C,3 ! FASTIUilSMY : I $ Lot 125, Ladies'...... ...... ...i. ...20c jPffiBERT K A d Lot 939, Men's.. ......20c $f ) 1 I These afe Speeial Values ' my I ggBT . PEASE & MAYS; $ Lie i Fire liightetC fiEVBt WEARS OUT. A great labor- and money-saver, as it does awap with the .necessity for kind ling of any description in starting either wood or coal fires. It is always ready for use, and a most convenient house hold contrivance. ' " DIrectlonstor Use. Take a can and put in sufficient coal oil to cover the lighter, which should re main in the oil for three or four min utes. Then light with a match and place in front of or under the grate. If tho blaze goes dfrectly to the fuel, the fire will be quickly started. Keep the lighter in the can of oil and it will al ways be ready for use. . ' JOLES, COLLINS & CO., - Successors to Tie Dalles Mercantile Co. and Joles Bros. ' -SPECIAL AGENTS FOR- 0 "Little Gem" Incubators and ...Bee Supplies. Come and see the Machine in operation. -ALSO. HEADQUARTERS. FOR- Maier & Benton, AGENTS FOR THE DALLES. 390 and 394 Second Street, TO STOCHoQEfi: We have just received Fifty Ton of Stock Salt, Lime and Sulphur.' Call before buying. The Dalles Daily Chfoniele. Entered a the Postoffice at The Dalles, Oregon, i aa second-class matter. Clubbing List. Regular Our price price tkraiicle ud X. I. Irin." $2.50 $1.75 " 11 i VeAIj Orfgoiiw 3.00 2.00 " u Csntpolitit Iaaiiie. . . . 3.00 2.25 Local Advertising. 10 Ccnu per line for first iusenlon, 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. J7ie Daily and Weekly Chronicle may be found on sale at I. C. Nickelsen's store. , Telephone No. J. ¬ SATURDAY, - - - MAY 19, 1894 MAY MINORS. Leaves From the Notebook of Chronicle Reporters. - Salmon are running light. The ferry boat now land at the foot of Washington street.'- .' Charles Snelling is still confined in the county jail, in default of bonds. Mr. J. Anderson shipped two cars of sheep from Saltmarshe & Co. 'a stock yards today to Victoria, B. C. Owing to the change in the weather the German picnic will be postponed till Sunday, May 27th. The Geaang Verein will hold their regular meeting tomorrow evening, as usual. The Orchestra Union give a dance this evening at the new - opera house. The best of music will be furnished, and there is no reason why the evening should not be very- pleasant to all who attend. , . The Independent Workers Lodge, No. 7, will give an ice cream social at their hall on Monday evening. . The admis - sion will be 25 cents. This will include ice cream, which will be served in soup plates, and cake. ; The proceeds will be used for providing the ' lodge with regalias. Everybody is invited, i Dr. Doane and Harry Clongh have just returned from Pendleton, where they have been as repiesentatives to the Grand Lodge I. O. O. F. A. N. Gamble was elected representative to go to Washington, D. C, at the sovereign grand lodge. Salem was selected for the nef t session of the grand lodge. . The Newport News says that a whale 100 feet long with a smell twice that length was found two miles up the river. It is supposed to be a young one about 90 - years of age, and. had been dead three or four years, as it had com menced to .decompose. Several men took possession of it and began taking , tons of bone and barrels of oil from the carcass. This is a fish story one likes to blubber about. : Mr. B. Arntzin, a special allotment agent, has been sent to The Dalles to in , vestigate a matter in regard to the sus pension of entry of land entered by Henry Brune, supposed to conflict with other interests ; and other matters which will come before the agent. - He is now taking testimony in regard to these matters, but before he will allow his in vestigations to be made public, he will fret go to Vancouver and return. A Very High Wind. A wind of almost cyclonic proportions blew this morning in the river canyon below this point.and crossing, blew with like intensity across the open space on this side of the Klickitat hills. Mr. J. A. Anderson, who was driving in a buggy across the river, says it was the fiercest wind be ever saw, and reports fences blown down and other effects of like nature. The .Regulator encountered the most turbulent waters, after reach ing Crate's point, it has ever known, and was forced to turn back. The lady passengers became alarmed. - The boat pitched so fearfully" they could not maintain a sitting posture : without holding to the railings. Ahead the river looked like a' sea of froth, and the waves seemed to have been propelled and car ried onwards bodily. There has never been such a high wind recorded on the river. After 10 o'clock the wind sub sided and the boat again left for its usual down-river trip. v A Detailed Statement. , In view of the fact that a number have inquired; as to the receipts realized from the' play given by the Home Dramatic Club for the benefit of the Y. W. C. T. U. last Tuesday night, the following list of receipts and expenditures is pub lished: Total Receipts.. ' f 126 65 For opera house and orchestra. .'. . fiO 00 Wigs 3 45 Printing.. 7 25 Curtain -. 2 80 Make-up box 75 Cartage 1 25 Books 1 75 56 S5 Balance.".....' (69 70 The above amount of $69.70 has been handed to th Y. W. C. T. U., where it will no doubt be used to the best advan tage. ' Saw Mill Machinery. Mr. F. H. Rowe, the saw mill man, is today loading the machinery for his mill on a scow at this point. It will proceed at once to its destination, at the mouth of the Klickitat. Mr. Rbwe expects to have the mill in operation within thirty days, and has a large quantity of logs on hand to commence work. - The timber cut is mostly all yellow pine, which he considers of better quality than the Southern Oregon yellow pine. PERSONAL MENTION-. Freddy Crabtree. son of Andv Crab- tree of Victor, is very low with bilious lever. Mr. John Whitten of Kingsley is in the city and favored The Chronicle with a pleasant call. , Mrs. M. J. Willis, of Colfax, Wash., woo nas Deen visiting ner sister Mrs. W. H. Vanbibber for the past few days, re turned to ner nome last night. Having had a large experience in fashionable dressmaking I have con eluded to open a shop in connection with my - millinery business in Dalles City, and would solicit a share of the public patronage.. Satisfaction guaranteed. Mas. LeBamster. f . .' Notice. Notice is hereby given . to whom it may concern, that wt. will prosecute to the fall extent of the law, any person detected trespassing upon or interfering in any way with any property in our care. . J. M. Huntington & Co. Lost. Last week somewhere in The Dalles, a gold breast pin. The finder will be lib erally . rewarded by leaving it at Thb Chronicle office. A DIVERSION FROM POLITICS. low tho Hon Xs Abmed and xtnlned. by Thoughtless Farmers. '. Oregox, May 17, 1894. Editor Chronicle In these times of political discussion, when each side is proving from statistics that their solu tion of the problems capital, labor and hard times is the correct one ; if their particular candidate is placed in office confidence will be restored and prosper ity sure to follow, while if the other side gain the victory, the country is ruined; when the brain is overtaxed trying to follow each side and find out which is right, I think a little respite would be beneficial. I would like to make a few homespun remarks,' acccording to my ability (if you will give me space in your esteemed paper) on a subject which we can all understand, viz: The Horse man's obedient servant and faithful friend. In a newspaper article; intend ed chiefly for an Agricultural commu nity, it is not necessary to go into de tails as to his origin. This we know for a certainty.y- Our earliest recollections are vividly associated with that noble. animal.' In the history of the world man anl horse seem inseparable com panions. When we glow with admira-' tion over the daring exploits of some in dividual oftimes the quadruped- should receive his share of the glory, when the biped asssumes all the honor. Who can separate the immortal Sheridan from his gallant charger as he led his troops from retreat ,to victory. As we read Sir Walter Scott's "Lady of the Lake" and follow the adventurous Fitz James through all fiia dangers, his con flict with and victory over his noble an tagonist, Roderic Dhu, the climax of that admiral pen picture is reached when he vaults into the saddle of his noble charger and is carried in triumph to- his castle at Sterling. When "Marmion" exposed himself to the wrath of the offended .Douglas we certainly must ad mire the noble steed who carried him in safety through a falling portcullis over a rising drawbridge. In the famous "Charge of the Light Brigade," that will be handed down to posterity through coming ages, who can separate man and horse, the one to guide and both to dare. If I were gifted with the pen of a ' Dickens or a Stowe I would show you Schoolmaster S queers and Slavedriver ' Legrees in every commu nity. I would paint them in such colors as to bring a blush to the cheek for the uncalled-for oppression to which the noble horse is subjected. I wish to show th horse as he is. . At some future time I wish to show the horse as he should be, and the kind of a horse. The first six months of a colt's life is generally pretty comfortable. As he follows his dam in the pasture what in nature can surpass the beauty of a well bred colt as it courses in playful gambol and seems to spurn the earth it treads upon? Smith thinks he has the finest colt in the country and takes Jones out to see it and tells Robinson all about its good points and what a horse he will make. Bye and bye comes . weaning time. Alas, 'poor colt, I pity you ! He is separated from bis dam for a few days until some of his animal spirits subside and . then- turned out with companions, many of them older than himself, to for age as best he can. Quite a change, is it not? The following winter Jones takes his family over to see the Smith family,' and in the course of conversa tion makes inquiry about that fine colt, Smith-- scratches' his head and informs him that he is not doing very well and wonders what is the matter. Be has not grown any since, he weaned him. He takes Jones out to the straw stack and there stands the colt over by the fence, his back arched, hair standing on end, hide drawn tightly over his bones and covered with scars from the teeth of his stronger companions. "Jones, there's that colt, a half Percheron, cost me $15 ; but you don't catch me paying such prices again. There is nothing in horses, any way." Next summer he is turned out to the timber to pasture, to be regaled at another straw stack the following winter. Thus time passes until, in spite of everything, his vigor ous constitution brings him up to quite a horse. It is now time to break him. After he is brought to the proper consis tency at the straw stack, so he will be easily handled, "you know," two or three men and a good-sized boy provide themselves with a rope', a noose being on the end thereof. They succeed in getting this noose around his neck and choke him down. He is then haltered and bridled and the saddle put on him if he shows much snap. Young Smith arms his own heels with - great iron spikes and gets into the saddle. After the customary maneuvers, he sticks the spurs into him and the poor colt, in the agony of terror, plunges and jumps in vain efforts to unseat his merciless tor mentor, while old Smith chuckles at the way that boy an ride a broncho. When the colt is thoroughly exhausted the har ness is put on him and he is driven around hitched up' alongside a steady horse until he is thoroughly broken. He is then turned oat to the favorite straw stack . to, await further torture in the spring. When the pressure of spring work arrives he is noosed again, har nessed and hitched - up to the plow, when be may plunge a little,, but soon settles down to pull. His shoulders are Eoft and soon get galled from sweat and pressure, but he is worked on day after day until the galled spots become raw flesh and blood and matter become en crushed on his collar. Thus spring passes, turning him out when he can go no longer and hitching him up when he recuperates a little. He is then sent to the timber, probably to pasture for the summer, and caught up again to put on a header wagon and afterwards in a fou-horse team to haul grain to market.; The humane driver provides himself with a pile of rocks be side him on the seat, and when - the horse lags he picks up a rock and throws it at him, and he becomes so expert with practice that he can drop a rock on top of the horse's head or on the project ing point of some exposed bone just to brighten him up a little. He drives Continued to Second page. Deafness Cannot he Cored By local .applications, as they cannet reaeh the diseased portion of the ear. There is only "one way to cure Deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed con dition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condi tion, hearing will be destroyed forever ; nine cases out of : ten are caused by catarrh, -which is nothing but an in flamed condition of the mucous surfaces. - We'will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (.caused by catanh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O, -tJSS" Sold by Druggists, 75c. Gre Reduction -JN- GENTS YOUTHS' BOYS' VlvU JL JLJLJULW. GENTS' VAI ITUCf: BOYSS .Good Boys' Suits from $2.00 up.. SPECIAL -VALUES IlsT - Staple papey Dry (joods, toots txxc3. Shoes. Ginghams, Calicos, ffluslins and Overalls at Cat Prices TERMS STRICTLY CRSH. pipe Tyillipery. The Latest Styles. -IN- Hats, Bonnets ... AND - Trimmings, The ladies of The Dalles are invited to call and. inspect our large and varied assortment of Millin ery Goods, which is the finest in in the city. MRS. M. LeBALIjISTER, The Dalles. What? Hand-Corded Corsets, Health Reform Waists, ' Nursing Corsets; Misses' Waists, Children's Waists, n Shoulder Braces and, Hose Supporters made to order. Where? At the Pacific Corset Company's Factory, north east of the Fair Grounds. It desired each garment will be fitted before being finished. Call at the fac tory and examine our goods, or drop a card in the office, and our agent will call and secure your order. . . ... -. . ' Y ',''-.,'..', V- 1 '. : . THE LATEST BOOKS RECEIVED AT I. C- NICKELSEN'S BOOK AND MDSIC STORE. A MARRIAGE ABONE ZERO, by Nevada AN APOCALYPSE OF LIFE, by W.T.Cheney. MARION DARSHE, by Crawford. .... . . A ...... .'.;...;' SO ! ...... Ed 1 00