UNBLEACHED MUSLINS. Cabot W, 14 yards for: .'.;.:.:. v!:.. ......... -$1.00 Cabot A, 13 yards for 1.00 BLEACHED MUSLINS. Clover, 14 yards for...... ; -.. 1.00 Chapman X, 13 yards for , 1.00 Fruit of the Loom, 10 3'ards for........:.:.,......... 1.00 WIDE BLEACHED SHEETINGS. 5-4, per yard. 1 .14 0-4, per yard. ........ 16i 8- 4, per yard ;. 20 9- 4, per yard , .25 10- 4, per yard ; : .2 7 J, Amoskeag Staple Ginghams, 11 yards for $1.00 Amoskeag Shirtings, 9 yards for: 1.00 Indigo Blue Prints, 14 yards or.....'...:...... , ....... 1.00 Table Oilcloth, per yard .25 Ladies' Fast Black Hose, per pair 12 J Clark's 6. N. T. Thread, per doz 50 Men's Cotton Socks, per doz.. 1.00 Men's Scarlet AVool Socks, per pair 25 Men's Riveted Overalls, per pair .GO Engineers' Iliveted Overalls, per pair..... 75 17 The Dalles Daily Chroniele. Entered H the Postoflice nt The Dalles, Oregon, , as second-class matter. Local Advertising. 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. "Weather Forecast. Ojficial forecast for i p. '. tomorrow: twenty-four hour ending at ( Occasional showers. Clearing and cooler weather, followed bv frost. Portland, Oct. 31, 1892'. . Pague. . MONDAY OCTOBER 31, 1892 LOCAL 15KEVITIKS. Mr. A. W. Branner, the Oregon, Idaho and California stage manager, is in the city. The Woodmen are to meet in their new hall for the first time tomorrow night. The gentlemen of the electric light company expect to resume lighting to morrow night. The Antelope Herald informs us that Hon. Geo. A. Young, has been seriously ill for some tirnp. inree pciiooners arrived in port yes terday and are discharging cord wood. along the levee today. Mr. Farrell came up yesterday and made arrangements for shipping 7,000 cases of salmon east. The rains yesterday made the roads very slippery for a few hours, but they are just fine for traveling today. A band of cattle came in yesterday for shipment by Hon. A. E. Lyle, of Crook county. He has some more on the way. Grain in the ground everywhere be1 gina to come up in the finest style pos sible, betokening a big crop next year. Mr. W. C. Gilbert's family have ar rived from Chilicothe, Ohio, and he now considers himself "at home" in The Dalles. Today ends the St. Charles cream ex hibits in The Dalles. The lady attend ants go to Portland tomorrow by steamer Regulator. N. J. Sinnott has been invited to ac company Hon. Binger Hermann to Dufur Wednesday, and take part by ad- Hon. YV. H. H. Dufur has a beet fieldV that beats the world. He is gathering the crop now, and has tons of them suitable for a sugar factory. , ,- Hon. W. H. II. Dufur was in the city a short time yesterday. Hon. A. J. Dufur come in with him, and will re main in the city several days. The IT. p. r. Co. have decided to make tl!e Hotel Erhart at Umatilla first class in every respect. An elevator, electric bells, etc., etc., are to be put in. Judge M. L. Olmstead of Baker City, paid The Dalles a "flying visit" yester day. Especially when overtaking the train upon his departure at 1 o'clock , p. 111. .- : Justice Clarke's court is in session to- dsy, wrestling with a civil .action for money, entitled Craft v. . Lenning. Dufnr & Menefee for plaintiff; Story fo Mr. A. G. Johnson returned from a hasty trip up into Sherman county yes terday. He says the farmers are all very busy and are showing their hope fulness of the future by their works. PERSE St WHYS. Mrs.' Juker, an old time resident of The Dalles, is in the city visiting friends. The Athena Press, in its zeal to do Cleveland a good turn, forgets decency in its references to Serfator Dolph at Pendleton. "Right wrongs no man." Steam was raised yesterday on Ken nedy's steam, yacht, but Bhe made no trip its the machinery was not in order. In a short time she will be readv to rn with Arthur H. at the helm A vouth from Telocaset who started for his home from Portland an been robbed of his money by a tramp thi3 side of Bridal Veil, was sent on hi wav rejoicing bv Judge Blakelev terday. A pian is now on foot to establish a local industry in The Dalles which will give employment to at least 2,000 opera tives. It remains with the people of The Dalles to say whether it shall come here or go elsewhere. The attending physician informs us that there is but little change if any in the condition of the Woods children down with diphtheria in the Pines. He las no fears of the disease spreading. he oldest oue of the Woods children is ,-ery liable to die. The first item to open the day was the runaway of Butler & Co.'s lumber team. The horses took a lively spin, covering .tue central, eastern and western portions of the citv. They stuck well to the for ward wheels, and considering the long run did comparatively no damages. Representative Hermann is making a splendid canvass of Oregon in favor of republican principles and the election of Harrison and Reid. He is a man of the people and his able and eloquent appeals to the people will have great weight with them. He is to speak in The Dalles to. morrow night. Who says Inland Empire spuds are not potatoes this year? A box of them at The Dalles Mercantile Co.'s store to day says potatoes are a crop in Wasco thi3 year, all other reports to the con trary notwithstanding. These were Wilson's favorite, and one of tbem weighed 3 lbs. The Review says the young lady who has consented to pose as the model for the silver statue of Montana which is to be on exhibition at the worlds fair, Chicago, is a native of Montana, Miss Nora Houser of Deer Lodge. She has a cousin Miss Nora Houser, a native of Multnomah county, Oregon. The Pendleton Tribune tells of three democrats there: Bluford Stanton, Henry J. Taylor and John Durham, life long democrats too, who are loud in their denunciation of the endorsement of Nathan Pierce by the democratic ma chine and openly declared that they will not vote for him under any consideration Mr. A. A. Bonney, of the market, cor ner of Third and Washington streets, has a grave charge to bring against some of The Dalles boys. One of their pranks last night was to run his delivery cart' off, and it took considerable time and trouble to find it. These bova are known, and if they persist- in such an noyances, must in the end suffer for Mr. Bonn returned from Mfc. -Ange aturday night. He was absent from he Dalles but twenty hours, and . had four or five hours to spare. Having in formation that his son Guss was ill he went to see him; but' found the young man all right, recovering from a slight indisposition. He speaks very flatter ingly of the attention of the teachers, and the school generally, at Mt. Angel. Five hundred black bass have been placed in the Willamette river above Salem. They, were shipped from Quincy, 111. In spite of all that has been urged against this infraction of the rights of our people, and the destruc- lon of our Royal Salmon, there appears o be no law to punish the crank, be he ligh or low, guilty of such indiscretion. Pacific county cranberries are begin mng to be an important crop. . Last year 2,000 barrels were marketed, valued at $16,000, and this season the crop will be much larger. The berries are equal in quality to the Cape Cod product. The owners of the marsh live in Oak land, Cal., and have been cultivating the berry in Pacific county for over . ten years. You can buy them in The Dalles next fall. A 20-foot draft waterway iai been proposed between Chicago, Duluth and Buffalo, and Gen Poe has been author ized to let the contracts necessary, the work to begin as soon as the ice breaks up next spring, and be completed with in four years. Thus it may be seen that the largest commercial centers are work ing for open water communication as industriously as we of the Inland Em- rire are for an onen Columbia rivpr. ti,. .!:.. i .- ' j jNj j-iic fjcupuiisia iiftu a luiiBiug uciliun- stration at the Court house Saturday evening. JVl. V . Rork, one of .the noted professional rainbow chasers of Orego was present, and kept just as far fror Truth as he could possibly, and Weav'er seemingly plausible story. In' private conversation at the Umatilla house, he told a friend that he was having "an awful hard time" educating the masses, and then holding them through the cam paign. He is a peopulist for reven only. Frank G. Lenz was telling his "terri ble road" story in San Francisco, one evening last week, of how- he pushed his wheel into The Dalles over 100 miles, when he,got into a dispute with ;a web footer who thought he knew better. Press dispatches tell the balance : "Mr. Lenz and his associates started to paint the town a vermilion hue. They suc ceeded in demolishing considerable fur niture in Brunnell's saloon and were making preparations to raid other re sorts near by, but were intercepted by the police and arrested for disorderly conduct. ' ' ;. The Dalles Portage. Arlington Record. This question is the most vital of all others to the people of this section of Oregon. Never before in the history of this region have the prospects for an open river been so bright as now. Our representatives from this section will either go as a unit in favor, of this appropriation or else they should go prepared for the well merited ondemnation of their constituency. hey will also have the full advantage of the many artful schemes that have so often and so long defeated the people in their clamor for their honest rights against corporate greed. Our immediate relief now rests with this body, and there seems little doubt of their fair and honest consideration of a portage, which means its speedy construction by the tate. - Attention Woodmen! meeting of Mount Hood Camo No. 59 J Woodmen of the World, will be held he new hall over A. Keller's store on Sabond street, at 7 :30 p. m-. sharp Tues- y Nov. 1st, 1892. - A full attendance of embers is requested. . By order of . J. M. Huntington, C. C. The lie ulator L ine Tie Dalles, PortM ui iitoria Navigation Co. THROUGH Freionc ana Passenger Line Through dally service (Sundays ex cepted) between The Dalles and Port land. Steamer Regulator leaves The Dalles at 0 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. I'ASSENOEH AIES. One wav ...... . .$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 Manage-. THE DALLES. OREGON FBOSPKlIVIUST AHEAD. A New Development of The Dalles Re sources Contemplatefl- The Chboxicle still holds to the view that so soon as it becomes known that there is any assurance that the canal and locks at the cascades are to be completed within a reasonable time, people looking out for investments will take a tumble this direction rather more rapidly han ceremonious. . This opinion has sen confirmed to our mind upon three ifferent occasions within three days. lOne of the most important plans for development of resources tributary to The Dalles is the construction of a railway a few miles south of hero to a belt of choice timber, such as there is a scarcity of on the coast, and for which there is a big demand everywhere. If the parties who are looking the matter up; there are two separate companies in terested ; decide to take" hold of the en terprise, either will require terminal facilities in the city, and some induce ments to place their manufacturing plants here-, as well as assistance to se cure right of way. The Regulator com pany have extended to them several favors, and the representatives of the different companies are expecting to re turn to The Dalles soon, when the whole plan will be made public. It of course depends somewhat upon the cascade canal and locks completion at an early i day, but with The Chboxicle that no longer figures as a doubt, and The Dalles people might just as well get ready at once for the dawn of prosperity, just a little way ahead. The Hotel Perkins. J. W. Hodson and Geo. E. Good, of Salem, have leased the popular and cen trally located Perkins hotel in Portland, for a term of ten years, and took pos session last Monday afternoon. Thev pay $25,000 for the furniture and a ren tal of $1,800 per month for the building, including the bar room, restaurant and five stores. They receive $800 per month for the restaurant, bar room and stores, leaving them $1,000 per month to pay for the hotel. It is one of the best hotels in Portland, is rapidly gain ing in favor, and, with good and liberal management, such as will keep the rooms full, the new proprietors ought to each make a comfortable fortune in ten years. - Examination of Teachers.' Notice is hereby given that for the purpose of making an examination of all persona who may offer themselves as candidates for teachers of the schools of this county, the county school superin tendent thereof will hold a public exam ination at his office in The JJalles, be ginning Wednesday, November 9th, 1892, at one o'clock p. m. All teachers eligible for state certificates, state di plomas and life diplomas must make application at the quarterly examina tions. Dated this Oct. 31, 1892. . Troy Shelley. County School Superintendent of Wasco County, Oregon. 10.31dwtd Please Report. Subscribers will oblige The Chboxicle by promptly reporting if their papers are not delivered, or the delivery boys do-not place them in a safe place. The distribution of the papers is one of the most perplexing questions to be solved by a newspaper. If you do not get your paper, kick. We are endeavoring to keep things straight. For Sale. Two choice lots and a cottage, on 9th street, one block west of Union. Very desi rable. Price reasonable, come quick, apply to N. Whealdon. - Just Received HOSIERY, UNDERWEAR, OVERS H I RTS, JOHN C 109 SECOND STREET, Miss anna peter s go, ; Fine Nlillinery ! 112 Second street, AMERICAN SCHOOL 0 o Stoneman & Fiege, dealers in Boots and Shoes." All goods we sell, we warrant. 114 SECOUU STIIEET BEST IN JiO REWARD OFFEKED. The Keaso-ns Why County Conrts Can not Ala Financially In Appre hending: Criminals. In Portland last week one day the at tention of Judge Moreland was called to a criticism passed upon him for a failure to offer a reward for the arrest of the fugitive murderer, Burdette Wolfe. For a reply Judge Moreland took from a shelf a copy of the 16th Oregon supreme court reports and turned to page 279, where a decision bearing upon the subject of rewards is given. In May, 18S6, the county court of Multnomah county offered a reward of $250 for the arrest and conviction of 'any person violating the bribery laws at the coming June election. Thomas J.' Mountain sub sequently secured '.-'the arrest and conviction of Herman Wise and Julius Centner in the federal courts. The county court thereupon made an order in Mountain's favor for $500, and the decision was appealed to the su preme court. Judge Thayer, in a lengthy and exhaustive opinion, held that the "power to make such a con tract is not possessed by the county court." ' "There is no authority, there fore," said Judge Moreland, "for the county to offer a reward for Wolfe's cap ture, much as I should like to do so. If there ever was a case where justice would lie served by such an offer, this certainly is one. The parents of the girl cannot do so, and I regret exceed iugly my inability, to move in the mat ter, but there is no help for it." For Sale Cheap For Cash. The best ranch in Gilliam county, Oregon. Being the E. of the N. W. and N. E. of the S. E..-ST H of S. W. of section 10, S. E. of the N. E., N. M of N. W. of Bection 11., and the N. W.'Of the N. E., and the N. E. of the N. W. of section 15, tp. 6, S. 21 E. of the W. M. This ranch contains 400 acres; some of which is grazing. There are fair buildings on the place, and good wter. x.- t-? jx . . .- r w fur luriiiur iMLuiuiuiiuu auuiccs j . Richie, P. O. box, 10S, Walla Walla, Wash. 10.2s)dwlm Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. When Baby -was nick, we gave her Castori. When aho was a Child, she cried for Castoria, When she became Itiss, she clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Castoria The Fence of the Future. There are a number of strong points in favor of the Tuna Hedge as the fence of the future, the advantage of this kind of a fence may be briefly inumerated as follows : It becomes a perfect barrier against all kinds of domestic animals after three years growth ; does not sap or impoverish the ground, being a strict ly atmospheric plant, and will not grow from the seed or bv cutting the roots hence will not spread, it grows only to a certain uniform height and therefore does not require trimming, it has been thoroughly and successfully tested in northern climates and does not kill out in the winter time, it serves the double purpose of usefulness and ornamen tation, as it is an evergreen and blooms during three months of the year, an in vitation is extended to thoroughly test its merits, and every one will be con vinced that it possesses all the advant ages claimed for it. "Messrs. Johnson & Payne are now taking" orders for the Tuna Hedge and have met with uniform success. Any, one wishing a living grow ing fence something that will not spread and will be a fence for all time to come should give their orders now and get their fence started this fall. ! -A. FULL LINE OF GENTS' EM COLLARSt and and CUFFS. HERTZ, THE DALLES. OREGON". THE DALLES, OR. CO X o 00 AMERICA. Oh, this ringing in the ears! Oh, this humming in the head! Hawking, blowing, snuffing, gashing, . Watering eyes and throat a-rasbing, Health impaired and comfort fled, Till I would that I were dead ! What folly to suffer so with catarrhal troubles, when the worst cases of chronic catarrh in the head are relieved and cured by the mild, cleansing and healing properties of Dr. Sage's Catarrh. Remedy. It purifies the foul breath, by. removing the cause of offence, heals the sore and inflamed passages, and perfects a lasting cure. ' " Itciomi to Let. Two pleasant bed rooms in a neat cottage on the hill, to let. Inquire at this office.- lO.ldtf ICE J ICE! ICE! Having on hand a large supply of ice wo are prepared to furnish our custom ers with ice in any quantity at a reason able rate. We guarantee we will supply the demand without advancing pricea throughout the season. Leave orders at C. F. Lauer's store, Second street. o-2tf Cates oc Allison A Care for Cholera. There is no use of any one sufferinsr 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 ueimetta was at nrst Deiievea to ce cholera, but subsequent investigation proved it to be a violent form of dysen- terv, almost as dangerous as cholera.' Th5 rpmlv wan nspd there with 0Tnt" success. For sale by Blakeley & Hough ton. ' PHOTOGRAPHER. Instantaneous Portraits. Chapman Block, The Dalles, Oregon. COLUMBIA CANDY FACTORY Campbell Bros. Prop rs (Successars to W. s. Cram.) Manufacturers of the finest French and - Home Made ' CD JIST DI IB S , East of Portland. -DEALERS IX- Tropical Fruits, Nuts, Cigars and Tobacco. Cnn furnish any of these goods at Wholesal or Retail , OYSTERS In Every Style. Ice Cream and Soda Water. 104 Second Street. The Dallea, Or. S. L,. YOUNG, Watches and Jewelry repaired to order o - bhort notice, and satisfaction guaranteed, - ; : -.-. : ) "'. :? . AT TUB ' . Store of I. C. NIckelsea, 2d St. The Dalle