CO VOL. X THE DALLES, OREGON. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 5, 1897 - NO 257 . COLONIAL SERVANTS. THE CUBANS ACTIVE Royal makes the food pure, wholesome and delicious. Tne Kind of Help They Had in Early New England. Conflict Rages with Unabat ed Fury. A SERIES OE HARD CONTESTS Insurgents Capture a Spanish Convoy In Fioar del Rio Town of HoIgulD Captured. New York, Nov. 4. A dispatch to the Herald from Havana says : ' The insurgent troopa in the field are very active. On October 30 the Span iards sustained the most severe loss they have met for some time. On the borders 6f Matanzas province General Molina was defeated by the insurgents under General Betancourt. General' Molina was on his way to Havana with a brigade of troops to par ticipate in Blanco's reception. At Agu acate he heard that the rebels were en camped in Purgatory hills, and broke his marchto attack them. Tne fight was a lopg one and the Spanish loes was large. He was finally forced to re treat. In Picar del Rio province the rebels under command of Captain Lorr , at tacked a convoy that left San Cayetano and ciptored a large supply of clothing and ammunition... A report apparently well founded is current in Havana to the effect that Holguin has been captured by rebbels uder Cebreco. That has been attacked and that 75 Spaniards were killed, is ad mitted, but the capture' is denied. General Luqun with heavy re:-iforce-ments left Havana yesterday for Hol guin. In a baok on the Cuban war just pub lished, here. General Weyler writes the introduction. In one place ha says : "The system of warfare carried on by me in this campaign is not a new one. It is the same as 'that pursued by the Americans of the North when they fought tneir brethren of the South." A million dollars in paper currency has mysteriously disappeared from the treasury here. The money was intend ed for the payment of the navy and the troops. This fact coupled with an attempt to deprive the army and navy of their pay for the months of April, May and June is causing great indignation. Spain Ready to Defy Us. Madrid, Nov. 4. The Spanish . cabi net has decided to reply to the United States minister's acknowledgment of the Spanish note in reply to the represen tations of the United States on the sub ject of Cuba, declaring in guarded terms that with reference to granting autono my to Cnba, Spain will do what she sees fit.. It is also understood that the Span ish government is determined to main tain that the Spanish officers acted cor rectly 'in making the capture of the Competitor in April, 1896, and the pro tocol of 1877 solely referred to American citizens residing in Cuba. The letter of Senor Salvon, published in the Spanish newspapers yesterday, Replying to the article of Hannis Taylor formerly United ' States minister to Spain, on the Cuban question, recently published in the American magazine, has created the greatest etir here. The Spanish papers hotly attack Taylor. - Result Is in Doubt. Columbus, O., Nov. 4. An official canvass of voteB Is in progress in most of the counties of the state today. These counts will be watched carefuily and awaited anxiously in the close counties. Cuts For Cute, simply apply two or, three ' times a day, using enough of the Salve to cover the wound well. No injury can come from the direct application of the Salve tQ the open wound, as there is" not an ounce of poison in a thousand pounds of Garland's Happy Thought Salve, . "I cat my hand oa a piece of ttn. Garland's Happy Thought . Falve cured it up in a srort time. I think it is the best Salve I ever used." F. F. SIMPSON, ML Vernon, Wash. vim, uiir'.j ftSYQER Absolutely Pure ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., NEW YORK. Celebrated for Its trreat leavening strength and healthfulness. Assures the food aeuinst alum and all forms of adulteration common to tne cheap brands. Royai. BaKinu Powder Co. New York. The democratic and republican head- uarters will be kept open to get the of ficial fig j res. The republicans todav confidently claim a majority of five on joint ballot. Columbus, Nov. 4. Up to noon, the state committees had not changed their respective claims. Their advices from the close counties indicate that protests are being filed today in anticipation of contests of about a dozen eeats in the legislature. . ' The state ticket is no longer in dis pute. Interest in the vote in the close counties on members of the legislature is increasing. 2,000 Men Wilt be Kinployrd. Los Angeles, Nov. 4. Another im portant enterprise in the beet-sugar in dustry is about to be launched by the Oxnards, proprietors of tho Chiuo fac tory. . After examining several different sites in widely different localities?, they have at last decided in favor of Huene me, Ventura county. In selecting this locality preference was shown over San Louis Obispo and Sacramento eounties, as well as over Texas, all of which places were in competition for securing the proposed factory. The production of beets raised upon 10,000 acres of land for. five consecutive years has been guaranteed for the fac tory's use at the price of $3.25 per ton duriDg the entire term. One hundred acres of land for. the factory site has been donated by the local people inter ested. Work on the building of the factory will begin promptly, in order to have it ready for the crop of 1898. It is to have a capacity of 1,000 tons of beets per day. which will be increased to 25,000 tons in 1898. It will give employment to 1,000 men at the factory, while from 1,000 to 1,500 men will ,be employed in the field. -' Dr. King's Mew Discovery for Cosump tlon. This is the best medicine in the world for all forms of Coughs, Colds and Con sumption. Every bottle is gauranteed. It will cure and not disappoint. It has no equal for Whooping Cough, Asthma, Hay Fever, Pneumonia, Bronchitis, La Grippe, Cold In the Head and Consump tion. It is safe for all ages, pleasant to take, and, above all, a sure cure. It is always well to take Dr. King's New Life Pills in connection with Dr. King's New Discovery, as they regulate and tone the stomach and bowels. We guarantee per fect satisfaction or return money. Free trial bottles at Blakeley & Houghton's Drug Store. Regular size 50 cents and $1.00. - ' Weyler In a Tight Place. . London, Nov. 4. A ' dispatch from Madrid this afternoon . says the cabinet is now considering the question of im peaching General Weyler, on account of remarks which he made previous to leav ing Havana on his return to Spain. $20002 Why does your grocer like to sell Schilling 's Best, baking powder ? , Because there is get-there and get-up and get-well and lots of other "goad gets in it. A Schilling; St, Company . ban rrancisco .2215 Menials Were In Some Cases Trans ported Convicts svnd Ma.lef ac tors Who Sold Themselves -Into Servitude. ' Domestic service in America has passed through' three distinct phases. The first extends from the early col onization to the time of the revolution; the second from the revolution to about 1850; the third from 1850 to the present jtimie. :- During' the colonial period service of every-kind was performed by trans-, ported ' convicts, indentured white servants or "redemptioners," "free will ers," negroes and Indians. . The first three classes convicts, redemptioners and free willera were of European, at first g-enerally English, birth. . " " - Protests were often made against sthis method of settlement, both by the colonists themselves and by English men, but it was long before the English government abandoned the practice of transporting criminals to the Ameri can colonies. Of the three classes of whites, or Christian servants, as they were called to distingush them from the Indians anoT negroes, the free willers were evidently found only in Maryland. They w ere received under the condition that they be allowed a certain number of days in which to dispose of themselves to the greatest advantage." ' " - " y ' It i? impossible to state: the pro portion of servants belonging to the two classes of transported convicts and re demptioners, but the statement is ap parently fair that the redemptioners who sold themselves into service to pay for the cost of their passage constituted by for the larger portion. These were found in ail the colonies', though more numerous in the southern and middle colonies than in New. England. In Virginia and Maryland they outnum bered the negro slaves until the latter part of the seventeenth century. In Massachusetts apprenticed servants, bound for a term of years, were sold from ships in Boston as late as 1730, while the general trade in bound white servants lasted until the time of the revolution, and in Pennsylvania even until this century. "SThe first redcrationers were natural ly of English birth, but after a time they' were supplanted by those of other nationalities, particularly by Germans and Irish. As early as 1718 there was a complaint of the Irish immigrants in Massachusetts. . - It has been said that a great majority of the redemptioners belonged at- first to a low class in the social scale. A con siderable number, however, both men and women, belonged to the re spectable, even to tho so-called upper class of society.' They were Kent over to preve c "lisadvantageous iuarriages, to secure inheritances to other members of a family or to further some criminal scheme. . Many of these bond servants sold themselves into servitude, others were disposed of through emigration brok-. ers and still others were kidnaped, be ing enticed on shipboard by persons called "spirits." The evil of "spiriting away," both childrea and adults, be came so great that in 1CC4 the commit tee for foreign plantations interposed, and the council created the office of register, charged with the duty of keep ing a record cf all persons going to America as servants, and the statement that they had voluntarily left England. This act was soon followed by another fixing the penalty of death, without benefit of clergy, in every case where persons were found guilty of kidnap ing children or adults. But even these extreme measures did not put an end to the evil; and it is stated that 10,000 persons were annually kidnaped after the passage of the act. The wages paid were, as a rule, small, though some complaints are found, especially in New England, of high wages and poor service. More often the wages were a mere pittance. Elizabeth Evans came from Ireland to serve John Wheelwright, for three '"' years. Her wages were to be three pounds a year and passage paid. Margery Batman, . after five years of service in Charles- town, was to receive a she goat tojhelp ner in starting life. Mary Polly, accord' ing to the terms of her indenture, was to serve ten years and then receive "three barrels, of corn, and one suit of penistone and one suit shirts of dowlas and one black hood, two hifts of dowlas and shoes and hose convenient." Domestic Service. Curb. In Sour Cheeks. All countv warrants 'registered prior to July 7, 1893, will be paid at my office. Interest ceases after Oct. 27tb, to. J. i i'Hii.Lipe, v - ; ; Coanty Treasurer, I i 1 jj y J j SUMMONS. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT of tne .state or Ore gon for Wasco County. ; . The Oregon Railroad & Navigation Company, a corporation organized under tne laws 01 noe State ot Oregon, Plaintiff, VH . Thomas J. Bulger and - Bulger, his wife, wuose given name is udkiluwu to iimmuu, D. L. Cates. George Gardiner and Fannie E. rim-diner. Defendants. - To Thomas J. Bulger, Bulger, whose given name Is unK'cwn to piaintia, George vxarai- ner and Fannie E. Gardiner, defendants. IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON you and each of you are hereby required to ap pear a id answer the complaint filed against you in the above entitled action on or before the first day of the term of the above el) tit lea court following the expiration of the time prescribed in the order for the publication of this sum mons, to wit: on or before the 8th day of No vember, 1897, that being the first day of the next recmlar term of said court, and if vou fail to so appear aud answer the complaint of the plaln- . . ... t - . i nUlnHft'nHII ti,,T. 1- t1 UU, 1U1 11 1 1 b Lllll 1.,1 ,U? J,l. 1",1. . . 1 . " the court for the iudement Drayed for In sid compliant, towit: For the condemnation and appropriation lor a ngnt-oi-way lor a rauruau oi a strip of land one hundred feet wide over and across the following described lands: Commenc ing ut a roint 1190 feet north frorn the southeast corner of the southwest quarter Cf section six, township two north, range eight east, in Wasco county, Oregon, thence north 70 feet to a point: thence uortn st aegrees a minutes east, irei to a TKiint in the ljorth boundary of the right-of- way of the Oregon Railway and Navigation Com pany, now Oregon Railroad and Navigation company 8 ngnt-oi-way: mence soumwesieriy along said north boundary of said right-of-way to the place of beginning, containing 22-1C0 acres. , Also another tract of land situated in said sec tion six, described as follows, to-wlt: Com mencing at a point in the south boundary ot the right-of-way of the said Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company, which point is 1175 feet north and 290 feet east of the southeast corner of the southwest quarter of section six, township two north, range eight east; thence north 86 de grees and 34 minutes east, 815 feet to a point on tne soutn Dounuaryoi iac saia riKUL-oi-wny ; thence on a curve to the left with and along the said boundary of said right-of-way in a westerly course to the place of beginning, containing 47-100 acres ; said land to be used for the re-loca- tion ot tne railway ot saia piainnn s across saia premises as provided by section 3241, Hill's An notated Laws of the State of Oregon. And plain tiff" will also take judgment for its cos s and dis bursements in this action. This summons is served upon the defendants above named by pubiication thereof in Thb Dalles Chronicle by order of Hon. W. L. Brad, shaw, Judge of the Seventh Judicial District of the State of Oregon, made at chambers In Dalles City, Oregon, this 25th day of September, 1897. W. W. COTTON, . ... J. M. LONG and W. H. W'JLSON, sept25 Attorneys for Plaintiff. FRENCH & CO., BANKERS. TKAS8ACT A GENERALBANKISG BDS1NE8 Letters' of Credit issued available in the Eastern States. Sight Exchange- and Telegraphic Tranefera sold on, New York, Chicago, St. Louie, San Francisco, Portland Ore gon, Seattle Wash,, and various points in Oregon and Washington. Collections made at all points on fav orable terras. '- Is a necessity these raw mornings and evenings. The famous Kuh, Nathan & Fischer Co. garments are now In. Get Into one of them. Every one of the de signs as bright and fresh as the first soft flake of snow. Turn: about... Leave it to your tailor for , 025. OO or leave it to us for 15. OO? . ; Vou're safe life giue you a XML WIILfllLiIiir.lS C Jleiv York Weekly With the close of the Presidential Campaign THE TRIBUNE recognizes th a fact that the American people are now anxious to give ther attention to home and businees interests. To meet this condition, politics will have far less space and prominence, until another State or National occasion demands a renewal of the fiehtfor the principles for which THE TRIBUNE has labored from its inception yto the present dav. and won its zreatest. Everv possible eflort will be pat forth, and money freely spent, to make THB WEEKL.VTRIBUNE pre-eminently a National Family Newspaper, interesting, instructive, entertaining and indispensable to each member of the family. We furnish "The Chronicle" and IT. Y. Weekly Trib une one year' for only $1.75. N Write your name and address on a postal card, send it to Geo. W. Beet, Trtbane Office, New York City, and a sample copy of The New York Weekly Trib une will be mailed to vou. . ' . I Jasco warehouse 0 Headquarters for Seed Grain of an kinds. Headquarters for Feed Grain of ail kinds. Headquarters for Roiled Grain, ail kinds. Headquarters for Braha Shorts, o? mTuifeed Headquarters for "Byers' Best" Pendle- . rYf" "PlfniT This Flour is manufactured expressly for family LlV-'J-L ' use; every sack is guaranteed to give satisfaction. We sell our goods lower than any house in the trade, and if you don't think so call and get our prices and be convinced. Highest Prices Paid for Wheat, Barley and Oats. with this make. written guarantee Tribune Farmers and Villagers, FOB . Fathers and Mothers. FOB Sons and Daughters, ' ' FOE ' All the Family. victories. onpny