CM) t . - ,- . . . ... ,. ' . ,;ff.y .'.( ' - - r, , , .. ' . : .'...,., ".","' ' .."'''. , . J"vu ' T-"' "' :" TBI ACSTBALUN BALLOT LAW. Sec. 33. Every uch certificate of ijlodi inatipn made by individual electors aa' aforesaid, of a candidate for any office to be fined by the electors of the state, at Jarge, or for member of congress, shall be signed by not leas than 250 electors of the state; and of a candidate for any office to be filled by the electors of an electoral district or county of the state, liball be signed by riot less than 50 elec tors of such district or county ; and of a candidate, for any office to be fijled by the electors of a precinct, or for the office . f constable or justice of .the peace.shall be signed by not less than ten electors of such precinct or justice of the peace dis trict. Each elector signing a certificate f nomination snail add to his signature his 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. Exceptn the case of electors of 'presi-i dent. and ..vlcef-presidenv of the United States, every such certificate of nomina tion made by individual ' electors shall -contain the name of only one candidate. At least two of the .signers to each such certificate of nomination made by in dividual electors, shall swear (or affirm) before some person authorized to admin ister oaths, that the statements, and signatures therein are true, and that the requisite number of signers thereio are qualified to make such nomination, and the certificate of such oath or affirmation shall be annexed to the certificate of nomination. See. 34. All certificates of nomination teball state such facts as are required by this act, and also : 1. The name of the candidate ; 2. The office for which he is nominated; 3. The party of political principle which he represents, expressed in not more than three words; 4. His place of residence, with street and num ber thereof, if any. In the case of elec tors of president and vice-president of the United Stated, the names of the candidates for president and .vice-president they represent may be added to the party or political appellation, and the names of all the nominees for electors of president and vice-president may be up on the same certificate of nomination. Sec. 35. Xo person who is not an elec tor shall be qualified to join in nominat ing any candidate. - No elector shall be qualified to join in a certificate of nomi nation made by individual electors in nominating more than one person for each office to be filled. No person shall be qualified to be a candidate for more than one office to be filled at the same election. e. 36. A certificate of nomination may be accompanied by the acceptance f the nominee, in ; Which a the ac ceptance shall be indorsed upon the cer tificate of nomination and signed by the npmineet or it may be by a letter or tel egram from the nominee attached to the certificate yf .nomination and' filed there with. If the certificate of nomination is not thus accompanied by the acceptance t the nominee, he may, at any time af ter the certificate of nomination is filed, and before the time for filing nomination for such office has expired, file his accep tance thereof in the same manner in the same office where the certificate of nom ination is filed. The officer with whom it is filed shall indorse the same and at tach it to the certificate of nomination to which it refers. SeveTaljdifferent cer tificates of nomination may thus be filed nominating the same person; and it the person so' nominated so accepts one of said nominations, it shall be sufficient, and shall be equivalent to accepting each one of said .nominations .to the same of fice. But unless said nominee accepts a nomination as a candidate for some office in some one of the ways and wilhin the time aforesaid, tie shall not be considered as fully nominated, and his name shall not be placed upon the ballots. " l .' . y '- Sec 37. All certificates of nomination of candidates for office to be filled by the electors of the state at large, and for members of congress, shall be filed with . the secretary of state. If such certificate " of nomination be made by a convention or assembly, it shall be filed ' with the secretary of state not more than 1 00 days and not less than 45 days, before the day fixed by law for the election. If such cer tificate of nomination be made by indi vidual electors, it shall be filed with the secretary of state not more than 100 and not less than 30 days before the day fixed by law for the election. - ' . t Sec. 38. All certificates of nomination of candidates.: foroflices to. be filled by the electors of .an electoral district, other then a. congressional district, or conntvi or prcinc:t, shall be filed with the coun-i y cierx oi xne county ana If sued elec toral" district embraces more than one : county, then a duplicate thereof shall be tiled with the county clerk of each coun ty within such .electoral district. If such certificate of, nomination be made by a : conveation or;t assembly it shall be filed . -with sncb county clerks or clerks not more than 100 days and not less than 30 days before Ihe day fixed by law for the elec- . lion. If such -certificate of nomination be made -by Individual electors, it shall - be filed with such county clerk or clerks not more than 100 days and not less than 15 days before the day fixed by law for the election. 3 UDGE AND BUNKO &EN. I A NEW YORK CJTY- JUDICIAL OFFI- ; :. CER'S ; EXPERIENCE, i V ; j Two Smooth Tongraed Sharpers Make a Sad Mistake in "Sixln- Vp" a Man, and One I Arretted and Sentenced The "ral" Meets a Later Fate. - At the Lasvyers' club a few nights ago Judge JRufus. B. Cowing and Judge Henry A. Gildersleeve were' spinning yarns on the queer experiences they have had with the thieving fraternity, when not known. Judges Gildersleeve and Cowing are two jolly and most entertaining- - compan ions. They are very popular wherever they go - and now and then meet with a sharper who tries' to ingratiate Himafif in their good graces to the extent of as many dollars as they may happen to have in their pockets. Judge Gildersleeve was telling how he was approached by a bunko man a few years ago at . the Pennsylyania .raihroad depqt in Jersey CSty , and how he crossed she ferry with; the f 'hand shaker." who thought he had; made a great .capture. Judge. GUdersleeve 4s a. .famous sports man and a 8ha.rpsbootei-' He has won many prises with his rifle at national and international tournaments, and has written a dozen- books on, .rifles, inarks- mansbip and. game, big rnd little. He was returning from a trip to Pennsylva nia, where he had had a very pleas ar able time shooting with a party of Phil adelphia lawyer friends. . .' He had i hardly . got . off the train at Jersey City when he felt a vigorous slap on the back. '.Why, hello, my dear Mr. Thompson. So glad to see yon. Just in from Phila delphia, eh? How are all the folks at home?'- ' ; , '. - When Judge Gildersleeve got a chance to say a wotd he replied meekly: "Yes, just in from Philadelphia.- I guess the folks are all well. They were when I left them, anyway." "Now. I've met you in Philadelphia, I am sure. Don't you remember me?" THE JUDGE GETS EVEN. Knowing what sort of a character he had to deal with, Judge Gildersleeve led him on in a modest, innocent way. ' "Why, yon must be mistaken," said he to the. buuko man. "My name is Johnson, Joseph W. Johnson, and I keep a store in Philadelphia." "Why, I beg a thousand pardons," and the bunko man bowed low and disap peared. - - GAVE THE TIP TO HIS "PAL." - Then came the "pal," just as Judge Gildersleeve expected. He was . iust stepping aboard . the Desbrosses Street ferry when he got another slap on the back. i, , : "My dear Mr. Johnson, how arer you and what are you doing over here?.' 'Yon don't remember me, but I knew 'you years ago in Philadelphia," and bunko man No.. 2 plied bis tongue in the most voluble manner, Judge Gildersleeve a senting to everything he said. ' The bunko man had got Judge Gildersleeve to promise that he would meet him again when he saw he conldu't get him to join him in a qniet game -or a liquid smile. ;: '-. VfiNow.my dear Mr. Johnson, don't forget to meet me, will yon?" said the bunko man as he stepped out of the ferry house on the New York side. , "Officer, arrest this man," suid Judge Gildersleeve to a policeman standing by. "Say, you old jay, what do yon mean?" shotted the bunko man, red with anger. "We will meet again, young man, in a short time, I hope. I will give you my name and place- of business Henry A. Gildersleeve, judge. Part 3, court of gen eral sessions." ... "What's the charge, judge?" asked the policeman. - 'Suspicious character." The next day the bunko man was sent to the island for six months by ' Justice Power, of the Tombs. '. " ; THE "PAL" SENTENCED. ;;- Two months later Judge Gildersleeve had the pleasure of meeting -the man who was king of the New York "hand shakers," "Kid" Miller. Miller was the man who first addressed the judge in the depot at Jersey City. ' ."Miller, I've met you before," said Judge Gildersleeve. - "Not guilty," replied Miller. "Well, Igot off a Pennsylvania train in Jersey City one day two months ago, with a gun and a basket and dressed in my bunting clothes. . I had been on a little pleasure expedition, and you saw fit to interfere' in the business of a peaceable, law abiding citizen. ' Your companion is now serving a term on the island, and the' strangers who come to town will be better off . if you follow suit. One year in the penitentiary," and the bunko king was led away, and if ever a face looked queer it was that dazed bunko man's. The two bunko men who tried to cap ture Judge Gildersleeve's 'shekels had worked New York and vicinity for a long time, yet did not know the face of the criminal 'tjourt judge. In the case of, Recorder Smyth the "hand shaker" was fresh , in from the Windy City, and hadn't looked , the city officers over so closely as his calling would seem to war rant. Judge Gildersleeve told me that so far as he knew he and Recorder Smyth were the only criminal judges that had ever been approached by the New York bunko inert.-- 4 ' -, ,. . k The only other experience "Judge Gil dersleeve ever had with the crooks out side his courtroom was -during the Cen tennial ,Sn v PhiladelpbialL . He i had his pockets picked while going over the ex hibition grounds. He had just been made a. j udge f'i the : criminal court in this city; and some' trf nis'frie'ndsr who remember how Judge Gildersleeve fell over the-theft, do say that for a long time pickpockets received very - little merciful consideration "when they were sentenced according to the jury verdicts. Mew York Herald. - - - Qneneos Does Miss Prym beliewe ererything in her Bible? Cynicos Yes, except the entry ot her "T V- .et a. jIass of water.- No sooner had he, .touched the .faucet than he had occamon U, pick himself up from a far corner of the room. ' ' .--.-('. ?a ' For a few moments everything seemed turned into an electric battery, . The nails in' the wall became retl.'electrici.ty: oew. from the water pipes and flashed around, .the . bands oil the water pails, ' At length some one found the cause of the trouble and the towel was removed. Portland Transcript. Mlitdireffted Enterprise. ' The constAUt improvement of burglars tools is hardly an uglier adjunct of modern civilization than the rapid prog ress in the variety and 'ingenuity of food adulterations. Eggs and apples, almost alone, are still above suspicion Cloves, tea. ground coffee, vanilla, lemon juice and mustards are nearly as frequently imitated as dairy butter. Cheese is filled with lard, and lard with corn-meal. The abolition of sugar duties has failed to stop the traffic in glucose. Candy factories nse. terra alba by tons. W ith an admixture , of an ex-, tract from hickory-, buds and ginger common treacle fain be made to resemble maple syrup sufficiently close to fool nine out of ten uonspecia lists. "Flavoring extracts" are made from such things as wood vinegar and coal tar. but the meanest tricks are those practised by the venders of honey. A vile compound of glucose and stearic acid is poured into factory made combs and sold in dainty wooden frames, which in one case, were found to consist of ligneous pasteboard a triple combina tion f frauds paralleled only in a cer tain sample of mustard.", which an analyst found to be a compound of four different ingredients, two of which had. so to express it. Ieen subadu Iterated. Philadelphia Times. . A Danish Medium hi Paris.. M. Aveling. tne young Danish me dium', is now occupying the attention of that faction of Paris which amuses or interests : itself tn ' the phenomena of spiritualism.- M.- A veling does not speak a word of . French, yet when the tit is upon him ha writes - answers . to mental questions . in , French, sand , in ; the very handwriting of . deceased authors, com posers and great historical celebrities. The latest sensation is the'' caligraphy. of Balzac, reproduced by the" Danish gen tleman innocent of French, and some very clever opinions of modem, novel ists, including Zola, by the i-efunct phi losopher of romance. But 4he joke is . that Balzac . asserts that he' has spectrally snperiutemied the adaptation of Ins own vHereGoriotv at the Theater Libre, and that he was in the middle of the tKilcony .stalls at its first representation. The fact. . is that the . center stall is ocenpied by M.; Fran cistjne Sarcey. and that Balzac jocularly added ..that rhe hal sat on that distin guished critic's lap. Religio Philosophi cal Journal. Aii Old Man in ICraxil. ' A South AuierK-au newspaper tells of a man living in Sao Pan lo. Brazil, who is considerably over ' HK . years old' and rho is growing young again. He has recently grown a new set of teeth and his hair, which hail ' turned gra is al most black again. He is m active busi ness as a horse trader and occasionally he.ndea over ten leagues iu a day.1 ; He has been married three . times, is now a widower and is quite wealthy. . " The paper asually remarks in the course of its story that the old man suffered great ly at one time with a tumor, ''but' this was cured by being gored by an ox." An Artificial Crow. .. An Englishman has invented anew aerial machine. The machine is divided anil constructed in imitation of the ar rangement of every feather in the wing of a wow, the bird selected, a-,niodel,. The dimensions are thirty feet from tip to tip of the large wings. The whole weight is about 650 pounds. The ma chine is to be operated by a light engine. English Mechanic. ' ; ;. . The Jew In New York City. ; .The foolish writer who laughs at the Jews and; ridicules their pretensions to influence would do well to. study facts. There are more than 300.000 Jews in this city, holding something like $180,000,000 of real estate, 'with about 150 Jewish congregations, and capitalized invest, ments representing the colossal figure of at . least JS50.O00.O0O. New York Re corder ' ' " '- -" ' ,'':- - ;-' . - . i ; u,..,. :. In the scholastic year 1890-1 8t Pe tersburg had 259 primary sc tools, with 12,780 pupils. V Last year the tirtmber of schools was 267 and the nndiber of at tending pupils 13.042. . This nit-iudes lao female schools, with 'an ' attendance of 5.703 . , ' ' ', The. growth of trade at Hnerto. tVv iombia, in South .America!, has . nec sitated the constmction of a pier 4.000 feet long at that port, It will be built of iroa and steel and will accommodate ten vessels at one time. ; - :r. .,. Modern Witchcraft In Salem.J . . During, a recent rainstonii' ijb' Saieuijv Masa., electricity , .played .some"tqneer pranks at Porter's market. ; On the rooif of the -buildinz is a clothesline. iluri ing the storm a towel . blew from thu line and lodged upon an electric lighting wire below. Being wet it wonnd around the wire and the - electricity passed through it and shot- down into' the ground, :where it came, in contact ' with the water 'pipes leading hi to the bnild ing.' ,';.;.,. . ; ,;,v;".;..( ;',' ,. :"; :' v :. it ran along -the pipes, and the first thing it encountered in the. basement was a pot of hot lard,.. which. was boiliutt on the stove. . The lard was illuminated and the young, man in charge thongbt it most be burning. , He started to. remove it from, the stove and received a shock that sent him , against the basement walln. . . ,. ,:. . ...... ; Pale with fright he rushed up stairs, where a. fellow workman, noting . nis pallor, reached for the 'water . faucet to Between 12.000 and 15.00O barrels of herring were taken recently in a single hight at Sound island, on the coast of ,T H..-J Jaut Pound It Out. Fond 'jiother' (anxiously) Why, 'what's the matter,' 'my dear? ' ; '' '- Married Daughter (weeping My hns husband ' has (asely de deceived me. boo, hop, hoo! ' ' ' Mercy on nsi Howjf" "Two r ye years ago last Chris Christmas he gave . me a watch for a Christinas present, boo, hoo!" ' . "1 know:-".What of it?" ' . '-'."-'' ,';This this tnorning 11 tried to wi wind it ' an it's nothing' but a a doll's "watch,, with no works insider-boo, hoo. hob?' New -York .Weekly. ' . Why Tbey Are Clmte Together. - By some it has lieen considered a mas tery why two such important holidays as Christmas and New ' V ear's come so close together. .It.is plain. .The excesses of. Christmas put the population in the humor of making ; good resolntiohs :for the coming year, and it is necessary that New Year's be close on hand, else they d backslide before the resolutions were re corded.' Denver' News. ' ' ' 1 i r- . -! -i i r ' :i . i ..Propelled toy m Water..,, y A -design of an electric '.boat propelled by- asea Water lottery h,as been exhibited before the French Academy of Sciences. The battery plates are tinder the boat; in the form of -a keel, and the crurreBt gen erated 'drives a motor operating, the screw. - The copper or zinc plates : are raied or lowered by 'means of ' pulleys. : i.i i "i i i f r ,. , An elpctric device for. cleadiQg a track of obstructions is among . jthe - newest ideas. ' It consists . of a triangular steel foldingr frame,.-over, ...which ...a net is stretched-1 This is placed on the front of a locomotive ' and can be opened at will, catching the obstructions upon it. An additional arrangement is a scoop to drop on,. the. track., . The recent tests were very-satisfactory. Exchange. The old Idea of 40 years ago was' that facial eruptions were doe to a "blood humor, for which they gave potash. Thm all the old Sarsa parlllM contain potasb, a most objectionable and drastic mineral,' that instead of ' decreaetne. actually creates more eruptions. You hare no ticed this when tat ing other Earsaperillai than Jo7. : It is however ik) known that the, tm ach. tUo blood creating power. Is the aeat of all Titiatins ,or cleansing prorations. ' A atomach clogged by. indigention or, constipation, Titiatet the blood, result pimples. A clean stomach and healthful l:gctloirpr.rifies i! and ihey disappear. Thus Joy"s Vegetable Earaapariila is compoubded after the modern tdea to Ti-guUte tho' bowels and atimnlato tho dlgvstlon. : The eCcct is immediate and most satisfactory. A short testimonial to contrast tho action of tho potash .SarsapariUas and Joy'K nio.lcrn yesitublo preparation Jlra. CD. Btuart', .f 100 liars. m Sv S.. F., writen:. "I have for years had iiicn-t'Iini, I tried a popular Sarsapariiia but it aeinaiiy.f aned more pimples to break out 0:1 my (ace.1.,llyti.-;n5 that Joy's was Slater prppurii.iiin aiut a.( te.i jiSereiitIy',.l tried It ana the piinpleit 'immediately d&a'ppeare'd." a 11 ;"- -M" - iiO-e'.i.'W S , ;,.',ViVMMIV -- Larsest.bottle, 4uotBoi;'ive.mamericew ; Fof Sale by . SNIPES'Ai..NERSLY : -THE -DAIXP3. pjEtEGON. . By using S. B. Headache and Liver Cure, and S. B. Cough Cure as directed for colds. They were sTJocEsax-1 u xjjar nffed two Tears airo durine the La Grlnne eni- demic, and very, (battering testimonials of their power over thut disease are at band. Manufact ured by the S. B. Medicine Mfg. Co., at Dufur, vjregvn. ror saie oy aii amggisis. 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 ' not alone that, bo thou- -and - of Europeans -who ' -leave - Europe ardent lovers of tea. upon arriving in the United States' rrada- ally discontinue 1U ase, and Cosily. cease it altogether. . '.:. : This state of things ia due to the fact that the Americans think so much of business and so little of their palate that they permit Chins and Japan to ship them their cheapest and most worthless teas. Between the -wealthy classes of China and Japan and the exacting ' end cultivated tea-drfnkers of ' Earope, the finer, teas find a ready market ; The balance pt the crOp comes to America, Ia there- any wonder1, then, that our taste for ' tea does not appreciate? it t . . . '-. ;' In view of these facta,-!' there not an fm . mediate' demand for the importation "of a 1 brand of tea thai Ui ipseranteettto Wnn eolored, - unmanipalated, and Vof febsornta) "pnrJtyT-.''We tWnk ' theri,;an preent Beech'aTes:-' Iu purity i gvaraoteed in 'veT'epect- tthas therefore, xsor ln ' herent strength thim the cheap teat yea have been drinkfng.'TBjly one third leas bef n'g re quired for an inrission ' ThU ton5 wlll di oover the -flrsttlme-you make i. likewise, the flavor ia deligbtfoi, being the natural fla : Vox of an unadulterated articht ItU arevela - ' tins to tea-drlnkera. Bold only in package neanng sua mark: 'PureAs-mildhood Triea Ma) sac pond. or sale at Tne Dalles cnronicie Of the Leading City Dnring the little over a year of its existence it has earnestly tried to fulfill the objects for which it -was founoTed, 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 an-i the phenomenal support it has received is accepted as the expression of their approval. Independent in every thing, neutral in nothing, for what it "believes to "be just and rig ht. Commencing with the yclume the weekly has been enlarged to eight pages while the price ($1.50 a year) remains the same. Thus both the "weekly and daily editions contain moie reading matter for less money than any paper published in the county. GET YOUR DONE AT IE WHICH BooK apd Job priptir; Done on LIGHT BINDING Address all Mail Orders to fvv--'-, ,J ' THE DALLES, mm of Eastern Oregon. it will live only to fight first number of the second PWflTIflG Short Notice. NEATLY DONE. Co., OREGON. V