"The nlplator Line" f0 o . o - Those desiring to wear one of the latest New York -etyles.ehoujd call' early as I have bnt h. , limited number of tbero." - ': ; Tis Date, PortM rl Mum Navigation Co. SPECIAL ! ! Gleveland and Jtoison Hats We desire way. The Dalles Daily Chronicle. Wintered a tho Postofflee at The Imllcs, Oregon, as second-class matter. Local A dvertisino;. 10 CenU jct line for first insertion, and 5 Cents per line for each subsequent Insertion. Special rates for ions time notices. All local notices received later than B o'clock ipill appear tuc following day. SATURDAY ATJGUST 20, 1892 lOCAl BUEVITIRH. Depnty county clerk Ed. Martin left by thefRegulator this morning to spend a few days at Collins' landing. Mrs. Theo. Miller is quite dangerously ill at the residence of her son-in-law, Mr. Thos. Kelley, of The Dalles. Tke busy sprinkling wagon is a sort of a squirt, but what would The Dalles be . t i . f is n Ted Marks, an Oregon boy who has made his mark as a theatrical manager, -dined at the Umatilla house today, en route east. The Regulator landing is a great re sort of evenings, and when the uphols tered and cushioned seats are provided for visitors Sam Campbell will be there to pass the ice cream. The East Oregonian reportes the find ing of coal on the Columbia river near Switzlers island. Indications are prome ising of a good supply of this much desired commodity. Umatilla county will export about 3, 000,000 bushels of wheat this season. In the face of this the statement that crops have failed this year in that section would seem unwarranted. The Hope Prospector states that the rain of last week saved much valuable timber from being destroyed by forest fires. These have been, unusually des tructive in that section this year. , Mr. Jack Shephard, the old-time im migration agent of Oregon, at San Fran cisco, is at the Umatilla house. He is no longer locating immigrants, as that occupation has been sapereeeded, by "Oregon on wheels," etc. . . J A mountain of sand, has covered, the planking on the Goldendale road one place this side of Gilmores. r It .makes the road dangerous for; tearaa coming this way, and almost impassable going the other way. A few days scrap- : 1.3 s . UIK WVU1U UM. Ik. ... r ......-.-.....',,.-., .,''.' A party -of our crack! sportsmen were out over the hills a short distance from the city yesterday and succeeded in get- ling five shots, one of which was partic ularly fine. It brought a spring grouse, which, for plumpness was almost equal to a five months turkey. .. .. . . Judge Watkins, accompanied "by his wife, left yesterday by steamer Retmla tor, expecting ' to' spend some" time at 'the borne of Mrs. Watkins' mother in Harttand, v aamngion. . pita. w. is quite feeble, but by the aid of her Tin's- band was able to walk from the carriage to the boat. ' '. .';'.'-- '. -. The racers "Nehalem," "Serrlta," and Mamio 8," and the trotter ."Anetta,' left by steamer Regulator yesterday ,in" charge of Andy Allen and M. E. Welch, Accompanied by riders and grooms, pre 'pared to make the circuit for which they are booked, which includes City View", Salem, Independence,- Walla Walla, La' 3ran3 and Baker City. When they re turn to The Dalles, which will be" lij tlme for the fair hero, commencing October 11th, other favorite horses are expected to accompany them. to call your attention to our Dress Goods, consisting of . ' Outing Flannels ...14 yards for flJOO Ohallies:...... ......20 yards for 1.00 Swandowns 8 yards for 1 .00 Chevalier Cloth ..." ..6 yards for 1.0(f Bedford Cords 8 yards for 1.00 Satines Black 6 yards for 1.00 Dress Ginghams. .. ...10 yards for. 1.00. Nainsooks 8 yards for 1.00 We have marked all of these at prices to sell them as we need the room for our immense Fall Stock now on the PEASE & MAYS. Mr. Bert Phelps is actively engaged in organizing a base ball nine to play at Giants on the 26th. In parts of Garfield county where threshing has been done, barley has yielded from 15 to 60 bushels per acre, while the yield of wheat has been from 12 to 25 bushels. This will leave quite a surplus for export, notwithstanding the predited failure of crops made some weeks since. Mr. Hugh Glenn, the only member of the Elks living in The Dalles, left by steamer Regulator yesterday to attend the great clam bake of the B. 1'. O.. E. at Clatsop on the 21st. II is hoped that ho will return with a charter in his pocket to organize ' the Elks in The Dalies, where there Js an abundance of good material. The Stamford, Conn. Advocate, of the 11th, commenting upon things in The Chronicle says : "Charles E. Haight, a former Stamford gentleman, conducts a restaurent in that enterprising city and is a member of the city council. We find by the proceedings of a meeting of the city council that Mr. Haight has been empowered to take action relative to the impounding of cattle running at large in the city, especially cows with bells on them. The problems with which the municipial - government of The Dalles has to wrestle are somewhat different from those which confront the Stamford borough board. One of them appear in a petition which is given be low ;" then follows Judge Watkins ap peal to the council, in full. So the Judge can see by this that his very readable article is abroad in the land upon its mission among dyspeptics. . A DENONSTBATIOIT AT GKA.NT9. A lay to toe Deeorated With Festivity, followed by a Grand Hall. Grants, one of the Dalles young and thrifty neighbors on the east, has set apart Friday next as a day for general jollity, and reunion. The Dalles and Goldendale picked nines' will meet on the diamond field to contest for a prize. The barbecue of two oxen, by one of the best caterers in the country, with condi ments and earves, will,, furnisb.a. .free dinner to all at one o'clock p. m. Speeches will be made by Editor John Michell, Hon. W. E. unbar of Golden dale, and J. B. Hosford. esq., of Moro. Various amusements will-intersperse tbe afternoon programme, including a grand musical festival by members of the Gol dendale and Dalles brass, bands. The invitation;;' which: is public, says : "The citizens of Grant extend an invitation to the ladies and gentlemen -. of Wasco, Sherman and Klickitat counties to their grand barbecue and ball on the above date. Thia' entertainment, given by the citizens of : Grant; will be one of the most enjoyable events ever held in the county. No expense" will - be spared ' to : make everybody happy. ; Come one, come all Bring your wives and little ones and your; fee.st girl VYou are all welcome Reduced rates will . be given by the Union Pacific to Grant for the festival. Don't forget it-rFriday, August 26, 1892, Walter M- Fraine, President of the day I .. . : ... : . . JBakex County Squirrel Hunt. ' Democrat. . Polecats -are - becoming disagreeably numerous in the city and tbe trace they leave behind them is even more; obhoxioris than the smell emitted from- the. basement of tbe.IIotol War shauer under the most favorable condi tions of the weather and the .olfactories of those who are compelled to endure the nuisance. 'sale of Summer STOPPED THE SHIPMENT. Some People 3ieTer- Learn Anything. Notably a Soulless Monopoly. As a matter of fact, tbe steamer Reg ulator is appreciated here in The Dalles, better than in some other portions of the Inland Empire. The man . of busi ness would be considered too slow for anything, here ; not to realize the dif ference between prices now, and prices before the Regulator started. Every dealer tributary, and every farmer, should realize these facts equally as well. There are some, this year in The Dalles, who have become converted to a realizing sense of the situation- persons who have involuntarily surrendered, heretofore persons whom the railway company have presumed . that they owned, body and soul; because, as ship pers, they never questioned the methods as others questioned them. The policy of punishing shippers, who may have broken away from the old regime, by sidetracking cars destined to them from the N. P. R., or by holding back unjust advances, or bona fide rebates, for from six to twelve or eighteen months, did its work effectually. There are men in business in The Dalles who would ship perishable goods around Cape Horn if necessary, rather than let theU. P. R. Co., have one pound of their freight. J. H. Shearer would let his wool rot in the warehouses before he would give the U. P. R. Co., a pound of it to ship. They lost by him alone this year, a cool fifteen thousand dollars. He is sending his wool direct to Boston by the all water route this year.'. But alPthis does not appear to have taught the management of the U. P..R. anything. . .They are this week duplicating the very same ac tion that drove Mr. Shearer from them, and the party to this transaction is a shipper whose patronage is equally as valuable to a transportation-company as that of Mr. Shearer. This gentleman started in to ship by the .Regulator, this week, goods to be delivered in ' Portland to the Merchants Steamship Co., for the Canadian -Pacific at Vancouver-; B. C. The first; lot.left all right, then the U. P. R. Co. hatched up charges, and specifi cations, and issued writs, and served pa pers, and played thunder in general. They have stopped this shippers ship ments this year, probably, as ho would have it r bat how about the next; and the next? The Regulator has fixed, the rates, and it is the duty of the publio to stay by the Regulator. y ' : "' v - Chnrch Notices. - Congregational church services in the court house1 Sunday a. m. at 11 o'clock ; Sunday school at 12 :15 ; Young Peoples Society of Christian Endeavor at 6 p. m. All cordially invited. . Union services at the court house Sun- day evening at 8 o'clock. -- Preaching by Rev. W. C. Curtis pastor of the congre gational church.' " ; ' The M. E. Sunday school will bold its session on Snnday, at 12 :20, at camp meeting grounds. It is hoped there will be a . full attendance of teachers-and scholars. . . J-; , r -V ' " KDCCATIONAL. - Wo Independent Academy, The Xlal- The next session of Wasco Independ ent Academy will commence on Monday, Sept. 5thv r'A Full facolty pf instructors has been secured with professor. Brown of Chicago Illinois, as principal. For catalogue or particular?, addreaa,. S. L Brooke, Secretary. . THROTJG-H Freig&t anapasssngerLinB Through dally service (Sundays ex cepted) between The Dalles and Port land, 'leaving -The Dalles at 6 a. m., arriving at Portland 5 p: m. ... PASSENGER KATES. One way : . . $2.00 Round trip. : . ... . .. . ...... 3.00 Special rates for parties of sir or over. Freight Rates Greatly Reduced. FAST FREIGHT. Fruit, per 100 pounds Melons and Green Vegetables. .40 .30 Through connection with steamers to Astoria and Ilwaco without delay. Shipments received at wharf any time, day or night, and delivered at Portland m arrival. Live stock shipments solicited. Call on or address. W. C. ALLAWAY, , General Agent B. F. LAUGH LIN, General Manager.' THE DALLES, - OREGON - Home Made Grain Sacks. The East Oregonian agrees with. The Chkoniole, that at the next- session of the Oreron oseembly : measures should be adopted by which the. state convicts may be put to work making grain bags, as is now done by tbe convicts in oar sister state Washington. "Thus . could convict labor be utilized without in - the least injuring the toiler outside of prison walls as is alleged by. those who look narrowly at such matters. . And. then further by their manufacturing grain bags, the farmers would be benefited by being able to buy - bags cheaper than formerly, and an Oregon product as well ; and in addition the convicts would be come useful, members of the industrial army,learning that which would be of service to them after their prison life was ended. A man who by the exercise of his energies produces more - than, he . uses is a useful member of society, no matter if he is a convict, , while one who con sumes more than he produces is a bur den and a dead weight to progress, no matter if be is a millionaire. The Press Association. Portland Chronicle. The Oregon Press Association will meet at The. Dalles on the 26th. of September. Preparations have been completed for making it one of the most interesting assemblages of the editors ever held in the state. Sup-, erintendent Mit iheli of tho Portland Ex position, has set Saturday, September 24th, as Press Day at the Exposition. This date has been set so that members from other parts of the state can attend the Press Day gathering and -the con vention at The Dalles on the same jour ney. The session will be held two days and about 130 members are expected to be present It is arranged that a large number of the delegates to the Wash ington assembly, which meets at Spo kane that week, will try and visit their Oregon brethren, and the compliment will be returned by a number of The Dalles delegates. : POOD AND DAIRY COMMISSION. Two Kssentlals for a Baking; Powder That Will Make Perfect Bread. The late report of the Minnesota State Food and Dairy Uommiseion contains the result of a series of experiments made by Prof. p.-W-Drew ..state, pbem-I ist, to determine tne strengtn ana Keep ing qualities of the -various baking pow ders. .The report attaches great .importance. to these experiments. 4 Baking, powders that vary in strength, or that readily lose strength before use, are unreliableTsettie up, as they have sold their stable and will not give even results ; besides, it is an indication of the use of improper ingredients in their compounding. The tests showqd the strength or. leavening power of the Royal very much greater J -Parlies desiring advertising space on than that of theothers. ThenniformityTtne.8Prink,er 'wagon , mayhaye it by of strength of all the .samples . of Royal tested, no matter what their age, was very remarkable. Its leavening power was practically, unimpaired even in the oldest specimens. The difference in the . . . . . . amount of leavening gaa 'in different samples of the otberlbrands was so great as to -seriously t: impair-their usefulness in baking. As much as 24 per cent; loss was found in samples a few months ago. All the samples of Royal examined bv State Chemi8t tDrev were .reported- of satisfactory strength and quality. . - Dr. Drew elates that the "Royal" be ing of greater strength than any other. and possessing better keeping qualities, it is tke natural conclusion that it-is the! beat baking powder made. JOHJ-I C 100 SECOND STREET, PAUL KREFT & CO -DEALERS IN- PAINTS, OILS - And the Most Complete- and the .BfiPTractical Painters and Paper Hangers. None but the beet brands of the-Sherwin-Williams and J. W. Masury's Paints need in aU'our work, and none bat1' the roost skilled workmen employed. Agents for Masary Liquid Paints. N 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 Bailee, Oregon second Stoneman & Fiege, dealers in Boots and Shoes. All goods we sell, we warrant. - Press Association Meeting. ' Heppner Record.. The , Oregon Press association will meet some time in next month at The Dalles. The meeting will doubtless be made a source of pleasure and should be made a source of- benefit, but if the meeting is conducted as they have been heretofore we fail, to see where the benefit comes in, and they had just as well not meet at all except for pleas ure. Hears, Berries,. Etc. . . Prineville News. Bears and black berries and picknickers are thick in the Cascades. ' Last week near one of the Prineville camps they got too thick and the ladies left the berries to the tender mercies of the bear, which ferocious ani,- mal "howled too fearfully awful." When the men came in from hunting they repaired to the scene and found the threatening tones to emanate from the tops of two trees that were being chafed together by the wind. A Bard Corner. The age . of SO is a hard corner for a woman to turn, and 35 is still harder. She feels that she is fast leaving her youth behind her. But there is no rea son why a woman should be faded and paste at 35, or even 45. The chief cause of the early fading of American "women is found in the fact that many of them suffer from some form of female weak ness or disease that robs the lace of its bloom, draws dark circles about the eyes, brings early wrinkles and sallow- ne6S, and stamps tho face and figure with signs of ill-health; Dr. Prices Fa vorite Prescription will cure all these troubles, will bring back the lost bloom, and remove the pains and ailments which make women- grow old before their time.' Guaranteed to give satis faction in every case, or price ($1.00) re funded. ' To The Public. I have no hesitancy in recommending Chamberlain's Colic,- --Cholera and Diarrheas Remedy to tho public, as I do to my friends- ond patron. r I .need -it myself after other well-known remedies had failed, and-it cured mc ire a few minutes, i I recommend it candidly and cheerfully- upon ittnerits,- -not- from a financial stand-pedn tf because .. I - have others in Btock'omwhich I make a larger Erofit, but because Chamberlain's is the est remedv I know-of for bowel com- Diaints. t There -is no i doubt; about it.-it does the work James Fohgv, Drnggist, Mcveytown, Penn. or . sale ty Blakeley & Houghton, druggists.. : d&w 1 ; ' ' - -. Notice, .Those knowing thenieeives; indebted to Ward and Kerns will please call and business to Burham and Robertson and must have all outstanding accounts set- J. od Notice. applying to S. E. Febbisv Stock Holders Meeting;. Notice is hereby given that the annual moAtinc ni the . stnrithaldera of thn I Wasco Warehouse company -will be held i Ai a; z T,-" v. . r- m t. T 1 1 at the office of French & Co.. The Dalles. Oregon, on Wednesday September2Sth, 1892, at 3-:30-pi m., for . the purpose of electine directors for -the ensuing rear and the transaction of such.oth?f basi- The Dalles, Oregon, Aug. 12th, 1892.r" G. J. Fablkyv ' Secretary W800 Warehouse Co. wtas.iz ''-. ; - .- City taxes fQrrl8J2 .are: now due and payable within sixty days, at - the office of tne undersigned. , -.-. . ' . , ; L RoBDBWj City. Treasurer. Dalles Uity, July 6th, isw. HERTZ, THE DALLES. OREGON. AND GLASS, Latest Patterns and Designs in . stuhett. The Old Times are Mot In It. .. . While at our other store at Big Island, Va., last April, I was taken with a very : severe attack of diarrhoea. J never had ' it worse in my life. I tried several old time remedies, such as Blackberry Wine, Paregoric and Laudanum without get' ting any relief. My attention was then called to Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy by Mr. R. C. Tinsley who had been handling it there, and in less ih&n five minutes after tak ing a small dose I was entirely relieved. O. G. Bpbfokd, Harris Creek, Amherst Co., Va. For sale by Blakeley & Houghton, druggists. " d&w A rare opportunity for the ladies is now afforded by Mrs. Philips, who is of fering millinery at one third less, as she : has decided to retire from the business. ' See advertisement. 6.18dtf Washington Market For Kent. For rent; the Washington market cor ner of Second and Court. . For terms ap ply to Geo. Williams administrator of the estate of John Michelbaugh. 8.3dtf Saved a Woman's Life. Mr. J. E. Thoroughgood. writine from. Georeetown. Delaware, savs: "Two tea- spoonfnlB of Chamberlain's Colic. Uholera and Diarrhoea Remedv saved the life of Mrs. Jane Thomas, of this place." He also states that several other very bad cases of bowel complaint there have been cured by this remedy.; For sale by- Blakeley & Houghton, druggists. d&w PHOTOGRAPHER. Instantaneous Portraits. ' Chapman Block, The Dalles, Oregon. COLUMBIA i- i. CANDY FACTORY fTamnho i Krne : Prnnr ( i. tiUiESSVlii lu n.-a. nasi.;- - : f !. ' ilanufsetorera of the finest French and i Home Hade - O ZLST 3D I IB S v East ol Portland. TropK Can furnish any of tnose goods at Wnotesala or Retail- - . In Krery Style A '." :'..?' -' : . inR i.rRriiTi rfTin Anna-namrs 104 Second Street, The Dalles, Or.. C. P. STEPHENS, . . DEALER IN (Clothing - "jBootsi Snoes, Hats, Btc. ., i-f ;. 134 Second.Stw. next to .Dales at$oal Bank, Dalles City,. Oregon.. '- Dry Goods