The Dalles Daily Chronicle. SUBSCRIPTION BATES. BT KAIL, POSTAGE PBIrAID, IH ADVAKCB. Weekly, 1 year " 6 months 8 ., i.... O&U, 1 year " 6 months. " per " ....... 1 80 .... 0 75 .... 050 00 .... 800 .... 0 50 Address all communication to " THE CHRON "ICXK." The Dalles, Oregon. SATURDAY; - - DECEMBER 7. 1895 LINCOLN'S LESSON FROM THE COUNTRY PREACHERS. The first chapter in the Lincoln Series in McClure's magazine makes the impression of a story too much told. Great as tho interest in the emancipator is, so mnch repetition, print and re print, wear off the nap, so to speak, and leave the great figure in threadbare gar ments. It will be j ist as well if no more guiOec net up for a while to con duct us in :im; "tit oi Tom Lincoln's wretched c.tbins in Kentucky and Indi ana. The public hasjseen enough, for some time to come, of their doors with out doors, windows without glass, floors without stick or splinter of wood, cham ber without beds, and of their one legged stools, no-legged tables and bow legged dogs. In all hero worehfp ample room must be given for the imagination, for that is one of its essential elements. Bjtit what is said in the article of the country preachers is significant. They wererthe first public speakers whom the little ;boy, who was to go from ft Ken tacky' cabin to the White House, heard. From these came the first impression of the great struggle going on in the world, that it is a conflict between light and wrong. No doubt that they were un learned enongh, that their utterances were crude, their elocution full of back woods awkwardness, their gestures wild as winds in the tree tops, their voices stentorian, - their illustrations often lurid, and their arguments without threads, links or line-fences, but there must often have been the transparency of sincerity, the eloquence of earnest ness and the power of soul-felt convic tions. Voices they were in the wilder ness, but voices to the human conscience, 'and although they may have reasoned of righteousness and judgment to come in a way which would offend the dilet antteism of the present day, yet as they set God and heaven on one side, and sin. Satan and the world of darkness and de epajr on the other, the 'child Lincoln saw the line between the two, the eter nal cleavage between right and wrong, God and satan, heaven and hell. Then and there came the conviction that there can be no compromise be tween the two,' that the separation be tween good and evil must go on until there is a great gulf fixed. This convic tion grew with his growth, ripened with his intellect, fruited with his experience, declared itself in the "higher law," for inulated itself in the never-to-be-forgot ten utterances that "a divided house cannot stand, that "a country cannot bo half slave and half free," that "you can repeal the Missouri Compromise and the constitution, but you cannot repeal the moral nature of n man," and at last it made him president and eman cipaior. uor wno uoubts tnat it was Lincoln's moral clearnees and moral force added to his intellectual clearness and ability that gave him the nomina tion for tho presidency? The Eeed which the Kentucky preachers planted in the young mind may have been no larger, than the grain of mustard seed, but it grew until it became a great tree and all the honors of the nation and the fame of ages lodged in its branches. Advance. MORE ABOUT THE MESSAGE. Tacoma Union : In the case of PresI dent Cleveland's message, read to con press yesterday, it may be eaid of it from a non-partisan standpoint, that i is disappointing to the country. Seattle Post-Intelligencer: As was to be expected, Mr. Cleveland insists that our revenue receipts have nothing to do wiin tne maintenance oi the gold re- 6erve, . on tl.e difficulty of preserving the integrity of which he writes at length. In holding this view he veiv plainly misses the fundamental trouble with the treasury, probably for the sim ple reason that lie doesn't care to view - it in the right light. Tacoma Ledger . Mr. Cleveland points with pride to the fact the Argentine Re; public "recognizing tho value':"of th large market opened to free importation of its wools, under' our last tarifract, has admitted certain products of the United States to enter at reduced duties." What these products are, or what the value of this trade is to us be does not say. But the effect of the law, eo far as we are concerned, has been to reduce our wool clip by 100,000,000 pounds'per year, and to reduce the price by 50 per cent- . . v Oregonian : The people of tho United States do not believe that the more they import from foreign countries the better for their "own country ; that the more nearly they . reduce their labor, to the -. '. . .. .' ' ;. I ' ... conditions of labor in foreign countries, the better for themselves; that cneap foreign goods are more to be desired than good prices for our own products, or steady employment of onr own labor at good wages. But with Mr. Cleveland and his political family, comioriaoie in possesion ot omce ana weaun, ineory has ran away with fact, and ' cheapness has become the sole principle of their economic statesmanship. The theory makes China, exemplar of cneapneEe.ine model for the world A Society Brent. With an ideal hostess, an ideal house, charming entertainment and a most sumptuous luncheon, the lady friends of Mrs. Daniel French spent a-never-to-be. forgotten afternoon on Friday. From the moment of entering the hospitable house to the moment of departure, was one continuous rounu or. enjoyment. Giving answers, found on a penny, to questions from the score cards was the main occupation of the afternoon, and from the peals of laughter ' it was ' very evident, that the guests entered" fully into the fun and appreciated the novelty of the idea. Mrs. Wilson, Mrs. Eshel- man and Mrs. Hostetler had the most correct answers and drew lots to see who should carry off the beautiful prize. Mrs. Eshelman's star was in the ascent and she captured the silver bon bpn basket to always remind her of the wisdom of carrying one a ' wits about with one. There were present, Mee- dames Lord, Condon, Myers, Wilson; H S Wilson, Herbert, Schenck, Snipes, Thornbury, Sinnott, J W Condon, Fish, Glenn, Garretspn, Taylor of Wallula, Houghton, Hostetler, Doane, Crandall, T reman Butler, 8 Bolton, Pease, Lewie, Huntington, Cushmg, A K Thompson, Eshelman, Haight, Curtis, Winneck, Biggs, Laughlin,' Hal French, Sheldon, Kinersly, Brooks, Price, S French, Peters, Lytle, Crowe, Shackelford, Miss Ruch and Miss Irene Adams. HsTJOchondrical, de$pondent, nerv ous," tared out " men those who suffer from backache , weariness, loss of en- ercry, im paired mem- ry, dizzi ness, melan- holy and discourage mentj the re sult of ex haustinsr dis eases, or drains upon the system, excesses, or abuses, bad habits, or early vices, are treated through cor respondence at their homes, with uniform success, by the Specialists of the Invalids Hotel and Surgical Institute, of Buffalo, N. Y. A book of 136 large pages, devoted to the consideration of the maladies above hinted at, may be had, mailed se curely scaled from observation; in a plain envelope, by sending 10 cents m one-cent stamps (for postage on Book), to the World's Dispensary Medical Association, at the above mentioned Hotel.' For more than a quarter of a century, physicians connected with this widely cele brated Institution, have made the treatment of the delicate ' diseases above referred to, their sole study and practice. Thousands, have con sulted them. This vast experience has naturally resulted in improved methods and means of cure. No more BOILS, no more PIMPLES Use Kineraly 's Iron Tonic. The Snipes- Kiuorsiy l)rng Co. Telephone No. 3. A girl to do housework, office. Apply at this n2t3rw2. 1,000,000 People Wear iWlflouglas Shoes HAND SEWED -PROCESS $5,001 1?3,00 $2.50 $2.00 $1.T5 For B071 anlYontls Wear W- X.. Doaiiu shoes and isn from 81. OO to 8S.OO n pair. All style, and Width.. The advance In leather has increased Ihe Slice of other makee, bnt the quality and prices of V. I.. Domlu aboea remain the isnt. Take no substitute : erc that name and price is stumped on sole. V. JL. louglsk.t Uuocktox, Mass. Sola bjr CH AS. F.' STEPHENS. LOST. One srray horse, Ftring halted" in both hind legs ; one small gray mare, branded diamond J on shoulder ; one eorrel mare, with small piece out of one ear. ' A liberal reward will be p3id for informa tion leading to their recovery. Address this office or O. B. Hartlev, Hood River, Or. n20-Xm. ii i I i n il I I V SA t K2 i jifis '.it tv a o f-T $4.oo ( $3.50 tAJ $2.50 $225 ForMeni v BRLDWIN OPERR HOUSE The HETTIE TONIGHT. The Popular Drama : "THE PEARL of SAVOY" The Latest Songs, Dances during the Acjmjsisiqn, 10c, 20c jTnnJ are Year Kerves? Pretty Shaky, Jlrea't They? Is Your Digestion? Pretty Pssr, Isn't It t 21 U U Thin Is Yocr Bloqd ? Almost Like Water, Eh ? Uli ONE THING will Make a Whole Man of You That is DR. HENLEY'S Celery , Beef and Iron Try a ease. It wll Make a 'New" Woman of Your Wife And She Won't Want to Vote. Either vi FOR SALE BY BLAKELEY & HOUGHTON. J. O. MHCK, pine Ctlines . Domestic and St. Louis and Mil-waukee Columbia THE OLD ORO 67 Second St., - - The Germama STUBLING & WILLIAMS, Props. FINE WINES, LIQUORS GIGARS. AH brands of Imported Liquors, Ale and Porter, ' and Genuine Key West Cigars. A Full Line of 0 ALI FORNIA - WINKS - AND - TiRANpiES Twelve-yrnT-old Whisker, striotly pnre, for medicinal purposes. Best Matt Liquor. Columbia lir.wory liter n Drsught. AgeuiB for the Celebrated, fabC Ullwaukes Ur. No. 94 Second Street, "There is a tide in the affairs of nten which, taken at its flooa leads on to fortune" The poet -unquestionably had . reference to the Closinff Out Sale of at CRANDALL Who are selling those goods MJCHELBACH BRIOK, JOS. T. PETERS & GO. -DEAL.ERS IN- BUILDIWC ; TolopHoue S3o " 138. Cfease Stock Gonopsifiy Headed hy: the Peerless Comedienne, In a Six Nights' and Specia'ties introduced performance. and 30c. -DEALER IN- and liiqaojps, Key West Cigars, Bottled Beer. Brewery Beer on Draught. FINO STAND. - The Dalles, Oregon. THE DALLES, OR & BURGET'S, out at" greatly-reduced rates. - UNION ST. - -AND- MATERIALS Engagement. Change of programme Every Night. QEORGE RUQH PIONEER GROCER, Successor to Chriemfin & Corson.) W FULL LIN OF STAPLE and FANCY GROCE ES. Again in bnsiness at the old stand. I would be pleased to see all my former patrous. Free delivery to any part of town. When the Train stops at THE fiEW GOlilJlvlBm HOTEli. -ofo This large and popular ITouse aoes the principal hotel business, and is prepared to furnish the Best Accommodations of any House In the city,, and at tne low rate of $i.oq per Day. - pirgt Qas Ieals, 25 Ceits Office for all Stage r.lnes leaving; Trie ralles for all' . points In Kastecn Oregon and Kastern. WtihiDgtoD, . lu this Hotel. Cornet of Front and Union Bta. New Odors Only a few names as a "persuader." Just received, a new and elegant principally ''Iiundborga," at Donneirs Oeutsehe Apotheke. CLOSING OUT SALE or DRY GOOE)S-r CLOTHING, FTJRITISHXISra QOODS, BOOTS, ! SHOES, HATS and CAF. These Goods .Must Be Sold Less Than Cost. J. P. McINERNY. THE CALIFORNIA WINE HOUSE, JOBBING AND Pure CiLIFORNIi WINES and BRANDIES At prices lower than ever. - Greatest assortment of Liquors. Also Colombia Brewery Beer on draught. CHAS. BECHT, Prop., RUPERT & GAB EL, - . ? WSbfeMTe'titid retait inanti'foctarrsVrid deklor; io - ibNrs ana B EPA1 RIN G rKOMPTLYDO S E. ' ' k ' - fctr Jleseryed Seats now on sale at Blakeley " &ought6ns Drugstore1:' T -.V DALLES, get off on le South Side ..AT THE .. T. T. NICHOLAS, Propr. ..... o o m 2 o .9 S h g " t -2 M S a o ba a Is- o " a a . o sa bulk of Handkerchief Extracts and Sachets, : 1 :. pirag Stptre. Telephone . Jio. 15. RETAILING OF THE DALLES, OR. wauuw uvta.. .Adjoining E. J.' Collins & Co.'s Stor