The Dalles Daily Chronicle. THR DAIX.ES - w. . OREGON Entered at the Postofflce at The Dalles, aa Hecond-claits matter. Oregon, STATE OFFICIALS' .'. Governor :...S. Pennover Secretary of State , . .O. W. Mc Bride ireasurer -Phillip Metschan Supt. of Public Instruction E. B. McElroy enators H- ?; V&SK I J. H. Mitchell 3ontrresHman B. Hermann State Printer Frank Baker COUNTY OFFICIALS. County Judge. C. N. Thombnry 8heriff D. L. Cates ;iern . : J. B. Crossen Treasurer Geo. Ruch r. 1 i (HA. Leavens u.,.,u.u.,Cr Prank Kin,.. Assessor John E. Barnett Surveyor ...E. F. Sharp 3ueriiittiiut;ui ui runuc ocuoois. . . iToy oneue Coroner. ...... William Michel The Chronicle is the Only Paper in The Dalles that Receives the Associated Press Dispatches. A NEW APPLICATION OF CIVIL SERVICE PRINCIPLES. The secretary of the navy has deternv mea on applying a plan 01 civil service reform in the appointment of foremen X . i anu muster raecnanics in tne various navy yards under his control that will meet with the approval of every man who is not a politician merely for what there is in it. He has made a beginning with the yard at New York and ordered that after June first all positions of fore men and master mechanics shall be de clared vacant. A board of examiners has been appointed to test the practical qualifications of candidates for the vacant positions, enquire into their antecedent reputation, character 'and habits and certify to the secretary who are best fitted to fill the vacancies. Other yards ill 1 T . . 1 . . win oe aeau wnn in a similar manner ' in the near future. This Is surely a step in the right direction. The doctrine that "to the victor belongs the spoils" iB the curse of American politics. When there is a change of administration the first half of a president's term is em ployed "turning the rascals out" and putting a new set of rascals in. The question of , fitness, of character, of capacity, is secondary to that of political affiliations. In this respect there is scarcely any preceptible difference, be tween the two great parties. With either in power the janitor as well as the postmaster must be of the same political strip. TheTe8ultis a hungry horde of office seekers who take interest in poll tics not from motives of patriotism, but for the spoils of office. - Destroy this latter incentive by a vigorous civil service reform and the business of . the mere politician would be practically . ruined and this is a calamity that . the country could . possibly brook with . great equinimity..v!'t .;:i.i;i.H . .. r 1 . . ... v.ie mgui last wees a soiaier ana a gambler had some trouble in a low dive in the city of Walla Walla, when the gambler drew, a pistol and shot , the soldier inflicting a fatal wound. The gambler was promptly arrested. .- The next night a number of soldiers broke in to the jail and taking out the prisoner filled hfm with bullets. No attempt had oeen made to remove the gambler or prevent a prompt trial or adequate pun ishment, nor, it is alleged, was there the slightest sentiment in the gambler's lavor among the respectable portion of tne community nor the semblance of an attempt to screen the crime. The gambler was simply detained to await the result of the soldier's injury. , Under the circumstances the lynching was wholly unjustifiable and ought to be severely punished. The Wateo Observer, referring to an ar ticle in the paper urging the importance of a railroad from this city to Grants' -which would not only serve as a portage but would practically control the traffic of Sherman county, says: We are glad to copv the - foregoing words of good cheer from the Chron icle and heartily endorse the ideas put forth by the writer. The farmers and business men of Sherman county 1 will hail with delight the building of a" port age road that will tap this section. - All will anxiously await the result of a sur vey and should the road become an ac complished fact we confidently predict that it "will be a financial success. The beet-sugar industry on the Pacific coast promises to become important to both farmer, and manufacturer. Isaac Hicht, president of the Alameda sugar company, reports an income of $100:per acre from 1320 acres in beets, while $25 per acre is considered good for wheat land. , . A level-headed exchange . well . says : Rudini, .. J)'Arco and the remainder : of their compatriots who are demanding a change in American laws had better not be too insistent.- We might oblige them by framing an exclusion act which would effectually prevent the further entrance of the Mafia into this country. With wheat worth one dollar a bushel in the Willamette valley, salmon worth one dollar apiece on the Columbia, and a fine fruit season promised, the organizer-of the farmers' alliance clubs may have up hill work in Oregon. Low prices and scarcity aid political freaks. If Kansas had half of the prosperity that Oregon enjoys such freaks as Pefter and Jerry Simpson would be unheard of out side the circle around the stove in the Tillage grocery. Astorian. , Pennsylvania has appropriated $30, for the world's fair. Do not Count tbe Cast. ' Walla Walla Union. It is a1 waste of time to inquire into the recent tragedies in Walla Walla, their effect on the future is of more concern. To estimate that effect 'it is proper to look coldly upon the facts. Two men met in a low saloon, at a ate hour of the night, and entered - into' an argument, which' became so heated that one of them shot the other, inflicting a mortal wound. The shooter was in stantly arrested and locked in jail. Two nights afterwards an attempt was made by the comrades of the wounded man to take the shooter from the officers and inflict summary punishment on him. The next night, il being the third night after the shooting, his comrades made a concerted, well-planned raid on the county jail, which was so successful that they "forced an entrance into that institution, and, taking from it the man who shot his comrade, they riddled his body with bullets. Stated in the worst possible light, the first shooting was murder in the heat of passion. Stated in the mildest form, the sec ond shooting was a cold blooded murder, without one redeeming feature, of a de fenseless prisoner bv an armed body of men perpetrated deliberately, in accord ance with a plan carefully elaborated in all its details. The Union has no words of defense for the gambler, who shot while inflamed by passion and liquor. The criminal records of Walla Walla bear evidence that he would have lieen awarded a fair and impartial trial and been properly punished. Nor is it within the power of the Union to frame sentences expressive of its con demnation of the deliberate murder by the mob . H ad the cri me been committed by the old time vigilante organization, it wouia not nave been so dastardlv character, because it would have been committed by citizens of the county tak ing the law into their own hands, after the courts had failed to perform their duty, and not by men paid by the public to uphold the laws of the land who m-e- juagea me action or. tne courts. W hen such men so far foreet their sworn duty as to conspire and combine. not to simply defy the law, but to over power its officers, and break down the doors of the public prison, drag out of nis ceii a cowering murderer and shoot him to death, it is time to nphold the majesty of the law bv everv nower that can De invoked ; time tor all good citizens to unite in the demand that every re source known to the civil and military authorities shall be put forth to ferret out the ring leaders of the mob and bring them to merited punishment.- He who asks less because it will cost money to DTOSecute the invftfitiVaHnns nrt i.rv and punish the ring leaders is unworthy me name or American citizen, Let -toe cost equal the national debt and it will not 'ie too srreat a tnce to uav for main. taining the majesty of the law and pun- isning tnose wno override it. Had the north stopped to - count" the cost when the confederate-can nonopened nre on numpter- wnat would American citizenship been worth today? The Encampment. Fossil Journal. mi : . ... n.. . . ine encampment or tne Third reeri- ment, O. N. It. takes nlace in Julv- nt The Dalles. - The various companies in Gilliam county will please note that this leaves only a little over two months in which . to -prepare for. camp. - We woaid like our local company to make a respectable- showing on that occasion, and to do so thev must drill without ceasing from now on. It is not to be ex pected that all the members , can turn out every evening, but nothing should be allowed to prevent a full muster at least once a week. . The Dalles is not an ideal place for . an encampment, but it has the advantage oi ueinK near, ana we trust tnat company E will be represented in full strength, or as near wereto as possible. Jsaoy 18 SICK. Tne woeful ernrfwainn oi a uea Moines teamster's countenance showed his deep anxiety was not entire ly without causey when he inquired of a druggist of the same city what was best to give a baby for a cold? .. It was not ne cessary for him to say more, his .counte nance snowed tnat the pet of the family if not the idol of his life was in distress.' "We give our baby Chamberlain's Cough Remedy," was the druggist's answer. "I don't like to give the baby such strong mBHifiina " ooi tnn.n4. X7 1 John Oleson, of the Watters-Talbot Print ............. KMA .lit- 1 III H ing Kjo.t don't you? inquired the druer- gist. "His baby, when eighteen months old, got hold of a bottle of OhamWlnin'H cough Kemedy and drank the whole of it. ui course it - made the babv , vomit very freely but did not injure, it in the least, and what is more, it cured the ba by's cold. The teamster alreadv know the value of the Remedy,- having used it lumaeti, ana was now satisfied that there was no danger in : giving - it even - to a baby. For sale by Snipes & Kinersly. Our devil has been busv ..the nast two weeks composing spring poetry. The following is his latest : "Oh 1 the clothes press is a swell affair for garments nice and neat : the hav Dress is a m-and . ma. chine and does its work comnleta ; t.h cider press is lovely with . its juices red auu eweei; out tne printing press con trols the world and eets there on hnt.h feet. Prineville Newt. Of course, a drownine man will rlntch at a straw, especially U he is drowning REMOVAL NOTICE. FRED DREHI & GO. ' . Have flitted up s first-class Barber Shop - : : AND: Bath Rooms At 102 Second Street, next door to ' Freeman's Boot and Shoe store, i HOT and COLD BATHS. None but the best artists employed. ; Do Not Forget the Place. 820 REWARD. '! Ml- ' - ' -I. . . WILL BE PArp FOR ANY INFORMATION ' lead Tiff- to thsAnnTlnrlnn si the ropes or in any way interfering with the wires, poles or lamps of Th Elbctric Light co- H. GLENN. Manager. A Backing Horse. Gentlemen, but wasn't r this,; luekr Twenty-three quail, two-i:: geese, w two coons and a fox all in one afternoon!-,. If any one can beat that on an everyday common goose hunt; let me see the. color of his hair. After tying on the game mounted and broke into: the S. 0,R.'s train of thought with. a. dig "in the ribs with the butt Tf the gun Right there was where 1 made, the mistake of the day. The Splendid Old Run awoke to his surroundings, took one sniff at his odorous burden, and in just one and half minutes by -the -clock had bucked himself clear of ..everything, saddle and all, and was making Salvator time for his stable - ' -. , - - , k , , i It was interesting while it lasted, but. thank the Lord! it didn't last long. Talk about riding a trip hammer! Why, that would; be, .comparative -fun to the way this old fiend bucked! First my hat came off; then the game began to come up and hit me in the face and the small of the back; then I had to throw away my gun so as to have both hands to hold on with; next it began to rain dead quail out of my - pockets, and finally he got me to coming down aa he was going up, and that settled it The next thins I knew I was sitting on the ground, with my teeth . ... . - au- loose ana a bulk in hit nrriiwmT game, gun, saddle and blanket scattered around,: and the horse nearly home. , Old Sport was sitting in front cf me, spat ting the ground with his stump of a tail and now and then licking his wounds in a manner that showed be was proud of tnem. . .- I was demoralized, there's no use de nying it; and weak and sick I sat there until my friend, alarmed bv the S. O. B.'s return riderless to the ranch, hitched up his team and came down the river hunting for me. Forest and Stream. Saved a Baby from. Drath. : Daring a small tenement house fire on the east side there was ' a thrilling inci dent that was not chronicled at the time. It occurred at a rear window in the sec ond story. The flames had been extin guished with taining damage, bat the house was full of smoke. Suddenly a woman tottered to the open windows In her arms she held a bundle, tightly clasped to her bosom, , It was in white wrappings. - Quickly the crowd of people in the yard below saw the woman. Great clouds of smoke whirled about her head in suffocating- volumes, and the crowd called upon her to iuma ' '' She hesitated, bat extended the bundle at arm's length, from which at that mo ment there- came a faint cry. . It wan t baby's voices . " , : .; . "Save my child!" implored the woman. ., Instantly a blanket was procured and strong men held its corners. "Drop ,itr they shouted. . . , ,. With ner face averted the agonized ana imperilled mothor let the babv fall. Down the little one fluttered like a white winged, wounded bird, with the despair ing ; cry. of - "Mamma' . noon, it li. laghtly it struck the blanket, and a mo ment .later- it. was taken., up safe j and sound, but sobbing, by a motherly look ing -woman, in the throng. , , : it required but a few minutes to raise a ladder and rescue the self sacrificing motner rrom ner perilous ' position and restore her dimpled darling to her arms. !i. J. xus i.touchmgi rescue was , loudlv cneerea oy the sympathetic spectators. . i . .... - ew xorir Merald. . -.'Advertise Tour Profess I oai Advertising is the legitimate coadi utor of any legitimate business.- No one occu pation or set of men has a monopoly of it by any code - of common. Benae. When properly -used and developed to its. capac ity tor good it is as honorable and as dir- -nified in its application to the professions as it is to the .merchant, manufacturer. publisher, playwright, the artist or the pulpit. ' Like anything else, it can be1 put to wrong -ends; but that should not dis credit' advertising as a proper factor for good purposes- Aa well, denounce relig ion, because, there are i hypocrites or con demn water as, a drink because men are drowned in the bay. Because .-rascals a 1 it i . ' ana aisrepaxaDie memoera oi toe profes sion have invoked its aid does not limit its usefulness when put. to good ends. The professional man must, in the be ginning of his practice, bend his energies to building up a large circle of acquaint ances. - In the-ordinary coarse of events. and fallowing the usual habits of all pro- zeesienal men, he is obscure for the first ten years of ; .his practice, .u After that tune,: if . fortune , favors, him, -he rises with more or less rapidity to a position which, is at -once profitable and honora ble. A. L. Teele in Printers' Ink. a'--!!-A:iDilloas Question. ,;i-4t -.-Daring a lull in the court proceedings at Auburn the other day. Sheriff Lamb propounded a legal-question based on an actual occurrence' recently- in East Liv- ermore. - Two .neighbors l a . that town. own' rams. . Que- of i the- rams jumped over, the fence into the field of tbe neigh bor and while there .injured one of , the cattle which was grazing 'in the field. The neighbor caught the ram and tied him in the barn where his Own ram was tied. -; A he J happened to1 give -him' 'too much slack rope the ram got at the more ecuraiy tied ram belonging to the man who ban toed him. and killed him.. After having performed tins feat he managed. through the extra amount of rope, to get so entangled aa to get hanged by the heck until he was idead. , The. legal question involved was as . to. who should . pay for the ram the. neighbor who, by letting his ram loose, caused all the trouble, or the neighbor -who, by tying him in the barn' so carelessly, oaused the death of both animals.- Bangor News. - '. What tbe SaJler Men Eat.- , ' , Times' are changed now on board hips. When I was a boy before th mast I had to" take a tin - pannikin and pot to the galley, get a lump -of tough salt horse, a pot of weak tea and mo lasses and eat wherever I had a show. Nowadays the sailors have a boy to wait on -them, ' get' canned -roast.' beef, and spuds every other day and the beet: of salt beef and pork. If the coffee ain't strong ' enough or sweet ' enough they 1 at the cook. In lerview with Cap t. S. L. YOUNG, rSueeesaor to E. BECK.) -DEALER IN- WATCHES, MR, Jewelry, Diamonds, SIIiVEltWflRE, :-: ETC. Watches, Clocks and Jewelry Repaired and Warranted. 165 Secocd St.. The Dalles, Or. W. E. GARRETSON, Leadi! Jeweler. SOLE AGENT FOR THE All Watch Work Warranted. Jewelry Made to Order. . 138 Second St., The Dalles, Or. -FOR- Garpets anil Furniture; CO TO PRINZ & NITSCHKE, And be Satisfied as to QUALITY AND PRICES. John Pashek, Third Street, Opera Block. Madison's Latest System, Used in. cnttine garments, and a. fit. J I t I V , - I . ....... , Repairing and Cleaning Neatly and Quickly Done. RB.HodD, Livery, Feed and Sale Horses' Bought and Sold" on w t - K-ummission ana , Money Advanced on Horses left JFor Sale. ..... H,. ; 7-OFFICE OF- The; Dalles and Gpldendale Stage.lk - fanes every morning at 7:30 and Goldendale at 7:80. All freight must be left at K. B Hood's office the evening It" ,i f;'befare.H R- B. HOOD, Proprietor. COLUMBIA y;;:paetory, 7WrS. CRAM, Proprietor. . (Successor lo Cram 4 Corson.) Manufacturer of tbe finest French and - Home Made ' CADDIES East of Portland. -DEALER IN- Tropical Fruits, Nuts, Cigars and Tobacco. Can furnish anv nf theae 'aanrln At WlinlAanl orBetall ........ WttesH OYSTEIS r In KTery Style., ' N ; 104 Second Street, The Dalles, Or. jnerBftant TiaHar We are NOW OPENING a full line of Blact ani Colore! Henrietta Cloths, Sateens, Gimlams an! Calicv and a large stock of Plain, ;pwiss and in Black and White, for -AL8o A Mens &ndllJtmend Hosiery. A Splendid Line of Felt and Straw Hats. We also call your attention to our line of Larii' ' j r-u-i j , ci H. SOLOMON - - -Next Door to The Dalles National Bank. ' NEW FIRM ! Hoseoe -DEALERS IN- ".'STAPLE '.'AND , - Canned Goods, Preserves, Pickles, Etc. Country Produce Bought and Sold. Goods delivered Free to any. part of the City. Masonic Block, Corner Third and Successors to BROOKS Gents' Furnishing G-odds, Boots and SHoes, Hats and Caps, Etc. H A R D.W A R E Groceries, Provisions, "Hay, "Grain and Feed 390 and 394 Second Street .BememlyeJeUyfic.aJpyrchsthou 1.fC.!feKELSEN, - . DEALER IN icnooi bOOK,S, ViIV' J' INTERNATIONAL Stationery, WctioxaW Watches, Jemelpy. r- 4. M.ofJM anasMiktofl Sts, The Dalles, drepL JAMES WHITE, Has Ofened a 3jxxia.olx Counter, In Connection With his Fruit Stand and Will Serve ; Hot Coffee, Ham Sandwich, Pigs'-Feet, aM Fresh testers. Convenient 'to the Passenger Depot. On Second St., near corner of Madison. Also a - Branch Bakery, California . .i 'It . ..- Orange; Cider, and the Best Apple Cider. If yon want a good lunch, give me a call. Open all Night C. N. THORNBCRT, ' T. A: HUDSON, uiie twc u. a. uina umce. notary ruouc THOR)iB!!IIYPDSOj, ; ROOMS 8 and 9-UND OFFICE BUILDING, Foftomcn BOX SZB, THE DALLES, OR. Filings, And all olcer ttasmess in tne U. S. Land Office ier Busin Promptly Attended to. ....... ? i ' Tjauurc umereu riauK8 tor-filings. Entries and, the purchase of Railroad Lands under the rewnt l?irfain Af 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. TnornDUir& Hudson. REMOVAL. H. G-lenn has removed his office and tne office of the Mectric- Light Co. ' to 72 Washington St. Embroidered and Plaided Nansooks: Ladies' and Misses' wear. x FULL LINE OF- NEW STORE' 8t Gibons, '.'FANCY'.' Court Streets, The Dalles, Oregon. JVleteantile Co., &. BEERS, Dealers in OWahs, Pianos, J. M. HUNTINGTON & CO. InsoraneeJlgents. Estate aiid Abstracts of. and Information Concera ing Land Titles on Short Notice. for Sale and Houses to ' Rent Parties Looking for Homes ia COUNTRY OH CITY, OR IN SEARCH OF Should Call on or Write to us. Mm Agents for a Full Line of LeaFire fir Coinpaiiies, i '.- .- .' - -51 -U-. -- And Will Write Insurance for . :.; ,' ' on all i ... IDBSIBABIiB Correspondence Solicited. All Letters Promptly Answered. Call on or L - . Address, . . . J. M. HUNTINGTON & CO. " Opera House Block, The Dalles, Or. $500 Reward ! t .We U W the above reward for any case ef Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, In- iVC Kr 1 . """veneM we cannot . cure with WostVVoKeteble Liver Pills, when the directions are strictly complied with. They are o?U8rar.U?led- Large boxes containing 8 - ncnare oi counteneits ana lmi . mSSP-V1?. Kenuine manufactured only br ?tS??tN C- WF8T COMPANY, CHIGAOOV. . . BLAKKLKV HOT7GHTttX . Prescription Droarg-lsts, 17 Second St. . The Ialles, Or. DiSOLTJTioN: 'NOTICE. THE PARTNERSHIP GF BILLS & . WHVERS ' is this day dissolved by mutual consent. x uc uumucm win in me raiure do conauccea oy N. B. Whyers who will pay and collect all part nership debts. - G. C. Biu. Dated April 14th, 1881. B. Whybbs. '1 1