"The Reffulator Line" Just Received ! -JUST RECEIVED A PULL LINE- -A FULL LINE 'OF GENTS' Tie Dalles, PorM M iitoria Navigation Co. Rcibb Goods We have in mens wear KNEE BOOTS, SHORT BOOTS. THIGH BOOTS. HOSIERY, UNDERWEAR, OVERS H I RTS, EM. COLLARS and and CUPPS. L.' "If '7Croixieii.'s9 Misses' and Children's Ths Dalles Daily Chfoniele. Entered a the Postollice at The Dalles, Oregon, as second-class matter. T. iicnl Art vertiMincr. 10 Cents per line for first Insertion, and 5 Cents per line for each subsequent insertion. Special rates for long time notices. All local notices received later than 3 o'clock will appear the following day. THURSDAY - OCTOBER 20, 1892 Weather forecast. Official forecast for twentg-four hours ending at Wp. m. tomorrow: Fair. Nearly stationary temperature, followed by warmer weather. Pagne. . Portland, Oct. 20, 1892. 1 LOCAL BREVITIES. ' Mr. and Mrs. Benton are expected home today. w . j. liarretson is tailing in tne con solidated city today. Mr. Emil Kohler of Tygh valley, paid vis a cheerful visit yesterday. Mr. J. O. Mack is expected home from Spokane, in a few days. Miss Cora Allen, of North Yakima, is a guest of Dr. and Mrs. Eshelman. The funeral of the pioneer Col. Chap man, took place in Portland today. Miss Mable Sterling of this city, left on the morning passenger for Portland. Tr. and Afrs ' T,nrlrmillir linvfe re turned from the exposition at Portland. Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Branner returned to Nancene this morning from Portland Tomorrow being a legal holiday there will be no Chronicle issued from this office. Part of the corrugated iron roofing has been placed on the box factory building at Grand Dalles. . Mr. A. II. Wilcox of Antelope, and Mr. W. A. Wilcox of Washington, D. C are at The Umatilla. ' Mrs. W. A. Kirby and daughter, have returned from a six weeks visit with friends in La Grande. The United States land office is to t j moved into the brick building, corner of Front and Washington streets. ' By common consent, business houses will be closed tomorrow during the eel ebration ceremonies of the schools. The postoffice general delivery will be open tomorrow between the hours of 9 to 10 a. ni., and 5 and 6 p. in., only. Wm. Grant, of the oldtime residents of The Dalles, is in the city today, re turning to the illihe of his name above The 6team shovel has finished up the 36 -foot cut at Shell rock below Crates, and will now come up for repairs and brief rest. Dalles, restaurants serve catfish calVd for, and when properly prepared they liva highly edible, much nicer than r than I r, nd a bullhead for breakfast. Hon. W. II. Ellis of Hepnner J udge Turner of Spokane, passed on the mon train today. Judge Turner is to speak at Goldendale this evening. The Tribune says Miss Clara Story, fronThe Dalles will remain in Pendle ton several weeks instructing a class in painting and decorating china ware. Mr" Btler says ; the' denjandetill keeps good for prime3 mutton. . Heis now here to receive 2,000 head from the Prineville, for western shipment. : PEHSE & BOVS KNEE KND Ladies' Fleeced Xjxa.ec3.- MEN'S VICTORS, MEN'S CAPITOL, MEN'S SNOW EXCLUDERS, MEN'S IVIisses' and WOMEN'S BEACON, WOMEN'S BRIGHTON, WOMEN'S SANDALS. Spring Heel Rubbers. This is a perfect day, following a crisp I frosty morning. . A C. E. Bavard was a passenger ttTPort- land this morning. . Mr. A. J. Borie, the La ' Grande U. P. E. official, is in the city. , Chas. Di'vbin, of Antelope, left for a visit to Salem this morning. The further sale of city lots has been postponed until 10 a. m. Saturday The U. P.'R. have, more than likelv, absoroeu" tne Astoria ana -ortiana iai nratr 1 Dr. Siddall leaves on the 4 p m. train today for Portland, to take in the expo sition. He expects to return on Sun day. A. J. Linton, of 10-Mile, has 8,500 Ks of dried prunes, and 1,200 fos of dried apples, which he is holding for an ad vance on the Chicago market. Judge Thornbury, whose illness for some time past has been a source of great anxiety to his family and friends, is al mt the same today as yesterday. The De Moss family are to give a con cert in The Dalles Tuesday eveningnext, the 26th, in the M. E. Church, for the benefit of the ladies society of that con gregation. , Mr. A. C. Phelps at Collins' landing, was so shamefully assaulted by a brutal half-brr ed yesterday that his scalp was laid open, and head and eyes fearfully bruised. He came to this city by the Tiocmlatnr. n.nd Dr. TTnlliHr.pr tnnk n dozen stitches in the scalp, andbandagedn i the head. His assailant escaped Mr. Josh. French left on the noon train today for Heppner to attend to the second shipment this month by the Gilman, French Land and Live Stock Co., of a train load of cattle for the Port land market. A train load of eighteen cars went through last Saturday. An other shipment will be made on or about the 1st of November. "A fog in the Washington hills, on the north bank of the Columbia, below the cascades, indicates a fair day," said a fellow traveler at OneonJa yesterday. The sunrise was grand, and we never saw a more perfect day in Portland.1 So when you go to Ihe city hope for the Washington fog. An Indian named Peter McKay, who lives on the Grande Ronde reservation, draws the sum of $8 per month for ser vices rendered the government during the Rogue river war of 1854-6. During those wars McKay bore a distinguished part as guide and scout, and the gov ernment has very justly shown its ap preciation of the service rendered. Is ewt Campbell, Julius Fisher, John Williams, The Chkonicle editor, and thers, were permitted to travel behind some fine locomotive engineering from Bonneville to Hood River last night. As Jack Wieke was missed from the 'coach, and didn't come in again until Hood River was passed, it is half susr pected he was spelling the man at the throttle. Mr. and Mrs. Allaway and Miss Mc Neal, returned Tuesday. Two more members of the Providence band came up to the Cascades that day, guests of Capt. Short of the steamer Dalles City. The whole band propose making the trip before leaving Oregon. They brintbeir instruments, and the soul -inspiring scenery seems. to increase their scope of musical ability.- Mr. ; Church .had his cornet with him, a beautiful gold in strument; . set with fine- jewels, and valued at $2,500. , 4 'is . s .,; BOOTS SANDALS. Cliildrexi's .roticc The members of the United States board of engineers, Col. Mendell and others, may be expected in The Dalles Saturday. Any person in p ossession of any leading information should endeav or to present the same to the board. We are not advised with respect to the length of time the gentlemen may be expected to remain with us. Reports from Yaquina bay are to the v enocD mat toe run oi salmon is simply DfimmpnRp In eighteen days two boats with four men caught 5.0CO fish. These were for Williams' cannery, where they are being salted. Owing to the big sup ply a email price is paid, about one cent a pound on the average. A Salem man trolled and caught nineteen one after noon.' . Bills of lading have been received by the Glass Works company for thhty five ' casks, fifteen tons of clay from Europe.Vla New York city, which is to. be used in building the cupola for the Grand Dalles glass works, and the pot for reducing our geyserite and produc ing our iruit jars, and every other con-l ceivable form of glass for commercial purposes. The work ptps nn.n Yesterdavs 4 p. m., train from the east did not arrive until 1 :15 a. m. tO' day; and the 3:05 a. m., train today came in at 7 :20 this morning. The cause of the delays was a smashed up freight, headed west, between Telocasit and North Powder. The first train t -ansferred at the wreck, the last one came through. Nine cars were ruined in the wreck. The Abercorn cargo of railway iron wrecked near Grays' harbor in 1837, and purchased by Paul Mohr for use at the dalles portage, will figure another year for newspaper items. Work has been suspended for 1S92. One of the divers employed says there is yet about $25,000 worth of iron to bring ashore, but work had to be suspended until next epring, owing to the washing away of a wharf on which the rails were landed. Yesterdays noon train bound east was three hours behind time because of a slide. The slide caused quite a sensa tion. Engineer Evans' attention was attracted by a man in a field, who sig nalled, and he kept his eye close on the track until he saw a woman, signalling for him to stop. The train was brought to a halt, thus providentially, just in the nick of time as around the curve where the slide had occurred it. could not be seen until too late to have prevented -a dreadful accident.- The woman was handsomely rewarded by the passengers. The Columbus Day. Exercises at the public schools will be gin at 10 a. m. The pupils from the hill school will hold exercises in the email frame building in the west school yard below the hill. In the large frame -and brick buildings the exercises will be held on the .second floors respectively. The exercises will consist of flag drill, patriotic songs, recitations and compo sitions relating to the day. At the close of the indoors exercises, all departments will meet in the yard around the. brick school - house over whicli will be raised the American flag. Visitors and children will join in the military flag salute and in singing Amer ica. It 16 expected that the exercises will be concluded at 11 :30. The' teach ers and pupils of the WascOi academy will attend in a body.. ... Wanted. A good girl to do general Apply at this office. housework. 10.5dtf THROUGH Freight auff PasseugBr 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 leaves Portland (Yamhill street dock) at 6 a. m. con necting with steamer Regulator for The Dalles. PASSENGER KATES. One way .$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. LAUGH LIN, General Manager. THE DALLES. OREGON Morrison Street Is Barred. The Champion Corbett passed through The Dalles yesterday. Not he who knocked Sullivan out, but he of cycle- fame. He left Omaha Sunday intending to attc ad the Portland exposition and only learned that he had the beginning date wrong after reaching Huntington. ilia credentials show that he is a thorough athlete; and is traveling in the interest of a byctcle manufacturing company. He had read of Mr. Frank G. Leuz' troubles on the road between Umatilla and The Dalles with surprise. It will be remembered Mr. Lenz claimed that he had pushed his wheel 100 miles out of a possible 126 over this route. Mr. Corbetts grain of allowance' was so uch larger than a mustard seed that e instituted inquiry of locomotive en gineers familiar with the region, and two of these inform us that from Willows Junction to The Dalles 164 miles, there is not to exceed fifty milei over which Mr. Lenz might not have rode bis wheel as easily as in the streets of Portland. Morrison 6treet barred out, of course. We found Mr. Corbett a chatty and ver satile conversationalist, and enjoyed bis company very much. He says he has never made a tour of the world on his wheel, but has plunged the mud and dust of every state and territory of America except Alaska, and he proposes going there next June. Afraid for Vs or of Us? Somehow "it almost always occurs" that somebody in Portland becomes so licitous for the welfare of the Inland Empire. Brother Williamson, of the Portland Rural Northwest, is now on the anxious seat. He recently visited the farmers' institute at Milton, which gave him an opportunity "to see some thing of a part of the state which he had not previously visited. As the trip was made in the night both ways, little was seen of the country west of Pendle ton, and in fact there is very little land of an agricultural character to be seen from the car windows west of that place, even with the aid of daylight." But be fore he returned to Portland he saw enough to cause a dreaded apprehension in his mind that we have a country here likely to bo overrun by combined harvesters and threshers, the inevitable result of which will be to root out small farms. The prospect is far from your picture of it, Bro. Williamson, and you ought to know that! in . this . country farming is jiot confined to any one thing. The- Inland Empire furnishes your beef, mutton, pork, veal, salmon, trout, venison, bear, grouse, fruits of every kind, -melons of every kind, grains of every kind, your carriage teams, sin gle roadsters, draft horses, mules, work oxen, etc., etc., ad libitum ; fur, fin and feather all abound in any style or shape, according to order, at lowest spot cash prices. But because this portion of the Inland Empire has doubled up on wool annnaly, from 750,000 8s in 18S9, to 6,000,000 fis even, in 1892 ; and has 79,000,000 lbs more wheat to send away this ' season' than we shipped in : all of 1890-91 ; don't think we forget to diver sify our time and talent for an open river, as well as our farming ; for all there is in it. The Inland Empire is all right now.and in , the hence to come. 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. JOHN C 109 SECOND STREET, M ISS ANNA PETER 5 CCX fine Millinery ! 112 Second street. AMERICAN SCHOOL 0 P O Stoneman & Fiege, dealers in Boots and Shoes. All goods we sell, we warrant. BEST IN Who Wants Sparks Again? Spokane Review. Millions of acres of public lands have bren thrown open to settlement under President Harri son's administration, commencing with Oklahoma, which will one day be a great state, and concluding . up to -date' with the opening of the Crow-' Indian reser vation in Southern Montana and the conclusion of the negotiations for the purchase of the Cherokee . Btrip. ? Com pare this with Commissioner" Sparks' suspicious, dilatory , and v exasperating conduct of the land office, and then let the western settler vote for a resumption of the Sparks system. Who will? 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 nick, we gave her Castoria. When ahe tra a Child, she cried for Castoria, When she became Hiss, she clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gare them Castoria NOTICE To Settlers Under the 3rd Sec. Act, September 29, 1890. Department of the Interior, General Land Office, Washington, D.C., Septem ber 3U, 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 claim?, to rnn from the date of the pro mulgation ot tne instructions for the restoration by this office-, I, have now to advise you that Congress, by act ap proved June zo. 18U2, 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 vears from the passage of said act of 1890. This latter amendment relates only 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, 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 eovern vou-m the cases of all other claimants under eaid act. , -- v ery .Respectfully, . (Signed) ....... . W. M. SxoxBi 10-21w30d. . - Acting Commissioner. '.'A Bare Bargain. Two Cottages for sale. -Enquire of 9.2Sdtf "N. Iv'hkaldom. HERTZ, THE DALLES. OREGON. THE DALLES, OR. CO X o CO 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 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 Diarrhoea 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. 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. r L. Robden, 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. Allaway, Gen'l Agent. A. Cure for Cholera. There is no use of any one suffering with the cholera when Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhcca 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 danzerons as cholera. This remedy was used there wih great success. For sale by Blakeley & Hough ton. Koomi to I.et. Two pleasant bed rooms in a neat cottage on the hill, to let. Inquire at this office, v lO.ldtf A Girl Wanted. For general housework in the country. 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 G .A. ZLST ID I IE S East of Portland. ' : DEALERS IN - Tropical Fruits, Nuts, Cigars and Tobacco. Can furnish any of these rooda at Wfemout -or Retail . - . eHtBSH "K OYSTEfS3 ;' ' ' ' . Kvery Style.'" ,:. 7-' Ice Cream and Soda JteterS: , 104 Second Street, The Dalleav