I To Buy of Us. I Our Business is Built on Quality. ' " Examples might be heaped until they hide . j 5) The rules, which they were made to render plain.' ' Store Closes at 7.30 P. M. I v i-assfig PEASE & MAYS. The Dalles Daily Chronicle. Kntered a the Poetofflce at The Dalles, Oregon, as second-class matter. Clubbing List. Regular Oar price price ...$2.50 $1-75 ... 3.00 2.00 ... 2.00 1.75 ... 3.00 2.25 . . 3.00 2.00 ... 3.00 2.25 .. 2.502.00 Ckroaicle ail K. Y. Trilue. . ...... ud Wwklj Oregoiiu .... " d iaerieu Funcr " ui IeClm'i laguiu. . . " ud Tit Detroit Fret Press . " ul Cuepolitu lutiiie. " ud Prairie Firmer, Cling ud 6Iobe-Dmrat,i-w)8t.Lui 3.00 2.00 Local Advertising. 10 Ceuui per line for first insertion, and S Cents per line for each subsequent Insertion. Special rates for long time notices. . All local notices received later than (o'clock will appear the following day. The Daily and Weekly Chronicle may be found on sale at I. C. Nickelsen's tore. Weather Forecast. Portland t March 10. The following weather forecast is for the time ending tomorrow (Sunday) midnight, March 11th: Saturday, fair; Sunday, rain or enow. SATURDAY, - - - - MAR. 10, 1894 MARS' MONTH. A Record of resser Events for the Thirty-one Says. School Superintendent Troy Shelley ia quite busy with his various school reports. Dr. Candiana has been in Portland nearly all week in consultation with his lawyer, the Cascade people believe in relation to his proposed damage suit for $10,000. Constable John Tra'na! brought up from Cascade Locks today Geo. Farrell, sentenced to thirty days in the county jail for using obscene language, breaking windows and contempt of court. v The Masonic fraternity of Hood River have extended an - invitation to their Dalles brethren and wives to be present at an entertainment tonight at the former place. About twenty-five Ma sons and their wives availed themselves of the kind invitation by leaving on the local, and will return on the passenger train tonight. The dance by The Dalles String Band last evening was the last of the series, and though it was not the best attended of the four, the music was none the ess entrancing, and the floor was in splendid condition. Previous to danc ing the club favored those present with some choice orchestral music, led by that thorough musician, Prof. Birgfeld. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria, When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Hiss, she clung to Castoria. When she had Children, she gave them Castoria. Mrs. Phillips has inst hnilf. kreen-house. much laroer than fcnr old lone', and has bought all of the pots and plants ot Mr. Varney, and, is now well prepared to furnish both cut flowers and 'plants. Sure Shot Squirrel Poison at Sninea A iCinersly's. . Eatl Creek Mines. From a private letter from Sparta we learn that, the last clean up of the East Eagle Co. was not very satisfactory, and the reason given is that they have been working on an inferior ledge. They will start up again as soon as the snow is off. There is now six feet of it on the ground. The Tacoma company seemed to be a fake or at any rate something was wrong.' They did little work and did not pay the men. A portion of them got due bills. Some of these were honored in Union for supplies, but soon the merchants shut down on them. The Tacoma is on East Eagle just where the old Indian trail crosses.- They have a fine property, one of the best on Eagle creek. . A mill will be put in aB soon aa possible. The Detroit company have'a ten stamp mill and lumber all on the ground ready to put up in the spring. Several fair placer mines are to be opened up soon. Some have been ship ping all winter. . Two men working on the Mary Ains worth mine are taking out some fine rock. - Trade Pointers. Sugar took a jump of c a pound yes terday at Portland, Or. Australian wools sold in London on the 1st of March, greasy, 4 to lOd ; New Zealand wools, greasy, 6) to lid. Reports from Boston of the 2d inst. state that Oregon wools are held steady on- the basis of best territory grades. New England hides nominal at 3 to 4 ; Texas branded 5) to 6 slaughter hides 2to3. Pelts are flat at 75 to 85 for winter and 40 to 60 for late spring. Populist Meeting. There will be a mass meeting of the populists of Wasco county at the court heuse on Saturday, March 17th. All lovers of justice and reform are cordially invited to be present." A People's Party Club will be organized and other measures pertaining to the welfare of th,e people will be discussed. By order of the committee for The Dalles. A "Monkey's Death-Bed Scene.. ' Prof. Garner's chimpanzee, Elishaba. recently fell a victim at Liverpool to the severe weather. The scene at the death bed was very distressing1. Poor Aaron, the male chimpanzee, had been most assiduous in his ' attentions to his consort during" the . whole of her illness. Prof. Garner was present during the last moments, and when he put his hand to her heart to find if it had ceased to beat Aaron also put his hand there, looking up in the professor's eyes as if inquiring if that was all they could do for her. Aaron would not suffer Elishaba to be taken from Mm, and clung to her body with such tenacity that the professor was compelled to .lay it down on its bed of straw. The sadness depicted on Aaron's countenance could : not have been more clearly portrayed on the face of any human being. Poor Aaron was not consoled until he had placed his hand in that of the professor, and by signs and sounds had told him of his distress. Both of the animals had1 become greatly attached to Prof. Gar ner, and, apart from her value in sup port of his theory, the loss of Elishaba isr keenly felt ty him. - ' Notice. " I hereby announce myself as a' candi date for the office of county clerk, sub ject to the. decision of the republican county convention. . - ' I. I. Bcbget. Haworth, printer, 116 Court St. tf COLLECTING FOSSILS. A "Dalles City Natural Science Associa tion" Shonld Be Formed. Editor Cheokicle In yesterday's is sue of your paper you state that Prof. Irelan, fstate geologist of California, is coming 'to Oregon "for the purpose of enriching the collections of his state with the product of our . fossil beds and that his trip will be a successful one there can be no doubt for, al though this region has been looked over for. many years, the nature of the forma-, tions here are such ' that the rains, snows and frosts of each winter expose new specimens to the eye of the col lector. The Princeton college expedi tion of '89, with which the writer was connected as collector and guide, was the last that has worked in this region, and since that time there have been sev eral winters of heavy rains and snows, which have doubtless restored many of those leaves, thus torn from the records of ages long past, to be deciphered and again' recorded by man among the arch ives of the present. ' It is a fact to be regretted that the greater part of all the fine specimens discovered in Oregon have been carried away to swell the collections of museums in other states, most ot 'which have museums of their own. This is all the more deplorable when we know that the things thus taken away can never be duplicated, for the reason that they are found no where else in the world. I have been connected with this work for many years, and there is not a fossil locality in Eastern Oregon that has not been explored by me. The first work done in the John Day rivers region was by Prof. Condon in 1870, and that was the first work in the fossil fields of East ern Oregon. As the localities were not well known then, comparatively few specimens were secured. In '71 the Yale college expedition came put and made a small collection, but in '72 work was commenced in earnest, and it was at this time that I began work for Yale college-museum, under the direction of Prof. O. C. Marsh,. and from then until '78, with one or two other men, I was kept constantly at work, each year send ing away great quantities of beautiful specimens to grace the Shelves of Pea body museum at Yale college. In the spring of '78 the Piute and Bannock In dians got up a little expedition into the John Day country, but it was not fossils they were looking for. They were after horses, cattle, and the scalps of settlers. As two - expeditions into the same re gions, with such divergent objects, could not well agree, we fossil-hunters gave the Indians the field and helped the settlers save their property. In the spring, of '79 I again took up the work under the direction of Prof. E. D. Cope, of .the Academy of Sciences, Philadel phia, and . the next year for the United States Geological Survey, direct ed by Prof. Marsh, then U. S. paleontolo gist. During all these years we procured many tons of material of the very great est interest to the world of science, all of which has been taken from the state and forever lost to it. It is true, that by i careful and systematic work, many of these specimens could in time be dupli cated, but it would take many years of labor to replace them all in a museum of our own and perhaps very many of them will never be found again. . Each winter for all time to come these things will continue to be exposed to view, but each year will make them less plentiful. Since there is apparently no interest manifested in this subject by the state, a city like Portland, Baker or The Dalles snouia taKe ine matter in nana, lorm a Natural Hietorv Association and start a museum of their own. Such an institu tion would very soon become a pride to the state and would directly not only be seJf-Buetaining, but a source of profit to its shareholders. Money could be made from the sale of duplicate specimens, from lectures on natural history subjects and from a small admission fee to the museum. Such an institution should contain specimens of fossil, minerals and Indian relics, also mounted sped mens of birds and animals found in this country, together with the best speci mens of plants, grainB, grasses, fruits, etc., all of which can now be had for the taking. . A vast collection could soon be made with comparatively - little cost, which would be worth many thousands of dollars,- besides being a source of great interest and pleasure. Can we not organize "The Dalles City Natural Science Association" and secure some of these benefits before it is too late? - It is true as you say, our state is being plundered of all its best specimens, but if our people will not reap the benefit to be derived from them, let us remember that since "science recognizes no state lines" it is better to let others have what we cannot have ourselves, than that all these fine things should remain where they are and be of no use to the scientific world, but in a short time.be destroyed by the action of the elements, or carried away and broken up by people who do not realize their value. L. S. Davis. T-a Grippe. 'During the prevalence of the grippe the past seasons it was a noticeable fact that those who depended upon . Dr. King's New Discovery, not only had a speedy recovery, but escaped ' ail- of the troublesome after effects of the malady. This remedy seems' to have a peculiar power in effecting rapid' cures not only in cases of la grippe, but in all diseases of throat, chest and lungs, and has cured cases of asthma and hay fever of long standing. Try it and be convinced.. It won't disappoint. : Free trial bottles at Snipes & Kinersly's drug store. PERSONAL MENTION. Mr. W. S. Cram is in the city. Mr. C. G. Roberta of Pendleton is in the city. Mr. George Prather of Hood River is in the city today.1 May op Paul Kreft left for Warm Springs this morning, to be absent sev eral weeks. Mr. J. P. Mclnerny ia en route to the Midwinter fair. He will be absent about two weeks. Mr. Leslie Butler returned home from Kansas this morning after an absence of several months. Mr. C. A.' Stuart, a prominent citizen of Cascade Locks, is in the city on busi ness, and favored Tub Chronicle office with a call. ' We had the pleasure of a call from Mr. P. B. Sinnott today. In conversa tion with that gentleman he.' expressed himself as very sanguine of telling re publican victory in the June elections. High Living, if you keep at it, is apt to tell upon the liver. The things to prevent this are Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. Take one of these little pellets for a corrective or gentle laxative three for a cathartic They are the smallest, easiest to take, pleasantest and most natural in the way they act. They do permanent good. Constipation, Indigestion,. Bilious At tacks, Sick or Bilious Headache, and all derangements of the liver, stomach and bowels, are prevented, relieved and cured. They're guaranteed to give sat isfaction in every case or your money is returned. The worst cases of Chronic Catarrh in the Head yield to Dr. Sage's Catatrh Remedy." So certain is it that its mak ers offer $500 reward for an incurable case. - Stockholders' Meeting. Notice is hereby given that there will be an annual meeting of the - stock holders of the Dalles, Portland & Asto ria Navigation Company held , in the Chronicle hall on Saturday, the 7th day of April, 1894, at the hour of 2 o'cloek p. m., for the purpose of electing seven di rectors and transacting any other busi ness that may properly come before said meeting. By order of the president. Sam'l, L Brooks, Secy. The Dalles, Feb. 28, 1894. 2-27-4t -importer of- CLOTHING, Negligee Starts, Under wear, Hosiery . . - t Boots, Shoes, Rubbers, &c. ' Eyery article mattei ii mail figures. 1 EL Honyvill, Boys bnyvilL SEEDS! SEEDS I SEEDS T IN PACKAGE OR BULK. ' We have a Complete Assortment of Seeds, both Timber and Garden, at Wholesale Prices. NEVER MIND HARD TIMES, Buy your Garden Seeds of Joles, Collins & Co., and raise -your own Garden Truck. . , JOLES. COLLINS & CO., Successors to The Dalles Mercantile Co., 390 to 394 Second St. . The Balance OF TO -AT Winter Dry Closed Great We especially offer Great Bargains in ' ... Dress Goods, Jackets, Underwear; Blankets, Clothing, Boots and Shoes. . TERMS STRICTLY CKSH. THE DALLES LUMBERING COL INCORPORATED 188S No 67 Washington Street. . . The Dalles. Wholesale and Retail Dealers and Manufacturers of Bnildiag Material and Dimension Timber Boors, Windows, Moldings, House Furnishings, Et - Special Attention given to the Manufacture of Fruit and Fish Boxes and Packing Cases. Factory uad Ij-a.xaa."fcex- 7arci . Old 3Jt. 33aUe. DRY Pine, Fir, Oak and any part YOUR RTTEJiTIOfl Is called to the faot that Hugh Glenn, Dealer in Glass, Lime, Fiawo?, Cement and Building Material of all kinds. - Carries the Finest Line of ' PiGtuie jnoulflings, To b9 foond in the City. 72 CUashington Street Harry Liebe, PRACTICAL All work promptly attended to, and warranted. Can be found at Jacobsen's Music store, No. 162 .-..ALL THE NEWS TWICE A WEEK. YOU THINK, YOTT WILL CONCLUDE THAT WE ARE AT PRESENT OFFER ING A RARE BAR GAIN IN READING MATTER. $1.50 A - YEAR FOR YOUR HOME PAPER. .-.ALL THEPTEW8 TWICE A WEEK. ..... OUR Goods BE A Slab WOOD Delivered to of the city, THE Oldest Agricultural Paper ia America. esTABUSHCo iai.l To all cash subscribers of Thk Chboniclb paving one year in advance. The American Farmer, 1729 Hew York Avenue, WASHINGTON. D. C. V - Thb American Fabbtek, which is now enter ing upon its 75th year, is the pioneer farmer's paper in the country. It is a large eight-page paper, and contains 56 columns of the choicest agricultural and liter ary matter, plentifully embellished with .fin illustrations. It is NATIONAL IN CHARACTER, and deals with farming and farmer's interest on broad, practical lines. . it - EMPLOYS THE BEST WRITERS IK THE COUNTRY, and everything that appears in its columns is of the highestcharacter. Every department of tha farmers business is discussed in an earnest, practical way, looking to the greatest profit and benefit to the farmer and his family. It appears on the 1st and 15th of each month, and is f urnisned at the low price of : 50 CENTS A YEAR In advance. This makes It the cheanast agricultural paper In the country. FARMER LEGISLATION. During tfle coming year there will be an im-v menso number of matters of the most vital in terest to farmers dealt with by Congress and the Executive Departments at Washington. It ia highly important that the farmers be kept promptly and fully informed as to what is being binned and done affecting them at the National apitaL They should all, therefore, take Tks American Farmkb, which, being on the ground, has better facilities than any other papers for getting this information, and devotes itself to this duty. They will find in It constantly m - great am.-unt of valuable infonution tht tW . can get iu no other paper. , Th American Fasvsr anrivrn irn Out Sacrifice will be entone year for 11.75.