The Dalles Daily Chronicle. OREGON. Entered t the Poatomce at The Dalles, Oregon, an second-class matter. 8TATK OFPICIAI.8. governor 8. Pennover Secretary of State . W. lieBride Treasurer PhlUlp Metschan Bupt of Public Instruction E. B. McKlroy ' enatora 3- N- D'Ph enaiora jj h. Mitchell Congwwman B, Hermann 8tate Printer : . . . . Frank Baker COUNTY OFFICIALS. County Judge...... : C. N. Thorubury Sheriff D. I- Catea Clerk :...'.... ...1. B. Crossen . Treasurer Geo. Kuch " Commissioner. J rV.nk'TtSSfd Assessor . John E. Baruett Surveyor K. F. Sharp . ttnperintendent of Public Schools. . .Troy Hhelley Coroner William MicheU EXTRAVAGANCE IN RAILROAD MANAGEMENT. It is a poor compliment to the manage . merit of the Union Pacific Railway Co., that 120 cars of -wheat, on an average ; are daily shipped from the Walla Walla country to eastern markets and the shippers ot that wheat-arej-able to pay-; tnree centa-per DtraneT more for it than can the buyers for the Portland market. In other words, the Union Pacific exact . three cents per bushel more for carrying wheat from Walla Walla to Portland, a distance of about two hundred miles, than does the Northern Pacific for carrying it t nearly ten times that distance. Is it possible that the Northern Pacifie are doing this business for the pleasure of taking it from . the hands of the Union Pacific, or is the Union Pacific simply choking its own throat in an attempt to swallow all the profits of wheat raising? With a country, naturally tributary to this road which, with the least encourage ment in the world, can give it all the freight btmmeHH it can handle with double its present rolling, stock, with a people to deal with who are not less in telligent, enterprising and fair than the inhabitants of other states, it makes no effort to encourage settlement within its . natural territory, and is regarded by its patrons as their most powerful enemy and unmerciful master. The entire population along the portions of its road in Oregon and Washington are today aroused as never before to resist what neems to thein the efforts of this corpo ration to drive tliem from their farms and their homes. Their apprehensions may be and perhaps are overdrawn in a measure, but the plain, indisputable fact nevertheless remains that its rates are " disproportionate to those of other roads and that little or no profit ia left to the producers when their products are marketed. So strong has become the feeling against the company that when it appears an a litigant liefore the courts ' the average jury of farmers can not be , led to see any merit in its claim, and it is notorious that all that is necewary for- tu opposing party is. to make a case sufficiently strong to go to the jury in order to prevail. So strong is the feeling that the company are capable of injustice alone, that most men deem it entirely ' legitimate to avail themselves of any and every opportunity to get even ; to steal from the company and to aid others in stealing from it, are deemed proper means of revenge with men otherwise honest ; in fact it has about as few friends -among its patrons as had the secession ists in New England when Sumpter fell. This condition of affairs may be a necess ary result of operating a railroad but we do not understand why it should be so . any more than in the carrying on of any. other large enterprise. Under the present exactions upon producers of this country there is nothing to encourage the further settlement of the country and i the absence of such settlement the business of the road can not increase ; the bitter prejudice and enmity will .grow until a union among the producers is cemented strong enough to enable them to open the Columbia to naviga tion and thus break the bonds in which this company now holds the commerce of the country. - Our friends at Hood River send up a bitter wail over the death of the Cas cade county bill, and take occasion to censure Representative Johnston and some of our citizens most severely be cause of their opposition. We plead Kilty to the change, that the.; people of the eastern portion of the county op posed the bill, and we presume a consid erable portion of the inhabitants of the territory of the proposed new county would do the same. It was the opposi tion of the people of Cascade Locks com bined with the general feeling in the legislature against the creation of new counties that defeated the bill. Had we of The Dalles maintained an armed neu trality, he opposition of the people of Cascade Locks would have killed the bill ; and had not the sentiment of the people of The Dalles been grossly mis represented by the Hood River advo catesjof the bill it is probable that no direct opposition would have been made here. We think the people of what would have been Cascade county have themselves and not Representatives Johnston and Welch, or our citizens, to thank that Cascade .county is not a countv. ' In selecting ex-Governor Chas. Foster of Ohio for the treasury iortfolio, Presi dent Harrison has reaffirmed his belief in the general principles of the Republi can party. Foster in a strong advocate of a protective tariff and is a representa- tive republican . in ' all other respects, He is a firm, conservative- financier and his appointment gives assurance that the policy of his predecessor will be closely followed. : . '.'""- '''-V v..' . From Pendleton and Walla Walla to Astoria the proposition to open the river by a private corporation results 'with strong encouragement. This Is the only sure method of getting the work done within the.next decade. As long as the railway companies can obstruct legisla tion, as they now seem to be able to do, the river will remain obstructed. ". ' HOW TO RUN A NEWSPAPER. Chicaoo. Feb. 11. Judge Blodgett has on hearing in the United States Dis trict Court a litigation to determine what part of the capital stock of the Chicago Times is fraudulent. . The case is a relic of the time when James J. West ran a brief but brilliant course as editor Kof the pajer'. i ' . Among tlic evidence introduced today was an interesting letter written bv West to one of the stockholders during the following extract is taken as show ing the policy of the editor : . , ..It is the-province of a newspaper to make them fear -rather than to make them love. A goody-goody paper won't fay and never has paid. What I would ike to do here is to raise hell from- one end of this city to the other, and that is the best way to win friends and make them useful to us. -. My wife saya-l have no friends except those-- who are.' afraid to be my enemies..".: : i ;: Oregon 'has a few eontftiiVptible repre sentatives of this same red-eyed style of newspaper pirates, but they . only flour ish where they can draw sustenance from the lower levels of humanitr. GOOD LORD DELIVER US. Portland Oregonian. The legislature ought to have author ized the construction of a portage rail way at The Dalles. Had it enacted a proper ' assessment law, this railway cuum nave Deen nmii ana tne state would not have felt the outlay. The next legislature could have ordered the construction of a transfer boat, which Could be built in ninety days, and the proDiem wouia nave been solved. But where one. .member was ready . to urge immediate action, two or three were always, at hand to fill every , proposition fnll of obstacles. No spur to action was sharp enough to'overcome the stolid . re sistance of inertia and hesitation, the customary disposition and inclination to postponement and delay. But the de mand for this measure is not to be silenced. It will increase to a storm, will rise to whirlwind, and will sweep all before it. A beeinninsr of this work a work that the people willsurelv Mnstst on till they get it ought to have been maae now. . 1 ostponement of it has onlv thrown forward a most disturbing factor into coming elections. THE KESULT. Rrsme of the Work ' Don ly the Late Legislator. ' Portland . Welcome. " 17lk tV WMnV Viurlif tha liutul.i(i1Ma x . - -f. - - . " vcimatiuc ll 1 .1 aniii.ta OT 1.. : ... ' eral laws, and 133 special laws, eighty three of the latter being incorporation laws. Altogether 535 bills were intro duced. During the last day of the ses sion . the senate acted upon fiftv-nine bills and the house sixty-one Mr. Tongue's assessment and taxation, bill, I'luiiuiuj; iw a, jiaie ixmri oi .equaliza tion. WSLH T-if'Tl Ul (1 o.i.l ....... ,,..1 1 1 ' " . . . Ullll J ..--!. V I I both houses at midnight. The approp' riations, which are to be raised bv a general tax during the next two vears, amounts to 1 .21.V439 sa r. i-V.ir.v." - - 7 - ' - V VI 111V11 . Ollill 1,014,032.53 is included in the general appropriation Dili. ine agricultural college gets $28,400; , the state capitol for a dome, etc., $80,000; the portage railway at the Cascades $00,000; the state board of charities and corrections, $10,000; the state militia $16,000; librarv penitentiarv. K1.000: offirm f nttimol- general $6,000, , Among the most im portant laws enacted are those providing for till A nstmlinn- Hallit .i... . 1 . ........... MMlWb OTOKUi 111 1 state board of equalization ; the portage v..v .... V-V , uiuuujig iiiic; state into two congressional districts, and others which we have not . space to name. The state treasurer reports that the sum of $90,000 will be in . the o per cent., fund for internal improvements, March 1, 1893. Now there is but '$36, 389.12. This is the fund -from which the .omnibus wagon-road appropriation bill($127,000,) is to draw ta sustenance. OKKAT KEJOICtNCS. r m strict Attorney iiitfm rnrllmil . Some Points. The Oregonisn. ,-'.' . District A ttnrnf.tr Vilinn if IV ..u lountj-, registered at the Perkins yester- uaj muraing ana was seen Dy a reporter. The Dalles, he says, are jubilant over passage .by the legislature of the bill ap- .viiwuig Wfvw iui tne purcage rail way there. There is considerable disap pointment that the Raley bill providing for another at Celilo failed to pass, as u would have relieve! . o-t- f tnanr noA. pie. The measure passed, however, he says will prove an inestimable boon to the farmers there. Even if the new mad dncta lint. fa.rrv mnMi fviKf ... 1 1 .. ... i, nil. operate to reduce the railroad tariff, frayely needed. A toll of twelve cents a ushel.on wheat was - more than the farmers could successfully cope .with. Business at The Dalles has been pretty quiet of late, but there is a general ex pectation that everything will open up in the spring, and that trade will resume us won iea activity. Victim of Accidental Shooting;. HoodKiver, Or., Feb. 21. Newton, aged 13 years, the son of Dr. E. J. Thomas, was shot in the head accident ally this afternoon at 4 o'clock, dying at 7. Several boys playing on the railroad bridge had a 22-calibre gun. In scuffling for its possession the gun was discharged, the bullet striking the Thomas boy in the left temple. To Oregon belongs the honor of being the first state or territory on the Pacific coast to have a Masonic lodge establish ed within its borders. To Olvmpia the honor of establishing the first lodge of Odd Fellows, and Walla Walla comes next. A Hint t Ballnoada. The Listener saw a sight the other day which has moved him to BMkg protest. On the Back By, at the -oossiag of the Boston and Albany mad PawJdeno-aail-road tracks, a gang ot men were engaged in boning np a lot at nUrd ties. Evi dently the tie made capital fuel, for the fire at crackling1 raerrOy. , .They were evidently disraed bnt by ne meaaa rotten. Of cornea the railroad wtmld not venture to keep - tie m plaee on tba roadbed until they were rotten. The IJetewer ha often aeen ties burning on the traoka near the city, but never before ao far within the city itself, and aeto&lly witfam a short atone' throw of the homes of the poor people who would have been only too glad to relieve the railroad oor porstkm of every stick of their dieuaed ties at an hoor'a notice. - Did it ewer occur to yoo, Meaer. Bail road Saperinteodecto or Direotore, or whoever ia nepoiadble for thie destruc tion of good fuel, that your old tie would give at least a little warmth to a good many households that have had none, oz next to none, through all this cruel weather? There would be no need of advertising for people to come and take the ties; every laborer among the num ber who wsrk at th task of destroying them most know familiee- wh would be glad enough to get them. The railroad could actually save money by giving th wood away. Boston Transcript. , v. -. . A Vmael ta Two TmrUi. ' ', A Teasel oanairncted on the ahores of Lake .-Michigan waa recently .floated down to the sea in two sections. The course was through the Welland canal, down Lake Ontario and oh to Montreal, which was reached in eleven days. The after section of the ship, containing the machinery, had steam in one. boiler and backed at the rate of seventy revolution per minute, teaming stern first, while the forward section followed in charge of two tags. On arriving at Montreal the two sections were placed, on greased ways in a dry dock, and when the parts were closed in upon each other the bntta eame together so closely that a knife blade could not be inserted between the plates. The re-riveting waa accomplish ed with facility iu the usual way, and the vessel waa floated out of tfaadocki complete hull, defying the eye of any ex pert to tell where the junction had been made. New York Commercial Adver tiser. . UadoaSi Kia;h Death BU. -Not for a long period has the death rate, in London been so alarming as it waa last week, when, owing to the fog and cold combined, 'it reached the high figure of 26 per 1,000. Thia is an in-1 ereaee of 5 or 6 per 1,000 on the returns for recent weeks, and how great the leap is may be judged from the fact that jn recent years the rate has averaged only about 19 per -1,000. The weather has chiefly Affected those with; weak lungs. The registrar general shows that deaths from diseases of the respiratory organs increased by nearly 800 during the week, and reached, the unusual total of .758, or nearly 80Q more . than the av erage .for thia time of year. The mor tality is not so great in London as in Preston, where the death rate has gone up in a week from 33.2 per 1.000 to 61.8. But the average for the great towns is only 25.1, and London is on the wrong side of thai; figure. London News. . Bandaome Shade Troea. ; Orange trees in fall bearing are as nu merous as ordinary shade trees in the streets of some inland Florida cities and towns. It is a common sight- just now to see the sidewalks lined with trees well loaded with the golden fruit, which' no body takes the trouble to pluck. The oranges seem to be as large and fine aa any which command $2 per box in the orchards. The real reason why the fruit is neglected is that most of it is sour and' often bitter. Oranges which grow wild and which are not carefully cared for by a cultivator are poor fruit, and Florida people don't think it worth while to take them off the trees. But no sight could be more attractive to northern eyes than that of the public walks shaded by the deep green foliage of the orange trees, in which the ripe fruit glistens like apples or gold. new X or Sim. .. . - ' The. BaCtway to Victoria If jraaaa. Sir Francis de Win ton writes home that he hopes by May next to hare sixty miles of the projected railway from Mombasa to - the Victoria Nyansa com pleted. Of counua it is only narrow gauge railway, bnt it will prove of im mense service in taking caravans quickly over the desert and waterless coast re gion. - A road is also being made the whole way to the lake. . Father Le Boy, a Roman Catholic missionary, in a letter written from Mombasaa, states that the great drawback at Mombaasa is the want of water. Wells have to be sunk to an enprmeus depfcbJ-rP all MaU Ctoaette. ..''. .- . Tot Xhay Art FHanda. They met in Wall street and shook hands. "Delightful weather, this," said one; ''keen, bracing air, you know. By the way, who was that young fellow 1 saw in your office yesterday?" -. ''That? Oh, that waa my keen bracing heir braced me for a hundred, and waa keen enough to get it, too." And yet that night at the Windsor they seemed to be as friendly aa ever. New York Times. - - James Garfield, the second son of Presi dent' Garfield, was recently married at Chicago to Miss Helen Newell, daughter of John Newell, president of the -Lake Shore and Michigan railroad. Mr. Oar field was graduated with his brother Harry at Williams college in 1885. Lord Salisbury is the hardest worked member of the English government. Rarely has the foreign office had so much business on hand, and Lord Salisbury has been reading and writing dispatches twelve to fourteen hours a day for weeks. What to do with the vast quantity of silk now lying unsold at Yokohama is a topic which engages the attention of not only business men, but financiers in gen eral. The quantity of silk thus detained is put at nearly 30,000 bales. NoticetoFuel Consumers HAIER MM ; ' Have on hand a lot of 1 Fir and : L Hard Wood. ' ' " " ' '; Also' a 'lot of ' ' '" ". '.""' " ORDERS FILLED PROMPTLY. Office corner . ' Third and Union Streets, &Ntp-ES & E33SJTERSLEY, Fine Imported, Key West and Domestic ; . (AGENTS FORI mSTD f'-V 1863 d. e. bYar;d xv do., Heal Estate, : : . v , n t-.l ' .' ' . i- v . insaFanee,:' j and Iioan AGENCY. Opera House Bloek,3d St. Dissolution Notice. NOTIOK IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE , n PartnerahJp heretofore exixtln between J. C yd' M- Pnd - D Doane, M. U., under the Arm name of Drs. Boyd & Uoane, bax been din solved by mutual connent. -iKfCCta?58 b?loi,Klli? the late Bnu are P"b.le..to,Rr- Boy"1- Those to whom we are Indebted will please present their bill at once to either Dr.. Boyd or Dr. Ione. Tha Dalle,'Or.,Feb. 2, 1891. O. JI..DOANE. Notice of Final Settlement.," NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE undersigned, administratrix of the estate h!..i. mtth,, deceased, has tiled her Hnal account, an4 that Tuesday, March 3d, 1891, nVii,C)S?k & M the court room in iJ.ai1Clty'i)reKoni haB beea dulY appointed as h Ke 4tnd place 'or "earing said final account ?f bJ!ctl?.nstotheHame' Vn" there be, aud the final settlement thereof. ' TJ?iS.J,otlce Is published by the order of Hon. r """'""O-. county Judge of Wasco Clounty, 0reron- LAURA SMITH, Administratrix of said Estate. Executors Notice. !. 2il ".n,d testaments of Ianiel Handlev. deceased. All person-rhaving ciiim Tagainst the a lffhd if" -re Fequired to present "!'. with the proper vouchers, within six th? Jra y ate, to the undersigned at thte Oregon y' ""fnK100 Wilson, The Dalles, Dated January 2, 1891. - G FORGE A. UEBE. ' . J- W. FRENCH, . KATE HANDLKY, . '. -- - - Executors. W. E; GARRETSON, Leading-?-Jeweler. SOLE AGENT FOB THE AM Watch Work Warranted. Je-welry Made to Order. 138 Second Ht., The Dallas, Or. Wholesale aid -Retail" Drnkists. ;The; Gate City of the Inland Empire is situated at the head of nayigation on the' Middle Coltunbia, and is a thriving, prosperous city. 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 tW hundred miles. THE .IiARG-EST 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. D?Iles is the gest 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 Xlickital 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? countrv than is t-ri'hTitn.ftr - citv in Eastern Oregon. . : tits, situation is unsurpassedr; Its climate deliffhtl fuLT Its possibilities incalculable! Its resources -n-nl limited! And on these corner stones she stands. S. L. YOUNG, (Successor to TE. BECK'.)' - DEAI-ER IN- WATCHES, CLOCKS, Jewelry, Diamonds, SILVERWARE, :-: ETC. Watches, Clocks and Jewelry Repaired and Warranted. 165 Second St.. The Dalles, Or.' -FOIt- Gamets and FDmiture, CO TO PRINZ & NITSCHKE, And be Satisfied aa t QUALITY AND PRICES. REMOVAL. H. Glenn has removed his oflice and the office of the Electric Light Co. ; to 72 Washington St. ; DALLES y l WOOL MARKET. -j w mmj vvAAVA fr 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. Tine Dalles MERCANTILE CO., 8ncceHor to BROOKS & BEERS. ' will sell you choice , Groceries and Provisions OF ALL KINDS, AND . AT MORE KKA90KABLE8 RATES . THAN' ANY OTHER PLACE . , . IX THE CITY. REMEMBER we deliver all pur chases without charge. . 390 AND 394 SECOND STREET. John Pashek, jllerc W 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 TO REN THE FARM KNOWN AS THKnMOORE Farm" situated on Three MUe'croek about two and one-half miles from The Dallex, will be leased for one or moreyears at a low rent to any responsible tenant. This farm has upon it a eood dwelling house end necessary out build ings, about two acres of orchard, about three hundred acres under cultivation, a large portion of the land will raise a good volunteer wheat crop in 1891 with ordinarily favorable weather. The farm is well watered. For terms and particu lars enquire of Mrs. Sarah A. Moore or at the office of Mays, Huntington Sc Wilson, The Dalles, Or. SAKAH A. MOORE, Executrix