The Dalles Daily Chronicle. Kntered a the Postoffice at The Dalles, as second-class matter. Oregon, Clubbing. List. Regular Our price price Cnronitle tni 5. T. TribMe, . 7. . Chronicle ui Aaericat Farmer, . . . . Chroiirle ud SeClnre'i Maaiine, . . . Ctronirle nl Cowopolitu Sasaiite,. ..S2.aU ..'18.00 . . S3.0d .. S3.0 .. $2.50 SI. 75 $1.75 $2.25 $125 $2.00 Chresiele ud Prairi Frmer, Chicago. Chroni-le and Glol)-De-io-rat,(i--r)St.Loa'n 3.00 2.00 oeal AdTertialnff. 10 Cents pea: line for first inseruon, and 6 Cents per line for each subsequent insertion. special rates tor long nine uuura. All local notices received later than S o'clock rill appear the following day. WEDNESDAY, - JAN. 24, 1894 The Daily and Weekly Chronicle may be found on sale at I. C. Nickelten's store. JANUARY JOTTINGS. Minor Events Which Pertain to City and. Country. The womenfolk are like to book-, Most pleasing to the eye, Whereon if anybody looks He feels disposed to buy. Eugeno Field. Tin weather bureau forecast for today and tomorrow is fair and colder. Sheriff Ward is : scouring over the county summoning jurors for the Feb ruary term of court. Last night was the coldest for the season. The minimum thermometer read 16 degrees above zero. A call has been made for the meeting of the republican state central commit tee at Portland, on Wednesday, ibe 31et of this month. A flat car ran off the track near the Umatilla House this morning, but after considerable engineering ' and a few 'cuss" words, it was replaced. "Indian Joe" is trying for a pension on his past record as a guide for the sol diers. He is quite old and crippled, and is a well-known figure on the streets. There is no soup house in The Dalles yet, though if these hard times continue there is no telling how soon there will be one. Its existence depends upon the passage of the Wilson bill. The dancing party at Wingate hall last night was a very pleasurable event, though there were not a great many in attendance. The music was said to be the finest ever had, and the floor in per fect condition. D. M. Ferry's Eeed annual for 1894 has been received, with a choice collection of seeds. We notice, on perusing the annual, many new and valuable varie ties of flowers, fruits and vegetables. Everyone can get the annual by sending for it to D. M. Ferry & Co., Detroit, Mich. Edward Woods was adjudged insane today before the county court, upon the testimony of Dr. Hollister, and he will be sent to the asylum tonight. He was found yesterday standing up. -to his arm pits in the water near the county poor farm. He fancies parties are after him to hang him and prefers death by drowning. The 21 mills tax is composed of 4.3 state. 5 echool and 11.7 county. The county levy, if all the taxes can be col lected, will amount to $40,000. The ex pense of the county for the year is about $30,000 and $10,000 is allowed for del in quents. If it proves to be a less sum than that it will lessen the county in debtedness by that amount. The county indebtedness is about $70,000. Charley Dall was the prosecuting wit ness in the Skibbe case yesterday. He iB a worthless vagabond, and if all ac counts are true, deserves a worse drub bing than he got. He endeavored to make trouble between man and wife, when, as is almost always the case, they both made it warm for him. A man of more brains than this tramp, whom Mr. Skibbe fed for charity's sake, would not try to alienate marital ties, even if he had more foundation for his tales than this man Dall. NEWS OF THE STATE. Lake Labish is under water again, the first' time for several years. Nearly the whole area that was reclaimed by ditch' ing is now completely flooded, and boats may be paddled over every part of it. John Hoffman was Bhot by Neil Camp bell while the former was stealing chickens out of his coop. The wound is '. dangerous the weapon used being a shot gun, loaded with buckshot and fired at close range, the charge taking effect in the breast and right shoulder blade, Hoffman is in a dangerous condition. Rev. T. M. McConnell, an evangelist recently held services in the penitentiary at Salem. After the sermon the preacher called on those who had accepted Jesus as their Savior to manifest themselves to which about a dozen uplifted hands responded, and twenty more signified . they were anxious to repent. The gen tleman will hold 'other meetings at the -prison. ; ' . - ; Winter Fuel. We still have a large supply of Hard Wood, including Oak. Ash, Maple and Crab Apple, all dry and suitable for family use to be sold cheap. January, 1894. - - Jos. T. Pbtees & Co ROA'cftSws" of "Oregon: Recent Legislation Blade for Counties of 10,000 Population. "7 ' At the present time there is a great deal of discussion in regard to the roads, not only iu Multnomah county, but in various sections ot the state. The ques tion of the best ways and means of im proving the county roads is being very generally agitated. " . . - The road laws of Oregon place the supervision of county, roads under the county court, but a provision is attached that in counties of over 10,000 inhabi tants or more, the court may appoint a roadmaster to carry out the road work and it can also prescribe his salary. Another section has a proviso "that in counties having a roadmaster, the money shall be expended under his supervision, and no road shall hereafter be located until a report as to the advis ability or practicability of such proposed road is first made and filed by such road master." Sectiod 10 of an act passed at the last session of the legislature "for the laying out or improving county roads, and the levying of assessment upon adjacent lands benefitted, to create a fund to pay the same;" reads as follows : "All work on said improvement shall be done un der the supervision of the roadmaster of the county or other competent person of the county appointed by the county court. Before entering on the duties of his trust, he shall take an oath to honestly, faithfully and impartially discharge the duties of. such trust, and shall execute a bond payable to the state of Oregon for the use of the parties interested therein, in the sum of $3,000, which bond must be approved by the county court or county judge. ; Suit may be brought on such bond by any person or corporation aggrieved. The superintendent shall re quire that all material used in making such improvements be good and suitable for the purpose for which it iB used, and that all work on such improvement shall be done in a workmanlike manner, and shall conform to the requirements of the plans and specifications for such im provement adopted by the county court." It Always Succeeds. The greater effectiveness of newspaper over sign or object advertising was lor- ibly shown yesterday afternoon". Mrs. E. M. Wiison lost a very valuable watch, to the chain of which was attached a coin of the old beaver denomination, dated 1849, when Oregon was a terri tory. Mr. Hans Hensen came into The Chronicle office to insert an advertise ment, having found the watch and be ing desirous of returning it to its owner, He had just been to the Times-Mount aineer office, where he ordered a similar advertisement inserted. . Previous to this Mr. Fred Wilson had inserted a lost notice for the same watch, and which was already in type when Mr. Hansen arrived. Consequently, the editor knew to whom it belonged and bo advised Mr. Hansen, who then left to return it to the proper owner. Mr. Hansen had the watch on exhi bition a whole day in. the postoffice, but it escaped the observation of both Mrs Wilson and her son. No belter proof is needed as to the superiority of news paper advertising over other kinds. Signs on fences, lithographs on the sides of buildings, colored squares of tin on telegraph poles command little re spect, whereas the same advertisement in a newspaper would impress the reader with its value. It is worth ad vertising or it would not pay. - - . - PERSONAL MENTION. Mr. A. S. Roberts. of Fairfield, is in Xne .Dalles today. Mr. James Burlingame and T, Ed mundson, of Wamic, are in town. Fruitgrowers' Meeting. The regular monthly meeting of the Wasco county fruitgrowers will be held at the city hall at 2 o'clock Saturday. The meeting should be well attended At this time a delegation will be chosen to attend the meeting of the Northwest fruitgrowers to be held at Spokane in February. At this meeting the very im portant question will be considered of dealing with the transportation compa nies with 'the view of fruitgrowers real izing more handsomely from their prod nets than has been the rule in the last two years. The experience of last season with the Earl company was very disas trous, as after paying all charges noth ing was left, often indeed a deficit. The persistent cough which usuallv follows an attack of the grip can be per manently cured by taking Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. " Mr. W. A. McGuire, of McKay, Ohio, says: "La Grippe left me with a severe cough. After using sev eral different medicines without relief, I tried Chamberlain's Cough Remedy which effected a permanent cure. I have also found it to be without an equal for children when troubled with colds or croup.' "Fifty-cent bottles for sale by Blakely & Houghton, druggists. . Bneklen'a Arinca Salve. " The best salve in tne world for cuts bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains. corns, and all skin eruptions, and posi tively cures piles, or no pay required It ia guaranteed to give perfect satisfac tion, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by Snipes & Kin ersly. . Wedding Anniversary. The sixteenth anniversary of the mar riage of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Hobson was celebrated last evening by a party at their home. Whist was the order of the evening, supplemented - with a dainty supper4 to which the guests did ample justice. The host and hostess were agreeably surprised at finding them selves the recipients of -some exquisite Chinaware, comprising plates, cups and saucers and a salad set of thirteen pieces, all imported goods and very handeome. All present enjoyed themselves in a manner befitting an event of this kind, and the lapse of time, denoted by six teen like anniversaries, was bridged for the evening by the unassumed merri ment which was general. " Those pres ent were : Mr. and Mrs, E. C. Pease, Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Bradahaw, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. C. Blakeley, Mr. and Mrs. W. Lord, Mr. and Mrs. S. P. M. Briggs, Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Houghton, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Wilson, Mr., and . Mrs. Jos. T. Peters, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Hilton, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. CrosBen, Mr. and Mrs. H. Glenn, Mrs. H. M. Beall. Julternry-Note. The February Overland Monthly is to be a Northwestern number, almost ex-H clusively made up of articles, stories, poems and sketches, relating to Oregon and Washington. These are profusely illustrated by a great variety of pictures of the most beautiful points in these two states. ... ' '- This has not been done by any great effort on the Overland's part, but sim ply by giving preference in selecting manuscripts for the number to its regu lar Northwestern contributors. Among them are Frances Fuller Victor, Ella Beecber Gittings, Ella Higginson, Her bert Bashford, S. A. Clark, Rose Sim mons, Carrie Blake Morgan, Frank C. Teck, J. C. Nattrass, and other writers well-known to Overland readers and to the Northwest as well. It emphasizes the fact that the Overland is the maga zine of the whole west coast. DIED. Edward Wettle, the 8-year-old son of Jacob Wettle, died at 2 o'clock today from peritonitis, very suddenly. - The little fellow had been ill for only two days, his abdomen swelling, proba bly from the result of some internal in jury, of which his parents did not know, They are almost, distracted over the con: tinned troubles which have . followed their children for the past two years but which heretofore have not resulted fatally. It is hoped that now they will have a cessation of these accidents, as they have already had more than their share. - AN ELASTIC CONSCIENCE. The Sin of It Lay Only In Being Found Out With Her. The penalty" attendant upon being detected is the entire foundation of many people's honesty. . A woman, says a writer in the New York Recorder, in whose . company I found myself re cently; was relating with pride an in stance of her shrewdness. She re marked as a preface to her story that anyone wlx expected to get the better of her would have to be an early riser, Said she: "I went to the theater the other night and after the play - a lady who sat in front of me asked me if the umbrella under her chair belonged to me. "I said no, and as no one else claimed it she left it at the box office. It was a lovely umbrella with a silver handle. "Well, now the joke be-fins. About a, week later I went to the theater and asked if such an article had been found and if they had it. I described it per fectly and told when it was lost. didn't say it was mine, but just let them infer it. It was there still; the owner had never called for it proba bly never knew where it had been left. They handed it out when I had an swered all their questions, and I'm that much in. "I had just as g-ood a right to it as the theater people, and it looked, after a week, as if the woman who found it wasn't going to put in a claim. I'm going to get a hat with the money 1 saved by being wide awake, for I in tended to buy a new umbrella." Arabian Saddles. . Some of the oldest equine habits which horsemen ever imagined are to be found in lands ' abutting on the home of the Arabian, but where he himself is not to be found; though, in deed, the Arab himself has enough of oddities. . The Kurds ride a tree cov ered with plaited straw, quite flat and padded with blankets. . This they never remove from their horses, ex cept occasionally to dry it out. The horse is kept saddled day and night, summer and - winter. This seems in credible, but " is literally true. In Turkestan the horse, under his saddle, is covered with the Biblical number of blankets, seven, which '. he likewise wears at all times, and which are sup posed to sweat him out and keep him in condition. - -- - - His Business, Exactly. It was on a quiet street in Washing ton, and the only sound that broke the stillness was the cry of an old colored man who was peddling bivalves from a push-cart. His noise evidently dis turbed ' somebody, for a window opened and a woman thrust out her head to say: "Dear me! what a great clamor!" :.The man stopped his cart, took off his hat and said, with a bow: "Thanky, lady, thanky! Dat's what is. . I's - de : greatest clammer in de whole Districk of Columbia!" . Furnished rooms to let. Mrs. Rine hart, head of Laughlin street. Leave your orders for chliken tamala 10 cts. each, at the Columbia Packing Co. WftAT CIDER IS MADE OF. A Glance at' the Raw Material In a Con. nectiout Mill. -. - -"Them's good cider, apples," said the cider miller. '"Ain't not h in' the mat ter with them." "But they are windfalls for the most part," said a New York Times corre-: spondent,. "all -knotty and dried up. Miserable things!" - 'Make tiptop cider, them " apples will," persisted the miller. 'But I00U at the" rotten ones. Half of the apples that I can see are touched with decay, while a crreat many of them are rotten from skin to skin. Look at that," said the correspondent, poking his cane into one of the apples, i "Ihere isn't a sound spot in it" ! 'That don't hurt 'em none for cider," answered the miller. "Makes the cider all the better, some folks says." How about the wormy apples? Are 1 they fit to make into cider?" J The miller had talked long enough, ' and so one of the hangers-on about the place volunteered a reply. --.'- "Uuess you wasn t ever into a eider mill 'fore to-day, was ye? If you had been I reckon, ; you wouldn't ask no questions about worms. Worms don't hurt cider none." The correspondent looked incredu lous. : ... "Don't you b'lieve it? Well, I tell ye what t' do. When you go home to night, just try an experiment. Wait till it's dark, an' then take two apples an go down in t' the cellar an' see if you kin tell the difference 'twixt the one with a worm into it an' t'other one." -. , "What do you mean? Why do you tell me to go down into the cellar?" "Why, thab-'s the most darkish place bout the house, ain't it? Don't take no light with ye." . "l!ut how am I to examine the apples in the dark? of course, I shouldn't know which was which Just by feeling of them." 'Thunder'n lightning You didn't s'pose I wanted ye t' go down there an' set round a-feeliq' of the apples, did ye? That wa'n't what. I meant. What I meant was this: You jest .take a wormy apple an' a sound - one an' go down int' the cellar an' eat 'em, an' I'll bet ye a shillin' you won't know when you eat the worm." The correspondent shuddered. "Don't that, prove it?" ran on the man. "Course it does. We put the worms right int' the grater, 'long with the rest. . How many of 'em they is we don't know. All we know is that they all turn into cider; an, the man ain't livin' that kin tell when he's drink in' the cider what part's apple juice an' what part's worm Juiced 'Then, ag'm, we couldn't do no dif- Frent if we tried. We - couldn't send every wormy apple to a hospital and doctor it with 'vermifuge till we'd killed off the live stock. No, sir, the worms has to go, an they'll keep on goin', I s'pose, till one of them cruelty to animxle fellers shuts down on it an makes us 'gree to dose the worms with chloryf orm 'fore we grind 'em up." Look Over Your County Warrants. All county warrants registered prior to January" 16th, 1890, will be paid if presented at my office, corner of Third and Washington streets. Interest ceases oh and after this date. , Wm. Michell, Treasurer Wasco County. October 21st, 1893. tf City Warrnts. ' All those holding city warrants of date prior to September 1st, 1891, will be paid on presentation at my office. Interest on same ceases after this date. .. :, -' I. I. Bcegkt, City Treasurer. The Dalles, Or., Jan. 8, 1894. TXT ANTED Pushing Canvassers of good ad TT dress. Liberal salary and expenses paid weekly; Permanent position. BROWN BEOS. CO., Nurserymen, Portland, Oregon. j- luwuawp ... Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat ent business conducted for Moderate Fees. Our Office is Opposite U.S. Patent office and we can secure patent in less tune Loan those remote from Washington. Send model, drawing or photo.. With descrip tion w arivisA. if natent&ble or not. free ox charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured, a diubiii w-r "How to Obtain Patents," with cost of same in the U. S. and foreign countries sent tree. Address, c.A.sriow&co. Opp. Patent Office, Washington, D. C. Suits for Boys Suits for Boys Suits for Boys -ALSO- Youths' Knee Pants - Suits Juat arrived from the maker. , IS PTOH Honyvill. lonpil Tlie People Bemand Ca-ood. We ' always - believe that the People want 'GOOD Quality of any kind of goods, either - and we intend to always keep Our Stock in , .. exclusion of any of the trashy stuff. We do - .-. not care to quote prices in our advertisement, but we invite Everybody to call and examine the QUALITX.of our Goods, and then judge whether or not Our Prices are Right. We always put prices as LOW as it is possible to ;. - S KTJIv GOOD G'OODS Our Stock is always complete, and we invite you to Call and inspect both our stock and our.priceB, knowing they will please you. Joles, Collins & Co., Successorslo The Dalles Mercantile Co. tie Bala nee OF nter TO Wi Dry . Closed Out " ' V AT - A' Great r- We especially offer Dress Goods,. Jackets, UncLerwear, Blankets, Clottiing, Boots " " . , and. Shoes :-'.-- ; ' TERMS STRICTLY CRSH. - . ". by Buying your Hay, Giain; Groceries, Fruits, Grass and Low down for Cash, or in exchange for such Produce as we can use. - Oasb paid for Sggs and All goods delivered promdtly without expense. At Old Corner," Seoond and Union Sts., , THE DALLES, OR. . Harry Liebe, PRACTICAL All work promptly attended to, and warranted. Can be found at Jacobsen's Music Btore, tlo. 162 . second btreet. Dress Taii7, Cutting y" . and Fitting, : By IrsIeGuff ey, At Residence recently vacated : by Mr. Leslie Butler. - - SHERIFF'S SALE; Notice Is hereby given that by vlrtne of an ex ecution Issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Wasco County, in a suit therein pending wherein W. A. Miller is plain tiff and K. P. Reynolds is defendant, to me di rected, and commanding me to Bell the real property hereinafter described, to satisfy the sum of $290.00 and interest thereon at the rate of eight per cent per annum from September 22, 1893, and the -sum of 12,400.00 and interest thereon at the rate of eight per cent per annum from the 20th day of March, 1893, and the further sum of 1300.00 attorneys fees, and the further sum of $22.00 costs, adjudged to the plaintitt' and against the defendant in said suit, I will on the the 3rd day of February, 1894, at the hour of 2 o'clock p. m.. at the front door of the Countv Court House in Dalles City. Ore gon, sell at public sale to the highest bidder, for cash in hand, all of the following described real properly, 10-wit: xne sou to. nan or me soum west auarter. the northeast Quarter of the south west quarter, and the southwest quarter of the southwest quarter of Section 28, Township 1 North, Range 13 East, V. M., containing 1G0 acres, and the north half of the northeast quar ter, the northeast quarter of the northwest quar ter and the southeast quarter of the northeast quarter of Section 83, Township 1 North, Range 13 East, W. M., containing 160 acres, to satisfy said sums and accruing coats. - T. A. Ward, .... d30wtd Sheriff of Wasco County. O-oods. or The Dalles, Or. OCR BE Great Bargains in . . ABE NO W.HEBE- peed Float, Provisions, G-arden Seeds, etc., ultry. J.H.CROSS. THE Oldest flgpiGultararPapep in flmefiea Essa ESTABLISHED 1819.1 To all cash subscribers of Thk Chbonicle- - - paying one year in advance. Thp ArnpriYsiTi formpr iuv muviiuii i uiuiU) 1729 New York Avenue, WASHINGTON, D. C. The American Farmer, which is now enter ing upon its 75th year, is the pioneer farmer's paper in the country. - It is a large eight-page paper, and contains 66 columns of the choicest agricultural and liter ary matter, plentifully embellished with flne illustrations. It ia NATIONAL IN CHARACTER, . and deals with farming and farmer's interests on broad, practical lines, jt - . . . . EMPLOYS THE BEST WRITERS IN THE COUNTRY, and everything that appears in its columns is ot the highest character. Every department of the farmers business is discussed In an earnest, practical way, looking to the greatest proflt and benefit to the farmer and his family. It appears on the 1st and 15th of each month, and is furnished at the low price of . ' . mflfHTO 1 vrD in advance. . This mokes It the cheapest agricultural paper in the country. , " FARMER LEGISLATION. During the coming year there will be an im mense number of matters of the moat vital in terest to farmers dealt with by Congress and the Executive Departments at Washington. It is highly important that the farmers be kept promptly and fully informed as to what is beinir Slanned and done affecting them at the National apt taL They should all, therefore,-take Thk Akkrican Fabmrr, which, being on the ground, has better facilities than any other papers for getting this information, ana devotes itself to this duty. They will And in it constantlv a can get in no other paper. Thk American Farmer and The Chronicle will be sent one year for 21.75. Goods Sacrifice