"I oh "The Regulator WK ' Ms 7f 17 fi' ' 0 i Dolls, Toys, Books, Albums, Pianos, Or- Be Dalles, Portland and Astoria : gans, Musical Instruments. Navigation Co. TO Our Friends and Patrons. fLa i - 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 feel justified in announcing that we shall have the FINEST ASSORTMENT and the BEST GOODS in all our lines that has, over 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 we 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, The Dalles Daily Chronicle. Enteral a ihc Postotnce at The Dalles., Oregon, as s.-cond-cla8 matter. Weather Forecast. Qjfleial forecast for twenty-Jour hour etuHng at 6 p. m. tomorrow: Saturday and Sunday snow, cooler temperature. Paque. SATURDAY - - - JAN. 28, 1893 LOCAL HKKVITIKS. J. H. Crabtree of Tygh valley, is in the city. O. L. Miller of Monumental mine, is in the city. Einnott & Fisb are filling- another ice house today. All The Dulles ice houses will be filled with ice by tonight. A. C. Jones and K . K. Fewell of White Salmon, are in the city. Seufert Bros., are harvesting a big lot of ice at the cannery ice house. Rev. Father Brenegeest is quite ill with an attack of pneumonia. E. 8. Farria left for Wapinitia this morning with a double team and sleigh. Hot clam broth todav, after 4 p. m., at J. O. Macks. Mr. Hugh Glenn returned last even ing from a fiytng business trip to Port land. The choir of the M. E. church will meet promptly at seven o'clock this evening. There will be lots of fun coasting on Union street this evening, so savs one of the Y.B. C. C.'s. No services will be held in St. Peters church tomorrow, as Rev. Father Brons geest is dangerouslv ill. The fine dry flakes of snow continued to fall nearly all last night, adding two and one-half inches to the record. Dr. J. C. Taylor, who has been very ill for three weeks past, is reported to be improving. Carpets and furniture at reduced rates at Crandall & Burget's, next door to Floyd & Shown's drug store. You can carpet your rooms at about your own price by calling on Crandall & Bnrget, at the new store on Union street. The contract for the construction of the Columbia Navigation Company's Tail way has been awarded to Messrs. Glenn & McKenzie. Mr. Thomas Burgess of Bake Oven was in the city yesterday. He says the trip coming in was the worst one-he has ever experienced on the road. J. F. Lucas of Centerville, is in the city. He says Klickitat connty is in the height of good feeling over future bright prospects in all lines. The snow is two feet deep on Dutch Flat this morning. This flat is about 2,600 feet above sea level, and about nine miles southwest of the city. Crandall & Burget are now settled in their new store in the Michelbach brick on Union street, next door to Floyd & Shown 's. Call around. fieth Morgan, the populist orator is i the city. He is quite enthusiastic over the political situation. Seth's friends believe that he is entitled to any office Jn the gift of President Cleveland. Dr. Sutherland of Portland, is in the city for a few days. It cannot be' a pro fessional business, as our city physicians complain of dull times in their line. As one said 3-esterday, the city 19 distress- PEASE fe Kansas City, St. Paul, Sacramento,! and New York City, have represents- j tives in The Dalles today. . A few minutes' past 12 o'clock today a robin was noticed perched on top of the court house flagstaff, chirping content edly amid his snowv surroundings, the flag below him flying at half ma?t inf the cold breeze. Preaching moi "Poor robin." . evening at .the Methodist Epis hurch, by the pastor. Sunda th, to which all are cordially Revival services will be conti ext week. .Let all arrange to attend. The Mignonette dancing club held its weekly meeting last evening at Frater nity hall. A large number were present, and jollity reigned supreme. The club dances are a very enjoyable feature in the season's pleasures. Eldon Patten was arrested last even - ing by Marshal Maloney charged with assaulting his wife with a razor. He was tried before Justice Schutz this morning and found gnilty of simple as sault for which a ten dollar fine was im posed, not having the wherewithal, hel was remanded to the custodv of Tom Ward. " 7s itecorcer Meneiee had J . (J. Hansen before him this afternoon charged with breaking into the store of Mays & Crowe. The evidence adduced showed clearly that the prisoner was the guilty party, and the court accordingly heTd him to appear before the grand jary. His bonds were fixed at $500, for want of. which he was remanded to jail. The launch of the steamer Regulato! and Western Queen did not come off to day according to programme, in conse quence of the fact that there was no water in sight. The river is completely frozen over and as an ice bridge is such a rarity here it will be kept for exhibi tion purposes as long as possible. When U tne ice goes out, tue steamers go in. j J. Folco was arrested Thnrsuty-ven-ing by Deputy U. S. Marshal Jameson on complaint of a woman named Maggie Plummer, charged with sending obscene matter through the mails. At the pre liminary hearing last evening before U. S. Commissioner J. If.' Huntington he was held to appear before the U. S. district court at Portland. Folco ad mitted having written the letter, but denied that it was of an obscene nature. The commissioner, howavcr, saw fit to give the letter an obscene construction, which was contrary to the meaning in tended by Mr. Folcp, as he endeavored to explain it. Folco gave the required bond for his appearance and was set at liberty. It is now Btated for a fact that Gov. Pennoyer 6ays he "would not have vetoed the Raley bill." A correspond ent of the east Oregonian says "the gov ernor believes the state 6hould not make tins appropriation, as the government engineers have given it out that they will report favorably and urge the gov ernment to build the identical road which the state is now talking of build ing." This may all be true. But we ont want any more 20 years' waiting capture the bird in the bush. "The ird in hand" is provided for bv the aley bill. If there is a dread appre- nsion that the United Stajea government s in danger of doing anything QUICK! o open this river, by hnilding a portage on top of the state railway, the matter might be readily adjusted by a proviso that : In the event of such an unlooked for incident, on the nart. of eonpresn the , . O J I state could gracefully retire Jrom the i work and let TTncV Knm .. iln-jl mnzjuni inuep. J . n J ijaerti v. r MAYS MISTAKE?? ECONOMY. An Error Which Should Have Been Dis covered a Little Sooner. From The Oregonian, 27cb. The defeat of the bill for a portage railway around The Dalles is to be re gretted. This was not a local project, though it was defeated by local in fluences. Its benefits would have been been shared by the whole state. The obstruction this improvement is de signed to circumvent lies across the main route of communication between Oregon and the east. Increased cost of transportation due to it affects every part of the state which trades with the east, whether situated on the lower Columbia or the Willamette: Reduction of the cost of ' shipment by this route would bring down cost of shipment on all competing routes, through what Part of tI,e 6e- It is an error to i ever con ceive the Columbia river merely as a route for shipments for Eastern Oregon wheat to the sea. It is the one great channel of direct communication between all of Oregon and the rest of the United States; the main land conduit of all our domestic trade, both import and export. Cost of transportation by this route cannot be educed without compelling reduction of ates on all other routes, whether hrough the state of Washington or uthern Oregon. The whole state, in- eed the whole northwest, is interested in the opening of the Columbia river. It was shortsighted and mistaken economy to organize the senators from Southwestern Oregon against the port age railway bill. There is hardly any equal expenditure of money from which the whole state can realize equal benefit. Thousands of dollars have been appropriated for wagon roads, which lave been of less real benefit to the peo ple of the localities directly affected than would be the effective opening ot the Columbia river to the people of the remotest corner of the state. It seems easier to get money . from the state of Oregon for local jobs and senti mental extravagance than for large pub lic benefits. The appropriation committee has agreed on a pension appropriation bill. It carries an appropriation of $1GG,400, 000, an increase of $20,662,050 over the appropriation for the current year. The ballots atOlympia yesterday show a loss of three for Allen, and one for Turner. It stood as follows: Allen, 48; Turner, 24; Griggs, 26; Teats, 9; Dunbar 1. Dr. Rinehart finished moving into his elegant residence, at the head of Laugh lin street yesterday. The doctor de serves congratulations on having one of the most picturesque locations and the handsomest residence in the city. He has, in addition to all the modern im provements, put electric lights in every room, irom basement to attic. There are but few ci'ies on the coast of the size of The Dalles that can boast of as many beautiful houses as this can. Yesterday's Chbokiclk quotes a Portland paper, as saying that, the cold w:as so severe at that place, as to freeze the words on the telephone wires, and intimating that it surpassed the incident reported from the east, of the engineer who was frozen at the throttle. The Dalles is generally found in the proces sion, and a case is reported here of a man who was actually "frozen "lit" during the recent cold snap, while Kit ting by a red hot stove, Irving to epjoy. himself in a game of cards. He iost his Inst nickel. THROUGH Freigut anil Passenger Line Through dally service (Sundays ex cepted) between The Dalles and Port- j land. Steamer Regulator leaves The i Dalles at 7 a. in. connecting at Cascade ! ixcks witn steamer Dalles City. Steamer Dalles City leaves Portland (Yamhill street dock) at 6 a. m. con necting with steamer Regulator for The Dalles. PASSENGER RATE1. One way Round trip. .r-.oo . 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 LI N , General Manager. THE DALLES. OREGON Trapping; the Guilty. Paris, Jan. 27. Franqueville, the ex amining magistrate, has found true bills of accusation against Deputy and ex Minister of Finance Rouvier; Senator Albert Grevy, brother of the late presi dent of the republic; Senator Reral, Senator Deves and Senator Leon Ra nault, on charges of corruption in con nection with the Panama canal com mittee. Proceedings against Rouvier and other defendants originated through the discovery of counterfoils of the so called Thierre checks, which were sup posed to have been burned. They were discovered in the following manner : A committee appointed by the chamber of deputies to investigate the charges of corruption in connection with the Pan ama investigation received an anony mous letter declaring that the counter foils had been photographed, and giving the name and address of the photog rapher. The matter was followed up and the commissary of police at once found the missing counterfoils. Down on The French. Panama, Jan. 27. The newspaper El Porvenir, of Cartagena, publishes a let ter from Panama, revealing an alleged violation of the contract on the part of the Panama canal company in the trans fer of material to the Panama railroad. The letter states that in August last the company effected the sale of 951 cars and 28 locomotives for $400,000. This, according to the letter, is regarded as a fraudulent attempt to swindle the re public of Colombia. The newspaper Observador, of Panama, is opposed to further negotiations with the French. It is said their dealings are dishonorable, and no good can result to Colombia from negotiating with them. Ferryman Johnson informs us that the spare ferry boat Flat, now frozen ih below Crates point, is fully as safe there as she would be here. He expects to get her out all right when the ice breaks OP- . That lawless comet has again been seen from the Lick observatory. The heavenly lunatic will get into trouble ! and losinothcr of its tails if it doesn't exercise inore discretion in its ramblings. ! The man who only a year or two ago j announced that the gulf stream had turned toward the coast of New England and that the climate was speedily un dergoing tropicalization has not been heard from of late. The fur collar on the overcoat of the manager of a theatrical company the other day saved him from death at the hands of an enraged actress who at tempted to slash his throat with a razor. The reason for the theatrical fur i-ollar had been a nivsterv before. When a new member was initiated into the Wustp'halmn vehmgerichte and swore to keep the jtecrels of the mo ciety from wife and child, father mid mother, nister anil brother, from fire ami swoni. from the things warmed by the sun or nourished by the. rain, he did so with the thumb1 and two fingers of his right hand upon the cross hilt of a sword An oath so taken was held to be irrevocable and not to be annulled by even he pope himself Chambers' Journal. Great Britain se ine to have the ever lasting cinch oh Egypt. A revolt by the Egyptian government would probably he seized upon by Downing street as a pretest for further occupation, under the plea r-J protect! nghe British bondhold er. That tjnme worked to perfection w! Mi A nil: i i'uxha roee in insurrection O o 0 o LOOK AT OUB OFFER V T This Webster's Dic tionary. ODly $1.00 ! Wnere can yon do - tetter? ooooooou - ' 9 OUS PRICES ARE BELOW ALL COMPETITION". We Have Made Sweeping Reductions. Call and examine our stock of E.JACOBSEN &CQ Kucfclen'x Arnica Salve. The best salve in the world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt Atum, fever sores, tetter, .chapped hands, chilblains, corns, and all skin eruptions, and posi tively cures piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect -satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by Snipes & Kin ersly. . It is said there are 16 men camped on Juniper flat waiting to begin work on the Clear lake- ditch as soon as the weather is favorable. The ditch is about half completed, and water is expected to be running through it by July 1st. This will furuish irrigation to every farm on the flat, and will make that portion of Wasco the garden spot of the county. Last I-eai : Her eyeH were rheumy, and weak and re1, Her breath you could nmell It afar, She bad ringing and dizziness oft in her head, A nd the cause of it all was catarrh. This year: Her breath is an sweet as the new meadow hay. Her eyes are as bright as a star. And the cause of the change, she is ready to say, Va the Dr. Sage Cure for Catarrah. Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy will posi tively cure catarrh in the head, no mat ter how bad or how long standing. Fifty cents, by all druggists. The crook and burglar have made their appearance in The Dalles at last. Oqe of them is in safe bands, and the mask and coat of another is in the pos session of the city marshal, who found tho articles stowed away under Moody's warehouse. Thursday the state council of Catholic Knights of America held a meeting .at the residence of Father Bronsgeest, Archbishop Gross of Portland, state spiritual director of the council, and many delegates from all portions of Ore gon being present. Several new mem bers have been added to the organiza tion during the year. The Only House in Town Making a Specialty of Gents Furnishing Goods, fSa---ataaaae-aea---M---M Hats and Caps. VIhICH gives us an opportunity to devote our entire time to this particular line. We have a few remnants m fcancy underwear, Overshrrts and Gloves, which we are clos ing out cheap. JOHN C. 109 SECOND STREET, HE 1 1 Uf Laundry o o o o o o o A full line of Mo. BOOKS, tonoi in cloth tilt ' Over .200 to select from, at 25c per voL To o u o o o o holiday presents Good Looks. Good looks are more than skin deep, depending upon a healthy condition of all the vital organs. If the liver be in active, you have a billious look. if your stomach be disordered you have n dys peptic look, and if your kidneys be af fected you have a pinched look. Secure your health and you will have good looks. Electric Bitters is the great al terative and tonic acts directly on these vital organs. Cures pimples, blotches, boils and gives a good complexion. Sold at Snipes & Kinersly's drugstore, 50c per bottle. Examination or Teachers. Notice is hereby gien that for the purpose of making an examination -of all persons who may offer themselves as candidates for teachers of the schools of this county, the county school superin tendent thereof tfDfnoToa public ex amination at hjrfgfece in The Dalles be ginning ThujedfcJanlary 30th, and ending Feb. 8Ur la&STat 1 o'clock, p. m. All teachers eligible for the state certi ficates, state diplomas and life diplomas must make application at the quarterly examinations. Dated this January 27th, 1892. Tkov Shellky, County school superintendent of Wasco County, Oregon. Leave yonr order for cord wood at Maier & Benton's. A fine lot of furniture going very at Crandall & Burget's new store. low For Kent. The only 3-etory, fire-proof brick, building in the city. For further par ticulars inquire of Tom Kelly, at Tho Umatilla house. PHOTOGRAPHER. First premium at the Wasco county fair for best portraits and views. HERTZ THE DALLES, OREGON". TROY Steam Laundry of Portland, has establish ed a branch office for laun dry work with Thos. McCoy at his "barber shop, No. 3.10 Second St., where all laun dry bundles wiH be received till Tuesday noon c-h w?ek. and returned it urday of the same y Foreland prices.