flop until I can be right Bide up in line with that policy. When pound of wool brings the farmer from 12 to 15 np to 50 cents to day, and when his sheep, that were only salable at a dollar per head in 1896, are worth today three to four dollars per head, I will flop whenever it is requ!red for me to do so to help maintain that condition for the wool grower. When I find that in 1806 we imported 230,000,000 pounds of foreign wool; in 1897, 351,000,000 pounds of wool ; while in the year 1899 we imported bnt6,000, 000 pounds of wool, to give the best market of the world to the American producer rather than the foreign producer of wool, males it easy for me to flop for the benefit of that wool-grower. When cotton, that sold for 4 cents p?r pound under the hist administration, brings from 9 to 10 cents per pound under the McKiuloy administration, I will flop to help the cotton grower. When I see an advance in the price of all farm products ranging from 25 to 125 per cent, and my flopping from my at titude to another will help that farmer, I will try to lie the first man to flop. When I sco furnaces blazinar, forges cloning, looms weaving, when I hear shuttles Clicking and spindles humming, when brawn and brain each find fair re compense whether in factory or In field, I will, as a man who aims to be loyal to his fellows, his country and his Creator, try my level best to maintain . that con dition, call me what you will. When wages have" Increased from 10 to 100 per cent In nearly all industries; when in 1809 we paid 709,000,000 more of dollars to wags earners of this land than we did in 1890, with the assured certainty that they will still further In crease, If we will only let our partisan ship shrivel and our patriotism expand ; are you justified in doubling If my at titudo of yesterday hinders that increase, I will flop until my position of today shall be on that higher ground standing a Kin which, humanity, from Ihe heights 1 t I li A A. ldi-l V ,.,Ai,n(.!r.. . d n I wa in. w .IVI-.UIV Illi'UIII-lli. Ll CI , n II V. visions of a more glorious future? When I see the miners of the Hocking Valley, ho received but forty cents ton f jr digging coat, now receiving eighty cents per ton fur the same work, and with a proportionate advance in all the bituminous coil fields, with steady work for all, it is ta easy matter fir me to a . nop. When I see the glass blowers receiving from 20 to 30 per cent advance in their scale of wages, ith steady employment, for a continuation ofsich happiness for them it will not be difficult for mi to flip. When I see the flig fired upon; when I see the brave boys in blue, your brothers, your sous and your sweet hearts, shot down by men in ambush, my sympathies go out to yon and to them rather than to a Tagal savage, and I have got to flop. And as I love my country, my fellow men and my God, no man will flop ahead of me. When we see each mouth a surplus in our national buget instead of a deficit: when we see, instead of borrowing mouey of England, as we did under the 'ast ad ministration, we have loaned within the last two years to Sweden, Kusaia, Ger many and England more than $-00,000,-000; when we see our exports doubling and our imports dividing; when we tee happy faces of a well fed and a well clad citizenship, and contrast it with the days of the Coxoy army of ttie un employed; when the pinched faces of hungry men and women and little child ren, clad in tatters, in the biting blast of the winter's stcrm, sought for cold charity and cold soup in the soup houses, let us pray that God In Ilia grace grant that you and I shall never witness those scenes again, but if we do, my earnest prayer Is that lie may so guide us all in His infinite love and wisdom that no vote or act of ours, whether in public or private life, shall he responsible for the return of such conditions. mm AcGtl jUe rrepaMlionJbrAs simila t ing the food and KcC ufci -ting the SloiKKhs and Cowvls of DEMOCRATS ARE AGAINST BRYAN McKialey for Best Interests of Couii' try Leader on Subject. Goldkxdale, Wash., Oct. 20. Demo crats here and all over Klickitat county are forsaking Bryan and his many isms and are lending assistance to the re publican campaign. One of the most re cent and notable democrats to renounce bis party's leades is E. O. Whitbeck. Since his residence in Washington, Mr, Whitbeck has been one of the pillars of the democratic party. Well educated, and thoroughly in touch with the issues of the times, he was looked up to as a wise counselor, and such he proved to be. But he finds that his duty as a loyal American citiziii is to leave his old political associations and come out for the best interests of the country, which he Is of the opinion will be subserved by Mr. McKinley's election. Asked as to his reasons for change of.political faith, Mr. Whitbeck said: "I am an expansionist. As to the Philippines, our whole policy turns upon the answers to two questions : "Shall we shirk the responsibilities brought by the Spanish-American treaty ? "Are the Filipinos qualified for self government? "To both I answer, No. If correct, our duty is plain. The insurrection must be quelled ; order established, and the future cf the islands consigned to tbe care of congress. It is useless to theories or picture Ideal conditions. 'An emergency, not a theory, confronts us' ; and we mutt rise to meet it. If there are no preced ents, make them. If a colonial govern ment is necessary, establish it. If the constitution does not provide a suitable means cf govtrun.ent, amend it. 'New occasions teacti new uutiee, and if we are to rite to the full measure of greatness, ve must accept whatever mav come. The future is uncertain, difficulties will he encountered, and mistakes will be made; b.it theee are no reasons why we should shirk the responsibilities thr.t come with progress. The Filipinos should ntd will ho given all the liberty comiett-nt wilh their civilization. The laws of any country are In very close touch with the public sentiment of that conntry, nnd I cannot believe that the American people will ever be guilty of an oppression. "Theee in brief are my views upon J w hat are considered the vital issues of the present campaign, and as they are essentially republican I cast my lot with that party and will support the republic an cause until such time as my views are more in accord with those of some other party." Promotes Dicslion.Checrrur ness iux Resl.Coitr.dins neither Olrium.iMorphine nor Mineral. iOTAllCOTIC. A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of Aperfecl Itemed? forronslipn lion, Sour Stouwch,Diarrhoca Worms .Convulsions ,Fe vcri sh ncss nnd Loss OF SLEEP. FacSunilc Signature of NEW YORK. EXACT COFy OF WRAPPER. AAif In Use For Over Thirty Years hm 9 uii TMI eCNTAUN OOMMNT, NfW VONN Oltf, IetiHng from Business. Closing out my Entire Stock Regardless of Cost. Pry Goods, Clothing-, Boots and 8l,oes, at much less than wholesale prices. Will sell in bulk or in lots, or any way to suit purchasers. Entire stock must be closed out before 30 days. All Roods will be sacrificed except Thompson's Glove-flttlnn Corsets and Bntterick Patterns. Your prices will be mine. Call early and secure bargains. , J. P. McINERNY, Corner Second and Court Sts. State flotmal Sehool, MONMOUTH, - . OREGON. Fall Term Opens September 18, 1900. Tbe RttitlenU of the Normal School nn nr,.itnrpi t.n i,ii ti,A hi.i., .,rtmnn,I. in.A.n........ ... Graduatel rcatflly secure (rood iiasltl iu. Exjisjhsu of year from f I) to ... KtrmiR Aetnlmio nmi l'roft-sslnniil Courses. New tijiecliil In nurture in Manual Trai'ilnu ull t'iuiptit'3 Training Ut',artiiiunl. For catalogue containing full announcements aiMress 1'. I . CAMPUKr.!., rreMdent. or W A. WANK, Stt-rstur of Facul'y. F. s. Gunning, Blacksmith, Wagon Shop, Horseshoeing. , Dealer in Blacksmith Supplies. Cor Second & laniWin. Ttoiie 157 T. A. IlrnsoN. .Notary l ulillc. Timothy K rows hill. Attorney ut Law. liuason & BrowqUlH CHcien Lice Ciprei USE Carbolineura : Avenarius. The most efficient Wrwid lrvervlrif I'ttint Hlftn m KH'licftl Kcinetly itgHiii'.t Chicken I.ic Itw Hjtjplieution to in f.itl wtdls of poultry 1huim will jr iminpntly extern. hutte all lice. He nilts liciiUhv chickt'iiH, ponty of Writ for rhi'iilatH a. id pi ices. Mention tiiia puicr. Jos.T. Peters & Co., Til K I.LI. KS. OICKCiON. Real Estate, Insurance, Loans, Conveyancing and Abstracting. We rcprest-nt some of tbe largest fire insurance companies in the worM. We have, a l.irtfp list of property, both city and emntry, for sale and rent. We have inor.ey tn loan on real estate security at reasonable rates of interest. We do nil kinds of conveyancing, and are tl exclusive owners fjr Kite's sys tem cf abitractinir, which precludes the possibility of mistakes In looking up titles lo real estate. Any on bavins propertv fur tale or rent will fin it it to their advantage to leave it iu our hands. Collections arid all leial business left in our ore will receive prompt atten tion. Will a practice in all the courts of tbe ttnte. Coriesp' nt'ence promptly answered. Offices: Washington ftrei-t, next to Th Aetlla afalloat Is envied by all poor dyspeptics whose stomach and liver are out of order. All such should know that Dr. Kinir'a New Life Pills, the wonderful stomach nnd liver remedy, RiveB a epl .mdid appetite, sound digestion and a regular bodily habit that insures perfect health and great energy. Only L'o cents at any drun store. 4 Have just secured the very latest and handsomest designs in picture molding. Call and see them. Win. Michel!. J. A. EBERLE, F. T , I French & Co. 's 9e Ta,l0ril?MATT SHOREN; General Blacksmith and Horseshoer. A complete line of Fall and Winter yuitiptis, rtntinita and Overcoating, now on display. 100 different varieties to re ject from. Suits, $20 ar)d up. Call and eliuwliere. k Crowe's. examine pndg before ff"inir Second strcut, opp. .Mays All kinds of lilai-ksiiiitbing will receive prompt attention ami w ill be executed iu tirt-c'a-a shape, iiive him a call. ra m a m a n ONE FOR A DOSE. tlmi,T PtmplM, TVv,ni Rrho'l.n.M, I'iiiii', hr HIihh!, liiro M '.U,'hr nl lyo,. n-i. l"fn.-llli. The n-llhvf;rtm nnrait-k.,, Y. b Jru UK. UUSANK0 CO. Phils. Pa. PILLS FiichardsoiVs Old Stand, Third St., near Federal, Tbe Dalies, Or. j ft. :. k. iKlintHON, Physician iiutl Surgeon, Olflcp, Vogt UIix-i fiver I'mtnirii ej, iOapliuo-dw THE DALLE -I, OHEUO.V.