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About The Dalles weekly chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1947 | View Entire Issue (July 31, 1895)
THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY, JULY 31, 1895. Outlook for Dallea Fruit. The first bulletin regarding the oat look for prunes and plums has just been received by Mr. Pinkham and given to Tub Chbo.viclb. Oar fruit men watch the market reports with great interest. This report gives a fall description of the situation in the East and the pros pect for Oregon frait. Following- is the entire bulletin : Since oar last bulletin there has been nothing moving with the exception of a few late cherries. Peach Plums The first arrivals of this frait shipped . from California sold in different Eastern markets from $1.60 to $2.00 per crate. However, prices gradually declined until today they are celling for $1.00. As the first car of peach plums from Oregon, was shipped from The Dalles, July 20th, it has not arrived at destination yet. Heretofore shipments of Oregon peach plums have been very unsuccessful and with ns this year, we are making every effort to know the exact condition of this fruit and thus be able to advise whether to ship hereafter. We shipped a car from The Dalles July 23d, one July 23, and one today ; also from Portland July 3d ; from Bose bure July 24. Two cars shipped by a California house from Eugene July 25th ; also one from Salem shipped by a local house, Six cars, mostly peach plums, were shipped from Walla Walla country the past week. We shipped a car from Biddies Julv 26 tb. We will issue re ports on the sale of all those cars. Peaches The local' Portland demand has been light, selling from 40 to 60 cts . A great many Snake river peaches have been shipped here. It will not pay to make eastern shipments of peaches, Georgia is shipping in such large quan tities ; also Michigan. On July 23d, 53,000 baskets were shipped from one point in Michigan to the Chicago and Milwaukee markets. California will dry most of her crop this year. Snake river is shipping a number of carloads, bat they will not prove profitable. Peaks With a short crop in Caliior , nia and no eastern grown to -compare " with Pacific CoaBt Bartletts, good ship ping pears will prove profitable. Calif ornia Bartletts are selling today for $2.25 to $3.50. Plums a Pbcneb The market will be good for oar Hungarian and Italian prunes, while the Egg plum and Silver prune do not sell as well on. account of light color, yet they will prove more profitable green than dried. Regarding handling fruit, good prices depend more upon equal distribution and systematic handling than anything else. With oar great expense to make this possible and our past successes, it should surely give ns reason to expect Lay. Clara Story , Etta, Story,' Clara Grimes. G. D. Sno vuen and . II. 1. Mr. Victor Marden left this morning for a trip to the sea coast, ile was, ac companied by bis friend Mr. Jack Bailey of Hillsboro, who has been visiting sev eral days in The Dalles. '' Monday. - Mr. C. G. Roberts of. Hood Kiver Is in the city. Mr. B. F. Laushlin returned ' home Saturday from Ilwaco. Ehren Eorten left on the Regulator for a visit in Portland. ., Mr. Franklin Irvine, -a merchant of Antelope, is in the city. . Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Biggs came home last night Irom Portland. Mrs. Robert Pilkington of Antelope is registered at toe Umatilla. ' Mr9. Hendershot left yesterday for Portland for a few days visit. Mr. A. J. - Brigham, justice of the peace at Dufur, was in the city today. Mr. H. B. Shannon, representing the Model Laundry company of Portland, is in the city. Mr. J. B. Haverlv. one of Wasco's sub stantial farmers, was upon i our streets this afternoon. Mrs. B. A. Hnnsaker and familv have removed from Heppner to their new home in The Dalles. ' - ; Mr. S. Farrell of Portland, -a part owner in 1 ho Ualles Packing Uompany, was in the city yesterday. Mr. 8. P. M. Brises and familv re turned on the midnight train .for a visit to Portland and Uhebahs. Mr. and Mrs. E. Keister. who have been visiting for two weeks in Walla Walla, returned home yesterday; Mrs. G. C. Blakeley and Miss Rose Michell are still at Newport and will re main ten days or two weeks longer. Mr. Julius Fisber left vesterdav for Portland and the sea shore. He will take a two weeks vacation from work. Mr. Simeon Bolton, deputy county clerk, returned this morning from Goldendale, to which place he went last rndav. Mr. Emil Schanno went to Grants this morning in response to a request to ex amine some fruit, said to be affected with scale. Mr. R. C. Wnllis of Rnfus is in the citv. He says four loads of this vear's wheat have come into Rnfus and a eood deal of last year's is coming in every day. Mr. John H. Wiele was a casseneer. down the river on the Regulator this morning to spend his summer vacation. Ile will first eo to Moffit Springs and then to the coast for some sea breezes. Mrs. Long of Haleey, Oregon, came up on the Regulator batnrday to spend several months in Eastern Oregon to seek renswed health. She is visiting the family of W. H. Taylor in Dry Hollow. 3 f siMMOTTf regulat"or7 v Reader, did yon ever take Simmons Livke Regulator, the "Krao of Lives Medicines 1 " Everybody needc take a liver remedy. It is a sluggish or diseased liver that impairs digestion and causes constipation, when the waste that should be carried off remains in tbe body and poisons the whole system. That dull, heavy feeling is due to a torpid liver. Biliousness. Headache, Malaria and Indigestion are all liver diseases. Keep the liver active by an occasional dose of Simmons liver Reg ulator and you'll get rid of these trou bles, and give tone to the whole sys tem. For a laxative Simmons Liver Regulator is better than Pills. It does not gripe, nor weaken, but greatly refreshes and strengthens. livery package lias the Bed Z stamp on the wrapper. J. II. Aeiiin dz lo., jfjuiaaeipnia. The car of fruit did not get started East last night as expected, bat prob. ably one may go tonight. Tbe plums that are in condition for shipment are nearly all gone- and the fruit agent is having difficulty in obtaining enough to make out the car. There will be no far ther shipments of plums after tonight The latest advices from tbe East give a little encouragement for apples. In Denver they are selling at $1.75 for a 50 pound box. In Portland apples bring from 50 to 80 cents per box. There is a good demand for Bartlett pears in the East and tbey bring from $1.50 to $2.50. For other varieties there is little call. The peach market is entirely overdone and immense shipments could be made from the Mississippi valley if justified by tbe demand. California has ceased shipping peaches and is drying them. The melon shipments will begin from The Dalles very shortly. " mi n 1 hn IV n mm guiaior Li Ths Dalles,' Portland ami Astoria Navigation Co. . co-operation in what we are trying to do make Oregon fruit giowing as profitable to the grower as it seemingly is to the railroads, refrigerator car com panies and the commission men. PERSONAL MENTION. Saturday. I. H. Taffe of Celilo is in the J ad ire Georce C. Blakeley returned yesterday from attending the Press As sociation at Newport. He reports tbit everyone who attended had an enjoyable Mrp. city. Sheriff driver went to Portland this afternoon Mr. I. N.' Day of the Cascade Locks was in the city yesterday. Ex-Atty General George II. Williams returned to Portland today, Mr. W. C. Jones, tbe wool buyer, went "' to Portland this afternoon to spend Sun- aay. Mr. and Mrs. A. Winans were pasen gers down the river on the Regulator tnis morning. Mr. W. H. Dunn and wife formerly residents or rue uaiies out now ol Uepp ner are in the city. Mr. S. A. Clarke, tbe veteran journalist ana iruit grower oi uregon was in The Dalles this morning. Mr. W. H. Butts returned last night from Astoria, where he attended the meeting of Red Men. Air. C. Jones of Wasco is in the city. He was married Wednesday to alias i&eyuoias oi wasco, Mr. W. L. Gozzam. general asent of .the Aetna Life Insurance company, was Mrs. D. M. French. m ma cuy mis morning. Mr. J. W. Walker, one of the pro - prietors of the distillery at Grants is registered at the Umatilla. : Pchool Superintendent Shelly of Hood River was in town this morning return . ing on the afternoon train. : Mr. Mark Long and family returned last night from Trout Lake, where they have been camping for two weeks. Mr. X. Harris was a passenger on the train this afternoon for Ocean Park. He will remain at the coast for a month. ' Mr. Ad. Keller, who has been a dele gate to the Red Men council in Astoria, . came borne on last night's passenger. - . . Mr. H. C. Nielsen returned on the eteamer Regulator from the coast last night. He will return in about a week, Mr. 8. L. Brooks and W. C. Allaway oi me is. i;. s a. in. km. went to Jas cades this morning on company basi- ' ness. Dr. Lewenberg returned to Portland - this afternoon after a two weeks stop in The Dalles. The doctor will return in tbe fall. a Rev. H. E. Monser and wife, who have been visiting Rev. I. H. Hazel for several days returned to Portland by boat this morning. Henry Schnartz returned todav from a two weeks visit in San Francisco and has resumed his position in the dry . goods establishment of N. Harris. 'The afternoon train carried a merry party of young excursionists to Bonne ville, where thev will nrwtnrl Inmnrmi I - rotn.ninr. n (hi f 1 -1 I etieCtS MO who composed tbe party were Miss 8ula time, and were well pleaeed with the hospitality of Newport. Tuesday. Mr. Grant Mays is in the city. Judge A. S. Bennett went to Cascades this morning on the Regulator. Captain McNultv was a passenger to Mosier on the Regulator this morning. Mr. Frank Cram of Cross Keys is in the city, his first visit to town for nearly a year, Mr. G. N. Maddock, a banker of Gold endale. was in the city this morning on his way to Portland. Mr. Tony Noltner, one of the pioneer journalists of Uregon and editor of the Portland Dispatch, is in the city. Mr. E. Y. Judd, of the Pendleton Scouring mills, came tip from Portland last night and stopped in Tbe Dalles. Mr. J. P. Van Houten of Hav Creek one of the owners of the Baldwin Land and Live Stock Co., was in The Dailes this morning. Mr. William Brain and family re turned last night from White Salmon, They have been camping in the Trout Lake country. Mr. F. Fortin. accompanied bv his brother from Walla Walla, left this moraine for a summer outing at Astoria and the beach. Mr. George Carpenter and wife of FoS' sil, returned last nlzbt from Ilwaco where they have been visiting Mr. and Messrs. A. Y. Marsh, Adam Kauffman and G. W. Stewart returned yesterday trom 10-Mile, neaviiy laden with ash. cnickeus and rabbits. Mr. and Mrs. H. W. French, accom panted by Mrs. French's sister, Florence Williams, left this morning for C'ateoo J5each, where they will visit at tbe VViI liams cottage. BORN. Near The Dalles, Julv 27tb. to the wife of Fred Stoller, a eon. BORN. In this citv. July 29th. Theodore Seufert, a son. to the wife ofJ Chance In the Regulator'! Time Card. Commencing Wednesday, July 10th and until further notice, steamer Reg ulator will leave The Dalles for Portland at 8 a. m., instead of 7 a. m. Steamer Dalles City will leave Portland at 7 a. m., instead of 0 a. m. W, C. Allaway, General Agt. . Hog-a for Sale. ' I have 100 head of hogs for sale. They are of different kinds and in good condi tion. Call on or apply to Solomon Houser, Tygh Valley, Or. , , jy2Cd&w2wks . We recommend De Witt's Colic and Cholera Care because we believe it a safe and reliable remedy. It's good shown at once in cases of Cholera Morbus and similar complaints. Bach, May Enright, Louise Bach, Mary For sale by Snipes-Kinerslj Drag Co. "We bad an epidemic of disentery in this vicinity last summer," says Samuel S. Pollock, of Briceland, Cal. "I was taken with it and suffered severely until some one railed my attention to Cham berlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. I procured a bottle and felt better after the first dose. Before one half of the bottle had been used I was well. I recommended it to my friends and their experience was the same, We all unite in saying it is the best. For salb by Blakeley & Houghton Drag' gists. - Mr. Winans, who lives at the fisheries above The Dalles, has in his possession a stencil bearing the name of Captain Meriweather Lewis, who in company with Clarke made the famous Lewis and Clark expedition in 1804. The stencil was used for marking the goods belong ing to Capt. Lewis and came into the possession of the Winans familv a long time ago. Tho relic is in good condition and its ancient appearance tells a mute story of an early day when the North' west territory was unknown by white roan and echoed only the soft tread of the Indian, as he carelessly wandered in pursuit of thechase or revelled in deadly warfare. Mr. Winans has promised to ship the stencil to a relative of Capt, Lewis in the East, who wishes to look at it and promises faithfully to return it Tbe express company will be given in structions not to let it go from the office, so richly is it treasured by its owner. THROUGH Through Daily Trips (Sundays ex cepted) between The Dalles and Port land. Steamer Regulator leaves The Dalles at 8 a.m., connecting at the Cas cade Locks with Steamer Dalles City. Steamer Dalles City leaves Portland (Oak street dock) at 6 a. m., connect ing with Steamer- Regulator for The Dalles. - PASSKNOKR RATES.' Oneway...... ;..$2.00 Round trip.... 3.00 Freight Rates Greatly Reduced. All freight, except car lots, will be brought through, with- out delay at Cascades. Shipments for Portland received at any time day or night. Shipments for way landings must be delivered before & p. m. .Live stock shipments eoiicted, (jail on or address, , W. CALLAWAY Kenentl Agent- THE-DALLES. OREGON Tic CI IS THE BEST OF ALL JOS. T. PETERS & CO., Sole Agents at The Dalles. I rFOR THE- T&os. F. date, Hsnry c. Payne, BBCBIVEKS. Henrr c. sosst ORTHERN j PACIFIC R. R n s Pullman Elegant '-Tourist E. UcMILL, Receiver. EHSTI GIVES THE Choice of Transcontinental Routes -VI A- Spokane Denver Minneapolis. Omaha Sleeping Cars Dining Cars 1 Sleeping Cars TO ST. l'AV I. MINNEAPOLIS FARGO GRAND FORKS CBOOKSTON 1 r WINNIPEG HELENA and BDTTE ." Thfough Tickets CHICAGO WASHINGTON a PHILAOELPH1A Kff TORE ' BOSTON AND AI L POINTS EAST and SOUTH For information, time cards, nun and tioketa. can on or wove io W. C. ALLAWAY. AgeDt, "The Dalles, Omgoa. P. CHARLTON. Asst. 6. P. A., 266. Ilorrikon. Cor. Third. Portland, Oregon St. Paul Kansas City Low Rates to all Eastern Cities. OCEAN STEAMERS Leare Fertlaatd : Every Flu Day for SAU FRANCISCO, CAL. For full details call on O. E. i Co. Aeent at Tba Dallea, or address - W- B. HURLBUET, Gon. Pass. Agt Portland, Oregon. Lost. One red Cow. branded jK on risht tid..F. R. on rigbt bin; two a its in each ear A reasonablere ward will be given for delivery or information as to her whereabouts. - mayll , . . . J. U KELLY. DOORS, WINDOWS, SHINGLES, FIRE BRICK, FIRE CLAY, LIME and CEMENT, Window-Glass and Picture .. , Moulding. AT THE DALLES, THURSDAY ace duo. Raa. 1. THE GREATEST, LARGEST, BEST OP GRANDEST AND flPrUGfl'S ' mausEpuT eutehpuises I Finest Horses am Greatest irrag of Circus Talent Of Any Sliow on XSaortli. x X X X'sn. NO WONDER IT IS GREAT! Three Rings, Two Stages! One-half Mile Race Track! Collossal Menagerie! Royal Aquarium! Four Trains! Ten Acres Canras! 20,000 Seats! 1,500 Employes! 4,000.00 Daily Expenses! CKPITHL, - 100 Phenomenal Acts! Twenty' Hurricane Races! Twenty-five Clowns! Six Bands! Fifty Cages! Fifteen Open Dens! Herd of Elephants! Drove of Camels! World's Renowned Performers! Every Great Act Known! S3.000.000. EXCURSIONS WILL BE RUN On every line of travel to enable vieitori from a distance to attend ' the 'ezibitions of this, the greatest show of the modern world. Trains trill arrive in time to wit nesa the monster, majestic, spectacular, grand, FREE STREET PARADE ONE MILE LONG! 50 FREE EXHIBITIONS DAILY 50 EXPERIENCED DETECTIVES IN ATTENDANCE. They are constantly on ther watch to protect the public from the operations of cam biers and swindlers. Same Prices West as East. Admission, 50c. HEX. G-XaEISTIiT. PChlehwtn' EmsMh Miaul Braa. EflHYROYAL PILLS . ftrlflnaj aa4 Only Cennhra. "Oa. Mavarar. alva rwli,KU DrogxM lor CklclutUrt Rualiih Dim. mtmdBnmd la Kca and Geid Bketmllki iiea. MM with bhw rikboo. Taka aotfce. ffffutt -'mman iiui mhirint fMaaandaaataUoau. At DraggHM, araaa44e. d luun nt pvuean, MauaaaMaai ana , M RaIIaT Car LmIIm." a UtlMr a MaiL 1MM Tiaiaaiua. nu ar CMabeatmflalaal Wj ,Mitlaoaj aiaara, PtimMM, .. arnliaiFaa Wool Growers, Attention I will be in The Dalles during the Wool Season of this year, prepared to boy all kinds of Wool in any quantities at the highest market price. . See me before selling or ship ping your Wool. CHARLES S. MOSES. New England Marble Granite Works, Calvin H. Weeks, Proprietor. -WHOLESALE AND KBTJrll. DEALBH IN- Fine JJonnfflBiiM Woi1 Imported j&alsiiaf ij. Do not order Monumental Work until yon ob'ain our figures. You will find that, for good work, our charees are always tbe lowest. Cash or time settlement! fas prt-ferre1 can be arranged for at greatly reduced figures. Send address for d signs and prices. Second and Third-street cars pass our salesrooms. . 720 Front Street, opp. the Failing School, PORTLAND, OR.