2) THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 3. 1897. The Weekly Ghroniele. COUNTY OFFICIALS. . Comity Jadife.... Robt. Mays fiheriff. T. J. Driver Clerk .- .....A M. Kelsny Treasurer -- O. rnuilps Commissioners in. a Kimsey Aaaeisor .... W. H. Whipple Surveyor J. J. i-oit Superintendent of Public Schools... C. L. Gilbert Coroner W. H. Butt STATE OFFIC1AI.B. aovenioi W. P. Lord ftoRretiuT of State US Kincaid Treasurer .Phillip MetPchan Bnpt. of Public Instruction u. at. irwin Attnrnev-Geaeral CM. Idleman . (G. W. McBride S7ui - jJ H Mitchell IB Hermann vuusicuuicu iw. R. VlHg atatc Printer ....i....; W. H. Leeds Weekly Clubbing Bate. Chronicle and Oregonian. $2 25 Chronicle and Examiner. 2 25 Chronicle and Tribune ......... 1 75 Chronicle and N. Y. World f. 2 00 THE I3IPVDENCE OF IT. It is stated that the most carefully ' worded, the longest and the most elaborate part ot Spain's reply to America's note anent Cuba is that in which is set forth the protest against filiCustering. The Spanish govern ment pleads as the reason for its fail ore to restore peace in Cuba, the de parture of filibustering expeditions from this country. The material aid thus carried to the insurgents is all that prevents their speedy conquest by the Spanish troops, and the gov ernment at Madrid has decided that henceforth it will look upon filibus tering expeditions as breaches of in ternational law, and will treat with the United States on that basis. There is a great deal of impudence in this attitude of the Spanish gov eminent Spoin understands very well that no expeditions were sent to Cuba town, is reported to be 35,000 men, occupying an intrenched camp. By gaining control of the sixth cataract the British troops have seemed open water for their gunboats to Khartoum. The most interesting recent state ment concerning the expeditions is that it will raise the British instead of the Egyptian flag at Khartoum, which, has not been regarded as Egyptian soil. That will settle the idea of the withdrawal of the British from the Nile resion. " ' ' UNDER WHICH FLAG. - Mr. John Hall of Portland has been appointed United Stales dis trict attorney for Oregon. He was recommended for the position by the Oregon delegation, and, the Orego nian says, by Mr. juitcneu. J. lie ur egonian comments upon the appoint ment in a style so different from its usual handling of such subjects as to provoke, or at'least suggest, comment thereon. It seems to realize that the Mitchell Republicans are in the as cendant in this state, and while dep recating that fact, lays the founda tion of its editorial comment upon the basis of monetary principles, in stead of Mr. Mitchell's connection with Oregon's politics. It goes back to the monetary standard, and bases its objections to the federal appoint ees, not on the ground that they were recommended by Mr. Mitchell, but on the broader ground that they are not sound upon the money question, and incidentally attacks ex-Senator Mitchell, Mr. Hermann and Con gressman Ellis because the' have heretofore been friends of silver. The Oregonian never has, and probably' never will, admit that while the Oregon delegation were ad vocating the free coinage of silver they were obeying the commands of them is an extraordinary intelligence and an honest - conviction. , George was a deep thinker, a logical reasoner, firm in his convictions and fearless in their expression. He was a typical American, and . his life's work has left an impression on American poli tics and American literature that will last. He was a good man, and in many respects a great one, whose death is a national loss. A GREAT PAPER. instruction in the elements of educa tion. . - The spectacle of the postoffices of a countiy being' used as a means for teaching the young the value of sav ing and inculcating in them habits that will be of great use to them in later life, should make every thought ful pei son an advocate of postal sav ings banks. Chicago Eecord. ' REt OB LIC A NISAI. from this country under the sanction of the government or even with iM tbe Part in the state as- iven lhcm tacit encouragement. The filibusters in the state platforms. It has never re persons who re acting on their admitted, and will probably never wn honlr. nri who fit. nnt thflir nr. aaml that Oregon State plat- ties'witb nrivate means. As a mat ter of fact, the lesources of lbe ver platforms, and that the delega- United States government have been tion were in duty bound to obey the commands of the party or to re sign. It has dodged . this matter in a masterly manner in order to be a a position to attack ex-Senator Mitchell. It has pretended at all limes since and during the last cam paign tuat ex .senator Milsheli s re- ost assuredly not contemplated-by Ujeated Public declarations at he siooa nrmiy oy me nauonai plat form of the party as promulgated by the St. Louis convention, were not sufficient; that Mitchell, having been a free silyer advocate, could not possibly be an advocate of the prin cipals laid down in the national plat form. It has persistently asserted taxed to an intolerable degree by Spanish demands for the prevention of filibustering. It has been found necessary to police the entire eastern coast at a very heavy cost, and pur suits, arrests and trials have proved a source ot annoyance ana expense m international law. If the new Spanish premier is look ing for a grievance against the United States, be certainly makes a blundering beginning. A more rea sonable and effectual way of solving the filibustering question would be to bring tue insurrection in Cuba to a close on a humane plan, and remove ibe cause of American sympathy with the insurgents. International law or no interna that the St. Louis platform was a gold standard platform, when the most violent construction of the lan guage could not possibly be tortured According to the Oiegonian,.thcre are two ' political parties in Oregon under the name of Republican. One is what it chooses to call "Mitchell Republican." the other it names the Republican party, hut, it mi slit more properly be called the Oregonian-Scott-Simon - Corbett combination. The Oregonian has ontranted Popu lism in backing Corbett and con demning evemhing else. It attacks McBride, not because he is vulnera ble, but to get a stab at Mitchell. It attacks Hermann, not because it has any quarrel with him, but because behind him it sees Mitchell. It at tacks Ellis, whose record is as crystal, not because of any cause, except its desire to reach Mitchell. To down Mitchell there is no depth of deceit it would not -delve into. To dorn Mitchell there are no Parnassan heights of fiction to which it would not soar. To down Mitchell there are no intracacie? of falsehood which it would not explore. To down Mitchell there are no labyrinths that, likeTheseus, it would not thread; no Sphynx it would not question; no anchorite whose cave would be sacred from its incantations; no 'spiritual seance whose chimeras it would not hail as heavenly visitors, if in their of chocolate caramels on the Yukon-! inrleflnite shades it might impress the The power of the country press. we are firmly convinced, is not fully measured, end certainly not fully appreciated. Reeent experience has convinced us of this, for while rusti cating in the Greenhorn during the last month the only paper we re ceived was The Dalles Chkoxicle. Ot course we read-1t; we had to, or go without. Almost the first paper we received contained a telegram Stating that tbe price of chocolate caramels on the Yukon was twenty five cents a piece. After j'ears association with The Chronicle as chief news dispenser that telegram made us proud. We : thought of the time, only ninety years ago, when it took 'the news thirty hours to go from New York to Philadelphia. We thought . of the time, less than forty years ago, when ii took six months to get news from Washington to Portland, and we felt proud indeed to know that in less than thirty days after the sale of a chocolate caramel at Dawson City, for the price of a quarter of a dollar, The Chkoxicle, 3,000 miles away, was enabled to give to its readers not only the price of wheat in Sber- maivcountj', but the coin equivalent j v tn H aa w a aa MM Nrr km 14 W M W tJ Tale of Suf f e ring and Subsequent Relief. v . .. . jFVom the Prew, Columbttt, Ohio. ' . ' It shows the scope, the far reach, ing possibilities of the country press, the vast improvement over ihe in stitutions of a hundred j'ears ago, when George Washington's farewell address to the army got mildewed before it reached "Semmes' hole," now known as Cincinnati, and is be yond the average comprehension. We need to illustrate the improve ment only this statement that choco late caramels on the Yukon were worth twenty-five cents each. And yet the papers are full of talk about people starving on the Yukon. Beans and bacon produced from Cal ifornia three billions of doilar?, but we venture the assertion that from '49 to '97 no California paper has ever quoted the price of chocolate caramels. - i ' TEACHING THRIFT TO THE YOVSG. black and damnable imprint of its dislike for Mitchell. The Oregonian strtnds, not upon the St. . Louis plat form, but upon the anti-Mitchell platform.' It knows nothing else, and, praise God! it knows nothing much. ' Ona of the.manv nersona is Columbna. Ohio.who have been benefited by the use of vt. w imams' nnlc .rills lor rale .People is suss Jerusna Mcts.inney.ot 60 Bout a Centre Street. Miss McKinney is well and favorably fch6ira, especially in educational circles, as ana naa Deaajor a numoer ot years a faithful and nrOBraasive school teacher. For soma tine she has been very ill and tbe nfferings and tortures endured by her for months nay been unusually severe. The tale f her sufferings and the subse quent relief and final cure which she derived from the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Paje People, aroused considerable agitation aatong her many mends ana others. A reporter was detailed to obtain a relia ble account of this marvelous case, and when he called he found Miss MoKinney at her com fortable and cozy home where she cheerfully complied with his request. She said : "The first indication that I had that any thing was radically - wrong with ms was about three years ago. I suffered the. most exoruciating pains in different parts of my body and was almost crazed at times. My sleep was disturbed by horrible dreams and I had began to waste away to almost a shadow. To add to my other afflictions the malady assumed a catarrhal turn and I was toon a victim to that horrible as well as dis gusting disease. I consulted the family Ethpriclan who gave me some kind of a nos Kjn and I was foolish enough to imagine iht it benefited me. I followed the advice of the physioians but noticed no perceptible Improvement in my condition ana was about to despair of ever becoming a strong and well woman again. " Some of my lady friends were calling on me one afternoon and before them I hap pened to mention my troubles, when one of them recommended that; I try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. I had never had any faith in medicines of that kind and faid but little attention to the suggestion, t was not long after this, however, that I again heard tbe pills highly recommended, by several persons, and then it was that I decided to give them a trial and purchased one box of the pills. I toon began to notice an improvement in my condition and before the whole box had been taken my health was so much improved that I was about ready to begin singing the praises of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. "I was not yet thoroughly convinced and decided to wait a while before growing en thusiastic over tbe results, and had begun on the second box before I was confident that I had at last found a medicine to meet the requirements of my case. I discontinued my calls to the physicians and have left them alone since. I am now as well and strong as I ever was in my life; am entirely free from all pains and never felt better in my life. I eat regularly and sleep like a babe. No more are my slumbers haunted with tearful dreams and when I retire at nijjht I go to sleep at once. I regard Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People as mr salvation, and would recommend them to all ladies troubled at 1 was. The pills are more than what is claimed for them and anvone giving them a trial will soon come to the same conclusion regarding their merits that I nave." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People wumui ui we vieineuis neuesoary to Kive uew r life and richness to the blood and restore shat tered nerves. They are sold in boxes (never in loose form bv the dozen or hundred! at 50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50, and may be had of all druggists or directly by mail from Dr. Williams' Medicine ComDanv. Schenec tady, N.Y. - .. . KOT1CK. I have a stray horse, a roaD, 9 years old, branded with a figure 2 on tbe ritiht hip, at my placu on three mile. The owner can have the same by paying the cost of this advertisement and proving property. . ' ' Seth Morgan. . The Dalles.. THE MAKING OF DIAMONDS. tional law. there is a point at which 11110 D 9WU meauiDS- I w . i lit . n it nas declared useu aissatisnea - patience ceases to be a virtue, and that point has leng been passed in the matter of doing police duty for a foreign power which promotes dis orders by its own incapacity. Tele gram. Mr. Mitchell's position, has a platform of its own, upon Bismarck dislikes the Monroe doc trine. Metternich disliked and de nounced it, and so did Metternich's friends, the crowned heads of the Ilolyj Alliance. Those "plenipoten- the with made which it demands he shall stand, and condemns him and all bis friends for preferring to follow the St. Louis platform rather than the Oregonian platform. It pinned its faith to Cor bett, and is sore at tbe result. The Oregon legislature was held up largely through the influence of Oregonian for the purpose of tianes of Providence' refrained from downing Mitchell, and Corbett was meddling wilh it, however, although simply the shovel used for the pur- w hen it was first promulgated the pose of drawing the chestnuts from United States filled a very small place I the fire, in the family of nations. At one President McKinley has taken the time and another the Monroe doc- only course open to him He has trine has curbed the ambition of heeded the suggestions of the dele many European powers and protected gation as it is, not as it may here- many little nations in the Western after be, and has wisely appointed Hemisphere. Ut did this as recently the men who fought the battles ot as 1895, when it defeated England's the party; who stood by the St, designs against Venezuela. If Prince Louis platform, and who dared to Bismarck takes a survey of the his- run counter to the Corbett-Oregc tory. of the world for the period nian Republicans, who built a plat wnicn nas eiapsea since Monroe made form of their own, and ignored that bis great declaration, he will find of the partj', that that policy was never seriously assailed except once by Napoleon III and Maximilian tin Mexico a third of a century ago and the fate of the chief actors in that entemrise is not calculated to encourage a repe- P886 titinn of tlm iKrfnrnuinp. kindly Henry George, the great single- tax advocate is dead. In the heat and front ot a great political battle. the leader of one of the factions, he away. History will deal with Henry George, for he was honest in his convictions, and Gen. Kitchener 8 earnest in their, advocacv. We do believe in his, theories, but we It is said that column on the Nile will push toward not Khartoum more rapidly than was In- have always had that admiration for tended at the opening of the cam- the man that is born of the knowl- paign. The Dervish force at Om- edge that however visionary we may of Belgium, therefore, it may be said, durman, on the river opposite Khar- think his ideas, we know that behind teach thrift and economy with their The number of minors who became depositors in the postal banks of countries having the system in oper ation is very large. . It is principally for the purpose of encouraging chil dren to save that provision is made for stamp deposits. In Great Britain, for instance, the smallest deposit ' which will be re ceived and entered in a passbook is one shilling, or twenty-four cents, However, smaller amounts may be saved by stamps. A child with a penny may buy a stamp and affix it to a card. When this card contains twelve stamps it can be deposited as a shilling, and the depositor is en titled to receive a pass book. This arrangement makes the institution very popular among, the children, and is so convenient as to stimulate them to make use of its advantages. In addition, the schools are frequent ly made use of as agencies of the postal bank for the collection of sav ings. The teachers receive the de posits of the children and turn them over to the postal bank authorities. Belgium is one of the countries in which activities of the savings bank are extended to the school-room. Out of iAli primary schools, inclu sive of infant schools and the schools of primary instruction attached to educational institutions oftli;r classes, there were 4,798 which took part in the savings-bank business. The, number of children in those schools possessing deposit books was 153,192, of whom 86,309 were boys and 67,883 were girls. Including the schools above primary grade there were, according to a recent re port, 5,056 schools of all kinds in which - 200.847 pupils had saved 3,734,402 francs. Most of the schools .What tbe Product of the Laboratory Looks Like. At the Royal institution recently, Mr. William Crookes delivered a lecture on "Diamonds." He said that, thanks to Prof. Moissan, diamonds could now be manufactured in the laboratory minutely microscopic, it was true, but with crystalline form and appearance, color, hardness and action on light the same as the natural gem. ,The first necessity, was to select pure iron and to pack it in a carbon crucible with pure charcoal from sugar..'' Half a pound of this iron was put into the body of the electric furnace, and a powerful arc. ab sorbing about 100 horse power, formed close above it between carbon poles. The iron rapidly melted and saturated itself with carbon. After a few min utes', heating to a temperature above 4,000 degrees Centigrade, the current was stopped and the dazzliDg, fiery crumble plunged in cold water until it cooled below a red heat. Iron increased involumeatthemomentof passingfrom he liquid to the solid state; hence the expansion of the mnef liquid on solidi fying produced an enormous pressure, under stress of which the dissolved car bon separated out in a transparent, dense, crystalline form in fact, as dia mond. To obtain the diamond from the metallic ingot . required a long and tedious process of treatment with vari ous strong reagents, and the specimens thus obtained were only microscopic. The largest artificial diamond yet made was less than one millimeter across. Many circumstances pointed to the con clusion that the diamond of the chemist and the diamond of the mine were strangely akin in origin, and the dia mond genesis must have taken place at great depths under high pressure. How the great diamond pipes came into ex istence, was not difficult to understand. After they were pierced they were filled from below, and the diamonds, formed at some epoch too remote to imagine, were thrown out with a mud volcano, together with all kinds of debris eroded from adjacent rocks. According to an other theory the diamond was a direct gift from heaven, conveyed to earth in meteoric showers, and the so-called vol canic pipes simply holes bored in the earth by the impact of monstrous meteors. London Times. f Special peatur i - v Of The Chronicle office is the Job priptirj Dpartnept. We have better facilities for doing artistic work in this line than any. office in Eastern Ore gon, and this branch of our busi ness is in the hands of expert workmen. We 5onparisor? both as to high grade work and reasonable prices. V ?I?roi?ile pub.o. Wholesale. JVLflLtT LtlQUOftS, Cttines and CigaPs. Thousands are Trying It. In order to prove the great merit of Ely's Cream Balm, the most effective cure for Catarrh and Cold in Head, we have pre pared a generous trial size for 10 cents. Get it of yonr druggist or send 10 cents to ELY BEOS., 5G V?arren St, N. Y. City. , I suffered from catarrh of the worst kind ever since' a boy, and I never hoped for cure, but Ely's Cream Balm seems to do even that. Many acquaintances have used it with excellent results. Oscar Ostium, 45 Warren Ave., Chicago, 111. . Ely's Cream Balm is the acknowledged core for catarrh and contains no cocaine, mercury nor any injurious drug. ' Price, SO cents. At druggists or by mail. THE CELEBRATED. ANHEUSER-BUSCH and HOP GOLD BEER .es. Anheuser-Busch. Malt Nutrine, a non-alcoholic beverage, unequaled as a tonic. STUBLING & WILLIAMS. Subscribe for The Chponiele and get the news,