DO THE SALMON EATT Ria IdM-of What Proprietor la. They ushered him into the editor's sanctum. He was a tall negro, with an oily skin as black as your coat, flat nose, thick lips, and the shiniest of shiny, eyes and teeth. "Is dis de editor?" he in quired as he twirled his hat in his hand. Notice to Fuel Consumers mTTTl TV A T T Tin Do salmon make- the ascent of the Columbia to their . spawning . grounds without taking food? We do not believe they do ; and principally for the reason that with the amount of vital force ex- -L7LJ2J UjluJh&. THE DALLES OREGON. BE4T0jl, Entered at the Postofflee at The Dalles, Oregon, as second-class matter. STATE OFFICIALS. The Dalles Daily Chronicle. .. ..,iiuc. . 8. Pennoyer Becretary of State G. W. McBnde Treasurer fhlllip Mctschan Supt of Public Instruction E. H. McElroy (J. N. Dolph enators....... jj H Mitchell Congressman B. Hermann State Printer -..Frank Baker COUNTY OFFICIALS. County Judge C. N. Thornbury Sherllt. I. L. Cates Clerk , J. B. Ciwucn Treasurer Ueo. Kuch Commissioner. l&nk'KtaSdd Assessor John E. Bnruett Surveyor E. F. Sharp Superintendent of Public Schools. . .Troy Kholley Coroner William Michell OPPOSED BY OUR SERVANTS. The following in the Monday Oregor.ian . .froin its Salem correspondent, is a di ''j rect "slap" at all Eastern Oregon, -and would lit the waste basket much y better than ilfe columns of our big con temporary : "The passage of the portage railroad bill in the senate has been opposed by the Oregon delegation in congress, and is argued for by the governor. As one senator expressed it :" ytV "Here is a slap at the Oregon delega tion in congress, and the"' furthering by a republican legislature of the political . ' plans of our democratic governor." "While the portage hjll gives, or is in tended to give, reliefito the obstruction ' at the Gascades, theenefit would only be to The DaUcs and the country tribu tary therekr. The" main obstructions ' tj&se at The Dalles and Celilo still re-."-main and impede navigation farther up " the river, thus leaving the major portion of Eastern Oregon just the same. The bill is somewhat ambiguous, and doubts are expressed by many memliers of the house as to its practical utility. The bill is still in the hands of the committee on railways and transportation." The fact is that while the building of the tKjrtageroad would perhaps help The Dalles directly more than any other lo cality it is leneficial to all Eastern Ore gon. The argument comes with poor grace from the Oregonian, for if true the building of the jetties should be aban doned because it helps Portland more than Eeastern Oregon, the dredging of the Columbia should be stopped because it helps Portland and by making the river navigable for deep sea vessels in jures Astoria. Appropriations for wagon roads for the same reason should not be made be cause localities are benefitted, and the new boundaries for Portland should not be established because it makes our metropolis larger without benefiting the rest of the state. On the same principle the state house should go without a dome, because Salem citizens would see more of it than the balance of us. - The canal and locks should not have been built because it benefited the Willamette valley alone, and the catching of salmon should be prohibited because the Colum bia does not flow through Crook or Har . ney county, thereby depriving the good citizens of those counties of their proper .share of the fish. The canal and locks at the Cascades should not be fin ished because the river is not nava; gable from The Dalles to Celilo, and nothing should be done at that point be cause the river is not open at the Cas cades. There is a large portion of Ore gon lying east of the mouth of the Wil lamette river, and our legislators might as well acknowledge the fact. There is no politics in the matter, and as for be ing a slap at our delegation all we can say is that they need it. For fifteen years we have waited on political prom ises made by both political parties, and we are tired of delay and hopeless of re lief except through state aid. If the ef fort to help ourselves is distasteful to the delegation they can either put up with it or resign, and this remark ap plies to this or any succeeding delegation regardless of politics. If we are not to help ourselves for fear of offending our public servants, then we had better dis charge them and do our own housework. The Australian ballot bill is causing the warmest fight of the session. It passed the house, and went through the senate with a rider in the shape of an amendment which virtually puts the primaries in Portland in the hanls of the police. The house failed to concur in the amendments and a conference will beheld. It has been demonstrated that Simon can command sixteen votes in the senate and it is therefore pretty certain that the Australian ballot system will be adopted with its amendments, or it will not be adopted at all. The bill was well circulated before the last election, and both parties were pledged to its adoption. We cannot understand how any member of the legislature can juggle with his conscience by insisting on the amendments, but'they can all the same, and will. Representative.Xhomas' bill appropri ating $16,000 for the benefit of the state militia has passed the house, and it is to be hoped will pass the senate. Either the state must provide for its militia or it must disband it. It is now in good shape and should be fostered. The ex pense is trifling and the possible benefits to the state enormous. It - forms a nacleus around which an army can soon be formed, and each of its members be utilized as a drill master. The state cannot afford to be without a militia sys tem, and therefore it cannot afford to kill the appropriation for their mainte nance. pnnuni in ascending four or five hundred, or perhaps a thousand miles of swift current, the force would be exhausted, the fuel would give out. It does not seem reasonable that these fish can accomplish the journey,, with no greater amount of fuel than is contained in the fat of their bodies. Besides, is it not remarkable to say the least, that these fish would deny themselves food while in the Columbia, yet take it greedily the moment they have passed out of it into its tributaries? . They take bait readily at the Willamette falls, and in the Sandy, Hood River and Deschutes are suffi ciently ravenous to furnish good sport for the angler. On the face of the affair the theory of total abstinence from food while in the Columbia, is untenable; for why should they refuse food in the Columbia, yet seek it eagerly the moment they are out of it, as they cer tainly do? We believe they take food while on their way up the river, and that this food is of such a nature that its presence in the stomach of the fish is not easily detected ; and therefore, an erron eous idea has gained credence that they do not eat. If any one will take a bucket of Columbia river water and strain it through a cloth, we think he will make a discovery which will probably cause a doubt of the non-eating theory. Years ago while employed in teaching school on Sauvie's island, we noticed one of Hilt. Bonser's little girls straining a bucket of water (brought from the Col umbia for the school children to drink) through a cloth. . Our curiosity was aroused, as the water was to all appear ances, clear and pure, and we could not understand why it should be strained. We understood better when . she got through, for the cloth contained at least two tablespoons full of small perfectly transparent, jelly-like fish, each from a half to three quarters of an inch in length and shaped like a pike minnow. In the water they were perfectly invisible, yet they were there numerously. These we believe furnish food for the salmon on their run up the Columbia, and their absence in some of the tributaries cause the fish to seek other food. We imagine that these minature "water color" fishes would be easily digested, and that while furnishing the motive power to the salmon, their presence in its- stomach would easily escape detection. The total abstinence theory is untenable, and we believe that an examination of the subject will disclose the fact that the salmon find an abundance of food in the invisible little , "small fry," which the school children of Sauvie's island objected to in their drink. Alliance Objects. The object ofjthe Washington Farmers' Alliance as set forth in the constitution and by-laws is as. follows : To unite the farmers of the state for the promotion of their interest, socially, intellectually and financially. To secure the enactment of laws to regulate the inter-state commerce and to establish equitable relations between the people and the roads, making the rights and duties of each depend not upon ! doubtful discretion, but upon positive enactment. To secure the enactment and enforce ment of laws prohibiting the use of free passes by public officials. To demand that taxation, corporate and individual, shall be) equalized, to the end that the burdens of government may be equitably borne by all who en joy its protection. To urge such changes in the constitu- ! tion as may be necessary to make the office of United States senator elective, to the end these high offices may become really representative of the people and cease to be representative merely of state and capital factions and state capital bargains. The scope and purposes of the Far mers' Alliance, it will be observed are broad. No question which affects the agricultural interests of the country, whether social, intellectual, financial or economic side, is foreign to it. It real izes and urges the necessity of an educa tion for our boys and girls which shall be based on moral, intellectual and man ual training and shall inculcate the essential dignity and necessity of honest labor. It recognizes the fact no calling requires a broader range of prastical thought and training than does the suc cessful farming of today. It feels that no farmers home can afford to be with out a liberal supply of the best moral, scientific, agricultural and political litera ture of the times. It feels that with such Bupply, and by means of intelligent discussion of those topics, it , will be possible to make every farmer's home a school house, every mother a teacher, inculcating a home training, shall retain the boys and girls on the farm by mak ing farm life desirable in an economic sense, as well as satisfying to the higher social and intellectual demands which the young do, and the old should, cher ish. It urges and provides for the dis cussing questions of broad, methods of treatment, cost of production, facilities of transit and exchange, supply and de mand, and a host of others which the quickened thought of the times is press ing upon the attention of all who desire to keep abreast of the world's progress, Soap made from corn is promised. uowaouuuniiwuiniiwag. ' "Well, boss, I wants to get job," be aid. "What is your business?" The old negro drew himself np to his full height and answered: "Ise been de proprietor ob de New leans ' Piccynne fo twenty years." "Oh, you have been proprietor of The New Orleans Picayune for twenty years, have you?" "Yes, Bah." "Well, I suppose you wrote the editor ials then." "Oh, no, sah; we had de editors for to dodat." "Yes? Perhaps, then, you gathered the news?" ' "No, sah, de reporters did dat." "Yon read the proof then, very likely." "Oh, no, no, no, sah, we had de proof readers for to do dat." The editor became amused at the old darky, and determined to see in what position his boasted proprietorship would land him, so he questioned him in re gard to the various positions right down the list, and still his function remained undiscovered. "Well," he was finally asked, "what was your position?" ' He hesitated a moment and then an swered in the most impressive voice he could command: 'Til tell you what, boss, if you wants to get some one to oil de joints ob you engine down sta'rs, I ken do it better dan any man in town." New York Tribune. ' George W. Chllds on Vocation. My rule has been to follow faithfully that line of business for which I felt the consciousness of being adapted. In this view I selected the newspaper, and. to it I devote my time and talents. I follow out the one line of business pursuit rather than engage in many. A few days ago certain gentlemen came to me to ask me to engage with them in the line of banking. "I am not a banker," said L "I am a newspaper man." "But," they persisted, "we do not ask for your time, but only your name, and the use of your name to us will be worth $100,000 a year to yon." I did not, how ever, accede to their request. I had no inclination to engage with them in the pursuit of banking, because it was out Bide of my line, and having more than enough money to meet my modest neces sities, and without a child in the world, I did not feel like taking $100,000 each year for doing nothing to earn it. The great trouble with mankind is to stick to that pursuit of which they have knowledge. Some men get strangely mixed np. I happen to know a banker in this town, with good general informa tion, but with no aptitude for banking. Yet he plods along in his line, acquiring nothing, you may say, and at times the necessities of his business have com pelled him to raise money on the family plate. Now, he is out of his line, and will fail, probably, until he finds that which is his real bent and gravitates to it Interview in Cincinnati Enquirer. Books Made of Clay. Far away beyond the plains of Meso potamia, on the banks of the river Tigris, lies the ruins of the ancient city of Nine veh. Not long since huge mounds of earth and stone marked the place where the palaces and walls of the proud capital of the great Assyrian empire stood. The spade and scraper, first of the French and then of the English, have cleared all the earth away and laid bare all that re mains of the old streets and palaces where the proud princes of Assyria walked and lived. . The gods they worshiped and the books they read have all been revealed to the sight of a wondering world. The most curious of all the curious things preserved in this wonderful man ner are the clay books of Nineveh. The chief library of the city was contained in the palace of Kanyunjik. The clay books which composed its contents were sets of tablets covered with very small letters. The tablets are all oblong in shape, and when several of them are used for one book the first line of the tablet following was written at the end of the one pre ceding it. The writing was done when the clay of the tablet was soft; it was then baked to harden it. Each tablet was numbered just as librarians of today number the books of which they have charge. St. Louis Republic. The Abase of Letter. The way the letter "a" is being dis torted and abused nowadays is shameful. Judging from the pronunciation affected by actors and anglomaniacs the poor little letter has only one sound, and that the mushy la de da Italian variety, des ignated in Webster's Dictionary by two little dots over the vowel. I went to a theatre the other night, and heard a girl sing a song in which she had something to say about a mash she called it "mosh" and a hat, which she pro nounced as we do the adjective applied to the business end of a poker in active use. In the course of her ditty she had occasion to use the words man, grand, fashion, habit, and answer, dash and mantel, all of which she pronounced in the same manner. I would like to know where this thing is going to end. Inter view in St. Louis Globe-Democrat. A Terrible Task. Dolly Have you spoken to papa about our our engagement? Cholly Yeth, and he t wealed me with pawsitive bwntality. Dolly Poor, dear boyt What did he Bay? Cholly Said he'd have nothing to do with a fellah that couldn't thwink for himself. The ideal Thwinking is such beastly, common, hard ' -work. Pitta burg Bulletin. . . Water which contains impurities will turn milky white when nitrate of silver is dissolved in it If "chemically pure" there will be but a trifling discoloration. Have on hand a lot of Fir and Hard Wood. Also a lot of ORDERS FILLED PROMPTLY. Office corner Third and Union Streets, SNIPES &. KENERSIiEY, Wholesale ani Retail Druggists. Fine Imported, Key West and Domestic . CIGARS. (AGENTS FORI EST'D tiF 1862. (J.E. BiYAD JO., Heal Estate, Insurance, and Loan AGENCY. Opefsk House Bloek,3d St. -FOR- Carpets ami Furniture, CO TO PRINZ & NITSCHKE, And be Satisfied as to QUALITY AND PRICES. W. E. GARRETSON, Leailiag Jeweler. - SOLE AGENT FOB THK All Watch Work Warranted. Jewelry Made to Order. 138 Second St., The Dalle, Or. REMOVAL. H. Glenn has removed his office and the office of the Electric Light Co. to 72 Washington St. l '-t?:.-.r,.",L J 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 Xake, a distance of over twe hundred miles. ' THE LARGEST The rich grazing country of the the Cascades furnishes pasture for thousands of sheep, the wool from which finds market here. 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, apples, pears. prunes, cherries etc., are unsurpassed. ITS PRODUCTS. The salmon fisheries are the finest on the Columbia, 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 city in Eastern Oregon. . Its situation is unsurpassed! Its climate delight ful! Its possibilities incalculable! Its resources limited! And on these corner stones she stands. : For the Best Brands and Purest Quality of Wines and Liquors, go to : JO. MMCK, Ul?ole5ale : Ijquor : Dealer, 171 SECOND STREET, S. L. YOUNG, (Successor to E.' BECK.) -DEALER IN- watches; clocks, Jewelry, Diamonds, SMEflWflHE, :-: ETC Watches, Clocks and Jewelry Repaired and Warranted. 165 Second St.. The Dalles, Or. John Pashek, IQerCiiaoj Tailor. Third Street, Opera Block. Madison's Latest System, ' Used in cutting; garments, 'and a fit guaranteed each time. Repairing and Cleaning Neatly and Quickly Done. the Middle Columbia, and city. WOOL MARKET. along the eastern slope original wool shipping 5,000,000 pounds being is tributary to any other es unAJ THE DALLES, OREGON. The successful merchant is the one who watches the mar kets and buysto the best advan tage. The most prosperous family is the one that takes advantage of low prices. The Dalles MERCANTILE 00., Successor to BROOKS & BEERS. will sell yon choice Groceries and Provisions OF ALL KINDS, AND 4aidauate AT MORE EEASONABLE9 BATES THAN ANT OTHER PLAC8 ' IN THE CITT. REMEMBER we deliver all pur chases without charge. 390 AND 394 SECOND STREET. FINE FARM TO RENOT. THE FARM KNOWN AS THE "MOORE Farm" situated on Three Mile creek about two and one-half miles from The Dalles, wilUafcf leased for one or more years at a low rent to C a responsible tenant This farm has upon good dwelling house and necessary out build ings, about two acres of orchard, aborft three hundred acres under cultivation, a large portion of the land will raise a good volunteer wheat crop in lil with ordinarily favorable weather. The farm is well watered. For terms and particu lars enquire of Mrs. Sarah A. Moore or attheWTioa of Mays, Huntington fc Wilson, The Dalles Or. SARAH A. MOORE, Executrix.