The Dalles Daily Chronicle. Entered a tthe Poatoffloe at The Dallea, Oregon, Low! AdTtrtliliir. 10 Cents per tin for first Insertion, and 5 Cent Special rate for long time notice. All local notices received later than s o'clock will appear tae following day. TUB TABLES. Railroad. BAST BOUD. No. 2, Arrive 11:40 a. m. Depart 11:45 A. if, "8. " 12: 06 T. M . " 12 : 30 F. M. WBST BODHD. No. 1, Arrives 4:40 A. Departs 4:50 a. if . 7, 6:20 r.u. " - 6:46 p. x. twoloca freights tost carry passengers leave me for the west at 7 -.45 a.m., and one for the east s a a, m. :i , , ; STAGES. For Prlnertlle, via.' Bake Oven, leave daily except Sunday) at 6 a. m. for Antelope, Mitchell, Canvon City, leave Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, at 6 a. m . For Dufur, Kingsley, Wamic, waplnitia, Warm Springs pnd Tygh Valley, leave daily (except Sunday) at 6 A. m. For Qoldendale. Wash., leave every day of the week except Sunday at 8 a. k. Offices foraU liuesat the Umatilla House. Post-Ofnce. OFFICE HOURS General Delivrey Window 8 a. m to 7 p. m. Honev Order .8 a. m . to 4 p. m. Sunday i D .9 a. m to w a. m. 11:45 a.m. 4:45 p. m. .7:30 a. m. s . . CLOSINO OF MALLS ' By trains going East .9 p. m. and west s p.m. ana 'Stage for Goldendale " "Prineville m , "Dufurand Warm Springs . 6:30 a. m. 6:30 a. m. Tiaviug lor xjyie t tiariiana .6:30 a. m. J Antelope Exoept Sunday. -tTri-weekly. Tnesday Thnrsday and " Monday Wednesday And 5:30 a. m. Saturday. Friday. TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1892. S. DEPARTMENT OK AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU. - Thb Dalles, Or., Jan. 19, 1892. Pacific I H Rela- D.fr W 2 State Coast bab. S tive of E. of Time. . ? Hum Wind P Weather 8 A. M. 30.14 40 76 West ' Cloudy 8 P. M. 80.13 49 48 '' PtCloudy Maximum erature, 40. temperature, 51; minimum tern- - Total precipitation from July 1st to date, 8.17; average precipitation from July 1st to date, 8.00; total excess from July 1st, 1891, to dale, .17 Inches. WEATHER PROBABILITIES. I FAIR San Francisco, Jan. 19. 1892. Weather forecast till 8 p. m. Wednesday; clearing weather, cooler. " Kerkram. LOCAL BRIVITIK8. C. W. Moore of Grass Valley is in the city. ' . George Filloon came up from Portland last night. The talented vocalist, Miss Sarah Eliza Walker, will sing a touching mel ody at the Mic-mac concert next Satur day evening. Dr. Siddall, will return from Portland about next Friday and not two or three weeks hence as was erroneously stated in Saturday's Chronicle. Please remember that the concert next Saturday evening is for the benefit of the Episcopal, Congregational and Methodist churches of this city. . The price of admission to the Mic-mac concert is fifty cents for any seat in tke vwui uvuo?. maw win mirenni under any condition and first come will be first served. The John Day Sentinel, having pro cured the latest edition of Ayer's alma nac, has started a query column and offers to answer any question that may be sent to it. Among the first already sent in s .the following : "What is the origin of the expression 'Down went McGlaty?' " The Sentinel answers by relating an incident that occurred dur ing the wet season after Noah's ark was built. Ah Irishman named McGinty having lost his rubber boots, it is pre sumed, climbed up a tree to keep his netner extremities out oi the wet. Alter be had beckoned in Tain for Noah to come over with bis ark be stepped upon a bigher limb to escape the rising water -uu Juab ns ii tuiu ixutui no miirui eo.to the "divil wirh bis bloody ' boat'' as it was only going to be a shower anyhow, his feet slipped and he was lost in the seething waters. Just as he fell, Noah was heard to remark "Down went McGinty." Joles Brothers. No business house in this city affords a better example of the success that al most invariably attends upon ploding industry and honest methods, than the ne whose name heads this article. Only a little over four years ago the three brothers, Isaac, George and Thomas Joles opened a little, two by four grocery store back of the Gates' building1 on Union street. J It was .an out of the way place for a store and scarcely afforded space in which to per form the proverbial service of whipping a cat, but it was perhaps equal to the capital invested and as the business . grew, which it steadily did from the be ginning, it was soon filled from floor to ceiling. In point of fact what with the increase of stock and a corresponding increase in the lateral growth of Baby Joles himself, who weighs over 300 pounds, avoirdupois, it became a ques tion of necessity to move into larger quarters. -These were found in the new Opera building, corner of Washington and Third, which they took possession of in July, 1890, Here they .remained, doing a -constantly increasing and prosperous busi- ..'iuss till the great fire of September 3, 1891 left the store and its contents in ashes. But the ashes were scarcely cold till they had bargained for the stock in trade of Roscoe & Gibons and were com fortably located in the fine brick block of the Masonic society on the corner of Court and Third where the main store .room measures ' 24x70 feet, besides a large-room used1 for storing grain and potatoes and "a ' capacious shed' for the toragd of coal oil.1 In addition, to this space, as the firm deals largely in hay as well as gram and mill feed, a barn building back of their-residence on Ful ton street is used for the storage, of the former commodity. The main thing that impressed itself on the mind of the writer as he walked through the various departments oi the store was the amount of business that must be done to justify the amount of stock on hand's. "Instead of a box f soap here and a con of some thing else yonder so placed as to fill up the space; stacks of boxfes and cases and immense heaps of sacks and bags are piled up so aa to make space, instead of fill it up, Beside a large variety of green apples in fine condition and of strikingly fine quality th Writer was pleased to note an unusually large and excellent variety of dried fruits which, we learned, were nearly all of home pro duct. Here was a stack containing thirty-five fifty-pound boxes of dried Italian prunes, all' produced at home aud better, as we were informed and be lieve, than any that come from Califor nia. As a proof of this they bring better prices than do California prunes in the Portland market. We were shown dried prunes that Joles Brothers bought from A. Y. Marsh, of Chenoweth Creek and if there are any better on the American continent we would like to. see them. A lot of dried Tokay and Muscat grapes produced by Frank Creighton of Three Mile deserves more than mere mention. They are in every respect equal to the best California or White London raisins, while they are sold at half the price twelve pounds for a dollar. We be lieve many a housewife will thank us for calling attention to Frank Creipton's dried grapes; They give such good satisfaction that Tom Joles says he would buy three or four tons of them if he could get them. Up till the time of the fire last year Joles Brothers bad shipped upwards of 5000 boxes' of green fruit, chiefly to Spokane, Helena, Cheney, Ueppner and other towns east, while they had made numerous' shipments of cherries, in the season, to Tacoma and Seattle. At present, they dispose of about 150 boxes of apples a month in the store. . The firm deals largely in farm products buying everything they can from our own farmers. Besides this they ship'corn from Nebraska and at present have a car load on the way. Year before last when feed was scarce in this section they shipped and disposed of fifteen car loads. The firm reaps a big advantage by buying such heavy articles as sugar, salt, and coal oil in car load lots, and they are both able and willing to give the benefit to their customers. They were the first to ship by the Regulator and the first to reduce prices in confor mity to reduced rates. They deal largely in Japan sugar, which they eell about of a cent a pound cheaper than a similar grade Of American sugar and claim that it is equal in every respect. Besides the articles we have mentioned there is a full li he of everything usually found in a first class grocery store such as canned goods of every description, teas, coffees, spices, syrups, lard, bacon, garden seeds, tobacco, cigars, candies, Quaker and rolled oats and flour, besides the famous Radham's Microbe Killer of which they are the special agents and of which they have sold since last October over 800 gallon jugs and concerning whose merits they can boast that the patient who has ever taBen a regular course of .tieatinent of the Microbe Killer has never died on their hands or ever had a relapse, unless when he gave np taking the medicine or changed doctors. When asked if the sale of the Microbe Killer kept increas ing the significant answer was returned. -'It is not quite so large as it was because all the many chronic cases Who1 used to buy it are cured and" don't need it any more." But we have reached the limit of this article and we close it with the remark made by Tom Joles when the writer spoke of the heavy stock the firm Carried. "It is all paid for and we don't owe a dollar in the world." A Very Honorable .Act. - Eight years before the late Judge J. H. Bird died he took out a life insurance poilsy in the Northwestern Life Insur ance 'company for the sum of $2000. About two years before his death he al lowed the policy , to .lapse by. non-payment of premium. ; Notwithstanding this fact, however, through the efforts of the local-agent of the company, Mr. T. A. Hudson, a check was received this morning from the company's borne office at Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in-'favor of Miss Lulu D. Bird, executrix of Judge Bird's estate for the sum of (533, being over $200 more then Judge Bird had paid the company in premiums. The payment of this sum is entirely vol untary on the part of the company as the estate bad no legal claim against it. This act .. reflects great honor on ' the company. - ' . " ' Chicago newspapers are getting nearer and nearer the point where they will print New York news under the heading of "In and About Chicago." Washington City Star. ".. "Who Waatu a Piano? A Tj&rtV will STolmnffA an nlonra,-. rosewood, upright, 7 octavo piano, for work in cleating land near The Dalles, Or. Address the Chronicle office, wlt.-dtf. Fro a Acvienltaral Cellera, v CoaVALiis, Or.', Jan. 15, 1892." Editor Clirontcle " " " ""'- '" "- The CHjtojficxE made. me a pleasant call yesterday. j'AH Vbe ' ioaie students of . the first year's classes; met in Prof. Letcher's room and, were introduced, by the pro fessor to to Capt. Warren, (retired from West Point) who made us a short speech setting 'forth" the objects of military training. ' He said the ' boys would be organized into two companies, A and" B,' with all the necessary sub-divisions' and officers. He farther stated, that there would be no drill till spring,, but that the stndy of the tactics would commence iri'a'few days, with recitation twice a week. ' ' ;Today I met Mr. Robert Bradley re cently from Boyd, but how running a farm which he says is two miles south of Corvallis. Although it has rained a' great deal this winter, it has not soaked the enterprise out of Mr. "Bradley, who thinks he likes rain better than : a- erop failure. He intends drainingand fertiliz ing his farm for the purpose of raising wheat and making it pay. . ." Roads are very muddy, the weather is again warm and the rain is at its old oc cupation coming down. The churches of Corvallis are having a union meeting at the old college chapel. The commodious new city school house is well filled, "It is said to 'have an at tendance of 500. The new building erected by the state for an . experiment station is fast nearing completion. ; Work on the Corvallis Carriage factory still continues, though not so fast as a while back. . Bunchgrass. The only hotel in Jerusalem is kept by a man from Philadelphia, and its pilgrim visitors are numerous. . The guides are said, to be well versed in the '. bible, and the conversations at the hotel tables are lareely about biblical scenes. characters and localities. Hon. L. M. Olmstead of Baker Citv has telegraphed Senator Dolpa asking, in case oi war, permission to raise a regiment of cavalry. A rumor was current in Washington last night that the Yorktown had been fired upon in the harbor of "Valparaiso, by the Chilians. , City Improvement. A telephone exchange, a etreet car line, a new opera bonse, a five story brick block, the paving on Second street, a woolen mill, a broom' factory and a four story brick hotel are among the probabilities of The Dalles, it is also very probable that if you have never used compressed yeast or Quaker oats you will like them. " Get them -from John Booth the Grocer. l-19-.lt Coverings for Bed. Springs. , Many of the best spring beds now to be had are covered over with stout can vas, thus keeping the springs and the under part of the bed free from dust, and saving the labor that results from its accumulation. ' Such springs cost ten or twelve: dollars, but when they are not to be had a good plan, if the ar rangement of the springs permit, is to make a strong covering for them your self. The wide durable prints used by furniture dealers for the first covering' of upholstered furniture is a very good material for . such coverings, though cheaper calicoes will do. The covers should be stitched up at both ends and on one side; and after the springs are slipped inside, the other side may be sewn up. Much expense is also saved, and bed ding is kept in much daintier condition if covers of unbleached muslin are kept over the mattress and pillow ticks. The covers may be washed two or three times a year, and the undercases be kept clean and fresh for years. New York Post. Accidents on Road Anr Rail. - M. Clerault, locomotive superintendent of the management of the Western of France railway, gives some interesting statistics of the accidents which happen with road vehicles, and which occur on railways. According to his figures the road, vehicle accidents can be summed up as follows: One passenger killed out of every 855,000; one passenger wounded out of every 80,000. .. . At the same time the statistics of the French railways show that one passen ger is killed out' of 26,720,000; and one passenger wounded out of 1,060,000. Thus in France at the present time the traveler may make a journey of ordinary length with only a twenty-seven-mil-lionth chance of being killed and one millionth chance of. being wounded. London Tit-Bits. Do Birds Draw Lstit " Flocks of birds so enhance every land scape that it is a source "of regret that they are less and less a common feature of our country rambles. They mark the return of spring more emphatically than the chance blooming of violets; and would that we were so keen sighted as to mark their breaking up and the scat tering of mated pairs over the conn try. This is doubtless a gradual process, for I find the birds, as the nestling season draws near, gathering about their favor ite summer homes, often a dozen or more, and in some way there is a draw ing of lots, and the particular spots are reoccupied. Dr. O. C.Abbott, in Mon treal Star. - Bis Amiable Intention. " Mrs. Bloobumper Why on earth did you ask Mrs. Gazzam if her sack were imitation seal?-' - Bloobumper I wanted to flatter her. Mrs. Bloobumper Flatter her? . Bloobumper Yes; imitation, is the sincerest flattery, you know. New York Truth. CHRON1VLK SBORT . 8TOPS. For coughs and colds use' 2579. - -2379 is trie cough syrup for children -ii v" " uig iwtt mv employ a will not be responsible for any debts he may contract nor any" business he may Stacy Shown having left mv employ I ""V,0"' . . VjARRKTSON". l'lT-IG-tf. ' " '- " ' . . ,"TJiey Speak From Experience. , .''We know from experience in the use of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy that it will prevent croup," says Messrs. Gad-berryVfc-Worley, Percy, Iowa. They also add that the retUedy has given great 8atl8ftU?f.imv i-n . f!,ta v4nni. n 1 ll.t they believe it to be the best in the uaa.Aci, iur inroai ana lung diseases, lor sale bv Blakelev fe Hnnirht i-its 1 Bn rw gists.. " " ' As Staple as Coffee. "Chamberlain's ("Vinorh Parxo.1i. ;a - staple as coffee in this "vicinity. It has done an InimAnRa Amrmnt. nf nwii its introduction here.'' A. M. Noedell, aiapie Kidge, Minn. For sale by Blake ley & Houghton, druggists. daw Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. When Babr was oick, 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 the Children. "Ip buying a cough medicine for lldren," savs H. A. Walker, a. immi nent druggist of Ogden, Utah, finever be afraid to buy Chamberlain's Cough Remedy'. There is no dancmr f and relief is always sure to follow. I Msrui-uiariv recommena Unamberlain's because I have found it to be safe and reliable. 25 and 50 cent bottles for sale dv riaKeiey & Houghton, druggists, dw La Grippe t The tAmluncv nf this Aiac. -.4 - j . ...uvtvt: -vnmu Dnenmnnifl ia what, molrna i omfwAMwna La Grippe requires precisely the same unuueut ns tt severe coiu. VIiamDer Iain's Conch Rmpilv la tamon - D . w .wiuvuD 1UI 1 W turen ui : severe coias. inis. itemeay effectually counteracts the tendency of the disease to result in pneumonia, pro vided that proper 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 has failed to discover a single case that has not recovered or that lias re sulted in pneumonia. ' 25 cent, 50 cent and $1-bottles for . sale by Blakeley & Houghton, druggists. . dw . - Notice. 'All Dalles City warrants registered prior to June 3d," 1890, will be paid if presented at my office. Interest ceases from and after this date. . Dated January 11th, 1892. i ' - : - O. KlKBBSLY, . : tf. - Treas. Dalles Citv. " FOR 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 this office. GRAND. -GIVEN ItTf- JHCK80H ENGINE G0..H0. 1. -ON- Thursday Jan , 21, 1892 -AT THE- Umatilla House. Reception Committee W.S.Graham, H. ClougH and F. Leinke. Floor Managers Jud Fish, II. Bills, Geo. T. Thompson, J. Woods and John Hertz." Committee of Arrangements Geo. Williams Frank Roach, Geo. Munger, Geo. A. Liebe and John Blaser. . .' No person- of questionable character will be admitted. : TICKETS, SI. BHelni&DOv, - ' Successors to C K. Danham. Druggists ami Chemists. Pare anJ MeMclnes,:- Dispensing Physicians' Prescriptions a Specialty. Night Druggists always in Attendance. TBI DALtlS, OKI0ON. JMyljUBlflijE B K L- L- I WE ARE AGENTS FOR THE Arpnd Stoves and Ranges, Garland Stoves am! Hanqes, Jemell's Stoves and Ramies. linivprsai We are also, agents fop the Celebrated Boynton Farnaee. " flmmanition and Loaded Shells, Ete. SHHITAHV. PliOlTlBirlC fl SPECIflLiTV. MAIER & BENTON 4iekeiseii's iwi StoE Saplas Stock at Cost. Agent in this city for m, . Tickets to and from North German Lloyd of Bremen Ham- ? burg-American Ticket Co. of Hamburg. L C. NICKELSENv NEXT DOOR TO YOUNG'S JEWELRY STORE. J. H. CROSS -DEALER IN- mm y uiiuui HEADQUARTERS FOR POTATOES. Cash Paid for Eggs and Chickens. ' All Goods Delivered Free and Prompt . TERMSSTRICTLYCHSH. Cor. Second & Union Sts., UJ-W- BUTLiEFf & CO., "THE LEADERS" IN MJjaBEH, IiflTH Office and Yard cor. First and Jefferson E. Jaeobsen & GoM -WHSLE3ALE Boosse 618 Pianos and Organs sold on . Easy , InstallmentG. Notions, Toys, Fancy Goods ' and : Musical Instruments "of all kinds. MAIL ORDERS FILLED PROMPTLY. 162 Second Street, STACY SHOHIfl, iatcliei, Has -opened an office for Cleaning and Kepairing Watches, Jewelry, etc. All "work guaranteed and . promptly attended. - AT C. E. DUftmjHS OLD STAfl0 Cor. Second and Union Streets. Pipe Work; Tin Repairs ; and Ming; Mains Tapped Under Pressure! Shop on Third St., next door west of oung A Km' blicii nitbi shop. Krtmich and Bach Pianos, w mu n iuk nxaiini r rs all parts of Europe IS. SHlKGItES. Sts. SOUTH SIDE of Railroad Track' ' AND RET All.- THE DALLES, OREGON. G. V. Johnston & Son, Oarpemters; autt: Bimaeis. Shop at Ko. 112 First Street "All. Job Work promptly . attended i- andnestiDiatea given on all wood wot 'e. Carpets take np", cleaned and pat dev; s. also Clo6ets and Chimnevs cleaned on short notice at reasonable - rates. Orders received through the poBtoflU-s - GRANT MORSE 1016-tf- Fir. Siaiionerc M Chimneys Cleaiie