THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY,- FEBRUARY 19, 1896. RETIRING from Business. LET EVERY REPUBLICAN TAKE A HAND. j one Object; ONE ONLY, and . V ; That of turning the stock into money, DRY GOODS, &c, CLOTHING, &c, FURNISHINGS, &c Ladies', Misses', Gents', .Boys Childs' Boots, Shoes, Slippers M. Honywill. The Weekly Chronicle. IUK 1IALLK3 - OKKGOM Entered at the postoflice at The Dalles, Oregon, as second-clu-ss mail matter. PublMed in two parts, on Wednesdays and Saturdays. STATE OFFICIALS. Governor W. P. Lord Secretary oItato H R Kincald Treasurer Phillip Metsehan Bupt. of Public Instruction O. JI. Irwin Attorney-General C. M. Idleman , (G. VV. McBride Senators jj. n. Mitchell IB. Hermann Congressmen W. B. ElUs State Printer W. tl. Leeds COCNTV OFFICIALS. County Judge. Geo. C. Blakeley Sheriff. T. J. Driver Clerk A. M. Kelsay Treasurer Vv'm. Michell (Frank Kincaid Commissioners ! A s. Blowers Assessor F. H. Wakedeld Burveyor E.F. Sharp Superintendent of Public Schools. . .Troy Shelley Coroner W. H. Butts CONTINUE THE GOOD WORK. As spring opens, among the topics that will be brought np for the consid eration of the people of Wasco and Sher man counties will be the matter of the Rattlesnake road. Through the efforts of ope or two residents of Sherman connty, aided by enterprising business men of The Dalles, this project was put under way and funds subscribed to in eure its completion. Most of the grade up the east bank of the Deschutes has been completed, and the work done gives promise that the grade, when fin ished, will fill every need which caused its construction. From the top of the hill direct to the Grant and Cross Hollow road the route lies through an uneven country, over which, it is said, teams loaded with wool could not pass without difficulty. From the summit of Rattlesnake hill, extending in a southeasterly direction, lies Gordon ridge, a well-known land mark in Sherman county, upon the summit of which a road of light grade could be built, intersecting the Grant Cross Hollow road immediately west of Moro, and providing a direct route to the Deschutes river for teams from Prineville and places far to the south. Traffic from these points, which crosses the DeBchutes, -is now compelled to travel the tell road, to obviate which condition the construction of the new grade was agitated. At the time the Rattlesnake project was discussed it was understood, and the matter so represented to the business men of The Dalles, that this road along the Gordon ridge would be built and the full benefits from the construction of the Rattlesnake road be obtained. The opening of the road mentioned would enable the wool and freight wagons from Crook and Grant counties to reach the Deschutes over a smooth road of gradual descent, with no toll to be ex acted, We are informed that only by the building of the Gordon ridge road -will the full benefit of the Rattlesnake route be reaped. For this reason we trust the matter will be urged with all possible speed, Sherman county is in terested In securing every possible means of communication with this city. The opening of the locks means that The Dalles will be more than ever the wholesale supply point for the country south and east, and good roads, mean less freight rates, and as a result better prices for the products of the farmer and stock-raiser, while their necessary sup plies will be furnished them at cheaper rates. public estimation. The republicans, with few exceptions, supported the mo tion. Indignation will be turned, not so much against the democrats who op posed the motion through principle, as against renegade republican senators like Duboise, Teller, Jonos of Nevada, Carter and Power of Montana, and others of tber ilk. These men, by placing selfish interests above consideration for the nation, have prostituted the high and honorable position of United States sen ators and made it a term almost of re proach. Never in our history was statesmanship in the senate needed more than now, and never, seemingly, was there such a lack of it. By con trast the house of representatives is surrounded with a halo of excellence. A PROPER USE OF WEALTH. In yesterday's Oregonian a most re markable statement was made in an editorial, where it was declared that the reason the charter for a certain secret society, asked for by students in the University of Chicago, was refused, was because scrupulous-minded persons de sired to avoid fellowship with colleges like Chicago and Stanford Universities, "which are sustained with money ac quired in corruption and dishonor, and bo disqualified to hold up the highest standards of moral and ethical culture." Such a statement will wound the sensi bilities of many people who, as admirers of the Oregonian and friends of that higher education of which the Chicago and Stanford Universities are in the front rank of promoters, feel that much injustice is done them. It is true that the methods by which Rockefeller and Stanford acquired their immense wealth are questioned by '"scrupulous-minded persons;" but this being granted, the institutions which have been the recipients of their generous gifts are no less qualified to do a great and lasting work in showing bright boys and girls the boundless op portunities for advancing and doing good to the world, which the fields of knowledge present. Were such logic as that of the Oregonian correct, all rich men, who by sharp practice have ob tained wealth, should be prohibited from dropping in the contribution The house has spent a day. discussing Secretary Morton and hie refusal to pro vide seeds for free distribution. The seed question itself is not of paramount importance, but in ik is involved the graver consideration whether or not a minsterial officer can exercise legiela tive or judicial functions. The attack both hi the senate and the bouse, upon Morton, and the refusal of anyone to take his ' part, shows that congress tired of having the veto power placed in the hands of subordinates. The coun try welcomes the seed incident as a re lief from the senseless and reprehensi ble action of the silver agitators, whose buncombe and manipulation have so cpnsumed time that the great interests of the nation are neglected. There seems a disposition among cer tain newspapers to view every incident from a bitter partisan standpoint. An illustration is found in the treatment given Senator Coggswell and the com ments made upon the announcement of his determination to leave the Demo cratic party and support the principles of protection. Coggswell is not the highest type of statesmanship which even Oregon affords, but the most cred itable act of his political career has been his latest. A man, no matter what his station and politics are, should be given credit for proper motives till the absence of them is clearly shown. No one should be condemned for honestly changing bis opinion, matter how firm that opinion may have been fixed. Coggswell has done what thousands of other men in Oregon are doing, who by the sharp touch of adver sity have been brought to realize what a devastating thing the Democratic pol icy of free trade has been. When the sun rises on the day after the Novem ber election it will be found that Cogs well is but one df a vast number who, Democrats once, are Republicans now. With the subsidence of war talkthe dropping of Durrant into obscurity and the reiusal of Chauncey Depew to be interviewed, enterprising newspapers have been forced to go to the Arctic circle in order to feed a curious public. No fishier tale was ever sprung upon an unoffending people than thejtwo reports, basket as it passed a tithe for charity or coming from points as widely separated for the carrying on 'of religious work I as the Missouri river and the Pacific The rise in wheat and its continnance at a satisfactory figure has caused plow ing to be begun with expectations of good returns. While the conditions justify a belief that the harvest next season will bo large and the price better than it has been since the slump of two years ago, yet the farmers .should re member that it is not wise to put all their eggs in one basket. Wasco county can. raise other things beside wheat. Diversified farming represents progress and offers better inducements for pros The defeat of Morrill's motion to take tip the tariff bill in the senate Thursday will still further reduce that body in the which teaches that the getting of wealth is not the chief end of man. Were this logic correct, the great benevolences, which can only come from the class rep resented Jby Stanford and Rockefeller, would cease, and the asylums, hospitals and schools, which every day are doing a grand work for humanity, would suffer for want .of sustenance. It is results that count, after all. Union College, one of the older institu tions in New York, was founded upon a land lottery scheme, a method that per sons "scrupulous minded" would con demn, and yet some of the purest, most high-minded and ablest citizens of the country were graduated from this insti tution, whose birth was in corruption. Were the history of our greatly endowed universities unfolded, and the methods by which their founders amassed their fortunes laid bare, it is more than likely the Oregonian would be further dis pleased. Johns Hopkins, who made possible the great university and hospi tal bearing his name, dabbled in Balti more & Ohio railroad stock, and was spoken of in much the same way as Rockefeller and Stanford are today Stephan Girard, whose munificence gave to Philadelphia an institution whose name and influence is world-wide, made money where other men could not, and suffered the reproach and condemna tion of those who were not so fortunate as he, and yet the world is infinitely better off because Hopkins and Girard, unable to bart with their money in their life time, left it for philanthropic and educational purposes. It is better that a portion of the Standard Oil Company and Central Pacific earnings be devoted to causes that are good than that it be turned in other channels; - Whatever the reason why the Omega society was not given a charter at Chi cago may.be, we do not know; but every college and fraternity man will be assured that there are many causes which are far more apt to be nearer cor rect than that given by the Oregonian. ocean, that Nansen had found the pole and was bringing it back with him. The public will stand a vast amount of bumbuggery and relish if, as the late Mr. Barn u in was wont -to declare, but there are instances when newspaper en terprise can be carried top far, and the Nansen incident is one of them. There is merit in Fitzsimmons' query to Governor Ahumada when, after watching the disemboweling of three or four horses in a bull fight, he asked him if fighting with gloves were anywhere near as brutal as what he had just wit nessed. Without wishing to disparage the Mexican authorities in their lauda ble attempt to thwart the wishes of the sluggers, we cannot help thinking tiheir inconsistences are certainly ingenuous. Bad as a slugging match may be, it is notuing in comparsion with the Mipular diversion of a bull fight, neither in its brutality nor demoralizing effects. The Mexicans are straining at a gnat and swallowing a camel. The meeting of the Republican cen tral committee will be held next Satur day, at which time the date will be chosen for the doultty convention and the call for the primaries issued. With this action of the central committee the political campaign actively opens.' The convention will probably be held the last week in March or the first one in April, as the meeting of the state con vention, April' 9th, precludes a later date being chosen. The time is ripe for the Republicans of Wasco county to be up and stirring,' making every endeavor tjiat the men chosen at the primaries shall be repre sentative Republicans, who will go into the convention carrying with them a deep concern for the welfare of the party, and not bound to any clique or fac tion, which will feed the flames of party dissension. The Republican party in Wasco county was never, in better favor with the people than it is today, at the entrance into a campaign which, it can be! said, will continue until the great November election. The men who two years ago were elected to 1U1 the county offices, have brought no discredit upon themselves or upon the party, and whether they be chosen again or new candidates nominated, no apologies need be made for the county management since the last election. At the primaries the battle will be fought, and the entrance of the sena torial fight into the situation will make the contest a very sharp one. Upon the men selected at the primaries depends the future .i the party during the com ing campaign. I he almost certain vic tory to which the Republicans look for ward may cause a lukewarm feeling and carelessness upon the part of the voters in the organization which might result in a serious handicap later on. At the primaries the people are given an op portunity to make an expression of their choice. The delegates selected should be men who will guard well the trust committed to them and start the party on a victorious march. Every Republi can should participate in the choice of delegates to the county convention in order that the best representatives may be chosen. A healthy interest shown in the party before the nominating con vention is a good guaranty that its fu ture course will be a satisfactory one. The Salem bog must give way to the Russian , bear. Not content with mo nopolizing things in Turkey, the czar has made a coup d'etat and marched 200 marines to Seoul, Corea. The king is under the protection of the Russian le gation. Were it not that his services will be needed, in the coming Mitchell- Do ph senatorial fight, it might be well for Judge Denny to resume his position as confidential advieer to the Corean king, and try and straighten things out a little. Pendleton has developed a great ca pacity of acquisition. She has just been chosen as the place far holding the an nual tournament of the Eastern Oregon and Washington Firemen's Association which takes place next June ; and is threatening to win from Walla Walla a meat packing and cold storage establish ment, which was contemplated being started there. In many ways Pendle' ton is a good example for other cities to follow. The agitation which is being carried on for a reduction in letter postage can' not be expected to bear fruit till after March 4, 1897. There are already enough deficits in the Democratic ad' ministration without another being caused in the postofBce department V ith the enactment oft a tarin measure that will revive the business of thecoun try, and at the same time provide a suffi cient revenue for the nation's needs, one cent postage may find realization. What The Dalles needs is the intro duction of outside capital to bring out resources now dormant. In commercial lines we are fully developed, but are in want of the stimulus given by manu facturing. Nowhere can better oppor tunities for the establishment of almost any kind of industry be offered than, at The Dalles. An article upon this phase of the city's needs in last even ing's Mountaineer meets with our full approbation. When i comes to work ing for the advancement of our city, the two local papers will work: as a unit. By all means let the Fitzsimmons Maher fighttake place in London. Eng land can haye the disgrace and America will regain some of the gold'she has lost during the period of export. It not only is so, it must be so, One Minute Cough Cure acts quickly, and that's what makes it go. Snipes-Kiner-ely, Drug Co. But little over a year remains till the Democratic administration . goes out of power, it is to be hoped enough bonds have been sold to tide them over this period. Skinning; the Coon. The Dalles, Feb. 15, 1S96. To the Editob : I have read Representative Coon's communication in your issue of the 12th instant wondering.the while, if it could, .ossibly, have emanated from the quiet, unassuming young man I helped to elect to his first term in the Oregon legislature. My ! what a rich vocabu lary of Leasean, Tillman, Populistico rhetoric he has acquired since then. What a preternatural instinct for nosing out "rings," "gangs" and "combines!" Nay, what supernatural vision for dis covering the shining eagles drop reson ant into the upturned palms of "the yelping bloodhdbnds of the hireling press." Lucky it is, my countrymen, that hard words break no bones, else the osseus fabric of these "yelping bloodhounds" would be ground by this young Hurcules into dust impalpable as the stuff that dreams are made of. What is Mr. Coon driving at, any way? Is his letter a vindicution of him self and the other twenty-nine "legisla tive highwaymen?' Alas! they are un happy, . indeed, both in the vindicator and the thing vindicated. Was there not a caucus? Was not Mr. Coon not to speak of the.other twenty-nine a member of that caucus? Did he not pledge himself over bis own signature, in palpable black and white, to enter that caucus-and abide by its decision? Nay, back ofall this, did he not repeat edly avow to his constituents, while the campaign was pending, that he would support Mr. Dolph because he be Iieved that gentleman was the choice of his constituents? Nay, back of all this still, was not the campaign of 1894 a battle-royal between the economic and financial theories of Dolpn-Republican-ism and' the outlawry, free trade and free silver heresies of Pennoyer-Popu-lism? And when the latter was burled to the limbo beside the moon was not Senator Dolph, morally, as much en titled to reap the fruits of the victory, by succeeding himself, as if his name had been on the. election ballots? So acted and spoke Mr. Coon, and so thought and expected all men, of every shade of political opinion, everywhere, from Maine to Oregon. Nay, so spoke a:i men, everywhere, while the battle was pending, and so was Mr. Coon sup posed to speak and hold, else be never would have warmed a second seat in the Oregon legislature. Nay, so do his con stituents still speak and hold, so that it is a perfectly safe prophecy that be will never warm another. What means, then, this sudden eruct ation of accumulated bile? this angry, frothy, jargon? this aimless recrimina tion of Mr. Coon? "this whimpering as of an infant that cannot speak what ails it, but is in distress clearly in the in wards of it, and so must squall and whimper continually, till its mother take it and it get to sleep?" Clearly the future troubles Mr. Coon no less than the past. Nay, more ! For from out the murky shadows rises the vision of -the legislative session of 1896. And Oh ! Horrors! Dolph is there. The same o!d "icicle" that the "thirty bighway mea" melted in 1894 to the beating of Populist torn toms and uproarious mu sic from Jonathan Bourne's free silver cornet band. And the same old "ring" that "we give the most beautiful thresh ing it ever received in Oregon." All there. But Coon is not there, and the "thirty highwaymen" are also conspicu ous by their absence, and the righteous soul of the Hood River statesman trem bles for the ark of God I But as the pri mal digits ("thumps up") of the "Port land ring-master," in the vision of Coon, point vertical toward the gilded dome of the capitol, the. voice of the Hood River statesman, solitary, thundering, pierces the murky shadow To arms! "The war is already begun. Are we cattle or are we men?" Nay, Brother Coon speak for thyself. Men are generous and cattle, at least, negatively so. - Nei ther will conspire in secret Star Chamber of "Professional American Citizens" to stab men in the dark! What then art thou? As for us, some of us, at least. are men who believe that promises are not like dicers oaths, made only to be broken, and that when the heads of our representatives become so abnormally swollen that they willfully scorn the be hests of their constituents, it is time to sequester them in perpetuity to their primeval Btrawberrv patch. For the rest, an infinitely worse calamity migb befall the commonwealth than the elec tion of Dolph. The nation would, in that event, have one "highwayman' less in the national senate no trifling consideration at this particular juncb ure the republican party an able expo nent and unflinching advocate of its best thoughts and principles, and the state a representative whom it has al ready weighed in the balance of experi ence and has not found wanting. Hugh Gourlay river from that point without first ex pending thousands of dollars in the way of clearing the bed of the stream of ob structions, building splash dams, etc. Now, Mr. Editor, I will say to you that Hood river Is not, and never was a practical driving stream, and never will be without it is first largely improved, the statement of some of Hood River's wiseacres to the contrary, notwithstand ing. I have tried' to drive Hood river myself and invariably came out at the little end of the horn. I have also seen others driving the aforesaid stream, and they also complained of being forced through the same small aperture. Whenever you meet a man that is en thusiastic in his desire to drive Hood river in her present condition, you can safely set him down for a tenderfoot. Cord wood, in considerable quantities, has been driven, or rather carried, down, from fifteen or twenty miles at one time," but it was five or six weeks in transit. and was in a deplorable condition when it arrived at its destination. Respectfully, Linn Winans. Antelope New. Ijt Reply to Sir. Parker. Editob Chronicle: As a counter irritant, to this powerful emetic gratuitously administered to the honorable county court of Wasco county (emanating from some of Hood River's sensational citizens,) I beg leave to state a few facts and figures. At present Hood river is "flowing un vexed to the sea." If Mr. Parker, or anybody else sees fit to float timber ot any kind down Eaid stream, he or they are at perfect liberty to do so for the simple reason that be, nor no other man can handle cordwood in Hood River val ley at $2 per cord on board cars and have any margin left, and if the H. R. L. Co, had their boom in place right now, and would run and boom his 2000 cords for 10 cents per cord, I believe he would not avail himself of such an offer with cord- wood at its present price. Mr. Parker adroitly cites yon tc the timber twenty-four miles up the river (mostly owned by speculators) and inti mates that had it not been for the grant ing of this lease, that tfmber would be available now, tor commercial purposes. At the same time knowing, as he cer tainly must, that that particular body of timber is hermetically sealed and of no practical value for commercial purposes without the completion of the proposed improvement of Hood river, by which time it is supposed the county, court takes control of rates. As to there being 'not much good timber short of twenty- four miles," the man simply makes a very large mistake. Others, who have seen that country, will say there is 20,- 000 acres of from fair to good timber short of the twenty-four mile limit, and tributary to Hood river. It would be just as sensible to talk about getting those logs to the front from that twenty- four mile limit, with a cant book, over land, as to talk about driving Hood W. Bolton of Antelope is in The Dalles this week as a member of the grand jury. W. D. Jones has rented his property here and has moved to The Dalles, where he will reside in the future. Alex. Kirchheimer has returned from Portland, where he went as a delegate to the meeting of the Republican clubs. Mrs. Wm. Kelsay is quite sick with erysipelas. A messenger arrived late Thursday night with a dispatch to W. J. Hinkle that his niece, Mabel Carter, was dan gerously sick at Salem, where she has been attending school. Mr. and Mrs. Hinkle leit the same night for Salem. Their friends hope to hear 'of Mabel's speedy recovery. Married, at Antelope, Thursday, Feb. 13th, by bis honor, Judge Keaton, Miss Mary Wackerly and Mr. John Young, both of Bakeoven. The weekly prayer meeting was held thursday evening at the residence of W. Bolton. A goodly numher was present and much interest manifested. The Antelope Dramatic club is prepar ing to give "Uncle Tom's Cabin" March 6tb, at Masonic hall, for the benefit of the brass -band. Considerable interest is felt here in the caae of the State of Oregon vs. D. McKalvey, for the larceny of hay. Mc- Kalvey lived on a rented farm and fed out an undivided stock of hay to his o.wn stock and the stock of his landlord. It is not generally believed that any crime or wrong was intended. Hornettb. SlOO Reward 100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a consti tutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Core is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of tho system, thereby destroying the foun dation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the con stitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that .they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address: F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. QF"Sold by Druggists, 75 cents. "The Reradator Line - fie Dalles. Portland and Astoria Navigation Co. THROUGH Mc ioni na FtssengerLine Throneh Daily Trips (Sundays ex eepted) between The Dalles and Port land. Steamer Regulator leaves The Dalles at 7 a. m., connecting at the Cas cade Locks with Steamer Dalles City. Steamer Dalles City leaves Portland (Oak street dock) at 6 a. m., connect ing with Steamer Regulator for The Dalles. PAHHKNUKR RATES. One way Round trip. .J2.00 . 3.00 Freight Rates Greatly Reduced. All freight, except car lots, will be brought through, ivith out delay at Cascades. Shipments for Portland received at any time day or night. Shipments tor way landings must be delivered before 5 p. m. Live stock shipments sohcted. Call on or address, W. CALLAWAY General Agent- THE-DALLES, OREGON