The Dalles Daily Chronicle. Entered a the Poetofflce at Tbe Dalle, Oregon, as second-class matter. Local Advertising. 10 Cents per line for first insertion, and 5 Cents per line for each subsequent insertion. Special rates for long time notices. Aft local notices received later than S o'clock will appear the following day. TIME TABLES. Railroads. CAST BOUND. No. 2, Arrives 12:01 a. H. Departs 12:06 x. M. " 8, " U!: 33 P.M. " 12:50 P.M. WIST BOUND. So. 1, Arrives 4:25 A. u. Departs 4:30 A. if. "7, " 6:00 p. H. " 6:20 P. 3t. 'Two locat freights that carry passengers leave one for the west at 7 .00 a. m., and one for the east at 9:15 a. M. STAGSS. For Prineville, via. Bake Oven, leave daily except Sunday) at 6 A. M. For Antelope, Mitchell, Canyon City, leave Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, at 6 a. m. For Dufur, Kingsley, Wamic, Wapinitia, Warm Springs snd Tygh valley, leave daily (except Sunday) at 6 A. K. For Goldendale, Wash., leave every day of the week except Sunday at 8 A. M. Omces for all lines at the Umatilla House. Post-Ofllce. OFFICE HOUB8 General Delivrey Window 8 a. ru. to 7 p. m. to 4 p. m. to 10 a. in. fnuuv; v . j .......... .w w. - - Sunday U U " 9 a.m. CASING OF MAILS By trains going East 9 p. m. and " " West 9 p. m. and Stage for Goldendale " "Prineville ... "Dufur and Warm Springs . " t Leaving for Lyle & Hartland . 11:45 a.m. 4:45 p. m. .7:30 a. m. .5:30 a. m. .5:30 a. m. .5:30 a. in. .5:30 a. m. " jAnieiope Except Sunday. Tri-weekly. Tuesday Thursday and " Monday Wednesday and Saturday. Friday. SATDRDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1892. V. S. DEPARTMENT OK AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU. Thu DAllbs, Or., Feb. A, 1892.' Pacific Rela- D.fr W S? State Coast bar. 2 tive of & 5 of Time. ? Hum Wind r 3 Weather 8 A.M. 29.H3 23 81 Calm PtCloudy 8 P. M. 29.77 i 73 Culm T'ckHaze Maximum temperature, 36: minimum tem erature, 2:1. Total precipitation from July 1st to date, 8.50; average precipitution from July 1st to dute, 11.3SI; total deficiency from July 1st, MSU, to diUe, 2.K9; Inches. WKATHF.lt PROBABILITIES. San Francisco, Feb. 5, 1892. Weather forecast till 8 p. rn. Saturday; generally fair. Slightly warmer. Kkekham. FAIR LOCAL BRBVITIKS. Ex-Governor Moody is registered at tbe Umatilla house. Dr. H ugh Logan left for Portland last evening on a short visit to his son. Jftsa Mason's soiree last night was a very successful and enjoyable affair. The.subject of Oregon at the world's fair has even dropped ont of the press. (Mr. Billen of Hood River and M. Rand jr. of Hood River .were in town today. Mrs. John Cates returned today from a visit to Mr. George Herbert at Hood River. A. W. Bramer the propneter of The Dalles and Prineville stage line is at the Umatilla House. A. Noltner of Portland, editor of the Dispatch is in the city in the interest of the dalles portage railroad. Willard Taylor of Dufur left a sub stantial token of his regard for the Chronicle at this office today. Hon. Peter Paquet, brother of O. L Paquet of this county, has been ap pointed receiver at the Oregon City laud office. The funeral of the late John Belat has been postponed till tomorrow, and will take place from the family residence of J. H. Phirmaa. at 1 o'clock p. in. From reading this week's issue of the Dufur Dispatch one gathers that the people out there are very much inter ested in the new grade up Tygh hill. The funeral of Mrs. L. Keith will be held from the family residence of Mr. 5. W. Stewart on Ninth street tomor row (Sunday) at 2 p. m. Rev. A. C. Spencer officiating. Congregational church services to morrow (Sunday) at 11 o'clock in the court house. Sunday school at 12 :15. Christian endeavor at 5 :30 p. m. Union service at 7 :30 o'clock p. n. preaching by Rev. O. D. Taylor pastor of the Baptist church. Methodist services will be held in the school house tomorrow, as the new church wilt not be ready for use. Class meeting at 10 a. in., preaching at 11 and Sunday School at 12 :20. The Epworth League meeting will be held in the school house also, at 4 p. m. No services at night. Mr. and Mrs. John Parker of Hood River return to their home at that place this evening. Mr. Parter has been in the city since the 12th of November, superintending the erection of three fine buildings on Fourth street for Dr. D Siddall. The work of Mr. Parker has given the highest satisfaction to the Doctor who speaks in the warmest terms of that gentleman as an all round first class man and mechanic, and the Chron icles from its own personal knowledge, endorses the doctor's sentiments. , .We have received a letter from an es K teemed reader of the Chronicle,- who lives on Juniper Flat, complaining bit terly and justly about Tygh Hill "slide.' The writer says some things that prove he could not have known when he wrote the letter what steps have been taken to build a new grade and he will agree with the Chronicle that it is useless to discuss the question who was to blame thai a road has not been built years ago. The main thing, now that an appropria tion is assured, is to put the money to the best possible use and hurry the work through so that people may have a way to get to market with next fall's is nothing small about tbe Wil lamette valley. Its press and leading public men are heartily for a portage railway at The Dalles. Salem Journal. The Dalles Electric, Telephone & Power Co., capital stock $40,000 has filed articles of incorporation at Salem, H. C. Nielsen. Geo. C. Blakeley, Geo. Ruch and G. V. Bolton are tho incorporators. Dr. McLean, of Portland, State Vet erinarian, in town Saturday, returned from Wamic, where he had examined and condemned tq be killed two horses belonging to Geo. Miller, of Wamic, as they had gleet, a contagious disease nearly always incurable, and much resembling glanders. He examined all hai had been exposed, but found no others with symptoms. Dufur Dispatch. Stole m Mummy. It is seldom a live white man steals a dead Indian, but this very anomaly has occurred at Pendleton. Several months ago some curiosities in tbe shape of mnmmified Indians were taken from tbe Indian graveyard at Long Island, on the Columbia river, near Umatilla. One, the remains of an In dian child about twelve years old, was presented to Dr. Smith of this city. He left it in a room in the Thompson & Flack building, and contemplated send ing it to a medical college in the east. A few weeks ago, when he took Will Hall Poore of the Irrigation Age to view tbe curiosity, the mummy turned up miss ing. Recently a pale, black -eyed young man who had a boot-black stand at the Pan theon, and prospered for a time but fin ally lost his pile by gambling and other recklessness, left the city. He borrowed money, and his departure was mourned by his creditors. Later it was discov ered by the officers that the young man, whose name is George E. Deletts, was negotiating for the sale of an Indian mummv at Portland for the handsome sum of '$350. So Depnty Sheriff Hailey, who went to Salem with prisoners, cor raled the bootblack and will bring him back on this evening's train. Thus do the vices of life lead their vic tims into temptation, even to purloining a mummified Indian, which surely ought to have few attractions for the covetous. East Oregonian. North Yakima Rejoices Over the Sue cess of the Second Flowing Well. Yakima is happy over the fact that a second well of flowing artesian water has been added to her treasures. The success of the first attempt to secure ar tesian water was a joyful surprise, , but it was feared that it was only a lucky strike, but now that another strong stream has been secured, and at a depth of only 159 feet, the problem of the irri gation of those lands lying above the ditch lines is considerably solved. The new well is eight, inches in diameter, and the flow is estimated at 500,000 gallons per diem. The drill is still being sent down with good effect, the discharge of water constantly increasing as a greater depth is attained, and it is thought that the flow will exceed that of the first well very shortly. There are now four artesian well plants in Yakima county, and a fifth, and heavier one, will at once be ordered by tbe company on the Moxee. 'The first well is 350 feet deep, and flows 650,000 gallons per day. In tne second well the water is within ten feet of the surface, and ooerationa are now suspended awaiting heavier machinery to sink the shaft deeper. It is already over 300 feet deep. An Amphibious Steamer. ' What else shall we call a steamer that travels on both land and water? That is just what a little steamer which has just been finished in Sweden has done on its trial trip, and there seems to be no reason why it may not be a successful traveler on land as well as in water. There are two lakes near Boras that are separated by a considerable strip of land; The object of the strange steamer is to save expense in the transportation of freight across the lake, particularly the avoidance of donble shipment, Rails have been laid across the land slip and- the steamer is so constructed that by its own engines it can be run from the water upon the rails and then roll across until it dips into the other lake, Tbe little steamer is of ten-horse power and can accommodate sixty passengers in addition to its freight, ft is very ap propriately named the Svauen, which is Swedish for swan. A Btmsrksbla Cow. Hess Green of Birch Creek, according to reports, is the owner of a most re markable cow. At the age of four years it has a family of seven calves to its credit. Twins were born when the ani mal was two years old, again at the age of three years, and this year triplets appeared, one black and two red calves. All the calves are alive and in good con dition. Such a cow ahold be dressed '.'in the finest silk.' The gun, "Big Betsy," recently shipped across the continent to San Francisco, will shoot fourteen miles, but each shet cost $850, enough to employ a man a whole year " at productive work. In ether words, every time the Biir Betsv is touched off a laborer's wages for a year goes up in smokerabsolutely wasted. js.ast ureyontan. . BORN.' ,- In this city, Feb. 6th, 1892, .to the wife of L. E. Ferguson, a daughter. LULLABY 1TX BLACK. L see a gray coon in de corn; . ' Sleep, baby, sleep. . t riear de mastan blow his horn ; Sleep, baby, sleep. . I see a niggat at de gray coon shoot, . -I heah de echo of de old horn's toot. An' I heah an owl in de wild wood boot ; Sleep, baby, sleep. A "gator's gruntin' in de ole bayou Sleep, baby, sleep At a fat big crawfishin' in de flue ; . Sleep, baby, sleep. His teeth am big, an' wide an' white, .An' he am chucklin' at de great big bite He's gwine to hab outen dat big tonight; Sleep, baby, sleep. . I heah de wild geese flyln' by; Sleep, baby, sleep. De air am ringin' wid dere cry ; Sleep, baby, sleep. It's gwine to be cole, but you am snug As de hoppln' lizard an' de little June bug, So I'll leab you now wid a good-night hug; Sleep, baby, sleep. . " New Orlmns Picayune. James W. Scott, publisher of the Chicago Herald and the Chicago Eveniny Post, recently refused the largest salary ever offered any man in any profession or line of business in this country. : ..Jos eph Pulitzer, of the New York WorldKof fered Mr. Scott a salary of $100,000 a year for a term of five years and other i aducements if he would give bis entire time and attention to the management of the World. In declining it Mr. Scott, declined a yearly salary double that paid the President of the United States. Inter Ocean: England and a number of valiant Democratic editors are de manding "tne recall of Minister Egan at once." Egan is an Irishman and a Republican. For the former reason he is offensive to England and for the latter reason he is offensive to England and for the latter reason is odioas to the "peace-on-any-terms"' Democrats. Egan will stand on his record. More than 2,500 Demorest medals have been won by the young people of Nebraska, and more than 1000 by those of the states of Minnesota, Michigan, In diana, Illinois. Ohio, Tennessee and Carolina. The first one to be awarded in The Dalles will be competed for Feb ruary id, and all good citizens should en courage Oregon young people to keep up witn tne procession. A Minneapolis man. bet $2.50 last Sunday that he could outrun a railroad train across a bridge. He lost the bet. The pastor, in his funeral dissonrse im proved the occasion to expatiate on the sinful folly of betting. Jay Gould has taken to going to church, and a New York minister thinks it is because of the recent bomb thrower's ' attack on Russell Sage. Maybe Jay has just discovered that sal- vuuon is iree. The era of cheap freights has arrived on this coast, when foreign vessels load on the Sound for 17 shillings, and whale- Dacks carry coal from beattle to San Francisco for $1.35 a ton. The inventor of the whaleback freight ship ' has made a model of that type which he claims will be the best boat ever devised for coast defenses. 'If I had two loaves of bread" said Mohpmet, "I would sell one of them and buy white hyacinths for they would feed my soul. Mortgages in Morrow county are com paratively scarce when compared with other countries. This denotes prosper ity. La Grippe! The tendency of this disease toward pneumonia is what makes it dangerous, La 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 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 has re sulted in pneumonia. 25 cent, 50 cent and $1 bottles for sale by Blakeley & nougnton, druggists. caw Examination of Teachers. Notice is hereby given that for the purpose of making an examination of all persons who may oner themselves as candidates for teachers of the schools of this county, the county school superin tendent tberof will hold a public exam ination at his office in The Dalles, be ginning Wednesday, February 10th, one o'clock p. m. All teachers eligible for State Certificates, State Diplomas and Life Diplomas must make application at the quarterly examinations. Dated this 1st day of February 1892. Tboy Shelley. County School Superintendent of Wasco County, Oregon. 2-1-2-12 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. O. KlNKESLY, tf. Treas. Dalles City. Miss Clara B. Story will instruct a limited number of pupils in oil paint ing, water colors, crayon, charcoal and pastelle work aud China painting. Studio, room 3, over Mclnernv's dry goods store. " 2-3-tf FOR SALE. Four lots with a good house on them, all on the bluff above the brewery which win uo ouiu uueup or iraue ior-caiue. Address J. L. Kelly, 9-11-tf The Dalles. Wanted. ' A good girl to cook and do housework. Good wages. Apply at this office. . 1-15-tf. Prescriptions compounded at all hours during the night by a graduate in phar macy at Blakely & Houghton's. 2-ltf. For Sale. Pure bred Berkshire Boars, ddres F. P, Sharp; The Dalles - 12-22-wtt NOTICK. Notice is hereby given that sealed pro posals will be received at the office of the City Recorder until 4 o'clock of Feb ruary 6th, 18S2, for grading the square gt the intersection of Ninth and Pent land streets. The council reserves the right to reject any and all bids. Par ticulars furnished npon application to the Recorder. By order of Ihe Common Council. ; Frank Mkkefee, Recorder of Dalles City. Dated Februarv 1st, 1892. 2-1-5 As Staple aa Coffee. "Chamberlain'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. Nordell, Maple Ridge, Minn. For sale by Blake ley & Houghton, druggists. dAW For the Children. "In buying a cough medicine . for children," says H.' A. Walker, a promi nent druggist of Ogden, Utah, "never be afraid to buy Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. There is no danger fiom it and relief is always sure to follow. I particularly recommend Chamberlain's because I have found it to be safe and reliable. 25 and 50 cent bottles for sale by Blakeley & Houghton, druggists, dw They Speak From Experience. "We know from experience in the use of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy that it will prevent croup," savs Messrs. Gad berry & Woiiey, Percy, Iowa. They also add that the remedy has given great satisfaction in this vicinitv, and that they believe it to be the "best in the market for throat and lung diseases. For sale by Blakeley & Houghton, drug gists.. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a. Child, she cried for Castoria, When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria, When ahehad Children, she gave them Castoria A Keceipt for Beauty. A lady was seen to approach the county clerk a day or so ago some what after the style of the bashful young man seeking a marriage License, and after inquiring, the fee for marriage license, and whether they would give any dis count of the list for two or three, or if they were likely to have a special sale soon said, gentlemen: I have three daughters who were till a short time since common looking young ladies, and acting upon my advice they began eat ing Quaker Oats and bread made of Compressed Yeast. That they grew rapidly beautiful you may immagine for after being seen the first' time upon the street, each received ten proposals from some of your finest young men. Leav ing the unmarried . young men in the office in deep regret, she walked out. A pointer for you, buy your groceries from John Booth, the grocer. C. W. ADAMS, THE ARTISTIC Boot and Shoemaker. Repairing a Specialty. 116 Couet St., The Dalles, Ok. JOHN PASHEK, t - Tailor, Next door to Wasco Sun. Madison's Latest System nsed in cutting garments, and a nt guaranteed each time. repairing and Cleaning Neatly and Quickly Done. MRS. C. DAVIS Has Opened the in the New Frame Building on SECOND STREET, Next to the Diamond Flouring Mills. - First Class Meals Furnished at all Hours. ' Only White Help Employed. YOUR ATTENTION Is called to the fact that Hugh Glenn, Dealer in Glass, Lime, Plaster; Cement and Building Material of all kinds. . Carries the finest Line of Picture piQultfings To be found in the City. rnercnan 72 LUashington Sfcf eet. DID YOU WE ARE AGENTS FOR THE Argand Stoves and Ranges, Garland Stoves and- flanges, Jemell's Stoves and flanges, Universal Stoves and flanges. We are also agents for the Celebrated Boynton Fwoaee. . Rmnmnition and Loaded Shells, Ete. SflfllTRHV PlxUmSirlG R SPECIALITY. . MAIER & BENTON I. C. ickelsen, -AGENT Estey KranioW Bach First Class Upright Pianos,, School Books, Bibles, Blank Books, Music Books, Sheet Music, Baby Carriages and Jewelry. THE DALLES, CtqVT. BUTLiEf & CO., "THE LEADERS" IN LUMBER. LATH Office and Yard cor. First aud Jefferson VALENTINES ! -LARGE ASSORTMENT AT- E. Jacobsen & Co.'s, Book and Music Store, 162 Second Street, Syffie.FloyilSCo.. Successor to C. K. Donham Druggists and Chemists. Pure Dims anJ leucines. Dispensing Physicians' Prescriptions a Specialty. Night Druggists always in Attendance. THE DALLES, OKEGOS. STAGY SHOHIN, TlBWatclniaRei, Has opened an office for Cleaning and Repairing Watches, Jewelry, etc. All work guaranteed and promptly attended. . . AT C. E. DUflflflUS OLD STflKD, ' Cor. Second and Union Streets. Pipe Work, Tin Repairs v and Roofing. Mains Tapped Under Pressure.' Shop on Third St., next door west of Yonng& Knss' blacksmith shop. KNOW IT FOR- Ml my 0 Opgan, OREGON AND SHINGLES. Sts. SOUTH SIDE of Railroad Trad VALENTINES ! THE DALLES, OREGON. R B. HOOD, Livery, Feed and Sale Horses Bought and Sold on Commission- andMoney Advanced on Horses Left for Sale. OFFICE OF The Dalles and Goldendale Stage Line 8 tape leaves The Dalles Every Morning at 7:30 and Goldendale at 7:80. All freight must be left at it. B. Hood's office the eve ning before. R. B. HOOD, Proprietor. Opposite old Stand. , The Dalles, Or. f 111 InUnntnn 0 Cnn u. mi. duiiiidiuii a ouii, t J. -M uaipiBis 3DQ tjuiiaeig. Shop at No. 112 First Street. All.Job Work promptly attended and estimates given on all wood work. ClosetsS Chimneys Cleaned CflrTMfjl IaIta tin. r1pfl.ner1 Anil Ttnt rtrw n also Closets and Chimnevs cleaned on short notice at reasonable rates. - : Orders received through the postoftU GRANT MORSE ioi5-a-