el)c Dalles VOL. XII THE DALLES, OREGON, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1900. NO. 377 Tho Kind You Have Always in uno for over 30 ycnm, and fflrtjf.,. N0,,al supervision since its infancy. '"t'OCCi4f(t AllMir nn nn 4-n I ...... .. !.! All Gounturl'uitH, Imitations and " JiiHt-ns-good" are but E.viKM iinL'iitK that triilo with and cuduiiger tho hcnltli of lnl'imts and Children Experience against Experiment, What is CASTORIA flnsloria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops nnd .Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. Ifc wmtsiins neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic Niibsiauce. Its ago is its guurantec. It destroys Worms ami allays Feverislmess. It cures Diarrhoea and "Wind Colic. Jt relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation ami Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving bcaltliy nnd natural sleep. The Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Friend. CENUiNE CASTORIA ALWAYS S7 Bears the The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THC CIMT4UR OOMMNV. TT MURRAY STRICT NCW VORR CITV. HOW ARE YOU GOING TO VOTE? Hciiiiirlialilc Letter WorliiiiKinan Issues. of nu American on the Paramount i I'liu American Economist. 1 i'ViW Wiii'litnijtncn! Jfow Are Yuu O'vimj to Volet 1 'lo not suppose for h minute that any intelligent laboring man la goiug to throw awav liin vntn nn nnv ivimliilntn who c.iniiot got ft simile electoral vote. Hither liryan or McKinley will bo elect ed and u yoto for any one else ia not only voto Ion, tiut u vote against the iniin who will bu elected. lutilmvt! read tho platforms of both parties imil tlio letters of neceptanco of wtli andidatos. You liavo read some o'thc pamphlets sent out by the coin "iitteea. Yon hovo read and heard some ' tho epeeohos of Air. Uryao. Mr. Kooso- fall It . . . . . .ur. uanna, Mr. Hill unci otliere. I want you to reud and think over Jt it (uw sentenced of plain talk from a "O'kingiuan. 1 Imvo made up my mind how I am WiUK to vote und I want to ask you to iu me name way. 1 not an orator nor a icliolar. ' cannot make a apeech nor write a mag me article. I am just nn ordinary everyday workingmau with intelligence ''ougli to have a littlo common nonse nl lull il to others. I am not writing ""a tor pay. It will probably coat mo a 'veek'd wages to got a few thoiiBiuid "Intcd. Then if Air. Croker or Mr. "nu wm,t 0 circulate It they are welcome to it. Kow as to wlt,t i alll( jl0W , xoiuit 10 Votu and why. 1 "in u workingmiui with a wife and children. Uight yearn ago, in 1892, lva doing fnlrly well, and my older were both ut tehool. I voted, uh V, Kutl democrats, fur Grover tlt!velaii(t, In less than nix weeks after j'tion, just before Christmas, I lost my 1. 1 could not get another. Things Wei" from bad to worse, Tho boys left f'"oil and tried to earn a littlo money. never got in tho bum llneat Aladison "iHare, but we did sometimes get near 1110 ''read lino at Tenth street. I could i Bought, and which has been has borne tho aiffnatnro of has been mado under his ncr- Signature of not tell yon all the hardships of those four years. Always behind in the rent and half the time without anything to eat. The wife worked hard and the boys and I did anything to earn a dollar. Il fiaemed sometimes as if we must give up, hut the patier.t hopeful wife would say: "Cheer up, old man, you will got work soon and thru we will be on our feet again." My men, have you got n good faithful wife? Have your clilldren got n good, patient mother? Then yon know what kept us from absolute despair. Well, 18!)G came and another election. With thousands of other democrats voted for Mckinley and hoped lor a change. In less than a month I pot a job, and have had woik constantly these four years. Tho boya eoon went bnck to school. I am now getting $18 a week. One of my boya entered college laat month; another went to a preparatory school and will enter college two years from now if I do not lose my job. My wife nnd I have plenty to eat and wear and wo are happy, oh, ao happy, to seo out boya growing to be educated men. Fellow workingmen ! Do I need to tell you how I am going lo vote? 1 don't exactly understand this ques tion of Imperialism, fxcept Hint I am for tho Stars and Stripes, and I do not believe anybody can or wants to make tide country an empire. 1 know littlo about the money quos lion, except that when 1 earn a dollar I want ICO conts, nnd when I put a little money in the hank I want to bo sure of taking out aa much aa 1 put in, with a little interest. I don't know much about tho Tariff, except that Kroo-Tiado would throw me and thousands of others out of a job, with no chance to gut another. 1 don't know much about Government by Injunction, the Consent of tho Gov erned, Initiative and Referendum, etc., except that I believe in law and order and good judges, and honeat courts, 1 don't know much about tho Income Tax or Municipal Owneiahip or tho Franchise Law. Tho boys will know all about those qiitiHtionH an 1 I'll leave eventhlnir for them to HOttle. I don't know any more nor any lcsa than you do, fellow workiuumon, but I do know this that, you and I and our wives and children were never so well oil' as we are today, and I believe we are Roliig to 1)0 still bettor oil' or a groat deal worse oil' after election. I haven't anything to eay against Mc Kinley or Bryan, but I know, and you know, that if Bryan is elected, thousands and hundreds of thousande of us are go ing to he out of work for tho next four years, if not longer, while if McKinley is elected, I believe there will not be an honett, capable wan who is Killing to work that will not be able to find it. If Bryan is elected, my boys ill have to leave school. If McKiney is elected, my older boys will aoon have a complete education, and the mother and I wi'l never have to worry again. Fellow workingmen, you want better wages, don't you? You want more than a mere existence. Well, you are not go ing to get it if we have Free Silver, Free Trade and Free Soup. Why, we workingmen could elect a president ourselves if we would. Let rs stand together, let us earn all we cm, let us save all wc can, let ua read and study and learn all we can. We shall grow stronger and stronger every year. We can never gain anything through Bryanism. Let us get books and papers instead of pawn tickets. Let us give our boys an education, and the woikinguian of tho future can think for himself, can make laws for himself, can elect hie own president. But this year we must choose between Bryun nnd McKinley. Every vote for Bryan is a vote for idleness and poverty. Every vote for McKinley is a vote for employment and prosperity. Tlie election oi Bryan would throw the workingmati and his condition back to that of 189.-). i( i eoniu make a speech I would go out on the corners hnd talk to every crowd I could get together. If I could write for the papers, I could do eo. But I will understand my simple sentences and I ask every workingman who reads th'iB to vote for me and my job and my boys and my home, and I'll vote for you and youra. A. Roiiinso.v New York, October 15, 1900. Catarrh Cannot He Cured. with local applications, ae they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh ia a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it you must take inter nal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts direcMv on the blood and mucous surfaces. Hall'f Catarrh Cure is uot a quack medicine It was was prescribed by one of the bef t physicians in this country for years, and is a regular piescription. "it is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood puritieis, acting directly on tho mucous surfaces. The perfect combination ol the two ingredients ia what produces euch wonderful results in curing Catarrh. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. Chunky & Co., Props., Toledo 0. Sold by drruggists, price 7nc. Hall's Family Pills are the best. 12 Union of Scotch Churches. KoiNiiuiton, Oct. SI. The formal un'oa of the Free and United Presbyter ian c'luiches, decided upon yesterday at the joint meeting here of the Freo Church Assembly and the United Presbyterian Synod, who consummated today. The members marched from the respective halls to Waverly Market and held the lirst meeting of the United Free Church of Scotland. Large crowds witnessed the procession. The Kev. Albert iiobert Hainey, D. IX, was choaon moderator of the United Free Church. The sceno at Waverly Market was etrik lug, though marred by rain. Some UQQO ministers took part in tiie procession, and dense crowds along the route cheoredthem repeatedly. The ball where the uniting act was Bigned was draped with crimson and yellow, and liberally bedecked with flags used by covenanters. The Karl of Aberdeen, Dr. Parker, the Rev. John Watson (Ian McLaren) and delegates from Canada, Australia, Ja- maica, Afiica, Franco and elsewhere participated. The email minority which opposed tho union met in a separate hall today and constituted themselves a Free Church Assembly. Uutoaiul liiulaoft oulcklj- llltltluil. Chamberlain's Pain Balm applied to a cut, bruise, bum, c-culd or like injury will instantly allay tho pain and will heal the parts in less time than any other treatment. Unloss the Injury is very severe it will not not leave a scar. Pain Balm 'also cures rhunintisni, sprains, awelliuus and lamenesci. For sale by Blakeloy druggist. Tho largest and moat complete line of fall and winter millinery ever displayed in tho city at tho Campbell & Wilson millinery parlors. The prices will sell the goods. e8tl Nasal CATARRH In nil Its sUfion there should bo cleanllucsi). Ely's Cream halm clciuiso9,eoothcs and hcalg tho diacaecil membrane. It cures catarrh and drives away a cold la the head quickly. Cream Rulm Is placed Into the nostrils, spreads over tho membrane and Is absorbed. Relief Is Im mediate and a cure follows. It Is not drying docs not produce sneezing. Large Size, 00 cents at Drug, gist! or by mall; Trial Size, 10 cents by mall. HA" IXKmiEIlS, 3G Warren Street, New Vork. Mtrayed. Strayed from my place on the bluff, a 2-year-o!d Jersey heifer; dehorned; ear mark on both ears ; branded bar Z on both hips. Liberal reward paid for her return. o!0'4tw Bnnx Babi.ky. (iluilfiiih News. Comes from Dr. D. B. Cargile, of Washita, I. T. He writes: "Four bottles of Electric Bittera lias cuied Sirs. Brewcrof scrofula, which had caused her great aufierine ior vears. Terrible sores would break out on her ! head and face, and the best doctors 1 i . . ... . coum give no neip; out tier cure is com plejo and her health ia excellent." ThiB shows what thousands have proved, that Electric Bitters is the best blood purifier known. It's the supreme remedy for eczema, tetter, salt rheum, ulcers, boils and running Eorce. It stimulates liver, kidneys and bowels, expels poisons, helps digestion and builds up the strength. Only 50 cents. Sold by Blakeley Druggist. Guaran teed. 4 Vogt Opera House, F. J. Clarke, Manager. One Night Only.,. FRIDAY, Nov. 2d Uncle Josh 25 People 1 Big Band... Spruceby Grand Operatic Orchestra Carload Special Scenery Novel Mechanical Effects The Great Sawmill Scene All New Specialties. Watch (or tho Bi l'arade. Note the jiriee Entire house, 50c. Tho Dalles Street Wo are saving the pooplo money on Men's Clothing, I. nclerwear, nats and miogs, as won as Ladies' and Children's Underwear and Hosiery. You will (ind in our Store lots of bargains. We have the best lino of up-to-date Jackets and and about one-third less in prico than other stores. Come and seo U3 and wo will bo pleased to show you Wo are agonls for Miller's All-Wool Clothing. THE FAIR. Blankets The bed clothing needs earl' attention. Many of tho pieces that served last winter, and the winter before, must be replaced this season. Now is a good time to buy; good because later on you will not have the assortment to select from, and the best numbers will have been sold. Further more, if you buy now, early discomforts may be avoided and a full season's use enjoyed. Hero are the best sorts to be found in their grades all marked at unusually reasonable prices: At $3.00 "Spokane Falls" a gray and brown mixed, wool blanket; wool warp and filling; 10-4 size; weight 4 pounde. At $3 90 "Cross Roads," iron-gray wool blanket; bright border; wool warp and filling; 10-4 size: weight 5 pounds. At $4.90 A 5J4' lb all-wool, 10 4 elzi, Oregon blanket ; dark pray mot tled ; bright border; cloth bound. At $5.00 "Pleona" silver gray, sanitary wool blanket; guaranteed all pure wool warp and filling; weight 4'2 pounds; 10 4 size. Cotton Bed Blankets. Used extensively whites and grays; 10 4 size at (10c, 75c and $1.25, Coarse Wool Blankets. Cotton mixed; medium and dark cravs and j blue; at $1.25, Ijl.V), $1.75, $2, $2.25 and $2.50. i Indian Robes. Finest wool, beautifully colored in various tribal deafens: some particularly attractive for coucli QUILTS. Filled with clean, white cotton, and covered both Mdes with figured silkeiene, tied with worsted; full double-bed size; at $1 03, $2 00 and $2 45. Downeline Quilts. Largo, flufly, comfortable; filled with pure, laminated white cotton, covered with' best quality ailkeleno; plain and figured; knotted with worsted; a first-class urticle; price $:i,40. Other quilts various grades from 75c up. A, M. THE FHIR The Place to Save Money on all kinds of Merchandies. Fair has come and jiono, but Tho Fair Storo has eomo to slay. 133 Second Street, THEDALLES, OREGON. and Quilts. various At $5.00 A 11-4 s'zi, 0 pound all wool Oregon blanket; uocd dark gray mixture ; special value. At $5.50 "Monoxi" camels-hair all wool blanket; 11-4 size; weight 54 lbs; full size, and all wool warp and filling. At $6.00 "Greenland" white blankets; all wool, both warp and fill ing; 10-4 size; weight 4,'. pounds. Olhei grades white wool blankets at $4.1)0, $5.90, $0.75, $7.50, $7.90, $8, $10. Colored wool blankets gradee, to $12 a pair. in various for 11 sheets 4 size in cold weather ; at $1, $1.50, $1.75. covers, etc. $3.50, $4, $1 50 and $5. WILLIAMS & CO. Capes for Ladies' and Missos', our goods. THE FAIR.