il Hi Embroideries and White Goods. We invite the public to inspect our latest arrival in novelties of Embroi deries. The assortment is very extensive, with prices ranging from ' 5c to $1.00 per yard. We call your attention to our special lines of India Linon, Victoria Lawn, French Nainsooks, Egyptian Dimity, French. Swiss, Colored. Dotted Swiss, Plain and Colored Piques. - -See Our Center Window. Call and see some Original and Exclusive Novelties in Ladies' Wrappers. Just received them. ' PEASE & MAYS. ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. Helium1 Pruning Shears, Pruning Knives, Budding" Knives, Pruning Saws, Tree -Pruning Shears, Bean Pumps. Myers Pumps, Sulphur, Limq, Salt, Dunne's Solid Sprays, AT BEJITOjrS - 1 We have the largest assortment of Bicycles" that has ever been carried in this city, and to reduce our stock, have decided that to all CASH buyers we will sell at greatly re duced prices for the- NEXT TEN DAYS ONLY. Prices made now will only hold good for whet V on hand. Call and see our display. SECOND-HAND BICYCLES for sale ch , cycles rented at 25c per hour. Bicycles repaired. ready Bi- Removal Hotice. Nolan's Book Store now located at No. 54 Second Street, near Union. Th Tyijli Tal ley Creamery Is Delicious. Ask Vanbibber & Worsley for it. 45c. Every Square is Full Weight. CREAMERY Tygh Valley A. A. B. TELEPHOISTB 3STCD. SO. The Dalles Daily Cbronicie. ntered a the Postoffice at The Dalles, Oregon as second-class matter. . TUESDAY. - MARCH 10, 1896 BRIEF MENTION. Leaves From the Notebook of Chronicle Reporters. Fine weather again. Forecast Fair today; stationary to . morrow. "India" tonight at the Congregational ohurch. The date of the Orchestra Union en- teriainment is the 17th of March. , Th TTmatilln. a.n( thfi (Tnlnmhia hntaln have each put a runner on the boat. y Mr. J. E. Hanna of Hood River has been appointed a notary public for Ore gon. Fern Lodge Degree of Honor have pre pared a very entertaining program, which appears in another column. A new tailoring establishment is be ing pat in at No. 83 Washington street, by H. E. Balch & Co., late of San Fran cisco. Marriage licenses were granted yester day to Henry Hardicy and Edith Whet stone, and Darwin Bradley and Minnie Angell. The Spanish Students Concert Co. will entertain music-lovers in The Dalles IFriday and Saturday evenings. See advertisement, top of second page. Mr. W. L. Harrington of Dufur an nounces himself -as a candidate for county superintendent of schools, sub ject to the decision of the Republican county convention. Those who have attended former en ' tertainmenta given at St. Mary's Acad emy, are looking forward to March 17th, when the pupils will give another of their pleasing efforts. Tickets can be procured at many of the business houses. Circuit court for Sherman county con vened yesterday with the largest docket in the history of the county. The crim inal cases will occupy the time of the court for several days. Several attor neys of The Dalles are in attendance. "India," though separated from us by vast waters and continents, is none the less a great nation. It will be' interest ing to study its old civilization and com pare its present development with our own. Mrs. E. W. Allen will tell of its people and custons tonight, accompanied by fitting stereopticon views. In the Oregonian's amusement column today appears the following, taken from its criticism of the Spanish Students : Edna and Eva Taylor, two bright, hand some little girl?, who made such a hit in "Fatinitza," again scored a success last night with their dancing, being re called, for which they gave the cocoanut dance, with calcium-light effects. ' ; ' Jim Crate eluded the vigilance of the marshal yesterday and escaped. While Crate bad the liberty of the back yard for a few moments, and Blakeney was talking to a lady in the office, Jim cleared the fence and was not discovered by the other Jim until two blocks away. Jim chased Jim, but he got away. It is believed he is still in hiding in the city, and when the officers catch him next time he will probably wear an iron or nament. Mrs. E. W. Allen of Portland, who will lecture this evening at the Congre-f gational church on : the subject o "India," will have a great deal to say o; interest pertaining to that far-awaj corner of the world. To impress it thd more fully on the mind, the lecture wili be illustrated by stereopticon views said to be the finest instrument in tLi state and bandied by one of the mos skillful operators. - The School Election. Y The polls for the school election openec andfc lively during the entire afternoon when the polls closed at 6 o'clock there were yet a few stragglers who made their appearence to vote, but were prevented by the hour having expired. More than the usual number of ladies were out yes terday. The total vote amounted to 327. The several candidates and their vote is as follows : FOR DIBECT0E. Adams .' 2185 narnett lUb . FOB CLEBK. Jacobsen 1981 Kraus. 129 MAJORITIES. Adams ' 112 Jacobsen 69 HERMIT WOODRUFF. He Lives In a Cliff Near the Cltj and lias Many Visitors. John Woodruff has solved a part of the social problem in tiis own way. He is living as a hermit about a mile west of the city in the hillside above the Odd Fellows' cemetery, Woodruff is an ofaL man, who last worked at the Columbia notel about two years ago as night clafrk. is a good conversationalist, an'omnivorous reader, and has the mildest manners arid most innocent cast of countenance conceivable . The gentleness or his disposition shows in every lineament of his countenance; he has the hair and eyes of a poet, the mobile mouth of an idealist. He has a smile for every visitor and is ready to talk and always has something to say A FAMILY EPISODE. A Wife Swaps Her Hnssiand and Chil dren for Her Gaest and His at 2 o'clock p. m. at the office of Wm.iKupon every subject brought up, either Micbell yesterday, Votine continued iiin the realms of sience, politics o: igion. SCHOOL ELECTIONS. Vlns The Antl - A. P. A. Candidate In Portland. Portland, March 9. Probably the most exciting school election in the his tory of Portland took place today. It was a straight issue between the A. P. A. and those opposed Ito the principles of that organization. Prof. R.K.War ren was elected by a majority of 630 over S. H. Finley, who was put forward by the A. P. A. The total vote of the city was 7,000. Long before 2 p. m., the hour set for opening the polls, doz ens of carriages,, placarded with the names of the candidates, were bringing people in to. vote. Challengers for both sides were at every polling place and many quarrels occurred though no ser ious trouble took place. . RESULT IN PENDLETON. Pendleton, March 9. Thomas G. Hailey, anti-A. P. A; candidate, was elected Ecbool director today by a ma jority of ten in a total vote of 370. IN EUGENE DIFFEBENT. Eugene, Or., March ,9. An exciting school election brought out about 85G votes and resulted in the choice of C. S. Frank, the A. P. Al candidate, by a ma jority of 130 over G. B. Dorris, the op position candidate. Auction Sale. Wednesday at 11 a. m. J. B. Crossen will sell at Vogt'a store, a large assort ment of dry goods and clothingetc. m8-td HiS flomifille fce calls" Rock Castle. It is hewn out of the conglomerate rock which juts out from the hillside about a hundred feet from the base of the moun tain. The doorway is just sufficient to admit an ordinary sized man. Enter ing it yesterday a reporter found the old man at his usual occupation, reading. (Before he entered upon his present life he was a great patron of the free reading room above Pease & Maj' store.) There is room comfortably for four or five persons within. He was sitting by a fire, within an ingeniously contrived 1 fire place made of an old piece of stove fitted in the side of the rock wall, a chimney leading up through the side of the cliff and out to the air. A single bunk extends along the rear wall, which comprises the greatest width of his dwelling. There are a few cooking utensils, but these serve only for him to live in the most primitive way. Out side is a woodshed, the roof of which is an overhanging cliff. The most unique feature of bis dwelling is a needle-shaped rock about twenty feet high, rising from nearly over his abode, which inspired the name Rock Castle.. It sets off the cave very neatly. Though forgotten by the world in this out of the way place, he does not the world forget. He has a splendid birds-eye view of the city, the winding river and the diatanttnountaine towards three points of ' the compass. What thougbtsevolve in his mind as he gazes upon the smoking chimneys of the city, the bustle and activity of a world of which he once constituted a part, is beyond conjecture. His needs are few and they do not trouble him. He comes to the city every two or three days to re plenish his larder and gets water from a spring he has discovered near by. . . It is jnst possible the old man does get enough to eat. It was remarked by a visitor yesterday he does not look -as well as formerly. Perhaps it might bo well for some of his former friends to in vestigate. Though a hermit, be does not possess that austerity commonly, supposed to exist with that species of misanthropists. His greatest need he expresses to be reading matter. Woodruff has spent the winter in his present dwelling. It Is warm in winter and cool in summer. He is satisfied with it, and seems to be enjoying his declining years in this unusual manner. Mr. Darwin Bradley and Mrs. Minnie w. . ........ Angel were married at 8 o clock last feevening at the Columbia hotel mere is something or a romance con nected with this event which is worthy of presentation by The Chronicle. Mr. Bradley has been a travelling photogra pher, a man of family, but of habitually (limited circumstances. His wife died at khe residence of Oscar Angel in Novem ber last, after a very Bhort illness, and was buried November loth. The Brad- leys for several months previous had been invited by Mr. Angel to make his biouse their home, sympatby for them an their straitened circumstances induc ing him to make the offer. When Brad ley's wife died, leaving three children motherless, he was unable to meet the funeral expenses, and the county footed the bill for the coffin. In a short time domestic infelicity was apparent between Mr. and Mrs. Angel, resulting in a divorce suit and the de parture of Mrs. Angel about January 1st to relatives in the Willamette valley. The divorce was granted Mr. Angel on January 15th last, together with the cus tody of four children, ranging in age fcom 9 to 14 years. The next 6tep in the Bradley-Angel history was the marriage last evening of Darwin Bradley 'and Mrs. Minnie Angel at the Columbia hotel. The woman who chose against husband and children to marry her guest and care for his chil dren arrived in the city the day or the day before the ceremony. The divorced husband beard of it and insisted upon being present at the ceremony, and aa a matter of fact was the 'first to congratu late the newly-wedded pair. It has not been two months since the Angel divorce was granted, nor four months since Bradley's wife died, therefore the wedding appears a little hasty under the circumstances. An Oregon statute forbids the marriage of a divorced person within six months time from the granting of the decree. But there are devious wavs to evade the law, Land when two hearts beat as fondly as those ol the impecunious Bradley ana the rash Mrs. Angel, love laughs at lock smiths as of yore. - . Awarded Highest Honors World's Fair, Gold Medal, Midwinter Fair. Most Perfect Made. 40 Years the Standard. BIG Our entire stock of Pianos to be sold before April 1st. We must vacate our store building', and anything" in our line at cut prices. Rather than to move our whole stock we will sell you anything you may want before we move, AT COST. Jacobsen Book & Music Company, 162 Second Street, THE DALLES, OR. Try a Bottle OF- At wood's- Syrup of Tar, Horehound and Wild Cherry for that Cough. DONEIili'S DtUG STORE. The Dalles Commission Co., -DEALERS IM- Coal, Ice and ProMce, Mp ani' Bomestic Fruits aM totals. t Oysters, Fish, Poultry and Game In Season. NORTH POWDER ICE, which is noted for its purity and laeting qualities. ROCK SPK1XOS. KOLN, ANTHRACITE Md GEORGES CHEEK. ' FOB 3FUHr. and HANCFACTIIBINO . l'lKFOBES, Phone 128 and 255. Corner Second and Washington Streets. Consignments Solicited. Goods received for Cold Storage and Forwarding.