The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, January 14, 1891, Page 3, Image 3

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    The Dalles Daily Chronicle.
WEDNESDAY,
JAN. 14, 1891
METEOROLOGICAL ELTOET.
Pacific H Rela- D't'r W State
Coast BAR. tlve of . of
Time. ? Hum Wind ? Weather.
8 A. M 30.13 24 68 E " Pt Cl'dy
3 P. M 30.15 37 6a Calm Clear
Maximum temperature, 37; minimum tem
perature, 24.
Total precipitation from Jul v up to date, 2.88;
I average precipitation from July to date, 7.44;
y average defflciency from July 1st to date, 4.56.
WEATHER PROBABILITIES.
3
The Dalles, Jan. 14, 1891.
Weather forecast till Thursday
IS if.; air. . Slightly warmer.
LOCAL BREVITIES.
The Chronicle is a month old to-day.
The Hyer sisters at Vogt Grand to
night. Mr. Joseph A. Wilson of Hood River
is in the city.
The moon will have its regular spree,
getting full this month on the 24th.
Shipments from the stockyards have
fallen off considerably during the past
week.
Miss Lillie Frisbie is here from Port
land visiting her parents, Prof. M. W.
and Mrs. Smith.
The Gymnasium club gave another of
their pleasant dances last night, which
was well attended.
The weather indications for the day
are clear, slight rise in temperature, fol
lowed by rain or snow.
The guard mount and complimentary
hop of the Third Regiment will take
place the evening of the 21st.
The Pennoyer boom has struck all our
exchanges, regardless of politics, and
each has something to say on the sub
ject. There are on the tapis some weddings
to come off in a few days, which they
think we don't know of, but we do all
the same.
. The Hyers Sisters are not strangers to
the amusement world. They have a
name and fame in our large cities. .Bog
Ion Herald.
The topic for prayer meeting at the
Congregational church to-night is "The
Reaper and His Wages." Reference
John 4 :30.
Mr. Wiley's boy started home from
New York yesterday in charge of the
conductors, and will probably arrive
here Monday.
Mr. John L. Thompson, who met with
the misfortune of having a leg broken a
few days ago, is very comfortable and
doing as "well as could be expected.
Mr. Jas. Brown, of Mosier, is in the
city, having come up on the "lightning
express," which came through, a distance
of twelve miles, in a little over an hour
and a quarter.
Messrs. Stoddard & Nebley of the Ore
gon Lumber company, who have been
in the city for several days left this
morning for North Powder, from which
place they will go to Salt Lake City, re
turning about February 1st.
An alarm of fire about 11 :30 last night
was caused by the burniDg of J. W.
Moore's woodshed on Tenth street near
. Mill creek. Several, cords of wood were
burned. The fire caught from the side
iiexi me eireei, ana mere is strong
probability of its being incendiary.
The last performance of the Hyers
Sisters in Ottawa was listened to by a
really appreciative audience, and the
many and insisted on encores from end to
end of the programme showed what
those present thought of the entertain
ment. The voices were remarkably eood.
and the whole affair is worthy of the
best notice which the troupe has received
at the hands of both the American and
Canadian press, The solo singers were,
without exception excellent, in most
cases combining those qualities of voice
which are hardly to be found outside the
colored race. Ottawa ((hit.) Daily Citi
zen. The Oto steam saw mill situated about
nine miles north of Lyle burned to the
ground about midnight Saturday last.
The engineer had been down to the mill
about 9 o'clock to let the water out of
the pumps, to prevent their freezing,
and everything was all right then. At
- half past ten before going to bed he
looked out towards the mill as was his
custom, but saw no signs of fire. The
first intimation he had of it was being
awakened by the light in thl room. At
this time the mill was in flames all over,
and nothing sould be done to save it.
By hard fighting a portion of the lumber
was saved. The loss is about $5,000, and
as we are informed there was no in
surance. The mill was new having been
started up during the summer.
' The end of the Washington and New
York Land company, which died -but
left a handsome sign painted by Hardy,
) in their windows is accentuated bv a
sheriff's sale of their desks, tables, and
other office furniture to Bettle the bill
for painting the said sign as aforesaid.
The point of its termination is rendered
Btill more acute by the fact that the high
rolling Stone, who in spite of the prov
erb that a "rolling stone gathers no
moss" undertook to remove the outer
jooating of this cryptogamous plant from
tJLhe cuticle of the gullible webfoot, is
now in jail with nine indictments hang
ing over him in the United States circuit
. court. His trial in said court will take
place in the near future, and Stone and
his partner Hyde will have a chance to
learn an honest, albeit unremunerative
' trade.
The west bound passenger train was
six hours late to-day.
Walter Fraine and J. W. Blackburn of
Grant are in the city.
Mr. H. W. Wells and bride arrived
here from Canada Friday.
Mr.' A. J. Brigham, of Dufur, and Mr,
Southern, of Boyd, are in the city.
Mr. W. Heisler, of Dufur, and George
Peterson, of Biggs, made us a pleasant
call to-day.
If anyone thinks that Oregon is not a
favored country, and as near a paradise
as there is on earth, let him come to The
Dalles and visit our meat markets and
see the grass-fed beef hanging on the
hooks in the stalls really so fat-and juicy
that an epicurean could not resist the
temptation to sample it.
Messrs Printz & Nitchke, loaded two
large wagons with furniture at their es
tablishment to-day, to go to Deschutes
for Mr. Joseph . Shearer's new house.
Two more loads will go out the forepart
of next week, completing the purchase
from this firm. Mr. Shearer has built
the finest residence in the county during
the past year. It being fitted up in the
most modern style, and elegantly fur
nished. Recorder Knaggs let the light of his
wisdom illuminate the dark vistas of a
"drunk and disorderly" the other morn
ing. As the arid culprit stood before
him, vainly seeking a sign 'of sympa
thetic irrigation in his honor's eye or
either of them the recorder remarked :
"Young man you are charged with be
ing drunk, drunk aud disorderly. A
common social, soaking drunk wasn't
rich enough for you; but abandoning
the traditions of your race, which limit
drunks to the peaceable, sociable, soak
ing, all-the-hide-can-hold variety, you
violated your obligations, filled up on
ghost dance essence, and imagined you
were Two Strike, Kicking Bear, Big
Foot, or some other high and mighty
Sioux. You were sadly mistaken. You
realize this now, and to assist your
mind in remembering this fact the court
will sequestrate you for ten days, that
you may learn to prefer the hospitalities
of the city and civilization, to the wild
and cheerless freedom of the brakebeam
or blind baggage."
STATE TE9IPERA'CE ALLIANCE.
Their Kezt Meeting: Will Be at Salem
January Slat.
The executive committee of the Ore
gon State Temperance Alliance, met at
the Y. M. C. A. rooms, in Portland,
January 5, 1891, and formulated the fol
lowing official call for the next session of
the Alliance:
The time is fixed by the constitution,
viz ; the third Wednesday., in January,
which falls this year on the 21st inst.
The hour of meeting is 2 o'clock p. m.,
sharp. The place of meeting is Salem
Oregon.
The basis of representation, is set
forth in Article II of the constitution,
which reads is follows: "Membership.
The Alliance shall be composed of dele
gates, representing churches, Sunday
schools and temperance organizations.
Each such society within the state shall
be allowed one delegate for each such
orgaization, and one additional delegate
for each fifty members or major fraction
thereof, and all life members hitherto
known as such, shall be recognized as
members."
An earnest and cordial invitation is
extended to all temperance and Chris
tian people of the state of Oregon, to
send representatives, duly accredited, to
participate in the deliberations of the
Alliance, at its forthcoming session.
We desire a large attendance of those
who are pledged to the protection of the
American home, against the vices of
intemperance. .
Signed in behalf of the committee.
C. C. Bateman,
E. E. McKinnev, President.
Secretary.
LOOKIXff OUT FOR OUR INTERESTS.
The Board of Trade Representatives Go
to Salem.
Messrs. B. S. Huntington, E. B. Mc
Farland and G. " J. Farley, representa
tives of The Dalles Board of Trade, left
to-day for Salem to attend the State
Board of Trade, which convenes to-morrow
in that city.
It is quite important that the state
board should take some active measures
in relation to the Cascade Locks improve
ment, and insist on the government at
Washington changing the plan of com
pletion from the war department to that
of letting the whole thing out by con
tract. Under the present regime the
new born babe will not live to see the
locks in operation and steamers laden
with products of the Inland Empire
passing through to the seaboard.
Remored.
Leslie Butler began to-day to remove
his store of groceries from the corner of
Court and 3rd St. to No. 113 Washington
street, first door south of Post Office.
Mr. Butler has been in business here
for the last nine years and has by fair
and honorable dealing built up a good
steady trade.. He is one of our leading
business men, and as such will no doubt
have a good business in his new quarter.
He will have better facilities for hand
ling his business at the store on Wash
ington street. ' '
The .Dalles Fi
Will meet at the residence of Mrs.
Marsh Sylvester on Third street Friday,
January 16 at 3 o'clock. Y'b please at
tend, as there is important business to
be brought before the society.
MBS. SYLVE8TEB,
Rec. Secretary.
Elaine oil at Maier & Benton's.
Nebraska corn at Joles Bros. .
Lard in balk at Central Market.
- For coughs and colds use 2379.y
Fresh Iowa Butter at Maier & Ben
ton's. Columbia river smelt at . W. A.
Kirby's, 10 cents per pound.
Does S. B. get there? "I should
smile." S. B.
Oregon Star brand of hams at the Cen
tral Market at 15 cents.
C. E. Dunham will cure your head
ache, cough or pain for 50 cenls, S. B.
Sliced hams, boneless hams, ham sau
sage and dried fish at Central Market.
New manufactories are going in at
North Dalles.
2379 is the cough syrup for children.
Get me a cigar from that fine case at
Snipes & Kinersley's.
Joles Bros.' is the boss place to buy
groceries.
You need not ' cough ! Blakeley &
Houghton will cure it for 50 cents. S. B.
The finest stock of silverware ever
brought to The Dalles at AV. E. Garret
sons, Second street.
Snipes & Kinersly are anxious to cure
your headache for 50 cents. S. B.
For a lame back, a pain in the side or
chest, or for tootache or earache, prompt
relief may be had by using Chamber
lain's Pain Balm. It is reliable. For
sale by Snipes & Kinersly. '
Those easy chairs made by Liver more
& Andrews are the neatest thing of the
kind ever made. They are just the thing
for your porch or lawn in the summer,
and are as comfortable and easy as an
old shoe. Call and see them at 77 Court
street.
notice.
All county warrants registered prior to
September 13, 1887, will be paid if pre
sented at my office. Interest ceases
from and after this date.
Geo. Rvch,
Treas. Wasco Co., Or.
Jan. 13, 1890. 4t
For a cut, bruise, burn or scald, there
is nothing equal to Chamberlain's Pain
Balm. It heals the parts more quickly
than any other application, and unless
the injury is very severe, no scar is left.
For sale by Snipes & Kinersly.
SCO Cash.
For the best shots of The Dalles
For full particulars call at the shooting
gallery No. 86 Second St. Don't fail to
make a record.
DISSOLUTION NOTICE.
The firm existing under the firm
name of Brooks & Beers is this day dis
solved by mutual consent by the
retiring of Mr. S. L. Brooks. The busi
ness will be carried on by Mesers. G.
F. Beers, and R. E.- Williams under
the firm name of "The ' Dalles Mer
cantile Co." The new firm will pay all
liabilities and collect all debts.
Samuel L. Brooks.
G. F. Beers.
January 1, 1891.
Having retired from the above firm,
I desire to return my thanks to the pub
lic for generous and friendly patronage
and to ask for the new firm a continu
ance of the same. Sam'l. L. Brooks.
YOU NEED BUT ASK
The S. B. Headache and Liver Cure taken
according to directions will keep your Blood,
ajxvii an 1 1 milliui n 1 1 1 inm U lllfl .
THB 8. B. COUOH ( IIRK for (YllrtK. Comrhn
and Croup, in connection with the Headache
Cure, is a near perfect as anything known.
Thk 8. B. Alpha Pain Cure for internal and
external: use, in Neuralgia, Toothache, Cramp
Colic and Cholera Morbus, is unsurpassed. Thev
are well liked wherever known. Manufactured
at Dufur, Oregon. For sale by all druggists.
FSETiCfl & CO.,
BANKERS.
V
TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS
Letters of Credit issued available in the
Eastern States.
Sicht "Ktto h an cm anil TVil mri Ji I
Transfers sold on New York, Chicago, St.
j-iouis, oan Francisco, Portland Oregon,
Seattle Wash., and various nninta in lr.
egon and Washington.
Collections made at all noints on fav
orable terms.
JAMES PERGUSEN,
EXPRESSION,
Furniture JVIoving a Specialty.
Leave Orders at Fish & Bardon's, The Dalles.
H. STONEMAN,
Next door to Columbia Candy Factory.
Boots and Shoes "
Made to Order, and
J Satisfaction Guaranteed. Quick Work '
Prices Reasonable.
F. TAYLOR,
PROPRIETOR OF THE , -
City Market.
THE SECRET MOURNER.
iiiey bore him on to bis grave in the heart of the
busy town;
And with furtive footsteps following: I watched
them lay taim down;
Xbe mourners, many and sad though they wept
there one and all,
The tears that fell were as naught to mine, that
could notfalL
We loved each other dearly. In a day that is dis
tant now, -
But something got to his ear, and he suddenly
changed Bomehow
A something got to his ear. I never could gather
whatr- .
And he kept away from thence, and his love for
me was not. .
Ibid my grief in my heart, and bore it as best I
might;
There was never darkness yet but had some re
lieving light;
And I found a balm In the thought that, although
his love was gone,
I could follow him secretly, and in secret stin
loveon.
And this Tve done through the years that have
come and gone since then
(So far the love of women surpasses the love of
men);
Pre hung on his track to the last, for I only
ceased today.
And from his grave in the town I turned in my
woe away.
Earth now looks lone in my eyes, yet I am not all
cast down;
I have firm faith that at last I shall somewhere
grasp Love's crown I -That
when the end shall have come, whatever
is good and true
Will receive Its Just reward, and a love like mine
its due.
James Dawson.
Glycerine as a Wool Preservative.
In order to make wool tissues water
proof manufacturers have to expose the
fabric to temperatures as high as 2C6 to
284 degs. Fahrenheit, and it has been
found thai the tissue thus treated loses
all its resistance. Up to 230 degs. there
is no change in wool or woolen goods,
but when heated to 266 degs. or above
both turn yellow and show evidences of
combustion. By a series of experiments
Mr. J. Perzog, an eminent French an
alytical chemist, has discovered a new
process by means of which wool threads
and fabrics may be made to retain their
durability and original resistance under
high temperature during the process of
manufacture.
Acting upon the established fact that
glycerine greatly prevents evaporation
of humidity, Mr. Perzog saturated some
woolen fabrics with a solution contain
ing 10 per cent, of glycerine, and ex
posed them to high temperatures. The
fabrics thus treated showed not the
slightest change under a temperature of
284 degs. Fahrenheit, and they retained
13 per cent, of the glycerine. The dis
covery of this simple principle removes
one of the greatest difficulties with
which manufacturers of waterproof
fabrics have had to contend. Philadel
phia Record.
About Torpedo Boats.
The next most important thing to
speed in a torpedo boat is the quick
turning, and for this purpose the larger
Normand, Schicatt and Yarrow boats
have two rudders, one in the usual place
at the stern and one under the bow.
Mr. Thornycroft has another device.
He puts two curved rudders near the
stern and the propeller is between them,
so that when the rudders are turned to
gether, the water which the propeller is
driving astern is turned a little to one
side and helps to push around the boat.
The latest idea in torpedo boats is to
have their launching tubes mounted on
turn tables on deck instead of being
fixed in the bow- With this improve
ment a boat wall not have to steam
straight at her enemy, stop, launch its
torpedo and then turn to run away; but
it can train its tube on the big ship as if
the tube were a gun, and launch the tor
pedo while rushing past at full speed.
This would be less dangerous for the
torpedo boat, for it would not afford the
men on the ship a good aim at her.
John M. Ellicott, IT. S. N., in St Nich
olas. An Odd Coincidence.
An old friend (call him W.) relates
how, while he was in Florida, his watch
stopped. Since it was a very good
watch and had never stopped before,
and had been duly wound the evening
before, W. was much surprised that it
wouldn't go. By and by the head of the
house (call him B.) came in. " "Will you
please give me the time?" said W. "Cer
tainly," said B., and pulled out his
watch. B. had a timepiece which was
entirely trustworthy, not given to irreg
ularities of any kind. He pulled it out
of his pocket. "By JoveP' he exclaimed,
"my watch is stopped; that's queer."
They compared the two watches, and
they had stopped at the same hour and
at the same minute, and why they had
stopped neither man was able to discov
er. Boston Transcript.
A Clever Toungster.
Little Kitty Clover is the most brazen
of beggars.
"Grandma, will yon please lend me
your gold beads?" she asked, for perhaps
the seventh time that week.
" Grandma patiently took them from
the drawer, and said, with her usual
mildness, as she gave them to the child:
: "Try not to ask for them any oftener
Chan you can help. Kitty."
"Hb'm," said Kitty, adding, as -a
clever solution of the difficulty occurred
to her, "If you don't like to lend 'em,
grandma, yon could give 'em to me and
then I needn't ask!" Yonth's Com
panion. '"
What Good Clothes Will Do.
The'proprietors of 'an up town clothing
store have adopted a novel method of
soliciting trade. They have hired a man
who has long been familiar to every one
in their neighborhood as a ragged, dis
reputable looking fellow, clothed him in
a handsome full dress suit, furnished
him with a beaver, a finely laundered
shirt and everything else that a man ac
customed to dress well could possibly
need, and turned him loose to distribute
neat advertising cards about the neigh
borhood. He usually wears some fresh
flowers pinned to the lapel of his coat,
and as he goes about distributing his
cards strikes people who have known
him and scorned him for so many years
as a remarkable example of wh&t-good
clothing will do. New York Tribune. ,
rlOfTtf DAMiES, Wash.
In the last two weeks large sales of lots tJJ5rV;
have been made at Portland, Tacoma, Forest in the West
Grove, McMinnville and The Dalles. All fiJtc
are satisfied that .
North Dalles
Is now the place for investment. New Man- ClMiCal
ufactories are to be added and large improve- MFW prSS?"
ments made. The next 90 days will be im- several
portant ones for this new city. Jjjjg COttaBS-
Call at the office of the folmi
Interstate Investment Co.,
r t m w "L2 Washington St., PORTLAND, Or.
O. D. TAYLOR, THE DALLES, Or.
: DEALERS IN
Staple aofl Fancy GrocBiies,
Hay, Grain and Feed.
Cheap Express Wagons flos. 1 and 2.
Orders left at the Store willj-eceive prompt attention.
Trunks and Packages delivered to any part of the City.
Wagons always on hand when Trains or Boat arrives.
No. 122 Cor. Washington and Third. Sts.
Clearance Sale!
For the Purpose of Disposing of our
Fall and Winter Millinery,
Will Sell so CHEAP that it -will pay you to have a
new hat if only for "Looks."
MRS. PHILLIPS, 81 Third Street.
JJalloB, - -
H- R- GLHS1ER,
DEALER IN
pine Cigars and Tobacco
Pipes, Cigarettes and Smokers' Notions.
GO TO
THE SMOKER'S EMPORIUM.
109 Second St., The Dalles.
Grandall & Barget,
MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS IN
FURNITURE CARPETS.
Undertakers and Embalmers.
NO. 166 SECOND STREET.
Or I. O. NICKELSEN,
-DEALER IN-
STATIONERY, HOTIOfJS,
BOOKS AND MUSIC.
Cor, of TM and Washington Sts, Tne Dalles, Oregon, . ;
Enmitnre STfr.
Wire Works.
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