The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, January 05, 1893, Image 3

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    "The Regulator Line"
Tie Dalles, Portland aid Astoria.
Navigation Co.
- - Mess Variety as3 Assortiaent of
Dolls, Toys, Books, Albums, Pianos, Qr-
Vlusicsl Instruments.
i i si
S J (3
oooooooo
o o o o o o o
lo our patrons and friends we thank you for past favors
and trust you will all have a prosperous- and Happy New
Year.
PEASE
&
THROUGH
FreigMFasseipLiiie
Through daily service (Sundays ex
cepted) between The Dalles and Port
land. Steamer Regulator leaves The
Dalles at 7 a. m. connecting at Cascade
Locks with steamer Dalles City.
Steamer Dalles City leaves Portland
(Yamhill street dock) at 6 a. m. con
necting with steamer Regulator for The
Dalles.
PASSENCBI.
One way.
Kouna trip.....
ATFS.
....$2.00
.... 3.00
Freight Rates Greatly Reduced.
Shipments received at wharf any time,
day or night, and delivered at Portland
on arrival. Live stock shipments
solicited. Call on or address.
W. C. ALLAWAY,
Goueral Agent.
B. F. LAUGHLIN, '
General Manager.
THE DALLES.
OREGON
LOOK
AT OUR OFFER
. .. .
Tnis Webster's Die-'
tionary, only $1.00!
Where can yon do
; letter?
L-v:':!v!l-.T-o;'-..;A-,1"1-'?-.,,TiV:v-W. V-
5' &.:iw'hT
oooooooo
I
A full line of
12-Io. BOOKS,
Mill -in clotl
lilt. Over 200
to select from,
at 25c per voL
o o o o o o o
OUR PRICES ARE BELOW ALL COMPETITION".
We Have Made
Sweeping Reductions.
Call and examine
our stock of
holiday presents
: AT
E.JACOBS EN
Weatlier Forecast
cial forecast for twenty-four hottrt ending at
n. tomorrow:
jhursday, Friday, fair. Stationary
perature. "ague.
s Dalles Daily Chronicle.
red a the Postnfflce at The Dalles, Oregon,
as second-class mutter.
URSDAY
JAN. 5, 1893
LOCAL ISKKTITIKS.
jlr. H. C. Rooper of Antelope is in
city.
. O. Warner of Nansene, is in the
m.,
ot clam broth today, after 4 p
t O. Macks. '
o to Joles Bros, for the celebratad
fner batter only 75 cents per roll'.
he Firemen of the city are going to
their annual masquerade ball on
fitli of February.
Ne were glad to eee Mr. Geo. P.
egan out on the tramp yesterday en-
ng the bright sunshine.
Sr. C. E. Bayard special agent of the
K. Land department, left for Ashland
other day to be absent on official
ies connected with that section, three
hks.
randall & Burget are now settled in
ir new store in the Michelbach brick
Union street, next door to Floyd &
bwn's. CV11 arcAind.
lies Margfifrte Mc7alty received a
ch prized remembrance from a cousin
Dublin, on Christmas day. It is a
'J? of a plant grbwinz over the srrav
yarn ell.
you can carpet your rooms at about
lir own price by calling on Crandall &
rget. at the new store on Union
fcet.
What fools we mortals be" is well
strated in the Columbian souvenir
f dollars that thousands are paying
ollar for. They are not half so pretty
the regular.
rhere was floating ice in the Colum-
last week so as to stop steamboat
Ivigation between Vancouver and The
lies. Boats ran between Portland
J Astoria..
Mr James Kelly of ,Wapinitia, is in
a city. He says that his neighborhood
n glee over tne recent lall of snow,
are all ready to welcome another.
Vilar installment.
Carpets and furniture at reduced rates
Crandall & Burget's, next door to
byd & Shown's drug store. .
It is with pain we chronicle the. death
Mr. Chas. Berget of Trout Lake
m lung fever. But five weeks since
. .berget led Miss Mate Lage of Hood
ver to the altar. The young wife is
bstrated by the blow that has left her
vidow so early in life. . . . .
A. new industry is developing at Yaki-
h, that of stock-feeding. During the
bnth of November alone 78 cars of
Xtle, about 1,700 bead, were- shipped
there to be held for a month or six
eks for fattening upon alfalfa. They
Bthen reshipped to the sound markets.
jhe D. P. and A. IT. company made a
jod beginning on the enlargement of
jeir wharf yesterday. It is to be five
at higher than formerly, making it
Jsven feet, six inches above low water
ark- When completed it will have a
lptg capacity for about 10,000 Backs of
iCat, besides room enough to acoom-
Hdate all other freight requiring sWr
a room.
E
In the county court this morning
Judge Blakeley heard the final account
of H. C. Rooper, administrator of the
estate of W. C. Tarleton, deceased.
This estate has been in the probate
court for nearly three years.
"Columbian stamps" are now for sale
in all denominations. If one could
afford to buy the whole set and frame
them as a souvenir it would make a
good Columbian biography. Perhaps
they will be cheaper next January, as
they have but one year to live.
The weekly meeting of the small and
early dancing club was well attended
last evening. The first part of the eve
ning is given to lessons in dancing, and
after that, dancing for the remaining
part of the evening. Mia Mason is a
competent instructor and is having good
success with her classes.
The following sentiment, compliment
ary to The Dalles entertainers, is from
the Portland
of the Oregon
passsngers of
weather bo
treatment
liypatcn: "inememDers
ess Association envv the
Union Pacific who were
d at The Dalles. The
corned tne editors last
Boaid of Equalization Concludes Work.
The State Board of Equalization rec
ommend that the legislature change the
assessment law so as to abolish the
present five-mill school tax, now re
quired of the county conrts to be levied,
and enact a. clause for a pro rata, ac
cording to the number of echool children
of school -ajje in the county. This is a
wise recommendation, and will no doubt
be readily endorsed by the taxpayers
throughout the state. They also ask
that the indebtedness clause be stricken
out, and that the mortgnge tax law be
repealed.
The result of the board's work is seen
in the following table :
' -Equulizution. .
county.
Class of Property . '..-., , boards.
City and town lots. . . . . . .'142,054,788
Mortgages, deeds ot trust
and con tracts 22,675,571
Railroad lands . 1,050,224
Wagon road lands 1,011,995
kwamp lands. 57.D71
Agricultural and other
lands ; 61,555,021 '
Rail road track 6,025,749
Telegraph lines : 110,194
worses ana uimes o,ah,o.-m
. . . . . 4,OZ3,76U
State
board.
52,20,S12
32,799,058
1,155,245
1,113.194
63,708
if
October had left very warm spot in
their hearts and inothing would make
them happier thanVto be snowed in at.
that beautiful city."
Last night the Union Whist club held
its usual Wednesday evening meeting,
being entertained by Judge and Mrs.
Bradshaw. The evening passed very
pleasantly at whist. The scores ran
high ; Mrs. W. H. Wilson carrvine off
the first prize with a score of twenty-six
points ahead. Mr. W. Lord captured
be booby after an exciting contest witl
a score of twenty-two points below zen
The house occupied by Frank lluot,
on Mr. J. H. Sherar's 8-Mile ranch, was
destroyed by fire last night. Mr. and
Mrs. Huot were absent, on a visit to
Portland, and the place was in charge of
their son Frank, who havr hp retirpri
about 9 :30 last night, and was awakened ,
soon after by the approach of the flamesl
The house and contents were wholltj
consumed. Mr. Huot's loss is much
more than the loss of the building
which it is understood Mr. Sherar in
tended removing for a new structure in.
the spring. (
Chris Cunningham, who is in a posi
tion to know what he is talking about,
ays that all the spring lambs in Idaho
ave been contracted for at $2.50 per
head, to be delivered next spring, and
sheep which will then be two-year-old
are under contract for delivery at $3 per
head. These figures do not indicate any
depression in the. sheep-growing indus
try. " In Umatilla county the condition
of affairs is the same. Grown sheep are
worth from $3.50 upwards, and lambs
command ' a proportionately high price.
N. B. Larmour, an active miner of
Gilliam county, has located a coal dis
covery on Camas creek, between Camas
prairie and North Fork, which he is con
fident will prove a big thing. He said
nothing about what he had found for a
time, but quietly sacked fifteen or
twenty pounds of the black-looking rock
and took it to Portland. It was there
analyzed, and pronounced, anthracite
coal. Mr, Larimore hurried back and
located two sections of land, claims being
taken by himself and seven Portland
parties; He says that the substance
seems unlimited in extent. There is an
immense vein, thirty 'feet thick, and
croppings can be traced for a distance of
2,000 feet. Other parties have seen it
but paid no' attention to it. The find
will be developed as soon as favorable
weather permits.
Cattle
sheep and goats .-. .
Swine
Improvements .
Merchandise and
ments .
Railroad rolling stock
Grand total. . . ,
2,19S,2:iC
... 216,157
lb,454,S76
imple-
- 725,900
67,710,517
5,528,323
127,810
5,183,656
4,668,915
2,4:is,494
308,413
19,2S5,547
16,315,644
798,495
. . .' $195,604,768 $226,108,695
No changes were made in the assess
ment of money, notes, accounts, shares
jof stock, household furniture, pleasure
carriages, watches, etc.
Cold Waves.
A St. Petersburg dispatch says : At
Olmsk the thermometer has fallen fifty
six deg. below zero, the lowest point yet
recorded.
At Woodsville, N. H., yesterday morn
ing the mercury registered eighteen deg.
below zero, and at the Fabian bouse it
as twenty-eight -deg. below.
Tuesday night wag the coldest of the
eaeon at Barre, Vt., being thirty-two
deg. below zero.
An Ottawa dispatch of the 4th says:
This morning the thermometer regis
tered thirty-one deg. below zero. At
Pembrook forty deg. below were reg
istered.' . ; ;
our
JWonthly meteorological Report.
Weather bureau, department of agriculture.
Station, The Dallea, Oregon, for the month of
December, 1892. .
latitude 45 36' IS". Longitude 121 V2'W' west.
Altitude 116 feet above sea level.
igO HKS 51
' 1 2"g
1 : " ? S
1 . ; .". 35 41 29 ..
2 41 48 34 -.12
3 39 46 33 .02
4 : '42- 47 37 .13
5 47 28
6 . ..... 37 41 84
7 ... 38 40 36
8 38 40 K6
9 .- 41 4.8 3 V
10... 36 39 82
11 37 39 ' 36
12. - 39 48 30 .09
13 '. .... 38 46 ' SO
14 ; 42 52 31
15 46 52 41
16 32 38 26
17... 36 38 33
18 28 32 25
19 80 34 25 .24
20... 11 20 02
21 25 29 21 .72
22 ..." 19 21 17 1.00
23 19' 22 16 .42
24..... 20 24 15 .26
25 25 34 16 .12
26 35 40 30 1.56
27 -. 36 39 32
28 37 42 32 .34
29 89 45 33 .01
30 30 38 28
31 44 52 85 .01
Sums 1053 1222 877 I 5.01
Means 33.8 39.4 28.3
Mean barometer 30.022; highest barometer
30.598 (date 16th); lowest barometer 29.373 (date
24th.
Mean temperature 33.8; highest temperature,
52 on 11th, 15th and 31st; lowest temperature, 02,
on 20th.
Greatest daily range of temperature, 21 on 14th.
Least daily range of temperature, 3 on lltb.
X BAN TEMPERATURE FOR THIS MONTH IN
1873... 1878.... 84.5 1883. .. .81.0 1888 ... .37.0
1874 1879 20.4 1884 20.5 18S9 31.2
1875 46.5 1880 29.0 1885 38.0 1890 37.2
1876 87.6 1881 37.6 1886 38.6 1891 ... .36.7
1877 36.0 1882 35.6 1887 37.0 1892
1878. 1.61 1883.... 1.77 1888.... 2.71
1879... 2.57 18h4... 7 04 1889 2.00
1880 6.75 1885 2.64 1890 1.19
1881.... 1.76 18S6....5.06 1891 4.14
1882.. ..5.11 1887 8.01 1892....
ion -during month,
The country at large as well as
state and section owes much of its ma
terial prosperity to Building and Loan
Associations. Every Building and Loan
Association honestly conducted is a ben
efit. We regret to see the disposition of
some associations to vilify and abuse
their rivals. Agents of corporations
struggling for business have published
derogatory reports affecting companies
seeking to secure business. We have
yet failed to eee any good result to an
agent or his company from such publi
cation. We recall various such items.
one of which in particular affected the
standing of one of the most solid insti
tutions that Oregon can boast of. We
refer to the New England National
Building and Loan and Investment As
sociation of Portland, Oregon, which is
a corporation whose unparalleled record
has excited the bitter envy of its rivals.
It is a fact that the New England is on a
firm and prosperous footing. That it is
honestly and skillfully managed. That
during the last sixty days it has- sold
over three hundred thousand dollars
worth of stock a large proportion of
which was bought for investment. That
the New England has daring this period
added to its assets over twenty thousand
dollars in first mortgages. This corpor
ation publishes the following invitation.
"Books always open to the inspection of
those interested.1 This is only one of
the indications of its probity and fair
ness, bat is on a line with the openness
of its record.
Total deficiency In temperature during the
month, 1.0
Total excess In temperature since January 1st,
.07.
Prevailing direction of wind, changeable. '
Total precipitation, 5.04; number of days on
which .01 inch or more of precipitation fell,
fourteen. ,
TOTAL PRECIPITATION FOB TniS MONTH IN
1873
1874
1875.... 4. 80
1876 0.46
1877.... 1.58
Total excess in precipitati'
for lb Years. 1.75 inches.
Total deficiency in precipitation since January
1st, 3.28 for 18 years.
Number of cloudless days. 10: oartlv cloud v
days, 2; Cloudy days 19. - .
Thiftv two and one-half Inches of snowfall
during month. Crimson aurora in northwest
sky at 7 p. m. on the 4th. A beautiful lunar
cerona on night of the 30tb.
Barometer reduced to sea level. T indicates
trace of precipitation.
SSAMU tU Lu BKUOKS,
Voluntary Signal Corps Observer.
A Million Friends.
A friend in need is a friend indeed,
and not less than one million people
have found just such a friend in Dr.
King's New Discovery for Consumption,
Coughs, and Colds. If you have never
used this Great Cough Medicine, one
trial will convince you that it has
wonderful curative powers in all
diseases of Throat, Chest and Lungs.
Each bottle is guaranteed to do all that
is claimed or money will be refunded.
Trial bottles free at Snipes & Kinersly's
drug store. Large bottles 50c and $1.00.
Xleservlng; Praise. '
We desire to say to our citizens, that
for years we have been selling Dr.
King's New Discovery for Consumption,
Dr. King's New Life Pills, Bucklen's
Arnica Salve and Electric Bitters, and
have never handled remedies that sell as
well, or that have given such universal
satisfaction. We do not hesitate to
guarantee them every time, as we stand
ready to refund the purchase price, if
satisfactory results do not follow their
use. There remedies have won their
great popularity purely on their merits.
Snipes & Kinersly's druggists.
Messrs. Chris Dethman and D. A.
Turner of Hood River are in the -city.
We beg to acknowledge receipt of a call
The Dalles Markets.
Thursday, Jan. 5. 1893. Trade for the
past week has been very quiet, partly
owing to the weather and partly to the
stringency in money. A general com
plaint is made about the closeness of
the financial condition of the country.
The call on brokers for money to make
payment on forfeited railroad lands,
which is limited to the third of Febru
ary next has quite exhausted the surplus
in the hands of those who- loan through
agents, this is a reason for less business
among our dealers. Prices have not
changed unless it be in sugars, which
have declined in San . Francisco and
Portland recently. Other staples con
tinues to move on old prices. '
Produce is in good supply, except eggs,
which continue scarce and prices remain
steady. Potatoes are being held for bet
ter prices by farmers, and the result is,
large shipments have been made from
west of the mountains, and prices are
without change in quotations.
The wheat market has hardened and
from recent foreign and eastern advices,
the markets are firmer and present an
encouraging outlook for better prices in
the early 'spring. Valley wheat has ad
vanced two cents per bushel, at Salem
and Albany. At Portland quotations
remain steady, with a better feeling for
movement for export. Dalles market is
quiet and former quotations remain
steady with hardly any transactions . at
the warehouses or mills.
Married.
We're not waiting for the bats and
moles, but .for men and women who
have eyes and use them, who "have
brains and reascU ! There's a new world
for them suffering and sickly as they
are a new world created from the brain
of a skillfal physician a discovery the
"Golden Medical Discovery."
Years ago Dr. Pierce found out that
the seeret of scrofula, bronchial, throat
and lung trouble lay in the beginning
at least in impure blood and the weak
tone of the system ; that the way to cure
these effects was to remove the cause,
that, human nature being the eame, the
same results might be looked for in nearly
all cases. So confident was he that the
exceptions were uncommonthat he took
the risk of giving the medicine to those
it didn't benefit for nothing, and the re
sults have proved that he was right.
At the residence of the bride's parents.
at Hood River, the 4th inst. by Rev. J.
W. Kigby, Mis9 Octavia Johnson to
Samuel McDonald.
Spectacle! Lost.
The finder of a pair of gold framed eye
glasses, will be suitably rewarded on
leaving the same at tnis omce.
Lost.
A gold . watch charm with a small
piece of chain attached,, between J. P.
Mclnernv and Leslie Butlers. A re
asonable reward will be paid for return
of same to Maier & Bentons.
And "Golden Medical Discovery" is
the remedy for the million 1 The only
guaranteed Liver, Blood and Lung rem
edy. Your money back if it doesn't
help you. .
For Sale Cheap.
A city lot with two houses and out
honpes, all inclosed bv fence. Inquire
at this office. dtf-12.12
For Kent.
The only 3-story, fire-proof brick
building in the city. For further par
ticulars inquire of Tom Kelly, at The
Umatilla house.
NOTItlK.
All Dalles Citv warrants registered
prior to May 1, 1891, will be paid if
presented at my office. Interest ceases
From and after this date.
Dated, Jan. 3d, 1893.
L. RORDES,
tf. Treas. Dalles City.
PHOTOGRAPHER.
First premium at. the Wasco county
fair for best portraits and views.
WE HAVE THEM!
Allthe Latest Novelties for the Holidays,
. ' CONSISTING OF : '.
NECKWEAR, .
MUFFLERS,
HANDKERCHIEFS,
SUSPENDERS,
, GLOVES, ETC.
JOHN C. H ERT,
109 SECOND STREET,
THE DALLES. OREGON.
THE EUROPEAN HOUSE.
The Corrugated linlldlug; next Door, to Court Douse.
Handsomely Fnrnisliea . Rooms to Rent by tie Day, feeler Monti.
Meals Prepared by a First Class English Cook.
. TRANSIENT PATRONAGE SOLICITED.
Good Sample Rooms for Commercial Men. " .
JWfS. H. pHflLSEt, Pvopv.