The Dalles Daily Chronicle. OFFICIAL PAPER OF DALLES CITY. . AMD WA.SOO COUHTT. . Published Daily-. Sunday Excepted. BT THE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO. Corner Second and Washington Streets, The . Dalles, Oregon. -. . Terms of Subscription Per Year. .............. Per month, by carrier.. Single oopy .$6 00 . 50 .. ' : 5 8TATC OFFICIALS Governor ..'...- '. 8. Pennoyer Secretary of State Q. W. McBiide Treasurer PhiUTD Metsohan Supt. of Public Instruction. F.. B. McElroy nators.............. ......... ... congressman. . . State Printer.... B. Hermann .Frank Baker COUNTY OFFICIALS. County Judge. Bheriff. Clerk .' Treasurer... 'Commissioners Assessor.-. ..C. K. Thornbury D.L. Cates J. B. Ctossen Qeo.Ruch - J Frank Kincaid IH' A. leavens . .John E. Barnett Surveyor. .K. F. Sharp Superintendent of Public Schools. . .Troy Shelley Coroner .William Michell The Oregon ian never had a sharp competition in Multnomah county until the Troutdale Champion hove in sight. Of the recent election the Champion says : "The way the Oregonian doesn't -succeed in electing the republican ticket in Portland is quite remarkable. It ex cased its failure in the county election on the ground that the people were not in accord with those political war- horses Lotan and Simon, bat in the city election it can put forwarded no such excuse. Neither Lotan nor Simon fig ured in the election. During the can vass and on the day of election Simon was in the east and Lotan was attending strictly to his private business, and the Oregonian had a splendid opportunity -to show what it could do as a leader in a fair fight in an open field. It made i failure. Got knocked out. Whipped We feel sorry for our contemporary in its discomfiture." The route of the railway now in course of construction from Astoria to trans connection, is wisely concealed from boomers by the managers. This species of genus homo which has followed the casap of the N. P. R. R. and others so faithfully, find it, extremely difficult to keep at the head of the procession with Mr. Goss, but as a pointer the following bit of soothing information is thrown out by the Astorian: Whether the road will head for Hillsboro and take up the Oregon Pacific line or trend away to the -southeast and push from Eugene through -the Bohemian country and cross the . fn r 1 I . t . LI 1. - r 1 vaouHicB lit . luc aurtuweufc. ui iougias county, is probably known to Mr. Goes . alone in this community. . It is entirely safe to conjecture that it will go one of the two wavs." To which The Chkon- iclk begs to add : "Possibly both." The old spirit of mercantile adventure ' is reviving in Oregon. Two vessels have .'been sent abroad already with specula tive cargoes, and the Tillie E, Starbuck Is about to follow. . She will go to New York, possibly, with a cargo composed n;ni;nnn.. t ri i snuwjciiljr vi VU1UUIUUI flVCr BtllUlUU, wool, hides and other Oregon products. This, says the Astorian, recalls the time when Robert E. Gray came round .the Horn with a cargo which he exchanged in part for furs, and then sailed -,for Prima - r- r Tr-Ck nt-Vmsa nnln n S A. v"i w uia&v viiuci ucaiO iCbUXiilUg IAJ Boston. Trade methods have changed, but foresight and enterprise will still reap liberal reward in marine ventures. It is sheer nonsense to talk of "Oppo sition to Clarksons" designation as chairman ' of the national republican committee. ne cua not expect it. vampDeu is selected oecause "ne was a personal friend of the candidate nomi nated ;" a rule which has always: bith--erto applied, and will continue to apply, mo long as nominating, conventions con iinue to appoint committees... The ne cessity for Buch rule will be apparent to anybody. . It is a charming condition of affairs when both sides in a political wrangle such as the Cleveland-Hill fight can de rive comfort from the same, convention. -While it may not exactly foreshadow a jwlitical millenium, it is a beatific con dition where good cheer and comfort are extracted by antagonists from the agen cies set in motion to bring injury and disaster to each other. The alcoholic etiquette of,national con ventions is said to be wine for the dele gates, whisky for the alternates and beer for . the. shouters.;. This Tale does not hold good, at the Cincinnati prohibition to all comers. .. They should be respected for sticking to their principles. ' Richard Wagner ' , probably. missed -securing some , of the most . astounding tone effects possible to human invention simply by not coming to 'America and .attending the late political ' conventions. -'Colfax , boasts-of five -strawberries which will fill a fruit -jar. ' Their com bined weight is three-fourths of a pound they .have been prepared, for exhibition at Chicago. There are alarming symptoms that the New York Times is getting ready to crawl baofc into the .republican tent. IRON A1U) WOOD SHIPS MATERIALS USED IN SHIPBUILDING .', AND THEIR 'VALUE. ' The Feints la Which Iron sad Staal Are Superior HVond Their Lightness sad durability mad the Comparative Safety of All Kinds of Vessels. The three materials used in the. con struction of ships in general are wood, iron and steeL Wood has been to use from time immemorial. Iron is only about fifty years old, and steel is easily within the memory of every man - of moderate years. ' The importance of the three materials are inversely as stated steel being the most valuable, then iron and last wood. . Noticeably is this so in the construction of swift steamships, for wood is unsuited to the great engine power nowadays put into ships; it can not properly stand the strain. ; : Iron ships are superior to wooden ones in the following particulars: Lightness combined with strength, durability when properly treated, ease and cheapness of construction and repair and safety when properly constructed and subdivided. In wooden ships it has been found that about one-half of the total weight of the sup is required for the trail, whereas in iron ships only from 80 to 40 per cent of the weight is thus taken up. .For -instance, in a wooden armored warship, the weight of the hull being 60 per cent of the displacement leaves SO per cent. for the weights to be carried. ' In an iron armored warship the weight of the hull is only 40 per cent., leaving 60 per cent, for weights to be carried. The tensile strength of iron is from 40,000 pounds to 60,000 pounds per square men, and tins strength can be secured throughout all the metal used, so that the material worked into the ship is uni form and homogeneous.- These are quali ties wanting in wood; the greatest care cannot eliminate such weak spots as are due to the presence of knots, crossgrain. hidden defects, etc. Generally good sound timber may be said to have a strength to resist pulling apart (tensile strength) of about 10,000 pounds. - IBOtr FAR SUPERIOR TO WOOD. When in shipbuilding it comes to fastening pieces together, as, for in stance, in making a ship's keel or her deck beams, the weakness caused by scarnng tne pieces of wood together be comes an element of strength in riveting tne iron, jno matter now it may be nee esssarr to treat the pieces of metal. whether by riveting or welding or by angle irons, the iron stands far above the wood in resistance to tensile strains. It is only when resisting strains of com pression that there is a tendency- of iron plates to buckle, and thii is guarded against by making the plates thicker than is required for other strains or by re-enrorcing tnem. Durability is a quality of iron that is not yet thoroughly determined. ' in tren eral, a wooden ship may be said to last about fifteen -years. Some last lontrer. but there will be much patching and re newing to be done. . The rules of Lloyds allow about fourteen years as the aver age durability of the best built timber vessels. Iron is not subject to the internal sources of decay to which wood is liable. Worms and marine animals cannot in jur it, nor will it - rot from imperfect ventilation, in either can the Darts work loose from the motion and straining of tne snip, allowing water to get in and cause decay. The danger to iron lies in the rusting or corrosion, esneciallv in the under water parts outside from the sea water and inside from the hihra water, ine -only prevention is careful watching, cleaning and painting, and even wjth all this supervision galvanic action is likely to do some damaee. Therefore the life of an iron ship is lim ited, and in the present state of knowl edge of the subject may be set down as approximately thirty years, for. though a ship will last longer, extensive repairs wui nave to be made that will cost con siderable money. . STEEL BETTER THAN IRON. ' it is also easier to repair an iron shin. since the necessary shape can be turned out at once. - The rapidity with which an iron ship can be built counts for much. In the present dav the ease with which iron is obtained and worked 'con stitutes another element' of cheamtess. for the final cost today must amount to nearly 25 per oent. less, especially when the time, preparation, saving of weight ana me or tne snip are considered. As to the safety of a ship when . prop erly constructed and subdivided, it is only necessary to say that when the in ternal- space - of an iron ship is sub divided into many ' compartments by longitudinal - or transverse - partitions rising to a sufficient height, or by hori zontal platforms, or inner skin, and all such divisions are made water tight, then that snip is safer than any wooden ship would be against foundering,- for the space required for these bulkheads can not be found in a timber built vessel. ; Theaabject of steel may be briefly dis cussed by remembering that steel is sim ply a superior kind of iron, and by vir tue of - its greater strength is of lighter weight. The strength, of steel is from 70,000 to 100,000 pounds per square inch. oteex : is as strong lengthwise as it is broadwise;-' iron is one-fifth stronger lengthwise than it is broadwise. The elastic umit or steer is about 25 "per cent, greater than that of iron. So steel may be , trusted with . workings, loads nearly 25 per cenL greater than the oth er , material. Lloyds estimate that by building ships of steel there is a saving in weight over iron of about 15 per cent, or, to put - the same thing in another Way, a steel ship of the same dimensions as an iron ship would have, an increased cargo capacity (m weight) of some 15 or w per cent, -In the matter of cost, steel ia more ex pensive at nrst, but the best proof of its ultimate cheapness is found in the in disputable fact that modern merchant ships are being' built of steeL - In 1830 there were 580 steel shins built. 90 iron and 27 composite and wood. There need be no further anrument as to the su periority of steel from every point of view. jjiew xotk xunes. ' Chamberlain's Colic. Cholera' and Diarrhoea Remedy? ..can always be, de pended upon, it is pleasant to take and will cure cramp, fiholers morbus, dysen tery and diarrhoea in - their worst format Every family should be provided with it; 25 and 50 cent -bottles - for sale by Blakeley & Houghton ; druggists. .s d&vr Dissolution Notice.. ' ,: The partnership heretofore existing between E. B. McFarland. S. French and C. J. VanDuyn, under the name and . style of VanDuyn & Co., Tygh Valley, Oregon, was dissolved on the 1st day of May, 1892, by limitation and mutual consent. - . - E. B. McFarland, r ' i, '. : S. Fkksch, ' J :. i 5-21-dlm. ; . .- C.J. VanDuyn.: A New Kind of Insurance. For twenty-five cents von can insure yourself and familv asrainst anv bad re sults from an attack of bowel complaint during the summer. One or two doses of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and JJiarrnoea' Kemedy will cure anv ordi nary case. It never fails and is pleasant and safe to take. - No family can afford to be without it. For sale at 25 and 50 cents per bottle by Blakeley & Hough ton, druggists, d&w Dissolution Notice. The partnership heretofore existing between Er B. McFarland, S. French and E. C. Pease, under the style and name or oiarariana dc frencn, was on the 11th day of April, 1892, dissolved by limitation and mutual consent. E. B. McFarland S. French, 5-21-dlm E. C. Pease. Mr. W. M. Terrv. who has been in the drug business at Elk ton, Ky., fqr the past tweive years, says: "unamoer lain's Cough Remedy gives better satis faction than any other cough medicine I nave ever sold." There is eood reason for this. No other will cure a cold so quickly ; no other is so certain a pre ventive and cure for croup ; no other anorus so mucn relief in cases of whoop ing cough. For .sale by Blakeley & fiougnton, druggists. d&w Notice. All persons indebted to ' the late firm of Mr. Farland and French will I! lease call at the old store, now Messrs ease & Mays, where Mr. French will be m -waiting that they may make im mediate settlement of their notes and ac counts. ' - - S. French. 6-3-dAwlm ... For the company. . Notice. All persons indebted to the late firm of W. Bolton & Co., Antelope, either by note or book account, will please call at the old store and make immediate set tlement of the same. Wilbur Bolton. dtwlm . . For the com nan v. Dlssolatioa Notice. The partnership heretofore existinc' between E. B. McFarland. S.' French. G. V. Bolton and Wilbur Bolton, under the name and style of W. Bolton & Co., Antelope, Oregon, was dissolved on the zist day ot aiarch, 1892. E. B. McFarland, S. French, G. V. Bolton, ; 5-24-dlm . Wilbur Bolton. ' Notice. ' All persons knowine themselves in debted to the late firm of Van Duyn & Co., Tygh Valley, either by note or book account, will please call at the old store ana maue immediate settlement of the same. , . . - C. J. VanDuyn, d wlm . " X For the comnan v. FOR CHURCHES. SuDerlor In tuna to Pino flro-a rt easier played and cheaper, are the ESTEY PHILHARMONICS. FIREWORKS! E. Jacobsen & Co.'s. 162 Second Street. 1 ? -p. PAUL KR -DEALERS IN PAINTS, OILS And the Most Complete and the - fttPraetical Painters and Paper Sherwin-Williams, and J. W. 'Masorr's the most skilled workmen employed..,., chemical combination or soap mixture. oruers promptly attenaea to. - Store and Paint Shop corner Third and SKlBBEtHOTEL - - ?'.'-- H "t.1i!-.iisjci iij its : ' I K 1 2 ..-Tm-s-r "---sgBltD rT-a. " itW. Flogfl t Mm, , Successors to c. K.' Dunham. Drugrists and Chemists. Fire .Brills ail Mciu insing Physicians' Prescriptions a" Specialty. Night Druggists always in Attendance. Cor. Second and Union Sts., THE DALLES, OREOOX. UtSTAGY -SHOOIIij; TtBWatCiMer, -DEALER IN- Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Etc. All kinds of repairing a specialty, and all work guaranteed ana promptly anenaea to. Call and see his stock oi clocks before you leave an order eisewoere. A. A. Brown, Keeps a full assortment of .- , Staple and Fancy.Grocms, and Provisions. - -i. - which he offers at Low Figures. SPEGIflli :-: PRIGES to Cash. Buyers. Highest Casi Prices for Eis and otter Proflnce. : 170 SECOND STREET. AND OYSTER HOUSE. One of tne. Finest Cooks la Tne Dalles. All Work dona by White Help. Next door to-Byrne, Floyd & Co.s' Prug Store. 85 Union St., The Dalles. Just Opened. Lflps. Jl. JOflES - Proprietor. Everything I , the Market Affords, at Reasonable Rates FIRE WORKS! THE DALLES, OREGON. EFT & CO., AND, GLASS, Latest Patterns and Designs ir si Ei TS3P TES3 " ita -JgT JIIJ JBZm Hangers. None bat the best brands of the Paints used in all our work, and none bat Agents for Masury Liquid Paints. No A first class article in all colors. All . -. . -r Washington St., jhe palles, Oregon &.bK S3 1 : i '. - f-': ' . r ' j ' '' i ' .' i, i ' The bateh String Sprii7 arfd -Summer, "But wonts are things, and Falling, like dew, upon a raiusr, me aew. udos t That which makes thousands, perhaps millions, think. W TRUST TO INTEREST Buy Ou$ Shoes'-Kt -MAKUFACTTJRED BY- THE DALLES MERCANTILE CO. ...... SOLE AGENTS FOR THE DALLES. THE EUROPEAN HOUSE. The Corrugated Building next Door to Coart iloaso. : -;flausoMy FnniisM Booms to Rent toy tie Day, Veet or Hontiu , ? - ; ' ' ' ' v 5 , -v r-v '? Meals, Prepared by a . TRANSIENT PATRONi-GE SOLICITED. Good Sample Rooms for Commercial Mea . ; ? 'v Glothiep BOOTS AND SHOES, Hats and Caps, Trunks and Valises, 3-oxxts' Jgyri ""A CORNER OF SECOND AND WASHINGTON, THE DALLES OREGON. Grraat BaTgains ! -Removal! Removal! On account of Removal I will sell my 4 entire stoclc of Boots and Shoes, Hats and. Caps. Trunks and Valises, Shelv- r , ings, Counters, Desk, Safe, Fixtures, at a 'Great Bargain. Come and see my offer. - - GREAT REDUCTION ! IN RETAIL. 125 Seeond Street, IEV SPfilllG flilD COMPLETE IN EVERY DEPARTMENT . Glothing, Gents' FaFnishing Goods, Hats, Gaps,4 Boots and Shoes. - -Full Assortmeiit of thei Leading Mahiifacturers. Cash Bayers atili save money by examining oar, stock . and prices before parenting velsemhere.:;; ' H. Herbmng. ?- ,WM, BUTLER & CO., DEALERS IN- Building it - CLumber, Lime, Plaster, Hair and Cement. , A liberal, discount to the trade , in all .lines handled by us.. JEFFERSON STREET, between Second and Railroad, . THE DALLES, OR Wash Washingto SITUATED AT THE v ... : v i , Destined to tie the Best . Manufacturing Center in the Inland Empire. ?.2 For; Further information Ca,H at the'Office of InteMate 0. D. TAYLOR, He Mil Or. is Rltjuays Oat I ?:. SEASON 1892. , a small drop of Ink, tnonzhL smdnna thought, produi AND DO TOt GOOD. WALTER H. TENNY 4, CO., BOSTON. WKSS. First Class English. Cook. ijpiTi" ixis . ' " ' .;. The Dalles. SUIOplEfi DRT G03DS . . , . ..-.-. ... HEAD OF NAVIGATION. Best Selling Property or the Season in the North- west. , . ... . , and Tailop Rough Investment Go., 72 Washinkida, SL, Porliaiia. Or.