THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, SATURDAY. MAY 22. 1897. The Weekly Ghroniele. - COUSII OFFICIALS. Count? Judge..- "..Robt Mays Bueriff.... ; T.J. Driver Clerk '. .A M. Kelsay Treuarer C. L. t-hillips r-nifnn. (A. S. Blowers Commissioners - )D. B. Kimsey Assessor W. H. Whipple Surveyor J. B. ioit Superintendent of Publio Schools. . -C. L. Gilbert Coroner W. H. Butt STATE OFFICIALS. - Sjrernot....... ..J.......W.-P. Lord Secretary of State H B Kincald Treasurer... ..Phillip Metschan npt. of Publio Instruction O. M. Irwin Attorney-General C. M. Idleman u . G. W. McBride Bnators - j. h. MitcheU i a tiermann lV. R. Ellis V. ....W. H. Leeds Congressmen.; 8Ute Printer.. two of the'rinzs worn by the woman true. It is having boom, and it were found in ' the vat. This may will have its re-action. Rossland be the correct theory, but the disap- started a stock boaid for the purpose pearance of a body in a sausage fac- of floating wild-cats, but as always torv is too (.uffffestive for the Deace happens to villages that undertake of one's stomach. I to maintain stock boards, the latter : . went defunct. A stock board never The Antelope Herald, noting the UelpeA B minC) but it has brokeD aeatn or a reie narris, sneep ueroer, man -m5ner- very fact that from camping , too steadily at the lhe board Wftg est&biisbea shows the mouth of a demijohn full of , alcohol, , . men who are booming the Clnbblogr Bate. Chronicle and Oregonian... $2. 25 Chronicle and Examiner. ......... 2 25 Chronicle and Tribune. 1 Chronicle and N. Y.. World 2 00 ECONOMIZE. "While congress is debating the revenue question, it c-might be well for it to exarrine into the feasibility " of reducing expenses instead ' of in creasing revenues. A penny saved is a penny earned, and there is no donbl but that there are plenty of opportunities fcr applying the prun ing. knife to the expense account, It costs this people seven dollars head to be governed by the United State's, nearly two dollars each to be governed by the state, four dollars a piece to be governed by the county, and . an average' of four dollars a head more for school and road dis trict government; or in round num bers about $17 each for carrying on our sy&tem of government, and this, too, not counting interest -on our local debts, which would make the rate nearer $20 each than $17. It is entirely too much. Besides this, the rate is steadily increasing. It costs os more per capita to run the government with 70,000,000 people than it did rith half that number, while the reverse of that proposition should be true. The situation in Greece has changed materially since yesterday, and all owing to Russia's action. The -sultan is now disposed to accept me diation and to modify the demands lie has made for indemnity. It seems from the results that Germany has been backing Turkey in her de mands; but when, through Russia's action, Bulgaria began mobilizing her troops, Germany took fright, and so advised the sultan to accept the .mediation of the powers. Russia's action meant war, and the balance of the powers didn't want any, for it might mean a loss of more money than the combined debts of Turkey and Greece amount to. It may safely be said that the war is over, the lerms of peace alone remaining . to be settled. . ' ' France, or rather Paris, has set an exHmple that this country might well follow. The ex-Princess Chim ay, who. achieved notoriety bv eloping with a hatchet faced gypsy and abandoning hef'children, were billed to appear in the music balls at Paris, but met with such a frost that their engagement was canceled. "We have as a people gotten to that stage were notoriety is sufficient to attract crowds,rwhether that notoriety was gained in tLe prize ring, the divorce courts, or without the aid of them. Paris has indeed set as a good ex says: "Dr. Pilkington was sent for, but Harris had expired before he got there." The account is rather sug gestively indefinite, leaving one in doubt whether the doctor was ex pected to save Harris', life in his capacity of a physician, or by taking a share of the disease. district, and furnishes abundant rea son for business people keeping their money out of Rossland. WHICH IS B ALA Ail t jl. The Portland Dispatch says the Mitchell push held up the legislature; that Gnding Mitchell could not be elected, it held up the" legislature and tried to throw the blame on Bourne and his Populist allies. It adds: "The Benson house having who does: and triumphant to that vacant chair, He chapters occasionally, and, as Bre Hart puts it, "playfully mumbles his chestnuts," but Tony is not that way. His level gaze, like that of, the Sphinx, sweeps, the vast desert of our non-information, stony-eyed, imper turbable, remorseless. ' "With Corbett on deck and Tony at the helm, "the dead steered by the dumb, float upward with the tide." While congress is monkeying with the tariff bill, the speculators of the country are getting their work in. Within a week foreign wools have been received in New York amount ing to 24,000,000 pounds; in Phila delphia 8,000,000, and Boston 65,- 000,000; or in all nearly 100,000,000 pounds. The government will get but little benefit from the tariff on wool for a year or two. : Wholesale. JVIflliT MQUOftS, CClines and Cigars. THE CELEBRATED ANHEUSER-BUSCH and HOP GOLD BEER on draught and in Dottles. Anheuser-Busch Malt Nutrine, a non-alcoholic bevcTage, uhequaled as a tonic. . A LIVE SENATOR. According to the Oregonian, the senate committee took up, or were to take up, the Corbett case yester day. Mr. Corbett expects a favora ble report, but he is the only Pson thi Qe memrS) could haV(J gone into the Davis house and captured f Oscar Wilde completed -his term the organization at any time, but ot two years' imprisonment yester- thev did not want it." The editor ay ana was given bis freedom. He Senator Mason of Illinois pays but 0f the Dispatch knows, ai every Ore- savs ne WM1 locate in Paris, engage little attention to senatorial usages, gonian knows, that the Benson bouse m literary pursuits, and will write and refuses to remain in the senate was not organized .until after the over his own name. - The world has for two or three years keeping his Davis house had been in session sev- na(J fln abundant sufficiency of his chair warm and his mouth shut He eral days. That the legislators who klffc ot writing, and if he has to, de is a Cuban sympathizer, and he went into the Benson house were first Pd on the pen, he will wish he wants the senate and the world to in the Davis house, and enly left it weie in it again. know it. Yesterday he SDOke in when Davis, their Knnaker. refused to favor of the Morffan resolution, and Lnke nv effort to hrino- in th J GermanT shontd not feel proud of I O I ' .!- rtfi told the senate some truths about Bourne crowd or the other stav-outs. Luer course ,n oacK,D8 AUrKe itself that must have made some of Thev mieht have cantured the Davis was about the meane8t thinS thal the venerable relics shiver m their house;" in fact did capture it. but 1 Sreat conntrT wa wr Sy of. cerements. He insisted that the they caught a Tartar, and could do sympathy' and aid of France alone nothinsr. There were twentv-one made it possible for this country to members who would not come jn , . r,ver. hI9 morn,"K 40.7, a rise UU,B,U ,us irouj au.., wnentney joinea torces wun wavis, t from the weather bureau, made and that gentleman refused to enter- Thursday morning, is as follows : tain any motion of any kind except The temporary fall in the Clearwater The ehr .f tho rr- nas Pf.Bsea, ana li is again riaing rapid .uw 'wuaww wa. a -w- i The Rivera. and that the United States would yet furnish a Lafavette for Cuba. In closing' his speech he said When you get at the deep under tone of the conscience of the Chris tian people of this country, they sny let us have freedom in Cuba. Then let the Spaniard go bnck to bis own land, and let us ' have no slaves on our continent. You can call that jingo as long as you like. You may define jingoes as long as you please Patrick Henry was a jingoist, ac cording to the definition of the gen t'emen who are trying to keep down the insurgents in Cub.i. Every man wbo bad rather ngbt tban buy. peace at the dishonor of bis wife or bis child has been called a jingo from the days of early republics until now. am for the libert, for the inde pendence of Cuba on a better and broader ground. I propose better environments, not for trade 'or com merce ; not for the extension of ter to adjourn. patch knos this as well as anybody. Besides, let us see what Corbett says, for the two do not agree. "We do not pretend to sny which is Balaam and which the ass, though Corbett seems to talk the most. But be that as it may, Mr. Corbett, in a recent interview at Washington City, Break ing of Mitchell, said; v. The nee in the Uolumbia above aaco is rapid, and for the next three davs the Snake will rise rapidly. The uoiumbia above Xhe Dalles will have a rapid rise for the next four days, I tie rise at - Weiser, Idaho, in twentv four boars ending Th a red ay morning, was .2; at Lewiston .1. The Columbia at North port 2. and the Wenatchee According to this we are to have considerable rise here yet; bnt how much it is impossible to state. We can stand a rise of four feet yet without . In the senate he hrtd made speeches teeing with railroad traffic; but that ritory and that is the distinction nattvann -tVia ' rivrli'nnrir TTnnrlicK Inn' I H mauer ana ourselves, "Mr. President." exclaimed Mason. ' Mi'. , t! : - it if we did not have a ship in the n,s own corrai, ana py jimminei ne world: if everv sun was melted into ought to know, plowshare; if every bayonet was in favor of free silver, anrt, when questioned as to bis position by the gold men, he told tbem that he stood bv the uriucioles laid down in the St. Louts platform. The men then compared noies and found that some one was boucd to get left, and so they agreed to not take the oath of office, and thus .they prevented the election of Mitchell. Which tells the truth, Robinson his man Friday? The former owned the goals, had them in will pat the v river ut the danger line, We do not think it will go much above that, if any, though phenomenally hot weather might give it a apart above that. The Snake has been up to 19 feet. fell again to below 14, and is now up to about 18. ' Its flood is la reel v spent, and in a few days it mast show a steady and rapid fall. This will counterbalance the Columbia's rise, and prevent' extra high water. However, according to Mr, Pazae's estimates, putting the stage at 26 feet in Portland, it will approach the 50-foot mark here. We believe that he has over-estimated the rise considerably. A Biff Gold Product. buried; if every ship we ever had was sunk in the middle of' the sea, there is no nation in the world, much less Spain, that would ever are strike our colors on Americau soil." (Applause in the galleries.) Mason stood bj his oiiginal prop osition that without Lafayette's aid, THE OREGON SPHINX. The Bonanza mine came near hitting its high -gold notch with its last cleanup, only one other exceeding it, when 29, 000 for one month's run was recorded. Monday evening $25,000 in bullion was received at the First National bank at Baker City from this great producer and There has been one benefit at least arising from the legislative hold-up lat winter, and that is that the amount spent by the state for useless commissions, snide normal schools and other utterly frivolous things, has become a matter of pub lic notoriety. About the only board of commissioners that costs but little and are really useful is the horticul- tuial boatd. ' The fish commission has also done some 2ood work. Out side of these the other boards should go by the board, and the public bot tle should be kept away from the normal schools. . Washington a government was not worth a "continental damn." What pose of examining the crop prospects. we should do was to give Cuba what It shows, though, that Tony is ob Lafavette eave Washington. serving; and that he is able to tell Tony Noltncr, in the Portland Dispatch, says that Eastern Oregou is to have a splendid grain crop. Tony knows, because - he has just been through Eastern Oregon, though I those bringing it say the mine is looking not. if rumor i3 correct, for the pur- better than ever jew maenmery amounting in an to about 50,000 pounds is soon to be put in place at the mine. Among the improve meats is an air compressor. This ma, -Before many days some steps will be taken looking towards the build ing of a railroad to the Des Chutes and . possibly eventually up that stream and into Crook county. Of the necessity of such a road there can be no doubt if The Dalles-is to wbat he sees and knows if he wants to. Why then does he so stubbornly refuse to enlighten his readers con cerning things they are anxious to know, and of 'which be is well in formed. They would like to know all about those ten Democratic sena- cbmery will equip the Bonanza second to no mine on the Pacific coast and will enable the mine to make greater show ings than ever in the output of gold. La Grande Chronicle. The Shakers have made a- discovery which is destined to accomplish much good. Realizing that three-fourths ot nil n nnr nnfTUrincra arisA frnm BtAmach maintain, its positioD as a shipping tors whom the magical silvery tones troubles," that the country is literally and supply town. Some of our citi zens are taking a deep interest in the matter, and arrangements are being made for viewing out a route and having a surrey made. With a road filled with people who cannot eat ' and digest food, without subsequently suffer mg pain ana distress, and that many are starving, wasting to. mere skeletons, because their food does them, ho good, they have devoted 'much study and Adolph L. Luetgert, a well-known sausage manufacturer of . Chicago, has been arrested, charged with mur dering his wife in the basement of bis sausage factory about ten days ago. As the police are unable to find the body, they account for its disappearance by saying that it was consumed in a vat by acids, and that of Tony's voice wooed into the Cor hett told. They would like to know at whose invitation Tony took that trip to Wasbicgton when he slipped off so quietly that no one knew he to tbe Des Chutes the portage ques- was gone. They would like to know thought to the subject, and the result is lion would be solved, and boats on the natt.ra of the sen! nnnn hi lirw this discovery of their Digestive Cordial. the upper Columbia would soon fol- t.h.t W. th ln,,,.nr ,rioi f A little book can be obtained from i. t.. . I . . .. vvur uruin iuu win- uuioi out tin UU5, gvu-ojuur..- free 8tlVer epeecn that they lisp of way of relief at once. A n investigation . -v, fvr..v, w w wDe gram procpecis in r-asiern ure-J will coat notbne and will result in 6nare when the matter materializes. ff0n when the reader of hid mnpr mach ffood . IO . j.-.j.-. . aie anguishing: for information that Laxol is the best medicine iae relatives or vin. xaaa win do well to offer a liberal reward for the conviction of the ghouls who stole the body of the deceased mill ionaire ; but it is to be hoped tbat they will neither offer nor give one cent. in the shape of tribute to the fiends themselves. The paying of blackmail to these wretches would soon give an impetus to the grave robbing industry, and no corpse would be safe. ' the Some of ' the Rossland mines are .undoubtedly good ; but that mining history is repeating itself is just as they know lies hidden deep in bathos beneath bis hat. For the sake of a long-suffering and anxious public, Tcny, remove that embargo oa free speech and let the liquid notes of melody come for chil dren. Doctors recommend it in place oi Castor Oil. The Westfield (Ind.) News prints .the following in regard to an old resident of tbat place : ."Frank McAvoy, for many years in tbe employ of the L., N. A. & C. Ey. here, says: 'I have used Cham plunking on each Other's heels to our berlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea enlightenment. . Remedy for ten years or longer am Ti,.nA fi.n -;,Wo !,. never without it in my family. I take o . - f tol at Washington stalks the gloomy and nnequaled-legged Corbett, hope lessly hopeful', waiting the action of the committee; waiting the gather ing rush of those ten Democratic senators to -bear him bay-wreathed pleasure in recommending it.' " It is a specific for all bowel disorders. For sale by Blakeley & Houghton.' SURE CURE for PILES Itch id k ud Blind, Bletfdinjr or Procrwdirjjr 11 Ictrttid atone: vn DV-OMra-i o rikB KCmcUT. top itch- Me. DivigUuirulj. ttve cure. CircnLtr sent. fr-M PrlM lH.UOS,AJ,k.O, fkiU.Po . stubLing & WILLIAMl, Jew. York Weekly Tribune ' FOB . Farmers and Villagers, . FOB , Fathers and Mothers, FOR , Sons and Daughters. FOE All the Family. Si ' ' ' ' t ' ' - ' . : - ' - A With the close of the Presidential Campaign THE TRIBUNE recognizes ths fact that the American people-are now anxious to give their attention to home and business interests. To meet this condition, politics will have far less space and prominence, until another State or National occasion demands a renewal of the light for the principles for which THE TRIBUNE has labored from its inception to the present day. and won its greatest victories. Every posnible effort will be put forth, and money freely spent, to make THE WEEKLVTKIBUNE pre-eminently a National Family Newspaper, interesting, instructive, entertaining and indieseusable to each member of tbe family. We furnish "The Chronicle" and N. Y. Weekly Trib une one year for only $1.75. . Write your name and address on a postal card, snod it to Geo. W. Best, Tribune Office, New York City, and a sample copy of The New York Weekly Trib nne will be mailed to you. clg5CAB, TICKSoftLICE THE WORLD RENOWNED Supplied to United States and British Governments. It has no superior. . Best Dip for the Wool. Sold by PEASE & MAYS. The D4113S, Oregon. Regulator Line Tie Dalles. Maui and Astoria Navigation Co.' P sirs. Regulator (6 Dalles City FREIGHT AND PASSENGER LINE BKTWEKK The Dalles, Hood Elver, Cascade Locks and Port- Una aaliy, except bunaay. GOOD SERVICE, LOWEST RATES. ERST! ' ; GIVES THE Choice of Transcontinental Routes , VIA- . Spokane- - Minneapolis St. Paul Denver Omaha Kansas City Low Rates to all Eastern Cities OCEAN Are you going 1 DOWN THE YALLEY . TO EASTERN OREGON ? If so. save money and enjoy a beautiful trio on the Columbia. Tbe we- t-bound train arrives at be Dalles in ample time for Dasseneers to take tbe steamer, arriving in Portland in time for the outgoing Southern and Northern trxlna; East bound passengers arriving in Tbe I)ales iu time to take the East-bound train. For further information apply to N. HARNEY, Agent, : C Oak Street Dock. Portland, Oregon, ,vOr W. C. ALLAWAY, Gen. Agt., The Dalles, Oregon. STEAMERS Leave Portland Everv Five Kays for SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. For fuU details call on O. E A Co. Agent Tba Dalles, or address . . - W, H. HURLBURT, Gen. Pass. Agt r Portland, Oregon E. M'NEILL President and Mana er A. D. GCBtKlT. ' Attorney anfl Connsellor at Law ARLINGTON. OREGON. Practices In the State and Federal Courts ol Oregon and Washington. jan 23-3mo 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. tn. No. 2, to Pendleton, Baker City and Union Pacific, arrives 1 :15 a. m., de parts 1:20 a.m. No, 3, from Spokane and Great North ern, arrives 8:30, departs 8:35 a. m. No. 1, from Baker City and Union Pa cific, arrives 1 :20, departs 1 :25 a. tn. ..Nob. 23 and 24, moving . east of The Dalles, will carry passengers. No. 23 arrives at 6:30 p. m., departs 12:45 p. m. , Passengers for Heppner will take train leaving here 6:05 p. m.