it 4 v The Dalles Daily Chronicle. Entered lit the 1'ostofflee at The Dalle, Orqron, a second-class mutter. The Dalles Daily Chronicle. HAS A PAMILY OF 2000 READERS. They nvul Thi! Chronicle to Rot the latent nnil most relliihlu u. Ami they rend every line thnt Is In the paivr. Thnt Is what niiike-s the Chronicle mi Invaluable advert! lm; medium. The uewspnta-'r that r to the family firesides Is the one 101 thnt the advertiser of today patronize ' when they desire to reach the people. When they want your trade their announcements will be found In the paper. Ijook over our columns and observe the verlllcu tloti of the truth of this assertion, ltemember, n trade of n family of two thousand Is worth asking for through these columns', espelally m at our very Omul .lob Printing. K you have your job printing done at Tim Chkonici.k you will hftvo the art vantage of having It done with the moat modern and approved type, with which wo keep continually supplied. All jobs under the direct supervision of one of the most successful and artistic printers in the Northwest. Wood! Wnorit Wood! Jlest quality fir, oak and slab wood. T-nnvn orders at 1311 Second street or corner Third and Union. All orders promptly attended to. Maiku & IlKNTOX. Go to N.Harris for fine prints; 20 yards for $1. I TT f XT T T 17 Clothier and Tailor. Decidedly tho Finest Line of. . THK DAI.I.Kt (lltHOON BEFORE FADS CAME. Interesting Fact About the ld-Fh-loneil Village School. Inside it was one unbroken room, writes Minot J. Savage in some inter esting reminiscences in the New Peter son. In the middle of the room was a raised brick platform, on which stood two large, old-fashioned box stoves, with the stove pipe running for a long distance overhead, so as U carry heat to distant parts of the room. On the side opposite the entry and in line with the stoves was a wooden plat form by the wall, on which stood the master's desk. The seats ran back Jrom the open space across the center, toward either end of the room. There were only two rows of benches, with aisles at th sides and one in the mid dle. Tho desks, therefore, were long, capable of seating a long row of pupils, instead of the short ones of modern days, with seats for one only, or two at most. So there was a chance for a good deal of disturbance when one of the middle boys wished to get in or out. The girls occupied seats at one end of the room and the boys at the other. On either side of the master's desk were blackboards on the wall. The l)oys brought in the big sticks of wood to keep the lires going, and it was piled up on the floor beside the stoves. On cold days we had to take turns in being permitted to leave our seats and go to the stoves to get warm. The one teacher taught everything, -from the a-b-c to algebra, including writing and the making of quill pens. Any child might study anything, pro vided only that he wished it and the master knew it. The bright pupil was not kept back because some one else was lazy or stupid, but he was at liber ty to go ahead as fast as his brains and industry could carry him. And if the master happened to know the higher mathematics or the languages, some ambitious pupil would frequently pur sue one or both of these outside of or- OUT Gents' Kurnisliiiig Goods, Trunks and Valises, etc., etc. COU. SECOND AND WASHINGTON. THK DALLES, OR. FOl piesh Paint I W. 0. Oilbkrt hereby sends His compliment to erery friend And enemy If he ha any Be they few or be they many. Tho time for painting now has come, And every one desires a home That looks fresh and clean and now, As none but a good paiutcr can do. IMlntlng, papering and glazing, top, Will make your old home look quite now. He will take your work either way, By the job or by tho day. If vou have work give him u call, Hc''ll take your orders, Urge or small, Respectfully, W. C. GILBERT, P. O. Box No. 3, THL DALLES, OR. The Fifth Annual F'R'I'R' OF THK Second Eastern Oregon District Agricultural Society, WILL UK HELD AT THE DIMES, 0!EG0f, October 10th, 1893, Continuing five clays. a. s. McAllister, President. J. O. MACK, Secretary. THE EUROPEAN HOUSE The Corrugated Hulltllncr next Ilnor to Vnnrt llonae. Handsomely Furnished Rooms to Rent by the Day, Week or Month. Meals Prepared by a First Class English Cook. TRANSIENT PATRONAGE SOLICITED. Good Sample Rooms for Tommcrcial lien. JBEEEt., Proprietor. J. O. MACK, FflE WlffEg and LIQUOR DOMESTIC Aho KEY WEST CIGARS. THE C LEBRATE O PABST BEER. FRENCH'S BLOCK. 171 SECOND STREET, THE DALLES, OR. Durham & Robertson Proprietor. dinary school hours. WRESTLING WITH BIG WORDS. 1 English Svrvunts Sometime Make Queer (' Attempts at S'onienclature. v English gardeners are almost more daring than the cooks in handling long words. This comes, no doubt, of their dangerous familiaritj- with Latin names of plants, says the Loudon Globe. Not long ago in a malaprop competition there appeared the follow ing excellent specimen, racy of kitchen garden soil: "I'll profligate a dozen or two more plants, and then I'll libel them." A combination coachman gardener is reported to have invari ably alluded to an indispensable por tion of carriage harness as the "lobelia band." Indeed, from motives of deli cacy or politeness, strange liberties are taken with the queen's English, as, lor example, when my lady admired a piece of pilot cloth at the local tailor's, and was told that it was sometimes "inquired for by ladies for peaman ties." Anything out of the common in nomenclature runs the risk of being burlesqued bj unskilled tongues. The nurse who called her charges Miss "Uurial" and Miss "Jones" must have made their mother wish she had nev ( christened them Ueryl and Joan. Hctsy and Jane they would have come off all right. Horses, too, with line names get strangely miscalled in the Htable. One pair known by their mas ter as Rustem and Solirab degenerated first into "Rusty and Sorebaek," and fell ultimately into the commonplace as "the little horse and the docthor." There is generally somebody a lady as a rule in each district on whom its finest malaprops are fathered, some times quite unfairly. It is she who is reported to have made that speech about the glories of her father's house, up to the door of which there ran a "revenue of popular trees;" she who asked her daughter to play that little "malady" she hud learned ut the "cem etery," and she again who pronounced 3Ir. Rrown as "proud as Luther." Mexican no duat. .Silver Stove Polish causes Use Mexican .Silver Stove Polish. ie writ seminanj This Is the Season Of the Year Olhen Judicious Advertising Pays. CityStables, Comer of Fourth and Federal Sta., The Dalles, Oregon. These Stables have on hand the finest Livery in Eastern Oregon, and can accommodate patrons with either Single or Double Rigs, closed Hacks or Carriages day or night. MORE ROOM. Also, cnu furnish First Class accommodations to teamsters with freight or driving tennis, having added to their stables large feeding and wagou room. Commercial Patronage Solicited. TheDrlles Wasco County, Oregon, From TEHWNNi of INTERIOR Points THK Ira Mt RKILROKD In the line to take Tacoma, Wash. Boarding and Day School for G-irls. TO ALL POINTS EAST AND SOUTH. It U the J)Inlng Car Bout. It nin Through Yeitlbuled Train.! every day in the yar to j3t paul and Chicago NO CIIANOK OF CAU8.1 Composed of Dining Oars uriatirpassed. futt man Drawing Boom Hleepera of latest equipment. TOURIST SLEEPING CARS Beit thnt can bo constructed, anil In which accommodations aru both Freu anil Furnished lor holder of FJrit unil Becoud-claj)i Tickets, and ELEGANT BAY COACHES A continuous line, connecting with all llnw ufl'ordiiig direct ami uninterrupted tt-rvlte. 1'iillmau Weeper reservations can bo ecurcd in ailvuucc through any ageut ol the road. Tenth Year Begins September 14, 1803. j hmStX TUnnilHU TIPICTC To and from all i imuyuii I iuitL I u pointy in America, r.uKiuuu ouu r.uropu cuit i3 purr;, chiucti at mii? For CiUnloguoiiiiil Admittance, iippl' to S-Sldlm Mrs, Sarali E, Wiiitc, rriiicipal, Full Information conccrnlni! rates, tlmu ol train, routes urn! other details Iurnii.hwl on application to W. C. ALLAWAY, Agent I), P. & A. Nav. Co., Ueirulntor oftlce, llii, Dalles, Or. i or lt A. I). OlIAKIfOH, As't, General VasKUicer Agt., Portlawt, )tn, Tho Gate City of the Inland Empire is situated at tho kead of navigation on tho Middle Columbia, and in a thriving, pros perous citv. ITS TERRITORY. It is tho supply city for an extensive and rich agricultural and grazing country, its trade reaching as far south as SumniAr Lake, a distanco of over two hundred miles. The Largest Wool Market. The rich grazing country along tho eastern slope of tho Cas cades furnishes pasture for thousands of sheep, the wool from which finds market here. The Dalles is tho largest original wool shipping point in America, about 5,000,000 pounds being shipped last year. ITS PRODUCTS. The salmon fisheries are the finest on the Columbia, yielding this year a revenue of thousands of dollars, which will Ik; more than doubled in the near future. The products of tho beautiful Klickitat vulloy find market here, and the country south and east has this ymr filled tho warehouses, and all available storago places to overflowing with their products. ITS WEALTH. It is the richest city of its size on the coast and its money ia scattered over and is being used to develop morn farming country than is tributary to any othor city in Eastern Oregon. Its situation is unsurpassed. Its climate delightful. Its pos sibilities incalculable. Its' resources unlimited. And on these corner stones she stands. IE DALLES III, Daily and Weekly Editions. THE CHRONICLE was established for tho ox press purposo of faithfully representing The )allos and the surrounding country, and thu satisfying od'ect of its mission is every whore apparont. It now leads all othor publications in Wasco, Sher man, Gilliam, a largo part of (J rook, Morrow and Grant counties, as well as Klickitat and othor re gions north of Tho Dalles, hence it is tho host medium for advertisers in tho Inland 3hnpiro. Tho Daily Chuoniclk is published every ove ning in tho week Sundays excepted at $0.00 per annum. Tho Weekly CiuuhWLK on Fridays of each week at 1 .50 por annum. J?or advertising rates, subscriptions, etc., address THE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO., Tlxo XnUo, Oreson. McCLURE'S MAGAZINE to Everyone Subscribing for The Dalles Daily Chronicle for 12 Months at 60 Cents a month. OR 5 UeeHly ropiel AT $2.25 PER ANNUM. JW-llv Hptvlnl iirriitmnmi'iit') with the pnlilliiliorHof imonl tin? IwHt Mffn.lnon now tmbujhM wo urn iHiiitiW tn iiiiiUo n most i'xri:ittoiiHl ofl'ur U noncl 1 McCLURE'S MAGAZINE O 3ST 33 YEAR tn I'rcryimt wIm lilts mil th fulloivlm: blank (orm, mill MiiilltiR It to uk, thuroby ititwcrtblng ft, The Dalles Daily Chronicle 12 MONTHS AT 60 CENTS A MONTH. CUT THIS OUT AND BEND IT TO UB Publisher CHRONICLE, The Dalles, Or.: Jou ivlllplea.se send to my address the DJ1TLY CHRONICLE for J 2 months from date, for which I. agree to pay 60 ots. a month, it being understood that you a.re to have sent to my address for 1 year, without extra charge, McCLURE'S MAGAZINE, commencing with the current member . Na.mc, Bate. Address. CALL AT OUR OFFICE anil mm thu entorUlnltiK nnil finely llltmtrAtml .McCLURE'S MAGAZINE, which Iih.i HnuniK Itnroiitrllintorn tho most fnninn niithnrM In Amorlcn and Kn laud, lucludla Mich wrlfem um thu following' K. L. Stovoiiiion, Ruilvnnl KiiiliiiK, A. Coniui Doyle, Octavo Thiinnt, William Dean HowHIh, IJret Ilarte, Clark KubpoII, Joel Chandler HarriH, ThotuiiH Hardy, J. T. Trowhri4'e, .leiomo It. Jerome. Fraru'eH HoilHon Httrnutt, Theodore ItooHovolt, Joaquin Miller, OiliKirt Parker, John IIurroURhfl, Mrn.ltobt. LotiiHStovetiNon.Catnile I'luiiimurion. F. Marion Crawford, Lillie Chaso Wyman, Margaret Deland, Harriet I'reHeott SpolToril, Herbert D. Ward, Edward Everett Hnle, Elizabeth Stuart 1'helpn, Louine Chandler Moulton, Kai:h niimbor n( McCLURE'S MAGAZINE conUilnx two Imniliomely llluatrntwl Intarrtm wiin men lamiiuH i)iic an: Hamlin Garland, Prof. E. 8. Holden, Prof. C. A. Yoanc, H. H. Itoyeaon, Itolwrt Uarr, Henry M. Stanley, Archibald Forlwii, Andrew Ltinu. Sarah Orne Jewett Dr. J. S. BillingH, W. E. Henley. Cnpt. CharhiH King. Jule Verne, Archdeacon Farrar, France Hodgnon Burnett, TliomaH A. Ediion, Tiaaandier, the famoun F. Hokinnon Smith, French liallooniHt, H. II. Itoyeaen, AlphonHe Daudet, Cumile Flatntnarion, Edward Everett Hale, Prof. Graham Hell. ami many others, have lumlnheil miitorliil (or eapcnliilljr vrcimrwl Intorvlowa which will appttl fully llluntratisl in thla mnitHzliiL'. Kach number contain! two or three ahnrt utorlwi by fnmnua authoru. Fully llluatrated atorlm will apix-nr in oariy uiimirara ny Tlioman Hardy, William Dean HowoIIh, K. L. SteveiiHon, Kudyard Kipling, ttret Ilarte, Sarah Orne Jowett, Joel Chandler HarriH, Harriet Premiott SpofTord, Octavu Thunet, Conan Doyle, Franeen HodgHon Hnrnett, Stanley J. Woyman. HENRY M. STANLEY will contribute, capeclally (or ynuiiK rcaflurn, u thrlllluxly IntoroatluR Mtrtryof African Ailrratur NATUHA1. HISTORY AND ADVENTURE. Them will be aeveral articles written by Raymond uiumtunyt, who Iihh Im-oh rnllcd by Mr. IV, T. Hteau tnc Doni interviewer in r.URiaiiu, irom iiiiiieruil liirninlifd nun by Karl HapanbMk.vr Jtaoi burc, tliugrent animal Importer nnil trainer. 'l'hoo nrticliM deal with The Capture of Wild IteantH. The Tranniiortatiou of Wild Reuti. The Training of Wild ReaHtH. The AdventureH and Ehciijm'h of Karl HngcnbcOb l i ene.s will rxi laiintraii-si nj no i.ukiisii nrimi ui nt:KiioiiLiiKi-si nun in iirnwuif; wiui nuiuiv JOHK iiUHKnuniiH, i;. t. uoi.iir.a, nr.. u. i . ahiiott, nun oincr wruora luminia inr inoir wort- thla Hold, will contribute to tho magazine. Of IntereHt to both Young and Old will lie PROF. It. L. GARNER'S AFRICAN EXPEDITION TO THE GORILLAS. Arrangement havo lHcn made, in connection with a leading Kiiftllxh rnvlew, to liulillih W Oaruer'a lettcrit decrlptlvo of his present expedition to Africa, I'rof. (iaruer la noted the wod over for the curious and interesting investigation hn In making In thu aiieech of uinukeri. S aalled for Africa Inst Bcptembcr for tho sake of further pursuing his studied In the natlvo hmslll tho gorilla. The Illustrations for these articles will Ikj from photograidiH taken by I'rol. (iarot;. Thu uiMgazlnc also contains most Intcrcatlug artlck'H under thu following comprehensive ha " The Edge of tho Fnture." " Knowledge of Immediate Value." " NoweHt Knowledge." " The Present Hour." " Stranger than Fietion," utu. Weareoflerlng this apleiidld maga2luo with the Daily CnrtoNici.r for only 7.'.l) a ycr,fiJM in advance or in iiioiiiuiy insiaunienis as uosireu. Wo make thla oxceptlnual offer In order that wc may secure n large numler of now aubtntbta masaiiue. nil up uiu uuiiik auu acuu u in, in THE DAILY CHRONICLE, The Dalles, Or. Columbia THE DALLES, OREGON. This Popular House a-l i-t it t t .a I furnished throughout, aud in now better ever prepared to furnhih the boat Hotel accommodation!) of any Iioiiho in the city, and at tho very low rato of $1 a day. First-Class Meals, 2& Office of tiie fant and commodiouB oppoaitlon 6ttf to Dufur, KlngHley, Tygh Vulloy, Wupinltt. Warm Spring- and Prinovllle Ih in tho Hotel ud penionn going to Prinevllle can nave $4.00 by going ou this Htuge lino. All trains stop here. PAUL KREFT &. CO., -DEALERS IN- PAINTS, OILS AND GLASS And the Most Complete and the Latest Patterns and DoHignfl i" a. MT ;lk I'ldntorH and Pupor Hiuigerfi. Noun hut tho best brands of tb Bhorwin-Wi iaiiiH and J. W. MiiHiiry'H PitintH UHed in all jur work, and iioueff the most skilled workmun employed. Agents for Masury Llijuid J'aintB. J choinical combination or soap mixture. A first class articlo In all colors. " oidorH promptly uttended to. Pninf Klinn nn, 1H,I..1.. ...1 nr.l..'. 4. n.. flil. TlnllnB. Of)"' THE CELEBRATED COLUMRTA RRFWRRY, AUGUST BUCHLER, Prop'r. Tlllu tl'flll-LllSiUril Itai.i.wv... I A..... I . I t . ..A till il I'D'" iivii-.iiunti iMunni r 111 iiuw Liiriiiiii' our rim iii'hl ji-ui i. oiint, HI UIU UUHCUIieS. M.IIO litest lllill uiiih tnr , m,mf,w(iirn 01 UO"" " . If w vtiv ite 1jrtP iui iieerimve ween introduced, and onlv (irUi.,.iuU uwinln will lini"" IKIIV VIHUU V ,1 uiu luaranv.