THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, SATURDAY, APRIL 25, 1896. ...... The Weekly Ghfoniele. THB DALLES. . - OBKOON OFFICIAL PAPER OF WASCO COUNTY. Published in two and Saturdays. part, on Wednesdays SUBSCRIPTION SATES. ' BT KAIL, POSTAGE PBEPAIB, IN ADVANCI. One year 11 80 Six months - , 70 Three months... SO Advertising rates reasonable, and made known on application. Address all communications to "THE;CHRON ICLE," The Dalles, Oregon. The Daily and Weekly Chronicle may be found on tale at I. C. Nickelsen's store. Telephone No. 1.. LOCAL BREVITIES. Wednesday's Sally. The orchestra disbanded last night. There wag a reorganization of the band perfected. i The citizens" meeting last night was sparsely attended, and little enthusiasm was manifested by those who did attend for or against the chemical engine. After a tew desultory Bernards the meet ing adjourned. Dr. H. VV. Sturdevant, the dentist, wishes it distinctly understood that he does not intend changing bis place of residence to Astoria or elsewhere. The report is abroad owing to the change of residence of T. F. Sturdevant. Engineer Eastman took a little stroll across the river into Rockland yesterday, and among the curious things he eaw was a large rattlesnake which measured about four inches through the body and . was only about four feet long and bad ainteen rattles and a button. An attempted burglary was made on the safe of VanDuyn, Adams & Co. at Tyeh Sunday night. The attempt to blow open the door was a failure, and they left without obtaining any money, A little merchandise abstracted from the store was the only loss, barring the in juries to the safe. No clue is known as to the burglar's identity. Dr. Grant and party left this morning on the Regulator for Portland. Mr, Grant's photographer will take "views along the river of the several points of interest, among them a precipitous rock . on the Washington side, which has been termed "Dr. Grant's castle," about twenty minutes' run from The Dalles, The views are to adorn a valuable lecture on Oregon which Dr. Grant will deliver throughout the East, and which will doubtless do much to induce immi gration to this state. Several wool buyers are again in the city, looking after their yearly business. The names of J. W. Russell, Portland, and E. Judd, Pendleton, are inscribed on the Umatilla bouse register. One facie will be missed this season, owing to the death of George F. Davis, known throughout the states of Idaho, Wash ington, Oregon and California as one of the most skillful buyers of wool on the coast. Mr. Davis died at a resort near Bakersfield, whither he had gone for the benefit of his health. He was the main representative of Koshland & Co., a heavy wool concern of Boston and San Francisco. Thursday's Daily . The foundation for the new Williams building Is being laid. The sheriff has started posting the general election notices. (jounty uierfc A. ai. JLeisay proposes to plant five acres to tomatoes this season. ' The rainfall last night amounted to one-twentieth of an inch, a fairly good summer rain. Ida Walters is held in the county jail as a.witness in the case of State vs. Wm Landis for adultery. Trout fishing is said to be better than average this season. All who have angled for the speckled beauties report excellent success. J. W. Walton announces himself as an independent Republican candidate for justice of the peace, and filed the re quired notice with ten signatures with the county clerk yesterday. John Carey's restaurant was moved today from its location next to the Mountaineer office to Mr. Mclnerny's building in the East End. A 15-cent house goes in across the street from Carey's old place. " The Pendleton brass band, of fourteen instruments, has begun a series of weekly outdoor concerts. It is the in tention of the leader to select a different portion of the town each week, in order that all may be .treated alike. In the case of Teal vs. Mosier, which tame before Justice Davis this morning, defendants were given until Saturday at 10 o'clock to file answer. The case of John Donovan vs. Taffe, for recovery of alleged balance due on a steam boiler, was postponed until April 29th at 10 o'clock. - , ' f John, Lnuer, a 10-year-old boy, who lives on 8-Mile, lan into a barbed wire fence this morning, receiving severe in juries about the face. His nose was nearly cut in two laterally, a gash was made in his neck nearly severing the carotid artery, and other cuts were made upon his face. He was immediately brought to the city and placed under the care of Dr Holhster. . . ' Col. 8innott thinks Dr. Grant over looked one very important photograph for bis to-be famous collection. If he bad only been asked he would have shown Mr. Grant the identical place where Geo. Francis Train crossed the river on the backs of salmon, a feat to which there are now but two living wit- nesse Train himself, who is in New York City, and Col. N. B. Sinnott. The finishing touches are being put on the 3-Mile road. A carriage team can now trot from the bottom to the top without losing any speed, so slight is the grade. This latter improvement is in line with the remodelled brewery grade, which is another excellent piece of work. At the present rate of im provement Wasco county roads will be well nigh perfect within five years which means increased prosperity alike for the farmers and the townspeople, Friday's Daily. Circuit court convenes at Prineville on the 4th of May. There was .15 of an inch of rainfall last night and today. . The Buchler well is down 107 feet, They are now drilling in granite. Mr. McArthur is replacing the re maining arc lights with mcandescents, The Wasco warehouse has received about 100 sacks of wool so far this sea son. Thursday next is the final day at the Boss Cash Store. Come early and secure bargains. The corset factory has moved over the old Chronicle office and is running a full force of operatives. J. H. St. Lawrence, the blind orator, will address the citizens of The Dalles and vicinity tomorrow nignt. Sallmarshe & Co. shipped three car loads of cattle to the Union Meat Co, this morning. They are from Summit Prairie. The Dietzel Bros, have n earl 3 finished the construction of a neat little sailing boat, which will be launched in the river soon. A wind this afternoon blew down some fences above the bluff. The wind was not very strong, but then the fences were not either. A number of emigrants from North Yakima are camped at the head of Union street near Twelfth. Thev are looking, for locations. On account of repairs going on at St, Paul's church, the regular mid-week service wil be omitted .this evening, Services on Sunday at the usual hours, morning and evening. Mr. U. Li. Kxhmond bad but just re covered from an obstinate felon on his hand, when another began to make its appearance, lie nas been incapacitated from work part of the time. Mr. Henry Dietzel recently sent out a man to his Tunnel mine near Mt. Hood, about 25 miles from this city. He went over a ridge where the snow was eight feet deep. There is four feet on a level at the claim. Rev. L. Grey will hold English Luth eran service in O. D. Taylor's church on Sunday morning at 10 "o'clock, and in the evening at 7:30. At 3 p. m. Rev. Grey will hold a German service at the same place. The team attached to Otto Birgfeld's new delivery wagon ran away this morn ing. The King bolt broke and the team ran with the front running gear. No serious damage resulted either to the horses or wagon. A vast acreage of grain has been sown this season in Klickitat county, and all bids fair to produce an abundant yield One observer estimates that the wheat crop of Klickitat county will this year be somewhere near 1,000,000 bushels. The date upon which Arbor day falls may be considered a fair indication of the advance of spring in the different states of the west. In Oregon it was April 10th, Washington April 24th, Idaho May 8th, and Monana May 12th The best bowling record so far was made on Wednesday by Judge Brad' shaw, who scored 52 points out of a pos Bible 90. Previous to that Mr. C. F, Stephens was champion, with 49 points to his credit. Of the ladies, Mrs. C. F, Stephens scored 19 out of a possible 45, The hobo who made it so lively for Officer Blakeney a few days ago is get ting very tame nnder the cooling infla ence of our excellent city jail and a diet of bread and water. Tbis morning he wanted to be taken out to work on the street, but the marshal thought he was too much of an athlete, and refused to grant the request. He will be very tired of The Dalles when his twenty-day sen- BITUMINOUS COAL. "Blossoms" Dlscorered Near the City . as Large as Lard Falls. Mr. E. B. Burns is the name of a man who has been in our city for about three weeks, and in that short time has ac complished what others who have been here' for many years wonM have been glad to find. Such is the irony of fate. He has discovered the best specimen of bituminous' coal ever foand in this region of country. It is soft coal, the specimen being as large as a 5-pound lard pail, broken from a piece much larger. He made the discovery about a week ago a few miles down the river from The Dalles on the Oregon side. The specimen was accompanied by an other, showing the colors of "peacock coal," a quality second only to an thracite. Mr. Burns claims to be a prospector of twelve years experience in Colorado, Wyoming and the southwest territories, and he certainly talks coal very famil iarly. He has been in Oregon Bince January, principally in the Baker City country. He was laid off the Virtrn mine, and came to Wasco county, as he had heard there were recent coal dis coveries here. He says everything in dicated the presence of coal. The base ment being dug by A. M. Williams & Co. shows carbonates, but 'they 'have been burned and are lifeless. In his walk of a week ago he dis covered familiar signs, known only to coal prospectors, and digging down pro cured the specimens he exhibited to a Chronicle reporter today. He claims that every coal region has faults and the fault of this is that the veins are not fiat, but pitch at various angles from 20 to 45 degrees,cansed by past ebullitions of nature. Therefore coal is harder to find, and when found may be broken off un expectedly and the vein lost for a time. Mr. Barns does not know whether the land upon which be found the coal is still government land, and will not tell its exact location until he ascertains. It is, however, on the mountain which lies between Chenoweth and Mosier creeks. Our people need not be skeptical over the existence of coal. Everything reads coal, and the opinion once expressed of our state geologist, Mr. Condon, is en titled to considerable weight. He said that The Dalles was built over a valu able bed of coal, but be couldn't say how deep it was. v OURI CZ? PECI SKLE, Saturday , April 25 2 BIG DRIVES IN DRESS GOODS. Black Dress Goods. " x 42-in. " 42-in. " Mohair, fancy, 38-inch.. fancy, plain, 42-in Jacquard, 40-inch. 42-inch, silk stripe,42-inch. " 44-inch. " 44-inch. Regular. Special. $ .35 $ .30 .50 .42J .65 .52 .50 .42J- . .65 .50 . .75 .62J 1.00 .82 J 1.10 .87 1.25 1.10 1.50 1.30 2.00 1.60 On Saturday vre will make a Special Display of our new: line of Sun Shades and Parasols. Colored Dress Goods. Our 25c line of Colored Dress Goods is one of the most popular that has been shown this season, and heeds no further mention. Special price, 21c In our regular 50c line will be found our popular Navy Serges, Plain and Figured Mohairs, Imported Weaves with changeable effects, and English Cheviots. Special price, 41c. - Our 65c line are all imported novel ties of the daintiest designs. Special price, 57c. Our 75c line includes Serges, in navys, greys, browns and all the new shades of green, as well as a full line of Fancies. Special, 64c. ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. PEASE & MAYS. An A VALUABLE QUARRY. Inexhaustible Ledg of the Stone the Looks Are Made Of. Mr. W. R. Winans was in town yes terday, having in his possession a hand some specimen of the building stone of which the main wall at the Cascades is built. Mr. Winans has been developing an immense ledge of this valuable stone which exists on his homestead about 20 miles from the mouth of Hood river. It has a mile of front, and is about thirty feet deep, an inexhaustible supply. It is the only known natural quarry of this valuable stone in the country. The im mense amount that has been nsed at the locks of this same kind of stone has been float, existing as bowlders in a creek bed mixed among other kinds of rock and debris, and probably glacial. This stone is more durable than gran ite, some kinds of which are subject to considerable erosion. Mr. Winans building stone partakes of a fine polish when it shows a uniform bine color of very handsome shade. It is very' com pact, therefore capable of immense pres sure. - It splits uniformly, and the action of centuries of weather does not make it crumble. It is an ideal rock for the con struction of the locks, for it will not wear a quarter of an inch in a thousand years by the action of the water. The locks are therefore as permanent as the pyramids of Egypt. Mr. Winans has taken no steps to de velop his quarry, but he has a property more valuable than a gold mine, if he conld get the stone to market. This would necessitate the construction of a railway to Hood River, when the entire United States would be tributarv as a market. XV. C. T. IT. Organisation. tence expires. Announcement. I wish to announce to the dealers and the smoking public that I am now mauufacturing strictly first-class cigars in The Dalles and am here to stay. I use nothing but the finest iniDOrted stock and can compete successfully with Eastern and imported, goods, because cbe import duty and freight is much less on raw material than it is on manu factured goods. My eighteen years ex perience makes me duly qualified to select the finest stock, on which my suc cess depends. My "Regulator' brand is made by hand of Havana tobacco grown in the famous Vnelta Aba'jo dis trict of Cuba; there is nothing finer in the world. Call for the "Regulator." It is a good thing, pu9h it along. . : ' ' Very respectfully, . apr24-dlw O. A. Pktebson. In response to the invitation to meet Mrs. Kinney, a good number of ladies came to the home of Mrs. S. French yes terday at 3 p. m. After singing a hymn and prayer, Mrs. Kinney spoke for a short time of the work and progress of the W. C. T. IT., and then asked that the work of the Union be begun here. Several gave their names, and an organ ization was effected. The following ladies were unanimously elected as officers: Mrs. C. S. VanDuyn, presi dent ; Mrs. M. E. Biggs, vice-president ; Mrs. Mattie Barnett, treasurer ; Mrs. J. E. Dean, recording secretary; Mrs. D. M. French, corresponding secretary. The meeting then adjourned to meet next Tuesday at Mrs. O. D. Doane's. All ladies who are willing to help, or would like to understand the working of the union are most cordially invited to be at Mrs. Doane's. Thirty ladies gave their names as members, and three gen tlemen as honoraries. Mr. Gourlay and Dr. Grant. Dr. Roland D. Grant, who was in the city yesterday, desires us to make the following statement: . "Mr. Gourlay misquoted me on the occasion of my first lecture in saying that I asserted that Washington said: "Put none but Americans on guard tonight." I pre ceded the statement with the words "It is said" Washington gave that order, whereas Mr. Gourlay claims Washing ton said not only that, but adds another statement, "because we shall need the Irish in the morning." Speaking of Mr. Gonrlay's communication in yester day's Chronicle, Mr. Grant said : "He condemns me for not what I said, but something I didn't say something he wanted me to say; but I never get caught in that kind of a trap. I as sert nothing but what I can prove. The statement about the 104,000 Catholic desertions first appeared in a New York daily newspaper, and was copied by the A. P. A. press. The paper w hich orig inated the story later corrected it, but not all the papers which reprinted the original article saw the correction. It is of such material Mr. Gourlay makes out bis case. He doesn't attack our fortress." I. O. G. T. RECLAIMING A DESERT. The Excellent WorK Now Going; on In Umatilla County. Monday night the Independent Work ers held a very pleasant and helpful session. The program committee had prepared a fine entertaiiment and it was duly appreciated by the large num ber present. ine i. u. . i. are making prepare tions for the meeting of the Grand Lodge, which holds its sessions here in The Dalles the first week in June, at which time from 70 to 100 delegates from all parts of the state will be present and all friends of the temperance cause are asked to lend a band in making their visit to our city a very pleasant one. There is time for you, who read this, to join one of the lodges of the order, and thus give your support to a good cause and enjoy the pleasures of the meeting, The Dalles Lodge No. 2, meets every Saturday evening at the K. of P. hall and the Independent Workers No. 7, meets every Monday evening It Fra ternity hall. Come ye friends pf tem perance and join us and be ready for the Grand Lodge in June. B. H. In Honor of Mrs. GUllam. Mrs. J. E. Barnett entertained a num' ber of the friends of Mrs. Wm. Gilliam, who is here from California visiting her, at her residence yesterday afternoon Most of the ladies present were old friends of Mrs. Gilliam's in days gone by when she was a resident of The Dalles, and although party days for them have most ended, so well did Mrs! Harnett entertain ber guests and so pleasant was it to recall old times, that the afternoon was one of great enjoy ment. Awarded Highest Honors World's Fair, . Gold Medal, Midwinter Fair. DE; CREAM : Most Perfect Made. 40 Tears the Standard. Some of the arid lands of Umatilla county are being settled upon by a party of men, who are putting in a ditch taken from the Umatilla river, known as the Baily ditch. ' The ditch is run over a beautiful little scope of country, and it is believed by all who see the growth of vegetation upon the land that it will de velop into a rich farming country. Al though it taxes a great deal of water to irrigate that land, we cannot question the quality of the land. Last year was the first to he cultivated and all kinds of garden truck was raised in abundance, Potatoes, both in sizs and quality, were almost unequalled in the state. All kinds of fruit trees are being set out this spring, as well as small berries, with long rows of stately poplars, which are being set out for wind-breaks. Several dwelling houses are being built, some splendid farm cottages and other im- prpvements. Mrs. Kinney's Lecture. Mrs. Narcissa White Kinney enter tained a large audience last night on the subject of temperance. She spoke in glowing terms of the work accomplished by the W. C. T. U., which is now 21 years old, the largest hand of women ever organized for any purpose. It numbers 400,000, distributed in forty different nations and comprising fifty languages. Its work has been apparent in legislation on many lines. The or ganization has raised the age of consent from 10 and 12 years to 14, 15, 16 and in three states as high as 18 years of age. In Oregon it has prohibited the selling of cigarettes to minors. Mrs. Kinney spoke of many other reforms of like ex cellence that were attributable to the in fluence of the W. C. T. U. Speaking of the progress of temperance, she said that while the liquor traffic was apparently carried on to as large an extent as ever before, there never was a time when there were so many total abstainers as now. She tnen continued, witn argu ment, example and precept leading to a full conception of the importance of the work of the W. C. T. D., and at the close of the lecture many ladies signed a pledge and membership cards of the or ganization, re-establishing on a firm foundation a branch order in The Dalles. The speaker was pleasantly introduced by Mrs. Smith French, Rev. Wood read Our County Schools. ". . j From the annual statement of Mr. Troy Shelley, county school superin tendent, we glean the following inter esting data concerning county public, schools : Number of pupils enrolled between ages of 4 and 20, 2,593 ; number of per sons in county between those ages, 3,052; 1,424 children do not attend school. Number of teachers employed, 158. Twenty teachers hold first grade, 31 second grade, and 23 third grade certi ficates. Sixty teachers take some edu cational journal. There are eleven private schools, with 144 scholars. Estimated value of school houses and gronnds.f 75,677 ; school furniture $ 9,701 ; apparatus $4,510. Amount of insurance on houses and property, $29,960. Average salary paid male teachers. $45.38; female, $35.40. Salary of super intendent, $700. There are 61 dietricts in the county. Five new school boaaes have been built during the year. Of the 62 school houses 58 are frame, 2 brick and 2 log. Number of graded schools 7, employ ing 30 teachers. There is one academy, employing eight teachers, with 125 pupils. Number of legal voters at school elec tions, 2,119. An average of 6 mills has been voted and levied during the year for school purposes. Wants Flsk and the Colonel Promoted a scripture lesson, and Rev. Hawk of Goldendale, who Bhort prayer. was present, made a Editor Chronicle: I have a propo- ' sition to make to those interested in the immediate opening of the Cascade locks that ought to meet the approval of every Oregonian from Point Adams to Snake river. I see by the papers that Lieut. Harry Taylor has been promoted and ordered to take charge of some score of ' government works in Washington that the government never intends to finish. Now don't you think it would be a good idea for us to petition the secretary of war to send Captain Fisk and "Colonel" Day to keep Harry company. It will be awful lonely for Harry away up on the raging StillaguamiBh ot by the deserted mud flats of the Swinomish. On the "promotion" of these gentlemen as aforesaid, I suggest that the works be turned over to the supervisor of road district No. 1 for completion. Hcoh Gourlay. A convention takes place in Spokane May 15th, to consider the best means of lighting the squirrel pest. , Don't be Bamboozled by Smooth-Tongued Feddlars Into paying $70 or $75 for a Steel Range when'you can buy a better Eange right at home for $15 to $20 less. We will sell you a better Eange, the " SUPERIOR,' with copper reservoir, for $55, and we guarantee it to'be'as good as any, and better than many. We do not come around once in 5 or 10 years. We live here, do business here, and are here to stay. YflLBXTS & CROWES.