C3) r We are Still In It, Saturday Jfe 10. SKLE. . Underwear and Hosiery. 1 Lot Ladies' All-Wool Ribbed Vests 50c Regular goods at $.150 and $2.00 Small sizes only. . Regular. Thi9 Day. Ladies' Black All-Wool Hose 35c 20c Ladies' Black All-Wool Hose 40c 25c Children's Black All-Wool Hose. , .35c 25c Ladies and Misses Underwear 10 per cent discount Children's Cloaks ,15 per cent discount New Winter Garments. Don't Forget. Friday is Remnant Day- Prices for Remnants of Dress Goods, Linens, Laces, Em broideries, Silks, Velvets, &c, are interesting to people who want a little money to go a good ways. DRY CORD WOOD, HAY and GRAIN, HEATING STOVES, COOK STOVES, STEEL RANGES, GROCERIES, PROVISIONS, all at the lowest prices at MAIER& BENTON, ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. PEASE & MAYS. and You Know It. . 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 & CO. Telephone No.- 20. THE RELIABLE1FIRM. EUROPEAN HOUSE, Best Hotel In the City. NEW and FIRST-CLASS. PHOTOGRAPHER. Chapman Block, The Dalle9, Oregon, I have takpn 11 first prizes. The Dalles Daily Chronicle. entered a the Post-office at The Dalles, Oregon, as second-class matter. Cluhhing List. Regular Our price price Clronich nd 5. T. Tribnae .$2.50 $1.75 " and Weekly Oregoniaa 3.00 2.00 " and IFeeilj Eiamiaer 3.25 2.25 " Weellj New York World 2.25 2.00 ,oeal Advertising. 10 Cento per line for first insertion, and 5 Cents ifer line for each subsequent insertion. . Special rates for long time notices. All local notices received later than 8 o'clock Till appear the following day. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9. 1894 BRIEF MENTION. Leaves From the Notebook of Chronicle Reporters. The literary society will meet tonight at 8 o'clock in the lecture room of the MethodiBt church. About 150 men are employed in re building Grant, Murray and Ruf as. The distillery is about completed and will probably start up' in a couple of weeks. Everybody can make their own cray ons by taking a few lessons from Mr. Moretti. Lessons 50 cents. Rooms the Gilhousen Art Gallery on Court etreet. Rev. B. Wistar Morris, bishop of the diocese of Oregon, will hold services in St. Paul's Episcopal church, this city, Sunday next at 11 o'clock a. m. and at 7 :30 p. m. The concert Tuesday night promises to be the event of the season. It has been well advertised and the fact that Signor Ferrari one of the great vocalists of the times is to appear, will undoubt edly cause a very large attendance. Our neighboring iown of Grant is be ing strung along the railroad track from the old site to Rufus. It has the same trouble Josh Billings complained about in the anatomical construction of the fish-worm, "Its tail is too long for its body." - The city recorder had one individual up for examination this morning. He obtained permission to "see a man" to get money enough to pay his fine, but up to this writing has evidently not found him. The presumption is fair that the man be is looking for is a dem ocrat, bo, it is probable he will not be back until some time next year. A. J. Carter, the man who took a dose of morphine yesterday morning for the purpose of shuffling off the mortal coil, got left in the shuffle, and this morning is out of danger. His back is said to be just one big bruise where he was pound ed with a board in the efforts to keep him awake, but as soon as these heal, he will be "as good as ever." G company give their - first annual ball in their new armory in' the Grant .building, corner of First and Washing ton, tomorrow night. The occasion is in honor of moving into their new quar ters, a sort of a house warming to which the boys invite all their friends. G company wishes it distinctly understood that this is their affair . and costs the visitors nothing. Mr. Taylor Hill came in from Prine ville this morning. ' He brought 250 head of beet cattle for shipment which he left yesterday near the bridge but which will be in today. He says they are an exceptionally fine lot. Taylor is a democrat from way-back but he told us this morning that he thought the re publican party contained most of the good men of the country, since it has. captured most of the democrats. In conversation with Mr. H. M. Montgomery, of the engineers who are surveying the boat railway route, he told us the work well in hand and would be completed in a week or ten days. The route as surveyed is eight and four-filths miles long. Concerning the right of way, he eaid all the land owners were disposed to be reasonable, asking only what the land is worth. There, will be some heavy rock work, but with all the money available at once, Mr. Montgomery thinks the work could be completed in a year. Seal Estate Transactions. Deeds were filed yesterday and today as follows: Charles Grodt to Wm. M. Stewart, the sw.J, swj, see 14, tp 2 n, r 10 e ; $400. -Jonah H. Mosier and Martha Mosier to Effie J. Phillips, 80 acres off Marshall donation claim ; $1 and love and affection. Jonah H. Mosier and iMartha Mosier to Dolly C. Mosier, 80 acres off Marshall donation land claim ; $1 and love and affection. Jonah H. Mosier to Martha Mosier, east half of donation land claim of Jonah Mosier and Jane Mosier, deceased; $1 and love and affection. A. S. MacalliBter and wife to Daniel Siddall, the undivided one-half of lots 1, 2, 11 and 12, block 3, Bigelow's addi tion to Dalles City ; $1. Advertised Letters. Following is the list of letters remain ing in the postoffice at The Dalles un called for Nov. 10, 1894. Persons calling for the same will give date on which they were advertised : Barratt, A Ballesslen, Carl Britt, Mrs AM Boyd, Lee Bonha, Tom Collins, Miss R Cushman, Chas Fagan, Chas Fagan, Peter C Fagan, Mrs Nise Fluke, S B .. Garton,M Gibson, Mrs Chas Lavernie, F J. Little, John Low, Miss Minnie Lucas, J T Martin, Mrs Nellie Merriman, J A Morgan, Mrs Eva -Moore, Mrs L B Morris, L M Morgan, Brook Oburn, Mrs L Powles, 8 A Riardan, Wm Smith, Jake Woods, J A. Crossen, P .M. Proel amatlon. To All Siwashes in Wasco County . Resebvation and Elsewhere : At the last regular meeting of Wasco Tribe, No. 16, 1. O. R. M., held at the wigwam in the seventh sun beaver moon, G. S. D. 403 (Nov. 7, 1894.) it was decided to give a grand masquerade ball and social pow-wow on New Year's eve, Dec. 31, 1894. The following siwashes were appointed a committee of arrange ments : W. H. Butts, F. H. Wakefield, D. S. Dufur, J. J. Wiley and F. W. L. Skibbe. Hi-u-Hihu. A test of hog-feediug is now in pro gress on the Corvalli8 college farm. It began about five weeks ago and ends January 1st, covering a period of thir teen weeks. Eight pigs, divided into lots of four each, are being fed one lot on chopped wheat and the other on mixed chopped - wheat, shorts and hopped oata. The experiment will be ade the subject of a bulletin: Che Chronicle prints the news. The Markets. he wheat market has made quite sUarp advances since the month opened, the local price running up from 31 cents b 33, and as high as 34 cents, for a few hoice lots. The quotations in London are a cent and a half higher than a week ago. By most dealers it is thought the advanced rate will not be maintained. In Portland the change is not noticeable, and the Valley has failed to get the bene fit of an advance. It seems that the ad vance has served to wipe out the differ ence in price between Valley and Walla Walla,' wheat felling here at the same it is bringing in Salem. The question of feeding wheat to stock has become a national one, and valuable experiments are being or have been made. As the success of this movement will affect the wheat market seriously and find a means . of disposing of a troublesome surplus, we give the result of the examinations made bv the Kansas board of agriculture : "The general conclusion reached by the Kansas board of agriculture are that wheat is superior to corn, pound. for pound, as a grain to produce healthful, well-balanced growth in young animals ; mixed with corn, oats or bran it is su perior to either alone for horses ; is very much superior to corn as a milk pro ducer when fed to cows ; is a profitable food for swine of all ages, both as to framework and flesh; and has a high value as part of the grain rations for cattle especially when judiciously mixed with bran, oil cake, or other albuminous foods, tending to balance the too car bonaceous nature of the clean wheat. It is a superior - food for fowls and cannot be surpassed as a promoter of the maxi mum of egg production. It is - more profitable in all cases to break the grain by coarse grinding, rolling or crushing, as perfect digestion is thus better assured. When this cannot be done soaking for 24 or 36 hours is advised, but in this case it should be fed slowly to insure thorough mastication. . On the important question whether it will pay to sell the wheat or feed it to farm animals, the board says : .'With corn and wheat approximately the same price per bushel, it is not unprofit able to feed the wheat, yet, if it can be ground, crushed, or in some way broken, at a total cost of not to exceed 5 to 7 cents per bushel, to feed it whole is un wise.' " ' Subscribe for The Chronicle. PERSONAL MENTION. Brother Armsworthy of the Wasco Observer is in the city. Mrs. A. H. Jewitt came up from White Salmon on tnev Regulator last nignt, Rev. AL'Horn came up on the Reg' ulator laet night, returning from a trip to the Camas Prairie section. Mrs. Byrkett and daughter-in-law, Mrs. Coleman, went to Portland from White Salmon yesterday. Dr: F. C. Brosius and son Estey, came up on the local today from Hood River and spent a brief hour in the city. Mr. James Roberts came up from Hood River last night. He has been en joying the extraordinarily good fishing at Winans. He caught eight beauties yes terday and his brother, C. G., almost the first cast hooked a twenty pound salmon, which after a long and exciting battle broke the line and made its escape. DIED. At the residence of her daughter, Mrs. J. E. Johnson, at Zillah, Wash., Nov. 1, 1894, of typhoid fever, Mrs. Margaret Rohrer, aged 67, mother of Mrs. F. B. Stevens of Condon and Mrs. M. J. ChjUrchill of Salem. Mrs. Rohrer was an old and highly respected citizen of Mt. Vernon, 111., and at the time of her death was visit ing her daughters on the coast. Installation of Officers. The lodge of. Independent Workers, No. 7, I. O. G. T., installed the follow ing officers Monday evening the 6th inst: H H Leonard, C T; Mrs LS Davis, V T; Mrs E.J Robinson, Sec; Lena Snell, Asst Sec; C H Brown, Fi nancial Sec ; Isaac Joles, Treas ; Mrs Mary Leonard, chaplin: Elmer Ward, marshal ; Lillian Snell, D M ; Maie El ton, I S; George Joles, Sent; E M Har- ton, P C T; E Joles, Supt Juvenile Temple ; T N Joles, installing officer. J? or tne many accidents that occur about the farm or houBehould, Buch as burns scalds bruises, cuts,' ragged wounds, bites of animals, mosquitoes or other insects, galls or chafed spots, frost bites, aches or pains in any part of the body, or the ailments resulting from ex posure, as neuralgia, rheumatism, etc. Dr. J. H. McLean's Volcanic Notice. To Whom it May Concern : This ia to certify that the undersigned has sold out his interest in the store Kwong On Tai. He is now a member of the firms Wing Hong and Dock Hing. Seid Wing. Just Opened. Not the Political Campaign, But a full stock of the la est patterns of Dress Goods. Call and see our elegant Plushes. We have just purchased the entire stock of a fashionable millinerv store in Portland. We bought them' for 25 cents on the Dollar, and can give you bargains. Don'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 IKTo. OS. Fine Goods, A Clean Store. . Prompt Delivery. . f . . just Ffeqehed, 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 smallest profit. Special Bargains every day of the week. TERMS STRICTLY OKSH. Ym Can't Mi li OraiiTliis 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. H ERTZ