GLOVE SALE i SATURDAY SPECIAL-. I o t I I o Williams' Quality Regular Williams' Welt Pique Street Glove ..Regular Foster, best quality :. Regular P. Centemeri , .Regular ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. 9 9 o 3 ? PEASE & MAYS - A ne-w Fall Suit calls for a new pair of Gloves. Our stock is bright and clean -with new stuff. New blood-red shades, and every pair guaranteed. ' . Special ' Reduction For SATURDAY ONLY. $1.00 1.75 : 1.50 2.25 Sale, $ .85 Sale, . lXJO Sale, 1.25 Sale, 1.25 if Tight Heaters. Air Tight Heaters are the best and most Economical heaters-made. Call and See our . STOVES and get our prices before buying1 elsewhere. MAIER & BENTON The Dalles. The Original Air-Tight Stove, a-A Hagey's King Hester. Take a look at them before you buy something else. They are all right. Sold only by MAYS & CROWE- Remember We have strictly First-class FIR, OAK and MAPLE WOOD To sell at LOWEST MARKET RATES, v Phone 25. JOS. T. PETERS & CO The Dalles Daily GtooniGie. SATURDAY. OCT. 31. 1896 Come Help Us Celebrate. The Dalles will celebrate the Opening of the Locks on Thursday, Nov. 5th, and cor dially invite the people of all sections to join in the celebra tion. R. F. GIBONS, GEO. RUOH, N. B. SINNOTT, MAX VOGT, P. HOUGHTON, F. W. WILSON, Committee on Invitation. WAYSIDE GLEANINGS. Random Observations ana Local Events of Lesser Magnitude. Two holidays next week. Hon. Ruf'is Mallory Monday night. Circuit court convenes in The Dalles on the 19th of November. ' On the fourth page of this issue will be found a fac simile of the ballot to be used on next Tuesday. - - Hon. E. L. Smith will speak at the Vogt opera house Monday evening, di viding the time with Hon. Rufus Mal lory. The final grand rally of Republicans will occur Monday night. It is -expected that fully 1,000 Republicans will be in line. There will be Democratic speaking at the Baldwin opera bouse this evening by Hon. W. M. Pierce and Thomas Har lan of Mosier. . An anti-gossip society has been start ed by six young ladies of Pendleton. They say nothing of anybody, unless they can say something good and pleas ant. This is very nice. We hope thev will not become envious of each other. The ladies of the city who wish to march iar the McKinley parade Monday night are requested to assemble at Fra ternity hall at 8 o'clock sharp tonight A committee of ladies ' will welcome them and all details will be arranged. The rhetorical exercises of the public school b yesterday proved very pleasur able. They comprised readings from Sir Walter Scott's "Lady of the Lake,'" and the field was covered so well that the entire plot was reproduced. Twenty one pupils took part in the entertaining exercise. All this talk about the gold standard or the silver standard is as sounding brass here in Grant county, where we see bat little of either. Here we have to content ourselves with doing business under the potato standard or the cord wood standard, both tbeBe commodities being legal tender and Dassine for mnnnv of ultimate redemption for debts both public and private. Canyon City News. An exchange libels our city in the fol lowing manner : "A young man was arrested recently in The Dalles charged with kiesing a woman against her will in the public highway. The prisoner pleaded that she was in bloomers, and that he mistook her for a long-lost brother." The Republican campaign will be fittingly concluded in The Dalles Monday night by two of the most finished orators it has thus far been the pleasure of Dalles audiences to hear. Hon. Rufus Mallory and Hon. E. L. Smith will de fend Republican principles on that evening at the Vogt opera house. The Republicans and all doubtful voters should attend this meeting. McKinley Mounted Squadron. All McKinley voters having saddle horses, who intend taking part in the great demonstration to be held Monday evening, will please report to. Grant Mays at Mays & Crowe's store, not later that 6 o'clock p. m. on the above-mentioned day. Committee. " Died, On Upper Mill creek, on Friday even ing, at 3:30 o'clock, Mrs. Laura A. Can non, aged 40 years. Mrs. Cannon was a pioneer of Lane county, having crossed the plains from Missouri when a little child. She was married to W. M. Kelsay in Lane county in 1867. Widowed in 1873, she was mar ried again in the same county to J. E. Cannon. The family then removed to Grant county, and to Wasco county in December, 1872. She leaves two child ren by her first husband and seven by the second. The funeral will occur at 1 o'clock tomorrow from the reeldence. (Eugene papers please copy.) - The Jurors Drawn. The jurors for the November term of circuit court have been drawn and are as follows : RB Hood, T VanNorden, N Patter son, Geo Rnch, J G Koontz, Geo An derson, C E Chrisman, Marshall Hill, C E Bayard, W McCrum, Hans Hansen The Dalles ; LN Blowers, Wm Slinger land, E E Savage, Frank Chandler, Simpaon Copple, John . Parker, F H Stanton, H F Davidson, C G Roberts, N C Evans, Hood River; A-J McHaley, Polk Butler, H E TMoore, Nansene; F C Sexton, G E Nolan, W H H TDufur, John W Dickens, Willard M. Taylor, Dufuf; J B Haverly, - Boyd ; Patrick Bolton, Xingsley. ; HON. BINGER HERMANN. Be Made One of the Oreatest of the Campaign. Speeches Election Sinner. Whatever side your weak-kneed broth er is on in this campaign, take him around to the store formerly occupied by W.' A. Johnston, ori Washington street, and by investing 25 cents you can put him in such a happy frame of mind that there will be no question that he will vote right. Dont forget the place. Get a good dinner, and help a charitable cause. Hon. Binger Hermann delivered last evening one of the most forcible speeches of the compaign. Though the audience was not the largest that has so far greeted Republican speakers, it was ! wildly enthusiastic, and as Mr. Her mann warmed to his subject .they par- ' took of something of his wonderful fire and defiance. The speaker was pleas antly introduced by Attorney W. H. Wilson, who made a few remarke of great force and candor. Mr. Hermann first commented upon the near approach of the opening of the locks, and took a share of the credit for having enabled them to be opened earlier by getting the government to finish them by the contract system. He said it- was a proud moment for him that be would be yet in congress when the . mammoth job was disposed of. Turning to the political campaign he paid a compliment to both candidates by declaring they were personally with out blemish. In congress he had ex perienced pleasant relations with Wm. McKinley and W. J. Bryan, six years with the former and four with the latter. He found them to be possessed of gentle deportment, kind, courteous, obliging and affable. But as to capacity there was a wide difference. There is no evi dence of tbo. fitness of W. J. Bryan for the high honor of being elected to the presidency of the United States. He then dweit upon the great and match less record of Hon. Wm. McKinley. He was the first to be mustered into the servic&of the U. S. army during the war and the last to be mustered out. He had served fourteen years in congress, and while there formulated the match less McKinley bill. Elected governor 'of the great state of Ohio he was re-elected to the Bame position. He declared that the present issue was a Democratic dodge to elect a president. There was nothing said about it four years ago or even two years ago. The cry-of the Democrats then was prosperity was de pendent upon the advent of free trade. A president and congress put such a policy in force, and the utmost disaster following unexampled prosperity, the Democratic party realized the hopeless ness of again electing a president unless some new cry was raised to distract the attention of the people. They found it in free silver and will now try to delude the people again. . So they made a fusion. The Demo cratic party has been swallowed . in Populism. I asd, where are our ancient and honored opponents those foemen we were 'once proud to meet and were worthy of our steel? Where are they? I reply that five autocrats sitting in the city of Portland wiped out the work of the party conventions, erased the names of the presidential electors put forward by them and substituted a new set, com posed of two Populists, one Democrat and one bimetalic Republican. Mr. Hermann then entered into a particular discussion of the financial question, covering every point which has been touched upon heretofore by The Chronicxe. He reaffirmed that when there was a difference ofbut two cents in the value of gold and silver the dearer metal went into hiding; thatHbe act of 1873 was not done, as charged, by stealth ; told of the enormous output of silver dollars since 1873 which ought to settle forever the claims against the Re publican party for unfriendliness toward silver; that while the Democratic party, as represented by Bryan, desires to in crease the amount of circulating medium they make noprovision -for the circula tion of that medium ; compared the per capita of silver-using countries, assert ing that India's was $3.64, China's $1.75, - while the United States was $21.48. He then turned to the protection issue, upon which he devoted about an hour and a half. Wen he concluded there was no one present who doubted that the tariff was a very important issue. During this part of his address he centured his eyes upon a certain in dividual in the audience at his right, personifying that individual as the em bodiment ot the Populist or free silver party. As he progressed he seemed to become maddened atthe party thus personified, although with a certain dogged courage the one addressed did not eeem to appear to feel the keen shafts of ridicule which were directed at him. With a supreme effort, the con cluding peroration, occupying full minute of time, was put directly at the man, and, though, the roof quaked with the applause and labghter that the au dience" gave the speaker, the individual addressed sat inert and unmoved, with out emotion and without protest. Mr. Hermann drove home in this manner some great truths, constituting bis entire speech one of the most, if not thu most, forcible of the entire cam paign. . ' '.- . . UOItN. In The Dalles, Oct. 30th, to the wife of James White, a daughter. In The Dalles, October 30th, to the wife of J. L.. Hollett. a Bon. Save the wrappers Hoe Cake Soap wrappers are worth a cent apiece. Ask Pease & Mays for premium book. jly24-i Awarded Highest Honors World's Pair, Gold Medal, Midwinter Fair. When yog mant to fray 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 goods are first-class. Agents for the celebrated WAISTBURG "PEFRLESS" FLOUR. Highest cash price paid for WHEAT. OATS and BARLEY. GEORGE RUCH PIONEER GROCER. Successor to Cbrisman & Corson. 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. School Books Supplies. JL JL fm CHEAH1 Most Perfect Made, do Vests the Standard. Jacobson Book & Music Co. No. 174 Second Street, New Vogt Block, The Dalles, Oregon. -DEALER IN- POINTS, OILS AND GLASS. And the Most Complete and Latest Patterns and Designs in ' WALL PAPER. WALL PAPER. PRACTICAL PAINTER anaPAPER HANGER. . None bnt the best brands of J. W. MASURY'S PAINTS used in all our work, and none but th most skilled workmen employed. Agents for Masury Liquid Paints. No chem icel combination or soap mixtare. A first-class article in all colors. All orders promptly attended to. , Store and Faint Shon corner Third and "Washington Sts., The Dalles. Orcot