C2J THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15. 1897. The Weekly Chronicle. CODSTV orncuLK. County Judge Kobt. Maya Sheriff. -. ; T.J. Driver Clerk A M. Kelsav Treasurer C. L. f billipe Commiloner, fcgE" Assessor W. II. Whipple Surveyor J. B. "Jolt Superintendent ol Public School. ..C. L. Gilbert Coroner " W. H. Butts 8TATE OFFICIALS. Sjvernoi W. P. Lord Bee rotary of State HE Kincald Treasurer '....Phillip Metschan Bapt-of Public Instruction G. M. Irwin Attorney-General CM. Idleman ' JG. W. McBride STOatora... Jj.H. MitcheU B Hermann Congressmen..... Jw R EU1, 8Ute Printer... W. H. Icd Wklr dabbing- Itatea. Chronicle and Oregonian .$2 25 Chronicle and Examiner 2 25 Chronicle and Tribune 1 75 Chronicle and N. Y. World. 2 00 EVENT IN MUNICIPAL POLITICS. The municipal situation in New York is most interesting. The time is approaching when the first, mayor of Greater New York is to be ohosen. All political organizations are deeply worked up over the prospect pre sented by the consolidation of New York and Brooklyn's municipal affairs. Probably no position in the country outside the presidency gives such opportunity for patronage and the resultant influence as does the . mayoralty of America's mammoth city, and either local organization would glaJIy sacrifice anything it had if this rich plum could be caught as it fel'. The Tammany machine and the Piatt push have been look ing forward with greedy eyes to the ripening of the fruit and reveling in the rich eating it would make; but an indication ot frost has appeared, which bids fair to blast hopes-. all their A movement on the part of prom inent citizens, mostly of Republican belief, but independent in municipal concerns, has been started looking towards the nomination and election of Setb Low, the president of Colum bia college, as mayor. Mr. Low al ready served as chief executive of Brooklyn and made a record never surpassed before or since. So when the movement for better municipal government started, all eyes turned naturally to him as the one best fitted to lead so important a contest. When the agitation began the ma chine leaders of both parties laughed at what seemed a futile effort, but recent events have caused them to think deeper and more anxiously. The method adopted for seenring the nomination of President Low was a great innovation. The Citizens' Union asked voters to pledge them selves tor Mr. Low, and one hun dred and sixteen thousand have done so. . The regular parties are astound ed and f i ightened by this amazing expression of public opinion. The Tammany leaders are retiring from business; Croker declares he is out of the control of Tammany ; that the active members, Shcenan and the rest, mnst be responsible for its management, -and mat England is good enough for him. The Republican machine leaders ore equally disturbed. They do not understand this new way of making nominations, and are disturcd by it. At first they demanded that the "Citizens" should not hold their convention till after the Republican convention, and now they beg that an "anti-Tammany" convention be held on the same day. It is likely that the Republicans will indorse the nomination of Mr. Low, and if so Greater New York is assured, a clean 'economical administration during his term of office. The struggle will be watched with exceeding interest by ail cities which are tired of municipal misrule. The feelings of everyone are - grieved at the news which, came yes terday from the Klondike. Few, if any, are surprised at the stories of distress and impending disaster which hangs over the hardy adven turers who have braved the Arctic snows in quest of precious gold. It is hard to blame them for going, - since the prize was tempting, but it seems that the fears of the most in credulous will be justified. The steamer Cleveland brings news of imminent starvation at Dawson City. The stores which heretofore have supplied the needs of the miners are closed, their stocks depleted and shelves empty, with the means of re plenibbment gone. The Yukon is beginning to .tliow signs ot the ap proaching freeze, wtile the mount ain passes are becoming every day more impassable. Viewed in sober judgment the situation is perilous for the four or five thousand men gathered around Dawson City, and the situation seems such as to call for government aid. " With proper equipment, and spurred by . the thought of rescue, a government ex pedition would accomplish more than any other agency in bringing relief to, the winter-bound miners. Un doubted- should these first reports be verified the administration will give prompt attention to the exi gencies of the hour. The worst part of the hole matter is that there will be no distinction between fore thought and recklessness. The man who went supplied with a year's pro vision will bo compelled to divide them with those who started blindly improvident, and in many cases such transfer wi'l be made amid circum stances of violence. TREAT, THEM ALL ALIKE. . x he case of President Andrews, of i Brown University, whose resignation j nas R8ije( for on account of his free , s;itrr views Sppm in f.iir w.iv of being settled contrary to what most people supposed it would be. Ow ing piobably to the pressure of out side opinion, the board of trustees has addressed a letter to President Andrews asking him to withdraw his resignation and intimating that the letter which asked for it was an on j fortunate document and the rcsuli of haste. We are inclined to think this lat.fpr jiM.inn nf the hoard is wise, while not endorsing for one moment the erratic views on this im portant question which we believe Mr. Andrews to hold. The man who is at the head of such an influen tial institution as Brown University is known to be, should necessarily be a man of calm mind and conserva tive judgment. In most things President Andrews has shown him self such a man. The prominent part he took in the last campaign was not in accordance with the best of taste, yet it is no more to be con demned from the standpoint of good economics than has been the course of the well known apostles of free trade who occupy prominent posi tions in our leading schools of higher learning. President Eliot of Harvard, to our mind, is committing as much an error when he argues for free trade as does Mr. Andrews wbji he spends his time trying to make peo ple believe that an unlimited quan tity of forty-cent dollars is as good money as 100-cent dollars, whose value is stable. One of the reasons which induced the asking of Andrews' resignation was that through dislike of bis cur rency views wealthy philanthropists would refrain from endowing the university as they otherwise would. This was an nnfortunate reason to assign. Colleges are not created simply for the purpose of becoming wealthy, and some of the best educa tional work done in the country is found in schools with limited means. President Garfield once said that the best college he could picture for him self would be Mark Hopkins sitting on one end of a log and himself upon the other. If it ever becomes com mon belief tnat our great universi ties are bidding for money and are willing to mould their views to suit the demands of the money changers, then their influence is curtailed and their work rendered futile as agen cies in establishing a higher standard of citizenship. . We are sorry Brown University has a man at its head with views like those of President Andrews upon this important question ; but unless they could have found other reasons for his dismissal they should not have asked it. Otherwise let the free trade professors go, as well as the free silverites. Wheat sold yesterday in Chicago for 98 cents; in Portland 88 and 90, and in The Dalles 80 cents per bushel. To the ordinary observer there would seem too much differ ence in these' quotations. Chicago ships most of its wheat to New York, while Portland, which is on the sea- board and ships direct to Liverpool, is eicht' cents below the Chicago price. While naturally there should be some variation, it does not seem that geographical conditions justify so much as there is. 'Another thing that is puzzling is the difference be tween the quotations in Portland and in The Dalles. With the 'open- ing of the locks it was hoped that the' variation between these two points wonld be nearly nominal, but there is little, if any, change from last year. FRANCO-nCSSl AN ALLIANCE. The one fact overpowing all other facts in Europe just now is the strange, and in some respects, incom prehensible frenzy of popular delight both in France and. Russia over the Franco-Russian Alliance. That the governments should be pleased is natural. It gives France a position and prestige such as she has not had since the First Empire. It is one more link, says the Independent, in the chain Russia is binding about Enrope to insure peace and freedom for herself to carry out her great plans. That the people,- however, especially while the contents of the treaty are as j et unknown, should be so extravagantly enthusiastic over it, shows that they suppose it to be something more than an ordinary arrangement between the two gov ernments, and understand it to secure some great advantage to them as peoples. v The advantage which the French hope to secure is very evident. They have felt and siill feel that Fiance has not only lost an important and integral part of her territory, and that she can never be her true self until Alsace and Lorraine aic re stored, but (hat so long as the pres ent frontier remains she -will be at the mercy of Germany. They look npon Russia as the only power that can assist them to recover that lost territory and regain the prestige which a well-defined frontier can give. In this alliance they see the first gleam of hope which they have had since Sedan, and the very chance makes them delirious. The advantage which the Russi ans expect to gain is very different. The Russian is an ardent Pan-Slavist, believes devotedly in the great fu ture of the Slavic peoples, and dreams of an empire the greatest that the j world has ever known. In the practical development of that idea, however, be constantly finds himself encountering two obstacles, England and Germany, or perhaps better, Englishmen and Germans. Wherever he reaches out his band to secure an opening for trade into the open sea, there he finds an English fleet. English forts block every access to India, which every Russian feels must come to him. If be wants to fraternize with other branches of the eastern church, English treaties and diplomacy are in the way. Most of all, he feels that he would have been In Constantinople long ere this, but for the English fleets at Besika Bay. Consequently he hates England. As fcr the Germans, are they not Jin every Russian city, mo nopolizing Russian trade, displacing Russian artisans, teaching Russian schools, preaching a non-Russian re ligion? Wherever he turns he sees Germans, and he devoutly wishes that he could find some means of re pressing if not suppressing them. France be knows, or thinks, bates both as cordially as be does; and al though he does not, perhaps, see just how, he yet feels that the alliance is going to strengthen him against them. . There is another . element which probably, has some iufluence. There is a certain sympathy of tempera ment between the French and Rus sians, and a corresponding antago nism between both and the Saxon races. Germans and English have very little of the peculiar type of sentiment characteristic of the Celtic acd Slavic peoples. They are in tense in their feeling, but not carried away by impulse.' The French and Russians are easily wrought up to a high pitch of excitement and fervor. This is manifest in the types of so cialism in each country. There is an abandon about the. French anarch ist and the Russian nihilist which is the very reverse of the calculating coolness of . Karl. Marx and Tom Mann. What gives most seriousness to the Franco-Russian alliance is the possi bility or the danger that the two peoples may force the action of their governments. French ministries are proverbially, uncertain in their hold, and a tide of popular feeling may compel President Fame against his better jodgrrent. ; The czar . is very powerful; - but there - is a might in the popular voice of his people which even he would find it difficult, if not impossible to resist. So long as the two government keep control peace is assured. Should they lose control there might be precipitated a con flict greater than any Europe has ever known. The Oregonian has the bestjof Pennoyer on the saw-mill question. Oregon's, boss demagogue loudly complains that he cannot run his saw mill because there isn't any free coinage of silver; but under these same distressing conditions other mills on either side are working ovet time and making more money than for several years. If Pennoyer continues flying in the face of tacts. it wil( be shown to the satisfaction of everyone what a cheap dema gogue he is. All sensible people are satisfied on that point already. inc settlement oi tne coal miners strike will cause satisfaction in al parts of the country. The tragedy al Hazelton, Pennsylvania, where twenty-one miners were killed out right and more wounded, was menacing portent of what might fol low. The conditions of settlement, while perhaps not what either side would wish if left as sole judge, still uuder the circumstances are as satis factory as any that could be ob tained. At all events, a distressing element in the general business situ ation has been eliminated. The authorities in the South are deserving of credit for the speedy waj' in which they have arrested the yellow fever scourge. All danger of a general epidemic now seems past The advance of medical science is again strikingly illustrated by the preventatiye measures used in sub duing what was formerly the terror izing malady of the South. Dufor and Tygh Valley-Notes. The following notes are taken from the Dufar Dispatch : The bnilding enterprises already be gan and to begin soon, are residences for Frank Peabody, Edward Bohna, W. H. McHaley and Amos Gragg. The disease among horses known as "pink eye," has been somewhat preva lent in this section for a few weeks past, but not as seriously as The Dalles papers wonld make it appear. The four, six and eight-horse teams which are seen daily and hourly on the streets of Dufur, present a scene of ac tivity, indicative of prosperity among wheat growers at least. Rev. John Evans took his departure this week for his new field of labor in Columbus circuit in Washington. Mr. Evans has labored in this circuit faith fully and patiently during the past two years, and while he is not of that gnsh rpg soft in personal relations, he has made many friends and demonstrated bis force of character and tenacious per eeverence, and all wish him well in future. Mr. Evans and his family left Tuesday. TYGH VALLEY. . The recent rains have put the roads in good condition for teaming. Last Tuesday, about noon, we" had a hail storm that lasted nearly half an hour. C. J. VanDuyn bad five teams loaded with wheat from his Tygh Prairie ranches en' route to The Dalles. x Last Monday some travelers, passing through en route to Willamette valley, sold J. K. Moad a span of mares averag ing 1100 pounds each, for $12, which is a bargain in horse flesh. Both are broken and warranted true. W. M. McCorkle had some fine peaches and pears that sold for 75 ceuts a bushel. The pears were ol the Bartlett variety and as fine as ever sampled. Ed. Both well, who lives- on Jnniper Flat where there is no water, bas a young orchard, and be says be bas as fine Bartletts as ever grew, as well as other kinds of fruit of fine quality. Concerning Dalles People. W. H. Biegs was up from The Dalles Sunday. Wasco News. Mrs. E. O. McCoy and family are visiting with Mrs. G. N. Crossfield. Wasco News. Rev. Johns started Monday to The Dalles after his family. He was accom panied by Oscar Kehay, who will enter The Dalles public ecboole. Fossil Jour nal. H. P. Steers started to The Dalles with his family Wednesday morning. The children will commence their second term in the public school there next Monday. Fossil Jonrnal. -: J.' II. Cradlebangh, ' editor of the Chronicle of The Dalles, arrived in the city yesterday. Mr. Cradlebaugfi is in terested in mining in ibis county and is here to inspect development since his former visit a few weeks since. Baker City Democrat. - - Tim UHinan-French Land & Live Stck Company this week delivered at 'Hie Dalles 200 bead of steers and dry cows to the Union Meat Co. of Portland. 'Roe Grimes was oat at Oilman's the first of the week selecting the cattle. The price was 2.2 on foot for cows and 2.7 for steers. Fossil Journal. Aaalffnmeut of Teachers. Court street Mr. Landers, 8th A, 9th Band.9thA. Miss Hill, (High school) 10th and 11th. Miss Michel), 7th A and 8th B. Academy park Miss T. Rintoul, 6tb A and 7th B. Miss L. Rintoul, 6th B and 6th A. Miss Flinn and Mrs. Bald win 2d A, 3d B and 3d A. Mis Tlilr- man, 1st C, 1st B and 1st A. Union street (mixed) Miss Cheese, 4th A and Ctb B. Union street annex Miss Ball, 5th B and 5th A. ' Union street Miss Snell, 4th B and 4th A. Miss E. Cooper, 2J B and 2d A. Miss Rowe, 1st C, 1st B and 1st A. East hill primary Mrs. Roche. 3d B, 4th B and 5th B. Miss N. Cooper, 1st B, 1st A and 2d B. . A Fine School. St. Mary's academy for ladie, located in this city and under the 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 deeire to form their hearts to virtue, and to fit them to be trne 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 shcool and a pleasant home. Those who have girls to send to school should write to St. Mary's academv for terms. tf. Neighboring Jcaloujy. It is evident the Dufur Dispatch does not like The Dalles, as the following will show. Comment is unnecessary : There are-some people to be found al most everywhere whocant't see through a picket' fence. It was supposed tbut the much vaunted "open river to the sea" would be a great reducer of freight rates, but the looked for reduction does not seem to reduce. Then, perhaps, the O. R. & N. has a band in the making nf prices, both at The Dalles and Waila Walla. The fact is, the mossbacks of The Dalles are subjecting that city to a process of slow strangulation. It does not pay so lifeless a town as The Dalles to fight a powerful railroad corporation. THE MYSTERIOUS SWORDFISH. They Came Prom Afar ana never Until They Are Fall Grown. These big creatures come and go as mysteriously as any of our sea visitors. and all fishes have their peculiarities. Who knows where the shad are before they begin to run up the rivers in the spring? ' The swordfish come to American waters grownup.- Of course they vary in size, but no young are ever seen here. This fact has been clearly set out by a government report on tne euoject. The young are found chiefly in the Mediterranean. After they are able to go it alone more or less of them strike for the North American coast most of these gathering about Block island. There they lie and sun themselves on the top of the water, the prey all sum mer of the fishermmen and their spears. What instinct brings these fish across 3,000 miles of water to spend a season and return? They come when they arrive; they go when they leave. That's all we know, although the sea son comes within approximate dates. The swordfish is a favorite sea food here in New England. Boston is its chief market, but it sells well all about here. It is solid meat, with a distinct flavor, and very edible. New York, however, doesn't buy it. New Yorkers, who hunt the markets of the world for new things, will not eat it. How long those queer fish will last is a problem. They are hunted not only for the market, but for pleasure. If the rich New Yorkers, who are too fas tidious to eat them, should establish the fad of killing the fish and collect ing the swords, they would probably soon exterminate the creatures, kill off all the old swordfish, and who would guide hither those that were about to make their first trip? Follow that notion back a bit, and who guided the first of them clear over here? Hart ford Courant. Why He Married Her. A story is told of a governor general of India who one day missed his wife from the room and said: "Where is Maria?" "Dear me, John," said his sisterv"you don't seem happy if Maria is out of the room for an hour." "I'm not," he answered; "that's why I mar ried her." Chicago Inter Ocean. An Antidote. When a man says his . first wife poisoned his existence, and subsequent ly marries again, the inference is that he took' the second one as a kind of an antidote. Tammany Times. GOOD WORDS FOR WASHINGTON Improvement In Moral Tone of tie Satlon's Capital. Gen. H. V. Boynton, the veteran Wash ington correspondent, has been for more than 30 years collecting' news and writing1 letters. Few men know so thoroughly as he the inside history of the capitol, the white house, and the departments. Being asked what he considered the most important deduc tion from his experience at Washington, he answered: "The marvelous improvement in the j moral atmosphere, and the general tone ana nonesiy oi tae government, we, the people of the United States, have the most honest government in the world. It is and has been for many years more honest than ever before, and is to-day more honestly and effi ciently administered than, any private business that I have ever examined. I mean that there is less waste and less defalcation. "Look at the great postal service, for instance. Where in the world will you find any private agency which does so much and does it so well, and at so little cost? And change of parties makes no difference. Thorough honesty is the rule. "The atmosphere of the white house is pure beyond that of any royal resi dence, and this is the most moral and peaceable city in the United States, if not in the world. It makes me laugh when those good people come from New York and Cincinnati and' away out west to help reform Washington." PERSECUTED IN AMERICA. John Wesley Suffered for Refnalna; Communion to Woman. Rev. W. J. Scott, D. D., writes of "Whisj John Wesley Preached in Geor gia," in Ladies' Home Journal, ana from the famous preacher's journal tells the story of his persecution in Georgia, which ultimately resulted in his quitting America and returning to England in 1737. "During the after noon before WTesley's departure he was approached by the recorder of Savan nah, who informed him that he must not leave the province until he had given bond in 50 sterling, and in ad dition furnished bail to answer Mr. Williamson's charge. Wesley respond ed: 'I have given him every oppor tunity to maVe good his accusation, but he refused to do so; and now, sir," he continued, with emphasis and firmness, 'I must insist that, as an official, you have treated me and the trustees of the colony very ill. I shall neither give bond nor bail. You know your busi ness and I know mine.' " 'The same afternoon,' he adds, 'I shook the dust off my feet and ett Sa vannah, after preaching there one year and nine months, not as I ought, but as I was able. "The show made by his enemies of a purpose to intercept him was a shal low pretext, and is now so regarded." Wesley's persecution was the out come of his refusal to admit a woman, of his congregation to holy cummunioa. without evidence of her repentance and contrition. . DANGEROUS CATERPILLARS. Armed with a Very Effective Weapon for Defense. The caterpillar of the puss moth, quite a common insect in this country, has a most effective way of defending himself, and may prove, as we shall presently see, dangerous even to hu man beings, says a writer in Cham bers' Journal. This well-protected cat erpillar is provided between its head and forelegs with a cleft, from which it can protrude an organ capable of squirting out a quantity of very acid fluid to a considerable distance, and when alarmed it habitually makes use of this formidable weapon. In one of the entomological maga zines a correspondent states that he was observing some of these caterpil lars in capfivity, when he happened to disturb one, and it suddenly squirt ed out a quantity of fluid in a jet, whish struck one of hia eyeballs, though his head at the time was quite two feet away from the insect. He rushed off in great agony to a doctor, who told him that the eyeball was in a very dan gerous condition. His eye was totally blind for hours after the occurrence, and it was some days before he finally recovered. What the effect of this fluid must be upon smaller creatures we leave our readers to imagine! The board of equalization will meet the first Monday in October, at which time all who are dissatisfied with their assessment, will be given the opportun ity to correct any error. , s7diScwtf. AN OREGONKMDIKE. Do you want money? If so, catch on to this. A 7-year-old orchard, twenty acre tract, sevonteen acres in choice fruits, bearing trees, new hiose of six rooms, barns, outbuildings, etc., all new; two horses 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. Fraier, The Dalles, Oregon. ELY'S CREAM BALM Is a positive cure. Apply into f" nostrils. It ia quickly absorbed. 60 eeots at Drn?eists or by mall ; samples 19c by malL SLY BEOTIIEBS, 66 Warren 6U New York City.