THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONIQLE, FRIDAY, AUGUST 12, 1892. GLADSTONES' SPEECH. Thelmse Has Kow Met. But wnat Foif' Tiie Queen's Speech. THE RETURNS ON THE GREAT ISSUE. Must the Battles of the Past Six Years be Again Fought Over? A VKBDICT AGAINST GOVERNMENT Valfour Followed Gladstone In n Speech JBnt It Hal Not Yet Been Repotted. Minor Topics. ' New York. Auk. id In the Louse of Commons yesterday, Gladstone began Lis speech against the government. He said the government had departed from precedents in not resigning when the verdict of the country was against them. The houso had now met, but what for? The queen's speech told them nothing. Was the house of commons to fight the battles of the last six years over again? Never had a great issue submitted to the country been so fully discussed as the issue decided at the last enthusiastic general election. Turning to the matter of home rule, amid loud cheers from the Irish members, Gladstone said the claims of Ireland had been for years the forefront of the battle, and that the position he held, and the principle of his home-rule bill were pretty well known By the provisions there would be a full and effectual maintainance of imperial supremacy, while Ireland would be giv en conduct of her own affairs. He en tertained no doubt about the duty of the liberal government in the event of rejec tion of the home-rule bill. Its rejection would not terminate their duty. Bal four followed Gladstone in a speech. The Scene of the Sixties. Long Creek Eagle. The Sloan & Has kell mine on Elk creek would now re mind one of the scene of the GO's. When they reached the .spot where O. C, Cresap had taken out a pile of gold in the early days they were compelled to move their entire apparatus to some dis tant spot up the creek. While this task is being performed they have put their force at drifting in the old claim r t . . . i yi iormeny. womea Dy pxi. vresap, in v wmcn it is oeneveu taere is unknown -quantities of gold yet. " It will require the remainder of the season before, thev will be prepared to. run. the hydraulic, therefore a force of men will be kept at work'drifting the remainder of the year. Just So Here, Klamath Star. The new-mown hay, dead loads of it, is coming in now, and the fragrance thereof wrestles with all . the sweet odors of the gardens; and comes out on top every time. If ' Shakespeare could come back to life and walk upon this sweet mountain a while, his new poetry, all redolent of our hay fields and flower gardens, would put its soft charms around the necks of our soft hearts and hug, oh ! so tenderly. Klamath's great hay gar dens are turning out great, sweet crops this season, and every flower garden looks as pure and innocent as a married man at a picnic. Money in New York. San Fbancisco, Aug. 10. The sub treasury train from this city reached New York at 10:40 a. m., yesterday, on time and without any hindrance or ac cident. The amount transferred was 124,500,000. Second assistant Post master-tienerai Jeu was on nana to re ceive the treasure, and drawn up in the enclosure were fourteen mail wagons, bix cars containing tne gold were switched back to a siding and the work of unloading began. The wagons were soon filled with their precious load and on their way to the sub-treasury on Wall street. The Weather Bureau. Portland, " Aug. 10. Reports for Eastern Oregon crops eay : "Wheat is being harvested steadily and will be a fairly good crop, except in some por tions of the northeastern counties. Oats are doing well enough. Corn would be improved somewhat by a little rain. The weather conditions , that have ob tained during the last seven days have been, as a rule, favorable to vegetation in nearly all sections of the state and were all that could be desired for har vesting purposes." v Republican Prospects Flattering, Moscow Mirror. The Idaho republi cans stand a big chance of carrying the state by a large majority. One of the counties giving the largest democratic majority is nnder martial ' law, and the leading democrats are. either in the guard house or in jail,, charged with murder or other crimes. A Decided Dampener. n m mi a ' pathy expressed by the . democratic press for Private lams received a sad dampener when it was learned that Col. Streator is a democrat. '' - I Sax. Fbancisco, Aug. 10. June. 1st Paul Rehm anil August Hermanos, natives of Germany, who have been em ployed as mechanics in the Guaymas railway shops in Mexico, left here to re visit their native village in Germany. When they reached New York, they re ceived letters from home urging them to return to Mexico, and warning them that they would surely be arrested un der the conscript laws, and be compelled to perform military eervice. . Kehm, however, decided to take his chances, and started for home, after having ad vised his mother that he would remain at home only one night. In a letter from Saxony it appears that Kehm pas sed through Belgium on his way to his native town. Arriving there at mid night, he remained until four o'clock in the morning conversing with his aged mother, and then left at once for the Belgian frontier, but was arrested on the train when only a few miles from the border. The offense charged against him was for avoiding Germany military service. - Bow i it Done East. In the Buffalo Courier, of August 6th there appears an official circular ad dressed to "All parties interested in navigation and in the construction of the harbor of Buffalo," issued by MajRufliier of the United States En gineers' office which reads as follows: "The adopted project for the work on the outer harbor of Buffalo contemplates an extension of the main breakwater of 800 feet more to the present structure. Then the sand-catch pier is to be ex tended to 16 feet of water, and an arm 2,800 feet long, will be built so as to lap the south end of the breakwater, leav ing an opening 150 feet wide for an exit The funds now available can build all this work except 350 feet of the break water and 800 feet of the shore arm. near that structure. When this is done the outer harbor would be practically secure for piers and wharves. An expression of your views is requested at your ear liest convenience." The circular is headed : "Now is the time to express your views on Harbor Construction." Parlies interested in an open Colum bia river would be most happy to see some such circular as that issue from Maj. Handbury, of the United States Engineers' office, informing us by the heading that VNow is the time for yon to prepare your bids for the completion of the Cas cade Locks!" , Strike Near Olive Lake. The year of 1892 is in some respects similar to the year 1862, in the region of The Dalles, -relative to mining discoveries. It has been a good year for .prospecting, and a great many "grub steaks" have been delving into the bow els of the earth, some of which show very promising results. The Eagle re ports that one of the richest gold discov eries ever made in Eastern Oregon was made near Olive lake by Jack Coyle and B. H. Bennett. They have run two tun nels in only a short distance, when as says were made, showing up $114 ore in the upper tunnel, and $2,457 ore in the lower. The figures were received from ore taken from the ledge near thesurfacej and is quite likely that when greater de velopments Lave been made," a better grade of ore will be discovered." The Last Day for Fishing. In a communication to The Chron icle, commissioner Geo. 1. Myers says: "Will you kindly warn all fishermen that the salmon fishing season of 1892 will close at 12 o'clock midnight, August 10th. Any devices, of traps, wheels nets, etc., found operating during the closed fishing season will be dealt with the full penalty of the law. I have notified all parties I know of, that are fishing at this time, and have also notified the prosecuting attorney in each county to take notice of the fact." Teachers' Institute. Remember- the teachers' institute August 22d. Two of the best instruct ors in Oregon will be here Profs. J. H. Ackerman and Frank Rigler, of Port land. President Bloss, of the agricul tural college, will lecture the evening of the 23d. State Supt. E. B. McElroy is expected one evening. A fee of fifty cents per week, half the usual amount, will be charged teachers, to help defray expenses. Board for teachers at re duced rates. The Fillibusters. lie view. Among the historical relics to be exhibited at the worlds fair is the chair occupied by Thomas Jefferson when writing the declaration of Independence ; the table on which it was signed ; the silver inkstand used on that occasion ; Jefferson's sword ; his thermometer and lock ot his hair. Yet a democratic majority in congress was pig-headed in opposition to doing anything for the fair. Jeffersonian democracy is evidently on the wane. ' Mr. Albert Owens is a prominent young larmer near V innebago Uity, Minn. He spent hundreds of dollars in endeavoring to recover from nervous prostration, and a year ago was so low that a report or his death reached the editor of the Winnebago Press News. An obitunay of Mr. Owens appeared in that paper, and was read by him. While in this condition he began taking Miles' restorative remedies, and in a short time he was a well man. Says he never felt better than now. , A POLITICO-SETBACK. Tie Peoples Part? as an Ally to Soutn ; . era Democracy. THE BUCHANAN-TURNEY TRADE. An Experience Which Will Drive New Party Men Back to the Old Times. NOT A BOOM FOB GENERAL WBAVER Matters are Shifting Around to a Proper Appreciation of the Mass of Voters. Chicago, Aug. 11. Adolph FraMf, the central! figure in the organisation of the peoples party, has returned from Alabama where he took an active part in the late contest. He says the hopes of destroying either old party are wan ning. To an Inter-Ocean interviewer he said : The result of the election in Ala' bama is far from encouraging to the people's party, and it gives a particular ly sharp setback to Gov. Buchanan of Tennessee. The' governor had with drawn from the contest for the demo cratic nomination, leaving the field clear for Peter B. Turney, but it was under stood that he wonld make an independ ent race, with the endorsement of the people's party, in which event the state could scarcely be kept in the democratic column. The overwhelming defeat of Mr. Kolb in Alabama, however, may give Gov. Buchanan pause. He will think twice before venturing upon a race which may end in crushing disaster. And if the Alabama failure of the peo ples party shall serve to damp the en thusiasm of Gov. Buchanan in Tenessee will it not equally and in a similar way affect the dissentient democrats in the other southern states? Will it not tend to check defections and encourage waverinsr members of the new party to return and renew allegiance to the old organization? The Alabama election was certainly not a boom for Weaver. The Nigger In the Woodpile. Ochoco Keview. This begins to look as if the hope, of the people of the Inland Empire for an open Columbia river was to he blighted, or at least that several years may be required before the gov ernment can determine just what is to be done before a contract will or can be let.; It is certainly an unfortunate af fair to have work oh this great and much needed public improvement suspended for even a day. And it is disheartening to think that the men who framed and passed the river and harbor bill did not know enough to plainly state the facts so that the secretary of war and his "able" corps of engineers could under-. stand the meaning of the appropriation, and the provisions for letting the work by contract. There have been so many hitches about the improvements at the cascades that people generally, have : for a long time been thinking that there was a "nigger m the wooapue" somewnere, and that some of the so-called friends of opening the river are insincere, and are not working for the removing of the ob structions to navigation of the river, but to detain the work as'much as pos sible, and thereby advance the interests of the railroad company which now al most has a monopoly of the carrying trade down the Columbia. Patronize Home Dealers. Eugene Guard. The buggy peddlers, mentioned a few days since,, have ar rived and we understand are working Lane eoivnty for all there is in it; Farm ers and all other residents of this county should bear in mind the . experience of former years in buying articles from transient agents. Our home dealers in variably carry a better selected .stock and at lower prices than yon can buy them of the traveler when the question of lasting utility is taken into considera tion. Always patronize your home deal ers, for it is they who share the burden of taxes with you, and maintain a home commerce, without which towns and cities, with .their manifold advantages in the way of education and progression, could not exist. v' - The Banner Line. Ochoco Review. r The trip from Prine ville to The Dalles over Branner'a line, via Bakeoven, is made in two days, while on other lines it requires three days. Fare on Branner's line from this place to The Dalies, $7.50, round trip $14. Denver Is Thronged. Dknvek, Aug. 9. Over 250 trains, loaded with passengers, have arrived in this city wfth comparatively little con fusion, since Saturday last, and it is es timated there are 100,000 strangers in the city today. The Magnates' Line. Telegram. President Clark and Jay Gould are whipping the streams-of Idaho, and Jim Hill is employed with his line which is pushing across the state of Washington to the sound. . . -H A Curtis Prediction. 'Astoria Herald.: It is reported that Messrs. Goes and Scbofield are interested in Ihe Tanzy Point property and that it is their intention to make that the term In liS of the Astoria and eastern railroad. There is no JoSbtbtit the .machine shops will be located at that point and that the bnlk of tha shi n.??1 be done n - i from there nrvnn a a iha nlot-of rTa i VVH "W -feUW 4 4 V V V U M built Just what effect this will have on Astoria cannot be determined, but if there is no hitch in the programme the Herald ventures the assertion, that in less than two years, Tanzy Point will have a larger population than Astoria Sanlisburys Policy. Uregonian. Lord Salisbury has the courage to meet a hostile majority in Parliament, but not to proceed with legislation in lace of it. His failure to resign probably means that he wants to force Gladstone to take the initiative by an attack npoa the government. He may think Such an attack will betray the weakness of the heterogeneous and disorganized force, with which Gladstone must work, more folly than negative opposition to a government measure. How not to Build a Town. Oaksdale Sun.. The Spokane Chroni cle wants to blame the dullness of Spo kane on the republican party and cites it as an example of our prosperity. The trouble with Spokane and many other places is that such papers as the Chron icle are all the time howling calamity and hard times, and as these things do not exist in other sections, people are not very anxious to flock to a place that bids them come to starvation. Irrigation in Crook County. Prineville News. Wm. Dunn has brought the waters three creeks to his desert spring ranch through eleven miles of ditch carrying 150 inches of water. The ditch was only recently completed, but by its use Mr. Dunn will be enabled to harvest the' second crop of hay from his rye field, which, he says is well adapted to irrigation and is now showing a better growth than during the season of the first crop. Called the Wrong Turn. Athena Press. It is reported that I. O , Jacks, who left Athena a few years ago and became an enthusiastic Tacoma-- ite, has been very unfortunate of late and has lost most of his property on ac count of the hard times, brought about by the reaction of the boom and the scarcity of money. His many friends here will be grieved to hear of his mis fortune. ' . Pendleton Wheat Market. .kast Uregonian. .- .No regular prices have -been jeatablished . Sor ; new.: wheat, and but. .few transactions have- taken place j The grain differs greatly in qual- Uy rand.the price ranges all the way from .forty- to fifty-six . cents a bushel Indications are. that when the market settles quotations for No. 1 wheat will be 55 to 60 cents. - Hard to Shoe. Chicago News. The ' Jollet Republi can calls Charles A. Dana of the New York Sua "that grand old democratic war horse." He may be, but the train' ers didn't break him well. He is a sort of a man-eating stallion, and awful hard to shoe. Current Topics. Gen. James B. Weaver", the people's party 'candidate for president, arrived in San Francisco. ' There ' was a mass meeting of the people's party at the mechanics' pavilion, and Gen. Weaver was among the speakers, of course. There is nothing new in the hunt af ter the train robbers ' and murderers. Sheriff Kay's posse are all in the field. All hopes of capturing the bandits are growing beautifully less. They have taken to the mountains and will prob ably be able to defy and evade any force sent against them. Jessie Gough, the 9-year-old daughter of the county auditor, at Dayton, Wash., was very seriously burned Sun day afternoon while playing with some children at a bonfire. Her clothing ig nited and she ran through the yard. She was with difficulty caught by Mrs. Bailey, who threw a comforter around her and smothered the flames. From the serenity that prevails in the neighborhood of Buzzard's bay, we judge that the bluefish are biting vora ciously. A Kansas paper says Senator Peffer has already elected Grover Cleveland, but. as we are informed, he has not yet inaugurated him. A Chicago paper says scientific men agree that the recent hot spell was due to the western prairies, being afire with enthusiasm for Harrisou and Keid. When the railroad to Jerusalem gets into operation it will be fun tar see how the Turkish government will wrestle with the rullman car porter problem. The poet who wants "the sweep of the wild, wet weather" needs only pa tience. He will get it some day when his umbrella is. missing.-. Why are po ets so impatient? - In Chicago habitual criminals locked in the police stations and brought - into the police courtB are now in danger of coming in contact with small boys who are. so depraved as to go swimming in the lake. GARFIELD PARK CASE. A Legal Contention Which Needs laiM Adjudication. IS POOL SELLING . GAMBLING, Constitutionality of the Illinois Statutes Applicable. A VITAL QUESTION LEFT OI'E.N That Horse Kaoe Gambling Is a Common Law Crime is Not a Matter of Grave Doubt. Chicago, Aug. 11. The whole United States is more or less directly interested in the now celebrated Garfield Park case. The decision of Judge " Baker amounts to this : "Pool-selling, book making, or in other words betting on horse races is gambling. The amuse ment licenses of the city all provide that no gambling shall be allowed in the places licensed. Therefore, belting on races being gambling, the mayor cannot issne a license for an amusement where admittedly gambling is to be carried on. Upon this ground the mandamus asked ior by the Garfield Park club is refused The court : declined to pass upon the constitutionality of the statute of 1887, The statute prohibits pool-selling and book-making in general, but by a pro vision tacked on at the end excepts from the prohibition fair and race-track in cisures during the time of the meeting of the association operating the same. But while the court did not .declare the law unconstitutional it held that the law did not repeal the criminal code wherein is forbidden gambling, which, according to Judge Baker, embraces betting on horse races. In the absence of proof to the contrary the court assumes the law of 1887 to be constitutional. This leaves open the really vital ques tion : Did the legislature have a right to license gamblers within race track en closures nnder any circumstances and conditions? If horse-race gambling is a common-law crime, as are murder and theft, the legislature did not have that power.' That horse-race gambling is a common-law crime is. not a matter of grave doubt. But there was no issue before the court which involved the question of whether pool-selling is a crime. Therefore there was no express decision on this point- It is now pro posed to have a test case which will de termine this question. This legal con tention is perhaps . well enough. The law needs adjudication. But it is to the discredit of the' mayor that, with law and ordinances on his side, be per mits the Garfield park track to remain in operation. 'The policy of. Mayor Washburne is to let the place run and see if the law is strong enough to close it. A courageous mayor wonld shut up the place and let the gamblers hunt for authority to reopen it. Prick's Assailant. . Uuiro, III., Times. Considerable in terest in the attempted assassination of Frick was revived here this afternoon by the publication that Bergtuann is really Hermann J. Orwartz. Orwartz was an eccentric Russian Jew, who came here from Chicago, small in stat ure, with an irascible temper that kept the office in trouble for two weeks. He had a swarthy complexion, black hair that bung in a mass of curis, wearing a Prince Albert coat and a very dirty shirt. . He smoked cigarettes constantly and claimed that he had once been ban ished to Siberia for political offenses. Ho also claimed to have been officially honored for conspicuous bravery at the time of the yellow fever epidemic in Jacksonville, Fla., and in proof of this exhibited a red cross medal and a di ploma signed by Clara Barton. He was an avowed nihilist and his descrip tion and that of Frick's assailant are almost identical. Race War in Oregon. Oregonian. Chief Peo, of the Uma tilla tribe, sat down in u colored boot black's chair at Pendleton and demand ed a shine. The negro, who evidently thought his dignity would be compro mised by blacking an Indian's shoes, indignantly refused. " Chief Peo talks fair English,, but he had' to fall back upon his native tongue in order to ex press himself. That portion of his re marks fit for publication might be trans lated about like this: "I've had my shoes blacked by a white man in New York, I Btopped at the best hotel in Chicago, and you're too black for me." This did not fully express his indigna tion, and he returned, after pacing off several steps, to remark : "You're only a black son of a gun anyway 1" The assassin Bergmann is addicted to the cigarette habit. Comment is un necessary. It is said he substituted a dynamite cartridge for the cigarette, at the time and attempted to commit sui cide by exploding it with his teeth. This, it is believed, is the first time on record that an anarchist's law ever went back on him. . ' THE PLOT THICKENS. Is This One of the Knotty Things Major Handbury Was Looking for? J Yesterday's Oregonian contains this "innocent-appearing" dispatch from Washington: EIGHT 1I0CUS A DAY. The navy deportment has about de. cided to advertise for bids for tbp con struction of the Puget sound dry-dock. A telegram from Brannigan, the low bidder, from Seattle, states that he can give all tho bonds required if be ia awarded the contract, bat the new eight hour law which is . in force, has deter mined the officers having the matter in , charge to readvertise. This new law prohibits the officers of the government from awarding contracts to any person who purchases material of any kind from any person who does not have in force, in his business, the eight-hour system. All government contractors will have to be bound by that, law now, and it might mako a material difference in the course of constructing the dock. The same law must be observed on all government work, including the locks at the cascades and the Portland public building, when work begins on tlmt. ' now IT WOBKS. An act of congress, approved Auguat 1st, provides that no officer or agent of the government in cbargeof any govern ment work shall require or permit airy- man employed upon such work to labor more than eight hours per day, under penalty of not more than $1,000 fine nor more than six months' imprisonment. The act does not apply to contracts let before its passage. In the caso of the government steamer Cascades, employed in towing rock from here to the jetty, and in many other cases, this law, which appears to have been framed es pecially for passage in the year of a presidential election, is going to inter fere with the progress of work, and cause it to cost a great deal more than originally estimated. The law does not say that 10 hours' wages shall be paid for eight hours' work. A l'ortland Youth. Portland is the home of the boys and girls aid society, but judging from the Telegram last evening, Portland is so busy looking after the children of her neighbors that she does not observe the neglected ones at home. The Telegram thus describes a Portland youth smoking a cigarette "in violation of law:" "To day a small boy, not to exceed 8 yean of age was observed smoking a cigarette with a great deal of relish. He was a regular street Arab shoeless, costless, dirty, and ragged. . . An old broken, bleached, dilapidated straw hat bnt meagerly. shaded-his sun-burned and freckled face, while there was a gener ally tough and slouching air - about this uyenile exile from home and moral in fluences. It was somewhat amusing to see this little gamin take a package o cigarettes out of his pocket, carefully pick one out and replace the bunch; then to witness the cool nonchaleace with which he took a match and struck t on the leg of his trousers, and pro ceeded to ignite the cigarette and puff away as big as life." The Dalle All a i'ark. How to appreciate the beauty and health-giving qualities of The Dalles surroundings, is sometimes difficult to the man whose occupation pins him - down to a daily routine. But an occa sional paragraph like this, from a Chi cago paper, brings with it a realizing., sense of the noble situation of a home which, like The Dalles, is all a park. The Chicago News says : "It is at such times as these, when t)ie mercury in the thermometer rises to the top of the glass, that people realize the full value of the magnificent parks of the city. At all times tho parks are beautiful. . They are in cheerful contrast to the granite-paved, iron-spanned streets of -the business quarter. They are incom parably more beautiful than the most beautiful residence streets. But while they are thus attractive at all times they do not assume a true utilitarian as pect save when a breathing place is not only desirable, but absolutely neces sary. There can be little doubt that. during the last few days the parks have done very much to keep down the death rate. They have done much for the health of the citizens that the doc tors could not do, learned and efficient as thev are." ttchool Taxes Due. School Clerk J. M. Huntington ha officially notified the taxpayers in Dis trict No. 12 that taxes will be delinquent after the 15th. Also that the board ot directors of said school district wiM sit as a board of equalization at the office the school clerk on Wednesday. Thursday and Friday, August 10th, 11th and 12th, 1892, at which time all com- plaints as to wrongful or unjust assess-, ments must be presented. The board will positively refase to hear any com plaints or make any correction after the said 12th day of August, 1892. Reports from Venezuela show that an archy reigns throughout the republic. Many of the petty leaders are collecting: small armies and are fighting each other -for the purpose of self-advancement. The whole country has been pat under anas.