The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, October 19, 1892, Image 3

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    "The Regulator Line"
T6e Dalles, Porflantt aii iitoria
Navigation Co.
Just Received !
. JUST RECEIVEp A FULL LINE-
-A. FULL LINE OF GENTS
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Misses' and Children's Spring Heel Rubbers.
PEHSE & MHYS
The Dalles Daily Chronicle.
Entered a the Postofflee at The Dalles, Oregon,
as second-class matter.
Local Advertising.
JO Cents per line for first insertion, and 5 Cents
per line for each subsequent insertion.
Special rates for long time notices.
All looa". notices received later than 3 o'clock
will appear tae following day.
WEDNESDAY ' - OCTOBER 19, 1892
Weather Forecast.
Official forecast for twenty-four Itourg ending at
S p. in. tomorrow:
Fair weather. Cooler. Light frosts
in lower levels, and heavy on high local
ities. LOCAL BKBTITIKS.
Ifred Mohr, of Hay Creek, is in the
city.
A. A. Clegg, of Astoria, is at The Unia
tilla. See what John Booth has got to say
in his new 'ad." today.
Hon. E. N. Chandler and wife, have
returned from Portland.
Mrs. J. Bridges and J. Cartwright, of
Fossil, returned from Portland last
night.
Frank Garretson and H. W. French,
returned from the consolidated city last
evening.
Read the new "ad." of Floyd &
Shown's drug store today .on second
page.
Miss Minnie Frieman was a passenger
on the Regulator last evening from
Portland.
Caroline was arrested this morning by
Marshall Maloney, for being drunk and
disorderly.
, Sale of city lots was resumed today by
' Auctioneer Butts, under direction of
city authority. x
. t- -r t t i 1 i - 1
Jir. jx. ti.. nmion waa urougnt in
from his ranch vesterdav with hemor
rhage of the lungs. A
Mr. W. R. Menefee, who was in the
city from Dufur yesterday, paid The
Chronicle a pleasant visit.
" There has been no notice of any re
ward for the Roslyn bank robbers post
ed in The Dalles sheriff's office.
Mr. C. C. Davenport, of Elkhart, Ind
iana, paid us a pleasant visit yesterday.
1 He is ratine in the PnnifiV. must.
N
Mr. N. J. Sinnott has accepted the
invitation to be present at the Heppner
. G. A. R. reunion, and will be one of the
speakers. S
Mrs. A. H. Utley and son, Mrs. O. J.
Lewis and Mrs. R. G. Davenport left on
the early morning train for a short visit
to Portland.
Mrs. H. W. Wells, of Sherar's bridge,
4 came up on the steamer Regulator. Mr.
Wells was here to meet her, 'and they
. return home today.
Jins Nelson, Nels Olsson and Ols
Nelsso'n, pleased with our free institu
tions and equitable government, took out
their first papers for citizenship.
Prinz & Nitschke were busy last night
covering the floors of Mr. Kellar's new
M store with a carpeting suitable to other
neat and natty surroundings.
ii iULK. v ieary naa aavices tronrner
soul A. P., at college at Ann Arbor, to
theeffect that he has resolutely started
upon his six years' course in the study
of medicine, and was just entering uoon
, the practical work before him. .
have in mens wear
KNEE BOOTS,
SHORT
GOV'S
KNEE
HND-
MEN'S VICTORS,
MEN'S CAPITOL,
x MEN'S SNOW EXCLUDERS,
MEN'S SANDALS.
XVomon's, Misses' and Children's Erotics.
WOMEN'S BEACON,
WOMEN'S BRIGHTON,
WOMEN'S SANDALS.
Thanks to Hon. Robert Mays, we
have been able to fill a few more de
mands for The Chronicle containing
reports of the editorial convention.
"Geo. C. Blakeley, Philadelphia," in
a very artistic hand ornamented a space
on The Umatilla register last evening.
It would be difficult to . counterfeit the
signature.
State of Oregon versus Pat Kennan,
T. J. Strickland and T. Nubours was ad
judicated by Justice Schutz. Pat Ken-
nan and T. J. Strickland were fined - $
and $25 respectively.
The levee still continues to be replen
ished with cordwood, notwithstanding
the demands made upon the fleet from
points down the river, for winter sup
plies of fuel to Dalles City families.
Friends of Mr. H. L. Powell will be
pained to hear that Elsie, his oldest
daughter, is down with the typhoid fever
in Portland. Mr. Powell remained to
care for her, after the burial of his wife.
Wood carvings on the benches and
railings at the north veranda at The
Umatilla snow that visitors this season
came from afar. The carving is scarcely
up to the average of that done in
gone by.
Yesterday evening would have been
an excellent opportunity to secure a
view of the Regulator dock, illustrating
the starting of our Inland - Empire
wheat by the all water route from The
Dalles to Liverpool and other ports of
the world.
No. 8 was delayed several hours on ac
count of a large mass of rock rolling on
the track near Rooster Rock. The late
rains have loosened the cliffs overhang
ing the track, and there is reason to an
ticipate numerous small avalanches be
fore many days.
The Dalles boys still continue to make
their mark, both at home and abroad.
We noticed the names of Jos. Bonn,
Augustus Bonn and L. Schanno, on the
programme of the celebration of Colum
bus day at Mt. Angel. Henry Bolton
and Richard Gorman were alsodown for
prominent parts.
We were pleased to meet for social
chat yesterday Rev. J. Whisler, the
new Methodist minister at The Dalled.
Mr. Whisler's family are in . Denver,
where he has a pleasant home', but we
predict that when he has become accli
mated, he will never leave Oregon to re
main away very long at a time.
A suit was brought to re jover property
isold in pawn, and judgment was ren
dered to the plaintiff by Justice Schutz.
The case is plain, and is important for
the public to know, that any article of
personal value, left by one person as a
pledge for debt, must be sold exactly as
under attachment. There is no legal
forfeiture, except as provided by laws
regulating legally licensed pawn-brokers.
The sight of the large number of teams
unloading wheat at the Regulator land
ing this morning, brought one back to
the days of "auld lang syne" when The
Dalles was the hub of all the surround
ing territory of Oregon, Washington and
Idaho, when the pack trains were car
rying provisions to the hard working
iner in the interior counties.
W. H. Butts, Frank Menefee and I. J.
orman made a happy looking trio this
morning as they marched with stately
tread and martial air down Second street,
collecting a crowd for the advertised sale
of real estate. . They succeeded in dis
posing of considerable property. - The
sale of the remnant of the lots was post
poned to 10 o'clock Saturday.
on
BOOTS.
THIGH BOOTS.
BOOTS
The "Interstate" and Capt. Donovan's
scow are lying at anchor at the Union
street docks. They both brought up
many cords of wood. The beach is
early covered with the winter's wood,
nd we are now prepared for a long siege
f cold weather.
The "dove dinner" is the craze of the
hour, and every hostess gives one. The
table is dressed in dove gray and white,
nd ornamented with wings. The sou
enirs are doves' heads, which means
peace, and seem very appropriate as
models for society folk, who are never at
peace with themselves or the world,
says the gossippy old Baltimore News.
WASCO KEEPS THE LEAD.
The llural Northwest Tells of the Fruit
Exhibit In Portland.
The exhibition of fruits at the Port
land exposition ii, perhaps, a matter of
more importance to the fruit-growing
interests of the state than is generally
thought. Its importance is found in
e impression which it makes upon the
rangers who visit the exposition. The
umber of eastern people who visit the
exposition during the time that it is
open is large. Every day a considera
ble number are found carefully looking
at the fruit on the tables and in the
jars. These visitors, when they return
to their homes in the east, will have a
good deal to say about what they saw
here, and the opinions which they form
and express about our fruit will have a
good deal of weight in forming a gen
eral opinson in the east upon that point.
In this connection it was a wise and
useful movement on the part of the
management of the exposition in em
ploying Secretary Sargent, of the Ore
gon state horticultural society, to look
after the horticultural exhibit, and call
the attention of strangers to its merits.
In a broad way the exhibit is creditable
to the state. And yet it must be said
that its merits lie chiefly in the Wasco
county exhibit and in the collection of
bottled fruit prepared by Secretary Al
len, of the state board of horticulture.
Nearly 1,300 plates of fruit, besides
some 500 museum jars, together with
the mass of grapes used in the construc
tion of the grape cottage, make a large
showing. If Marion, Washington,
Yamhill, Lane, Josephine, Benton and
Jackson counties had come in with dis
plays, as they undoubtedly wouid have
done if fruit had not proved such a fail
ure in Western O-egon this year, it is
hard to imagine where room would
have been found for, all the fruit.
Umatilla county might have made a dis
play, but failed to appreciate its oppor
tunity. The fruits best represented in the
display were grapes and apples. Wasco
county came out particularly strong
with these two fruits, the grapes com
ing from The Dalles, while most of the
apples came from the Hood river district.-
It must be said to the credit of
the Wasco county exhibit' that it was
entirely free from defective or worm
eaten fruit a statement which could
not be made about all of the. fruit on ex
hibition. An A No. 1 good girl is wanted to do
general housework in a family of two
persons, wages $20. Apply " to Mrs.
Thornbury, The Dalles.
Wanted. .
A good girl to do general housework.
Apply at this office. 10.5dtf
A Rare Bargain.
Two Cottages for sale. Enquire of
9.28dtf N. Whkaldon.
THROUGH
Freight autr FassBuger Line
Through daily service (Sundays ex
cepted) between The Dalles and Port
land. Steamer Regulator leaves The
Dalles at 6 a. m, connecting at Cascade
Locks with steamer Dalles City.
Steamer Dalles City leave Portland
(Yamhill street dock) at 6 a. m. con
necting with steamer Regulator for The
Dalles.
PASSENGER KATES.
One way. . . '. f ; $2.00
Round 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. C. ALLAWAY,
General Agent.
B. F. LAUGHLIN,
General Manager.
THE DALLES. - OREGON
Where do They Pay Taxes.
A traveler asks the question : "Did
you ever hear tell of a Pullman Sleeping
car agent paying 'a cent of taxes in the
state of Oregon?"
Never heard of it. But have heard
that they claim millions of exemption
in Illinois upon property assessed in
other states.
The impositions of the Pullman com
pany upon the traveling public have
long escaped proper ventilation.'
"If ever there was an imposition on
the traveling public the Pullman sleep
ing car outrage is the chief. I had oc
casion," says a traveler in the Telegram,
"to go from Portland to Eastern Oregon
recently, and found it most convenient
to take the day train. Owing to the
crowded condition of the day coaches, I
was compelled to pay in addition to the
outrageous rate of 4 cents per mile rail
road fare $1.25 to sit in a Pullman to
Pendleton. 'Now, think of it $2 to $2.50
is demanded for a berth for one night
when our princely host Lei and, of the
palatial Portland, will furnish you with
a large, handsomely furnished room for
$1.50. I say it is high time the public
rise as one man and down this gigantic
octopus. All other business has com
petition, and supply and demand regu
late prices. Not so with this gigantic
monopoly. One dollar and fifty cents
for lower berths and $1 for uppers, is
my motto."
It is quite time the subject was agi
tated, and The Chronicle suggests that
this be one of the very first measures to
come before the Oregon assembly, at
Salem next January.
Personal Paragraphs.
It is said that Ann O'Delia Diss De
bar, the spook priestress, is alive and
living in New York under an assumed
name.
Mme. Bourinine, whom the Grand
Duke Nicholas married at Toula, was
born a serf, it is stated, as was her first
husband.
Moses Boyd, aged 78, is conductor on
a suburban train from Dedham to Bos
ton and is probably the oldest conductor
in the country.
Charles Ashton, a London policeman,
has received a prize of $250 for an un
published bibliography of Welsh litera
ture from 1801 to 1890.
Rev. A. N. Keigwin, a Presbyterian
minister of Wilmington, Del., prophecies
the end of the world in 1897. He has
been preaching sermons for some time
past with the special object of preparing
bis flock for the event.
One of the most' successful florists of
this country is Mrs. Charles H. .Wilson
of Cleveland, Ohio. This enterprising
woman commenced the business over 10
years ago, at a time when she found it
necessary to increase her income.
Miss Annie Shepard Spooner, aged 18,
has published Around the Lamp, a
monthly paper for young people, for
three years at home in Hillsdale, N. H.
She has always bad a wish to edit a
paper and is much interested in the
work. She sets her own type, solicits
her own advertisements, and is said to
have 4,000 subscribers.
The friends of Archduke Joseph of
Austria have had much fun over the re
sults of his attempt to colonize his es
tates with gypsies. During the spring
and early summer the tribes seemed
perfectly happy in their new homes.
Harvest time and the days of selecting
recruits for the army came however.
The gypsies, fearing work and service,
picked up their belongings a few weeks
ago and silently stole away.
HOSIERY,
UNDERWEAR,
OVERS H I RTS,
JOHN C
109 SECOND STREET,
Miss anna peter s Co..
Fine jVIillinery !
112 Second street.
Golamks Day Special I
J ohn Booth, the Grocer, will give a
flag free TOMORROW to every cash
purchaser. '
A Trip on Steamer Dalles City.
Cornetist Bowen R. Church, the talent
ed leader-elect of the famous American
band, took advantage of the pleasant
weather today on a pleasure trip on the
lower Columbia. Mr. Church spoke in
glowing terms of the matchless scenery
and was so impressed with .the lavish
display of nature met at every Turn of
the river, that his usual reticence was
overcome and he consented to awaken
the mellifluous melodies lying dormant
in his sweet toned cornet by playing
Annie Laurie. The effect was indescrib
able. As the notes were wafted from the
pilot house, they reverberated and re
echoed from the adjoining cliffs and
again from the more distant crags and
canyons 'till the sound died away amid
the tortuous turns of the Columbia.
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 under 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.
They must 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 Pitcher's Castoria.
When Baby was trick, we gave her Castoria.
When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria,
When she became Hiss, she clung to Castoria
When she had Children, she gave them Castoria
NOTICE
To Settlers Under the 3rd Sec. Act,
September 29, 180O.
Department of the Interior, General
Land Office, Washington. 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 February 18, 1891, which so
amended the act of 1890 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 th
restoration by this office, I have now to
advise you that Congress, by act ap
proved June 25, 1892, amended section 3
of the act of September 29, 1890, so as to
extend the time, within which persons
actually residing upon the lands claimed
by them might present their claims, to
three years from the passage of said act
of 1890. .
This latter amendment relates only to
claimants under section three, of the act
of 1890, who actually reside upon the
forfeited lands, and the Secretary of the
Interior, on September 16, 1892, decided
that as to such claimants the time was
extended to September 29, 1893, the act
of February 18, 1891, in so far as it
related to them, having been repealed
by the act of June 25, 1892, by implica
tion. The instructions of March 5, 1891 ,
(supra; will govern you in the cases of
all other claimants under said act.
Very Respectfully,
(Signed) ' W. M. Stone,
10-21 w30d Acting Commissioner.
C O LLA RS
land!
and
CUFFS.
HERTZ,
THE DALLES. OREGON.
THE DALLES, OR.
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 but a, "
violent dysentery, which is almost aa
severe and dangerous as cholera. Mr.
Walter Willard, a prominent merchant
of Jamesburg, two miles from Helmetta,
says Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and
Diarrhuea Remedy has given great satis
faction in the most severe cases of dys
entery. It is certainly one of the best
things ever made." For sale by Blake
ley & Houghton, druggists.
NOTICE. ,
AH Dalles City warrants registered
prior to January 6, 1891, will be paid it
presented at my office. Interest ceases
from and after ihis date.'
Dated October 13th r 1892.
L. ROBDEN,
tf- Treae. 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. All a way,
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 m 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. 1
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 countrv.
Apply at this office. 9-30dtf
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
O-A- UST 3D I B S r
East of Portland.
-DEALERS IN-
Tropical Fruits, Nats, Cigars and Tobacco.
Can famish sat of these mods at' WhniMRla
or Betail
" j In ETery Style.
Ice Cream and Soda Water.
104 Second Street, The Dalles, Or. -
em