O 3 if Tight Heaters. Up-to- g! The Original Air-Tight Stove 6 Hagey's If you want to be "one of the boys," you had better fall" in line and have 3rourself fitted to one of the King CELEBRATED o I c Date Clothin Heater 1 o i C If you want a swell 3-Button Cutaway 3 SUITS. A Complete Stock of this famous make of Clothing and at Popular Prices. Round-cornered Sack Suits in all the popular Cheviots, with fly fronts and flaps on pockets, are the latest?" You can have it, with Trousers of the same or some . yother pattern if you choose. .' y '" . - B ' 4-V 2 r. We are putting on sale todav our new arriv- Oyb VlOLiling. als in Boys' and Young Men's Clothing. Come early if you want some of the good things. See Our Window for Display. ! ALL GOODS MARKED IN I PLAIN FIGURES. PEASE & MAYS Air Tight Heaters are the best and most Economical heaters made. Call and See our "stoves and get - our prices before buying1 else-where. MAIER & BENTON The Dalles. Take a look at them before you buy something else They are all right. Sold only by MAYS & CROWE. Rememb'er. We have strictly First-class FIR, OAK and MAPLE WOOD To sell at 'LOWEST MARKET RATES. Phone 25. V JOS. T. PETERS & CO The Dalles Daily Chronicle. WEDNESDAY. NOV. 18. 1896 Weather Foiecsst. Portland, Nov. 18, 1896. For Eastern Oregon Tonight aud tomor row, fair and cold. Pague. Observer. bey all refused to work they are getting in condition for . starting a famine on there liberation by taking in a diet of bread and water. It is really a pity they -refuse to work, as the street cross ing in front of the city jail is in about the worst condition of any in the city. Resolutions of Condolence WAYSIDE GLEANINGS. Random Observations and Local Events of Lesser Magnitude. Money loaned on pereonal security, or real estate near the city. Inquire of Joel G. Koontz. novl8-dlm' Four hundred sheep were shipped on the Regulator this morning to Trout dale, and 200 went on the cars to Ta coma. The many friends of Harry Liebe will be pleased to learn that his condition is somewhat improved. He has had a hard and long straggle, bat it is hoped that the worst is oyer, and that he may move along steadily on the up grade to health. Heater and Hawthorne were taken before Justice Filloon yesterday after noon. Heater pleaded guilty to an as sault upon McNeil and was fined $50. They were bound over to await the ac tion of the grand jury for the beating of Brooks. The Columbia is still coming np slow ly, but it takes more than two weeks rain to make what might be called a rise in the old giantess. It takes the melting snows and concentrated rains of nearly a million square miles of territory to wake her np. ' Reports from all the country aronnd us show that the ground hai received a more thorough soakingshan it has had at this time of the year, forsxtany years past. As it is probable the price of wheat will remain good for another year at least, the outlook for our farmers is just at present exceedingly bright. The sturgeon catch seems to be get ting better again, from the iispiay made at the express office. The big robber nosed sharks are said to make fine bone less codfish, but they are certainly not an appetizing object to look at. Among the lot received for shipment today is one 300 pound fellow that undreesed would have weighed nearly ISO pounds more. The picture of Rath and Naomi, painted by Mrs. John Filloon, was raffled for last night at the Snipes Kinersly Drug. Store. -The -numbers corresponding to . the tickets were all ." placed in a box, and just as everything was completed, Miss Myrtle Michel! - entered the store, and was at once re quested to 'draw the winning number, Reaching' in the box she drew out the number 31, which ticket was held by , Mr. Orion Kinersly. But one hobo ornamented the dock at , tbe recorder's office this morning, and he was an old man that could hardly be classed as a professional.'- He was fined $5, bat will be permitted to continae his . travels today. Yesterday ' five abl bodied tramps were sentenced, and as A MYSTERIOUS CASE. The following preamble and resolu tions were adopted by Wasco Tribe, No. 16, 1. O. R. M., at their last council held at the wigwam on the sleep of the 17th sun. Beaver moon, G. S. D., 405: Whkbbas, The Great Spirit has re moved from our reservation to . the Happy Hunting Grounds above, oar be loved brother, W. Cede r son ; therefore be it ' - Resolved, That in the sudden manner in wmcn toe inscrutable decree of tne Mishe Manitou was carried out in the removal of onr brother, the shock filled as with horror,' and to us it appeared that a giant tree while in the, vigor of pring had been stricken down, and a vacancy' had been made which it would be difficult to fill. Resolved, That in the death of Brother Cederson the community has lost an upright neighbor, the state a good and loyal citizen, and our tribe an earnest, zealous member. Resolved, That to his afflicted relatives we extend our heartfelt sympathy, and, while we mourn with them the loss of brother and an "exemplary man, we must bow with resignation to the fiat of the Great Spirit, who orders the sun shine and the rain, the blasts of winter and balmy breezes of summer. Resolved, That onr charter be draped in mourning lor tbirty days, and that a copy of these resolutions be furnished to the city papers for publication, also to the family of the deceased, and that they be spread, upon the speaking papers of the tribe, as a part of the pro ceedings of the council. Respectfully submitted in F. F. andC. 'Jno. Michell, E. B.. Dofue, ' , Frank Menefkb, Committee. A 8nng Fortune Awaiting Louis Daven ' port of M osier. . Land Office Business. The following business was transacted at the land office today. John W. Booth commoted his home stead and made final proof on Bw qr . of section 3, township north of range 17 e. William Hunt made cash entrv for se qr ot sw qr, and sw qr of ee qr, section 15, township 2 north of range 21 e.-- cmariee barker made-. final proof on timber culture, n bf of ne qr, section 15, township 7 south of range 20 e.' Cyrns R. Breckingham made, final homestead proof on se qr of ne qr, and e hf of se qr, section 34, township 6 south of range 19 e, and ne qr of ne qr, section 3, township 7 sontb of range 19 e Anyone desiring their , chimneys cleaned can have it done by calling upon or addressing Mr, Ike Peary or JameB Hogan, The Dalles or telephone to 'No, 89. ol7-tf Oar. reporter has had a serious time of it today, for items have failed to materi alize and all sources of information that usually yield eorne returns were dry and fruitless. Just about disheartened, the weary scribe citme across .the smiling and genial Col. Sinnott, and hence' this tale. " '- We spoke of the rqbbery of Louis Dav enpor.t a week ago, the robbery having taken place in 1863, or thereabouts, and the fact, that a man 'Was here inquiring into the matter. The man went down to visit Mr. Davenport last week, and today, as a result of that visit, Mr. Davenport is in the city. The stranger has been very reticent, bis actions being also decidedly "queer." In the coarse of a two or three days visit, by putting' disconnected statements together, Mr. Davenport has gathered, that the man who picked up his grip containing the $8,000 in gold dost is, or was,. known to this stranger. That sometime since, realizing that he was approaching the giave, the man who took the money made a will, and in this will he provid ed for the re-pay menf of the $8,000, with interest at legal rates from the day it was taken until it shall have been paid. The ill-gotten money, it seems, pros pered in. his hands, and be was able to do this. Not long since he died, and the stranger now here has knowledge of all L the facts. The heirs and the adminis trator of the estate are making no effort to find r the legatee, and unless the strange gentleman discloses his knowl edge it. may be impossible for Daven port to get his' money. In the mean while another claimant comes forward, a mysterious "French Charley," wbo. it is claimed, and not Davenport, lost the money. The latter claims, so the Col.'-says, are endorsed -by Mr.- Emit Scbanno. - There promises to be a pretty muddle grow out of the situation, and it is prob ably the legal fraternity will get a whack at the coin before the matter is settled. As the sum now amounts to over $27,000 it will be seen' that the fight might may become interesting. Col Sinnott is, however, confident that he is right, that Davenport, and not "French Charley, lost the money, and as the Colonel is generallv right, and has a memory whereof none may run to ine contrary, we put our money on his sice of the case. Hot clam broth every d Kellar's. , day at noon at tf ilow Will Responsibility Affect Women? - Eliza Sproat Turner of Philadelphia. . - Mr. Lectcy, in ma.' valuable work on "Democracy and liberty, finds one source of danger in the increasing in fluence of women in politics. He thinks their tendency in trying to reform the world would be to over-legislation. They have thrown themselves, for instance. into the question of temperance in such a way as to "considerably alter its pros pects." And the same is trne of vivi section,. ' which they are disposed not only to guard, but o abolish, thus doom ing thousands ot . human beings to an nntold amount of preventible suffering. "There have been," he says, "ages in which insensibility to suffering was the prevailing vice of public opinion-. In onr own, perhaps, more is to be feared from wild gusts' of unreasoning, uncal culating, byBterical emotion." I think that common fairnees compels as to acknowledge the at least partial truth of these opinions. Because women are by nature more compassionate, be cause, in their more domestic lives, they see so distinctly the immediate results of intemperance, of immorality, of cru elty, they are more likely to be tempted (until they learn its futility) to over legislation and over-coercion, to sweep ing the whole world clean of sin and error by one grand whisk of the broom of the law. When it comes to the "wild gusts of emotion,", however, I doubt if we could much exaggerate the methods of our brothers ; their little ways at a nominating convention, for instance, wbere.the correct thing is for the dele gates to climb. on chairs and tables, to ecreech, to howl, to roar, to break into sobs, to embrace each other, etc., by way of expressing their political opin ions; and not about any question that might be called ethical either. Our doings could scarcely be more hysterical than those in the bedlam, of any city Bourse, and we should find it hard to be more nncalculating than was onr con gress a. short time ago on receiving the message of the president concerning Venezuela, when, without pausing to consider consequences, without stopping to consider the unimportance of the issue with the awful results of a possible war, they set to -work on their resolu tions of approval, which were to give the cue fo a nation, with the glee of a parcel of children starting a fire. The fact is, 'we -vould do better to say that nnreasonlngness - is the tend, ency of the human race, and we can afford to admit that the feminine half, from the difference of the conditions in which it baa been reared, and from that absence of responsibility which always makes' people more reckless in the expression of ..opinions, have been thus far even more disposed than men to speak without consideration. Make every woman responsible, let her real ize that when she' says' a man ongnt to be bung she is helping to hang him, and that when she advocates war, she is helping to send the men to the field, and after the first wantonness of power, especially of the supposed power to legislate sin and suffering out of the world, her sense of accountability will steady ner. . And then it will sorely not beamiss that she will bring the humanitarian view of a political ques tion more frequently to the front. GEORGE RUCH PIONEER GROCER. Successor to Cbrisman 5t Corson. . FULL LINE OF STAPLE and FANCY GROCERIES. Again in business at the old stasd. I would-be pleased to see all my former patronB. Free delivery to any part of town. School Books , Supplies. JL JL - Jacobson Book & Music Co. No. 174 Second Street, . ' ' New Vogt Block, The Dalles, Oregon. Job Printing at this Office ' Awarded Highest Honors World's Fair, - Gold Medal, Midwinter Fair. r mm Fresh Tillamook creamery butter re ceived direct every week at The Dalles Commission Co.'s store: King 'em up. 'Phones 128 and 255. ' oct24-lm Marsh and Joles will give a turkey and pigeon shoot the day before Thanks giving and on Thanksgiving day'. CREAM IMM& Most Perfect Made. 40 Years the Standard. - Femsle Help Wanted. . '.JWantkd Red-beaded girl and white horse to deliver premiums given away with Hoe Cake Soap. Apply to any where. ' - Leave orders at The Dalles Commis sion Co.'s store for dressed chickens. Telephones 128 and 255. King 'em np. sll-dlnr Subccribe for Thk Chronicle. Assignee's Notice. Notice is hereby given- that on October 20, 1890, C. G. Hickok ol Cascade l ocks, Oregon, made a general assignment to ine for the benefit of all bis creditors In proportion tf the amount of their respective claims, of all his property. All persons having elaims against mild C. 6. Hickok are hereby notified to pr sent them to meat Cascade ixreks, Oregon, with tbe proper vouchers therefor, within three mouths irora this date. Dated Oct. 21, 1896. J. O. DAY. Tk, oct24 5t-ii Assignee of C. G. Hickok. Administratrix' Notice. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed administratrix -f the estate of George W. Turner, deceased, and has dulv qualified as such. All persons having claims against said estate are therefore n. .tilled to pre sent the same to her, with proter vouchers, within six months from tbe ante hereof at the office of the County Clerk of Wasco cn nty, Ore gon, or at the office ot her attorney, W. Y. Mas ters, rooms 1 to 4, Hamilton Building. Portland, Oregon, within six months ftois thin date. MARGARET E. SYKES, Administratrix of the estate of Geo. V. ifuraer, deceased. oci3-ii Dated October 2, 1896. Notice. Owing to pressing obligations, I am not pre pared to extund tbe time tor payments due me later than Oct. 1, 1896. 1 like to ei omni. date, but find now I must collect my accounts if! fail to colltct, my creditors will do it forme. Don't forget the date, Oct. 1, lc96. Frankly Years, septl2-2w V. 6. GORDON. X