,6 The Dalles Daily Chronicle. THE DALLES - OREGON. Entered at the Postofflce at The Dalles, Oregon, as seoond-class matter. STATE OFFICIALS. - Governoi S. Pennoyer 'Secretary of State G. W. McBride Treasurer Phillip Metxchan Bupt. of Public Instruction E. B. McElroy U. N. Dolnh " J J. H. Mitchell Congressman B. Hermann State Printer Frank Baker COUNTY OFFICIALS. County Judge.... C. N. Thornbury Sheriff D. L. Cates Clerk J. B. Crossen Treasurer . Geo. Ruch , IH A. Leavens voramiMioners Frank Kincaid Assessor. John E. Barnett Surveyor E. F. Sharp Superintendent of Public Schools. . .Troy Shelley Coroner William Mlchell The Chronicle is the Only Paper in The Dalles that Receives the Associated Press Dispatches. A SHOE FACTORY FOR THE DALLES. It needs no argument to prove the 'value of manufacturing industries to the growth and prosperity of the city, as everyone will admit that no city can ever become great and prosperous with out them. The local press of this city, to do it justice, has never been backward in urging the importance of establishing factories at this place but has met with little response, largely, we presume, be cause of the lack of necessary funds, and because all surplus monies could, at all times, be safely and profitably loaned out on good real estate or personal se curity. It may not, however, be useless to call attention to one industry that might be established here, that if we are correctly informed as to the cost of the plant, is surely within the means of .a city of more limited resources. No one will doubt that if the shoe factory at . North Dalles had been established on this side the river it would today, have been a running if not a paying institu tion. The question occurs to the writer, Why could we not have a small shoe factory in The Dalles?. The capacity of the North Dalles shoe factory is said to be 600 pairs of shoes a day, but the whole manufacturing plant, we are in formed, only cost $4,288. The boiler and engine cost something like $1,800, while the machinery, complete in every detail for the manufacture of the shoe, in all its stages from the moment it is cut from the hide till it is burnished and ready for the packer, cost only $2,488 ex clusive of the freight charges. Such a plant is adapted to give employment to eighty persons, that is, when it is run at its fullest caDacitv. but of mnran fivn persons or any other number of employ es, each capable of doing every class of work could run the whole factory, if it were thought best to begin on a small scale. In such a case, as less power would be needed it might be rented, thus doing away with the cost of the boiler and engine. The amount of capital re- quirea 10 run ine Dusiness would, of course, depend largely upon the amount of business intended to be done. There is no question as to the readiness with which a market call be found for the products and there seems as little doubt that the business is profitable. A shoe manufactured at North Dalles which sold readily in competition with eastern goods cost, at what was considered a full figure $1.19 and sold for $2.00. Another that cost to manufacture $1 73 sold for $3.00. Another that cost $1.51 sold for $2.77, and the smallest profit on any of the lines made was on a shoe that cost $1.35 and sold for $2.00. The prices of course include material, wages and every thing. We have them from Mr. Hall who was foreman of the works and they surely prove that there is money m a shoe factory and thai, no great amount of money is needed to start one on a .small scale. The Attorlan says : "From a strip of water iu front of the city, every year, without any preparatory sowing or cul tivation Astorians annually lift $3,000, 000 worth of the most delicious of all fish the famous Chinook salmon which is found from St. Petersburg to Cape Good Hope; amid Alpine snows or Arabian sands, and is prized by all the world alike." From a strip of water above The Dalles a few fishermen, after con siderable expense in building wheels and leads, (occasionally, under favorable cir cumstances, take a few tons of fish, whereat these three million dollar chaps, at the mouth of the river get very mad and cry out about the awful havoc and slaughter of the fistr wheels. The government lately awarded con tracts for Indian supplies amounting to over $2,000,000 which called for blankets, clothing, woolen and worsted manufac tures, calico, hardware, household uten sils, agricultural implements, provisions an1 mwi'n - PnDaan t..-ta n..w.a up the result: "For all manufactured goods the prices were as low or a shade lower than last year; for beef , flour and other agricultural products the prices were somewhat higher." A. OT1 J X I . T Isenhoot of Crook county shot Allen Henry of Chico, California in the drug store of Tern pleton & Son of Prineville. The wound is not dangerous and Henry will recover. .What led to the shooting is a matter of. conjecture. ' The men had been at law with each other and were not on friendly terms. School Report. Fairview, Or., June 19, 1891. ' Editor Chronicle : School closed in District No. 25 today with twenty-two pupils enrolled. Following . is their standing in scholarship and deportment : Sch'l'p. Dep. Edna Hall....... 90 90 GracieHal: 83 90 Florence Wolfe 90. 98 Mav Wolfe 85 98 Emma Wolfe 90 95 IdaWickbam 75 80 Bessie Hastings 98 . 90 Maggie Hastings 92 90 Charles Obrist 82 95 Harry Obrist 85 99 John Obrist . . . ; 84 99 Ralph Hall... ' 83 82 Henry Wolfe . . 90 95 Willie Walter 86 85 Robert Walter 92 95 Orrie Walter ... 92 93 Clarence Wickham . . 75 82 George Hall .... 75 - 82 Willie Hastings 90 80 Charles Stewart 90 90 Ernest Hall 85 90 Edward Wickham 75 75 Those receiving the highest number of head marks are: Class No. 1, Ralph Hall; class, No. 2, Willie Hastings; class No. 3, Henry Wolfe ; class No. 4, Florence Wolfe; class No. 5, Bessie Hastings. Ettie Rows, Teacher. Will be In The Dalles Monday Night. Miss Vernona Jarbeau, in "Starlight," is an actress of note. She is the personi fication of motion, ever changing, sur prising, alluring. The grace of action is in her modulating voice, in the tossing of her head, in the arching of her neck, in the movement of her limbs, in the pose of her body, in the pucker of her lips, the glance of her eyes, the wichery of her tones, in the archness, friskiness, pertness, the inimitable style of her be ing. With vocal attainments of high or der, with facial beauty, a handsome woman, she'possesses the chic that would set all Paris wild with delight and that popularized her in every city she has appeared. She has equally the insou ciance and artliness of the Italian peas ant girl warbling spontaneously rustic melodies at the "Spur of Vesuvius." The exquisite grace of the French grisette singing "Pi Ouit," the saucy 'Spanish senorita dancing with castnets and undalating movements, and the topical singer, archly and rougishly in quiring at the end of each verse satiriz ing some popular folly, "That's enough, don't you think?" Miss Sarbeas verstility is sufficient in itself, with such a character as Star light, to hold the audience ; but she sur rounded herself with a company seldom seen in musical comedies. A Fish Hatchery Site. The Washington fish commission, comprising Governor Perry, State Treas urer Lindsley and James Crawford, a short time ago held a conference with F. C. Reed, chairman of the Oregon state fish commission, shortly after which they tagan to look for a suitable location for the hatchery. This they have found in the upper Okanogan county. Salmon will be tried first, and trout afterward. From this point they can keep the Col umbia and all tributary rivers stocked with healthy fish. The exact location will be kept a secret as long as it is on surveyed land, but work will shortly be commenced. It is thought the $15,000 appropriated will run the hatchery until the next legislature, when another ap propriaiion will be made. Seattle Press Times. Do you want to double your wealth without gambling or stock -jobbing? Share it ! Whether it be material or in tellectual, its rapid increase will amaze vou. What would the sun ' have been had he folded himself up in darkness? Surely he would have gone out. So would Soprates. . C. Hare. The worst all-around striker is the borrower. ' FOR BALE. A choice lot of brood mares : also a. number of geldings and fillies bv "Rock wood Jr.," "Planter," "Oregon Wilkes," and "Idaho Chief," same standard bred. Also three nne young stallions by "Rock wood Jr." out of first class mares. For nricesand terms paII nn or aHHnua either J. W. Condon, or j. H. Larsen, The Dalles, Oregon. Lost, Strayed or Stolen. A Rmn.ll ret millr DAar arithnnt na.1rfi 3 years old. Any information that wili lead to her recovery will be suitably re- waraea Dy jviays & ubowe. I am now ofTerinflr mfn' anrino- ahH summer suits at greatly reduced rates. T SI T1.1J o j. xaiuwxu. Cash naid for cirra and rhinlrpnn nr. -T H. Cross feed store. - Splendid Stories ! Striking Pictures ! Funny Poetry! Patriotism Without PMtu&I Will Characterise Our Independence Day Edition.' ORDER IT tlOVJ. The Laborer Should Be Honored. The real dignity of labor is well sym bolized and set forth in those single acts at the beginning or end of a great work which represent to the imagination the whole enterprise. - The corner stone of a great building is generally laid by some official digni tary who, in an un accustomed apron and with a trowel which he use., clum sily, makes a pretense of doing the actual work of putting the stone in place. Crowds stand about to witness the work, and orations are made and hymns sung. The knocking away of the prop which sends a vessel off the ways .and into the water is an event of equal consequence and interest, , because it represents the noble task of constructing a great ship. When one of the greatest engineering works of all time was completed the construction of the Pacific railroad it was regarded as a great honor to drive the last spike that bound the last rail to the earth; and the spike which served at least temporarily for - the work was made of silver. Emperors, kings and presidents start with their own hands the machinery of great industrial exhibitions, themselves typical in a high degree of the import ance of manual labor. In a certain sense it would be more fitting that these ceremonies, which con centrate into a single instant's act long periods of hard labor, should be per formed by one of the real workingmen who are engaged upon the enterprise. It is they who do the work, and they might well claim that the honor of the key ceremony belongs to them. This was what was done, indeed, when the first blow of the pick was struck in the construction of the buildings for the World's fair of 1893 at Chicago. Youth's Companion. " Where Gold Goes To. A considerable part. of all the gold which goes to India never returns. Hav ing been obtained in the west by the sale of exported productions, it is retained in the east as realized profits, wealth stored up, and to a moderate extent for nse in the arts, for the rest as a representative of value on the credit of which traders buy and sell with the bills of exchange they issue and the book credits they open, and settle np the differences with the silver money of the country. But the vast stock of gold accumulated there undergoes no diminution. There is no ebb and flow under the reciprocal action which commerce enforces iu the case of countries trading together on a common metallic basis. The three mill ions sterling (or thereabout) of gold bull ion which India annually adds to her store are, under the monetary law of that country, just as much lost to the nations of the west, by being with drawn from the general commerce of the world, as if the money had been lent to a South American republic. Between the years 1835 and 1889 (April) this depletion amounted in value to 130.292.758. Between that date and the month of September, 1890. a further accumulation, to the value of 5,069, 272. took place, bringing this portion of the gold treasure of India up to a value exceeding 135,250,000. Blackwood's Magazine. Ibsen's Curious Figure. I cannot recollect having ever met a man of more peculiarly striking appear ance than Mr. Ibsen. He reminded me to a certain extent of those fabulous creatures the gnomes, who play such an important part in Scandinavian myth ology, and are vividly described in the old songs of the Ed da. He is a man of less than medium size, but very heavily set. The upper part of his body is very large in proportion to his lower limbs, but still small in comparison with that immense head, which, with its bushy hair, white as snow, overtowers the. compact bodily frame. " A heavy beard of the same color would encircle the face if it was not for the fact that Ibsen keeps his chin shaven, a dis tinction also enjoyed by the upper lip. 1 wonder if Mr. Ibsen knows that by wearing bis beard in the manner de scribed he shows a very strong chin and a mouth of classic delineation. Irresist ible is the charm of his eyes, which are of a deep blue, like the color of the sea on the shores of his beautiful native north land. Louisville Courier-Journal. A Glance at London Society. Take the vast London society. It is a stiffnecked dress parade in which one meets one's best friend once a fortnight and strangers in proportion. People never know each other well and are al most suspicious of those they do know. Invitations are sent out from one to two months ahead and people come and go without making a visible impression, and there is none of that merry familiarity which makes American life so enjoy able. A dinner is a set affair, with no gen eral conversation and a total absence of what the French call esprit; in fact, most of the Englishman's pleasures are of the macintosh and umbrella kind. The Londoner is always guarded and suspicious of the stranger, and I don't wonder, considering some of the Ameri cans he has had shoved upon trim. But, after all, there are too many people is London; it is impossible to expect free dom, familiarity and hospitality among such a multitude. Cor. Chicago News. It Can't Be. ' A New York surgeon who ha made a specialty of nerve centers says the music of a hand organ is pleasant to at least ninety-nine out of every hundred people, falling upon the nerve centers and tym panum of the ear with soothing effect. He says that when you meet a person that cries out against this sort of music you can safely put him down as a falsi fier and deceiver. Detroit Free Press. An Innocent Question. Clockmaker Why, my good woman, if your clock doesn't go, you must bring me the whole of it: I can do nothing with the pendulum alone. Woman Ale prosim! Why the whole clock? The clock is all right; it's only the horrid pendulum as won't work. -Wiener Figaro. y ,.' S. L. YOUNG, (Successor to E. BECK.) -DEALER IN- WATCHES, CLOCKS, Jewelry, Diamonds, SHiVEllWflflE, :-: ETC Watches, Clocks and Jewelry Repaired and Warranted. 165 Second St.. The Dalles, Or. The Dalles GigaF : paetory, PIEST STBEET. FACTORY NO. 105. O.Tfr APCof the Best Brands vAVJ illlkj manufactured, and orders from all parts of the country filled me snoriest notice. , The remitationof THE rAT.TRK r-T GAR has become firmly established, and tuc ueuiana ior me nome manufactured article is increasing every day. A. ULRICH & SON. A NEW Undertaking Establishment ! PRINZ & NITSCHKE. Since the first of June we have added to our Furniture and Carpet business a complete Undertaking Establishment, and as we are in no way connected with the Undertakers' Trust our prices will be low accordingly. Remember our place on Second street, next to Moody's bank. 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. ouiKa mvvs ine issues every morning at 7:80 and Goldendale at 7:80. All freight must be left at B. B. Hood's office the evening before. R. B. HOOD, Proprietor. I. t iMnTLgEN, DEALER IN SCHOOL BOOKS, STATIONERY, ORGANS, PIANOS, WATCHES, . JEWELRY. Cor. Third and Washington Sts. John Pashek, jneictot Tailor. Third Street, Opera Block. Madison's Latest System, Used in cutting garments, and a fit guaranteed each tune. Repairing and Cleaning Neatly and Quickly Done. Removal 41- H. Herbring?s fa DRY Has removed to 177 Second opposite his former stand, where he will be pleased to see his former customers and friends. He carries now a much larger stock than before and every Department is filled with the Latest Novelties of the . The Dalles Mercantile Co., Successors to BROOKS BEERS, Dealers in General Merchandise. Staple and Fancy Dry GoodsT Gents' Furnishing Goods, Boots, Shoes, Hats, Caps, etc. ' Groceries, ; Hardware, ; 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 . ' 390 and 394 Second Street JAMES WHITE, Has Opened a X-xixxoIx 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 COLUMBIA Qapdy :-: paetory, W. S. CRAM, Proprietor. (Successor to Cram k Corson.) Manufacturer of the finest French and Home Made OUST DI B S, East of Portland. -DEALER IN- Tropical Fruits, Nuts, Cigars and Tobacco. Can furnish any of these goods at Wholesale or Retail , FESH OYSTESS- In Every Style. 104 Second Street, The Dalles, Or. " C. N. THORNBURY, T.A.HUDSON, late Rec. U. 8. Land Office. Notary Public THDRHBURY & HUDSON. ROOMS 8 and 9 LAND OFFICE BUILDING, Postofflce Box 388, THE DALLES, OR. Filings, Contests, And all other Easiness in the D. S. Land Office Promptly Attended to. , We have ordered Blanks for Filings, TCnt.TnAa and fha nnwiliima ftf T?alwa4 iuvuboq V. -.U.X-i Jfn Lands under the recent Forfeiture Act, which we will have, and advise the pub lic at the earliest date when such entries Can DO made. Tknlr tnr wIvarfioAmiint in this paper. Thornburv & Hudson. SteamFerry. t) A nTrfJf is now running a steam l U. EM ririO Ferry between Hood River and White Salmon. Charges reasonable. R. O. Evans, Prop. FLOURING MILL TO LEASE. THE OLD DALLES MILL AND WATER Company's Hour Mill will be leased to re sponsible parties. For information apply to the WATCH CUMM1BS1UWERS, The Dalles, Oregon. Notice I ' GOODS STORE street (French's Block) nearly Season. , J. M. HUNTINGTON & COf Abstracters, Real Estate and 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 Full Line of ; ' Lealii to Insurance Companies, And Will Write Insurance for ' - on. all DESIEABLE EISKB. . Correspondence Solicited. All Letters Promptly Answered. Call on or Address, J. M-HUNTINGTON & CO. Opera House Block, The Dalles, Or. Phil Willig, 124 UNION ST., THE DALLES, OR. Keeps on hand a full line of MEN'S AND YOUTH'S Ready Made Clothing. Pants and Suits MADE TO ORDER On Reasonable Terms. ourchasing elsewhere. , 1 ' $500 Reward! We will pay the above reward for any case of Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, In- v digestion, Constipation or Costiveuess 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- -lion. Sugar Coated. Large boxes containing 36 Pills, 2b cents. Beware of counterfeits and imi tations. The genuine manufactured only by THE JOHN C. WF8T COMPANY, CHIQAGO, ILLINOIS. t BLAKILET A HOUGHTON, ' Prescription Druggists, 178 Second St. - The Dalles, Or. REMOVAL. H. Glenn has removed his -office and the office of the Electric Light Co. to 72 Washington St. $20 REWARD. TTTILL BE PA1LI FOB ANY INFORMATION TT leading to the conviction of parties cutting f a m m In mnv WAV T1 t.tT-f'H T1 IT Wl th ttltt 9 win poles or lamps of Thi Electric Light rv ' . . H. GLENN. :' ? " . ': 'it, ; Manager; 1