DO The Dalles Daily Chronicle. SATURDAY, 7- - ? JAN. 24, 1891 METEOROLOGICAL BEPOET. Pacific 3 Rela- D't'r fe State Coatlt BAB. tlve of E. of Time. Hum Wind cs w eather. 8 A. il S0.15 39 100 6W .89 Lt Rain a P. M 30.24 44 9i .01 Cloudy Maxlnvum temperature, 45: minimum tem perature, 38. Total precipitation from Julv up to date, 3.30; veratre, precipitation from July to date, 8.45; nverafiaaemciency from July lut to date, 5.15. , KATHIB PROBABILITIES. Thk Pali.es, Jan. 24, 1891. Weather forecast till 8 p. in., Saturday, rain. Nearly sta tionary temperature. LOCAL BREVITIES. Mr. Orion Kinersly went to Portland last night. Hon. F. P. Mays came up from Port land this morning. Senator Watkins came home from Salem this morning. v . Mr. Win. Chambert has moved his family to Albina and will make that city his home. Messrs. James Benson, of Goldendale, Robert Rand and John Parker, of Hood River and E. Husbands, of Mosier, are in the city. A light, but steady and apparently general rain set in last night. It was needed by our farmers and is more than welcome. Mr. J. A. Anderson shipped two car loads of sheep to the American Dressed Beef Co., at Troutdale last night, and will ship another tonight. Mr. Crook, father of Mrs. John Filloon who has been visiting his daughter here, returned to his home in Klickitat county this morning. Assessable property is being created very fast these days in Wasco county. Three or four firms are making out pa pers and the entire force of the land of fice are as busy as bees. The weather reports are received here at 8 o'clock in the evening at which time the flags are changed. It will be seen from this, that the weather chang ing in the night the flag is not noticed until the change has taken place. Garden seeds are exposed for sale in the groceries, and are being sold too. Gardens are being prepared and the hardier vegetables planted. Making garden in January in this latitude seems I preposterous but it is nevertheless true. I If you want to get the news before it gets stale subscribe for the Chronicle. . It will cost you only fifty cents a month to have it delivered by the carrier, and it is brimful of news, wisdom and locals. Read it for a month and you will find that you cannot do without it, Mr. John Stoddard manager and member of the Oregon Lumber Co., of Hood River, has received seven carloads of railroad iron and expects eight more soon, says the Glacier. This iron will be used in building a railroad in con nection with the company's mills. Mr. Robert Mays returned from Salem this morning, and informs us that the appropriation for a portage railway at the Cascades is going to meet with con siderable opposition in the house and that it will require attention if the bill is to pass. Several persons applying to locate, forfeited land were compelled to take out their first papers in order to do so, though some of them were already naturalized. All those who have their papers should bring them, as it is abso lutely necessary that they be produced. Ed. W. Bingham, who was secretary of the Ballot Reform League, writes . from Salem, that if the people want the . Australian voting system adopted they will have to make their representatives in the legislature know it pretty forcibly, as there is great danger of the bill being killed by having riders put on it. Now is the time to buy your tickets and reserve your seats for "A Celebrated Case" which will be put on the stage again next Tuesday night. The proceeds are to be donated to the Y's, and this should aid materially in filling the house. We have the best amateur club in the state and should show our appreciation . . of it. The land office is doing a rushing busi . ness, which will evidently be rapidly increased as the great majority of appli cations are from Hood River which being situated on the line of the railroad got the news of the opening of the lands first. When the other precincts are heard from, the gathering of the clans of Roderick Dhu will be nowhere. There is really no need of hurry, but everybody is anxious and consequently the rush will be made just the same. 1 The Chronicle is daily in . receipt of such kind words from the readers and ich flattering indorsements, that the TJlitor has nearly dislocated his maxillae trying to blush. It is a lost art, and the attempt is vain.. Chasing the elusive item, perusing the spring crop of poetry, and bringing pnr marble cheek (monu ments are made of marble) in contact with the icy breath of a cruel world has dismantled the blush that used to be the mantle-piece thereof. We thank our friends for their kind words, and hope ' they will take our attempt to blush, for the deed. THE SABBATH BELLS. Service at the Different Dalles Churches To-morrow ' CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH. At the morning service the pastor Mr. Curtis will preach on the subject of "The Unpardonable Sin," and at the evening service on "Every Man to his own Company ; or Tendency is Destiny." Sabbath School immediately afterservice. Seats free. THE M. E. CHURCH. Subject in the morning, at 11 o'clock: "The Christian Race." In the evening at 7 o'clock : A Revo lution." - . GOD AND MAN. Rev. Geo. W. Bemis will preach at the M. E. church at 3 :30 p. m. tomor row on "God and Man." Mr. Bemis is called the "Scriptural Poet" and his ad dress will be mostly poetical. All are invited. GERMAN LUTHERAN. Rev. A. Horn pastor of the German Lutheran church will preach at his school room on Ninth street tomorrow at 10 :30 a. m. All are invited. Hotel Arrivals for the Pant Twenty four Hours. UMATILLA HOUSE. John A. Benson, Goldendale. A. B. Niles, Walla Walla. H. P. Thrall, San Francisco. E. Husbands, Mosier. John Parker, Hood River. C. L. Berger, " " E. C. Miller, " John Reynolds, " " John Kroeger, " " Mrs. Robbinson," " W. B. Gelden, Philadelphia. H. S. Thayer, Citv. B. W. Mcintosh, New Whatcom. S. M. Clarke, Kansas City. Joseph Mycomb, Portland. John C. Stewart, Modesto, 111. D. Young, Fort Klamath. J. Hanrahan, Portland. To Meet the Committee at the Locks. A passenger car will be attached to the freight train which leaves here to morrow morning at 8 o'clock which will furnish transportation to those desiring to visit the Cascade Locks tomorrow. The car will remain at the locks until 3 o'clock. It-is desired that as many of our business men as can possibly get away, go, in"order that the committee may see that we are in earnest in the matter. We understand the fare will be nominal. Show your interest in the work and your desire to benefit your selves by being of the party. At the Locks To-morrow. The special committee from the legis lature will visit the Cascade Locks to morrow on a special train, arriving there probably before noon and remaining a couple of hours. It is important that The Dalles be represented and that a committee from the board of trade and as many of our business men as possible should meet them there. The morning passenger, if it is as usual an hour late, will make it possible to get down in time and a freight train leaving at 8 :10 will reach the locks by noon. Trying to Intimidate an Editor. Portland, Jan. 24. The editor of the Free Water Herald sends the following note to the press which has been received by him. "MUton, Oregon, Jan. 22, 1891. Please say nothing in your next issue of the Herald regarding the proceeding of the regulators on Wednesday eve. By so doing you will avoid trouble. Signed by fifty citizens." Real Estate Transaetions. ' Joseph Smart and wife to J. F. Ed wards the north half and southwest quarter of section 5, township one north of range 14 east, $1 and other valuable considerations. The Railroad Land Has Cone Back. The IT. S. land office is now receiving filings on railroad lands and we are pre pared to make out all necessary papers. Thornbury & Hudson. The Dalles, Or., Jan. 22, 1891. His Behavior Accounted Eor. Pedestrians'in Fifth avenue, New York, near the Windsor hotel, on Thursday last, were surprised to see a well dressed man, who had been placidly promenading the sidewalk, jump into the air, fling his cane into the gutter, toss his hat away, rip open his coat and vest. It was supposed by those who observed his antics that he was insane. He was seized by several men, who pitied bis condition, and while he howled and fought his captors, he was carried to a drugstore. . After a pony of cognac had been administered to him without any evidence of repugnance on his part, he explained that something was burning his back. On partially disroding him a partly burned cigar ette was found lodgedb etween his under shirt and his skin, between his shoulder blades. It is supposed that a cigarette smoker on the roof of a Fifth-avenue stage tossed a half-smoked cigarette toward the sidewalk, and that it hap pened to lodge in the sensitive place where it was found. - A meteoric stone resembling- granite recently fell near the mouth of Pistol river, in Curry county, Oregon. It weighs something over 400 pounds, and embedded itself feet in the earth. Par ties who saw it fall went to dig it out, but found it so hot nothing could be done with it. After it had cooled it was removed and will soon be placed on ex hibition in Portland. Rev. Mr. Talmage says "There is no happiness in this world for an idle wo man." Mr. Talmage should reserve his sympathy for the overworked women. The idle women can derive considerable pleasure fiom a 25 cent novel and .a $5, poodle dog. The secretary of thetreasury has sent to thej house a communication from the attorney general relative to the necess ity of having means of transportation of witesses arrest of murderers in that sec tion of Alaska lying west of Sitka. The secretary recommends that a revenue cutter be detailed for this dutv. - CHRONICLE SHORT STOPS. Employment Bureau. Haworth & Thru-man, 116, Court St. For coughs and colds use 2379. ; . Lard in balk at Central Market.' : : 1 Buy your school books at Jacobson & Co. 's. , 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. Big bargains in real estate at 116 Court St. First come, first served. Sliced hams, boneless hams, ham sau sage and dried fish at Central Market. The best fitting pantaloons of the latest style are made bv John Pashek-in Opera House block on Third street. 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 W. 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 Livermore & 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. For a cut, bruise, burn or scald, there is nothing equal to Chamberlin's Paint 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. 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. Ruch, Treas. Wasco Co., Or. Jan. 13, 1890. 4t A prominent physician and old army surgeon in eastern Iowa, was called away from home for a few days ; during his al sence one of the children contracted a severe cold and his wife bought a bottle of Chamberlin's Cough Remedy for it. They were so much pleased that they afterwards used several bottles at var ious times. He said, - from experience with it, he regarded it as the most reli able preparation in use for colds and that it came the nearest being a specific of any medicine he had ever seen. For sale by Snipes & Kinersly. t From Society to Socialism. Speaking of ministers reminds me of a little story I heard recently. Hugh O. Pentecost, who started out as a Baptist preacher, broke away from his church, ran for mayor of Newark, N. J., and is now editor of Twentieth Century- He married a very prominent society girl of Hartford, Conn., about ten years ago. Their wedding was a very swell affair. Afterward Mr. Pentecost accepted a pul pit in Brooklyn at a salary of $10,000 a year. Everything seemed bright for the young couple. The wife was handsome and popular, the preacher was eloquent, earnest and successful. A few nights ago some old friends of Mrs. Pentecost, who had known her in the days when she shone as a societv belle, went to hear her husband address a crowd of workingmen on the east side. Imagine their astonishment when Mrs. Pentecost came out on the stage and, at tired in a most striking garb, sang to the assemblage a revolutionary song. She has been a most loyal wife. She has sup ported her husband in every step he has taken, and has been of great service to him in his rather peculiar career. Con sidering her former life as a society woman, her present career as a singer of socialistic songs is picturesque. New York Cot. Kansas City Journal. Mrs. N. E. Bragg, president of the Ladies' Auxiliary, recently laid the cor nerstone of the new Y. M. C. A. build ing at Bangor, Me. Of the $40,000 so far paid in on the building fund the women of Bangor have given $13,600, and it is to be hoped that young women will share with young men the) advan tages of the building when completed. Mrs. Olive Washburn, of Ran TlVnrv. Cisco, is about to devote the bulk of her fortune to founding a Nationalist col ony in California. Bellamy's "Looking Backward" theories are to be followed, and all people of good moral character will be admitted, irrespective of religious belief. Over $100,000 will be spent in buildings and improvements. Instead of wintering at Corfu, as was her original intention, it is very likely that the empress of Austria Trill go to the West Indies in a few weeks, in which case she will probably cruise on this side of the Atlantic during the greater por tion of next year. The empress has con ceived a wish to visit Cuba, Jamaica and Mexico. One of the three daughters of John D. Rockefeller, while a student at Yassar, had a handsome allowance in the way of money from home. Instead of spending this on rich gowns and apartments she paid for two years the tuition and ex penses of a girl from the country who was not able to pay them herself. For lovers of condiments and highly spiced dishes it is a simple thing to work up a French dressing into an entirely different article by adding a pinch of celery sauce, a dish of curry, or horse radish, a few drops of caper or Worces tershire sauce and a spoonful of French mustard. . Fame is fame. Mr. Watterson now with a story as to how he dropped a cou ple of thousand dollars at poker. PEANUT CRAFTINESS AN ITAUAN PEDDLER WHO UNDER , 8TANDS HUMAN NATURE. Othars "Malta da Appetite" and He ,Waka de Mon" How a Shrewd Vender Takes Advantage of the Wind and His Companions Ignorance. A newspaper man who is fond of hot roasted peanuts, and generally pur chases a pint of them daily from some street .vender in Park row, noticed on one occasion that a particularly swarthy old Italian gave him better measure for his money and also larger and more per fect nuts than any other. Accordingly, being, a thrifty man, even in small things, he resolved to deal with this fel low exclusively if possible. The next day, however, as he descend ed the stairway of the elevated railway he missed the vender at his accustomed stand, and so purchased a pint of pea nuts, which subsequently turned out to be a rather wormy lot, from another son of Italy. He had not got half way to Broadway when he came across the gen erous vender selling his wares as usual, but in a different place from the one he occupied the day before. The newspaper man did not want two pints of peanuts, and in fact he had not then discovered the wormy condition of his recent purchase, nevertheless he made a mental note of the new stand of his chosen source of supply and passed along. DODG1NO AROUND. The next time he had occasion to go through Park row he entered it from Broadway. He looked about for his peanut vender, expecting to find him at the new stand, but he was not. "His honesty has bankrupted him," solilo quized the newspaper man. "It evi dently pays better to remain in one spot and sell wormy nuts." So he purchased from another vender and got among his change a plugged Canadian dime, which a horsecar conductor subsequently re turned to him with loudly expressed scorn. This thing happened several times. The honest vender always shifted his position and his would-be customer al ways bought his nuts elsewhere. Final ly it flashed into the mind of the news paper man, whose brain was generally so busy with the big questions of the day, that the circumstances just de scribed had hardly been noticed by him at all up to that time, that this honest vender was always in Park row, some where between the elevated road and Broadway, so he determined not to buy any nuts till he came np to him, wher ever his chosen stand for the day might be. Accordingly, the next day he passed several venders before he came to the shifting merchant, but was rewarded by a heaping measure of particularly fine nuts. "Why don't you stay in one place?" asked the newspaper man. "I bike to buy your nuts, and I would do so every day if I could find you without so much trouble. I really can't spare the time to keep thinking of you and a trifling pint of nuts all the way. from the elevated road to Broadway. If I knew just where you were I need only think of you as I pass your stand, and my mind would do that mechanically without in terupting my other thoughts. See?" "No unnerstando," said the Italian, with a bright smile. thk secret out. "I suppose not," arid the other. "Why don't you get one stand and stay there like the other fellows?" he shouted, fall ing into the popular belief that people understand a foreign tongue when it is screamed at them more readily than when it is whispered. The Italian shrugged his shoulders. "Tinka I get reglah customers?" he asked with a grin. "Certainly," said the adviser. "Look at me, for instance." "Why you reglah customer of me and not of other fellahs? Lika de good nut, eh?" and he showed his white teeth from ear to ear. "Well, that's so," replied the news paper man with a laugh. "I'd deal with you anyway, and you've found that out. I suppose youll begin to treat me less generously by degrees, now that you think you've got me. But what makes you shift about so anyway? The others don't do it." "The wind," said the peddler, and then he looked as if he had admitted too much, and would say no more. But the newspaper man's curiosity was aroused, and after dealing with the man for a week or two he won his confidence, and finally learned what the wind had to do with it. "Well," said the Italian, still grinning, "I tell you. People dat lika de good nut reglah follow me; people dat lika nut once in while I follow dem. More of dose don de odder. Today wind blow from dat Dago vender up de street, who always stand in one place, to me, who shift about. Man come along very bey and pass his stand. Just as he go by he get strong smell of roasta peanut. He tink he like some, but no time to go back.. 'Plenty other fellahs,' he say. Den he come to me and buy some. To-morra, praps, wind blowa de odder way. I go odder side of Dago dat always stand in one place, and I catena de cus tomahs dat he cause wanta de nut. He maka de appetite, I maka de mon." New Yojk Tribune. Japanese Lacquer. The Japanese lacquer which attracts so much attention here on trays and ornaments imported from that myste rious land has an interesting history. It is extracted from a tree, like sugar from a maple, and these lacquer yielding trees reach a very large size. They only live about forty years, when they are cut down, and the lacquer extracted from the branches, and young trees take their place. The varnish is proof against boil ing water, alcohol and almost every agent known, while it takes a polish which is practically indestructible. It can be used for the most diverse pur poses. New York Telegram. TlOlTH DflliliES, Wash.' .. In the last two weeks large sales of lots tahnSv have been made at Portland, Tacoma, Forest in the West. Grove, McMinnville and The Dalles. All ftjt are satisfied that Ig" North Dalles Is now the place for investment. New Man- CheilliCul ufactories are to be added and large improve- NrWli!f ments made. The next 90 days will be im- several portant ones for this new city. Jo C0tt36S- Call at the office of the- 0103(1 Interstate Investment Co., r 72 Washington St., PORTLAND Or O. D. TAYLOR, THEDALLES, Or ' -: DEALERS IN He Hay, Grain Gheap Express Wagons flos. 1 and 2. Orders left at the Stcre willeceive 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. H- P- GLHSIER, DEALER IN pine Cigars and Tobacco Pipes, Cigarettes and Smokers' Notions. GO TO THE SMOKER'S EMPORIUM. 109 Second St., The Dalles. Grandall MANUFACTURERS FURNITURE Undertakers and Embalmers. NO. 166 SECOND STREET. 3 I. O. NICKELSEN, -te DEALER IN STftTIONEflY, HOTIOHS, BOOKS AND MUSIC. Cor. if TIM. and Wasliiiita sts, Tie Dalles, Own. H.C.NIELSeN, Clothier and Tailor, Grents' F-u.3?XLjLis:ti.lxxg? GrOOdS, tyat5 aijd Qap5, JruT) ilalises, Boots and Sboes, Xito. CORNER OF SECOND AND WASHINGTON STS., THE DALLES, OREGON. -: For the Best Brands and Purest J.O.MKGK, Ur;ole5aIe : Ijquor : Dealer, 117 SECOND; ST. THE DALLES, OR. Fnrnitnre MTj. Wire Works. weiies-, and Feed. & Barget, AND DEALERS IN & GARPETS. Quality of Wines and Liquors, go to :-