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About The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 27, 1893)
' Endless Variety anfl Assortment of " . Dolls Joys, Books, Albums, Pianos, Gr gans, Musical Instruments. Tie Dalles, Fortlani ni Astoria . Navigation Co. TO Our Friends and Patrons. "H3S531- "The Relator Line" WE HAVE rather neglected our Advertising of late, not because we had nothing to sell; but we had nothing especially new to offer, and preferred to wait until we could say something of interest. We are, and have been for some time, busily engaged in placing our orders for Spring and Summer Goods and fee justified in, announcing that. we shall have the FINEST ASSORTMENT and the BEST GOODS in all our lines that' has ever been seen in The Dalles. We have secured some genuine ' novelties in the Dry Goods Department, and the ladies will certainly con sult their best interests by deferring their purchases until after their arrival, of which wo shall . give you due notice. Keep both eyes on this space and we will certainly surprise you, not only with the goods, but the prices at which we shall sell them. We mean business .and propose to have your patronage, if LOW PRICES and the BEST GOODS will accomplish it. Yours Respectfully,. THROUGH oooooooo PEASE & MAYS: The Dalles Daily Chronicle. (entered a the Postofflee at The Dalles, Oregon, (in veuond-class mutter. Weather Forecast. Official forecast for iwm1-frtrrr noun mliiu, t t p. m. tomorrow: Today snow, stationary temperature. Saturday enow, decidedly warmer. ' Paqde. -IDAY JAN. 27, 1893 LOCAL BBKVITIKS. Leave your order for -cord wood at Maier & Benton's. Kim Gertrude Meyers, arrived on the yesterday noon train front Portland, and will return next Monday. Carpets and furniture at red seed Tates at Crandall A Burget'e, next door to Floyd A Shown's drag store. il Mrs. TUotnas A. Edison wants ; her jband to take luncheon with her he i to drive down to tois laboratory for v., for unless reminded, Mr. Edison sr thinks of his meals, e entire width of the Colombia rrverj rrozen over today opposite this city, v dome 'distance .above the Regulator arf to a point .about opposite the -shoe ory ,'ir. a. K. Wilcox has returned 'to e Oven, from his sojourn for his lth in Portland, daring which time Has nearly regained hia "former -'gth. ' the time Shakespeare wrote hia y i there were not in all the world as English-speaking people ae there iJwinNew York and New Jersey. '..f more than 100,000,00ft people a English. ' , Chelan- Indian prophesies that it l he at least a mouth yet before win 'segins to break up. What he bases predictions -on is not stated, but in- i ttants of that section are iioping he : ' prove a false prophet. . wretary Noble has ordered that Mt. aier and its adjoining lands on the stern elope, be withdrawn from eettle . 5it, and Senator Squire expects the aunt Rainier forest reservation to be side by proclamation tomorrow. San Francisco has a new candidate for' jublic favor in a very handsome publi-1 ttion entitled Town Talk. The copy bfore ns is a gem, both in its matter id makeup, while the printing is of 9 highest style of the "art preserva- e." ., ' The new machinery ordered for the iamer City 'of Ellensburgh last fall .8 delayed en route, and is just now ing placed in position. She will be io only boat on the river with two boil- and two smokestacks, and will re- nable the Mississippi -river steamers in ia respect. -. The Telegram says: "The senate Js t taking very kindly to "Eastern Ore l's wishes. First, Blackmail's bill for iridge over the John Day river was de ted, and now the eame fate befalls ley's portage bill. If that eection had P more senators it would be more tunate." Not such as Dodsou, let it hoped. . ' ortland weather yesterday, beat theJ icago weatner of last Sunday where it i bo cold that firemen were frozen to; sidewalks at a fire. In the consoli- ! ed city yesterday it is said the! ither was so cold that conversa-' i couldn't be carried on the telephone j ie, the words freezing on the wires ! dropping off into the street, to the i:!;i?:Jt danger of passing nedet-trisns. Freignt ana Posssnoer Line Through daily service (Sundavs ex cepted) between The Dalles and Port land. Steamer, Regulator leaves The Dalles at 7 a. m. connecting at Cascade Lock 8 with steamer - Dalles City. Steamer Dalles City leaves Portland (Yamhill street dock) at 6 a. . m. con necting with steamer Regulator for The Dalles. PA88KNOEF. RATES. One way 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. Calf on or address. W. C. ALLAWAY, , Genoral A gent. B. F. LAUGH UN, Oeavrsl Manager. THE DALLES. - OREGON LOOK AT OUR OFFER TMs gWs Dic tionary, only $1.00 ! Where can yon do oooooooo A o o o o o o o A ffl line of 12-Mo. BOOKS, tana in clotl Eflt- Oyer 200 to select from, at 25c per yoL. t O o o o o o OUR PRICES ARE BELOW ALL COMPETITION:. . -We Have Made Sweeping Reductions. Call and examine our stock of holid ay p r e s e n ts E. J AGO BS EN & C9. The flag on the Court House Is at half mast in respect to the memory, of Hon. Jas. t. Blaine. Vtu. Henderson, who was to have been hanged at Oregon City this week for urmrder, has been granted -a etay of execution pending an appeal for a new trial. He was cocvicted of stabbing to death Cyru9 Sutor overafame of cards in a saloon in Canby last summer. He is reasonably rertain fat least three months longer of life. The E. O. Salem correspondent eay's The democratic members of the Oregon legislature. xceptinc two or three, have signed a petition to President Cleveland to have John P. Irish formerly editor of a Southern Pacific railroad organ and fhe gentleman who led the Oregon dem ocracy iur years ago to an 8,000 defeat appointed as secretary of the interior. Hon. Van B. DeLashmntt eeude to the Oregooian a number of onions of extra-1 rdinaryize and strength, raised on hie itch Hazel farm, in Washington unty, merely to show that it cu pro- dace other things as well record- breaking colts. The onions, several of hich weigh 'five pounds each, were ?rown on beaver-dam land, which Mr. Lashmutt-etates is the best dam land in the world. He should take to raising roast igeese and sage to go along with the onions. at is probable, says a Salem corres pondent, that the committee appointed to visit the Walla Walla penitentiary, to inspect the,jute mill there, will "report in favor of establishing a similar institu tion in the Oregon penitentiary. A member of the committee told yocTor respondent that the evidence was strongly in favor of such action. -Inte bags, he Baye, cost the state four and one-half cents, and are sold within the state of Washington for six and one fourth cents, while in Umatilla county, just across tkeJine, similar bags sold for from eight to ten cents apiece, and the same in the Willamette valley. The plant of a mill capable of employing 300 men will cost about $115,000, with water power; if steam power is necessary, about $10,000 more. This is beside the I ostof the building. 1 m i -.. . . xne lsmorest meaai contest, Wednes day evening at the -court honse, greeted a Jull house. The contestants Misses Martha Schooling.Stella Harvey, Rachel Morgan, Jennie Russell. Ruth Fisher and Daisy Alloway fairly "excelled in their work- The medal was awarded by the j'udges, Messrs. W. H. Wilson. Dr. Scrcednker and Mrs. C. J. Crandall. fr Miss Jennie Russell. An eujoyabl feature of the evening was the solo h Miss Myrtle Michell, accompanied b Mrs. Patterson. The programme pase very pleasantly and at the close th little boys "got ur and laughed" a dis missai io i no anuience. . People living twenty-five miles south west of Pendleton have just taken cour age last week, possibly from the hope of an open river, and are threshing wheat that grew in 1S91, and :92; think of that! Threshing wheat two years old in mid winter. The East regonian is Our au thority, and M. L. Fix and his son are the threshers. They have . been at it two weeks, and expected to keep at it two " weeks longer. Mr. Fix says, he averages about 200 bui-hcla of grain a day. He has threshed several crops of wheat grown in 1S91. '.The vhet is of fairly good quality and the yield is tatis fuctory, considering, the possibility of shipping it. Eut now,fliould theEALBV bill be defeated these threshers may turn their attention to iisinir the fen:Uors v. ho fixc-d them on the 25th at ?;i!cin. 1 Judge Tnrner, candidate for the een ate from .the state of Waehington,' was one of Grant's immovable -'306" at Chi cago in 3SS0. Turnerevidently has stay ing qnaMties. We were with him at Chicago, and know hli iwell. The Telegram says the road question can stand all the agitation and discussion it gets in the legistatore. It is a popu lar issue, and some important law must be passed at thie session.' The people wanx good roads, and the. lawmakers must provide a1 way to secure them. X Washington 4fispatch to-day 6tates tnat Senator Doih yesterday saw the president regarding his bill extending tke time for payment on railroad laoda, but the president would not act until he secretary of the interior had ap proved the bHL The latter was then vailed upon for an immediate report, and the bin will probably be approved to-morrow. . - , Many a uustuess man cuts down Ins newspaper advertising just at the wroug time. It is not the return from judic ious advertjeuig which brings ' euooess?i It is the cumulative effect. Watch the; business of two firms, one a live presis-. tent, aggressive advertiser, the other, negligent. Which becomes the lead ing merchant in a few yearsT Buy a space in yoor paper, make it interest-' ing and don't begruge the money. Ad vertising ia a live paper pays. The paper can live without your advertiee ment better than you can live' without its etlect. 1 he fitonn of yesterday was a wide spread one. It extended ail over Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana, Wyoiaing and the Dakotas. In some places as suming the dignity of a blizzard. At Umatilla the wind blew from the north east at the rale of forty miles an hour, accompanied with a light fall of suow. On the coast, down by the deep" eea snow fell and over at Tatoosh Inland the wind blew 7a miles an hour. At Tacoina and Olympia the snow was three inches deep, and at Eugene City it was eight inches. At Sissons the snow wuh' the deepest, measuring two feet. Bain or snow fell at nearly every point oii the , coast from San Francisco to the extreme northern telegraphic range, j, Senator Vandenburg did not vote for the Raley bilf, but he is the author of a rather uniqut bill himself. lie pro poses to do away with the publication of an itemized account of county expenses m the newspapers, and, as a substitute. the itemized accounts of the monthly expenditures are to be printed iu long primer tipe on cloth posters to be stuck up in all postofljces, on the street cor ner dry goods boxes, and other bring ing places. For downright simplicity and utter impracticability this bill stands preeminent. But what' can be expected from men who would cast the shackel9 of monopoly about the necks of Ivo.OtiO free born people by his "intelli gent vote as a senator from the classic regions of southern Oregon? It is said that he is a "merchant" at home. Probably he has a whittling constituency whose only ambition is a eoft pine box to sit on and a jack knife to cut it into fragments, cloth posters and all. Krtfe Without thn 'ewa. Baker City Dem. Once upon a time a certain man got mad at the editor and stopped his paper. The next week he sold hisorn at 26 cents below market price. Then his property for taxes be cause he didn't read the sheriffs sale. He was sirrested and fined $8 for hunting on 'Sunday, and he paid $300 for a lot of forged notes that had been advertised for two-weeks, and th public cautioned oot to negotiate 'for them. He then paid w. big Irishman with a foot on him like a forge hammer, to kick hiin all the way down to a newspaper office, where he -paid four years subscription in ad vance and made the editor sign an agree ment to knock hi in down arid rob him if he ever ordered his paper stopped agaia-. twieh is life without a newspaper. !1im perun. Maa Go. Mr. DeiStyle How does it happen that our daughters are going around without a chaperon? Mrs. De Style I've dropped the silly custom. It doesn't work well on this side of the water. "Why notr "The young men seem rather afraid of chaperons.' New York Weekly Exoaiaati on of Teacher. . Aluminum horseshoes have been tried in one of the cavalry regiments. A number of horses were shod on one fore fixit and hind foot with this metal, or dinary iron ehoes being used on the other feet. At the end ff six vecke, during which time the cnimais liad U-en moving on a hard and stony' road, -"St w a found that the aluminum shoes had w on; in nch better than those of iron, and n:.i f lhe'f-!iuiT !:r-.l troTie : r.3--- Jfotiee is hereby given that for tle urpoee of making an examination 11 persona who may offer themselves as andidates fc- teachers of the schools of his county,ti(fUnCy school superi-n- tendent theiiVWir hold a public -ex amination aiVfflice in The Dalles be- ginning 1 brRlay, Vannary 30th. aod mamg Feb.Ch 1892,Vt 1 o'clock, p. wi. ill teacherCehgiBJe f the state' certi cates, state diplomas and lifediplomas nust make ttpplication at the quarterly xaminatione. Dated this Jannarv 27lh' ' 92. . Tbov Shelley. ounty school superinteadent of. Waero jou n ty j wregon . : All Free. Those who have used Dr. King's New Discovery know its value, and those who have not, have now the opportunity to try it free. -Call on the advertised drug gist and get a trial bottle, free. Send your name and address to II. E. Bucklen & Co., Chicago, and get a sample box of Dr. King's Sew life Pills free, an well as a copy of Guide to Health and House hold Instructor, free. All of which is guaranteed to do you good and cost you nothing. fcoio. by Snipes & Kinersly. A1 Yertiiictl Letters- - Following ia the list of letters remain. , ing in the poptoffice at The Dall es un called for, Friday, Jan. 27th. 180X. Persons calling for same will cive dntt on which they were advertised: Bramlet A Brown Mrs Elizzie B-otts Mrs A Bryan Chas W Byrne Peter Chapman G D Craig Kev Crider J Daoson Mrs Cyrena Kellossr CM Henderson J A Morton Eddie MaiJcaulay 8 S . Schofield Mr McCain J L - Smith 8 L. Smith D II and A Scott Thos Smith Boss WiiliamTaylor Miss Alice Taylor Mrs Ann (2) White Iawver varrt Airs Mollis Woods Mrs S F Wisley Mr James Florence Mrs O - M. T. Nolan, P. M. i ' Lout i'ackice. A package containing a pair of So. 3i ladies shoes was lost on Saturday, Viet ween the top of Brewerv hill, arid Mr. Koberts place in lrv Hollow. Th ! unuer win oe XbanKtu lv rewarded on paving the same at t his "office. : Admiral Crosby of the navy eayi mil dew on gloves, etc., laid away, may be averted by placing the articles in aa air tight preserving jar. A Rsbber Insole. Persons with tender feet will be inter ested in an insole for boots and shoes. It is -made of hollow India rubber, inflated with air or gas -under pressure, the ex ternal protective covering being canvas, siBr or other similar material. Inserted in the shoe it relieves the pressure of the leather against the tender parts of the foot. Shoe and Leather Facts. Macpte Anions; the Greeks. With the ancient Greeks the magpie was supposed to possess the soui of a gossiping woman, and we all know how unlucky it 'is to meet an odd number of the species in Ireland. Irish Times. In Belgium no person is allowed to vote unless he is a taxpayer to the amount of forty 'francs a year. This law makes the voters only twenty-two out of every thousand of population. The Kentish plover, like the stone curlew or thick knee, is being" rapidly ex terminated in the county from which it derives its name by collectors and o called "naturalists." .-' Let every enfeebled woman know it!' There's a medicine that'll cure her, and the proof's positive ! Here's the proof if it doesn't do you good within reason- -abje time, report the fact to its makers -and get your money back without a word but you won't do it ! The remedy is Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription and it has proved itself the right remedy in nearly every case of female weakness. It is not a miracle. It won't cure every thing but it has done more to build-urr. "tired, enfeebled and broken-down, women than, any other medicine- known. . Where's the woman who's not. ready for it? AlJ that we've to do is to get the -news to her. The medicine will do the -rest. Wanted women. Firet to know ' . it. Second to use it. ' Third to be cured ', by it. The one comes of the other. The seat of the ick headache is not in the brain! Regulate the stomach and-', you cure it. Dr. Pierce's Pellets are the little regulators. Only 25 cents a vial. Hot clam broth today, after 4 p. m., at J. O. Macks. - After the juice is squeezed from lem ons the peels are useful to rub brass with. Dip in common salt, then brush with dry bath brick. In some -countries the leaves of trees are still used for books. In Ceylon the leaves of the tall pot tree are used Surveyors at work on the Gila river in New Mexico claim that they have dis covered a mountain of pure alum a mile square at the base and S.O0O feet high. A line lot of furniture going very at Crandall & Burget's jiew store. low , Lost. - A gold watch, charm with a small Siece of chain attached, between J. P. Iclnerny and Leslie Butlers. - A re asonable reward will be paid for return, of same to Maier & Bentons. For Kent. The only 3-story,' fire-proof brick building in the city. For further par ticulars inquire of Tom Kelly, at The Umatilla house. PHOTOGRAPHER First nreminm it tko Wo.n , . ' - ..... orvw 114 IjJ fair for best portraits and views. The Only House in Town -Making a. Specialty of- Gents Furnishing Goods, ... Hats and Caps. VJLhICH gives us an opportunity to devote our entire timo to this particular line. We have a few remnants ' , in Fancy Underwear, Overshirts and . Gloves, which we are clos ing out cheap. ' " JOHN C. Jrl BRT2, I0iJ SECOND. iSTKEET, THE DALLES. OREGON. . The Weston Leader says "There Is a widow with a large family of children in the north part of town, who needs pecuniary assistance. Let our good peo ple respond.!' Send for Peter West; Bro. Bowir.er. - - You can carpet voui- rooms at about your own prire by calling on Crandiill A fJnrget, at the new etoie on Union iret-t.'- Oid pa'pera,' suitable hc-lv, will be exi-han? for . carpets or d for clean 'rags Hi 1 IMP! HE TROIT Steam Laundry of Portland, has establish- i 7 ed a "branch office for laun- -dry -work with Thos. McCoy at his "barber shop, No. 110 Second St., -where all laun dry bundles will be received . till Tuesday noon of each weak, and returned on Sat urday of the same week at