The Dalles Daily Chronicle. Kntcred a tthe Postoffioe at The Dalles, Oregon, as second-class matter. Local Adrertlslns;. 10 Cents per line for first Insertion, and 5 Cents per line for each subsequent insertion. Special rates for long time notices. AU local notices received later than 3 o'clock will appear ttie following day. TIME TABLES. Railroad. , f- BAST BOTKO. V . ' - NoJ2, Arrives 11:10 A. v. Departs 11:45 a. m. S, - " ; 12:05 tM.' ,12:80 F. X. - wssTEorsn. " '.' So. 1, Arrives 4:40 A. n. Departs 4:30 A. at. - 7, ". 6:20 T.M.- o:4o P. sc. Two loca freights that carry passengers leave ine for the west at 7-45 a. and one for the .stat8A. H. . STACKS. For Prinevllle, via. Bake Oven, leave daily except Sunday) at 6 a. m. Kor Antelope, Mitchell, Canyon City, leave Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, at 6 A. u. Tor Duf or, Klngsley, Wamlc, Wapinitia, Warm springs snd Tygh Valley, leave daily (except Sunday) at 0 a.m. Kor Ooldendale.-Wash., leave every day of the week except Sunday at 8a.m. Offices for all lines at the Umatilla House. Post-OfBce. . OFFICE HOURS General Delivrey Window 8 a. m. to 7 p. m. Money Order . " 8 a. in. to 4 p. m. Sunday i D " 9 a. m. to 10 a. m. closino or MAILS Br trains going East . .9 p. m. and 11:45 a. m. " " West .'J p.m. and 4:45 p.m. Stage for Goldendale.. 7:30 a. m. " 'Prineville 5:30a.m. u "Dufur and Warm Springs ..5:80 a. m. ' (Leaving for Lyle A Hartland,.5:30 a. m. " " J Antelope 5:30 a. m. Except Sunday. Tri-weekly. Tuesday Thursday and Saturday. " Monday Wednesday and Friday. SATURDAY, JANUARY 16, 1S92. U. S. DEPARTMENT OK AGRICC I.TURE, WEATHER BUREAU. Tils Dalles, Or., Jan. 1G, 1892. Pacific H Rela- D.t'r !a j State Coast bar. 2 tive of 2. g of Time. Hum Wind s Weather 8 A. M. R0.15 .16 82 West .03 Cloudy 8 P. M. .SO. 16 45 85 " PtCloudy Maximum temperature, 47; minimum tem erature, 31. Total precipitation from July 1st to date, 8.17; average precipitation from July 1st to date, 7.02 ; total excess from July 1st, 1801, to dare, .25 Inches. WEATHER PROBABILITIES. Sax Francisco, Jan. 16,1892. Weather forecast till S p. vi. Monday; fair, clearing up; cooler. Kebeham. FAIR LOCAL BREVITIES. E. dinger of. Hood River is in the city. A. J. Wall, proprietor of the EigHt Mile menagerie ia in the city. Dr Siddall intends to leave for Port land this evening to, be absent three or four weeks. Protracted meetings arc now being held in tiie Methodist church t Dafur under the charge of Presiding Elder Motor. C. W. Adams, the well-known artistic shoemaker, has removed to 116 Court street, tne building occupied y the Haworth printing office. This morning, to the wife of Thomas Kelly of the Umatilla house, a eon, weighing twelve pounds. The Chron icle extends congratulations. Representative Herman introduced a bill in the house yesterday appropriat ing $414,000 for the construction of a portage railway around The Dalles: The three governors of Oregon, Wash ington and Idaho and the Idaho secre tary have signed the Dalles board of trade petitions for an appropriation for the Dalles portage. The ladies of the Congregational church will give a Leap Year social on next Friday evening at the residence of Dr. W. E. Rinehart. Ladies will of course invite their own escorts. Quite a nice crowd of ladies and gen tlemen greeted Miss Mason last evening in the Wingate hall, on the occasion of tne first night of her dancing class. A goodly number joined, the class and its success seems well secured. An amusing thing occurred at the Chronicle corner this forenoon. A cow that had lost her calf was passing through the rows of express wagons, when Jim Harper gave a bawl so like - the cow's lost baby that the fool thing wont clean crazy and tried to climb up on the seat of his express wagon to kiss him. An old man named llanschild, father of the late Mrs. John Michelbacb, was found dead in the western part of the city about 8 o'clock last evening. He had been living alone lately in a build ing on the Michelbach property. He was 76 years old and has been sick for some time and a neighbor going last evensng to take the old man some food found him dead. The house was found in a miserable condition, notwithstand ing that $133, was found in a sack in a ' tin can between the mattresses of his bed. He will be buried tomorrow. His Honor Judge Thornbury and Sheriff Cates have kindly consented to Uow the members of the Mic-3.ac Glee club to use the court house for their concert, to be given (la grippe permit-, ting) next Saturday evening. This con cert for the benefit of the Congregation al, Methodist and Episcopal churches It is to be hoped the people of The. Dalles will give the club a" crowded house. Every . effort ia being made to make the entertainment worthy of pat i ronage. A special feature in the pro- grotume will be a chorus by ten colored -damsels, whoee sweet voices blend snoet .harmoniously. . . Still tlie Go I p. (Communicated.) Even in this, the middle of the winter of our discontent, made - miserable by the . fire of September 3, our town grows. Buldingi have gone-up in every direction and; what is the subject of commsn remark, the new buildings are all handsomer and better than the ones they supersede. There is the new M. E. church building, for example, which is just sow beginning to show its goodly proportions. It is a magnificent struc ture, and proves to be an ornament to the city. But it ia along tbe line of Fourth street east of the Ward & Kerns stable where . the greatest number of residences have been built. The first , is a nice comfortable looking dwelling by Mr. Blakeney. . Then almost directly opposite is a neat and tasteful little cot tage occupied by E. N. Chandler and owned by Mr. Phillip Michell. 'Again on the south side of the street Mr. Wm. Sylvester is putting up a handsome family residence while Mr. George Row land is building another on the south east corner of Fourth and Laughlin. On the south east corner Dr. Siddell com menced to build three dwellings on the 12th of November and they- are now finished, and are actually the neatest and most convenient houses ever built in this city to rent.; Supplied as they are with every modern convenience what particularly took the eye of your correspondent was a device invented by the doctor himself for elevating stove wood from the basement, to the kitchen by means of a windlass. The. elevator is enclosed in what appears to be a little cupboard for the reception of pies and cookies. This serves the double pur pose of wood box and elevator, and is a thing of beautyas well as convenience. It is confidently ' predicted that the house wife who is fortunate enough to occupy one of the buildings will shower many a blessing on the man who in vented this device. The doctor's houses were all rented before they were finished and Mr. R. R. Hinton moved into cne of them the other day. Speaking of city improvements it is only just to mention the handsome home of ye editor of the Chronicle just erected on the bluff south of Dr. Siddell's house. The building is an ideal city home, displays good taste on the part of the architect, is an ornament to that part of the city and ehows that the Chronicle editor is wil ling to prove his faith in the future of the city by his works. Further east from Dr. Siddell's buildings an elegent cottago is in course of erection by Messrs Hostetter and Aiasworth. When finished it will be one of the very hand somest residences in the city. Still far ther east are three fine comfortable looking buildings owned and occupied by Messrs. Stepheus John Filoon and G. F. Beer. Again north of these on Third street we find two really raagni ficant and tasteful residences owned and occupied by Mrs. Laughlin and Mr. G. J. Farley. Both of these present a striking appearance and command the admiration of all who see them. They will compare favorably with the best buildings in much larger places, and this will apply to many other new buildings, all of which goes to show that our people are not dead like tbe ashes of our ruins, but still live, and are confi denet that a more beautiful and more substantial city will soon take the place of the old. Many additional and costly residences will go up just as soon as the winter is over. Of these it is impossible to give a list at this writing, but there is no doubt that before the year 1893 ar rives we will have a much better and handsomer town than ever, and when money and energy go together the wheel must turn to the joyous whistle of the Regulator. ' . W. Butler & Co. It was natural that the great fire that laid so mueh of our fair city in ashes last fall should produce a few changes in the business houses of the city. Some businesses changed hands; some await reconstruction and reestablishment in the spring; very few passed out of exist ence, while a number of new firms rightly calculating on the increased de mand for certain lines of goods necessary for rebuilding the burnt district have cast their lot amongst us. One ot the most popular additions of this class is the firm of W. Butler & Co. The senior member of the firm and manager is a gentleman thoroughly familiar with the line of business he conducts having been for years in the employ of the Michigan Lumber company of Vancouver. Wash ington. The firm is located on that part of the city known as the Laughlin Home stead and it has obtained a- five years lease of a square of one hundred and fifty feet which corners on Jefferson and Main street. After considerable patient negotiation Mr. Butler has succeeded in having a side track laid along the north line of his lots where cars can be loaded and unloaded with great convenience. Nearly the' entire square is covered with lumber, lath, shingles and sawed cedar posts, while a large shed ia filled with dry dressed lumber, embracing finishing lumber red wood and larch wainscoting, double "beaded fir wainscoting, yellow fir rustic, fluted red wood casing and dressed pickets besides a full variety of the ordinary lines of pine and fir floor ing and rustic? Mr. Butler ships largely from Lautervellc Falls, Bridal Veil and Portland and a better quality of lumber than that handled by this firm is simply to bo found nowhere. Besides the lines referred to Mr. Butler keeps a smal stock of sash and door materials, a stock which he intends to increase just as soon as the winter breaks and he can build a warehouse with sufficient accomodations to handle it. When the proposed ware house is completed the firm will stock it with everything usually classified under the name of building ' material. . Mr. Butler has full faith in the future of The Dalles. As an evidence of this he has built himself a handsome and comforta ble five roomed cottage where, he and hie small family aredomiciled and where he seems determined to remain as a permanent fixture. His entire good faith, manifested in the character of his improvements, demands that the peo ple of this city should look upon him' in the light of a permanent citizen and. not as a stranger who simply pitched a tent where he can sell a little lumber during the rebuilding of the city. In point of fact the city already owes a good deal to Mr. Butler as being tbe leader in a re duction of the price of lumber, ' mater ially below what it was before the fire. This distinction Mr. Butler proudly claims and the writer is not aware that the claim can be successfully disputed. Since Mr. Butler's advent into . The Dalles he has received very flattering en couragement in the way of trade and patronage and ' the . Chronicle will be pleased to see this state of affairs con tinue and increase. - - - Wapinit ia Items. Wapinitia, Or., Jan. 11, 1892. Editor of the Chronicle: As I have not seen any correspondence from this vicinity to your paper I take this opportunity to write you a few lines. We are having a fine winter. So far, there is about three inches of snow on the ground and stock is in good condi cion for this time of the year. The ground is wet to a greater depth than it has been for four years at this time of the year and we have good prospects of fine crops next season, but there is poor consolation for one to raise a crop of grain here on accounty of the bad roads between us and the market. If Wasco county would make ' a. good grade up Tygh hill it would be well compensated in taxes in a few years and befriend the people of this vicinity a great deal. I guess it's no use kicking as we are only considered common hayseed?. We need a railroad to carry our pro duce to the coast markets but there is not much use looking for one if we can't as much as get a wagon road up Tygh hill there is lots of land laving idle that would be farmed if we had a market for the grain. Want of wa"ter has been a great draw back to" this part of the country but the people are building reservoirs and cisterns and in the near future they wifl be able to have plenty of water as the snowfall will .refill tlem in winter. We had a pleasant dance here the 8th inst. Everything passed ofiiquietlv. J. Trippier and B. Alexander furnished us with excellent music. -Mr. S. E. Farris took a prominent part." Hayseed. BORIS. In this city, yesterday, January 15, to the wife of Superintendent Troy Shelly, twins, a boy and a girl. . The children both died at an early hour this morning. Original Ideas and Dressmakers. In my experience I have loner since come to the conclusion that if you are not a fashion plate, an actress or a so ciety woman celebrated as a model on which dressmakers show new exhibits, you must do your own thinking when you want something a little different from one of a dozen turned out at the manufactory. But in case you find yourself under the necessity of doing your dressmaker's head work, there is no need of going to a first class man or woman who sends first class bills. " You must find a woman who fits well, who is not so stubborn but that she will take and execute some one else's ideas, who will become interested in the work for the work's sake, and who is intelligent enough to do some suggesting herself. But I hear my readers exclaim, "That pearl is impossible to find." It is perhaps difficult, but not impossi ble. I have never found it so. When I lived in America it was almost impossi ble to convince mv friends that I did nnt wear imported dresses, that I had them' made right in town; and here in Paris I have been faithful to my little obscure dressmaker for the last ten years for gar ments cloaks as well as dresses. Those dressmakers, like good servants, can be found. There are. a few of them left, and I don't see why I should' not be as clever as my neighbor, find them out and have the benefit of their services. Paris Letter. . Ancient Batter in the Bo;i of Iriu. Louisville Courier-Journal; - ' - .. Numerous specimens of ancient butter are to he seen -in the Irish museums;, which were discovered during the- past century by peasants engaged in digging peat. Some of .' them "were-, dug from depths of ten, fifteen and even eighteen feet below the surface of the ground, and considerable antiquity . must be allotted to the finds, although no abso lute data exists by which the average in crease of bog soil may be calculated. Examples of this butter weigh as much as thirty and forty pounds and upward, and are identified by the numerous hairs of reddish color, as being the product of the cow.' Tho butter is found packed in hollowed vessels of wood, and in masses of irregular form. The latter are usually surrounded by a layer of moss, and at times have an additional covering of linen cloth. The object of thus burying butter in pe:rt or immersing ' it in bog water would appear to be for its preser vation under circumstances and in dis tricts where salt could not be procured. FOB SALE. ' A good photo outfit for sale cheap, Any one wishing a bargain in this line will do well to see this outfit. ' Apply at tins onice. CHRONICLE SBOBT STOPS. For coughs and colds use 239. ; .2379 is the cough syrup for children, .f.tacy Shown having left mv emplov I Will not be resnnnnihln fnron HoVita'l may-contract nor any business he may transact. .- . Wt E. Gahretson. . 11-16-tf. Tney Speak From Experience. 'Wfl IrTinnr f . : il.' of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy that it Will .I , i- 1 1 -1 . nui iic,cin tiuup, pays aiessra. jraa- also add that the remedy has given great caiioiwuuu in tuiB vicinity, ana tnat they believe it to be the best in the market for throat and lung diseases. For sale by Blakeley & Houghton, drug gists.. - A Staple at Coffee. i'Chaniberlain's Cough Remedy is as staple as coffee in this vicinity. It has done an immense amount of good since its introduction here.'" A. M. Nokdkll, Maple Ridge, Minn. For sale bv Blake ley & Houghton, druggists. -". dw Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. When Baby was nick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Castoria For tlie Children. "In buying a cough medicine for children," says II. A. Walker, a promi nent druggist of Ogdcn, Utah, "never beafraid to buy Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. There is no danger fioin it and relief is alwa5's sure to follow. I particularly recommend Chamberlain's because I have found it to be eafe and reliable. "Jo and 50 cent bottles for sale by Blakeley & Houghton, druggists, dw La Grippe ! The tendency of this disease toward Eneumonia is what makes it dangerous, a Grippe requires precisely the same treatment as a severe cold." Chamber lain's Cough Remedy is famous for its cures . of severe colds. This Remedy effectually counteracts the tendency of the disease to result in pneumonia, pro vided that yroper care be taken to avoid exposure when recovering from the at tack. Careful inquiry among the many thousands who have 'used this remedy during the epidemics of the past two years lias failed to discover a single case that has not recovered . or that has re sulted in pneumonia. 25 cent, 50 cent and $1 bottles for sale by Blakeley & Houghton, druggists. dw Notice. " All parties having claims against the estate of Ralph Fonger, deceased, will please present the same to T. T. Nicho las, administrator. Columbia Hotel. Dalles City, r., January 61S92. ' - ' jO-lm Taken Vp. One small sorrel mare, branded 53 on left shoulder,, two white feet and white face, the owner can have the same by -paying for advertising and feed. Address Amos Root, Mosier, uregon. i-i,iti Notice. All Dalles City warrants registered prior to June 3d," 1800, will be paid if presented at my office. Interest cease3 from and after this date. Dated January 11th, 1892. ' .- O. KlNBUSLY, tf. Treas. Dalles Citv. GRAND BKLL ! GIVEN PI- JOTC0.J0.1, ON Thursday Jan , 21, 1892 AT THK- Umatilla Hosc. Reception Committee W.fj. "Graham, H. Clough and F. Leinke. '. Floor Managers Jud Fish, H. Bills, Geo. T. Thompson, J. Woods and John Hertz. COMMITTEK " OF AcKANGEMENT Geo. Williams. Frank Roach, Geo. Muneer, Geo. A. Liee and John Blaser. No person of questionable,- chat acter will be admitted. TICKETS, $1. client Co.. "' -Successors to ('. 32 Dunham. Druggists and Chemists, Pare Drcp ni Mmi DispeEsifig Physicians' Prescriptions a Specialty'. Night Druggists always in Attendance. THE DALLES, OREGON." DID YOU WE ARE AGENTS FOR THE Argand Stoves and Ranges, Garland Stoves and flaages, Jemell's Stoves and Ranges, Unlvepsal Stoves and Ranges, v We are also agents fop the Celebrated Boynton Farnaee. ' Ammunition and Loaded Shells, Ete. SRfliTalV PllUmSlfiG R SPECIAIiTV. MAIER & BEDaMTONj 500 BOOKS AT fliekelsen's Hem Store. Surplus Stoek at Cost. Agent in this city for cjouojr organs, ijumesuc cewmg jviachi: es. North GrermanXloyd of Bremen Hamburg-American Ticket Oo. of Hamburg. Tickets to and from all parts of Europe. I. C. NICKELSEN, NEXT DOOR TO YOXTNG-'S JEWELRY STORE. J. M. GROSS, -DEALER IN- Hay, U, Feel Hi Fir. V HEADQUARTERS FOR POTATOES. i . - - Cash Paid for Eggs and Chickens. All Goods Delivered Free and Promptly TERMS STRICTLY CKSH. Cor. Second GCUW. BUTIEP& CO., "THE IN MJIHBEH, . IiflTH Office and Yard cor, First and Jefferson E. Jflcobsei) & Go., -WHOLESALE B00BI8 Pianos and Organs sold on Easy Installments. Notions, Toys, Fancy Goods and Musical Instruments of all kinds. MAIL ORDERS FILLED PROMPTLY, 162 Second Street, STAGY S0Wl G. W. Johnston & Son. T4B Watc4niaiBI,iCaipntei8 and Biiigis. Has opened an office for Cleaning and Repairing Watches, Jewelry, etc All work guaranteed and promptly attended. ' AT C. E. DUMRflS OLD STRJID, : Cor. Second and Vnlon Streets. Pipe Work, Tin Repairs . and Roofing. Mains Tappsd Undar Pressure. Shop on Third St., nest door west of l t x a' l v. :i a h shep. KNOW 1X1 Krunich and Bach Pianos, & Union Sts., 03EE.. LEADERS" flflD SHINGLES. Sts. SOUTH SIDE of Railroad Traci AND KETAII. THE DALLES, OREGON. Shop at No. 112 First Strrct. . AU Job Work promptly attended. to and estimates given on all wood work.' Closets 9 Chimneys Cleaned .! Carpets take up, cleaned and put down, also Closets and Chimnev; cleaned i 4. oKlv , Oil e 11U1 L nutlet; l ' rates. ! ,)rdei.8 ,1 u, roiili tho iostoEee GRANT MORSE aofl sahoMs.