3J aWk dr 2 SPECIHL SHLE. Saturday, flag. nth. , MEN'S SUITS Make your own selection from our $12.00, $14.00, $15.00, $16.00 Suits for, $9 95 See our Center "Window. ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. PEASE & MAYS. DESJ.fi Aluminum Drinking Cups, Aluminum Frying Pans, Aluminum Sauce Pans, Aluminum Preserving Kettles, Aluminum Milk Pans, Aluminum Tea and Coffee Pots. MA1ER -ft BENTON. DRY FIR WOOD, $3 per cord, delivered. joles, dllips & Qd. arc? Ovr te porta with, a fresh stock of Groceries, In our large stock of General Merchan dise "we have many special bargains in STOCK SALT, DRIED FRUIT, , BACON, (Klickitat) CASE GOODS. 390 to 394 Second Street. EUROPEAN HOUSE, Best Hotel in the City. - NEW and FIRST-CIiASS. PHOTOGRAPHER. Chapman Block, The Dalles, Oregon . I have taken 11 first prizes. , The Dalles Daily Chronicle. Entered a the Postoffice at The Dalles, Oregon, as second-class matter. Clubbing List. " Regular Our price price Ckronide ui H. Y. Irikae. $2.50 $1.75 " 4 Weekly OrfgonUi 3.00 2.00 corrected by the master clock . every hour, and so the time is absolutely cor rect. The clocks will be placed at the following places : Van Norden, Sidney Young, J. O. Mack, Mays & Crowe, Umatilla Honse, Wm. Jones, Stabling & Williams, Pease & Mays, Snipes, Kinerely Drug Co., Dalles National bank, Wood Bros., and The Chronicle. Local Advertising. 10 Ccuva per line for first insertion, and 6 Cents per line for each subsequent insertion. Special rates for long time notices. All local notices received later than 3 o'clock irill appear the following day. The Daily and Weekly Chronicle may be found on sale at I. C. Nickelsen'a store. Telephone No. 1. THURSDAY, - AUGUST 9, 1894 AUGUST AUGURINGS- LcTi Trorn the Notebook of Chronicle Reporters. The postoffice will not be moved until September. W. C Allaway wants to purchase a email fresh milk cow. The teachers' examination will con tinue until tomorrow evening. Rev. A. Horn conducted religious ser vices at Trout lake Sunday, and at Camas prairie Wednesday. The poptoffice will be moved to the Masonic building in the very near fu ture. It is a case of innocuous desue tude, though we prefer the present situ ation. For the first time in weeks the city recorder's court this morning was with out a case. As there is- plenty of beer the result must have been caused by a scarcity of money. Sheriff Driver has gone out to his ranch, and at the same time is watching for the coming of a criminal from west of the mountains, who was last seen headed this way on the Barlow road. Rev. A. Horn desires us to Bay that he will hold services next Sunday at 10 :30 in the Lutheran chapel on Ninth street, and in the evening at 7 :30 in' the school . house near Mr. Jansen's place at Moeier. Trout lake is populated with Dalles people. Among them are E. Schanno and family, Mrs. Liebe and children, Judge Bennett and family, Mr. Birgfeld and family, Mr. Tack man and family, Mrs. Schmidt and daughter and Dick CloBter. Miss Dahl was there but came home Tuesday. It seems now that Pendleton will not be the headquarters for the superintend ent of the O. R. & N. but that Umatilla will be the place. This is said to be a much more convenient arrangement, and as soon aa the arrangements with the Great Northern go into effect the trains for Spokane will be run by way ef Wallula, leaving the main line at Umatilla. Kleetrlcal Clocks. In the near future a round dozen of electrical clocks will be put up in the city, and this not counting the big regu lator or master clock at the telegraph office. These clocks are bo arranged that , they wind themselves and correct themselves, all being connected "with the master clock, as we have said. The master clock is corrected at noon every day getting the time from the observa tory at Washington. The clocks are The Horse Saved Him. The Bear and the Pickles. "It was just such a day as this,',' said friend of ours while sitting in the office of the Umatilla House at noon to day, "just such a bay as this thirty-two years ago when a young friend of mine was drafted into the service. He was a bright young fellow, the only stay and support of a widowed mother, and while he was patriotic enough to have en listed had circumstances been different, he felt, as did his mother, that he could illy be spaced from home. His mother came to me, knowing I had some influ ence in the war department, and asked me to intercede for him. I had but lit tle confidence in my ability to aid her, but moved by her tears, I wrote Secre tary Stanton. It was without avail. In a few days lie was sent down to Mid- dleburg, N. Y., to be mustered in. His name was Shafer. Two days later I re ceived a dispatch from the secretary saying: 'A horse kicked J. S. Shafer in the Freemyre house. If that's your man, take him.' " Kenneth Bazemore flad the good for tune to receive a small bottle of Cham berlain's Colic, Cholera, and Diarrhoea Remedy when three members of his family were sick with dysentery. This one small bottle cured them all and be bad some left which he gave to Geo. W. Baker, a prominent merchant of the place, Lewiston. N. . C, and it cured him of the same complaint. When troubled with dysentery, diarrhoea, colic or cholera morbus, give this remedy a trial and you will be more than pleased with the result. The praise that natur ally follows its introduction and use has made it very popular. 25 and 50v cent bottles for sale by Blakely & Houghton, druggists. - ' ' Mitchell Coming to America. Lojjdon, Aug." 8. Charles Mitchell, the pugilist, has announced his inten tion of returning to the United States in October. - "1 know an old soldier who had chronic diarrhoea ot long standing to have been permanently cured by taking Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy," says Edward Shum pik, a prominent druggist of Minnea polis, Minn. "I have sold the remedy in this city for seven years and consider it superior to any other medicine now on the market for bowel complaints)." 25 and 50 cent bottles of this remedy for sale by Blakely & Houghton drug' gists. - ' Floyd Herman owns a bear, a black inquisitive cub, which' he keeps at the Umatilla House, partly for" his own amusement, and partly because he does. Last night he had placed the Ursa Minor in the court, or midway plaisance, in the center of the bi&lding, expecting the measly thing just to bear his im prisonment - until morning. But he wasn't , that kind of a bear. About 9 o'clock bruin over his trouble made himself mad, and he determined to let' folks know be was around. He climbed through a window and entered the din ing room, and being out of one pickle he immediately got into another, in the plural number. He managed to open a cupboard wherein the caretul steward keeps stored the chow-chow, piccalilli, olives, etc. No sooner was this wealth of acidity and mustard before him than he proceeded to juggle with them, try ing to keep . two in the air at once, and as every time he caught one be dropped two and stepped on the pieces, the work of demolition went' bravely on. Olives and cucumbers, small onions and cauli flower, ." mustard, vinegar and broken glass, with here and there a splash of catsup to give color to the scene of car nage, spread over the floor, while in .the midst of it the joyous cub danced the serpentine. It was a scene of devastation he left when lie was surrounded and dragged away. And now rloyd wonders how two-bits worth of bear could do $20 worth of damage in so brief a time. A Valuable Bear. The meeting of the Relief Corps ap pointed for Friday evening has been in definitely postponed. - ' Mas. W. S. Myers, President. Ask your grocer for Farrell & Co.'s sweet clover honey, rock candy drips and Puritan maple syrups. These syrups guaranteed pure. . Ask your grocer for Farrell '&. Co.' table syrups sweet clover honey, rock candy dnpj and Puritan maple. Farrell & Co.'s table syrups are easily digested by children. The Union Scout says : "For several years past the stockmen of Snake river have been terrorized by an immense bear that roamed the hills and mount ains of that section. The loss from stock killed by this beast will amount to several hundred, if not thousand, dol lars. He would kill and devour a large cow or steer with perfect ease. Several attempts were made by old hunters and others to kill the ferocious beast, but it seemed that it was almost impossible to get sight of mm. - lie was such a terror to the stockmen that a reward of $100 was offered for his carcass. ' Many old hunters were afraid to attack him. He ha-t been shot at several times without effect. Word reached here a few days ago, however, that a man in that vicin ity had succeeded in trapping and kill ing the animal. The captor received the $100 reward, besides $80 for the hide and $2.50 each for the claws." ' fie Wasn't Born that Way. " J. A. Weed, bridge superintendent, returned from Alto this morning at 3:30 after a night of hard work preparing for the building of the bridge destroyed Sunday, says the Pendleton E. O. of Tuesday. - Upon inspecting it he found it would be necessary to construct a new one from the ground up. There hap pened to be on hand some materials which could be used to advantage and these were , hurried Monday evening to the scene of labor. Bridge No. 321 was 96 feet high, 800 feet long and what bridge men call a three-decker. Over a hundred men will be employed in the work of rebuilding, and they will utilize about one million feet of lumber. Walla Walla Statesman. The 'express man does not live in this office. We don't know where he is ; we don't care. He - don't belong to us ; is no relation. Doesn't tell us when he is going away,- nor mention when he is coming back. ' We have no key to his shop; . don't understand, bia business We don't know how long it takes him to eat,, nor what he has for dinner, nor how -eoon- he is coming back, nor whether.be has gone to deliver a sermon or a package, or any other little thing. We do know that he goes away on busi ness, and that, apparently: everybody waits nntil that time to ask ns among other things the questions that the above answers fit. We know that he is in the office all day, and part of the night, except when out on business of the company's. We also know that Mr Hill would have proven a mnch more satisfactory agent if he had been born twins, so that be could chase himself around and be in two places at once. The Alto Bridge. PERSONAL MENTION. Hon. W. H. H. Dufur and wife arc in the city. Miss Virginia Marden returned last night from a visit at - Pine Reet cottage, Clatsop beach. - Mr. U. C. Neilsen and family left by the Regulator this morning for Sealand, to remain a month or more. Messrs. Wm. Garretson and A. Ander son and families went out to 15-Mile to day to remain for some time. Mr. R. S. Andrews, one of the board of examiners, came up from Hood River yesterday to assist in the examination of teachers. Mr. Ralph Rowland, Misses Levia. Rowland and Alma Scbimdt returned last night from a camping trip near Hood River. ; Miss Minnie Michell left on the after noon train yesterday for Ilwaco beach, where she will spend the remainder of the vacation. T. A. Ward and familv. I. J. Norman and family, Mrs. Phirman and a whole mob of other good loosing people went to Trout lake this morning. Mr. Kenneth MacRae, a prominent' sheep owner of Davville, Grant county, registered at . the Umatilla last night. He is on his way to Portland for a week's visit. Mrs. Henrv Clarke, who has been visiting her sister, Mrs. Julius Wiley, for a month or more, left this morning, with her children, for her home, uys terville, Wash. Mr. Hollingshead has sold his interest in the mercantile business of VanDuyn & Co., at Tygh. Valley, to Dr. J. Adams. He will leave tomorrow or next day ior Chicago, to visit relatives, and perhaps to remain permanently. It is quite probable, however, that he will soon De with us aeain, for those who have once become inoculated with Oregon, never get over it. . ; Verdict of the Coroner' Jury. We, the jury impaneled to inquire into the cause of the death of the person whose body was found on the railroad track east of town, on the morning of August 8th, find the deceased's name tq be J. Stef, age about 33, height 5 feet, 6 inches, weight about 160 pounds, black hair, sandy mustache, and that he met his death while lying on the railroad track, in ft' state of. Intoxication, by be ing ran over bv tbe locomotive on train No. 2. F. H. Wakkfikld, Foreman. Gxo. W. Rowland, , E. Jacobsbn, 3. Dohiety, W. B. Bbown, M. T. Nolan. Ayer's Ague Cure never fails to neutralize the poisons of malaria, and eradicate them from the system. This preparation is purely vegetable, contains no harmful ingredients, and, if. taken according to directions, is warranted to cure fever and ague. . Try it. Feed wheat for sale cheap at Wasco Warehouse. tf- The Balance -OF OUR- Summer Dry Goods, Clothing, Hats, Shoes, Etc., Etc., -WILL BE CLOSED OUT AT A- O-IE&IEr.A.T SACRIFICE TERMS STRICTLY CHSH. The Only Thing Ever high in our store was the Columbia, and that is marked down; but it is not . ye as . - Low as Our Prices. We can give you bargains in everything in Ladies', Gentlemen's and Children's Clothing from Hat to Dress. Call and see us at the old corner. N. HARRIS. When the Tram stop at THE DALIES, get off on tbe South Side ' AT TH ftEW COLtU JVlBlfl hotel. --to- ' ' This large and populm House docs the principal hotel business, . . . ' ' and is prepared to furnish the Best Accommodations of any House in the city, and at the low rate of .- $1.00 per Day. , - f irst Qass I)eals, 25 Cerjts. . Office for aU-Stage tines leaTioc The Dalles for all points i Kasteru Oregon ud Jiaitttn Washington, in this Hotel. . Corner of Front and Union Sts. v TV T. NICHOLAS. Propr. THE CELEBRHTED COLUMBIA BREWERY, AUGUST BUCHLER, Prop'r. This well-known Brewery ia now turning out the best Beer and Portei east of the Cascades. The lateet appliances for the manufacture of good health ful Beer have been introduced, and on,y the first-class article will be placed oa he market.