The Dalles Daily Chronicle. THE DALLES OREGON. Entered at the Postofnce at The Dalles, Oregon, an second-class matter. STATE OFFICIALS. tSovernor S. Pennover BeCTetary of State O. V. McHrlde Treasurer. .. Phillip Metschan Supt. of Public Instruction. .E. B. MoElroy enators Congressman State 1'rinter (J. N. Dolph . J. H. Mitchell B. Hermann Frank Buker COUNTY OFFICIALS. County Judge C. N. ThornburT Sheriff D. 1. Cates Clerk J. B. tjrosseii Treasurer Ueo. Kuch Commissioners IS-nnS-ld Assessor..... John E. Burnett Surveyor. E. F. Sharp Superintendent of Public Schools. . .Troy Shelley Coroner William Michell MR. HERMA NN A T WORK OX THE CASCADE LOCKS. The river and harbor bill had a hear ing last Friday in the committee room, through the' effort of Mr. Hermann who prevailed on the speaker to call the committee on rivers and harbors together for the purpose of considering Mr. Dolph's hill appropriating the total estimated amount necessary for the completing the work at the mouth of the Columbia and the Cascade locks and canal. The limited time of the remaining congress precludes the possibility of getting the appropriation through, but in veiw of this Mr. Hermann thought it more prac ticable to submit a substitute authoriz ing contracts to be made at once ior the entire completion of the work. Mr. Hermann said similar bills had been reported on favorably by this committee, and to pass this by without favorable recommendation would be a grave dis courtesy to this senate bill and an unjust treatment of one of the great waterways of this country, and explained at length the importance of immediate action in this matter which does not directly make an appropriation but expedites the great work through the systems of contracting for the material and entire work. Mr. Hermann was authorized by the com mittee to make a favorable report to the house. The substitute provides that the contracts shall not exceed $1 ,872,000 for the mouth of the river, and $815,000 for the Cascade locks and canal. The un expended funds of the last appropriation, together with the amount asked in Mr. Dolph's bill is believed to be sufficient to complete this great work at the Cascades if done by contract, at an early day. Mr. Hermann is very confident if he can get a recognition in the house for the considering of the substitute it will be favorably acted on as the river and harbor bill is the ouly one that harmon izes all sections and unites all rival interests. NOTABLE DEAD. One more of the great. leaders in the war for the maintenance of the union have joined the millions, who, "since first the flight of years began have laid them down in their last sleep." Ad miral David Dixon Sorter died suddenly at his home in Washington on the 13th inst. A son of a naval officer, distin guished in our history, he used well the opportunities offered him by the civil war to render efficient service to his country and thereby endeared himself to the loyal people of the nation. His services in conjunction with General Grant at Vicksburg were essential to the latter's success and Grant never lost an opportunity to show his appreciation of the assistance he there received. In many respects an abler man than his associate; Faragut, he lacked the moral courage and frank honest nature which so endeared the latter to the American people. The committees appointed .by' the legislatures of Washington and Oregon to devise some plan of action for portage railways at The Dalles and Cascades, met at the Hotel Portland Friday even ing and again on Saturday. The sub stance of their work was a decision that neither state could assist the other on account of legal difficulties. We very much regret this decision, for we believe that the interests of both states demand that joint action should betaken to in sure the overcoming of these obstructions. We suggest in lieu of any other plan that each state appropriate, say $100,000, as a bonus to the first individual or corpora tion that will undertake the construction and operation of a portage road from Celilo . to The Dalles, the recipient of these endowments or gifts to give satis factory bonds "to each etate that it wDl build within . a certain time and will operate the road or roads upon prescribed terms for- a . certain length of time or until the permanent improvements are completed by the United States. East ern Oregon and Washington are in dead earnest about this matter and with some Buch aid a company would be organized at once to build the portages. , - . One of the most important events in the political history of Oregon is the passage of the Australian ballot law, which has passed both houses and been signed by the governor. This is a long leap in the right direction. We may lose a portion of our population, the professional ward strikers, who will be forced to seek employment elsewhere, but we will hope to make up the loss before the next census farce is put on the stage and we believe the loss will not seriously effect the money market. THE DEAD HERO. ' William Tecumseh Sherman, ex-general of the army of the United States, was born in Lancaster, Ohio in 1820. His father one of the judges of the supreme court of Ohio, died in 1829 and William was educated in the family of the Hon. Thomas Erwing until he had reached the age of 16, when he went to West Point, and graduated In 1840 ;' he then entered the U. S. Army, and was pro moted to the rank of first lieut. in 1841. He acted as assistant adjutant general, in 1847, and obtained a breyit of captain in the regular army from May, 1848, for meritorious services in California during the war with Mexico. He was appoint ed commissary of subsistence in 1850, served at St. Louis and New Orleans, but finding his pay inadequate to support his family, resigned his ' commission September 6th, 1853, and removed to San Francisco when he was a partner in a bank till 1858, when he returned to St. Louis and was elected superintendent of the Louisana State Mlllitary Institution, which position he resigned when the Civil War began. After the. fall of Fort Sumpter he was commissioned colonel of fhe 13th infantry, and comnanded the 3rd brigade at the unfortunate battle of Bull Run, on the 21st of July 1861. On the reorganization of the National army, Colonel Sherman was made brigadier general of volunteers, and accompanied General Anderson to Kentucky, where he succeeded him temporarily in com mand, until at his own request he was relieved by General Buell, and was or dered to Missouri. In the early part of 1862, he was appointed to the command of a division under General Grant, and acted with great bravery at the battle of Sliiloh on the 6th of April ; he was pro moted to the rank of major general on the 1st day of May, and . when the de partment of Tennessee was formed, in December, he was made commander of the lofli army corps. At the end of that month, he led an expedition to Vicks burg, but the works were too strong to be taken by assault, and he was obliged to withdraw his troops, after a severe fight. He commanded the wing of the army that captured Fort Hindman, Ar kansas, January 10th, 1863, after which he resumed command of the 15th army corps ; took part in the siege of Vicks burg, which capitulated July 3rd 1863, and led the expedition which captured Jackson City July 10th. When General Grant was placed in command of the army previously under General Rosencrantz, he gave the com mand of the department of the Tennes see to General Sherman, who encoun' tered General Longstreet, and obliged him to retreat, November 20th, ' and in February, 1864, made his expedition to Meridian, Mississippi, and broke up that important railroad center, driving Gen eral Polk's army out of Mississippi, Having been charged with the command of the army in Georgia, May 4th 1864, he commenced the expedition through that state, which ended in .the capture of Atlanta, the capital city. . General Hood thrice attacked the Fed eral army, and was repulsed, sustaining considerable loss. After his third fail ure, General Hood acted merely on the defension in i Atlanta, which fell into the hands of the Nationals in the beginning of September. In October Hood began his movement towards Tennessee. Sherman followed him as far as Resacca, 75 miles,- drove him from the railroad, and then sent part of his army to Ten nessee to defend that State, and with the balance began his wonderful "March to the Sea," to act in concert with the Union army in Virginia against General Lee. The distance from - Atlanta to Savanah is 260 miles. General Sherman accomplished the march with very little loss in 23 days ; and Savannah fell into his hands December 21st; 1864. The news of its late capture was received with great rejoicing, not only because it showed how triumphant the campaign in Georgia had . been, but because it opened up the seaboard of the state,' and inflicted a heavy blow to the Confeder ate cause. General Sherman defeated the Confederate army of North Carolina at Bentonville, in that State, March 19th 1865, and soon afterwards paid a visit to General Grant, to concert those measures for the defeat of General Lee, which end ed in the submission of that general, and that of General J. E. Johnston, who surrendered his army to General Sher man, April 26th 1865, which was one of the closing actions of the war. General Sherman was promoted to the rank of lieut. general, of the army July 25th, 1866 ; and . succeeded to General Grant as general of the United ' States Army March 4th, 1869. General Sherman after the war, made his home at St. Louis, Mo., although he lived in New York at times ; never left the. chosen spot, only for a season, so attached to its environment he requested that his body be well away iri its dust with military -honors, a short time be fore he died. ' ' General Sherman was a great soldier, in the full meaning of the term, a man of stern and. determined character, whose force of will-power suffered no defeat in an undertaking as his march to the sea verified though it might, cost great loss, or sacrifice. - He was a man of strong impulses and unyielding in whatever he believed to be right. He was strongly attached to his friends, thongh his deportiwent led them to doubt his sincerity, but his enemies he hated with a bitter hatred, which no doubt was due to his excitability and morbid self-esteem Whether his soldiers loved him as they did General Grant is another thing, ' he was born a soldier and died one. .. $ - ' . "No morrow's boom, or sunset gun, ' - Or tramp of legions hnrrying on. Shall wake the land where he has gone." .. There are said to be those-who object to The Dalles portage railway bill on the ground that it will make taxes too high. But for what purpose can taxes better be paid? When the object is considered, an appropriation of $400,000 is but a bagatelle for the", state. Isn't it high time to crawl out of that old shell? A fair assessment will raise the valuation of the state to $250,000,000 and payment of $400,000 on such valuation will be easy enough. Of course the state has no money to be wasted, " but for a purpose like this it should have money in ample supply. Oregonian. t :. f. ; The amount of -money saved to the producer in Eastern Oregon in two years would build the portage road and the success of the farmers would be so great that land would be taken up and culti vated in so much larger quantities that the taxable property of this section would be more than doubled within the same time. The tax for the building of the road will never be felt so great would be the increase of the products of the farms. We believe, too, that as a speculation, it would pay the state to build the portage road, as the volume of business done by the road would soon make it a paying investment. The leg islature of this state should not quibble for co-operation with Washington, but march straight up to the work and pass the bill. Do not let this long suffering people wait two years longer for justice and remain at the mercy of a robler railroad corporation longer while relief is- so easy and so near at hand. The legislature has done well in passing one portage bill how let that body finish the grand work and it will receive the thanks of a people released from a worse than Egyptian bondage. ' One of the speakers at the mass meet ing Saturday' evening rejoiced over the ,paesageof the portage railway bill because we are "all in it ;" and the sentiment was expressed by others that The Dalles was in greater need of unity than of any other single commodity. If this has been true in the past it cannot be changed too quickly for our own good. No man can succeed alone in any community ; his success is limited only by his readiness to aid and to be aided by his fellow citi zens. Every citizen, when matters of public interest are at stake, owes much to his fellow citizens and if he is willing to stand by the community then his reward is certain- in matters of personal interest. The man or set of men who are ever seeking personal gain at the ex pense of the public interests ought to move where communities don't exist say Nevada. r . What is the matter with an electric motor portage road. The falls at Celilo or The Dalles will furnish the lightning and the expense of operating would be reduced to a minimum. Portraits of Christ. There is no portrait of Christ which can be pronounced authentic. The Jews were forbidden by their law to make likenesses, and so art, as we understand the word, scarcely had among them an existence. There are, however, two por traits which' have the merit of extreme antiquity, and were both probably made at some time in the First century. , The one ia cut on an emerald, the work pur porting to have been done by command of the Emperor Tiberius. The jewel was preserved in the treasury of Constanti nople, but in some way fell into the bands of the Turks beforethat city was taken ' by them, and about 1483 was given by the sultan to Pope Innocent VIII as a - ransom for the sultan s bro ther., . ... ! ,. -i . .. . The other portrait is on a fine brass medal discovered in Anglesea, Wales, in the year 1702.. . The workmanship is that of the First century, and a Hebrew in scription on the reverse declares the por trait to be that Of the prophet Jesus. The two portraits bear a close resem blance, but it is altogether probable that both are ideal, and that each followed the description of Christ given in . the well known but not well authenticated letter of Publius Leu talus. The napkin portrait . called St. Veronica's is much more modern, and is probably a copy of the emerald likeness. St. Louis Globe- Democrat. ; , , The stomach of a shark has for many years been supposed to be capable of di gesting anything he could swallow, no matter what the substance thereof, but he must now take a back seat. The juice of one jolly pineapple will dissolve ten pounds of tough beef, and dyspeptics and. pineapples will now .be boon com panions Detroit Free Press. -Competent to Judga. ' Little Johnnie had just returned from a star chamber meeting at which his mother had treated him to a. laying, on of slipper. Amid tears he turned to his little sister and said:., ''Don't , I wish grandpa - hadn't thrown', that ' slipper when ma got married.: -; She just throws It at me ever since." St. Joseph News. Mrm. W right's Bed Quilt Record. ' Mrs. Priscilla Wright has made twenty bed quilts since she was 90, and has just begun her twenty-first. - Quite-remarkable for an old lady. Plymouth (Mass.) Letter. . :. '.- Meerschaum is imported in boxes, say 30 inches in length, a foot wide and 15 or 18 inches high, and holds about 50 pounds. A. box costs from $75 to $200, and as high as $325. The price all de pends upon the quality. . . .The process of eating wellia a science. The food should not be bolted and hur ried into the stomach before it is ready to be placed there. . Notice to Fuel Consumers MrEi BEflTOJI, -- - ' - Have on hand a lot of Fir and " Hard Wood. Also a lot of ORDERS FILLED PROMPTLY. Office corner Third and Union Streets, SNIPES & KESTERSLEY, Wholesale and Retail Dniiists. Fine Imported, Key West and Domestic CIGARS. (AGENTS FORI CSTD 1862. & E. Bip(D CO., ... Heal Estate, Insurance, and Loan AGENCY. OpePaHouse Bloek, 3dSt. Dissolution Notice. NOTICIK IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE partnership heretofore existing between J. Ct. Boyd, M. D., and O. D.Donne, M. IX, under the firm name of Irs. Boyd & Ooane. has been dis solved by mutual consent. All accounts belonging to1 the late firm arc f livable to Dr. Boyd. Those to whom we are ndehted will please-present their bills at once to either Dr. Bovd or Dr. Daone. . J. G. BOYD. . The Dalles, Or., Feb. 2, isni.- .. D. DOAN'E. Notice of Final Settlement. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE undersigned, administratrix-of the estate of John Smith, deceased, has filed her final account, and that Tuesday, March ad, 18U1, at -2 o'clock P. M. at the county court room in Dalles City, Oregon, 1ms been duly appointed as the time and place for hearing said final account and objections to the same, if any there be, and the final settlement thereof. This notice is published by the order of Hon. C. fc. Thornbury, county judge of Wasco County, Oregon. LAURA SMITH, Administratrix of.said Estate. Executors Notice. OTICE is hereby given that the undersigned have been duiv HntwiintMi .v.ni ..s .i. " icsiamenis ot Daniel Handle-, deceased. All persons having claims against the estate of said deceased are required to present them, with the proper vouchers, within six months from this date, to the undersigned at the office of Mays, Huntington A Wilson, The Dalles. Oregon. ' Dated January 29, 1X91. GEORGE A. LIEUE, J. W. FRENCH, KATE HAN DLEY, '. Executors. W. E. GARRETSON, Leaill-?j'Jeweler. : SOLE AGENT FOR THE All Watch Work Warranted. Jewelry Made to Order. 138 Second St.. The Dalles, Or. THE DALLES. The Grate City of tlie Inland Empire 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, a distance of over twe hundred' miles. ' : t'lri 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 here. The Dalles is the largest original "wool shipping point in America, about 5,000,000 pounds being 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, 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 iruA i;m4J f A J ixi-u. lou.: A.J-LU. UJJ. LiieiSk) uomer stones sn sra.nns l S. L. YOUNG, (Successor to E.; BECK.) -DEALER IN- ins; CLOCKS, Jewelry, Diamonds, SILVERWARE, :-:ETG. Watches, Clocks and Jewelry Repaired and Warranted. 165 Second St.. The Dalles, Or. -FOR- Garpets and Furniture. CO TO PRINZ & NITSCHKE, And be Satisfied aa to QUALITY AND PBICES. REMOVAL. H. Glenn has removed his oflice and the office of the Electric Light Co. to 72 Washington St. the Middle Ctolumbia, and city. and all available storage 1 . , The successful merchant is the one who watches the mar kets and buystothe best advan tage. The most prosperous family is the one' that takes advantage of low prices. The Dalles MERCANTILE CO.. Successor to BROOKS & BEERS. will sell you choice Groceries and Provisions OF ALL KINDS, AND Haidixtaie AT MOKE REAgONABIES BATES THAN ANY OTHER PLACE IN THE CITT. REMEMBER we deliver all pur chases without charge. 390 AND 394 SECOND STREET. John Pashek, pierce 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. FINE FARM TQ RENT. THE FARM" KNOWN As'LrtE "MOORK Farm" situated on- Three Mile creek about two and one-ball mlU from The Dalles, will ba leased for one or morteCars at a low rent to any responxible tenant. This farm bar upon it a ?;ood dwelling house ud necessary out build ngs, about two acres of orchard, about three hundred acres under cultivation, a large portion of the land will raise a good volunteer whejtt crop in 1891 with ordinarily favorable weathqr. The farm Is well watered. For terms and particu lars enquire of Mrs. Sarah A. Moore or at the office of Mays, Huntington & Wilson, The Dalles, Or. SAJIAH A. MOORE, Executrix. ,