THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE SATURDAY, JANUARY 15, 1898. The Weekly Ghroniele. COUNTY OFFICIALS. County Judge ..Robt Mays Sheriff. .T.J. Driver Clerk A M. Kelsay Treasurer . C. L. Phillips . Commissioner D. h. Kimsey Assessor.....". H. Whipple Surveyor J. B. -oit QHnroriVant 'nt PtiKlff KrhoOlM.-.C. L. Gilbert Sn:-:::.: .... w. h. Butt. -8TATI OFFICIALS. Governor W. P Lord uTctnm niaota H B Klncaid Treasurer Phillip Metscban Bupt. of Public Instruction. .G. M. Irwin Attorney-uenerai Senators ..CM. Idleman IG. W. McBride Mitchell 1 B Hermann IW. R. Ellis Congressmen. Btate Printer W. H. Leeds AdvertUtor Kates. Per inch One ir.cn or less in Daily 1 60 nvnv twrt infthM and nnder four inches, . 1 00 Over four Inches and under twelve Inches. . Over twelve inches . .'. 60 DAILY AND WEEKLY. . One inch or less, per inch 2 60 An a InAh it ii nniliar fnnr Inches. ...... J W Over four inches and under twelve inches. . 1 50 . Overwelve inches 00 THE BURSTING OF THE BUBBLE, The Corbett bubble bas broken at last. The voices which for nearly a year have been proclaiming the easy triumph of Governor Lord's ap pointee in securing a seat in the sen ate now are still, and the newspaper which has heralded his cause in sea son and out, bides its grief in silence, The dispaiches from Washington announce that Senator Burrows of Michigan, a Republican member of the committee on privileges and elections, will oppose the seating of Mr. Corbett. and this will give a majority for an , adverse report. Senator Burrows gives as his reason that the decision in the Mantle case- where the governor of Montana made an appointment to fill a sena tonal vacancy is a precedent against the appointment of senators when the legislature bas bad an op portunity to act, which cannot be set aside. The action of the senate com rr it tee will meet the approval of the people of Oregon. The reason may not be the same technical one, for the objection here to the seating of -Corbett is that be does not represent tfhe citizens of Oregon, but stands as 'the exponent of a political c'lque which bas long been an eyesore in -the politics of the state. Personally -there can be little said against Mr. Corbett. He is an able, successful business man, and his private life has of regret to many to see him placed .in the ciicumstances which he has een, and be will retire to private meditations blamed only for the company he bas kept. -la view of all that has happened, tlo" Simon acd the Oregonian think it -was worth the while to hold up the legislature merely to give Mr. Cor bett the opportunity to spend a year in Washington? However they may feel aboift it, the people think differ ently, and when next the Republicans oT the state meet in council, these wreckers of harmony may expect .scant treatment, but none the less evere. The new city of New York covers 359 square miles, and has a popula tion estimated variously at 3,200,000 and 3,388,000. London, which ranks first among the cities of the wona, nas iits square mues ior its 4,231,431 people, and Paris, which now comes third, packs its 2,447,957 into thirty square miles. It thus ap pears that New York has an opportu nity for growth far greater than either of its two greatest rivals; and if the extension of population north to the Bronx and east to Queens, is forstered by wise government and assisted by belter facilities of tran sit, it is urged that it will before many years take the first place. In the United States, Philadelphia and Chicago compete for the .. second place. According to the census of 1890,' Chicago led with 1,099,850, Philadelphia following with 1,046, 964. - The latest sensation from Klon dike is that Pennoyer'? ' brother-in, law bas gathered up several hogs beads of nuggets, and is coming home with millions. With all this money in the family, Pennoyer will be able to fuse the Populists and Democrats, or to accomplish any other old thing he may try. Pen nbyer's luck has become proverbial. Portland stands in a fair way of securing a woolen mill. . Parties from the East, claiming to represent sufficient capital, are negotiating for a suitable site, ami the citizens are eager to offer the necessary induce ments. With woolen mills to the right and woolen mills to the left, The Dalles is in a peculiar position; but we can have the satisfaction of knowing that this city furnishes the market wheie the woolen mills in these other places get their supplies. THE MARCH OF PROSPERITY. A little comparative consideration of the commercial and industrial con ditions that prevailed at the begin ning and at the end of 1897 shr.uld convince any person that the latter was a very paradise of prosperity. The year commenced says the Pen dleton Fnbune, with a deplorable lack of trust in the stability of the nation, There was but little business being done, and all sorts of indus tries were at the lowest ebb to which they had sunk in many years. But bv degrees the people began o see that there was ' a solid, trustworthy helmsman at the tiller of government, and began to move a litter freer. Then a spurt commenced, and the last six months of the year were a rapid succession of bounds toward the commanding position of prosper ity. . Not in the history of the United States bas the export trade so loftilj scaled the heights of well being. The t tal exports for the first eleven months of the year amounted to $947,500,000, to $888,600,000 in 1896, $732,300,000 in 1895, and $740,200,000 in 1894, showing a steady increase. The exports of merchandise and silver for the period exceeded the imports by $325,000, 000. In every branch of commerce there has been the same gratifying revival of business. Even on Wall street, the great thoroughfare whose inhabitants are first to feel a change in conditions, the stock exchange alings amounted to 77,401,720 shares, as against 54,490,643 in 1896, and sales of bonds amounted to $544,- 530,530, an increase over 1896 of $140,465,430, or nearly thirty per cent. i The earnings of the railroad com panies are a gocd index of the gen eral business conditions ibrougbout the c dud try. During the month of November the Pennsylvania railroad system showed an increase of nearly $1,500,000, of which about $760,000 was net. . The company's business for eleven months of the present fiscal year shows increased net earn ings of over $4,000,000. For the five months ending November 30th the Atchison, Topeka .and Sante Fe system shows an income from opera tion of $4,401,101.74, an increase of $900,241.33 over the corresponding months of last year. The net earn ings for the same period have in creased $740,313.80. The same satisfactory condition which exists in the East is found also in the West, as the recently declared dividend of the O. R. & N. Co. indicates. Pros perity bas struck the capitalist as well as the farmer. But does each begrudge the other his good fortune? A, telegram from Pittsburg states that an order has been placedfjwith a bouse in Cleveland, O., by Sir Lo thian Bell, the great English iron king, for , 4,000,000 tons of Mesaba iron ore, to be delivered at Cardiff, Wales, at $5.15 a ton. This is an entering wedge, it being the first in stance in which American ore bas entered Europe. It is hoped thtit theresult of this order will be that American ore will shut out Spanish and African from the English market The favorable winter which East ern uregon is experiencing so rar this season is proving of incalculable benefit to f aimers and stockmen. The ground is thoroughly moistened and the fall wheat has received a good start. In many . places the stockmen have not fed their sheep or cattle, the native grass is supplying all necessary food. Should present in dications continue, this section will be favored again with bountiful bar vests, and the hum of prosperity be come all the louder.- Governor Bushnell can imagine the feelings of Phillip Nolan, "the man without a country." The Re- publicans of Ohio have read him from their 'midst, and rightly so, while the Democrats, will have no use for him when this little brush is over. He" may find resting place among the Populists, for there, all political outcasts congregate. , The career of Bushnell 6bows that, even in politics, dishonesty sometimes is given its deserts. BEGGING THE QUESTION. The Oregonian, in replying to a remark of The Chronicle, com plains that "it seems to newspapers like The Chronicle and there are many of them in Oregon perfectly incredible and incomprehensible that there should be, or can be, a newspaper entirely independent of men or factions, governing its own actions according, as in its judgment, public ends are to be served; criti cising and opposing men at one time, and commpndins' and snDnortmo- tbem , at another, 'as issues change or as men's relations to them change." It does not seem incredible to The Chronicle that there can be newspapers with the utter independ ence which the Oregonian men tions, but the Oregonian is rot among them. Nu ideal of journal ism can be higher than that pictuied above, and .were the woras applica ble to the paper which printed them, the enconium would be a gratifying one. But the course of the Orego nian has shown time and again that it is not "independent of men or factions," but absolutely subservient to them. It this were not the case, why does the Oregoniau support the Simon faction now, when it is known that Simon and bis followers have broken the peace of the Republican party in Oregon and wrought havoc on the welfare of the state by their hold up of the legislature lust win ter? If the Oregonian is such a vir tuous organ, why does it not rise superior to factions and condemn the methods used by both the Simon and Mitchell men, and say to thj Repub licans of the state, "Let us settle this fratracidal strife, and since it cannot be adjusted while Multnomah county is a fictor, let the rest of the state make the party nominations and leave Multnomah county out nntil she learns how better to behave her self." It is useless for the Oregonian to say that Simon is wholly right and Mitchell altogether wrong in this factional fight; it is useless for a Mitchell paper to say the reverse. Both have done things entirely rep rehensible while trying to win the political struggle, and though each justified his action, to himself, from the exigencies of the situation, yet when it comes to fair speaking, both factions are much to blame. If the Oregonian is such a paragon of independence, why does it not condemn this factional spirit and seek to heal the party's wounds. The Chronicle is showing more inde pendence in this one article than the Oregonian has exhibited in the last two 'years, or longer. And yet it wraps itself in the self-assumed virtue of being independent of all factions. The. Oregonian's statements and its actions (if a newspaper has actions) are so inconsistent that fair-minded people place no reliance in neither. Any yet the Oregonian could, if it would, be the greatest power in the ...... , , . good. Bryan is keeping up bis determin ation to talk himself into the presi dency. His last set speech was fin ished at 2 a, m., though the dispatches do not say when be began. It will take more than Bryan's eloquence to convince the people that prosperity is not already here and promising to come in larger quantities. . , When, by process of. cremation, Durrani's remains are turned to ashes, it is to be hoped the San Fran cisco newepapers wiil let them rest in peace. Tne public has had a sur feit of the morbid details of these famous crimes, though the trial itself will always remain a notable one in legal annals. The government customs receipts for Wed sday were $889,024, the heaviest since the new tariff law went into effect All the Dingley bill needs is a fair chance, and it will demonstrate to the country the merit of a moderate protective sys tem. 1 - Now that the chances of Mr. Cor bett being seated have vanished, wil Governor Lord call an extra session? or is he afraid Mr. Mitchell would be elected? What ha3 become of one David B, Hill of New York? Has he, too, joined the procession to Klondike? He has not even been heard to re mark, of late, that he is still a Dem ocrat. Portland is making a record in convicting criminals. Those who seek to argue that juries fail to do their "duty will have' to seek else where for examples than in Multno mah county just at present. , ' Ohio is fortunate in the speedy termination of its senatorial election, With six years before him in the senate and the friendliness of the national administration, Senator Han na will be able to repay some of his political enemies witb interest. NEWS NOTES. ' Wednesday's Daily. The Elder arrived from Alaska last night, bringing with her very, little gold dost or news. - A report received this morning, states that the Seminole Indians are on the warpath in the Indian territory. It etated further that they have already killed twenty-five people. The president of the Montana State Bank was killed yesterday by a crank who was out of work. The only reason for the crime, as far as could be learned, was that the bank president refused him employment. Senator Carter, of the senate commit tee on territories, and Chairman Cox of the houee committee, bad a conference yesterday, going over what legislation is necessary for Alaska, it was agreed that nothing should yet be done in the way of giving Alaska a territorial form of government, in. view of the different character of the population of that dis- district. It was decided that action should be taken giving more United States commissioners for the district. .' Thursday's Dally. Thethree men, Mulligan, Murphy and Keller, who held np and robbed three men who bad broken all the crap game? in Bourne, near that place, last week were captured Sunday in a dug-out near Excelsior mill, by Sheriff Kilburn. They were lodged in the Baker Ciiy jail. Latest repoCa from Havana state that rioting is going on at that place. Great excitement prevails, and the American citizens are thought to be in danger. General Lee bas reported the condition of affairs to the president, and it was supposed this morning that a war ship would be sent to Cuba at once. A telegram was received by Adjutant- General Breck, at Washington, from General Merriain, commanding the de partment of the Columbia at Vancouver barracks, that may have some effect on the policy of the war department in ex tending relief to the miners of the Klon dike. The general reports that passen gers on two steamers, which have re cently arrived from Alaska, state that the miners will get throngb the winter in safety. Friday's Dally. The George W. Elder leaves tonight On another trip to Alaska. She will be loaded to the guards, having 300 pas sengers and a large amount of freight. ' A special report received this morn ing states that Hanna's opponents are going to contest bis rights to a seat in the senate on account of the charge of bribery. Their success is to be seen. Latest reports from Havana Etate that all ia quiet at that place, and that tbe rioting ia over. Further trouble is ex pected at any time, and our government is in readiness to send a gunboat there at a moment a notice on the slightest intimation of trouble. Tbe tornado that descended upon Fort Smith Tuesday night crossed the Ar kansas river one-balf mile south of Van Buren, and tore a path 200 ya-da wide through Crawford county, and dealt death and devastation to everything in itspath. A ecore or more of bouses were blown down and many persons were hurt. : Pirates have been committing depre dations in the French settlements at Haiphong, China, and even in the vicin ity of Hong Kong itself. On . December loth, a gang of 800 pirates attacked tbe suburbs of Haiphong, wbic ia inhabited by Europeans, setting fire to places simultaneously in the four quarters. Tbe deeparadoes were fired npon by a party of French marines, and about 30 killed. ; When yon can not sleep for coughing take Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. It always gives prompt relief. It is most excellent for colds, , too, as it aids ex pectoration, relieves tbe lungs and pre uents any tendency , toward pneumonia. For sale by Blakeley & Houghton. . Everybody reads The Chbokicl. ANOTHER GREENHORN LETTER. Fate of the Precocious Wood-Rat--Good Words for Tbe Da!!::. Gheknhoen, Or., Jan. 9, 1898. Editor Chronicle : . In my last eliusion I think I wound up by talking about rats, or wood-rats, and tbat makes me think of a story tbat I have not time to tell. We nave a wood-rat in our tunnel that is a bird, so to speak; a daisy, and all that sort of thing. He bas a nest (I sex the animal by the whiskers) about fifty feet from tbe month of the tunnel ; a nest made of the uiobs that bangs from the liltlesj black pines in graceful festoons, like the chin-whiskers of a billy goat. The nest is cunningly bidden on top of the lag ging (the split timbers roofing the tun nel) and there he sleeps by day, for your true wood rat only works on tbe night shift. Back there in the eternal darkness, in some mysterious way, be knows when the daylight fades away, and be. rises np to work. Ic a short cross-cut we have u powder magazine, where tbe dynamite is thawed out', and there is the scene of some of bis labors. He is a cunning little "cuss," with long grey whiskers, little beady eyes that gleam in tbe darkness like1 a toper's nose over a set of false teeth, and a tail like a gigantic caterpillar. "... The boys found his nest one day and swiped a part of it to use for tamping. The wood-rat, whom I have named Co pernicus, because he works only at night, caugnt on, ana tne next morning the boys were surprised to find a whole wad of moss piled up by the powder magazine, and they found tbe same thing every morning. Soon after, Co pernicus began piling chips on the track, chips from tbe mining timbers, and every morning there were two piles of tbem, always at tbe same place. Tbe boys began to get interested in Coperni cus, and one evening they left a piece of candle by tbe magazine just to eee what be would do witb it. In the morn ing they found ' it propped up by three or tour pieces ol rock and close to (Jo- perntcua' chip pile. Then an idea struck the boys that 'may be Coperny wanted a candle to work by, so tbat night tbey left half a block of matches along witb a piece of candle. In the morning they found tbe candle propped up as before, and the matches all broken apart and lying near it. After that Co perny didn't ehow np for a week, and none of ua conld imagine what tbe trouble was: but at tbe end of tbat time, as they were quitting work, tbey saw Copernicus standing on the powder magazine, with a woe-begone expression on his face and tears in his eyes. Even as they gazed. Copernicus turned sadly around, cocked bie tail over to port, and showed his right bip, hairless and blis tered. The little fellow had seen tbe boys striking matches, and he wore all the hair off bis southeast quarter trying to get a light. . Then tbe boys made a pair of cute little pantiea out of a flour' sack, with a rubber waistband and a little pocket for matches, and then you ought to have seen tbat rat. Whv, he would climb up car, reach down after a lucifer, raise his hind leg so as to stretch bis trouser- loons, and strike a match secundum ar tem, or words to that effect, and then he would cut up the queerest you ever saw. If the boys left the car in tbe tunnel, he always bad it filled with rock by morn ing. And then he got so be would go down to the mill, kindle a fire at the forge and sharpen all tbe tools. We bad to hide all the picks, because the little ecamn scorched the bandies. But his pursuit of knowledge caused bis un timely decease. He bit off more than be could masticate when be got to fool ing witb - the powder, ut course we don't know, just what happened, for we can only reason from effect back to cause. A small piece of wood-rat tail and a di lapidated pair of diminutive overalls made of flour-sack, these - were . found near tbe face of the tunnel, and half a stick of giant powder, left at tbe maga zine the night before, was missing. Whether Copernicus took it with him, or it took uopernicus, is only conject ural, but I incline to tbe latter opinion, for Copernicus had an open countenance and seemed honest. Way np here in tbe snow, I look back longingly to Tbe Dalles and old Wasco. One has, after all, a pride in his home town, and who would not feel proud of having for a borne town the city tbat sits at the foot of tbe mountains and the head of navigation. I am more than proud of her when I note tbe deliberate manner in which her laws are enforced. San Francisco' bas been nearly three years monkeying with Durrunt. . Law, there, has become a bv-word and Jus tice is not only blind, but lame of both legs as well, bhe should take a lesson from The Dalles. There the evil-doer. if be knows when he is well off, bitteth tbe railroad track witb an exceedingly hasty hit, or shinneth across tbe coun try with both shins, anxious to be else where. Tbe Dalles, alone, of all tbe cities of the Northwest, is onto her job. She knoweth a good thing when she sees it, ana ner optics are gooa. no tricks of tbe law, no quillets of techni calities hamper her in ber criminal jurisprudence. No sir I When she sends ber officers ont to arrest a crimi nal, she sends tbe coroner along, 'and there is no appeal from the verdict of a coroner s jury;' ana that " mates me think of another story tbat X may tell when I am no longer , .. . A. UEKENHOBN. Regulator Line. Tie Dalles. ForOaiiJ aiii Astoria Navigation Co.' a Regulator! Dalles City FREIGHT AND BETWEEN Tbe Dalles, Hood River, Cascade Locks and Purt ' land daily, --ent Sunday. DOWN THE VALLEY OR TO EASTERN OREGON? Are you going If so, save money and enjoy a beautiful trip on the Columbia. The west-bound train arrives at Tbe Dalles in ample time for passengers to take the steamer, arriving in Portland in time for the outgoing Southern and Northern trains; East bound passengers arriving In The Dales in time to take the East-bound train. For further information apply to J. N. HARNEY, Agent, ' - . Oak Street Dock. Portland, Oregon, Or W C. ALLAWAY, Gen. Agt,, The Dalles. Oregon RBORTHERN y PACIFIC RY. s Pullman Elegent Tourist Sleeping Cars Dining Cars i Sleeping Car 8T. PAUL : ' M1NNEAPOLI '. . DULUIH , KAKGO r GKAND FOR CBOOESTON WINNIPEG HELENA sn BPTTB . ' TO Thiroagh Tickets CHICAGO T0 WASHINGTON PHILADELPHIA NEW YORK r BOSTON AND ALL POINTS EAST and SOUTH " For information, time cards, maps and tickets, cal on or write to W. C. ALLAWAY. Agent, The Dalles, Oregon A. D. CHARLTON, Asst. G. P. A., 253, Morrison Cor. Third. Portland Oregon TO THE EHS T I GIVES THE CHOICE OF TWO Transcontinental ROUTES GREAT NORTHERN OREGON SHORT LINE. RAILWAY. -VIA- Spokane Salt Lake -f Minneapolis Denver Omaha Kansas City St. Paxil Chicago Low Ratesfto all Eastern Cities OCEAN STEAMERS Lt Portland Every Five Days for SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. . Steamers monthly , from Portland to Yokohama and Hone Kong via North ern Pacific Steamship Co., in connection withO. R. & N. For f nil details call on O. B S Co. 1 Agent The Dalles, or address W, H. HUELBUET, Gen. Pass. Agt ' - Portland, Oregon TIME CARD. Kn A. 'fa, Hnnkjina And Great Northern arrives at5:25p. m., leaves at 5:80 p. m. No. 2, to Pendle ton, Baker City and Union Vaciflcaxrivesat 12:45 a. m., departs at 12:50 a. m. No S, from Spokane and Great Northern, ar rives at 9-20 a. m., departs at 9:25 a. m. No. 1, from Baker City and Union Pacific, arrives at 8:20 a, m., departs at 8:30 a. m. Nos. 23 and 24, moving east of The Dalles, will carry passengers. No. 23 arrives at 6 p. m., departs at 1:45 p. m. ' Passengers for Heppner take No 2, leaving here at 12:50 p. m. - - JBBT- GE1SENDORFFER BDBDI, Physicians and Surgeons, Special attention given to surgery. Booms 21 and 22, Tel. 828.' Vogt Block.