The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, March 13, 1891, Page 2, Image 2

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    The Dalles Daily Chronicle.
THE D.U.UiS
OREGON.
Entered at the Fustolfloe at The Dalles, Oregon,
as ecoud-clasn matter.
STATE OFFICIALS.
Governor...:
Secretary of State ........
Treasurer
fcuyt. of rrtblic Instruction.
enatorg
Congressman
State I'riuter
S. 1'ennover
G. W. McBride
.I'hilUp Mcl!iii
.. ..K. H. McElroy
U. N. Dolph
" J J. U. Mitchell
...B. Hermann
Frank Baker
COITNTY OFFICIALS.
County Judge C. X. Thonibury
8heritf I. U Cutes
Clerk . J. B. Cronsen
Treasurer Geo. Kurh
Commissioners ...... j 'gS
AHsessor ". ... lohn E. Harnett
Surveyor E. F. Sharp
superintendent 01 ruuuc Kcnoois. . .Troy sneiley
Coroner.
..William Miohell
The Chronicle is the Only Paper in
The Dalles that Receives the Associated
Press Dispatches.
FOB AN OPEN KIYKK.
THE
GOVERNOR AND THE
WAGON ROADS.
The press of the state ia very much
divided on thequestion of the governor's
veto of the wagon road bills. We notice
that the bed rock democratic papers gen
erally stand in with the governor, but
not always, und geographical location
has more to do with opinions on this
question than political partisanship. In
the old valley counties, the native home
. of the Silurian, where roads are easily
built, and where the people have had,
for many years, all the roads they want,
they all pat the governor on the back
.nt it is verv tntlerent in the newer
regions, as for example the sparsely set
tled counties of Eastern Oregon, where
roads from many important points are
little better than trails, and the people
wholly unable to improve them. Here,
in tms county we nuked a small appro
priation to build a road overTygh moun
tain. The road has long been one of the
most important ones in Eastern Oregon
it is the direct way from The Dalles to
the AVarm Spring reservation. It is also
the old direct route from Walla Walla or
The Dalles to Barlow's Gate,-and the
Barlow route over the mountains.
United States mail passes over it
six days in the week. The present mule
trail, for it not a road has an acclivity,
in several places, of nearlv four feet to
the rod. It is an outrage on civilization
It is a barbarity, a murderer of horse
flesh. Yet the people living in its
neighborhood can scarcely be said to be
able to build a new road without outside
help, and when the legislature twice
made provision for building it the gov
ernor interposed each time with his
veto.
An appropriation was asked for
another road, partly in this county and
"partly in Gilliam. It is over a long
siretcn ot country between two import
ant points, where immense freights of
wool and hides and supplies require to
be transported. The country between
its two termini is not settled and what is
more it never will be settled. It is a
rough, Droken sheep range, abounding
- in oeep ravines and precipitous moun
tains. The people need the road. They
cannot possibly build it themselves, and
the governor by his veto says : "Then
; you must do without it."
But this ia not the worst of it. When
this state was a Imitted into the Union
the general government made a dona
tion to the new state of ?500,000 for
"roads" and other internal improve
ments. Years ago the legislature granted
an appropriation of 200,000 out of this
fund for building the locks at n
' City. The Silurians of the valley have
lattened on the fruiteX this donation.
There is not an acre of land in the Wil
lamette valley, from the head of naviga
tion on the river to its mouth, that has
aiot enhanced in value bv reason of this
appropriation. There is not a farmer in
-the valley who is not bettered by its
having been made, yet when we, over
Jiere m Eastern Oregon, who have never
benefited a picayune by this outlay,
asked a little from the same fund, for
improvements, relatively as important
to us as the opening of the locks at Ore
Son City was to them, the members
from the old, rich valley counties by
their vote, and the governor by his veto
say, "You cannot have any of it."
Two years ago Governor Pennoyer al
lowed a lot of wagon road bills to be
come a law. Hit was right for him to
do so then it would have been equally so
now- As it is he has only succeeded in
riveting a hopeless inconvenience on
many sections of the country, and contri
buted to the retardment of the progress
of the state.
To allow the wagon road bills to be-
wiue a law, would be "looting" the
treasury, the governor says, but it was
the correct thing for this same governor
to approve a bill for an appropriation of
over $90,000 for improving the capitol
building, the greatest portion of which
is to be spent in a dome, which is noth
else than a useless and expensive orna
ment. We wish his excellency no ill
but if by any change of fortune he should
lose his job as governor and be reduced
to the rank of a farmer or stage driver it
would give us peculiar satisfaction to see
him compelled to drive a Bix mule team
with a load of -wool, from Mitchell to
Antelope, or a span of balky horses,
hitched to a loaded wagon, up the Tyeh
hill.
Subscribers to the Dalle, Astoria and
Portland Steamboat . Co.. Hart a :
Sleeting:.
At the meeting of the subscribers to
the stock of the Dalles, Astoria - and
Portland Steamboat Co., held at the
board of trade rooms last night, Robt.
Mays was elected chairman and J. M.
Huntington secretary of tbe meeting.
Mr. A. S. Macallister stated that the
object of the meeting was to make some
preliminary arrangements, in anticipa
tion of the regular stockholders' meet
ing to be held next month.
On motion Messrs. H. Glenn, B. F.
Laugh lin, A. S. Macallister and Orion
Kinersley were selected as a committee
to visit Portland, for the purpose of col
lecting information, as to the particular
kind of boat most suitable for this route
and the probable cost of constructing
and equipping the same.
A proposition from Capt. J. D. Miller
to run and manage a boat for the com
pany, was submitted and on motion
placed on file.
Messrs. Geo. W. Filloon, S. L. Brooks
and S. B. Adams were appointed a com
mittee with instructions to look for a
suitable landing at this place and ascer
tain what action is necessary to procure
the same. Both committees will report
at the regular meeting next month.
HOTEL ARRIVALS.
UMATILLA HOUSE.
Hans Lage, Hood River.
W. L. Bigbee, Tygh Valley.
H. E. Moore, Nansene.
J. W. Moore, "
.1. W. Bennett, Arlington.
W. C. Fitzpatrick, Tygh Valley.
N. H. Staatz, Dufur.
Henry Peterson, Wapinitia.
W. Holder, Grass Valley.
F. Pike, Moro,
The Best Cough Medicine.
One of mv customers came in todav
and asked me for the best cough medi
cine I had," says Lew Young, a promi
nent druggist of Newman Grove, Neb.
'Of course I showed him Chamberlain's
Cough Remedy and he did not ask to
see any other. I have never vet sold a
medicine that would loosen and relieve
a severs cold so quickly as that does. I
nave sold lour dozen ot it within the
last sixty days, and do not know of a
single case where it failed to give the
most perfect satisfaction." 50 cent bot
tles for sale by Snipes & Kinerslv, drug
gists. "
Real Estate Transactions.
Hood River Townsite Companv to
Leslie Butler, et. al.. trustees of the
United Brethren church, lot 5 in block
11, in second addition to town of Hood
River; consideration, $125.
On Hand.
J. M. Huntinarton & Co.
that they are prepared to make out the
necessary papers for parties washing
to file on so called railroad land. AddH.
cants should have their papers all ready
before going to the land office so as to
avoid the ruslL and save time. Their
office is in Opera House Block next to
main entrance.
Last Call Last Chance.
Messrs. Livermore & Andrews the
makers of the luxurious easy chairs at
t 7 Court street, hereby give notice that
they will close out their business on
April 1st. Parties wanting chairs should
give their orders in at once in order to
have them made before we close out.
Livermore & Andbews,
I he xurt house janitor has been
studying the genealogy of the five
prisoners tnat Deputy Marshal Johnson
took down to Portland today, with the
following result : There is one English
man, one Scotchman, one Frenchman,
one Dutchman and one Yanki
ne'er an Irishman.
' Is Disease a Punishment.
The following advertisemeut,piiblished
by a prominent western patent medicine
house would indicate that they regard
disease as a punishment for sin : .'"
"Do you wish to know , the quickest
way to cure a severe cold? We will tell
you. To cure a cold quickly, it must be
treated before the cold "has become
settled iir the system. This can alwavs be
done if you choose to, as nature in" her
kindness to man gives timely warning
ouu (iiuiu; tcjio vou in .. nature s way,
that as'a punishment for some indiscre
tion, you are to be afflicted with a cold
unless you choose to ward it off by
prompt action. The first symptoms of a
cold, in most cases, is a dry, loud, cough
and sneezing. The cough is soon followed
by a profuse watery expectoration andl
the sneezing by a profuse watery dis
charge from the nose. .In severe" cases
there ia a thin w hite coating on the
tongue. What to do? It is only necessary
to take Chamberlain's Cough Remedy
in double doses every hour. That will
greatly lessen the severity of the cold
and in most cases will effectually count
eract it, and cure what would have been
a severe cold within one or two days
time. Try it and tie convinced." 50
cent bottles for eale by Snipes & Kiners
ley, druggists.
Common Sena A boat the ClnntU.
A tobacco dealer says: There has been
a great deal said about the harmfulness
of cigarettes, and certainly they are in
jurious . to young - boys or to men if
smoked in excess; bat most of those who
attack the cigarette habit have very lit
tle idea of what they are talking about.
It should be remembered that the great
est smokers in the world the Spaniards,
the Cubans, Spanish-Americans and the
Russians use cigarettes far more freely
than cigars, and none of these nations
can be called unhealthy. People talk
about the injuriousness of the paper, but
any physician will tell you that it has no
effect worth mentioning.
If you take a piece of rice paper and
light it scarcely any residuum will re
main, and a man might smoke that pa
per indefinitely without experiencing the
smallest bad result. What makes cigar
ette smoking injurious is the fact that
the smoke is not retained in the month
and throat, bat is taken into the longs.
It is because the cigar smoker does not
understand this that he denounces cig
arette smoking as insipid. So it ia if the
cigarette is smoked like a cigar; but
when the smoke is swallowed the effect
ia far more delicate than can be obtained
from any cigar, and you will find that a
confirmed cigarette smoker seldom en
joys either a cigar or a pipe. St. Lonia
Globe-Democrat.
SNIPES & KINERSLEY,
Wholesale and Retail Dragsts.
Fine Imported, Key West and Domestic
OIG-ARS.
f AGENTS FOR)
1803
CSTD
but
Twenty men are at present employed
at the shops where there were 450 this
time two years ago. .
They Must Be Sola.
Another mark down on carpets.
55, 45 and 30 cents, 25 cents per
less than San Francisco prices at
J. C. Baldwin's.
Now
yard
CHBOISICI-E
seed
Alfalfa
Bros.'
SHORT STOPS.
for sale, cheap at Joles
Just received 25 boxes of choice apples
at- Maieb & Benton.
For coughs and colds use 2379.
Does S. B. get there? "I should
smile." S. B.
C. E. Dunham will cure your head
ache, cough or pain for 50 cenls, S. B.
All kinds of garden seeds in bulk at
Joles Bros.'
Get your land papers prepared by J.
M. Huntington & Co. Opera House
Block, Washington St. ' -
Snipes & Kinersly are anxious to cure
your headache for 50 cents.- S. B.
2379 is the cough syrup for children.
Get me a cigar from that fine case at
Snipes & Kinersley's. ' ; .
Joles Bros, deliver all roods sold to
any part of the city, and don't you for
get it. : - .
One Good Item In the McKinley Bill.
New York Sun.
Hurrah ! Here is something about
the McKinley bill which everyone will
say is'good,-- There are now beginning
to appear in the cutlery stores many
knives and other articles on each of
which is stamped the word "German v "
The McKinley bill requires this. In the
custom house and on sea on their way
back to Germany are hundred of thous
ands oi ot dollars worth of such goods
which are not stamped "Germany."' A
large dealer in cutlery, in discussing this
effect of the bill, said yesterday that the
market had been flooded with knives
and cutlery of all sorts 8 tamped "Provi
dence Cutlery company," or "New Bed
ford Cutlery company," but nevertheless
of German make, and of such inferior
material that men who bought them
vowed they would never again buy an
American knife or tool. Our American
cutting tools are the best in the world,
and hereafter they will not suffer from
unfair competition.
Why People Bite Their Lips.
If you surprise the father of a family
stretched oat at fall length and trying
till he is red in the face to raise his legs
without lifting his body, yon may know
he is endeavoring to work off his super
abundance of avoirdupois, which inter
feres seriously with his catting a grace
ful figure in the waltz, which his better
half insists on dancing every chance she
gets. If yon consult Mr. Russell on
what changes will make you better look
ing, you will find him very blunt. He
may tell you you do not wash your face
clean, and when you ask how he knows
he will tell yon if yon did your skin
would not be disfigured with those black
pimples, or he may tell yon, as he told a
woman who recently appealed to him
for advice, that she did not eat enough,
which fact he had reached because he
had observed how much she chewed her
hps.
So yon see you need not be on your
good behavior when you pass under his
eagle eye. But did yoa ever sit in the
' ferry boat or car and watch the women,
who make the most hideous, wry faces
in their attempts to get some nourish
ment or crumb of comfort from their
lips? Not only the women but the men
also have this fiendish habit. Brooklyn
jaAgie. . . .
A Kara New Zealand Bird
' Dr. Fristedt has brought a most inter
esting and valuable collection of birds.
etc., from Australia, where he had many
an adventurous outing, and from where
he proceeded to New Zealand. . There he
succeeded in obtaining a specimen of the
quaint and almost extinct kibi bird.
This bird is somewhat like an' ostrich,
duv oniy toe size or a crow, it has no
wings at all, and is covered with fur
like short striped feathers: ' Another pe
culiarity about the kibi is the fact that
its egg is larger than one-third of its
body. " -j .'-
" He also succeeded in bringing home
some Maori skulls, which are difficult to
obtain , on account of . the manner in
which the natives bury their , dead.
When the bodies have been so long in
the ground that all the flash has fallen
from the skeleton they Unearth them
and carry them into the interior of the
forests, where they are deposited in nat
ural caves, ' which are very difficult to
find. The attempt to obtain these skulls
is attended with the greatest danger as
any. one discovered with one is certain of
being instantly killed. Qalignani's Mes
eenarer. . -: . . .-. ... ; . ...
!Tb
(5. U.
E. BYAlD (JO.,
Heal Estate,
Insurance,
and Loan
AGENCY.
Opera House Bloek,3d St.
W. E. GARRETSON,
Leafling-?- Jeweler.
SOI.K AGENT FOR: THE ' J r
All Watch Work Warranted.
Jewelry Made to Order,
138 Second St., The Dalles, Or.
You . need not couch 1 . Blakele
Houghton will cure it for 50 cents
Health is Wealth !
Wflf 1' JJatTR ATM E NTytgr
DR. E. C Wkt' Nkbvk and Ahatk Trkat-
KENT, a guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dizzi
ness, Convulsions, Fits, , Nervous Neuralgia,
Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by the use
of alcohol or tobacco, Wakefulness, Mental De
pression, Softening of the Brain, resulting in in
sanity and leading to misery, decay and death,
Premature Old Age, Barrenness, Loss of Power
in either sex. Involuntary Losses and KtwirrriHt-
orrhcea caused by over exertion of the brain, self
abuse or over indulgence. Each box contains
one month's treatment. $1.00 a box, or six boxes
for fo.00, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price.
WK GUARANTEE SIX BOXES -
To cure any case. With each order received bv
us for six boxes, accompanied by $5.00, we will
send the purchaser our written guarantee to re
fund the money if the treatment does not effect
a cure. Guarantees issued only by '
BLAKELST & HOUGHTON,
175 Second St.
Prescription Druggists,
The Dalles, Or.
PIERS BEJITOJI,
. ui PROPRIETORS OF . .
The Dalles Ice Co.
Are putting up an additional ice house
near the freight depot on the track.
They will have better facilities for hand
ling ice than any other firm in town,
and one buying ice from them can rest
assured that they will be- supplied
through the whole season, without an
advance in price. .
MAO & BENTON.
; Cop. Third and Union Streets.
FBOPBIBTOB OP THE
Chas. Stubling,
r
New Vogt Block, Second St. '
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
Liquor v Dealer,
MILWAUKEE BEER OX DRAUGHT.
THE BELLES.
The Gate City of the Inland Empire is situated at
the head of navigation on the Middle Columbia, and
is a thrivingprosperous city. ! ' 1 r' ( . .
ITS TERRITORY.
It is the supply city for an extensive and riclQgri
cultural and grazing country, its trade reaching as
far south as Summer Lake, a distance of over t&t
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 here.
The Dalles is the largest
o ww will i J in ii r
point in America, about 5,000,000 pounds bei
THE VINEYARD OP 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,
moW 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 sho atari
FOR FINE
Commercialj
,' COME TO
THE CHRONICLE OFFICE.
FIRST ANNUAL MEETING.
Notice to the Subscribers of
The Dalles, Portland and
Astoria . Navigation Co,
THE FIR8T ANNUAL MEETING OF THE
subscribers to The Dalles, Portland and
Astoria Navigation Company will be heU at the
rooms of the Board of Trade at Dalles City, Ore
gon, on Saturday, April 4th, 1891, at 2 o'clock p.
m., for the purpose of electing officers, for the
ensuing year, and the transaction of such other
business as may legitimately come before the
meeting.
By order of the Incorporators of said Com- r
. pany. ...
-FOR-
Carpets, and Failure.
CO TO
PRINZ & NITSCHKE,
And be Satisfied as to
QUALITY AND PRICES.
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 ad vantage of
low prices.
The Dalles
MERCANTILE CO.,
S. L. YOUNG,
(Successor to 15. BECK.) '
-DEALER IN-
Jewel ry , Diamonds,
,:-:ETG.
Watches, Clocks and Jewelry
Repaired and Warranted,.
165 Second St.. The Dalles, Or.
REMOVAL.
H. Glenn has removed, his
office and the office of the
Electric Xight Co. to 72
Washington St.
Successor to
BROOKS & BEERS.
will sell you ehoico
Groceries and Provisions
f - -
OF ALL KINDS, AND '
AT MOKE KEASONABLES BATES
- THAN ANT OTHER - PLACE
. . " ." : . ' INTHECITT,
REMEMBER we del ivr all nnr-
chaaea without charge; '
390 AND 394 SECOND STREET;
John Pashek,
flercfiani Tailor.
Third Street, Opera Block.
Madison's Latest SysO.
Used in cutting garments, and a fit
guaranteed each time.
Repairing and Cleaning
Neatly and Quickly Done.
FINE FARM TO RENT-
THE FARM KNOWN AS THE "MOORK
Farm" situated on Three Mile creek about
two and one-half miles from The Dalles, will bo
leased for one or more vpai-h n t. a Iaw rent tn uit
responsible tenant. -This farm bar upon it a
Kood dwelling house nd necessary out build
ings, about two acres of orchard, about three
iiuuurcu -acres anaer cultivation, a targe poruoo
of the land will raitu. a wmH vitlnntivr 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 & Wilson, The Dalles, Or.
bAKAu A. MLMJKi., Jixecuwix.
t