THE DALLES WEEKLY CHOKICLE SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1897. The Weekly Chronicle. COUNT'S OFriClAtS.- Count; Judge........ .Robt. May Bheriff. T. J. Driver Clerk....' . A M. Kelrav Treasurer C. U fhillips. (A. B. Blowers Commissioners Jd.S. Kimsev .Assessor W. H. Whipple Surveyor ......J. B. oit Superintendent of Public 8cbool...C. L. Gilbert Coroner... W. H. Butt , STATE OFFICIALS. ajvernor ...... .J.....'...W. P. Lord Secretary of State H R Kiucaid Treasurer -....Phillip Metschaa Bupt.of Public Instruction..-. G. M. Irwin Attorney-General CM. Irtleman , . IG. W. McBrido Senators... , .. Jj.:h. Mitchell r. - 1 IB Hermann Congressmen. jw K Euig SUte Printer '. ., ., W. H. Leeds Weekly dabbing Rates. Chronicle and Oregonian $2 25 Chronicle and Examiner 2 25 Chronicle and Tribune.;. ....... : .'. . 1 75 Chronicle and N. Y. World. 2 00. of protection, practically applied and prudently adjusted to the indus tries and interests of all sections and, classes. Wool Record. v; ' NEWSPAPERS IN SCHOOLS. AMERICAN AND BRITISH SYTE3IS "la discussing the compaiative merits of the American and British commercial systems, it is necessary to study' the respective conditions ' out of which they arise. In the first place, the American people possess a variety of soils adapted to every species of agricultural product Thej have also in abundance every de scription of raw material required for their diversified industries. Eng. .land, on the other hand, is in want of evcrythiDK except labor and a limited supp'y of minerals. In or der to feed and clothe her popula tion, she calls upon Asia, Africa, Australia,America, China, India and tbe isles of the sea for enormous contributions of grain, meal, fish, oil, cotton and woo!. It is naturally her policy to seek these in exchange for her manufactures. To facilitate this she maintains her magnificent uier cqant marine. In England the Malthusian theory has become a stern reality. Her population increases while her food supply relatively falls behind, and the gap in the proportion widens in an alarming manner. The value of England's ' agricultural products would oot serve as units in the count when compared with the value of the agricultural output of the United .States. Our present are in cultiva tion would afford food for a popula tion more than twice as large as that which now occupies this country. Yet we have less than one-tenth of Our arable area in cultivation. Our mining industries not only throw those of England in the shade, but they are in excess of those ot conti nental Europe, Asia, Africa, South America, Mexico and the British colonies combined ; . and we have scarcely begun to develop our , min ing resources. While the coal mines of Great Britain arc alteady so deep as to "greatly increase the cost of mining, we have enough coal near the surface to last us for centuries of consumption, and our aggregate coal supply is practically inexhaustible. In our manufactures we start with the advantage of having our raw material ready at hand, while Eng land must so thousands of miles for every cotton ball she spins. We can produce all the wool, cotton, woods and metals required for . any and every varietiy of manufacture. It is, therefore, clear that with these natural advantages of food, fuel and raw material in available abundance, we only need favorable conditions of enterprise and competition to attain and maintain absolute supremacy in ever' line of human industry. These conditions can only be provided by the system of protection' This prop osition requires no argument It has been amply demonstrated by experience. . Free trade has been a failure even in Great Britain, despite her elabo rate colonial policy. . A . special A New .England man has . just given $50,000, the interest of which is to be spent in buj-ing newspapers for the public schools of Boston. Of course if the ri?ht papers are pur chased, the money will be well ex pended, but in Kansas City, where newspapers have been adopted as text books m the public schools, the selection is queer, to say' the ' least Superintendent Greenwood of that city has written a letter to the Is ew York Journal, saying that he has or dered a file of that paper to be kept In every school building in that city. He based this .action on the claim that the Journal "teaches progress and patriotism" and that its illus trations speak volumes to the eager mind. The Jersey City ?ews, in com meriting on this, calls attention to the character of the issue in which the Journal announced proudly that it bad been made a textbook for the public schools of Ksnsas City. One of the articles in this issue was an account of how Anna Held, an opera singer, had been "kissed to a stand still" in 150 kisses, with full page il lustrations, and an interview with the "lady" telling how she felt while the kissing was in progress. Then there was a Hindoo legend with nude illustrations and an elaborate account of a barge on which the Roman orgies used to be carried on in the time of the Caesars. This was from the pen of a well known moralist, Mr. Edgar Saltus. . Of course there was a double page picture showing nude men and women dancing. After this came' an article suggesting that the figures on the new five dollar bills issued by the government are indecent To emphasize the claim there was a large picture of tha gov eminent designs, which no doubt will have great effect in training children to discover filth in common place things. of 'education or otberwise,"cannot accept, the single tax theory as cor rect' It isj in our opinion, the cor rect thing to prevent,' foreigners owning lands ; in the United States, and it is the best thing that caa hap pen to this or any other 'country when every one of its citizens owns a piece of the soil. ' . GR0S1T EXAGGERATION. Last year -Col. Pat ripping nepuoucanism TIIE WHEAT TRABE. The local market is very inactive, and the same is true of interior markets. The export value of wheat has declined a great deal during the week, and holders prefer to take chances on a rise in prices after the turn of the year, rather than market at present quotations, which to mer chants and speculators represent quite a loss on their dealings with the farming community. ,The for eign demand for our cargoes is slow, nnd it is quite difficult to effect sales forward, and sellers must con cede 6onretbing on pi ice to place surplus cargoes. Our shippers really have no present need of wheat, stock in store here being large, and will cover the wants of exporters for some time to come. The situation here may be summed up as follows: Buyers will only trade on the real export values, and holders won't sell except at an advance. Receipts have been large during the week. There is a pressure to sell on the part of a few holders, and during the week sales were of a moderate pro portion. The actual business trans acted was small, buyers and sellers being apart as to a trading basis. Foreign advices are weak; European markets with buyers holding off, and prices lower and still tending down ward. Quote Walla Walla club, 73c; b.'uestem, 75c; Valley, 76c per bushel. Commercial Review. cable from London,-dated IS o v. 7th, states that the total decrease in the Talue of British exports for ten months of 1897 is 130,000,000. Eng land is today confronted by the om inous fact that of the enormous for eign trade of all the Britssh colonies, only about forty per cent is trans acted with the mother country, while sixty per cent goes to rival nations. The United States suffers under none of these distractions and imitations. . We require for continuous and in creasing prosperity, not so much any particular tariff schedules, as the general, vital, conserving principle The East Oregonian, noting the fact that a case was - pending in the Washington supreme court to test the constitutionality of the law ire venting aliens holding real estate in that state, says that "if it is right for land to be owned, it is right for aliens to own it," and that "rights that cannot be conferred upon ail men irrespective of nationality, be come privileges and stand in the way of progress under any govern ment conferring I them." If this be true, Chinese should be admitted to citizenship, foreigners , permitted to hold public office and manage the government, and a hundred similar things permitted. We cannot all see -the land question as the East Or egonian sees it, and the great major ity of people, whether through fault Dorian was up the back and howling calamity for political purposes. Now he is employed by the O. R, &.N. to boom Oregon, and he sings like the cylinder of a thresh ing machine. The trcuble is, was, and always will,, be with Donan's work, that it is so grossly exagger ated that it loses all its power for good and becomes a positive evil. The Col. should - put the air brakes on his imagination. This is what be says of Oregon: "From the northern line of Cali fornia and Nevada to the remotest limits of Alaska and the Northwest territory, the whole Pacific slope is booming booming beyond alfprec edent I am one'of those who de voutly believed that McKiuley, as the 'advance agent of prosperity,' was traveling a long way ahead Of his show; but the caravan has caught up with the foremost Luglar and bill skins being dressed there, and the United States puts up the expenses. It is high time for this government to- quit guarding Behring sea for England ,and Canada, and policing Cuban waters for Spain. The sensi ble tiling to do is simply to permit the killing of seals by any American citizen. '. In two years the herds would be extermined, and the ques tion forever settled. - "-' The Portland Tribune, we under stand, is to blossom out with the dis patches and bloom in the early morn ing. -Another daily piper is sadly needed in Oregon's metropolis, and wc hoi.e the Tribune will be able to fill the, long-felt want. lima' do so, but the public has lost confidence in all such experiments, and will not believe in its continuance until it is known that behind it is money enough to carry it and build it up. poster, so far as the Pacific North west is concerned. The stars in their courses have fought for protection Billy and the 'grand old party. Prosperity has swept like a golden cj clone over Oregon, Washington Idaho, Alaska and British Columbia Great as the Yukon gold boom is and infinitely greater as it is to be it is, as j et, but a trifle compared with other booms that are pushin the Pacific coast forward. Take Oregon, for instance.. With an area of 96,000 sqare miles and but about 400,000 population, it has this year produced 40,000,000 bushels of wheat, worth $30,000,000. In addi tion, Oregon has this j-ear turned out 600,000,000 feet of lumber, worth 112,000,000; about 50,000,000 lbs. of fruit, worth about $5,000,000; something like 15,000,000. pounds of wool, worth $2,000,000; fish, amount ing to $3,000,000; gold,ilver, cop per, lead and coal, aggregating $ 10, 000,000 a grand " total of $70,000, 000, or about $175 for every man, woman and child within her borders for one year's yield." ; report that comes from Eng- as to thread and twine maru The land facture will interest persons in Ore gon who have been paying attention to growth of fibers. A movement is on foot to start opposition oh a great ssale to the Coates company. So many applications for stock have been received that it has been de cided to increase the capital from 5,000,000 to $15,000,000. The Coates company is capitalized at $37,500,000. Fourteen leading firms of threadmakers in cotton, silk and linen, have been absorbed by 'the new anti-monopoly, and a war in the trade is looked for. The ' Coates people, however, are taking things comfortably, and they say that there is room for both in the field." The report that there will be a tvo-thirds majority in the senate for the ratification of the . Hawaiian treaty is probably correct. . The an nexation project gains fi vends as time passes, says the Oregonian. All the objections which can be urged against annexation have been heard, and they are : not' formidable. The president will, in his message, recom mend early action, and nearly all the Republicans and a majority of the Democrats are likely to stand with him on this question. Nobody need be surprised if annexation comes be fore the end of January. The everlasting seal controversy still bothers the administration, fills the newspapers and bores the public. This government has no interest in the protection of seals, and Bbould abandon them to their fate. One American' company is permuted to kill all the seals it wants to and no one else is allowed to kill any" The company refuses to pa3' the govern ment for its privileges, and even if it did, the amount would not cover the expense of protecting the herds. England gets all the benefits, the The wealth of Wasco county, in money, as shown by the assessment rolls for 1897, is but $4,987, and yet thousands of dollars worth of busi ness is being transacted throughout the county every day. Either money , is not absolutely necessary for the transaction of business or else somebody has lied to the as sessor. Glacier. Bis; Gale at Astoria. A dispatch from Astoria on the 16th said : . . ' . "A furious gale has been raging since 3 o'clock this morning, and is now in creasing. The wind is blowing sixty miles an hour at the cape. - No ships have arrived or departed. The mouth of ihe river is obscured by a heavy fog and rain. The steamer State of Cali fornia, due this morning, it is presumed, ie lying outside near the lightship. In Aetoria, fences were' blown down, awn ings swept away, and .the old Anglo American 'cannery was tumbled over onto the railroad track in East Astoria, compelling the work train to stop and the bands to clear away the wreck be fore the train could proceed. A runaway skiff was blown across the bay at a high rate of speed, and passengers on river steamers were seasick. "A man just in from Elsie, in the Up per Aenalem valley, reports that toe storm is very severe all through the Ne halem conntry. The Big Fisbhawk is so swollen it la difficult to cross it. A large tree was blown across the Cist. skanie bridge, knocking out four epaua. It ia feared there will be much damage. NATURAL GRAVITY GATE III IP I i frFr ra'- ' ' - v . . i-j'. . Cheapest and Simplest Gate. on Record Eor Simplicity, Durability, Ease ot Operation and Cheapness of Con- ' atruction. it is unequele l. Can be operated without dieinonntino- . Parties wishing to see large gate in Operation can do bo by- visiting Sannyeido Orchards. State and County rights for sale by SSXIr?sE.. E. E. GUSTIN. THE DALLES, OR Dalles Public Schools. Following is the enrollment on Friday, November 12, 1S97 : TEACHERS. 36! 33 44 41 49! 4S i 851 SOi 46: 44 46, 45 East Bill Primary. - Miss Kan Cooper..- 1 and 2B Mrs. Roche 3, 4 and 5B Acaacmy ram. Miss rtilrman IB Mrg.Baldwlnl . Miss Flinn . ( "uu41 90 Miss U Rlntonl 6 T) S3 MissT. Rlntonl 6 A and7B 51 Union Street - MiesRowe . 1 B 55 Miss t. cooiier 2 HI 4' Miss Snell 4 B 4fli MissCneese. . . .. .. 4 A and SB 471 Union Street Annex. Miss Ball 5 w 4' Court Street. Miss MicbeU 7 A and 8 B 54 Miss Hill... I Hitrh Hehnnl Sfcl. 1U Mr. Landers and HA HI 10910310 Totals. Similar quarter in 1896. .... migneei previous record.) 51 50! 29W2 6K 4S 5, 4l 7 4-a 53 No. days of school, 20. Per cent of.attendance on number be longing, 96. , John Gavin, Principal. - Ad rertlsed Letters. , ' Donation Wanted for the Children. The Boys', and Girls' Aid Society is at this time in great need of funds, and in fact, of everything that would be of nse to children. Last summer, as stated in Tns CnRONiCLE,tbe superintendent of this society planned a visit to The Dalles to canvass lor; subscriptions, but was prevented by a severe attack of typhoid fever,' which kept him in bed for almost the entire summer. However, having now recovered, he will wait on the busi ness men of this city in a few days, and any and all donations will be thankfully received, eucb as money, children's clothing, both new and- second hand, or provisions. Blakeley & Houghton, druggiets, will receive them or notify Mr. Gardner on bis arrival. iN early every person. ia familiar with the work of this society, viz : . Keecmng homeless, neg lected and abused children, and finding them sni table homes. . It is hoped that all who are able will respond with what they can afford. . . ; . Will Bant Gold on Copper Birer. A party of New England men, most of whom hail from Boston, are in Seattle outfitting for a most hazardous trip over the glacial fields" and enow-covered mountain ranges of Alaska. They are captained by F. Herbert Haines, a news paper man from Salem, Mass. The party is bound for a second Eldo rado lying in the upper Copper river country in Alaska. In preparation for a possible encounter with the 'hostile tribe of Indians living in the region, they will go well armed. Tht Copper-river Indians have for years brought down gold to the trading stores at the mouth of the river. They will not tell where they got it, and op pose anything like exploration of the country. .They carry this policy to the point of firmed hostility. ' 7 He Was a Bis; Man.- He was big of chest and litnbe, and as he came in he said : 'I'm going to give you all the trouble I can till I get what fits me." Lees than five minutes later the salesman , said, "Try this one." It was a first rate fit, one of those clay worsted, size 48., The vest perfect ; the trousers 48- around . the . waist, . 30 in length perfect, without an alteration of button or anything the most trifling. He wore it away on bis back, a more than pleased man. Conldn't have been fitted better bad it been : made to his measure, and it cost fully one-half lees. Everybody, big -man or not, can' be fitted at A. M. Williams & Co.'e. Your money back it you want it. ; . Following is the list of letters remain: ing in the poetoffice at The Dalles un called for Oct. 29. 1S97- Persona calli ng for the same will give date on which they were advertised : Aldrich F M Adieson Pase Alley Geo M Aldrich Franjc BennisGeo . Barnes Lizzie Blue Mrs L Barber CO Bacon B B ' Connolly Delia A Lage Mattie Linch TE . Lowerv Chas F Model'Feath ClrCo Myers WC Moe Frank ' Margan Lou McDonald J M McAllister Jos - Mayer Lizzie Campbell MraNittieOlson John Darvis T F Davidson Chas E Davidson Harry Davidson Daisy Davia J A' Defoy A Flemming A Floory Mary Grove Sadie Gordon Lei a Groves E Groeney Lue Greenleaf Lewis Hoyt M . Hawley Ira Harris G W Hammon C H Johnson J A Johns Bess . Johnson Frank " Johnson Hilda Jaioles Mr , Johnson Dave Johnson C A Jenkins J W -Jnika Amanda King Mchael Lemons Josan Laukine Suaie Lona Mrs H M Leinenger Martha J. Poole Chas Rogers Dick Bobbins Minerva Kobins May Selden Sarah Sears H State Olive Schanner Johan Shane I A Wmith Fritz Swanson Jno -Tull Geo Thompson C F -Thomaa J D Wren Clay Vermont Mar Wks Vo der Helen H Vineyaro S W Wattle Jno Watt J N Walker Mary Warfield Edw Wakefield & Jacob. Warner M Wilson EE. Woodford W T Woodcock Wm Wing G L Wright J T Wickbam Clarence Witham Verona A. Cbossen, P. M. Robbed at Hantington. The Baker City Democrat prints the following dispatch from Huntington, dated November 16th : D. McCrawley, who shipped some sheep east from here a short time ago, was robbed of $135 here early yesterday morning by a canst of hoboes."- McCraw ley had been drinking heavily all night witn tne boboes and bad displaced- con siderable money with the result that when he reached a stage of intoxication bordering upon helplessness he was robbed. It is understood the party was from The Dalles and was returning there. ' William Thorn, said to be well con nected in Eastern Oregon,, was arrested in Weiser last night for the robbery, and $101 of the stolen money recovered. He had bought a ticket for rocatello, bat owing to the vigilance of the officers he had no- chance- to. .use it. - He will be bound over to the grand jury, and stands a good chance of getting a long term in the penitentiary. -- J. W. Nesm-.th Woman's Relief Corps will hold a memorial service in Schanno'a ball next Saturday, evening at 8:30 o'clock. This meeting is called , in pur suance' of general orders,, received . irom national and 'department officers, in memory bf Mrs. E, Florence Barker, past national preeident, who died at her home in Maiden, Mass.,. on September 11, 1897, and Mrs. Julia Abraham, past department president, who died at the family, home . in Roseburg, Or., ' on Oc tober 6, 1897, and our own members who have "crossed over", during the present year. All friends of the order are in vited to be present Wanted. Freight teams to load for the interior. For particulars inquire at the Jacobsen Book and Music store. 16 2t FOUNDER OF TOMBSTONE. Remarkable Career of a St. Loala Box Who Became a Miner. Edward Schefflein, who was found dead the other day in his miner's shack in Oregon, had an eventful life, saya the St. Louis Republic. . "I remember well," said William H. Boothe, an old-time mine promoter, to a reporter, "when he opened up the Contention mine at Tombstone and gave the place its queer name. I ought to remember it, for it was I who grub staked Shefflein on that prospecting tour. He bunkoed me out of all but a few hundreds. ''The stories that have been told about Schefflein's daring in penetrating into the Apache country and particularly into the Cochise mountains, where he found the Contention lode, are not much exaggerated. It was a pretty ticklish thing to do down there. Old Cochise had been 'pacified,' it is true, but he ' had a lively son, Natchez, and a valiant nephew, Geronimo, and they were the active young leaders of about as 'pizen' & set of Indians as ever swung a Win chester. . - "So when Ed Schefflein struck the Contention lode and called the place I 'Tombstone,' we thought it a happy play of Ed's mind. -. - "The Contention proved to be a great mine. It was enormouslv rich in sil- 1 x - . J ! .3 i L X 4.1... time every condition arose toput aown the price of that metal. However, it yielded an amount away into the mil lions. The Scheffleins sold half of the mine to Walter Dean, of San Francisco; Dick Gird, of Los Angeles; F. A. Tritte, then governor of the territory, and others in San Francisco for $500,000. "Of course the Sheffleins lost most of their fortune.' They couldn't help it. Ed was a restless fellow; He wasn't dis sipated, nor did he gamble or have other expensive vices, but he was generous and a Dluntrer on his luck. He wouldn't settle down and do business on busi ness principles." ' ' . -y.'V.StK' CRUSH ED tTTeCON DUCTOR. A PasHcnsjrer'a Quick Wit Ronndlr He proved His Grnffnesa. The passengers on a crowded cable car the other day . were immensely -"tickled" at the discomfiture of a con ductor, who was both rude and dia obliging, but was cleverly circumvent ed, says the New York Commercial Ad- vertiaer. The conductor banded five pennies in change to a well-dTessed womarr. She requested that a nickel be given to her . lmsteaa, as sue nau no purse ana uie pennies would probably be lost. Gentle as was the request, it irritated the con ductor, and he said: "No, I have to take peuuics auu juu van uu iuc otuuc xxicav will buy just as much as a nickel." The woman, remained silent and the con ductor proceeded down the oar. At that .moment a man. who was about to pay his fare touched the lady's arm ' and handed her a nickel, taking in ex change the pennies, which he immedi ately gave to the conductor. It was all . done quietly and quickly, yet many saw the play, and all who did smiled with. satisfaction. .' 1 WINNING. A WIFE IN GREECE. Sponsjre Gatherers Ena-aa-e la Sub aqueous Contests for Ber Band. In many of the Greek islands diving . for sponges forms a considerable part of the occupation of the inhabitants. A visitor to this unfrequented region describes the following rather startling custom. He saye: "Himia, which is a little island directly opposite Rhodes, is worthy of notice on account of the singular method by which the Greek . inhabitants of the island get their liv- -ing. On the bottom of the sea in this . . locality the common sponge is found in greater abundance than in any other' UU1 U Ul I lit D1CH lltllOHLUU. - " - - ' - make it a trade to trainer iui-sc, aim their income from this source is far -from contemptible;-their goods areI ways in demand among the Turks, who use an incredible numDer or sponges in . the ablutions prescribed by the Moham medan ritual. A girl in this island is -not permitted to marry until she has brought up a certain number of sponges and given proof of . her skill by taking them from a certain depth. But in certain of these islands this custom is reversed. The father of a marriage able daughter bestows her on the best diver amour her suitors. He who can ' stay longest in the water and bring up the bieirest cargo of sponges marries the maid." - - '" . Tne Obesitr Record. Daniel- Lambert, the famous fat man and the most noted example of obesity -recorded in medical annals, was born in 1770, and died at the age of 40, of ex- cessive fat. His weight was 739 pounds.