Czl. The Dalles Daily Chronicle. THE DALLKS OREGON. Entered at the Postofflce at The Dalles, Oregon, as second-class matter. STATE OFFICIALS. Governor S. Fennover Secretary of State tl. W. Mcltrlde Treasurer Phillip Metxchan Supt. of Public Instruction K. B. McKlroy frftWhell Congressman B. Hermann State Prluter Frank Baker COUNTY OFFICIALS. , County Judge. C. N. Thnrnburv Sheriff I). I Cute Clerk j J. B. C'rossen Treasurer ieo. Ruch Commissioner, cuid Assessor ..John F.. Burnett Surveyor E. F. Sharp Superintendent of Public Schools ... Troy Shellev Coroner William M ichell A CONGRESSMAN FROM EASTERN OREGON. Governor Pennoyer has received iifli cial notice of the new congressional ap portionment, whereby Oregon becomes entitled to a second representative. Since the death of Hon. Joseph Wilson of this city, Eastern Oregon has had no repre sentative at Washington. Many thnes since then our portion of the state has put forward men as capable as any in the state, but always with the same re sult. ' The political machinery of the state with both parties has centered in Portland and the western portion of the state hay disregarded our claims with impunity. The conditions have changed some during the past two years some what and during the next year or two a . greater change will be experienced. Our population and commercial importance are growing rapidly and we can a year hence, and will, speak with a voice that the western part of -the state cannot fail to hear." The party that names a candi date from Eastern Oregon will, we be lieve, elect him. Our interests are now : better defined, our needs are better un derstood and our desire for a representa tive from among us is greater than ever before. Politics will have less to do with the next election than with the last. With a new balloting law the sentiment of the people instead of the politician will find expression and will seak with no uncertain voice. The transportation problem will be the all absorbing ques tion and will unite the people bf bonds too strong for any political power. We do not wish to be understood as com plaining of our treatment at the hands of our present delegation in congress. They have done much for ns and the people throughout the Inland Empire both in Oregon and Washington appre ciate most highly their efficient service in all matters of interest to. the state. But we believe the lime has come hen, in all justice we are entitled to name one of the next representatives in con gress from this state. Let us stand firm and insist upon our just claim. The people of this country now look to The Dalles, Portland and Astoria Navi gation company to proceed with its or ganization and the construction of a steamer. The portage at the Cascades will be built notwithstanding the asser tion of its enemies and the skeptical gen erally that it will never be completed. We understand that over $30,000 have already been subscribed, and if this be true, the boat can be built. The boat built for the upper Snake river, to run from Huntington to Seven Devils mine. cost about $23,000 and is as large as is needed here. The same boat could lie built here for less money. The stock books of the company are still open and every property owner and business man in the city ought to have his name there It is a matter in which all are deeply interested. In 1889 the railroads of Kussia paid the government a net surplus of $77,500 000. Taking this aa a basis the railroads -of the United States would pay all the state and national taxes. India has 16, O00 miles of government railroads, mag nificent depots and iron telegraph poles. The poor working people of India average only seven cents a dav. The ra.ilrnu1 fare is only one-seventeenth of a cent per nine. to they can ride 119 miles for the price of a dav's labor. The price per day in the United States for iaoor is about $1.50. There is a wide difference between seven cents and $1.50; yet the American laborer can only ride about fifty miles for a dav's work. The citizen of India can ride sixty-nine miles further for the price of a day's work than the American citizen. The Pennoyer presidential boom is gaining considerable recognition in the East. Pennoyer may., yet become a prominent 'figure in national . nnlitw-a . i ui course ail patriotic Oregonians hope he may, and there is one thins certain ijf he does, he will be a credit to the ' piifty which puts him to the front. John L. Wilson, Washington's con gressman, wires from the national capitol that he is sincerely in favor of an open river. His father defeated D. W. Voor hees in Indiana, for congress. He de feated Voorhees' son for congress in Washington. Some people seem ' to think the Farmer's Alliance a mushroom organiza tion, and yet it has just held its eleventh : annual national convention at Omaha. For the first time,-the United States last year produced more pig-iron than Great Britain. THE FOKTAGE ROAD. Oregon's Senators Again Say. Congress Will Do Nothing;. Wahhixotox, Feb. 23. Senator Dolph received today an official telegram, ad dressed to the delegation, from the sec retary of the state of Oregon. It em bodies the house concurrent resolution adopted by the legislature of Oregon the 18th inst., requesting the senators and representatives of Oregon to present to congress the appeal of the people of the state for a sufficient appropriation at the present session of congress for the con struction of a portage railroad at The Dalles, to be maintained until the com pletion of a permanent improvement to overcome the obstructions at said point. The resolution also requests them to use their utmost efforts to secure at the present, session such an appropriation, and a further appropriation for a perma nent improvement: at The Dalles bv means of a boat railway. Senator Dolph said that he understood from this tele gram that the bill which had been intro duced in the state legislature to appro priate a sum sufficient to construct a portage railroad at The Dalles had failed, and he was very sorry for it. The state, he said, should have undertaken the work, and the fact that the people of vjregon were matting enorts to neip rneni selves would have helped the delegation to secure a liberal appropriation from congress for a permanent improvement. He is afraid the members of the legisla ture had not understood the situation in congress, and the difficulties which em barrassed, any effort to induce congress to enter upon the new work of construct ing portage or other railroads. After consulting with Senator Mitchell, there being but one copy of the resolution, they concluded that the resolution should be presented in the hous e by Mr. Her mann. Thev said the senate had al ready done all and more than was asked for by the legislature, and all that it could do in the premises. It had passed bills making appropriations of the whole amount reqnired for the construction and completion of the lxat railway and the completion of the canal and locks at the Cascades, and of the improvements at the mouth of the Columbia. Every thing, he said, now depended upon the action of the house, which had all these bills before it and could modify them in any manner desired. It had the identi cal proposition for a portage railroad before it by an amendment of the boat railway bill. Both senators said that they had repeatedly presented to the members of the house committee on rivers and harbors the necessitv for im mediate relief of the people of Oregon by opening the Columbia river, and urged action uxn the senate bills. They had sought an opportunity to present the matter to the committee formally, and they would continue their efforts to se cure the consideration of the bills now in the house. Should the house pass any one of the senate bills now before it, modified as to the amount, or so as to provide for a portage road, they would do their utmost to secure favorable con sideration in the senate. The whole matter rested with the house, so far as this congress was fonoerned. Representative Hermann savs that he has secured a favorable report'upon the portage railway bill, and that the diffi culty in the way now is the short time preceeding adjournment. It is utterly impossible, he says, even to obtain recognition from the sieaker, as appro priation bills. are crowding for the right of way. The fact is there has been little possibility of securing any action in the house this sesriion on improvements for the Columbia river. No other section of the country has secured any money at this session, except for those improve ments authorized in the last river and harbor bill. It is believed that the com mittee which authorized Hermann to re port the jortage railway bill would have opposed its passage on the floor. The whole sentiment of the house was, and is, against any river and harbor appro priations at this session, and the com mittee so decided earlv in the short ses sion. The Kditor'a Upward. poetic turn of mind, thus delive-n him-. self: "The preacher works for the soul of man and generally gets his pay ; the banker sits in his office chair with his bundle of cash to rent, and gathers a harvest month by month of a vigorous ten per cent. ; the dealer in grog stands behind the bar and fills up the schooners high, and jingles the tin that the bovs "blow in" for potions of old rye; the lawyers and doctors find work to do that brings in the hard cold cash; and the men who wield the plane or spade find money to buy their hash ; but the editor has a thankless task as the busy months roll by, and he knows no rest of body and brain, while he misses his chance to die. His reward in this world never comes, but over the silent sea, if justice reigns, he is bound to have an elegant ubilee." ' Says Chancey Depew, pf New York : "One story which General Sherman told me gives the inside history of the famous march to the sea. Sherman had been importuning General Grant, President Lincoln and the war department every day for permission to cut loose from his base of supplies and march through the country from Atlanta to the sea coast. Stanton thought he was foolish. Lin coln was afraid he would loose his army, and while General Grant in the main agreed with the plan there were staff in fluences around that were hostile to its execution. One day Sherman received a telegram from Lincoln saying that he might use his discretion. He instantly ordered one of his staff to take a detach ment and tear down the wires for fifty miles. This circumstance he never told publicly, but he said that when General Grant's book ws published he was "in terested in a statement . it contained to the effect that when General Rawlins went to Washington to countermand the order permitting Sherman to march to the sea he found that "the rebels had cut the wires." Wet Hair in Winter. "What a foolish habit some men have of putting water on the hair this kind of weather!" remarked a Duqcesne barber yesterday. "Why put water on the hair at all? It 88 done, to be sure, to make the hair lie down, but is more of a habit than anything else. The hair can be brushed dry as well as wet. You see men go out of barber shops with the wa ter running from behind their ears. In a few minutes it is changed into icicles. The next day they complain of earache, neuralgia, or a rutin in t.hn hnl nf tv. head. Do vou wonder why? - A DTPftlir man alvrtull waa, . ..1 .. .1 c T -" -. . . . ii v.t i jjiam reel, so as to' keep a check on his stomach. ' Klaa B island's Business Xacttea. All clever women do not possess simi lar capacity for business, a fact which is conspicuously illustrated in the cases of Miss Elizabeth Bi&land and' Miss Nellie Bly, the rival globe trotters. Miss Bly won the race around the world by three days, but she has sunk into obscurity, and her name, which was on everybody's lips a year ago, is now only tradition. On the other hand. Miss Bisland is stall a favorite Contributor to The Cosmopol itan, from which she is drawing so lib eral a salary that she is able to lire in London. And it is in a great measnre because Miss Bisland has business talent as well as literary ability and personal beauty. ". Miss Rhrtand is a Mississippi girl, who entered journalism in New York three years ago. She contributed to The Cos mopolitan regularly. When it was an nounced that Nellie Bly was to be sent around the world to beat the record of "Pbileas Fogg," the managers of the magazine sent for Miss Bisland, and she undertook tostart in a contrary direction in a race with Nellie Bly six hoars later. Then she went to pack a Email traveling bag for the journey, but amid all the hurry of preparation she found time to go to her lawyers and have an agreement drawn whereby The Cosmopolitan en gazed her . services on salary, for two years. - . v - When the charming young woman reached the office to receive her final in structions, ehe smilingly unfolded the agreement and it was signed. Under it she still draws her salary. Miss Bly had no such foresight. She had no sooner returned to New York than she quar reled with The World, and her services were dispensed "with by that paper. Miss Bisland lost the race, bnt she gained the greater material advantages from it be cause she had a talent for business. Philadelphia Times. Yoarng, but a Business Woman. In the Pennsylvania railroad depot the other morning I noticed moving among the . crowd a tall, handsome brunette somewhere in the twenties. She pur chased tickets which would carry her through several states and territories by almost as many railway connections, and had her baggage, four iron bound trunks, checked to apparently all the cities in the Union. She was young, pretty and alone, and she seemed to have such a lot of things to attend to, which she did tn a thorough businesslike way and without any assumption of mascu linity. " As she tripped through the gateway to board the train a weather beaten old of ficer, who is one of the veterans at the depot, shook hands with her and said: "Good luck and lots of business.". "Who is the actress?" some one in- j quired. i "Actress! why that Tonne woman is no actress. She is, one of the sharpest drummers in this country in her line. I have known her since she started on the road seven years ago. She was only 18 then, but looked two years., younger. I have met traveling actrntn &nd Hmmmom of all sorts, but it is seldom that you will come across a woman as young as that who starts out from New York twice a year, and visits every city in .the United States where there is any chance to sell goods. Tortoise shell and amber goods is her line, and she does the biggest busi ness ror tne biggest house m .New York, and is the niece of th haasl rtf t.Ha firm She is just as gentle and good as she looks, bat I guess the young man who wotua try u mash' her on the road wouldn't want to try the second time." New York Telegram. ' - . Haw York's Women Notaries. There are four women notaries in New York, and one of them ' is the private secretarv' of Gonnnindnnnr . Ttonttfo During his illness she superintended the wot oi 1,000 men, ana personally in V estimated the details, of its. uwnnlk.l merit." ' She is a western woman - who came to New York to join the ranks of the women custom house inspectors, and is a . distinctive type of the self maae woman wno is now asserting her self so generally in the world's work. By making her home each year in fami lies of different nationalities - she has learned to speak with a good accent four of the most important tongues one hears in this very cosmopolitan city, and in addition to her duties as inspectress, managed to spend three ' hoars a day in special study at one of the city colleges. She is quite the reverse of strong mind ed in appearance, low voiced and bright in conversation, sings delightfully in a deep, full contralto voice, dances like a dream, and has the happy ' faculty of "Mng a RnoraHnfnl nsvi&l ovanimv of the most undesirable and hopeless of materials, ner name is Miss Westover. The woman Ben Franklin in . mnst in teresting phenomenon wherever you en- wuuter uer. aev xoribim. r alust Hsrrr ts Get BUs Lcrscr. Sol Strauss, of, this city, has been placed in an unpleasant predicament. Not long ago he received notice through attorneys in Germany that a rich uncle had recently died, leaving' him heir to $50,000. This was not bad news, but the legacy was conditional open his marry ing and settling down within twelve months' time of the date upon which official notice was given. Gossip's tongue soon posted people on the Strauss windfall, and now he is in daily receipt of scores of letters from ladies offering to help him out of his difficulty. Pueblo Cor. St. Loms Globe Democrat. - Harried at One' Hundred, and Seven,' On Dee. 21 George Hartan and Mrs. Kate Woodson were united in marriage at Iiowena, Tenn. The bridegroom is a hearty man of 107 years, while the bride blushed under the weight of 83 summers. The groom served in the Mexican war and the rebellion. "Mrs. Woodson is his fifth wife. The last one he married in his 100th year. , The groom is the fourth husband of the bride. It is also worthy of observation that the groom has con fined himself to a diet of hnttormiiv bread and cheese for the past twenty years. Pittsburg Dispatch. Notice to Fuel Consumers mier; BEjlTOpl, Have on hand a lot of Fir and Hard Wood. Also a lot of ORDERS FILLED PROMPTLY. Office corner Third and Union Streets, SNIPES & KHTERSLEY, Wholesale and Retail Bmgsts. Fine Imported, Key West and Domestic CIGARS. (AGENTS FOR) EST'D - y 1862s d. e. baYar;d v Co., Real Estate, Insurance, and Loan AGENCY. Opefa House Bloek,3cJ St. Dissolution Notice. NOTICE 18 HKREBY GIVEN THAT THE ,. partnership heretofore existing between J. G. Boyd, M. D., and O. D.Doane, M. I)., under the firm name of Drs. Boyd fc Doaue, has been dis solved by mutual consent. All unfi in i ( u K..1 ......... ... .l . . . .. J...ki V. """5"B ' ic iHie nrni are payable to Dr. Boyd. Those to whom we are I. ,,i,r J"1? present tbeir bills at once to either Dr. Boyd or Dr. Daoue. J G BOYD The Dalles, Or., Feb. 2, ISM. o. I. DOAXE. Notice of Final Settlement. NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE unnersiimari HHmtl.t. . .r .1 . . . t 1 wiiuiiuusuia 111 uii; csuite ox John Smith. Hmvumi hu i 1 Ji,alac,co,Jn a"d tha Tuesday, March 3d, 1891, 7," T.- -i W uiuj court room in Dalles City, Oregon, has been dulv appointed as '"VU 1nd P1"" for hearing siiid final account and objections to the same, if any there be, and ThlH nriHfiA to .iki:i 4 ai . . . - Om Thwmbur' county judge of W aco County, Administratrix of naid Eutate. iiAt'IlA Bmi'lM. Executors Notice. OTICK is hereby given that the uudersiirned rri j """"""" eKUB)r 01 ine J52l Li1 "JV? testaments of Daniel Handler, 3..U ,?"h4iv,n clai"' againsi the 7? L??i deceased are required to present ""A, ith the proper vouchers, within six S Jl0 this date, to the undersigned at the otlioe of Mays, Huntington & Wilson. The Dalles, Dated January 29, 1X91. GKORGE A. JJKBE, J. W. FRENCH, - KATK HANDLKY. . Executors. W. E. GARRETSON, All Watch Work Warranted. Jewelry Made to Order. 138 Second St., The Dalles. Or. Leafflitg- Jeweler. SOLK AGKM FOB THE ir- ' " C ' 1 rnTTTn 1- The Gate City of the Inland Empire is situated at the head of navigation on the Middle Columbia, 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 pro hundred miles. ' - v 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 KHckital valley find market here, and the country south and east has this vear 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 deligh ful! Its possibilities incalculable! Its resources limited! And on these corner stones she stands. S. L. YOUNG, (Successor to K. BECK.) -DEALER IN- WATCHES. CLOCKS. Jewelry, Diamonds, SILVERWARE, :-: ETC. Watches, Clocks and Jewelry Repaired and Warranted. 165 Second St.. The Dalles, Or. -FOR- Carpets ami Furniture, CO TO PRINZ & NITSCHKE, And be Satisfied as t QUALITY AND PRICES. REMOVAL. H. Glenn has' removed his office and the office of the Electric Light Co. to 72 Washington St. A t t nn and all available storage The successful merchant Is the one who watches the mar kets and buys to the 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 ehoioc Groceries and Provisions OF AIX KINDS, AND AT MOKE KEASONABLKH RATES THAN ANY OTHER PLACE Iff THE CITT. REMEMBER we deliver all pur ckaeea without charge. 390 AND 394 SECOND STREET. . John Pashek, 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. f FINE FARM TO RENT. THE FARM KNOWN AS ' TH1 "MOORE Farm" vituated on Three Mile creek about two and one-half miles from The Dalles, will be leased for one or more years at a low rent to any responsible tenant. This farm har upon It a good dwelling house tid 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 1X91 with ordinarily favorable weather. The farm is well watered. For terms and particu lars enquire of Mrs. Bareta A. Mooreor at the Wlico of Mays, Huntington 6l Wilson, The DalleJTOr. , . SARAH A. MOORE, Executrix. I A tui- piercw Tailor