' ." -'Mess Variety and Assortment of - - Dolls, Toys, Books, Albums, Pianos, Or gans, Musical Instruments. TO Our Friends and Patrons. "The Regulator Line" - t Tie Dalles, Portlani aiii Astoria Navigation Co. ft 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, busity 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 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 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 Dafly Chroniele. . iitered a the Postofflce at The Dalles, Oregon, as second-class matter. Weather Forecast. Official forecast for Umcnty-Jowr hour ending at I p. m. tomorrow: Fair, but decidedly colder. Paguk. fUESDAY - - JAN. 31, 1893 LOCAL KRKV1TIKS. V Good bye January ; Kiel McLeod, of itv. Grant, is in the i Dr. Sanders is noty&rfing teeth with out pain, over FrenlnAbank. The Ladies Glee Club will meet this e"Pning with Mi Rose Michell. Hot clam broth today, after 4 p. m., at J. O. Macks. Subscribe for The Chronicle, the i .jcttuiu paper ui Xioouriu vicgiru. ' , Services will be held in the Ninth Bet Lutheran chapel on the 2nd, in 1 l! E TT . 3 Scandinavian language. Mr. T. H. Johnson, of the Dufur Mer .ntile firm of Johnson Bros., has en- , nraging word frorr. the capital. i . Hon. AV. F. Matlock of Umatilla, in ..rodoced a bill in the senate yesterday, ; '.or a branch insane asylum in Eastern , Oregon. Hon. John L. Ayeufeneral manager .. and attorney for t&e N$v England Na ' tional Building an L4iui Association, is in the city on buairaaar You can carpejr yonr rooms at about your own price by calling on (Jrandall & ' target, at tho new store on Union f'freet. 111 is quiet in judicial circles today. ' ouple of hobos in the cooler is about extent of the doings of the preserv- . o of peace for the past day. Hon. E. N. Chandler's bill, providing -r the filling of vacancies in the Dalles ' lird reading in the senate yesterday .'The Juvenile Temple will give an en ' 'tertainment Friday evening at the Con gregational church. Admission, 25 cents, children 10 cents. This promises to be a very enjoyable affair, and well worth the purchase price. . Crandall & Burget are now settled in their new store in the Michelbacb brick -on Union street, next door to. Floyd & Shown'e. Call around. We understand that Senator Cogs well says he believes in The Dalles por tage railway and only opposed the Raley Hll becaDse he couldn't find out how much the road would cost. . He don'l have to wait two years to find that out His constituents want the bill passed Seveu-tenths of them get their supplies JU tl inmntTi ""d fih'p this wav. toi ' Thnt cAc rlipst.nnt ; 'Ta thia fold t enough for you?"' was reviewed in The Dalles at 9:45 a. rn. today when the I thermometer bulb married zero. At 8 a. m.. it was 10 above. Aaclock Kfitnight it Btood 29 abovej The bar" 'ometerat o p. la.'jerclay stood 29.428 ; . Thermometer fell 1' below zero at 10 a. ?. today. - Last night the wind was ; Rowing 20 miles an hour from w. by , " w but it veered east at about 2 a. m. ibis morning, when it got np a velocity ; of 3y mile, and at a. no. was scooting along at 20 miles an hour coming from the east. At the same hoar high clouds were scudding eastward with equal - velocity. Aa we go to press the barom- V eter stands 30.40 ; thermometer 3 above xero. Bright sunshine, east wind 12 to 15 mil per hour. The above readings f are local. PEASE & Hon. cLtv. V. H. Biggs of Moro, is in the W. C. Cox of Everett, the new candi date for terminal honors on Puget sound, ia in the citv. Dr. N. G. Blalock and J. M. McKin ney of Walla Walla, are in the city to day on land office business. The remains of Mr. J. R. Love were shipped to WaEco today for burial in the family lot. Brief services were held this forenoon, under the auspices of the A. O. U. W. The Prineville mail started out witha sleigh this morning, but in consequence of snow drifts the driver returned. Mr. J. D. Parish then prepared himself for the trip, and made another start at 8 :45 a. in., determined to go through The lower Columbia is so choked with running ice that only the most powerful steamboats can make the run up from Astoria. All of the boats have been de layed, but so far no accidentB have been reported Mr. L. Winans received a telegram to report at Hood River this evening, and leaves on the 4:20 train. He reports the ice harvest A J, and their company will have enough to cool all creation should nothing happen between this and tomorrow evening. Mrs. Frank Sels and her sister Mrs. Snow, of Daysville, arrived at Canyon city on the 21st from a visit to their par ents, Capt. and Mrs. J. W. Lewis of this city. The following day Mrs. Snow pro ceeded to Dayville from Canyon city and reports that the roads were found right dustv. J. F. Graham, the recently appointed master mechanic of the Iowa Central, with head-quarters at Marshal town, writes that the thermometer is frozen up and no one can tell how cold, it is. Some say that it is 46 below ; some say 56, and Mr. Graham thinks it is pos sibly 140. Old timers inform him that the winters hardly ever last more than eighteen mouths. The Chftiitanrmn rpftrf!n( f!rM fulfil its weekly session last evening at the residence of Mrs. C. J. Crandall. The principal topic nnder discussion, coming in line with the regular work was the annexation of Hawaii, Miss Frazier con ducted the. recitation in Greek hietorv 1 . 0 . - and Mrs. Brooks the TJ. S. and Foreign Powers, next week the circle will begin the consideration of Callias, a Greek ro mance, in connection with the Greek history. Those present were Mesdauies S. L. Brooks, C. J. Crandall, Misses Iva Brooks, Mary Frazier, Lizzie Sampson, Annie Fulton, Jessie Lown, Messrs. H. H. Riddell, E. N. Littlefield. Rumor savs that several semttoi's so called) feel ashamed of their vote on the Raley bill on the 25th. " It is never too late to repair an injury done. Take no stock in the report that Mr. Ralev, has himself stated that if the vote was re- considered he would not attempt to pass the bill thia session, ns he saw that was useless. That bill has got to pass. About $50,000 is wanted to buy the Ore gon city locks, the agricultural college wants about $50,000 as usual, the state university, the normal school, the peni tentiary, the asylum and various other institutions want large sums, and indeed must have them.- -They are all willing to accept Eastern Oregon's share of the taxes, but if they have no notion of con tributing anything to aid Eastern Ore gon's taxpayers, we should now show them the "fine Italian hand" nt retalia tion, -eliould they again attempt to play double with - us. Eastern Oregon has never dona anything unfair, bu time wifl show results. MAYS. THE CASCADE RESERVATION. Wn there a Job la the Measure? If so by WkomT . And From the Ashland Tidings. And now comes some of the argus- eyed newspaper men of Oregon alleging that they have discovered the job of the great Cascade mountain' reservation. It would give the state school land board a big field for the operations by which some of its members and their friends have made thousands of dollars during the past few years. The with drawal from settlement of an area of 125 square miles in the proposed res- rvation, as the latest proposition con- emplates, would include 125,000 acres hich in the 16th and 36th sections if surveyed would fall to the state, school and fund. The state would have the ght to select lands in lieu of this, herever within its boundaries it could nd unappropriated government land. As tho state has been receiving only $1.25 per acre for all the lands it has sold, the agents who have been working with the speculators have been making big margins by giving to purchasers the key to lieu lands which in many cases. for timber and other value, have been worth from 5 to $20 an acre in open market. Another lump of 125,000 acres of lieu lanas wouia give these speculators a very nice job. This African may be under the woodpile all right, but if he is it shonld not interfere with the pro posed timber reservation, which is de manded by the highest interests of the state. The proper thing to do is to fix such prices upon the state lands as will give the school fund the full benefit of the mnnificent grant made by the gen eral government. Clean out the nest of leeches in the capitol and quit robbing the school children of Oregon of their birthright. What is the legislature sent to Salem for if it can't meet snch prob lems as this? Appropos of the above is the following from a Salem paper: 'Governor Penhoyer dictated the fol owing to G. W. Davis, clerk of state school board. Tuesday : 'From this date no selections of lands in lieu of lands occupied by settlers under United States laws, in sections -16 and 36, will be ap proved by me, but all settlers on such lands will be permitted to get title from the state by paying the state the price therefor. Nor will any selections be made ih lieu of school sections in the Cascade mountain reservations, nor will any further selections of lieu lauds what ever be approved, which are not already partially completed at this date.' The governor says his object is to have some of the lands left for future generations JUXK BAG MANDFACTCItK. Experience and Results Id the State of W asb In gton .' Following is an ex'ract from the re port of the penitentiary commission of the state of Washington, submitted to the legislature now in session at Olyui pia. It will be seen that while the man. ufactureof jute bags pays nothing toward support of tho prison it pays six percent on the fund used in setting up the es tablishment, buying material, etc. ; and also that the product of the factory forces a reduction in the market price of bags. So there is an indirect benefit in employing "prison labor in this way. The commission says: t "After many annoying .delays, conse quent upon the importation of a large amount of intricate machinery from Great Britain, we were finally enable? to start up the jute mill' In April," 1892, THROUGH Freipni ana Passenger Line Through dally service (Sundays ex cepted) between The Dalles and Port land. Steamer Regulator leaves The Dalles at 7 a. in. 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. 0 . . rASSKNGEB KATE. . 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. LAUGHLIN, General Manager. THE DALLES. OREGON and begin teaching the convicts bow to operate the fifty looms, etc., used in the manufacture of jute fabrics, a labor that consumed several weeks and destroyed considerable raw material. The first few thousand grain bags turned oat were hand-sewn. This was speedily found a slow mode of turning them out, and we purchased the most improved rfd latest patent, power sewing and hemming machines. By this addition we have been able to turn out about 4,000 complete bags each working day. The jute mill, and its necessary attach ments, gives hard labor to an average of 215 convicts per day, and requires the undivided time of two expert citizens. "When we first placed grain bags on the market, in July, 1892, the selling price in Walla Walla was 8 cents a bag. We offered bags of better quality than the best Calcutta at 7J cents each. The dealers dropped to seven cent-; and gave purchasers credit. In order to make sales for cash, as required by law, we were compelled to drop to 6 cents, at which price the market remained firm to the close of the season. Had the dealers dropped their price below cents, we would have been unable to sell a bag, because the revolving fund act requires us to add to the cost of raw material, skilled labor, etc., interest on the investment at six (6) per cent. This interest charge was, after con sultation with the state auditor, figured on the total appropriation of $150,000 for the jute mill, equaling about 1 cent per bag. That ia to say the monthly interest charge to be added is to make $750. As it is verv difficult for an average of much more than 75,000 bags per month, because of una voidable delays, short days, ' holidays, etc., it is very evident that the interest charge is, in round numbers, I cent a bae." The Washington commission suggest, in addition, that the act requiring six per cent interest to be paid on the in vestment in machinery and material be repealed. Under the snowing presented the jute factory see ma to present a good method of employing the convicts, and nets a saving to the farming community of from to 2i cents on every sack raanutactured. . We noticed todav a horse hitched to a sleigh, tied to a tree in the street ex posed to the full force of the cold wind The poor brute was almost frozen', and was quite frantic in its endeavors to get loose. Any person so devoid of any sense of humanity as to permit a horse to freeze on a day like this, should be forced to stand several hours exposed to today's east wind, in order to appreciate the amount of suffering he causes to the animals he uses. Our city officers should be vigilant to arrest any one so inconsiderate of the city ordinances and the comfort of their domestic beasts which are oft-times more intelligent than their brutish owners. The ice gorge below Seuferta ia some thing grand. .In the line of an ice bridge it is superior, in magnificence, to any picture we have seen of the now ex isting and wonderful ice bridge at Niag ara. Herrin should go with Winans BroB., and photograph it, before it goes out. The ice ia forced up from the bot tom of the river, as it cornea down and lodges under the gorge in the swift chan nel. . . A German inventor Is reported to have devised an ingenious camera for taking photographs of the internal organs, of tinman beings and beasts. L. L. Masters of Goldendale, Is at The Umatilla; also G. W. Smith of North D.illtis, Is registered there today. OOP o o o o o LOOK AT OUR OFFER This WeMer's Dic tionary, only $1.00 ! Where can yon fio hcttcr? . oooooooo OUR PRICES ARE BELOW ALL COMPETITION". -We Have Made- Sweeping Reductions. Call and examine our stock of E. Jacobs en &cq Deputy Sheriff Phirman left for the east last night in company with an officer from Missouri in charge of R. C. Rose, alias Carter, who. is under sen tence to hang at Mount Vernon, Mo. Gov. Pennoyer granted a warrant of ar rest on Gov. Stone's requisition. Rose broke jail six years ago while under the sentence of death for murder. He was arrested a few weeks ago near Mt. Ta bor, just as he was about to skip out. Mr. Louis Payette, .one of our city mechanics, has just finished putting the iron work into the steamer Regulator, which :en through haulin repafrT . T! class in respect, a: is well It is gra that s has as good mechanics aa any place on the coast. Mr. Payette stands at the head in his profession as an iron worker. "" - One thousand tons of ice were put up by Messrs. Winans Bros, at Hood River yesterday. If this weather continues a few days they expect to house at least 12,000 tons, as they have one of the finest plants for ice harvesting In the United ' States. - Yesterday they had seventy men in the field of ice on the river. Along towards evening tne ice became so ' weak that it was dangerous. and five men got into the river. One of them was unable to swim, and bad a close call for his life, but fortunately all escaped with nothing more serious than a cold bath and a bad scare. Last l.ear: Her eyes were rheumy, and weak and rei, uer Dream you couia smeu it ajar, She bad ringing and dizziness oft in her head. And the cause oi it all was caiarrn. . This year: Her breath Is as sweet as the new m endow hay. Her eyes are as bright as a star. And Jho cause ol the cbunge, she Is ready to suy, was we IT. ewge l.ure iui VjHuutbii. . 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. nas ce ajeneifxoTRr- Vw work isjhr8t- WTS y t rif the company wi easen A f . (yimfto know s - . . TfieVnalfe Thfi Onlv House in Town Making a Specialty of-1 Gents Furnishing Goods, Hats and Caps. gives us an opportunity to devote otir entire time to this particular line. "We have a few remnants : i Fancy Underwear, Overshirts and , Gloves, which we are clos-. ' ing out cheap. JOHN C. 109 SECOND STREET, V V T E 1 o o o o o o o J. A ffl line of 12-Mo. BOOKS, lonnl iii clot! gilt Over 200 to select from, at 25c per voL ' o o o o o o o holiday presents . GockI Ioolc. 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 yon have a 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 boils and gives a good complexion. Sold. nt. Sniiipa TCiriernlv!H driieBtore. 50c per bottle. ' Examination nt Xeachers. .. Kotice is hereby given that for the purpose ol ymaking . an examination of all "pr3oi who may offer themselves aa cantJidat's)for teachers of the schools of this oountVj the county school superin tendntjH5ereof will hold a public ex airjfiitfon at his office in The Dalles be ginning Thursday, January 30th, and ending Feb. Sth 1892, at 1 o'clock, p. m. All teachers eligible for the state certi ficates, state diplomas andlifediplomas mntt malm nnnlmntinn at the Quarterly A-amtnatirnn . Tin tvl t.hi a .Tftn nil rv 2-7th. 1892. Tnov Sheli.ky, County school superintendent of Wasco County, Oregon. Leave Maier & your order Benton's. for cord wood at A fine lot of furniture going very at Crandall & Burget's new etore. low Fr Rent. The only 3-story, fire-proof brick building in the city. For further par ticulars inquire of Tom Kelly, at The Umatilla house. - PHOTOGRAPHER. rirsc premium ai xne asco county fair for best portraits and views. HERTZ, THE DALLES. OREGON. HE TROY Steam Laundry of Portland, has establish- ed a branch office for laun dry "work -with Thos. McCoy at his barber shop, XTo, 110 Second St., -where all laun dry bundles -will be received till Tuesday noon of each week, and returned on Sat urday of the same "week at Portland prices.