The Dalles Daily Chronicle. iitlt'tinliiit iMity, uii'ltiy r.xfted. r.r THK CHKONICLE PUBLISHING CO. Corner Second and Washington Streets, Dalles, Oreguu. The Terms of Subscription. IVrVwir M 10 Per mouth, by currier ." Mugle copy 5 STATE OFFICIALS. ' (iovcrnoi S. Pennoyer Secretary of State 1. W. McBride Treasurer:-.- Phillip MetscUan BupL of Public Instruction E. IS. MeElroy (J. N. Dolph enators ...y jj H MitcheU ConKretwman...: H. Hermann State Printer Frank Baker COUNTY OFFICIALS. County Judge C. N. Thorabury Sherllf I. L Cates clerk J. B. Crossen Treasurer Geo. Rueh ., . , IH' A. Leavens .ominisl,nt.r J Frank Kincaid Assessor . . .John E. Barnett Surveyor E. F. Sharp Superintendent of Public Schools. . .Troy Hhellev Coroner William Michell The Chronicle is the Only Paper in The Dalles that Receives the Associated Press Dispatches. " SE W WELL YOUR WHEA TSA CKS. A well known local wheat buyer sug gests' that farmers this year ought to take particular pains to have their wheat eacks sewed in the best possible manner. It is expected lhat a great deal of Wasco county wheat will be forwarded to Portr laud by boat atid when the sacks are not well sewed there is 15 ablo to be a good leal of waste. "WORTHY OF SPECIAL ERATION." CONS II- The regular meeting of the Portland Chamber of Commerce was held Mon day evening and a partial report of the committee appointed to investigate the proposition of the Columbia Railway & Navigation company to open the Colum bia river to navigation was submitted to the meeting. An extension of time was gi anted the committee to finish their work and a full report is expected to be submitted to the next regular meeting in September. Meanwhile the committee informed the meeting that their "atten tion had been called to a practical route for a portage on the Oregon side of the river," that the committee had gone over the proposed line in company with R. E. llarbersham and Douglas W. Tay lor, civil engineers of the city of Port land." The committee statedthat "the Oregon line was worthy of 6pecial con sideration" and recommended that it be referred to a special committee or to themselves for investigation.. Thus the gentlemen who went over the proposed route between The Dalles and Sherman county last Sunday have fulfilled our ex pectations and brought the matter favor ably before the Chamber of Commerce. As they had not been authorized to in vestigate the Oregon road, but merely came here in a private capacity, at the request of the directors of The Dalles, Dufur & Silkstone road, they have done all we could expect and we shall watch further deveiopments with great interest. PROTECTION RUN TO SEED. The exigencies of political partisan ship must be very pressing when it is found necessary to condemn the super intendent of the Bureau of Immigration because he has decided that certain Welch tin-plate workers may be brought into this country without violating the contract labor law. We have no opin ion to offer as to the legality of the su perintendent's decision, but we do think it is in harmony with the dictates of -common sense. With plants establishd and material on hand for the manufac ture of tin-plate, skilled labor is needed in an industry entirely new to the country. If the neceseary skilled labor were already here, the case would be entirely different, but it is not here and manufacturers cannot reasonably be asked to put their plants in charge of men who know nothing of the business, A Washington dispatch of the 10th inst, informs us that President Xiedringhaus, of the St. Louis stamping Company, re plying to Secretary Foster's recent letter relating to the employment of foreign skilled labor for the tin-plate industry, simply claims that for the successful operation'of this industry, it is neces sary to have a number of skilled work men, fresh from the business, as con ducted in Europe today. "The foreign labor needed," he says, , "will not uunount to ten per cent, of the whole number of employes. This sort of help cannot le obtained in the home market." This is a very different thing from lay ing dir.vn the bars for the influx of the "pauper labor of Europe." It is the ad mission of ten per cent, of skilled labor, without whose presence the remaining ninety per cent, already here, would find no emyloyment in connection with an industry that no man is justified'in say ing may not eventually attain immense proportions nnd be of great benefit to the country. We heartily believe in protecting the American laborer from the pauper labor of Europe, but the pro posal to shut out a class of skilltd labor new to the. country is protection run to seed. ' 1.I11KI'' 8TATE NEWS. George Waldron, the i'J-year-old sm of William Waldron. a prominent farmer living near Prairie City, 'was dragged to death by a horse Tuesday, the youiig man bei'n thrown off and his foot catch ing in the stirrup. John Simonis of Wolf creek, a pioneer farmer of Baker county is dangerously ill. A small smelter will be erected at the Galena mines on Middle ' fork, Grant county. , George Ebell, cue of Baker county's most prosperous farmers, states that his grain this year will uverajre sixty bushels to the acre. - W. F. Noble has shipped from Baker county since the first of the year between 13,000 and 14,000 head of sheep, leaving something like $40,000 with .the sheep men. The Albany woolen mills have pur chased this season 280,000 pounds of wool. The mills are ' running steadily and will manufacture more than that amount during the next year. Rev. Father Metayer, of Albany, who has been at the hospital at Portland for j some time, has so far recovered from his severe illness as to be able to go to the Siskiyou mountains where he will re main until he is able to resume his ministerial duties. F. J. Miller,, clerk of the loard of rail road commissioners, is busily engaged in taking care of the mass of papers which have accumulated in that office during the last1 five vearsi. . Previous to this there was no system of filing the papers, and they were scattered here- and there without any attempt at keeping them in order. " , Oscar Oliver, of'Lost Prairie Wallowa county, aged 13, was thrown from his hotrae and kicked b t te animal in the face. . The lad's jaw was broken in two places and the accident may result fatally. Mr. Oliver lost two little girls about a year ago by a terrible accident, ana it seems that misfortune etui pur sues his family. i The Southern- Pacific is contending with a big slide about two miles and a half north of West fork, that keeps 100 men busy to prevent it from covering the track. There are several acreg of earth that are inclined to slide, and of unknown depth. There .is not much danger of the trains being delayed by it, Out as 100 men is all that can be worked at a time it is giving them somewhat of a steady job. During the thunder storm at 'Mon mouth last ' Wecnesday,-a barn was struck by lightning and destroyed. When the rain was pouring down its hardest a young man, named Dolmeter, rode into the barn" on a horse, lie had no sooner got ' inside the door than the building was struck. The lightning stunned him but he recovered himself in time to get out of the way of the fire. The horse did not get awav and was burned with the barn. GENERAL. l'EKSONAL MENTION. Prince Henry of Prussia has started for England. to visit Queen Victoria. John A. Riley, brother of James Whitcomb Riley, has been appointed superintendent of the Bradstreet com pany for the Pacific coast, with head quarters at Los Angeles. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Packard, who rside on a farm near New Hartford, Iowa, are the parents of. twenty-nine living children. The eldest is forty-nine and the youngest is sixteen years of age. Robert T. Baker, of New Bedford, Mass., read the Bible through for the first time in 1828. Since that date he has read it ' ninety-nine times. It usually takes him two months to read it from beginning to end. President Diaz is again well enough to attend to executive business, but he bears traces of recent suffering. His wife wishes him to go to Europe for a rest, but his ambition keeps him . at home and will for some time yet. Ex-Speaker Reed has apparently been getting gay during his trip abroad. A New York paper records that on his re turn "his suit of clothes was distinct ively American in cut, wherever it was made, but his silk hat, with a narrow brim, was plainly built on a British block. He wore it on the back of his head." John C. Calhoun, grandson of. the South Carolina statesman of that name, declares that alternate generations in his family smoked and eschewed smoking. He. never touches a cigar himself, and he says the great apostle of mullification never did either; but hia father and and great-grandfather were inveterate smokers. Princess Milena, wife of the reigning prince of Montenegro, has euojected herself to a severe surgical operatjon in the clinic of Heidelberg. The princess is now forty-five years old, but she has been married thirty-one years. As Milena Petrowna Bukotitisch in 1847 she was called the loveliest and most beautiful woman in Europe. ' G. W. McKay, the alliance judge in Kansas, who recently tried to overrule the supreme court, but found it was not practicable, came originally from Michigan, and stu'ddied law at Ann Arbor. He removed to Kansas for his health, and derived so much benefit from the change that he soon threw himself into his new profession with en thusiasm. t California's Brush Fire Subdued. San Rafael, Aug. 11. The brash fire which started in Coleman's addition yesterday afternoon was subdued early this morning. About lOOtTacres of pas ture land was burned. It required the tffbrts of seventy men to gain control of the tire. United Stales Senator John H. Mitch ell is just in receipt of a very kind invi tation to etunip Ohio for Major McKin 1 this falL It is from 'the republican slate executive committee nnd is feigned by Chairman William K. Halm and Secretarv W.S.Matthews. Th Ancient Mines of .murium. United States Consul . Manatt, at Athens, in a recent report on Greek min ing and metallurgy, enters into the his tory of the; subject in an interesting manner. The mines of Laorium, now worked for zinc, lead and iron, are, he says, the very mines from which Themis tocles drew the silver supply to fit out his fleet and beat back the Persian invader at Salamis (490-480 B. C), and so to lay the foundations of-the Athenian hegemony. More than this, it is thought probable that the Phoenicians delved here before the Greeks came, as they are known to have done in the Island of Thasoa. . At any rate, Thoricus was a free city before Theseus welded the Attic bor oughs into a single commonwealth (that is to say, before the name of Athens ap peared in history) and its importance must have been due to the mines; so that the mining industry at Lauriurn may possibly boast an origin as - remote as thirty centuries back, while it is again in full blast today. ' . r In walking through the French com pany's great mine at Camaresa, in the heart of the Laurium region, one tra verses here a gallery in active exploita tion for zinc and lead and hard by an other worked out by the old Greeks two or three thousand years ago.'; These an cient works are among the- most inter esting monuments of Hellenic civiliza tion. .... ., ? .. Etiquette In the Reign of Louis XIV. The etiquette which prevailed at Ver sailles was of the most minutely elaborate character, and governed every movement of the king and those about him from the very moment he opened his august eyes until he closed them in deep. He was the center of the whole; it was a drama, daily repeated the same charac ters, the same scenes, the same derails oppressive in its sameness, fatiguing in its constant pressure. . . . -L- I have neither the space nor the inclina- i tion to dwell on all the extraordinary ceremonial of the state dinner; the twen ty or thirty grandees fluttering around the king's plates and glasses; the sacra mental utterances of the, occasion; the gaudy procession of the retinue; the ar rival of la nef that is, the center piece of plate which contained, between scented cushions, the king's napkins, and Pessai des plats the tasting of each dish by the gentlemen servants and officers of the table before the king partook of it. The same custom was observed with the beverages. It took four persons to serve the king with a glass of wine and water. Well might Frederick the Great, on hearing an account of all this tyranny of etiquette, exclaim, that if he were king of France his first edict would be to ap point another king to hold court in his place. All the Year Round. . LomI n Goud Story. A ri'ii-jrtsr called at the house of a prominent city pastor who liad been down with pneumonia. His wife an swered the door bell. "How i3 the doctor?" "Much better, thank you." A shade of disappointment mirrored itself on the reporter's face, and he said in a tone which showed that he felt ag grieved, as one who had been robbed of a sensational item: f'Well, they told me at the office that the Rev. Mr. B was at the point of death, and that your hus band was very low. I've just called at the Rev. Mr. D 'a office and I find that he's got well and gone out. And now yon tell me your husband is better," sighing. Then, rwith a hopeful look, he asked qmckiy: "Is there any likelihood of a relapse?" "Mercv!" cried the frightened wife, "I hope not!" "Good morning, then," said the sad re porter. St. Louis Republic. Things Worth Knowing. Words do seem so weak and value less. Fellow worker, companion, friend, dear mother, dear wife till we meet again adieu. The person who fnrnishe's items for a newspaper is always a friend to the edi tor. Many persons hesitate about sending items to a newspaper regarding the movement of friends lest the editor should think them anxious to eee their j names in print, He will think nothing4 of the kind, bnt on the, contrary, is glad to get such items. Many seemingly un important notes when .printed are news to a large number of readers. British board of trade returns mark a heavy decline iu texile exports to the United Stales. On the iwbole the ex ports are only about one-half what they were at this time last year. It is evi dent that our country is manufacturing more and more of the goods it consumes and that the McKinley tariff is contrib uting to this result. Frank Lee, of the Klickitat Leader, has purchased of O. P. Mason, the Northwest Pacific Farmer, and will as sume charge about September first. Three other parties will be associated with Mr.! Lee, and the company will publish the paper in the interest of the granges and grangers of the northwest. They have the endorsement of the state grange of Washington, and have been assured a flattering patronage. Dis patch. In 18G0 the total number of sheep in the territory composing today the states of Idaho, Wyoming, Texas, Oregon, California, Mod tana, and Colorado, and the territories of Arizona, New . Mexico and Utah, was 2,774,965, This was 12 per cent, of the total number of sheep in the country, which was 22,471,000. To day there are in those states and terri tories 22,437,931 sheep, being ove- 50 per cent, of the total for the United States, and equal ' to the sum of the sheep thirty-one years ago. SI O.OO Seward. Lost, a diantond scarf pin the above reward will be paid bv returning to C. E. Haight. Money to Loan. - 100 to $500 to loan on short time. , Batakd & Co. The Columbia river - must be opened,' so that the. river . navigation can come into competition with the rail roads reaching this city and the Sound ported This must be accomplished, else the advantageous location of Portland at the confluence of the two great rivers of the Pacific northwest, and seemingly designed by nature as the place for the luture great city ol.the coast, will weigh hut lightly in the balance. But what ever plan adopted to secure this, care should be taken that the power or influ ence of any of the great railroad corpor tions be completely barred from taking a hand in its organization. Portland World. SOCIETIES. 4 I SSEMBLY NO. 4827, K. OF L. Meets in K. t. of P. hall on first and" third &unduvs at 3 o'clock p. m. TTTASCO LODGE NO. 15. A. F. & A. M. Vivta T f P. N . first and third Monday of each month at 7 DALLES ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER NO. . Meets in Masonic Hall the third Wednesdnv of each month at 7 P. M. MODERN WOODMEN OF THE WORLD. Mt. Hood Camp No. 59, Meets Tuesday even ing of each week in I. O. p. F. Hall, at 7:30"r. M. . COLUMBIA LODGE, NO. 5, I. O. O. F. Meets every Friday evening at 7:i o'clock, in Odd Fellows hall, Second street, between Federal and Washington. Sojourning brothers are welcome. H. A. Ruxv, Sec' y , it. G. Clostkb, N. G. I FRIENDSHIP LODGE, NO. ., K. of P. Meets 1 every Monday evening- at 7:80 o'clock, in k-hanno's building, corner of Court and Second streets. Sojourning members are cordially in-'ited.- ' Gko. T. Thompson,: 'j : 1). W. V ausk, Soc'y a . C. C. ' '' WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN"' tKMPEREXCE UNION -will meet every Friday afternoon it 2 o'clock at the reading room. A 11 are invited. TEMPLE LODGE NO. 3, A. O. II. W. Meets at K. of P. Hall, Comer Second nnd Court Streets, Thursday evenings at ":.. John Fiiaoon, W. S Mykiw, Financier. . M. W. THE CHURCHES. 1MKST BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. O. D. Tat lob. Pastor. Services every Sabbath at 11 1. M. and 7:-S0 P. u. . Sabbath School at 12 X. ("raver meeting every Thursday evening at 7 3'ciock. . . . CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Rev. W. C. Kj Ccetis, Pastor. Services every Sunday at 11 . M. and 7 r. M. Sunday School after morning trvice. Strangers cordially invited. Seats free. r E. CHURCH Rev. II. Brown, Pustor. I Serviees every Sundny morning and even ing. Sunday chool at lJa o'eloek M. A cordial nvitation is extended by brith pastor and people J. M. HUNTINGTON CO Abstracters, Heal Estate and Insurance 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 Bu0iqe00 Locations, Should Call on or Write to us. Agents for a Full Line of LeaJis Fire Insurance Companies, And Will Write Insurance for on all , DTISIB A "RT.j"Fj ZEBISIECS Correspondenee Solicited. All Letters Promptly Answered. Call on or ., Address, . . J. M u HUNTINGTON & CO. Opera House Block, The Dalles, Or- The Dalles Gigar : Faetory, FIBST. STEEET. FACTORY NO. 105. CT A"TG of the Be8t Brands VXVXJr.X;) 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 Su SON. Health is Wealth ! Dr. E. C. West's Nervc akb Brain Trkat- . mist, 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 Spermat orrhoea caused by over exertion of the bruin, self abuse or over indulgence. Each box contains one month's treatment. $1.00 a box, or six boxes for (5.00, sent by mail prepaid oil receipt of price. YVK GUARANTEE SIX BOXES To cure auv case. With each order received by us for six boxes, accompanied by fo.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 , BLAKELEV & HOUGHTON, t 1'rescrlpt Ion Druggists. 17ft Second St. The Dalles, Or. $20 REWARD. WIIL BE i-Aiu FOR ANY IXTOBM ATIOS leading to the conviction of partiescutting " e rpos or in any way interfering with the wir - poles, or lamps of Th Electric Light Co. . v ' H. GLENN. .Manager I Mrpvt. I I 3RAIN ) 'rK mm! fmw ! ' DEALER. IN ran J J X UiUl HEADQUARTERS FOR POTATOES. Cash Paid for Eggs and Chickens! AH Goods Delivered Free and Promptly TERMS STRICTLY CKSH. Cor. Second & Union Sts., The Dalles Mercantile Co., Successors to BROOKS BKERS, Dealers in ' . General Merchandise, : ; : Staple and Fancy Dry Goods, Gents' Furnishing Goods, Boots, Shoes, Hats, Caps, etc. Groceries, Hardware, ; Provisions, Flour, Bacon, HAY, GRAIN AND PRO'DUCE Of all Kinds at Lowest Market Rates. . .. Free Delivery to Boat and Curs and all parts of the City. 390 and 394 Second Street NEW FIRM! foscoe 8t -DEALKRS IN- CHOICE 7 STAPLE 7 AND V FANCY V GROCERIES, Canned Goods, Preserves, Pickles, Etc. Country Produce Bought. -and Sold. Goods delivered Free to aity part of the City. Masonic Block, Corner Third and E. Jacobsen & Go., WHOLESALE AND RETAIL R00KSELLERS AND. STATIONERS. Pianos and Organs Sold on EASY INSTALLMENTS. Notions, Toys, Fancy Goods and Musical ments of all Kinds. IV,X Orders Filled Promptly. 162 SECOND STKEET, Phil Willig, 124 UNION ST., THE DALLES, OR. Keeps on band 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. Chas. Stnblingy PBOPK1KTOK OF THK QEITW, New .Vogt Block, Second St WHOLESALE AND RETAIL- Liquor v Dealer, MILWAUKEE BEER ON DRAUGHT C. E. BiYARD (10., Heal Estate, Insuranee, - and Loan AGENCY. Operra House Bloek,3d St. - FLOORING MILL TO LEASE. ' v THE OLD DALLES MILL AND WATER . Company's i'lour Mill will be leased to re sponsible parties. For information apply to the W ATER COMMISSIONERS, . The Dalles, Oregon.. rai aoi Fir. - . NEW STORE' Gibons, Court Streets, The Dalies, Oregon. Instra- THE DALLES, OREGON. JAMES WHITE, Has Opened a Ijianoli Counter, In Connection With his Fruit fc-tand and Will Serve Hot (Mee, Ham Sandwich, Pigs' Feet, and Fresh Oysters. Convenient to the Passe-nger Depot. On Second St., near corner ot Madison. Also a Branch Bakery, California Orange Cider, and the - .. Best Apple Cider. If you want a good lunch, give me avail. . Open all Night - Steam Ferry. nA ETfnilC i8 now running a steam . U. tUHflO Ferry between Hood Kiver. and White Salmon. - Charges reasonable. R. O. Evans, Prop. A NEW ft -1 i i n i 1 1 mi raus PRINZ & NITSCHKE. DEALERS IN ,; Furniture and Carpets: We have added to our buainess 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. ESTRAY. NOTICE. A RED COW WITH WHITE 8POTS, SWAL low fork In each ear but no brand, Is in ray pasture on Mill creek. The owner can have her by paying for pasturage and advertising. W. BIRGFELD. 1 1 I inmeni!