..S. Pcnnover .. .(i. W. McBride ....l'biMT Mctsplmn K. B. McKlroy (J. X. Dolph j. H. Mitchell B. Hermann Frank Baker sw.rrtary of Stntr Tiw.SHriT Suit. f 1'uMic Inttmctiuu. Senators. i. t'ontrrwMmin Mute I'rin'.cr COliSTV OFFICIALS. s'n-'tff .: I). I fates Clerk J. B. t'rossen Treasurer. - .-. Kuch , . H' A. Leiivens ComniisMcners. v j !.-rBllk Kincnid Ascsor .John E. Burnett urveyor -f-- 1 MiiuteiHli'iit 01 i'nr:ic N'nwas... irn.v nne"i- umiiw " WE ARE pleased YOU. TO GREET The first numberof the The Chronicle is letore you and speaks for itself. It is far from erfwt iuuI there being room for iinyroveiient, we shall lisuko it, until it is what ittfproprietorn intend it to be, as good a jit wspaier ut can he made out ride the larger cities. Theohjeet of the ajer is to assist to the utmost of its power in advancing the interests of The Dalles and country tributary to it. To advertise- our resource;!, to build up our industries, to extend our trade, these we shall work for energetically, and per sistently. We desire the prosperity of every individual and firm in The Dalles, recognizing the fact that every individual member of a community, as long as that member is not a .riminal or pauper, is of benefit to it : and working for the srood of each, we hope to be of benefit to all. The Chhon:ci.e will be non-partisan, and will devote its best energies to matters of local imjiovta-nce. Its columns will be open at all times for the discussion of local matters, requiring onlv of contributors that their language Iks at all times re-pectfui and gentle- innnlv. We have no promises to make except to reiterate that whatever bene fits The Dalles it shall be our pleasure to advocate at every opportunity, and to the le8t of our ability. We shall be just, fair and impartial, and ak that your criticisms of the paper be measured with that rule. A BUSINESS CITY. Stkaxcjers arriving in Hie Kailes are at first apt to think it a quiet, or as some of them express it. a dead town. Even a cursory examination into the amount of business done here will dispel this idea. The amount of wool, grain and live stock shipped from this point is eimnlv immense; and the amount of supplies purchased here would astonish even our cwu businessmen, by its grand total. It has back of it the best and largest pastures in the northwest, and the country capable of producing grain, which is naturally tributary to this point is as large as an- of the New England States. The larger portion of t his agricultural land is still uncultivated, simply because the cost of transporting the grain to market is yet too great. In the near future this difficulty will le re moved, and thoueands of acres of virgin soil will be covered with waving fields of golden grain. The fruit industry is in its infancy, but promises to take a promi nent place. When the business created oy ine rapnuy developing country iriou tary to it, is added to that it already has, The Dalles will be second Only to Port laud in the volume of its trade, and with the opening of the Columbia this trade will 1h? again more than doubled. The "Dalles is doing a bigger and letter busi ness to-day than any city of its size in the state, but that business is done through well established channels, and sweeps along as quietly as the mighty Columbia, which makes not as much noise as some babbling brook, yet sur passes all such, ten thousand fold. A CHANGE REQUIRE IK Thk Dalles has entered upon a new era, an era of prosperity of progress of development, and we all want to adapt ourselves to the new order of things. We want to in a measure at least forget self, and understand that the good of the community results in good to its indi vidual members. We want to remember that there are many ways of accomplish ing a result, ami while working to have , that result reached in ur way, when the majority are against us and adopt some other plan, stand in and work for it. Adopt the plan of the iolitical conven- 1011 and when in the minority give it ujj jicncciuuy uuu niHKe 11 unanimous. i . . . . i i : i . i : . f : i . i 1, i . place in our municipal work, but all of us should put our shoulders to the wheel wherever the interests of The Dalles are concerned, and working for the good of all, add to the prosperity of each of our citizens. The new order of things requires it, self interest demands it, loyalty to The Dalles compels it. We aiti informed by Mr. Samuel L. "Brooks that the Portland board of trade, chamber of commerce and some" (.tlicr business societies have determined to make an energetic effort to have the If-wka Mirt f"Vicivifl.u .-,, .loi..l Tim,- ',.. ,s -t L,..;,, " I im, ana are compiling ftatintirs siiow- 4- I. A ........ S I A. 1 1 it .-.:nt end value of ..rodnets. th,,t ! I ii(l !uan:it by th? vr::v ot (he a'--.bia. 'There is al ,u:d:.ut i'.u:.-- for : ..t'ihtt'on m fids? :i:rl the ci';Vor I e t liver of !'.-;.? f'hine out i bolaad the 0UU-- oi isesr.Uiv nave no l.Mir 1 undortiiki: fil inf- of 1 :voi;Ui: 01 ) to - J :,;! . t"j. ovomor to ence, arid is used principally tor trie reason that the speaker is talking meta physics. We have heard the term ap plied time and again to the businessmen of The Dalles, and yet if the term has the meaning those using it, give it, of a non progressive person, or one who does nothing to benefit his town, it is sadly misapplied. ' There is an old saying that "you cannot eat your cake and have it," and it is certainly true that with a given amount of monev vou cannot put it in two places at once. The business men of The Dalfcs have not invested their money in factories, for the simple reason that they have used it all, are still using it all in developing the agricultural resources, and live stock industries. The Dalles does an immense credit busi ness, and has hundreds of thousands of dollars trusted out, loaned as it were, to the farmers who are bringing the wild land under cult ivation, and the stockmen whose cattle, horses and sheep are turn ing the wild grasses of the mountain sides 'into twenty dollar pieces. With out this aid from The Dalles business men, the development of the agricultural and stock industries could not go on, could scarcely have begun. Without these, the country would he a desert waste, and The Dalles a whistling station ; and yet these men, whose coin is aiding the farmer and stockman in their good work are flippantly called "mossbacks." The settlers in a new country are gener ally persons of small, or moderate means, and require assistance until the result of their toil finds a market, and without the assistance of capital, they could not, nor would they in most cases, undertake to make themselves homes on the prair ies of Wasco county. If developing the countrv is the essence of "mossbackisin" then The Dalles is full of "mossbacks," and there is room and demand for more. We need them in our business. "Moss backs" with wealth, and with a disposi tion to lend it to the new comers to aid in developing our resources, can find a glad welcome and an open field. We can't have too manv of him; and he can't come too fast. FINISH THE WORK B Y CONTRACT. The engineers in charge estimate that it will take another appropriation as large as the present one, ($433,000) to complete the work at the Cascade locks. A long-suffering and patient public might take heart of grace, could the statement be believed, and the hope cherished that that amount would do the work. The aforesaid public, how ever, are not willing to accept the state ment as true,and have not the least idea that another, or yet another appropria tion, no matter how large, will see the locks completed under the present man agement. Already $1,1S0,000 have been expended and there is nothing compar tively to show for it. What the people of Eastern Oregon want is that its rep resentatives in Congress besiege Con gress and the departments until the work is let by contract. When this done we will believe the locks will le completed, and until it is done we wil continue to believe that an appropria tion for the locks is a dead waste of the peoples' money. It is not alone East era Oregon that is interested in this matter, but Portland's future de pends largely upon the immediate opening of the Columbia. Channels of trade once esiablished are hard to change. and these channels are being rapidly formed between eastern Oregon and Pttget Sound, and Portland is losing large portion of a trade, which, in a few vears will be lost to her entirely, and forever. If Portland will add her infill ence, the work mav be taken out of its present hands, and completed next year by contract. If she will not, the work will not le finished this century, and Portland will have voluntarily surren dered a trade, which alone, if properly fostered, would support a citv of double her present size. Comparative statements prepared by clerks of the house and senate commit tees, show the total estimated needs of the government for the, next fiscal year to be$4Sl,032,lG9; increased $75,430,529 over last year, and not including any thing for rivers and harbors-.. The total estimated revenues for the current year are $446,935,031, making an excess of es timated appropriations, exclusive of de ficiencies and miscellaneous, over the estimated revenues, of $34,077,131; The excess of estimated revenues over, esti mated appropriations, exclusive f $49,- 224,928 for the sinking fund and excli?: of deficiencies and miscellaneous, is -147,790, leaving this amount as the i plus if the. sinking fund requirement not included in the estimates. Th I nm 7 mm imn f, vnt;. 000,000 or o,000,000"for drawbacks unc t he last tan if law. The telegraphic news in this paper t f l l m if i1 trim i t lit rnln mu rf flic rjirr-n5 i ,V : . i whip h ii n orritini'ita uti unut f-vi ni.nd. " ...l.l .i Il-Hlllliui UUUH K.tl 1V1 Ul.;il a?,A.l:,"?!t0r b-T V? VU neM-spaper here with our present popula-'; '' -ir to take the rdsnatclies.' but the 'hiviicl( l:as urrogj?d for a special" " 'Trice vvnif-n will uocoaruy he bnet. We make tliis rlalament as "we do not wif.ii to vail ui.der ftilse enlc J 'A htu i.-;UiO;.loifi:ca between Quakers s.nd eaVoiess land !;dh -a? Ths former omit ' ! -a re-'their lira:! u.id the latter to air TRiWiupds. -v . .. f though V lie former get a decided prefer The most prosperous family is the one that takes advantage of low prices. BROOKS & BEERS - will sell yon choice Groceries and Provisions OF ALL KINDS, AND AT MORE KEASONABI.ES KATES THAN ANY OTHER PLACE IN THE CITY. REMEMBER we deliver all pur- chases without charge. 390 & 394 Second St. D. 1. Thompson" J. S. Schexck. H. M. Beau, President. ice-1'restdent. Calmer. Hist Um Bank. THE DALLES, - OREGON. A General Banking Business transacted Deposits received, subject to p-isht -Draft or Check. Collections made and proceeds promptly 1 11 ,! remitted on uay oi collection. Sight and Telegrapliic Exchange sold on jSew xorfc, t?an trancisco and Port land. DIRECTORS. Thompson. Jxo. S. Schexck. . Spahks. Geo. A. Liebk. H. M. Be all. D. P. T. W FRENCH 8t CO., BANKERS. transact a gekeralbankixg business Letters of Credit issued available in the Eastern States. Sight Exchange and Telegraphic Transfers sold on New York, Chicago, St. Louis, San Irancisco, .Portland Oregon, Seattle Wash., and various points in Or egon and Washington. Collections made at all points on fav orable terms. C. N. THORXBURY. T. A. HUDSON, Notary Public. Late Kec. L . S. Luna Office. THQRHBURY & HUDSOH. ROOMS 8 and 9 LAND OFFICE BUILDING, ' Postoffice Box 330,- THE DALLES, OR. Filings, Contests, And all other Business in the U. S. Land Office Promptly Attended to. We have ordered Blanks for Filings, Entries and the purchase of Railroad Lands linder the recent Forfeiture Act, which we will have, and advise the pub lic at the earliest date when such entries can be made. Look for advertisement in this paper. Thornbury & Hudson. Front street Gip store, THE DALLES, OREGON. W. H. JONES, PROPRIETOR. Opposite the Umatilla House. HAVE ON SALE THE BEST BRANDS OF Imported and Domestic CIGARS and TOBACCO. ALSO A FULL LINE OF Tanls.ee Sfotiozis PURE HAVANA CIGARS. Chas. Stubling1, 1 ' PROPRIETOR OF THE WW. New Vogt Block, Second St.- . Wholesale and retail- puor v Dealer, :!KEE BEER ON DRAUGHT. REWARD. tt'AII) FOR ANV INFORMATION X the conviction of rartieseuttinjr ii any v:;v iiiforfcrine with the Uaniis of Tiit-; Elkctkc l.tujii 11. 'ji.K.x.y. . V.- K aims of TliB ElKnuir l.nmi TTT 1- i I. CM-t. 1 1 " CtrrAMn 5?T TIJ HA! I SX CTl ' ' ii. U1.EN.V. VV aSIUiigWii ou . . v. --v- X BENTON The Red Front Grocers Have? Moved to the Corner of Third antiunion Streets, In the Oil Postoffice Building. SNIPES fit KlNESIiV, Wholesale and Estail Bmiists. Fine Imported, Key West and Domestic CIGARS. (AGEXTS FOR) 1862. (J. E. BlfKgp; (JO., Heal Estate, insurance, and Loan Opef a House Block, 3d St. -FOR- Carpets anil Furniture, CO xo PRINZ&NITSCHKE And be Satisfied as to QUALITY MD PRICES. W. E. GARRETSON, Leatfii Jeweler. SOLE AGENT FOB THE All Watch Work Warranted. Jewelry Made to Order. i:;: Second St., TIio Dalles, Or. REMOVAL. H. Grlenn lias removed his oiS.ce and. the'ofiice of the Electric Light Co. to 72 "Washington St. C-c......:'A-Z:-.j:fe.Tr- Jl f - v; cr ! The Gate City of the InlandSJSmpire is situated at ... the head of navigation on is a thriving, prosperous ITS TERRITORY. It is the supply city for an extensive and rich agri cultural and grazing country, its trade reaching as far south as Summer Lake, hundred miles. THE LARGEST WOOL MARKET. The rich grazing country along the eastern slope of the the Cascades furnishes pasture for thousands of sheep, the wool from -which finds market hf '"r; The Dalles is the largest point in America, about shipped this year. - THE VINEYARD OF OREGON The country near The Dalles produces splendid crops of cereals, and its fruits cannot be excelled. It is the vineyard of Oregon, its grapes equalling Cali fornia's best, and its other fruits, annles. -nears prunes, cnerries etc., are unsurpassed.. ... ITS PRODUCTS. The salmon fisheries are yielding this year a revenue of $1,500,000 which can and will be more than doubled in the near future. The products of the beautiful Klickital valley find market here, and the country south and east has this year filled the warehouses, and all available storage places to overflowing with their products. . ITS WEALTH It is the richest city of its size on the coast, and its money is scattered over and is being used to develop, more farming country than is tributary to any other city in Eastern Oregon. Its situation is unsurpassed! Its climate delight ful! Its possibilities incalculable! Its resources un limited! And on these corner stones she stands. John Pashek, MERCHANT TAILORS Domestic and Imported' ENGLISH AND FRENCH cAoTH. The very Best Qnality, First Repairing and Cleaning at Reasonable D. W. EDWARDS, DEALER IN Paints, Oils, Glass, Wall Papers, Decora tions, Artists' Materials, Oil Paintings, Chromos ani Steel Emrayinis. Mouldings and Picture Frames, Cornice Poles Etc., Paper Trimmed Free. y Pioturo Xramea 276 and 278, Second Street. . HOMDAY L. RORDEN Sz CO. Lai'gest and Best Assortment of CHRISTMAS PRESENTS. Ever Brought to this City. Your presence is Cordially Invited at our Stdre EARLY AND OFTEN". VOGT BLOCK, SECOND ST., THE DALLES, OR. : For the Best Brands and Purest i lift oSe5a!e : Ijcjuor : Dealer,. Ti'iCOND ST. i . .... the Middle Columbia, city. a distance of over M A , original wool sniping 5,000,000 pounds iieine r v the finest on the Columbia - class Woit Fit Guarantee! Prices. Opera House, Third St. Made t Order. - The Dalles, Or. o. GOODS Quality of Wines and Liquors, go to : THE DALLES. if I i rs e r