The Dalles Daily Chronicle, j THE DAUJCS OREGON. Entered at the Pnstofflce at Tlie Dalles, Oregon, as wxiond-cLaaa matter. STATE OFFICIALS. Uovernoi S. Pennover . Secretary of State -G. W. McBride Treiwurer Phillip Metschan 8upt. of Public Instruction E. B. McKlroy enators J. II. Mitchell CongresHinau II. nermann State Printer Frank Baker CODKTI OFFICIALS. County Judge C. N. Thorabury bheriff ; D. L. Cates Clerk J. B. Crossen Treasurer Geo. Ruch CommI.K.ners I Franfcincala Axoessor John E. Barnett Biirvevor E. F. Bhiirp Superintendent of Public Schools. . .Troy Hhelley Coroner William Miehell The Chronicle is the Only Paper in The Dalles that Receives the Associated Press Dispatches. The cry of the people of Northeastern Oregon and Southeastern Washington and Western Idaho for a open river to the sea cannot remain much lonsrer un heeded. Now that Portland has so far waked up to her own interests as to vote with practical unanimity for the consolir dation of her three cities it would be per fectly natural for her to go a step further in the path towards commercial supremacy and demand an open river. The importance of such a step has been demonstrated in a hundred ways. Port land is no longer a provincial town but a great and flourishing commercial me troolis. In the past she has allowed the cities of the Sound to outstrip her both in enterprise and population. The revelation of the census was the goad that waked her to the consciousness that she had been asleep, and this revelation was a blessing in disguise. But she must keep awake. There are no more towns of any importance to be annexed to supply a census deficiency. Her future growth must come from natural causes, through the .enterprise and energy of her citizens. It cannot any longer be brought about by an act of the legislature on a vote of the people. The one thing that more than anything else will conduce to the continued increase of population, wealth and commercial supremacy is an open river. A portage road at the Cascades, valuable as we hope it may prove, is but a temporary expedient. Portland ought to unite with us in demanding that the govern ment works shall be finished by contract. The outrage of an army of government obstructionists playing a game of crimi nal retardment and squandering of the people's money while a soulless and greedy monopoly fattens off the people's poverty should no longer be endured. Portland ought to help us in this work as well as 'in that of a portage road around the dalles of the Columbia. Our helplessness pleads for us. Our geoj graphical and commercial relationship pleads for us and Portland's interests as well as ours demand it. The election in Portland last Monday is a lesson for all of us. It shows what the people can accomplish when they only try. The triumph over political bossisin and corruption was complete. When the best citizens turned out and fought for consolidation from morning till night they got it and they got it triumphantly. Such a spectacle de moralized the bosses. Their ammuni tion was not adapted for bagging that kind of game. The effects were con tagious. The enthusiasm rose to fever heat, and the bosses were routed, horse, foot and dragoons. That's the only way to rid a free people of the course of cor rupt government. WUo Is He? Express. ' A fellow with $500 worth of "the right of eminent domain," at the Cascades, demands that the state put up a bonus of 2000 for the use of it ten years, for the portage railway. He will" soon find himself in the fix of that other fellow who spelt down a country school in Miss ouriout and injured. The Cascade portage railway will be in operation July 27th, 1891. The state will have to exercise its right of eminent domain and have a portion of the right of wav appraised and condemned accord -' ing to law. Engineer Farley will go east to procure the rolling stock as soon as all the work of grading is well under way. The state will equip and run the road. The employes will work for the state. One locomotive and enough cars will handle the business at actual cost. Now Mr. Gould, see if the producers will be prevented in getting their grain and wool to market at reasonable rates. A correspondent of the East Oregonian writing from the Vansycle, Or., says: "It is refreshing to read extracts from The Dalles Chronicle and see that The Dalles is now willing to let the truth be known in regard to how the government work is carried on at that point. Major Handbury has a good thing and of course he wants to keep it. Doubtless he thinks as Mr. Vanberbuilt said, 'The people be damned.' It was whispered at Salem last - winter when the following House Concurrent resolution No. 19 was offered on the 29th of January by Killian that Major Handbury was the cause of having . it pigeon-holed in the senate until the 20th of February, and it was the hardest kind of work to get action on it then, and was it 7ot tor the assistance rendered by Messrs Holer of the Capitol Journal and the correspondents of the Oregonian, to gether with senator Hursh, senator Wil lis and his friend, major Handbury would have kept the resolution buried. Of course major Handbury does not want the work let out by contract. It would be likely to throw him out of a good big fat job.' " A HAY OFF. A Correspondent Gives an Account of a Visit to Mr. Seufert' Place. Editor Chronicle: Monday our worthy young judge announced to such jurymen as were not engaged in looking after some spoiled horse of plaintiff, or defendant that they could be excused until tomorrow morning at 9 o'clock. This meant a day off; and was seized as an opportunity by the undersigned and Mr. Vanderpool, to visit the Seufert Bros., ranch east of The Dalles to find out how fish are caught, and the pos sibilities of growing fruit in the Colum bia river canyon. A horse and buggy being secured we were soon at the place designated, where acres of cherry trees full of ripening fruit just met oar gaze being through this part of the orchard toward Mr. Seufert's residence, on our right is a vine yard on the left cherries. Some of them luscious with ripeness, others green enough to make the stomach ache to look at them. Going to the cannery we found Mr. Seufert who took us in charge and gave us every opportunity to see the works he and his brother have erected and the fruit trees they have grown. He explained to us that the catch of fish is light, as they have for several days not averaged above three or four tons per day. We watched a wheel for some time but the sign was not right, the water too clear or some other factor wanting, was in vain, we were only convinced that the thing could be done. We next took a stroll through the peach and apricot parts of the orchard. Here we found a system of cutting back had been followed so that each limb ap peared as sturdy as a post. These trees are in no danger of breaking down or of being, flopped about by the wind and thus robbed of their fruit. Every tree of the peach variety is full of fruit in good, healthy condition. The apricots have but little fruit on them. Among a part of the peach trees are quite a lot of strawberries which have been ripening for the past two weeks. The transfor mation, wrought by these industrious and enterprising young men in the past six years is truly wonderful. What was then principally a waste of sand has be come a beautiful, productive orchard that will bring in a profit told in thous ands of dollars. The Seufert Brothers are pleasant, agreeable gentlemen and well deserve the success their industry, skill and perseverance have attained. At Mr. Seufert's house we were kindly enter tained by himself and lady where we spent a pleasant hour as conversational ists. They are both pleasant and enter taining and show that they are heartily engaged in the enterprise that is making such a fine showing for this country. Mr. Seufert is a lucky man indeed ; lucky in his . enterprises and lucky in having found so genial and pleasant a partner with whom to share the joys and sorrows of life. Aaron Frazier. "The name McGinty," so The Dalles Chronicle man tells us. and he oueht to .know, "has been honored in Irish storv 8i nee Eochid II was crowned King of Ul ster on Jacob's Pillar by the prophet Jer emiah ;" but it has remained for a resi dent of The Dalles to cast discredit upon it. One Jemmy McGinty, in order to secure a contract for building a reservoir, has denied his nationality, and changed the spelling of his name. The only re deeming feature of the whole affair is that he got the contract. Oregonian. Immigration Under Federal Control. Washington, June 2. Secretary Fos ter today took the immigration bueiness at the ports of Baltimore, Philadelphia and Boston out of the bands of state boards of immigration and transferred it to federal control. This step, it is said, is rendered necessary because of the fact that under the act of March 3, 1891, the several state boards of im migration were practically shorn of all authority over immigration matters. xne cnange places all details of the im migration business throughout the coun try in the hands of the federal govern ment as was done at the port of JNew York in 1889 and renders the svstem uniform. Through Trains on the Canadian. Tacoma, June 2. There is no lontrer any doubt that the Canadian Pacific will commence immediately to run through trains into Whatcom and make the steamship Premier's service a daily run between that citv and Tacoma. Chair man Moffatt, of tile Puget Sound Steam boat Association, said this morninsr that he has it on the authority of Captain John Irving, manager of the Canadian .Facihc Navigation Company, that the Premier's run will be so changed. A Serious Shortage In Peter's Pence. Rome, June 2. The pope has charged Archbishop Walsh to ask Cardinal Man niug to bring about, if possible, an aug mentation of the contributions to Peter's pence from Great Britain. The Vatican commission, which has been inquiring into the financial condition of the papal household, has found that the Peter's pence is 10,000,000 francs short of the es timated amount. Ralph Gibons announces himself as a can didate for CITY MARSHAL SteamFerry. t) ft Pn Ji Q. 8 now runihig a steam t V. CMiiriO Ferry between Hood River and White Salmon. Charges reasonable. R. O. Evans, Prop. $20 REWARD. WILL BE iAii FOR ANY INFORMATION leading to the conviction of parties cutting he ropes or Jn any way interfering with the wires, poles' or lamps of Tei Elkctric Light Co. H. GLENN.- Manager K;irvels at Brussels. ' The finest of all lace is Brussels. ' Bel gium is the hicemakors chosen home. One-fortieth of the whole population is engaged in it The government supports 900 lace schools, to which children are sent as young as five years. By the time they are ten they are self supporting. Brussels is a pillow lace. Indeed, Barbara Littman, the inventor of pillow lace, lived and died there. The pattern, drawn npon parchment, is fixed firmly to the pillow, pins are stuck along the outlines, ari to them the lace is woven by. crossing and twisting the threads, each of which ends in a bobbin. Lace two inches wide requires 200 or 300 bobbins. A piece six inches has sometimes as many as a thousand. - The thread is hand spun from the best Bra bant flax, in damp, dark cellars, whose one ray of light falls on the spinner's hand. Naturally spinning is very unhealthy, and experts get high wages. The best yarn from a single pound of flax fetches over $3,000. For filling flowers and leaves fine soft cotton is used. Grounds, too, are often made of it. Elaborate patterns are made in sections, and joined together by the most skillful workers of all. As the lace is never washed before it is sold, the most exquisite neatness is requisite in everything connected with it. Still, as months are consumed in mak ing very handsome pieces, the work turns dingy in spite of the lace worker's best efforts. To remedy that it is some times dusted with white lead in powder, and turns dark at contact with gas of sulphur in a way to exasperate the wearer. New York Herald. Why the Mafia Exists In Italy. The origin of the Camorra and Mafia murder leagues ceases to puzzle travel ers who have visited the rural districts of southern Sicily. Nearly all the real estate of the coast plain from Syracuse to Cape Bianco is in the hands of a few aristocrats, who have deprived their ten ants of their panes as well as of their circenses, of the right to hunt, to fish, to train fighting cocks, without a special license, as well as of the more argent necessities of life. The streets of the in land villages generally resemble the gul lies of a parched out mountain river, and the houses are mere mud piles, roofed with flat stones and wattles of broom corn, and surrounded by rubbish heaps, where mangy curs and sore eyed chil dren compete for scraps of animal re fuse. , Laborers, returning from a day's hard work, sit down to a meal of maize paste and salad, washed down with the water of the slimy village cistern. The profits of little truck farms barely satisfy the demands of the tithe collector, and in dignation meetings are promptly sup pressed, but midnight conventicles are less easy to prevent, and the starving villager would as soon defile the statue of Garibaldi as to betray a Capo Mafioso who has befriended him at the expense of an oppressive landlord. Felix L. Os wald in Philadelphia Times. A New Use ajku- Matches. I watched a train hand stagger through the coach with eyes closed, and a tearful face a case of cinder. He met a com panion, who instantly felt in his vest pocket, poised himself, made one motion, and the suffering brakeman at once went back to his poet relieved. "How did you remove that cinder?" I asked. "With a match," he replied. Producing one, he split it to a point with his thumb naiL "This looks like a harsh way to treat so tender an organ," said he, "but it is en tirely safe. Turning back the eyelid, the speck only needs to be touched by some dry substance in this case the match to adhere to it. We have to help one another so a dozen times a day." "But why not wait until stopping?" I inquired. "Too busy then. Besides, there is no need. It is as easy on a train in motion as on the ground when one is accustomed to it, - After raising the arm for the operation, one needs to get the swing of the train. This car runs smoothly, so I did quick work." Spring field Homestead. Parisian Bouquets. Please to heed what an autocrat direct from the salons of Paris has to say on the subject of bouquets. No more "com posed bunches of flowers" are carried by the fashionable women in that dizzy capital. A beribboned bouquet is re garded as "bad form," only the Parisian has another phrase for bad form, and a dame of the haut monde now enters a salon carrying a spray or branch of some flowers in season, such as lilac or mimosa. In this land of extravagance, where all the flowers are always, in bloom, she might hold a spray of orchids or a bunch of roses,' but the arranged bouquet, jamais! The idea is to resem ble the young martyrs in the pictures, these said martyrs generally holding in one hand a palm branch. Perhaps our florists will catch on to this new wrinkle and have some extraordinarily lovely blooms prepared for their fair customers. Boston Herald. Pleasantly Expressed. A humorous writer thus describes bow he got out of a bad scrape at the police court: The next morning the magistrate sent for me. I went to him. and he re ceived me cordially, said he had heard of the wonderful things I had accom plished by knocking down five persons and assaulting six others, and was proud of me, for I was a promising young man. Then he offered a toast, 'Guilty or not guilty? I responded in a brief but elo quent speech, setting forth the impor tance of the occasion that had brought ns together. After the usual ceremonies 1 was requested to lend the city forty shillings. 'A Speculation. - "Chollie is in great glee today." "Why?" "He owed his tailor $365 for five years, and the tailor got mad and put the ac count up at public auction." "I should think that would make Chol lie mad.". - , "Oh, no. He went to the sale and bought it for eighty-fire cents." Har per's Bazar. S. L. YOUNG, (Successor to K. KECK. -DEALER IN- WHS, CLOCKS, Jewejry, Diamonds, SILVERWARE,:-: ETC Watches, Clocks and Jewelry Repaired and Warranted. 165 Second St.. The Dalles, Or. The Dalles Gigar : Factory, FIEST STEEET. FACTORY -NO. 105. OTii- A DO of the Best Brands VlvXixXVlO manufactured, and orders from all parts of the country filled on the shortest notice. The reputation of THE DALLES CI GAR has become firmly established, and the demand for the home manufactured article is increasing every day. A. ULRICH & SON. -FOR- Carpets ami Furniture, CO TO PRINZ & NITSCHKE, And be Satisfied as to QUALITY AND PRICES. R. B. Hood, Livery, Feed and Sale Horses Bought and Sold on Commission and Money Advanced on Morses left For Sale. OFFICE OF- The Dalles and Goldendale Stage Line. Stage Leaves The Dalles every morning; at 7:30 and Goldendale at 7:30. All freight must be left at R. B. Hood's office the evening before. R. B. HOOD, Proprietor. COLUMBIA Qapdy :-: paetory, W. S. CRAM, Proprietor. (Successor to Cram & Corson.) Manufacturer of the finest French and Home Made r OUST ID X IK! s East of Portland. -DEALER IN- Tropical Fruits, Nuts, Cigars and Tobacco. Can furnish any of these goods at Wholesale or Retail &Ff?ESH ' OYSTERS-IS- In Every Style. 104 Second Street, The Dalles, Or. John Pashek, Maut 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 Dalles Mercantile po., - Successors to BROOKS & BEERS, Dealers in ' C? General Merchandise, ..;-. V: ' Staple and Fancy Dry Goods, Gents' Furnishing Goods, Boots, Shoes, Hats, Caps,, etc. Groceries, Hard-ware, Provisions, Flour, Bacon, HAY, GRAIN AND PRODUCE Of all Kinds at Lowest Market Rates. Free Delivery to Boat and Curs and all parts of the City. 39Q and 394 Second Street We are NOW OPENING a full line of Blact and Colored Henrietta Clous, Sateens, Hwhm ani Calico, and a large stock of Plain, Embroidered and Plaided : Swiss and in Black and White, for X ALSO A FULL LINE OF - Iflen's and Boy's Spring and Summer Clothing, Jleekmear and' HosierV Over SHirtsi, TJnderWear, 33o. A Splendid Line of Felt and Straw Hats. X We also call your attention to our line of TjuHea' nl r!i,;w 01 j iu. V- i: r - , i t . . tv viic uig line oi men s anu uoy s Jtsoots ana Shoes and .S Uppers, and nlentv of other Goods to be sold at. T.riraa to mi it. th t, ' P'enty oi Otner H. SOLOMON, Next Door to The Dalles National Bank. NEW FIRM! loseoe -DEALERS IN- CHOICE STAPLE : AND V FANCY V GROCERIES, Canned Goods, Preserves, Pickles, Etc. Country Produce Bought and Sold. Goods delivered Free to any part of the City. Masonic Block, Corner Third and JAMES WHITE, ' Has Opened a IjuuoIi Counter, In Connection With his Fruit Stand and Will Serve Hot Coffee, Ham Sandwich, Pigs' Feet, and Fresh Oysters. Convenient to the Passenger Depot. On Second St., near corner of Madison. Also a Branch Bakery, California Orange Cider, and the Best Apple Cider. If you want a good lunch, give me a call. Open all Night The Ladies' Tailor School of Dress Cutting AT Mrs. Brown's Dressmatin Parlors, Cor. Fourth and Union Sts., The Dalles, Or. Each scholar can bring in her own dress and is taught to cut, baste and fin ish complete. They are also taught to cut the seam less waist, dartlesa basque, French bias darts and most every form of sleeve. BT"In the dressmaking department I keep only competent help. Dress Cutting a Specialty. Phil Willig, 124 UNION ST., THE DALLES, OB. Keeps on hand a full line of MEN'S AND YOUTH'S Ready - Made Clothing. Pants and Suits MADE TO ORDER . On Reasonable Terms. Call and see my Goods before ourchasing elsewhere. REMOVAL. H. Glenn has iemored his office and. the office of the Electric Ligut Co. to 72 Washington. St. Nansooks: Ladies' and Misses' wear. . : n ruut auu n NEW STORE' & Gibons, Court Streets, The Dalles, Oregon. J. M. HUNTINGTON & CO. flbstraeters, insoranee Agents. Abstracts of. and Information Concern -. ing Land Titles on Short Notice. Land for Sale and Houses to Rent Parties Looking for Homes in COUNTRY OR CITY, OR IN SEARCH OF Bugiqe Location?, Should Call on or Write to us. Agents for a Fnll Line of Lfiartinir fin? TnsnranRfi nnirnianips And Will Write Insurance for AITY -A.3Vi:OTJJSrT, on all Correspondence Solicited. All Letters Promptly Answered. Call on or Address, J. M. HUNTINGTON & CO. Opera House Block, The Dalles, Or. C. N. THORNBORY, T. A. HUDSON, Late Rec. V. 8. Land Office. Notary Public THORHBURY &HUDSQH. ROOMS 8 and 9 LAND OFFICE BUILDING, Poitofflce Box 35, THE DALLES, OR. Filings, Contests, And all other Business in the D. S. Land Offiei Promptly Attended to. We have ordered Blank's for Filings, Entries and the purchase of Railroad Lands under the recent Forfeiture Act, which we will have, and advise the pub lic at the earliest date when such entries can be made. Look for advertisement in this paper. Thornburv & Hudson. $500 Re-ward! Wo will pay the above reward for any case of Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, In digestion, Constipation or Costivenetts we cannot cure with West's Vegetable Liver Pills, when the directions are strictly complied with. They are purely vegetable, and never fail to give satisfac tion. Sngar Coated. Large boxes containing 80 Pills, 25 cents. Beware of counterfeits and imi tations. The genuine manufactured only by 1LHNOI8. BLAKILEY A HOUGHTON, Prescription Drugg-lata, 17 Second St. ' Tfce Dallea, Or.