"V" Tht Dalits lfcily Ctmmkk Knturiil it the I'Mtofflcoat The DftllM, Oregon, mr neoona-oiRM mailer. Clubbing List. RcffUlnr Our Irloc jirlco f hruaitle ni S, V. Tritnnf J2.R0 t. Chronicle mJ Anfrifsn Firmer, T. KM l.5 rhroaidr aid Iti'larr i Mtftlm, ...... tt.W $iS (broiithari CtMMplitu luuitt J.1.00 Cbrniflf ftfifit hnwt 8V.50 ?:'.0 Local AiivnrtUian. ID Gum wr Hue tor first limertlon, Mid 6 Cent ir lino (or cnoh Ratncqncnt Insertion. Hcll rnten for lone Umo notices. All local notlcra received IhUt tlmn o'clock will appear the following lny. FRIDAY, DEC. 22, 1893 The Daily and Weekly Chronicle may be found on talent I. C. Nictelen' itore. DECEMBER DOTS. Hplry NtwltU Oarnereil from porter' Note Hook. a lie- I'll tell you n H'crct tht'n clever, Tin one to onxlirluo In the heart: They lire Imiiplent when they're together who iiinut ol their time are npurt. Country roads are very bad owing to the heavy rainfall. CliMrlcs Cheater was arrested today by MnrHlic' Maloney for larceny in the honte tl Mr; DeWolf on Second fitreet. Ctty council meets toniffht to consider bids for constructing the Lincoln street newer. There aro two bids to be con sidered. The professor has leased the Shanno liull for dancing school purposes and will Rive the first of series of soirees Saturday evening. The gronud is moro thorough!' satur ated this season thun for many years and an abnndanco of moisture is assured for the succeeding growing season. Attention is called to the letter in Pease .t Mays' announcement today. The original may bo seen at the store uKn application by any reador of The Ciiijonici.k. The prevailing hard times do not Keem to affect the Christmas trade. Dealers inform us the usual number of articles designed for gifts are being in dulged in, and if times are really closer than formerly no one is economizing on Christmas good cheer. The ladies of the Good Intent Society will give their annual New Year's en tertainment on Saturday evening Dec. .'!Otb. A good programme is being pre pared, for which Mrs. . M. Wilson hits kindly consented to tell of her trip to the world's fnlr. A hot chlckenj plo Bnpper will bo served for 25 cents. Ad mission to the entertainment 25 cts. The flour spoken of in yesterday's Ciiuostci-R will bo disbursed to worthy parties upon application by themselves or friends to the ladles relief committee. The old flro relief committee havo mado their final report and concluded their duties, leaving what supplies were left in the hands of Mrs. N. B. Slnnott, Mrs. T. S. Lang. Mrs. Smith French, and Mrs. J. 0. Mack. It is very impottant that a delegation be sent to Salem to represent our inter ests in the selection of the asylum site. This could be done at a very trifling ex pense, and would assure ns that nothing would bo overlooked. Tonight is the accepted time, if snch n committee are to be 'sent. The matter will admit of no delay. The Ciikoniclk suggests the name of It. F. Gibons as one of such committee. The M. E. Sunday school are to have a donation social in their Sunday school room tomorrow evening, Dec. 23d. Each member is expected to bring something that will bo placed in the hands of a committee and by them given to the needy. All are asked to make the children's effort a success by helping the children to contributions of vegetables, flour, rice, groceries, meats, clothing or anything that can be used to make life endurable and comfortable. The com mittee for receiving and distributing are Mesdames Willerton, Fowler, D. M. French, Bills, Miss Ursula Ruch and Nellie Mtchell. Everybody is looking for bargains, and at E. Jacobsen & Co.'s you can find them. All prices of holiday goods re duced. Campbell Bros., of the Columbia Candy factory, are showing the finest line of candies and Christmas ornaments ever brought to The Dalles, and prices to suit the times. flood Iteanonlng;. Every farmer should put in as much fall grain as possible. Don't be dis couruged at the bad luck of this season, nut try again and wish for a change for the better. We are all laboring under difficulties, but despair will only make matters worse. Wheat may be worth 75 cents a bushel next year, for we have always noticed that one extreme follows another. WaBco News. All we ask for holiday presents are hard-time prices. Do not fail to call at E. Jacobsen & Co.'s if you need holiday goods. Carving sets and Roger's triple plated table cutlery at Maier & Benton's hard ware store. LOW PRICE OF WHEAT. Trarhe a Valuable I.emon to Many of the Fanner. There is probably no nt,. cultural question that comes so directly home to the farmers of today as that of feeding wheat to stock and poultry. Will it pay to raise wheat and feed it to animals and poultry? asks a writer in the Ameri can Cultivator, and continues in answer : with wheat so cheap as It is now it is almost impossible for many farmers to mako a fnir profit from this industry, although in favored parts of the West and northwest the large farmers claim that even at this price they can make a profit. But this is not true of thousands of others scattered throughout the East and West. Undoubtedly this season has been an exceptional one and prices arc lower than will be the case for many ycais again. But the present low prices for the grain are having their beneficial results. Many farmers aro feeding their surplus wheat to stock and poultry, who at any other time could not be induced to at tempt this. They are learning bv j actual experience what nothing elso ! could have taught them. As an illustra tion, one farmer this summer fed his i wheat to his poultry, and he is so well pleased with the experiment that ho as serts that not 70 cents a bushel would induce him to sell it in the market an other year. He would feed it o the poultry, for by so doing he realizes at the lowest estimate $1 per.bushel in the summer time. He now intends to try the same experiment this winter, and he anticipates making the wheat pay him nearly $2 a bushel. Another poultrv-raiser has even deigned to buy the wheat direct from his neighbors at the city market prices simply to feed his poultry, and the re sults are so good that he is now laying in a stock of wheat for winter feeding Instead of his usual rations. The fact is, there is no better food for making the hens lay than wheat, and this may yet be the food that we will give to our poultry. It also answers the purpose better than the best screened oats. Then we have other farmers feeding their wheat to swine, and here, too, the results are satisfactory. Hogs are high this year, and the profit is certainly sure to be good. It will return $1 per bushel to the owner today when fed to hogs, and this is much better than selling it in the market at current prices. It is estimated that two quarts of wheat equal in feeding value four quarts of oats, and the stock, as a rule, like the wheat better. Now, there is an outlet for wheat that has never been given much attention, and one need not fear that wheat grow ers will have to go out of the business. Within a short tlmo poultry-raisers and stock owners aro going to buy moro wheat for feed, and nil tho surplus will go in this direetfon, relieving the mar ket of tho heavy stocks. Tho market prices will consequently advance, and those who must have tho ready cash for their wheat will be benefitted in the long run also. Farmers should feed wheat rather than sell it at today's prices. Christina Dinner. The following bill of faro will be ob served for Christmas at the Umatilla House : DINNER. Oyster Soup. Turtlo Soup. Celery en Branch. Filet of Salmon. . Tannason. Boiled Potatoes. Pigs Feet. Mixed Pickles. Cold Slaw. New Beets. Chow Chow. Oyster Patties. Boiled Queen Ham, Champagne Sauce. Ox Tongue, Mint Sauce. Leg of Mutton, Caper Sauce. Chicken Fricassee. I'iga Head with Sauer Kraut. Veal Cutlets, Cream Sauce. Beef a la Mode, Wine Sauce. Lobster Salad. Prime Roast Beef. Roast Shoulder of Mutton. Young Turkey Stuffed, Cranberry Sauce. Roast Pig with Apple Sauce. Baked Potatoes, Sweet Potatoes, Mashed Potatoes. Sugar Corn, Stewed Tomatoes. English Plum Pudding, Hard Sauce. Fruit Pudding, Cream Sauce. Pumpkin Pie, Mince Pie, Pineapple Pie. Fruit Cake, Cocoanut Slices, Jelly Roll, Lady Fingers, Christmas Frosted Cake, Cup Cakes, Small Assorted Cakes. Fruits. Bents Water Crackers, Domestic Cheese. Coffee. Special reduction on lamps, glassware and crockery for the holidays at H. H. uampneirs. Always Keaily to Ilelleve Distress. The committee of ladies organized for charitable purposes, consisting of Mes dames Sinnott, Lang, S. French ,and Mack, are always ready to extend relief to those needing it, and if anyone is suffering for the necessaries of life it is their own fault. These ladies have often been misled by others in seeking objects of aid, where investigation proved it not necessary, and again they have been im posed upon. No really deserving case escapes them unless so concealed that there is no possibility of hearing about it and then it is no one's fault but the sufferer's. mf Si S ' V Just flrrivea from Hew York SPLENDID ASSORTMENT OF todies' Jackets, . . FROM $3.50 UPWARDS (Holding & mm At Remarkably Low Prices. its $5,50. Est ni- ru FULL ASSORTMENT OF Winter Dry Goods, IjW BOOTS, SHOES, HATS, ET0, As we aro lorced to SELL FOR CASH in order to avoid lawsuit" (liko he famous A. S. Collins and wife's suit) and bad debts, our prices will always b found the verv lowest in the market. Wo invite our friends nnd customers to examine our goods and prices before purchasing. M. Honywill. 5r?os Ladies' Gents' Childrens' Men's ia nor- i Matte Suits, Pants, Overcoats. A Large Assortment of Men's flat of the newnt shapes made epecially for The Dalles. "Samantha at tie World's Fair, Awl be up to tho tltne. J ) THE LATEST OUT Greatest Work of the Nineteenth Century ' By JOSIAH ALLEN'S WIFE. A. G. Hoering, Locnl ARCiit, The Dulles, Or. Business Change. Gents' Silk Handkerchiefs, Mufllers, Neckwear, Gloves. Umbrellas, etc. Suitable for Christmas Presents. Every article marked in plain figures. The undersigned has bought the Chinese merchandise busi ness heretofore conducted by YEB HOP & CO., and will pay nil bills owing by said firm if presented to them before December 1st, 1893. CHEW KEE & COV 130 Mniu St., The Vnllex. Or. ' ' . i ! " - . r a A Letter from Santa Claus: ; 4 'I j t . SANTA-SLAUSVILLE, Dec. 18, 1893. V ' PEASE & MAYS, , The Dalles, Ore. "r : ' Gentlemen: I have yours of the 10th inst. asking if it would be possible for me to visit The Dalles this Christmas-time. I have had most excellent reports of the behavior during the past year of the children in your City, and have finally decided to pay you a visit. Shall endeavor to reach your store, where I intend to make my Headquarters while in The Dalles, by half-past two Saturday afternoon. It is possible that, owing to the bad condition of the roads, for we cannot travel nearly as fast as if the ground were covered with snow, and also because I have had the misfortune to lose two of my pet Reindeers, Comet and Vizen, I may be a little late. I am disappointed in not qeing able to have a present for all that I may meet while in your city, but I will send on some Candy and Pop Corn for the children, and a more useful present for their mothers. You may say to all the children of The Dalles, who have been good boys and girls for the past year, that I will be in your store Saturday afternoon and evening, to shake hands with them and wish them A MERRY CHRISTMAS. Yours Truly, v , SANTA-CLAUS. I