CO euioodeS Heuloot COmTIJm U ED this CHEEK. Ladies' French Kid Shoes, Were $3.50, $4.50 and $5.00. $1.95 We hesitate not for Congress to decide, but have. marked our goods to please the people. Large stock of - Ladies' Dongola and Pebble Goat Shoes Were $2.50, $3.00 and $3.50. Ladies' and Misses' Tan Shoes Were $2.00, $2.50 and $3.00. Ladies' Oxford Ties J .. 95 cts Were $1.50, $2.00 and $2.50. ".;- Misses' and Children's Slippers 15 cts Baby. Shoes ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. " The Dalles Daily Chroniele. entered a the Postofflee at The Dalies, Oregon, as second-class matter. Clubbing List. Regular Our price price Chronicle and S. Y. Tribaae. . . " tU Weekly OregoaiM . .$2.50 $1.75. . 3.00 2.00 Local Advertising. 10 Ccuts 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 rill appear the following day. The Daily and Weekly Chronicle may be found on sale at I. C. Nickeleen's store. ' Telephone No. 1. TUESDAY, AUGUST 21. 1894 AUGUST AUGURINGS- Leaves Krom the Notebook or Chronicle Reporters. Several families have gone from Hood Kiver to Yakima to engage in hop picking. Mrs. Lewis, the old lady who came here Sunday morning, is at the Umatilla House, and is very sick. There seems to be but little hope of her recovery. , A brakeman named Adams bad the fingers of his right hand badly pinched this morning near the depot, while coupling cars. No bones were broken. Mr. Simons, of the Pacific Bridge Co., is in the city. We understand be will put in a bill for patting in the lower in cline of the state portage toad at the Cascade Locks. . There is a steady west wind every day bat it has forgotten bow to be cool. . As it comes fresh from Japan, the .warm condition of things over there may have something to do with it. , Quite a number of tourists, on their way home from Alaska, came up as far as the lower Cascades on. the Dalles City yesterday to take a look at the grand canyon of the Columbia. - The political parties of California are being arranged on new lines. The tendency seems to be. to divide on one issue only. It is the people on one side and the Southern Pacific railroad on the other. - St. Mary's academy begins its fall term September 3d. The school stands in the front rank of its kind, and has earned a generous patronage. For in formation concerning rates tuition, etc., read their ad. in this issue. Mayor Bolton held a regular reception this morning, having ten callers by special invitation of the city marshal. They were fined $5 each. One of them put up the coin but the others, being impecunious, will board it out. Mr. J. O. Mack, secretary of the Sec ond Oregon District Fair Association in forms as the catalogues for 1894 are now ready for distribution. He will be pleased to forward them to anyone de siring a copy, or to pass them over to those who call for them. The fair will begin Tuesday, October 9th and last five days. . On account of September commenc ing on Saturday, several of our business men will make that collection dav This being the case, it is to be hoped the otners will stand in and make it nnani mous. One reason of this is that sev PEASE eral of them , intend going to Oregon City and will not be here on Monday, the 3rd. ' ' . T. A. Ward is again . visible in this neighborhood, Mr. Norman having brought him back from Trout lake last night. The party camped at the falls of White Salmon, and we are told that Tom had gotten so infatuated with his tent life, he had to be lassoed and tied to a tree over night to prevent his taking the back track. The baseball game advertised to come off Sunday between Hood River and Dufur clubs . did not take place. The Dufur boys were on hand, but Hood River did not show up for the reason that nearly all of the members of that club are in the mountains. " The Dalles boys took their places however, and won a victory by a score of 27 to 9. . At a meeting of Columbia Hose com pany last night three delegates were ap pointed to represent the company at the annual meeting, of the Veteran Volun teer' Fireman's Association of Oregon and Washington. It was also ordered that each member of the company in good standing attending the meeting at Oregon City be allowed $10 towards de fraying his expenses. Quite a number of ministers, who will attend the conference beginning bere to morrow, have arrived and the others will get here tonight. If Mr. Blandford would now turn on his cold weather faucet for a few days he would confer a great favor, for with the present oppres sive heat the -meeting', will ' not be as pleasant as it should be. .- It is and has been for several days genuine eastern sweltering weather. It was quite amusing to some light- minded . people .this morning when one of the visiting ministers Bhook hands enthusiastically with one of our good citizens. , Of course-it was a mistake, for he said "Well, well, and' this is Brother Sparks of Milton." All we have to say is that if Brother Sparks of Milton resembles the gentleman for whom he was taken, then Brother Sparks of Milton is a remarkably hand some and brainy man. . . To Attend the Bops. The Yakima Hop Growers Association have published a circular showing the acreage, probable yield and number of pickers necessary to handle the crop. It gives the area as about 3000 acre;, and the yield at 160,000 boxes of green hops, averaging 100 pounds to the box. The picking season will commence September 1st, and 12,000 people can find employ ment. The wages paid pickers are $1 per box. The state fair will be held at Yakima during the season and will, no doubt, cause hundred's of Indians to gather there. - ' Rest ICstate Transfers. The following deeds were filed for record today: J. J. Lackey and Lillian Lackey his wife to S. B. Crockett, lots 7 and 8, block 6, town of Hood River; $1500. United States to Hugh Lacey, se, sec. 18, tp 2 n, r 11 e patent. United States to Henry Peterson, nw, eec. 31, tp 5 s, r 12 e patent. Ayer's Ague Cure is an antidote for malaria and all malarial diseases, whether generated bv swamp or sewer. Neither quinine, arsenic nor any other injurious drug enters into the composi tion of this remedy. Warranted to care fever and ague. " 95 cts 95 cts .10 cts & MAYS. WASHINGTON LETTER. From our Regular Correspondent. Washington, Aug 17, 1894. The worst enemy of Mr. Cleveland could not wish him to occupy a more humiliating position, than . he does at this writing. Ho has been defeated in the fight with the Gorman-Brice com bination, which he himself invited ,and he has now to choose between signing, vetoing or allowing to become a law without his signature, the senate tariff bill, which' he characterized in his let ter to Mr." Wilson as "undemocratic, perfidious and dishonorable.'.' If he followed . his personal inclinations he would veto the bill and try to keep con gress in session until he could force a bill through that was nearer free trade. But there are weighty reasons why he is not likely to follow bis personal in clinations, the first of which is the uni versal demand from the business men of all sections and all parties that tbe bill be allowed to become a law, bad as it is, in order that they may have a chance to do. business, even if it be poor business. The second, and probably the most weighty reason with Mr. Cleve land, is the knowledge that the senate would refuse to pass any bill that he was known to wish passed. The pop gun tariff bills for free iron, coal, sugar and barbed wire, which the house passed and sent to the senate, are nothing more than excuses to aid free trade democratic members of. the house to square "themselves with their free trade constituents. The only one of them that could possibly get through the senate is that, prpviding for free sugar, and that one the administration joins the sugar trust in opposing. ' Sec retary Carlisle and the agent of the sugar trust are both working in concert to prevent the passage of the free sugar bill, the latter trying to frighten those democratic senators whose votes are not controlled by the sugar trust, by repre senting that the money to be collected through the tariff ' on sugar is absolutely "necessary to save , the administration from another issue of. bonds. This ar gument does not speak well for Mr. Carlisle's opinion of the intelligence of' the democratic 'senators, as every intel ligent reader of the newspapers knows that the treasury will- not for a long time to come collect any tariff on eugar, tor the very simple reason ttfat the sugar trust has supplied itself with all the raw sugar it will need for months, in order to escape -the payment of the duty. The real reason why the admin istration is opposed to free sugar is that it would knock the sugar trust out of the two cents a pound which it pro poses to add to tbe price of sugar. - It is an open secret here that Secreta ries Gresham - and Carlisle have advised Mr. Cleveland to sigh the tariff bill and let congress adjourn, leaving the demo crats to make the . best they can indi vidually of the surrender of Mr. Cleve land and the house, when they take the stamp for the congressional campaign. But so far Mr. Cleveland has refused to accept their advice, because he wants to "get even" with Gorman and his sap porters by writing a message to congress explaining his position. The more ex plaining he does the more republicans will be elected to the next house. For that reason republicans .hope that he will send a message to congress. Senator Vest made another savage at- tnpfc on Mr. Clavalnnd fn a srewVi in We have again on hand an abundance of strictly dry FIR WOOD, which we -will sell at the lowest rates. MAIER & BENTON. Wednesday, during which he let the cat out of tbe bag as to his soreheadedness he hasn't been given any pap. He also argued that Secretary Carlisle's letter against the passage of tbe popgun tariff t ': bills proved what has all along been con tended by many of the democratic sen ators, that Secretary Carlisle favored the senate bill and not the Wilson bill. There is a rumor here that Mr. Carlisle wrote that letter without consulting Mr. Cleveland, for the purpose of making it more certain that the senate tariff bill would be allowed to become a law, with or without Mr. Cleveland's signature, and that in consequence the relations of the two men are strained to such an ex tent as to make the resignation of Sec retary Carlisle a probability. Republicans consider the work of the session done, and so many of them have gone home that the senate is already without a quorum and likely to remain so. it is probably because of tbe knowl edge that nothing can be done' that cer tain democratic senators have become so solicitous that some bill should be passed that will take away the profits they 1 have deliberately voted to give tbe sugar trust. There is democratic hypocrisy on every hand. The senators are merely trying to keep up with the record made by the bouse democrats when they passed a tariff bill with a duty on iron, sugar, coal and barbed wire, and immediately afterwards passed separate bills patting those articles on the free list. The voters of the country will in November express their opinion of this sort of business. Cab. PERSONAL MENTION. W. H. Moore of Moro was in the city yesterday. Mr. Thomas Burgess of Bake Oven is in the city. Miss Katie Cronin of Dufur is visiting friends here. Hon. E. O. McCoy of Grant was in city yesterday. Mr. E. Jacobsen arrived home from Portland last night. I. J-Norman and party arrived home from Trout lake last night. Mrs. E. L. Menefee of Sherman county is visiting relatives at Dufur. D. W. Simmons, sheriff of Yakima County, Wash., is in the city. Miss Irene Adams and Miss Pauline Adams came up from Salem last night. C. R. Bone came up from Hood River Sunday evening, and went up to Grant last night. Mrs. H. I. Bulger, who has been visit ing relatives here for several weeks, re turned to Portland this morning. . Mrp. D. Malarkey of Portland, (nee Miss Laura Burgess) is visiting Mrs. Fletcher Faulkner, and will in a few days accompany her father .home. . Mr. Ben Wilson, who has been at Collins landing 'for several weeks, ar rived borne on the Regulator last night Ben hasn't been shaved for nearly a month, and if he knew how to climb a pole would readily pass for a bear. ' ' Another Order- The election of officers for The Dalles Council, No. , of the Loyal Mystic Legion of America, took place at Frater nity hall Saturday evening. The fol lowing were elected : Geo. C. Blakeley, W. C. ; H. H. Riddell, W. V. C. ; C. C. Cooper, W. Sec; J. A. Crossen, W. Treas. ; T. J. Driver, W. P. Dr. Suth erland was appointed medical examiner. ' ; . The Cheonicls is prepared to do all kinds of job printing. Gents' Furnishings, Boots and Shoes, Ladies' Hosiery, Ladies' Kid Shoes, Ladies'-Underwear, Children's School Shoes, A Thorough Clearance Sale. Watch our Center Window for Bargains. Order Groceries, Telephone XTo. 20. EUROPEAN HOUSE, Best Hotel in the' City. i NEW and FIRST-CLASS. -OF The Balance-. Summer Dry .Goods, Clothing, Hats, Shoes, Etc.', Etc., WILL BE CL03KD OCT AT A TBRMS STRICTLY CHSH, ji?e Sariff Bill :- Ipsurqs gfreap goods And if yon don't believe it, go to t HARRIS' DRY GOODS HOUSE and be convinced of this fact. A Large Invoice of Dry rived. A fine assortment to ID. W. " . .. Successor to Paul Kreft & Co. DEALER IN PAINTS, OILS AND GLASS. And the Most Complete and Latest Patterns and Designs in WALL PAPER. WALL PAPER. . ". PRACTICAL PAINTER and PAPER HANGER. None but the best brands of J.W. MASURY'S PAINTS used in all our work, and none but the most skilled workmen employed. Agents for Masury Liquid Paints. No chem icel combination or soap mixture. A first-class article in all colors. All orders promptly attended to. ; Store and Faint Shou corner Third and Washington Sts.. The Dalles, Oreo-on THE CALIFORNIA WINEHOUSE. r ALL KINDS OF California Wines at Low Prices." FREE DELIVERY TO Call on or address . CH-S. Calicoes, Men's French Calf Shoes, Axnoskeags, Oxford Ties, Outing Flannels, Quincy Cloth. JOLES, COLLINS MOO. PHOTOGRAPHER. Chapman Block, The Dalles, Oregon. I have taken 11 first prizes. OCR- Goods, Clothing, Etc., just ar- ' select from. TLXJiS flfiY PART OF THE CITY. SECHT' The Dalles, Otr.