Xhe Dalles Daily Chronicle. FRIDAY, FEB. 12, 1897 TIME CARD FOR TRAVELERS Below is published a correct time card - .-.litis niitl boats which leave and ar- rive at The Dalles. Travelers may trust it as TitK CimoNioiiE is kept fully formed'of revisions : P. V. & A. N. O . STEAMERS. ln simmer Iteculntor leaves every Mondny, W ,. ,,,i uririuv ut 7130 n. in. Vca IltMH'j mi 1 Arrives cvpry Tuesday, Thursday and Sntur day nt &n;u r- "' OKEIiO.N' IIAI1AVAY A: NAVIGATION CO fast mail. Arrive. Lonvc v iVct'b3tind i..-lrt5n.m. 4:50 ii.i No.'i--Knst-bouiHl 10:15 n.m. 10:'J0n.i DALLES I'ASSKNOKR. y0 7Vcst-louwl, leaves l:G0p.m, vn' s Kiist-bmni'l, arrives 11:55 a.m. All pnsicnRcr trains (.top nt Union Street, well as the depot. Ad vcrtlnlnc ItHtes. Per inch One Inch or less In Pally : $1 50 Over two Inches and under four inches 1 00 Over four inches and under twelve Inches. . Over twelve Inches 50 IJAILY AND WEEKLY. One inch or less, per inch ?2 Si Over one inch and under four inches 2 00 Over four Inches and under twelve inches.. 1 5Q Over twelve inches 1 00 WAYSIDE GLEANINGS. lamloni Ohsnrvntioim aiitt Local Events of I.onser Mucuitude. Columbia River smelt at W. A. Kir by's, o cunts per pound. The weather forecast for tonight and tomorrow is snow or rain For sale or trade, an organ. Apply at this office. ' febl2-w Choice- wheat, oat, timothy and hot torn hay for sale" cheap at J. H. Cross' feed and grocery store. Phone 01. lOtf Tiio senate committee .to exnmine the line of the proposed portage road was expected here at noon today, but failed to arrive. The examination of applicants for teachers certificates was completed to day. The names of the successful ones will be given later. M. R. K. Love having arrived from Portland today, there will he a rehearsal for the coming minstrel show at the iSehuniio hall at 7 :30 this evening. Vapor baths and masBage treatment by lime. DeGrey and young lady assist ant. Union Street Lodging House, rooms 0 and 10. febll-2t Bob, the big dun-colored cat belongA ing at tiie Snipes-Kjnf rsly drugstore is! missing. InformatiolHleading to his re-; covery will lift a load! otSoe from the hearts of all connected with the Btore. .. The state senate has discharged all! the clerks, and will wiggle along the: few days it has left, without their assist ance. It would have been the part of economy to have discharged them before they were hired. jT The masquerade tonight promises to be a grand affair, and will be notable from the numerous handsome costumes. Everybody who does not go masked iB going to look on, and it will be a scene well worth seeing. , ' Yesterday's raiu terminated with a sudden drop of the temperature, result ing in a light fall of enow on the sur rounding hills. It was nearly all gone by noon and the day has been one of the finest of the winter. A jury to try Osburn for the robbery of Rothery was aeleotedthia afternoon. The evidence is all circumstantial. It is expected the trial will be completed tomorrow, and the entire panel of jurors discharged for the term. Stock to the amount of $3500 has been subscribed to build a creamery at Cor vallis. ' Yesterday the stockholders met and elected directors, and decided to have work on the erection of a suitable building for the creamery begun at once. Tuesday night two gillnet fishermen destroyed the fishtrap of J. N. Lane, ou the Naeel river, Wash., by cutting it out with brushhooks. The trap was located short distance below Nasel and was constructed strictly in accordance with tho law. Mr. Parkins, the willowy and graceful tonsorlal artUt, shows symptoms of having a desire to know something of the school teaching business, and we have heard it stated he was taking the examination at this meeting of ex aminers. Do not fall to call on Dr. Lannerberg, the eyo specialist, and have your eyes examined free of charge. If you suffer with headache or nervousness you un doubtedly have imperfeot vision that, if corrected, will benefit you for life. Office in the Vogt block. Looked upon from a purely literary standpoint, the communications of Mr. Anderson to the Dufar Dispatch are the best articles on the Salem situation that have appeared in print. M. J. Ander son handles a lead pencil as forcibly as a boar does a roasting ear. Senator Dufur was expected home at noon today, but could not get away from Salem. It was expected also that he would defend Osborne, whose trial be pan on the opening of court this after noon, but as he did not come, Judge Bennett appeared for the defendant. The last of the salinon eggs from Cali fornia have hatched at the Clackamas hatchery, and that institution now shelters about 3,200,000 salmon fry, tax ing its capacity to the utmost. In about five weeks most of the young fish will bj turned loose to shift for themeelves. The football game that was to be played between The Dalles and Albina. a off. One of the reaeons being that the Albina boys want to be guaranteed $39 to pay expenses, and as tho 22d is not generally observed as a holiday, the boys here cuuld not see their way to gut even aud so the game has been called off. "Viv French, Jack Powers and Ed Pat terson went out rabbit hunting' a few days ago, each armed with a mighty 22 rifle, and after traveling half a'duv thnv struck town hungry and witnout a rab bit, just as a country .boy came into town with a wagon load'of them. The boy 'at once found a market for three jack rabbits, and the young nimrods onnli rrnf tinmo rl 1" n . ... vuuriea onyaer, a aecuiiaua on the steamer Ruth, was drowned in the Will amette river at Corvallis yesterday. The Ruth had been loading flour, and in swinging down stream, caught the Gypsy, which was moored near. Sev eral deckhands from the Ruth stepped on board the Gypsy and separated the boats, and in stepping back to the Ruth, Snyder missed his footing and fell into the water. A petition prepared by Register Wil son of the land office at Burns, to the department at Washington, is receiving numerous signatures. It is for a topo graphical and geological survey of a por tion of Oregon extending west from Snake river between the base line and the third Btandard parallel, in the vicin ity of Vale. Within 'this dietrict is a arge scope of mineral country. The Arlington house at Junction City was entirely cousumed by fire Wednes day morning. As the train passed the city at 3:40 a. in., the hotel was in flames. The fire company was laboring in vain againBt it with u weak Btream from one nozzle. Thero were two guests in the hotel and their trunks were gotten out, but nearly all the contents of the building were burned. How the fire started is not known, but it was prob ably of incendiary origin, Perhaps the first black walnut lumber ever manufactured on the Pacific coast from Pacific coast timber was sawed a few days ago a't the mill of H. S. Horton, west of Monroe, says the Corvallis Times. The logs come from old Lancaster, two or three miles from Junction, and the trees were planted while the commonwealth was still in swaddling clothes. The logs were in dimensions from twelve to fif teen inches, and only a few hundred feet of the lumber was made. The fiber is tough and the grain susceptible of the high polish usually seen in walnut furni ture. S. H. Horton, writing to the Corvallis Times, eays that the only survivor of tho four Benton county members of the Oro gon constitutional convention is Hon. H. B. Nichols, who. at a ripe old age, full ol the honor of a well-rounded life, lives quietly on his farm west of Monroo. Mr. Nichols was a member of the constitu tional convention, a member of the last territorial legislature, nnd a member from Benton county of the first state leg islature. He is now almost, if not quite, 80 years of age, and a remarkable fact in this connection is that he reads the fin est print without the nidof spectacles. The hold-up of the legislature pre ented Senator Dufur coming up yes terday, and his not coming homo held up tho trial of Osburn; this hold up the ury one day, preventing them being discharged, and as many of the latter are from Hood River and should bo at tending to their borry patches, that in dustry may be said to have been held up too. Tho holding up of the berry busi ness will make lesB money for the mer chants, who will, therelore, not buy as much in Portland, their business being slack will mako times hauler in Port- and and so eventually it will happen that Simon will havo less plunder, and so he will have achievod the holding of himself up, and that would he the most irtuous yet he could do if he would carry it to a finish. Schilling's Best ten bukinz powder coffee fUvoriiqr extracts .uia and sokes better than good. are 61 For sale by W. E. Kahler SHORT LINE REORGANIZATION Chief Solicitor GoeMo Salt I.nke for tho Closing Formalities. The fact that Zcra Snow, of Portland, chief counsel for tho Oregon Short Line & Utah Northern, went East today on business along the lines of his company, indicates that the work of reorganiza tion iB being pursued. In fact, Mr. Snow himself stated that he was going to attend to the final formalities, though he did not give any intimation ns to when the new officials will assume chareo of the properties. It has all along been asserted that the reorganiza tion would take place on about February 15th. It will probably be somewhat later than that date. It is reasonably certain that Y. II. Bancroft will bo tho manager, and that means that the Union Pacific and Short Line will be operated in a common in terest. Railroad people are wondering what means the reported agreement between the bondholders of the Northern Pacific, Union Pacific and several other roads in connection with O. R. & N. bondholders. Some assert that tho lines between Wallula and Portland will be used for the O. R. & N.. Northern Pflrifie and Great Northern trains, and that the Oregon Railway & Navigation tracke will be kept hot with a largely increased traffic. But no one yet knows anything definite, who will say anything for the information of the public. Mr. Snow has resigned his position as solicitor for the O. R. & N. Co., and has been appointed chief solicitor for the Short Line & Northern. Strike ut RubliiNonvllle. The news was brought to this city last evening, says the Baker Democrat, by a gentleman who came in over the Sumpter Valley Railioad direct from Robineonville that a wonderfully rich ore strike had been made in the Don Juan mine, the property of Kelly & Al len. The Democrat's informnut states that when he left the Don Juan mine on Tuesday the ledge in the crosscut was twelve feet wide and the ore wbb being sacked and would go at least 50 to the sack. From this same mine last week five tons of ore netted thirty-five onces, of gold, or $560. The owners of the Doan Jnan are com paratively poor men and have contended with many hardships in the develop ment of their property, but at last it would seem that a fortune is in wait for them. A Teutler Condolence. Walter Wyland, who was confined in ttie Grant county jail, on a charge of horse stealing, made his escape last Saturday by sawing off the bolts holding the door leading from the jail corridor into the sheriff's office. Wyland had been given the liberty of the corridor on the promise not to make any attempt to escape. The sheriff and a posse took after the escaped prisoner, and about 5 o'clock in the afternoon one of the men caught Wyland and started in with him, hut when the sheriff caught up with them Wyland drew a razor and cut his own throat, but did not succeed in kill ing himself. The reason he gave was that he was ashamed to face the sheriff after having lied to him about not at tempting to escape. Charged With I.urceuy. A man named A. Clemens was arrest ed today charged with larceny. Mr. Haight, who is in from the southern part of the county, owns a house near the fair ground, and being in tho city, thought he would take a look at his property, which ho supposed to be un occupied. He found he was mistaken, for Clemens was in possession, occupy ing the upper Btory. Quite a number of articles were found in the rooms, evi dently brought there by Clemens, and just how he came in possession of them will be one of the things he will be per mitted to explain. Among the articles found were a couple of railroad lanterns, two overcoats and some live chickens. "Thou Shttlt Not." The next of the series of lectures at the Congregational church will be given Tuesday night next, by Judge Lowell of Pendleton, the subject being "Thou Shalt Not." Judge Lowell is one of the ablest speakers in the Northwest, and will furnish plenty of food for thought in his hour's discourse. As we under stand it, there will be but one other lecture to follow, his, which will com plete the series. So far the lectures have all been exceptionally good, and Judge Lowell's will serve to raise the standard still higher. For Bale. . One hundred and sixty acres all plow land ; 130 acres under plow ; good family orchard. Four-room house and good barn; running spring of water. One and one-half miles from Goldendale, Wash. Terms, 2000; one-half down and mortgages for the balance. Apply to George Daren, corner Fifteenth nnd Pentland streets, The Dalles, Or.; or W. T. Darch, Goldendalo, Wash. fbS-lm Ad vertlsoil t.etttr. Following is tho list of lettors remain ing in the postoffico at The Dalles un called for Feb., 12 1S97. Persons call ing for the same will give date on which they were advertised : Bnrch, Jacob Hamilton, Juliet Irvin, Mrs A Johnson, Dolly Johnson, John Thomas, J N Talbort, C H Ward, Emma Woods, Harry Wilson, Arthur J. A. CuosseS, P. M. P EHSOJfAt. MKNTl'n N . Mr. Whealdon camo homo from Port land today. Mr. R. D. Jones, the Dufur mill-man, i9 in tho city. , J. M. Beaeon, tho cattle buyer, is reg istered nt tho Umatilla. Mr. Matt Mosgrove, the energetic trayeling man, is in the city. R. K. Love, who will direct the drill ing for the minMrel show, camo up from Portland at noon today. Mrs. Laura Smith, who has been visiting here for Eeveral weeks, returned to Portland this afternoon. Mayor A. J. Dufur of Dufur is in tho city today, and reports everything quiet and peaceable out that way. Deaincsa Cannot ho Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the car. There is only one way to euro deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed con dition of the mucous lining of tho Eus tachian Tube. When this tube is in flamed yon have a rumbling 6onnd or imperfect henring, nnd when it is en tirely closed, Deafness is the result, and unless tho inflammation can be taken out and this tube restoredfto its normal condition, hearing will bo destroyed for ever; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an in flamed condition of tho mucous sur faces. Wo will give One Hundred Dollars for nny case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. ' Send for circulars ; free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. 0-10 A BAKING UlTUGI.AKY. Hasfjett Dome In I.u Graudo Entered by Xhlevns. L,v Gkakde, Or., Feb. 11. A daring theft, yielding a substantial quantity of plunder to the thieves, was committed in, the Hassett home, adjoining the post office building. Tho articles taken in clude three diamond rings, a set of car rings, a draft for $200, and a $20 green back, all of which belonged to Mrs. Hassett. It is not known exactly when the theft was committed, but tho dis covery that a Email Back, which contained valuables, had been stolen, was made yesterday mornipg. A ban of eecrecy had been placed over the affair in the hope that the officers might discover eome clew that would lead to the arrest of the thieves and the recovery of the property. The loss is estimated at $1000, No trace of tho thieves has been found. THE BEAN AUTOMAllC SPRAY PUMP. Ib, unquestionably, the most success ful and perfect working Spraying Device yet invented. It is a unsversal testimony that more, as well as better, work can bo accom plished with the Bean Spray Pump than with any other pump on the market. With this pump ono man can charge the receptable and leave it to direct tiie spray just where it 1b wanted, and thus with sufficient hose pass from tree to tree. The solution Is delivered in a fine mist or spray, penetrating every nook and cornor, thus doing better and more effective work than is possible by any other method, and with no wusto what eAer of solution. Fnr further narf iniilnra ana ananlal !- cular or call upon or correspond witii. MAIER & BENTON AGENT FOR THE DHLLES, Advertise in The Ciironiclk. : LARGE CONSIGNMENT WILSON HEATERS JUST RECEIVED at Remember. We have strictly First-class FIR, OAK and MAPLE WOOD To sell at LOWEST MARKET RATES Phone 25. JOS. T. PETERS & CO 52l?ooI Boos, Stationery, 4 MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS, t AT Jacobson Book & Music Co. No. 174 Second Streot, New Vogt Block, The Dalles, Oregon. Northern Grown Seeds. Fresh Garden and Grass Seeds in Bulk, Seed Wheat, Seed Bye, Seed Oats. Seed Barlev, Seed Corn, Flax Seed. Alfalfa Seed, Timothv Seed. Bed Clovor Seed, Millet Seed. J. H. GROSS' Feed Goods Sold at Bedrock Prices for Cash Store open from 7 GEORGE RUCH PIONEER GROCER. ' Hucccpxor to Ctirlbinim a cortoti. FULL LINE OF STAPLE and FANCY GROCERIES. Again in business at tho old stand. I would he pleased to see all my former patrons. Free delivury to any part of town, GRAND MASQUE BALL, FRIDAY PT, . msm GIVEN BY JACKSON ENGINE CO., NO. 1, FOB THE BENEFIT COMMITTEES 5 ArranKements: A Sandrock. FWLSkibbe. W II Butte. II Sinnott. Geoue Llebe, Jr. Floor: J 8 Fish. C L Phillins. Walter Klindt. N J Sinnott. Harrv Glcuih. J P Mclnerny, H J Maler, B Saltmarshe, Matt Shoron. Becentlon : M A Moodv. Judae Llebe. F Monetae. W L Bradshaw. Colonel Thompson, Capt Lewis, August Buchler, Ed Williams, A liugueuiue, E C Pease, Cbai Frank, John Blaser, A S Mao Allister. TICKETS, admitting one masker $1.00 1 MAYS & CROWE. Crimson Clover Seed, Blue Grass Seed. White Clovor Seed, Orchard Grass Seed. Beo Supplies. Fertilizers, Oil Meal Cako. Hay. Grain, Feed and Groceries. Early Koeo Potatoes. Poultry and Kgs bought and sold at and Grocery Store. a. in. to 0 p. in. FEB. 12, 1897, OF JOHN CRATE. i' ::