.a Candee's Rubber Goods ' ' ' ' ' JUST RECEIVED A FULL LINE - . : - it ' We Misses' and Children's The Dalles Daily Chronicle. Kntereda the Postoffice at The Dalles, Oregon, -- ; Local Advertising;. 10 Ceut-s per line for Hint insertion, and 5 Cents per line for ciich subsequent insertion. Special rntes for lonir time notice. All Ioch'i notices received Inter than 3 o'clock will appear trie follnwlnc tiny. - TUESDAY - OCTOBER 18, 1892 Weather Forecast. Ofictal forecast for tventij-foiir hmirr ending at uotm lombrrotr: FaiV. Slightly warmer temperature. Winds west and northerly. LOCAL IIKIVITIES. Dr. Suedecker was a passenger to Holdendale this morning. The day is lovely, and all that, but news items are precious scarce. Mr. B. F. Laughlin leaves in the morn ing for Portland, to return on Friday. A bunch of keys picked up on the street awaits the owner at The Ciik'ox-ici-k office Dr. Sutherland, formerly of The Dalles, but now of Portland, was in the city today. The demand for homes, small build ings, or convenient rooms, is increasing in The Dalles. Senator Mitchell will speak at Baker City on the 22d, and at The Dalles on the 26th. Don't forget this date. A new and lighter cable for the ferry boat, which will do better service than the old and larger one, has been ordered. Crandall & Burget are drawing the plans for a new residence to be built on the bluff, near the stone house, for Hon. Robert Mavs. Men's clothes have from ten to twelve pockets, but a man can explore the whole aggregation of them looking for a car ticket before a woman can find the front entrance to her one. At the recent annual meeting of The Chronicle stockholders the old board of directors and officers were re-elected. The stock of the corporation was in creased from $S,000 to $15,000. Five packages more of prize fruit from The Dalles and vicinity went to the Portland Exposition yesterday, from the Columbia River Fruit Co., Mrs. Mesplic, and Messrs. Cashing, Fred Creigbton,. and Sandoz Bros. We are verv much pleased to lea that Hon. V'. R. Ellis Iras about recov ered from the injuries he received on the Condon stage line last May. Mr. Ellis has hail a serious time, being confined to his bed much of the time. Umatilla, county have done well this year. Quite a number have been ob served in various places and sportemen men ty ojrj ! jbope within a few years to find plent these birds in that section. Horrt Solomon Hirst:!), ex-minister to Turkey," rnssed The Dalles Sunday morning on his way iVoni New York to Portland. His trip has Treu hurried on account of tlie serious illness of his , brother. Leopold Hirsch,' at his home in Salem. xue procession ot wheat teams con tinues to string into the city from north and south. At 10:30 this forenoon ten wagons, two to each' team, drawn bv twenty-four horses, ' two 6-horse and three--f-horse, were driven loaded to the Regulator wharf. : . - - - ... : - - n 7 ' PERSE &7VY7WS have in mens wear KNEE BOOTS, SHORT " BOY'S KNEE HND 9 MEN'S VICTORS, MEN'S CAPITOL, MEN'S SNOW EXCLUDERS, MEN'S SANDALS. Women', XWUhsos' and C!l3Lilciar3aa.' .rotiot WOMEN'S BEACON, WOMEN'S BRIGHTON, WOMEN'S SANDALS. . , .Spring Heel Rubbers. . City Marshal Moloney is again fillin; the cattle pound today with Herefords, DetOTis and Jerseys ; all fine much cows, Mrs. Powell was buried in the family . . ... , . , burial plat in i'ortiana. rrienas who accompanied the remains to Portland, returned today. The festive house-fly is again festive when the rooms are warmed up. Some of them were out on the sunny sides of houses today for an airing. Mr. Wm. Bethune, state geologist and assayer for Washington, was in the city yesterday, returning from the Mount Adams silver mining district. He es caped the interviewer. It is said one object of the U. P. offi cials visit to Oregon this week was to purchase the Astoria railway. Mr. Clarke says : "No agreement has been made, no decision reached.' A description of Burdette Wolf, the young man wanted by Sheriff Kelly of Multnomah county, on charge of at tempting to kill Mies Birdie Morton, inav be seen at Sheriff Ward's office. Mr. Frank Beezeley, and the wife of Mr. William Beezley of Newbridge, are in the city paying a visit to their father and father-in-law , Mr. Joseph Beezley, whose illness is of a very serious nature. yDr. Shackelford says that duck shoot ing about The Dalles will soon be a sport of the past. In its day it was truly fine sport, but feed is not so abundant in I Members of the Congregational church, are requested by the board of trustees to attend a meeting to be held in the vestry of the new church at 7 :30 p. m., Wednesday, October 19th, upon business of importance. An aggravated case of assault and battery on the night clerk at the New Columbia hotel Sunday morning early, in 'which Pat. Keenan, a man named Stricklan and one John Doe are defend ants, comes up before Justice Shutz. The express companies interested on the Pacific Coast in the capture of the Dalton gang, have remitted rewards aggregating $27,000, in connection with other companies who were after the scalps of the robbers, dead or alive. The season has been fairly successful J in all productions for the Oregon farmer, and the bulletins have, as accurately as possible, portrayed the general condit ions from seed time to harvest and 'tis hoped that they have been of value to the -public. A report came to our ofiice, says the Wasco News, that the money lenders of The Dalles are willing to loan money to the farmers on easy terms. We are sure that it wilLmot be lost, for this is one of the "best counties east' of the Cas cade range and should be so recognized by the business man elsewhere. Justice Phutz was called out of bed last night is issue a warrant for Charles Chapman, accused of stealing horses. Fifteen horses were stolen, it is alleged, and Chapman had one of them ; but he proposes to establish a lawful ownership to it, and deny having any claims to the other fourteen head. Returns are coming into the Palouse Gazette office from the sugar beet seed distributed by that paper last spring, which show that beets will flourish and produce abundantly in Whitman coun ty soil.' It is not beyond the range of possibility that a sugar factory will be established in that section .within a few years. ' Wasn't some seed distributed from The Dalles last vear? , And how did it yield? ; ' ' . ) .' '. ;; v ; BOOTS. THIGH BOOTS. BOOTS - f Baptiste, the Indian pilot known by all American tourists who have passed down the rapids of the St. Lawrence, died a few days ago, aged 82. He was the first Indian to run a boat down the rapids. . The old question of having Mt. Hood with a large domain surrounding it, set aside as a national park has been again revived. There are many reasons urged for the adoption of the measure and no stone will be left unturned to secure the passage of a bill authorizing it. '. A Chinese pheasant was captured i Pendleton while trying to get into tin second story of a building on Main street through a transom. The bird had evi dently exhausted itself, for it died in a short while. It was a young one and evidently a descendant of the birds im ported to Umatilla . county by ' A. M; Despain. . V Kupt. Mitchell, of the Portland Expo-1 sition, says the Wasco county people in and about The Dalles are stayers. We have just got in with both feet, kept up fresh supplies of fruit and people daily, and fully endorse the Oregonian editor ial, "that while it has created no local furore. it has been the most valuable and successful exposition in the history1 of the society." So say we, all of us. As our readers have already been ap prised, the 21st of October has been de clared a legal holiday, and on that day the public schools will celebrate th? occasion in a becoming manner. They have prepared an excellent programme and the exercises promise to prove highly interesting. It ha9 been sug gested that it would be well for our mer chants and other business men and all civic and secret organizations to unite in the proper observance of the day by tak ing part in the exercises., r The Grant's Pass Observer, speaking with reference to the resources of the In land Empire, to be tapped by the exten sion of 'the Washington and Columbia river railroad, as the Hunt system is to be called, through Grant county, Camas prairie, Southern Oregon and California, says: "Such a route would bring the road via Goose lake, Hot Springs valley and Fall River valley to the head of the Sacramento valley. It would throw ope to marKet millions ot collars worth o timber, range, agricultural and mineral lands and develop an extensive and ric. territory that is now isolated." L. M. Davis, a member of the city council of Portland, in speaking of the Lake Washington canal, eays: "Port land has been working 17 years for the completion of the locks on the Columbia by congressional appropriations, at a cost of $2,000,000, and the work is only nicely begun." "Yes," retorts, the Klickitat Leader, "Portland has worked very hard but the most of her work has been to keep the locks from being completed. If Portland was very anxious to have the locks completed, she could do just what Mr. Davis advises Seattle to do with the canal, get in and build the locks." Had ! Portland been very largely interested in the opening of toe Columbia the locks would have been completed long ago. If we have to depend on the consolidated city, it will be another 17. years before ! the locks are completed. : CORN. At Pleasant Ridge, October 14th, to the wife of J. C. McCormick, a 9-lb son. An A No. 1 good gil is wanted to do general housework in a family of two persons, wages $20. .. Apply to Mrs Thornburv,'The Dalles. "Tie Regulator Line" The Dalles, ftrtW aid i&taria Navigation Co. P THROUGH Freignt ana Passenger Line Through daily service (Sundaj'8 ex cepted) between The Dalles and Port land. Steamer Regulator leaves The Dalles it 6 a. m. connecting at Cascade Locks with steamer Dalles City. Steamer Dalles City leaves Portland (Yamhill street dock) at 6 a. m. con necting with steamer Regulator for The Dalles. PASSENGER KATES. One way ; $2.00 Rouncf trip . -. 3.00 Freight Rates Greatly Reduced. Shipments received at wharf any time, day or night, and delivered at Portland on arrival. Live stock shipments solicited. Call on or address. W. CALLAWAY, General Agent. B. F. LAUGH LIN, General Manager. THE DALLES. OREGON Latest News tn Brief. No matter how hopefully the doctors' statements are made to sound every day, there is never a moment passes for the White House family that is not filled with the deepest anxiety. Mrs. Har rison became so weak yesterday that the lightest change may mean the end. The United States supreme court, by hief Justice Fuller, yesterday reaffirm- the judgment of the Michigan ,sn- remecourt, upholding the constitution ality of the famous Miner law, providing for a choice of presidential electors by congressional districts instead of by the state as a whole. The Olvmrda en nreme court decided yesterday against Judge Bloomfield, of Vancouver, in the mandamus proceed ing instituted by him to compel the sec retary -of state to certify to the proper officers that he was the regular nominee of the republican party for the office of superior judge for the counties of Clarke. ICowlitz and Skamania. This case has attracted wide .attention because it raised the question, for the first time under the new ballot law, as to what constitutes a regular party nomination. The Idaho Supreme Justices Sullivan, Morgan and Huston met in chambers at Boise City yesterday to consult in regard to the test oath case, which was argued in Lewiston last week. They will today hand down a written decision up holding the laws, which prevent 2000 persons, who N felt sure they would be allowed to vote, from exercising the elec tive franchise at next month's general election. Last week Judge Stockslager rendered such a decision that the Mor mons thought they had solved the problem, so the action, of the supreme court will be a great disappointment to them. Had they been allowed to vote democratic gains would have resulted. . There was considerable activity about the republican headquarters yesterday in New York. The republicans charged fraud in, the naturalization process, in that runners from Tammany were bring ing in droves of Hungarians. Poles and Italians who will vote the democratic ticket, the expense of which was paid and the issuance of papers facilitated by them. It was also stated that a combi nation to gauge the applications for naturalization and to cut down the re publican naturalized vote had been op perating for more than three weeks, with the full knowledge of the officers of the court. It was charged further that republican applications for naturaliza tion were rejected en insufficient grounds after passing from six hours to two days in an effort to reach the clerk's desk be hind the crowd of Tarn manv heelers. ' Chronicle Snp Shots. Chide a friend in private and praise him in public. Friendship is a shield that blunts the darts of adversity. Solitude causes ns to write because it causes us to think. He is a king who fears, nothing. He is a king who desired nothing. .Whoever has loved knows all that life contains of sorrows and of Joy. It is too late to be on our guard when we are in the midst of misfortunes. Sow seeds in the furrows of time seeds of benevolence and. charitable deeds and they will grow and ripen to everlasting felicities. ; -Tarited. A good girl to do general housework. J Apply at this office. 10.5dtf Just Received HOSIERY, UNDERWEAR, OVERS H I RTS, JOHN C 109 SECOND STREET, MISS ANNA PETER SCO, Pine Millinery ! 112 Second street, AMERICAN SCHOOL . Stoneman & Fiege, dealers in w Boots and Shoes. All goods i. p we sell, we warrant. H ,' n ' ' ' B X 114 J33E3CJ02NT33 STREET ryj , ' . . BEST IN From Far Off Africa. Miss McNiel,a mild-mannered pleasant Oregon lady of middle ager told those who attended the M. E. church last evening, a graphic story of the work that has been done by women toward evan gelizing the dark continent. ; She told her own experience and that of her friends in the mission. Not. only, had the mission done great work for India, but it had set an example and inspired others with confidence, so that to the efforts of its founders were .due the es tablishment of others, in the far away Orange free state in Africa. She made a good. impression, and so did her little African pupil Dinah. " Women are not slow to comprehend. They're quick. They're alive, and yet it was a man who discovered, the one remedy for their peculiar ailments. The man was Dr. Pierce. The discovery was his "Favorite Prescription" the boon to delicate women. Why go round "with one foot in the grave," suffering in silence misunderstood when there's a remedy at hand that isn't an experi ment, but which is sold nnder the guar antee that if you are disappointed in any way in it, you can get your money . back by applying to its makers. ' We can hardly imagine a woman's not trying it. Possibly it may be true of one or two but we doubt it. Women are ripe for it. Theyrmust have it. Think of a per scription and nine out of ten waiting for it. Carry the news to them. The seat of sick headache is not in the brain. Regulate the stomach and you cure it. Dr. Pierce's pellets are the little regulators. .' Children Cry for Pitchers Castoria. When Baby xraa nick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Castoria NOTICE To Settlers Under the 3rd .Sec. Act, September 30, 1890. Department of the Interior, General Land Office, AVashington, D.C., Septem ber 30, 1892. Register and Receiver, The Dalles, Oregon Sirs: Referring to office in structions of 'February '3, 1891, issued under the forfeiture act of Sept. 29, 1890, and of March 5, 1891, issued under the act of iebruary 18. 189). which' so amended the act of 1S90 as to cause the time, within which claimants thereunder were required to properly present their claims, to run from the date of the pro mulgation of the instructions for the restoration by this office, I have now to advise you that Congress, by act ap proved June 2-3, 1S92, amended section 3 of the act ot September 29, 1S90, so as to extend the time, within which persons actually residing upon the lands claimed by them might present their claims, to tiiree years irom the passage ot said act ot JSIH). ' This latter amendmentielates onh- to claimants under section three, of the act of 1S90, who actually reside upon the forfeited lands, and the Secretary of the Interior, on September 16, 1S92, "decided that as to such claimants the time was extended to September 29, 1893, the act of February IS, 1S91, in so far as it related to them, having been repealed by the act of June 2o, 1892, by implica tion. ' The instructions of March 5, 1S91, (supra) will eovern vou in the cases of all other claimants under said act. Very Respectfully, (Signed) : V. M. "Stone, 10-21w30d , Acting Commissioner. ' -''' A. Bare Bargain. Two Cottages for sale. Enquire o! . 9.28dtf , N. Whealdon. ! -A FULL LINE . OF GENTS E. J pOL-IvARS and 1 CUFFS. HERTZ, THE DALLES. OREGON. THE DALLES, OR. AMERICA. A Cholera Scare. A reported outbreak of cholera at Hel metta, N. J., created much excitement in that vicinity. Investigation showed . that the disease was not cholera bat a violent dysentery, which is almost as severe and dangerous as cholera. Mr. . Walter Willard, a prominent merchant of Jamesburg, two miles from Helmetta, says Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy has given great satis faction in the most severe cases of dys entery. It is certainly one of the beet things ever made." For sale by Blake ley & Houghton, druggists. NOTICE. All Dalles City warrants registered prior to January 6, 1891, will be paid if presented at my office. Interest ceases from and after this date. Dated October 13th, 1892. L. RORDEN, tf. Treas. Dalles City. Portland Exposition. The Dalles, Portland and Astoria. Navigation Co. will. sell round trip tick ets from The Dalles at $3, including ad mission to the exposition. Tickets on sale daily at the office or on board the Regulator. W. C. Axlaway,' Gen'l Agent. A Care for Cholera. There is no use of any one suffering with the cholera when Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy can be procured. It will give relief in a. few minutes and cure in a short time. I have tried it and know. W. H. Clin ton, Helmetta, N. J. The epidemic at Helmetta "was at first believed to be cholera, but subsequent investigation proved it to be a violent form of dysen tery, almost as dangerous as cholera. This remedy was used there with great success. For sale by Blakeley & Hough ton. Booms to Let. Two pleasant bed rooms in a neat cottage on the hill, to let. Inquire at this office. lO.ldtf A Girl Wanted. For general housework in the country. Apply at this ofiice. 9-30dtf PHOTOGRAPHER. Instantaneous Portraits. Chapman Block, The Dalles, Oregon. COLUMBIA ' CANDY FACTORY Campbell Bros. Proprs . " (Saccesscrs to W. s. Cram.) , Manufacturers of the finest French and : . Home Made -i East of Portland. -DEALERS IS- Tropical Fruits, Nuts, Cigars and Tobacco. , Can furniah any of these goods at Wholesala . or Retail . . . . - . . In Every Style, v Ice Cream and Soda Water 104 Second Street. The Dalles, Or. , - An