-NIGHTI One Week, Gommencing1 Monday, May 13th. The beautiful Irish Comedy in 4 acts, to be followed by the laughable farce, "DODGING FOR A WIFE." v SENTER AND LUCY SENTER AND LUCY And a First-Class Company. A Change of Program Every Night. ADMISSION, 25c, 35c and 50c. Matinee Saturday, "EAST LYNNE." cents; Children, 10 cents. Admission, Adults, 20 NIGHTI HLDMIN OPERA House The Dalles Daily Chronicle. SUBSCRIPTION KATES. BY Kill P0CTA8B tXXTXlD, IX ADTaHCB. WMklj, 1 JBMT. f 1 BO . 6 months. 2 Z5 a 0 "O Call,, 1 year. " 6 months JO pa, 0 50 : AJldreaa all communication to " THK CHKON- ICLC," The Dalles, Oregon. FRIDAY 7Z - MAY, 17 1895 OLD WASCO COUNTY. AIBW BB1EF FACTS COHCBEKING - ITS BESOCBCES. FinlU, Flh, Farm and Forests Bha Has Them All. sod Unlimited VPater Power. TBAN8PORTATION FACILITIES. One of the most vital questions to erery community is its transportation facilities. Wasco county has settled that. Up to three years ago the only transportation company was the Oregon Railway & Navigation Company, oper ating a line down the south bank of the Columbia. Forty four miles below The Dalles this great river is obstructed by impassable rapids, there belng-a fall of 26 feet in a quarter of a mile. As the O. R. & N. had no opposition, both freight and passenger rates were high. Owing to this, a corporation was formed know as The Dalles, Portland and Asto ria Navigation Uompany, which put a fine steamer on the middle Columbia, plying in connection with the Dalles City, a fine boat on the lower river. Of course there was a transfer to be made, but the state generously stepped in and constructed a portage railroad about three-quarters ot a mile long, so that freight could be'transferted cheaply and quickly. As a result, freight rates were reduced one-half and passenger rates almost as much. The government several years ago be gan the construction of a canal and locks to overcome the obstructions. Two years ago the completion of the work was let by contract, and in less than a year this grand work will be completed so that steamers from the lower river can reach n. These works have cost $3,600,000. and are pronounced by engi neers the finest piece of work of the kind in the United States. The com pletion of this work will make Ttie Dalles a "terminal point," giving us the benefit of through rates from the East, and will thus put our city in a position to compete wirh Portland for the whole sale trade of a large territory. At the same time it will give us very low rates on our wheat and other products to the . seaboard. As it is, The Dalles is now the best market of any place in Eastern Oregon. Wheat brings ten cents more a" 'bushel, simply because the freight rates' are that much lower, and they are that much lower owing to the opposi tion line of boats. They will be lower still when the canal and locks are fin ished and cargoes can be shipped with out the expense of re-handling at the portage. WATBB POWER. Waeco county has unlimited water power, not to speak of the rapids of the Columbia, which has a fall of 70 feet in nine miles ending, three miles east of us, but which would require consid erable capital to control. Deschutes, a tine river 200 miles long, which drains the eastern slope of the Cascades, has a rapid fall, and Hood river, a stream ris ing in the glaciers of Mount Hood, falls 6,000 feet in thirty miles, and for the laet twelve miles of its course falls seventy-five feet t J the mile, and is of volume sufficient to furnish 2,500 horse . power for each twenty feet fall. These streams will eventually be used to bring the timber from the mountains, and at the same time will furnish the power to manufacture it into lumber. And wh 1 speaking of the timber it may not be out of place to add that the immense forests of hemlock on the heads of these streams will furnish unlimited quanti ties of bark for tanning purposes. , " - . . MANUFACTORIES. The immense amount of wool received here naturally suggests that it would be a fine place for a scouring mill, which it undoubtedly would ; and this is an in dustry that will soon be established here, as the opportunity is too good to long remain open. There is, bee i-lee, room for numerous other factories. A woolen mill ought to have been running long ago, and only the great difference in wages between the Pacific and 'Atlan tic coasts has prevented it. As wages are gradually equalizing themselves throughout the country, this objection is not now tenable. We already have a fine roller mill, producing 100 barrels of flour daily, if run to its full capacity ; but there is room for more, as the snp- p y of wheat is unlimited and the local market utilizes the bran and shorts. A cannery is another necessity, to use no the surplus fruits and vegetables ; and a soap factory would find plenty of ma terial and a good market. We have a fine packing establishment, its prod acts ranking high and not beginning to supply the demand. A flame from the mountains brings a large portion of the wood supply and lumber for the local market. At its bead are vast forests of hemlock, the bark of which is the very finest for tan ning purposes; and as there are hun dreds of dry bides shipped from here East and brought back again in -the shape of manufactured products, it is evident that a tannery, and with it a shoe and harness factory, would be profitable investments. " Indeed," the field is a promising one, aud the above are only suggestions in the line of what might be done here. SCHOOLS AND CHURCHES. ' Our educational facilities are good, the public schools ranking with those of any city in the state. We have in The Dalles 1,240 children of school age, and j an average attendance of about 800, and sixteen teachers are employed. The city owns two fine brick school houses and three wooden ones. ' Besides these the Catholics have here a fine boarding school for girls. The religious denominations are well represented. The CongregationaliBts, Methodists, Episcopalians, Catholics and Lutherans all have fine church build ings, and the Baptists two. In tbise lines the city is ahead rather than be hind the great majority of cities of its size. CLIMATE. The climate is delightful, the seasons Deing distinctly marked, but running neither to the extremes of beat nor cold. The west wind, sweeping down over the Cascades, reaches us laden with ' the odor of cedar and pine, making it of peculiar benefit to those who are troubled with weak lungs. Generally the climate is considered a remarkably healthful one. It is not true that we had to import a corpse to start a grave yard, but it is true that persons do not die oft an not more than once. Many who find life unbearable in the wet cli mate of the coast, find ' relief at once on coming to the dry climate of Eastern Oregon. Another peculiarity is that diseases absolutely refuse to become epidemic. Diphtheria comes: It is an isolated case. Scarlet fever it claims seldom more than two' subjects, and neither is often fatal. Several times within the past thirty years smallpox has found its way here, but in nearly every case it was confined to the person who brought it, or, at the worst, to those who were in the bouse with him. The death rate shows that the percen tage is as small here as any where in the United States. The -nights are al ways, as elsewhere on the coast, cool and conducive to refreshing sleep. TEMPERATURE. The climate is equable for the latitude, the thermometer seldom going be ow zero or above 94. In either case the ex tremes are very short. Our extreme co d weather seldom lasts more than three or four days, and the same may be said of the heat. The reason for this is the prevailing wt winds coming from the warm Japan gulf current, and famil iarly known here as "Chinook winds." In the summer this wind is moist and cool, and blows almost steadily a gentle breeze full of moisture, and beneficial to all vegetation, almost taking the place of rain. In winter . it is compara tively a warm wind, cutting the snow rapidly, preventing any long period of cold. There is little or no rainfall after the 1st of June, and consequently there is no rush in harvesting. The grain is stacked unprotected in the fields until such times as it is convenient to thresh it. Light rains in the fall start the grass, and stock generally find plenty of good pasturage until Christmas, and many years go through the entire winter-without being fed, but depending entirely on what can be found on the range. CONCLUSION. What we have presented are the sim ple facts, told in simple language. We ask yon, if you are a honie-seeker, to consider them, and consider them well, and in the light of their application to you. We ask you to cast your lot with us; and bete on the banks of the graud Columbia, in the shadow of snow-capped Hood, to make your home. The time is propitious, . the opportunity ripe. There is yet abundance of unimproved land to be had almost for the asking. The west wind yet waves the bunch grass on the hills, where ere many years busy hands will have made happy homes. Let yotirs be of them. In a short time it will be too late. - Soon our fields and our hillsides will in the spring te masses of orchard bloom, and the air, now spicy with the healthful odor if cedar and pine, will be redoleut of blossom, and in the fall fragant with the odor of ripened fruit. Embowered cot tages, the homes of a happy, prosper ous and contented people, will be on every side; while white-winged Peace and golden-robed Plenty shall be our tutelary goddess. Jos. T. Peters & Co. have cord wood, which is desirable in all respects, and respectfully solici' your orders. Fifteen Day's JCxtenslon. Rosebubo, Or., May 16. The county court, after being in session all the week, adjonrned tonight. The time for pay ing taxes has been extended from May 15 until June 1, 1895, after ' which time the sheriff is ordered to make out the delinquent roll, and 2 per cent will be charged on all unpaid taxes. No war rants will be accepted in payment from this date. - WE GIVE AWAY A Sample Package (4 to 7 doses) of Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets To any one sending name and address to us on a postal card. QNCB USED THEY ARE ALWAYS IN PAYOR. Hence, our object in sending them out broadcast -ON TRIAL. They absolutely cure SICK HEADACHE, Biliousness, Constipation, Coated Tongue, Poor Ap petite, Dyspepsia and kin dred derangements of the Stomach.Liver and Bowels. Don't accept some substitute said to be " just as good." . . The substitute costs the dealer less. It costs you ABOUT the same, HIS profit is in the "just as good." . . XVHERB IS YOURS? Address for Free Sample, World's Dispensary Medical Association, No. 663 Mmla St, BUFFALO, N. Y. Cfclebeatrrs EuIUh TTI.injit Bi ENNYR0YAL PILLS Arc, sJwmja reliable, la Dies uk unaulrt tor C3UcJtstr Mntiah Dim- Brmm4 in Kt sum Gold. atsKalli.' svsOed with bin ribbon. Tab Sjf ' tiMU sna i.r firms. AtDrHgiMt,trsSB44i in strap for MrttowUra, tetisUJ mI RUf tor tmAlmmJ s uur, try ntom BblIL 1LM ITaau fW It StuiQi Greennouse Everything for the Garden we can furnish Floral Designs and Bouquets second to none in Eastern Ore gon at very reasonable prices. . nee onr assortment of flants, Button hole Bouquets, and display in M. Z. Donnell's Drugstore and Keller's Bak ery. Orders can be ielt at either ot the above places. The Hyacinths are now in foil bloom. : All are cordially invited to come and see onr assortment .of Flowers and Greenhouse Plants. Soipes-Kinercly Drug ' Co. Drugs, Paints, Wall Paper, Window Glass. 129 Second St., THE DALLES, - - OR. BEFORE! could eet reliefH from a most horri- S ble blood disease. I a had SDent hundreds i of dollars TRYING various remedies! t and physicians, none of which did me j s any good, fflv fineer nails came off. ! (and my hair came out. leavinc me 2 j penecuy Daia. i men went to HOT SPRIFJCS i Hoping to be cured by this celebrated treatment, but very soon became? disgusted, and decided to TRY! ine effect wasj truly wonderful 1 commenced to re cover after takinc the first bottle, and oy the time i had taken twelve bottles I was entirely cured cured by S. S, S. when the world-renowned Hot Springs had failed. WM. S. LOOMIS. Shreveport, La. Our Book on the Disease and Its Treatment mailed tree to any addrvMk SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. E. JACOBSEN BOOK and MTSIC CO., THl LKADBBB lit - Pianos aod Organs, Books, NOTIONS, STATIONERY. Call and eet' their nrlces. Sell PIANOS on eas; monthly iavmei.t, and is prepared to meet any cOMrBtlllUN. 162 Second SL THE DALLES, DR. Caveats, and Trade-M arks obtained, and all Pat- j ent business conducted tor modch arc Fees. i oun omer t o.pnmTr II e. patent Ormtl and we can secure patent in less time than those j remote from Washington. J Send model, drawing or photo with deserfp-j tion. We advise, if patentable or not. free of i charge. Our fee not due till patent ts secured. J cost of same in the V. S. and foreign countries j a PMMtrr. "tiowtououm rateuis. wnn sent tree. AaoTess, c.A.srjow&co. Op. PTTirr Office, Washington, D. C Don't Forget THAT TBS Crow Photo Co., (Formerly Crow A Lutnier, of Portland) Will sooa have their Kaw Fhatofrsph Gallery at The Dallas flmafcael asd ready for buslaeas. Wait until yam see samples of work and prices before having pietares taken. . - sprtt Bring m Your Family. Come in Yourself, And see how cheaply we can dress all of you. Men's Suits, Boys' Suits, Silks, Satins, LACES, WOOLENS, COTTONS, LINENS, Everything from Hat to Shoes, for everyone. All new stock. . -i..,., - -. . . . i C. IT. STEPHENS, Closing Out Sale of DRY GOODS CLOTHING-. FURNISHING- GOODS, . BOOTS, SHOES, HATS and CAPS. - Past or present values cut no figure, as goods MUST be SOLD The C. P. and P. D., French Woven, Hand-Made, Dr. Warner's Health, Coraline, French Model and other makes of Corsets will be closed out at extremely low prices. Call and be convinced. You will be surprised at our low prices. J. P. Hi There ! P i i W D Largest Assortment in the ROBERT E. Blue Front Store, Tillir;ery. ALSO A FTJLI LINE OF- Ipfapts' furT))T) MRS. M. E. BRIGGS, RUPERT & GABEL, Wholesale and retail manufacturers and dealers ip ' Harness, Saddles, Bridles, Collars, TENTS and WAGON COVERS, And all Articles Kept in a First Class Harness Shop. REPAIRING PROMPTLY DOVE. X' sHC w a LESS than COST. McINERNY. Men's Straw Hats, Boys' Straw Hats, Misses' Straw Hats, Ladies' Straw Hats. City. WILLIAMS, Opposite Diamond Mills: Having secured the services of a first-class trimmer from the city, I can assure my patrons perfect sat isfaction as to style and- finish. . Call and see the large variety of Hats on display in window. Qoods QIoaI5, Successor to Anna Peter St Co., 112 8econd Street. Adjoining E. J Collins & Co.'s Store, TO". -