.s cv.'- -d Joles, ollips 9 Q). Aluminum , Drinking Cnps, Anxious, to Please with a fresh stock of Groceries. In bur large stock of General Merchan dise "we have many special 'bargains in Aluminum Frying Pans, I rv US; ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. The Dalles Daily Chroniele., entered a the Postoffice at The Dalles, Oregon, as second-class matter. Clubbing List. Regular Our j pi ice price Chronicle nd ft. Y. Trikiie .$2.50 $1.75 " and Weekly Oregoniu '. S.00 2.00 ' ud CosmoDolitai fiarizine. . . ; 3.00 2.25 Local Advertising. IS Ceuta 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 8 o'clock rill appear the following day. The Daily and Weekly Chronicle may ' be found on saU at I. C. NickeUen't store. Telephone No. 1. . THURSDAY, - - JULY .19, 1894 JULY JINGLINGS. Leaves XTrom the Notebook of Chronicle Reporters. ' Pease & Mays' warehouse- is again back on its foundations. The Diamond mill has been running for some time sixteen hours a day. Just read the ad. of A. M. Williams & Co. in this issue, and note the big re ductions. George S. Stevenson has been . ap pointed register of the land office at Vancouver. Mr. N. Harris received last night, and is opening today, a large stock of elegant goods. Call and see them. The west-bound train failed to con nect with the boat again this morning, being detained for some reason ye re porter wots not of. The case of the state against Hagan was on trial before Justice Davis this afternoon, Mr. Bert Phelps representing the plaintiff. Hagan was charged with larceny from a dwelling, and. was hound over to appear before the grand jury, A tug was brought up from Portland yesterday on the carp, and will be, or was launched today in the middle Col unbia. We are told, this story by a gentleman who never said a word about the Baker, hence we are disposed to be- lieve him. - ' The change in the temperature- is properly appreciated, for the past four days have been .unnecessarily hot While a continuance of the hot spell would, no doubt, have caused damage to the wheat crop, it is thought so far little, if any injury has resulted. The smuggling steamer Haytian Re public was to have been sold- by the U S. marshal Tuesday, but that gentleman announced h.e would not take a bid for lees than $20,000; and attorneys for parties claiming the old hulk warning people not to buy, the bidders were not visible and so the sale was postponed. Guy Southwell, who was arrested for shooting a horse belonging to an Indian a few days ago, had his "trial before Justice Davis yesterday afternoon. The evidence was not sufficient to warrant his being "placed under bonds, the In j: r . M : : .i . : c. t . i uiau inuiug iu iiroumjr mm as me - pel son doing the shooting. The big scow, Interstate, was anchored at "the" foot of Union street yesterday a'ternnoo and the engine and piledriv. built for repairing the Mill creek trestlr were put on board and taken below this PEASE morning. I here was -quite a crowd watching the operation, as the engine palled itself along the track built for it, and strange to say, there were but few who had any. suggestions to make by following which the job conld have been performed more quickly. From Col. Eddy, who came down from Pendleton yesterday morning we learn that quite an extensive fire occurred at that place Tuesday night. A two story building adjoining the East Oregonian building on the east, and occupied as a saloon, caught fire about 10 o'clock and with several adjoining buildings was totally destroyed. For. awhile it looked as though the East Oregonian 'building' would have to go but hard and persistent .work - saved it. We congratulate Brother Jackson on his good fortune. . ' And ao They Married. - Yesterday evening a gentleman en tered the county clerk's office as- it was about to close, and after a few pertinent questions, proceeded to buy the county clerk's consent to his getting married. The lady he proposed to marry accom panied him, and, like Barkis, seemed willin'. Mr. Kelsav forthwith made out the document, and the two whose hearts beat in rythmic unison, started out to find some one to tie the knot, Mr. Kelsay declining to do so though urgently requested. They had scarcely left the courthouse door when they met Judge Blakeley, who, with becoming diffidence, it being bis first case, con sented to swear them in. The party adjourned to the clerk's office, and there, as they joined hands, the judge pro nounced them man and Tife. The gen tleman's name is D. P. Woodward, and the lady's was written in the license C C. Edmonson. We wish to add, without any charge for it, that for dignity, neatness ' and celerity in performing the marriage ceremony, Judge Blakeley is pronounced by all present on this occasion as with out a peer. - W. H. Nelson, who is in the drug business at Kingville, Mo., has so much confidence in Chamberlain's Colic, Choi' era and Diarrhoea Remedy that he war rants every bottle and offers to refund the money to any- customer who is not satisfied after using it. Mr. Kelson takes no risk in doing this because the remedy is a certain cure for the diseases for which it is intended and he knows it. It is for sale by Blakely & Houghton Real testate Movements. The following deeds were filed for rec ord today : ' Bruce L. Carr to P. Johnson & Co, lots 3 and 6, block 4, Hood River park ; $1. ' . ' ' Jane A. Erwin to Calven Gordon, lots 31 and 32, block 6, Erwin & Watson's addition to Hood River; $15. . When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. V When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Hiss, she clung to Castoria. -When sue had Children, she gave them Castoria. - . Wanted. ' fo buy one good 3V second-hand wagon.- Inquire at this office. Wanted, a girl to do general house' work. Apply at this office Thb Chboniclk prints all the news, & MAYS. RETURNING TO W0KK AND LOCA1 8TB1KKS ARK BEING UECLAKKD OFF. Judge Ross Sentences Haworth and En gineer Kelley to Kl'ejht Months In ' . the County Jail. ' At the Pullman carshops yesterday the first break occurred in the ranks ot the strikers, one hundred Hollanders going back to work on the'' tracks. At Logan, Ohio, the local Railway Union held a meeting yesterday and de clared! the local strike off. . At MrKeesport Ahe strike against the National Tube Works, which has lasted for nine weeks, was declared off yester day. ' . . Judge Ross, of Jhe federal court at Los Angeles, yesterday sentenced John Haworth and Engineer Martin Kelley to eight months in the county jail for con tempt of court in interfering with trains carrying' the mails. General Hart, attorney for Knox and. others charged with wrecking the train at Sacramento, played it low down on the Southern Pacific. Finding the road was going to send out a train, he had all the switchmen served with subpoenas to attend - the preliminary examination at Woodland, leaving the road helpless. About 150 men returned to work at the Sacramento shops yesterday. Debs, Howard, Kelcher and Rogers, in jail at Chicago, are evidently pleased with that fact. The are getting, rest, and agree with the country in believing they need it. - Vice-president Howard of the Ameri can Railway Union in an interview yes terday, said : j "This thing is going to be a test case, and we are gathering evi dence for the coming trial. There is a letter," said he, "that will be a valuable piece of evidence in our favor. This letter tells of evidence that will prove that most of the freight cars that were burned in Chicago were burned by two men in the employ of the Railway Man agers' Association, and the cars were burned for the purpose of creating a sentiment against the American Rail way Union. The railway managers paid these two men $200 down, and they were "Jo receive $200 more when the job was done." ' ''This is not all the evidence we have by any means," continued Howard. "We further have positive evidence that the men who led the mob of 5000 men at Blue Island were Pinkerton men, and that these men were ' employed by. the railroads." V . What at Cannon Ball Can Do. In dwelling upon the wonderful power of the guns of the Indiana, Albert Franklin Matthews, in an article on "the Evolution of a Battleship," in the Century for July, gives illustrations from the recent Chilian. civil war, showing the effectiveness of the smaller sizes' of breech-loading rifle guns. A shot weighing 250 pounds from an 8-inch jtun of Fort Valdivia, in Valpa raiso harbor, struck the cruiser Blanco Encalada above the armor belt, passed through the thin steel plate on the side went through the captain's cabin, took the pillow from under his head, dropped his head on the mattress with a thump but without injuring a hair, paesed through the open door into the mess room, where it struck. the floor, and Aluminum Sauce Pans, Aluminum '; " Preserving 'Kettles, Aluminum Milk Pans, Aluminum Tea and Coffee Pots. MAIER & BENTON. DRY Pfe WOOD, -J $3 per cord, delivered. then glanced to the ceiline. " Then it went through a. wooden bulkhead one inch thick into a . room 25x42 feet where forty men were' sleeping in hammocks It killed' six1, of them outright, and wounded six others, three of whom died. after which it passed through a steel bulkhead five inches thick, and ended its course by ..striking a battery outside, n which it made a dent nearly two inches deep. It was filled with sand. Had it released deadly gates ho one knows what damage it might have done. A 450-pound missile from a 10-incii gun , in the', same, fort struck the same vessel on its 8-inch armor. It hit square on a bolt. The shell did not pierce the armor, but burst outeide the vessel. ' It drove the bolt clear through, and in its flight the bolt struck- an 8-inch gun, completely disabling it.-Such is the power of the smaller-sized guns. Hatuni Day. "This morning' the weather was not propitious for our friends the Mazamas and Mazamaresses,' for the old West Wind was up and a bustling, and bad taken possession of the mountain before the cliff-climbers stuck' their inquisitive noses out from under their blankets. It was disappointing, and we feel sorry for the whofe crowd." It is not nice, even. for a Mazama who has set his heart on ascending a mountain to rise betimes only to have, the untamed zephyr toy with his whiskers -and interfere with his intentions,. . A heavy black cloud enveloped the mountain at sunrise, and from all appearances not only the wind, but also rain or snow prevails there. Even should this not be the case the day is a most unsatisfactory 'one, for ihe mountain is beclouded and should the accent be made nothing could be seen. With the first clear weather the trip will be made so that for a day or two bid Hood will be worth watehing for the pillar of smoke by day or the fed fire at night.' The Oregonian says some 'of the party have taken Yakima cigars with them; if so, the fact will be known to the nose long before the smoke is visible. Since writing the above, which was done the first thing this morning, the weather conditions have changed some what. The clouds disappeared about 9:30 but the windiVas fresh here all day, and undoubtedly blew a gale at Mt. Hood. Besides, as the ascent is nearly always began early in the morning, it is not probable that the start was made to day, the weather clearing up too late. A horse kicked H. S. Shafer, of the Freemyre House, Middleburg, N. Y. on the knee, which laid him up in bed and caused the knee joint to become stiff. A friend recommended him to use Chamberlain's Pain Balm, which ' he did, and in two days was able to be around. Mr. Shafer has lecommended it to many a bruise or sprain. This same remedy is also famOus for its cures of rheumatism. ' For sale by Blakeley & Houghton.- ' Men Wanted. Fifteen men wanted to .cut cord wood. 'Inquire of ' The Dalles Lumbering Co. Ask your grocer for Farrell & Co.'a sweet clover honey, rock candy drips and Puritan maple syrups.- These syrups guaranteed pure.- Ask your grocer for Farrell & Co.'s table syrups sweet clover honey, rock candy dripj and Puritan maple. Farrell & Co.'s table syrups are easily digested by children. ,.'., STOCK SALT, DRIED FRUIT, BACON, (Klickitat) V CASE; GOODS: 390 to 394 Second Street. The' Ike Hilt Greenhouse Is still adding to its large stock of all kinds of . - - Greenhouse Plants, - And can furnish a choice eelec- tion. Also ' CUT FLOWERS and FLORillt DESIGNS MRS. C. L. PH5LLIPS. The Bal ance. -OF Summer Dry Goods, Clothing, Hats, Shoes, Etc., Etc., . " WILL BE CLOSED O'JT AT A-r ; G- E& IE A0? SAdEI FIG'B TERMS STRICTLY CHSH. . The Only Ever high 'in our store was the Columbia, ' . . and that is marked down; but it is not yet as Low as Our Prices. We can give you bargains jn everything in Ladies', . Gentlemen's' and Children's Clothing from Hat to Dress. Call and . -see us at the old corner. - N. Tb TJonV Qt tllO fl'rl Qtanrl and will ers, and nan Drain FrriT Flnnr . Fruits, Ees, Poultry, Potatoes, Bee Supplies. Orders Promptly Filled. All Goods Delivered Free of Charge. THE EUROPEAN HOUSE Complete and clean in CBITTK;XjT-i The Culinary Department is under the immediate super vision of Mrs. Frazier, and the table is better supplied than anv other in the State for the money. V .. Union Street, Harry Liebe, PRACTICAL. W a tch mak er I J ev e 1 er All work promptly attended to, '. and warranted. Can now be" found at 162 Second street. , " . OUR- HARRIS be glad to welcome all his old custom- as many new ones as possible. Thin -DEALER IN - RrnRRTifR M Prnvisinns; all its furnishings, and LOCATED. .... TtfE DAIiIlES, OREGON.