The Dalles weekly chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1947, August 22, 1894, PART 1, Image 3

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    THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 22. 1894.
ybc Weekly Gbronicle.
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hturdT Pally.
Wheat i quoted In Walla A 'alia at 27
mil per bubel.
Poo't (rKt the ball game between
. -.I llixwl IMvfr tomorrow after.
immr
,000 at the fair ground. Admiion
Company 0 will attend the funeral of
ih late Joweph Oublng tomorrow
idernoon, lie having been a memlier of
the company.
The body Judge Wlwa!l, who u
jronHl i nop " ago,
htan recovered and will be shipped to
jin Fmnrlwo, and cremated.
Tl,e went Iwiund mnae.ligcr paused
through this morning at o'clock, the
ftiHoet since tlie roaa u re-openea,
md did not stop lor breakfast.
We would like very much to rint the
Mtnen u( the successful applicants fur
certificates to teach, hut are nimble to
pi them until Supt. Shelly returns.
Mr. N. Whealdon undertook to break
i bone yesterday, and made it about a
iiamloll'. The borne ran over him,
Hepped on hie foot, and performed a
dam-e ln entre while he had hie Inn-
Tbr ire cream npier at the Salvation
traiv hall, was well attended last bight.
Tlie lift receipt were $:10, and would
hive been more If the stock had not
given out. The captain desire u to
tty thank you, in Wialf of the army, to
lli putlic for generou atronu(re.
.Sheriff Maddock of Clark lull county
arrived here last night, coming after a
prianner, Morton Creen, who escaped
from him and who waa caught at Oak
Grove. He al remain here nntil Mon
day, and po down in company with
Sheriff Driver, who goes lielow to take
Mr. Neelv to the asvlum.
Arrangement have been completed
(or starting a aerond hand store and
brokerage business in the building op
posite Hood's etahle on Second atreeL
Second baud good will lie bought and
uld, money will he loaned on jewelry
and gooda. Tli i i eomething The
IwIIh need. After the first of Sept
mtier there will lie an auction every
Saturday from II to ' o'clock.
There wax hut one candidate before
bit tumor the mayor thin morning. He
looked weary but brightened np in ri-w-pon-e
to the question "Have you any
thing to iay?" and told a pitiful itory ol
bow hii Iwt had gone down the moral
ladder, and that hia heart grew weary.
He nmght nepenthe in the beer mo if,
ami in fart waa a victim of circumstances.
The mayor aynipathir.ed with him to
nich an extent thut he sent him np five
dollar worth. Yesterday there were
two victim who were fined five dollar!
Mich, which they paid.
Mimtlay a lil
Watch C. V. Stephens' ad. tomorrow.
He may have aomething to lay to you a
he has just returned from the Will
amettc valley.
Judge Fultou's reaidem, near the
railroad tli'is aide of Grant, burned to
the ground Friday night. Everything
in it at the time waa consumed.
The copy for a new ad. for N. Harria
on the hooka and will be In the paper
tomorrow. Mr. Harria haa a fine etock,
which it will pay yon to examine.
It in rumored that Mr. Hugh Ciourlay
and auuie other gentlemen will at art an
other republican newepaper in Golden
dale, ntili.ing the old Courier plant.
The iupreme lodge Knlghta of I'ythiai
of the world will mwt at AVaahington on
tliel'Hth. Uwlll loneof the largont
(Htheringa of the kind ever held in the
eoontry.
The con tract for moving the grain
'levator from Grant to Murray 'a or
chard, a diH'ance of about two milea,
been let for the aiim of $S00. Who
ever got the contract ill go broke, nn
he haa a large aack to draw from.
Cardd are out announcing the marriage
"I Irma Belle, daughter of Mr. and Mra.
I. Klenner, to Mr. J. U Kagland.
He ceremony will take place iu Koine
dy. Thuraday evening, August C"d, at
'o'clock.
Two team came in from Cauyuu City
''tanUy, loaded with wool. Thia la
mething out of the nana! order of late
yarn, t.)ii! trade of Canyon City going to
l'ker. The tenma will each take out a
'"ad of furniture.
Hither money la getting ecaroe or the
nt weather haa a depreeeiug effect on
thoe who Urry long at the bar faucet,
jr hi morning the recorder'a court waa
re. John Ioe waa abaeut and none of
othera of that numcroua family
howed np.
8ome very fine trout are Deing caught
,rw Hood River, near the railroad
bridge. The titer ia very milkv.fr
hl'-h we jud'e bait mint I uh,!, ai a
fly would not le viaible. We w one
jeelfrduy ia trout and not a fly llmt
weighed over three pound.
Lieutenant Croehy and four of hi
lioat' crew were drowned in the mrf
near the month of Jo creek, tlfi-n mile
north of tiray'a Harbor. He wan in
command of the I', s. tt-Mmr Mi
Arthur. There were fifteen in the lmt
when it npact, ten Wing navel.
There i gixxl run of nilverxhU-a iu the
river, but a It I againtit the law to catch
them they are of no nee to humanity.
They are the laft fn.b to come ami nndcr
tlie ecnllur hnh Uwt of thia Ute, gr
entirely free. The aeaaon ought to tie no
arranged that at leant a portion of the
ailveraide run could lie caught.
We w ere told yeaterday in Hood Uiver
that another peraon would be wnt np in
day or no to t examined aa to hia or
aanlty. We guetsed pretty nearly every
body in that neighborhood, but were
told we had not named the right one,
though for that matter it doexn't much
matter which oue they bring.
The little 4-year-old eon of M r. and
Mr. W. II. Allen fell off the porch of
the Mt. Hood hotel at Hood Kiver yea
terday evening. It wa thought at first
an arm had lieen broken, bnt Ir. P.ro-
iu, who attended the little fellow,
atated that there waa a eevere wrench of
the elbow joint, hut no broken tione.
The weather atill maintain ita phe
nomena torpidity, and everybody swel
ter. The folk dow n bv the founding
sea stay there and make no nonnd.
They don't even write to tell a fellow
how happy they are. It la not likely
that many of our citizen w ill let go and
come home nntil the w eather cools or
the Falb tidal w ave brings them along. '
Mr. Ii, an aged lady, arrived yes
terday on the west-bound paHsenger,
and ia at present at the Umatilla llouce.
She is qnite sick and has no relatives or
others here to whom she can look for
support. It eeems she is given to wan
dering, tick most of the time, but di
viding her patronage among the towns
aloug the line of the O. II. A. N. From
her present condition it i qnite prolic
ide that her wandering are abont at an
end.
The west-bound train yesterday morn
ing waa delayed, not arriving here nn
til 0 o'clock. The cauae was a contrary
engine that had gotten crossways of the
track at Grant. We boarded it to go
down to Hood Kiver and get acquainted
with our family, and reached that
charming rummer resort about 11 :t0.
The delay wai caused by the bridge
carpenters, with which the road seem
to le lined. The road is Vicing put in
shape very rapidly.
Will Ijuigille, the genial proprietor of
Cloud Cap Inn on Mt. Hood, tells us
that he haa been examining Into I'ro-
feeitor Falb's theories concerning tlie
earthquake and resultant tidal wave
now due, and finds the trofeior is right
in his theory but wrong in hi calcula
tion. Inn tend of the wave being sixty
feet high it will be IW.000 feet. This
makes Cloud Cap one of the few afe
places on the coat as its altitnde is
7(X feet.
As result of judicious advertiniiig,
we make mention of the fuct that Tin
CuKoNici.i was not fairly distributed
Faturduy night, before Jess Crandall
had his atepladder back. A lady reader
of Tue Cuuomci.k at once reported to
him that a atepladder had been left at
her house by some painter, and to call
and examine it. Jeaa recognised it at a
glance, and when he came home the
ladder reposed gracefully on his shoulder,
only at such times as it tried to tangle
ita legs with his.
The editor of the Heppner Gnxette
waa personally acquainted with John
Hansen Craig, who recently died in the
Kaat, with the record of being the heavi
est man in the world, and aaye the fol
lowing statement made by Mr. Craig ia
correct : "I now weigh 907 pounds, and
am 30 year old. At birth I weighed 11
pounds, at 11 months I weighed 77
pounds, and at 2 yeare 20 pounds. At
that time I took 1000 premium at liar
duiii'i baby show In New York city in
1K.-.H. At 5 years I weighed 302 pounds ;
at 20, Ml pound; l 2- 725 pounds;
at 2X, 7!4 pounds ; at SO, VM pounds,
with the present weight of 007 pounds.
I am 6 feet 5 inches high, measure 8
feet 4 inches around the hips, 18 inches
arouud the ankles, 49 inches around the
thigh next to the body, and required 41
yards for a suit of clothes and three
pounds of yarn for a pair of stockings.
Tueodicjr'a Dmlj
(Several familie have gone from Hood
Kiver to Yakima to engage in hop
picking.
Mrs. Iwis, the old lady who came
hera Bnnday morning, is at the Umatilla
Hofuje, and is very sick. There seems
to be but little hope of her recovery.
A brakeman named Adams had the
fingera of hi right hand badly pinched
thia morning near U depot, while
coupling cars. No bone were broken.
Mr. Simons, of the l'acific hridge Co.,
la in the city. We understand he will
put in a bill" for putting in the lower in
cline of the stale portage road at the
Cascade Locks.
The baseball game advertised to come
off Sunday between Hood Kiver and
Ihifnr club did not take place. Tha
lliiiur hoy were on hand, but Hood
Hiver did not show np for the reanon
that nearly all of the member of that
club are in the mountain. The I!!c
boys took their place however, and
won a victory by a score of L'T to 9.
There ia a tittady l wind every day
hut it ha forgotten bow to be cool. As
it coiiu'x freh from an, the warm
condition of thing over lliere iny have
something to do with it.
Quite a number of touriata, on their
aay home from Alaska, came up as far
an the lower Catt-adcs on the Dalle
City yerterday to take a look at the
grand canyon of the Columbia.
The political parties of California are
lieing arranged on new line. The
tendency eeems to be to divide on one
issue only. It in the people on one side
and the Southern l'acific railroad on the
other.
St. Mary's academy begin it fall
term September 3d. The school stand
in the front rank of its kind, and ha
earned a generous patronage. For in
formation concerning rate tuition, etc.,
read their ad. In thi iosue.
Mayor Bolton held a regular reception
this morning, having ten caller by
special invitation of the city marshal.
They were lined ." each. One of them
put np the coin but the others, lieing
imcuniiu, will board it out.
Mr. J. O. Mark, secretary of the Sec
ond Oregon District Fair Association in
forms us the catalogues for 1MUJ are now
ready for distribution. He will tie
pleased to forward them to anyone do
siring a copy, or to pars them over to
those who call for tberu. The fair will
begin Tuesday, Octotier (uh and last live
days.
On account of September commenc
ing on Saturday, several of our business
men will make that collection day.
Thia being the cune, it i to be hoped the
other will atand in and make it unani
mous. One reason of this is that sev
eral of them intend going to Oregon
City and will not le here on Monday,
the 3rd.
T. A. Ward is agaiii visible in thia
neighborhood, Mr. 'Norman having
brought hiiu back troin Trout lake last
night. The party camped at the falls of
White Salmon, and we are told that
Tom had gotten so infatuated with hi
tent life, he had to l lassoed and tied to
a tree over night to prevent his taking
the back track.
At a meeting of Columbia Hose com
pany laft night three delegates were ap
pointed to represent the company at the
annual meeting of the Veteran Volun
teer Fireman's Association of Oregon
and Washington. It was also ordered
that each member of the company in
good standing attending the meeting at
Oregon City be allowed $10 towards de
fraying his expenses.
Quite a number of ministers, who w ill
attend the conference beginning here to
morrow, have arrived and the others
will get here tonight. If Mr. 15 land ford
would now turn on his cold weather
faucet for a few day he would confer a
great favor, for with the present oppres
sive heat the meetiDg will not be as
pleasant as it should be. It is and has
been lor several day genuine eastern
sweltering weather.
It was quite amusing to some light
minded people this morning w hen one
of the visiting ministers shook hands
enthusiastically with one of our good
citizens. Of course it was a mistake,
for he naid "Well, well, and this is
Brother Sparks of Milton." All we
have to say is that if Brother Sparks of
Milton resembles the gentleman for
whom he was taken, then Brother
Sparks of Milton ia a remarkably hand
some and brainy man.
The M. K t'oaforvarr.
The twenty-first annual session of the
Columbia Kiver Conference will be held
at the Methodist Episcopal church, this
city, commencing Wednesday, August
22d, at 8 a. m., Bishop 1. W. Joyce,
I. I). LL. P., presiding. FCach day re
vival service will be conducted from H
to 9 a. id., by Key. S. A. Keen, P. P., of
Iielaware, O. Business sessions each
day except Sunday, from 9 a. in. to 12 in.
Anniversary services at 7:30 each week
evening. The bishop is expected to
preach Sunday morning. The public is
invited to all these service. The con
ference will probably adjourn on Mon
day, Aug. 27th.
J. Wuimlkk, pin-tor.
A Walloon AM-raalon.
The lalloon ascension advertised to
take place Saturday afternoon at 3
o'clock, was postponed on account of the
wind, until Sunday morning at about 9
o'clock. The ascent waa very pretty, a
height of about a thousand feet being
reached. After dropping 10,000 coupons
for A. M. Williama it. Co., the parachute
was detached from the balloon and
floated gracefully earthwards while the
balloon turned upelde down, aud a the
gas escatied came wriggling downward
like a great tadpole. The aeronaut
landed safely, In the block by May &
Crowe's store.
For Tront !..
The great fiahing resort of the North
west. Parties can procure teams or con
veyance the round trip by writing and
stating time they wish to start, number
of thw partv, amount of liaggage, etc.
Address A. H.JwTr,
jm White Salmon, Wah.
Mil-ball llaan.
As I sit at my window this morning
there 14 a brink health-giving breeze that
lends vigor and bfe to those of our little
town, who have been melted into a
somnolent apathy by the intense heat
of tln pui-t two weeks. But with all
there haa been an nnu'nal stir. Har
vesting I still keeping many busy.
Wool team are passing down and
freight team passing up every day of
the week. But excessive hctt ii gone
for the season, I think, and our days
and night are pleasant, with the excep
tion of midday, when it is still warm
enough. Wednesday, I think of last
w eek the thermometer stood at 93, and
some say at 104 in the shade, and 142 in
the S'in from about 10 in the morning
until about 4 iu the evening. I think
there were several equally as warm,
judging from my own sensibility.
Pleasure and recroiting parties are
still seeking the health-giving mountain
air of Sunset Prairie. Sunday Mra.
Thompson and her eon, Willie Bird,
Alice Saltzman, Maggie Roberts, Miss
Conally and several others, the names
of whom I did not learn, passed
through here, Mrs. Thompson said, to
to have a good time in general.
E. E. Allen has disposed of hie town
property in part payment for the old
S. F. Allen ranch. Johnny has dona
well, aa I am well able tc testify. There
is room for improvement, but few
changes will make them a nicehome.
There is no plac for miles around that
haa as fine a location for stock raising
purposes as has that. No place of ita
size that can raise more hay, or in re
ality anything they should want to
grow. The general lay ia to the north,
and the yiew from the door is pleasant,
and in some places grand. Being
hemmed in on the south by a high
mountain range, there is no chance of
being crowded by other itockmen.
Isolated and independant; but that ia
what a stockman wants.
Mnch has been eaid lately concerning
the practical siJe of establishing a scour
ing mill for our F'agtern Oregon wool at
some central point to wool. It is a well
authenticated fact that the wool of this
side of the mountain loses half of its
weight in washing. True we would not
have aa much by half in weight minus
the dirt, but just as much wool, for
which we would command prices two or
three times grerter. Beside that, a 1
great advantage would accrue to trans
portation. The ideas of one of our most
thoughtful and practical wool growers
I will give. He says: "I have been
talking with some of my neighbors in
the wool growing business of the practi
cability of a wool scouring establishment
being located at this town, or some place
equally as good. I think a email invest
ment of that kind would do very well,
Since wagca, under this prosperous
democratic administration, are gradu
ally growing lower and the prices of
wool much reduced, there is a growing
inclination, a desire to have Ies dirt in
the wool. With onr water power ad
vantage?, as good as any in the county,
alo situated in the center of a wool
growing district, argues much in our
favor. An estimate of the wool that is
grown within a radius of forty miles
east and west a:id lifteen miles north
and south from Mitchell, would be
aliout one million pounds. The East
ern Oregon wool shrinkage is about Go
per cent. This calculation, gives sixty
five pounds of Bridge creek dirt in every
one hundred pounds of wool to be
hauled to The Dalles over the worst
roods under the sun, 1 think. At an
aveiage freight rate of l'. cents per
pound, making 6,o00 paid out for
freight on a very poor quality of dirt,
and it is very probable there would be
one million and a half pounds of wool
brought to be scoured if there was an
establishment of that kind here."
E. V. E.
Mitchell, Aug. 14, 1S94.
Mr. Hant-a Mtatement.
Tvtm Valley, Or., Aug. 16, '94.
To Euitob ok Tiik Ciir.oMt'Lit:
Please allow me space in your paper to
answer a piece I saw in the Antelope
Herald, about Hunt aud Beach not pay
ing the board bill of Stevens, the pro
fessional runner. Wegave Stevens what
money he wanted to pay hie own bills aa
he went along supposing he would do so.
If not we wou'd be responsiule. We
brought him there Monday morning and
he stayed until Wednesday noon. He
had two chicken dinners aud you charge
we owe you $1.50. Chickens must lie a
very rare article in Antelope.
If Mr. Wallace had written to me, aa
he ought to have done, and stated that
Steven bad not paid hi bill, I would
have done so,
Mr. N. Wallace, if you are a gentle
man and will send your bill to Tygh
Valley I will pay it.
Mr. Wallace, as for you warning other
to look out for me, I can assure you that
I can get credit for fL'O to w here you cau
get credit for l, and furthermore Mr.
N. Wallace, any man would not have
treated a customer as I have teen to yon
for eight year in the way yon have
treated me nnder the circumstances.
We got left on man Steven. It wai not
because he was not the fastest man, it
waa becauav we had such men as you to
deal with. Yours very truly,
W. E. Hist.
Thk CiiROHui a is prepared to do all
kind of job printing.
atrajred - a ktoplaldr.
C. J. Crandail i engaged in putting
the lower story of the Masonic building
in shapo for the xtor!ice, which will
be moved into it the llmt of September.
We looked in thia morning, and found
hi usually pleasunt smile conspicuous
by it absence, We realized that we
were treading on dangerous ground nut
ventured to ay "Good morning."
"Say," laid Jess, "don't you know
somebody has taken our stepladder ;
took it out of the shop and never said a
word Wish you would burn him up.
I would If I owned a newspaper." "All
right," said we, "just resume that old
smile and we'll fix him. Tell us some
thing to make an item." "You go and
see Burget," was the reply, "for he
know just when they took it." We
replied that we would look into it, and
again repeated our request for an item.
"An item; oh, yes, it waa abont five
feet and a half high and a good ladder.
Wish the man that borrowed it would
bring it back." Then we took a new
tack and aaked about the Hood Kiver
schoolhouse. " That's nil right; foun
dation being laid. We need that step
ladder all the time. If the man who
took it will bring it back we won't ask
any questions." And then we said
"Good bye." "So long," said he, and
as we went out we heard him say : "I
don't see who in the dickens could have
taken that stepladder."
Whoever it was, won't he pleae take
it back.
It Might HT llfrn.
We were shown a letter thia morning
written by a stranger from the Eastern
states, who has been here, to a gentle
man of this city. The letter is a curt
condemnation of The Dalles and all its
surroundings. The writer says that he
intended to locate here, and expected to
circulate whole lots of money, but that
be changed his mind, and now he
wouldn't let go of a cent in Wasco
county ; no, sir, not if he got two back.
The reaon he give for thia sudden re
vulsion of feeling is that he was "charged
twenty-five cents for a very poor ten
cent shave," and be concluded therefore
that we were thieves and robbers un
conscionable. And so he took his dishes
and his doll babies, quit paddling in our
rain-water barrel and sliding down our
cellar door, vowed he would never,
never swing on our gate, or play with
us any more, and went away mad.
He was going to circulate just whole
lota of money, but he will never, no
never circulate it now. And yet one
would think that to amputate the
whiskers that found root in that ada
mantine cheek were well worth two bits.
To Attend the Hop.
The Yakima Hop Growers Association
have published a circular showing the
acreage, probable yield and number of
pickers necessary to handle the crop. It
gives the area as about 3000 acre;, and
the yield at 100,000 boxes of green hope,
averaging 100 pounds to the box. The
picking season will commence September
1st, and 12,000 people can find employ
ment. The wages paid pickers are fl
per box. The state fair will be held at
Yakima during the season and w ill, no
doubt, cause hundreds of Indians to
gather there.
iral Kstal Tranirvra.
The following deeds were filed for
record today :
J. J. Luckey and Lillian Luckey his
wife to $. B. Crockett, lots 7 and 8, block
6, town of Hood Uiver; $1500.
United States to Hugh Lacey, se.'4',
sec. IS, tp 2 n, r 11 e patent.
United States to Henry Peterson,
nw', sec. 31, tp 5 s, r 12 e patent.
Vnulhar Ordrr-
The election of officers for The Dalles
Council, No. , of the Ixiyal Mystic
Legion of America, took place at Frater
nity hall Saturday evening. The fol
lowing were elected : Geo. C. Blakeley,
W. C. ; II. H. Riddell, W. V. C. ; C. C.
Cooper, W. Sec; J. A. Croesen, W.
Treas. ; T. J. Driver, W. P. Dr. Suth
erland was appointed medical examiner.
Mystarlnu Lights.
l.ust night about 9 o'clock a series of
flashes, resembling the Aurora Borealis,
were observed. The Hashes seem to
come from all parte of the heavens, hut
moat of them apeared to travel from
wet to east. There are many opinions
concerning it, some maintaining it was a
genuine display of Northern lights,
others that it was the flash light from
the Monterey, others yet, thut it was
the electrical department of the tail
ender fair at Tacoma, w hile some Insisted
it was caused by the president commun
ing with the Gorman bill.
l.lKhtinnc's Fraaha.
I.aet Saturday afternoon at Ieiu Cas
tle place on Camp creek hay hauling
was interfered with by the sudden ap
pearance of a thunder-storm. The
team were unhitched and led to the
barn. The hindmost horse waa stand
ing in the barn door when a flash of
lighthing struck the animal, killing it
Instantly, ft ilnged the hair all off the
horse and set the straw afire, and it was
with difficulty that the barn was kept
from burning. IVineville New.
PERSONAL MENTION.
I HAtunlajr.
Air. W. C. Kddon and fumily of
I Sprague are visiting Mm. Atwater.
Mr. George Stapleton of Vancouver
I arrived here yesterday on her way t
I her old home, (ioldemlule.
Mr. J. W. French arrived hame last
night, leaving his family at the Iwacb.
Ho i tanned up and hearty looking ami
says he will lie buck at the beach in
time to take a header through I-alb's
tidal wave w hen it comes.
Commodore French und Julius Bald
win arrived home from a two-weeks
ciiinping trip last night. Tliey had a
fine trip and caught all the fish they
could get rid of. Mr. Baldwin leaves
for Walla Walla tonight to resume hia
labor at the case. The gallant commo
dore is loth to tear himself away from
the good boat w hich for the past two
weeks ha been his home, and will prob
ably remain a few day.
Monday.
Kay Iogan is visiting friends at Arl
ington. Will Crossen started for the sea shore
yesterday morning.
Miss Elizabeth FitzGerald went ont
to Kingsley Saturday to visit friends.
Kev. Frank I'arrisli and wife of Lex
ington are in the city to attend confer
ence. Mr. and Mra. Goo. Johnston were in
town Saturday, returning to Dnfur yea
terday morning.
Tuewlay
W. H. Moore of Moro was iu the city
yesterday.
Mr. Thomas Burgess of Bake Oven is
in the city.
Miss Katie Cronin of Dufur ia visiting
friends here.
Hon. K. O. McCoy of Grant was in
city yesterday.
Mr. V.. Jacobseti arrived home from
Portland last night.
I. J. Norman and party arrived home
from Trout lake last night.
Mrs. V.. I.. Menefee of Sherman county
is visiting relatives at Dufur.
D. W. Simmons, sheriff of Yakima
county, Wash., is in the city.
Miss Irene Adams and Miss Pauline
Adams came up from Salem last night.
C. It. Bone came np from Hood River
Sunday evening, and went up to Grant
last night.
Mrs. H. I. Bnlger, who has been visit
ing relatives here for several weeks, re
turned to Portland this morning.
Mr". P. Malarkey of Portland, (nee
Miss I.aura Burgess) is visiting Mrs.
Fletcher Faulkner, and will in a few
days accompany her father home.
Mr. Ben Wilson, who haa been at
Collins landing for several weeks, ar
rived home on the Regulator last night
Ben hasn't been shaved for nearly a
month, and if he knew how to climb a
polo would readily pass for a bear.
1IIEU.
Near The Dalles, Friday, August 17th,
Joseph M., son of Mr. and Mrs. M. M.
Cashing, aged 19 years, 1 month and 12
days. Funeral from Catholic church
Sundav afternoon at 3 o'clock.
In th is city, Saturday, August 18th, to
the wife of Captain L. C. Chrisman, a
daughter.
Attention. Firemen!
AH members of the fire department
are requested to attend a special meet-
ing of the department Wednesday, Aug.
22d, at 8 p. m. Delegates and members
who desire to attend the annual Fire
men's Convention at Oregon City on
Sept. "d and 4th are especially requested
to attend. By order of
John Blasik, Chief Engineer.
Yanhon Collefa.
President A. C. Jones, of Vashon col
lege, arrived in the city last night aad
can be found at the parlors of the Col
umbia hotel. Those having children
they desire to send to school will do
well to see him. The school is pleas
antly situated on Vashon island, Wash.
For information concerning the school,
should you fail to see him, write him at
Burton, Wash., for catalogue.
For Hal.
A. I:. Byrkctt, at White Salmon,.
Wash., has a nnmber of pure bred reg
istered A 1 C. C. Jersey bulls of all ages.
Pedigree furnished on application. Ad
dress or call on A. K. Bvbkett,
Hood Kiver, Or.
We hnve made arrangements with the)
San Francisco Examiner to furnish it in
connection with The Ciikoniclr. Hay
ing n clubbing rate with the Oregon ian
and N. Y. Tribune for our republican
patrons, we have made this arrangement
for the accommodation of the democratic
member oT Tax Ciibonici.k family.
Both papers, the Weekly Examiner and
Skmi-Wklki.v Chromclr will be fur
nished for one year for $2.25, cash in ad
vance. St. Mary's Academy
THE DALLES, OR.
RE-OPENS SEPTEMBER 3d, 1894.
HOVKIUNO ANI HAY 8CI1O0L FOB GIRI4,
Hate rs-r Urm of Ion weeks,
payable iu advance:
Board and Tuition 1 10 0O
Knlranre Klv f payablu but ouce) b lat
lird and Heitduic )
liutrumviiUi Muaie, Tyue-wrltln, Telruay
lirawlnj and fainting form eilra charai .
FnMicI . t.nnan, IaIIii, Needlework and Vocal
Miimc uuiiiht frreof charga to reaulat cuplla.
RATKrt KOK DAY PimU!.-.,6,WorIOpr
liirm arHnllB to ra1e,
Kor further particular! address,
HIbTKK SUrKKIOB.