-w-.---.-rf ifiee CLOSING THE SEASON. fill our pall apd Uipter (Joods must o. 4 it "TTE will not carry these over to another season, and have marked them down to pri ces that must sell them and that The Dalles daily Chronicle. Entered a the Postofflce at 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. "fifficial foreecwt for twenty-four hours ending at 5 p. m. tomorrow; Fair. Nearly stationary temperature. WEDNESDAY - - - NOV. 23, 1892 LOCAL BREVITIES. Mr. Smith French is in Fortland. Leave your order for cord wood at Maier & Benton's. Mr. Wm Weigle of Omaha, is visit'iDg friends in the city. No mail at the postoffice today up to the hour of going to press. Leave orders for Thanksgiving Tur keys at J. H. Cross' Feed Store. Wanted by a lady : A position as nurse. Inquire at Chronicle office. Mrs. Durbin, daughter of Hon. Geo. A. Young, arrived from Montana yester day morning. The Democratic ratification at Dufur was an excellent one. About 500 people participated. The jury in the case of the State v. Seivner, indicted for larceny, brought in a verdict of not guilty. Judge Bradshaw expects to hold court for Judge Stearns, in Multnomah county, on the 5th of next month. The past two trips the stsamer Regu lator took 234 head of beef cattle besides her other freight and passengers. For the best oysters in any style, tea, coffee, chocolate and cake, go to A. Keller's Oregon Bakery. 122 Second street. Pigeon shooting, with clay birds, will be an amusement for tomorrow on the beach, above the Regulator landing, foot of Washington street. Mrs. A. McCormick, mother of John E., of this vicinity, met with an acci dent at Albany on Tuesday which re- sulted in breaking an arm. The Columbia is getting its back up at this port. It raised 22 inches in 24 hours ended at 9 :30 a. in. today, and is now six feet above low water. Jas. W. Hanson, and Mitchell King and wife, of Sherman, county, Geo. J. Sargent of Portland, and Wm. Floyd of 5-Mile, are at the European House. No one need be misled by a false and specious fairness of the weather into re turning the umbrella he is carrying. Today's sunshine is probably only a cruel decoy. The ladies of St. Paul's guild desire to thank Mr. John Booth for his kindness in loaning the arc light from his store for the chrysanthemum festival last week. Leave your Thanksgiving orders for ice cream, fruit, cakes, extra mince pies, fresh oysters, choice candies and cakes, atlA.. Kellers' Oregon bakery, 122 Second street. The circuit court has taken up the case of the State Wm. Bergfeld today, and at noon six jurymen had been em pannelled. ' This will be about the last of the criminal actions for the term. We commence OUT SALE of and Winter Dry Goods,Clothing, Cloaks, Furnishing Goods, Hats, -'Shoes, etc., etc. pems Mrs. Judge Bradshaw was in Lafay ette to attend the funeral of her brother- in-law. It was impossible for Judge B to accompany her, on account of the business in the circuit court, of which he is judge. Miss Iva Brooks and ' Miss. Bertha Ehlen were passengers to Portland by the steamer Regulator yesterday. Miss Brooks will be the guest of Mrs. Frank Dekum in Portland. Miss Ehlen is returning to her home in Aurora. Thanksgiving service at Congrega tional church at 11 a. m. Sermon by Rev. J. Whisler, who has sufficiently recovered from his recent physical in disposition so as to perform the duty assigned him. All are cordially invited to attend tne service. An excellent quality of fire clay has been discovered on the ranch of J. P. Hillstrom,. near Tuckers, sample of which has reached Thb Chronicle. A test of it is displayed in a brick two inches thick, which has been tinder fire in a large fire-place for seven years past The wood outside of this brick was notj even charred by the heat. Another card for Wasco countv. The New Railway. Press dispatches confirm The Chroni cle statement, made three weeks since, that bonds for $1,000,000 have been floated east by the Tacoma, Lake Park and Columbia river railway for con struction of the first fifty miles of the extension to the Columbia river. This information was received from President Baisley, of New York, by Secretary J. D. Miller at Tacoma. This is a line in corporated to run between Tacoma and The Dalles. Twelve miles of the line is finished, and this loan will complete fifty miles more in this direction. The distance from The Dalles to Tacoma is only about five miles farther" than the distance between Portland and Tacoma, hence the reader can readily observe that day is dawning upon the Inland Empire, which is not wedded to Port land. The more, lines the more busi ness, is the motto up here. The Regulator Line. What is generally known as the Regu lator line of steamboats, on the Colum bia river, will eooner or later become famous. The incorporation is The Dalles, Portland and Astoria Navigation company. At present there are but two teamers in the scheme, the Regulator eaves The Dalles daily connecting at Cascade Locks with the Oregon, Port age Railway, and the steamer Dalles City for Portland. The Regulator is manned as follows : Capt. Fred H. Sherman ; First Officer, Richard Fisher ; Chief Engineer, McCulIy ; Purser, John Hampshire; Steward, D. H. Merrill. The time of the Regulator over the route traversed by her, has never been beaten. Round trip five hours. The steamer Dalles City, plying below the locks to Portland, has made some of the most remarkable trips ever made by a steamer of her dimensions in Pacific coast waters. Her captain is S. V Short ; First Officer, John Delmar; Chief Engi neer, Jas. Gilbraith; Asst. Engineer, Chas. Granlund ; Purser, Truman Butler ; Steward, H. Person. Now that it may be reasonably stated the contract for the completion of the cascade locks is let, and an open river is assured, we expect to see the fleet of Regulator steamers increase in a ratio corresponding to the development of the country, and it is earnestly hoped that they may secure the lion's share of the business of the Inland Empire. They need not necessarily all belong to one corporation, but they may all be con sidered Regulators. quickly, too. You will need Blank ets, Quilts, Underwear, Hosiery, Rubber Goods, Shoes, Dress Goods, Clothing1. Then take advantage of Er HIGHLY PRIZED RELICS. ralnables And Keepsakes on Deposit la The Dalles. "In the days of old, the days of gold ; the days of '49," it was not considered anything unusual for a miner to "deposit his sack" with a friend or acquaintance who happened to have a safe, ' in Cali fornia anywhere. Many interesting in cidents of this nature have been re ported from time to time, and we re member having reported an occasional incident of this kind in Oregon, years ago ; but the most notable one that has come under our observation occurred in this city Saturday evening, when Louie Davenport, who was the retail banker at The Dalles in 1862-63, applied to Pease Mays for a sack deposited 20 years go with their predecessors French & IcFarland. In a few moments the sack as brought out, Ljuie asked the charg- s on it,- which amounted to nothing, anked the gentlemen for their kind ness and put the sack into his pocket and went his way. Traveling together the next day Louie told us of the circumstance, produced the sack, which was one of those long buckskin styles used here in the days of gold duet, tied with a thong, and bear ing his name. "I haven't seen a thing there is in that sack for 20 years," said Louie, "but I can name almost every thing it contains." At .our suggestion we both adjourned to the purser's office, we were on the steamer Regulator, and Louie opjned the sack. There was a Spanish dollar, new when it was put away, which was given to Mrs. Davenport on their marriage, in 1865, by Mr. Krouse. A pair of elegant baby bracelets, a present to Rosa Davenport from Mrs. Jas. Teal, when Rosa reached her first birthday. -. They were made to order by Goldbaum, the popular jeweler of "those days. Next week they go to Rosa's baby, now Mrs. P. H. Robinson, of Port land. Spanish dollar 1871; . Guatemala dollar 1871 ; gold quartz sieve buttons, made from samples from the Ruckel mine, and presented to Mr. Davenport by Col. Ruckel, when he was president of the Oregon Steam Navigation com pany. Mr. Davenport also has the $300 watch with magic cases, and rich quartz fob, and gold buckel, worn by Col. Ruckel in the sixties. Among other things were numerous keepsakes, including notes given in 1862 and 1867, payable in United States gold coin, with incerest till paid. Among those old signers appears the name of Jose Maria Lopez, one of the most noted and daring packers of those early times. His I. O. U. is a sort of reminder to Mr. Davenport that although it seems high in these days the per cent, of interest in 1862 was not too large for a safe business. There was also sC solid gold ring made to order, worth about $50, and a $5.00 button of gold, dug by Louie in his younger days, in 1853, in the mines of Althouse, Southern Oregon. And a gold chain, saved from a wreck at Crescent city in 1856. And last but not least his tax receipt, for $17.00 taxes' paid to Sheriff Schutz and receipted by Will S. Bahr, deputy. Louie remembers that that was about the last act he did before depositing the eack with French & Gilman in 1872. ; " Married. In Corvallie. Nov. 9th. iS92. bv Rev. Mr. Kentner, Mr. Fred Hanna of Olex, and Miss Maud Bradley of Benton county. . .- .-, , . tomorrow a CLOSING our entire line of Fall The Annual Holidays. No paper will be. issued from The Chronicle office tomorrow, as it is a na tional and state holiday. The Printers will not be able to get a day off on Chrism as and New Year this season as their recurrence is on Sunday. We sometimes think, with all the new an nual holidays getting on to the Ameri can calendar: "What ehall we do with them?" It is becoming a question more serious than humorous. It is much discussed just now, as it is at the recur rence of every American holiday, Christ mas excepted. Heaven be praised, there's one holiday that withstands the modern aversion to celebration. Pres ent and future generations are tolerably sure of their Christmas ; partly because it is rooted in the church, but chiefly because it is the crown of the year for the children, and until children go out of fashion and everybody is born old and mean, Christmas thall not vanish from the earth. All Hunks Dora. New York, Nov. 21. A special from Valparaiso says: "Leadiug Chilians say they consider it an act of great courtesy on the part of the United States government in changing the place for holding the sittings of the claims com mission from Washington to Santiago, and that it will . greatly lessen the ex penses of the commission. The Chilian people, as well as the authorities, intend to show every possible courtesy to Ad miral Gherardi and his fleet. Special trains from various parts of the republic will be run while the ships are in port." The Parting: of the "Ways. Wilkins and Watkins were college chums and close friends. They had been hard students and had taken little out-door exercise. When they shook hands and said good-bye at the end of their college career, they were in im paired health. Both had dyspepsia, liver troubles and troublesome coughs. Wilkins had plenty of money, and decided to travel for his health. Wat kins was poor. "I must go to work for my living," said he, "but I'll try the remedy that Robinson talk9 so much about Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery." In less than two years Wilkins came home in his coffin. Watkins, now in the prime of life, is a bank president, rich and respected, and weighs 200 pounds. "The 'Golden Medical Dis covery' saved my life at a critical time," he often says. "Oh, if poor Wilkins had only tried it!". For weak lungs, spitting of blood, all lingering coughs, and consumption in its early stages, it is an unequaled remedy. Pioneer . Bakery. Having again reopened this norjular 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. Next door to Chrisman & Corson, Cor. Washington and Second streets, The Dalles, Or. Geo. Rcch. 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 minntea 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 roved it to be a violent form of dysen- sry, almost as dangerous as cholera, his remedy was used there with great uccess. For sale by Blakeley & Hough ton. this GREAT MARK-DOWN SALE Remember first comers have choice of selections. ; IN. B. All marked in plain figures. Too Much of a Risk. It is not unusual for colds contracted in the fall to hancr on all winter. In such cases catarrh or chronic bronchitas are almost sure to .result. A fifty cent bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy will cure any cold. Can yon afford to risk so much for so small an amount? This remedy is intended especially for oaa coids ana croup and can always be depended upon, lor sale, by Ulakeley & Houghton, druggists. Dissolution of Co-partnership. Notice is hereby given that the fir ji of Abrams & Stewart bas been dissolved bv mutual consent. W. R. Abrams is authorized to collect all amounts due the firm of Abrams & Stewart, and will pay all demands against said nrm. W. R. Abrams. ' Wm. Stewart. The Dalles, Or., Aug. 15th, 1892. 8.25d&w6w Notice is hereby given to all persons indebted to the late firm of Abrams & Stewart, of The Dalles, or W. R. Abrams. either by note or account, to make pay ment of the same immediately at the bank of French & Co. All notes and ac counts remaining unpaid November 15th,-1892, will be placed in attorneys' hands with instructions to collect.- Any claims against the late farm must be presented at the same place, with proper vouchers, on or before above date. The business of the firm must be closed up without further delay. Res- pectmny, w. K. Abrams. 8.25d&w3m "The Regulator Line" Tie Dalles, Portlani anJ Astoria Navigation Co. THKOUGH Freigiu ana Pssssnosr Line Through daily service (Sundays ex cepted) between The Dalles and Port land. Steamer Regulator leaves The Dalles at 7 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. PA89ENOEK ATES. 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. CALLAWAY, General Agent. B. F. LAUGH LIN, General Manager. THE DALLES. OREGON DEW DROP INN. " . I.. C. SHERWOOD, Prop. The very best Wines, Liquors and Cor : dials. Imported and Domes- : . tic Cigars. All county warrants registered prior to May 1, 1889, will be paid if pre sented at my office, corner Third and Washington streets. Interest ceases on and after this date. The Dalles, Oct. 31, 1892. William Michkll, 10.31tf Treasurer Wasco County, Or. THANKSGIVING EVE, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 23d, 1892. ARMORY HALL. PROF. C. W. KENT ON THB SUBJECT OF Charles Dickens and Little Nell A beautiful atopy of child life ap pealing to all tiePt. PRICES OF ADMISSION, 50c and 25c. NOTICE: SALE OF CITX LOTS. Notice Is hereby given that, by authority of Ordinance No. 257, which passed the common council of Dalles city, September 3d, 1892, enti tled "An ordinance entitled an ordinauce to Brovide for the sale of certain lots belonging to alles city," 1 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 fourth of the price bid on any of said lota shall be paid In cash at the time of sale, and the remainder in two equal payments on or before one and two years from the date of such sale, resueetivelv. with interest on such defeneri mv- nients at the rnta of ten per cent, per annum, payable annually. Provided that payment may be made in full at the time of such sole at the option of the purchaser. The sule will begin at the hour of ten o'clock a. m. of said day and will be continued from time to time until all of said lots shall be sold. Dated this lHt day of November, 1892. FRANK MENEFEE, 11-ldtf Recorder of Dalles City. PHOTOGRAPHER. First premium at the Wasco countr fair for best portraits and views. rri 1 1 ato 1 a CANDY FACTORY Campbell Bros. Proprs - (SMcesssrs to . S. Craa.) Manufacturers of the finest French and Home Made . aasr di :e s, . East of Portland.' -DEALERS IN- Tropical Fruits, Nuts, Cigars and Tobacco. Can furnish any of these goods at Wholesale or Retail .. . In Every Style Ice Cream and Soda Water, 104 Second Street. The Dalles, Or.