The Dalles Daily Chronicle. Entered a the Poetofflce at The Dalles, Oregon, as second-class matter. . Local Advertising-. H) Cent per line for first Insertion, and 6 Cents per liue for each subsequent Insertion. Special rates for long time notices. All local notices received later than 8 o'clock .-Vr HI appear tne following day. TIME TABLES. Railroads. - BAST BOUXD." No. 2, Arrives 12:01 A. M. Departs 12:06 A. X. 8, ; " 12:80P.M. 12:50P.M. .': J . ' . WEST BOUND. No. 1, Arrives 4:25 A.M. Departs 4:30 A. M. " 7,? " 8:00 p.m. " 6:20p.m. Two iocat freights that carry passengers leave one for the west at 7:00 a.m., and one for the "east at 9:15 A. M- STAGES. For Prlnerille, via. Bake Oven, leave daily at 6 A. M. ' t- For Antelope,' Mitchell, Canyon City,, leave 4ally at 6 a.m. For Duf ur, Kingsley, Wamic, W'apinitia, Warm Springs snd Tygh Valley, leave daily (except Sunday) at 6 A. M. For Goldendale, Wash., leave every day of the - areek except Sunday at 7 A. M. Offices for all lines at the Umatilla House. Post-Omce. '""optics houks '. General Delivery Window. . .... .8 a. m. to 7 p. m. Money Order . " 8 a. m. to 4 p. m. Sunday G D " 9 a. m. to 10 a. m. CLOSING OF MAILS trains going East .'.9 p. m. and 11:45 a. m. . West...;..9p. m. and 5:iXp.m. - 8tage' for Goldendale. ...... . .7:90 a. m. . ... " Frlnevillo.... : . . . . .8:80 a. m. '. ". ;' ""Dufuraud Warm Springs -:. 6:30 a.m. . S " tLeavlng for Lyle&Hartland.. 5:80 a.m. " " " " JAntelope......-...'.5-.80a.m. Except Sunday. Tri-woek.ly. Tuesday Thursday and Saturday. " Monday Wednesday and Friday. WEDNESDAY - - - JUNE 1, 1892 LOCAL BREVITIES. If you want the news, You want The Chronicle. . If you are' not a subscriber, please read this and hand in vour name. ; Circuit court stands adjourned until the 13th. i( The supply of dust in The Dalles today is far ahead of the demand. The Columbia at this point, this morn ing, stood as it was yesterday morning. Next Monday a new term of German school will begin at the parsonage of Rev. A. "Horn, on 9th street. Early this morning a little fire in the Umatilla house office sto.ve," just enough . to take off the chill, was very acceptable. . The strawberry crop this year will bo -double that of last in the Hood River 'district. The average size of the fruit a'i beats the world. .''''' ...... Mr. W. H.. Smith, superintendent of the coach department at the ' U. P. R. R. shops in Albina, was in The Dalles today renewing old time acquaintances. I.ack of vitality and color-matter in the bulbs causes the hair to fall out and turn gray. We recojomend Hall's Hair renewer to prevent baldness and gray nesa. Evangelical Lutheran services will be held at 10 :30 a. in., Penticost Sunday, -at the chapel on Ninth street. Sunday Bchool at 9 130 a. in. All are cordially welcome. A. Horn, pastor. : Eastern Oregon : wool against the world. For fine fleeces, no other por tion of the country can show better than . may be seen daily in The Dalles. Of ferings today are loH cents per pound for choice lots., ' . , Conductor Mitchell had a . fine train up last night. It consisted of fourteen coaches, two of which belonged to the -editorial fraternity nd three ' to the Presbyterian delegates. It required two locomotives to pull the train. Wool is coming in freely, "and compe tent judges say it is of finer quality than the average of many years. The price is too low to stimulate lively trading, but the prospects are brightening .every -day. Sales now are mostly confined to small lots. . '. ' . Boyls, accesses, tumors, and even can cers, are the result of a natural effort of the system to expel the poisons which the liver and kidneys have failed to re 'move.i... Ayers Sarsaparilla stimulates all , the organs to a proper performance of their functions'. , The nip of -a poisonous snake is but a . -slight remove from being more dangerous than the poison of scrofula in the blood. "A yer's Sarsaparilla purifies the vital fluid, expels all poisonous substances, and supplies the elements of life, health and strength. t , Speaking of the comforts and dis- comforts of a cold June morning, Mr. ' H. C, Nielsen tells a good one on hitn . self. This morning" he had occasion to drive to Mr. Klindts place, and thought fully took an overcoat along belonging to me oiu eentiemanbut he did not think to wear the overcoat, until he alighted from the buggy at Mr. Klindts, shiver ing with the cold so much that -it made it difficult for him to tie the home. Then he thought of the overcoat, on the DUggy seat, lie put it on immediately, nd walked into the house where he farmed himself by the kitchen stove. In the early sixties the mines of Baker county were all tributary to The Dalles. They were barely known then. Now . statistics from two of these mines show an aggregate output during 1891 of $2,- , 128,540.96, and there' are at least fifty more mines to hear from equally as rich. : The figures of all will be compiled to en able Senator Dolph to convince the com- mi t tee on appropriations that a govern ment assay office should be established in Baker City. Years ago a fine stone structure was built in The Dalles for a branch mint. If that mint had been completed, in accordance with the de mands of the times, The Dalles would yet have been the headquarters for all mining operations in the Inland Em pire. It was a short sighted policy which caused its ' abandonment. . It makes an elegant flouring mill, but we hope Baker City may be more fortunate. In fact The' Chronicle would say, if The Dalles cannot have a branch mint, it ' would be no - disadvantage to the country to give one -to Baker City, Our National Birth Pay. . - The -Glorious Foubth will soon be upon us, and all patriotic citizens of The Dalles are invited to attend a meeting which will be held . this evening, at 8 o'clock in the old court house, to -determine the question of a celebration. The committee of last year have on band the nucleus of a fund, 'and at this meeting the whole matter will be taken up and discussed,' so it is important that there be as full attendance as possible of rep resentative citizens. ?t ' CHRONICLE BREVITIES. Matters of Interest Reduced to Suitable ,..'... ;: ' Proportion. ; '. .j .. Hon. Jos.; Simon left Portland ; today for Minneapolis, the east and -Europe.' The noon passenger came in today with a stiff breeze which put the train five minutes ahead of time. It's an ill wind that don't blow some good. The Baltimore sailed away from Port land yesterday, for Paget sound. The only protection left in the river now is the Charleston, the Cyclone and the Cricket.-.:- We hear that the thunderbolt purifies the atmosphere, to which a political candidate in the Multnomah field says, "a Minnie ball would be a good thing to purify the Portland community, of a loathsome weight of blackmailing " edi tors." - - Mr. A. M. -Kelsey, of Antelope, left a sample of his fine delaine wool at The Chronicle office today. It is a sample of 40,000 pouhds which he has sheared and is to shear this season. And it would be very hard to beat in any other por tion of the continent. &arah Bernhardt carried home . with her, a small box filled with, American sand. As typical of the country this is a most appropriate emblem and in dicates that : the eminent tragedienne did not associate to any great extent with the American , dude. , . The manager of the casino at Monte Carlo has published an annual state ment showing a neat little profit of $5,700,000 for the season just closed. There has long been a suspicion that the robust French tiger is not remaining on the Riviera solely for his health. Dispatches from Washington say Paul F. Mohr is attempting to defeat the dalles boat railway project; claiming all the rights and franchises' of the earth hereabout, thereunto appertaining. The Mbhr corporation is a strong ' one, but unless his protests are better than his promises the country has very little to fear from him. ' President Hill, of the Great Northern, will be in Spokane today. Connection between . the Great Northern and the Union Pacific tracks was made yester day, and the track-laying crew put to j work ballasting the track. About 600 j men are engaged in this work. The': work, of grading through westward, is completed at points all the way from Spokane to the Columbia river. The Salvation Army band headed the Tacoma G. A. R. procession on the 30th. In fact it was the only band in the parade. The musicians union band was not employed because it demanded ex cessive pay. One'of the union musi cians who wished to evince his patriot ism by playing free, but was prevented by the union,-announces his intention never to play again .in Tacoma. , .'-- rA - . ,- In Senator Sherman's argument1 on the silver question yesterday he said the only trouble about the law was, that the senators could not see ahead." If it had been known silver was going to fall as rapidly as it did, he would have kept the silver dollar and put it on the same footing as fractional silver. The suspen sion of silver coinage by the Latin Union and the increase of production have given great bjows to silver. He claimed it was not true he was unfriendly to silver. Sherman then went on to denounce the bill under consideration, . as wrong to the American people inprinciple, in de tail and in every aspect. ' It is a fraud on the creditor, and deception to the debtor. ' , . Tub Chronicle, at the time, Spoke of the large loop hole left open by the su preme court decision that the making of special rates to parties traveling by rail road in the United States was not a vio lation of the : interstate 'commerce law. Now there is considerable discussion a bout it among shippers, who believe the railroads -are bound to treat all their pa trons alike, and if they can make special rates to parties of ten or more persons, they should make special rates to ship pers shipping large quantities, by car loads, so that a house shipping 100 car loads "would have to pay less in propor tion than one shipping ja single carload ; thus opening the question for a square evasion of the law. - There is "no foundation for the 1 that ..the president intends .'to yef river and harbor bill. Mr. Harrisc know fall well, when this billrt him, that it is a measure of such in tance that the greatestcommercial k cou, ui mo uauou lemsna n, ana there may be a great many things which should not be. there, he will jeopardize the progress pf the coc by withholding his signature. .. ' ! ; Tf '.- THE ODD FILLOW8 NEXT. Meeting; of the Sovereign Oranq Xoii ' ..- . . J a-,.r.- ln Portland. :. . : 1 Oregohian : ; What between 4he Prl by terian general assembly; the Visitr the crnisers Baltimore and CharV biivi ui tmt euiiors Deiongintr. it National Editorial Association, Po has enjoyed a great deal of. 'distin' for- several weeks.. . .These, events soon pass into history, and a: ments will be poshed for the Sovi Grand Lodge of Odd Fellows, whic meet here in September. General vines received by the ' commitW" that there will be many visitors land while the Sovereign grani iu bcbbiou more man ;nave codjl witbvthe Presbyterian general assa A large attendance is expected of it coast Odd Fellows. The memberslX. the order on the coast on Decembek 1889, was as follows : Lodges. Oregon.. . .' 95 Washington 83 Idaho.. . . 37 California.. : . .339 Montana ,,. .' . 35 Nevada .-. 23 3,3! 1,0 27,475 1,580 1,52 Totals? .612, 39,349 Cursed Words of the Texideea. The Yezidees, a peculiar Turkish sect, fare perhaps the only people in the world which consider certain letters, words and phrases as being enrsed, and the person who pronounces them a worthy subject for immediate destruction. They attach no value to human life, arid to these ordinary dangers' are added 'those arising from the embarrassing etiquette of conversational intercourse with them, f 6r if ." any one inadyerently speaks the word "devQ," "satan," or anything with the same meaning, be commits a mortal offense, and to cut off his head is a God pleasing act, a sacred duty of the Yezi dee, the fulfillment of which will insure him a place in paradise! ';" " ' ' '! ' In a like' 'manner several letters are wholly banished from their language, chiefly those which contain the sound of shun.". 'c The 'Arabian ' word "pallet, ''Thou art" damned,"' is also expunged because it is believed by the Yezidees to hare " been ' the word uttered by God when the fallen angels were thrown into helL . These '' and similar ' words and phrases are set aside and combinations which do not belong to any language used instead. St. Louis Republic. , - . Amending Bar Prayer. I am prompted to send you the follow ing anecdote about a half -pas t-2 midget who is quartered in bur domicile. She is accustomed ' at bedtime, after having had a hilarious frolic en dishabille, to re peat the words: . '' ; v . Jesus, gentle shepherd, hear me. -Guard thy little lamb tonight; . . Through the darknesa be thou near me, . Watch my sleep till morning light. These lines she has faithfully repeated, word for word, with the remarkable and inimitable , pronunciation , common to all children at her age, but last nisrht I she astonished us by saying : ' I Onard thv littln lamh tn.nlnht '' ' Through the that not darknesa. that : r gaslight),.. ... - And surely enongh. a new lamp post had been erected during the day on our corner, and so the "little lamb' no long er needed protection through ' the dark ness,' but; through the gaslight. She thought, I suppose,' that she must be lit eral or die. Jor., Boston Transcript. A Delightful Pinos fur s Woman. . What a delightful day one could spend rummaging in the ureal -cabinets at Windsor castle, where are stored 'away all the gowns that Cjueen Victoria ever worer For the queen's robes" are never s61dT)r' given away.'.despite the energetic 'attempts whiclv have 'been" made from time to time. to induce the attendants tc pasi-f with some of these thousands of gownsv. which their wearer has probably forgotten that she ever possessed. The coronation robes, bridal gowns, resplend ent garments of stately-fete and royal ceremonial, worn in the old days before tne .magmncence or queenliness was for gotten in -' the -sorrow of 'widowhood. What will become of these"' relics when the long reign is ended and theenor- .mous cabinets are made ready for the new queen's arnyal? London Letter. Points for the Suburban Resident. - It is better to let the heels of your shoes go unblackened than , to miss- a train. It does not pay to invest in accident insurance' policies. The accident al ways happens to some other train than the one in which you are traveling.. ' -? Late to bed '.and. early po rise- will shorten, the road to your hotnjs ,in the skies. . ., . . Always try to eat ' at least one meal each week with your family., jit keeps up the acquaintance and conduces, to so ciability .-Chicago Tribune, " Columbia river views for sale by Hunt the photographer. , 5.23d tf NOTICE rrO' ICEi COSSliMERS. ' As manager-of The 'Dalles Ice' -Co.-' I wish to contradict the statements that I was only acting as agent for an outside company. I own one half interest in the company, and will sell ice this year and -for years to come, and should a crop of natural ice come in this ' locality we will put np enough to supply this city for three or four years and Spokane com panies will then have to withdraw their agents from here. Respectfully, - W. S. Cb am, Manager.. Meml 4.i ftt? o'clock, Will Vanbibbg of Chas. Lauer tended to. . T Lost Package. The finder of a package, or parcel. taining a pair of No. 11 shoes. 7 rards of gingham, and 3 yards of muslin, will confer a favor, and be suitably rewarded on leaving the same at the store ot Cris man & Corson,. The Dalles. , . 522tf Building Material. We offer to the buildincr Dublie a full line of building material. We do not resort to trickery to buy or sell any lines handled by us. wm. UUTLER&; jo., dumber Dealers. Sole azents for the 'Oreeon" lime and Oregon sewer and chimney pipe. 5-7dtf -A Pointer. 'I am very much pleased with Cham berlain's Cough Remedy," Bays H. M. Bangs, the druggist at Cbats worth, 111. "During the epidemic of la grippe here it took the lead and was very much bet ter liked than other cough medicines." The grip requires precisely the same treatment as a very severe cola, for which this remedy , is . so efficient. .It will promptly loosen a cold and. relieve the lungs, soon effecting a, permanent cure, while most other - medicines in common use.for colds only give tempor ary relief. 50 cent . bottles for sale by Ulalceley & Houghton, druggists, d&w ICR! ICR! ' ICRI Having oh hand a large supply of ice we are prepared to furnish our custom ers with ice in any quantity at a reason able rate. We guarantee we will supply the demand without advancing prices throughout the season. Leave orders at C. F. Lauer'e store, Second street. 5-2tf . , Uates & Allison. The Dalles, Portland & Astoria ftav. Co. TTT.n. . Until further notice the Regulator will make trips to the Cascades and return on Thursdays and ' Sundays,' leaving me JDaiies at i a. m. excursion - rates. 50 cents for the round trip. ' 5-23tf TVTOTICE. I haveappointed Mr. C. W Xri Dietzel mv aeent, to collect all notes and accounts due and owing to me. ; All those indebted to me will please settle with him. - v Mrs. M.J. Wingate. The Dalles, Or., May 24, 1892.; 5.24dwlw COLUMBIA CANDY FACTORY Campbell BrOs.'Pr6prs . (Successors w K. S.'Cram.) Hanufscturers-of the finest French and . ' Home Made East of Portland. -DEALERS IK- Tropical Fruits, Nuts, Cigars and Tobacco, -Can faralsb. any of tbese goods at Wholesala Or Retail 'Si'i r! ,. f''Si t .; .'" -'' -" rt 'f: t . t- - - ' In Ererjr Style. Ice Cream and Soda Water. 104 Second Street. The Dalles. Or. Ui' F - STEPHENS, DEALER IN v ' L LOTBING - . ' .. Ss. , . , ', :,;; - j y t: ' ' . " - V ' ?-.-.. . .' ' Boots.. Shoes. Hts.t ; "''' ".' !te.,'''a!lc..' 'ktei ' ' 134 Second, St., next to Dalles National Bank, Dalles City, Oregon. . V TTVa iry Kin: 12 Second street, 8NEWJTHIS MEEK ! Webster's Unabridged Dictionary ONLY $1.00 EACH, - E. Jacobsea 8c Go.'s. 162 Second Street. Webster & Oahler Pianos, also Earhnff Organs, . -sold on easy PAUL KR -DEALERS IN- PAINTS. OILS And the Most Complete and the Practical Painters and Paper Sherwin-Williams and J. W. Masary's Paints-used in all our work, and none bat the most skilled workmen employed. Agents for Masury Liquid Paints. Ke chemical combination or soap mixture. A first class article in all colors. All orders promptly attended to. - ...,'.. Store and Faint Shop corner Third and Washington Sts., ' The Dalles, Orego J. O. .WHOLESALE '- Finest; Wines f r - --t Liquor yt Second Street, Frencb.s Block, " SKIBBE o 7, - a .' Z . , i -i.----. - i THEDAlX 7X.T - THE DALLES, OREGON. installments. " . EFT & CO., AND GLASS, a - Latest Patterns and. Deeigns in Hangers. None bnt the best brands of th MACK, AND RETAIL. .1 anr Liquors. -v?i' i The Dalles, Oregon. Dealer