ovn DlSPliRY. A PEASE S MAYS,t . DISTRIBUTORS OF MERCHANDISE i HI (Joods (Hartd ig piair? F'9ures- N53 39- U 'i.f ' -? fix, -jO 9h , U. lax "We have made unusual efforts to have our stock for this season handsomest and brightest we have ever had. -We hope our efforts .have been successful, and that you will find much to admire and praise in our new, fresh and y ; choice selections. , you ' ARE iNVITECr TO OUR SPRI NGOPEN. NG TO-MORROW. PEASE & MAYS. We would ' wish '-that, ,when you visit us, you could xhave ample leisure time to allow us to show you through the different departments and to permit you to more carefully examine the goods that par ticularly attract you.- : - the Ui 5' CD W - 1 i ' -v -vu .-J- ...rr 0: 1 PEASE 5 MAYS, t DISTRIBUTORS OF MERCHANDISE ... . : ( Ill Goods flarld in plain pigures. MS ,.t , . The Dalles Dally Chronicle. Kntered a the Postofflce at The Dalles, Oregon, as second-class matter. Clubbing List. Ciroiicle itl If. T. Trikue. . " tid Wteklj Ortgoiiai . " ni Americas Firatr " ud leCluie'i lagaiiu .... " ui tie Detroit Free Prem . . " ui Couefslitu Iseuiie. . " ani Prairie Farmer, Ckitage . Regular Oar price price . .$2.50 $1-75 .. 3.00 2.00 .. 2.00 .. 3.00 . 3.00 . . 3.00 : 2.50 1.75 2.25 2.00 2.25 2.00 ui Glle-Dfm(HTit,(i-')8t.l8aij 3.00 2.00 Local Adrertlslnc;. 10 Ceaui mst line for first Insertion, and 5 Cents per line for each subsequent Insertion.. Special rates for long time notices. All local notices received later than S o'clock will appear the following day. TTie Daily and Weekly Chronicle may be found on sale at I. C. Nickelsen'e store. TUESDAY, MAR. 20, 1894 MARS' MONTH. A Record of Cesser Brents for Thirty-one Days. The La Grande Daily Chronicle is one of the. neatest little papers that' grace oar exchange table. . "The Rise of Imperialism in Home," at the coart house this evening at 8 o'clock. Seats free. 'No collection. The young ladies of the M.'E. church are decorating a number of Easter eggs; which are to be on sale at Pease & Mays' store. The populists .are said to have a ma jority In Sherman county over both the old parties combined. What benighted landis.this? Mr. A, G. Johnson organized a re publican club of seventy-five members in .Cascade Locks ... yesterday. H. A.. Leavens is president. An impromptu dancing .party will be civen ah ("JhrvRarithemnm Hall thin pvpn. I '4 : i r ... ir t st worth, who leaves tomorrow for Cal ifornia. c: ': : The trains have just got through the 'obstructions at Nam pa and Shoshone, and will reach here in about twenty-five hours. The bridge gangs have performed herculean labors. H . ine young ladies of the First Chris tian church will give a social Wednes day evening in the basement of the church. . One of the chief attractions will be living pictures of prominent persona. ' . We desire to thank our numerous country correspondents for their weekly i letters. Each of them is doing his neignDornooa a valuable service. These letters are always interesting and are eagerly read by hundreds of others all over the county. ' Opening Iar- ," Wednesday, March 21st, Miss. Anna Peter & Co. Ladies of The Dalles and vicinity invited. A Rio dispatch says it is believed Da Gams and about 70 of his officers who left the bay yesterday on the Portuguese war vessels will be put ashore at Monte video, and from there they will join the insurgents in Southern Brazil. -" Mexican Silver Stove Polish causes no dust. . CITY COUNCIL. The Are XlgUt Question Discussed and an Agreement Beached. A special meeting of the city council waa held last night to consider the arc light question and other matters.' There were present Acting-Mayor Eshelman and Councilmen Butts, Lauer, Crowe, Jolea and-Hudson. The matter of the arc lights was con sidered with the arrival of Mr- Virgil Bolton, manager for the company. He stated that a committee of councilmen had submitted a proposition to him of $11 per light. This he was not inclined to concede because the margin of profit would be very small. It costs about $9 to maintain each light, figuring' npon a basis of regular expenditures, and when other details of expenses, constantly oc curring, are considered, he could not figure upon a margin of $2, which is a very small one, and stated that at $11 there would be nothing in it for the company. He narrated that Mr. Rob erts had tried to lessen the rates below $12 some years ago and failed to make it a success. . The last light placed by the company cost $200 to put in and it would be a long time before the com pany got the mere cost back. He recog nized, however, that times were hard and the city badly in debt, and was will ing to make as fair a concession as he could. For this purpose he offered to furnish the lights for $12 each, in any number required, provided the company could have a two years' contract from the city. Mr. Hudson thought" the proposition a very fair one and moved for its acceptance. - Mr. Butts wanted the question postponed until the regu lar meeting, but was opposed by Crowe and Hudson and t the . motion . carried. The recorder was next instructed to draw up a contract with the company and present it at next meeting for ap proval. "' " ' ' "u. Mr. Crandall submitted Ms estimates on the cost of repairing the jail. The improvements contemplated aw very thorough. There is, to be one large and two small cells, all on the, south side of the ball way. Partitions to be of dressed 2x4's, . spiked together. . The iron door leaning to the jail yard will , be closed. The water closet and wash" bowl will be removed to the interior. The iron work is to be of boiler iron with half-inch hole's punched through. The corridor will be 15x15 feet. The old walls are to be lined with 1-inch plank. The cost was stated to be about $500. The report was accepted, and the recorder instructed to advertise for bids. : Mr. Butts then moved 'that bids be asked to lay 212 feet of sidewalk in the Union street cut, and recorder wis in structed to so , advertise. . Mr. Joles wanted the sidewalk extended down to Fifth street, the city to bear all the ex pense, but Mr. Butts would not listen to it as part of his motion, saying it would delay the other. He believed there was a way of condemning bad sidewalks and fencing them out, but Mr. Joles' only re ply was an ominous 'shake of the bead. He has been through the sidewalk ordeal before. . . ' Mr. Crandall then read a report con cerning the "Elton?' grade from Fourth street to the city limits, stating the num ber of cubic yards of cuts and fills that would have to be made, the grades, etc., but not the probable cost. The steepest grade was 12 per cent, or one inclined the same as the steepest part in the Union street cut. After considerable argument the recorder was instructed to advertise said proposed improvement for fourteen days, the property-owners to be given to understand they were to pay for it ' entirely, the city, to pay only for sur veying. ' : The Lincoln street sewer ordinance was brought up in a new way ' by Mr. Hudson, stating that the assessment of Capt. McNulty for the same was illegal, as he would not be benefitted thereby. This' made a complicated state of affairs, since the ordinance has already been passed twice, the assessment made and the property owners notified, and the question was referred to a committee of the whole at next regular meeting. The next question, taken up was the dog ordinance. After some discussion, the recorder, was instructed to notify owners of dogs that the taxes on them must be paid by the 12th of May, or the dogs wonld be impounded. Ad journed. ' The Lecture Tonight. Mr. Lydell Baker will address the citi zens of The Dalles at the court house at 8 o'clock this evening. It is not a political lecture, and is purely historical. No admission fee is charged, and it is given merely , out of courtesy to the many friends in The' Dalles, who know the honorable gentleman and for whom he has a strong regard. This lecture is very fine and has been delivered but once before in Oregon. Those who know of the lecture and do not attend will regret it tomorrow. ' No cost is at tached, Mr. Baker stating that railway transportation costs him nothing and he would rather lecture than not. The kindly spirit should be appreciated by a full house. , The ChhoKicle is assured he has . no ends to serve, other than a pardonable ambition to give the people the benefit of a good thing at his own hands. Diphtheria In Portland. The . public schools of Hollidny Ad dition, Portland, have been closed owing to diphtheria, and charges have been preferred against a physician there for reporting cases of diphtheria as tonsili- tis. The . Oregonlan undoubtedly refers to Mr. E. B. McFarland in the following : One case was that of a child who died, and ' the death certificate,, signed by the attending 'phy'sician'- and ' filed at the health office, alleged that death was due to tonsilitis. The -body was shipped to The Dalles for burial, and the funeral was a public one. Dr. Wheeler visited another child in the same family, al leged to be suffering from tonsilitis, and found a serious case of diphtheria. He at once had the patient isolated, and took every precaution to prevent spread of the disease." PERSONAL MENTION. Mr. T. J. Driver of Wamic is in the city. ?'; : .r-' - Dr. Morgan, of Hood river is in town today. ,; , .5 ; ? , Gov.' McGraw's condition' is greatly improved. .-. .? MrJ. J. Bins of Wapinitia came in to.wn today,; -: r : - '..- . We are not mocked. Today is as fine as' yesterday'."'.'! : 1 '; ' Mr. T. J. Mo'ffett of 'Gorman, Sher man county, is in town today,' " ... Mr Chas. Fraley of- Kingsley favored The Chhoniclb with a pleasant call 'to day. : " ! i. ' '- :.'.' ,' DIED."" 7 .. In Spokane, Wash.,"March 16th,' Al bert, son of Thomas and Mary Lawler, aged 17 months. Surprised. ; Some of the young friends of Mrs. C. L. Phillips found out yesterday was her birthday, and, knowing where they are always welcome and have a jolly time, determined to . surprise her. Accord ingly last evening, while she and Mr. Phillips were enjoying a quiet chat, they beard the sound of . voices coming nearer, which .soon changed into a sere nade. 'Twas not long before they were invited in and bad possession of - the house, which stands for a good time were such a jolly crowd is concerned. '" Mrs. Phillips declared that, like all men, C. L. "could not keep a secret," and by his actions she imagined something was going On; while he still insists she was surprised. But there's nothing so sur prising as a genuine surprise. The Independent Workers. Probably the largest membership of any lodge of any order instituted in The Dalles was the new I. O. G. T. lodge of the Independent Workers which waa duly instituted by State Deputy R. . L. Mcintosh of Frazier Lodge at 3-Mile. He was assisted in this work by repre sentatives from Frazier and The Dalles lodges. ' " Yes, an enthusiastic lodge of-sixty- eight members was instituted to do valiant work along the temperance line. - .The following excellent list of officers were elected to serve for the remainder of the term. " Thomas Joles, Lodge Deputy ; C. H. Brown', Chief Templar ; Mrs. C. Frazier, Vice Templar; Miss Marion Kennedy., Chaplain ; A. A. Urquhart, Secretary ; E. Korter, F. Secretary; B. G. Wagle, Treas ; -Dave 'Lemmerson, Marshal ; B. C. Millard, Guard ; George Mann, Sen tinel. ''-' The members are delighted with this grand showing ; and we received many congratulations and best wishes for bur success. " Many more names are pro posed and' before the flowers bloom . in May there is little doubt but the mem bership will have reached one hundred. . The installation of officers was deferred -I for one week owing to the lateness of the hour. ; ' " :w- 'Come and join us and spend a pleasant evening once a week. ' . ' 1 .' ' . : Know Nothing. .A -Queenly Head ; Can never rest on a body frail from dis ease any more than the lovely lily can grow in the sterile soil.. When Con sumption fastens its hold upon a victim, the whole physical structure commences its decay. At such a period, before the disease is too far advanced, Dr. Pierce's Golden. Medical Discovery will arrest and cure it. So certain is this, that an offer is -made to refund the money paid for it when a failnre can be found under the condition of a fair trial. . Millinery Opening. The formal spring opening., of our millinery parlors will occur Wednesday, March 21st. ' ' ' ' " Miss Anna Pktek & Co. ' O. W. O. Hardman, Sheriff of Tyrel Co., W..Va"., appreciates a good thing and does not hesitate to say so. - He was almost prostrated with a cold when -he procured a . bottle of . Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. He says : "It gave me prompt relief. I find it to be an invalu able remedy for coughs and colds." For sale by Blakeley & Houghton, drng Riste. . - Sure Shot Squirrel Poison at Snipes & Kinersly's. Haworth, printer, 116 Court St. 'tf JOLES, COLLINS & CO. .. -;- WANT ; -r; 'i 'i. . Voaf : Attention, - - and they deserve it. - r Certainties are not always certain; but here is' one you can pin. your faith and tie your dol- , lars to. .We carry the largest, freshest stock of . Groceries at the most reasonable prices of any- where in The Dalles, Oregon. -CALL FOR-.-. Ltime, ,. . ... -Sulpnutr, , ,:v' ; . Salt. Great Reduction 0 -IN- GENTS' YOUTHS' BOYS' GENTS - VAIITUIM Xi i no BOYS -Good Boys' Suits from $2, Ob up. :.: , SPECIAL VALUES IIN" . Staple parpey Dry (joods, ' Boots and Slioes. Ginghams, Calicos, ffioslins and Overalls, at Cot Prices. TERMS STRICTLY CKSH. New Suits for Easter. , New Pants for : Easter. ' ' ' ' New Hats for Easter. 1L 5 New Shirts for Easter. -. New Hbsiery .for Easter. , New Shoes, &c, for Easter. The ahove are amongst the newest products, . v ' and marked on the , successful system of . " . . - small profits and quick returns. - - -. - ' - Nl. Honywill,