THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1892. The Weekly Chroniele. OFFICIAL PAPER OF WASCO COT7NTY. Entered at the Postoffice at The Dalles, Oregon, as aecona-ciasa mailer. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. BT KAIL (POSTAGE PBCFAID) IN ADVANCE. Weekly, 1 year. 1 1 50 ' 6 months 0 75 . " 3 0 50 Daily, 1 year.: 6 00 " 6 months 3 00 " per " . ..- '0 50 - Address all communication to " THE CHRON ICLE," The Dalles, Oregon. THE IDAHO CAM PAWS. In the absence of anything at home interesting in campaign work, it may not be inappropriate to call attention to the vim displayed at the beginning in Idaho. The campaign opened on the Dart of the republicans at Sand Point yesterday, and our dispatches show that it was rightly opened. The point made tljat the peoples party is a part of the product of anarchism is rightly taken, and it is curious to know whether the farmers of this country are prepared to receive its dictation in the future, Farm strikes would indeed be some thing new ;' and they may be looked for if the third party succeed in placing a few anarchists in power. That is what it is intended for, beyond doubt. The democrats of Idaho are totally demoralized politically. There has ap peared on the scene in Idaho democratic politics a lot of political adventurers who have combined for the purpose of retiring the old party workers whom they term mossbacks. Such men as Hailey, Ainslie, Stevenson, Wilson and others who have sacrificed the best days of their lives in advocacy of what they term Jacksoniun democracy, have been eat down upon, and Tammany methods are to be Substituted. Certainly the friends of these gentlemen who have been so ruthlessly retired do not feel very sympathetic toward those who are in the combination. Then again the action of the recent democratic house in repealing the tariff on lead has not had a tendency to stiffen the backbone of those democrats who are Interested in the mines. It is predicted that they will make a very email showing when the polls are counted in November. THE LOTTERY POISON. There are three. mliarmbnibue factions in the Hawaiian legislature, and that aucust Lodv is hivinsr a' very- serious fp ' - time over the proposition of the Louis iana lottery comnanv. , A bill waB read in the legislature August 30th, granting an exclusive franchise to P. H. Cross, of Chicago ; S. W. B. Davenport, of St. Louis; and John Phillips, J. J. Will iams and Dr. Gilbert Foote, of Hono lulu, for a term of twenty-five years ; the company to pay for the franchise $500, 000 each year in quarterly installments. The minister of the interior is to dis burse this sum for the following pur poses : An ocean cable between Hono lulu and any port on the North Ameri can continent connecting with tne American telegraph system, $100,000 per annum ; a subsidy for the construe tion of a railroad around Oarra island of $50,000 per annum ; subsidy for a rail road through Hilo and Hamadua,$30,000 per annum; roads, bridges, -landings and wharves in the Hawaiian kingdom $175,000 per annum ; improving Hono lulu harbor, $50,000 per annum; en couragement of industries in the king dom, $50,000 per annum. If, however, the reciprocity treaty with the United States is abrogated, the last two items are to be applied to building drydocks, The last item is $2o,000 for the en curagement of tourists travel and im migration. The capital stock of the company is nxea at o,uw,wu, ou.uuu shares, which may be increased to $10. 000,000. The bill provides that two com missioners snail be appointed dv tne MIDWAY IX THE CAMPAIGN. queen at a salary of $6,000 per year to reside at all drawings or tne lottery. 'he grantees are to be exempted from all taxes and license fees and to have the use of the Hawaiian mails. The bill has created much disscussion, and thouch there is a strong opposition pre sent appearances favor the passage of the bill. It is reported that President fllll of the Great Northern has taken another important step. He has filed a notice of withdrawal from the western traffic association. This was not unexpected, as his contempt for that organization has always been evident, and his ulti mate withdrawal at a time when he was fully able to hoe his own row was regard ed as a matter of course. A glance at the railroad map and a knowledge of rate-making will show that the Union Pacific cannot remain a member and be hampered by the association rules when the Great Northern and the Northern Pacific are free lances. It is confidently believed that the Union Pacific will with draw this week. When this inevitable result occurs, there can be no further thought of continuing the association in its present form, nor in any other so far proposed. Chicago officials see no hope of any new agreement until the Great Northern and the Northern Pacific come to an understanding. Until then through traffic will go by the board, and every energy will be bent toward foster ing local business. It is gratifying upon reaching a half way station in the national canvass to observe that some of the most optimistic predictions concerning it are being entirely- fulfilled. Up" to the present, with but few exceptional instances, the batting has been right along the line of the main issue.- From coast to coast there has been abundance of ora tory and proselyting. Sir. Reid has his coat off and Is working as if he earned wages by the piece; Mr. Stevenson is scurrying hastily about in high-tariff districts; the presidential candidates are conducting - themselves discreetly, and Messrs. McKinley, Reed, Boies and others are directing the steam of their persuasive talk into willing ears. And everywhere this campaign, is "being lougnx intelligently, considerately, coldly even politely on the question of the tariff. Of personality there is but little; of blackguarding none . at all. The inevitable result of tins state of af fairs is that no voter need go to tho polls next November without a clear, -conviction 'as to bow he is going to vote and why. No flying rumor or belated per sonal diatribe should be able to deflect one degree the convictions made up in weeks of calm study of the situation. A. A. Brown, Keeio a full assortment of Staple and Fancy Groceries. and Provisions. which he offers at Low Figures. Lieut. Totten, the millennium crank of .Yale college, says in a recent letter: "The time will come when you hear of some person, it may be in your own family, who is gone and no trace can be found of them. You will wonder, and the first you know some other person in eome other fumTly will also be missing. Disappearances will become common, and no one caiVexplain them." If Totten will only inaugurate the move ment he Mill .receive the thanks of a long-suffering people. But, professor, can those who are to remain and do the wondering select the wonders? SPEGIfllt :-: PRICES to Cash. Buyers. Highest Cash Prices for Eis ana otter Prate. 170 SECOND STREET. A NEW Undertaking Establishment ! DRUGS Snipes & Kinersly, -THE LEADING- . ; Handled by Three Registered Druggists. ALSO ALL THE LEADING Patent (Dedieines ' and- Dfiiggists Sundries, HOUSE PAINTS, OILS AND GLASS. Agents for Murphy's Fine Varnishes and the only acents in mo kjiuj iui a iie oiierwin, wnrams uo. 8 ramts. -WE ARE- The Largest Dealers in Wall Paper.. Finest Line of Imported Key West and Domestic Cigars. Agent for Tansill's Punch. 129 Second Street, The Dalles, Oregon rtortb Carolina bad . made a about time distance between ments. Not one of the inhabitants of this country who has its best interests at heart will deny the justice of President Harrison's arraignment of the steam ship companies, which are still bringing immigrants from infected ports.' Mr. Harrison properly characterizes it as an outrage, and intimates that in case the offendini? comnanies nersist in it. we "may be compelled to turn back their ! party will carry pest-laden vessels." The particular of fender at the present juncture is the Hamburg-American company, which, knowing the freedom from taint en joyed by this country, has been sending over cholera-stricken - pilgrims from Hamburg, the very hotbed of the pest. If the officials of this line have not con science OT sense enough to slop this jeopardizing of i he inhabitants of this continent, they should be made to stop. By everv law of decency" they should not be allowed to bring any more infec' tion to onr shores. If they do not rec ognize this moral bond, Mr. Harrison will be justified in taking any measures in his power to . punish them for their infamous conduct. Gov. Tillman of South Caroliua, is said to be so earnest on the stump that he actually foams- at the mouth. This phenomena wouldn't bo so surprising if it happened just after the governor of remark refresh- Ignatius Donnelly savs the peoples Minnesota by 30,000 majority. This is on a par with his fearfully and wonderfully made Baco nian cipher, and should be accepted as gospel truth. I'RINZ & NITSCHKE. -DEALERS IS- Furniture and Carpets. We have added to our business a complete Undertaking Establishment, and as we are in no way connected with the Undertakers' Trust our prices , will be low accordingly. Remember our place on Second street, next to Moody's bank. : DEALERS IN: Staple and Fancy Ms, . Hay, Grain and Feed. KOEN. FRENCH & CO., BANKERS. TRANSACT A GKSEKAI. BAXKIXU BC81SESS In TheDalles, Sept. 15th to the wife of A. J. Friendly, a daughter. A Word for Wasco Vineyard. The East Oregonian has a theory that - disease exists in ratio to the ignorance - of the masses of the people. We be lieve that with the coming of universal intelligence and freedom, disease and pain will decrease until humanity is comparatively free from its ravages. 'The cholera scare of tho present time bears us out in this statement. The dreaded disease hails from the most poverty-stricken districts of the world, where the ignorance of the masses is more denso than anywhere elee on the face of the earth. Now look at the dif ferent ways of handling the disease, in telligently in America, and so lacking in intelligence in other portions of the . world. The fools may not all be dead, but thev are- killing themselves off at a lively rate. The latest is "Pretty Lulu Godfrey, a 16-year-old tvpe writer of San Jose, who killed herself yesterday for the following "gentle" reproof of conduct by her mother. She had been with a young man to witness a fire. Her mother met her at the door on her return, and in the preeence of the young man upbraided Lulu for remaining out so late. '"I have telegraphed your step father, and when he comes he'll thrash you till your flesh falls off," said the angry mother. The girl, overcome with grief and mortification, went to -her room and fired a bullet into her brain The mother is prostrated with grief, The affair has created a great sensatiou. as the young lady is well and favorably known among a wide circle of friends. ' Yesterday began what promises to be the best state fair ever held in Oregon. The exhibits are varied and complete and more fine stock is shown than ever before. The races also promise to be an excellent feature of the fair. But it is a question yet to be decided, whether any fair can be run successfully without the aid of a little home production printers ink. The East Oregonian cites as an in stance of what thrift and industry will accomplish in Eastern Oregon, the case of a farmer near Pendleton who came to that section nine years ago a poor man. He now owns 1,000 acres of the finest farm lands, not more than one acre of l-!t. : a e . m. .... wiucn is nnni tor plowing, mis is but one instance among hundreds in the In land Empire. Two thousand men at work along the line of the Great Northern west of the Cascades. The work on the big tunnel at the summit has not yet been com menced, but switchback is being built up the side of the mountain. Only about ninety miles remain to be built to join the two ends of the line, but as the unfinished portion is all heavv rock work, the road can hardly be completed before April. Everything used by the men and teams has to be freighted up on wagons from Snohomish, and costs enormous prices. Hay is $100 per ton, and potatoes 6 cents per pound, with other necessaries of life at similar figures, The regions now known as Wasco, Sherman, Gilliam, Grant and Crook counties were famous for their gold product forty years ago. And today the vast mineral belt which stretches east ward from the Cascade mountains to the boundary line of Oregon has just as many mines, and jest as famous for richness of its gold and silver-bearing specimens as formerly. The only thing is men are too busy to prospect. There are some very queer things found in the Cascade mountains. Near the summit of the range, east of Rose burg, were recently found porphyry boulders that so' closely resembled watermelons in size, shape and color, that it would puzzle an expert to tell the difference without putting his hands on them. The Yukon river, which is now navi gable for steamers of 14-foot draught for 300 miles, can, with very little improve ment, be made navigable for 1,600 miles. The region lying along the river is marvelously rich in minerals and is attracting much attention. - Can any region duplicate the quality of the grape crop of vineyards near The DaheS? Samples from Mr. Cushings from Seuferi 8, and from the Columbia river fruit company's Mill creek ranch, lead us to positively say, No. And this is the opinion of Professor Lorant, the French chemist, who is preparing Wasco fruit. for exhibition, at his room over A. A. Brown's store on Second street. The size of the Wasco county grapes is a wonder, but the size is not its only special recommendation The dry hilly soil of Mr. Cushings' place is proof that thia region is adapted to the production of grapes every wav superior to those of the choicest lands of California, or the more favored vine yards of France. The climate here is so dry, and. the freedom from fog so uniform, that all the grape has to do is- to grow and mature, and ripen - with all the desirable flavor and solidity for which the grape is noted under the most favorable circumstances. A simple test is all that is required to sustain these statements and while we regret our in ability to furnish the practical test to all of our wide circle of acquaintances, we take pleasure in the dissemination of the facts by publication so far as they go. and follow up the publication as much possiDJO witn tne samples, winch are sent to a few friends in Portland and Astoria, to let them understand that what Tiik Chronicle may say about Dalles fruit is equally as reliable as what may be said -for other abundant re sources of the Inland km pi re and an open river. - A Clam Bake. Letters of Credit Issned available in Eastern States. hi bight Exchange and Telegraphic ircuuiierssoiaon Jew I one, umcago, St. Louis, San Francisco. Portland Onwnn. Seattle Wash., and various points in Or egon and Washington. Collections made at all points on fav orable terms. Masonic Block. Corner Third and Court Streets. The Dalies.Oregon. HORSES rxl. 8- Yoang, BiacKSfluiQ & waooii Sfiop General Blacksmithinz and Work done promptly, and J. S. COOPER, Corner Barn, Union Stock Yards, Chicago, Illinois. The Largest and Only Strictly Commission Dealer in Horses in the United States. Commencing tL? 3rd of August and every month throughout the year will hold Special Extensively Advertieed Sales of WEST9RN RKNGE HORSES. RpfoM.ru National Live Stock Bank, Chicago, 111. iveierence . Cnicag0 Nationai Bankj Chicago, III. Write for Particulars. CHRISMAN & CORSON, all Guaranteed. work Horse Shoeeing a Speiality -DEALERS IX- GROCERIES, Flour, Grain, Fruit and Mill Feed. HIGHEST CASH PRICE PAID FOR PRODUCE. Tuiri Street opposite the old Lielie Stani An Astoria dispatch Saturday says 600 Odd Fellows and friends went, down to Flavel on an excursion that day. At Ealama they were joined by 400 over the Northern Pacific. At Astoria a few hundred boarded the boats. - The clam bake at Flavel was a feature, and ad dresses were delivered by leading Odd Fellows. Yesterday the - visitors at tended Portland churches, ana today a grand parade was held. The city is profusely decorated in honor of the oc casion, numerous arches spanning the leading thoroughfares. ' The sum of $64,000 which has been appropriated for surveys in Washing ton this year, while totally inadequate for the needs of the state, is remarkable, considering that the $35,000 set aside for Eastern Oregon has to be held up, prize like', to tempt people. A Chance For Protest. Telegram. Now is President Harri son's chance to manifest his interest in foreign affairs. The introduction of the lottery bill into the Hawaiian legislature gives opportunity for a first-class protest from this government. The lottery has been weeded out of this country because of its demoralizing influence. If it gets a foothold at Honolulu it will continue to prey upon Americans. Practically there is but little difference between the lottery being established at Honolulu and New Orleans. Kstray Mare And Colt.' A light gray inare, weighing about 1 ,100, branded on the left shoulder with an inverted "with a quarter circle over it, came to the premises of the under signed with a sorrel colt, about June 15th, near Nansene P. O. "Owner is i quesiea to caii ana prove property, pay charges, and take her away. J. T. Robebtso.v, Nansese, Aug. 8, 1892. 6.tw ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE, In the Connty Court of the State ol Oregon for In the matter of the estate of Abner B. Smith. deceased, notice is hereby given that the under signed has been appointed administrator of the estate of Abner B. Hmith, deceased; all persons having claims against said deceased are notified to present them to me, with proper vouchers mercior, itc uie onice oi ways, rtunungion at Wilson. The Dulles. Or., within six months irnm the date of this notice. Dntcd August 20th, 1S92. J. H. SMITH, Administrator. - 8.26wtl0.7 FARM FOR SALE. I offer for sale all or a nnrt of m v farm of 480 acres in Sec. 24, Tp. 1 south, range 14 east, 15 miles southeast of The Dalles : pood improvements, eood voiinc five-acre orchard now bearing, plenty of good water for house use and stock ; 175 acres in cultivation, good outlet north, east.south or west via county roads. I also offer for sale 160 acres in section 26, township 1 south, range 14 east; also five head horse, one double set of harness and a few farm implements, etc. Prices reasonable, terms easy anJ title good. For particular!) come and see me at The Dalles or J. H. Trout at the farm. jan29-tf E. W. Tboft. COR. WASHINGTON AND SECOND ST., THE DALLES, OREGON CLOUD CHP INN. Open f pom Jaly 1st to October? 1st. This picturesque hostlery, built of silver fir logs, and rooted securely on the edge of a precipice on the north side of Mount Hood is within fifteen minutes walk of the perpetual ice and enow of Eliot Glacier, 7,000 feet above the sea level, twenty-seven miles from Hood River, over the finest roads in the United States. Fare for the round trip $8.00 ; rates per day (3.50. The Table at Cloud Cap Inn is supplied with everything the market affords. Hot and cold baths, etc.. the best of guides will take vou to the tor of Mount Hood by the best practicable routes, which are from the Inn. W. A. LANGILLE, Manager. Washington fforth Dalles, Washingto SITUATED AT THE HEAD OF NAVIGATION. Destined to be the Best Manufacturing Center in the Inland Empire. Best Selling Property of the Season In the Northwest. For Further Information Call at tha Office of Interstate Investment Go., O.D. TAYLOR, ft Data Or. 72 f aslftOD, St., Maui Or.