C2J THE DALLES WEEKLY CHKONICLE, WEDNESDAY. APRIL 28. 18S7. Ths Weekly Chronicle. STATU OFFICIAXS." . Sjrernot Secretary of State . . . . ...W. P. Lord H K Kincaid Treasurer. Phillip Metschan Bant, of Publlo I as traction G. M. Irwin Attorney-General. Braators.. ........ Congressmen.. 8 tata Printer..... .C. M. Mleman G. W. McBride "" f J. H. Mitchell i a nermann ....... jw K E1Us -....'....W.H.Leeds COUNTY OFFICIALS. Count? Judge..... Btieritt Clerk.. .-. Rnbt. Mays T. J. Jjnver A M. Kelrai ...... C. L. Phillips Treasurer. Commissi oners. . Assessor........J J A. B. mowers " D. . Kimsev ...Vi. II. Whipple Surveyor j. a. ioi Superintendent of Public SchooU. ..C. L. Gilbert uoroner W. H. Butte SCOTT, THE RIGHT MAN. We learn, but not from the Ore- sonian. that Hon. H. W. Scott is now in Washington, for the" purpose : of .urging the seating of Corbett. It is quite proper that the chief train-wrecker should be on hand to look after the plunder. The gang patterned after the farmer who dis covered ' the boy in his apple tree They first throw, grass, J. Thorburn . Ross and Wallace McCamant, then dirt, Tony Noltner, and now thev are trying the effect of a pebble in Har- Tey Scott. ' Mr. Scott goes back to convince the senate that the legislature did not meet and '. that, therefore, the governor had the right to ap point the senator. His words' ought to have weight He can tell the senate, none better, why it did not meet. He can tell it that in the col umns of the Oregonian, ihe great paper of the Northwest, he thundered forth the fiat, "When Mitchell is out of the way the Ore gon legislature will meet, and not before." He can tell it ; that he as editor of the Oregonian, , bronght that paper's great influence to the aid of Joe Simon, whom it has repeatedly pronounced a "boss." He can tell it that be joined hands with Jonathan Bourne, whom he pro nounced a traitor to the Republican party, to prevent the legislature meeting. He can tell it that he took the Populist members to his heart and coddled them as his first-born to persuade them to avoid their bounden duty. He can tell it that . he boiled the slate convention and fongbt the regular Republican nomi nee for congress Ellis, for no other . reason than-that the indorsement of that gentleman, would prevent his attacking Senator Mitchell's position. lie can tell it that he and others in veigled a decrepit old man to open his purse and squander his money in the pursuit of the will-o'-the-wisp, honor, in the foul swamp of politics. - He can tell it that he was the David who gathered the soreheads from all parties at his political cave of Ari el uilam. He can tell il that moved by blind hate of Mitchell he has, in season and on I, fought that gentle man and his friends, for eighteen years. He can tell it that he under took to pull Mitchell down eighteen years ago. that he might step from his prostrate body into his seat in the senate. He can tell it that there is no depth to which he will not de- scend,no scheme of political treachery ' which his ears will not drink in gladly, no assassination of Truth for which the dagger of his pen is not plucked forth, no follj too foolish to allure him on to the accomplishment of the one insatiate desire of his dis appointed heart the destruction of Jonn H. Mitchell. If his statements are not heeded by the senate, let the Corbett gang send on its other leaders. Let it forward Joe Simon - and Jonathan Bourne, U'Ren. Barclay, Bilyeu and all that host of noble patriots who disgiaced civilization at Salem. Let the senate, in its capacity as a jury, look upon the faces of the witnesses, and then seat Corbett if it can. A GENTLE AMUSEMENT.- The gentle science of boxing, or the manly art of self-defense, which ever form you prefer, has received another set-back at San Jose, Calif ornia. ; . . ; Frank Evans and Matt Semichy, two gentlemanly representatives of the dainty gentlemen who pummel each others mugs on scientific prin ciples for a consideration, met before the San Jose Athletic Club a few days ago to debate the question as to which was the better man. . The argument lasted through all the stages of that kind of pleading. There was the complaint presented with the right hand of one, the de murrer filed on bis antagonist's nose by the other, then followed in quick succession the answer, the reply, the rejoinder, the sur-rejoinder, ihe re butter, the sur-rebutter and the pleas in continuance. ". During the four teenth Semichy advanced a forci ble argument that struck Eves on the point of the chin, and the Rub sequent proceedings interested bim no more. He fell like a log, was carried from . the ring and in a day or so took passage with old Charon into the land of shadows, where, let us hope, armed with , the cestus, be may box the happy hours away with some or virgirs men or miguiy prowess. . '.' 4 Evans is dead, and will remain so for a long time. The debate was in some respects expensive to him, but just think what a good time the crop-haired gentry had all for $5 apiece. What thrills of pleasure must have chased themselves up and down the spinal columns of that crowd of noble men, as they saw the insensible form of the defeated le-r Later carried out of the blood-stained ring. And yet the brutal legislatures of every state in the Union have de clared this gentle amusement un lawful. LIVING GREECE NO MORE." It is classic ground the modern Greeks are defending from the Turks, as the ancient Greeks might have de fended it against the Persians, had not the Thessalians played them false. The plain of Thessaly was the garden and battleground of historical Greece, like Belgium in Europe, Here alone was space enough to make wide farms and move great armies. It fed Rome with wheat and saw - the greatest battles of bis tory. ; Thessaly was the fairyland of mythical Greece. ..Peneus drains it. It is entered through the lovely vale Tempe, cleft by Poisedon and cele brated by Greek poets from Anacreon to Walter Savage Landor. Olym pus, Pelion and Pmdus mount them in and overshadow the plain. The Salambria is the ancient Peneus, and the Gulf of Volo is the ancient Pa gasae. From here Jason sailed with his Argonauts and Achilles led his Myrmidons to TrOy. Thessaly was the home of the Eacidae. Silver footed Thetis had a temple there and Chiron nourished the goddess born in the caves' of Pelion. This plain was the stage of many world-dramas of history. Xerxes crossed It, with connivance of the Thessalians, on his way to Thermop ylae, end retreated across it after Salamis and Platea. On it Cynos cephalae, twice famous in battle, saw Thebes victorious and Philip of Ma ccdon crushed by the Roman power. One and a half centuries later, and only a few miles away, the fate of the Roman world -was decided at Pharsalia. Caesar's 5 legions came through ' the Pindus passes, where Turks and Greeks are now struggling, to meet Pompey's eastern forces on the plain between present Larissa and the Gulf of Volo. Two thous and years later Europe and Asia are in combat on the same ground. Seventeen years after Pharsalia, the young -Octavius, defeated Mark An thony and Cleopatra off Aetium, which is the very point from which the Greeks have been - bombarding Prevesa. The old Ambracian gulf became Antony's Bay of Actlum, and is now the Bay of Aita, separating Thessaly and Epirus. Land and sea here reek of battle memories like the low countries. , Glorious traditions cluster about Thessaly, but cold-blooded ethnolo gists insist that the modern Greets have small right to claim their inher itance. These Greeks can be Hel lenes only in name. . Fifteen centu ries of political servitude and social chaos separate them from the pure race the Romans found, spared and preferred. But after the Romans came Goths, Serbs, Huns,' Bulgars barbarians who ravaged Greece with fire and sword and enslaved the sur vivors, mingling their blood with their own. After these came Nor man and Italian crusaders, Venetian and Florentine merchants, and finally five centuries of slavery to the Turks. Not less than ten of these fifteen centuries were times of such grinding and mixture of human material as destroys all continuity of race. ; Un der the Roman and Eastern empires and the feudal monarchies of the Crusades the Greeks lived and reared families, though . in political slavery, But Goths, Bulgars and Turks re- garded life and domestic tie3 ho more than if dealing with beasts, Greeks of purest strain were ravished as slaves, and all of ambition and en- ergy sought relief in exile. Proba- bly the purest Hellenasnow are those whose ancestors never saw Hellas, Only the dregs of the native popula- tion remained to mix with the low- est of successive waves. of invasion and produce the hybrid race now battling under a Danish king in the name of Hellenic traditions. Schol- ars think that probably this race is nine-tenths Slavic' If . so, it might be well content as a member of a Balkan confederacy under Russian protection Oregonian. THE POSH PUSHES. The Corbett push is It, is in the fight j to win.; It has nothing to lose, every thing. to gain, and it is ; working the racket for all there is in it. It has sent J. Thor- burn Ross. Wallace McCamant, Tonv Noltner.'and his accidency, the gov- ernor of this state, the last named gentleman being the. last to go, to the front." They are attacking the prop osition on the cumulative plan, and they have about reached their limit. Scott might ' easily represent the devil, and Lord the deep, deep blue sea. " . ' ' Between the two, Corbett is liable to lose his reckoniug. Th j governor can ipdorse Scott, and Scott can lend credence to anything' the governor might say. By each other's kindly aid each " may. be able to prove an alibi. Scott can prove he was not in Salem by Lord; Lord can prove by Scott that he didn't do a thing until the legislature, which never met, ad journed. They can prove by each other that Lord's message to the leg islature was delivered to the Orego- nian, and in consequence' that paper imagined it was the law-making power of the state. . It still has that idea, but it is mistaken. . There remains Simon, and back of Simon loom up the shanky Bilyeu, the oily U'Ren, the prayerful Bar- clay,, the infantile Jones from Sherar's Bridge. These should be called in. Edmunds and Hoar and Cullom, Al- lisonl Vest, and the balance of the light weights of the senate who need information, should have something weighter than Scott and Lord. Our own only J). IN. Jones is, tl.e man. He weighs 250 pounds, and is as reti- cent as the shades of Hades. By all means let Jones of Sherar's Bridge be added to the list. It may be pensive, but Corbett pays.the freight, The Democratic wing of the Cor- i i a . i ? . . j mi 1 Deu pusn is again in evmence. iuis time Salem furnishes the material in the person of Ahasuel Bush, who goes back to Washington to shed more light on the senatorial proposition. Bush has the proud distinction of having been sat upon by Cleveland and afterwards picked up by that gentleman, a brand from the burning, a scrap from the waste basket. He and H. W. Scott ought to "fix Cor-' bett plenty,' and we think they wilL "ine pusn; nas yet tne uoiquitous U'Ren, the versatile Bourne, the pic- turesque Barclay, the amusing Bil- most of the passengers to escape drown yeu, besides the general job-lot of jng Had the accident occurred forty the Salem solons. There is still the feetfartherahead.it is probable every Hon. F. N. Jones of Sherai's Bridge, per80n 0B the car wouid have really "the: Digest man of the lot," drowned, as ' the Twater is. fifteen feet who ought not to be overlooked, and deep.' ' k - who weighs - sixteen ounces to' t.he Commencing with May 1st, the South pound, avoirdupois. 'There is Mise- ern Pacific will put into effect a new ner of Crook, who will work as well time card, which will make a number of as a measure of weisht. as a weiVht changes, the most important one being itself. There is Joe Simon. In fact,-when one considers the heavy reserve force, one is forced to won- der why the small ' fry like Noltner, who couldn't possibly control his . . . own vote; bcott, who couldn't con- trol any one's else, and Bush, who wouldn't know how to vote any how, should be sent to the front to fight Mr. Corbett's battle. ; . The Reform c.'ub of New York gave a dinner at the swell hotel of New York, "The Waldorf," Satur- J day nioht, at which ex-President Cleveland responded to the toast "Present Problem." The ex-president of course declared adherence to the "single gold standard" and at tributes the 'discontent of the coun try" to the work of demagogues and "ruthless agitators." Mr. Cleveland, as usual, tails to see the real cause of discontent and simply sends up the "shrill cry" of his own environment in his effort to read the signs of the times. Mr. Cleveland's speech reads well and probably sounded patriotic to the well-fed fellows who heard it but it will fail to reach the hearts of the people, as it contains nothing of point and good cheer to them. . Mr. Cleveland spoke , to the "business judgment of the country" and con veyeJ the impression that , the peo pie s existence depends upon the prevalence of the influence of this I business judgment in affairs. When this 'business judgment" Js known to be of .that kind thai creates cor ners in wheat and other food stuffs. organizes trusts to rob the people debauches legislatures to secure fa vorable legislation for syndicate in te rests and manipulates the money of the country in order that the gov ernment may be driven to sell bonds at an enormous profit to a bond syn- dieate, Mr. Cleveland appeals in its name to deaf ears. Mr. Cleveland means well enough, but he really a063 not understand the case under consideration, and is prescribing from a diagnosis that is made by the most selfish , and narrow sighted interests, and. tb&t is radically wrong in the abstract, as well as ruinous in pras tice, MSHED TO THEIR . DEATH ELECTRIC CAR JUMPS THE TRACK IN EAST PORTLAND. Thirty-row Passengers Thrown Into the Ditch, Three of Whom Are Killed, and All Are Hart. Portland, April 27, 1897. Special to Tub Chronicle. An electric car on the Mt. Tabor line jamped the track this morning at East Morrison and Eighth streets and plunged through the bridge Into the slough, 25 feet below.' There were thirty-four people in the car when the accident happened, and it is now be- llieved only three were killed, three bodies having been recovered, those of W. A. Blaochard, laborer; Newton Han- son, 18 years of age, and an unknown young, lady, A number of others were badly bruised and cut on glass o'f car windows. ' ' The accident occurred on the bridge which spans the slough at the foot of Longnui. -wnen tne car reached East Eleventh street, two blocks from the scene of the accident, the motorman lost control of the car, which was then run; ex-lnirig abont fifteen miles an hour down the steep. Realizing that, the car was beyond - his control, L the motorman jumped, leaving it to dash down the in dine with its load of passengers. Near th bottom of the grade there is a eurye hn the track, and when the runaway car reached the curve it jumped the track, &Dd then ran about forty feet, when the bridge gave way, percipitating the car int0 tne water below. The conductor taA eeveral of the passengers jumped before the crash came, and escaped with ony a alight shaking np. Most of the passengers were laborers on their way to work The water where the carstrnck was not moretnan five feet deep, which enabled the leaving time of the San Francisco overland from Portland, which will be at 6 p. m., instead of 8:50, as at present, The object of. this change is to make closer connection with the Northern Pacific from St. Paul, which now arrives in Portland at 5 n. m.. instead of 7 :30. ag heretofore. By ,eaYing PortIand at 6 D. m. the Southern Pacific through train will take the place of the present Salem local, which leaves at 4 p. m., and the through train will do the local service, stopping at an tne stauons Detween Portland and Salem. The through train frnm Ran Franfiisiv will arrive in Pnrt. ,and at 9 :30 a. m inatead of; 8 :10 a9 ct present. SHIPBUILDING ON THE CLYDE. Immense Trade of the Scotch River , . Last Vcar a Record rjrealter. People generally have a very faint idea of the extent of the, shipbuilding ' in dustry on .herivex Clyde, Scotland, says the- Fall River JXcws. Some ptatistics have come to hand, however, which tell the story in a measure.- In a recent issue of the North Eritish Mail, of Glas gow, 70 firm 3 are named who are con structing from one to ten large vessels from twin-screw steamers of 1,000 tons up: to first-class cruvsers and batt: ships of 16,500-borse power. The year 1896 was a record-breaker on the Clyde, tut- the prospects for 1897 are equally satisfactory. - The work on hand rep resents about 310,000 gross register tons. ' Compared with last. year this shows an increase of 50,000 tons. The. marine engineering trade is also well represented in 336,000-horse power, or 40,000 over that of the previous year. Ihe government orders include one line of battle ship, two first-class cruis ers and three second-class cruisers, The largest order given to the Clyde for a long time nas that for the Nippon Yussen Kaisha, cf Japan. This con sisted of ten steamers of 5,824 tons reg ister and 7,500 deadweight, tons each. Four of these arc already launched and six are being built three in the yard of D. & W. Hendsrson and three n that of Napier, Shanks & Bell. The money value of the contract represents well on to $5,000,000. . We would like to look into the pleas ant face of some one who has never had any derangement of the digestive organs, We see the drawn and unhappy faces of dyspeptics in eery walk of life. - It ij onr national disease, and nearlyall com plaints spring from this sonrce. Re move the stomach difficulty and the work is done. , Dyspeptics and pale, thin people are literally starving, because they don't digest their tood. . . Uonsumption never develops in people of robust and normal digestion. . Correct the aud loss of flesh and we cure the disease. Do this with food. V .- - . The Shaker Digestive cordial contains already digested food and is a digester of food at the same time. Its effects ere felt at once. Get a pamphlet of - your druggist and learn about it. . - 16 Laxol is tbe best medicine for chil dren. . Doctors recommend it in place of Castor Oil; - Nicholas White, the man who is now in the county jail under the doctor's care, is in pretty bad shape. He has a bad case' of eczema, and is helpless. Wasco county Is able and willing at all times to take care of its own, but it seems bard to compel it to take the care of other counties. ' While according to his own statement, - was furnished a ticket by the Walla Walla authorities, and' was sent here. We can do nothii g bnt take care of bim for bnmanity con. pels that, but it strikes ns that Walla Walla should take care of' its own pi-a- pers. - - . - . 100 Reward SIOO. Tae 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 Care is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous Burtacea of tbe system, thereby destroying tbe foun dation of the disease, and giving the patient strength bv building up the con stitution and assisting nature in doing its work. Tbe proprietors have so much faith in its enrative powers, that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it laMs to cure. ' Head for - list of testimonials. Address i - F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. y"Sold by Druggists, 75 cents. No. 2-8. ' -r;-:'- The New Time Card. Under the new time card, which goes into effect tomorrow', trains will move as follows: No. 4, to Spokane and Great Northern arrives at 6 p. m., leaves at 6:05 p. m. No. 2, to Pendleton, Baker City and Union Pacific, arrives 1 :15 a. ' m., de parts 1 :20 a. m. , ; . - 1 " , No. 3, from Spokane and Great North ern, arrives 8 :3U, departs a: AO a. m. No. 1, from Baker City and Union Pa cific, arrives 1 :20, departs 1 :25 a. m. . Nos. 23 and 24, moving east of Tbe Dalles,, will carry passengers. No. 23 arrives at t :au p. m., departs & :io m. ' ' ..v . " ,: ' Passengers for Heppner will take train leaving here 6:05 p. m. - Two years ago R. J. Warren, a drug gist a Pleasant Brook, N. Y., bought a small supply of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. He sums np the result as fol lows: "At that time the goods were un known in this section; to-day Chamber Iain's Cough Kemedy is a household word." - It is the same in hundreds of communities. ' Where ever the good qualities of Chamberlain's Cough Rem edy become known tbe people will have othingelse.. For sale bv Blakeley & Houghton. ' ... Notice of Dlosolutlon. Notice is hereby given that the part nership heretofore existing between Frank Gabel and W. C. Eupert has been dissolved, to date from Saturday, April 1897. Frank UaDel will pay all Dins, and is authorized to collect and receipt for all bills due the firm. Dated at The Dalles, Or., this 5th day of April, 1897, - , r BANK l?ABEL, . 85-lm - 'W. C. Eupebt. Garden ose We are agents for the celebrated MALTESE CROSS. Every body knows-that it is the . best Hose on the mar- ket today. We also carry the Ridge wood brand of Hose, which we recommend as a superior article second only to our Mal tese Cros brand in quality. It is made on extra strong duck, and of the best rubber. Then we carry the Wallabout brand which is a good quality and medium price, equal or better than the average so-called "best Hose on the market." We sell it for what it really is a good, ' serviceable Hose. See our stock before buying elsewhere. BICYCLE REPAIRING. .We have; secured the services of Mr. Joseph . KirchofF, -who has been doing Bicycle Repair ing and Gun Work for the last five years in The Dalles. All work entrusted to him -will receive prompt atten tion. ' -' MAIER& BENTON'S Regulator Line The Dalles, Portlani ani Astoria . Navigation Co.'s strs. Regulator & Dalles City FREIGHT . AND PASSENGER LINE BETWEEN .. The Dalles, Hood River, Cascade Locks and Port- . land daily, except siinaay. , GOOD SERVICE, LOWEST RATES. DOWN THE VALLEY ' OH TO EASTERN OREGON? Are you going If so. save money and enlov a beantiful trio on the Columbia. The we-t-bouud train arrives at The Dalles in ample time for passengers to take the steamer, arriving in Portland in time for the outgoing Southern and Northern trains; East- oouna passengers arriving in lae uaiies in time to take the East-bound train. ' For further information apply to N. HARNEY, Agent, Oak Street Dock. Portland, Oregon, Or W. CJ AIXAWAY, Gen. Agt, .. ' The Dalles, Oregon. HI ORTHERN J PACIFIC RY. H '. s Pullman Elegent Sleeping Cars Dining Cars Sleeping Car ' Tourist, BT. PA tit. ; HINNEAPOLI ' DPLTJTH t-AKGO . . : GRAND FOB CROOKSTOS WINNIPEG HELENA UUTTK ' TO Through Tiekets CHICAGO ' WASHINGTON PHILADELPHIA . ' - , , EW YORK BOSTON AND ALL POINTS BAST and SOUTH For information, lime cards, maps and tickets, cal on or write to W. C. ALLAWAY. Agent, The Dalles, Oregon A. D. CHARLTON. Asst. G. P. A.., 255, Morrison Cor. Thirtt. Portland Oregon