C20 THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1896. Prom February Bthf 189, to Blarcli th, -7 -Genuine Bargains the order of the day. GREHT1 tHlTV PRY SM LE! Dress Goods. Our entire lot of 36-inch all-wool Tre cot, Fancy Mixtures, xfcc, embracing the most desirable shades and effects. Never sold for less than 50 and 60c; these are reduced to 25c. A fine assortment of all-wool Checks and Plaids, Wool and Silk Mixed Novel ties, &c goods that have found ready sale at 75c, 85c, $1 and $1.25; balance to close at a reduction of 33J per cent. ... Boucles . : . 60-inch Novelty Cape and Jacket Ma terial 5 pieces of the latest color combi nations. Regular value, $2; spec. $1.50. Eiderdown Flannels. Plain Pink; reg. 40c, to close at 25c. Tan and Grey Crepe Effects; never less The Weekly Ghronlele. TUB DALLES OBKGON Entered at the postofilce at The Dalles, Oregon, as second-class mail matter. Published in two parts, on Wednesdays and Saturdays. STATE OFFICIALS. Governor W. P. Lord Secretary of State HE Kincaid Treasurer Phillip Metschan Bupt. of Public Instruction G. M. Irwin Attorney-General C. M. Idleman . G. W. McBride Benators JJ.'H. Mitchell Congressmen jyy b.'euu''1 State Printer W. H. Leeds COUNTY OFFICIALS. County Judge. Geo. C. Blateley Bheriff. T. J. Driver Clerk : A. M. Kelsay Treasurer Wm. Micheil , , (Frank Kincaid Commissioners U.S. Blowers Assessor F. H. Wakefield Surveyor : E. F. Sharp Superintendent of Public Schools. . .Troy Shelley Uoroner W. H. Butts THE REDEMPTION LAW OF 1S95, A correspondent in the Oregonian of the 4th inst. calls attention to the fact that the new redemption law, as con strued by the supreme court, may prove a curse, instead of a benefit, to the debtor class. The law .was enacted in response to a popular demand for some meaeure which would alleviate the con dition of mortgagors. Prior to the ses sion of 1895 the owner of real property which was sold on execution, might re deem the same at any time within four months after confirmation by the court -of the sale ; the law of 1895 extended this time for redemption to one year. The constitution of the United States forbids every state from passing any law which would impair the obligation of contracts. The question was recently presented to the Oregon supreme court in a case in which the plaintiff claimed Ibat the law in force when his contract was made, giving four months' time for -redemption, was a part of his contract, tion the value of his security was re--duced, and therefore the law of 1895 impaired the contract. The supreme -court held otherwise, and declared the Jaw valid as to all mortgages, whether executed before or alter the law of 1895 went into effect. . The OregOLian's correspondent calls attention to the fact that this being a federal question, the decisions of the United States supreme court will govern. He cites several cases of that conrt which uphold the plaintiff's contention In the Oregon case referred to. If it is true j ' that the supreme court of the United States has held directly opposite to the supreme court of Oregon, those who rely npon the Oregon decision and allow more than four months to elapse before redeeming, may be left out entirely when the federal courts decide that his time for redemption expired at the end of four months. The contention of the plaintiff in the Oregon case recently decided,- is sup ported by the leading text writers on constitutional law, and it looks as if the suggestion of the Oregonian correspond ent that our supreme court has erred, and possibly to the great injury of some one, who may rely upon its decision, is apt. ' ' . - General Harrison has the wisdom and courage to say "No" to bis many friends, and there will be no more talk about his nomination. 4 The people of the nation respect . bim more than ever, and more than 50c, than ever feel that be would be a most desirable president. With General Harrison out of the race, the West will no doubt rally about Mr. McKinley. There is today no more able, honest, sensible, and in all reBpects American, than Mr. McKinley, -and his nomina tion will insure Republican success and a return to true American principles in the administration. The other aspi rants are good, but McKinley is tire best. The opening of the Cascade Locks, which event is supposed to be, very close at hand, means more to Eastern Oregon than is generally conceded. The Dalles will be benefitted more than any other city on the river, but the benefit to The Dalles will be great because Sherman, Gilliam, Morrow, Crook and Grant counties will also reap the benefit. Merchants in these various counties can purchase goods here, when the locks are completed, at as good, or better advan tage than in Portland. Merchants here have less rent to pay, and yet will have all the advantages of competition in freight rates enjoyed by Portland, and rates from the East will be the same as to Portland. With a good road, free of toll, into Sherman county ineured, goods can be landed in the southern portion of Sherman and Gilliam coun ties at about the same expense for haul ing as from Biggs, Grant or Arlington, and thereby the entire freight charge from Portland to those railroad points will be saved. The only advantage Portland will present will be the advan tage of a larger stock from which to select." As regards staple goods, this amounts to nothing. We hear it frequently suggested that The Dalles is the 6nly place to be bene fited by the opening of the canal. We insist this is a mistake; Moro, Grass Valley, Rutledge, Condon, Fossil, Day- ville, Mitchell, Antelope and Prineville, in fact all interior trading points at a distance from the railroad, will be di rectly and materially benefited, and consequently all producers in those localities will feel the effect, both as to prices of their products and their supplies. The opening of the canal means more to a very large section of Oregon and Washington than any com mercial event in our history. It is stated that the United States treasury has 350,000,000 ounces of Bilver etored in its vaults and yet it is borrow ing money to meet running expenses. What is the matter with selling this stuff which our senators from Nevada, Montana, Utah, Idaho, and one-half our senators from Oregon admire so much? If any one of our three banks in this city were compelled to borrow gold to keep running, and yet had a propor tionate amount of that Bilver bullion stored in its vaults, they would be re garded as poor financiers and unfit to run a bank. Perhaps Mr. Carlisle has overlooked this way out of the bole he The city council has done the tax payers of the city a most excellent ser vice during the past- year in reducing expenses. If a like saving could be made in the administration of school district and county affairs, there would be a perceptible reduction in taxes next year. We can do very little in the way of reducing state taxes, but school and county affairs are in our own bands. They should be- so run that our aggre gate "tax next year will.be materially less. now 35c. Fancy Tufted Eider-. down, stripes, in popular light shades:; regular 80c yd, sale price, 50c." Underwear. v Our entire stock of Woolen Under wear in all grades and sizes, AT COSTj broken lots at half price. All-Wool Hosiery. Child's and Misses' Ribbed ; rest. 20c, reduced to 10c ; Ladies' Fine French Ribbed Cashmere; regular 600 reduced to 35c. Ladies' Fine French Plain Cashmere, reg. 60c, red. to 40c Ladies' Fine French Plain Cashmere, reg. 50c, red. to 35c." Ladies' Heavy Ribbed, regular 40c, reduced to 25c. ' '; Ladies Heavy Ribbed, regular 35c, reduced to 20c. Ladies' Heavy Ribbed, regular 25c, reduced to 15c. "' . . . Special . . . 1 case Child's and Misses' Black Rib bed Cotton Hose, seamless, " Hermsdoif ." dye, guaranteed fast black; only 5c pr. :' Men's Extra Superfine Merino Half K. THE RISE IN WHEAT. The recent sudden and unlooked-for rise in the price of wheat may benefit the speculators, but we believe it will prove a curse to the men who raise the wheat. In the first place it occurred after nearly all of the crop of 1895 had passed out of the hands of the farmers, and almost none of them reaped any benefit from it. It adds another temp tation to the producer to withhold his crop from market in anticipation of a rise. In a large majority of cases the holding is a direct loss, by reason of a falling market, and the .loss on account of interest, insurance and storage is al ways larger than the farmer counts. As a rule the producer who has his crop early in market and sells promptly, re alizes more out of it for himself and his creditors, if he has any, than he who holds in anticipation of a rise. The recent rise in the price of whea was due to speculation and not a legiti mate demand, and already the market is falling in Chicago. The convention of Republican clubs at Portland made a wise eelection in the officers and delegates which it elected. Judge Carey, the president elect, 'is clear headed and clean hearted. Pos sessed of unlimited energy, sterling in tegrity and most excellent judgment, he is the man tor the important posi tion to which ho was chosen. The executive committee is a good one. The delegates to the national league conven tion are representative men. And so far as the organization of the party is concerned, it was never so well equipped, and its prospects for success in this state were never so bright. The governor . of this state has no longer the power of pardon. Whenever he attempts to pardon a criminal the secretary of state vetoes the ( pardon until the pardoned person or some friends pay His Royal Kincaid the sum of $2 for affixing the state seal to the certificate. The fact is that the state Is pretty much controled by the aforesaid secretary of state, and a large part of the revenues of the state government, as now administered, find their way into his capacious pocket. Senator Mitchell would do well to call off his friends. The senator is popular and will, no doubt, be re-elected to suc ceed himself. But a convention held for the organization of tfife party and the election of delegates to a national league convention is not the place to ad vance his interests. A little of the at tempted booming like that which was disregarded in Portland Tuesday, might prove serious. ' Dr. Wallace has resigned and is going to Chicago. "His experience in Oregon mining speculation has fitted ''him for Chicago life. He will there have wider field for service and a larger sal ary. He will no doubt ayoid in the future quarrels with the family of bis broker, and thereby' lessen his useful ness in his new field. In the meantime Oregon will have to become degenerate. Article XHIyof the constitution of the state provides as follows : Section 1 The governor Bball receive an annual salary of $1500. The secretary of state Bball receive an annual salary of $1500. The state treasurer shall receive an an nual salary of $800. They shall receive no fees or perquisities whatever for the performance of any duties connected Hose; seamless; extra good at 15c, re duced to 10c. Men's Dark Grey Mixed All-Wool Half Hose; special value at 20c, reduced to 12c. '. Ladies' Grey All-Wool Knit Skirts; regular $1.50, to close at $1.00. Special Attractions In our Neckwear Department. 24 dez. Stylish Tecks, good variety of shades and patterns; the best value ever offered at 25c, during sale only 15c. Misses' Cloaks. One and all at half price; sizes 4 to 14. Don't delay buying, as they cannot possibly drop any lower. Ladies' Capes and Jackets At half their regular prices. Every M. MILLfflMS with their respective offices. Not even the supreme court of Oregon could find an excuse for holding section 2337 of Hill's code com pat able with article XIII of the state constitution. It provides in substance as follows : The fees of secre tary of state shall be as follows: For certifying and affixing the eeal of the state to any document or paper, $2; for mailing copies of records, etc, 25 cents per folio ; for filing articles of incorpora tion, $2.50; for recording, etc, 25 cents per folio. The - supreme court might hold that this statute does not app'y to the judicial department of the govern ment and therefore decline to pass upon it, but a man of ordinary common sense would say that the legislature could not have intended that the secretary of state should retain these fees, even if he is al lowed to collect them. We wonder if the judges of the supreme court are liv ing in glass houses. THE BOND ISSUE. The appeal to the nation for a popular loan is now unquestionably a success. From East and West and North, but not from the South, come countless bids for bonds at a rate which will make the rate of interest not to exceed three per cent, It demonstrates that there is not such a shortage in the circulating medium as our statesmen from the plow fields would have us believe ; it demonstrates the fact -that hundreds of millions of gold are now seeking a safe investment at a low rate of interest; it indicates that if investors were assured a fair re turn and a safe enterprise, there would be no want of funds in this country for business purposes; it demonstrates that the North, the East and the West have entire confidence In the stability and integrity of our government, and that ourjaction is not dependent upon Wall street syndicates. Last, but not least, it indicates that the next administration, which will be Republican, will. Bee to it that the revenues of the government will be proportionate to the expendi tures, and popular, or other, loans will soon be a thing of the past. Two hundred millions of bonds will be the legacy of the Cleveland administra tion to the McKinley administration; but that administration will be entirely competent to take care of them and in time pay them off; and at the same time set the wheels of industry all over the land to humming. The county court is proposing to do a very wise act in reducing the number of justices of the peace. Much expense is caused the county by justices of the peace who work for the fees there .may be in the work. It is safe to say that more than one-half of the civil cases tried in justices' courts leave both par ties poorer at the end of the litigation than before, and every appealed case involves the county in greater or less expense. . A large part of tbg criminal business of the justice of the peace is of no benefit to a community. With fewer justices there will be fewer justice court cases and a very considerable sav ing to the county. If the whole justice court system could be repealed and the essential portion of it given to the county court, there would be a saving annually of more than sufficient to pay the salary of the county judge. ' Four justices are quite enough to do the business in Wasco county. Subscribe for The Cdboniclb and get the news. garment correct in shape, correct sleeves, correct in price. We have one or two of those very stylish 26-inch French-made Beever, Box-front Reefer Jackets, two rows buttons, half-satin lined, strapped seams; Black only; a splendid value at $15; sale price makes them $7.50. We have cheaper ones in proportion. Our last two very nobby Child's Jack ets, 4 to 6 years; perfection of style; reg ular $6.00 sale price, $3.00; regular $6.25, sale price, $3.15. Lack of space will riot permit us to give you more than an idea of our Great Reduction Sale. Every article of Winter Wear greatly reduced; some lines going at cost and others at half price. Call and be convinced. It is very fortunate for all the aspir ants for the presidential nomination that J. C. Burkes of Moro refrained from expressing to the Oregonian reporter a positive choice. It would be too bad to have all the fun and excitement of the national convention destroyed, and" its work done so long before hand. Dr. Brown.the Congregational minister of San Francisco, is strongly supported by his family and a small majority of his church members. Whether guilty or innocent of the offenses with which he is charged, both he and his wife have convicted themselves of being fools, Whether there is greater sin in being what the doctor concedes he is, or in be ing guilty of the alleged offense, we canr not judge, and we are glad we do not have to. Being either, unfits a man for any pulpit, and the doctor will serve the cause of Christianity best by ceasing to serve it at all. Wealth does not always shield the guilty. Dr. Duestrow, a St. Louis mil lionair, has just been convicted of mur der in the first degree for killing his wife-and child. It requires more than money to fool an ordinary jury or sway the ordinary judge. A Delay Almost Criminal. The branch asylum question drags its slow length along. Meanwhile the num ber of inmates to the single state asylum at Salem keeps increasing, until the poor unfortunates are crowded together almost like sheep. This condition makes it well nigh Impossible for those who" are insane primarily from nervous disorders to ever get well. Two or more are placed in a single email room, even in the more violent wards, and there is constant danger of one patient 'abusing another. Another difficulty is that in the present over-crowded condition of tbe asylum every available cell inust be utilized. Hence if it happens that a peaceful ward is more crowded than a violent one, the peaceful inmate, per haps a convalescent, is thrust amid the noise and turbulence of the violent ward, and it does not take a great length of time to render the patient as bad as the rest. It is altogether probable that no asylum in the United States is as crowded as the one at Salem, and there is urgent demand for the construction at once of the Eastern Oregon branch asy lum. The latest dispatch from Salem shows that the same circumlocution which has been going on for two years is yet in effect. Following is the dis patch from Salem : "Since the iast decision of the supreme court, reversing the judgment of the lower court in restraining the state board of commissioners from locating a branch asylum in Eastern Oregon, there has been more or leES talk as t why the constitutional question has not been passed upon. - Though many prefer that the board should proceed with the build ing, others are determined to have the court commit itself more definitely on the power of the legislature to locate the institution away from the seat of government. The latter have not yet evolved a definite plan, but the state ment is warranted that a rehearing will be asked or a new suit begun." . Ayer's Cherry Pectoral is known by its works. The experience of half a century proves that no other prepara tion of the kind stops coughing and allays irritation' of the throat and bron chial tubes bo promptly and effectually as this. S CO Dr.PIERCE'S Golden Medical DISCOVERY Cares Ninety-eight per cent of all cases of Consumption, In til Its Earlier Stages, Although by many believed to be incura ble, there is the evidence of hundreds of living: witnesses to the fact that, in all its earlier stages, consumption is a curable disease. Not every case, but a large per centage of cases, and we believe, fully gS percent, are cured by Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, even after the disease has progressed so far as to induce repeated bleediags' from the lungs, severe lingerins; cough with copious expectoration (includ ing tubercular matter), great loss of flesh and extreme emaciation and weakness. Do you doubt that hundreds of such cases reported to us as cured by " Golden Med ical Discovery " were genuine cases of that dread and fatal disease ? You need not take our word for it. They have, in nearly every instance, been so pronounced by the best and most experienced home physicians, who have no interest whatever in mis representing them, and who were often strongly prejudiced and advised against a trial of ' Golden Medical Discovery," but who have been forced to confess that it surpasses, in curative power over this fatal malady, all other medicines with which they are acquainted. Nasty cod- ' liver oil and its filthy "emulsions" and mixtures, had been tried in nearly all these cases and had either utterly failed to bene fit, or had only seemed to benefit a little for a short time. Extract of malt, whiskey, and various preparations of the h vpophos phites had also been faithfully tried in vain. The photographs of a large number of those cured of consumption, bronchitis, lingering coughs, asthma, chronic nasal catarrh and kindred maladies, have been skillfully reproduced in a book of 160 pages which will be mailed to yon, on re ceipt of address and six cents in stamps. Address for Book, World's Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. Durur's Population to Increase. Dr. A. Deitrich of Dufur left this morning for Wisconsin and Indiana on a colonization scheme. This kind of work is a favorite with the doctor, who practi cally settled tbe Nebalem valley some years ago with a thrifty population of Germans, who have made that section busy and prosperous. Though Dr. Deitrich has reaped little benefit person ally, he has benefited the common wealth greatly by his work in this line. For some time past the doctor has been in correspondence with acquaintances east, maturing in the present trip east. Tbe colonists he will bring or who will follow him will settle around Dufur, buying in great part improved and deeded land. Advertised Letters. Following is the list of letters remain ing in the postoffice at The Dalles un called for Feb, 8, 1896. Persons calling for, the same will give date on which, they were advertised : . Brown, Walter Lowyer, Jas E Brown, Alden Lockwood, W It Canfleld, J H McBride, Mr Cannon, O McDonald John (not Friedman, J L 107) Hall, P P Moore, Lewis Jurech, Syman Moore, M A Kirtzel, Pacil A Steward, Geo' Lefrage, Robt Smith, Miss Belle Todd, A Wood, Uladdis J. A. Ckossen, P. M. If hair has been made to grow a natu ral color on bald heads in thousands of cases by using Hall's Hair Renewer, why will it not in your case For Sale. Silver-laced Wyandottes chickens ; good layers, especially in winter. Fine table fowl. Eggs per thirteen, $1.50. A few young Cockerels for sale, $1 each. lebo-lm Mas. A. A. Bonny.