C20 Just Received ! "The Regulator Line" Blankets -A. FULL LINE OF GENTS Tie Balles, Portlail ui Astoria Navigation Co. esssbsssbs HOSIERY, UNDERWEAR, OVERS ti I RTS, COLLA RS A COMBINATION OF UTILITY AND ECONOMY and. and CUFFS. 3 1 . - Blankets OUR , TO HAVE Good warm blankets and bedding is one comfort; WE CALL AT- J TENTION TO OUR LINE OF FURS IN THE FIRST WINDOW SEE The Cailes Daily Cttfoniele. Entered a the Postoffice at The Dalles, Oregon, as second-class matter. Local Advertising. 10 Cents per line for first insertion, and 5 Cents jer line for each subsequent insertion. Special rates for long time notices. All local notices received Inter than 3 o'clock will appear tae following day. Weather Forecast. ijliciul forecatt J 5 p. vi. it til irroiv: ilfficiul forecatt for tKCnty-Joar hoars ending a: Light rains and slightly cooler weather. PoriTLAKn, Nov. 11th, 1S92. Pague. FRIDAY NOV. 11, 1892 LOCAL BREVITIES. g. ' : C. P. Balch of Dufur is in the city. W. M. Barnett, the Wasco banker, is in the city. Hay creek gave 25 majority for Har rison. Hay creek has wool to sell. Van Horn is -again in the city to the delight of ladies having pianos to tune. If you want a safe moved quickly em ploy Charley Fouts and Frank Egan. There are two prohibitionist in Wamic ; the next election there will be 202. J. C. Lucky, of the Warm Spring3 agency, passed through for Portland last night. The Lewiston Teller and the Orego nian are still discussing- the price of wire nails. H. E. Hayes, the Alliance state lect urer of Salem, an old time tillicum, is in the city. "Wamic gave Cleveland three majority. Don't forget Wamic when the state is made up. Wasco county has as pood an article of lire clay as can be found in Germany, but we didn't know it till the German clay arrived. Joe Holliday is the Inland Empire horse man's f-iend. He is the only man living who pulls a street car with mule power. Goldendale, Wasco and Centervil'.e lodges K. of P., will pay the fraternity of The Dalles an -official visit sometime this month. Prineville gave foity-eight majority for Clevelaud. Prineville has a candi date for every office in the gift of the president. By request Rev. W. C. Curtis has withdrawn his resignation and will re main as pastor of the first Congrega tional church of The Dalles. ' Judd S. Fish has invested in a thoroughbred 2-year old Ingrahatn colt, nearly related to OroFino, winner of tbe 22 race at Spokane. He purchased the colt of Dick Hinton. The heav y safes in Thornbury & Hud son's and tbe United States land offices were removed yesterday after the fashion of Bowser taking a trunk down stairs, only Bowser wasn't present. Havejyou seen Hubbards latest pic ture? His work for educating people up to a sense of the situation respecting an open Columbia river cannot be elipsed by all the Blancbards in congress. John Dolan and C. O. Blakely, of .East Portland, offer a reward, for Bur dett Wolfe, but the way in which the Oregonian prints the figures one is un able to say whether the BUffv is" $tM30 or $21.50. '' ' ' . ' ' ' ' BLANKET OFFERINGS TO BUY Them at reasonable prices ' like ours is another OUR CENTER WINDOW PEASE AND T. J. Driver was in the city last night with three car loads of beef cattle which he sold to Butler. If Butler don't look out he will clean the Inland Empire out of all its available fat stock. Judge W. Lair Hill, now in this city, says people may be mislead by a item in The Chronicle yesterday. Mrs. Hill will make her home in California, but he still clings to webfoot and hails from Seattle. A report has reached Klamath of the death of Peter French, cattle king of Oregon, at Stein mountain. His ranc'i in Harney valley is seventy miles long and thirty-five wide, worth Ja million and a hall". He was very much disliked ; and leaves no family. . N. H. Bigg's, in whose honor the lively station was named, is at The Umatilla House. He proposes that Cleveland call a special session of congress as soon as he is inaugurated, to furnish the country with "free trade blessings" im mediately. Biggs is all right. If you know of a news item give it to The Chronicle reporter. If you have relatives or friends visiting you let us know it and it will add interest to our local columns. Notices of marriages, births and deaths are published free of charge. Send them in promptly. Mr. Linus Hubbard of this city, is one of the few constant democrats, from principle alone, presiding in the Inland Empire, hence we rejoice with him in his appreciative reception of a full pledged rooster yesterday which is to ornament his librarv in the future. Campbell Bros, of the Columbia Candy Factory have made arrangements wiih Geo. Ruch proprietor of the Pioneer Bakery to handle bread, cakes, etc., tbe product of that popular bakery. They can assure their '"customers that these goods will always be fresh and of the very best quality. borne rea'ly nne horses have been ad' ded to tbe suills on the fair grounds this week for training. One of these is a two-year-old stallion owned by Frank Button of Hood River, who traces his almost blood back to some 2:03 pacers. S. B. Adams has also placed a fine Black smith colt in the hands of Welch, which weight 1,100 pounds, and is as fine as silk. . , .. . ' .. N Arrangements ior me enrysantueraum festival, and high tea, to be given Wed nesday and Thursday, Nov. 16th and 17th, in the Baldwin buildings opposite the Umatilla house, are now 'completed. The flower room will be open from one, o'clock till 10 p. m. where a magnificent display of choisest chrysanthemums can be seen for 2o cents. The price of the high tea, at which will be served every substantial edible as well as all the delicies of the season, has been fixed Jat 50 cents. Families of four or niore tak ing high tea, will be admitted to tbej flower display free of charge. The te. room containing trie cnocoiate and ici cream booths will be open at 5 o'clock to! which there will be no charge of admis sion. Free Encyclopedia. The merchants of The Dalles who have made it possible for every family in thisl region to ootaiu a complete iiorary tree of cost are : Snipes & Kinersley, C. F. Stephens, M. T. Nolan, Maier& Benton, Henry S. Kuck, W. E. Garretson, Geo7 T. Thompson, fetoneman & Fiege, and John Hertz. Those coming in from the country or surrounding .villages to" en quire as to the plan of presentation should call at the drug store of Snipes & Kinersley; between 11 and 1 o'clock, any day before November 30th, at. which time this offer will be withdrawn. IV1AYS General Sickles' illegibility. Washington, Nov. 10. The election in congress from the tenth district of New York of General Sickles has revived the question as to the right of an officer on the retired list of the army to a seat in coogiess in view of the constitutional provision that "no pei-son holding any office under the United States shall be a member of either house of Congress during his continuance in office." The only question involved is whether retired army officers holds an office within the meaning of the constitution. The consensus of opinion among legal officials on this point is in the affirma tive. There is not even a probability, however, that any official of the execu tive branch of the government will at teinri tc interfere in any way -with-the seating of General Sickles. Therefore, unless some mcmler of the house .itself shall make the objection, he will be al lowed to take his seat. Maz of Mirrors a New Fad. The magic maze, a maze of mirrors, is the latest novelty at the horticultural xhibit in London. The visitor enters he maze, by a crooked passage, walled 'entirely by mirrors, into the central hall, toward which a number of seem ingly endl s avenues appear to con verge. Reproductions of the visitor are presented at every impInable point and angle. A figure stands at the entrance to the hall, beckons with uplifted hand, and the reproductions show the figure in a hundred different places at once. ,The bewildered visitors walk about in a cautious, rilf-scared wav, ruDninsr into, their own reflections and looking pith distrust on every one who ap proaches, unable to tell substance from shadow. The 6pace 'occupied by the maze is only forty by thirty feet, but the arrangement of mirrors gives it the appearance of being acres in extent. To ICeep Out the Cholera. Washington, Nov. 10. In view of the still lingering possibility of a fresh out break of cholera in European countries in the early spring, and the consequent danger of its introduction into tbe LTnited States, officials of the treasury department have determined tomain tain the utmost vigilance in guarding against tbe entrance of people or mer chandise that might posssibly convey germs of the dreaded epidemic. To this end, immigration will be generally dis couraged and the provisions of the presi dent's proclamation of September. 1, imposing a quarantine of twenty days Vtn all anonatal ? ret ty ira 1 .4-a rSl 1 Ttn vigorously enforced. The transporta tion companies have been given to understand that the department reserves the right to remove tbe restriction in special coses calling for such action. According to official construction, all aliens who come to this country for per manent residence are immigrants, and will be treated as such, regardless of whether they travel in the cabin or steerage. Oregon's Railroad Commission. Salem Statesman. There is room for the railroad commission to earn, its salary, but it can't do it riding around in palace cars, with two nigger cooks and a case of champagne oh tap. The state pays a good sized sum for this luxury, and it, with a lot of other com missions, should be made to do some thing useful or be suspended from the pay-rolls indefinitely. .-" THROUGH Freignt ana Passenger Line Through daily service (Sundays ex cepted) between The Dalles and" Port land. Steamer Regulator leaves The Dalles at 6 a. in. connecting at Cascade Locks with steamer Dalles City. Steamer Dalles . City leaves Portland (Yamhill street dock) at t a. m. con necting with steamer Regulator for The Dalles. PASSENGEK ATES. Oneway Round trip ..$2.00 .. 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 Atlveri'sed Letters. Following is the list of letters remain ing in the postoffice at The Dalles un called for, Friday Nov. 11th, 1892. Persons calling for same will give date on which they were advertised : Anderson Miss M P Baker C F Bentley Ira Bridgefarmer M Bocham HE Duyer Mrs Thomas Chapman John Calvin F J Elkins M C Frank Mrs E R Foster Sqnw-e .Fox M S Green J M Henderson Annie Holman F Dellard Knight Mrs Geo Lyon Mrs H B (3) Milligan Billy Moter Rev R D Staack Pete Smith Dr Leon Smith S S (2) Smith Leon M. T. Nolan, P. M. An Attempted Revolution. Kingston, Jamaica, Nov. 10. Ad vices .from Hayti tell of an attempted uprising at ;Cape ilaytien. ' Hippolyte was on the alert, however, and nipped the revolution in the bud. There were many arrests, and it is rumored some executions. The Manigal party has nothing Jto do with the affair, and ex pressed much surprise when the news reached here. It may interfere with some of their plans by putting Hippo lyte on his guard. The Butcher's Trust. The Union Meat company is what they call the consolidated beef trust in Portland now. Parties from Chicago, however, are in the country, and The Dalles stands as good a show as any point in the Pacific Northwest for being the leading beef market another year. Why not? The location for securing cattle, sheep, hogs, etc., is superior to Portland in every way, and the facilities for marketing the goods are equal to any one of the best points on the Pacific coast. It is a well known fact that the bulk of the hams, bacon, lard, canned and smoked meats that are consumed in this market are imported from eastern cities. This is also the case on the en tire coast, and the magnitude of this trade can be betler understood when it is stated that -careCully-couipiled statis tics show that something like 60,000,000 pounds of meat products of the kinds before stated were imported the past year for consumption by the coast states and British Columbia. This is due to the fact that the large eastern packing -houses possess facilities for putting up a more palatable and desirable brand of meats, etc., of this'character than have been heretofore put up by local pro ducers. The reason for this is readily apparent to all who will give the matter any consideration. There is no one es tablishment here that is devoted to the packing business, and consequently the hams, bacon, etc., of local - production are not at all of uniform quality. The Dalles could have facilities equal to Chi cago, with a Chicago firm behind it; to supply the whole coast with meats of uniform quality. Discussing this mat ter yesterday the Oregonian says : "As large as the city of San Fran cisco is, it was only recently that a plant of this kind was put up there, and it remained for Chicago parties the same ones who are desirous of locating here to start the enterprise, the residents of the Eay City not being progressive enough to establish such a much-needed institution. Now - that tbese same gentlemen are about to es tablish another great enterprise here they cannot but be the recipients of con gratulations from all sources, and with the display of the same zeal and energy shown by them in the past, success is assurred for them in their new field of operations." "," JOHN C 109 SECOND STREET, MISS ANNA PETER 5 CO.. . Fine Nlillinery ! 112 Second street. Dress-Making Parlors FasMoqaMe D?e Cutting and Fitting a Specialty. J Room 4 over French & Co's Bank. : : MRS. GIBSON, Prop. Another Crater Lake. A large lake situated in the Olympic mountains, at an altitude of 5,000 feet, was recently discovered by two hunters, who describe it as in all probability the crater of some extinct volcano, and the lake was christened Crater lake in con sequence. It was about two miles in length by half a mile in breadth, with depth unknown, as the cliff descends perpendicularly into the water on all sides, while a huge glacier runs into the southern end. A small stream forms the outlet, which 'is one f the tributa ries of the Duckabush. ' '. Wanted. A Change. Alliance, O., Nov. 10. One of the big surprise.? of the election was the selection of Dr. George P. Hurt, dem., in this (McKinley's) district, for con gress. Put Into l'ort Leaking:. London, Nov. 10. The ship State of Maine, from New York for Puget Sound, put into Montevideo with her watertank leaky. Home Without a Mother. The room's in disorder. The cat s on the table. The Mower-stand upsemnd the mischief to p iy ; And Johnny is ..ere aning As loud as he s able, For nothing got 3 right when l.inmma's away. What a scene of discomfort and con fusion' home would be if mamma did not return. If your wife is slowly breaking down, from a combination of domestic cares and female disorders, make it your first business to restore her health. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is'without a peer as a remedy for feeble and debili tated women, and is the only medicine for the class of maladies known as female diseases which is sold under a positive guarantee from the manufacturers that it will give satisfaction, or the money refunded. It is a positive cure for the most complicated cases of womb troubles. I'loneer Bakery. .Having again reopened this popular bakery and employed the services of a first class baker, I am prepared to furn ish the public with the yery best of bread, pies and cakes on. short notice. Nextrfloor to Chrisman & Corson, Cor. Washington and Second streets, The Dalles, Or. - Geo. Ruch. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. When Baby waa nick, ire gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, When she became Hiss, she dung; to Castoria When she had Children, she gave them Catori Announcement. We bag to inform the public that we are about to open a night school of busi ness and short hand here in the city, and respectfully solicit the patronage of all each young men and" women as desire to secure a practical Knowledge of busi ness. For full and further Darticulars apply at room 4, over French's bank. (Jlakk Gibson, 11.2dtt Edwaeo W. Werick. County Treasurer's Notice. All county warrants registered prior to May 1, 1889, will be paid if pre sented at my office, corner Third and Washington strepts. Interest ceates on and after this date. The Dalles, Oct. 31, 1S92. '.. ; William Michell, 10.31tf Treasurer Wasco County, Or. Notice. I will sell a few lots in the city ciei; titles clear. Now is your time, call or address , . - A. KennedV1 ir.7-5t , ' Nihth'streeCThe DalleB, 0r HERTZ, THE DALLES. OREGON. THE DALLES, OR. and flloaMains For Sale Cheap For Cash. The beet ranch in Gilliam - oountv, Oregon. Being the E. K of the N. W. and N. E. of the S. E., S. y& of S. W. of section 10, S. E. of the N. E., N. 1. of N. W. of section 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 water. For further information address C. W. Richie, P. O. box, 108, Walla Walla, Wash. 10.2i)dwlm . . A Cure 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. . - ICE ! ICE I ICE ! , Having on hand a large supply of ice we 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 prices throughout the season. Leave orders at p. F. Lauer's store, Second street. 5-2tf Cates & Allison. NOTICE: SALE OF CITY LOTS. Notice is hereby given that, by authority of Ordinance So. 25", which passed the common , council of Dalles city, September 3d, 1892, enti tled "An ordinance entitled an ordinauce to provide for the sale of certain lots belonging to Dalles city," I will, on Saturdav next offer for sale at public auction, to the highest bidder, all of the lots and parts of lots situated in Gates Addition to Dalles City, Wa-co county, Oregon, not heretofore sold, as "previously adver tised, Each of said lots -will be sold upon the lot respectively and none of them shall be sold for , a less sum than the value thereof as above stated. One fonrth of the price bid on any of said lob' shall be paid in cash at tbe time of sale, and the remainder in two equal payments on or before one and two vears from the date, of such sale, respectively, with interest on such deferied pay ments at the rate of ten per cent, per annum, payable annually. Provided that pnyment may be made in full -at the time of such sale at the', option of the purchaser. - - The sale will begin at the hour of ten o'clock a. m. of said day and will be continued from time to time until nil of said lots shall be sold. Dated this 1st day of November, 1892. ' FRANK MENEFEE, 11-ldtf - Kecorder of Dalles City. 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-iET ID I IE S East of Portland. -DEALERS IN- Tropical Fruits, Nuts, Cigars and Mam - Can furnish any of these goods atWholesal orBetail eFHESH -f 'OYSTEfS4 ' In Every Style. " Ice Cream and Soda Water. 1041 Second Street. The Dallee, Or.,