The Dalles Daily Chronicle. Published Dully, Sunday Excepted. BY . THE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO; Corner Second and Washington Streets, The Dalles, Oregon. - Tumi of Subscription. -.- , -V Per Year. . 1..J6 00 Per month, by carrier 50 Single copy . 5 STATU OFFICIALS. Governor . . .' -. s. i'ehnover Secretary of State G. W. McBride Treasurer - Phillin Metsehan 8upt. of Public Instruction E. B. McElroy natorn (J. N. Dolph J- H. Mitchell it. Hermann Frank Baker VonjrresKnmn State Printer COUNTY OFFICIALS, County Judge C. X. Thombnry Bherifr U.L. Cate Clerk, J. B. Croasen Treasurer . .Geo. Rtieh Commissioner, lUiciSd Assessor John E. Bornett Surveyor ,.E. F. Sharp Superintendent of Public Schools. .-.Troy Shelter Coroner ..William Micheil The Chronicle is the Only Paper in The Dalles that Receives the Associated Press Dispatches. FREE WOOL, PRACTICALLY. In view of the fact that the prevent tariff law contains the following proris ion for a rebate on all ' exported articles where imported materials on which duties have been paid are used in their manufacture, it is difficult to understand the force of the claim that free ool wonld stimulate American manufacture of woolen goods and enable the American manufacturer to compete more succea fully'with the foreign market. Under tjie present law the manufacturer for ex port has to all intents and purposes free wool saving one per cent, of duty. Here is section 25 of the McKinley bill. Sec. 25. That where imported mater ials, on which duties have been paid, are used in the manufacture of articles manufactured or produced in the United States, there should be allowed on the exportation of such articles a drawback equal in amount to the duties paid .on the materials used, less one per centum of such duties: Provided, that when the articles exported are made in part from domestic materials, the imported materials, or the parts of the articles made from such materials, shall so ap pear in the completed articles that the quantity or measure thereof mav be as certained. Iteport has it that Roger Q. Mills has bebome disgusted with the treatment accorded. him and hag gone on a hunting trip to Texas to be absent for three weeks, It is said that the defeated can didate for speaker has entirely washed his bands of any' responsibility for or connection with the program or business of the house and that his hunting trip is intended to emphasize his disgust at the treatment accorded him by the' speaker in the make-up oi the committees. If thU report is true it only shows the. un fitness of Mills for the position he aspired to. The man who cannot broek disappointment is not capacitated to re ceive honor. If Mills has sulked and ran away it shows that ex-Speaker Reid sized him p correctly when he said if Mills were elected speaker he would be throwing the gavel at Rcid before a week. ' - VilI ye Recognized. WA.siii.vtito'N, Jan. 4. -There has been "a great deal of talk alwut preventing David It. Hill from taking his seat in the United'States senate because he con tinned to serve as governor when his term as senator began ten months ago. It was thought that it might lie good policy for a republican' senate to refuse to sent him, but it is now generally be lieved that nothing of the kind will be attempted, aud that Hill will be sworn in and will take his seat as if he had not ignored the senate for nearly a - year. ;There is nothing to be gained by refus ing to recognize his title. Governor Flower would reappoint him so soon us the seat was declared vacant, and the legislature of New York, having been declared Democratic by Hill's great steal, would re-elect him immediately, and his triumph would give him "a greater place before the country than to ignore him altogether. It is possible that the action by .the senate might make him the democratic nominee for presi dent, and in that view of the case it might be good republican politics to turn him out, as he would be doomed to -do-feat. . Watch Factory Employe Dissatisfied. Chicago, Jan. " 3. Three thousand operatives of the Elgin Watch Company, of Elgin, 111., stand ready to strike and only await the signal to quit work. Sev eral hundred skilled workmen in two departments walked out .yesterday, and unless all signs fail, the strike will be come general. Two weeks asro there were rumors that a general cut-down was contemplated by the management. The rumors were verified on the payday following, when the employes found their wages decreased from 15 to 16 per cent. The claim is made that the 2800 employes of the watch company are or ganized and are about to strike a blow agiinst the recent reduction. SlaTln Falls to Put Up. New York, Jan. 4. Neither Slavin, . his friends, Charlie Mitchell, nor any representative of theirs, put. in an ap-pearauce-at the Herald office today at the hour they had appointed to meet s Charley Johnson, John L. Sullivan's backer, to cover the $2500 put tip by Johnson some weeks sigo. After waiting half an hour f'.r them to appear, John jBun 'drew dmvn the forfeit money.- lie says he is ready to put it up again at any time th Australian can induce soie one t-. back him against Sullivan. The Expelled Journalist. iLondon, Jan. 5. A statement is made that the Bulgarian government has de clined to ; rescind the decree expelling thej Erjaitelij' Journalist" Chadoune from Bulgaria, ' how confined in Paris. vA special says there is no reason to believe the matter can be arranged amicably. Tlie Grip in England. Londox, Jan. 4. There were nineteen deaths from the grip in this city last week. The disease is now prevalent throughout Great Britain. ..Whole fam ilies are prostrated. There- seems no prospect ot a cnange tor the better in the near future. The Robber Sly Identified. St. Louis, Jan. 2. Sly, the suspected Glendale express robber, has been iden tified as the perpetrator of the postoffice robbery at station C, November 24. Heary Death Mate in San Francisco. San Fbaxcisco, Jam 4. There were fifty-five deaths yesterday, the largest number ever reported in any one day in this citv. . -' . ' j , . A Noted Mexican Dead. , City of Mexico, Jan. 4. Joaquin Garcia, a noted general who was General Jaurez' right-hand man, died here Sat urday in abject poverty. - German Miners on a Strike. Berlin, Jau. 4. The miners of the Holzappel district, near Wiesbaden, have struck. Troops are keeping order. A Lieutenant-Governor Dead. Toronto, Ont., Jan. 4. Colonel. Gil more, recently appointed deputy lieutenant-governor of Ontario, is dead. Capt. John V. Lewis, register of the United States land office at The Dalles, Or., is in the city, enjoying the first sight of the country east of the Rockies which he has had for twenty odd years. Captain Lewis was among the lirst in this state to enliit in the Union cause and rendezvoused "with his company at Camp Dick Robinson as soon as it was opened. He served at first in the Fourth Kentucky infantry, but was transferred to the Twelfth in fantry and then to the Fourth cavalry by promotion. He was taken prisoner at Chicamauga and was one of those who escaped from Libby through the famous tunnel. After eerving through the war in the volunteers he received a com mission in the regular army and was sent to the Pacific slope, where he has been, save for one short visit, ever since. He tired of post service after-four or five years and resigned and went to ranch ing in Oregon and pursued that avoca tion successfully till appointed register. Capt. Lewis had an excellent military record and his old comrades, whom he has been looking up in Kentucky for the last week, bare been delighted to see him and to see how little a qnarter of a century has changed him. Louisville. Ky.) Journal. The Medical Gazette alleges that the following letter was received by a physi cian from a man whom he knew, prac ticing medicine, and desiring counsel: "deer Dock I have a pashunt who's phy sical sines shows that the wind-pipe has ulcerated off and his lungs has dropped down into his stumick i have given him everything without effekt his father is wealthy horable ann influential as he is a member of the assembly and god nose i dont want to loose hym what shel i du ans be return male. Yours Frat."- They Speak From Experience. .i:Ve know from experience in the use of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy that it will prevent croup," savs Messrs. Gad berry & Worley, Percy, Iowa. , They also add that the remedy has given great satisfaction in this vicinitv, and that they believe it to be the "best in the market for throat and lung diseases. For f.aleby Snipes & Kinersly, druggists. For the Children. Our readess will notice the advertise ments in these columns for Chamberlain & Co., Des Moines, Iowa. From per sonal experience we can say that Cham berlain's Cough Remedy has broken up bad colds for our children and we are acquaints with many mothers in Cen terville who wou'd not be without it in the house for a good many times its cost and are recommending it every day. Venterville, S. V., Chronicle and Index. 25 cent, 50 cent and $1 bottles, for saie by Snipes & Kinersly, druggists, daw Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. When Baby was sick, ws caws her Castoria. When she wa a Child, she cried lor Castoria, , When aha became Miss, she clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gare them Castoria The Old and the JItw. "Of course it hurts but you must grin and bear it," is the old time consolation given to persons troubled with rheuma tism. "If you will take the trouble to dampen a piece of flannel with Cham berlain's Pain Balm and bine it on over the seat of pain your rheumatism will disappear," is the modern and much more satisfactory advice. 50 cent bot tles for sale by Snipes & Kinersly, drug gists. - - - , " diw, A Preventive for Croup. ' We want every mother fo know that croup can be prevented. . True croup never appears without a warning. The first symptom is hoarseness : then the child appears to have taken a cold or a cold may have accompanied the hoarse ness from the start. After that a pecul iar rough cough is developed, which is followed by tho croup. The time to act is when the child first becomes hoarse: a few doees of Chamberlain'.': Cough .Remedy will prevent the attack. Kven nfter :t :n!:rl! cough ha ' appeared the diseaw' u::iv : prevented ly ui.ing this remedy as directed. It has never been known to fail. 25 cent, 50 cent and $1 bottles for sale by Snipes & Kinersly, druggists. " d.iw NEW -LONDON IN WAR. Tho Stratea-te Value or a Connecticut City - In the Defense of New York. -. Navy, officers who have studied the region have often and urgently pressed upon their department the importance of developing the station at New London and making it efficient. One must ad mire their energy and faithfulness . in continuing to lay before their superiors the vital importance of strengthening this strategic base in the outer defense f New York in the face of long con tinued pigeonholing of reports. That their anxiety is not unfounded becomes plain when - we consider that Great Britain has a powerful station at Hali fax, from which, if so. disposed, she could hurl her thunderbolts of maritime war upon this unprotected spot at very short notice, precisely as she could strike onr South Atlantic coast from the Bahamas. She may never even wish to do either thing, but isn't it rather fool ish to remain unprepared for the blow when we have ample resources for es tablishing a guard against it? The atqpunt of trade that passes through Long Island sound coastwise is hardly coueeived of by the' majority of citizens. It amounts to a great many million dollars' worth a year, and all this trade could be paralyzed by a quick stroke from a foreign navy. In 1880 the entire munitions of. war manufactured in the United States amounted to $11, 000,000. Of this total, $9,000,000 worth was manufactured in Connecticut alone. A foreign fleet in the sonnd, therefore, wonld be able' to deprive ns of our main source of munitions without even at tempting to attack New York. Cut off a city's supply of air and what wonld it matter whether that city sur rendered or not? Shut off from New York in war time nine elevenths of the material it needed for war and it would be as helpless as a city without air' to breathe. Bnt this is cot all. An enemy in the sonnd could cut at New London and again at New Haven, the chief lines of land communication and railroad1 transportation between New England and New York. If of the loss which would thus be caused a small percentage were now to be promptly applied to building up New York's outer line of defense, with a strong navy yard at New London as its base, the whole cost would be defrayed in a few years without inconvenience to anyone. In time of action, while our battle ships and cruisers patrolled the Race or engaged the enemy, with sup port from the forts, our monitors, emerg ing from New London, would lurk safe ly behind Fisher's island, prepared to assist; for there again, on the north face, nature favors us with the sheltered -waters of Hay harbor and West harbor. In case of injury, vessels could quickly run into New London, and repair at the navy yard. Thus, while the surroundings and topography are not the same as those of the entrance,, to the Mediterranean, we should still have what might well be called "an American Gibraltar," quite as invulnerable as the stronghold at the pillars of Hercules, and much greater 'ip. range. ' Boston can be equipped effectually to defend herself? and Newport also, if fortified, is in a position to ward off . an enemy. ' But neither of these, by so' do ing, can help to defend New York. New London, on the- other hand, if her nat ural advantages are utilized, can repel any attack on New York from the east, and thereby relieve the metropolis from dread in that quarter. It is well, it is indispensable, to protect New York from assault by way of the Narrows. But what will it avail to bar that small front door if the broad rear entrance through the sonnd be left undefended?- " Women Doctors In England. "In Great Britain," said Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell, "onr seventy-three, registered women doctors are few compared with the three thousand in the United States. Yet with the nine students in onr Lon don school and the addition of the Edin burgh classes and the fact that the Glas gow Medical college has lately opened its doors to women, clearly indicate that the movement has taken sturdy growth in onr country, and when our English, work has been carried on for forty Tears there is every probability that onr Brit-5 iah woman doctors will equal numerically onr kinsfolk across the water." THE CHURCHES. ST. PETER'S CHURCH Rev. father Bnoxs geest Pastor. Low Mas every Hnndav at 7 a. M. High Mass at 10:30 a.m. Vesners at 7 P. 91. ST. PAUL'S CHURCH Union Street, opposite Fifth. Rev.EliD.SutclirTeReotor. Services every Sunday at 11 Ai tt. and 7:30 p. m. Sundav Befool 9:45 A. if. Evening Prayer on Fridav at .'" i,: -i FIRST BAPTIST CHl'RCH Rev. O. D. Tay lo, Pastor. Morning services everv Sab bath at the academy at 11 . u. SabtmtU School Immediately after morning services. Prayer meeting Kridiiy evening at Pastor's resi dence. Union services in the conrt honse nt 7 COStGREOATIONAL CHURCH Rev. YV. C. Ccbtis, Pas(or. Services ever" Sundav a t II . x. aud 7 P. M. Sunday School after morning service. Strangers cordially invited. Seat free. M! E. CHURCH Rev. A. C. Stescke, pnstor. Services every Sunday morning. Snnday School at. l'J:20 o'clock p. tt. A cordial invitation is extended by both pastor and people to all. The Dalles Mercantile Co.; Successors to BROOKS BEERS, Dealers, u - - . General Merchandise, : , . : ' Staple and Fancy Dry Goods, Gents' Furnishing GoodsBoots, 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 Cms and all parts of the City. 390 and 394 Second Street SOCIETIES. ASSEMBLY NO. 4827, K. OF I Meets in K. of P. hall the second and fourth Wednes days of each month at 7:30 p. in. WASCO LODGE, NO. 15, A. F. & A. H. Meets .: first and third Monday of each month at T DALLES ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER NO. 6. Meets in Masonic Hall the third Wednesday of each month at 7 P. M. , MODERN WOODMEN OF THE-WORLD. Mt. Hood Cainp No. 59, Meets Tuesday even ing of each week in the K. of P. Hall, at 7:30 r. m. COLUMBIA LODGE, NO. 5, I. O. O. F. Meets every Friday evening at 7:30 o'clock, in K. of P. hall, corner Second and Court streets. Sojourning brothers are welcome. H. Clocgh, Sec'y. H. A. Bilis,N. G. FRIENDSHIP LODGE, NO. 9., K. of P. Meets every Monday evening at 7:80 o'clock, in Schanno's building, corner of Court and Second streets.. .Sojourning members are cordially -invited, w. S. Cp.m. . D. W.Vause, K. of R. and S. C. C. WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN TEMPERENCE UNION will meet every Friday afternoon at 3 o'clock at the reading room. All are invited. TEMPLE LODGE NO. 3, A. O. P. W. Meets at K. of P. Hall, Corner Second and Court Streets, Thursday evenings at 7 :30. . - Joas Filloon. W . 8 Myers, Financier. M. W. TA8-. NEBMITH P08T, No. 32, G. A. R. Meets every Saturday at 7:30 P. M., in the K. of P. Hall. B. OF L. E. Meets every Sunday afternoon in . the K. of P. Hall. C- EoANG VEREIN Meets cverv. Sunday X evening in the K. of P. Hall. B " OF L. F. DIVI8ION, No. 1S7 Meets in the - K. of P. Hall the first and third Wednes day of each month, ttt 7:3 p. m. A; A. Brown, ? . Keeps a full assortment of Staple and Fancy Groceries, and Provisions. which he offers at Low Figures. SPEGIAIi :-: PfllGES to Cash Buyers. Hiitot Cast Prices for Ep and otter Produce. 170 SECOND STREET. Suilding materials I a. me-made arrangements with a iinmner of Factories, I am pre pared to furnish . . Dook, Windows, Mouldings, STORE FRONTS And all kinda of Special work. Ship ments made daily from, factory and can fill orders in the shortest possible time. Prices satisfactory. It will be to your interest to see me before purchasing elsewhere. -; Wm. Saunders, Office over French's Bank. W. E. GARRETSON. Jeweler. SOtE AGENT F0K IIIK AM Watch Work Warranted. Jewelry Made to Order. 138 Second St.. The IJalles. Or. . FLOURING MILL TO LEASE, r 'J-UUC OLD DALLES MILL AND WATER J : Company's Hour Mill will be leased to re sponsible parties. For information apply to the WATER COMMISSIONERS, I he Dalles. Oregon. Found. A couole of saie or ra11rx-k Icevn. t.toi i together with a string. The owner can I 1 i I . J 1 ' nt. . ... uiiu mem ai mis omce. - LOST, A bunch of keys on a ring, 6 or 7 in numer. . Finder "-will be rewarded by leaving same at this office. Mm k, -rriTTiTai if ruin l'giTrniintiwiiMMiiMimni MAYS & rS ALE AGENTS FOR fleotn ' ' and "Chattei Oak STOVES AND RANGES. Jew effs Steel Raw ani Maiflson's ani Bopton's -ftmcei We also keep a large and eomplete stock of Hardware, Tinware, Granite, Blueware, Silverware, Cutlery, Barbed Wire, Blacksmiths' Coal, Pumps, Pipe, Packing, Plumbers Supplies, Guns, Ammunition and Sporting Goods. Plumbing, Tinning, Gun Repairing and Light ' Machine Work a Specialty. COK. SJBCONI AND t'EDEKAL STS., Great Bargains ! Removal! Removal! Ora account of Removal I will sell my entire stock of Boots and Shoes, Hats and Caps, Trunks and Valises, Shelv ing, Counters, Desk, Safe, Fixtures, at a Great Bargain. Come. and see my offer. GREAT REDUCTION IN RETAIL. JPREIMKN, 125 eeond Street, HEW FULL P WHITER DRY GOODS . COMPLETE IN EVERY DEPARTMENT. Glothing, Gents' famishing Goods, Hats, Gaps, Boots and Shoes. Full Assortment of the Leading Manufacturers. ! Gash Buyers mill save money by examining oar stock .and priees before purchasing elsewhere. JOS. T. PET6RS St CO., DEALERS IX liUmBEf, COHD WOOD General - Buliaing iiteiial and Yard Corner of First aad Jefferson CJUJW. BUTliEH & CO., "THE LEADERS" IN IitiJJBEH, MTH Office aM Yard corJirstM Jefferson PAUL KREFT & CO., DBALERS IN Paints, Oils, Glass And the Most Complete and the Latest Patterns and Designs ia , Practical Painters and Paper HnnRera. None but the befct brands of the Khcrwin-Williams Pidnt used in all our work, and none but the most skilled wnrVincn employed. All orders promptly attended to 10-17-d . SHOP Art joining Red front Grocery, THIKU STKSEI, -. Xi- 33- C3aO VVJ3. CROWE, THE CELEBRATED XHK DALLES, OREGON. The Dalles. H. Herbring. Streets. North Side of Railroad Track. flflD SHlNGIiES. Sts. SOUTH SIDE of Railroad Tract The Old Germania Saloon. J0HH D0NAV0H, Proprietor. The beat quality of Wines, Liquors and Cigars, Pabst Milwaukee Knicker bocker and ' Columbia Beer, Half and Half and all kinds of Temperance Drinks. . ALWAYS ON HAND. k.