THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 29, 1897. The Weekly Ghfoniele. COUNTY OFFICIALS. Conner Judge. '. ..Boot Mays bQ6Tltt........ Clerk Treasurer... Commissioner! Assessor Surveyor ,.T. J. Driver A M. Kelsay ,...C. L. Phillips I A. s. mowers i D. 6. Eimser . W. H. Whipple IS. liOlt Superintendent of Public Schools... C. L. Gilbert Coroner W. H. Butta 8TATK OFFICIALS. Sovernor W. P. Lord Becretary of State HE Kincaid Treasurer -Phillip Metschan Bupt. ol rublic instruction u. . lrwm Attnrnov-ftonernl C. M. IdlemaD o IG. W.McBride """" -JJ.'H. Mitchell (B Hermann uugnwuucu. 1W. E. EUls State Printer W. H. Leeds PENSION ABUSES. The present necessity of retrench ment in government expenditures will prove of great value if it should not only stop further pension extrav - agauce, but lead to & revision of ex isting laws and of the pension roll itself. Hitherto congress Las paid little heed to warning voices from the great public, and none at all to various presidential suggestions as to the need of preserving the honor of the pension system. It was thought a few years ago that the highest point in pension expenditure drawing pensions than there are sur vivors, and, as everybody knows, thousands upon thousands of real veterans counted among the 727,000 survivors of the war are not drawing pensions. The probability, if not the certain ty, of great fraud, is sufficient to make the duty of congress an urgent one. The temptation is a strong one Many argoe that as it is public monev. and some are setting it fraudulently, they might as well have their share. The roll should be revised so as to make it an honest roll, and the many special acts of congress making the way to the treasury easier and the pay larger should be examined, and some of them repealed. AMERICAN DOMESTIC COMMERCE With a territory as large as Eu- rope, a population double tbat or Great Britain, and domestic indus tries nearly equalling the aggregate of those of Great Britain, France and Germany, the foreign trade of the United States is much smaller than that of any of these countries. had But in twenty years France increased been reached, but the annual bill is her foreign trade three per cent, Ger increasing again, and promises to go many eleven per cent., the United several millions higher. Every con- Kingdom seventeen per cent, and gressman now sees that care in mak- the United States sixty-six per cent. Ing appropriations is necessary lest This growth is "especially remarka the monthly deficit be continued in- ble, and eighty-six per cent of Ainer definitely. . , . I ican shipping is engaged in coasting During President Cleveland's first or inland navigation, and as the bulk term it was extremely unpopular to of the foreign trade is done on for- to criticise the pension system. It eign bottoms. was taken as offensive to the veter- This striking fact is elucidated and ans, and as indicating lack of sympa- many other interesting phases of the thy with the great service they ren- growth and status of American in- dered the country in restoring the dustries are shown in an article en union and making the United States titled "Thirty Years of American free from slavery. Since Republi- Trade," by M. G. Mulhall. in the cans of the stalwart type in both November North American Review, branches of congress are now calling Mr. Mulhall "the true policy of the attention to the need of keeping United States points to a free ad mis down the pension appropiiation by sion of all fibers, so as to stimulate guarding against abuses of the gen- textile industries, and thus render erous provisions of the laws, it may the country independent of foreign not be considered unpatriotic to urge manufactures of this description the cause of pension reform. Many The conditions prevailing under the abuses hive recently been pointed experimental f ree trade of the Wil out. and it ia elearlv made the rlntv sn om are or too recent occurrence seen Eastern Oregon as well. These colonists wish to secure several thous and acres lying together. ' They come with monej , and are prepared to build homes in a new country. It is immigration of this kind tbat efforts should be made to induce to this country. There is room in Wasco county for hundreds of more happy and prosperous homes, and when the simple truth is known, this section needs no other advertisement. I he Willamette valley can no longer claim superiority over Eastern Oregon in the matter ot moisture, The Cascade mountains have al lowed the rain laden clouds to pass without any hindrance, and the amount of rainfall here this season will be above the average. Plenty of moisture is the farmer's want and whether it camsi ia the ahipi of snow or rain, its oeneuts are the same. STEPHEN GIZZ8UNKLER. -of congress to provide a remedy. An elaborate article in the New York Sun will afford many bints to willing teformers. It makes a care ful estimate of the survivors of the -civil war on the basis of the com monly received statement that 2,063,- without infringin, '391. individual actually served in pendence. This, for those interested in the wool in dustry to coincide in this opinion. The eminent writer of the article suggests also that all custom houses between the United States, Mexico and Canada should be abolished on political inde he argues, would the union forces. Of these 304,360 double the trade between the United died in battle or in hospital. Ac- States and Canada to the benefit of cording to the census of 1890, there both nations, but Canadian bay, luna were then 1,034,073 survivors, show- ber and coal have figured too Jarge'y ing a natural decrease, up to that in commercial affairs recently for time, of 724,958. Since 1890 it is Americans to appreciate the wisdom estimated that from various causes of such an alliance. the list has been reduced to 727,122. The internal trade of our country In addition are widows and depend- is estimated at $40,000,000 daily, ents of dead soldiers. From the and the external commerce a liitle pension list it appears that there are over $5,000,000 daily. The former 947,542 pensioners, including 65,- nas insreascd forty-nine per cent S60 children and 27,559 dependents, "nee 1880, while the latter has risen leaving 854,114 survivors and wid- barely ten per cent. Internal trade ows, or 40,745 more than the whole is the best gauge of national progi ess number of soldiers and widows sur- because it reflects the power, energy viving. In addition 187,505 surviv ors are demanding pensions. Remembering that there are many actual survivors who are not re ceiving pensions, it must be admitted that we have here a problem In and resources Record. of a people. "Wool The world may progress in some things, but the proportion of fools to wise men seems to remain as great as ever. Recent inauirv in the arithmetic which is not easy of solu- work!, of th. frnmhHn(, Pensioners are proverbial for tabii8hment. Monte Carlo, deve'oned longevity. We still have on our I etme interesting, as well as astound. lists not only pensioners of the war ,ngi facts In aM!tion to the 8ub. of 1812, but also of the war of inde- -;lv n!(1 fh. npr,nA nf Tnnann tho pendence. But it would appear that w ln honae8 provide for and participants in the civil war have teep the judge8 poicej htj the power of coming to life again, . t j . and that the list of survivors by ble institutions. The total nwmn some unexplained miracle is increas- of the tabe8 laMyear wa3 154(V year uy jear, uuiwiuiaianuing 000 Mnda An inb1.Htin. ,tj, ; ing the expectations of an accelerated death rate among them There are on the pension rolls 378,000 who receive their pensions under the provisions of the act of 1890. Of these, says the . Sue, not one received an injury during the war, and not one was able to trace the press subventions 25,000 pounds. It is stated that it is absolutely nec essary to expend a large sum in se curing the good will of the conti nental press, and it is said that over one -half the stories of suicides are only bids on the part of newspapers for a share in the "boodle." As t.h any disability back to service in the world ows better in 80me thjDg8) war. Their disability, when they the refinement of civilization brings - ....V 4. .1 xiau any, urw auuueuu U ui war with it vice8 of a deeper type buu irum ausuiuieiy jnuepeuuenb causes. , bo with the widows who are The representative of a number of drawing "pensions under that act eastern colonists is In The Dalles Their husbands died of diseases and looking for some location suitable causes not in any way traceable to for such a settlement . This . repre their war service. But, as has been sentative has visited all sections of shown and as is plain by the records I the Willamette valley, but does not on their face, more "survivors" are I wish to make a choice until he has Old-Time Resident of Storkville t'en ter Remarkable Experience. "I doubt if any man ever had a more singular experience," said Col. Calliper, than once befell to the lot of my old friend, Stephen Gizzbunkler, who for merly lived in Storkville Center, Vt. Mr. Gizzbunkler, like most of us, had his peculiarities, the most conspicuous, perhaps, being his habit of always car rying an umbrella. No matter what the weather nor what the signs might be, he never went out without an umbrella; he knew it would be sure to rain if he did. Where he got that impression I don't know. He may have been out some time 'in his youthful days in his best clothes without an umbrella when it came on to rain. "Some years ago when they began making- the curious and costly experi ments in the arid regions of the far west, firing explosives from balloons, and one thing- and another, to produce rain, Mr. Gizzbunkler, standing one day with his umbrella under his arm, in the Storkville Centre post office, perusing the newspaper which he had just taken from the mail, said: '"Why do they waste all this money in mere experiments when they could get rain with certainty and at far less cost? Why don't they send for me?" "What could you do?' asked a neigh bor who was standing near. " 'Why, I could go out without my umbrella,' said Mr. Gizzbunkler, and, amazing as it may seem, it is not the less certainly a fact that he wrote to the mayor of a town near which some of these experiments had been conducted offering to go there and produce rain for his expenses. It shows the con suming desire for rain on the part of the people and their readiness to take any chances to get it, that they imme diately sent for Mr. Gizzbunkler a draft for the money to come on with, without even asking him how he was going to produce rain. "When Mr. Gizzbunkler arrived at the town he was met at the railroad sta tion by a delegation of citizens who es corted him to the hotel; later he was waited on officially by the rain commit tee of the town council, who, in the presence of the reception committee and a large number of other interested citizens, asked Mr. Gizzbunkler his plans. "They had some queer people in this town at one time or another, but Mr. Gizzbunkler appeared to them to be the most useless person they had ever had there. At first they thought they would kill him at once; that -there would at least be some slight saving in shipping him back as freight; but Stephen was so obviously a well-meaning man that finally they thought they would give him a trial, which they did on the following day. "It was a day on which any other man in the world would have left his um brella at home, anyway. Stephen Gizzbunkler was about to leave his at home for the first time in many years, and he was equally confident of what would happen. He had been a little shaken personally, by the attitude of the people after' his simple plan had been unfolded; but his confidence in the success of his plan was quite un broken. He laid his umbrella careful ly across the foot of the bed in his room at the hotel, looked at it almost lovingly, and then went down to meet the committee. "They walked, Stephen ahead, the rain committee and the reception com mittee next, and then after them The people, along the dusty road. "Did it rain? No, no, no. It seemed to Stephen, and it seemed to the people, too, that the corn shriveled up as he passed, and that the last blades of grass withered. They gave him one more trial the next day, with the same result, and then they took him back to the railroad station. They had taken him away from the station in a carriage; they carried him back on a rail; but this was a matter of detail that almost es caped Stephen's attention at the time, so glad was he to get back at all. "On the day after Mr. Gizzbunkler s return to Storkville Centre he went out without an umbrella; he had had a great experience, and he had been somewhat impressed by it. Possibly he had been mistaken all these years and he thought he would see. But that day there came a storm that ' swept away every bridge in the county, and which washed away, too, whatever im pression the extraordinary experiences in the arid regions had made upon the mind of Mr. Stephen Gizzbunkler. "Thereafter until he died Mr Gizz bunkler carried an umbrella always, aa firm as ever in the belief that it would rain if he went out without one." N. I PRESENTATION AT COURT. What Happens to Any "Improper Per on" Her Sponsor's Punishment. , A morning journal, much given to romancing, announces that "the pre cautions taken by the lord chamberlain to preclude the possibility of anyone appearing at a drawing-room whose past will not bear the closest scrutiny, are yearly becoming more rigorous." This .is a farrago of the purest fiction, says the London Truth. As a matter of fact, the lord chamberlain takes no "precautions" whatever, and it is diffi cult to conceive how this official could possibly investigate the antecedents of the hordes of nonentities who now go to court, unless he were provided with a large staff of detectives. All the re sponsibility of a presentation is now thrown upon the (presumably) "unim peachable female" who undertakes it. If an "improper person" is presented, the immediate result is the arrival of a shoal of anonymous letters at the lord chamberlain's office. The lady who has made the presentation is then com municated with, and if the ultimate re sult is unsatisfactory she is punished by foeing herself excluded from the court for a year or two, or if it is a bad case she receives sentence of permanent banishment. Moreover, if a lady on the state ball or concert invitation list has been so indiscreet as to make an un desirable presentation, her name is struck off forever. It is only in very aggravated cases that presentations are publicly canceled in the Gazette. The usual course is for the lord chamberlain to inform the offender that her presen tation took place "by mistake," and that she is to consider it as canceled. Episodes of this description are of fre quent occurrence, but they are kept as secret as possible, for obvious rea sons. , "A POT OF THE BEST CHAW." Setting Out in kite ! As well as in the thick of the battle, is a time when a man should be careful about neat and correct dressing. First impressions are half the victory. Who has a better chance, even in looking for a situation, xnan tne young man whose attire is an evidence 01 taste, tnriitand judgment? ' Young men who wish to prosper should order their Suits and Overcoats from M. BORN & CO., The Great Chicago Merchant Tailors, j New over 20 yn. at the head of the Custom Trade. All ages can be suited. Style, fit and workmanship are guaranteed. The j world's best looms supply the material. Tbt Best is always The Most Economical, loo irrw ulictid riTrcsas to obdib fbom. NEW YORK CASHJSTORE A. C GIGER & CO., The Earliest Mention of Tea in tin Year 1015. The earliest mention of tea by ao Englishman is probably that contained in a letter from Mr. Wickham, an agent of the East India company, written from Firando, in Japan, on the 7th of June, 1615, 'to Mr. Eaton, another officer of the company, asking him tc send "a pot of the best chaw," says Uppincott'8. In Mr. Eaton's accounts of expenditure occurs this item Three silver porringers to drink chaw It was not until the middle of the seventeeth century that the English be gan to use tea. The first importations were from Java and the price ranged from six to ten pounds sterling per pound. In the Mercurius Politicus of September, 1658, appears the following advertisement: "That excellent and by all physicians approved China drink, called by the Chineans Tcha, by other nations tay, or tea, is sold at the Sul taness Head, a cophee-house in Sweet ings Cents, by the Boyal Exchange London." Pepys enters in his diary on the 25th of September, 1660: "I did send for a cup of tea, a China drink, of which had never drunk before." This is proof of the novelty of the drink in England at that date. In 1664 it is recorded that the East India company presented the king with two pounds and two ounce of "thea." About this time, however, the con sumption of tea and coffee became fashionable and the importations large in proportion. COLORADO FISH HAVE LEGS. 01: 91 THE j Weekly Inter Ocean! LARGEST CffiCULATIOH OP MY POLITICAL PAPER 15 THE WEST 2 TT o It is radically Republican, advocating m the cardinal doctrines of that party with ability and eataestaessJtjtJtJt JtBut it can always be relied on" for fair and honest reports of all po- litical movcmentsjjtjjjjJtjtj THE WEEKLY INTER OCEAN 8UPPLIES ALL THE NEWS AND BEST CURRENT LITERATURE It Is Morally Clean and as a Family Paper Is Without a Peer. The Literature ot its columns is equal to that of the best maga zines. It is Interesting to the chil dren as well as the parents........ THE INTER OCEAN fa a WESTERN NEWSPAPER, and while it brings to the family THE NEWS OF THE WORLD and gives its readers the best and ablest discussions of all questions of the day, it is in full sympathy with the ideas and aspirations of Western people and discusses literature and politics from the Western standpoint. BO S3 Binocular Creatures That Inhabit th Stream of the Centennial State. Much consternation and still more wonder was created in the state house the other day, says the Denver Repub lican,' by the discovery in the office of Mrs. Mary A. Shute, secretary of the state board of horticulture, of an ax olotl, or fish with legs, which had be come metamorphosed into a salaman der. "All kinds of theories to account for its presence there were broached during the day. Of these theories the strangest appears to be the most tena ble. This is that the evoluted axolotl was taken up by evaporation from a mountain lake near the City of Mexico, where its species is most abundant, to come to earth again in Denver with the afternoon's abnormally heavy rainfall. In the morning when Janitor Smith opened the windows in order to air the office against the arrival of Mrs. Shute, he beheld an object on the sill outside which caused him to spring back in horror. Squatted on the sill was a hideous, dirty-hued green and yellow reptile, about ten . inches in length, with a head like that of a bulldog, an enormous mouth, wide open, six web footed paws and a tail that tapered to a lash and was curled at the end. SI! 1 1 $l.00-PICE OHEJDOLLJRPER YEAR $1.00 TEE DAILY AHD SU1TDAT EMTIOWS OF THE IITE& OCEAI ARE BEST OF THEIR KHH. Price of Iaily by mail. $4.00 per year Price of Sunday by mail 93 OO per year Daily and Sunday by mail $6.00 per year Twice-a-Week Chronicle and Weekly Inter Ocean for one year $ 1 .85 NEWS NOTES' Portland merchants claim to have done the largest Christmas busineea of any season for many years. Advices received today ' state that H. E. Bart is to be the next president of the Union Pacific. The Overman Wheel Company, one of the largest concerns in the country, failed yesterday. - Martin Quinn, the populist leader in Portland, will resign his position in the spring to go to Alaska. Friday, which will witness the close ot the ereat Leiter deal in wheat on the Chicago board of trade, bids fair to be a memorable one in the trade. No great excitement is expected in the wheat pit, but in oats a squeeze of shorts may oc car. An inspired organ published at Ber lin, says the Chinese emperor, in order to-avoid the reproach of having lost territory, will lease Kaio Chou to Ger many in perpetuity at a very low rate, with all the rights of sovereignty exer cised by England at Hong Kong. No Wonder People Die. Is it to be wondered at that the com mon people of India are weak and un healthy? Accounts say that in sea sons when it is peculiarly scarce they drink the very water they have been bathing in; and that they inherit the practice from generations of fore fathers. In many country districts there are 800 of them to the square mile all living on what little rice they can produce on their miniature farms, Little wonder that they die by thou sands, even when famine is not pres ent; that all the minor diseases, as well as King Cholera, find them a good feed ing ground. The gospel of hygiene should go along with every messenger of light that is sent there. Everywhere. Tesretarlan Dress. ' '"' The members of the Women's Vege tarian union in London have a new craze. It is for vegetarian dress. They have concluded that it is as wrong to kill animals for clothes as for food. They want vegetable boots, vegetable gloves, vegetable gowns, and even veg etable note paper. They have decided that the kid, the calf and the sheep shall be spared, if their influence can do it. Don't bolt yoor food, it irritates your stomach. Choose digestible food and chew it. Indigestion ia a dangerous sickness. Proper care prevents ' it. Shaker Digestive Cordial cures it. That is the long and short of indigestion. Now, the queetion is : Have yon got di gestion? Yes, if you have pain or dis comfort alter eating, headache, dizziness nausea, offensive breath, heartburn, lan- gour, weakness, fever.J jaundice, flatu lence, loss of appetite, irritability, con stipation, etc". Yea, you have indiges tion. To cure it, take Shaker Digestive Cordial. . The medicinal - herba and plants of which Shaker Digestive Cordial is composed, heip to digest the food in your stomach. When your stomach ia strong, care will keep it ao. Shaker Di gestive Cordial ie for sale by druggists! price 10 centa to $1.00 per bottle. The Bowline Contest. In the foar games of the bowling con test played at the club alleys last night, the Umatilla House team won for the second time the palm of . victory by a larger number of points than on Sat urday afternoon. The totals for each of the four games were as follows : Umatilla Clnb 213. : . . . . . . ..Firat Game .209 217 ..... . Second Game 205 255. . . , Third Game :233 219 Fourth Game .187 Making an average of 904 for the Uma tilla House and 834 for the club, and ac cording to thia the Umatilla House baa a victory of seventy pina to their credit. A Wildcat Scare. Kingsliy, Deo. 24, 1897. Editor Chronicle : I wish to report a little excitement that occurred at the ranch of Mr.L Bemi Rondeau of thia place. The excitement was caused by a wildcat coming into the yard, entering the woodshed, and swip ing a chicken. Mrs.. Rondeau and" the children . scared him and he .let. the chicken drop, but stood his "ground. Seeing his stubbornness, Mrs. Rondeau sent one of the children after i notable nimrod who Cli'ved cIoaeQby. In the meantime the wildcat proceeded to get another chicken. Jnat then the hunter arrived on the scene with bia dog, but without his gun. Th dog did his doty by running the cat up a tree. Is the house was an old gun, some powder and caps, bat no bullets. Here the hunter was equal to the occasion, and going into the pantry took tae lead lining out of a tea box, rolled it into a bullet, and downed the cat the firat shot. It was reported to be a very large one, measur ing over three feet from tip to tip. 1 The writer was not there, but won ders if one of the neighbor's cata in not mieaiag. M. A. ssuslness Announcement. I take pleaaure in announcing to my friends and patrons that George H. Dufur haa thia day associated himself with me in the business heretofore con ducted by me. The new firm will here after be known aa Dufur & Dufur, and transact all business under aaid name. Our aim will be in the future, aa it haa been mine in the past, to give entire satisfaction in all matters brought to ua, and to treat each and everyone alike. I desire to thank my many frienda and customers for their liberal patron age in the past, and solicit a continu ance of the same with the new firm in the future. Dated thia 27th of December, 1S97. Respectfully, D. S. Dufur Bncaien's Arinca salve. The best salve in the world for cuts, bruiBes, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever. sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains, corns, and all skin eruption, and posi tively cui ea piles, or no pay required It ia guaranteed to give perfect satisfac tion, or money refunded. Price 25 centa per bor. For sale by Blakeleyand ' Houghton, druggists. Notice. Notice ia hereby given that bids will be received by the county court for keep ing the county charges by the week for the ensuing year. All bids must be filed with the clerk on or before the 5th day ot January, 1898, at 9 o'clock a. m. Court reserves the right to reject any and all bida. A. M. Kelsay, -County Clerk. TILLETT & GALLIGAN, WM. fILLETT. H. GALLIGAN. Sole Proprietota of the CELEBRATED XAKIMA APPLE. ' Hood River Nursery, TILLETT St GALLIGAN, Props. First-class Nursery Stock a Specialty B S HCKTINGTON. B I WILSON. HUNTINGTON & WILSON, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, THE DALLES, OREGON Office over First Nat Bank. " " FEED. W. WILSON, - - , ' ATTORNEY AT LAW, THE DALLES, OREGON. Office ovet First Nat Bank. .