run Bran and Shorts (Diamond Mills), $12 per ton. : Flotir at Bedrock Prices. Good Potatoes, 65c a sack. Seed Wheat. Chicken Wheat, 75c sack. Choice Wheat, Timothy and Alfalfa Hay. All Goods Sold at Lowest 3"- OEtLOSS, Telephone No. 61. Tramp About a year ago I came by and you gave me an old vest. You may not know it, madam, bat there was a $3 bill in that vest. Lady of the House Mercy! .Have you brought it back? Tramp Not much I I've come for an other vest. Clothier and Furnisher. There is no medicine so often needed in every home and so admirably adapted to the purposes for which it is intended, as Chamberlain's Pain Balm. Hardly a week passes but some member of the family has need of it. A toothache or headache may be cured by it. A touch of ' rhenmatiso. or neuralgia quieted. The severe pain of a burn or scald promptly relieved and the sore healed in much less time than when medicine has to be sent for. A' sprain may be promptly treated before inflamation sets in, which insures a cure in about one third of the time otherwise required. Cats and bruises 6hould receive im mediate treatment before the parts be come swollen, which can only be done when Pain Balm is kept at hand. A sore throat may be cured .before, it be comes serious. . A troublesome corn may be removed" by applying it twice a day for a week or two. A lame back may be cared and several days of valuable time saved or a pain in the side or chest re lieved without paying a doctor bill. Pro- cure a 50 cent bottle at once and you will never regret it. For sale by Blakeley .& Houghton Druggists. Mr. Verinice-r-Good evening, Johnny. How is your big sister? Johnny Well, riahe wuz awful eick a few minutes ago, when Mr. Borey colled, but I guess she's well enough to see you now. Come in and I'll ask. Brooklyn Eagle. . See the Worla's Fair (or Fifteen Cents Upon receipt of your address and fif teen cents in postage stamps, we will mail you prepaid our souvenir portfolio of the world's, Columbian exposition, the regular price is fifty cents, but as we want you to have one, we make the price nominal. You will find it a work of art and a thing to be prized. It con tains full page views of the great build ings, with descriptions of same, and is executed in highest style of art. ' If not satisfied with it, after you get it, we will refund the stamps and let you keep the book. Address . .-. . H. E. Bucklen & Co., ' Chicago, 111. Figg What a peculiar man Dander is. He has a sovereign contempt for any body vrho doesnt know as much as he does. Fogg I should think he would. Boston Transcript. There !b more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it albtl disease, and prescribed local rem edies, and by coustantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it in . curable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional care in the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoon ful. It acts directly on the bloodand mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to care.-. Send for -circulars and testimonials. Address. . F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O; &Hod by Druggists, 75c. ' "Julia tells me she left the company she was in because she had too many lines." Delia Yes. You see she was to appear as a pretty young girl in the living pictures. Chicago Inter-Ocean.' Bncklen's Armca Salve. The best salve in the world for . cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fevei sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains, corns, and all ekin eruptions, and posi- tively cures piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect . satisfac tion . or money refunded. Price 25 cents per hox. For sale Dy Snipes & Kin- erslv -t - Another Call. All county warrants registered prior to January 1, 1891, will be paid on pre sentation at my office. Interest ceases after Sept. 10th. Wm. Micbell, County Treasurer, rm Seed Rye. Feed Oats. Rolled Barley. Poultry and Eggs bought and sold. :; ' - Choice Groceries Sz Fruits. Grass Seeds. ; ' Living Prices. Cor. Second and Union Sts. notice. : To All yhom It May Concern: By order of the Common ' Council of Dalles City, made and entered on the 3d day of October, 1894, notice is hereby given that said City Council ft about to proceed to order and make the improve ment in Tenth street in said City as hereinafter stated and that the cost of such improvement will be levied' upon the property adjacent thereto and said improvement will be made unless with in fourteen days from the final publica tion of this notice the owners of two thirds of the property, adjacent to said street about to be improved shall file their written remonstrance, against such improvement as by charter .provided. The improvement contemplated and about to be made is as follows, to-wit : - To improve Tenth street by building a sidewalk on the north side thereof, six feet wide, commencing at the intersec tion of Tenth street with Union street, in said citv and running thence easterly 75 feet. " ... Said improvement will be constructed in accordance with the provisions of Ordinance No. 270, which passed the Common Council of Dalles City, May 10th, 1893. Dated this 15th day of October, 1894. Douglas S. Dufub, Octl5-30 Recorder of Dalles City. NOTICE. To All Whom It May Concern: By order of the Common Council of Dalles City, made and entered on the 7th day of September, 1894, notice is hereby given that said City Council is about to proceed to order and make a sewer in the streets and parts of streets as hereinafter stated and that the cost of each improvement will be levied upon the property directly bene fited thereby, as by charter provided. The improvement contemplated and about to be made is as follows, to-wit : To construct a terra cotta sewer com mencing on Court street at low water mark in the Columbia river, thence southerly to Fifth street ; thence easterly to Washington street ; thence southerly to Fulton street ; - thence easterly to LaugWin street ; thence southerly to the alley south of Alvord street. ' Said sewer shall be of the following size, to-wit: - - From the Columbia river to Fourth street, sixteen inches ; from. Fourth street to the corner of Washington and Fulton streets twelve inches, and from said point to the termination thereof eight inches. Said improvement will be constructed. in accordance with the. provisions' of Ordinance- No. 270, which passed the Common Council of Dalles City, May 10th, 1893. Dated this 15th day of October, 1894. Douglas S. Dufub, Octl5-30 . Recorder of Dalles City. NOTICE. ' To All Whom It Slav Concern ; By order of the Common Council of Dalles City, made and entered on the 3rd day of October, 1894, notice is here by given that said City Council is about to proceed to order and make the im provement in Union street, in said City, as hereinafter stated, and that the cost of such imnrovent will be levied upon the property adjacent thereto, and eaid improvement will be made unless with in . fourteen days from the final publica tion of this notice the ownera of two- thirds of the property adjacent to said street, about to be improved, shall file their written remonstrance against eucn improvement aB by ' charter provided The improvement contemplated and about to be made is as follows, td-wit : To improve and grade Union street in said city, thirty feet in width in J;he center thereof, from the intersection of Tenth street to Thirteenth street : thence west one block to Liberty street ; thence south one block to Fourteenth street ; thence west, on Fourteenth street four blocks to Trevitt street; thence south one block to Fifteenth street; thence west on Fifteenth street two blocks ter minating at the intersection of Fifteenth and Mount Hood streets. All of said improvement will be con structed in accordance with the provi Bions of ordinance No. 270, which passed the Common Council of Dalles City May 1U, 1S3. Dated this 15th day of October, 1894 Douglas S. -Dufur, Octl5-30 " Recorder of Dalies City. Notice. AH city warrants registered prior to January 2, 1892, are now due and pay able at my office. Interest ceases after this date. 1. 1. Bubget, City Treas. ' Dated Dalles City, Aug. 1, 1894. Put on Tour Glasses and Look at This " From $100 to $2,000 to loan. Apply to UKO. V. JCOWLAND, 113 Third St, The Dalles. Or. NOTICE. No Freight will be accepted for ship ment between tbe hours of 5 P. At. and 9 A. !., except .lve Stock and Perish able Goods. !., P. & A. N. Co. .J ml? 30th. 1894. Seed Rye, 75 cents Joles, Colling & Co. 'a per bushel, at AUSTRALIA'S GOLD MINES. Two Young Adventurers Who Struck .a - Great Bonanza in That Country. Some- big-- stories are current of the richness of the Coolgardie gold fields in western Australia, and particularly, says the Scientific American, of one mine in the district discoverea.py two young adventurers named Bailey and Ford. The former, wane prospecting, found a forty-five ounce nugget stick ing'out from a reef in a big mountain of quartz. As -quickly, as possible a claim was staked out, but in spite of all. precautions much valuable surface ore was stolen before a proper guard could be established. . The monthly output from, the mine now amounts to 2,000 ounces, t rom thirty tons of ore picked, from a bulk of 1,400 tons 18,000 ounces of gold were obtained, and the remainder of the' stone is expected to yield from five to six ounces to the ton. Out of 650 tons raised from a depth of fifteen feet twelve tons were picked, giving 8,500 ounces of smelted gold. From another part of the mine four tons selected out of 100 tons of ore yielded 1,600 ounces of gold. Some of the other returns of picked stone were: Five tons from 250 tons for 2,000 ounces, two tons from seventy tons for 900 ounces, four tons for 1,000 ounces and thifty-five hundred weight for 800 ounces. Some of the surface "is so rich in gold that ounces can sometimes be picked out in a few minutes." Down tcrthe .fifty-foot level only it is estimated that gold to the amount of 40,000 ounces is now in sight. It . is as yet too soon to speak about the prospects of other claims which have . been pegged out in and around Coolgar die. Very few. of them have got beyond the rudimentary stage of prospecting claims, although re ports have been received of some val uable finds, among which may be cited a reef carrying ten ounces to the ton, and the discovery of nuggets of fifty two ounce weight on a field forty-five miles distant. The population of the place amounted to about 1,500 some weeks ago, but since then has dimin ished in consequence of the terrible hardships which must be encountered there, owing to the climate. RIDING IN A RICKISHA. - Experience of an American Traveler with the Human Horses of Japan. , The most novel, and withal natu ral, sensation I ever . experienced re garding rickishas and their human horses was on a certain occasion when driving, or. rather being pulled, in Tokyo, writes . Walter Rogers Furness in September Lippincott's. 1 was idly watching a rickisha ahead of me, which was bowling along at a goodly rate and contained two young Japanese girls most elaborately dressed. All of a sudden, to my horror and alarm, the hub of the rickisha struck 6harply against the hub of another rickish go ing in the opposite direction with so severe a shock that their collie pitched forward on his head, breaking both shafts, and the two girls rolled out on top of him. Were it not for the mud the tumble was in reality no more se vere nor dangerous ' than that of fall ing off a chair. Nevertheless, without stopping- to reason, I took an. instan taneous flying leap" over my collie's shoulders, landing close to the over turned rickisha, seized a girl in each hand and dragged them dear of the wreck and the cast steed. Of course without the greatest promptitude on the part of the collie on the ground, entanged irr the harness, would in his struggles kick the girls' brains out or else get up snorting and terrified and trample them to death before he bolt ed np.the street with the broken shaft dangling at his heels. I have a recollection of even think ing, as. soon as the two girls were in a place of safety, that I ought to-dart back and sit on the collie's head while some one got the harness off. Ah; but the two poor Japanese maidens! What could have been their sensations when they were suddenly and rudely- grabbed by a wild-looking foreigner, dragged through the mud and bundled up against a- wall? All, forsooth, be cause that big, ugly foreigner was afraid of a very timid, apologetic and bruised little collie. - CHINA'S FLAG. A Tradition Concerning the Origin of the Dragon and the Ball. . . A Japanese merchant in the city re peated this tradition of the origin of the Chinese flag one day recently, says the New York Sun: . "The flag of China is one of the gayest among en signst The body of the flag is a pale yellow. In the upper left-hand corner is a small red sun. Looking intently at the sun is a tierce Chinese, dragon The . dragon's belly is a brilliant red and white. His green body is covered with stiff knobs. He is standing on his two hind paws and the left fore foot. The feet are five-toed and slight ly hooked. His long five-forked tail stretches away in the rear. The drag on's neck is. arched back. His mouth is wide open, and he looks as if he were o Iumi oTxrfallrTHT .T-i, T-rl en-n "That is just what he is trying to do, and that is the symbolism: of the flag," the Japanese merchant said. Then he explained that .the Jap anese flag has a white body and in the center is a large red sun with rays radiating in all directions. ' About a thousand years ago the Chinese made war on Japan and prepared a grand in vasion. To symbolize their anticipated victory they adopted their . flag of to day. They took the sun of Japan and made it small and put it in front of the dragon's mouth to express the idea that the Chinese dragon would devour the Japanese. It happened, however, that the Chinese " fleer . conveying an army of one hundred ' thousand men was wrecked on its way to Japan by a, great storm and all but threcof the one -hundred thousand perished. De spite that unlucky beginning in the . use of the flag the Chinese retained it. ' f ' Prom Liock jaw. . . Death from tetanus was infrequent during the civil war, only two wounded soldiers in one thousand dying from it. Tn the Crimean war the ration was fifty-seven to one thousand. - , Mexican Mustang Liniment for Burns, Caked & Inflamed Udders. Piles, Rheumatic Pains, Bruises and Strains, Running Sores, Inflammations, . Stiff joints, Harness & Saddle Sores, Sciatica, Lumbago, Scalds, 1 Blisters, Insect Bites, V All Cattle Ailments, : All Horse Ailments, All Sheep Ailments, - Penetrates Muscle, Membrane and Tissue Quickly to the Very Seat of Pain and ' i Ousts it in a Jiffy. Rub in Vigorously. ? Mustang Liniment conquers : Pain, Makes flan or Beast well . again. "The Regulator Line" The Dais, Portland ail Astoria Navigation Co) THROUGH Freigfii ana Fasssngsr Line " Through Daily Trips (Sundays ex cepted) between The Dalles and Port land. Steamer Kegulator leaves The Dalles at 7 a. m., connecting at the Cas cade Locks with Steamer Dalles City. Steamer Dalles City leaves Portland (Yamhill et. dock) at 6 a. m., connect ing with bteamer Kegulator for The Dalles. FA8SKKOKK KATKS. One way Round trip. .$2 XX) . 3.00 Freight Rates Greatly Reduced. All freight, except car lots. will be drought through, with out delay at Cascades. Shipments for Portland received at any time day or nieht. Shipments for way landings must" be delivered before o p. m. lave stocK enipmenis soiiciea Call on or address, W. C. ALLAWAY, General Agent TH E-DALLES, OREGON J F. FORD, Evangelist, Of Dei Moines,' Iowa, writes under date oi m : . March 28, 1893: S. B. Mio. Mfg. Co., . 7 Dufur, Oregon. - ' -Qentlemen : ' .- On arriving home last week, 1 found all well and anxiously awaiting. - Our little eirl. eight and one-half years old. who had wasted away to 38 pounda, ie now well, strong and vigorous, and well fleshed up. 8. B. Cough Cure has done its work well. Both of the children like it. Your 8. B. Cough Cure has cared and kept away all hoarseness from me. So give it to every one, with greetings for all. Wishing you prosperity, we are . lours, mb. s jxLBS. j. jj. aosu. If you wish to feel fresh and cheerful, and read; for the Spring's work, cleanse your system with the Headache and Liver Cure, by taking two or three doses each week. Sold under a positive guarantee. 50 cents per bottle by all druggist. Ad. Keller is now located at "WV H. Butts' old stand, and will be glad to wait upon his many friends. Jew for! - - rweeuiy. nnflfl'nf' Mnuu mi Till ""'s' 'fis Mil rHE CHRONICLE was established for the ex press purpose of faithfully representing The Dalles and the surrounding country, and the satisfying effect of its mission is everywhere apparent. It now leads all other publications in ; Wasco, Sher man, Gilliam,-a large part of Crook, Morrow and -Grant counties, as well. as Klickitat and other re- 1 gions north of The Dalles, ; hence it is the best . medium for advertisers in the Inland Empire. ' ; The Daily Chronicle is published every eve-- ning in the week Sundays excepted at $6.00 per annum. The Weekly Chronicle on Fridays of each week at $1.50 per annum. ' , ? . "" For advertising rates, subscriptions, ftc, address ' : . i. - THE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO., Tito Zalles., Ore&oni FIRST 0 0 1 CAN BE C H R O N I C L Reaspnably CAN I OBTAIN A PATENT For a prompt answer and an honest opinion, write to BI U NN Ac CO., who have had nearly ftf ty years' experience in the patent business. Commnnica tions strictly confidential. A Handbook of In formation concerning Patents and how to ob tain them sent free. Also a catalogue OX nfrnhan- ' ftcal and scientific books sent free. Patents taken through Mann ft Co. receive special notice in the Scientific American, and thos are brought widely before the public with out cost to the inventor. This splendid paper, issued weekly, elegantly illustrated, has by far the largest circulation of any scientiflo work in taa world. S3 a year. Sample copies sent free. - Building Edition, monthly, tiSO a year. Single copies, 25 cents. Every number contains beau-, tiful plate, in colors, and photographs of new ' bouses, w S ptaana, enabling builders to show the 4tvt .( sa4 secure contracts. AiMruaa Awji 4vJ. Xcx.fti BaoADwA- I'M 0 - Pi 1 V "M a none l III H ri U I E HII J ' iuy oiiivjiiiioiu 8d - CLHSS nlWl my1: (1 JU Jll in tin HAD AT THE E O F F I C E FuinoustRates. Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat- J ent business conducteeHbr Moderate Fees. Our Ornce i Opposite U.S. patent office J and we can secure patent in less time than those J rMnni. ffnm W.iKinMnn.v t, d Send model, drawing or photo., with descnp- i tion. We advise, if patentable or not, free of J charge. Our lee not due till patent ta secured. 1 m Dmmin Hm to Obtain Patents, with cost of same in the U. S. and foreign countries 5 sent free. Address, 4 G. A GfJOVJatCO. L Opp- Patent Office, Washington, D. C. . J