Q3) o Mr Ti The Original Air-Tight Stove, t (ft- 6 m Heaters Ma Kiii Heater ( g t O '6 t That is -what our GREAT SHOE SALE has been. And in order for those -who have not availed themselves of the opportunity of se curing Footwear .-.at a Great Reduction," We will Continue Our Sale One Week Longer. See Window for Goods. & MAYS o i 6 Air Tight Heaters; are the best and most Economical heaters made. Call and See our STOVES and get our prices before buying elsewhere. ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. O Take a look at them "before you buy something else. They are all right. Sold only by MAYS & CROWE. MAIER & BENTON The Dalles. Remember We have strictly First-class FIR, OAK and MAPLE WOOD ., , To sell at LOWEST MARKET HATES. Phone 25. JOS. T. PETERS & CO The Dalles Daily Chronicle. FRIDAY. OCT. 9i 1896 . Weather Forecast. Portland. Oct. 9, 1896. For Eastern Oregon Tonight and tomor row fair and stationary; frost tomorrow morn inc. Paguk. Observer. WAYSIDE GLEANINGS. Random Observation and Local Events of Lesser Hsgnltnde. Watson, tell us of the night, What the signs of promise are! "Sewall's going to spoil the fight; Bryan is a falling star." Gen. Geo. H. Williams Saturday night. On account of the (Republican rally, the social to be given at the Good Tem plars hall Saturday night, will be post poned one week. . ' The McKinley club of 8-Mile will meet at White's school house Monday night at 7 o'clock. ' Good speakers will address the meeting. Every citizen in our city who intends to uphold McKinley and Hobart is cor dially invited to fall in line at McKinley headquarters tomorrow evening at 7 o'clock. There will be no meeting of . the Mc Kinlev club tonight, 'but members are requested to call at headquarters, Second and JLaugblin streets to try -on tne new uniforms. The seventy-fifth anniversary of the Gesang Verein - will be celebrated in Portland at the . exposition. A - large number of -Germans will ' attend from The Dalles; " ' ' '" Found A draft on the county treas urer of Colusba county, Cal., which owner may secure by applying' to Mr Geo. Darch, corner of Fifteenth and Fentland streets. Marshal Humphrey came up' today and arrested G. Moulton for sending ob- scene matter through the 17. S. mails The witnesses are in Portland and he ' was taken there this afternoon for a pre liminary bearing. ' The McKinley club respectfully ask the merchant and business houses, who -favor the election of McKinley & Hobart, to close the- stores and offices at 7 o'clock tomorrow (Saturday) evening, Oct. 10th, for the purpose to allow all to form in j the march. ""' :' ' : j All members of the Geeaug Verein Harmonie intending to -participate in the celebration at Portland, are request-, ed to assemble at the depot at 12 :30 to morrow (Saturday, Oct. 10th). All those holding receipts for their transpor tation will receive their tickets in the car. By order of committee." Mr. O. B. Whitmore is in the city looking after the interests of the- Ar ' tisans. That order, originating in Port land, now has over 3,000 members. A meeting was held at 4 o'clock this after noon at the hall for the purpose of in structing in the work. The fullest pos aible attendance is requested. - " jMri, James .4lly of Kingsley came in last evening." He is a staunch Kepubli can and one of the most unswerving champions of McKinley .'protection "and sound money 'in the state. : -He . was present when Judge Webster. spoke at Kingsley and pronounces him one of tne most able and convincing speakers of the campaign. ' . MrB. H. E. 'Balch left today for San Francisco, to be absent several weeks. She took with her some curious-looking pets, being a pair of Arctic cats,, with long white silken fur adapted to the cold weather of that region. These cats are descendants of the pets of a Mrs. John soil, a very wealthy woman of San Francisco, now - deceased, - who be queathed a fund of $20,000 to' care for her cats as long as they lived. Gracie, the little daughter of F. E. Brown, of Fossil, last week, had a play house in the sand. She found in the house what she thought was a toad, and put her hand down to haul out the in truder,' but concluded it was : too repul sive, so she called on a boy to help her. They discovered then that. the supposed toad was a huge rattler. Fortunately both escaped without being bitten. ' v Rev. .WV C- Curtis has just received a letter -announcing the death of Mr. Rufus Roscoe at Victoria, B. C. .His funetal occurred at 2:30 p. m. ..Wednes day. The deceased was very much re spected and greatly beloved by those who knew him in this community, where be lived prior to four years ago. The remaining members of the family consist of a wife, a son -and a -daughter, to whom the sympathies of this commu nity are universally extended.- Mrs. S. Myrtle left for Boise last night after coming hp from Cascade Locks. Seven months ago her husband left her at the Locks, bound for Sitka, Alaska, on a fishing expedition,' since which time she has heard nothing from him She became destitute, her funds becom ing exhausted. Coming to The Dalles she found friends, being a- ladyof refine ment, and was assisted by Judge Mays to reach Boise, where she has friends of long standing who will help her. - Anyone who neglects to hear Gen Geo. H. Williams at - the opera house Saturday night will have cause for - sin cere regret. Mr. Williams has been 1 hiBtory-muker himself for a long period of years. ' 'No man in the state has been more intimately acquainted with the great statesmen of this country who have operated on the field of action since the beginning of the civil war. He is man of remarkable discernment, of wide information and is possessed of an Intel ligence naturally gifted, and later trained to wrestle with the great prob lems of economic science as they have appeared. , Trimmed hats at the Elite Millinery parlors from $1 Up, to suit everybody. . . oct9-dlw-wlt Bargains at pianos' Book & Music Co. at the Jacobsen -Leave orders at ..The Dalles Commis aion Co.'s. store, for dressed , chickens, xeiepnonea izo anu zoo. .King -'em up. -'"' sll-dlm THE' GREAT PENNOYER. ScholarlT Effort Bat Devoid " ol Ex-Governor Pennoyer began an ress before a large house at the Vogt last evenings which grudnal ly dim i nisbed as the evening wore away. . Mr.Pennoy er is pleasing only as a scholar. He has the refinement of language of a polished orator and his frequent references to the classics and sacred history, , though the latter was sometimes, adapted . .some times mis-quoted, showed him to pos sess the arts and . graces of a trained lecturer. ..Mr. Pennoyer has the reputa tion of being more or less demagogic, and the accuracy of the report was the most apparent at the -point in his ad dress when he wiped an imaginary tear from one eye, as he told of an appeal to him for work by some, breadwinner's son in Portland- ' His speech was other wise disappointing to his free silver con stituents. -He neglected ..argument for the subtler passion ; -of -prejudice, and strove to arrav class against class bv touching the chords of sympathy, which though misguided, has been the most effective weapon of the Populist party. ' The first part of his address was in de fense of the often discarded policy at popular elections of free trade. ;' This was a grave mistake, and one which Bryan never commits. When he told of the beauties of free wool, the free, silver Republicans should have, winced as they remember how they have ' in' the past borne aloft the banner of protection to American industries, have cheered. and Btamped and' crowed at the ratification meetings of Grant, Garfield and Harri son over the triumph of the sole issue of those remarkable campaigns. But they did not. 'Those few former Republicans who were on the platform, bore, patient ly and with a stolid indifference the threadbare argument of the free trader, Pennoyer, when every utterance should have been gall and worm word to. their souls. . At times even tbey ' were sur prised into the inconsistency of cheering. To what base uses may we all return. Great Ceeaar,' dead and turned to - clay, might stop a bole to keep the wind away." Finally quitting the tariff question, Mr. Pennoyer attempted a discussion of the monetary issue. In Tain the silver men strained - their ' ears : to ; bear one comforting 'assurance, one ( argument, one real," tangible fact, stripped of rhetorical flourishes, which would bear the X ray of Republican ' declarations. Away back into the misty past did, Pen noyer stray to show how the single gold standard has disrupted past civilizations He pretends to find, that this was. the policy of Rehoboam, who . succeeded King Solomon as King of the Jews, that the Populists of that day clamored for free silver, and tailing, the glory of the Jewish nation .departed. -forever. He said Judas was a gold bug, and that his remorse was occasioned in part by his not making a gold contract, instead of taking his pay in silver for the betrayal of the Savior. And that Christ himself failed to find. language adequate to con demn the money changers of the temple and scourged them from it with the lash. . This is the kind of pap that Pen noyer fed to an audience thirsting for truth. Sacred history is distorted and d- (.ridiculed .at his, hands to tickle the ear of the irreligious and the unthinking. Mr. Pennoyer has an education fitting him for a gentleman and a scholar. 'It is disappointing for the Bryan men who employed him, and who expected to listen to some argument, to find that he gave them a lecture of an . idealist, a pot ppurri from .the classics and .ancient history, - ' . - - - . Milk May Cause tbe Typhoid Fever. When you utant to bay Perhaps the cause of the typhoid fever in our midst may be found. in the milk used by our citizens. It is well known that milk is more capable of con tamination than any other product. To the repeated demonstrations that ty phoid fever germs find their most con genial habitat' in milk, and propagate faster in that liquid than in any other, may be added the . recent experience of Cambridge, Mass., and New Haven. In the former city the prevalence of typhoid fever, which at one time threatened to reach the proportions of an epidemic, has been made the subject of a. thorough investigation by Professor Sedgwick, of the -Massachusetts institute of technol ogy," and. he , has succeeded in tracing every -case to the milk supply of the afflicted families. There was a case of typhoid in the family of, the milkman, and tie was permitted to continue to ply his trade, and -eo communicate the dis ease to his .customers.' In .New Haven the concentration -of typhoid fever cases in one section of the city facilitated the inquiry, of. .the health .authorities, who found evidence ..which -led them to be lieve that the majority of the cases had their origin in infected milk, furnished by one dealer and boughs by him from a farmer -in .whose family there had been a case of the fever. : , Ono result of the investigation in New Haven is .the drafting of an ordinance, which awaits tbe sanction of the, city council,, and which-provides for the licensing of milk- venders -and for . an inspection of , the milk carried by them, and an inspection also pf .the sources of,, supply with their surroundings.' . - - - Seed Wheat, Feed Wheat, - Rolled Barley, Whole Barley, Oats, Rye, Bran, Shorts, Or anything in the Feed Line, go to the WASCO : WAREHOUSE. " Our prices are low and our foods are firt-claps. Agents for the celebrated WAISTBURG "PEFRLESS" FLOUR. Highest cash price paid for WHEAT. OAT8 and BARLEY. GEORGE RUCH PIONEER GROCER. Successor to Chrisman & Corson. 1 '-.. ; ' : . I FULL LINE OF STAPLE and FANCY GROCERIES. Again in business at the old stand. -I would be pleased to ' see all my former patrons. Free delivery to any. part of town. - Awarded Highest Honors World's Fair, Gold Medali Midwinter Fair." K School Books Supplies. 't J i ?0maVis.aUlis i ii-7MstsPerfectr Made. Jacobson. iBook & Music Co. ' No. 174 Second Street,' ' Nevir Vogt-Block, The Dalles, Oregon. ' - : DEALER IN PAINTS, OILS AND G LASS. s And the Most Complete and Latest Patterns and Designs in WALL PAPER. WALL PAPER. ' PRACTICAL' PAINTER Mrt' PAPER HANGER. ' None but the best brands of j. - W. MASURY'S ;PAINT8 used in all our work,- and none but the moBt skilled. workmen employed. -Agents for Masury Liquid Paints. No chem icel combination-or. soap mixture. : A first-class .article in all colors. All orders promptly attended to. .... . -. ... ...; and Paint gJioncpriier Third and .Washington Bts., : ".. The Dalles. Oreoa