F2l i '- "' '"' ' ; : : The Dalles Daily Chronicle. THE DAI.IJiS Entered t the Postofliee at The Dalles, Oregon, as second-class matter. - STATE OFFICIALS. governor j g. pettnnrer Secretary of State ii.Vf. McBride Treasurer. - ..Phflll M ..!.,.. Supt. o( Public Infraction E. B. McKlroy enators pongrefwman B. Hermann fctate Printer Frank Baker (J. N. Dolph J J. H- Mitchell COII NT Y Countv Juilge.... Sheriff ...... Clerk Treasurer OFFICIALS. C. N. Thornbnry D. U Cates J. B. CroKsen . .Geo. Kiich Commissioner j"' A-,,5ve" J rank Kincaid Assessor .. . .John E. Burnett Surveyor e. K. gharp buperintundent of Public Schools ... Trov Shellev Coroner William M ichell The Chronicle is the Only Paper in The Dalles that Receives the Associated Press Dispatches. RESTRICTION DEMANDED. The results that have followed the lynching of the eleven Italians at New Orleann who were charged with being jwcensorj- to the murder of Chief of T,.i : . ii , uwi iwy wgin to look rerioua 2 1 ..... il r. , . "juji fin nicy were connnea to inso lent vaiairings by their America countrymen about revenge, and silly threats of raising an army of 140,000 Italians in the United States to compel redress. American citizens looked on with indifference if not contempt. But the scene is changed. it is no longer cotteries of blood-thirsty Italians breath mg out their own shame by condemning an act which, however much the neces ' wity of it might be deplored, very gener any met the approval of tne very best people the world over. The Italian gov rnment, if the dispatches are to le tie ..v-vcw, int. Jim jei.rHiei an act ot open Hostility to tlie United States bv recall : 1 I. . t: ... " . jug mc imnan minister at Washington who, in turn, has demanded his pass pons irom tne department of state, and all because, forsooth, the king of Italy is . unsatisfied with the progress of the adjustment, between the two countries of the matter relating to the New Orleans massacre. There is petnlent impatience about this act of the Italian King more befitting the warm blood of the fiery emperor of Germany. To say the least one would have expected more good sense from King Humbert. The United States has shown no disnosition to be unfair or to shield wrong doing, if inueea any wrong was done. There loes not seem to have been any unneces HQ ltT lnlnn a A. I . . . . . uci. uii me pari ot tnis govern ment in the progress of adjustment. To thousands outside the diplomatic circle there was really nothing to adjust. A hand of murderous cut-throats, had met ngnteous judgment at the hands of peaceable and honored citizens, whose only fault was that they did not offer up tne venai jury mat acquitted them in the same holocaust. So the king gets maa ano we suppose the next move on n.c lurckw Doard win be to send a part ins vaunted navy over hereto demand indemnity -or something of that kind -Alarming rejxirts are current of Ameri can citizens being arrested on Italian soil and retained as hostages. This is a game two can play at. If the king ..iu inaeinnity we will gladly giTe him ine wnoie alalia outfit, while if he per "iu nis unreasonable hostility, the climate of some parts of this country may become very unhealthy for ven detta brigands. Meanwhile this govern ment is learning a lesson from this New Orleans affair that she will do well to iieed. The gates of Castle Garden have swung too widely inward for these many .years. The line must be drawn some where and sometime. We have no use for a class of immigrants, whom we can not punish, when they violate our laws, without getting into a row with the mother country. The man who is not willing to assume the responsibilities of American citizenship with all that that -words implies has no business here. If ' we reject a Chinaman because he cannot be assimilated, we must reject others for the same reason. This country has too long been the dumping ground for the social offal of Europe. Politicians have from time to time placed restriction planks in their platforms but the dumps still continue to grow larger, until this Italian entanglement at last demands in thunder tones that the thing ought to stop and stop right soon. While the nation will Always regard with pride every for-' ign American citizen who walks worthy of his citizenship, no matter to what race he belongs or what country gave him birth, we have no use for men who look to a foreign country for protection, while professing loyalty to the United States. ' Pre ma Comment. The working class of this eta hold the balance of power in: their ballots OREGON. L thev . will sret together and effect thorough -and permanent organisation and .then cast their : votes for members of their own class instead of the profes sional politician. jsigin tiecoracr. The majority are .toilers. If they manufacture produce and consume more than all the rest they are as much right to govern as are men of the profes sions named.' ' Yes, directly or indirectly the toiling masses pay the burden of taxation. . W here the trouble comes in consists in the fact that the majority are compelled to pay tne taxes oi tbese mid dle men, yet iney are not as capable ot making laws, oh no. Athena Press. Both old parties might as well prepare to meet a third opponent in the cam paign of '92, viz : The Farmers' Partv alliance or whatever you desire to call it Ihere are reasons to believe that it will make a formidable fight, although its principles are very crude indeed. Hep- prirr uazeue. - - Nothing is more certain than that the western and southern states will soon co operate. "When that period arrives, the balance of power by which the plutocrat ic states now govern the Union will have no power in it. The farst national elec nun iu vwiu-ii iarmers vote logetner is tne end ot plutocratic denomination in America. . S. m Mammouth JJemocral An exchange has the followinc- The National Farmers' Alliance has decided to call a convention next year and nom inate a candidate for the presidency, mis means a possible failure of the people to elect, but a certainty of the success ol the democratic candidate, either in the electoral college or in con gress, if the election were to be held now tne alliance would have a reason able hope of carrying South Carolina, ucuigiu, Aiauauw, rvansas, .Nebraska tne .Ua fc otas and M in nesota . This would prevent either party from securing a majority, and would throw the election into the house, where the democrats would have everything their own way. It is impossible tosav. of fonrep u-Vitlir the alliance will be stronger or wRakor next year than it is now ; but at present n, jb ueruumy growing stronger. nine in a. Hiiiguiar tiling. , me news- paiiers iiave discovered that Dr. TCrh the great consumption curist with lymph, has a brother-in-law living in southern Indiana. The b. i. 1. is in the warv lorHieannga watch. Astorian. rn - the Peters burar CVa dared our opposition to many features of the McKinley bill, but we cannot help ciiemitH ii ig malting in ngiand, tTermany and other parts of xuiope, viermanyis mad clear through, but Germany doesn't remember that the farmers and stock-raisers of the iTnitoH States were also "mad clear t.hmuoti" when the American hoe was refused ad mission to the German market. And is,neland also raises hnwl n the more significant because her nnliri. cians and manufacturers were wont tn assure us that we were the chief suffer ers by the policy of exclusion of foreign competition and the encouragement of American industrial inrininrli.n Their resentment may carry them to, the extremity of bringing their plants to this country, and from this base continue tne war on our manufacturers. Let them come. If he wants this marker, lor hin. come and take it in this manner, and he will have the good will and God blessing of every true American heart. 1 lie bill, with all its faultR. hna endeared itself to our heart on account of another enemy it has made t.h im. xjiter. mat loreign-Amencan who is i lere ior revenue onlv is the hittr on.) most insidious, not to sav mnst Wr,.;- ical, of the enemies of American indus trial progress and development. mine Recuntrlc "'fila 'Al Indiana for Aonjiifeafgl ? For more. thMiYslxty yaiMr-'nd Lizzie Harpor- have lived la a. tumble down log hnt near the village - of New TTentonj JFtanklin county, ;lni.,"i four miles from the Ohio line. '"':.Th?jr art he most remarkable specimens hf .eccentric ity in this conntry, and have been ob jects of curiosity for more than half a century. - They are old maids, and have been really dead to the world ever since theywere children. ;-Mary, the elder, w 63 years old, and her sister Lizzie 60. The oldest inhabitant of that locality doesn't know when the Harpers came to the place. It is only known that-tl.o father and mother of the eccentric old maids lived and died in the miserable log shanty from which neither of the two women has ever .been away for more than a few hours at a time. The roof of the shanty fell in ten years ago, and was only held up from the ground by the high, posts of the old fashioned bedstead in which they sleep. There is no floor, and the ground has been worn down into a regular burrow. The sisters own property, but they take no interest in tne care of it. The stock which thev used to have all died from exposure and neglect. All the efforts of the neighbors to in duce the women to take some intercut, in the care of their property have been un availing. Alary only tries to nw the in terest on the mortgage on their farm. and once every year walks twelve miles to the county seat and settles the ac count. Her sister Lizzie has the pecu liar habits of the snake and ground hog. Although she has no physical nil she goes to bed on Oct. 1 every year and is not seen again until April. There is some mystery surrounding the strange conduct of these old maids, but the rea sons for their hermit life and their al most complete retirement from the world have never been satisfactorily plained. Kecentiy t he neighbors erected frame cottage adjoining the pen in which they lived so lone. hnt. it only after threats of having the two women removed to the Door bona t hit they could be induced to occupy it They are continually complaining about their hard lot, and want to return to the hovel, which ia the most squalid and miserable place imaginable. The sis ters are perfectly respectable, but know nownng or wnat is going -on. They can't even tell the day of the week, and are utterly indifferent to everything. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. J. M. HUNTINGTON & CO. 1 Estate and Insarahee Agents. Abstracts of. and Information Concern ingLund Titles on Short Notice. Land for Sale and Houses to Rent Parties Looking for Homes in COUNTRY OR CITY, OR IX SEARCH OF Bugiqe Location Should Call on or Write to us. Agents for a Full Line of Leaiini Fire tarance Companies, And Will Write Insurance for on all DESIRABLE BISKS. Correspondence Solicited. All Letters Promptly Answered. Call on or Address, J. M. HUNTINGTON & CO. Opera House Block, The Dalles, Or. XT PATRIOTISM VERSUS IRON-CLADS. Now that Italy has got mad it may be comforting to this country to learn that the Italian navy consists of "ten first class iron-clads, five steel war vessels and fifty sea going torpedo boats, besides any number of lesser iron-clads and wooden ships of war." Well, she will need the whole menagerie when she tackles Uncle Sam. If we have not an army or navy -we have men, money, stout hearts and willing hands and enough of surplus patriotism at present running to seed among foreign born citizens of several nations alone to take the contract of lick ing any son-of-a-gun that dares to poke his fist in our nose. I A physician testifying before a Cincin nati court in a breai-li-of-ni-omSaa ,.o recently bad occasion to refr tn th ui tne piaintin nad " blushed, "where upon ne was required by the counsel for the defendant, on cross examination to explicitly me meaning ol the term. He astounded his interlor-ntor U lift rrv vulsed the spectators bv obligingly giving v luiiuniii itii;iu tieillllliion : "A blush is a temnomrvprvflioinn ar,A .murine eiiuigence oi tne physiognomy apologized by the perceptiveness of the sensorium when in it predicament of un equilibrity from a sense of slump in. or other cause, eventuating in a paresis oi tne vasomotor nervous filainenteof the iaciai capillaries, whereby, being divested ul. meir elasticity, iney are suffused witn radiance, emanat.inu- from m ;n timidated prsecordia." This should settle the question in de iense ot girls of the present day of whom it is asserted tnat "they do not know how to blush." It is no wonder that blushing has become a lost. flnd that the trade in carmine and verniillion is a growing one. Vregonian. Is Disease a Punishment? The following advertisement. niiKTiclinl by a prominent western patent medicine house would indicate that. t.hir disease as a punishment for sin : ifo you wish to know the oiiickest. " j I'ure a sever cold r we .wall tell you. To cure a cold qickly, it must be treated before the col tied in the system. This can always be oone it you choose to, as nature in her Kiuaness to man gives timelv warning and plainly tells yon in nature's way, that as a punishment for some indiscre tion, you are to be afflicted with a cold unless you choose to ward it off bv prompt action. The first symptoms of a cold, in most cases, is a dry, loud cough and sneezing. The cough is" soon followed by a profuse watery CX'Dectorftt.ir.Ti a ii r? the sneezing by a prosuse watery dis- umgc iruiii tne nose, there is a thin white j-u severe cases coatinc on ' rho tongue. What to do? It is only necessary to take Chamberlain's Conch double doses every hour. That will greatly lessen the severity of the cold and in most cases will effectually counteract it, and cure what would have been a severe cold within one or two days time. Try it and be convinced." Fifty cent bottles'for sale by Snipes & Kinerslev, druggists Forfeited Kallroad Landa We are now ready to prepare papers for the filing and entry of Railroad Lands. We also attend to business be fore the U. S. Land Office and Secretary of the Interior. Persons for whom we have prepared papers and who are ' re quired to renew their applications, will not be charged additional for such papers. - Thobnbury & Hudson, . Rooms 8 and 9, Land Office building , The Dalles, Oregon. - - Don't Be Afraid of Cold Alp. To suppose that the constant inhala tion of impure air has a tendency to ex cite the symptoms of consnmption is not at all unreasonable, when we con sider the wonderful mechanism of the lungs and the efforts which they are continually employing to throw off the poisons of a corrupted air which h been breathed again and again, until its foulness has become unbearable, and even worse overpowering. One drop of the flnid condensed from the air which has come from the lungs has been found sufficiently powerful to cause instant death. Is it any wonder that wasting away and slowly dying upon this destructive food? The fear of catching cold has caused more sickness than all the colds thatever were "caught." With this peevish dread many strip up their doors, bind up their windows, and look upon every puff of wind as if it were some keen thief who had come to rob them of their lives. This custom prevails mostly among the better class, or "the rich," as they ttrmeu. i ne poor man, whose com forts are confined to a little frame house. is seldom beard to complain; and bis cbildren are always hale and heartv. in spite of the many draughts which come in through the cracks and the rents of every door and window. The infinite value and the immediate necessity of ventilation must not be underrated, for ii is tnis ever changing current that con tributes the greatest boon toward the health and happiness of all chuues of Humanity. Hall's Journal of Health. Plucky California Girl. A San Diego girl distdngished herself at Jfacihc beach the other day.' She was one of the three students from the Col lege of Letters who belong to the swim ming club. They went to the bath house in the cove of Mission bay, got into bath suits, and rowed out to a little island nail mile off looking down on San Diego. The San Diegon has become an expert swimmer,' and 6he was so bnsv teaching her girl companions that none of them observed two of the college boys swimming over and carrying off their oars. When it was discovered the San Diegon girl remarked that she wouldn't be outwitted by any sneaking boys. Her companions could not be trusted in' deep water, and they accordingly turned pale. The San Diegon told them to eet into tne boat, as she would pull them across, fehe then pushed the boat off. 1 A. - , . .. " me rope in ner teeth and swam across to the boat house, having to float on ner bacA: but twice in the entire pull. San Diego Union. Look Out for Yellow Garters. The fortunate srirl ia the one who has a yellow garter given her by the bride of less than a year. And why is she fort unate? Because it iwrarea for her lad die who shall be her own true love and her husband ere another twelvemonth baa elapsed. The yellow garter mnst be worn day and night and never removed saw when the act of, cleanliness requires it. During the first six months that it is worn the young woman will see her own true love and become desperately well acquainted with him. The next three months sees them en gaged to be married, and the last three months of the year bear a wedding chime in their echoes. Dear, sweet match making young matrons give a yellow garter to all the young girls of their acquaintance whom they wish to see wedded, and then they do all in their power to further the cause by introduc ing every eligible man of dear Jack's ac quaintance. JN ew York World. - JAMES WHITE, Has OjHMied a -La'va.aa.olx Counter, In Connection With his Fruit Stand and Will Serve Hot Coffee, Ham Sandwich, Pigs' Feet, and uueiui!ui to me i a?enger .l.epot. Un .Second ft.. near corner., of Madison. Also a Branch Bakery, California Orange Cider, and the : Best Apple Cider. If you want a good lunch, give me acall Open all Night The Gate City of the Inland Empire is situated at the head of navigation on the Middle Columbia, 6d is a thriving, prosperous city. ITS t TERRITORY. ' It is the supply city for:-.exlxi8iYejaad.i "gi cultural and grazing country, its trade reaching , as far south as Summer Lake, a distance of over twe hundred miles. V THE LARGEST WOOL MARKET. ' " The rich grazing country along the eastern slope of the the Cascades furnishes pasture for thousands of sheep, the wool from which finds.market here. The Dalles is the largest original wool shipping umi1 America, about 5,000,000 shipped this year. pounds being S. L. YOUNG, (SnecpNwor to E. BECK.) THE VINEYARD OF OREGON. The country near The Dalles produces splendid crops of cereals, and its fruits cannot be excelled." It is the vineyard of Oregon, its grapes equalling Cali fornia's best, and its other fruits, apples, pears prunes, cherries etc., are unsurpassed. ITS PRODUCTS. The salmon fisheries are the finest on the Columbia, yielding this year a revenue of $1,500,000 which can and will be more than doubled in the near future. The products of the beautiful Klickital valley find market here,- and the country south and east has this year filled the warehouses, and all available storage places to overflowing with their products. ITS WEALTH It is the richest city of its size on the coast, and its money is scattered over and is being used to develop, more farming country than is tributary to any other city in Eastern Oregon. Its situation is unsurpassed! - Its climate delight ful Its possibilities incalculable! Its resources un limited!' And on these corner stones she stands. The Dalles JVIereantile Co., , . : Successors to BKOOKS & BKERS, Dealer in -DEALER IX- WATCHES Gents' Furnishing Goods, Boots and Shoes, Hats and Caps, Etc. HARDWARE Groceries, Provisions, Hay, Grain and Feed. 390 and 394 Second Street. Remember we deliver all purchases without charge. ' V. E. GARRETSON, Jewelry, Diamonds, SIIiVErJWflUE, :-: ETC. wcnes, Clocks and Jewnirv Repaired and Warranted; m nnu o ULUUiiO, Tpnitinn , TnmoTdr i-uuuiim uuiiuiui. 165 Second St.. The Dalles, Or. m e r c n a n i John Pashek, Tailor. Third Street, Opera Block. Madison's latest System, Used guaranteed each time. ' ' - Repairing and Cleaning Neatly and Quickly Done., FOR FfNE Commercial! ol) Printing V COME TO THE CHRONICLE.' OFFICE SOUS AOKNT FOR III K -FOR- Garpets anil Furaiture, CO TO All Watch Work Warranted. Jewelry Made to Order. 138 Second St., Th Dallea, Or. - $500 Reward! We will pay the above reward for anv ease of Uver .ompllnt, DyHpepula, Sick Headache, In digestion. Constitution or (wiin,. S?J2.Uh We8t; Vegetable Liver Pills, when the .uu) muipiiea wim. iney are purely vegetable, and never fail to give sat&fac- "- C01- Large boxes containing 80 rills. 25 Cents. Rewntv Af r... ... j ; . i . -. mw nu lull- B..r.V,n& manufactured lijiartoitt. COMPANY, onlv bv CHICAGO, BLAKEI.KY HOCCHTON, ... K . I'rescrlptton Drngirlsts, 17 Second St. The Dalles, Or. REMOVAL. PRINZ & NITSCHKE, And be Satisfied as to QUALITY AND PRICES. C. N. THORNBURY, Late Rec. U. 8. Land Office. T. A. HUDSOisw. Notary Puf I 1 i. THGRNBURY S HUDSOJ.V ROOMS 8 and 9 LAND OFFICE BUILDING. " I'ostoltlce Box 33ft,' THE DALLES, OR. H. G-lenn has removed his office and the office of the Electric Light Co. to 72 Washington St. pilings, Contests, And all other Business in the U. S. Land Office . . Promptly Attended to. We have ordered Blanks for Pilings, Entries and the purchase of Railroad Lands under the recent Forfeiture Act, which we will have, and advise the pub lic at the earliest date when such entries can be made. . Look for advertisement in this paper. - u Thornburv & huason.