The Dalles Daily Chronicle. THE DALLES OREGON. Kutered Ht the Postoflicc at The Dull on, Orvffon, as Mxsond-C'Utss mutter. . STATE OrriDIALH. . . .H. i"eiiii.pyer j Phniiet'hn I K. b. McKimy H-u-nfi'A" I " J- H. Mitchell 1jiveriii . BtMTetary of State Treasurer Supt. of 1'iiblic Instruction flinatonf 'JoiigresxniMii Hermann etMto Prlntwr Frank Baker Otll'NTV OfMCIALS. Connlrv Judgo ' K. Thot-ihary PueriS' -..!. L "t-1 Clerk ... 1...J. B. Crosscn Treasurer Gen. Rue h , , H' A. Ien CnmmlKHiimei. i Frank Kincai.l AiuHjosor John E. Harriett Bnrvevnr .E. F. Sharp Superintendent of Public Schools. .Troy ahelley Corouer . The Chronicle is the Only Paper in The Dalles that Receives the Associated Press Dispatches. A ROAD ITSELF THE THING. IMPORTANT The Portland Telegram puts the case fairly and well whon it says that, "It is natural for the people and papers of The Dulles to desire the portage road built on the Oregon side of the river, but this is not the important feature of the- ques tion. Other things being equal, all the people of Oregon would prefer t he road to be built on the Oregon side. . Yet the important thing ia the road itself, not the question whether it is on one side of the river or the other. That is a matter for honest, capable, unprejudiced engi rmers to determine. . We hooe their de cision may favor the Oregon side ; but if the other ide is the best there it must go." So far as tins journal is concerned it hns never asked more than thip. A oortuue road around The Dalles and Celilo is for the benefit of the country east of here and not specially for this city., io far as we are concerned we will have an outlet to, Portland and As toria even if the road in question should never be built. While not ignoring the fact that a road on this side would greatly benefit this city we hope we are more anxious for an open river than for any special beuelit that might accrue from its location in Oregon. At the same time a portage on this side that would tap Sherman county would be a paying investment if they had a hundred roads on the other side, and, believing that such a road can be built and oper ated for nearly half the cost of one in Washington we believe that in the long run it will te built here. THE TYGII HILL ROAD. Mr. William McCorkle, theTygh Vail-J ey miller, is in the city. From him we learn with regret that nothing has been done for a long time regarding the open . ing of the Typh Mountain road. The people whose interests are most deeply concerned are those who treat the matter with the frresitest indifference. Subscrip tion listsaent to prominent points in An) nntnnil TVnrK A".- 1 1 . n- Kiniirvl-tt K f 1 or no respouse. Mayor Mays put' down his name for f 150, A. J. Dufur $100 and Mr. McCorkle $75, and a few others smaller sums and then the matter came to a dead stop. We ars sorry for this indifference and still think a better or ganized eilbrt niurht have done better. The getting of subscriptions was left too much to that shiftless personage known as "every body." A mass meeting ought to be held and a committee appointed, of enterprising and active citizens, who would lie willing to sacrifice a little time on a work of such importance. There is not a doubt in the world that The Dalles would help liberally and just as little that the county court would do the same. But really the people directly in terested must do some rustling them selves or they will never get the road opened. "God helps those who help themselves." . The road is needed as everyone knows. Mr. McCorkle says : "I have traveled on foot from the Columbia river to the isthmus of Panama and on nearly every road from the Pacific Ocean to the Rocky Mountains and there is no Toad in America as bad as the road over Tygh Hill." OREGON OUGHT 'TO PORTAGE. HA VE A One thing is certain, if the present agitation for a portage around the Dalles should result in nothing being done till the next meeting of the legislature we can, without a question, obtain an ap propriation from the legislature to build one on the Oregon side. If the question were carried into the next campaign not a man could go to the legislature from any county in Eastern Oregon, bordering bnor near the Columbia river who would not pledge himself to .vote for an appro priation. More than this, if the state portage at the Cascades is a success, as we fully expect it to be, and another around tbe Dalles can be built and equipped for anything like the sum of Engineer Norton't estimate, we see no reason in the world, why the legislature would not make an : appropriation of a quarter of a million so that Oregon couia nave a portage ot ner own. it a competent survey had been made before the meeting of the last legislature, we have not a doubt in the. world that an ' appropriation would have been made and the road would now be in process of construction. " Some oue asks : "Who is the really nappy man 7 borne, other man. - DANIEL WEBSTER SAID OF FIAT MONEY. Daniel Webster denounced a depre ciated currency as "fructifying the rich man's field with the sweat of the poor man's brow." Speaking of the effects of a depreciated currency on the laboring classes he said: ' Capitalists may outlive such times. They may either prey on the earnings of labor, on their per "cent, or they may i.-nrrl . int tu lo hnrini? man. what can he hoard? Preving on nobodv he be- i comes the prey of all.' His property is in their hands. His reliance, his tunrt, hie productive -reehold,' his . alV " his labor; whether he woiis on his own small capital or on the capital of others, his living is still made by his industry, and when the money of the country is de preciated or debased,- whether it be adulterated coin or paper without credit, that industry is robbed of its reward. He then labors for a country whose laws ! cheat him out of his bread. A TOUGH STORY. A paragraph is going the rounds of the Oregon press that contains some very interesting figures on the sheep industry of Eastern Oregon. These figures are the same in every instance and we have met them in fullv half a dozen. exchanges else we should have supposed that some printer had blundered. The num ber of sheep in Eastern Oregon is given every time as 150,000 and the number of pounds of wool produced by these same 150,000 sheep is 8,978,123 pounds. T.he amount is an average of very, nearly sixty pounds of wool to each sheep. . The story is a little tough, but then the edi tors, some of whom employ the passing moments in writing learned essays jn the destructive effects of the Hessian fly on the.orchards of the country, have said it and it must be true. Still it's tough as we remarked before. . ALL WE ASK. The Paul Mohr company will not give up their chance to unload on the Port land capitalists their right of way for a portage on the Washington side of the river, without a struggle. The company has money and influence and they will undoubtedly Ufie loth to the bestadvant age. But we have good reason for know ing that Portland capitalists will not adopt their scheme without thorough in- i ..: .. , u ii. 1 vuk-l.u.i a...., .......5 i equal, they will favor the Oregon side ratner man mai oi wasumgiuii, ami this is all we can reasonably ask. i . Destroying Aphis. j i i t-i li spectacle has been witnessed in Madden e . ladv buns and someotherspecies of a bug atiout one-third of an inch long are doing effective work in cleaning out tiie aphis. They may be plainly seen destroying the pest. They work only on the trees that were unsprayed, in fact Mr. Sladen says that he considers that the spraying has been a failure, the trees being more or less iniured. It might be productive of good results , if some of our hop growers would try these bugs in the hop yards. Mr. Slad den says the lady bug is a peculiar looli- j ing one, and that yesterday was the first day they had been observed in bis or- : chard. Eugene Gua -d. ! Will Know More In the End. The farmers' alliance may favor "vis-! ionary schemes," so-called by their op- j ponents, but there is no denying the ! fact that the movement includes' a very large number of earnest, thinking farm- j ers, who desire above all things to bet- j ter the condition of the agricultural j classes, and who are working ' and will work for that end. All great reforms : are brought-about by agitation, and j while the wildest of these "visionary j schemes" may not be brought about, I this agitation may bring the farmers' , interest to the fore and his condition be j materially benefitted by it. To say the j least the movement will educate the I farmers up to a better understanding of their duties and privileges. i&cto frets. A Water Puxile. A singular fact has been noted at Mik echa which some scientists might find pleasure in explaining. Mr. Dudley has excavated a ditch leading from a spring to the Union Pacific well, in order to in crease the water supply. The ditch flows considerable water during the day, com- mencing at about 8 a. m., but the water disappears at sundown, and not a single drop 18 in the ditch during the night, If it ran dry dnrine the day timeevapor ation might furnish an explanation. Out the Union Pacific boys are at a loss to .account for the water's disappearance at night. EaH Oregoman. S. L YOUNG, (SoficeKJinr to E. BECK.i Jewelry, Diamonds, SILVEHWflHE, :-: ETC Watches, Clocks and Jewelry Repaired and Warranted. 165 Second St.. The Dalles.Or. WH A T DEALER IN WATCHES, CLOCKS, . ljovera t a litt:b.ii i.atui. It may have been the mill that hoodooed the Oakland,; or 'per blips . it Waa that touching little" scene' from "Borneo., and Juliet" enacted in one of the boxes. Along' about the middle of the game some one in the grand stand discovered the; simper ing, sail ejfad lovers io the act of plighting their troth iu the box. . '. . , ' They had evidently wandered In from the Alfalfa girded regions round - about Mil pitas to take in the Docoiation Day ex ercises. Then somebody steered them out to the ball park, whero ebey placed them selves on exhibition in their ureat two-hearts-that-beat-as-one act. In plain sight of 4,000 people and the players they eat lovingly clasped in each other's arms, thinking thoughts too utterly utter for words. First he would raptur ously kiss the maiden and then gaze down into the sweet, soulful depths of her lovelit eyes, and she would bury her face in his celuloid collar and sigh like a bathtub ex haust. ."Doe? her love her 'itcle tootseyf" -he would exclaim witli all the fervency of which a strong man is capable. "Well, I should gurgle, Petie," and the listening winds wafted the answer to the eight thousand expectant ears in the grand stand. Tbey took no interest whatever in the game as they sac in silent bliss, utterly ob livious to the shouts' of "Shut the door" and "Break away." Both audience and players forgot the game for three innings while watching the iiDconsoiotiR young I couple in the box. - Once, while the uproar waa at its height, Romeo tore himself away from. Juliet's side long epough to go out on the balcony and ascertain, if possible, the cause of the excitement. He glanced down toward the score board, thinking, perhaps, that some important news had just arrived from San Jose. He theu returned to the impatient maiden, who had not been kissed for nearly two seconds, and . made it as pleasant for her as he could. i Not until the. game was over did the young folks learn that their sacred seance in the box had been exposed to tha vulgar gaze of a cold, anfeeling world. As. they were leaving the park some one exclaimed, "There they are," and the crowd gave them a vigorous round of applause. The' girl wound a veil around her crimson cheeks. and Romeo instinctively felt in his girdle for a dagger with which to stab himself to death. San Francisco Chronicle. Sommur Furniture. Decorations for summer homes are now engrossing. The wide vine shaded piazzas are justly regarded as the most delightful ! lounging places and receive much atten- I tion from the tasteful housekeeper. Hand ' some rugs are strewn about, low sewing i chairs flank trefoil and star shaped tables, and a divan piled with cushions is a sine qua non of all well regulated piazzas. For 1 the lower and most used veranda one cov ered with corduroy may be recommended to wear indefinitely. Dark blue or stone blue are good colors, though one seen last summerof rich scarlet corduroy was won- derfully effective after the sun went down These couches are usually covered plain. !'with a box plaitad valance of the material around the seat. They are wide and low. and their pillows are of many shapes, I square, onions. 01 stiat' atAitn ; and little, to fit into Such couches are put out in May and are not taken indoors till November, and even under such conditions keep fresh for a number of Reasons. . Other I piazza divans are done up iu blue denise, i which requires a little embroidery at least ; on the pillows to be effective. For the upper verandas, where the worn ' en of the family loiter throush the morn j ings with sewing, reading and writing, ; cane sofas, with sateen and china silk pil lows, are popular. The cane work table, with brass tipped legs, is apt to be found in this alfresco sitting room, and a cane rack to hold newspapers and magazines secure from an invading breeze is another essential. Some novelties are seen in foot cushions. Among such are those of embossed leather red and brown, pretty for the library and dininK room. Small tufted oblongs, close ly resembling mattresses, are covered with rugs, and are suitable for foot rests in any room. For the cool looking white and gold parlors and drawing rooms of pretentious residences, the llama foot stools with gilt feet are effective, and the young woman whose slipper rests upon one may fancy her pet poodle is supporting it. Her Point of View in New York Times. . Nationality In Art. The men most prominent in American ! art today are, in the majority, of Parisian ' training, so much so that the most familiar 1 reproach directed against their work is that it lacks national character. That this ! criticism, if applied to a period of transi j tion, has a basis of truth is undeniable, for ! nothing is more natural than that the first ! steps in any career should be directed by i the influences which have presided over ' preparatory studies. But if we take ten j years to be the shortest period in which a young painter on his return from Europe can gain a foothold here, it will be lounu j at the end of that time that;-subjected to i the various influences of the iotellecnal j and material life of his native country, he ! has taken on more of our national charac- tenstics than he is given credit lor. ' Modern art is essentially cosmopolitan, and as nations obey - the iron rule of the general average, so in art the national char acteristics become fused and blended until they are questions of detail more than of fundamental construction. ' Paris fin de siecle has a keen eye for detail, howeven and we may depend upon it that, measured by its standards, the exhibition by our painters may be found wanting in many things rather than in tbe personality which results from race and temperament modi fled by conditions of environment. Scrib- Ders. ' A Good Word for the Colleia Boya. An American college contains from 500 to 1,500 boys, rich, poor, ambitious or thoughtless, as the case may be. Among them there is sure to be a miscmnf making element. .The escapades of these are tele graphed over the country and commented on by a sternly indignant press. Had the indiscretions been committed by boys out of college they would never have attracted even passing attention. From these widely circulated stories, always exaggerated and affecting at most but a handful ox students. the idea has sprang that to send a boy to college is to cast him into a moral fiery furnace, where he will be assailed by every form of temptation. This is as far from the truth as it can well be. There are few temptations in college life which are not encountered in the everyday world. On the other hand, there is a stand ard of college morals which must be lived np to by any student who cares to preserve his social standing among bis fellows. This is not, in some ways, airigh standard, bat it is higher than any to be found in common use outside college walls. To live by it is to acq aire the habits of thought and the manners of a gentleman. The only wonder is that college disturbance are so rare. Albany Journal. ' J. M. HUNTINGTON & CO. Abstracters, v Keal Estate and ; ; :s Insurance Agents. Abstracts. of. and information Concern ing I.nd Titles on Short Notice. Land for Sale and Houses to Rent Parties booking for Homes , in; - CO UNTRY OR CITY, OR IN SEARCH OF . . Should Call on or Write to us. ' Agents for a Full Line of LeadlM Fire Insn ranee 1 Companies And Will Write Insurance for ' , on all . DESIRAfeiiBi-EISKS. Correspondence Solicited. Ail Letters Promptly Answered. . Call on or ' Address, J. M. HUNTIN6T6N'& CO. " Opera House Block, The Dalles, Or. COLUMBIA Qaidy :-: paetory, W. S. CRAM, Proprietor. ( successor to Cram i Corson. ) , Mnnufacturer of the finest French and Home Mude o j'iisr DIES, .East of Portland. DEALER IN " - Tropica! Fruits, Nuts, Cigars and Tobacco. Can furnish iiny of these good Ht Wholesale j or Retail In Every Style. 104 Second Street. The Dalles. Or. R. B. Hood, Livery, Feed and Sale riorses none nt ana sola on Commission and Money Advanced on Morses left For Sale. OFFICE OF- The Dalles and Goldendale Stage Line. stage Ijeaves 1 he Dalles every morning at 7:30 and Uoldendule at 7:30. All freieht must be left at R. B. Hood's office the evening before. R. B. HOOD, Proprietor. Columbia Ice Co. 104 SECOND STREET. IC33 ! IOB ! IOE ! Having over 1000 tons of ice on hand, wholesale or retail, to be delivered through the summer. Parties contract ing with us will be carried through the entire season without advance in pkicb, and may depend that we have nothing but PURE, HEALTHFUL ICE, Cut from mountain water : no slough or slush ponds. . - ieave orders at tne uoiumoia uanay Factory, 104 Second street. W. S. CRAM, Manager. PIIIIER & BEJITOIi; Offiee Cop. 3d and Union Sts. Oak and Fir on Hand. Orders Filled Promptly. $500 Reward! We will pay the above reward for any ease of Liver Cnmnlfdnt. DvfmenfriA. Sick Headache. In digestion, Constipation or Costivenews we cannot cure with West's vegetable Liver Pills, when the directions are strictly complied with. They are purely vegetable, and never all to give satisfac tion. Sugar Coated. Large boxes containing 80 Pills, 25 cents. Beware of counterfeits and Imi tations. The genuine manufactured only by THE JOHN C...WF8T COMPANY, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS. y JtI.AKKI.Kir A 'HOUGHTON, Prescription Drugglata, J 75 Second St. ' The Xlles, Or. CORD WOOD Summer Goods! SUMMER GOODS Of Every Description will be sold at A : GREAT : SACRIFICE For the Next THIRTY DAYS. Call Early and Bargains. get Terms The Dalles Mercantile Co g ' ' ' ' ' Successors to BKOOKS fc KEEKS, Dealer In General' Merchandise, . Staple and Fancy Dry Goods, Gents' Furnishing Goods, Boots, Shoes, Hats, Caps, etc. Groceries, Provisions, HAY, GRAIN AND PRODUCE Of all Kinds at Lowest Market Rates. . - r : Free Delivery to Boat and Curs and all parts of the City. 390 and 394 NEW FIRM! Hoseoe -DEALERS IN- .'STAPLE'." AND.' FANCY' Canned Goods, Preserves, Pickles," Etc. Country Produce Bought and Sold. Goods delivered; Free to any part of tlie City. Masonic Block, Corner Third and E. Jacobsen & Co., WHOLESALE AND KETAlL 1 BOOKSELLERS AND RTAT10NERS. Pianos and Organs Sold on EASY INSTALLMENTS. Notions, Toys, Fancy G - ments of all Kinds. Orders lEixicsd Promptly. 3VEct.X 162 SECOND STREET, The Dalles Gigaf : Factory, FIEST STREET. FACTORY NO. 105. (T( A T G of the Best Brands VVA vH"-i-XVlO manufactured, and orders from all parts of tbe country filled on tbe shortest notice. The reputation of THE DALLES CI GAR has become firmly established, and the den:and for the home manufactured article is increasing every day. A. ULRICH & SON. PRINZ & NITSCHKE. DEALERS IN Furniture and Carpets. we nave aaaed to our 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'8;bank. - $20 REWARD. WILL BE fAj.u KOB ANT INFORMATION leading to the conviction of parties cutting e ropes or in any way interfering with the win poles or lamps of Ths Electric Light Pit H flT.KNN. Manager FLOURING MILL TO LEASL ; rrwrR m.n T)t.t,tt.s mill AND WATER X Company's I lour Mill will be leased, to re sponsible parties. For information apply to the WATER COMMISSIONERS, The Dalles, Oregon., A NEW Undertaking Establishment ! Summer Goods! some of our Genuine H. Herbringv Chsh. . Hard-ware, Flour, Bacon, Second Street v-l-ir'-.'." ,-nv-5'a r3Ji-i2 NEW STORE' Gibons, Court Streets, The Dalles, Oregon. oods and Musical Instru- THE DALLES, OREGON. JAMES WHITE, Has Opened a Lunoli 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 . Phil Willig, 124 UNION ST., THE DALLES, OR. Keeps on hand a fall 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 purchasing elsewhere. ' Steam Ferry. i ..... '. f A mTTTiC 8 now running a steam t. U. IlMlilO Ferry between Hood River and White Salmon. - Charge ' i w r.. - .