The Dalles Daily Chronicle. THE DALLES - OREGON. Enteral at the Postoffice at The Dalles, Oregon, an second-clan matter. STATE OFFICIALS. Governor.. , S. Pennoyer Secretary of State G. V. Sn-Hiide Treasurer rhillip Metnehau Sunt, of Public Instruction E. B. McElroy Dt , (J. N. Dolph enators j. H. Mitchell ConerecsmHU H. Hermann State Printer '. . .Frank Bitter COUNTY OFFICIALS. Craintv Judee. C. N. Thornburv Bberift D. I- CateK Clerk J. B. Crossen Treasurer Keu Kuch Commissioners j Fronk'inellfd AfweHsor John K. Burnett Surveyor E. F. Sharp Suiennteiident of Public Schools. . .Troy Hhellev Coroner William iliehell THOSE LAND MATTERS. Representative Hermann was today before the commissioner ot t he general land ofbce and urged tliat telegraphic instructions be forwarded the land ofiices at The Dalles, Oregon City and L,a Grande to allow land filings within the restored limits of the Northern Pacific railroad land grant. The act of forfeiture was approved September 29th last and the law made six months from this time the limit within which filings could be received, but over four months of this time has practically expired already, pending the preparation of in structions by the department, which will go forward tomorrow by mail. The - senate resolutions extending the time as recommended by the interior depart ment were taken up by the house this morning, but, on motion of Judge Hol man, who desires to offer an amend ment, it went over until tomorrow, when, if not sidetracked by pressing ap propriation bills, it will be considered and passed. In the meantime the com missioner will at once telegraph instruc tions to receive filings, so as to save the time consumed hy the mail. If the above statement which was tele graphed to the Oregonian Tuesday is true, it will not be long before filings will le again received. But as the land officers here have received a telegram stating that the instructions had ,bcen ent by mail, the same day this telegram was sent it is probably a mistake. There can be no doubt though but that vonsress will extend the time in which priority rights can be asserted, as it would be manifestly unjust to publish the notices thirty days thus leaving but a week or ten days at most in which the occupant of lands could assert his rights. It could not possibly be done in that time. TWO IMPORTANT LETTERS. Washington, D. C, Jan. 29, 1891. Regsiter and Receiver, The Dalles, Or., Sirs : On November 3d last, vou were directed to call upon Wm. W. Gosney to elect whether he would have his homestead and timber-culture entries of lands in section 5, township 3 south of range 23, east, cancelled pursuant to his relinquishment, and applications for re payment, or have them stand for the purpose of making the required proofs and acquiring title. You will please re port what action has been taken in the premises. Respectfully, Lkwib'A. Gbokf, Commissioner. Washington, D. C. Jan. 29, 1891. Register and Receiver, The Dalles, Or., Slits : I am in receipt of registered let ter of January 12, 1891, transmitting an application by William II. Leathers for the repayment of the fees paid on his pre-emption filing 6089, for the N. E. k sec, 31, T. 3. S., K. 25 E. At the time the filing was made, in 1887 the land was reserved under the grant to the North ern Pacific Railroad Company, by the legislative withdrawal which took effect August 13, 1870, and the filing was there fore illegal. This portion of said grant was declared forfeited by the act Sept ember 29, 1890, but the forfeited lands are not subject to disposal under the pre emption law. The filing has accordingly this day been cancelled. You will transmit the duplicate receipt and re linquishment referred to in your letter. The repayment will be the subject of a further letter. Respectfully, Lewis A Gkoff, Commissioner. It will be seen from the above that all persons who have located railroad lands in good faith, either under the homestead or timber-culture acts, and have since complied with the law, will be allowed to make final proof and acquire title. At the same time it will appear, that these lands cannot, under any circum stances, be acquired under the pre-emption laws. Senator Dolph seems to take the lead in advocating the construction of the Nicaragua canal, and proposes that the general government expend $100,000,000 on the scheme. " We do not understand how the senator can ask so large a sum for he has frequently stated that it would be unwise to ask any larger sums than we have been granted for fear that we would get nothing. It may be, and perhaps is good policy to construct the Nicaragua canal, but it strikes us forcibly that the expenditure of a small portion of that sum in completing proposed river and harbor improvements would be a better use for the money. A lump sum and contract work on the obstruc tions to navigation in the Columbia for instance would be thoroughly appre ciated. The fruit interests of Oregon demand the retention of the horticultural com missioners. The battle with fruit pests has but just begun in this state and the present commission Las done excellent work in making the fruit grower under stand the nature of the pests, showing that our orchards are afflicted, and rec ommending suitable treatment. It would be a public misfortune for this board to be disorganized. : THE BILL IN DANGER. There is an evident intention on the part of the legislature to kill the portage railroad bill. Miller chairman of the house committee is bitterly opposed to it and is keeping it from getting before the house. It is probable that these ' tactics will be followed until late in the session, that the bill will be reported with an obnoxious amendment, and that it will not have time to get through. If Mr. Miller understood the temper of the people up this way he would hesitate about following this course. Any one who opposes this bill will hear from Eastern Oregon should he ever be up for office, and it is going to give the party twenty years work to recover the ground the defeat of this bill will lose for them. The Union Pacific is making a hard fight against the bill, and its fate will show whether the legislature attaches more weight to the demands of the people, or the commands of the Union Pac.iflj. The United States Government has never understood and apparently never wanted to understand the value of Al aska. Secretary Seward was laughed at when he made the purchase, and that country has leen a laughing stock ever since. The fact of the matter is that Alaska is rich in mineral and forest pro ducts, and her fisheries are the best in the world. It is high time slue be given a territorial government and the people a representative in congress. She now occupies in the minds of the eastern people, the place made vacant by the settlement of the country between the Missouri and the Sierra Nevada moun tains, and the consequent vanishing of the great American desert. The silver pool investigation drags along slowly and will result in a general whitewashing of all concerned. The testimony leaves no doubt but that many members of congress and senators were guilty of buying silver previous to the passage of the silver bill. There would be no harm in this were it not for the fact that their votes on the quee- tion were supposed to have been in fluenced by their interests. Investiga ting committees are generally appointed to smooth over and cover up the things tbey are 'supposed to investigate, and this committee will not prove an excep tion to the rule. A GOOD Sill. To Assist Officers In the IMscharsre of their Duty. Be it enacted bu the Legislative Assemhlv of tlie iState ot Ureqon: hectlon 1. That any person who shall wilfully refuse to assist an officer in the lawiul discharge of any duty pertaining to his office, when requested to do so by such othcer, such person shall be subject to indictment theretor, and upon con viction thereof shall be punished bv im prisonment in the county jail not less than ten days nor more than thirty days. or by fine of not less than $50 or more than SoOO, or by both such fine and nn prisonment, in the discretion of the court. Inasmuch as it is of great importance that officers should be rendered assist ance whenever necessary, in the lawful discharge of anv duty pertaining to their office, this act shall be in force and. take effect from and after appro tred by the governor. They Agglutinate. The Dalles has at last found something that its citzens can unite on, and that is in demanding an open river. We sin cerely hope their wishes may re gratified, and having found that thev can unite. and tnat the other lei lows are not all crow that thev will maintain this cheer fut frame of mind, and stand together to build up their citv. The Dalles has unequalled advantages, the finest loca tion for an inland citv on the coast, and with a proper unity slie would soon start a period of development that would make her what she ought to be, the best city in uiinuu cuiuiic. mucu cut; Its bounded on the west bv Cascade county with Hood River a populous thriving - i - i ;n i -1 , ciiy, which win uappeii in me near iu ture, she will look back to the days of her quarreling and wonder what it was all about. Hood River Glazier. 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. tor sale by Snipes s Kinersly. On Hand. J. M. Huntington & Co. announce that they "are prepared to make out the necessary papers for parties wishing to nie on so caned railroad land. Appli. cants- should have their papers all ready before going to the land office so as to avoid the rush and save time. Their office is in Opera House Block next to main entrance. The Baldwin Locomotive Works built voz locomotive in 189U. . YOU NEED BUT ASK ' The 8. B. Headache and Liver Curb taken according 10 directions will keep your Blood, Liver and Kidneys in good order. Thb 8. B. Cough Cure for Colds, Coughs and Croup, in connection with the Headache Cure, is as near perfect as anything known. - The S. 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 iraiur, Oregon, t or sale by all druggists. Brain' Poker HlufT. George Cole, of Fairhaven, "Wash., who has had charge of a Port Townsend southern party of engineers for some time past, was in the city the other day, and talked freely of the experiences the 'boys" had had with big game in that wild region. One of the stories which he relates is as follows: . "During the summer we had a pet bear one that we caught when it was only a few weeks old, and kej.t until it got to be a nuisance. We had trained it down to a fine point. Yon have heard of the educated hog that 'could read? Well, Ruby couldn't do that exactly, but he could play cards, and when it came to a bluff at poker he simply couldn't be beaten. Me was sublime. 'Tve seen him when there was a pot of fifty or more lumps of sugar we al ways played for sugar when Ruby was in it bluff the entire gang and rake in the stakes when it proved he had 'noth ing better than a pair of twos. No, he couldn't talk; but he'd wag his head if he wanted to pass, and his eye stood him in good stead when it came to any thing else. Wonderful eye had Ruby. and I don't suppose we would have killed him if we hadn t caught him one day, after -he had won nearly all the sugar in the outfit, scratching his ear and pulling out an extra ace from one of the big wrinkles in his neck; Alas, poor Rnbyl He was a thoroughbred, but too smart for this country, and we had part of him for dinner that day." Forest and Stream. England's limits In the Middle Ages. It is a curious fact that in the Middle Ages England was horticulturally much behind the continent of Europe. In Chaucer's time the English larder was very meagerly supplied with vegetables. and but indifferently with fruits. Onions, leeks, nettles, peas and mustard were the only articles that then figured in the short catalogue of English vegetable supplies. There is no trace of the exist ence of cabbage in England at this period. In the contemporary accounts of orchards there is no allusion to plums, only once to damsons. The pears were poor, but the apples were good. It is ques tionable whether cherries, raspberries and strawberries had crossed the Chan nel. The cherry gardens of Kent were first planted by a servant of Henry VTLL Be fore the close of the Sixteenth century, the turnip had reached England; so had the cauliflower and the quince, for both are mentioned by Gerarde in his 'Her bal. " Carrots, when Gerarde- wrote, were still a foreign vegetable, though their naturalization in England was not far off. In 1612 we hear of the peach, the almond and the filbert among the products of an English orchard, and in 1630 the apricot was transplanted from Morocco. New York Ledger. Fulfillment of a Dream. The persons who place any reliance in the prophetic qualities of dreams, an ar gument in Bupport of their theory may be deduced from an incident that oc curred some time before the escape of two prisoners from the Riverside peni tentiary. The best known man of the pair, Paddy McGraw, has a married sister living in the hill district. About two weeks be fore McGraw made the perilous descent to liberty o'er the prison walls she dreamed one night that her brother had made his escape much in the same way that it actually occurred. She told several neighbors about it the next day, who can vouch for the ac curacy of these statements. While she had the sympathy of a sister for a brother, when she awoke to the reality she had to content herself with the knowledge that Paddy's checkered ca reer was at an end for the time being, and that while they knew where he was, they also knew he was away from the reach of all evil. When the news of the escape became generally known the above circumstance was freely recalled, and dozens of people are now familiar with the story in the locality mentioned. Pittsburg Dispatch. irds' Egcs. The old, wrinkled, dusky aunties of southern plantations will tell children, "Do not eat the bluebirds' eggs; they make you love to wander." They believe that the pale blue eggs of that beautiful creature, "that violet of the air," that bird with "sky tinge on his back, earth tinge on his breast," will make the greedy nest robber restless as long as he lives, No place, however enticing, can hold the being who has once tasted a bluebird's egg. He who eats a mocking bird's egg will be compelled to "tell all he knows." The one who robs a killdee's nest and eats its eggs will surely break an arm. He who eats a dove's, egg will be fol lowed by bad luck, while the egg of any bird of yellow plumage will be sure to cause a fever, and he who eats an owl's egg will be always shrieking. The eater or a crow's egg will always, as old aunt ies say, "be gwine on foolish like a crow does go on, 'Ha! Ha! Hal' But a par tridge's eggs," they declare, "dn des make yon thrive an' grow fas'; dey is de onlies' sort er birds' eggs dat you kin eat widout findin' 'em dangersome." Youth's Com panion. Ho Waited. Allen O'Myers was lecturing in an np country town. He had been speaking ten minutes, when a man in the front row arose and started to walk out. The lecturer was not taken aback by this ex pression of disapproval, but said, "Hold on, my friend, Til join yon outside in a couple of minutes." The audientse laughed, and the man returned to his seat without a clove. Cincinnati Com mercial Gazette. Let Him Alone. A box of hardware weighing 600 pounds fell overboard from a vessel at Vancouver, and an octopus, who thought he had struck a soft thing, drew it along the sandy bottom of the harbor for a distance of 400 feet before becoming dis couraged. Among the "dont's" to be ob served is don't fool with an octopus. Detroit Free Press. Notice to Fuel Consumers mjier; beW, Have on hand a lot of Fir and Hard Wood. Also a lot of ORDERS FILLED PROMPTLY. . Office corner ' Third and Union Streets, SNIPES & KINERSLEY, Wholesale ani Retail Dmiists. Fine Imported, Key West and Domestic (AGENTS FORI EST'D 18624 d. e. BYak;d do., Heal Estate, Insurance, and Loan AGENCY. Opera. House filoe k,3d St. -FOR- Carpets ana Furniture, CO TO PRINZ & NITSCHKE, And be Satisfied as to QUALITY AND PRICES. W. E. GARRETSON, Leaaii-?-jeweler. SOLE AGENT FOB THE All Watch Work Warranted. Je-welry Made to Order. 138 Second St., Tlie Dalles, Or. REMOVAL. H. Glenn has removed his office and the office of the Electric Light Co. to 72 Washington St. THE DALLES. The Grate City of tlie Inland Empire is situated at the head of navigation on is a thriving, prosperous ITS TERRITORY. It is the supply city for an extensive and riqh agri cultural and grazing country, its trade reaching as far south as Summer Lake, hundred miles. THE LARGEST WOOL MARKET. The rich grazing country along the eastern slope of the the Cascades furnishes pasture for thousands of sheep, the -wool from -which finds market here. The Dalles is the largest original -wool shipping point in America, about 5,000,000 pounds being shipped this year. THE VINEYARD OF OREGON. The country near The Dalles produces splendid crops of cereals, "and its fruits cannot be excelled. It is the vineyard of Oregon, its grapes equalling Cali fornia's best, and its other fruits, apples, pears,, prunes, cherries etc., are unsurpassed. ' ITS PRODUCTS. The salmon fisheries are the finest on the Columbia, yielding this year a revenue of $1,500,000 which can and -will be more than doubled in the near future. The products of the beautiful Klickital valley find market here, and the country south and east has this year filled the -warehouses, places to overflo-wing "with ITS WEALTH It is the richest city of its size on the coast, and its money is scattered over and is being used to develop, more farming country than is tributary to any other city in Eastern Oregon. Its situation is unsurpassed! Its climate delight ful! Its possibilities incalculable! Its resources un limited! And on these corner stones she stands. : For the Best Brands and Purest J. O. Ul7ole5ale : Qquor : Dealer, 171 SECOND STREET, THE DALLES, OREGON. S. L. YOUNG, (8uccesor to E. BECK.) -DEALER IN- WATCHES, CLOCKS, Jewelry, Diamonds, SMERWilRE, :-: ETC Watches, Clocks and Jewelry Repaired and Warranted. 165 Second St.. The Dalles, Or. John Pashek, JHeicHant Tailor. . Third Street, Opera Block. Madison's Latest System, Used in cutting garments, and a fit guaranteed each time. Repairing and Cleaning Neatly and Quickly Done. the Middle Columbia, and city. b a distance of over twc s and all available storage their products. , Quality of Wines and liquors, go to : The successful merchant is the one who watches the mar kets and buysto the best advan tage. The most prosperous family is the one that takes advantage of low prices. The Dalles MERCANTILE CO., SuccesMir to - BROOKS & BEERS. will sell yoo choici Groceries and Provisions OF ALL KINDS, AND f4ai?dxtaie AT KOBE BEASONABLE8 THAN ANY OIHEB. FLACK THE CITT. REMEMBER we deliver all pur chases without charge. 390 AND 394 SECOND STREET. FINE FARM TO RENT. THE FARM KNOWN AS THE "MOORB Farm" situated on Three Mile creek about two and one-half miles from The Dalles, will be leased for one or more years at a low rent to any responsiDie tenant, imn wnu " i"" r, f ood dwelling house and necessary out bulld ogs, about two acres of orchard, about thres hundred ajres under cultivation, a large portion of the land will raise a good volunteer wheat crop In 1891 with ordinarily favorable weather. The farm is well watered. For terms and particu lars enquire of Mrs. Sarah A. Moore or at theottictf of Mays. Huntington St Wilson, The Dalles, Or. y ' 6AKAH A. MOOSE, Executrix.