Just Received ! A' FULL LINE OR GENTS' Tie Dalles, Porflani aiii Astoria Navigation Co. HOSIERY, XJ N DERWEAR, OVERS H I RTS, COLLARS and and CUFFS. JOHH C .HERTZ, .109 SECOND STREET, THE DALLES. OREGON. " THROUGH iilator Line mm TO THE LADIES: We Cloaks, cordially - them. o The Dalles Daily Chronicle. Entered a the Postofflco at The Dalles, Oregon, as second-class matter. Local Advertising. 10 Cent per line for first insertion, and 5 Cents per lino for each subsequent Insertion. Special rates for long time notices. All local notices received later than 3 o'clock will appear tie following day. THURSDAY SEPT. 22, 1892 LOCAL -BREVITIES. Call upon Maclnnes and make ar rangements for exhibiting something at the coming fair. Congregational church prayer meet ing at the residence of G. M. Patterson, on,. Fourth, street this evening at 7 :30 o'clock. -' Mr. S. L. Youngs advertisement notes i fact that he may be found ready for work at the store of I. C. Nickelsen on Second street. If you have lost your teeth, perhaps you can find them at The Chronicle office. An upper set has been left here by the finder. The first day's proceedings of the Ore gon Press association will be held on ' board the steamer Regulator, coming up from the Cascades. a A gang of h es are operating . in the vicinit Chutes. They have stolen an quite a number of good horses Up in the Willamette valley people are arrested for stealing sheep. In Portland a whole carload of freight can be stolen with perfect impunity, and the thief is not molested. City Marshal Maloney informs us that yesterday he had nine cows in the pound awaiting owners, and the num ber is increasing. People must pay at tention to the ordinances, as the pfficers are in duty bound to enforce them. The photos of the members of the Sovereign Grand lodge, as published in the Oregonian suggest that possibly the climate of Oregon, or the fruit, or some thing, doesn't agree with them. Steb bins appears to be fierce about it today. Mrs. Wilson and her soHFred left on today's east-bound trala for Baltimore, where Fred has enVececl this year's grad uating class at JqHps Hopkins Univer sity. Mrs. VViJson Sill spend the year visiting friend3in Washington and other points. A great many business men are com plaining about hard times in Astoria, and yet Clinton & Sons wanted ninety men to work pn the streets last week for $ 2.50 per day, and couldn't get but two or three extra "men. J That don't look very much like hard times. Bright and Vjiewsy , iieat, and spotless as a mirror, comes to our table The Daily Tribune Nfrom Pendleton. Be sides being a thorWghbred Republican, the Tribune evidences the fact by its appearance, that iu reflects the intelli gent sentiment lot theNtepresentative citizens of graritl old Umatilla county. " Long life and prosperity attend it. Collector Taylor, in getting after ves- ' sels at the mouth of the Columbia for violations of marine laws, has included the Truckee, on complaint of the board of local inspectors, who charge that she went to sea without a licensed pilot on board. We are somewhat enrious to learn whether the 8-hour law of con gress has anything to do with this seiz ure. '-. ' ' orse tniev a rivi off rcccnl. now have our fall line of Dry and Furnishing Goods open., invite 3011 to our store to PEASE & Mr. Lucky of Hood River is in the city. New York may as well stand up and confess that Corbett can attract a larger crowd to Madison Square garden than young Mr. Damrosch and his Wagnerian fiddlers. The popular restnranter C. E. Ilaight nearly had his phist knocked off him a few days ago, by its coming into friendly contact with the toe of a boot worn by a high stepper romN.Wamic. Dr. Hollis ter will today attempt to save the index finger by placing the hand in a paris caste. t , Mr. Frank II. Lamb, Supt. of the AV. U. Tel. Co., paid The Dalles a hasty visit at noon today. He told us that there hadn't been a kick coming from The Dalles for so long that at head quarters they had begun to believe that the office here had been abandoned. He was greatly surprised to find an operator here, Balfe Johnson, who understands his business and knows how to keep his mouth shut. It is astonishing, is'nt it? When O. N. Denny was taking a stroll through a Marion county orchard the other day be started up a Mongolian pheasant. The bird probably knew the close season was past, so it flew away in a hurry. The judge should have pre sented his card and introduced himself, for if the bird had known that Denny was the friend who sent his great-grandparents over from China years ago, it would undoubtedly have been proud to make his acquaintance, especially as no dog or gun was in sight. A gentleman who is a constant reader of the current. political literature of the day, having closely observed the situa tion of business under the McKinley act, gives it as his opinion that McKin ley is responsible for the exodus to the New World from the Old World. The prosperity of American industries is directly traceable to protection, and the operatives in Europe are consequently thrown out of work, as we buy at home, and they are hastening to America to prevent st arvation "at home. Enjoy a Joke. Nobody enjoys a joke any better than W. S. Ladd of Portland. He is down at North Beach now. having a good time, as may be inferred by the following from the Oregonian yesterday : . Snipe are coming in down at ' the beach, and Mr, W. S. Ladd, who is still rusticating at his cottage, is enjoying very fine sport. His method is to take out two or three men in his buckboard, and let them shoot the snipe, while he drives around the swamp and scares the birds up. A day or two since, while thus amusing himself on the shore of Willapa harbor, he saw several men digging claims near the water mark and I started to drive down where they were. tie is 89 used to being driven in all sorts of places around his farms whenever he wants to see anything, that he thinks his horses and buckboard can go any where ; but before he reached the clam diggers he got into a soft spot or pit hole, and his horses went down to their bellies and the buckboard sank till its bottom rested on the mud, and there he was, with the tide coming in. It took twelve men all the time they had to extricate Mr. Ladd and his outfit, and when he started for home it looked as if he had been driving about Portland through a long winter's day. He will not bother himself to cultivate the ac quaintance of any more clam-diggers but intends taking out ' the juveniles of Ilwaco for a daily drive. Goods, and we examine MAYS. THE cla'ckamas hatchery. A Scarcity of Salmon and Obstructions I'revtnt Good Operations. From the Oregon City Enterprise. Of late the work of the Clackamas hatchery has been considerably hamper ed by the inability to get salmon. Last season so little was done that the fish commissioners thought seriously of abandoning the concern. This year however, the state commissioners or dered a fishway put in at the dam of the Gladstone sawmill company, which has been the chief hindrance to fish ascend ing the Etream, and the fishway was built according to the directions of the commissioners. But it is a small and extremely crooked passage into which it is impossible to coax the salmon. A salmon of any considerable, size cannot turn the sharp angles in the narrow passage. A new fishway has been prom ised at that point, and it mnst be put in at once or the necessity for it will have passed. The Clackamas hatchery has a capa city for handling 12,000,000 to 15,000,000 salmon eggs a season, but scarcely more than 5,000,000 have been obtained any year, and for the last three years not so many. - In 1889 the first eggs were taken August 28, and only about 4,000,000 were hatched. The next year eggs were taken September 16 and last year Sep tember 8, and the hatch was smaller each year. This season nothing has yet been done, owing to the absence of the salmon, and the prospect is not a bit en couraging for a large product. W. F. Hubbard has been superinten dent of this hatchery from the beginning under the Oregon and Washington fish propagation company. He attributes the dwindling of the number hatched to the inability of the salmon to ascend the Clackamas to the hatchery by reason of obstructions in the stream. About 30, 000 salmon eggs from' Maine were re ceived here last winter to be hatched and the young fish to be ' liberated in Oregon waters, but the eggs were spoiled and not one would hatch. If 12,000,000 or 15,000,000 young Chinook" salmon were liberated at this hatchery each year it is probable that the effect on the Columbia fishing interest would eoon be noticed. - The business of hatching salmon roe artificially was begun on the Clackamas river, about seven miles above its con fluence with the Willamette, in 1877, by the Oregon and Washington fish propa gation company, which was . composed almost entirely of lower Columbia can nerymen. This company bought about fifteen acres of land, and erected the ne cessary buildings,' and prosecuted the work of propagating Chinook salmon for four years. Then the plant remain ed idle until 1888, when the state took the matter in charge, pat the plant in repair, and ran the concern one year. The next season the United States fish commissioner obtained possession of the hatchery, paying the state about $4,000 for the improvements it had made dur ing its year 'of work, and receiving the remainder of the property free from the Oregon and Washington fish propaga tion company, which owned it. it is now entirely a United States institu tion. - , - . ,., . The Oregon Pacific management was allowed by Judge Fullerton the time asked for until November 1st to com plete': the reorganization' and .pay the $1,000,000 bid for the road and property at sheriff's sale ' several months ago. We sincerely hope that they may De able to come to the scratch handsomely, and then go forward with the work with the opening of another spring. Freignt ana Passenger Line Through daily service (Sundays ex cepted) between The Dalles and Port land, leaving The Dalles at 6 a. m., arriving at Portland 5 p.m. . "PABSEXGEB KATES. . One wav. : '. -.... v. .$2.00 Round trip . . . . . .... : . . . ...... ,3.00 Special rates for part iee of six or over. Freight Rates Greatly Reduced. FAST FREIGHT- - .' Fruit, per 100 pounds. :. . . -. ... .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 m arrival. Live stock . shipments solicited. Call on or address. . . W. C ALLAWAY, ;. ' General Agent. B. F. LAUGHLIN, General Manager. THE DALLES, - - OREGON From Lack of Attention. A correspondent of the Union-Journal says the Tekoa fire was rendered de structive because of alack of power to pump water for fire purposes. Mr. Sutherland advised the city council a few days before to secure some kind of power temporarily, until the machinery of the electric light company, which had been organized recently, and which' was to' ftfrnish the pumping power, arrived from the east. Acting under the advice of Mr. Sutherland, a traction engine had been secured," but had not been at tached to the pump yet. Had the en gine been attached to the pump the city would have had an ample supply of water for . protection against fire. The city was also" "'without'5" any' fife hose, with the exception of .200 feet which had been borrowed from - Spokane to test the works. 1'ap r Gore. " Coos Bay Mail. The-devil of this office tried his hand on a political squib this week which is omitted for want of space and other considerations. -' He called the new party the p. p. g. in dis tinction ' from the g. o. p.; and says it stands for the motto of the peoples wing of democracy, viz : pap or gore. " "'Some Fnmpkin." Klamath Express. John Shallbck takes a natural pride, in exhibiting a photograph of his little son astride a big pumpkin that is growing in his yard that borders on Main street. The pump kin weighs ninety-six pounds now and will weigh much more when thoroughly ripe. " ' . In The Haystack Region. Heppner Record. Chas. Austin, a far mer.' and stockraiser of the Haystack country, arrived in : Heppner Saturday evening to meet his wife who has been visiting with relatives at Portland. ; Mr. Austin reports that the crops On bench lands in the Haystack section averaged about 35 bushels to the acre, while that along the river did not do so well. '".' 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 that'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 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. Stove Wanted. A ' good cook stove. State size and price. Address, Stove, K O. Box, 381, The Dalles. 9.20dtfwlt S. L. YOUNG, : : JEWELER : : Watches and Jewelrv recalled to order on . . short notice, any satisfaction guaranteed. AT THE ' " ' ' " ' Store of I. C. Nlekelsen, Sd St. The Dalles PAUL K REFT & CO., -DEALERS IN- PAINTS, OILS ": And the Most Complete and the " DfiT"Practical Painters and Paper Sherwin-Williams and J. V Masury's the most skilled workmen employed. chemical combination or eoap mixture. orders promptly attended to. - . Store and Faint Shop corner Third and AMERICAN SCHOOL .0 Z: P O -". Stoneman tfe FiEGE, -dealers in Boots and Shoes. All goods we sell, we warrant. . 114 SXIOOND S-raIET BEST-; lH Where Does It Coine In.- Klamath. Star. ; The great, open- mouthed calamity howler who wants office, tells the farmer that the duty on a barrel of salt ia 33?4 cents, and is added to the price as a tariff tax. Yet'farmers in New York are buying it for 28 cents a barrel, exclusive of the cost of package. Where in the name of good hard horse sense does the tax come in?..'. ' v For sale or trade at a bargain a hotel of 23 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 K Mexefee, - . No. 521 Delay St:; Albina, Ore. . D.17dl0t. : . ... kotice. To All Whom It May. Concern: . . Bv order of the Common Council of Dulles City, made and entered on-the 3d day of Septem ber, lsy', notice is hereby given that said City Council Is about to proceed to order and make me improvements in mreew iu emu iiij, na Here inafter stated, and that the cost of such ini- Srovements, and each of them respectively, will e levied upon the property adjacent thereto; and said improvements, and each of them, wili De maue, unless within tourtceu aays ot tne nnni ?ublication of this notice, the owners of two birds of the property adjacent to some or all of the streets about to be improved shall file iheir remonstrances -4ij?ainst such improvements, as by charter provided. ine improvements coniempintea aim aooui to be made are as follows, to-wit: 1 To imnnwp Third strfipt ill s i rl ftltv. hv buildine a sidewalk eicht feet wide on the torth side thereof t from Washington street to Monroe street. 2. To improve Fourth street in said city by building a sidewalk six feet wide on the north side thereof, from Court street to Jefferson street. " - - ' . . :i. ro IniDrove Fifth street In saia citv bv buildiiitr a Bidewalk six feet wide on the north side thereof, from Union street to Washington street. 4. To improve Fifth s'reet in said city by building a sidewalk six feet wide on the sonth side thereof, froin Union street to Washington street. 5. To Improve Washington street in said city bv building a sidewalk eight feet wide on the west tide thereof, from Third street to Sixth street. - - G. To improve Federal street in said city by building a sidewalk ten feet wide on the west side thereof, from the alley between Second and Third streets to Third street. . To improve rederal street in said city bv build ing a sidewalk eight feet wide on the east side thereof , from Third street to Fourth street. 8. To improve Lauprhlm 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 there.if, from Third street to fcourtli street, u. To imnrove Lautrhlln street in said citv bv 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 Thira street to tourtn street. 10. To imnrove Jefferson slreet in said citv b 7 building a sidewalk ten feet wide on the west side tnereot, trom secona street ro i nira street, and a sidewalk eight feet wide on the west side thereof from Third street to Fourth street. 11. To imnrove Madison street in said city by building a sidewalk ten feet wide on the west side thereof, from First street to Third street. 12. lo improve Madison street 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 with the provisions of an ordinance to define and establish the width and manner of buildin sidewalks in Dalles Citv, being Ordinance No. 10s, which passed the Common Council of Dalles City March 7th, Via.', except as otherwise hereinbefore specified- uutea mis loin aay oi Bepiemrer. jsirj. FRANK MF.NEFEE, 9.14dl4 . . Recorder of Dalles City. .. NOTICE. To Alt Whom II May Cuneernr ' -' Bv order of the Common Council of Dalles City, made and entered on the 3d day of Septem ber, 1893, notice Is hereby given that said City council is aDouc m proceed to oraer ana mane the improvements of streets in said city as hereinafter stated, and that the cost of such improvements, and each - of them respectively, will be levied upon . the property adjacent thereto; - and said ' im provements, and each -of them, wiU be made, unless within fourteen days from the final pub lication of this notice, the owners of two-thirds of the property adjacent to some or all of the streets aoouv ui oe iinprovw snail nie-ineir re monstrance against such improvements, as by charter provided : The improvements contemplated and about to De mane are as ioiiows, ro-wi; 1. To improve Union street in said citv. bv building a sidewalk ten feet wide on the east side thereof, from First street to (Second street. .2. To improve Second street in said city by building a sidewalk ten feet wide on the north 31UC 1 11 J '1 , IIVIM nil 11 h HI VUUIl DUCCi. All of said sidewalks will be built, constructed and erected in -accordance with the provisions of an ordinance to define and establish the width find manner ff buildinflr fiiriewalkn in Dalles City, being Ordinance Ko. 108, which pasted the Common Council ' of Dal es Citv. March 7th, 1885, except as otherwise hereinbefore specineo. Dated thisl2tb day of September, 1892. ' '- ..... FKANK MEMEFEE. 9.Hdl4 - Recorder of Dalles City, AN D GLASS, Latest Patterns and Designs in . - Hangers. None but the best brands of the Paints used in all our work, and none but Agents for Masury Liquid Paints. . No A first class article in all colors. - All Washington Sts., . The Dalles, Oregon XL X o 05. AMERICA. . . Stock folders Meeting. . - : ' The regular annual" meeting of the stock holders of The Chboxicle Pnb- i i : f ii i i ii i . . ii iisuiug vAjuipauy win ue neiain- me nau over The Chronicle office at 8 p.. m.T 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. Boltox, secretary -9.2td . . . - . - . A Traveling: Man's Experience With. . -'. Diarrhoea. . ' I am a traveling man and have. been, afflicted with what is called chronic diar- iuu-a mr Bumc veu yeurs. jutmbiaui waa 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 nbw to introduce it among my friends. - H. M. Lewis, 24 Freeman street, Cleveland, Ohio. For sale by Blakely & Houghton, City taxes for 1892 are now due and payable within sixty days, at tlie office of the undersierned. ' : L. Rordes, City Treasurer. Dalles Citv, July 6th, 1892. : ' Saved His Child's Life. a xt r:ir u l -- i ' -vi. "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 cording to 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 . t . , , i . given nun me secona aose ne went to sleep, and, as my wife safi,, "from a death-bed he was up playing hr, iNre hours." It saved me a doctor bill ot about three dpllars', 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. - - r i . UAN L)Y FACTORY Campbell Bros. Proprs (Siccessars to . s. Cram.) :. Manufacturers of the finest French and Home Made CXiA-JST D I E s, ; tr.et . Cm!... -DEALERS IX- 1' m 'i it i n i m i iropical trails, urn, ugars ana locieoo. Can furnish anv of these roods at Wholesala orBetail . - . . In Every Style. ;'. . " Ics Cream and Snda Watur ' 104 Second Street, The Dalles, Or. r. r TT M r ' T" 1 -v T ." " T a T X T I IU 111 II I J 1.117 I 1 I f I J- - TL C. SHERWOOD, Prop. - The very best Wines, Liquors and Cor .;' -dials." -Imported and Domes-. . r-1" - tic Cigars.