C2 J The Dalles Daily Chronicle. THE PA LUSH OREGON. Entered ut the PoRtoflice at The Dulles, Oregon, hh wxxma-ciass mailer. STATU OFFICIALS Govemoi Secretary of State Treasurer Supt. of Public Instruction, enators S. Pen nover ... G. W. Mubride ..Phillip Metsehan E. B. McElrov U. N. Doli.ii )J- H. Mitchell H. Hermann "ongresaniaii . State Printer Frank Baker COUNTY OFFICIALS. County Judge 0". N. Thorabarv Sheriff D. L, Catea Ulor. J. B. rrossen Treasurer Geo. Rueh (H A. Leavens ","u"w,ra Frank Kineaid Assessor John E. Rarnett Burveyor K. F. Sharp Superintendent of Public Schools ... Troy- hhellev Coroner : . William Michel! ine inronicie is tne unly fa per in The Dalles that Receives the Associated Press Dispatches. OLD TIME TACTICS. The City of Frankfort which, report has it, the Union Pacific bought the other day and tied up, in order to prevent hor making connections with our new steam er on the lower river, whh patched up out of the " Traveler " one of the oldest boats on the Lower Columbia which was sold some time ago for $4500. Pacq net & Smith built a new hull for her at a cot of $2225 and the old machinery was re paired and placed in it. The whole out tit cost less than $7000 and if the owners have succeeded in cinching the Union Pacific into paying a good round sum for her we shall be so far gratified. The story of the City of Frankfort reminds us of another, well known in these parts to all the older settlers. The little Oold Dust about ten years ago was a bitter thorn in the side of the old O. R. & X Co. The utmoHt value one could place on the boat was not to exceed $3000 Yet it is stated on perfectly reliable au thority that the owner, Captain Spencei , a year after she-was withdrawn from competition, was still drawing the snug sum of $500 a month from the company for his eervice in putting her out of the way. About the same time another little boat called the Elvina was on the middle river. She was worth, not to exceed $2500, yet to get rid of her the company agreed to pay her owners for tying her up for one year, the sura of $200 a month and at the end of the year another con tract was made, on condition that she should be taken below the Cascades, by which the owners received the sum of $1800 or $150 a month for twelve months. We mention these facts that the people who are not already familiar with them may know -- hat friendship we may nat urally expect from the , Union Pacific when our new boat is put upon the river; A SCO UMNO MILL NEEDED. Our wool-growers are discussing the advisability of establishing a scouring mill at this point. Not long since Mr ; Shearer had the matter under consider ation and made estimates on the cost of putting in a plant at, his place on the Deschutes. Valuable as such an enter prise would be at that point it would be still more valuable if located here. It is well-known that more wool is handled at The Dalles from actual wool-growers than at any other point in the United States. Some classes of wool shrink as high as 80 per cent. The average we believe is somewhere about 60 per cent, at least. To large shippers the cost of freight to Boston ou so much waste matter is very considerable. The freight on wool last year from this point to Boston was two and a quarter cents per pound. To a man who has fifty or a hundred thousand pounds of wool the saving of sixty per cent -of his freight bill is an important item. To our large buyers and shippers it is still more important. The cost of a scouring plant is of trifling importance when compared with the saving to be affected and there is- no doubt in the world that such a plant would be a profitable paying investment. A DEAD-LOCK. The situation of the wool market at this place is somewhat peculiar. The buyers and sellers have locked horns f and neither are disposed to yield. The wool-men think that outside quotations warrant better prices than the the buy ers are disposed to offer, and the former are free in expressing the opinion that the latter have conspired to "bear' the . market. ;. Whether this is so or not we have no means of knowing, but we do know that several of the largest wool growers, at present in the city, express themselves freely when they say that if the dead-lack is not broken within the next two or three days, they will return to their , homes . and wait for events. Wool-men, as a rule, are not particularly crowded for money as they can borrow all they need for their present necessities on their stored clips. .If the buyers are, as alleged, playing a fine game we hope the wool-growers will - stand by their colors to the last moment, and we know some of them will.. PORTLAND TO THE RESCUE. ' The' Goldendale Sentinel intimates that Klickitat county is making arrange ments to ship her wheat "up the river to some outlet to the sea." This means, most likely, shipping by the Northern Pacific to the Sound. Klickitat county is a great agricultural county and capable of immense developments - Portland might have every pound of her freight if we had an open river. The Columbia river is the natural outlet for Klickitat county and an open river would practi cally coutrol its - trade, but if Portland sits supinely and allows that fine terri tory to make other connections she will soon discover that she baa lost her trade forever. The cities on the Sound are looking out for the trade of Klickitat countv and past experience shows they are willing to make sacrifices to get it. THE . FOKTAGE KAILKOAD. How Easily a Plain, Simple Matter Can . He Muddled, or How Mot to Io It. Portland Oregonian. Pendleton, May, 30. To the Editor For many years past people in eastern Oregon and Washington have been groan ing under the burdensome tax imposed upon them by railroad monopolies for transporting their surplus products to the seaboard. Their obvious means of relief from this is by water transporta tion along the line of the Columbia river ; but there are natural obstructions in this river which must ?e removed or surmounted before this relief can be ob tained. These, are of such a character that the cost of their removal is far be yond the capacity of our new and unde veloped states to pay. The general gov ernment has leen apjcaled to in this emergency, and for the removal of the first serious obstructions, that at the Cascades of the Columbia, lias re sponded with approprirtions that in the aggregate amount to the considerable sum of $1, 877,000. These appropriations have been spread over a period of fifteen years, and made in such insignificant amounts, considering the work to be done and its importance to the com munities to be relieved as to merit just ridicule as a business undertaking, and to materially increase the cost of the work. On this sum the interest at 4 per cent, would amount to $75,000 per year, which no one gets any benefit from. The government officers in charge of this work have time and again in their re ports represented these facts to congress, but it has produced no change in the jKjlicy of that body. It is now estimated that $1,700,000 will be required to com plete this work,' and that if this amount be rendered available at once boats can pass this obstruction within three years. The state of Oregon growing weary in long waiting, provided at the last ses sion of its legislature for a temporary re lief in the shape of a portage railroad around this same obstruction at the Cas cades. It authorized a commission, to consist of the governor, secretary of state and state treasurer, to construct and op- .. .i -. i 'I-1 ii . ciaic biua . njuu. xiicec geuueuitm at once entered upon the duties imposed upon them by the law, and in consul tation with the engineer officer in charge of the government work at the Cascades, came to a satisfactory understanding as tothe conditions under which the road' should be coustructed and operated over she government grounds at that place. The matter went forward to Washington, was approved by the chief of engiueers, and forwarded to the office of the secre tary of war. The acting secretary raised a point as to the legality of the recom mendation of the engineer in charge that a certain . portion of this road be built at the expense of the United States, in con sideration of certain benefits in the way of cheaper freight rates to be derived from the portage system, and to attend to the government work, and to keep more clearly defined the question of United.States and state authority with in the government reservation. . This point, on being referred to the attornev- general, was returned with his opinion that the state should build this piece of road also. The portage commissioners at once notify the engineer officer, who telegraphs to the chief of engineers that they accept the opinion of the attornev- general , and the matter is all satisfactory as it was before, with the excep tion mat tne expense ot tne work to the state will be increased bv about $8000. It apparentlv takes the state board of portage commissioners and the officer in charge of the government work about five minutes to come to an under standing on all points in connection with the crossing of this road over the govern ment ground at the Cascades, while the politicians and' government legal lumi naries in Washington are spending weeks raising points and showing how not to do it. To the uninitiated in the subtle and mysterious ways of Washing ton red-tapeism it would seem that the proper persons to manage this little busi ness are the state board and the govern ment engineer in charge of the work, their action being subject tothe annroval of the secretary - of war. ' The board is certainly competent to look after the in terests of the state, and from what I have seen and know of the eovernment engineer I have no reason to doubt that be will take care of the interests of the work in his charge. It is evident that both he and the board are determined that the portage railroad shall be built. and do not propose that any- difference oeiween tnem snail delay its commence ment. The necessity for so much tele graphing across the continent about' a simple matter of this kind is not appar ent to those who look at it as a straight forward business proposition. Should it become mixed with politics, then there will be a mnddle. ; East Oregonian. Convey our compliments to the states man that finds it. The mental endow ment is a 'rich one. Attorian. " The stock-holders of the Eastern Ore gon Co-operative Association closed their labors by re-electing the old board of di rectors. Ralph Gibons announces himself as a can didate for ' : , CITY MARSHAL Steam Ferry. t) A ElHltfC 8 now """ling a steam I. V. LLU n.0 Ferry between Hood River and White Salmon, Charges reasonable.; R.. O. Evans, Prop. $20 REWARD. Wn-I- BE IAiD POR ANY INFORMATION ' leading to theconvlction of parties cutting be : ropes or. in any way interfering with the wires, poles ox lamps of Th Electric Light Co. .-', H.cr.mN Manager JUST A LITTLE KNOWLEDGE. The Possession of It Ooes Not Tmf Terr Well In the I .on Bun. "It doesn't pay to know just 'a little about things," said one of those menf who are always after "general informa tion." "Judging' from experiance I thoroughly agree with the gentleman who said, 'A little knowledge is a danger-: ous thing.' For example, IVhave never been able to eat an "egg with thorough- relish though exceedingly fond of them' for their flavor since I learned that the little spot on one side of the yelk:, toward the butt end, is the germ of the chicken. You may cook an egg in what fashion you please, but whether it is boiled, poached or fried, you will find that germ always - conspicuous, when once you know it is there, and you cannot eat the egg until you have carefully removed it. It would add considerably to my happi ness if 1 could believe today what I was taught in the nursery, that the white of an egg makes the bones of the subsequent fowl and the yelk the flesh, instead of knowing, as I do, that both are merely the food by the consumption of which the germ is developed. "But that is only a very minor in stance. My slight knowledge of patho logical anatomy, amounting to the mer est smattering, is a source of continual distress to me. Though an abstemious man. on the whole, I cannot indulge in a glass of any alcoholic beverage without realizing that I am subjecting my sys tem to the action of a 'heart stimulant' which accelerates the pulsations of that organ injuriously. The slightest sensa tion of any sort about my chest causes me to imagine, despite myself, that the tubercular bacilli are beginning to get in their deadly work upon my pulmona ry system. "Presumably it is only a trifling inter costal rheumatism, but I am none the less uneasy. A similar feeling in the small of my back makes me think of Bright's disease. Supposing that I swal low an orange seed by accident, it oc curs to me at once that there is a chance for its getting into a certain useless bac attached to the stomach, where, if it does, it will occasion inflammation that is necessarily fatal before long. I know that uiy intestines are a prey to certain vermicnlor parasites, as are those1 of every one else; but they do not occasion me so much annoyance as the possibili ty, always existing, that painful concre tions of lime, may be forming in my bladder or my liver. "A superficial knowledge of physiology takes much of the poetry out of exist ence' and removes a large part of the gilding from the sublunary gingerbread, as one might say. Having acquired it, a man realizes rather painfully that he is largely an elevated animal after all, though hitherto he hasimagined himself chiefly mind. , "Supposing that one's partner in the german is a thin girl, he cannot help figuring her out as an articulated skele ton and setting an- estimated price upon her as a 'preparation' in that guise This does not apply , however, when she' is an acknowledged heiress. "Imagination is always opposed to facts, and by as much as "the latter are calculated "to; dispel agreeable illusions; they" are destructive of happiness. There fore I am inclined to think that hewever desirable knowledge may be respecting things with which one has no personal and intimate concern, it is most, com fortable to know a very little about one's self and one's environment. 'Drink deep or taste not the Pierian spring. " Wash ington Star. Two German Words That lUsa Much: German barbers in New York have' a curious system of signs- and mysterious words by which they indicate to each other the tendency of customers to give large tips, email tips or none at all. If a new barber in a large shop gets a gen erous customer ; in his chair, a fellow workman who has shaved the generous' customer before 'mutters in his ear;' "Brnnz" that is, "He. tips." "Brnnz" is a distinctively German, product, and till recently' was never heard ' outside of continental barber shops.' Its greatest merit is that it means' nothing to per sons who are not barbers, for. it has no indorsement from the German diction aries, and does not even enjoy the ques tionable authority of student slang. German barbers in New. York desig nate a man who gives no gratuities as a "muff." Like "brnnz," "muff" is no word at all, and was invented by wily continental barbers for the needs of the shop onlyi The amount of the tip to be expected is revealed by the old journeymen- to the new ones by various contor tions of the fingers and by low German monosyllables of no apparent relevancy. Montreal Star. ' Stones Are Composed of Shells. ' The tripoli,. used for polishing eur ta bleware, is composed entirely of the si licious shells of infusoria. ' The earthly paint with which our houses are colored' is nothing but the remains of different species of these animals. Even the hard est rocks--the flints show, when . exam ined under' the microscope,' that" they, too,' are composed of the skeletons of in fusoria. I once examined a thin section of a flint formerly used by 'the great hunter, Daniel Boone. This " flint was composed of the shells of infusoria.' The gun, an old flintlock rifle, fivai which this flint was taken, is still - preserved at Frankfort, Ky. - Even many of the precious stonee, such as the carnelian, owe their beautiful colors to the presence of fossil infusoria. Macon Telegraph.' - In the Train. "That fellow over there must feel un comfortable." "Why?" "He tried to shut the window for the girl in front of him, but couldn't do it. After, he gave it up the girl tried and succeeded." -Boston Herald. " . When acid is dropped on an article ol wearing apparel pour ammonia imme diately upon the spot to neutralize -the effect of the acid; then apply chloroform and the original, color will in, almost every case return." S. L. YOUNG, (Successor to . BECK.; -DEALER IN- WATCHES, CLOCKS, Jewelry, Diamonds, SILVERWARE,:-: ETC. Watches, Clocks and Jewelry Repaired and Warranted. 165 Second St.. The Dalles, Or. The Dalles Gigar ; Faetopy, FIRST STREET. FACTORY NO. 105. fTA A T"Q of' the Best Brands V'A VJ XVlVkj 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 Horses left For Sale; OFFICE OF- The Dalles and Goldendale Stage Line.' "vw ine xraues every morning at 7:30 and Goldendale at 7:30. All freight muBt be left at R. B. Hood's office the evening before. R. B. HOOD, Proprietor. COLUMBIA Qai?dy :-: paetory, W. S. CRAM, Proprietor. (Successor to Cram & Corson.) Manufacturer of the finest French and Home Made O.A. 3ST ID I IE S .' East of Portland. -DEALER IN- Tropical Fruits; Nuts, Cigars and Tobacco! Can furnish any of these goods at Wholesala or Retail SFfESH 4 , OYSTErtS-rv" In Every Style. , 104 Second Street, The Dalles, Or. John Pashek, Third Street, Opera Block. Madison's' Latest" System, Used in rnr.r.inr mmiAnfji' n.nri a guaranteed each time. Repairing anci Cleaning Neatly and Quick ly Done." piBiciiant Tailor The Dalles Mercantile Co., Successors to BROOKS & BEERS, Dealers in General Merchandise, Staple and Fancy Dry Goods, Gents' Furnishing Goods, Boots, Shoes; Hats, Caps, etc. Groceries, Hardware, Provisions, Flour, Bacon,k HAY, GRAIN AND PRODUCE Of all Kinds at Lowest Market Rates. Free Delivery to Boat and Curs and all parts of the City. - - - - 390 and 394 Second Street We are NOW OPENING a full line of Blact and Colore! Henrietta Clouis, Sateens, Giihaius ani Calico, and a large stock of Plain, : Swiss and in Black and White, for -ALSO A FULL JHen's and Boy's Spring and Summer - A Splendid Line of Felt and Straw Hats. x . "" ' i- iu e,?l8 f ilyo!lr a"entwn to our line of Ladies' and Children's Shoes and to ' H. SOLOMON, Next Door to The Dalles National Bank. NEW FIRM! NEW STORE' loscoe 8t Gibons, DEALERS IN CHOICE '.'STAPLE'.' AND Canned Goods, Preserves- Pickles, Etc. Country Produce Bought and Sold! Goods delivered Free to any part of the City: Masonic Block, CornerThjrdandCBurt Streets; The Dalles, Oregon: JAMES WHITE, Has Opened a Lunoli Counter, In Connection With his Fruit Stand and Will ' Serve 1 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 1 The Ladies' Tailor School of Dress Cutting AT- ' Mrs: Brown's Dressmatmc Parlors, 0or. Fourth and Union Sts., The Dalles, Or. Each scholar can bring in her own dress and is taught to cat, baste and fin ish complete. ' They are also taught to cut the seam less waist, dartless basque, French bias darts and most every form of sleeve. 0In the dressmaking department I keep only competent help. Dress Cutting a Specialty. Phil Willig, 124 UNION ST., THE DALLES OR. Keeps' on hand a full line of r MEN'S AND YOUTH'S Ready - Made Clothing. Pants and Suits MADE TO ORDER On Reasonable Terms. Call and see my Goods before Durchasing elsewhere. REMOVAL. H. Glenn has l emoved his office and the office of the Electric Ligit Co'v ' to 72 Washington. St. "' " 'j " Embroidered and Plaided Nansooks: Ladies' and Misses' wear. x LINK OK- Clothing, Neekaiear and Hosiery ' . , w V FANCY .' J. M. HUNTINGTON & CO.' Real Estate and Abstracts of. and Information Concern-" . ing Land Titles on Short Notice. Land for Sale and Houses to RnL Parties Looking for Homes in COUNTRY OR CITY, OR IN SEARCH OF BuiqB Location Should Call on or Write to ua. Agents for a Full Line of Leading Fire Insurance Companies,' And Will Write Insurance for on all DESIRABLE EISKS." Correspondence Solicited. All. Letters Promptly Answered. Call on or Address, . J. M. HUNTINGTON & CO. Opera House Block, The Dalles, Or. C. N. THOKNBURY, T. A. HUDSON. Late Reo. U. 8. Land Office. Notary Public up"ory& note ROOMS 8 mi 9 LAND OFFICE BUS, roitomee if ox 325, v ... THE DALLES, OR. filings, contests,: . - - . : ,".. And all other Business in the D. S. Land Office ' Promptly "Attended to. " We have ordered Blanks for Filings, Entries and the. purchase pf 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. r , . v Thornburv Hudson. v $500 Reward f' We will pay the above reward for any case of Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, In digeHtlon, Constipation or Costlvenew 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. Sugar Coated. Large boxes containing SO. Pills, 25 cents. Beware of counterfeits and imi tations. The genuine manufactured only by' THE JOHN -C. -WFST COMPANY, CHIGAGO, ILLINOIS... - - - BLAKELIT HOUGHTON, ,; Prescription Drugglsta, 175 Secund St. . The lalle. Or.