SATURDAY OCTOBER 30, 1867 ISSUED EVERY SATURDAY . BY DOUTHIT, Publisher- SUBSCRIPTION BATES. DAILY Or Yea ,y mail $6.00 Six Months 3 00 - face Uoonthi 1-60 WEEKLY One Yew, by mail 1.50 btxaiontns.... All Subscriptions Payable In Advance, ' WAR ON TILET MERIT SYSTEM An organization has been estab lished, or is trying to establish itself, with its headquarters in Washington which takes the name of "National Re- publican Anti-Civil Service League. Its object, as stated in a commuuica- . tion sent out to solicit contributions; is to "enlist all republicans through out the United States who are opposed to the civil service law in a movemen to secure its modification or repeal by con cress at its session in December next." It is proposed to get up a pe tition on this line and it is intimated that it will require the expenditure ' of some money and a great deal of work, .The civil service law is a republican v measure. It was passed by a republi can congress and approved by a repub lican president. The powerful public opinion which demanded it found re iterated expressions in the political platforms of both the great parties, and the policy inaugurated by repub lican administrations was adopted and carried out by President Cleveland But notwithstanding all that it ought not to be difficult for the National Re publican Anti-Civil Service League to - secure a large number of republican and democratic signatures to its peti tion for the repeal of the law. It will be signed by all the political heelers and rounders who demand places at ,. the public crib as the reward of party services for which they have already been paid more than they were worth. It will be signed by the,whole army of incompetent mendicants who are incompetent and are incapcapable of earning a living and want to be taken care of at the public expense, ' It will be signed by office seekers of every grade who have no hope of ob ; taining places in the public service through merit and depend wholly upon their political pull for getting some thing good. ' Politicians and political managers - and bosses, whose only means of political success is in the pur- ' chased support they obtain through the distribution, will sign the petition and support it with speeches on the floor of congress. But all these petitions from-, the ar mies of partisan mercenaries will avail ' nothing against the mighty force of public opinion which extorted the civil service law from a reluctant con gress and has fostered and expanded it during the last quarter of a century in spite of all the efforts of the spoilsmen, I in and out of congress, to defeat and nulify it. ' The St. Louis convention made the maintenance and extension of the merit system the subject of one of its most emphatic declarations, and President McKinley, in his letter of acceptance, heartily approved . this declaration and announced that the party would take no step backward on this question. St. Paul Pioneer Pre9S. bered that sugar has declined in value during the period from . 7.58 cents to 2.92 cents per pound and that our per capita consumption is from two to three times as much as that of other sugar producing countries. Of the 1,739,313 tons imported into this country over one-fourth, or 500,000 tons, came here in the shape of brown or raw German beat sugar. This, and indeed all the important raw sugar, whether from cpne Or beets, is pur chased by the American Sugar Refin iDg Company, and other firms of less note, who refine it and put it on the market as standard granulated sugar. Of the two sources of sugar, sugar cane and sugar beets, tho former is the older and better known. It is said that it was the blockade of France during - the Nepoleonic wars that turned the atlentiou of the French people to the culture of sugar beet, and that to this emergency Europe owes its present sugar beet industry. Be that as it may, the growth of the industry has been steady, and in re cent years truly phenomenal. Ger many which in 1884 produced 1,147,000 tons of beet sugar, in 1894 produced 1,800,090 tons, an increase of 57 per cent. Austria-Hungary in the same decade raised ..her production from 63,000 tons to 1,050,000 tons, and in crease of CI per cent, and in France the increase has been from 303,000 tons to 814,000 tons, a gain of 163 per cent the increase for the whole of Europe during the same period being 78 per cent, and the production reaching the great total of 4,792,000 tons. With America consuming more sugar per capita than any other coun try on earth, it is not to be wondered that the industry should spring in to prominence; and with the atten tion it is receiving and the encourag- ment given it oy me government it j bids fair to grow until this conntry shall produce a1! the sugar it consumes, In this event the $100,000,000 now sent abroad will be kept at home and good portion of it, at least one-third will be circulated among the pro ducers. UNJUST CRITICISM. AN EXPECTED FAILURE. In justice to President McKinley, it must be said that he made an effort to fulfill the pledges ,of . his party for International bimetallsm, by sending a commission to Europe to confer with the leading nations and sue for a conference. But their mission ' was a failure, as all clear minded peo ple believed it would be. An inter, national monetary agreement without Jija occurrence of England would be useless, and this, nearly everybody was satisfied could not be obtained, for the simple reason that at present it is not to England's interest to have any money standard but gold throughout the world. She is a loaning nation, and holds securities in almost every section of the globe. So long as the gold standard prevails, her bankers are assured of a fixed income, and the value of the rent or interest they re celve upon - their loans enhances, whereas, if a double standard were adopted they would diminish in pur chasing power. It was folly to send a commission to that nation to plead for bimetallsm, and the mission of Messrs. Wolcott, Stevenson and Paine could result in nothing but failure. It was almost a foregone conclusion that England would not even consent to the opening , of the India mints, and it was certain that neither Germany nor France would - enter into an international monetary agreement without conces sions from Great Britain, hence so far as any beneficial results were con cerned, they could not be accomplished, consequently nobody. is. disappointed at the failure. There is only one way by which bimetallsm will ever be ac complished and that is by independent action. One nation at, a time must adopt a double standard, and others will follow. The Crook County Journal com' menting on the recent district fair held in The Dalles says: 'The district fair held at The Dalles last week was not a success. Both the attendance and exhibits were smaller than usual. If the truth must be told the whole thing always was a farce. The $1,500 appropriated by the legis lature is a wanton waste. The farm' ers take no interest in the fair, and The Dalles merchants less. The ex hibits are so small that anyone can get a premium for anything without respect to its merits, while the at ten dance would not amount to a corporal's guard if it were not for the horse races." This is, to say the least, an unjust criticism. While the fair was not the success the people of The Dalles hoped it would be, it was not a failure by any means, nor was the horseracing the principal attraction. True, extra ef forts were put forth to get good horses, and as a result some of the best horses on the coast came and the trials of speed were witnessed and enjoyed by a great many people. But the exhibits at the pavilion were equally as attrac tive; there were displayed there pro ducts of the farm, orchard and garden that would have compared favorably with the product of any country, and the works of art were indeed creditable. Farmers possibly do not take the greatest interest in the fair, not so much perhaps as they should, for the fair furnishes an excellent means of advertising the resources of the country and the products of their farms, still they take sufficient interest to bring in most excellent exhibits and are awarded' liberal premiums on the same, it is to be regretted that greater interest is not taken, but interest can not be created by such criticism as that coming from the Journal. AN OUTRAGEOUS VERDICT. WATER TRANSPORTATION. The' 'complaints that have, been raised by the San Francisco papers against the O R. & N. Co. for charg ing what are termed excessive rates on freight between San Francisco and Portland, have brought to light some interesting facts with reference to water transportation. It is shown that the minimum rate from San Francisco to Portland by steamer is $1 a ton on sugar and salt, $9 a ton on the highest priced merchandise and an average of $2.50 a ton on all classes of freight. The distance from San Francisco to Portland by water is about 800 miles, and a flat rate of $2 50 a ton for that distance does not appear excessive, es pecially to those who have to depend upon railroads for transportation facili ties or even upon river steamers. Water transportation, either by ocean or by river, is unquestionably the cheapest poisible means, and can ever be made lower than by rail, which has been demonstrated wherever there is competitions between water and rail. For instance when The Dalles depended solely upon the railroad its freight rates to and from Portland were about double what they are now. But the fact that there is an ayerage rate of $2.50 a ton between San Fraa- cisco and Portland a distance of 800 miles and that the rate between Portland and Tho Dalles a distance of 100 miles is from $1.0 to 84.00 a ton, would indicate that our great rivers cannot compete with the ocean as a thoroughfare for vessels. Never theless all places situated on navigable rivers are at a decided advantage over those located on railroads. Only compare for instance the freight be tween Portland and Roseburg with tho rates between Portland, and The Dalles. . Roseburg has a rate of $4.75 to $9 a ton; The Dalles has a rate of $1.50 to $4. Roseburg is 200 miles from Portland, The Dalles 100. mother tressed. country will be sorely dis- WHERE TILE MONEY IS. IKE SUGAR INDUSTRY. within the next few years sugar mak- in? is destined to become a very im portant feature in the industrial and commercial questions of the United South are insufficient to anywhere near supply the demand, the beet must become the article from which our sugar is to be made. Past unsatis factory conditions of agriculture, our present enormous and increasing im portations of sugar and the legislation by which the present administration is attempting to foster sugar manufac ture, render the question of beet farm ing one of unusual interest. The statistics of the industry for the year 1896 show that the total consump tion of sugar in the United States nted to 2.093.891 tons, eaual to a per capita consumption of 63 pounds. Of this amount 1,739,313 tons were im ported from abroad and 354,506 tons represent domestic production that is to say, for one ton of sugar manufac tured in the United States we brought in five tons from other countries. The statistics of the past .sixteen years show that the consumption during that period was 25,182,649 tons of which 2,673050 tons, or only one-tenth, was produced in the United States. Dur ing this period we paid out for this im ported sugar about fifteen hundred million dollars, or in otner woras we have paid to foreign countries .an average- yearly tribute for the past sixteen years of about one hundred million dollars. These figures become yet more significant when it is remem- In the case of Richard Hinkle, ac cused of murdering Scott, a book agent for the J. K. Gill Company, of Portland, aOout two years a?o, for his money, and burning his body, a jury in the circuit court at Canyon Citv on the 23d inst, returned a verdict of manslaughter," and the accused was sentenced to fifteen years in the peni tentiary. The verdict of manslaughter was utterly absurd. ' If Hinkle was guilty, he was guilty of murder, and if there was not evidence enough to con vict him of murder there certainly was no evidence to convict him of man slaughter, for killing a man for money and burning the body to conceal the crime do not stand for any form of manslaughter. In the case of Profes or Webster, of Harvard college, who was hanged in 1850 for the murder of Dr. Parkman, while there was a gen eral conviction that Webster, had struck Parkman a fatal blow while in a fit of anger, nevertheless the proof that he had deliberately tried to de stroy tne body or nis victim was deemed proof of murder, and of murder he was justly convicted and justly ex ecuted. But in the case of Hinkle the charge was that be and one Bare murdered Scott for his money and burned the body to conceal the ' crime. There was no suspicion of a quarrel; the accused was either absolutely in nocent or absolutely guilty of murder; and not at all of manslaughter. There fore Bare, who is serving a life sen tence for his part in the crime, and Hinkle, who gets off with 15 years, as guilty of manslaughter, represent a very gross miscarriage of justice, for if there was evidence beyond a doubt that those two men murdered Scott for his money, they were guilty of a most barbarous murder and deserved death; and if there was not sufficient evidence to show beyond a reasonable doubt that they murdered Scott, they should have been acquitted. . This verdict cither means that the state has suffered a great wrong aone by the jury in convicting' of man slaughter a man accused -of cold blooded murder for the purpose of theft, or it means that the accused have been grossly wronged by being found guilty of a crime of which they were not accused and of which they could not have been guilty, since the evidence was not sufficient to satisfy the jury that a murder had been com mitted. Yet a man accused of killing his victim for money and burning the body is either innocent of murder or guilty of murder; he is not guilty of manslaughter. Oregonian. ' America makes the boast of haying more money in circulation 'per capita than almost any other nation on the globe, and in fact has a very large yolume as compared ' with other coun tries; but in reality there is a very small percentage of money in so-called circulation that is in actual circulation among the people. The 'controller of the cursency in his report for 1696 showed the entire amount of money in the United States to be $2,257,915,845, of this $675,543,556 was held in the treasury, leaving $1,582,302,389 in so- called circulation, or $21.15 per capita. This presumably is the amount that circulates from day to day between the people of the country supplying a medium of exchange for the ordinary transactions of business, but in fact only a very small portion of it is actu ally employed. Fully three-fourths of it is lying in bank vaults where of course it exercises, the functions of money through a system of checks given and received in commercial transactions. A journal called Money, published in New, gives a list of what it terms the "average per capita bank credit in each state," which it explains is the capital and deposits of the banks and bankers, that is held ready for use in legitimate business. The list shows the average per capita bank credit to be the lowest in Arkansas, $4.86, and the highest in Rhode Island, $371.62 An average between the highest and lowest would be $188.24. Thus with our boasted high rate "of per capita circulation, we find it 'absorbed many times over by the banks of the country in their deposits 'tfnd capital stock. The fact is, a comparatively small amount of money is in actual circula tion or even held by the masses. Oc casionally some of it gets into the hands of the people',"fts It isJ now' flow ing out to pay for the Crop just har vested, but it soon will' find its way back into ' the banks, troth' whence it can only be drawn on loans. At least nine months in every year, very nearly all the money in the country is in the banks, and all the time nine-tenths of it is under their control. HAS FAITH IN SILVER. It has been asserted of late that Senator Teller, of Colorado, had abandoned the cause of silver, and would fall back into the ranks of the republican party no matter what its policy might be, at the next national election. This, Mr. Teller says, is one of the little falsehoods of the gold press, and he declares he never has given up the cause of bimetalism, though he considers that there is no hope for It during this administration. In a ltier to a friend in Pennsylvania he expresses himself on the money question and other political issues as follows, which sets at rest all question as to the position he will take in future elections: "The democratic party is committed to silver, and the gold democrats will go to the republican party, and under the influence of the gold democrats, it will degrade and debase the party to such an extent as to cause the old liberty loving republicans to leave it. I expect to see the republican party in the hands of gold republicans and gold democrats, and under the domina tion and control of the worst element ever in American politics. I do not care what your Pennsylvania papers gay about the per capita circulation. Governor Hastings and other poli ticians of you..- state know that the platform was made to get into office on, and I expect to see the - influence of your senators and members of congress brought to bear on congress to retire the greenbacks and treasury notes, and let the banks and bankers of the country issue whatever paper money they think the country needs, and that issue will then be determined by the interest of the banks and bankers. The fight for silver is still on and will be until we get a righteous money system, and we never will have one until we open the mints for gold and silver at a ratio to be established by law." There is a difference of $7:50 in the price of American steel rails in Japan and the United States. In Japan the railroads get them at $20 a ton, while here they are charged $27.50. This is one of the beauties of the present tariff which allows manufacturers to charge local customers more than thev do in foreign countries where they must meet the competition of the world. The gold currency commission! may prepare all the bills that it pleases for the benefit of the national banks, but not one of them will get through the present United States senate. The campaign in New York City is hot. The chances favor the election of Van Wyck, the Tammany candidate. George is talking too much and is los ing ground. A Kansas City jury has emphatically said the despoiler of the home may be punished by an agrieved husband. John Schlegel, the slayer of Dr. Ber- ger who assaulted Schlegel's wife, has just been acquitted. Another of Spain's refactory chil dren is about to turn itself up to be spanked by the maternal slipper. Costa Rico is about to rebel, and with the Phillipines, Cuba and Costa Rico all on her hands at once, the poor old i There are soma 13,000 more names on the pension rolls than there were a year ago. The increase in the num ber of pensions keeps pretty close pace with tho increase in population, and there seems to be no hope of abate ment. Boss Piatt expresses confidence that General Tracy will be elected mayor of New York. Piatt is one of those politicians who never gives up the sMd until it has sunk. However, after next Tuesday he will hardly bo known as a prophet in his own land. . Every day we are given an object lesson of the beneficial effects of good roads by tho long string of Klickitat teams loaded with wheat being hauled into The Dalles. Good roads leading in every direction will do much toward retaining the trade of the surrounding country. So interesting has the campaign in Ohio become that President McKinley has determined to desert tho White Houso and repair to the Buckeye state where ho will remain until November 4. In tho meantime he will deliver lew auuresses probablv intended to help the cause of his friend Uanna. . At last we must acknowledge that General Weyler is nor. wholly bad He has ordered the release of eleven prisoners supposed to have been con nected with the uprising that resulted in the imprisonment of Evangelina Cisneros. This, however, is the only act of humanity placed to his credit during his dictatorship in Cuba. Captain-General Blanco goes to Cuba with the utmost confidence of being able to squelch the rebellion in a short time. Compos and Weyler were equally confident when they set foot on Cuban soil, but tho war goes on. Blanco will likely be less success ful than either of his predecessors. I'oor senator wolcott: ay espous ing the cause of gold he has killed himself off in bis own state, and now his mission to Europe has heaped new disgrace upon his head. He made some erroneous statements about the attitude of France towards silver that has got him into a position where he must defend his integrity. Only what might be expected has occurred in the discovery of a plot to assassinate Sheriff Martin who ordered his deputies to fire upon the strikers at Hazleton, Pa. The miners look up on his act as a coldblooded, deliberate murder, and it is but natural they should desire to avenge the death of their comrades. The Portland Chronicle asserts that it matters not what an over-zealous and sanguine opposition may haye to say, the fact remains undisputed that right will always triumph over might and that Mr. Corbett will be seated as senator next December." The Chronicle has some peculiar ideas of right. The most important case ever tried in the Chicago criminal courts that of Sausage-maker Luetgest termi nated in the disagreement of the jury. After haying'been cooped up for eight weeks listening to the testimony of "expert" witnesses and the wrangling of attorneys, it is a wonder the jurors had even sense enough left to disagree. Such long drawn out cases are a farce, Eastern papers are complaining of the increased number of tramp3 that travel over the country since harvest is over and work is not to be had in the fields. Why are not the mills opened up to giye this army of unem ployed worn.' That is what was promised a year ago if a certain thing happened, and it happened. Already merchants are forced - to make telling campaign 'speeches to their customers. They are forced to explain why it is that they are com pelled to charge more for clothing, and must attribute it to the tariff, at the same time explaining that the manufacturer gets the benefit of the adyance, while their profits remain the same. As election day grows nearer in Ohio the prospects of democratic sue. cess grow brighter, and the democrats feel assured that they will elect their full stae ticket and a majority of the legislature. The republicans have had but two issues to contend for in the Ohio campaign Mark Hanna and the gold standard and neither has proven any too popular. Road-making is to be a subject of study and experiment at the agricul tural colleges. Certainly no subject is of greater importance nor presents a wider field for inyestigation. Secre tary Wilson, of the agricultural de partment, advocates a steel track-way for wagons as tho easiest solution of the road problem especially on the western prairies. He estimates the cost at from $2,000 to $3,500 per mile, exclusive of the cost of macadamizing the treadway for the horses. A jury in Maine gave damages t oa man who sued a woman for breaking a promise of marriage, but anyone might have known that a California jury could never be induced to assent to such a verdict. In the suit of Thomas Eragorri against Mrs. Stearns of San Francisco to recover $10,000 for a simi lar injury, the jury has just decided in fayor of the defendant. There is too much chiyalry among California ns for a jury of native sons ever to give a jilted swain damages for his blighted affections. The war that . has been waged be tween the Tribune and Republican at Pendleton is only the beginning of the rupture in the republican party in Oregon. The Mitchell and anti- Mitchell factions have their knives out for each other, and will never be reconciled. It will be no surprise if there are two republican tickets in the field next year one whose only aim shall be to elect Mr. Mitchell senator aud the other to defeat him. .When the interests of a single man shall thus diyide a party it is time for the state government to be turned over to another. It would be more becoming for the members of President McKinley'a cabinet if they had less to say regard ing the return of prosperity and if they would devote less attention to boom ing the administration of which they are a part. While the people every where are pleased to know that times are improving, they believe the mem bers of the president's cabinet have higher duties to perform than trapsing around over the country or seeking in terviews that give them an opportunity to tell what great things they have done for the country. The treasury balance for September, as shown by the latest monthly sum mary of the treasury, is lower than it has-been, with the exception of last February, since January, 1896. The receipts of the treasury are way below the expenditures, but this will not serve to check the appropriations that will be made by the next congress. A majority of the members consider their only duty to aid in the looting of the treasury by getting fat appropria tions for their respective states, and if a deficiency occurs they do not hesi tate to pile the taxes on a little higher. And if taxation does not avail they are ever ready to resort to tho sale of bonds whereby future generations may be made to pay for present extravagances. Killed ills Father. Redwood City, Cal., Oct., 27. Thomas FianneTIy" shot and killed his father, Patrick Flannelly. one of the most respected citizens of this place, last night, because he had been or dered from the ranch for disregarding the old man's wish. The crime was committed in the elder Flannellv's house, which the son had entered evi dently with the intention of commit ting murder. Tho crime aroused the people of this city to a high state of excitement, Posses were formed to pursue the boy, and he was located at tho ranch he had been ordered from by his father. When called upon to surrender, you ne Flannelly fired upon Sheriff McEvoy, of San Mateo county, and several of his deputies, one bullet taking effect in tha sheriff's left arm. The volley was returned and the murderer was wounded several times. He then sur rendered. A BLOW AT AUTONOMY Such the Murder of General Castillo ia Likely to Frove. New York, Oct. 28. A dispatch to the Herald from Havana via Key West says the outgoing authorities have struck a heavy blow at autonomy by permitting, the killing of General Castillo. -'' General Castillo was not killed in open fight; ho wasljetrayedby a Cuban guard and captured by the Spaniards last Friday and shot on Monday morn ing. It was more satisfactory to shoot him than to treat him as a prisoner of war. Castillo commanded Havana province, and was beloved as an able and brave general by eyery Cuban un der arms. His killing will arouse a de sire for revenge that at the present juncture will tend to prevent accept ance of autonomy. With an escort of seven men Castillo was lying ill with fever in a secluded spot when the guide betrayed him. The exhibition of his body has aroused indignation even among General Wey- ley's officers. Side by side with him in the morgue was the body of a man who had starved to death. The two presented-a plain illustration of General Weyier'a methods of conducting this war. A manifesto will be circulated and signed by President Capote and Gen erals Gomez and Garcia, calling upon all Cubans not to accept autonomy. Government. Reconsiders. Washington, Oct. 26. Indications are that the government may yet re consider its decision to ask a postpone ment for the sale of the Union Pacific, The reasons for belief are that the government has received or is hourly expecting to receive an additional proposition from the reorganization committee. This proposition is be' lieved to be for a very material in crease in the guarantee offer, provided the sale is allowed to proceed on the date "originally fixed This in crease, it is reported, will make the committee's guarantee equal to the full amount of tho government claim against the Union Pacific proper, or about $58,000,000. In that event it is probable the offer will be accepted and the sale take place as originally agreed on;' .-.' FIVE BRAVES SLAIN Colorado Game Protector Meets Indian Braves. TWO WERE DROWNED Distressing1 Accident Caused by tbe Breaking- of a Bulkhead at Oregon City. 1 OLIVER 1 CHIIL, D PLOWS 1 Cold Wave Sweeps Over NebraBka nnd 83ilth llahotu Union Pacific ICeor giiulzatioii Committee Sub mils Another Hill. Kifle, Colo., Oct. 26. Reports from Snake river are to the effect that Game Warden "Vileox attempted to arrest some Indians near Lily Park for violat ing tho Colorado game laws, and was fired upon by the Utes. The officers returned the fire, killing five Ut03, Game Warden Wilcox with several posses of deputies and ranchmen are after the Indians, aud a further con flict seems inevitable. The excitement here is intense, and parties are orgn-n mug to go to Wilcox's assistance, fear ing a general uprising of tho Indians, i no trouble commenced last wees, when tho White River, Uncompahgre and Uintah Utes began pouring over the line from Utah on their annual fall hunt. The White River Utes are ex ceptionally ugly, and have apparently been anxious to pick trouble with parties of whites with whom they have come in contact. The Utes were in tho Meeker massacre and have never been anything'but ugly and waiting for an opportunity to do mischief. There are several hundred of them now in the state. Governor Not Apprehensive. Denver, Oct. 26. Governor Adams has received the following from Deputy Sheriff Watson at Rifle, Colo.: "Game Warden Wilcox tried to ar rest some Utes on Snake river, five miles from Lily Park. They resisted and fired on the Wilcox party. No whites were injured, but several In dians were killed and wounded. Gen eral Otis should order the Duchesne troops out at once to corral the Indians and save further trouble, as there is much alarm here." The governor said he did not ap prehend serious trouble, and would not at present order out the state troops. ' From Summer to Winter. OMAHA, Oct. 26. The warmest Octo ber ever experienced by white men in this region is closing in a blizzard. Rain began falling' in western Ne braska and southern Dakota last night, turning to snow, which continued all night. Dispatches have been received from Valentine to the effect that a heavy snow has fallen there, while in the western part of the state the rail ways are having trouble moving their trains. Fire at Baker City. Baker: City, Oct 28. S. A. Heil- ner's stone and frame warehouse op posite the O. R. & N. depot was burned early this morning. There were stored there a large quantity of seed . wheat, some wool, bides and several carloads of flour, salt, furniture and missel- laneous articles. The loss is $12,000, with $7,500 insurance. The origin of tbe fire is unknown. How much does the babv weigh " is only another way of asking:, "Is he healthy and strong: ?" When a baby is welcomed into the world with loving: care and forethought, his chances of health and strength are increased a hun dred-fold. A prospective mother cannot beein too early to look after her own health and nhvs. ical condition. : This is sure to be reflected in the baby. Any weakness or nervous de pression, or lack of vigor on the mother's part should be overcome early during the expectant time oy tne use ot Dr. rierce's Favorite Prescription, which promotes the perfect health and strength of the omnism specially concerned in motherhood. ' It makes the coming of baby absolutely saie ana comparative iv iree trom oam : ren ders the mother strong and cheerful, and transmits neaitay .constitutional vigor to the child. : No other medicine in the world has been such an unqualified blejii; to mother and their children. It is the one positive spe cific for all. weak and diseased conditions of the feminine organism. It is the only medicine of its kind devised for this nni purpose by a trained and educated special ist in this particular field. Mrs. F. B. Cannings, of No. 4320 Humphrey St, St Louis. Mo., writes: "I am now a happy mother of a fine, healthy -baby girl. Feel that your Favorite Prescription and little ' Pellets' have done me more rood than nnvihinv r t,a ever taken. Three months nrevious to mv con. hneinent I Began using your medicine. I took three bottles of the rPiwm five min- three bottles of the quences were I was only in labor foi Prescription.' Conse- in lAnrtr Ihrtv. Utes. With my first babv I suffered iS hours. then had to lose him. miww.j.iw. only lived 12 hours. For two years I suffered cntoia agony, and had two miscarriages. The Favorite Prescription ' saved both my child and myself. My baby is not yet three weeks old and I do not think t ever felt better in mv life." THE CCLKBEiO BIIOKE. Two Men Drowned and Five Injured at Oregon City. Oregon City, Oct. 26. A terrible accident occurred here at noon today, causing the death of two men, and in juring fiye others. A gang of men had been working night and day for a week to remove a bulkhead, expecting to finish the work this afternoon. The bulkhead was CO feet long, and extended from the power station on the east to the east wall of the boat canal on the west. At the lower end of the new extention of the power-house another bulkhead had been constructed, and it was the in tention to take out tne old one, in order to let tho water into the new section for tbe turbines. The workmen had removed a con siderable portion of the foundation of the old bulkhead, and today were en gaged in taking off the nuts and cut ting the bolts, intending to remove the entire wall tonight.. The work gave way and a flood of water rushed in upon the workmen, filling the section. At first it was sup posed that eyery man was drowned, An alarm was given and the water was drawn from the Canal as soon as pos sible. After this was done a count of the men in the gang was mado, and it was found that two men George Stouch and Jacob Macomb were mis sing. Among the five injured men, the most seriously hurt are Carl Newberg, whose bead was severely cut and bruised, and Harvey Little, whose left arm was bruised and whose bead and face were badly cut. Thomas Smith had, his Vpine hurt and William W. Smith had one bone of his right leg broken. Home Rule the Basil. . , ' . .j. ;'.'ijJi fx I New York, Oct. 27. A dispatch to the Herald from Madrid says: Senor Morely Prendergast, the new colonial minister, has outlined for the Herald his plan for Cuban reform as follows: The autonomy which the cabinet of Senor Sagasta proposes to bestow on tbe islands of Cuba and Porto Rico in fulfillment of the manifesto of June 14, is a special autonomy founded on the aspirations adopted in the platform of the A.ntillian autonomists and not identical with the other colonial con stitutions. It is clear that in their es sential principles the future constitu tions of Cuba and Porto Rico agree with those colonial constitutions that start from self-government as the capi tal ideal self-legislation, responsible to the government; supremacy of the gov ernor who, either under that name or that of viceroy, shall represens the mother country, and who shall choose the ministers who shall be the execu tive in that colony. -Starting from the above basis, the project of tbe Spanish government contains the first partition of those matters and concerns that belong to the colon ial parliament and to the im perial parliament, that is to the nation al cortes. The partition is founded on a careful discrimination between what interests tho islands themselves nave in a local sense and what is of national importance. - The project in operation will inter pret in the most generous manner the phrase "local interests,'' since it will not only grant to the colonies com plete control of all that relates to edu cation, charity, etc., but it also in trusts to representatives of the local government tbe right of drawing upon their customs tariff without any limita tions beyond those mutually arranged. Of these ministerial functions -re served to the metropolis are: First -those, that' concern inter national relations; - second, military and naval matters; third, organization of the law courts; fourth, those deposi tions that under the came of patronage really regulate relations between the church and state. Are The Best General Purpose nuwb in une woria. Beware of imitation plows and extras claiming to be the "genuine Oliver or equally good. . . . . . THE GENUINE PLOWS AND REPAIRS, direct from the factory, ARE FOR SALE IN THE -DALLES ONLY BY PEASE & MAYS. So great is the popularity of these famous plows that unscrupulous parties are seeking to trade upon their good name by offering for sale " bogus "? plows and parts as genuine. A Full Carload of Walking, Riding and Gang Plows... 3 JUST RECEIVED DIRECT FROM THE FACTORY. 3 ALL. GOODS MARKED PLAIN FIGURES PEASE & MAYS 3 D o vou Want a Gang; WALKING PLOW OR HARROW . . Of Any Kind If So, Try the Canton Clippers They are GUARANTEED to work successfully any where. .They are Guaranteed to be Stronger Built, Lighter Draft, and Easier Handled than any others.' r-2 Don't take our word, but try one, a3 thousands of good farmers have done, ard be convinced. . . . v . The New Superior Drills and Seeders HAVE NO EQUAL In buying these goods you can ALWAYS GET EXTRA? for them at reasonable prices, which is a big item to farmers. Call and see these goods at JOS. T. PETERS The S CO., Dalles, OregDri boat turning over repeatedly, until Bradford was struck on the head by the gunwale. He at once .sank and did not reappear. The others man aged to cling to the boat until it had drifted as far as Kinney's cannery, where they were picked up by two fishermen, named George Nichols and John Enquist. THIS BOAT CP8F.T. A Fatal In Altorla Accident Occurred Harbor. Astoria, Or., Oct. 27. A most dis tressing accident, resulting in the drowning of Edward F. Bradford, health officers' boatman, and the nar row escape from drowning of four other men, occurred "yesterday morn ing about 10 o'clock, when the unlucky German ship Flottbek was making ready to proceed to sea. Bradford started down the river in his Whitehall to put Pilot Doig on board the Flottbek. Besides tbe boat man and pilot, there were also in the boat Captain Schumacher, of the Flottbek, and J. M. Gillette and son. The sail was hoisted at Flavel's dock, and in a few minutes the party were alongside the ship. Bradford then stepped on the gunwale to unstep the mast, when the frail and overloaded craft upset, turningbottom uppermost. All five of the struggling men grasped the keel of the upturned boat, only to cause it again to turn over. The strug gle continued for several minutes, the HO COMPBOMISE POSSIBLE. - Cubans Keasaert Their Determination Sot to Accept Antonomjr. New York, Oct. 27. Tnomas Es trada Palma, the Cuban delegate to the United States, when asked his opinion of the Cuban reforms proposed by the Spanish ministry, said: "As the representative of the Cuban provisional government, l am in a position - to state most emphatically that the Cubans in arms will entei in to no compromise with Spain. Tb Cubans are fighting for absolute linde pendence, and they will entertain .no peace proposals from tbe Spanish gov ernment based on anything but abso lute independence. The Cubans are firmly determined . to carry on the struggle until their purpose is accom- plished, and they will listen to no proposition acknowledging Spanish authority over Cuba. Cubans will never accept autonomy, no matter how ample, as a solution of their struggle for independence. "The Cuban problem must be settled this time once for all." Bryan at Mount Vernon. Columbus, O., Oct. 28. William J. Bryan spoke at Mount Vernon to about 10,000 people. It was after 10 A. M. when the procession formed. The press about Bryan was so great as to make it difficult for him to leayo his carriage. He was very hoarse, but spoke until 12 o'clock, when he left for Newark. ORDER FBOSt SPAIN. Deposed Commander Mnat An alt Blanco at Havana. New York, Oct. 28. A dispatch to the Herald from Havana' savs: General Weyler has been ordered by his government in Madrid to remain in Havana until General Blanco ar rives. This may mean that Weyler is to be sent home under arrest for refus ing to obey the order to give his com' mand to General Castellanos. General Weyler is using every means to win sympathy here. On the way he employes the power ho' has concen trated depends to a very considerable extent the stability of Spain in Cuba, If be chooses to resist Blanco's au thority, the latter will need a strong lorce oenina aim oerore he can Jand in Havana. If there is not serious trouble it will be because Senor Sa gasta and his ministers bend their knees to General Weyler, ior the in dication is that Weyler will not sub mit quietly to them. That tbe Spanish eovernmettantici pates a disturbance is evinced by the fact that it has telegraphed to General Weyler to disband the volunteer forces. This morning the caotain-t?eneral called to tbe palace the colooe Is and read them a telegram from Minister of the Colonies Moret. statin? t-hat the services of the volunteers would not be longer required, and that they were to oe aisarmea. Alter an excited con sultation the colonels agreed to send a considerable dispatch to Senor Moret expressing their indignation and stat ing that they would not be responsible ior tne actions oi tne men it tne news was conveved to them. "The Regulator Line" The Dalles, Portland and Astoria : Navigation Co. THROUGH FieiW ann Passenger LfJie LOWEST RATES BEST SERVICE FASTEST TIME. None Will bo Barred. Snow In South Dakota. Minneapolis, Oct. 26. Specials from many points in Central and East em South Dakota are to the effect that heavy rain has changed to snow and sleet, and the temperature is rapidly falling under the influence of a strong north wind. For Sale. Mrs. C. Nelson & Co's. restaurant on Court street, between be-'ond and Third,is offered for sale at a roasonable price. This is a bargain for anybody desiring to engage in tbe restaurant business. Call early and get terms. Washington. Oct. 23. Senator Me Bride, of Oregon, saw tbe secretary of war and tne president today regarding the report that the new military reser vation in Alaska would create a monop oly tor tne two transportation com panies now operating between that ter ritory and points in tne United States. He was assured there was no such in tention in the order: that no one would be excluded from the territory or pre vented irom engaging in any ousiness on the reservation. Secretary Alger said he would telegraph tho chamber of commerce of Tacoma to that effect. The intention of tho order was solely that of protecting life and property in the territory and any company or per son entering the territory would be given the same rights and privileges allowed companies or persons already operating there. Senatoi- McBride said be had no doubt there would be no trouble for any persons operating in Alaska, and tbe assurances of the president anf secretary were sufficient to quiet all apprehensions that might be felt either in Oregon or Washington. The steamers ot this line will leave The Dalles at 7:00 a. m. Shipments received at anv time, dav or night. Live stock shipments solicited. Call on or address, ' Jul C HLLHWHY, General Agent THE - DALLES - OREGON. THE. Cary House Bar Prlneville, Oregon. Presided over by Joe Hinkle. Cirri e the beit brandi Wines, Liqaors I Cigars When In that city call on Joe. iiviifK iMiinivisu v j vara experience. No tiM etiftcisordrumttfm frm tuslDe4a AoBiimns. wnnK flB or flnhhin- im tlcUus and twclety Udies Ladorae 1L ThouwuxU curod. AII,FNIS TREATED BY MAIL confidentially. For parr lea I art sddrtw, with tumiv DR. SNYDER, Z2ZZiIm'iiiz