CO THE DALLEd WEEKLY CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 1. 1897 The Weekly Ghr ojiiele. COrSTT OFFICUL8. County Judge. Robt. Mays Sheriff. T. J. Driver Clerk A M. kelsny Treasurer C.U Phillips ia. B. mowers Commissioner JD. S. Kirasev Assessor W. H. Whipple Surveyor J-B- ,0' Superintendent ot Public Schools... C. L. Gilbert Coroner W. H. Butts - STATE OFFICIALS, Sjvernor W. P. Lord Henretitrv of Rrjlt EE Kincaid Treasurer Phillip Metschan Bnpt of Public Instruction G. M. Irwin Attorney-General C. M. Jdleman G. W. McBride Senators - Jjjh. Mitchell ' , IB Hermann Congressmen. - Jw. R. Ellis Bute Printer.'. W.H.Leeds Weekly Clubbing Rates Chronicle and Oregonian $2 26 Chronicle and Examiner 2 25 Chronicle and Tribune 1 75 Chronicle and N. Y. World 2 00 THE BOSS. ..... In boss all these diatribes against the in politics, lamentations over his successes and paens over his less conspicuous reverses, are we not missing the mark? Is the bess, after all, a pestilential weed without possi bility of good, or is he rather i nlant. now unmistakably wild and unrestrained, dwarfing ani killing more lovely growths; yet which, un der proper use of the implements of political gardening, might be made . to delight the eye and swell prodig iously the granaries of work and wisdom ? We have Speaker Reed's word for it that a statesman is a poli tician who is dead. And, while this may suggest that we are blind to the good the living politician is doing, let us go a step farther and inquire whether the boss is not capable of be ic 2 made an instrument of great good, instead of the unmitigated scoundrel we have been accustomed to regard him. The boss has his sins and his limit ations. From Tweed or shall we say from Crassus down to the petty political tyrant of every little Ameri can city, the baleful effects oi "ring rule" have furnished the theme of numberless phillippics. We all know how jobs have been perfected in councils and legislatures, courts have been influenced and elections carried bv force or fraud. Then the boss is rarely a man of any decided con victions on public questions. Does anybody care or consider it worth while to know what Gorman thinks about the tariff, what Piatt's views are as to the best basis for additional banking currency, or how Quay would retire the greenbacks? There is an obvious falling off here from the leadership that based itself on force of advocacy of. idea, well ex emplified in such practical politicians as Douglas, Tilden, Blaine, or even Oliver P. Morton. Undoubtedly the boss deserves nearly everything that is said about him. Yet it is about time to recognize the fact that genius for practical po litical organizations must be reck' oned with. The evolution of Amer ican politics has given us the boss, and the pertinent question appears to be whether we shall keep on fruit lessly abusing him, content to carry the newspapers, magazines, clubs and pulpits, while the boss gets the votes ; or, on the other hand, to recognize his efficiency for accomplishing things and turn it into useful chan nels. As a rule, the boss finds bis reward in the triumph of his ticket. He is about as honest as other men, and no more avaricious than the average. He prizes a seat in the senate, not for its direct or indirect emoluments of fame or money, but because it helps him to lubricate the machine of which he is the chief en gineer. And all political machines are merely means to the higher ends of measures. Every boss under stands that. The Republican politi cians knew well enough last year that McKinley's election meant per sonal triumphs not nearly so much as it meant a Republican tariff, cur rency reform and an American for eign policy. These things are some what above and beyond the business of the boss; but he dimly realizes their importance, and cheerfully offers himself and his machine as ve hicles for their furtherance. It is pretty clear that the boss in some shape we must have. ' Another rises up as soon as one is knocked down. The economist and the pa triot will have "to use him still to bring desirable things to , pass. And the boss is, after all, only the prod uct of his time, a truthful weather- vane of his commumtv. He never pretends to direct public opinion, but. is at his best when shrewdly foreseeing its drift and getting in line with it The talent for practical politics is as legitimate as the talent for reading books or stating proposi tions of law. . . r f ( . The people will get the kind of political leaders they want. These will be no lower morally or intellect ually, and assuredly no higher, than the body of voters with whom they work. The boss is very much what we make him. Oregonian. COMPENSATIONS. The world is full of compensations, averages, offsets, counterbalances, or whatever they might be called. All human affairs are subject to them. The rich envy the poor, the poor the rich. Each would be satisfied with the other's lot. yet neither would trade. The barefooted boy looks at the bald-headed .millionaire, and thinks what a glorious time he would have spending the money, if he had it, and dreams of things utterly un selfish that he would do with it, and undoubtedly derive much pleasure from doing, and the millionaire gazes at the barefooted boy and his thoughts go fleeting back to his own childhood when he was happy. The poor man, who has to work like a slave to support himself lives to be J a hundred years old before he can quit his job, while the rich man, with money to buy everything purchasa ble, gets old and dies at 65, The rich are always satisfied with the lot of the poor, the poor envious of the rich. The married folks oc casionally think of divorce and envy the freedom of their unmarried friends, while the unmarried envy the home life of the benedicts. The girl that dislikes ice cream gets hired everv summer to sell the stuff, while the girl who "dotes" on it has to spend the summer camping where the picture of a cow is a rarity. The woman with the smallest foot pays most for her shoes, and a bald-head ed man sets no reduction for a hair cut. And so it goes. What we have someone envies us, ana wnai otners have we desire. And so in the grand wind up of life it may be said that we all get what we do not want, and we all want what we do not get This makes us all satisfied with each other s lot, and dissatisfied with our own ; but it is the way of the world, and the result of the law of corapen sations which puts the nastiest worm in the nicest looking apple, and the biggest corn on the smallest toe The fellow who gets more than his share of the champagne, gets a like quantity of the next day's headache, and the highest pinnacle to which drunkenness lifts him would, if turned upside down, but serve to sound the abysmal depths of next day's woe. PUBLIC OWNERSHIP. In 1894 Glasgow acquired owner ship of its street car lines. As a re sult the hours of labor were reduced and wages were advanced. Fares were lowered about thirty-three per cent; the average fare is below two cents, and thirty-nine per cent of the fares are one cent The service was improved. The Progressive Review of London, in its November number, 1 89 6 , said : "The tram ways of Glas gow have been made the finest un dertaking of the kind in the country, judged both by their capacity to serve the public, and as a purely commercial enterprise." The traffic was doubled in about two 3 ears. Yet these improvements were made without burden to the taxpay ers. As a mafter of fact, the tax payer had his direct benefit along with tfnt enjoyed by the riding pub lic. For the year ending June 1, i 896, in spite of 2 cent fares, there was a clear profit of $213,000 above operating expenses and fixed charges, interest, taxes and depreciation. In brief, fares are lower, wages higher, hours shorter, service better, traffic larger, and taxes lower. What Glasgow has done, other cities can repeat, unless their people wish to confess their incapacity to grasp and work out the problems of higher government. Since the Klondike craze started nothing has been heard of Hawaii. The newspapers suddenly quit mak ing war between Japan and this coun try, and Hawaii annexation, Japan and the whole subject dropped out of sight. The fact that, the dis patches are again dealing with the subject indicates, a falling off of in terest in the gold praze. THE SAME OLD STORY. With the breaking out of the Klon dike fever, and long before it be came epidemic, The Chronicle, along with the majority of the papeis of the Northwest, pointed out the fact that the stones of the great area of rich placers on the Klondike were grossly exaggerated. That while the evidence of the richness of the claims was sufficient, there was not a strong probability of the area be ing large. We fixed the limit of the claims on Bonanza and Eldorado creeks at 200 each, the. Klondike at perhaps as many more, and we point ed out, as best we could, the difficul ties under which prospecting must be done. Attention was called to the fact that less than 200 Indians were available for packing supplies across the mountains, and that with out their aid it was impossible for the man not backed by unlimited capital to get across the mountains. Besides stress has been continuously laid upon the danger of starvation for those who reach the mines this fall. The latest reports show that the editors of the Pacific coast did not lose their heads, and that every pre diction made by them is true, or to become true. Practical miners, fresh from the mines, give the num ber of rich claims on all the creeks at 140. These, they estimate, will yield t7Q,000,000 in three years, but an outsider has just as much chance to get an interest in one of them as he has to buy an interest in a bank. These same miners report that pro visions are used as fast as delivered by the boats, and that the supply will be totally inadequate for those already there. . The first chapters of the Klondike story only have been told and mark the prediction that . the tales of the survivors next summer will make one of the most gruesome chapters of the world's history. Spavined dog will be a luxury by Christmas, and cannibalism will become a part of the social functions before spring. The history of every mining ex citement has been one of suffering and want, and this where the climate was not vigorous and the walking was good. Eight months a thous and miles from no place, and this in the edge of the Arctic circle, with scanty supplies and no preparations to withstand the cold, means annihi lation. A man arriving at Juneau from Dawson City says the last steamer from that place carried away a pile ot gold dust that measured at least a quarter of a cord, while another man writing from Dawson City says the same steamer carried three and a half tons 'of gold. There is con siderable difference between the statements. A ton of gold is worth in round numbers $500,000 at $16 an ounce, which is about the average value. Three tons and a half of gold would therefore mean, at a liberal estimate, $2,000,000. A quarter of a cord contains thirty-two cubic feet, and a cubic foot of gold weighs about 1000 pounds. By this second estimate there would be sixteen tods of gold, or $8,000,000. The farmers export from the United States year ly , $650,000,000, and yet no one hears the American farm called a Klondike. It is the craze for sud den wealth, the getting of something for nothing that causes the rush to the gold mines, and yet the fellow who sticks to his job and only gets something for something, will in the end have the most money. The amount of agricultural produce sent from this country each year to feed and clothe the foreigner would make a pile of solid gold equaling eleven and a half cords, 1280 tons. 'One does not hear anything now," says the Indianapolis Journal, "about there not being money enough to do the business of the country. Busi ness has improyed wonderfully, and yet there is no complaint of scarcity of money." Just wait until the au tumn winds sigh and sob with reso lutions about the scarcity of the cir culating medium and the, insufficient amount of circulation per capita. No article in the whole Popnlist dream book is more sweetly mathe matical than this per capita article. 'My cow eats, so, much hay a day," says the Populist economist; "there- fote every man, woman and child must have so much money. At least there .must be some money which they could have if they could get it." If business has improved under existing conditions, it would have improved twice as much if there weie twice as much money. That is the theoiy. However, some emi nent authorities, Democratic as well as Populist, attribute trusts, and, consequently, all evil, to the scarcity of money. So complaints about it will not be wanting. New York Sun. ' Let's see, it was only a few weeks ago that Joaquin Miller wrote an idyl about the Klondike. Then he was on the steamer, and his vision ran something like this: "I will, with my little pack on my back and my little camp outfit, saunter over the mountain pass to the lakes. There I will build or buy a boat and float into the new Eldorado. I will show these pessimists what a man can do." Joaquin now sings a differ ent song. He writes that an "Alaska mile, with a fifty-pound pack on your back and the mud and ice water to your knees, is the biggest mile, the hardest mile) the thickest, longest and hardest to get through of any mile on earth. The first tale was that of the poet; the second is plain prose. AVbeat took another tumble in Chicago yesterday, going down to 89. The market price cannot be told, however, from the wild scram ble now going on in the wheat pit, where every fellow who got nipped in the rise is trying to get even. SMILES. "Are you one of the striking miners?" asked the woman at the door. "Yes, mam. I'm what they call a pioneer. I etrack thirty years ago, and I've never give in yet." Free Press. "I want to say this," shouted John Jingo, "as a state in the great galaxy of commonwealths Hawaii will simply be a jim dandy !" "Yon bet !" echoed the Hon. Bouaer Down, "a regular Hono lulu." North American. General Coxey insists that if he must keep off the grass the safest place for him is in the middle of the road. Chi cago Times Herald. The case of Coxey shows ths value of keeping yourself in evidence, even when the way of doing it consiata in playing the clown. Mew York San. Not Startled: "Hold on tight," said the driver of the Leadwood coach ; "I may give you a sudden tip." "I'm aaed to 'em' said the senator Cleveland Plain Dealer. Death Awaits Them. H. A. Stanley, of the Binghampt'on, N. Y., Evening Herald, who has been at St. Michaels for seven weeka, lifts up his voice to warn prospectors against going into the Yukon. He gives what he claims as approximately correct statements as to the amount of provis ions, and shows that with the number of men already in camp there must be starvation and Buffering this winter. The difficulties of the Chilcoot pass have perhaps sayed many lives by keep ing people oat of the country. Nature baa been kind, bat the action of the transportation companies, or some of them, will rank little short of murder. If next summer the story of the Greely expedition, multiplied five hundred times, is not brought back from the Yukon, then all'signs fail. x Oregon's Greatest Fair Can be attended for one fare for the round trip from any point on the lines of the Sontbern Pacific in Oregon. The fair opens on September 30th, and closes October 8th. Nine days. Every day will be the best. Fraternal order day, October 2d ; Oregon press day, Oc tober 4th ; pioneer and barbecue day, October 5th ; Salem day, October 6th ; school day, October 7th ; fiee for all race, last day, October 8tb. School day, October 7th, children nnder 12 years of age free. School children over 12 years of age, ten cents. After harvest you will want a rest, so come to the state fair and enjoy your self. One fare for round trip. Popular admission of 25 cents. Cash In lour checks. All conntv warrants registered prior to March 11, 1893, will be paid at my office. Interest ceases after Aug 5, 1897. C. L. Phillips, Conntv Treasurer. We sell Hoe Cake soap. Pease & Mays. a3-2m A TWO-MINUTE HORSE. Star Pointer Paced a Mile In One Min ute and Fifty-Nine and One . fourth Seconds. At Readville, Mass., Saturday, August 28th, the - long expected two-minute horse came to the front and placed the record three-quarters of a second below that long attempted mark. The dis patches give the following account of the making of the record : ' . : "Accompanied by a runner, the big bay Tennessee-bred stallion wiped ont the mark and had three-quarters of a second to s pure when he went nnder the wire. This wonderful performance was wit nessed by about 8000 persons. It was the more wonderful for on Friday Joe Patchen, with Geers behind. him, bad made a try at the mark made by John R. Gentry last October, and had failed by a second and a half. Because of this, it was not thonght that his greatest rival in the race line would get down be low the even time-mark. -The day was perfect for record-breaking. Not a breath of air was etirring when at 4 o'clock the horse came out with a running borse to make the trial for a world's record. The first two scores were not satisfactory to McCIeary and be worked the horse way down be low the tarn. The second score was even worse than the first, for while at scarcely a two-minute clip be went to a break right under the wire. Thia made the friends of the horse more than a trifle nervous. The horse was acting as if a little sore and not np to the task. But the third time down there was no hesitancy. McCIeary nodded tor the word, and off the pacer went. The first quarter was at a two-minute gait, thirty eeconds, and then, as Mc CIeary called on his pacer to move, there was a great cheer, for he was beating two minutes and got to the half in 0:59, with the second quarter in 0:29. The third quarter was the fast est of the mile, the distance being cov ered in 0 :29J seconds, a 1 :57 gait. Aronnd the turn Pointer seemed to waver the smallest fraction of a second, but McCIeary had him right almost be fore one could think, and he straight ened out into the stretch, the runner moving up closer. Both pacer and run ner were asked to step along. McCarthy laid the whip on the runner, but Mc CIeary only spoke a word of encourage ment to his horse. At the drawgate .Pointer was reefed a little, and, coming stronger from the distance, the great pacing stallion ap peared to freshen in the last few strides, gathering fresh courage as he neared the wire, and finished like a lion in the rec ord-breaking time of 1 :59J. A mighty shout went op. Men yelled as though possessed'. In the grandstand tbe owner of the horse had his band wrung until it ached. Over the fences jumped men who knew 'the horse and driver, or who were carried away with the enthusiasm of tbe moment. - Hardly had McCIeary brought the the horse to a standstill before they had him on their shoulders, and be was borne along the stretch to the judges' stand and there, as the band played "Hail to the Chief,'' he was introduced to the throng, and then renewed ap plause for horse, owner and trainer rang out. A fairer mile was never timed. There was not a watch in the stand but what agreed with the time announced, while on tne otner eiae ot tne airetcn, .tne watches in. the grandstand caught it equally fast or better, not one slower. C. W. Marks, also of Chicago, tbe owner of the greatest rival of Pointer, looked at his watch earnestly and then remarked : "If anything, the mile was faster rather than slower. It was a 1 :59 per formance.". The summaries: To beat world's pacing record, 2 :02 Star Pointer, b. 6., by Brown Hal, dam Sweepstakes (McCIeary), woe; time, 0:30, 0:59, 1:29, 1:59. DEEP BODY OF FRESH WATER. Lake Chelan Baa Been Sonnded to the Depth of 2565 JTeet and No Bottom Beached. Lake Chelan, in the Cascade mount ains, is the third deepest body of water in tbe world outside of the ocean. It may take second place, as bottom has not yet been found. It is certainly the deepest body of water on the American continent. These facta have been established by W. G. Steel, now of the United States geological survey and well known as a daring mountain climber and explorer and founder of tbe well known Alpine club, the Mazamaa. Mr. Steel writes as follows: Camp No. 8 on Lake Chelan, Aug. 24 To the Editor of The Spokesman-Review : You will remember that in 1886 I broke the record for deep water on the American continent by sounding Crater lake, in southern Oregon, for the gov ernment. Yon will remember also of having invited me to visit Lake Chelan a year later. I was very sorry indeed not to be able to do so, but am examin ing tbe Washington forest reserve for the government, and in that capacity at tempted to sound the lake last Saturday. A steel line was sent me 2560 feet long, all of which was let out in the middle of the lake without finding bottom. Have just ordered more wire end everything necessary to do the work thoroughly, and shall find that bottom under any circumstances. This makes Chelan tbe third deepest body' of water in the world, outside of the ocean, the record standing : Lake Baikal in Siberia, 4000 feet ; the Caspian sea, 3000 feet; Lake Chelan, 2560 plus which means we are after second place, and have good hopes of beating the Cas pian sea. Before Saturday last Crater lake held the third place. W. G. Steel, TJ. S. Geological Survey, Lakeside, Wash. Lake Chelan is in Okanogan county. It descends to within three miles of the Columbia riyer and discharges its vol ume of mountain waters through an out let known as the Chelan river. The fall of the outlet is about 300 feet and creates a water power second only to the falls of the Spokane. Tbe lake extends for 68 miles back in to the very heart of the Cascade mount ains, and its wild precipitous shores, with cataracts leaping out of the dark forests and falling in foam and spray in to the waters of tbe lake, present a scenic panorama which the world can scarce surpass. The lake's surface is about 900 feet above the level of the sea. Mr. Steel's soundings of 2560 feet therefore prove that the bottom of the lake is at least 1660 feet below the level of the ocean. A Fine School. St. Mary's academy for ladies, located in this city and under tbe direction of the Sisters, is one of the best educational institutions on the coast. The building is of brick, large and well ventilated. Besides the regular studies, especial ef fort is made to instil into the minds of the pupils a desire to form their hearts to virtue, and to fit them to be true and noble women. Gratuitous lessons are given in all kinds of plain and fancy needle word, knitting, embroidery, etc. Pupils will receive the same watchful care that would be given them by con scientious parents. It is in fact an ideal s h cool and a pleasant home. Those who have girla to send to school should write to St. Mary's academy for terms, tf. . Electric Bitters. Electric Bitters ia a medicine suited for any season, but perhaps more gener ally needed when the languid, exhausted feeling prevails, when the liver is torpid and sluggish and the need of a tonic and and alterative is felt. A prompt use of this medicine has often averted long and perhaps fatal bilious ievers. No medi cine will act more surely counteracting and freeing the system from the malar ial poisdn. Headache, Indigestion, Con stipation, Dizziness yield to Electric Bit ters. 50c and $1.00 per bottle at Blake ley & Houghton's drug store. 1 Did Fltzslmmons Foal Carbett? Thursday night, September 2, we will all have a chance to see for ourselves whether Wm. Brady, Corbstt's manager, was correct in claiming a foul against Jim. The New York Herald explains it as "a trick of perspective." Aa the gen uine Veriscope reproduction of the great Carson contest will be here, this mooted question will soon be settled ia tbe minds of all. There is already a big de mand lor seats and tbe house will un doubtedly be crowded. Regulator Line Tie Dalles. Portlani ani .Astoria Navigation Co.' sirs. Regulator & Dalles City FREIGHT AND PASSENGER LINE BETWEEN Tbe Dalles, Hood River, Cascade Locks and Port land daily, except Sunday. GOOD SERVICE. LOWEST RATES DOWN THE YALLEi on to . EASTERN OREGON? Are you going If so, save money and enjoy a beautiful trip on the Columbia. The west-bound train-arrives at Tbe Dalles In ample time for passengers to take the steamer, arriving in Portland in time for tbe outgoing Southern and Northern trains; East bound passengers arriving In Tbe Dales in time to take the East-bound train. For farther information apply to J. N. HARNEY, Agent, Oak Street Dock. Portland. Oregon, Or W. C. AIXAWAY, Gen. Art., The Dalles, Oregon AN OMOjMaOMffi Do you want money? If so, catch on to this. A 7-year-old orchard, twenty acre " tract, seventeen acres in choice fruits, bearing trees, new house of six rooms, barns, outbuildings, etc., all new ; two horeea and harness, two wagons, one road cart and one cow. Will sell at a bargain and on easy terms. Call on or address C. E. Bayard or Chas. Frazer,, The Dalles, Oregon. DR. GUNK'S IMPKOVKD XJTCER A Wild Physic. One Pill for a Done. A movement of the bowels each day is necessary tor health. Theee pills supply whet the system leaks U puis enppw v.w r The; cum liesdache. brighten thr t hoGonjplMtoa better than cosmetics. Eyes, nd Clear tee uoropinxioa ueiw uwu vuwuwmu. Tber neither (tripe nor sicken. To conraoe voo, we wiu mail Vi t-T-rDxT l.XLlk:. i-