, AUSTRALIAN BALLOT LAV Section oue to eight ipclnslve, provide for opening the polls,' and are similar to the old election laws. Sec. 0. All general or special elections hereafter held in this state shall be con ducted under the provisions of this act, and the polls shall be opened at 8 a. in., and continue open until 6 p. m. ' Prior tp opening the polls the chairman of judges of election shall make public proclamation of the game, and thirty minutes before closing of the polls pub lic proclaiuatiou shall be made by The same officer, that the polls will be closed in half an hour. Provides for noon ad jonrnment, keeping poll books, boxes, tally sheets, etc, tcgetber in the pref- ence of four officers, and the Cnal count ing of the ballots. Sec. 10. Provides that .in-all -special elections certificates of nomination may be filed at anv time' between the date of the writ authorizing tie election, and the time of holding the election. Sec. 11. Provides for challenge of any person suspected as not being a qualified elector. Sec. 12. Provides the oath ami wanner of proceeding with person challenged. Sections 13, 14, 15, relate to the same subject. . Sec. 16. Provides rules for determining residence and qualifications of electors 1. The place in which his habitation is fixed, and to which, whenever he is ab sent, lie bas the intention of returning 2. Shall not lose his residence by going into another state or territory or county of this state for a temporary purpose only. 3. A person cannot gain a resi lience in any county in this state where lie may be for temporary .purposes only, 4. If a person remove with intention of -changing; his residence, it must be held that he has lost his residence ia this state. 5. The place where a married man's family resides shall be considered and held to be his residence. 6. The place where an unmarried man sleeps shall be considered to be his residence, 7. If a person shall go from this state to any other state or territory and there ex ercise the right of suffrage, he shall be held to have lost residence in this state, 8. All qualified electors shall vote in the election precinct in the county where they may reside for county officers, and in any county in the state for state offi c rs, or in any county of a congressional district in which such elector may reside for members of congree. Sec. 17. It shall be the duty of the judges of election, or the chairman there of, immediately before proclamation is made of the opening of the polle, to open the ballot boxes in the presence of the people there assembled, and turn, the, ame upside down, eo as to empty the aid boxes of anything that may be in them, and then lock said boxes securely, and they shall not be re-opened until Tor the purpose of counting the ballots therein at the close of the election Soring the election one of the judges, other than the chairman, shall have the custody of the keys. Sec. 18. In all incorporated cities and towns in this state, no person shall ap proach or stand within fifty feet of the polls when open for the purpose of re ceiving votes, except such peace officers as are particularly selected or appointed by the judges to preserve order or en force the law within such limits, and electors actually desiring and proceeding to vote, and but ten electors shall be permitted to approach the polls within nfty feet at the same time; provided, hotceter, that the said judges of election . shall, if requested, permit one person from each political party, selected by the party, to stand outside of the guard-fail at the polls, while open for receiving votes, for the purpose of challenging vo ters; arm the said judges of election shall, if requested, permit the respective candidates, or some person selected by a -candidate, or by several candidates, or a political party ,to be present (but outside the guard-rail) where the said judges are during the time of receivin and counting the votes. Swch selections shall be evi denced by a writing signed by the chair man and secretary of such political par ty, or by the candidate, or candidates, and presented to and filed with the, juuges. 4 bee. 19. For the purpose " of holding elections and preserving order at the polls, the judges of election are hereby appointed, and invested with the juris diction of justices of the peace during tne time of holding elections ; and they, - er a majority of them , are hereby author ized to impose and enforce a fine not ex ceeding fifty dollars for each offense, to . be applied to -the benefit of the school fund, on any person ' or- -persons who shall conduct themselves in a disorderly or riotous manner at the polls, and shall persist in such conduct after having been warned of the : consequence, or who hall refuse 'to '. move from the polls fifty feet when directed, er on any person who shall be detected in the com aaission, in the immediate presence of the judges, of any offenses defined by this act, and on the refusal or neglect to forthwith pay the same to the chairman . to commit him or them to the common jail of the county for any time not ex-. eeeding 25 days, or until the fine is paid and the sheriff, deputy sheriff, constable and jailor, and policeman of any incor porated city or town are hereby required to forthwith execute said order, as tho 4l had been issued by a magistrate in due form of law. Judges may appoint special officer if needed. (To be Continue.) - . ODD SORT OF SLAVERY. SECURING GOVERNMENT LABORERS IN MADAGASCAR. .. 'Terrible Farm ol EnplajnMt That Usbei -Over tlie Head of Every Miwlm ruunu What "Fanampoana" Means Ut a Harbaroos People., ., ' ; ; . - Not. only is slavery universal through out Madagascar, tut also is there a still more, enizantic evil, and one which is even more surely crushing the manhood .nd stifling the life of that curious and beautiful country. -"Fanainpoana, or forced labor, has a protean shape. It may best be nnder: stood by describing it as partaking of the nature of the corvee; it is also applied to conscription, to all kinds of government service; it is part of the feudal system, and it even sometimes tabes the shape of a "logging bee." It would be unjust to the astute old man who presides over the destinies of the people of that country if it were not stated that be has more than once considered a plan by which it might be modihed and reformed. But the sys tem is too deeply woven into tne inner life of the nation to be dealt with except by a master hand, and then only with the assistance of outside and friendly financial support. For instance, it is one of the main characteristics of . Fanam- poan' that it supplies the place of the payment of officials "throughout the is land. In fact, in all Madagascar no sec retary, clerk, artisan, soldier or civilian serving the government in whatever ca pacity (with the exception of a trifling percentage received by some of the gov ernors of districts) is paid or even fed by the state. "The queen honors them by employing mem" (so the official euphem ism runs) and they must feed and clothe themselves. But when loyalty takes th shape, as is constantly the case, of carry ing vast weights of wood, iron or stone on raw and bleeding shoulders, alone goat tracks (for roads there are none) through swamps and forests, up and down hills 5,000 feet high, then the addi tional stimulus of shackles aud leg irons is needed to persuade the poor captured peasant that on the whole he bad better accept the "honor," half starved though he must be. POWER OF TUB QUEEN. If he runs away he brings punishment on his family, and becomes a fugitive and a bushranger; the numerous robber bands are mainly recruited from such runaways. Hundreds of instances could be cited, especially, within the past twelve months, to show that this tyran ny is becoming more and more unsnp portable. In the first place all the land in Mada gascar, with comparatively few excei tions, belongs nominally to the queen, but actually to the government. At the present moment and for many years past the government is and has been com pletely centered in and despotically ruled by the prime minister, Bainilaiarivorny. who besides his original wife has mar ried two successive queens of Madagas car. Fortunately for himself and his family his rule has, on the .whole, been wise as well as vigorous. In the Saka lava expedition, out of tens of thousands of peasants who were summoned, as sembled, and even partially drilled throughout the country, only about 2,000 could be actually laid hold of, and a few months of fever and numerous deser tions quickly reduced this ntraiber. Similarly in the alluvial gold fields, which are being worked by forced labor upon the enormous nominal royalty of 55 per cent to the government (45 per cent, is divided among the foreign shareholders, directors and superintend ents), immense exertions have to be con stantly made to keep up the supply of forced labor. TALENT UNDER A BUSHEL. Thus it comes about that this most important branch of the national wealth is not developed. Here,' as elsewhere, serfdom spells poverty. .Again, in the case of craftsmen and artificers, Madagascar possesses and could produce plenty of men whose talent would compare favorably with that of almost any people in the world. But the moment they show proficiency in their art they are "Fanampoaned," that is,' they are honored by being em ployed by the government or by some powerful official, without wage and without food. A clever craftsman, from whom you buy a work of art, in what ever metal, begs you v not to -say from whom you purchased it, solely for fear of the "honor" which would be in store for him. So if you want a good tinsmith, carpenter or jeweler you must not search for him among the tradesmen of his own craft;, but the clever jeweler is found among the washermen, and so on, in an amusing "bo-peep" of industry. The queen honors "Raini-be" or "Bootoo"by taking him away from his rice fields just at the season when his labor and . super vision are most required for his crop. So the unfortunate "freeman," who is not allowed to send his slave as his substi tute mark the grandeur of the distinc- tion conferred upon him is remorseless ly bled, even to his penultimate dollar, if he desires to procure exemption from tne noaor. i.ortimghtli Review. . A Problem 'In Mathematics. - A vessel divided into f arty-two thirty-seconds" was discovered at . the cus tom house ' when the official papers of the schooner H. CMousley were being hanged from registered to a coasting aft. ' Forty-two owners were marked a the papers, each owning a tblrty-eec-end part of the craft. What to do about tbe matter puzzled the captain 'very much, but he left feeling that he had not only the largest vessel under the Kmericmn flag, but the biggest in the wold. Philadelphia Record. A Play That Failed. Ftedgeley I see that bow knots in jewelry are very fashionable. Gwendolin Beau knots have always, been fashionable. And she thought she heard the dull thud of the setting sun, a the yooag ban showed no signs of IntelUgesoa. Jewelers' Circular. -.'-.;. ;. riefcttas- HI Fleafcw ... General Furlong is gentleman of in dependent means, who lives at the rifts Avenue hotel. ie is a large, neavy wjs man, whose tendency is to get larger and heavier set All he has in the world to do is to look pleasantr-fu. wbjch, jtp succeeds ' admirably and. o fight tnis flesh. Most people thus unhappily situ ated have some hobby to ride and al ways go cantering off ..on the slightest provocation. Not so General Furlong. His hobby is walking. He never rides anything not even his Jiobby. Most people m easy financial circum stances would now and then try a Broad way car if they didn't keep a brougham" and pair, but he entertains a prejudice against everything on wheels. He walks. Technically speaking, there are eight furlongs to the mile; in his case one Fur long will cover eight miles without stretching. Sixteen to twenty miles a day are as nothing to him. - There is a pleasant fiction about the aristocratic Fifth avenue that ' when' General - Furlong is out he has "just stepped down to the . Astor House." If anybody calls for him,'-"Oh, he'll be back soon he is probably strolling around Ir vington somewhere," or, "He went out for a short walk he . is by this time either at the Battery or in Harlem." Manhattan island is too small for General Furlong. This talk of rapid transit makes him tired. New York Herald. Attends Executions, but Dislikes Funerals. The great weakness of a well known reporter in a large city is a partiality for attending executions! For many years past he has been present at all the exe-' cntions which have taken place in his own neighborhood as the representative of and important daily journal. Mr. Titerope can tell you scores of in teresting anecdotes about celebrated criminals, unknown to or forgotten by the present generation, whose departure to another sphere he assisted at, as he himself jocularly puts it. He can make your blood run cold with his stories about awful scenes on the scaffold. He is still hale and hearty, and expects to be a wit ness of many more scaffold scenes before his own work is ended. A murder in his own neighborhood is enough to raise him to an unwonted state of excitement, for in the murderer he sees a wretch who probably will pay the penalty of his crime upon the scaffold. Mr. Titerope is an excellent reporter and is ready for any kind of work with one exception. That exception, strange to say, is a funeral. His chief and his colleague's are aware of his dislike for that particular kind of duty, and to a funeral he has not been for years. But what an extraordinary thing it is that a man with a fondness for executions should be so averse to attending a funeral. London Tit-Bits. Pure Coffee. There is one consolation for the prev alent adulteration of coffee, which is that the people who use the adulterated article are apt to be better off in health than those who partake largely of the pure article. It is known that coffee in creases the pulse, makes the mind active and produces wakefulness. Consequent ly most people take it in the" morning. In large quantities it produces palpita tion of the heart, consequently people with heart trouble are forbidden to drink coffee. Taken at night it produces wake fulness. One cup of black coffee at night will give a night of misery to any one inclined to heart trouble' and keep awake for the entire night a person pot accustomed to its use. The optimist must therefore hail with delight the prevalence of adul terated coffee. The epicure, however, will continue to get his -coffee green, roast it himself, grind it with religious exclusion of any adulterants and use it at once by mak ing a decoction by pouring boiling water over it and never boiling the coffee in the water to be drunk. Thus the epicure may extract the utmost of unhealthf ul ness from the fragrant and delicious berry, adding another to the long list of pleasures that are somewhat hurtful. New York Sun. Fashion In Pill Boxes. You saw the customer ahead of you.' You heard him ask what sort of pill boxes we are using this season. There is a fashion in pill boxes the same as in hats and bonnets and parasols. -Some years the round pill box of the olden times is the rage. Then we have the oblong box and the box which has a drawer in it. There is a variety of shades in these box es. Some seasons they run to one color altogether, and there are customers who insist upon their pills being put into the box which is all the go. A woman sent back a box of capsules because the box was black when the fashionable shade is pink. These things do not prevail in such stores as ours, but in the parlor drug stores , in the swell "centers they have to observe these niceties to the let ter. Pharmacist in Chicago Tribune. . ; KeTeetive Way -t Cutting; Iron., , r ' ' It is well known that a smooth disk of steel driven at a high speed will cut in two a file held to the edge of the disk.. This principle does not seem to have been practically used save in an inntanpa recorded in a government armory.. , The ends of tempered steel ramrods, such as were in use twenty-five years ago, were being treated and the material-was found to be too hard to out. Some small wheels of iron, about six inches faa diameter and one inch thick, were broogfa into requi sition. They were driven at the rate erf 8,000 revolutioxBS per minute, and melted or abraded. the metal away instantly, vt the same time drawing the tempers that screw thread oonld afterward be at on the end of the tempered Pitteberg Diepatoh. Vour Well I The Earl of Dudley holds the largest' life insurance ever effected, ttie amount being for $6,000,000. Second in the list ones Mr. Wanamaker, whose policies1 of t5.250.000 exceed that nf tha vu J ill the Russias by $250,000. Fourth comes the Prince of Wales, whose life ts toaured for $3,828,000. Tankee Blade. . A Miens Maws. : - vAb Auburn business man and av friend were out hunting the other ' day. : A big hawk flew over their heads and they blazedvaw3yvjat him. The shot broke the bird's -yfuig" and he- came to the ground- alighting ltt Ws baclj, He was unable to turn over and get upon his feet, but was lively just the same, as the ' Auburn hunters found before they suc ceeded in killing him. " The business man placed the ramrod of his gun in the hawk's big, grasping claws, all of which straightaway closed, like the jaws of an enraged mud initio snapping at a stick in the hands of mis chievous boy. With the claws' thus taken care of the business man's friend proceeded to wring the bird's neck. In the earlier stages of the operation the harder the friend worked the tighter would the hawk grasp the, iron ramrod and flap its wings. - . All this was ran for the hunters, who after a long struggle declared them selves winners of , the scrap. They had hardly so proclaimed when the bird got his wind, and leaving . the ramrod vi ciously attacked his persecutors. As fate would have it, the business man's friend, being nearest, was the first to catch it. The hawk lighted on his wrist, and the way he stuck there was a caution. One claw sunk deep into the hunter's wrist, and he called loud and long for mercy. The business man, seeing that some thing must be done at the risk of his life, finally went to his friend's rescue. He got a good hold on the sunken claw, braced his feet against a rock, and was successful . in pulling it out. As the claw came out, the hawk fell back and in a moment was still in death. They found that the bird's wings measured three feet and ten inches from tip to tip. Maine Letter. pimples, The old Idea of 40 years ago was that facial eruptions were due to a "blood humor," for which they gave potash. Thus all the old Saraa- parillas contain potash, a most objectionable and drastic mineral, that instead of . decreasing, actually creates more eruptions. You have no ticed this when taking other Barsaparillas than Joy's. It is however now known that the stom ach, the blood creating Vower, is the seat of all vitiating or cleansing operations. A stomach clogged by indigestion or constipation, vitiates the blood, result pimples. A clean stomach and healthful digestion purifies it and they disappear. Thus Joy's Vegetable Sarsaparilla is compounded alter the modern idea to regulate the bowels and stimulate the digestion. The effect is immediate and most satisfactory. A short testimonial to contrast the action of Cue potash Sarsaparillas and Joy's moJern vegetable preparation, lira. C. I. Etuart, of 400 Kayc St., S. F., writes: "I hare for years had intilscslioii, I tried a popular Sarsaparilla bnt it actually caused more pimples to break out o:i my face. 11 earl ng that Joy's was a later preparation and aclci differently, I tried it and the pimples, immediately diKappcared." S Vegetable Sarsaparilla Largest bottle, must effective, same price, ' For Sale by SNIPES a K1NERSLY THE DAIXE8. OREGON. LTt GRIPPE By using S. B. Headache and liver Cure, and S. B. Cough Cure as directed for colds. They were STJ'OOXSSBS'TJXjIj'E' used two years ago during the La Grippe epi demic, and very nattering testimonials of their power over that disease are at tand. Manufact ured by the 8. B. Medicine Mfg. Co.; at Dufur, Oregon. For sale by all dru ggists. A Severe Law. The English peo ple look more closely to the genuineness of these staples than we do. In fact, they have a law under which they make seizures and de- t?r siroy adulterated - products that are not what they are represented to be. Under this statute thousands of pounds of tea have been burned because of their wholesale ad al teration. - , - ; Tea, by tho way, is one of the most notori ously adulterated articles of commerce. Not' .. alone are the bright, shiny green tea artifi cially 'colored, bat thousands of pounds of substitutes' for tea leaves are, used to swell . the hulk of cheep teas; ash, sloe, and willow leaves-'Tieing those 'jnost commonly used. Again, -sweepings from tea warehouses are ! . colored and sold as tea. Even exhausted lea .. leaves gathered from the tea-honsee are kept, dried, and made over and Cud their way Into tbeebcap teas. - . . The EaglUb. gov frnneot atrompte to stamp ' hi out by co:ifikc&U.n; but no tea istoo pouforu'. and the rasuh U, that probably the poorest tele iaed by any nation are those " eonsumed lu Ameriea. - : Beech'a Tea is presented wits she gmmt auty that it is anoolored and unadulterated; la fact, the suB-eareo. tea leaf para and slm- ' r-Pis- Ita purity insares - superior strength, about one third loss of it tein- required fox a iafuaion thaaor the a-tiflciI teas, and Its fragraaoe and exquisite flavor is at aaee ap parent. II win be a revelation, to yoa. Is' order thai its parity and quality may be guar anteed. It ia sold aaly la poaaed packages Coring this trade-mark: BEEC PuTBAsWdhopd? Price SOepwpoaDsl. Vcaraalaa Zieslle Sutler's, Joy iw. TEA Tne Dalles Of the Leading City of Eastern Oregon. During the little over a year of its existence it VlOt? Jfsl 1A rt4-1 W WAJ .a. www . J a. a -j w .vu.u. mo uujeuts xor wnica xt was founded, namely, to assist in developing our industries, to advertise the resources of the city and adjacent country and to -work for an open river to the sea. Its record is before the people and the phenomenal support it has received is accepted as the a . CO,! JinS 1. 1 V III H I T-sTt TTI I expression of their approval. Independent in every thing, neutral in nothing, for what it believes to be Commencing with the vclume the weekly has been enlarged to eight pages while the price -($1.50 a year) remains the' same. Thus both the weekly more reading matter for published in the county. GET YOUH DONE AT THE CHICLE JOB BooK apd Job priptip Done on LIGHT BINDING Addreai all If ail Orders to Chronicle THE DALLES, cmonicle Tl II V A A at H A. f e e . it will live only to fight just and rig ht. first number of the second and daily editions contain less money than any paper PftfOTG Short Notice. NEATLY DONE. Pub. Co., OREGON. Room.