-,-.. Just Received ! me. -A FULL LINE OF-GENTS' Tie Dalles, ftrtlani aiiilstoria ' Navigation Co., ; HOSIERY, .-:-UNDERWEAR, O.VERS H I RTS, E1W. COLLARS and and CUFFS. JQHH G HERTZ, The Re ... 1 j 1 uaiorL them. The Dalles Daily Chronicle. Entered a the Postofflce at The Dalles, Oregon . as second -class matter. Local Advertising. 10 Cents per line for first insertion, and S Cents per line for each subsequent insertion. Special rates for long time notices. All local notices received later than S o'clock will appear the following day. WEDNESDAY SEPT. 21, 1892 LOCAL BREVITIES. Win. B. Thune, of Mitchell, is in the city today. . - - ' Mr. Tracy, representing the Vancou ver nurseries, is in the city. Hon. F. A. McDonald and wife, of Seattle, are visiting in The Dalles. S. P. Haines of Buffalo, and Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Stockwell, of New York, are at the Umatilla. Mr. W. E. Garreston is visiting with the family of Hon. Peter Pacquet, at Oregon City. It is in again today. Page 7, col. 5, Oregonian. Keep your eye on Hand bury, until Nov. 15, 1892. J. G. Julien, and Mrs. W. P. Morris, of Hay creek, and Mr. N. Froeber, of Wasco, are in the city. Scandinavian Lutheran ' services will be held by Rev. A. Dol.ven tomorrow at 3 p. m. at the Lutheran chapel on Ninth street. The amoutit of moisture in The Dalles the past few days was not sufficient to check the rounds of the sprinkling wagon." Judge Blakeley and wife are still in Portland, also Justice Schutz, taking in the Sovereign Grand lodge of Odd Fellows. Hon. C. W. Cartwright arrived in the city last evening from Hay Creek. His imported Bheep reached their destina tion in fine condition. J. W. Gilman of Fossil, is in the city. Mr. Gilman is a member of the famous Gilman & French Stock company, known all over the Inland Empire. Rev. A. C. Spencer writes to Leslie Butler that be is nicely located as pastor of the M. E. church at Salamanca, N. Y., and is well pleased. Wheat is king at the East End this week. A long string of teams at the warehouses, awaiting their turn to un load, is a fine subject for a picture. Mr. Malcolm Maclnnes, assistant sec retary of the agricultural society, may be found at the office of Wm. Butler & Co., corner of Second and Jefferson streets, The Dalles. An advertisement fcr proposals for disinterring the reinains'of twenty-six soldiers at Fort Colville, filled the space of the ad. for bids on the Cascade canal in the Oregonian yesterday. Francis Conlin and . Elizabeth Agnes Lyman, have permission of the state authority to become linked in the bans nf m&trimnnv liponoa t li o f nflfonf li i tt. ing been issued by the county clerk. Another offender was locked ' up by Deputy U. S. Marshal Jameson last night for selling liquor to Indians. He Utah, a member of the Juvenile Tem ple. Collector Taylor of Astoria has filed -b. ' libel against the'steamer Wilmington on account of the 400 cans of opium captured on uoaiu. . iuc wuu --. was iouna among the cargo, end was without,stamp8 .or marks, and was not manifested, - TO THE LADIES: " . We now have our fall line of Dry Goods, - ' ' - " ' ".: -: ' Cloaks, and Furnishing Goods open, and wej ' '.cordially invite you to our store to examine PEASE & Frost was so distinctly . traceable in the East End this morning that cats', tracks were noticed. . There mnst have been frost all about us. The mercury stood at 41 minimum. But we had a royal sunrise and a delightful day. - Col. J. B. Yeagley, of Coos county, now in the city, is .a gentleman well posted on the political issues of the day, and he will tie heard from, prob ably, in Wasco county, before he re turns to Coos. It has been found that the town of Spokane is built on gold. Perhaps this is why the citizens have been getting in and digging. Can't some benefactor get in and discover a gold mine under The Danes. Who says Astoria has not reached a high state of civilization? Her trage dies are the most startling and original on record. She blew up a sawmill on the departure of the Sovereign Grand i.oage lor t lavel last Saturday. Mr. E. C. Pentland takes charge of the editorial columns of the West Side, at Independence this week. We are glad to hear this, as Mr. Pentland is a thorough newspaper man all round, and will bring the West Side up to its former standard of excellence. . The cannery at Seufert's is again run ning to its full capacity putting up salmon. The crew which operated Pillar Rock during the summer are em ployed. Mr. Haveley, and his crew which operated the Seufert cannery during the summer, have been trans ferred to Seattle, for the cannery of Hon. Geo. T. Myers. The controversy which Cass, our faith ful Cascade Locks correspondent has stirred up about the block house, and the Indian' massacre of March 2Gth, 1856 (not February a? given in the Ore gonian,) will receive due attention, and the history of that stirring scene will be straight, for the first time, perhaps, since the fight; through an article in the columns of Thr Chronicle. Mr. R.'W. Baxter, general superin tendent of the Union Pacific, has just returned from a trip over all the lines of this division. He says the xmtlook generally throughout the country he visited is very good, and he thinks there is more wheat this year than ever be fore. In some places where it was thought the crop would be a total loss it yielded 20 bushels per acre, and a great deal of wheat which it was supposed would be shriveled is turning out very good. Newspapers are sometimes employed in fiction as the medium of some start ling bit of intelligence to one of the personages of the story, but truth is sometimes stranger. The father of Johnny King, while in A. M. Williams & Co.'s store last night, received through a newspaper the first intelligence of his boy for five years, .whom he has mourn ed as dead. The boy, who is now living near Kansas City, Mo., did not write home during his long absence, and. the sad news awaits him of the death of bis mother and a sister. In speaking of oysters, and where the finest are grown, Sam Campbell says that at Lynn Haven bay, Virginia, there grows an oyster that is supposed to be the finest in the world, but that the bed is owned by four families who hold the entire product for their own use, except that every Thanksgiving day, a bushel of the luscious bivalves are sent' to the president of the -United States. So if any oyster lovers in The ' Dalles desires to feast on these famous oysters it will become necessary to "either marry into one of those four F. F. V- or -else - be come president! " ,- - MAYS. 0( The Wool Shipped. Seeing the last of his 550,000 pounds of wool safely shipped on board the American ship lillie E. Starbuck, for Boston, by the all-water route from The Dalles, which includes the steamers Regulator and Dalles City, Mr. J. H. Shearer and wife left for home last evening. They expect to leave for the east in time to see the wool arrive in Boston. This has been a very import ant matter for The Dalles. It is the closing of a season of unprecedented in terest in the wool traffic of the Inland Empire, and as the shipments of Mr. Shearer by the Starbuck will go to the credit of the wool producers of the In land Empire, it will add another laurel to the wreath that places The Dalles in the very front rank of most desirable markets in, the United States for pur chasing the best grade of fleeces.. The First Steamboat. , It may be interesting in these days to note that the first steamboat to make a landing at The Dalles, was the James P. Flint, built by the Bradfords in 1851, and at least one of the crew is still a resident of The Dalles. He was master of the steamer Mary in 1856, at the time Wright and Steptoe were taken to the Cascades to drive off the Indians after the famous massacre of March 26th.. The James P. Flint made her landing at the mouth of Mill creek, with but a few Indians on the bank to greet her. ' Oar District Fair. We are pleased to observe that farmers generally are preparing for the coming fair in The Dalles . October 11th. Mr. Malcolm Mclnnes, assistant secretary, is prepared to answer all inquiries need ed by intending exhibitors. Let ns all join in making the fair a decided suc C388. It was put off from September to October purposely, to meet the period of leisure on the farm. ' Weather Forecasts. San Fbancibco, Sept. 21. Fair : partly cloudy and cooler weather. Light frosts may be expected in ex posed places. ' ' MAKB1KD. In this city, Tuesday, Sept. 20th. at the residence of Hon. E. N. Chandler, by Justice J. C. Clark, Miss Adelia C. Freeman and Mr. Ephriam Pitman, all of Wasco county. Charming people, these exceptional people! Here's a medicine Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, for instance, and it's cured hundreds, thousands that're known, thousands tbat're un known, and yet your's is an exceptional case!" Do you think 'that that bit of human nature which you call "I" is different from the other parcels of hu man nature? "But you don't know my case." Good friend, in ninety-nine out of a hundred cases, the causes are the same Impure blood and r that's why "Golden Medical Discovery" cures ninety-nine out of every hundred. You may be the exception. And you may not. But would you rather be the ex ception or would you , rather be well? If you're the exception it costs you nothing, you get your money back but suppose it cures you? ' Let the "Golden Medical Discovery" take the risk. , v i - Stove 'Wanted. A good cook stove. State size and price. Address, Stove, P. O. Box, 381, The Dalles. - 9.20dtfwlt THROUGH- Freigni ana Passenoer Line Through daily service (Sundays ex cepted) between -The Dalles and Port land, leaving The Dalles at 6 a. m., arriving at Portl and 5 p. m . . . .. "t" V VASSEJTOEU KATES., .. ' .- ' jDne way.-.-. . . . : ... . .1 .'$2.00 Round trip. ..... . ...". . . . . . 3.00 Special rates for parties of six or over. Freight Rates Greatly Reduced, FAST FBIIOBT. - Fruit, per 100 pounds. . . . ..... . . . j .; .30 Melons and Green Vegetables. .' .30 . Through connection with steamers to Astoria and Ilwaco without delay. Shipments received at wharf any time, day or night, and delivered at Portland in " arrival. . Live" stock shipments solicited. Call on or address. - - W.'C.ALLAWAY," ' General Agent. B. F. LAUGHLIN, ' . - General Manager. THE DALLES. - . OREGON AT THE EXPENSE OP TRUTH. The Kind of Songs That Tighten The Grip on Bunch Grass Land. We do not reproduce the following as a literary curiosity, nor because it is particularly interesting, nor that it con tains the merit of truth, but as a speci men of "Home Amusement" which acts as a boomerang, in this : that in its re coil it hits the sender. The Chronicle last week showed that, certain eastern capitalists had peremptorily "eat down upon" further loans of money upon real estate securities in Wasco, and adjacent counties, for no other reason whatever than the published reports of last June concerning crop failures in the Inland Empire. Reports that may possibly have been justified, at the time, but which should have been corrected later on, when the evidences showed conclu sively that the crop would be up to the average with the exception of a few is olated cases. - In spite of all reports to the contrary, more wheat, and that, of finer quality than any previous year in history of farming operations in Eastern Oregon, is finding its way to market, and on the U. P. R. line from 100 to 125 car loads daily reach .Portland. Barley and rye are eqcally as good as wheat; oats may be a little off, and the same may be said of potatoes in some localities, but not generally. So to sum it all tip bunch grass land people have nothing to complain of this year ; in wool, wheat, rye,, barley, fruits and vegetables, the world over are invited to a comparrison. But to the funny business. This pome purports to have been written by some webfoot,"who "strayed away up to Weston," and with "four brothers "of us" was having a good dinner, lots of fun, and a family, reunion at the home of his sister. "This country is not so dry as Morrow county," says this sprig of literary genius. "I am at work driv ing header wagon. I heard a faint voice from Morrow county singing a song this morning, and as he sang very slow, I wrote it down and send you a copy for the Gazette:" A BCNCHOBABS LAND LIE. (Tune Beulah Land.) We're in a land of drouth and heat Where nothing grows for man to eat. The winds .ihat blow with burning heat O'er all this land, are hard to beat. . CHORUS. O, bunchgrass land, Poor bunchgrass land, As in its burning soil we stand And look away across the plains And wonder why it never rains. But Gabriel calls with trumpet sound And says, "The rain has passed around." 4 The farmers go into -their corn, And there tbev stand and look around : They look and then they are so shocked To find the ehoot has missed the stock. We have no wheat, we have no oats, We have no corn to feed our shoats ; Our chickens are too poor to eat, And pigs go squealing through the street. Our horses are the broncho race, Starvation stares them in the face. . We do not live, we only stay -And are too poor to get away. - A Little Better Than Expected. The bureau weather report from Port land yesterday admits a proposition in words like this -concerning Eastern Oregon crops : "It seems that grain generally is turning out'va little better than expected." "In portions of Marion and Malheur counties," continues the report for Eastern Oregon, "the first and second crops of hay have been very bonntifuJ,-!jHr than for five yeari past." Thanks, awfully. :; . - : 109 SECOND ' STREET, PAU L KRE -DEALERS IN- rAl IN 1 b, vJ 1 Lo - And the Most Complete and the - aV riovuuii f Bimeni auu jraper xiaugera.. - iwue uuii mo ueet orsnas 01 LIlo Sherwin-Williams and J. W. Masury's Paints used in all oar work, and none but the most skilled workmen employed. Agents for Masury Liquid Paints. No chemical combination or soap mixture. .- A first class article in all colors. ' All orders promptly attended to. .. . - ' . Store and Paint STlnn nnrnnr Third vnr1 Wnnhinpr.nn Rfa.. '- ThA T)a11na. Droirnn ry ! 1 Ti r . i t T AMERICAN SCHOOL. 0 Stoneman & Fiege, dealers in Boots and Shoes. AH goods .. we sell, we warrant. 114 seookt: BEST IN -' - Committees on Entertainment. The committee on entertainment for the coming annual meeting of the Ore gon Press association in The Dalles Octo ber 4th, have designated the following sub-committees: . '17 On Music Mrs. Geo. P. Morgan, Mrs. C. J. Crandall, Mrs.' J. M. Patterson and Mrs. John Michell. - - On Russian Tea Mrs. J. M". Patterson, Mrs. ueo. iJIakeley, Mrs. .Dr. Kinenart, HUBS Jang. c On Flowers Mrs.' A. P.' Brooks, - Mrs. Hn?h Gonrlav. Misses Fraser-:Srooks. Rose Michell, Kate Craig, Grace Miehell. For sale or trade at a bargain a hotel of 28 rooms in Albina, doing a good busi ness. . No saloon connected. Near the shops with good paying boarders. ' Reas ons for selling other business. - Address. Hepner a Menefee, No. 521 Delay St.. Albina, Ore. . 9.17dl0t. NOTICE. To All Whom 11 May Concern: By order of the Common Council of Dalles Citr. made and. entered on the 3d dav of Sentem ber, 1892, notice is hereby given that said City Council Is about to proceed to order and make me improvements in Bireers in cam oiy, as Here inafter stated, and that the cost of such im provements, and each of them respectively, will be levied upon the property adjacent thereto; and said improvements, and each of them, will be made, unless within fourteen days of the final publication of this notice, the owners of two thirds of the property adjacent to some or all of the streets abont to be improved shall file their remonstrances against such Improvements, as by charter provided. The improvements contemplated and about to be made are as follows, to-wit: 1. To improve Third street in said city.bv building a sidewalk eight feet wide on the north side thereof, from Washington street to Monroe Btreet. 2. To improve Fourth street In said city by building a sidewalk six- feet wide on the north Bide thereof, from Court street to Jefferson street. - 3. No improve Fifth street in said city by building a sidewalk six feet wide on the north side thereof, from Union street to Washinirton street. 4. To imm-ove Fifth s'reet in suld cltv bv building a sidewalk six feet wide on the south side thereof, from Union street to Washington street. 5. To Improve n asnington street in said cltv by building a sidewalk eight feet wide on the west tide thereof, from Third street to Sixth street. 6. To improve Federal street in said city bv building a sidewalk ten feet wido on the west Bide there i, from the alley between second and third streets to Third street. 7. To improve Federal street in said citv bv building a sidewalk eight feet wide on the east side thereof, jrom lhird street- to rourth Btreet. 8. To lmirove Laughlin street in Boid citv bv building arsidewulk ten feet w ide on the -west siae tnereoi, irom second srrcec to 'iniru street, and a sidewalk eight feet wido on the west side thereof, from Third street 10 Fourth street. 9- To improve Laughlin street in said city by building a sidewalk ten feet wide on the east side thereof, from second street to Third street and a sidewalk eight feet wide on the east side thereof, from Third street to Fourth street. 10. To im Drove Jefferson street in said citv by building a sidewalk ten feet wide on the west side thereof, from Second street to Third street, and a sidewalk eight feet wide on the west side thereof irom Third street to rourtn street. 11. To imorove Madison street in said citv bv building a sidewalk ten feet wide on the west side thereof, from First street to Third street. 12. To improve Madi&on Btreet in said city by building a sidewalk ten feet wide on the east side thereof, from Second street to Third street. All of said sidewalks will be built, constructed and erected in accordance wiih the provisions of an ordinance to define and establish the width and manner of buildinc sidewalks in Xallee City, being Ordinance No. 108, which passed tbe common council oi uaues city March 7th, 1S85, except as otherwise hereinbefore specified. uateu una ui.a uuy ox DeptumDer. ib'jj. -. FRANK MKNKKEK. 9.1-idM - Recorder of Dulles City. NOTICE. To All Whom It Hay Concern: - Bv order of the Common Council of Dnilea City, made and entered on the 3d day of Septem ber, 1892, notice is hereby given that said City Council is about to proceed to order and make the improvements of streets in said city as hereinafter stated, and that the -cost of such improvements, and each- of them respectively, win oe levied upon the property adjacent thereto: and said im provements, and each of them, will be made, unless within fourteen days from the final nnh- lication of this notice, the owners of two-thirds ot tne property adjacent io some or all oi the streets abont to be improved shall tile their re monstrance against such improvements, as by charter provided: - . Tbe improv omenta contemplated end about to be made are as follows, to wit; L To improve Union street in said citv, by building a sidewalk ten feet wide on the east Bide thereof, from First Btreet to Second street. - a To improve Second street in said city by building a sidewalk ten feet wide on the north side thereof, from Union streetr to Court street. All of said sidewalks will be built, constructed and erected in accordance with the provisions of an ordinance to define and establish the width and mannor of building -sidewalkt in Dalles City, being Ordinance No. 10S. which passed the Common-Council- of Dal es Citv, March 7th, 1885, except as otherwise hereinbefore specified. . . , iuiea uusjxcn-aay oi Beptemher, 1B92. -- --- - v - - FRANK MEHEFER. 9J4dl4 ' Recorder of Dalles City. THE. DALLES. OREGON. FT & CO., AiN U UJLAbb, Latest Patterns and Designs in T x i . A, t . i . r X o ' - TP ti- AMERICA. Stock Holder Meeting. . ' The regular annual meeting of the stock holders of The Chroxi6le Pub lishing Company will be held in the hall over The Chronicle office at 8 p. m., October 14th, 1892. Directors for the ensuing year will be elected, and such other business as may properly come before said meeting will be transacted ' thereat. . V. G. Bolton, secretary. 9.2td ' ... A. Traveling Man's Experience TVIth 1 - ' . Diarrhoea. I am a traveling man and have been afflicted with what is called chronic diar- -rhoea for some ten years. Last fall I was in Western Pennsylvania,' and accident ally was introduced to Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. I ventured to make a trial and was wonderfully relieved. I would like now -to introduce it among my friends. - H. M. Lewis. 24 Freeman street. Cleveland . Ohio. For sale by Blakely & Houghton, druggists. . City taxes for 1892 are now due and payable within sixty days, at the office- of the undersigned. L. Rorden, City Treasurer. Dalles City, July 6th, 1892. Saved Bis Child's Life. A. N. Dilferbough, York, Neb.; gays: The other day I came home and found my little boy down with cholera morbus, my wife scared, not knowing what to do. I went straightway and got a 25 cent bottle of Chamberlain's Colic. Cholera ' and Diarrhoea Remedy, and gave it ac- -cordingto directions. You never saw such a change in a child. His limbs and . body were cold. I rubbed his limbs and body with my hands, and after I had given him the second dose he went to sleep, and, as my wife says, "from a death-bed he was tip playing in three hours.'i It saved ine a doctor bill of about three dollars, and what is better, it saved my child. I can recommend it with a clear conscience." . For sale by Blakely & Houghton, druggists. PHOTOGRAPHER. . Instantaneous Portraits. Chapman Block, The Dalles, Oregon. COLUMBIA . CANDY FACTORY; Campbell Bros. Proprs (successors to . s. cram.) Manufacturers of the finest French and - Home Made East of Portland. -DEALERS IN- Trepical Frails, Nuts, Cigars and Tobae). Can furnish anv of these eoods at Wholesale or Retail In Every Style. ' Ice Cream and Soda Water. 104 Second Street, The Dalles, Or. V DEW- DROP INN. ' L. C. SHBEWOOD, Trop. . The very best Wines, Liquors , arid: Cor, - jiiaia.--, imported ana uomes- - ' tic CigaraV' ; . - v;;.