Go Is not the Time to Buy To make room for new stock, and this Hegaf dless $ of Mees. WOOD Today Our $10.00 Overcoats will be $14.00 Overcoats will be $18 to $20 Overcoats will be These Prices are. ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. The Dalles Daily Chronicle. ntered a the Postoffioe at The Dalles, Oregon as second-class matter. Clubbing List. Regular Onr price price Chronicl tti I.I. Tribute. r i .$2.50 $1.75 " ani IFetklj Oregoniu ....... 3.00 2.00 " ind Weelly Eiamuer ....... 3.25 2.25 Weekly Few Tork World. .... 2.25 2.00 Local Advertising. , 10 Cents per line (or first insertion, and 5 Cents oer line for each subsequent insertion. Special rates for long time notices. All local notices received later than 8 o'clock nil! appear the following day. TUESDAY - JANUARY 15, 1895 BRIEF MENTION. Leaves From the Notebook of Chronicle Reporters. Conductor Fowler is in the city today.' Mr. John Wellburg of Mosier waa in the city today. Mr. Wm. Wiley came in from Ante lope yesterday. John W. Russell of Kingsley made us a pleasant call today. The ladiea will be pleased to learn that Mrs. Phillips expects to go to San Francisco soon to purchase a stock of millinery. Grand exhibition drill and ball by Co 6, O. N. G, at armory first and third Wednesday of each month. Admission, gents 50 cents ; ladiea free. jl5-2t The lower honse of the legislature was organized yesterday, C. B. Morris of Marion, waa elected speaker, Ralph E. Moody chief clerk, A. J. R. Snyder, of Polk, journal clerk ; George R. Hughes of Washington, reading clerk ; Harry T. MeClellan calendar clerk, M. L. Wilmot : sergeant-at-arms. " A meeting of the members and afc tendanta of the Congregational church will be held thi8 evening, at 8 o'clock, in the church building. Questions of vital importance will come up for settle ment and it is desired that every friend of the church," whether a member not, will be present. r Tom Ward was out this afternoon I with a big sleigh drawn by four black 1 horses, and loaded with some of the very handsomest young gentlemen in the I city. Tom himself was wrapped in an immense fur overcoat, and his beard and tout ensemble, whatever that is, was topped out by a four story hat. He waa the happiest man in the state, not even excepting Jonathan Bourne. . Tiie-rtcbrder's court had considerable business today. There were three Rich ara .Does, charged' with imbibing too freely. Not being able to liquidate their fines, though good liquidators, they are doing time.- There was also one case be fore the court in its capacity of justice of the peace, a young man named Aiken being tried for assault and battery. The Wouldn't you rather have one now? Well, PEASE case grew out of a snow balling scrape, Mr. Matthews being the party injured. Mr. Aiken was fined $20, which he paid. A FIRST-CLASS COMPANY. The Judgment of All Who Heard French and his Talented Co. Last Might. The "bolden? Giant" at the opera house' last night was . beyond question the best play that has been on the boards here for a long time. We have had so many troupes of at least; medium talent that our people have grown chary about patronizing them. This was shown by the light attendance laBt night. We want to say tight here that those who miss seeing "Davy Crockett" tonight and"Phoenix" tomorrow night,are going to miss a genuine treat. The company is a first class one and their acting last night was superb. This is not the state ment of some far away newspaper but the assertion of everyone who attended the play last night. Mr. French as Jack Mason waa perfect and so was his support. It is quite certain that those who saw the "Golden Giant" last night will be in their seats early tonight to see the curtain rise on "Davy Crockett." - The way to have good actors viBit us is to patronize them when they do, and tonight everyone who appreciates a good clean play and first-class acting should see this talented company. Reserved seats at Blakeley & Houghton's, and if you take our advice, you will fill one of them.. . Commissioners' Court. The county commissioners were in session all day yesterday and today, but have about completed their labors for the term. The January term is always a long one and this has been no excep tion. The settlipg with the road super visors takes considerable time, and the business of the December term of the circuit court brings in a large quota of bills which in this case have ? been largely augmented by the trial of Savage and Klein. These bills are numerous but outside of that are not very formida ble, for most of them are small. It is quite probable the business of the term will be completed tonight, though it may ke a portion of tomorrow. Estray. ' Came to , my place, on ' Chenoweth ireek, a .white mulley cow, branded W on left hip ; crop off one ear, slit in the other ; young calf with her. Alex Anderson, BORN. I At Portland. Or.. Jan. 14th. to the aite or J. K. Davis, a daughter. When Baby was sick, -we gave her Castoria. ) When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. , When she became Hiss, she clung to Castoria. , When she bad Children, she garetheia Castoria, Subscribe for Ths Chxonicxx. marked $6.30. marked $9.40. marked $13.10. Less than Cost. & MAYS. And the Worm Turned. He waa a small, slender man, wth skim-milk eyes, both as to color and their well watered condition, and his whole appearance betokened one who had grown weary in the battle of life. Hia Prince Albert coat, that had been made for some one much larger than himself, clung affectionately to his form, in places, and was buttoned tightly un der his chin. A Fedora hat, much the worse for wear, sat Equarely upon "his molasses-candy-colored hair, as firmly as the untoward Fates did on him. A pair of pants, jeans, fit the sinuosities of his meager limbs so tightly that one could not but wonder if he put his pants on first, how he evef got his boot legs under them, yet it seemed not a very difficult feat either, if you observed that they bad but a little distance to go, the panta navmg been pulled quite young. Taken all together, he was not prepos sessing, yet when he slipped up to Col. Sinnott, of the Umatilla House, and rested his weight on one foot, while he lifted his Fedora in a deprecatory sort of way, there was such an air of listless, hopeless, woe-begone despondency about him as to make him a sort of living and pathetic protest against life. He shifted uneasily from hia right foot to his left, and then back to the right again, while the Fedora balanced on the index finger of his left hand, re volved slowly like the earth, from left to right, being twirled absent-mindedly as he requested something to eat, and ex pressed hia willingness to work tor it. Something to eat? Why, of course," said the Col; "but what can you do? Can you saw wood?' ' The gaze that had been vacant before, became fixed ; the listnessness vanished, the hat ceased to twirl, and his weight rested for an in stant firmly on both feet. Then his lower lip quivered, his left hand tremu lously sought his lace, and tire big tears gathering in his eyes, welled over, aud impinging on his weather-beaten cheeks, fell with a crescendo movement to the floor. The Col. was touched, and find ing the little fellow a seat by the stove, sat down -and by degrees won from him this tale: "You see," said the little man mourn fully,; "when you spoke of sawing woo'd you touched a tender spot. I haint done nothin' but saw wood for nigh onto fourteen years. I was married twenty years ago to my Ann, a pretty girl, too, she was, that might have done better ; but somehow, things didn't go right, and by the time our first babyjwas 5 years old and the youngest of our four was nearly a year, I had spent what little money I had saved when I got married ; and be sides, owing to the man I worked for dying, I was left without work. Well I bought a buck saw, and thought to fill the hungry months that way, until something better turned - up. When spring came, the only thing (hat . had turned up was James, that .was our fifth child. I didn't" have time then to look for' anything ' else, it taking all my time pumping the buck-saw, so many pumps, for bread, to many for potatoes, so many for paregoric and red "flannel. Good r Leave or telephone your orders to us for Strictly Tvy FIR, and OAK WOOD. We are not running a four-horse team, "but will deliver all Wood promptly. AIER & BENTON. Lord ! It makes my back ache when I think of it. "Well, it wasn't long until spring came around again, and so did Omega. That was our sixth child, a girl ; but in spite of the name, we only passed one spring until another girl arrived. More pare goric, more red flannel, and the bread and potatoes required considerable more pumps over the buck-saw. Another spring passed, and then another, with ft total failure of crops, eo to speak, and I begin to take heart again ; and then the next spring it was twins. I didn't say nothin',. but kept ,on sawing wood, bat I tell you it was tough. Every morning the streak of i day found me bowing over that saw, and I neyer .bowed myself out until it was too doo dark Jo see.. , The years fled by" quick enough , and without interest, except that. I used to get, .uneasy in ,'the Spring , Wondering if paregoric and. red flannel were going to be in the bill,: and expecting every night when I went home to hear a new; cry ; also wondering why some of the rich fellows whom I sawed wood for wasn't picked oat Jby the babies for a father to themselves, instead of eternally select ing me. It was flattering, of course, their choosing me, but hang flattery, any way ! . "Well, to make a long story short, I stuck to the buck -saw and its successors (for I wore out many a one), nntil last spring. There were thirteen in the family still at horns, a couple of the old est girls' being out at work and helping me some. Last spring, I confers it with shame, I abandoned my family and the d d back-saw. My bump of parental affection is developed sufficiently, and I would have still been pushing that buck saw, bat last spring, when the crops failed again, and I begin to pick up a bit, my Ann that's my wife took sick, or rather she took hungry; She had an appetite like a cross-cut saw, and when she had about eaten us out of a house and home, I got the county doctor to come down and see her. After he had got through with his examination, he turned to me, and says he: "Mr. Wil liamson, your wife has a tape-worm.' That day I went to my work as usual, but I never went back. I left the buck saw, for it was tuneless. I did not act hastily, but I just figured it out that fifteen mouths were all any man could be expected tafill with one buck-saw, and that nothing smaller than the county was capable of running np against the tape. I have a chronic ob jection to sawing wood, but if you have anything else, I'll do it." The Col. waa touched, and the man got his supper without tackling the wood pile. The next day the CoL called us across the street, and the first thing he said, as we smoked (at hia ex pense), was: f'Say! Do you remember that little chap with the wood-sawing experience that was here last night?" On our answering in the affirmative, he went on r "Well, sir; do you know: fur ther that he lied?" "Why, how was that, Col. ?" we asked.;. "How? . Why, the little shrimp, he had the tape-worm himself." . We are doubling our Store Room to make room for new Goods, and our present stock has to go. Everything in the shape of GIiOTHWG FOH R. A. DIETRICH, s Physician and Surgeon, DUFUE, OEBGON. All professional calls promptly attende i, iay and night. aprl4 Two Lives Saved. Mrs. Phoebe Thomas,of Junction City, 111., was told by her doctors she had con sumption and that there was no hope for her, but two bottles Dr, King's New Discovery completely cured ber and she says it saved her life.' Mr. 'Thos. Eg gers, 139 Florida St. San Francisco, suf fered from a dreadful cold, approaching Consum ption, tried without result every thing else, then bought one bottle of Dr. King'B New Discovery and in two weeks was cared. He is naturally thankful. It is such results, of which these are samples, that prove the wonderful effi cacy of this medicine in coughs and colds. Free trial bottles at the Snipes. Kinersly Drag Store. Regular size 50c. and $1.00. 'Here comes your old enemy, the ma jor!" "Is he loaded?" "I think so." "Jug or shotgun?" Atlanta Constitu tion. Carlton Cornwell, foreman of the Gazette, Middleton, N. J., believes that Chamberlain's Cough Remedy should be in every home. He used it for a cold and it effected a speedy cure. He says : "It is indeed a grand remedy, I can rec omend to all. I have also seen it used for whooping cough, with ; the best results.'' 50 cent bottles for sale by Blakeley & Houghton Drugists. ; She I'm sorry I married yon. He You ought, to be. You cut some nice girl ont of a mighty nice husband. Life. Many stubborn and aggravating cases of rheumatism that were believed to be incurable and accepted as life legacies, have yielded to . Chamberlain's Pain Balm, much to the surprise and gratifi cation of the sufferers. One application will relieve the pain and suffering and its continued use . insures an effectual cure. For sale by Blakeley & Houghton Druggists. . . - " Bneklon'l Arlncft Salve. The best salve in the world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains, corns, and all skin eruptions, and posi tively cures piles, or no pay required It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfac tion, or money reiundea. Price 25 cents per box. tor sale oy bnipes & Kin ersly ' Shiloh's Cure is sold on a guarantee. It cares incipient Consumption. It is the best cough cure. Only one cent a dose 25c ts., 50cts., and $.00. THE CEI-EBRKTED COLUMBIA BREWER, ! AUGUST BUCHLER, Prop'r. ; This " well-known Brewery ia now .turning .out. the best Beer and Portei east of the Cascades. ; ! The latest appliances , for the manufacture of good health, fol Beer have been introduced, and ony the first-class article will be placed on be market . -.:. ' EVERYBODY. JOHN I. OEOGHEOAN, Register U. 8. Land Office, 1890-1894. Business Before the United States Land Office a Specialty. Wells Block, Main St., Vancouver, Clarke Co Washington. novl6 A Long String1 of Fish Is not Carried up a Side Street. It's just about as important to let folks know that we've got extra fine Hams and Ba cori,Eastern Buckwheat Flour, genuine Maple Syrup. The Finest Coffeein town. A fine lot of New Breakfast Foods. THAT ELEGANT DAIRY BUTTER (Dufur For all those who callon. us we have bargains in Fine Goods; for those who don't, sympathy. J. B. CROSSEN, Grocer. Ask Central for 62. . BUY YOUR GROCERIES We carry everything that is good to eat, and at such prices that we should have the trade of all hungry people. Try our Teas and Coffees. Can give you an excellent blend ed Coffee at 25 per pound. Ask for Halivor Butter. Telephone No. 60.