The Dalles Daily Chronicle. OFFICIAL PAPER OF DALLES CITY. Published Daily, Sander Excepted". ' r".t BY ;--.-v. ' , . THE CHRONICLE ptrBLISHlXiiS C6 Corner Secondhand-Washtagton .Streets'. '" The ;,, -" Dalles, Oregon. . '- y Terms of Subscription Per Tear Per month, by carrier. . . Bingle copy - .....,. ...6 00 . 60 ... 5 ' '8TATK OFFICIALS. AwttMM - -. - : ! .ttT- Penhover QFtf.x'nigbi'ta (i. W. Mr.Bride Treasurer. . . . i ...'.'.,... Phllllri Metschaii Supfc. pt PnbUo Instruction E. s. .mckiedj ators jj. H. Mitchell rinnm.Tnan B. HMmUlD BUte Printer.'.'.'. . .'.'. . . . . Frank Baker ' COUNTY OFFICIALS.. l County Judge.... . Sheriff ...;... Clerk Treasurer Commissioners . . . a V ThArnhnn .'.'.'".".'. . .,, D. I Cates ....... .... J. B. Crossen .....ueo. Kucn 1H' A. Leavens IWanV Vinnid John E. Barnett Surveyor.. Superintendent of Public Schoois '. '. Troy Shelley Coroner William MicheD i K K NMrn If it be true, as it ii reported, that President Harrison, will not consent to the appointment of Mr. Simon to the federal judgeship of the ninth district, notwithstanding all tha pressure that has been brought to bear upon him by the Oregon delegation, the decision redowns very much to tke credit of the president. It ehows that Mr. Harrison brings conscience to bear upon the mak ing of his appointments and that no amount of partisan service will atone for the lack of the higher qualities that ought to adorn the judicial bench. Mr. Simon is a staunch republican and an able lawyer but President Harrison, it would seem, does not consider these sufficient. If Mr. Hiraon's political methods, successful though they may have always been, were less shady, less - liable to just criticism and more con sistent and honorable, there cannot be a doubt he would have captured the judicial prize. The action of Mr. Haw-iron is only an incident in the official life of a president who has made fewer mis takes in his appointments than any other president since Abraham Lincoln. -.The announcement of Mr, Blaine that be will not be a candidate for the presi dency at the next election will effect thousands of his friends and admirers with a keen sense of personal regret. No other name in the ranks of the re publican party has such a multitude of enthusaistic and devoted followers. No other name is dreaded half so much by the democracy. A second time he refuses that which he might have had for the asking and the sad presumptions remains that he will never fill the seat of, honor to which so many of his countrymen would have delighted to see him exalted. The Hood River Glacier - says a coffin factory is atxnit to be started at that place. Since the Chronicle has read the resolutions of the Hood River demo cratic club it has been wondering if the Glacier really means a real live coffin factory, so to speak, or if the facetious editor merely used this form of speech to indicate that the club intends to pre pare a numerous lot of candidates for political interment against the ides of June. Ia Crlppe Plagae In Londuu. So prevalent and fatal is the influenza in London that all the' Surrey church yards'are as full of new made graves as if a battle had just been fought in the neighborhood.1 Grave-diggers are kept at work all night and hearses are to be seen going and coming at all hours. Tbe majority of deaths are among older people. Like Job's comforters physic ians are now predicting that next year will bring "cholera. 'The chief medical director of a leading life insurance com pany says that influenza' has cost ' the company more loss in the last two years than did the sholera in 1843. . He . fur ther ..remarks; . ;inr every: country, in Europe local outbreaks of cerebro-spinal meningetis has followed In its wake and have destroyed over ninety per cent.' of those attacked, and I see no reason why this disease might not at any time .throw off its comparatively benign character and appear in it true malignity to cast terror and consternation among the ' na tions of the earth." - Kusala at flarseir Again. Worse than the famine news from Russia is the announcement that meas ures are to be initiated fori the 'restora tion of serfdom. ' .The. reason given, for , the retrograde movement is that the land allotted to the local comniuaals is not sufficient to supply the wants of "the "rapidly; multiplying population. It is proposed to allot, vast tracts of land .to tbe peasants to' be occupied-under serf tenure,' one third of "the crop to be used for their support, another third; for the payment of local debts to the state, and the remaining third to. pay government taxes. The occupants, will be bound to the soil. - It is said that the trial will be -made in two or three provinces, and if successful the system -will be generally extended.' . : -.. - The many admirers of Luther Benson will read the following, which we clip 'from the Eugene Guard, with much re grets .', ' ; , r . A few months ago Luther Benson lec tured in Eugene on temperance. - He was a magnetic, eloquent speaker, and here told how he hud been unable to re it't.tbe drink habit, onco a year falling before it. He returned East )o his Home in Indianapolis, and in a dispatch of January 26, the result is told as follows : L,utner lien son, having just returned from a temperance tour m Washington, Oregon and California, wound up in a terrible drunken spree tonight and was taken to tbe sprlugneia v iwunkaras Home for treatment. "When the .itlfcer iscte8t'-'y8 IwVVIarf po ignore resist t e, te tnp tat fori " t u itp I.fean; fly, and. it tiger ai. naltfral as life , It Appears Jog teat' me:-.When j flrst "see H it is;as1eep, as neaceful as a lamb. '.In a little while it opens its eyes and looks about in a dreamy way. Then it begins' to move and its eyes begin to glare at me. Pretty n i le7irlsltA move its iaws and show its teeth. Then it springs at. ine and with those great jaws around -my neck, Completely overpowers me- - No one -who , meets that tiger can resist." ' Mr. Ben eori cried bitterly over his-failure to re slst the temptation. ; ;r---: . . ti ..v' - : ', i j ' i' . r : ' ' i ' ';A Titu'sVille'j Pa.V tannery 1 years bid, i.oV em ploys bver 300 hands with a pay roll of over $11,000 "per month. A; three-story ., building, - 50x250 . feet, , is going up for the' manufacture 'oi fancy leather and 160 feet addition to the vat house is. under way... The firm ' n9ws turns, out 1,000 sides .of . upper leather a day. Buffalo Expre$. - - - - '. : All ' lalles-: City ; warrants registered prior to September 1, 1890, will be paid if presented at my omce. interest ceases from and after this date. Dated February 8th, 1892. - -- O. KlNERBLY, tf, ' " . ..''- Treaa. Palles City. The Spread of Inflatau. '' The outbreak of influenza is spreading fast, with its customary concomitant of highly increased mortality from res piratory affections.' In J tbe metropolis, for bne'week, thirteen.' deaths were at tributed primarily, to .influenza, the total death rate being 19.9 per 1,000, or slight ly less than the preceding week. ' It may be noted that the death rate at Plymouth for tjhe week ending Nov.' 28 was 88.3; or precisely double what it was three weeks previously.' There has also been . rise in the death rates of Newcastle-on-Tyne and Sunderland. Influenza con tinues to be very prevalent in Scotland; it has appeared . in a . severe form at Bandy, one of the isles of .Orkney. ' In Glasgow it is said that it has never been so widespread and severe as at the. pres ent time, and almost the same is true of Edinburgh. In both places the resources of ' the profession have been severely taxed. ' ' ; Abroad the accounts are of . like im port. . At Berlin it has. been prevailing during the past month. It. has been very severe at Hamburg and Dusseldorf, and is also spreading rapidly in the Sile sian' provinces and Schleswig-Holstein. It has appeared again in Paris, where Professor Brouardel has stated that ' it was responsible for 100 deaths during one week. .The Australian mails bring accounts of the deaths of several promi nent Melbourne citizens f f om influenza, and our New Zealand correspondent also' speaks of its" prevalence. London Lancet. "' '' i, - 1 1 i f ... , j . Death In a Big; City. ' The shadows of metropolitan life could scarcely have a more ghastly illustra tion than in the case of the corpse of the old man at a Greenwich Bireet window staring into the windows of the elevated cars for two days, the butt of the train men's Christmas time humor. . A little while before was . the killing and man gling' of another man on the elevated al most immediately opposite a window where sat his wife and child looking in nocently put and wondering who it was being carried away under the protecting blanket. We are wont to look upon the extraor dinary situations created by the novelist and playwright with satirical severity, but the pen of Sue, Dumas,' Dickens and of a' host of imitators never conjured up' from imaginations vivid . with research and ' practical observation a more pa thetically impressive picture than is. pre sented in the dead man at the Greenwich, street window. , . Yet such . things are so common in JNew York that .they are swallowed up in the great maelstrom of metropolitan events forgotten in, a day. New York Herald. ., t t i - , Diridenda in Philadelphia- The .January payments . of interest and dividends in this city are the heaviest of the year. Upon Jan. 1 in terest matures on a large portion of the" national debt," and the government" pays tne .quarterly, interest, on; ..the ..4.,- per cents.,, about $5,596,000, and .also fl,938, 705 semiannual nteresl; on the '.Pcffic railroad bonds known as the 'currency' sixes.", Ine semiannual interest on the debt of . the city, t due Jsit ', l.isow being paid." TJie city, interest; ' line is' $l,51,075,.of. which $589,773 -goes into the city sinking fund. , The principal of the city 4ebt upon which interest is dis bursed is $524)7300. "it' is" estimated that an.the money, paid in ' Philadelphia for January interest' and dividends exr coeds $10,000,000. Philadelphia Ledger.. In June -last . tree ,on.,,thj9: farm; of Mortimer Hamilton,; in . Jackson county Ind., was blown down and pressed into the earth a large snapping turtle. Some days ago the limb which imprisoned the turtle . was . removed,..' and . tne" animal' crawled off, apparently unhurt.' (During; all that time lhadj existed without food or water.' YankeeBlade.1 "V,:"L" Aarnlnat Wide CraTt. : ' The attempt'tb widen " a dress cravat nearly' two inches is a fallacious fancy. xnere ls .notnmg bo untidy looking as the, appearance of the band Of the white lawn cravat above "the coat collar. At this width," unless it is crumpled consid erably; it would reach almost to the top' of the .linen collar. 4-Clothier and Fur- msher. - ',; '."'A' Mew liaMbnil Cllove."'.' ' - A new fprm of baseball : glove has in, the palm an air cushion or pad which can be removed and inflated. It is made in compartments, connected by free but restricted passages, ..and . surrounds a central portion which is unpadded.' , The arrangement of the glove is said to give admirable results. New York Journal. HOW FRENCH BANK BILLS ARE MADE. More Than Four Hundred Persona Are . Employed In Msuufavtuii9e Tbein. "f , AU bills are issued bytne-"Bankof France, which carries on. theVhole"Hocr 'ess of manufacture, including gyiitj.thiU of the paper on wttfehthey areVprfnted . and the ink usedThe'pajwr fatbry "at La Fertetoaarre'tune rags are .so treatetT as to' produce a paper of apeculiar quality." .hissgeciaVvt per is made, inspecteaUt. jnto"l8heets and Bhipped to Paris nnder"thecare"'bf two of the bank officials, who are held responsible Jor eyjgry sheet. ItThe sheets are packed in - bundles cV Mnmttahj)pk As "witirthe blank' paper, the bills; in 4fe)fy.sagT of fabrication; jafe to charge sofdal.'whoj fmust account fox every one which has come into his hands; either by showing it, or a receipt given for it by the official to whom he has landed it over.. As. the bank has some times pxmtedl 400ipo0 bills day, andk a such periods employs about 400 persons in tbe printing - department, strict ac counts are necessary to prevent loss, and an elaborate system of humbugging and checking is used. , A series of. bills consists of 1,000, which are numbered from 1 to 1,000, and twen ty-five series, lettered A, B, O, etc., and tied up together, under the name of an "alphabet." After each operation, the bills are verified by women, -who sign their names on the baud placed around the bundles . As there are rune opera tions, there must be nine verifications, and the final verification is repeated,. by a fresh set of inspectors, so that nothing can be overlooked. After the. bills are complete they are delivered to the secre tary of tjie bank, who examines them and gives a receipt for them, discharging the bead of the printing department from further responsibility. - They are - then placed in the vaults and are withdrawn for issue only by order of the governors of the bank. The principal difficulty in regulating the accounts comes from the defective bills. No bill is allowed to pass the in spectors which shows a spot, an uneven margin, a defect in printing or any other imperfectipn, and. the bills thrown out niusV be recorded in the lxoks with quite as much accuracy as those which pass successfully to' the final stage. Every bill rejected by the inspectors is stamped, and its place in the series, filled by a check.. The stamped bills go; to the sec retary of the bank who puts them un der lock, and key, and. new' bills, corre sponding to the checks' are printed, and credit is .given to the paper manufactory for the paper necessary to make these. ' The accounts of the " "faulted' bills are carried through the books and : for verification the stamped .bills . them selves are kept for five, years. ..At the end, of that time, if there has been no question about themj the regents of the "bank, the secretary, the examiners, the chiefs of the' printing department, and the chiefs of the department of bill ac counts join in signing an order! in purr suance of which they are taken from the vaults and destroyed. Le Genie Civile. Profits of Sleeping Cars. ,' An operating official who knows con siderable about sleeping cars, their cost and profit remarked:' "Sleeping cars pay. big inone" and when one knows the cost of operating ' them, it is no wonder. A new car costs, good, strong and mod ern., anyway from $3,000 to $10,000, al though you. hear of them worth twice that sum., However, those " costly cars don't' get outside the'shops. Well, the railroad corujanies pay three cents ' a mile for the privilege Of haulinsr them. and the car will average 300. miles in twenty-four hours the year round, or nine dollars a day earnings. Say it only earns .$3,000 a year, a low. estimate, it will pay. for itself in three years. . . Now a ten section car has twenty berthSv selling local at two dollars a berth," making the earning capacity per night forty dollars, not counting the day earnings.. Of. course sleepers xhrn't carry full loads, .every night, but if they .did not, average ten passengers, a day we would not haul them on our road.. Now. we pay for ice,"; water ."and fuel, and in sure the cars that is, we repair them when wrecked or injured. ; The sleeping car company pays a porter twenty-hye dollars amonth at the most, a conductor ninety dollars and has . to . furnish . linen and soap. . It is not difficult to see how the sleeping . car companies pay divi dends. Indianapolis Journall !-..- Advice to Curiae. " ' : Don't conclude that a man is a gentle man because he has the manners of one. Don't .think: because, a. man is. a grace ful and . interesting .; talker that . he ia everything else. , .... , , ,' ; Don t' fail to take a iiiari at ais word wheri"he says oe'is'pbor." :-;' . . ; " V ' Don't "be familiar with men, and don't permit' familiarities from them. J Don't think -because a man iikes yon that ne wants to marry you." w ';', Don t thinlf a'man is not in" love with yoq because liehaa not 'grbppsed to yon. ;"Dont bii sitty' ahoui the men.' . : , Don't be rude " td aUinan: in 'order' to shoyboriewhaeitf;;;,; i t Don't let .a nian impose -upon you, sim ply because he is aman., .... , ; . ... ; .. r ",' Don't believe everything a man. tells you. either about himself or yourseb?.' Detroit Free Press! " "' ' ,-:,. ft."! bor.yfc'- -' '.'Dear ' mer" exclaimed "Grandma Too good," "them ''bpy, ought . npt to be play in football.. The newspapers says that the Maydpver ) players aren't .'strong in "tlieir backs.'. , 1 shouldn't , think .- the f akelty would let em, should you7 ,, ; . ,: "No, . indeed, grandma," replied Tom seriously. "It is very dangerous. , Why, yon ' can't' count on some of those poor fellows for" anything" more fhan a quar ter oacK. tsoaton fpst. - , , ' Mariy'PuHt Particles. ' In his own labotatbry, Mr, Aitken cal culated 30,000.000 of dnst particles in a cubic inch of .air, near the ceiling 88t- 000,000. and above a Bunsen flame the infinite number of 489,000,000. Good Words. ' - A. A. Brown, Keeps a full assortment of s and Provision whloh he offers at Low Figures': SPEGIfllr :-: PftlGES Hinliest Cast Prices for Egis anfl -- r 170. SECOND STREET. J. S. BCBXMCK, President. - H. M. BEAU. Cashier, first Rational Bank; .'HE DALLES, - - OREGON A General Banking Business transacted Deposits received, subject to Sight Draft or Check. Collections made and proceeds promptly Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold on New iork, an franciaco and Fort " r land. . DIRECTOKS. D." P. Thompson. Jko. S. ScnaNCK. Ed. M. Williams, - Gko. A. Libbk. H. M. Beall.; STACY SHOOIIl, Has opened an office for Cleaning and repairing vvatcnes, jewelry, etc. All work guaranteed and ? i i ;j promptly attended. ' '-! '" IIT EDUKHfljaS OLD STflflD, Car. Second' and; Union Street. W. E. GARRETSON, All Watch Work Warranted. Jewelry Made to Order, 138 Second St., The Dalles. Or. WoiiTin Repairs and Roofing.; ; Mains Tapped Under Pressure. ' Shotv on Third St.? next door west of x oungdc Jonas' blacksmltn shop. G.w; J6hristo'n& Son. Garpenters Shop at tii. 112 first Street: All Job Work 'promptly attended . and estimates given on all wood work. Closetsi Chiihneys Cleaned ". t '? 3 i ! A ft 4 . Carpets take np, cleaned and -put down, also Closets and Chimnevg cleaned on short notice at reasonable v-'ratesr; ' .' Orders received through the postoffice GRANT ' 1015-tf-' J MORSE FLOURING MILL TO LEASE. rpME-OLP DAI-LEii MILL AXD ' WATER J Company's Flour Mill will be leased to re sponsible partieH. For information apply to tbe 1 he DaUes, Ores-on Leadiiig JeweleL . SOI.B AGENT Fie THE Jj iiii mi - miiiniliiinmimamiMi Pipe aM BiiiTilBis BOBT. TwTA -2-S. MAYS & -SALE-, AGENTS FGE iX'S AND JevBffs Steel Ranees, aid Marison's aii Bopton's Fnraaces. . v : t We also keep a large and eompiete stoek of " TO ' Hardware Tinware Granite, garbed Wire, Blacksmiths . Coal, '; Pumps, Pipe, Paekifig, ' Plumbers: Supplies, . Giirisj : i Ammunition and Sporting Goods. Plum'bing, Tinning ; Gnri Machine Work a Specialty. COB. SECOND AND FEDERAL ST9., Qreait Bargai ns ! Removal ! Removal I On account of Removal I vvill sell my entire stock of Boots and. Shoes, Hats and Caps. Trunks and Valises, Shelv ings, Counters, Desk, Safe-, Fixtures, at a Great Bargain.. Come and my offer. . . . ; . GREAT REDUCTION I'N RETAIL. 125. Second Stireet . - II JEW FULL m WWTB DBY BOflDS; if. COMPLETE IN EVERY DEPARTMENT. ' Clothing, Gents' Furnishing Goods, Hats, Gaps, Boots and Shoes. - Full Assortment otvthe Leading Manufacturers. Cash Bayers mill save money by examining oar stock and priees before The Dalles Mercantile Co., Successors to BROOKS J ROOKS !iSta Gents' Furnishing Goods, Groceries, Provisions, , GRAIN Of all Kinds at Lowest Market Rates.' Free Delivery to Boat and . 390 and 394 Clotfeier and Tailor , T BOOTS AiND SHOES, Hats and Caps, Trims andr Valises, CORNErToF 8ECofoD AND WASHINGTON y "XS. rjALTSokgqOg. PAUL KREn & CO.. DEALERS IS Paints,' Gils; Glass ' -'-- - i l j . .- :i ;; And tbe Most Complete and tbe Latest , Patterns and Designs in - mrr a t ,-r JbSJbrl. Practical Painters and Paper Hangers. None crUtthe best brauds of the 8herwin-W Uliams Paint ned in all our work, and none but -the most tikillcd -workmen en? ployed. All orders promptly attended to ; ; , V . - 10-17-d Store and Paint shop- corner Third and . Washington Streets. Xj. 33. CBOWM.1 CROWE, THE CELEBRATED- 99 Blueware, Silverware, Cutlery, Rairiiig and Light THE DALLES, OREGON, see The Dalles. purchasing elseoihere. H. Herbring. 4 BEERS, Dealers in Boots, Shoes, Hats, Caps, etc.. Hardware,' - Flonr, Bacon, AND PRODUCE Curs and all part of the : City Second Street The Old Germania Saloon. JOHN DONHVOfl, proprietor. The beet quality of Wines, Liquors and Cigars, Pabst Milwaukee Knicker bocker and Columbia ' Beer, Half and Half and all kinds of T6interaiice Drinks. ' ALWAYS ON HAND pie and Fancy Dry Goods I