to floods ewloot If You Want $1.00 At Prices within reach of all. We hesitate not for Congress to decide, but have marked our goods to please the people. Large stock of To go as far as $2 00 in ordinary times and places, take your Dollar and . i Come to Us, And supply your -wants from our CLEARANCE SALE. : : : : : I ALL GOODS MARKED IN I PLAIN FIGURES. PEASE & MAYS. We have again on hand an abundance of strictly dry FIR WOOD, which we "will sell at the lowest rates. FtlAIER & BENTON Gents' Furnishings, Boots and Shoes, Ladies' Hosiery, Ladies' Kid Shoes, Ladies' TJndeirwear, Children's School Shoes, Calicoes, Men's French Calf Shoes, Amoskeags, Oxford Ties, Outing Flannels, Quincy Cloth. , A Thorough Clearance Sale. v Watch our Center Window for Bargains. Order Groceries, Telephone No. 20. JOLES, COLLINS & CO. EUROPEAN HOUSE, Best Hotel in the City. NEW and FIRST-CLASS. PHOTOGRAPHER. Chapman Block, The Dalles, Oregon. I have taken 11 first prizes. The Dalles Daily Chronicle. Koiered a the PoHtoffice at The Dalies, Oregon, as second-class matter. Clubbing List. Regular Oar price price CktMitle us I. T. Trikii. .$2.50 $1.75 " tai HtMj OwgoiiM 3.00 2.00 Local Advertising. 10 Cents per line for first insertion, and 6 Cents per line for each subsequent insertion. Special rates for long time notices. All local notices received later than 8 o'clock Jill appear the following day ' The Daily and Weekly Chronicle may he found on tale at I. C. Nickelien'$ store. Telephone No. 1. WEDNKSDAY. - AUGUST 29. 1894 AUGUST AUQURINGS- Leaves Frtm tbe Notebook of Chronicle Reporters. Collection day Saturday. Milton Morris, while feeding a thresh ing machine near Wapinitia yesterday, got his arm caught in the cylinder and torn to pieces. Harmon Temple, No. 4. w 311 dispense ice cream and cake at 10 cents a dish on Friday afternoon, commencing at 3 o'clock, location given later. On and after September 1st, 1894, tbe office hours of the Pacific Express Co, will be from 8 to 12 and from 1 to 6 o'clock. The office will not be opened Sunday, eepl Prairie chickens are said to be more plentiful this season than for years past. Hunters kill from tnirty to sixty in a few hours, and then quit because they couldn't carry them home. A log rolled on John Lenz, who was working at the Oregon Lumber Co, mills last week, out lie crawled away without any broken bones when bis companions took it off him. Mr. Taffe, the grand dnke of Celilo, is preparing to do some fashing as Boon as the season opens. If the silver side run keeps up he will add eeveral thousand cases to the salmon crop this fall. Mr. Victor Moretti, the famous fresco artist, has been engaged by the Sisters to do some ornamental work in the chapel, and will be here next week. This will furnish an opportunity for . others to have work done in that line. Those attending the tournament at Oregon City will leave here Sunday. Engineer Brown has painted and orna mented tbe old hand engine, and it will be taken to Oregon City and take its place in the parade. Work on the Clear lake canal is being pushed rapidly. Aboat 150 men and forty teams are at work steadily. The canal will be eighteen feet wide on top. twelve feet on the bottom, and four feet deep, and besides this it will prove of inestimable valne to the country tribu tary to it. 1D6U.K.4K. made qmte a settle ment for the death of Mr. Moore of Hood River, who was'killed bv a pulley filling from a pile driver while repairing a trestle near that place a few weeks ago, x esieraay jur. u. x,. nail, claim agent for the company, met Mrs. Moore here and paid her (1700 in full settlement of all claims tor damages. . Mr. A. Tilzer of Oregon City, formerly a druggist in tbe employ of Blakeley & Honghton of this city, was severely burned about the hands and face by the explosion of about two drachms of ether be was using in filling a pres:ription. His clothing was set on fire and it was only by great presence of mind that a cat astrophe was averted. Tbe hole knocked in the Regulator shrunk considerable during the night. The reports today show that the hole was 12 by 4 inches instead of that many feet as reported yesterday. It may be possible the story grew on its way up, the prolific soil and fine climate of Hood River giving it a boost as it passed by. At any rate, the bole was 144 times larger when the news reached here than it was when it left the Locks. ' Hood River is in hard lines, and her goodly citizens today are going unshaven and nnahorn just because some evil- minded burglar burglarized the barber shop and made a clean-up. He took two dozen razors, five or six pairs of clippers, .all the scissors, and in fact everthing in the shop except the chairs, mirrors and stove. The shop belonged to Grant Evans. Robert McDonald, who was working with a threshing crew on Mr. Patter son's place on 8-Mile, was struck on the head by a derrick fork yesterday after noon about 3 o'clock and remained un conscious for about three hours. Dr. Hollister was called and did everything possible for the unfortunate man. Un less the unforeseen happens Mr. Mc Donald will be all right in a day or two. Sm Klein and Charley Hall started on a fishing expedition down the Col umbia this morning in a small boat, The start was made from the Regulator wharf, and as Sam undertook to place a box of provisions in the boat he stepped on some loose object and slipped, rolling into the water. He turned over as he fell and grabbed tbe wharf so that he only went in up to bis neck, but he held tne grno nign ana ary. as ne and bis precious load were pulled ashore he re marked that it was "a blamed fine start anyhow." Worse and Worse. O. C. Chrisman got the returns for twenty-five crates of plums this morning with a bill for $10 67 balance of ex penses. But it is all right, all things work for the best for those that love the Lord. He has sold two fruit driers this morning and expects to sell eight or ten more as soon as the rest of the shippers get their returns.. Banders & Btordevant, Dentists. Dr. Sanders has associated with him self in bis dental practice Dr. Sturde vant, who is a graduate of the dental college of the University of Michigan and has had six consecutive years in the practice of dentistry, having spent over one year of that time running an office for himself. - When tlabjr was sick, we gave her Castorla. When she was a CSiild, she cried for Castoria. When she became Uiaa, she clung to Castorla. When she had Children, she gare them Castoria. Notice. All ity warrants registered prior to January 2, 18H2, are now due and pay able at my office. . Interest ceases after this date. X. I.Bdrgst, City Treas Dated Dalles City, Aug. 1, 1894. To Locate at Antelope. KITE-FLYING IN GURMAH. Dr. Victor Hawthorne Smith, son of W. K. Smith of Portland, graduate of the University of Virginia and of Belle- vne hospital of New York and at pres ent assistant house surgeon at fat. Vin cent's hospital, Portland, went out to Antelope yesterday. It is quite possi ble that he may locate there. Besides bring well up in his profession, Dr. Smith is a great believer in athletics, beinp himself a first-class kicker, but only in the foot-ball line.' He is a mem ber of the Multnomah foot-ball club. Should be conclude to locate at Ante lope, that section will take the lead in sporting matters, with tbe boss foot racer, Shutt, the boss ball club, and the leading foot-ball player. But, more im portant than all. Antelope will have a first-class physician. ' For a City TJnlon. The Dalles, Aug. 28, 1S94. Representatives from the Christian Endeavor societies and the Epworth League met this evening in the vestry of the Congregational church, to consider plans for forming a city union of these societies, that more efficient work may be done for our master, Jesus Christ. Alfred Hoenng was elected chairman of the meeting and a pleasant though in formal lalk was engaged in -by those present. It was decided to defer the organization for the . present and hold a union prayer and consecration service, the thonght being to hold this anion set vice one week from next Sunday evening, in one of the churches, and if deemed advisable to call a meeting for organization some time in the week following. N. TJ. PERSONAL MENTION. One of in- Mr. H. A, York of Hood River is in the city. M. F. Loy came up from Hood River this afternoon. Mrs. George Mathias of Hond River leaves for tne Argentine KepuDlic, Thursday. Mr. Ralph Row'and left for Missoula this morning to take a position on the .Northern Pacihc. Mrs. Emma McCnllongh arrived from Murray, JUlaho, this morning and is visiting her father, Mr. A. G. Johnson. Mr. Ernest DeBrul. who has been Visiting his college mate, Mr. Roger bmnott, leaves this afternoon for Port land and from there over the Northern Pacific for the Yellowstone Park. Mr. S. Blumaner came np from Port land last night, he says to getaway from the neat. While this section can no doubt put up warmer weather during the day, the nights are cool and that is more u-an can be said for the weather west of tbe Cascades. HAKKIE I. At the Catholic chnr.-h, Monday even ing, the 27th, Key. A. Bronseeept othciat inn, Mr. John Dunn and Miss Eliza Keyzer, both of Condon. The newly-made couple were pass engers on the Regulator esterday morn ing and so struck a w reck early in their married life. the Main Amusements of am ' dolent People The Burmese are by all accounts an indolent people. One traveler goes so far as to say that one day's work and four days' rest is their idea of industry. The same traveler, Mr. E. D. Cuming-, author of "In the Shadow of the Pa poda," describes them as much given to kite-flying, an amusement which they contrive to enjoy with a minimum of bodily exertion. Their method of operations is very simple. Says Mr. Cuming: Yon pare down two twelve-inch Blips of bamboo, tie them at their centers crosswise, run a thread round the four tips, and paste upon this frame ono thickness of paper. Tic a nail Or a small screw-nut to one corner and your kite is made. The altitude which a well-made kite of this kind will reach is wonderful. and the lightest breath of wind will take it up. A hundred and fifty or two hundred yard3 of strong' sewing- thread, wound on a skeleton reel of four inches in diameter and eight inches in length, completes the equipment. Then, having1 started the kite by a process of .gentle playing., you squat down in the middle of the street, so as to keep your thread clear of the houses, and let the kite help itself. If you have fastened the thread with cunning, the kite rises almost perpen dicularly, bringing you joy in the envy and admiration of those who cannot make a steeper angle than forty de grees. The kite having taken out all the thread, you sit and contemplate it poised still and clear in the upper air for a few hours. In Rangoon, on a still morning or evening, hundreds "of kites float over the Burmese quarter of the town, some nearly out of sight, others hovering just above the roofs. When driving. your syce has frequently to halloo out of the way a middle-aged man who is backing slowly down in mid street coaxing his kite up. He goes about the ' business with a ponderous solemnity that raises it to the dignity of a science. " Stockholders' Meeting;. fit a 5aerifiee. .- -ODR- Summer Dry Goods, Cloth i ng, Hats. Shoes, Etc., Etc. NOV 18 THE TIME TO 8ECTJRB ... TERMS STRICTLY CHSH, Notice is hereby given that the annual meeting of the stockholders of the Wasco Warehouse Company will be held at the office of French & Co,, The Dalles, Oregon, on Friday, September 28, 1894, at 3 :30 o'clock p. mC, for the purpose of electing directors for the en suing year, and for the transaction of such other business as may come before the meeting. J. W. Fkknch, Pres. Attest: Smith French, Sec. ' 4w. The Dalles, Or., August 29, 1894. Jtye Sariff Bill q IiTSurqs (gfyeap Qoods And if you don't believe it, go to it HAW DHY GOODS HOUSE and "be convinced of tnis fact. A Large Invoice of Drf Goods, Clothing, Etc., just ar rived. A fine assortment to select from. 33 . 757 "V XT JS 355 v Successor to Paul Kref t t Co. - . Get Tour Money., All county warrants registered prior to August 1, 1890, will be paid on pre sentation at my office. Interest ceases after July 12th. Wm. Michei.l, County Treasurer. Tbe regular -subscription price of the Weekly Chronicle is $1.60 and the regular price of the Weekly Obegonian is $1.60. Any one subscribing for The Chronicle and paying for one year in advance can get loth The Chronicle and the Weekly Obegonian for $2.00. All old subscribers paying their- sub scriptions a year in advance will be en titled to the same offer. The Chkonicl is prepared to do all kinds of job printing. St. Mary's Academy THE DALLES, OR. EE-OPENS SEPTEMBER 3d, 1894. BOARDING AND DAY SCHOOL FOR GIBLS. Raten per term of ten weeks, , payable in advance: -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 PAINT8 used in all our. work, and none hut 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 Paint Shou oorner Third and Washington Sts., The Dalle, 0re-ot THE CALIFORNIA WINEHOUSE. -ALL KIND 8 OF- Board and Tuition. .$40 00 Entrance Fee payable but ouce) 6 00 Bd aud BeddihK 8 00 lubtrumental Music, Type-writing, Telegraphy, Drawing and Fainting lorm extra charges. French, (jennan, Latin, Needlewoik and Vocal Music taught free of charge to regular pupils. BAiEs KOrt DAY-fUPlLo. o, ?6 Sor10per term acoTdii'g to grade. For further particulars address, BISTER bUPERIOH. California Wi nes at Low Prices. FHEE DELIVERY TO fiflY PR$J OF Tp CITY. Call on or address. CflRS. SECHT' The i