THE PRESS has the circulation, its advertising rates ,are within the reach of all. THE PRESS "touches the spot." $1.50 per year r THE BIG CLEARANCE SALE . ; OIP : ; : ' Sacks, Buggies, Carriages' and Eoad Carts. gons MCMDDEN ATHENA PRESS Published every Prldy Morning By J. W. SMITH, Proprietor. F. B. Boyd, Editor. Entered at Athena postofllce as second-class mail matter. Subscription Hates: I'cr year, In advance, - J1.60 Single copies, In wrappers, 6c. Advertising "Rates: Local reading notices, first Insertion, 10c per line. Each subsequent Insertion, 6c. All communications should be addressed to he PRESS, Athena, Oregon. ATHENA AUGUST 21 1896. FOR president: WILLIAM J. BRYAN, OP NEBRASKA. FOR VICE PRESIDENT. . ARTHUR SEWALL, OF MAINE. "JVo Crown of Thorns, No Cross of Gold." WHICH SHALL IT BE? The danger to our free institu tions from the centralization of wealth, and the possibility of the money power gaining control of the leins of government, was one whierh our early statesmen sought to guard against, and in eloquent terms did they warn the people to beware of this threatening menace to popular government. Washing ton, Jefferson, Jackson and Web ster all raised their voices caution ing tho masses against risking too much authority in the hands of the classes. And tho martyred presi. dent, Abraham Lincoln, whose sympathies were wholly with the common people, and who was nearer to the people than any other man of his time, soon after the close of the war, saw this danger, and he asserted that it caused him more anxiety for the safety of his country than even the rebellion. In a message to tbo thirty-seventh congress (see pages 309-310 Bar rett's Life of Lincoln) he Baid: "Monarchy itself is sometimes hinted at as a possible refuge from tho power of the people. In my present position I could scarcely be justified were I to omit raising a warning voice against approaching despotism. Thero is one point to which I ask a brief atteution. It is the effort to place capital on an equal footing with, if not above, labor in the structure of the gov ernment. Let them beware of sur rendering a political power, which they already have, and which it surrendered will certainly be used to close the door of advancement against Buch as they, and to fix new disabilities and burdens upon them, till all of liberty shall be lost." Then iu a subsequent letter Mr. Lincoln expressed his fears of the encroachment of the money power as follows: "It has indeed been a trying hour for the republic; but I see in the near future a crisis approach ing that unnerves me and causes me to tremble for the safety of my country. Asacsult of the war, corporations have been enthroned and an era of corruption in high places will follow, aitl lto money power of the country will endeavor to prolong its reign by working up on tho prejudices of the people, un til all the wealth is segregated in a few hands and the republic is & GORMAN, destroyed. I feel at this moment more anxiety for the safety of my country than ever in the midst of war.- May God grant that my sus picions may prove groundless." Indeed the great Lincoln was al most prophetic in his suspicions. What he feared would result has come to pass. We find at this time our government in the hands of corporations and the money power. In every branch of gov ernment, in our state legislatures, in our house of representatives, in the senate and on the bench we find the representatives of corpora tions predominating. And as Pres ident Lincoln said they would do, the money power is endeavoring to "prolong its reign by working upon the prejudices of the people" im ploring them to maintain the hon esty of the currency and at the same time elect to the highest office in the, gift of the people, one who is bound body and soul to administer a government for the classes. Will the people be thus gulled into bar tering away their liberty by eleit- ing to the presidency the direct representative of the Corporations, and aid the money power to tight en the yoke of financial bondage about their necks?' Are they ready to surrender their right to rule this nation and turn it over to the classes? Or will they heed the warning of grand, honest old Abe Lincoln and elect to the presidency a man whom the corporations, the trusts, the money brokers abhor? Times-Mountaineer. The Boston Herald observes that "it would not be at all sur prising if in the next ten years the rate of progress in the south were not more rapid than in any other section of the country." On the contrary, if that were not the case it would afford ample cause for as tonishment. During the past ten years the rate of progress in the south has been marvelous. But it was only the beginning of a de velopment which will not reach full fruition within a quarter of a century, though it will increase in volume and velocity with each year. At the conclusion of the war the south was prostrate in destitu tion and helplessness. For near ten years following the odious carpet bagger sapped the fruits of her en deavor, and the next decade was devoted to the re-building of her lost resources, but since that she has been moving forward and dur ing the last few years her pi ogress has been unparalleled in any part ofthewoild. The south is especi ally rich in elements of wealth, and the people have at last learned to utilize the advantages with which generous nature has endowed her. In iron, coal, cotton and various other Btaple products of the earth and soil Bhe is provided more boun tifully than any other section of the common country and the fact that manufacturing enterprises have found their way to these ex haustless sources of supply is the natural consequence of the change of industrial conditions. The iron furnaces of Alabama and the cotton factories of Georgia, Ten nessee and other cotton producing Btates have enjoyed a prosperity during the past three years that has existed in no other quarter, and the determination to further and fuller development is the logic al result. But the full measure has not yet been reached. There are other and equally potential agencies of progress iu -the south which are still unexplored. These are the fertility of the soil for ag ricultural operations, tho vast for These Vehicles Must he (Successors to Knapp, BurreM Company) ests of timber and the facilities for international commerce. The har bor advantages of New Orleans and Galveston will sooner or later challenge the consideration of cap italists. As population increases in the south and west the contiguity of these points to the consumers as well as the producers of merchan dise will lead to the establishment of great commercial houses in the western and southern cities through which the products may bo distrib uted without the great expense of long hauls by rail from the eastern seaboard. In view of these facts the prediction of the Boston Her and may be relied upon, That "deadly parallel" now ap pearing in the goldbug press, un der the title of "Silver vs. Gold," and purporting to be a comparison of wages and cost of food, clothing and furniture in Mexico and the United States is indeed a paralyz er. The prices ot furniture in the two countries is especially surpris ing, and why manufacturers will sell a three-piece oak bedroom set for $30 in the United States when they can get 1200 in Mexico for it, which is equal to $108 in our mon ey, is a conundrum. Other items in the furniture line are practical ly on the same ratio. In food pro ducts the difference is not so great, although bread is quoted at 3 cents per pound in this country and 12 cents iu Mexico. The statement that the average pay for labor in the United States is $40 per month is another surprise. The term "la bor," as used, is presumed to mean unskilled labor, and every one knows that where that class of la bor is employed by the month the average of wages is nearer $10 than $40. It is stated that the average pay for labor in Mexico is $8 per month. This is presumably some where near the truth, for in a dis patch in the Sunday Oregonian it is stated that laborers in Mexico are paid 40 cents a day and board or 50 cents a day without board. Either the employers don't feed their "hands" anything, or else the cost of living is greatly exaggerated in that "deadly parallel." For with food products 100 per cent, higher in Mexico than here, it would puzzle the most astute goldbug to board laborers for 10 conts a day. Even in this country where everything is so remarkably reasonable, no one pretends to board men at 10 cents a day. Hence it is an easy matter to see that there is something materially wrong in the parallel business, or in the Oregoniau's news service. La Grande Chronicle. When a farmer has toiled like a Blave for a year, only to find that his produce will not pay his ex panses 6f living, it soothes his feel ings and makes him happy and contented to be told that he is an anarchist and a lunatic. And he is particularly happy when he reflects that the persons calling him an anarchist are those who profit by the laws that rob him. In one of his speeches on his way to New York, Mr. Bryan, to tho statement that his "Chicago speech nominated him," replied that it was not, but that "the peo ple had placed him in nomina tion." There is no question about this. A man that received over two-thirds of the votes of his own party in a convention in which he was hardly known as a probable candidate the daj before, without even headquarters; the unanimous nominee of a national silver party, INSURANCE Other Companies without his solicitation, and who received over one thousand out of thirteen hundred votes in the pop ulist convention in the face of an organized opposition, can truly say that he was nominated by the nennlA Tf AlAfffid Tin will Viavn no( master but the people to serve. Do not pay any attention to the wild vaporings of the enemies of union in the great fight for freedom now going on in this country. Since the forces of reform united at Ellensborg to sweep this state and save it from the rapacity of , re publican cormorants by whom it has been robbed and looted, the gold bugs are ranting like wild bulls in a China shop. The people are leaving them bo rapidly that they are almost insane to Bee their chances gone for ever for living like Nabobs off the earnings of the people. Drive them to work. Washington Independent. The large crowds that have greeted Mr. Bryan at every stop during his journey to New York demonstrate the truth of Mr. Bland's statement, when he said that the plain people of the east are as much in favor of free silver as the voters of the west and south. W, R. Hearst, proprietor of the San Francisco Examiner and the New York Journal, has entered the journalistic field of Chicago. The Enquirer is the name of the paper and it advocates free silver. The Democratic Platform. The platform which has been heralded to the people of these United Statea by the democratic party in convention as sembled, on which it is predicted the brilliant Bryan will be swept to victory by a tidal wave ia aa follows : We, the democrats of the United States, in national convention assembled, do re affirm our allegiance to thsee great essen tial principles of justice and liberty upon which oar institutions are founded, and which the democratic party baa main tained from Jefferson's time to our own freedom of speech, freedom of the press, freedom of conscience, the preservation of personal rights, the equality of all citizens before the law, ant the faithful observance of constitutional limitations. Recognizing that the money question is paramount to all others at this time, we invite attention to the fact that the federal constitution names silver and gold together as the money metal 8 of the United States, and that the first coinage law passed by congress under the consti tution made the silver dollar the unit of value and admitted gold to free coinage, at a ratio measured by the silver dollar unit. We declare that tho act of 1873 de monetising silver without the knowledge or approval of the American people has resulted in the appreciation of gold find a corresponding fall in tho prices of commodities produced by the people ; a heavy increase in tho burden of taxation, and of all debts, public and private; the enrichment of the money-lending clawes at home and abroad ; paralysis of indus tries and impoverishment of the people. We are unalterably opposed to the sin gle gold standard, which has locked fast the prosperity of an industrious people in the paralysis of hani limta -io!d monflroetaiiUiu is a British policy, founded t;pon BiUish g wJ gi8t.i Sold at Once I write Insurance only with the very best Companies. When you want Policies written on your house, barn, or grain, see that they are in the Aetna, Palatine or Caledonian. Represented. J W. p-wer, and its general adoption baa brought other nations into financial ser vitude to London. It is not only un American, but anti-American, and it can be fastened upon the United States only by the stifling of that indomitable spirit and love of liberty which proclaimed our political independence in 1776 and won it in the war of the Revolution. We demand the immediate restoration of the free and unlimited coinage of gold and silver at the present legal ratio of 16 to 1, without waiting for the aid or con sent of any other nation. We demand that the standard silver dollar shall be a fall legal tender, equally with gold, for all debts, public and private, and we favor auch legislation as will prevent the demonetization of any kind of legal tender money by private contract. We are opposed to the policy and practice of surrendering to holdera of obligations of the United Btates any option reserved by law to the government of redeeming auch obligationa in either silver coin or gold coin. We are opposed to the issuing of interest bearing bonds of the United States in time of peace, and condemn trafDcing with banking syndicates which, in exchange for bonds at an enormous profit to themselves, supply the federal treasury with gold to maintain a policy of gold monometallism.- Congress alone has power to coin and issue money and President Jackson declared that this power could not be delegated to corporations or individuals. We therefore demand ' that the power to issue notes be taken from the banks and that all paper shall be issued direct ly by the treasury department. We hold that tariff duties should be levied solely for the purpose of revenue and that taxation should be limited by the needs of the government, honestly and economically -administered. We denounce as disturbing to business the republican threat to restore the Mc Kinley law, which has twice been con demned by the people in national elections, and which, enacted under the false plea of protection to home industry, proved a prolific breeder of trusts and monopolies, enriching the few at the ex pense of the many, restricted trade and deprived the producers of the great Amer ican staples of access to their natural markets. Until . the money question ia settled, we are opposed to any agitation for further changes in our tariff laws ex cept such as are necessary to make the deficit in revenue, caused by the ad verse decision of the supreme court as to the income tax. There would have been no deficit in the federal revenue during the last two years but for the annulment by the supreme court of the income tax law, placed upon the statute books by a demo cratic congress. The obstruction to an income tax, which the supreme court dis covered in the constitution after it had laid hidden for a hundred years, must be removed, to the end that accumulated wealth may be made to bear its juet share of the burden of the government. We, therefore, favor an amendment to the federal constitution that will permit the levy of an income tax. We hold that the efficient way of protecting " American labor ia to prevent the importation of foreign pauper labor to compete with the home market, and tbat the value of the borne market to our American farmers and artisans is greatly reduced by a vicious monetary system which depresses the prices of their product below the cost of production, and that deprives them ot the means of satisfying their needs. We denounce the profligate waste of the money wrung from the people by oppres sive taxation and lavish appropriations of recent republican congresses, which have kept taxes high, while the laborer that pave them is unemployed, and pro ducts of the people are depressed in price until they no longer repay the cost of production. We demand a return to tbat simplicity and economy which best befits I a democratic government, and a rednc- I tion in the number of useless offices, the 3 salaries of which drain the substance of j the people. Confiding in the justice of our cause and tne necessity oi its success at the polls, we submit the foregoing declaration of principles and purposes to the considerate judgment of the American people. . We invite the support of all citiiens who approve them and who de sire o have them nia.'e effective thrcuah leg'sUtion tor tie nlie of the peop'e and tie restoration of the C"i;rtyV prosperity. WaUa Walla, Wash. SMITH, Athena, Oregon.. W. D. HANSFOED & CO., Dealers In Hardware... and Stoves TIN AND COPPER WARE. Pumps, Pipe, etc., . - ; . '. Baker Barbed Wire. PLUMBING A SPECIALTY. ALL WORK GUARANTEED. 629 Main Street, Pendleton, Oregon. !!f!!f!?f!!f!!f1!f!tf!!f!Tf1!fpf1!f!?ri!f!!f!!F1?f!!f1tf!!f ATHBNA PRB&S " -AS AM 5V fioS A Y1BATK Zeiger'a Shop, at Helix, can repair Ma. chinery. General Blacksmithing. W. L, ZEIGER, - - Helix, Ore- Shop