TV) THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1892. The OFFICIAL PAPER OF WASCO COUNTY. Entered at the Postofflce at The Dalles, Oregon, as second-class matter. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. BY Mill (P08TAGB PREPAID) IK ADVANCE. Weekly, 1 year. . 1 50 " 6 months. 76 , s 0 50 - - Daily, 1 year. 52 . " 6 months ; 8 00 , " per " ' 0 "0 . Address all communication to " THE CHRON ICLE," The Dalles, Oregon. . A PLEA FOR AN EXTRA SESSION. But they do more than this. They warn the "ring,": the "bosses," .the mutual admiration society" of The Dalles, a set ot office holding barncalee who have parceled out and held in pos session every lucrative office in Wasco county for the last score of years that their doom has come and that the Hood River club will "certainly make itself felt" in demanding a thorough reforiua tion. More power to the elbow of the Hood River club ; It will have the eym Dathv and coooeration of every inde pendent voter in Wasco county. . . The Salem Journal is still earnestly urging' that Governor Pennoyer call a special session of the legislature to make an .appropriation for a portage at The Dalles. It contends, and very justly as ".we think, that there is not the least possible show for an appropriation from the national government for the work. Roilroad building is a new departure" which congressional attachment to pre cedent is not likely to adopt. Holman's hostility to any new items of expendi- . ture and a democratic congress anxious to make a record for economy, stand in s the way: The republican senate is ; committed to a canal and locks partly ' completed, fcenator Mitchell is cham pioning a boat " railroad, scheme in the senate and Biuger Hej man n a portage railroad in' the house. r?e:iator Dolph is -urging a liberal appropriation for the lower river. Paul Mohr has got the ear of members of the house committee and '. the Union Pacific influence is at work .'.everywhere all these conspiring cir cumstances and conflicting combina ' tions reduce the chances of an appropri ation to a m'oral impossibility. Mean while difficulties have arisen in connec tion with the vicious pilot service at the mouth of the Columbia. The last leg islature put the business in the hands of the Union Pacific taking it from the pilot trust of Astoria. The hope that the corporate interests of the Union Pacific, being identical with those of the state, .would be sufficient to secure good service, was delusive. Scores of vessels during the fall and winter remained . outside the bar for days and weeks for lack of tugs to tow them in, and tens of thousands of dollars were lost in conse quence to the -people of the. state, apart ' from the immense damage done to the commerce of the Columbia river. If this state of affairs continue over another season it will do so at a loss to producers and shippers of a probable half a million dollars. Again, an appropriation is needed for the world's fair if Oregon is not going to be the . laughing stock of the whole nation. It is perfectly evident that no adequate amount can be raised by voluntary sub scription by those who are liberal enough to contribute, Nor should it be, as the exhibit would be a benefit to every inhabitant of the state, and the state, should therefore bear the burden of it- But apart from the wtfrld's fair we have a conjunction of circumstances 'in the necessities of the Dalles portage and the pilot service that make a de mand for an extra session of the legisla ture, with an occasion as great as per haps ever occurred in any state in the union. An expense of $20,000 to f 50,000 incurred in effecting these measures would save to the producere of three states au easy half million dollars. Will Governor Pennoyer be equal to the occasion? AFTER THE RING'S SCALP. Unless we greatly mistake-the mean ing of words there is trouble ahead for the chronic office seekers and perpetual office holders of this county. The dem- , -ocratic club of Hood River, a large and respectable body of independent demo crats, held a meeting on January 30, at which a series of resolutions was drafted and endorsed "expressive of their views and wishes in connection with the pres ent status of democratic affairs in The Dalles, and the Immediate requirements of our party-in Wasco, county." The second of these resolutions reads thus: "Resolved, That the powers that 'be, to the best of our knowledge and belief, are allied with mt-re office seekers." The third resolution says: "This club from its numerical strength and standing will certainly make itself felt in the future councils and conduct of the democratic party in Wasco county." These resolu- tions can have only one meaning. The club is sick of ring rule and chronic of- . flee seekers and office holders in the democratic party of "The Dalles and Wasco county." The resolutions ' are strictly confined to the club's "views and wishes" in connection with home affairs. There is no thought of national affairs in the reference to the "powers that be", and no reference to national or even state affairs in any of the resolu tions In this respect the resolutions are clear and . distinct .and no. other grammatical construction can possibly be put upon thein.v The club is after the ring's scalp and they make no secret of it: The Chboxicle therefore heartily echoes the sentiments of our democratic 'contemporary the Wasco Sun when it fays of the resolutions: "They' please us immensely." The resolutions please the Chronicle immensely. . They man ifest a sturdy independence and manly assertion of the rights of- American citi zenship that, are highly commendable, j The Chronicle is in no sense cheeseparing sheet. It believes in at taching; rood and 'sufficient salaries to all p'ublic offices but it does not believe in a foolish, wasteful and extravagant use of the people's money. In the case of legislative or gubernatorial honors, where the office is never sought for the wages attachedto it, the pittance of $3 a day or $1500 a year may be justi fiable, but offices that are not stepping stones to power and influence or compli men tar y tokens of respect, but whose7 only reward is the - salary attached, Should be paid liberally in proportion to the character and responsibility of the work. The laws of Oregon as they re late to the salaries of state and county officers are just about as bad as bad can be. Onlv a short time ago a. row oc curred between the county clerk and county assessor of Multnomah "when the latter gave the facts and figures to prove that in the year 1890 the county clerk got two-thirds as much for simply making a copy of the assessment roll as the au- sessor was paid for doing the whole work in making the originnal, a work that required the labor of two or three men for a whole year. It will surprise many of the tax payers of Wasco count' to learn that the condition of things in this county differs very little from that of Multnomah. The clerk of Wasco county gets about half as much for mak ing two copies each of the assessment roll and military list as the assessor gets for doing the whole work connected with the originals. Be that as it may the fee book for 1801 shows that the county paid its clerk the sum of $203 each for making two copies of the as sessment roll and $75 each for making two copies of the military l'st or $556 in all. Any competent penman could copy the whole in less than three week's time working eigth hours a day and thus "earn" nearly $200 a week. The Chronicle must not be misunderstood. These are the fees, as we understand it, that the law has prescribed for this work. The clerk- simply charges what the law alows him, no more nor no less. The county court has no jurisdiction in the matter. The fault is wholly in the law that permits this outrageously ex travagant compensation. But this is not all. The entire fees and emolu ments of the clerk and sheriff's offices are on a par. It need not therefore sur prise the taxpayers when they ara told that during the year just past these two .offices received from the county funds, for their criminal and county business alone, excluse of all fees- for record and conveyance work, licences and costs of civil proceedures, the sum of $9,504.26 and for the two years ending the first of January last over $22,000. We have no figures to show the amounts received for the civil business of the offices but an estimate made by those thoroughly familiar with the income of these of fices in past years places the clerk's civil fees at nearly a half and the sheriffs at about one-third of the income paid by the county. If this estimate is correct, and it must be nearly so, it has cost the taxpayers of Wasco county, to run these offices for the past two years not less than the sum of $30,000, while for the past, year, since Sherman county has been cut off, the cost has been in the neighborhood of $14,000. The Chroni cle is attacking nobody. ..It has laid these facts before the people, at the ex press desire of taxpayers who insist that this criminal extravagance with the law that sanctions it must be abolished by the next legislature. Ou the eve of an election campaign it is just as well to know what the people will demand from candidates for the legislature. If candi dates for the offices named consider themselves aggrieved we remind them that no one has a life lease on the job : but whether or no, these incomes must be cut down to reasonable figures. The taxpayers will insist upon it and the Uhronicle will light for it, and no can' didate for the legislature will receive the support of either unless he pledges approval the following from the Cath lamet Gazette: "Times will be doll and money scarce until our people wake up to the fact that the importation of eggs from Nebraska and beef and butter from Iowa drains our ready cash and leaves us poorer after each shipment." But of course we would get rich if we "drained our ready cash" to pay for free lumber from Canada and free wool from Aus tralia and free manufactures from Eng land and continental Europe. It's a poor rule that wont fit both cases. himself to work for it. About two weeks ago a bill introduced by Senator Mitchell passed the senate, appropriating ' $100,000 for a public building at The Dalles. It this bill ever passes through the mill of the sub-committees and fall committee. on public buildings and grounds and is ground down to the .fineness required by the recently-adopted rule not to pass any bill for any amount to exceed 3 per cent, interest on the rent paid by the govern ment for post offices and other offices in the city where the building is to be erected then The Dalles will have a pub lic building that will be an-enduringj monument of the frugal . virtues vof Uncle Sam's five-cent congress. After suitable grounds have been bought and paid for there would not be enough left to build a sod dugout. ' ' A free trade contemporaty copies with If the Chronicle has seen, fit to lay before the taxpayers of this county the amount of fees that have been paid out during the past ten years to offices whose respectives incomes are not 'placed by law at an annual'fixed sum, it has done so at the express desire of a large num ber of taxpayers and with no thought or conception, so lee as tne writer Knows, that anv one has been paid a cent that be was not legally entitled to. The in vestigation is in the interest of taxpay ers only. They want the information and they are entitled to it. If it be true that a county office pays its incumbent seven of eight thousand dollars, a years where the service could find hundreds of persons just as . competent as ever filled it willing to qualify and uudertake its duties for half that sum, the people have a right to know it that steps may' be taken to have the law fixing the fees of such offices amended. The investiga tion is in uo sense au attack on present or past incumbents wno cannot- De blamed for acce'pting every dollar they are legally entitled to. Neither is it'in any sense an effort to defeat the candi dacy of the present incumbents, who, it is generally understood, are seeking renomination. The Curomcle is not concerned about their renomination. It is not in the business of nominating candidates. It believes the fees of the clerk and sheriff are too high, and in its own interest and in the interest of those who have to foot the bills it proposes to lay the facts before the people and let them be the judges. The only other office whose income is not an annual fixed sum is that of assessor and because ' the waiter once held that office he has specially insisted that that shall be in cluded in the investigation also. No one supposes the per diem of the assessor of four dollars a day is too much but the people have a 'right to know what it costs them to have the county assessed, and they Bhall know that too. The time to spring this investigation is before nominations for the legislature are made that candidates may know what the people expect of them. If the Chroni cle was seeking the defeat of a candi date for a county office it has sufficient political horse sense to know that this is not the time to begin that work. It would wait till after the nominations were made. A FIGHT NOt FOUGHT. How Captain Schley Prepared the Bal timore for Action. ... Washington, Feb. 6. The following incident in connection with the Chilian difficulty, has not before been made public. After the attack on the sailors of the, Baltimore, excitement ran high in Valparaiso. As will be remembered, rumors were thick and frequent that the Chilians intended to attack the Balti more. - The naval demonstrations on their part were very threatening, and of such a character that Captain Schley felt impelled to put his ship in order - for a hot fight, if it was forced upon him According to the reports a combined at tack was to be made upon the Baltimore by the Chilian cruisers, the Esmeralda, the.-A1 mirante, the Cochran and the tor pedo vessels. The idea of the Chilians was with their force they could 'make a complete wreck of the Baltimore in a very short time. . Captain Schley- did not think so. At any rate he was ready to give them a warm reception on either side of the Baltimore. Between the range of her guns and the Chilian cruisers lay the German man- of-war Liepsic and the English man-of- war Meloboniene. Captain Schley had determined, in case of attack, to let the torpedo boats go in the beginning and direct his attention to the work of dis abling the cruisers, but he wanted to have them in the line with his guns. Getting in his gig, he first boarded the German man-of-war and stated bis views and wishes to her commander. The German captain promptly said he would get out of the way at once and give' the Baltimore a fair show. Captain Schley then went to the Melopeomen. Her captain did not show the spirit of ac commodation of the German.: He said his ship was "in 'very good auchorage, and be did not see why he should move. After some further conversation he con sented to comply with the request of Captain Schley, and said that he too would get out of the. way. As it hap pened, the Chilians either abandoned their attentiou to attack, or never enter tained it. Otherwise there would doubt less have occurred one of the most re markable naval engagements of history. v Tie E 0. Cooperative Store . CARRIES A FULL LINE OF Groceries, Family Supplies, Boots and Shoes,- -ALSO A FULL LINE OF- Warn Carts, Reapers and Mowers, and all Hits of A&ri&iltiiral is. . ' Corner Federal and Third Streets, THE DALLES, v : - OREGON. MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS IN FURNITURE CARPETS The editor of the Washington Inde pendent besides being the editor of "the greatest paper in that or any other state" is ; mayor of Pomeroy, U. S. weather bureau signal officer and ob server, special correspondent of the agri cultural bureau, state correspondent . of the National association of democratic clubs, vice-president of the Pomeroy board of trade, president of the Pomeroy improvement company, chairman of the Garfield county democracy, has a diploma conferring the honor of V. D. M., and has just been elected (in his mind) gov ernor of the state of Washington. He says tne sensation produced by this crowning honor surpassed anything that ever thrilled his frame. Blaine 'not a Candidate. New York, Feb. 7. The Press this morning has an article signed by Carson Lake, in which he says : -"Secretary Blaine will not be a candN date for the republican presidential nom ination. I have the highest authority, next to Mr. Blaine himself for making this statement. The decision of Mr. Blaine is the result of his belief that his health ..though now good, will not bear the great strain for a' canvass for the presidency and the subsequent duties of the presidency. He knows that the nomination ot nis party is at his com mand and that even President Harrison would not contest it with him, against the overwhelming sentiment in his favor that prevades the republican party in every state in the Union. But he real izes his physical condition to be unequal to the task of canvassing the states of New York and Indiana, which the re publicans muBt carry to win the election. Undertakers arid Embalmers. NO. 166 SECOND STREET. New - Umatilla- House, . THE DALLFS, OREGON. . HANDLEY & SINNOTT, PROP'S. LARGEST-: AND : FINEST : HOTEL ': IN : OREGON. Ticket and Baggage Office of the O. R. & N. Company, and office of the Wester Union Telegraph Office are in the Hotel.. ' . ' Fire-Proof Safe for the Safety of all -Valuables. S ESTABLISHED 1883. LESLIE BUTLER, -DEALER IN- What is the -matter with the Baker City Blade f ' It says "Eastern Oregon should have at least six congressmen." That reminds us of the drummer who in trying to make himself solid with one of his customers went with him to a prayer meeting and on being - called upon to praid said "O Lord give this people bar rels of flour, and barrels of fruit, and barrels of sugar, and barrels oi meat, and barrels of pepper, and then think ing be. was "overdoing the thing, he added, totlo voce, "O Lord that's too much pepper," We are pleased to announce that we have made arrangements with a gentle man well known to the people of this city and county, now a resident of Washington, : D. C, for a regular weekly letter from the capital of the nation. Our correspondent has special facilities for obtaining correct informa tion on all matters of interest to Eastern Oregon and anything appearing in his communications may be relied on. We publish the first of these letters in this issue.- - ' Agreeably to the wishes of many tax- payere, tne Uhbonicle will, in the near future, present to the people a state ment, taken from the records of this county, showing the income, for the last ten years, of the several county offices whose salaries are not fixed by law. This is done that the people may intelligently determine if the laws that fix the amount of the fees need to be re vised. . " . . Wasiiixgton. Feb. T. Secretary James G. Blaine has finally spoken. Under date of yesterday he has written Chair man Clarson, of the republican national committee, formally announcing be is not a candidate for the republican presi dential nomination. The full text of his letter is : . 1 "I am not a candidate for the presi dency, and my name will not go before the republican national convention for nomination. I make this announcement in due season. To those who have ten dered me their support I owe sincere thanks, and am most grateful for their confidence. They will, I am sure, make an earnest effort in the approaching con test, which is rendered especially im portant by reason of the industrial and financial policies of the government be ing at stake. The popular decision on these issues is of great moment, and will be of far-reaching consequence. Washington Assessor's Convention. Olympia, Feb. 3. The assessors' con vention adjourned this afternoon after agreeing upon valuations for the classes of property named as follows : WESTERN WASHINGTON. Horses and males, 8 years old and over 75 Colts, 2 years oid and over 50 Oolts, 1 year old. . . ; .- 25 Cows, 3 years old 2030 Cows, 2 years old 15 Cows, 1 year old .... 8 100 2 4 . 5 10 3 After two months of ardious labor the house of representatives has succeded in passing one bill that will send a mighty thrill of pleasure through the hearts of the toiling masses of this great nation. Mr. Coateg of Alabama introduced it and it was for the protection of congressmen from the ridicule of- the press. The country is now safe. - Oxen, work cattle, per yoke . oneep, oer neaa Hogs, per head -. . Lumber, rough, per M Lumeer, dressed, per M Logs, per M feet EASTERN WASHINGTON Horses, 1 year old ... .:. .? Horses, 2 years old -. Horses, 8 years old. . '. Work Horses -. .. Cows, 1 yaar old Cows, 2 years old. '.... Cows, 8 years old, and up Sheep ' ... Hogs, per cwt The values adopted are not intended to,be strictly binding, but only to serve as an approximate guide. Groceries and Groekepf . A full line of Lamps, Glassware and Dishes of all kinds. Silver plated- Knives, Forks and Spoons. When you are selecting your Christmas presents look through my stock and you will get something useful -. . as well as ornamental. -. -- 113 QIASHWGTOtf STREET, THE-DALLES, OREGOfl SEWIIIG ex t SII6EB IU1ES HJ 33 T Ladies' and Childrens' French Felt Hats,.: Trimmed Hats, 25c. 50c.: AND UPWARDS. Ladies and Childrens' Furnishing Goods, "WAY DOWN.' Mrs. Phillips, - 81 Third Street. THE DALLES LUMBERING CO., INCORPORATED188a. No. 67 Washington Street. . . . The Dalles. Wholesale and Retail Dealers and Manufacturers of Building Material and Dimension Timber, Doors, Windows, Moldings, Boose Furnishings, Etc Special Attention given to the Manufacture of Fruit and Fish . Boxes and Packing Cases. Factory ancl Tnxm'bor T.rd Old 37t JJnlloai. 15 . 25 . 35 . 65 . ft . 10 . 15 . 2 . 4 Food for the Russians. Philadelphia, Feb. 6. At a meeting of the Russian fauain committee today, a dispatch was sent to Miss Clara Barton, of the Red Cross Society, saying Phila delphia would, February 15, ship 3000 tons of goods to Russia, and offering to transport all the grain that arrived be fore that date. It was also decided to sen4 telegrams to the governors of Iowa,1 Wisconsin,' Minnesota and Indiana, to send all the provisions they could con trol. It is expected the steamship In diana, which arrives in this port Febru ary 15, will be secured for the service. PRY Pine, Fir, Oak and Slab WOOD Delivered toy any part of the city, wasco waiciousB Co., Receives Goods on Stor age, and Forwards same to their destination. Receives Consignments For Sale on Commission. fates treasonable. -MARK GOOD W W- Oo.' THE DALLES, OKIOOS. Chrisman Bros., (Successors to F. Taylor. -: proprietors of the: CITY PRpT UNION STREET. HAMS, BACON and SUSAGE ALWAYS ON HAND.