THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE. WEDNESDAY. APRIL 20,, 1898 ' The WeeUy GMohiele. The only Republican Daily Newspapet in Wateo County. COUNTY OFFICIALS. County Judge... '......Robt. Mays Sheriffs T. J. Driver Clerk A. M. Kelsay Treasurer.. c. rnuiips v. .. . S. Blowers 'Commissioner D- 8 Klmsey Assessor.... ..... W. H. Whipple Purveyor J. B. ;oit Superintendent of Public Schools. . .C. L. Gilbert Ctroner ........ W. H. Butts Weekly Clubbing; Bates. Chronicle and Oregonian $2 25 Chronicle and Examiner 2 25 Chronicle and Inter Ocean 1.85 Chronicle and Tribune. 1 75 Chronicle and N. Y. World 2 00 SPAIN'S ARMY IN CUBA. At the close or lotJb there were 200,000 Spanish soldiers in Cuba. These were, even at that.time, poor ly paid, poorly equipped for active "Campaigning, and without a commis e&riaU as it would be understood in this county, or in Germany or Great JJiitain. In a campaign against the insurgents the troops making a fight were compelled to return within twenty-four hours to a fortified town or camp. No ' provision was made except the last campaign . inaugur ated by General TVcyler for extend. d operations in the field. The sol diers were clad as a rule in linen suits, with shoes that did not stand the wear and tear of .marching, and even a short campaign put them in ' In his Inst campaign in 1897 Gen eral Weyler put into the field 36,000 effective troops, moving these in six different .columns against the insur gents. At the c.'ose of 1897 the in surgent government claimed bat there were not more than 70,000 effective Spanish troops in Cuba. These were concentrated . in and trtiout Havana, Matanzas, and other cities on the coast. Only three in . terior towns were occupied at that time. These wete held as a matter cf pride rather than of strategic im portance, and.it was said that in their attempt to bold Bayamo and to supply it with munitions of war and provisions the Spaniards had lost 5n 5,000 men. . in January or mis -year it was .fcated that l Cuba ere blockaded by -a hostile power the Spanish army would be compelled to evacuate or ;surrender within two weeks. Al imoalieverythftig that Is necessary for ' the support of tlw army is brought .from Spain, the United States, or JMexico. The troops are well sup plied with ammunition, but they Lbaye ueyer been on full rations, and ate-w rmontbs ago fully one-third of xbe army was in the hospital or on the sick list". To say nothing of the insurgent army, which is probably 40,000 strong, the Spanish army in Ctba could not stand a long siege. It is not made up of veteran troops, but mainly of young men who were iiurried away , from Spain without much military training. - - W do not think the Astoria con vention acted wisely in casting out the ' ahti - Simon delegation from Multnomah county . in the waj that it did; but that is neither here rror there at this time. However, the victorious faction should not seek to rub the wounds. The Republican party has a ght on its hands in the coming campaign. Every RepublU -can vote will be needed, and the contesting delegation from Multno mah county represents a large influ- enoe and body of voters. 1 he olive 'branch of peace should be extended, and every effort made to alleviate the soreness which naturally remains. The senate votes today on the resolution giving recognition to the Cuban government." A few weeks go the passing ot such a measure -would have been thought tantamount to . bringing on war; ,but the war loud has hovered and passed so ujjuijt Liujca tuav iiir uuc uua bijj ou- raise to make as to the future. The delav mar have been a 20od tbitJii for this country in enabling it to inke better preparations, but' it has exhausted the patience of the people. When war does come, however, the latent interest will be speedily and thoroughly aroused. ' The nominations of lH. S. Wilson for the circuit judgship and that of A. A. Jayne for district attorney will meet with the approbation of every Republican." Mr., Wilson has never, been " a ' candidate for office, but ia known as a lawyer of unusual ability and unquestioned character. Mr. Javne has made-an excelleLt record as prosecuting attorney, and his re-nominaiiot. insures his election. Both these nominations add strength to the ticket.. NO TIME 'FOR ' HARD WORDS. Republican . success in Oregon must be secured next June in order to maintain the good name of- the state. The ccming election will be watched with great interest in all parts of the country, because it is the first to occur, and will be taken by many as a forerunner of what shall follow next November, when general elections are to be held. ; A weighty duty rests upon the Republicans of Oregon this "spring," and not one should be found faltering in his place. N -. . The great drawback toassurred success is the '. factional difficulty in Multnomah county. This we do not believe to have been wisely bandied by the state convention, and instead of being made " better, has . grown worse. It should, be the especial charge of .the Republican leaders to see that some sort of a reconciliation is effected whereby ' the feeling of soreness may be allayed and the' Re publicans made to forget their per sonal and political grievances. The campaign this year is one of principle, and so it will be viewed throughout the country. Oregon has committed herself to sound money in the past, and nothing has arisen to justify a reconsideration of the vote of November 1896. " The silver issue is being forced again to the front, and the Republican party must de fend the standards it won a year and a half ago." 1 ' The men who have been honored with leadership must see their duty plain before them, and make every honorable effort" to alhy this unfor tunate factional feeling. It is not a time for abuse or unkind words. Such treatment never did, nor never will, win a vote. But let such a spirit of conciliation be shown that every voter will be made to feel that he is still a Republican, and not an outcast. . THE PRESIDENT AND MILITIAJ V THE The following from the Oregonian will be of interest to militiamen, who are. under the impression that they are not subject to the call of the president: ' . "Every man between the ages of 18 and 45. who is not Included in the exemptions provided for, by law, is a national . militiaman, subject to the orders of the chief executive of the nation. National Guardsmen have asserted that they were enlisted for service In their own slate vlche, and that any service outside of the state must be purely voluntary, but this opinion is cleat ly an error, for the federal constitution is supreme. ana no state can so ameni me con stitution and laws of the United States so that a man can be a mem ber of the state mililia for bis own private ends , and the ends of the state, but not a member for' national purposes. "The United Slates supreme court says: .' -Our.understanding is the organ ization of the active militia (National Guard) of the state conforms exactly to ' the definition usually' given of mililia." Whatever the respective states have made their organized militia to be. that is the militia that the president may call into the ser vice . of the United-States.' '.When the militia passes into the service of the United States, it comes under the military law, and the president, as commander-in-chief, can determine finally what it shall do and where it shall go. Once in service, militia men are subject in nil respects to the same control as men of. the regular army. 4'The constitution of the United Statessays that congress shall have power to provide for organizing, arming and disciplining the militia, and for governing such part of them as may be employed in the service of the United Stalesreserving to the states, respectively, the appointment of the officers.' During our civil war this provi&ion was interpreted to mean that the authority, to appoint and commission officers of the vol unteer militia rests with the gov ernor, unless otherwise, provided by state laws." . ' ' CONGRESS AND WAR. Taken altogether, congress has acted with a great deal of patriotism in the Spanish trouble. Barring a few indiscreet speeches and uncalled for criticism of the president, the members generally have acted in a conservative, dispassionate manner, The senate and house haveagieed upon a resolution which amounts, in its purport, to a declaration of war, and this resolution the president is expected to sign today. This completes " the second stage in the affair, the first having been the diplomatic negotiations, carried on between Washington and Madrid As has been frequently said, un less Spain completely . back down. war is a certainly, and it is gratify ing to note the ease ana quicKness with which the United Slates has prepared itself for the conflict. .We do not believe that the. struggle will continue long, nor that much blood will be shed. Spam may put up a show of ' resistance, but it is written in the fates that she is a moribund country, and unable to cope with the fresh vigor of the Weet. Whatever may come, this nation will have the consolation that it did nothing hastily, but only resorted, to arms after provocation unendurable THE FINANCIAL PROBLEM. War or peace alike demands a final settlement of the financial prob lem which has vexed the people since the agitation for free silver ob tained a foothold in the federal leg islature, says ihe Independent. We -cannot count upon always being the creditor of the outside world ; on having famines abroad and surpluses at home; on keeping at borne the gold produced from our mines and bringing here stores from the vaults of Europe. The great gold stiength of the national treasury, built up since the sound money victory of 1896, must be conserved. The bank ing facilities of the country need en largement in some directions and moie elasticity throughout War should not blind, us to the imperative need of currency, reform; peace should be utilized for the greater facilitating of the work. The hope of international bimetal lism must be deferred by its advo cates for a long time. It is obvious ly impracticable when the trend of events and influences ip the British Empire is pointing toward the prob ably introduction of the gold stand-. urd in India before many years perhaps months. The rising of the Cuban specter brought to a bait the efforts ' of the party in power at Washington to devise an acceptable plan for securing the foundations of our financial system. Yet the. duty of the nation in this regard ' should not ' be wholly aban doned "under any stress. The gov ernment and the people must spare some time from the forging of can non and the buying of warships to the great domestic problems of rail road regulation, revenue'raising and currency correction, without the solv ing of which peace will never bring the fullest measure of ' prosperity, nor even war, however successful, leave the " strongest pawer of recu peration. "' ' ' ' - ..As stated in the special dispatch to The Chronicle today, congress has adopted a joint resolution favor- ing armed intervention in Spain, but not recognizing the independence of the Cuban republic. The resolution as passed is eminently a "wise one, and is completely in .accord, with President McKinley's views. " What the American people have long de sired has come, and Spain will be hurled from off the Western. Hemis phere because of her utter inhuman ity. The United States can well be called the foremost exponent ' of civilization. ; -; When once the power of the pco-r pie asserts itself, the politicians have to give way. . This was demonstrat ed in the nomination of. TTGeer for governor. . 1 ' HKEOES WHO FIGHT FIBE Their Bisks Increase in the Ratio 'of Our Progress. Modern Bnlldlnss and Their Con veniences Add Enormously to the Work of the Firemen Security Built Upon Tbelr Sacrifice.. His life is too lull of real peril for him to expose it recklessly that is to say, needlessly. From the time when he leaves bis qua-rters in answer to an alarm until he returns, he takes a risk that may at any moment set him face to face with death in its most cruel form. He needs nothing' so mach as a clear head; and nothing1 is prized so highly, nothing puts him so surely in the line of promotion;, for as, he ad vances in rank and responsibility, the Ijves of others, as well as his own, come to. depend on his judgment. The act of conspicuous daring which the world applauds is oftenest to' the fireman a matter of simple duty that had to be' done In that way because there was 'no other. Nor is it always, or even usual ly, the hardest duty, as he sees it. It came easy to him because he is an ath lete trained to do such things, and be cause once for all it is easier to risk one's life in the open, in the sight of one's fellows, than to face death alone, caught like a rat.in a trap. That is the leai peril which he knows too well, but of that the public hea.rs only when he has fougnt his last fight, and lest. How literacy our evpryday-security of 'which we think, if we think of it at all, as a mere matter of course is built upon the supreme sacrifice cf these de voted men, we realize nt long intervals, when a disaster occurs such as the one in which Chief Eresnnn and Fore man Eooney lost their lives three years ago. They were crushed to death un der the great water tank in a Twenty fourth street factory that was on fire. Its supports had been burned away. An examination that was then made of. the water tanks in the city discovered 8,000 That were either" wholly unsupported, except by the roof beams, or propped on timbers, and therefore a direct men ace, not only to. the firemen when they were calied there, but daily. to those living under them. It is not pleasant to add that the department's just de mand for a law' that; should 'compel landlords either to build tanks on the wall or on iron supports has not been heeded yet; but that is, unhappily, an o.'d story. Seventeen years ago the collapse of a Broadway building during a Are con vinced the community that stone pil lars were unsafe as supports. The fire was in the basement, and the firemen had turned the hose on. When the water struck the hot granite columns they cracked and fell, and the building' fell with them.- There were upon the roof at the' time a dozn men of the crew oi trncK company no. j., cuujj p.ng holes for smoke vents. .The na- ority clung to the parapet, ana nung tuere tall rescued, iwo weni auwn into the furnace from which the flames shot up 20 feet when the reef broke. One, Fireman Thomas I. Dougherty, was a wearer of the Bennett medal, too. His foreman answers on parade day, when his name is called, that he "died on the field of duty." These, at all events, did not die in vain; Stone col umns arc not cow used in supports for buildings in New York. ' " ., So one might go on quoting the perils of-the firemen as so many steps for ward for the better protection of the rest of us. It was the burning of the St. George flats, and more recently of the Manhattan bank, in which a dozen men - wre disabled; that stamped the average ' fireproof construction as faulty and largely delusive.J One might even go farther, and say the fireman's risk increases in the ratio of our prog ress or convenience. .The water-tanks came with' the very high buildings,' which in themselves offer problems to the fire fighters that have not yet been solved. The very air-ehafts that were hailed as the first advance in tenement house building added enormously to the fireman's work and risk, as well as to the risk of everyone dwelling under the roofs by acting as so many huge chimneys that carried the fire to the open windows opening upon them in every story. More than half of all the fires in New" York .occur in tenement houses. When the tenement couse commission of 1894 sat in ihis city, considering means'; of making them safer and better, it received the most practical help and'advice from the fire men, especially from Chief Bresnan, whose death occurred only a few days after he hid testified as a witness. The recommendations upon which he ip sisted are now part of the general teneT. ment house law. Jacob A. Kiis, in Cen tury. ' Beat tt Klondike- Mr. A. C. Thomas, of Marysville.Tex., has found a more valuable discovery than" has yet been made in the Klondike. For years he suffered untold agony from Consumption; accompained by hemmor rhapes; and. , was' absolutely cured bv Dr. King's New. Discovery for Consump tion, Coughs and Colds. He declares that gold isof little- value in comparison with this marvelous cure; would have it, even if it cost a hundred dollars a bottle. Asthma, Bronchitis and all throat and lung affections are positively cured by Dr. King's New Diecovery for Consump tion. Trial bottles free at .Blakeley & Houghton's' drag store. Regular size 50 cents and $1.00. Guaranteed to cure or price refunded. - ' V ' 2 : The farmer, the mechanic and the bi cycle rider are liable to unexpected iuts and. bruises. V DeWitt's Witch .Hazel SAtve ia the 'best thing to ieep on hand. It heals quicily, "and is a well known cure for piles. Snipes-Kinersly Drug Co. AH3 Thi Favorlta Hostelry In Anfa-Bellum Days Oftan Patronlzid by Abraham Lincoln From its Veranda Stephen A. Douglas Deliv ered a Great Speech Again the Scene of an Important Evinl. From the Tri-Cbunty Scribe, Pfymouth, 111. Hi. and Mrs. Campbell Thompson run the I she could not stand straight. One of the doe- historic Cuyler House at Plymouth, ILL, a hos telry where Abraham Lincoln often slept, where " Dick" Yates, Lyman Trumbell and Richard Oglesby bought refreshments for the inner man in ante-bellum days, and from the veranda of' whioh Stephen A. Douglas de livered one of his great speeches. This article has not so much to do, how ever, with this historic hotel, as it has with the landlord's thirteen-year-old laughing, bright-eyed, rosy-cheeked daughter Ollie. As one sees her to-day, the picture of per fect health, it is hard to believe that nearly nine of the thirteen years of her life were spent on, the bed of invalidism , that for months she never walked, and for Tears suffered the pain, misery and distress of inflammatory rheuma tism in its worst form. Able physicians were employed bnt no permanent Denent resulted. - "' Mrs. Thompson heard of a wonderful enre whioh had been effected by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People, and was. influ enced by it to purchase some of the pills for her daughter. : Before she had taken half a box, there - was marked improvement in her condition ; when the had taken two boxes she was completely restored to health. To-day, there is not a healthier child than Ollie Thompson. . Tift case came to the attention of the editor of the Tri-Counly Scribe, and a reporter was detailed to learn the story of this remarkable core from Mrs. Thompson's own lips. She aid: " . " Ollie was a hearty, well-developed child from the time she was born until she was three years old. In 1887 she was taken down with inflammatory rheumatism. For nine years she was never entirely free from the dig-! ease, and much of the time was in an alarm- ing condition. At ritces, she could not walk, and her spins was drawn out of shr t so that j Spial peatur V - v :-.'.'' Of The Chronicle office is the ; ' Job prii7tii7 D(?partnei7t.. T We have better facilities for ' doing1 artistic work in this line than any office in Eastern Ore 7 gon, and this branch of our busi- " ness is in the hands of expert j t workmen. Ue t ' 5omparj8or; . both as to high grade work and . J y reasonable prices. " 9iwiiaHiwoeiiaaesoaiiBwBaMiti0ia I Weekly Inter Ocean lUi LSEGEST CIRCDliTIOH OF MY It is radically Republican) advocating JJ the cardinal doctrines of that party -with, ability and earnestnesstJt THE WEEKLY INTER THE NEWS AND BEST It Is Morally Clean and as a The Literature of its columns is equal to that of tie beat maga zines. Itis interesting to the chil dren as well as the parents........ 'HE INTER OCEAN is a and while it brings to the family THE NEWS OF, . THE WORLD and pives 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 ana discusses literature and politics from the Western sUndpoinWJ $I.C0-PRICE CXE DOLLAR PER YEAR $1.00 THE SAH.T JJTDSraDATEBrnOHS OP THE la TEE OCEAS ARE BEST OF THEIR ETAS. Price of Daily by mail.'.. .U ..$4.00 per year Price of Sunday by mall , .. OO per year Daily and Sunday by mail..... $6.O0 per year Subscribe for Ghpoi nn wm Lru tors said if she became well she would be a cripple for life. "Dr.Grierai Grigran, of Augusta, was the first doctor who had her case. He doctored her through two serious times of the disease, and finally told us he could not cure her. We doctored her most all the time, bnt when she was ten years old she had an unusually severe attack, and we called in Dr. Kreider, of Prai rie City, where we were then living. He tried hard to cure her but finally gave it np. He said,' ' I can do nothing further, the case is the worst I have witnessed.' " We nearly gave up hope then, but called Dr. McDaniel who doctored her after we came to Plymouth, but no benefit was derived. "Then I heard how Uncle Wesley Walton had been cured by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. Knowing the condition he bad been in, I thought if the pills cured him, they might help Ollie. Consequently I bought a box for her, and before she had finished it she was much better. She continued , taking them, and when the second box had been used she was well, and has never had rheumatism since. " I cannot say too much for the Dr. Wil liams' Pink Pills for I believe Ollie would have been, dead long ago.if she had not taken, them." Victoria Thompson. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 11th day of September, 1897. W. S. EOMIOC, Notary Pvbtic I hereby state that I have examined Miss Ollie Thompson, and find no outward ap pearance of rheumatism. " W. D. Wade, M. D. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 17th day of September, 1897. '- W. S. Romick. Notary PulKe. ' All dealers sell Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for 'Pale People, or they will be sent post paid on receipt or price, 60 cents a oox or six boxes for $2.50 (they are never sold in bulk, or by the 100), by addressing Dr. Williams' POLITICAL PAPER IH TH WEST Jtjffiut it can always be relied on J for fair and honest reports of all po- litical movcmealsjttjtj)tJtJtjJtJ OCEAN SUPPLIES ALL' CURRENT LITERATURE Family Paper Is Without a Peer. WESTERN NEWSPAPER, ' Si '