C2J THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE SATURDAY, DECEMBER 25, 1897. The Weekly Ghrooiele. CUCNH OiriCULII. air Ji Sheriff.... Clerk Treasurer Commissioner AneMor Surveyor. . . T. i. Driver A M. Kelsny c. L. runup I A. b. Blowers i D. 8. Kimsey . W. H. Whipple ...J. . I'Oll Superintendent of Public Schools... C. L. Gilbert vttroner.. ....... if . a-, buiw HATE OFFICIALS. . Sjvernoi W. P. Lord Secretary of State H B Kincaid Treasurer ..Phillip Metachan apt. ot I'abuc instruction i. m. irwip Attorney-General. C. M. Idleman ' . 1G. W. McBride dibu. jj.-h. Mitchell tB Hermann -"'"0""" w. K. Ellis Btate Printer : ....W.H.Leeds THE ; CO USER IN WHEAT. Those who are watching the- wheat market closely are eipecting devel opments of a sensational character, A combination has been formed to corner December wheat, and the in dications are the effort may be suc cessful A pool headed by the wealthy Chicngoan, Loiter, is buying up the wheat as fast as it is offered. and announces that it is expected the price will reach a dollSr and a half a bushel. The president of the Chicago board of trade has made the state ment that he expects wheat to reach a figure considerably higher than at present. It is thought by many that Amer ica has sold to a closer margin than should hare been done, and when this fact is made patentt wheat will take a jump. The crop in Argen tina is only an average one : India - has the ravages of the famine to make good, and in Europe there is a short age. It is these conditions that make the success of the attempt to corner, more than a possibility. The bulk of the crop has left the farmers' Lands, and a rise in whlat is not desired now as it was in the fall. True, some farmers who have not yet sold would be benefited, but the great gainers would be the cold blooded speculators who play with millions,. while the losers would be nomah county i!l be on more bitter ; year, however, the law enacted by than ever. It is the duty of the out- the last congress compels ine secre sTde delegates to take control of the tary to put into the annual ' estimates parly macLinery, and when the state the eutire sum named in these state convention meets make the noraina ments of the '-amount that can be tions without regard to the. fi.-jlit in profitably expended in the next fiscal Portlapd. In this way only can Re- year." rue result is that the sum publican success be assured. . "estimated" for river and harbor rorks alone in the next fiscal year A SURPLUS, SOT A DEFICIT. i3 $05,400,409.81, while nobody ex pects that the appropriations will be more than one-third of this sum. . It is apparent that the actual ap propriations fcr , the fiscal year will be $20,000,000 less than' the esti- - The New lork Tribune says Hereafter the secretary of war shall annuallj' submit estimates in detail for river and- harbor improvements required for the ensuing fiscal year to mated receipts, instead of $20,000,- thc secretary of the treasury, to be q0q more. included in and carried into the sum total of the book of estimates This quotation from the last Sun dry Civil Appropriation bill, as it became a law and stands upon the THE APPROPRIATIONS. Here comes the eral journals that assertion in sev- Secretary Gagi statute books, explains the apparent himself estimates there will be a defi nrnsnor-t nt n rlpfinir in the fiscal vear Cit Of $21,000,000 in the next fiscal which is to begin On Julj 1, 1898. year under the present revenue law, a o-rtnrl deal of distress has been Is it strange if many newspapers are manifested in certain quarters over j lamenting their loss or mnuence witu the figures of the report of the sec- the people, even when tney try to relary of the treasury, which indicate use it in a good cause, so long as they a deficit in the next fiscal year. The resort to such untruths in order to rmonle mdiiloino- in this distress will support any claim they make? The c 1 I - perhaps be gratified to know that the secretary made no statement war deficit is only apparent, and that the ranting such an assertion. What he figures, which considered in the light did was to contrast his estimate of nf the nnraoTflnh cited, warrant the the probable revenue for the next I a t ' I - ... assertion that the next fiscal vear nscai year wun trie amounts asueu r.y will show a. surolus of $30,000,000 the various .departments, showing instead of a deficit of $21,000,000, The explanation of this apparent defi cit is found in a single line on page 12 of the secretary's report. It is as to? lows: "Public works, war de partment, $65,400,409.81." The above is the formal "estimate" for river and harbor improvements in the" fiscal year in question, now re quired to be inserted in the annual estimates sent to congress by the that if all the money asked should be appropriated by congress, and spent during the fiscal year, there would result a deficit of $21,647,886. This formal statement, made by successive secretaries in their annual reports, is never supposed to be an estimate by them that congress will appropriate all the sums asked, although it does at times exceed the estimate. - The fact remains, says the Tribune the poor of the great cities, whose judgment of the chief of engineers, pittance . is scarcely enough to keep body and soul tosether now. and to whom a rise in the price of wheat means still greater denial. Better it -would be, if 'twere possible, that a rportion of this projected rise be add led to next year's price, and then the -.whole country would be the gainer. An index to the general improve meat of business conditions through--oot the conntry is found in the in- creased employment given to labor. In New York City there are nearly '-35,000 less unemployed men than Ihere were a year age at this time. So far in the present month 841 per. ons have seenred employment through the 'Association for Improv ing the Condition of the Poor, while during December of 96 only 263 persons were thus provided for. Let what will be said, a protective tariff has stimulated all kinds of business throughout the country, and the man ' who works is receiving his full bene fit. When labor is employed one of the great reasons for social unrest is eliminated. secretary of tho treasury. Prior to that the responsibility for the future. the adoption of this new requirement both as to sufficiency of the revenue the secretary of war made his esti- and as to possibility of strengthening mates of the amount required for the tie monetary system, rests just where river and harbor improvement on th'e President McKinley placed it when he urged in his message great prud ence in appropriations. It. is obvi ous that congress has power to ap propriate more money than its reve nue laws raise, and equally obvious that a deficit, so long as it exists, involves more or less risk of distrust regarding the monetary- future. In plain words Secretary Gage has row be is obliged to insert in the annual estimates every dol'ar that any and every subordinate officer in charge of the various improvements the country over may choose to name as the amount that can be "profitably expended" during the coming fiscal year. And now it is rumored that Ger many is planning a conp to seize the the Hawaiian Islands and secure the sapreroacj of the Pacific. While there is absolutely no foundation ior the report, and it is undoubtedly as untrue as any of the fake sensations of "yellow journalism," yet even the thought of such a possibility would evoke- the declaration from every true American that no foreign nation can get control of the Islands with out a merry brush with the American navy. We may not want Hawaii ourselves, but we will see to it that no other nation gets her. She must either . be independent or wholly 'American. The war scare now appears in Asia when Russia, Germany and England are wniting for China to die. The avarice of the old woild monarchies is pushing their armies and navies to points further away and China bids fair to follow the fate of India and pass under the dominion of a foreign people. Along the shores of the Pacific the drama of history is going to be played doring the next few years. China is the first victim se lected, and whether the drama turns into a tragedy, time alone can tell. Since the Oregonian has led the way, the Republican fight in Mult- Everybody familiar- with the re- shown congress that it is asked "by ports of officers in charge of liver the several executive departments and harbor works knows that it is and offices' to appropriate $21, bUU, their habit to recommend the annro. 000 more money than Its revenue priation of large sums, usually two law wil1 probably yield next year. or three times as much as is expect- although that law will probably ed to be obtained. It has also been yield next year, although that law the habit of the war department for wiH yield, in his opinion, $13,600,000 many years to reduce to about one- more than the government requires third of their dimensions the estl. for its expenditures this current mates made bv these subordinate year, and $34,400,000 more than it officers. - actually expended in the last fiscal An example of this may be found year. Thus the whole question in the total estimates for river and comes to be one of appropriations harbor works sent to congress in De cember, 1891, to cover the expendi tures of the fiscal' year 1893, for which the secretary recommended an appropriation cf $113,208,303. On the very same page began a lengthy table which gave the detailed esti mates presented for the various rivers and harbors, the total of these figures $52,489,950. " That table was preceded by the following note : "River and harbor, showing .the amount that can be profitably ex pended in .he next fiscal year. ' The following statement is not furnished as a part of the annual estimates for the public service required by the act of March 3, 1875, to be .resent ed by the secretary of war 10 the secretary of the treasury, but is in serted as a convenient and custom ary summary of items"taken from the annual rejKul of the chief of en gineers for the fiscal year 1801, show ing, under the r revision of the act of congress, approved March 2, 1867, the 'amount that can be profitably expended in tho next fiscal year' on each of the woiks mentioned." In this case it will be seen that the figures covering the. ."amount tuat can be profitably , expended in the next fiscal year" were $52,489,950, while the amount that was actually estimated was $13,208,383. ' The re sult was that the total estimates in that year as they went to contained for river and harbor, improvements on the condensed item of $13,208, 393, instead of the elaborate esti mate of ."profitable expenditures" amounting to $52,489,950. -This is the great increase asked, largely exceeding the probable revenue, necessary for the proper support of the government? This is the one question which the representatives of the people in con gress must decide in the light of their knowledge of the needs and the will of the voters. It is their especial and great responsibility at this time. They know that they can defeat themselves and their party, as both parties have more than once been de feated, by appropriations which the people hold excessfve in vie of the existing conditions. It is plain to them that the country greatly needs such assured excess of revenue1 over expenses as will strengthen the pub lic credit and the currency and make practicable reforms to that -end. If they care rather for the satisfaction of interested people in this or that improvement .or building' or exten sion of the public service, they have to answer to constituents who are not slow to remember that heavy appro priations -without an ample surplus involve grave risks. The appropriatians asked this year are substantially the same as the amounts voted last year in most branches of the service, and the great difference is found in compara tively few items. Under the war de partment, including river and harbor improvement, $65,400,000 is asked, in place of $22,914,816 asked a year ago. .The responsibility rests with congress to decide whether, until the sufficiency of the revenue has been established, such extensive increase of appropriation should be made Secretary Gage's department reduces its estimate for department service and public works by $1,043,000, and increases its estimkte for miscellane ous expenses by $786,000, making a net decrease. The department of agriculture asks an increase of $500, 000, while in the estimate for foreign intercourse there is a decrease. The estimate for the navy deparment shows a decrease of $2,350,000, and the interior department shows a small decrease in public works. The esti mate for pensions is slightly reduced, and expenditures for the department of justice and the estimate for the District of Columbia are reduced about $500,000. A decrease is ' also made in the estimate for interest on public 'debt. - The great increase asked is for public works, and that increase alone would turn a comforta ble surplus into a deficit if the reve nue proves as large as Secretary Gage estimates. Yesterday's dispatches tell of six glass factories which will resume operations January , 1st another practical illustration of the benefits of a protective tariff. NEWS NOTES. nn ! 7 vC NATURAL GRAVITY GATE . iJ'?tt'; t"g'i"""" "Lnxmlfr - fUMMv !. i 1- --.y 'Mf.-K.WM-au.a. - Cheapest and Simplest Gate on Record Eor Simplicity, Durability, Ease ot Operation and Cheapness of Con struction, it is uneqneled. Can be' operated without dismounting. . . Parties wishing to see large (fate in Operation-can do so by visiting - Sunnyside Orchards. State and County rights for sale by SUNNYSIDE -n -n riTTnmTTVT ORCHARDS ... JH. JEJ. UUOlllN. . ' THE DALLES, OR DISEASES OF INFANTS. Mesnbr Bos- Qaincy was re-elected mayor of ton yesterday. ' - Yesterday a robber was killed while trying to rob a station near Redding, Cal. The first meeting of the National Building Trades Council was held at St Louis Monday. . laieBt aa vises say that England is thinking very seriously of helping her self to a tliee of China. Reports received from Portland this morniug btate that the Portland Cham ber of Commerce may eend a relief ex pedition to Alaska, No appointments will be made by the president miring the recess of ccngretB except in case ot emergency. Despite the announcement of , this fact, the number of visitors at the White House yesterday tras unusually large. Yesterday Miss Leila Herbert, daugh ter of the ex-secretary of war, . died at her home in Wbington. The death was reported to police headquarters as a case of suicide caused by melancholia and temporary aberation of the mind as the result of illness. ' After a week of conference in Boston, Justices Putnam and King, the commis sioners for the United States and Cana da, respectively, in the arbitration of the Behring sea claims, have completed their work for the present, and it is an deretood will soon begin the preparation of their reports to their respective gov ernments. - Thursday's Dally. Latest reports state tbat the Demo cratic, Populist and Union parties of Lane county have combined. Matthew Richardson, a Clackamas county pioneer, was killed yesterday evening by falling from a wagon. Latest advices say there is no danger of this country, having anything to do in the affairs of China. A steamer is being bnilt at Baltimore for traffic on the Yukon, which can be navigated on ice or water. The Cuban version of the battle fought at Yacta ford, on the Canto river, December 14th last, has been received at New York through the mails by Cap tain Alfredo Rodriguez, a Cuban insur gent officer, who is invalided in that city. tells of a crushing defeat inflicted pon the Spanish general, Pando. At Havana yesterday it was announced from the palace that during the past ten days the insurgents have lost 303 men killed, and that in addition the Spanish troops have captured seventeen prison ers and that sixty-nine armed inenrg ents have surrendered. The troops, it farther announced, have captured inety-five stands of firearms daring this time. Among the killed, the state ment continues, are three insurgent leaders and three officers of the- insur gent forces. The Spanish troops, dar ing the same period, according to official statistics, lost three officers and thirty three Boldiers killed, and had thirteen officers and 213 soldiers wounded. Energr Directed There is no, daug-er so great for a man or a boy as idleness. It mothers and fathers yvould save their boys, they should give them soinethiug to do.. Buy an ax and a sew, ad let them chop np that wood,, no matter- how large the bank account.- Let them keep'the weeds from the f garden -and the tall grass from the lawn, tne dirt, irom. their own clothes and the dust from their own shoes. " Don't do everj-thing for them. It ' pays to ler.ch the boys work not so much, for what they can do as for v.-kat it. does for them. If more boys could have a piece of ground, shop, a place of some kind where they could work off their superfluous energy, we would hear less of truant and reform schools, In the matter of reading, too, if vou do Jiiot w ish the boys to read worthless books and trashy novels, you miist put into their hands good, well- written books', and these not ot tne dull type, which-'will discourage a young mind. St. Louij Republic. . ; eons -Affection Are the Most Common. . -The high mortality among infanta ia largely due to the widespread oc currence of inflammations of the mem branous tract, the exact seat of in flammation varying with the change of the seasons. In summer the mucous membrane of the stomach is likely to be attacked, causing frequent vomit ing, which results in an interference with the absorption of nourishment; while a similar inflammation of. the mucous membrane of the intestines will cause persistent diarrhoea, with a like result. ' ' In cold weather the mucous mem brane of the nose, throat or lungs is oftener the seat of the disease. - The skin of infants, too, offers but a feeble resistance to outside influences. A condition of the blood due to indi gestion often gives rise to eczema on the cheeks, scalp and elsewhere, the symptoms being roughness, redness and even moisture weeping of the skin. Local irritations, such as mois ture, cold, or the rubbing of seams, are apt to give rise to the state known as "chafed skin." -. This sensitiveness of the infants skin should be borne in mind, and the underclothing should be loose, soft, and frequently changed, whrle nature a skin-tonic for both infants and adults the bath -should be daily adminis tered. In view of the quickness with which infants become chilled, especially Be fore the period when they are able to walk, the garment worn- next to the skin should be invariably of wool. which material affords the best protec tion against a too rapid loss of heat. In sumrner the garment should be thin ner, but always of wool. Infants are rarely "bundled up" too much, not withstanding opinions often freely ex pressed to the contrary. The lack of resistance to disease in infancy which has been noted in con nection with the skm and the mucous membrane is likewise characteristic of other organs. The most common age at which infectious diseases are con tracted is in infancy, and in early in fancy they prove more severe than with older children and are oftener fatal. . An impressioii that "children's dis eases are .better once had ana done with is entirely at variance With the observation and judgment of the med ical profession. The sequence of dis eases which the physician so often sees in children, as the result of one of the contagious diseases needlessly con tracted, is a lesson which, he cannot ig nore. One disease makes a child less able to battle successfully with an other which may be contracted before he is rid of the first. Wise parents ward off the contagious diseases as long as possible. Even measles fre quently proves fatal in the young in fant, while in other cases its evil ef; fects are lasting throughout childhood. Youth's Companion. MUSCLE-MAKING FADS. MISS GUILFORD'S VOW. Bald She Wouldn't Speak for Fifty Years, and Now She Can't Talk. The people in the southern part of Hancock county, Me., are deeplv inter ested in a peculiar malady which af flicts Miss Experience Guiliord, an aged woman of East Eluehill, who has not uttered a word or any audible sound for SO years. The original reason for Miss Guiliord's speechlessness was an ger because she could not marry the man of her choice. When she was 19 years old she fell in love with William Simpson, the village schoolmaster. They were to be married on June 18, 1847. One of Miss Guilford's rejected suitors told tales about the schoolmas ter, and Miss G uilford's parents stopped the wedding. Miss Guilford thereupon Kairi:- "I swear. I will not speak a word, thon.-rh I live for 50 vears. unless I mar ry this man." ' She kept her pledge. . Her parents AnA A K . i: I. l.AwvnnH ried brother. When he died she made her. home with a sister, and after the RisterR rifnth F.T10 tront tn a oamn in thp .. r' woods and kept house for a brother, with whom she is ri&w living. All this time she performed her share of the household work and did not show any regret for having made the vow. When the 5C years of silence expired she wiui visited by a large number of rela tievs and fricnd3. who went to the camp for the uurnose of bein? nresent when she was at liberty to speak. Soon after . tne midJay meal Hiss Gui'-Cord dressed herself in the garments which she had not woi;i for Ielf a century. At two o'clock uhe stocd up before the people, ... siuiled hud opened her mouth to speak; but, thr..ih she tried hard and got red in the face ia trying, she could not ivu"r a bcur.d. Ilcr vocal muscles had biorne s.trophicd from long disuse and re tused 10 work. V.ten Miss Guilford found that she ' 1 ... . 1 . A . T t.uuiu am.- Bum lkj uaiigui for a fiyescian and .took to her bed The doctor gave no. hope of recovery, but E'j.7f -?t-j:l ihat r.he be sent to a l!cston h:-- fnr. treatment. As soon Exercises That Keep Athletic Girls Abreast of Their Brothers. The fad for fencing at home has led many a girl to set up in the privacy of her father's residence a private gym nasium, or, as she prefers to dub it, au "armory," where she practices with the aid of. an instructor and in com pany with a few of her intimate friends, says an eastern exchange. Many a girl can do her trick on the flying rings or the parallel bar in a manner that makes' her college-bred brother hustle for his laurels And he'll have to hustle still more when the glorious May days come and she can show the result of her secret train ing on the golf links and the tennis court, The Vassar girls and students at other of the famous women colleges and co educational institutions have estab lished gymnasium classes and are hard at work preparing for the coming sum mer. The Wellcsley girls train with a special view of developing the mus cles, necessary to become expert at the oars, and their famous fours and eights are expected to beat all records this season. . . . : Bowling has its devotees, and many of the fair sex have proved themselves experts on the alleys. The most usual place for practicing bowling is at some of the large ath letic clubs, which generally have one day in the week, known as "ladies' day." : ... ' - . Harry Martell's company will arrive on the 5 :15 train, and the parade will start from the depot at 5:20 sharp. as Miss C take i'.zb effort to rc; left her si dc'ctb, w-hU ve-'r !-..?! able to r.'c!:! t!:e quires! M.v. P'-n. t f-'ets strong enough to v t-ho v. ill rocke another 1 or f--;-crch. Her father I sum cf money at his rs 1-cei growing every s b.-rk. so she is well treatment she re- THE LIGHT OF THE FUTURE. Xradj-lnsf That Produced by Animal and Vearetable Life. . The incandescent electric light wastea and throws away 98 per cent, of the en ergy utilized, ' only two per cent, ap pearing in the shape of light rays. On the other hand, the light emitted by the. firefly and the glow worm wastes but two :per cent.. In other words, "the ani mal light is 48 times cheaper. In the course of recent experiments Dr. Raphael Dubois, of Lyons, has made elaborate studies of a great many kinds of light-producing creatures. -There is no lack of them in nature; in fact, thou sands of species possess this curious photogenic power. Not a few plants also have it, and among the latter may be mentioned certain mushrooms that grow in Brazil and Austria. Some of them give enough light to make it pos sible to read by the aid of a single speci men. The luminosity frequently seen in autumn in the forests on dead leaves or on bits of wood is due to fungi. The yellow flowers of the nasturtium emit a "small amount of light. " But in the an imal kingdom the torchbearers assume an immense variety of forms, the min ute organisms that crc responsible for mnch of the ocean's phosphorescence to the deep-sea fishes that carry lamps of their own and form endless torch light processions through the other wise black and gloomy marine abysses. Many jelly fishes are luminous, and so are some of the star fishes. A few earthworms are light-givers and num erous crustaceans have a luminosity of their own. One kind of shrimp has a brilliant circle surrounding the eye, which is really a luminous socket. A European species of "thousand legs" enfits light in autumn- But no animals are better light-givers than certain in sects, and even the eggs of some of these are luminous. From generation to generation the light-bearing crea tures transmit the torch that is never extinguished, and which seems to have been lighted at the very dawn of crea tion. Boston Transcript. ( The Snipes-Kinersly Drug Co. have just ' received a fine line of Japanese ware suitable for Christmas presents. dcl3-lw