THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE.- WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 16, 1898. The Weekly Gbronicle. COUNTY OFriClAX.8. County Judge... .'. Eobt. Mays Sheriff. Clerk Treasurer Commissioners Assessor W. H. Whipple Rnrvevor J. B. -oIt Superintendent of Public Schools. Coroner . T. J. Driver ....A M. Kelsnv .. C. L. ehiUips 1 A. S. Blowers ( II. B. iwiiuBejr C. L. (illbert W. H. Butts .Weekly Clubbing- Bates. Chronicle and Oregonian $2 25 Chronicle and Examiner 2 25 Chronicle and Inter Ocean 185 Chronicle and Tribune .- 1 75 Chronicle and N. Y. World 2 00 to the square inch than any journal in our observation, and that ia why the people dislike the Oregonian. . ,;It does not know how to be fair. ' ; '; TRIUiltH.' OF PROTECTION. WHO THE "BOSS" REALLY IS. The Oregonian, in yesterday's is sue," published an editorial which was in the main a strong protest against the evils of bqssism, which every observer will agree have grown to an alarming extent But the Ore gonian has reached that stage .of prejudice where it can but rarely. comment upon any subject without bringing in a slur upon John H. Mitchell, which, in many cases, is en tirely uncalled for and unfair. In the article referred to, after summing up the situation in Penn sylvania and New York, the Orego nian asks. 'What does Quay, or Piatt or Mitchell care for the gold stand ard, except as it may be employed as a battery under which he may march to the senate and distribute the spoi.'s of office among his craven fol lowers?" As regards Quay or Piatt, The Chronicle has no concern; nor has it any regarding Mr. Mitchell, except as be is a prominent figure in- the politics of this state, and as such, es pecially under the circumstances at present existing, comes in for a good deal of newspaper comment. The Chronicle is not a Mitchell paper, .nor is it devoted to the political in terests of any one man or set of men, but it does like to see fair play, and thinks that the time has come when Mr. Mitchell should be allowed the same treatment as other men are, and not made the especial and constant target for the venom-dipped shafts of the Oregonian, representing, as it does, Mr. Mitchell's bitterest ene- jnies. The Oregonian talks of bossism, -and then brings in Mitchell's name -as a sample of such men. Whatever . may be said of Mr. Mitchell,. be can never be charged with being a poht ical boss. He has aspired to a seat 'in the United Slates senate, and used 11 his endeavors as far as we know, honorably to secure an election. He has been honored by the people -of Oregon and has served his con stituents abler, perhaps, than any senator ever chosen from Oregon. At the last attempted session of the legislature Mr Mitchell said time and again that he was willing to withdraw if such action would in any way sim plify the situation. Mr. Mitchell is not a boss, and the Oregonian by calling him one does not establish the fact. Who then is the "boss" of Oregon ? It is the master of the Oregonian -the man who can swing that journal o the right or left ; the wrecker of party harmony in Oregon, and a man altogether unlovely politically in the eyes of the people Joseph Simon. He is the man who planned and carried into effect the last legis lative hold-up. He is the man who is preventing an extra cession of the legislature because he fears that should it meet, Mr. Mitchell might be elected a senator. He is the "boss" along with Piatt and Quay. The Oregonian talks about these bosses parading under the gold standard simply as a subterfuge to secure spoils for "craven followers" Joe Simon again the high-minded statesman who consorted with Popu lists and free silverites of all descrip tion at Salem last winter and be trayed the sacred trust of leader ship. Simon, if he had wings, would chase a silver cloud Or golden sun beam, without regard to the- ratio of ffold to silver, if bv so doins it would bring him political advantage. And Simon, according to the Oregonian, is little less than a god. - As we have often said, the tOrego faian is an able paper, and when it divorces itself from local politics has few equals; but when discussing matters of local concern it can show node prejudice, unfairness and venom The culminating triumph ot the system of protective tariffs applied to Ameiican industries is that it has taught the old world that low wages do not of necessity insure low cost of production. It is simple truth that the manufacturer of iron and steel goods in the United States pays from thirty to eighty, or even one hun dred, per ceni more for his labor than his European rival, and that, i hough he has to haul his raw mate rial ten times os far from the mine to the furnace and shop, be produces a better article at a lower cost. In its beginning protection increased the cost of some articles to the Amer ican consumer, but this was duilr.g a short stage of commercial exist ence. Protection stimniatea output and stimulation of output involved fierce coga petition for possession of the home market, and that resulted in low prices. At last, says the Inter Ocean, the American output has exceeded, all possible demands .of the home mar ket, and foreign trade has become a necessity. To the astonishment of Europe it is proved that goods made by men who earn from $1.50 to $4 per day can be soli as cheaply as those produced at a labor cost of from $1 to $3. America is teaching Europe a lesson in sociology. The low-paid laborer ot Europe often is a tool rather than a me cbinic. He woiks as he was taught to work by his father. He improves upon nothing; he discovers nothing, He eats, he sleeps, he works ; be does not think. The better paid artisan ot America is better educated, more ambitious, and infinitely more inven tive. He is paid far more than the European, and he lives upon a tar more liberal scale, but he produces far more and of better quality, al though' he works fewer hours in each day. The European plan has worked to the degradation of the workman ; the American method has worked to his betterment. Thus we now are able to produce pig iron at from $2 to 13 per ton less cost than rules in Eng land, and this saving pays ocean freight and leaves a margin of profit on foreign sales, we are selling steel rails to London, and covering the roads of Europe with American bicycles, and are putting American sewing machines into European shops and houses. We are furnish ing Japan, China, Australia and British Africa with steam warships, locomotives, electrical appliances and all materials of railway plants. It is, paradoxical as it may seem, to the high- wages that our protective system fostered that our success in foreign trade is due. Competition for possession of the largest and most profitable home market of the world stimulated invention, and the intelligent ambition of our artisans made them specialists and inventors. Protection insured us a home market, and commercial activity in that wide area has strengthened the arms of our commerce and manufactures till they have become able to reach out for and to grasp a large and increas ing share of the trade of the world. cities in Cuba, and siicerety-desire tue iiuerauun ui i.uak laiauu, ucuto would 'not deplore arif Incident that would bring on hostilities.' 'But the De Lome incident, of itself, is no ad ditional - occasion ' for war-, with Spain. Tribune. THE "BOSS" AGAIN. The Oregonian having charged Mr. Mitchell with most of the offenses in the catagory, has -discovered a new one, and accuses him of being the political boss of Oregon, equal in turpitude to Quay, Piatt, Croker, or any other man who may happen to be in popular disfavor just at pres ent. It is useless to waste words in showing what petty motives of jeal ousy actuate lue uregonian in tnis instance; and it is equally useless to call attention to the unfairness of the charge. ' " In the same article wherein Mr. Mitchell is charged with being the Unsavory "boss," Joe Simon, the little man who says nothing, but does a whole lot, is pictured as a clean minded individual, who never knew anything about politics and has had nothing to do with the machinery of the Republican party in Oregon. Simon, according to the Oregonian, is a simple-minded little bor, who never put up a job or packed a pri mary, and to whom the devious ways of pclitics are as a sealed book. All this is rot, and the Oregonian knows, or if it dcesn't it ought to know, that such stuff will never be swallowed by fair-minded Republi cans. It will take more sophistry than even the Oregonian possesses to convince the people that" it was not Joe Simon and his fawning followers who made the coalition with Jona than Bourne and the Populist last winter, which made the hold-up at Salem possible. The Chronicle does not care to attack Mr. Simon, because his political reputation is known to the peop'e of Oregon, so that the words of the Oregonian will fall of their own weight: nor does The 'Chronicle sare to be continu ally defending Mr. Mitchell, because he . is able to stand upon his own merits. But the ravings of the Ore gonian are too amusing to be passed unnoticed. Bosses are never popular, and Mr. Mitchell's popularity in this stale is sufficient to prove that he does not belong to the kind of men called bosses. Fancy Joseph Simon and John H. Mitchell running against each other for an office in the popular vote, and the result would clearly show that the people do not regard Mr. Mitchell in the colors the Orego nian paints him. But enough of this. The Orego- nian's latest attack on Mr. Mitchell simply- shows to what extremities that paper is driven for ammunition in its jealous warfare against this gentleman. - .. RULER OF THE NAVY. THE DE LOME INCIDENT. Either by the acceptance of dis graced De Lome's resignation, or by his recall, it matters not much which, he was summarily ousted from the honorable and onerous position which he has proven himself unfit to fill. It was a bad faux pas for so ex perienced a diplomat to make, even in a private letter.' No true gentle man and diplomat could have so far forgotten bis position and the re spect he owed to the chief magistrate of this great government.' The United States will not lay De Lome's fault at the door of the gov ernment at Madrid, and the incident need not necessarily cause any offi cial rupture between the two gov ernments, though it is likely to in crease the hostile sentiment among the people of both countries. The intelligent people of the United States do not hate the Spaniards as indi viduals, but they despise the Spanish government, and reprobate its atro- Secretary Herbert Haa Power Which -J -. . Cannot Be Cahuald. ' a "There , is one man in the United States who has more power than the president and all the federal courts combined," said a naval officer recent ly. "The secretary of the navy is the man. nis power over officers of the navy is autocratic' He can without the aid of a court fine an officer all the way from four .hundred to four thou sand a year, according: to his rank, and simply to it the whim of the secreta ry. Unlike officers of the army, offi cers in the navy are not paid a uniform and fixed compensation. In the army the salary of an officer is fixed by law, and no one, not even the president, can deduct a cent from that pay with out a court-martial. In the navy there are three regular grades of pay. In the case of a rear admiral, which is the highest rank in the navy, the pay at sea is six thousand dollars. On shore duty this is reduced to five thou sand dollars, while if the officer is on leave of absence or 'waiting- orders' this is reduced to four thousand dollars. :"JJow suppose a rear admiral is or dered to tne command of the fleet in the North Atlantic. The secretary of the navy proposes to visit the fleet. He is received on board the flagship with all the honors due 'his station, and the ad' miral does his best in the way of enter tainment. Suppose again, when the secretary sits down to dine at the ad miral's table he firids that a cheap brand oi American wine is served in stead of his accustomed Chateau .Yquem. The secretary determines to resent this indignity.- He goes ashore and decides to relieve an admiral who knows nothing of the first principles of hospitality. He issues an order de taching the admiral and placing him on waiting orders. Then on the fol lowing day he determines to punish him still further. He calls in the chief of the bureau of navigation and directs that Admiral Bowline be given an in definite furlough. That means that instead of drawing six thousand- dol lars a year as he was yesterday, the late admiral of the North Atlantic finds his income suddenly reduced to two thousand dollars, and all because he has offended the ruler of the navy in some slight matter. "Cannot the admiral appeal? Cer tainly not. ; There is none to whom he nnn ...... t-i . : ,i a -k. wjf ULiU jlug uicaiueub iioo uu power to review the" decisions of the secretary of the nary in matters of this kind. This is an extreme case, of course, but it would not be difficult to point out where lieutenants have had their pay cut from two thousand six hundred dollars to nine hundred dol lars by a secretary who had a grudge." INDUSTRY AND COMMERCE. The gradual increase of the re ceipts from the Dingley tariff seems to justify its friends in their predic tions that it will soon produce suffi cient revenue for the uses of the gov ernment The customs returns for January were $14,300,000 in round figures. This indicates an increase over the uecemoer returns or 600,000. and is exactly $3,000,000 more than the receipts of January, 1897., Beginning with August, the first full month of the Dingley tariff, there has been an increase every month. This increase amounted to $900,000 in September, to $1,800,000 in October, to $100,000 in Novem ber . and $1,900,000 in December. The receipts for the early days of February indicated a decidedly up ward tendency, so that a considerable surpluses expected at the end of the- present month. " Mr. F. A. Seufert has achieved fame through his refusal to join with the fusionists. The action of the Democrats in cleaving unto the Pop ulists will turn many men away from their party, as it seems to have done with Mr. Seufert. The fight is squarely on between free silver and sound money, and it is not difficult for each voter- to determine where he belongs. . Yon can't cure consumption bnt you can avoid it and cure any other form of throat or lung-trouble by the use of One Minute Cough Cure. It cures quickly. That's what you want, Snipes-Kinera? ly Drag Co. ;;. . ; T : ; . Melon mice are ruining crops in the neighborhood of ruewport, Ky.' Farmers in Douglas county, Kan., are educating their horses to eat potatoes which they can feed at 11 cents, while corn stands for 17 cents. - An immense pumping engine at the mines of Fried-ens vi lie, Pa., raises 17,500 gallons of water at each revolution of the huge fly-wheel. . Not all western cherries in eastern markets come from California. Oregon shippers sent two car loads east within a week from Salem and Portland. England's oak is now made in Ger many. The great roof beams of Win chester cathedral are being renewed, and the wood used is Stettin oak, cut in i2y3 foot lengths, the other dimen sions being 14 by 18 inches. The recent exposition of the Royal Dublin Agricultural society demon strated that while our farm machinery equals that of the -British in strength, it is of much lighter build. Our con sul at Dublin suggests that on this ac count our machinery is at a disadvan tage, as the Irish farmer prefers heavier looking implements. SHE WAS ECONOMICAL. Bat After Testing: the Kesnlt Ber Hus band Was Unappreniatlve. With one of those good intentions with which the infernal regions are said to be paved, an economic uptown housewife recently dyed her hubby's shabby hat. , The operation was per formed, says the Philadelphia Record, with a toothbrush and a package of patent dye, unknown t6 the owner of the headgear; who put his hat on be fore it was .dry and sallied forth to his Chestnut street office. On drying the Derby turned a beautiful bronze, at tracting no little attention as its igno rant and . . L lisful wearer passed through the principal streets. Before he reached the office he was caught in a shower, and when he afterward saw himself in a mirror his counte nance was decorated like that of an Indian chieftain in war paint. The dye wasn't fast black indeed, it wasn't even black, and to the preju diced eye of the unhappy husband it seemed to have been . composed, of green, pink, blue, purple and yellow. The rScture he delivered on "false econ omy" when he reached home would have done credit to Mrs. Caudle. " The Cuban "Trocha." The "trocha." to which frequent refer ence is made in" Cuban dispatches de scribing the movements of Gen. Weyler is a fortified line extending across the island from Mariel pn the northern coast to Majana n the southern'. The purpose of the Spanish commander, in constructing and fortifying this line, was to cut off the western province of Pinar del Rio from the rest of the island, and thus to prevent the. retreat of the forces of the Cuban leader Maceo, who is operating in that province. Mariel, the northern termius of the line, is about 25 miles west of Havana; and at ,two points, Guana jay, which is six miles south of Mariel, and Artemisa, which is four miles north of Majana, there is di rect railway connection with Havana, West of the "tracha" there is a fairly open country for a few miles, but beyond is the mountainous region in which Maceo's forces have their camps. Youth's Companion. 1 a Locomotor Ataxia Sufforor Was Cured. From the Evening Sews, Detroit, Mich. James Crocket, a sturdy old Scotchman, 1 1 T7! T (. in rkotvutit - DO Vf . 1 " Street, was asked about his wonderful cure. J First," he said, " I must tell you some- uung oi my me Deiore my almost latal sick ness. I was .born in Scotland in 1S22, aud came to this country in 184S. I am a marine engineer by trade. In 1872 I was in the employ of the Detroit and Cleveland Navi gation Co., and for fifteen years I was chief euKiuccr vii one oi meir- uig passenger . K X 1 A Jl . T" -K- T ' iwmucio. jut uioi uuui. was lue xu i. nice, which was burned at the docks. Then I was trausterrea to tne liubie, wmch was chartered to make the run between Detroit and Cleveland, . "I brotogfcl out the new steamer the 'City il f ! . ' . I , J di iuo ovaics, ana ror years actea as ner ihief engineer. It is a great responsibility, the position of chief engineer on those big passenger palaces. Thousands of lives are held in the keeping of the engineer. The anxiety causes a great nervous strain, and the strictest attention is necessary. Hot for moment must he lose his watchfulness. ; "For fifteen years' I carefully watched the big engines and boilers without a single accident,' and only noticed that I was getting nervous. Suddenly without warning I was taken sick, and in less than a week I was prostrated, I had the best of physicians. I grew gradually worse, and at the council tf doctors, they said I had nervous prostra tion, and had destroyed my whole nervous system and wouM never be able to be- up tgain. " They said I had worn myself out by ins . long nervous strain caused by watching nd worrying about the machinery. For three long years I was unable to move from tpy bed without assistance. The doctor said I had locomotor ataxia, and would never be ble to walk again. "The pains .r.nd suffering I experienced luring those years are almost indescribable. My wife used to put eight or ten kot water bags around me to stop the pain. Those that came to see me bid me good-bye when they left me, and I was given up. The doc tors said nothing more could be done for me. " We tried every known remedy, and my. wife kept reading the articles about Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People to me. Finally she said they only cost 60 cents, and she wanted to know if I would try them. To please her I consented, and the first box gave me relief. I continued to use them for about two years before I could get strength enough to walk. It came slow but sure, but what I am to-day is due wholly to Dr. Wil liams' Pink Pills for Pale People. "lam nearly seventy-five years old to-day," and there is not a man in the whole city that can kick higher or walk further than I can to-day. If any one has loeomotor ataxia that reads this, let them come and see me to-day. Can you tell me a man today in' this big city that can do better than that 1 " said Mr. Crocket, as he kicked the reporter's hat, which was held high above his head. " Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale Peo- ?le made me what I am to-day. I only wish could persuade others to do as I did. and take them before it is too late." (Signed) "JAMES Ckockxt." try iruh Before me, a Totarv Public person allv appeared James Crocket, who slimed and swore to the above statement as being true ia every particular. - - KOBEBT is. nmx, JE., liotary v&ite. Wayne County, Mioh.' Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale Peonle are sold m boxes (never In loose form by the' dozen or hundred, and the public are eari-i Honed against numerous tsnitatlons sold inj this shape) at 60 cents a box or six boxes for f2.50, and may be had of all dnagisfs -or direct by mail from Dr. WUliamr mWM Company, Schenectady, N. Y. : - ; j f Special peaturq ."(t - - . ' . Of The Chronicle office is the Job prifytiQg- v We have better facilities for doing artistic work in this line than any office in Eastern Ore T gon, and this branch of our busi ness is in tlie hands of expert J T workmen. . t ' Ue omparisoi? T both as to high grade work and J reasonable prices. DEALERS IN fill kinds of aneral Supplies CrandaMBarget UNDERTAKERS EMBALMERS The Dalles, Or. Robes, Burial Shoes, Etc. PIONEER BAKERY. I have re-opened this -well-known Bakery, and am now prepared to supply every-, body With Bread, Pies and Cakes. Also all kinds of Staple and Fancy Groceries. GEORGE RUCH, Pioneer Gfcrocer . - ; has the best Dress Goods has the best Shoes has everything to be found in a f first-class Dry Goods Store. C. F. STEPHENS.