C2.J THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 20. 1897. The Weekly Chronicle. Weekly Clabblsc Bates. Chronicle and Oregonian $2 25 Chronicle and Examiner 2 25 Chronicle and Tribune.-. 1 75 Chronicle and N. Y. World. . 2 00 COUNTY OFFICIALS. County Judge. Root. Mays Sheriff. T. J. Driver Cler A M. Kelsay Treasurer... C. L. fhillipe , , IA. 3. n lowers Commissioner. id. B. Kimsev Attesaor W. H. Whipple Surreyor J. B. Holt Superintendent of Public Schools. . .C. L. Gilbert coroner . n.. oum STATIC OFFICIALS. GjTernor W. P. Lord Secretary of State HE Kincaid Treasurer -Phillip Metachan Sopt. of Public Instrucuon vr. m. irwm A ttfimfv-CrfTieral C. M. Idleman . G. W. MoBride " - J J. H. Mitchell IB Hermann -.rtjugraauucu )W. R. Ellis State Printer W. H. Leeds STEPHEN J. FIELD. The retirement of Associate Jus tice Stephen J. Field from active service id the supreme court of the United States marks an epoch in the history of American jurisprudence. Justice Field has completed the long cst term of service of any justice since the wonderful machinery of the American government was finish ed and put in motion. Appointed by President Lincoln, March 10th, 1863, he has outlived all the other appointments to like positions by the martyr president. As the venerable jurist himself puts it, "At the head of 1 he court when I became one of its members was the venerable Chief Justice Tarrey, and among: the asso ciate justices was Justice Wayne who bad sat with Chief Justice Mar shall, thus constituting a link between Che past and future, and, as it were, bringing into unity nearly an entire century of the history ot this coun try. During my incumbency three chief justices and sixteen associate justices have passed away." Few families, if any, have taken such prominent part in the conduct of American affairs as has this genera tion of Fields. Four brothers. equally prominent in their different vocations, have contributed deeds of worth to promote the country's -greatness, and added laurels to their own fame Without the indomitable courage and far seeing prophecy of Cyrus Field the la3'ing of the Atlau tic cable would have been delayed many years. David Dudley Field ccupied, probably, the foremost po sition among the leading legal stu -dents of the last half century. II. M Field is known wherever the church has spread its gospel's, while the white haired man who has just lain down the actiqe burdens ot life to spend ihis few remaining rears in peace, has made an impression upon the consti tvitional life of the country such as few nren could ever hope to do. What a well rounded life bis has been! In the stirring scenes of gol den California, he bore a prominent and dignified part. In the dark days of the rebellion be sa.v the inner workings of the ponderous taachin- ism whose labor it was to save the union from disruption. In the time reconstruction he aided in making the nation whole again. His eyes have witnessed and his " hands have born a part in the determination of the gigantic 'questions which the American people have bad to settle id the last quarter century. The supreme court of theUnited State3, most people agree, is the most dignified body in the world. To, oc cupy such a prominent . position as Justice Field has done, would seem the satisfaction of the most exacting ambition a man could have. '"Happy, indeed, is he who crowns mid . scenes like these, A youth of labor with an age of ease." The American people feel a sym- . pathetic interest in the retirement of Justice Field, and appreciate the very tender letter written by Pres ident McKinley and the heartfelt words of the associate justices. The example set by any one of the Field brothers is one which every Ameri can vouth would do well to follow though few can hope to imitate. CONCERNING FAIRS. The District Fair has come and gone. Whether Or not it has been a financial success remains to be deter mined. The exhibits were up to the standard of previous years, and the races were as good as races go. But the fair docs not seem to elicit the interest it did in former years, and with the exception of one day the at tendance was not large enough to be satisfactory to the management. Just what the reason is because the fair has not a greater bold upon public attention may be variously answered, but the fact remains-that these meet ings are not what they used to be. The management has labored earn estly to promote the interests of the fair, and some of the most earnest promoters haye incurred pecuniary obligations in order to further the good of the association. Probably the solution of the prob lem lies in the separation of the rac ing inteiests from the agricultural ex hibits. The attendance 'at the pa vilion during the evenings of fair week was very good, and the success of that portion of the meeting was unquestioned. v We doubt very much if the legis lature can be prevailed upon to make another appropriation for the main tenance of fairs throughout the state. The State Fair at Salem was not a financial success, and despite the most strenuous efforts of those most interested, ran $1500 behind. In view of the demand for economy which is springing up from all por tions of the state, the legislature fill in all probability provided they can think of anything else except a Unit cd States senator refuse to make any further appropriation tor toe maintenance of fairs. In such a case The Dalles can do just as surrounding places are doing hold a fruit fair, together with an agricultural exhibit. Walla Walla has closed a very successful meeting of this kind, which was both an artis tic and financial success. Hood River attracts wide attention from its an nual fruit display. - Spokane is now in the midst of a glorious carnival of fruit and flowers. None of these places can exceed The Dalles in mag nificence of display. Wasco county can bring forth an array of Pomona's gems which no other county in the state could surpass. The Fruit Fair would be rid of some of the objec tionable features now attending the incidents of racing, and it is not im probable that more general interest could be elicited. It is very likely the fair will be held again next fall, as the failure of the legislature to meet allows the ap propriation to continue ; but whether it meets in The Dalles or not, we can lay our plans for the holding of a fruit and agricultural exhibit, which will give pleasure and satisfaction to all concerned. THE RETURN OF PROSPERITY. The return of gold to this country is generally accepted as one of the most substantial signs of renewed prosperity. The gold arrived or shipped dur ing th past week amounted to $8,- 850,000, and it is thought before the movement stops forty or fifty millions will come. The treasury now holds nearly one hundred and fifty million dollars in gold, against one hundred and twenty-five mill ion last year and ninety-three millions in 1895. The failures for the quarte r to October 1st, were for any quarter ince 1892, and the business payment through banks the largest by two hundred and sixty-eight millions, ac cording to Dun's Review,ever known in September. The week's exchanges were 8.8 per cent larger than in 1892. The aggregate returns of the railroads for September were 12.8 per cent larger than last year. There was a net increase of 113,160,440 in the money in circulation in Septem ber. The export trade was enormous, but there has been a falling off.dur- ing the past week of one million bushels each in wheat and corn. It is thought to be a hint from foreign customers to our farmers and spec ulators not to hold back for higher prices. An advance in wool to the average of twenty cents a pound adds to the satisfaction ef the farm ers. Altogether it may be said that a greater shange for the better in the business condition of the country was never experienced than that which the last twelve months have witnessed. By every possible test it has been proven that the policy ad- ! ; vocated by the Republican party is the best for the general good of its country, and under it the nation can enjoy a prosperity not possible under the doctrines romulgated by any other political body. A Philadelphia paper reviews the history of the Lincoln monument at Springfield, 111., and says: "The monument has been a disgrace to the country for j'ears. A mistake in the disposal and control of the re mains ot the martyr president was made at the start. His grave should have been at Washington, where his great and distinguished work was done." This is a false view of the case. Liu coin is buried where his qualities were discovered by the American people. ' rant also should have been buried in Illinois or in St. Louis. The Lincoln monument his been neglected by the officials who should have cared , for it, but ihey are hearing from the people. The memorial will be restored and prop erly maintained. News from Rome is distinctly gratifying. The American ambassa dor there has been at work to some purpose. In the course of a couple of months he has done what his predecessor failed to do. He has secured the abolition of an unjust and burdensome discrimination against American meat products, and thus has opened the Italian mar ket freely to an important branch of American commerce. That is emi nently satisfactory, both in theory and in practice. It marks a triumph of American diplomacy and it as sures expended trade and increased pecuniary profits to American in dustry. If, as is so often quoted, that man is a benefactor of his race who makes two blades of grars grow where only one grew before, that officer is certain! v a benefactor of his country who opens for its trade a profitable market where there was none before. Such work may 1 be more arduous than attending social functions. It may be less showy and may elicit from, foreigners less flattering praise than making post prandial speeches about peace and good will. But it commends the doer of it to the sober sense of his own government and people as a faithful servant who has done the work he was sent to do. ABUSIVE INSINUATION. Mark Hanna is busy buying a seat in the United States senate from Ohio these days. East Oregonian. What rot! Such a statement as that coming unsupported by any evi dence from a paper like the East Ore gonian, which wraps itself in a man tle of self-assumed virtue, does little credit to that journal. - The East Oregonian has no proof that Mark Hanna is doing anything more than pressing his canvass for the senate in a manner such as any American citi zen has a right to do. We are not hide-bound enough to believe that every Republican is a saint and every Democrat a sinner; nor do we like to see mud slung at a man because he differs in politics from the mud slinger. If the East Oregonian knows any facts which reflect upon the political rectitude of Senator Hanna in his present contest, let it make them known ; but to make such a statement as that just quoted is un fair, unmanly and lacks nothing from being cowardly. The East Oregon ian has some merit to it in discus sing certain kinds of questions, but when it comes to anything with a po litical tinge, its utterances are so deeply dyed with prejudice and un fairness that it cannot hope to win the approval of fair-minded people. Above all things, a newspaper should not make charges against the private character of any man unless it can substantiate these charges beyond the possibility of error. A man's good name is too sacred, a thing with which to trifle. POTATOES TO IRELAND. It would be a graceful act on the part of the residents of Walla Walla and of the entire state to follow the initiative taken by C. L. Whitney and other residents of Walla Walla and send several carloads of potatoes and other products to the famine threatened inhabitants of Ireland. It has been stated by. those who know the Irish people that they will never appeal to England for aid in their distress, but. would rather ap peal to America. However true this may Jbe, no appeal to any country has yet been . made, although U is known that unusual distress exists in the unfortunate Emerald isle. From a humanitarian standpoint the pro ject of sending food from tliis state is commendable, and beyond that a selfish end might be achieved in the sending, selfish technically, onlj Such a gift as is proposed would serve as an advertisement for Wash ington, and might attract a desirable class of agriculturists to this state. Farmers educated in agriculture in a country where the ground is com paratively unproductive, and where there is so little return tor labor ex pended, would be overjoyed to get into a country so rich in natural re sources as this. Their habits of fru gality and economy, developed in a hard school, would enable them to be eminently successful in a country where others, trained to be more prodigal in their expenditures, would only meet with a medium measure of success. Wherever Irish farmer emigrants have sought to wrest their living from the soil in this country they have been successful. In later years the bulk of the Irish immigra tion has been into the centers of American population, where it has entered, for the most part, the ranks of unskilled labor. In some in stances Irishmen have met with great reward, while in many instances bare living has been their lot. There is room here for those Irish men who possess the rudiments of agriculture and an understanding of the elements of economy. Should they be attracted by the Washington potatoes sent them, they will find warm welcome waiting for them in this state. Spokesman-Review. EARLY DAT KEMINISENCKS. On. oi Our Dalles' Boys Recites Inci dents of th. Past. Over thirty-five years ago, in 1862, Robert Pentland came to The Dalles with his family, consisting of a daughter, Anna Pentland, now Mrs. S. L. Brooks, and two eons, Ed. C. Pentland, who lina been here visiting bis sister, and Charles Pentland, who died when a small boy The first water works here were put in bj Robert Pentland. In conversation with a Chronicle re porter Mr. Pentland recalls many in cidents of the earlv days. In the old school houae nnder the bluff, near where Captain Coffin lived, he learned bis A B C's, nnder Mies Mollie Snyder. At that time Oliver White, lately State printer of Washington, and Joe Day, the detective, and Tom Parrott, the artist, were going to echool. In those daye Fort Dalles was occupied by several companies of soldiers. The fare was $12 for passage on tbe steamboats from Portland, and freight $50 a ton. Front street was the business street. Tbe postoffice was in Waldron Bros.' drug store, tbe stone building now standing vacant. In those days coal oil was $1.50 a gallon, and apples were worth 10 cents each or three tor a quarter. Small change was unknown. It was the "long bit" and the "short bit." Mr. Pentland lived, in The Dalles sixteen years, and left here about nine' teen years ago. The boys and girls of those days be now finds men and women some of them heads of families while the children are themselves in business. He recalls the names of Hope, Dill and Ernest Ferguson, Fred and Frankie Stump, Malcolm and Zenas Moody, George and Charley Craig, Al Bettingenl Ed Holland, Frank McFarland. Charles Reed, Mike and Will Day, Farmer and Clay Hill, Dennis and Will Bannell, Bert Bunnell, Geo. Gibbons,' Clarence, Edith and Adella Carter, Joe and Ben Teal, Aliie Martin, now Mrs. Croseen ; Emma Harmon, now Mrs. Doane;EIia Bulger, now Mrs. Michell ; Emma Condon, now Mrs. Thompson; Hattie Condon, now Mrs. Arthur Coffin ; Nell Coffin, now Mrs. E. B. McFarland; Laura McFarland, now Mrs. McEwen; Alice McFarland, now Mrs. Abrams; Clara Ho mason, now Mrs. Judge Waldo; Annie Thornbury, now Mrs. Einersley; Amanda Thornbury, now Mrs. Hudson ; La Donnell, now Mrs. Crandall ; and many other boy and girl school mates of those days. The people of The Dalles were always noted for their sociability, and in those days the young people engaged them selves as 'much if not more than now. Mr. Pentland says he has never bad anything but the very pleasantest mem ories of The Dalles. "I want to say one thing to the news papers of The Dalles. It is a mistake to 'born np' tbe capitalists of yonr town, and try ' to force enterprises. I find human nature tbe same everywhere, and the place of a newspaper is to point out where money can be-profitably in vested in yonr town, and yon will find that yonr men of capital are just as EETING WITH DESTINY. No man can teU when it will come along, often it starts np before ns in unexpected times and places. Even an afternoon stroll with a friend and a chance introduction may shape all the course of one's after life. To be always at your best and not ashamed of your destiny yon must dress like a. true gentleman. This can be done by ordering your Salts ami Oreraaats of ML BORN & GO., The Great Chicago Merchant Tailors .Who .re unrivalled Master, of the Tailoring Art. 300 NEW Patterns. Finest Material. Perfect Fit. New Stock. Latest Styles. Best Work manship. Thrifty Prices. A Cheery Guarantee With Ail, A. C. GIGER & CO., Closing FURNITURE CARPETS. PRIIJ2i EJITSCHKE Are going to close out their business, and they are offering their large stock at CUbl .FKICJiS. Now is the time to buy good Furniture cheap. All persons knowing themselves indebted to said firm are requested to call and settle their account. eager to invest in profitable enterprises ' as they ever were. The Dalles is al apienuia Business town, and naa a brilliant future. A permanent in vestment which would pay property owners is the paving of Union street from the Umatilla house to tbe bluff, and Second street from Union street to the warehouses ; out unless tbe properly owners see that it will actually pay them to make Each an investment it will remain undone. Then again an agitation by all the newspapers showing how profitable to the stockholders would be the development of the immense water power near here would finally bear fruits and The Dalles become a manufacturing city. The Dalles has a great deal of available capital, and if the newspapers show where it can be invested, with assurance of interest on the outlay, the surplus money will be invested at home. Th'e Dalles bears the reputation abroad of being an enter prising town. Yonr business men have ehown, in many ways, a very commend- aoie spirit. VICTORIA'S REGAL RIGHT. Why the Niece of William IV. Was Called to the Throne. a Several newspapers, in explaining' to their readers how Queen Victoria came to suceceed William IV., say it was because she was his niece. That is the truth, but only half the truth, for Wil liam IV. had nephew3 and other nieces. George III.'s first, second, third and fourth sons were respectively the prince of Wales, afterwards George IV., who died childless in 1830; Frederick, duke of York, who died in 1827, also without children; William, duke of Clarence, who died, William IV., June 20, 1837, without lawful issue, and Kdward, duke of Kent and Strathearn, and carl of Dublin, who died January 23, 1820, aged 53, leaving as the sole issue of his mar riage with l'rincess ictorsa of Jjem- ingen a baby daughter, now Queen Vic toria. The queen succeeded William IV., not simply because she was his niece, but because she was the only child of the brother next to him in the order of succession. Had Queen Victoria had a brother, she would in all probability rot have been a person age of historical celebrity, save in the contingency of succeeding him. Her rights were those that devolved on her from her father. At the time she suc ceeded to the throne Ler uncles the dukes of Ci:iriberiand, of Sucscx and Cambridge v eve living. younger brother;; of hor faticr acd junior ta him in the line of euccessio:i in the or der named. The duke of Cumberland (who became king of Ka.-.over on the death of William IV.) was a man of such despotic' trnwer and principles that all England cherished the l'rincess Victoria as standing between it and his succession to the throne. He had lawful issue, as had the duke of Cam bridge. The duke of Sussex, a most estimable man, married twice, but these unions being repugnant to the provisions of the royal marriage act. his children, were barred from the line of succession. From the revolution of 1688 rose the Jacobite party, made up of those who supported the cause of James. II., his sons and descendants. The picturesque modern Jacobites do not recognize Queen Victoria, despite the fact that her succession is due to her Stuart Mood, for she is a direct descendant of Elizabeth, daughter of James I., to whose heirs the title to the throne devolved by the act of set tlement on the death of Anne. Boston Transcript. DIMnfcctina; Street.. The sireet8 of Brussels are now sprinkled with a diluted disinfectant, and it is believed in Helgium tha its use thus far prevented an outbreak in that community of a disease now epi demic among the cattle of Holland. The disinfectant is contained in a little cylindrical reservoir, which is attached to the ordinary watering apparatus. Chicago Times-Herald. ' For Sale. Six lots, house and stable in Lyle, ap ply to G. Magan, Lyle, aeptl8-d&wlm Nebraska corn for sale at the Wasco warehouse. Best feed on earth. m9-tf NEW YORK CASH STORE Out Sale -OF- TP 1 1 ptt a Pill I IP III MLLtl I & uALLIuAll, WM. TILLETT. H. GALLIGAN. Sol. Proprietors of the CELEBRATED XAKIMA APPLE. Hood Riyer Nursery, TILLETT & GALLIGAN, Props. First-class Nursery Stock a Specialty. B 8 HUNTINGTOE. K 8 WILSON. HUNTINGTON 4 WILSON, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, . THE DALLES, OREGON. Office over First Nat. Bank. F RED. W. WILSON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, 1UC, iui.i.hk OREGON. Office over First Nat. Bant. THE STUB FROM THE DALIES TO PORTLAND. . PASSENGER RATES. One way $1.50 Round trip 2.50 FREIGHT RATES ARE DOWN. The Steamer IONE leaves Tha Dalles on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sat urdays at 6:30 a. m. Office in the Baldwin Building, foot of Union street. For freight rates, etc, call on or address J. S. BOOTH. Gen. Agt, The Dalles, Oregon. J Opera House ONE NIGHT ONLY, Monday, Oct. 25th. First appearance here of the distin guished Comedian, M. B. CURTIS Supported by his metropolitan company in niB iamoua original crcnuuu, ifllil'LoI THE DRUPIES UP-TO-DATE, As played by him over five thousand times. Admission, $1.00. No extra charge for reserved seats. tsacK seam toe; children 50c. Reserved seats on sale at Snipes-Kinersly Drugstore. pur