The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, February 29, 1892, Image 4

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    mm AUSTRALIAN BALLOT LAW.
Sec 21. Provides manner of proceed
ing in Multnomah, and other counties
-which have no county clerk to act. '
' Sec. 22, Provides the form of pollbooks
to be kept by the judges and clerks of an
election.
Sec. 23. Providesthemannerof open
ing the ballot box, taking out and read
ing the ballots.
Sec. 24. Provides the form of the tally
sheets, manner of tallying the count,
preparing the certificate, signing, etc.
Sec 25. Immediately after canvassing
the votes in the manner aforesaid, the
judges, before they separate or adjourn,
shall enclose the poll-books iu separate
covers and securely seal the same.
They shall also enclose the tally-sheets
in separate envelopes and seal the same
securely. They shall also enclose all
the ballots and stubs strung on strings
as aforesaid, and seal the same securely.
And they shall, in writing, with pen and
ink, specify the- contents and address
each of said packages upon the outside
thereof to the county' clerk of the
county in which the-" election precinct
is situated. - '
. Sec. 26. Same ' subject.' - Provides
how to be conveyed to the county clerk.
Sec. 27. In the canvass of 'the votes
only white ballots furnished under the
provisions of this set shall be counted,
and any ballot from which it is impossible
to determine the elector's choice for any
of the offices shall be void and shall not
be counted. .,.
Sec. 28. Provides for the care and dis
posal of rejected ballots.- To be sent to
the county clerk.
Sec. 29. Any ballot from which it is
possible to determine the elector's
choice for a part of the. offices shall be
' Counted for such part, but the remainder
of the ballot from which it is impossible
to determine the elector's choice shall
be void as to such defective part, and
i such defective part shall not be counted.
The judges shall disregard misspelling
or abbreviations of the names of candi
dates for office if it can be ascertained
from such ballot for whom it was in
tended. Every such ballot not counted
for any party shall be immediately en
dorsed on the back thereof with pen nd
ink by the chairman, "Not counted for
" (stating what office or .offices),
who shall sign his initials thereto. .
Sec. 30. In the canvass of the votes,
all ballots found in the box marked
""State and district," which are marked
"State," as provided in section 61 of
this act, shall be considered and counted
. only for such state offices as are to be
filled at the election, and all ballots so
marked as "State and district," as pro
vided in section 61, shall be considered
-and counted only for such state and dis
trict offices as are to be filled at the elec
tion, and the names of persons thereon
for other than state or distriet offices
Bhall not be considered or counted.
Bee. 31. Any convention of delegates,
and any assembly of electors, as herein
after defined, and alEO individual elec
tors to the number hereinafter speci
fied, by canning a certificate of nomina
tion to be duly prepared and filed in the
manner hereinafter provided, may nom
inate one candidate for each 'public
office to be filled at the election, whose
name shall be placed upon ballots, to be
furnished as hereinafter provided. A con
vention of delegates', within the mean
ing of this act, is an organized body of
delegates representing a political party,
which, at the election next preceding,
polled at least 3 per cent, of the entire
vote cast in the state, county, precinct,
or other electoral district for which the
nomination is made. An assembly of
electors, within the meaning of this act,
is an organized body of not less than 100
electors of the state, or electoral division
thereof, for which the nomination is
made.
Sec. 32. Every such certificate of nom
ination made by such convention or as
sembly may contain the name of one
candidate for each office to be filled at
the election. It shall state such facts
concerning the convention or assembly
as are require 1 by section 31 of this act
for its acceptance, and as are required to
be stated therein by section 34 of this
act. In conclusion, it shall be signed by
the presiding officer and the secretary of
the convention or assembly by which it
purports to be made, and an 'affidavit
shall be made thereon by such presiding
officer and secretary, and subscribed and
sworn to (or affirmed) by them before
some person authorized to administer
oaths, to the effect that the statements
therein are true, and the certificate of
the oath or affirmation shall accompanv
the certificate of nomination. ,
Sec, S3. Every such, certificate of nom
ination made by individual electors as
aforesaid, of a candidate for any office to
be filled by the electors of the state at
: rKe or for xnembar of congress, shall
be signed by not less than 250 electors
f the state ; and of a candidate for any
office to be filled" by the electors of .an
lectoral district or county of the state,
hall be signed by not less than 50 elec
tors of such district or county ; and of a
' candidate for any office to be filled by
the electors of a precinct, or for the office
of constable or justice of the peace,shall
be signed by not less than ten electors of
auch precinct or justice of the peace dis
trict. Each elector signing a certificate
of nomination shall add to his signature
bis place of residence, with the street
and number thereof, if any, and each
elector shall be qualified to subscribe to
only one such certificate of nomination
for each office to be filled at the election.
(To be CeaUaaes.)
Buggeetioa About the H-orwm Car fjneatlaa. :
An uneasy conscience considers- ..'
point as settled, but ever concerns itself
with the rearrangement of old argu
ments and pleas. Therefore is it per
haps that one meets everywhere at this
season paragraphs in the papers all bear
ing on the question of giving seats in
horse cars up to women. . It is beautiful
to see with what unerring regularity
this ancient campaign is invariably
epened. Year after year, with that first
touch of frost which bring the summer
traveler back to town, it begins. - 1 have
often been struck with the persistence
of old types in these arguments, where
rules of mutual courtesy and tact seem
forgotten.
A new suggestion has, however, been
made. Separate cars, it is urged, might
be- provided for men. just as in ferry
boats different cabins are set apart. One
car. in other words, bearing the an
nouncement "For men only." to be run
at certain intervals. But, . after all.
would this answer any better? Women
in crowded ferries have to stand, seats
in their cabin being filled by men, and
no woman yet lived with courage to
penetrate the cabin on the other side,
claiming a seat there for herself. Why
not acknowledge at. once that women,
even in the rush of travel, carry with
them a certain quality of refinement
that ' no man can command " at will
among his fellows. We are ready enough
to recognize this- at home. Why not
recognize this power wherever women
move in public places? Harper's Bazar.
Two Conversation.
The two pale faces" looking into the
great shop window filled with soft, beau
tiful furs, belonged to a young mother
scantily clad and a little boy. of five or
thereabout, both lingering instinctively
as they passed the wealth of . warm
clothing displayed so temptingly.
"Them things must be very warm," said
the little fellow, "and nice and soft,
mammy." "Very warm, dear; very
nice and soft. answered the young
creature, with unconscious repetition as
a blast of icy wind came from the chill
East river, making them both shiver as
they walked slowly on. It was only a
chance scrap of conversation heard as
the crowd surged "by.
As if to mark the irregularities of
fate, the places of the little mother and
her boy were immediately filled by two
young girls glowing with health and
spirits, and evidently enjo3ing the keen
wintry air. "Furs are selling for really
nothing-here." remarked one of them to
her companion; "l am going in to get a
new boa and muff, although 1 really do
not need them at all; but they look so,
pretty ana sort ana warm that 1 cannot
resist them." Almost the same words
as those used by the shabby little child,
but with what a difference! New York
Tribune. .
A Big Hole iu Arizona.
ti. K. Oilbert and Marcus Baker, the
former chief geologist of the United
States geological survey, with a force of
men, have returned to Flagstaff from
Canyon Diablo, where they were sent by
the government to take observations and
make a map of the region where so much
meteoric iron' lias recently been found.
They spent sixteen days investigating
the mammoth hole in the ground sup
posed to have been made by a meteor.
The hole is 655 feet deep and 2 miles in
circumference.
Tho theory is that from the appearance
of the walls and the fact that they have
found many pieces of meteoric iron
around the hole, the meteor penetrated
the earth to a depth of 700 or 800 feet
before it exploded, and this accounts for
the strange phenomenon. Three pieces
of the meteor, weighing 300. 600 .and 800
pounds respectively, were found on the
mesa within two miles of the crater and
are now in the Smithsonian institution.
Besides these they found many pieces
weighing from two ounces upward.
Tompstone Epitaph.
Hum a Coffin to Sell.
For some time past Michael Barry, of
Durand. an old man, has been lying at
the Hoint of dp.arh. nnd h Aor-iAnA tn ay.
Tange all the details of his funeral. He
was measured for his coffin iD bed, and
the cusket was placed in the sick room,
where the old man could feast his eyes
upon it. Barry made all preparations,
including carriages for the mourners.
No sooner had he satisfied his mind that
everything was ready for his demise
than he began to mend. He is now able
to walk, and is willing to let the coffin
go at a bargain. Kalamazoo Telegraph.
- Maniacal Story.
A colored youth who had. a few wees
ago. served a short term in the Houston!1
Va., jail, was recommitted to appear be
fore the grand jury to answer another
charge. He informed some of his fel
low prisoners that he was going to as
sume insanity, and make things lively
for the sheriff and his assistant.' He
performed his promise to perfection, and
today is a raving maniac in earnest.
Philadelphia Ledger.
Indians In the Regular Army.
A noteworthy experiment has been
made in the regular army of the United
States. Seven full companies of Indian
soldiers, three of cavalry and four of in
fantry, have been . recruited and. added
to as many regiments and more.compa
niea are now being recruited, so that
ultimately every regiment stationed west
of the Mississippi will have an Indian
oonapnay.
A telephone has been tried on a new
telegraph line erected between Mel
boane and Adelaide, .which are mm
miles apart. UonTersatioo was carried
on easily and the chimes of the Ade
laide poetofBce clock were - distinctly
heard in Melbourne. ' ' '
. The oil of gtsape seeds has been found
to be so valuable for certain purpose as
to warrant its extraction at considerable
expense, and a new industry will oou
be develeped.
A Use daughter of a San Francisco
millionaire was baptized the other day
wtta water brought especially from the
river Jordan in a bet of hammered
gold.
' 'TFreaaa Cokry firni. '.
With the best of Anglo-Saxon inten
tions it is sometimes a little difficult to
avoid the use of French terms in cookery
or a bill of fare. Here are some that one
encounters constantly: Beleve is no dish
in particular so far as the style of pre
paration is concerned, but answers to'
the word "remove," and consists of a
dish replacing another, a doubling, so to
speak, of the same course before going
en to the next. It is therefore not un
usual to find in a large dinner a relevede
potage, releve de rot, de gihier, etc. En
tree is a made dish served after the fish
or in its stead, where it is not obtain
able, and preceding the rots or roast
meat. - After the latter comes the entre
mets, i. e., sweets or puddings.
" The term hors d'euvre is the most dif
ficult to particularize. When cold it
comprises all side dishes which are really
accessories to the meal. As such they
can be and are eaten indifferently either
before or after the soup; they are always
placed on the table when it is being laid,
and are often left there until the entrees
have been served. ;They consist of. rad
ishes, olives, caviar, boutargue, all man
ner of salt and smoked fish, sardines,
anchovies and a variety of dainties. '
Hot hors d'euvre are almost unlimited;
they are very acceptable' at large din
ners, and are generally served immedi
ately after the soup and before the fish:
they are tften fried or baked, and are
then usually such things as can be dished
on a napkin, such as patties, rissoles,
croquettes, vol-auvent, etc.; obviously,
however, the -series can be very much
extended. At ordinary family dinners
they are often served as and instead of
an entree. Providence Journal.
The Boy Who Discovered the "Saw By."
A few years ago a green country boy
applied to the superintendent of a "west
ern railway for work, and, somewhat
against the superintendent's wish, on ac
count of the danger to life and limb at
tendant upon such occupation, was given
a place as brakeman of a freight' train.
On one of his first trips it happened
that his train met another freight train
at a station . where the side track was
not long enough to accommodate either
of them. The conductors were debating
which train should back up to a point
where they could pass, when the new
hand ventured to Buggest that neither
should back; that they could pass each
other by means of the short side track if
the thing was managed right.
The idea excited a good deal of laugh
ter on the part of the old trainmen, but
the boy stood his ground.
"Well, how would you go about it?"
asked one of the conductors, confident
that the lad would soon find himself
against a stump.
The boy took up a stick and traced in
the sand a diagram to illustrate his plan.
"Good gracious!" said the conductor,
"I believe that will do itt" " '
And it did do it. Today every train
man in America probably knows how to
"saw by" two long trains on a short side
track, but it is not so generally known
that the thing was never done until an
inexperienced country boy, who ' is now
the manager of a great railway line,
worked out the problem for himself.
Washington Post.
An Eipemln Infirmity.
I happened to be in a Broadway opti
cian's store and saw a good looking, well
dressed matron with a slip of a girl and
a small boy, all of whom wore spec
tacles. The lady gave some directions
about a pair of glasses, and when she
had gone I asked the optician whether
defective visipn is hereditary.
"Rarely," said he. '.'That lady has
four children, and all of them must wear
glasses. The father's eyes are sound.
The mother and her children are afflict
ed with astigmatism, a defect of the
vision which is almost as rare as any
thing that afflicts the human eyes. It
makes straight lines crooked and parallel
lines fade into one. Special glasses must
be made and ground to suit each person,
and sometimes the respective eyes. They
cost five dollars apiece too. So you see
a large family of children with astigma
tism costs a good deal of money in
glasses alone. As the children grow up
the range of vision changes, they break
or lose their glasses oftener than adults,
which increases the expense. " New
York Herald.
The Shark la a Slow Swimmer. '
One ill service nature has done the
shark, namely, that of placing a trian
gular fin on his back which acts as a
danger signal and gives warning of his
approach. Happily, the shark has not
been gifted with sufficient sagacity' to be
aware of this peculiarity, for had he
been so he would unquestionably aban
don his habit of swimming close to the
surface of the. water, and would; in that
case, be enabled to approach his victim
unobserved. . The shark is a slow swim
mer for his size and strength.
Byron observes, "As darts the dolphin
from the shark;" but Byron was a poet,
and does not appear to have been a close
observer of the habits of inhabitants of
the water, or he would have known that
a shark would have no more chance of
catching a dolphin than a sheep would
of overhauling a hare. A shark will
keep up with. a sailing- ship, but it is as
much as it can do to follow in the wake
of a fast steamer, and a torpedo boat
would be able to give it points. London
Standard.
Benaloe Cleans Vara.
Nothing cleans soiled fur better than
benaine. Actresses immerse their wigs
in baths of this liquid with most . excel
lent results. . Buy the fluid at a paint
store, where ten cents will fill a quart
bottle, rather than at the druggist's,
where the Basse asooont will cost a quar
ter. Wash the for until the beneine re
inainaolaar; the first two or three rounds
will show fairly black; Be careful not
to throw the fluid into any receptacle
where by any obance a lighted matoh
may fallow. New York Times.
"A Grists la Spaaa.
Queen of Spain- Moi grabial The
baby Mag baa the etomaoh aohe.
Lord Chamberlain (excitedly) Woo-o4
Call the aeoretary of the interior. Good
News.
Xaneing for a PoaUkg,
A mild way of hazing uninitiated schol
ars has been in vogue for a long time at
the Eclectic Medical college. - Every new
man is required to get up before the
whole school ami give a little jig before
he will be recognized as a fit person to
associate with. - If he refuses at first to
give the jig he is not in it with the boys,
who 'slight him on every possible occa
sion and make him the butt of their,
jokes. Some-very dignified scholars
found it terribly hard to get through the
little ordeal, but experience taught them
to succumb, and there is not one of them
who has not rattled his feet in accordance
with the unwritten rule of the institu
tion. Of course this is a matter which
does not come under the jurisdiction of
the faculty. ciimahEiiquirer.
.'Criticism for the Eagle.
Why cannot some able designer get up
a representation of the eagle that looks
something like that glorious bird? The
spread ' wing idea is unnatural and ab
surd. It is only because of its antiquity
that it is tolerated. ' An eagle that would
spread its wings and legs in an attempt
to symbolize peace and war deserves to
be shot. A fine design of an American
eagle at rest, perched on a crag or limb
of a tree, would not be a bad one for our
silver coins. Cincinnati Commercial
Gazette. ' -
Killed Two Deer with One Charge of Shot
W. M. Park, of Foxcroft. shot a buck
and a doe with one discharge of his gun
recently while hunting near that town.
He did not see the doe when he fired,
but when he went forward to secure the
buck which he had hit he was surprised
to find a doe by his side. His gun was
loaded with a heavy charge of buckshot,
and two of them had entered the doe.
Bangor (Me.) News.
pimples.
The old idea of 40 yean ago was that facial
eruptions were due to a "blood humor," for
which they gave potash. Thus all the old Sarsa
parillss contain potash, a most objectionable and
drastic mineral, that instead of decreasing,
actually creates more eruptions. .You have no
ticed this when taking otht r Sarsaparillas than
Joy's. It is however now known that the stom
ach, the blood creating power, 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
heolf hlul digestion purifies it an J they disappear.
Thus Joy's Vegetable Sarsanarilla is compounded
after the modern idea to regulate tho bowels and
stimulate tho digestion. Tbe effect is immediate
and most satisfactory. A short testimonial to
contrast tbe action of the potash Partajwirlllas
and Joy'ii modern vegptabls preparation, lira.
C. T. Stuart, of 400 'llsyi-p St., S. F., writes: "I
hare for years bad indigestion, I fried a popular
Sarsaparilla but it ae'.nnllv rat-ed more pimples
to break out on my fwe. Hearing that Joy b w as
a later prepisracicn an.i ec tej 31ITerectly, I tried
it and the pirale immediately disappeared."
Joy'
Vegetable
y Sarsaparilla
Largest buttle, most cS'ccve. same price.
For Sale by SNIPES . KINER3LY
THE DALLES. OREGON.
L-H GRIPPE
C3 U JrtEP
By using 8. B. Hendache and Liver Cure, and 9.
B. Cough Cure as directed for colds.. They were
STTOOESSX'TJT iT iY
domic, and very fluttering tetimoniis of their
power over that disease are at mid. Manufact
ured by the e. B. Medicine Mfg. Co., at Dufur,
uregon. r or sate oy ui aru ggisis.
A Necessity.
The consumption
of tea largely In
creases every year in
England, Russia, and
the principal Euro
pean tea-drinking
! countries. But it
does not grow ' in
America. And net
alone that, hot thou
sands of Europeans
who leave Europe
ardent lovers of tea,
upon arriving in the
United States rradn-
ally discontinue its nse, and finally, cease it
altogether.
This state of things is due to the fact that
the Americans think so much of business
and so little of their palates that they permit
China and Japan to ship them their cheapest
and most worthless teas. Between the
wealthy classes of China and Japan and the
exacting and cultivated tea-drinkera ef
Europe, the finer teas find a ready market.
The balance of the crop comes to America.
I there any wonder, then, that our taste (or
tea does not appreciate?
la view ef these facts. Is there sot an im
mediate demand far the importation af a
brand at tea that la guaranteed to he i
eoloned, umanipulated. and ml absolute
parity? We thin these m, and
Beech's Tea. Ks purity 1
every respect. It has, therefore, mm la
herent atieugMt than tbe cheap teas 7am have
been drinking. foy one third less being re
quired for an infusion. This rem will die
over tfcs first time you make K. likewise,
the flavor Is delightful, being the natural fie
voros as uaadaiterated article. ItaasereUv
. Hon to tee-drinkers. Bold only hi packages
. bearing this mark: -
'PureAsmTdhood:
BEEIgL:TEA
Prtas 0e per poand. For sal at
XjeosXio Butler'a,
TJiK ALU0BBO2.
Te Dalles
IS
Of the Leading City
- -,..
During the little oyer
TO
has earnestly tried to fulfill the objects for which it
was founded, namely, to
industries, to advertise the
adjacent country and to work for an open river to
the sea. Its record is before the people and the
phenomenal support it has
expression of their approval. Independent in every
thing, neutral in nothing,
for what it "believes. to be just and right.
Commencing with the
vclume the weekly has been enlarged to eight pages
while the price ($1.50 a
Thus both the weekly and daily editions contain
more reading matter for
published in the county.
GET YOUH
DONE
THE CHILE JOB
Bool apd Job priptiroV
Done on Short Notice.
LIGHT BINDING
Address all Mail Orders to
Chronicle
THE DALLES,
cmonici
of Eastern Oregon.
a year of its existence it
assist in developing our
resources of the city, and
received is accepted as the
it will live only to fight
first number of the second
year) remains the same.
less money than any paper
WTIflG
AT
NEATLY DONE.
Pub. Co . , v
OREGON.
III