The Dalles Daily Chronicle. Entered at the Postoffice at The Dalles, Oregon, ' as Becond-class matter. TIME TABLES. Local Advertising. 10 CenU per line for first insertion, and 6 Cents ?t line for each subsequent insertion. A U local notices received later flian :i o'clock will appear tae following day. ltallroads. KKT BOUND. No. J, Arrives 11:40 a. v. . Departs 11:45 A. M. " 8a " 12 : 05 F. M. ' " 12:30 P. M. WEST BOUND. No. 1, Arrives 4:40 A. H. Departs 4:50 A. M. ." 7, " 6:20 P. M. " 6:45 r- Two lociu freights that carry passengers leave one for the west at 7:45 A. M., and one for the east at 8 A.M. STAGES. For Princviile, via. Bake Oven, leave daily except Sunday) at ti a. m. For Antelope, Mitchell, Canyon City, leave Mondavs, Wednesdays and Fridays, at 6 a. m. For luf ur, Kingsley, Wainic, Wapinitia, W arm Springs find Tygh Valley, leave daily (except Sundav) at 6 A. u. . , For Uoldendale, Wash., leave every day of the week except Sunday at 8 a. m.. Offices for all lines at the UinatillH House. I'ost-Offlce. OFFICE HOURS General Delivrev Window 8 a. in. Money Order " 8 a.m. Sunday U ' "- 9 a.m. vuosrsa of mails By trains going Kast 9 p.m. and to 7 p. m. to 4 p. m. to 10 a. m. 11:45 a.m. 4:45 p. m. .7:30 a. m. .5:30 a. m. .5:30 a. m. .5:30 a. m. .5:30 a. m. " " West Up. m. nna Stage for Goldendale " "'Prineville .i "Dufurand Warm Springs. . " fl-enving for Lyle Hartland. " " " J Antelope Except Sunday. fTri-weekly. Tuesday Thursday and " Monday Wednesday and Saturday. Friday. METE0E0L0GI0AL EEP0ET. Paclfle H IRela- D.t'r ta State Coast BAB. 2 tive of 5. of Time. I Hum Wind 3 Weather. 8 A. M .ll.lfi 47 ! I W Cloudy 3 P. M 30.20 5a 70 I 8 W " Maximum temperature, perature, 4i. minimum tem- WliATHKK PROBABILITIES. . The Dali.es, Oct. 2, 1891. Weather forecast till IS m. Friday: Cloudy; probable light RAIN rant vjziii nitvw ti miito, gradually warmer. FRIDAY, OCT. 2, 1891. The Chronicle is the Only Paper in The Dalles that Receives the Associated Press Dispatches. LOCAL BREVITIES. T. II. Johnston, of Dufur is in town. Hon. F. P. Mays is in the city. He came up on the noon train. In a couple ot days more tne Mcuinty reservoir will be ready for the concrete work. . Harry Ponting and Patrick Mahew of Kingsley, left the city for their home to day at noon. The office of The Dalles, Portland and Astoria Navigation company is now on First street at the - northeast corner of Court. '-Rev. Henry Brown accompanied by his family left last night for Spokane to assume the pastoral charge of a Method ist Episcopal church at that place. Henry Williams of Eight Mile has just been over the "free" bridge between this and Sherman county and he thinks verv great credit is due Mr. Harris, the keeper, for the excellent condition in which he found the grades on both sides of the Deschutes river. Mr. Linus Hubbard shipped today to Major Ingalls, for exhibition in the Portland fair, some peaches of the Sal way variety, raised by Alex Anderson, near this city, one of which measured eleven and one-half inches in circumfer ence and three of them weighed two and one-fourth pounds. Mr. Deyet Weeks, traveling agent for Chamberlain & Co., proprietors of Chamberlain's cholic, cholera and diar rhea remedy and St. Patrick's pills, is in the city, looking after the interests of his firm. Mr. Weeks swears that his pills are made from the same formula that St. Patrick used fifteen hundred years ago when he physicked the devil out of the whole Irish nation and trans formed tliem into an island of Baints. Eph Olinger, deputy sheriff at Hood River, brought up today a mannamed Thomas Ryan, who has been bound over bv the justice court of Hood River, to appear before the grand jury, charged with house-breking. Ryan waa de tected leaving the saloon of T. Deeke, which 'he had broken into with the in tent, it is supposed, of procuring whiskey. He has been for some time . working as a section hand at Hood River. Sergeant Gurney of Troop C 4th cav alry U. S. A., while in the neighborhood of Baker City, en-route with his com pany from Fort Walla Walla to Fort Bidwell, Cal., died suddenly on the 28th nit., from the effects of an over dose of norphine. His death is believed to - have resulted from his own carelessness in not following the instructions of the company's surgeon. . ' ' J2"Mr. Alexander MacEachernof Town- , ship 48 was in town Friday. Although 'over 92 years of age he is still hale and hearty. In conversation with Mr. Mac Eachern we could not observe that his u&ntal power was the least abated. He was for many years an elder of the late Rev. Donald McDonald's church and by whom he was much valued, and that es- ' teemed clergyman said of him many years ago, that he was an Israelite in deed in whom there is no guile. We are glad to see onr old friend looking so well." The above is .copied from the Prince Edward Island Patriot and refers to the father of our esteemed fellow townsman, Joe McEachern, who has become a good deal of an Israelite himself , since S. B. Adams has taken him in training. The "no guile" qualification may possibly come when Joe is as old as his father, but as yet the horoscose gives no indica tion of it. ' Special Council Meeting. The Mayor called a special meeting of the council for last evening at which a resolution was passed ordering the re corder . to have published the usual notice for the building of side walks on the. following 6treets: On north side of Second street from Wash ington to Madison. On south side of Third street from Court to Madison. On south side of Fourth street from Un ion to Madison. On south side of Sec ond street from Washington street to the Brewery. On the east side of Court street from Third to Sixth. On the east side of Washington from the alley be tween Second and Third to Sixth street. On the east side of Federal from Second to Sixth street. On the west side of Federal from Third to Fourth street. On the east side of Jefferson from First to Third. On the west side of Madison from First to Second street. The marshal was instructed to enforce the dog license, which requires every owner ot a dog running at large in any of the public places of the city to pay a license of $1.50 a year. At Their Old Tricks. This morning H. C. Nielsen received a box of goods which was plainly ad dressed as follows: "H. C. Nielsen, The Dalles, Or. Care of D. P. & A. N. Co." The IT. P. company at Portland had crossed out the shipping directions and 6imply left the name and thus shipped the box by rail to The Dalles. Mr. Nielsen promptly returned it to the freight agent here, and told him to ship it back to Portland. Ad. Keller, the ba ker has a parcel plainly addressed to the navigation company's boat at Portland, which came up on the Baker. This is a very small business for a great, rich company to be engaged in stealing small packages of freight. No particular complaint was made when the same company stole thirty-one cars of wool from J. H. Sherar, but we must draw a line somewhere. It is pofitively mean to steal anything less than a car load. St. Peter Nodded, f About midnight's holy hour last night St. Peter again nodded while the celes tial gate, as is its wont, stood gently open for the weary pilgrim from the nether world. A little ten pound angel of the male persuasion, full of the cur iosity of its budding - life, crept "quietly through the portals and, seeing an au tumn zephyr pass, bestrode its crest and gently floated through the blue ex panse till it came in the neighborhood of the Galloway farm on Three Mile, when Dr. Hugh Logan, happening to be in that neighborhood visiting a sick patient, caught it and made a present of it to Ed Sharp. Ed and Mrs. Sharp are doing everything in the world to induce it to stav with them. - Death of T. T. Turner. A telegram arrived in the city last night announcing the death of T. T. Tur nar, late operator for the .'Western Un ion Telegraph company at this place. Only a couple of days before a letter was received from his sister - expressing the hoperthat he was improving. The hope was delusive and yesterday evening he passed over to the silent majority. Mr. Turner was a young man of excellent habits and most obliging manners. During his residence here he made many friends who will regret his departure. He leaves a mother and sister to mourn his lose. ." Files' on Wasco County. A telegram came to this office yester day, too late for publication, announcing that Wasco'county had taken the first premium on fruits, at the Portland Ex position and that James A. Varney of The Dalles had taken the first premium on grapes. Otto Cramer while in company with his best girl and traveling in a traction car in Philadelphia, a short time ago, sat down upon the business end of a tack that had some way got on the car seat, and sustained damages to his dig' nity and anatomical structure that re suited in his filing a suit against the car company for $2,000. . Great statesman, to married daughter "My dear, your husband will never amount to anything if you don't spur him on. Why don't you persuade him to go into politics?'' Daughter "But, pa, he has tried, and he can't stand it. The whiskey makes him sick." It is not the scarcity of money in the country, it is the scarcity of money in the pockets of the people who earn it that produces distress. It is not the small circulation, it is the small distri bution that plagues us. Roger Q. Mills. Uncle Jerry Rusk thinks and says the removal of the embargo on the Ameri can hog will increase the country ' trade $50,000,000." ! j Notice. All persons are warned not to pay a check drawn by Fish & Bardon in favor of E. Wingate & Co. ' The same waa lost on the street today. Finder please re turn to either party. 10-2tf Copying and tvpewriting done at the Western-'Union telegraph office." 26-lw SOCIETIES. ASSEMBLY KO. 4827, K. OF H Meets in K. of P. hall on first and third Sundays at 3 o'clock p. m. . w ASCO LODGE, NO. 15, A. F. & A. M. Meets hrst and third Alonauy ot encn mouth at 7 r. x. DALLES ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER NO. 6. Meets in Masonic Hall the third Wednesday of each month at 7 1'. M. MODERN WOODMEN Jf THE WORLD. Mt. Hood Camp No. 59, Meets Tuesdav even ing of each week in 1. O. O. F. Hall, at 7 :3Q p. M. COLUMBIA LODGE, NO. 5, I. O. O. F. Meets every Friday evening at 7:30 o'clock, In K. of P. hall, corner Second and Court streets. Sojourning brothers are welcome. H. Clough, Sec'y. H. A. Bills.N. G. FRIENDSHIP LODGE, NO. 9., K. of P. Meets every Monday evening at 7:30 o'clock, in Schanno's building, corner of Court and Second streets. Sojourning members are cordially in Tited. Geo. T. Thompson, D. W. Vausb, Sec'y. - C. C. WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN TEMPERENCE UNION will meet every Friday afternoon at 3 o'clock at the reading room. All are invited. TEMPLE LODGE NO. 3, A. O. C. W. Meets . at K. of P. Hall, Corner Second and Court Streets, Thursday evenings at 7 :S0. John Filloon, W. S Myers, Financier. M. W. THE CHURCHES. ST. PETER'S CHURCH Rev. Father Broks oeest Pastor. Low Mass every Sunday at 7 A. M. High Mass at 10:30 A. M. Vespers at 7 P. M. ST. PAUL'S CHURCH Union Street, opposite Fifth. Rev. Eli D. Sutcliffe Rector. Services every Sunday at 11 a. m. and 7;30 p. m. Sunday School 12:30 p. M. Evening Praver on Friday at 7:30 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. O. D. Tay lor, Pastor. Services every Sabbath at 11 A. SC. and 7:30 P. M. Sabbath School at 12 M. Prayer meeting every Thursday evening at 7 o'clock. CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Rev. W. C. CURTIS, Pastor. Services every Sunday at 11 a. H. and 7 p. M. Sunday School after morning service. Strangers cordially invited. Seats free. ME. CHURCH Rev. H. Brown, Pastor. Services every Sunday morning and even ing. Sunday School at 12 o'clock M. A cordial invitation is extended by both pastor and people to all. QBilly Graham of the Opera Eating House has a fine lot of game on hand, consisting of deer, bear, grouse, pheas ant, teal, mallard and spoon bill ducks, mountain trout and all the delicacies of the season , also the finest Eastern oysters in can and shell in the market. Billy and his new gang are certainly coming to the front. Pay your city tax at once and save extra costs. Time is up. O. Kineksly. 21 -tf. " ' ' City" Treasurer. THE Dalles, Portland & Astoria NAVIGATION COMPANY'S Elegant Steumer . EEGUliATOR 3 Will leave the toot of Court Street every morning at 7 A. M. . for Portland and Way Points Connections Will be Made, with the Fast Steamer DAkliES GITY, At the Foot of the Cascade Locks. For Passenger or Freight Rates, Apply to Agent, or Pnrser on Board. Office northeast corner of Court and "Main street: S. Ii. BROOKS, Agent.' FRENCH & co., BANKERS. TRANSACT A GENERALBANKING BUSINESS Letters of Credit issued available in tlte Eastern States. Sight Exchange and Telegraphic Transfers sold on New York, Chicago, St. Louis, San Francisco, Portland Oregon, Seattle Wash., and various points in Or egon and Washington. Collections made at all points on fav orable terms. - The Old Germania Saloon. JOHH DOfiRYOJt, Proprietor. The best quality of Wines, Liquors and Cigars, Pabst "Milwaukee Knicker bocker and Columbia Beer, Half and Half and all kinds of Temperance Drinks. ALWAYS ON HAND. Jr;e Feijouged liolirist. to August flamold. " ON . Thursday Evening Oct. 8th, AT THE COURT HOUSE Under the Auspices of the . Y. P.S.C.E. of the Congregational Church Admission 50 cts. Reserved Beats 75 cts. . Tickets on sale at Snipes & Kinersly's. XHItONIClE SHORT STOPS. For coughs and colds use 2379. 2379 is the cough syrup for children. 1 Get me a cigar from that fine case at Snipes & Kinersley's. Fresh oysters in every style at the Columbia candy factorv. 18-tf ! Farley & Frank have a lot of second hand tents of all sizes for sale cheap, tf Charles Stubling has opened up his saloon in the building next door west of the Germania saloon. tf J. H. Larsen will buy all scrap iron of all kinds and pay the" highest market price.. See him at the East End. 9-9-tf. F. Dehm is again on deck. He saved his stock and tools and has opened busi ness at the cigar factory on First street. 9- 9-1 m Maier & Benton are prepared to do all kinds of plumbing, tin-roofing, and tm work. See them at the old Bettingen stand. tf My large and complete stock of mens'' and boys' boots and shoes, San Fran cisco made and recently received, I shall sell at the same great redh.ct.ion, as my clothing, to close them out. 10- l-2t J. C. Baldwin. Max Blank wishes to inform the peo ple of The Dalles that he has not raised on brick, and is selling them for the same price as before. And will try and supply all demands with the best of improved machine made brick, as soon as time will allow. 15tf. Max Blank. Long Ward offers for sale one of the best farms of its size in Sherman'county. It consists of 240 acres of deedec? land at Erskinville. There is a never-failing spring of living water capable of water ing five hundred head of stock daily. The house, which is- a large store build ing with ten rooms attached alone cost $1700. A blacksmith shop and other buildings and the whole surrounded by a good wire fence. Will be sold cheap and on easy terms. Apply by letter or other wise to the editor of the Chronicle or to the owner, W. L. Ward, Boyd, Wasco county, Oregon . Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. When Baby was sick, we gave her Caatoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castori, When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Castoria They Speak From Experience. "We know from experience in the use of Chamberlain's Cough Rernedv that it will prevent croup," says Messrs. Gad berry & Worley, Percv, Iowa. They also add that the remedy has given great satisfaction in this vicinity, and that they believe it to be the best in the market for throat and lung diseases. For sale by Snipes & Kinerslv druggists. NOTICE. R. E. French has for sale a number of improved ranches and unimproved lands in the Grass Valley neighborhood in Sherman county. They will be sold very cheap-'' and ' on reasonable terms. Mr. French inn locate settlers on some good unsettled claims in the same neigh borhood. His address is Grass -Valley, Sherman, county, Oregon . An Old Adage. There Is an old adage : "What every body eavs must be true." Henry Cook, oflnew Knosville. Ohio, in a recent let ter says: '. "Chamberlain s Cough Rem edy has .taken well here. Everybody likes it on account of the immediate relief it gives." There is nothing like it to loosen and relieve a severe cold. For sale by Snipes & Kinerslv, druggists, dw For Sale At a Bargain. The Mission Gardens, greenhouse, stock and ffxtures. I am prepared to offer a rare bargain owing to a change in residence, tor terms enquire at the premises or of A. X. Varnev at the land office. 15tf. J. A. Vakxev. The Best Physic. St. Patrick's pills are carefully pre pared from the beet material and accord ing to the most approved formula, and are the most perfect cathartic and liver pill . that can be pioduced. We -sell them. Snipes & Kinebsly, d-w Druggists. NOTICE. All indebted, to the firm of Fish & Bardon will please call at the store of Mays & Crowe and pay up all bills im mediately to Fish & Bardon.' ; . Fish & Baboon, September 14, 1891. 14-tf Notice. Chas. Stubbling desires all those in debted to hirft to come up and settle as soon as possible. He lost all his stock bv the late fire and a prompt settlement would greatly oblige him. 9-26-dAw-tf y . For Kent. ' A furnished cottage containing three rooms, on Union street, near Second. Apply to Mrs Frasier. . 26 lw. For Sale Cheap." A gentle, handsome family horse and a new covered buggy and harness for sale cheap. Apply at this office. lotf Xew Today. A store to rent on Union-St. near Sec ond. Apply to Mas. Fbaseb. .' 25-6t. r ; i -v For Kent. " One four-room house at $10 and three large rooms for $5. Inquire of Joseph Beezley or at this office. . v For Kent. Two furnished rooms suitable for gen tleman, conveniently and pleasantly lo cated. Enquire at this office. Fastare. " Good stubble and meadow pasture to be had on the A: B. Moore place on Three-mile, two and one-half miles from town. 8;1,7-tf- ' . For Rent. . ' Three furnished rooms suitable for housekeeping, and four unfurnished rooms, on Second street. Inqnire at this office. . . --,9-30-3. ., - . - Wanted.' ' ' A girl to do general house work' at a road ranch seventeen miies irom ine Dalles. Apply at this office. 8-17-tf. The Northwestern Life Insurance Go OF MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN. Assets over $42,000,000.00. Surplus over $6,500,000.00. Prof. E. L. Shucy, Dayton, Ohio. with.?, ;.hr-S Company then ottered me the following terms of rixtdi a paid up policy for 110 000 00 Ana cash ' uVm rjt SECOND A paid up policy for .' .' 5J 00 rHI RD Surrender my policy, and receive in cash .'.'.'. 3o',496 bo I was so little satisfied with the results of my investment that I chose the third, cash uronosl Vtr oAhdeC;,de1itne nPny. through several of its representatives, labored to induce SSwnS thSS.?Sr? L8?"1??! !? ?-ndi'l 1 5 determined to surrender SS 5 Vi: 1 . V- . - " j moHutreu 1 1 uiu iue norae omce io send policv nnd Tectnnt w ?ihe "i? ilnt' J36;6-??' to thejr State managerin Cleveland, and he would remit me the Amount I followed their instructions and sent the policy and receipt through my bank in Springfield our nuicnwiiiuciit in uicveiunu. on iv m novp i r. rotnrnivi frnm tha ...;i thiitttae SWte manager of the Equitable states that V i. i , " ""'ce, uuu compeuea me to wait some twenty davs after maturity before receiving final settlement. . cr f I!j,aX,etTtln0 st?.teIn,ent p""1""5' the Equitable, or expressing my satisfaction with theiriH settlement with me. On the other hand I have positively refused to do so. The fact that my re-1 turns were l,01a.20 less than my total investment renders further comment unnecessary. During the time I carried the Equitable policy and up to the day when they submitted the above proposition to me, I was kept in total ignorance of the condition of my investment t . . m45rk?. con,r"st mtb this lias been my experience with the Northwestern, in which in 1882. I took a Ten ) ear Endowment Policy, Ten-Year Tontine, for ?10,000, that company having from time to time furnished me with a memorandum of the surplus on my policy over the signature of their actuary: so that while my policy has not yet matured, and will not until next year, I have the satisfaction of knowing that at maturity it will net me from 4,000 to ?5,000 more than the face of the policy calls for. Very trulv vours, R033 MITCHELL. We have thousands of comparisons with all the leading Life Insurance Com panies of the United States. Full inforrnation furnished upon application to T. A. HUDSON, Associate General Agent. JOHN A. REINHARDT, Special Agent, The Dalles, Oregon. EOBT. liZASZTS. MAYS .& CROWE, , (Successors to ABRAMS S STEWART.) Hotailers and iTobbers n . Harflware, - Tinware, - Graniteware, - WBBflepaie, SILVERWARE, ETC. AG-EKTS "Acorn," "Charter Oak" "Argand" STOVES AND RANGES. Pumps, Pipe, Plumbers' and Steam Fitters' , Supplies, Packing, Building Paper, SASH, DOORS, SHINGLES. Also a complete stock of Carpenters', Blacksmith's and Farmers Tools and Fine Shelf Efardware. -AGENTS The-Celebrated R. J. ROBERTS "Warranted" Cutlery, Meriden Cutlet v and Tableware, the "Quick Meal" Gasoline Stoves. "Grand" Oil Stoves and Anti-Rust Tinware. All Tinning, Plumbing, Pipe Work and Repairing will "be done on Short Notice. SECOND STREET, - - - - - THE DALLES, OREGON. : DEALERS IX: staple ani Hay, Grain Masonic Block, Corner Third and flexxj Qolumbia j-lotel, THE DALLES, OREGON. Best Dollar a Day House on the Coast! First-Class Meals, 25 Cents. First Class Hotel in Every Respect. None but the Best of White Help Employed. T. T. flioholas, Prop. H. C. NIELS6N, Glotniet and 1 ailotv BOOTS AND SHOES, f Hats and Caps, Trunks and Valises, GVonta' 3?u.xxxislxxx8; Goods, CORNER OF SECOND AND WASHINGTON STS., THE DALLES, OB EGO L. RORDEN & CO. -Btith a Cp oekety and Glassuaate 'J'r Fo the present FadmEti!s Boot Lagoxda Heights, Spkisgfield, O., .Iiyie 15, 1801. ? fcts eoncernliiR my experien, settlement with me. I woold settlement; he "had not sufficient funds to meet it" ThS Xj. IE. CEOWE. FOR THE FOR- and Fte:i Court Streets, The Dalles, Oregon. pall Line of- nfill be fount t; iand; Shoe Store. 1 Fancy Groceries.