We are Still In It, I ot batoraav, JiOY. ou. SKLE. and You Know Kid Gloves. We have had several Kid Glove Sale3 before this, and they have always been very successful in the number of Gloves sold. La dies appreciate bargains in Gloves. The prices named for this Special Sale give the Biggest Kind of Bargains. JOUVIN, 5-button Colored .-$1.25 $ DRESDEN, Hook Black 1.00 LIPPEN, 4-tmtton Black 1.25 CENTEMERI, 5-bntton Suede 1.50 GITlZOT, "Large Button Suede ....... 1.50 Dress Goods. .75 .75 75 1.15 1.15 A handsome line of Wool Dress Goods in Pattern Lengths. .20 per cent. Discount. I ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. PEASE & MAYS. DRY CORD WOOD, HAY and GRAIN", HEATING STOVES, COOK STOVES, STEEL RANGES, GROCERIES, PROVISIONS, all at the lowest prices at MAIER & BENTON. We, are selling more goods than ever, for the simple reason that Our PRICES are RIGHT. .We pay more for Produce than any other dealer in The Dalles. Consult Your Interests, and Trade with. JOLES, COLLINS & GO. Telephone No. 20. THE RELIABLE5FIRM. 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. Entered a the Poetoffice at The Dalies, Oregon, as second-class matter. , Clti'b'bing List. Regular Our price price Chronicle and K.I. Tribme $2.50 $1.75 " md TTellj Oregoniai 3.00 2.00 " aid Weekly Examiner 3.25 2.25 " Weell j Itfw Tori World 2.25 2.00 Local Advertising-. 10 Cents ikt line for first Insertion, aud S Cents er line for each subsequent insertion. Special rates for long time notices. All local notices received later than X o'clock will appear the following day. . : High Prairie neighborhood. Some wheat is hauled from Centerville to that FRIIMY, NOVEMBER 2. 1894 BRIEF MENTION. Leave From the Notebook of Chronicle Reporters. Oh, lady in the bloomers, How glad yon ought to be. To know that they will never Be bagging at the knee. The weather clerk promises us fair weather tomorrow. License to marry was issued today to John Rogers and Miss Susie Johns. A' young lady wants a position in. family. Good cook. Apply at this office. octl6 3t District court meets Monday ,the 12th, and has an extraordinarily large crimi nal docket. The county court meets in probate Monday, and as a commissioners court Wednesday. The price of hogs has fallen considera bly, $3.75 being the price quoted for good shippers. There is going to be a wedding short ly, but as we were told in confidence we point, on account of saving ferriage, worK on tne cannery is progressm rapidly, ine eiues are up and the rafters raised. With a few days good weather the roof will be on and then the work can be prosecuted steadily. The warrants issued from the United States court were sent here several days ago for the arrest of Klein et al. for rob bing the postoffice, but up to date they have not been served A four-horse team loaded with goods for the Warm Springs reservation, left this morning. An evidence of. civiliza tion in the shane of several htinriTen nf mattresses formed a part of the load.' Ihe recorder, b court interviewed three individuals who' had been Imbibing too freely this morning. They were fined $5 each, and what is particularly refresh ing about the matter is that they each paid up. -. A rumor ia in circulation that the Regulator will soon tie up. There is ab solutely no foundation for the state ment. The incline will have to be abandoned by the 10th, but the- new road will be laid, and the new incline completed by that time. 1 The governor has issued his Thanks giving proclamation. This time he gave the president the first shot at it, and then accepted his decision. The. gover nor's proclamation is as follows: "I hereby appoint the last Thursday of this month as a Thanksgiving holiday. 'In days of prosperity be joyful: Ln in days of adversity consider.' (Ecclesias ticus vii :14.)" The celebrated play of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde will be on the boards here next Monday night, remaining one night only. The Seattle Post-Intelligencer, Bpeaking of this play, says : "Richard E. French opened the week with Dr Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, which ran success' fully the entire week. Mr. French made a strong impression by his masterly transformation into the fiend incarnate Hyde, and the general excellence of the vcast and scenery, made it to be regretted can't give it away. The saw mill at Lyle is in operation Yhat this play could not have had and is supplying lumber for the High linger run. Prairie Bettlemantn. . . r i The '94 dancing class will begin their regular soirees at the Wingate hall, Saturday evening next. Council meets tomorrow night, which means that today is a good day on which to put in your bills. in is Deing; collection day the man with the bill book is about the most numerous thing on the streets. Seven carloads of sheep were shipped from Saltmarshe & Co.'s yards to Troutdale yesterday, and a carload of hogs today. Cabinet officers of the Epworth League are requested to meet ' in the lecture room of the M. E. church, this evening at 7:30 o'clock. The company owning the mill at Lyle intends putting in a ferry from ' that place to itowena, it would prove a, great convenience. - . . The Orchestra Union will give their regular dance at the opera house to morrow night. Dancing commences at 9 o'clock, and not a minute later. Mr. Judd Fish and party are home from Hood River. , They didn't kill any bears because after diligent search they were unable to find any ripe ones. M. A. Moody has a barge at Lyle and is receiving considerable wheat from the A Spokane deputy eheriff with the coroner and a newspaper reporter or two went recently to the northern boundary of the county to open a grave on a farm belonging to an old German named Her mann. ; Hermann's boy, aged 16 years, ran away some time ago and as the old man used to thrash him occasionally, the neighbors came to the conclusion he had, in a fit of anger,' killed him. The diecovery of a grave on' the old man's anch eet all tongues to wagging, finally eaulting in the visit above mentioned. he old man eat by the grave. while the coroner and sheriff shoveled out the dirt and when they reached a depth of five feet and unearthed the decaying remains of a Jersey cow, the bid man laughed a laugh that made neither the sheriff nor coroner smile. And then he told them the last be had beard of the boy he was in Cheney, where they could find out all about him. ine success that has attended the use of Dr. J. H. McLean's Volcanic Oil Lin ament in the relief of pain and in curing diseases which seemed beyond the reach of medicine, has been truely remarkable, Hundreds supposed to be crippled for life with arms and legs drawn tip crook ed or distorted, their muscles withered or contracted by disease have been cured through the use of this remedy. Price 25c, 50 and $1.00 per bottle. For sale by the Snipes-Kinersly Drug Co. Wood Wanted. . The committee on streets and public property will receive until 12 a. m., No vember 10th, 1894, sealed proposals, to furnish Dalles City fifteen cords No. 1 oak wood ; same to be delivered at city .ail.- Committee reserves ' th- right to ject any or all bids. By order of the mmittee, S. S. Johns, oct30-td Chairman When Baby was sick, we gaw herCastorta. --. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria. When she had Children, she gave them Castoria. Subscr.be for The Chronicle. ;A Jersey Lily. PERSONAL MENTION. H Got Thirty Days. Arthur J Th'ornley was arrested in Portland a few days ago on a telegram sent from this place, and was brought here Wednesday evening. He had been employed by S. P. Conroy to sell pack ages of stationery containing prizes. A short time ago he received sixty pack age?, with which ' he was to work Hood River. He also had a watch and an overcoat belonging to Conroy. Instead of stopping at Hood River he went on to Portland and wrote back that he was going to " San Francisco, but that he would settle up' everything as soon as he was able, provided Conroy would not make any fuss about it. Conroy, how ever, swore out a warrant for him and had him brought back. On being' ar raigned before Jnstice Davis yesterday he acknowledged his guilt and was sentenced to thirty days in jail. The total value of the plunder he was trying to get away with was about $15. The Markets. Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Crovre returned from Portland last night. Mr. Frank Fulton of Sherman county was m the city yesterday. Judge Bradshaw and B. F. Laughlin returned from Portland today. Mr. W. H. Fear, Portland agent of the Jarvis Conkling Mortgage Trust Co., is in the city. . Judge Liebe, Emil Schanno, Dick Closter and several others went to the Cascades this morning. MAKKIED. At Endersby, Oct. 31, 1894, by G. W. Fligg, j. p.,.Wm. S. Woodcock and Anna L.- Woodcock, formerly Anna Chase. AH of Wasco Co., Oregon. ; ; Advertised Letters. : There is considerable activity in the wheat market, and especially is this true of Portland, though prices remain unchanged. Sales at that place have run from 62 to 63 for Walla Walla, and 70 to 72 Valley, per cental. The crop news from European coun tries does not vary much from previous reports. Advices from Russia ' vary greatly, some reporting favorably and others quite unfavorably as to the re sult of the wheat harvest. - No official estimate of the crops has yet been' is sued. It 13 being anxiously looked for. The official reports of the exports of wheat from the Argentine Republic for tha first six months of 1894 have been published, showing exports of 37,864,- 000 bushels, a little less than commer cial reports have shown. The exports of wheat from Uruguay, during the same six months were 2,240,000 bushels. None -; of '.the ' European corn -' trade journals' appear to anticipate any lm provement, unless it can be established that this grain is going to be more ex tensively used for feediniz purposes in place of corn than is now considered probable. ' Desired to Die In Russia. - London, Nov.' l.--According to dis patches from Berlin, the Emporer .Wil liam has received a dispatch from Gen eral von Werder, German ambassador to Russia, how at Lividia, saying the czar refused to go to Corfu, as he desired 'to die in Russia. Following i8 the list of letters remain ing in the postoffice at The Dalles un called for Nov. 3, 1894. Persons calling for the same will give date on which they were advertised :' " Borrow. G E Brown, H Carey. Miss Maddie Chuaney, H S Davis, Miss F Davidson, W S Edwards, W C Fogel, L Harris, Mrs J D Jory, A Maloney. T G Moore, HP Odell, Miss L Khoades, J Runke, Mr Stout, F M Stout, Jessie Wegstein, Chas ' Williams, Mrs R Davis, Henry Da vies, Louis Fitzgerald, C C Guyton, W F Haverly, J H Johnson, Mrs H Masterson, E H McCormick, Mies B i Odell, U J Rucie, Owen Stanford, Miss N Schroder, C Ward, C D (2) Wood, Wm Williams, R E , A. Ckossen, P .M. SlOO Reward, SIOO. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded' disease that science has' been able to cure in all its stages and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Care is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con stitutional disease, requires a constitu tional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the founda tion of the disease, and giving the pa tient' strength by building up the consti tution and assisting nature to do its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its cultivati ve powers, that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of Testimonals. Address. F." J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. tySold by Druggists, 75c. "Why do yon insist upon saying he ia a painter? Why not call him an artist?" "Because he has made money by his brush. Why, he's rich !" Boston Tran script. ' Notice.' A resolution was adopted by the water commission on October 31st, providing that from and after January 1, 1895, water rent will be ' collected from the owners of buildings instead of tenants This includes all occupancies,- stores, residences, wash-houses, sEops, etc. . H. Chsisman, Nov2-9 .Secretary, " ' Wanted. The undersigned desires to rent a farm of 100 to 160 acres grain landl same amount of pasture, must have good water, house and barn. Address Farmer, care Chronicle notice Mo Freight will be accepted for ship, ment between the hoars of 5 P. M. and v A. M. , except Live Stock and Perish able Goods. !., p. & A. ". Co, .ruly 20th. 1894. S 7 P Si , -vV, X 47 IJoiS't Be Caught Buying Groceries at less than we sell them, for we sell the best there is at the lowest possible prices. J. B. CROSSEN, - - - - The Grocer. TelepHone No. 62. Fine G-oods, A Clean Store. Prompt Delivery. just leeiued, FROM THE EASTERN MARKETS, NEW FALL and WINTER DRY GOODS, CLOTHING-, FURNISHING- GOODS, Notions, Hats and Caps, Boots and Shoes, &c. Cash Buyers are invited to examine our New Prices, as everything will be sold with the emallest profit. Special Bargains every day of the week. TERMS STRICTLY CKSH, Yl GlTAIl'J IB Qw III Ti In anticipation of a renewal of business activ ity, we have bought an enormous line of Men's Underwear and Overshirts for Fall and Winter,' which we have placed on the market at prices to suit the times. JOHN C. HERTZ