m The Dalles Daily Chronicle. Published Dally, Sunday Excepted. BT THE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO. Corner Second and Washington Streets, Dalles, Oregon. The Terms of Subscription. Per Year Per month, by carrier Single copy . 00 50 S STATE OFFICIALS. Govcraot S. Pennoyer Secretary of State G. W. McBride Treasurer Phillip Metschan Supt. of Public Instruction E. B. McElroy 4 J. N. Dolph enators J. II. Mitchell Congressman B. Hermann 8tate Printer .Frank Baker COUNTY OFFICIALS. County Judge. C. N. Thornbury Sheriff .' D. I Cates Clerk -....J. B. Crossen Treasurer Geo. Ruch . , t H" A. Leavens Commissioners (Frank Kincaid Assessor John E. Barnett Hurvevor E. F. Sharp Superintendent of Publio Schools. . .Troy Shelley Coroner William Michell The Chronicle is the Only Paper in The Dalles that Receives the Associated Press Dispatches. The Oregonian has today vindicated its reputation as a great newspaper by writing a perfectly fair and impartial report of the sentiment of the people of this city with reference to the charges made against Superintendent Farley in the columns of that journal by some sneaking coward who stole another man's name to do it with. Speaking for himself the editor of the Chronicle thanks the Oregonian for the article because it has given the outside world an opportunity of judging impartially of matters in which the Chronicle has been largely interested, which the Ore gonian never had a chance perhaps of placing in their true light before. The Chronicle is perfectly willing to abide by the judgment that fair minded men will form after reading the article in question. A government that guarantees the greatest liberty to the individual, social, civil and in-lustrial, consistent with so cial order and equity and interferes the least with private affairs", is a govern ment of the people and for tho people, and is undoubtedly the best form of gov ernment and the only form in accord with the natural laws of human life. It is based on the individual consent of the governed, is a government represen tative of the people, and is good or bad in its laws and in its administration just as the people ore good or bad and intelli gent or ignorant. . It should never be forgotten that the people make the gov ernment are the government, in fact and not the government the people. ' Dr. Willford Hall, the editor of the Microcosm, claims to know of a new electric telephone which for the first time steers clear of Prof. Bell's patent, For years, nearly ever since the Bell company lias been organized, numerous parties have started telephone com panies hoping not to encroach on Bell's rigbtB, but invariably the courts have stopped them. Bell's invention, as fin ally decided by the United States bu ipreuie court, consists of an undulating current over a closed or ' unbroken cir -cuit. But the new telephone permits . conversation over a wire cut in a dozen places ! There are millions in it, and the doctor proposes to have a slice of the fat -disooverv. Under the reciprocity treaty with Cu Ta we. send them wheat, flour," corn, xmeal, meats and fish of all kinds, lard, fallow, sewing machines, coal " oil, ice etc., all of which we produce in abund ance. In return for the free admis sion of these articles into Cuba the United States grants to that island the free entry for her special products which do not compete with American indus try. Call this policy free trade, if you will, it matters little, so long as it gives ns a better market for what we have to sell and lower prices for certain things we need to buy. If the holy coat at Treves has only been able to perform twelve miracles of healing among two million pilgrims, and even these twelve are not such as the authorities there are careful to endorse, It may well be believed that the virtue is gone out of it; that is, if it ever- had "any. There are millions in it," however, for the cathedral and clergy. King that chestnut bell, please. Tony Xoltner says Harvey Scott wants to become a United States senator. - Good Adriee. An autograph letter from' Abraham Lincoln to a friend is said to contain the followiug; "Do not worry. Eat three square menls a day. Say your prayers.' Think of your wife. Be courteous to your creditors. Keep vour digestion good. Steer clear of biliousness. Go slow and go easy. Maybe there are other things that your especial case re? quires lo make you happy, but, ray friend, these, I reckon, will give von a good lift." - tmlKF STATU NTWS. j oi me wees, in ceieDrminij, wnsi, in Another irrigation scheme U talked of I Yankee vernacular is known as The for the improvement of Umatilla county, j Harvest Home Festival. One of the ob bv which the waters of the Snake river ! fccls of the celebration is to drive the are to I need in making the now arid plains fertile and productive. . ..... . 1 1 i -i t i v ,u The little sis-yenr-old child of Richard Toni, living on the Lnckimnte, Polk county, was thrown from a horse lasj Saturday, breaking one of its ribs. It was thought no serious results would follow, but on Sunday the little sufferer died. It is reported that when "Sandy" Olds is liberated -from the penitentiary he will open a saloon in Portland. He apprehends that the notoriety he has achieved will make him a fortune in the saloon business, and that he will thus be enabled to reward those friends who stood so closely' to him whsn his life hung in the balance. Corvallis issued $10 000 in bonds for building a city hall. The contract was let and work begun on the hall. Now it is learned the issuance of the bonds was illegal and the successful bidder will not take them. It seems that the charter simply authorizes the people to issue bonds for water works, electric light, bridce and seweraze. and with these four objects the power to float bonds stops.- Albany Democrat. For two nights the arc light on lower Alta street, in Pendleton, failed to burn, and the company electricians were at a loes to account for its strange behavior until the casing of the arc was removed by Superintendent Burgess. He found a spider snugly ensconced in the arc which had woven a web so strong and thick amidst the internal economy of the machine that the mechanism was pre vented from working and the "light wont out." Why that spider happened to climb the big pole which supports the light, and crawl through the casing to select such a queer abiding place, where no flies come into his parlor, is a ques tion for an entomologist to study. A TRIBUTE TO SMITH. Ertn His Political Opponents Recognize His 'Worth. New York, Oct. 11. The London cor respondent of the Tribune says: "The death of William H. Smith, first losd of the treasury, is a real misfortune for Lord Salisbury's government. He was one of those men, of whom during their life time some evil was spoken from purely political motives, and after his death nothing but good, - This final testimony is due him. No English statesman need desire a better eulogy than is bestowed on Mr.. Smith by his opponents. They recognize not gener ously but fully, his sterling worth, his good traits, his sense of honor, his devo tion to duty, his able conduct of difficult affairs and total absence of rancor in bis dealings with party matters, his fairness, his moderation and his invariable cour tesy. To replace him will not be easy. Probably no successor will be appointed just yet, perhaps not until the house re sumes next January. If Balfour could be spared from the Irish office he would be the next leader of the house. But to govern Ireland and to lead the house of commons at the same time is a burden too heavy for any man. Balfour cannot well quit his present post until be has carried or failed to carry, his bill for local government in Ireland, one of the most complex of measvres, bristling with difficulties in every clause. The chances are that Sir Michael Hicks Beach will succeed Smith. He is a per fectly . competent man but with a temper not always under control. Various estimates have been made as to the number of persons who witnessed the demonstration. The Daily New places it at 200,000. The Chronicle says : "The demonstration was a spontan eous, irresistible surging from all parts of Ireland to Glansnevin. The mighty wave would have swept away any bar rier the police or politician could have put up to stop it. The Catholic demo cracy thus pay their last tribute of hom age to the protestant leader, in defiance of a majority of their own representa tives in parliament." MONTANA'S PRECIOUS STONES. London Market Asked to Subscribe HeTily to the Recently Incorporated Company. London, Oct. 11. The correspondent of the New York Herald sendB the fol lowing telegram : "A huge American enterprise to be launched in the coming week on the London market is the Sapphire and Ruby company of Montana which will ask the public for $2,252,000, on. the declaration that the company will secure 4,000 acres in Montana, on the right bank of the Missouri river, about twelve miles northeast of Helena. The prospectus says " On the lands acquired by the company careful prospecting has demonstrated the existence of sapphires and rubies, chiefly the former, in quantities unpre cedented in the history of gem discovery. Piecious stones are found on the bed rock of an ancient river channel, nowa days an elevated terrace skirted-by the Missouri river, and covered by a deposit of gravel. ' It is asserted that . 35,000 carats of sapphires and rubies, now in London, were procured during a trial run of the machine separator, which was put in to separate the gems from gravel. The prospectus gives an omciai report irorn Edward W. Streeter, the gem expert, in which he says: j - Excepting- onlv two South American ; diamond fields, 1 consider tne sapphire and ruby mines of Montana to De the I most important discovery of modern j times. , The language of the prospectus is j bound to create a sensation, and the an- I nonncement mat an me company nas to do is to Bet the machine to work on the gravel to have the rabies and sapphires separated from the rubbish, has already set mining expects buzzing in a lively wav. j The Chinese have been engaged, moat j devil out of town, and the probabilities j are that they sucreeeed. i heard their band he is touj mHy 8uppoee(, if he difIn Tacoma the first night of tion. Welcome. If the deA'il i KTKRYTHINO AMD NOTHING. South Dakota has the largest artesian well in the world. It shoots water 140 feet above the surface. - It is estimated that at least $50,000,000 of the governments' paper money sup posed to be in circulation has been lost ' or destroyed. . Ex-President Grevy was an inveterate billiard player, bis favorite opponent be ing his most rabid political foe, M. Paul de Casagnac. Uncle Jerry Busk thinks and says the removal of the embargo on the American hog will increase the country's trade 50,000,000.. A week or so ago they had to close the schools in Minnesota 'twas so hot there. This morning's dispatches report snow in that pleasant state. The mean tem perature there is very mean. The president has announced to the Canadian government the indefinite postponement of the reciprocity confer ence set for Oct. 12, giving as reason the continued illness of Mr. Blaine. It turns out now that boys and young men in Walla Walla and vicinity mur dered ' the Chinamen found ' dead on Snake river in 1887 for money. This is the dying statement of one of the mur derers. A new' kind of cash register, which lops off the fingers of those who attempt to rob it, is in operation in Wilmington, Del., where a thief left a deposit of one of ais fingers the other night in one of tnem. Subterranean Florida is honeycombed by underground streams. When these are obstructed from any cause they work their way to the surface, makine the great swamps which are characteristic of that state. . . . The artesian well at Farmington is down 185 feet, and the water is running over the top of the pipe, two and one- half feet above the surface, at the rate oiouu gallons per hour. The flow in creases as the hole goes down. "Where did the baby come from, mamma?" asked Willie. "Heaven, my boy," said mamma. "It's a wonder his bones wasn't all broke. Did he fall through the clouds? The Australian ballot system adopted by the last legislature, . is going to be an expensive piece of bnsiness for the sev eral counties.. Every forty voters -must have a wooden or steel booth, to be pro vided by the sheriff. The observance of the law will cost each county from $2500 to 16,000. The sporting editor of an exchange says that the best way to tell a well-bred dog is to lift him by the "back of the neck, and if he is a cur be will yelp; if well-bred he will not whimper. But we would suggest a better way ; and this is by kicking him. If he is a enr he will leave your pants on yon ; if he is a thor oughbred you'll have to stand in a bar rel until 'someone brings you another pair. C.?N. THORNBURY, Late Rec U. 8. Land Office. T. A. HUDSON, Notary Public THORHBURY &HUDSDH. D. S. Lad Olce Attor ejs. Rooms 7 and 8, U. S. Land Office Building, THE DALLES, - - - OREGON. Filings, Contests, And Business of all Kinds Before the Local and General Land Office Promptly Attended to. Over Sixteen Years' Experience. WE ALSO DO A - General BealJEsiate Bnsiness. All Correspondence Promptly Answered. S. L. YOUNG, (Successor to K. KECK., -DEALER IN- -Jewelry, Diamonds, SILVERWARE, :-: ETC. Watches, Clocks and Jewelry Repaired and Warranted. . 165 tfecon-.l St.. The Dalles.Or. PAUL KREFT, Artistic Painter a House Decorator: THE DALLES, OR. . JIouim- Painting nnd Decora ting a specialty Inferior and cheap work done ; Dut good last ing work at thi. iwest prices. SHOF-Adj - line Bed Front Grocery j Tk.SI' STBBBT. WATCHES CLOCK J. 6. Bchxwci, H. It. Beau. Vloe-President. Cashio .First national Bant VHE DALLES. OREGON A General Banking Business transacted .. jseposits received., subject to bignt Draft or Check. . Collections made and proceeds promptly remitted on day of collection. Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold on New York, San Francisco and Port- land. DIRECTORS. D. P. Thompson. T. W. Sparks. H. M. Jno. Si Schenck. Geo.. A. Liebe. Beau.. A. NEW mg Establishment ! PRINZ & NITSCHKE. DEALERS IN Furniture and Carpets. We have added to our business a complete Undertaking Establishment, and as we are in no way connected with the Undertakers' Trust our prices will be low accordingly. Remember our place on Second street, next to Moody's bank. Having made arrangements with a number of Factories, I am pre pared to furuish Doors, Windows, Mouldings, STORE FRONTS And all kinds of Special work. .Ship ments made daily from factory and can fill orders in the shortest possible time. Prices satisfactory. . It will be to your interest to see me before purchasing elsewhere. Wm. Saundefs,- Office over French's Bank. W. E. GARRETSON, Leailinii- Jeweler, . SOLE AGENT FOR TH All Watch Work Warranted. Jewelry Made to Order. 138 Second St.. The Dalles. Or. Still on Deek. Phoenix Like has Alien Prom the Ashes! JAMES WHITE, The Restauranteur Has Opened the Baldiain - Restaurant t- , ON MAIN STREET Where he will be glad to see any and all ', ' i of his old patrone. y Open' day and Night. First class meals - twenty-five cents. Cleveland, Wash., : June 19th, 1891. j - 8. B. Medicine Co., Gxntuixkk Your kind favor received, and in reply wonld say that 1 am more than pleased with the terms offered me on the last Bhipment of your medicines There is nothing like them ever intro duced in this country, especially for La' grippe and kindred complaints. I have had no complaints so far, and everyone is ready with a word of praise for their virtue. Yours, etc., M. F. Hacklkt. P. TBOKNOX' President. ' - . r - Buiiamg jMenais ! s B Of Every Description ill be .Sold at CnT. - FOR THE NEXT THIRTY ; DAYS. Call Early and Get Some of Our Gen uine Bargains. J. H. CROSS -DEALER IN- Hay, Grain, Feed aid Flour. HEADQUARTERS FOR POTATOES. Cash Paid for Eggs and Chickens. ' All fioois Delivered Free undPnupdi TERMS STRICTLY CKSH. Gor. Second, & Union Sts., Great Bargains ! '' 'vy . - Removal ! Removal I On account of Removal I will sell my entire stock of Boots and Shoes, Hat and Caps, Trunks and Valises, Shelv ings, Counters, Desk, Safe, Fixtures, at a Great Bargain. Come and my offer. GREAT REDUCTION IN RETAIL, i J.FREIMKN 125 Second Street, HUGH CHRISM AX. CHRISMAN -Successors to Keep on Hand a Floor, Grain. Groceries, Highest Cash Price Corner of Washington and Second-St. The Dalles Gigaf : Factory PIBST STREET. ' FACTORY.NO. 105. fTf A T CI of the Best Brands J I VXx XLiO manufactured, and orders from all parts of the country filled on the shortest notice. The reputation of THE DALXES CI GAR has become firmly established, and the demand for the home manufactured article is increasing every day. A. ULRICH & SON. Phil Willig, 124 UNION ST., THE DALLE8, OR. Keeps on hand a full line of MEN'S AND YOUTH'S Ready Made Clothing; Pants and Suits " y . ;' MADE TO ORDER On Reasonable Terms. Call and see my Goods before purchasing elsewhere. ' - FLOURING MILL TO LEASK (UK OLD DAISES MILI. AND WATER nrti Flonr Jim will De teaaea to re es. For in formation apply to Ota WATKK COMMISSIONERS, po Toe DaUea, Oregon. .DlOTD v H. Herbring. see The W. K. COBBOK. & CORSON GEO. RUCH,- Complete Stock of Frail and Jill FBBO. Paid for Produce. The Dalles, Or. THE Dalles, Portland & Astoria ffAVIGATIOIT OOMPAmC'8 Elegant Steamer jREGUliATOR Will leave the foot of Court Street every morning at 7 A. M. for , ' Portland and Way Points Connections Will be Made with the Fast Steamer ',' DMIiES GITY, At the Foot of the Cascade Locks. For Passenger or Freight Rates, Appy to Agent, or Purser on Board. Ofltea northeast corner of Court and Main atecet. S. Z.. BKOOK6, iftlt. $500 Reward! at cure with West's Vegetable Liver Pilla, when the directions are strictly complied with. They ara purely -vegetable, and neTer fail to gtre satlsfa- tion. Sunrar Coated. Large boxes containing M Pills, 26 centa. Beware oi counterfeits and imi tations. The "genuine manufactured only by THE JOHN C. WF8T COMPj. '.Y, CHI G AGO, f ILLINOIS. N BLAKSLBT HOK HON, Preaeriptlon Druggist. 175 (mill St. The Dallas, Or.