THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE. WEDNESDAY. APRIL 14, 1897. Spring Clothes We Ladies' Gapes. Light Tan Broadcloth, single and double Cape ... ?. - $3.50 to ,$ 5.00 o S8 ' They are the finest men's gar ments we ever saw. . ...See Famishing Goods window New Styles, New Colorings, New Ideas ex pressed in the Suits, Top Coats and Trous ers that make tip our New Spring Stock. The very latest and "best the country affords is here for our customers, and the prices are less than usual. .' Every man who likes good cloth and perfect making should look, at them. - LOO. $10.00. 12.50. $15.00 18. and Have Them The garments you'd be proud . of. : . All the style you can stand ; : all . the wear you-want, and we will sell them lower than ,we ever have. What are thev made of Come and see. There are some things that can't be all told about on paper. ' ' " xau roauciotn, Draia trimming, hne quality Tan Broadcloth,' braid trimming, better quality, Tan Broadcloth, silk lining, elegantly trimmed. Black Gros Grain: Silk, cut bead trimming.......... Black Moire Silk, braid and cut bead trimming. ' .........:..:...... ...,.;.:......:;....;......:,. ....$15.00 and 7.0l 8.00 10.00 9.00 16.50 LADIES' JACKETS. In Black', Tan and Red, lined with silk. These are v good bargains at prices ranging from $6.50 to $12. TAILOR-MADE SUITS. Navy Serge Blazer Suit, braid trimming,........L$15.00 Black Serge Jacket Suit .................... 12.50 Tan Covert Cloth Blazer Suit . 12.50 Black Serge Blazer and Jacket Suits, trimmed, :.,....;.. :.$! 2.50 and '15.00 7 o ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. PEASE & MAYS. 9 The Weekly GhroMele. TMR IIALLIB, - . - OKEOOM OFFICIAL PAPER OF WASCO COUNTY. Published in two parti, on Wednetdayt and Saturday. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. BY MAIL, POSTAGE FRZPAID, IS ADVANCE. One year 1 SO Six months 75 Three months..... 60 Advertising rates reasonable, and made known on application. Address all communications to"THE;CHRON- luus., ine uaiies, Oregon. Telephone No. 1. LOCAL BREVITIES. Saturday's Dally. Mr. John Miler of Hosier made final proof on bis homestead this morning. James Kelley has eighty-seven hogs at the yards for shipment. They were fattened on corn brought from Nebraska, Dr. Hollister was called to Grant this afternoon, on account of the serious ill neas of Mr. Blade, the hotel keeper at that place. The contract for bnilding the CaUiolic church has been let. The building will cost something over f 13,000, and will be the handsomest church edifice in East ern Oregon. said the dnat here was four inches deep, and we, like an ignoramus, denied it. Today at times it was forty feet deep and forty miles wide, in 'some places. Mr. Rankin, the ferryman at White Salmon, returned from Goldendale. to day, where he had been interviewing the county commissioners in behalf of the settlers below the bluff, at White Salmon, who want a public road laid out along the foot of the bluff. ; ' Edward J. McBee made homestead filing on Hood Eiver lands today, they being a portion of section 4, in township 1 north of range 10 east. There is quite a large tract of land in the. immediate vicinity subject to homestead entry, and as it is fine orchard land, it will soon be taken up. , In the suit of Mrs. K. L. Barrill vs. W. G. Barrill, referred at the .last No vember term of the court to a referee to take and report the' testimony, Judge Bradshaw, on March 22d, rendered a decree granting a divorce and the cub- plaintiff. The Woodmen's Circle held a social session last night after the regular ses sion, the latter feature being in honor of the return of Mrs. Filloon from the su preme lodge at St. Louis.; An address of welcome was delivered by Mrs.' Ella Cashing, which was responded to by Mrs. Filloon. This was followed by banjoand guitar music by' Mr. Parkins and Simms', eoloi by Charles.' Clarke, farce by members of the order and song, "Going Back to Dixie," by the: ladies, the program concluding with a tableau representing the mottoes of the order, "Love, Wisdom and Power." The ac tion of Mrs. Filloon and the other dele gates to the supreme lodge, leaving the old order, was indorsed, and the lodge will affiliate with the Pacific jurisdic tion. . , An -attempted burglary last night at A. M. Williams & Co.'s that is it might have been, but the burglar un doubtgdly was disappointed at finding those nobby, all-wool suits marked down to only $10, so cheap that stealing them would have .been deemed an ex travagance. ... This morning it was reported that an attempt to burglarize Williams & Co.'s store had been made last night, and later Johnston's store had been broken into. When traced down it proved to be that Nightwatcbman Wiley last night found the back door at Johnston's open,. but it bad not been properly fastened, and had been blown partly open by the wind. . ' Yesterday appropriate programs were presented in the different departments of The - Dalles public schools in observ ance of Arbor day. No trees were planted, as the grounds are supplied with a sufficient number, the last work in . this way . being in January of the present year, when eighteen trees were, by order of the board, set out in the East Hill primary grounds. ,' Mrs. Lyman Daly met with a serious accident this morning, just how serious cannot yet be determined. Mr. Daly was bringing her and their two little children to town at an early hour, they intending to take the boat for Vancou ver. Coming down 3-Mile hill one of the wheels of the wagon ran into a ditch alongside of the road, and Mrs. Daly was thrown off the seat, falling on the wheel. Her right lower , jaw was badly fractured, and she received a se vere concussion of the brain, which ren dered her unconscious. She was brought into town and taken to the residence of Mr., and Mrs. J. C. Meine, where Dr. Hollister reduced the fracture and at tended to her other, injuries. Her con dition is dangerous, but : she may pull through all nght. Nick Sinnott and "Nemo," before they get the, matter off their hands, will wish they had never toyed with Cissy Sideways of Dufur. Their profusenesB of apology to that now famous young collective noun of the female, gender, has .proven a case of jumping out of tne trying pan into the fire. - It seems now that the aforementioned gentlemen- are in more than' a peck of trouble at home. " When the Dispatch appeared in The Dalles containing their "billet doux" addressed to the "Indignant Thirteen," it created a flury in the local feminine-circles, and they were imme diated accused of flirting with the young ladies of this berg, and the next Sun day evening were treated with such a degree : ot eang froid, they bad an at tack of chills and fever and made a per- cipitate retreat. Never -mind, boys, patch the affair up as well as you can at home, and we'll smooth it down here. Dufur Dispatch. ;. ',',.--'. t.: Monday's Dally. The ladies' Good Intent Society will not meet this week. The carpet at C. F. Stephen's store will be-, raffled off this evening at 8 o'clock , - , The late Latimer Booth was a member of both the A. O. U. W. and Woodmen, and carried $2000 insurance in each. . Mr; Ad. 7 Keller yesterday received word that the Improved Order of Bed men, of Portland will give - a grand ex cursion to The Dalles, May 16th. ' ;' The Good Templars will give one of their excellent socials next Saturday evening, to which all are invited. An admission fee of 15 cents will be charged.. The D. P. & A. N. yesterday bad a big scow load of rock landed alongside their wharf, and are now loadinn the lower wharf with it to hold it during high water. Maetz & Pundt are making the at tempt to open up a sewer across First street, in order that the water may be drained from their lots, after high water. A. M. Williams & Co. have put up a neat stand in their shoe department, and have boptblack, who will polish the shoes of all of their customers free of charge. - The social committees of the Christian Endeavor .societies of this city are ar ranging a. fine entertainment for next week. Look out for further announce ments in these columns. " The sheriff today sold a tract of land in the edge of the city to satisfy .a judg ment of John Barger against O. D. Tay lor. It was purchased by C. W. Dietzel, the price paid being $2319.29. ... ' The baseball game between the Cham pion and White Stars yesterday after noon was an exceptionally well played one. Up to the eighth inning the White Stars had Bix runs to their credit, and the Champions eight, but in the eighth the Champions broke away and tallied eight runs. The score stood, Cham pions 16, White Stars 8. The funeral of Latimer Booth took place yesterday afternoon from the Con-. gregational church, Rev. Curtis preach ing the sermon. The procession was a very large one, , the Masons, Workmen and Woodmen all attending, the inter ment being made in accordance with the rites of the former. Saturday the wind was on a tear in Grand Dalles as well as here. The 6- year-old daughter of Mr. Rorick at tempted to go to a point a short distance from the bouse, when the the wind caught her and carried her. over a bluff. Her face was quite badly cut, and her left fore. arm., broken, or rather bent in what is known as a "green-stick" fracture. ' Mr. Geo. Young came in from Ridge way' Saturday, to meet the sheep in spector, from Klickitat county. . Mr, Young usually sends a flock of 5,000 sheep across Klickitat county to market at Yakima, but under the recent de cision of the county commissioners, he 1b forbidden to take bis sheep into the county until they have been quaran tined for sixty days. ' ' Sunday morning Roderick,- the 10- year-old son of George Brown, who works for Mr. Saltmarshe, was playing at the slaughter-house, near the tank used - for scalding hogB, and which was full of water almost boiling hot. He slipped and fell, both legs going into the water over the knees. In removing his Blockings the skin and flesh peeled off with them. Dr. Hollister attended to his injuries, and thinks he will pull through all right. Although suffering terribly, the little fellow is stoical and bears the pain without murmuring. ; . Tuesday's. Dally ' ' One carload of cattle was shipped to Tromdate from the stockyards today. A b:g drive in matches. ; Three papers for 5 cants at Maier & Benton's. - The street sprinkler started this morn ing, and the recent dust storms make its good work all the more acceptable. If the cases at Condon are all tried. Judge Bradshaw will have quite a siege of it, as there are forty-two cases on the docket. The river this morning shows con siderable small drift, indicating that some of the smaller , tributaries are at their highest. It probably comes from the Umatilla, as the Pendleton papers re port that stream' unusually -high, and some of the bridges on the O. R. & N. partly washed out. ... On account of the baseball meeting last night, the meeting of the wheelmen was postponed until next Thursday night. Do not forget that there is an ordi nance against riding bicycles on the sidewalks. . : . . . The Herald says that a Cuban officer, traveling incognito, and engaged in secret revolutionary work, passed through that town last week. . ' , ' . - In Mrs. Wingate's handsome yard, is a magnolia in full bloom that has more than 400 blossoms. It is worth walking np that way just for a glance at it. Goose lake, in Lake county, is much higher; this spring than it has been for a number of years. A number of houses and haystacks are completely surround ed by. water. , . . It iB expected the delinquent tax roll will be completed today, and the foot ings made up, so that the rolls will be in the hands of the sheriff and taxes will be again received Monday. The salmon catch is evidently increas ing very . rapidlv. Saturday a half of one was brought in, and last night whole one represented the catch. "The supply has doubled in two days. All. ball players of the Commercial Club are notified that there will be a practice game at the fair grounds every afternoon at 4 o'clock, and they are all requested to be present and participate in the games. , The ladies of Canyon City have or ganized a brass band and elected officers George Cattanach is president and in structor, Mabel Gray secretary, and Mrs, D. I. Asbury treasurer. There was a fish wheel went down the river this morning. It was on a ecow, This item was furnished us free of charge by Sam Thurman. He also told us that one of the wheels caught seventy-five pounds of salmon last night. .. A weekly shipment of sturgeon is be ing made from Huntington, and some good-sized fish have been brought in lately. Fish weighing between 200 and 300 are not an uncommon thing there They are taken from Snake river, near Old's Ferry. Jack Parker, who killed Bud Howard at the time the latter killed Til Glaze in Harney county, has been pardoned by the governor, after serving ' two years of a seven years' sentence. A strong pe tition was sent in his behalf, and . his own exemplary conduct while in the pen had much to do with the pardon being granted.' They are evidently preparing for a brisk trade in their grocery department. We refer to Pease & Mays, whp are to day unloading five full carloads of. mer chandise, consisting of beans, canned and dried fruit, tea, coffee, spices and miscellaneous groceries. It is buying goods in such quantities as these that they are enabled to make low prices to the consumer. At the Stnbling Greenhouse you will find ' strong, well-rooted . geraniums, fuchsias, white and yellow marguerites and heliotropes, from . five cents up. Roses in bloom, 15 cents, or two for 25 cents; call a lilies in bloom, 2o cents; pansies 25 per dozen. Appropriate floral designs furnished on short notice. . 24-dlw-wlm Early. Rose and Early Everet eeed potatoes at Maier & Benton's. ENJOYING THE TRIP. School Superintendent Gilbert Writes Something; or His Journey. Indianapolis, Ind.. April 5, 1897. Editor Chronicle: I arrived in this city yesterday and learn that it will be necessary - for me to remain here about two weeks, during which time I will write . occasionally, anticipating that inrisimas you promised me on my return. ' We left The Dalles March 20th, and arrived at Andrews, Ind., on the 25th, (and judging from the newspaper reports of the storm 8 since then,' we were fortu nate not to be delayed. A stop-over of six hours at Denver gave us ample time to visit Colorado's three-niillion-dollar rew capitol build ing, which is not fully finished inside We visited both branches of the legisla ture, and then went to view the other fossils in the museum. It is said that the Smithsonian Institute does not con tain as complete an exhibit of all that pertains to the cliff dwellers ai is to be found her. . Many of your readers had the pleasure of bearing Major Jackson, U. S. A., lecture about these Indians, Well, everything is to be found here as he described, except the snake dance. The department of minerology cannot be excelled by any one Btate, and when gazing upon the collection of opals one feels an attack of kleptomania. After leaving Denver it is pleasing to make faster time, and from St. Louis we took the New York expresB, next to the fastest train in the United States. It is needless to tell you that our stay here will be a pleasant one. Four gen erations are represented in the family at present, and at a recent reunion two hundred and fifty relatives were present. I took 'a walk along North Delaware street this evening, and saw the home of ex-President Harrison, and. by the way, that reminds me that I promised to look after Colonel Sinnott's in terests in Washington, D. C. I now . feel that - be can get the appointment of IT. S. fish commissioner on the strength of the salmon story, of wDicn ne is now tne only living witness. . . C. L. Gilbert. Funeral of Pearl Batler. The funeral of Pearl Butler took place from the family residence Saturday morn ing, and in compliance with her request, made but a short time before her death, the ceremonies were very brief. The floral offerings were profuse and beauti ful, the grave being covered with tbem. Among the many beautiful pieces were one from the Sunday ' school class to which she belonged, another from the graduating class of '96, of which she was member, and one from the W. C. T. U. Also a very pretty floral ship, wh:ch bad been presented to Pearl when she was graduated, and which bad been re arranged in hyacinths. Despite the terrible wind and dust storm, a large uuiiiber of sorrowing friends followed all that was mortal of Pearl Butler' to the cemetery and saw her placed by the side of her sister, who so recently preceded lier into -the valley of the shadow. The floral iia on Jes sie's grave bad all been refilled, and as the sad cortege turned back from the graves, the sisters slept side, by side un der masses of flowers, typical ot the in nocence and purity of those beneath, and of those flowers of the field of Ar dath, whose white, star-like blooms for ever kiss the feet of the children of men who have returned to their home with God. Beaatlfnl Display of Bat. -.'- That The Dalles ladies thoroughly ap preciate fine millinery, and know where to find it was shown by the attendance Friday afternoon and evening at the . grand EaBter opening at Mrs. Briggs millinery parlors. ' It was conceied by all that it was the finest display of the kind-ever made in the city, and the beautiful 'and artistic creations called forth many expressions of admiration.' The shapes are about the Bacne, but larger,. and the trimmings show quite a difference from those ot last year. They are much more elaborate, and red leada all other colors, the hats from the East most distinctly showing the difference.. The windows were most beautifully dec orated, but these were lost on the ladiea who went there to see hats, and would not or could not see anything else. We don't blame the dear creatures for ad miring them,, for alter seeing her try on a dozen of those hats, we came, near falling in love with our own wife. The ladies are to be congratulated on having so fine a selection to choose from, and Mrs. Briggs to be commended for pro viding it. " There Was Some Dost. We f owe . an apology to Mr. Hardy. the gentleman who told the Oregon ian there was dust in The Dalles, and also . to the Oregonian in questioning the cor rectness of its information in yes terday's issue. ' Then the air was balmlv and soft, as a summer girl, the streets aa quiet as a Bleeping babe'. It was not that way today. All the spirits from the cave of the winds were out on a jamboree, and there were whirlwinds and whirlpools of blinding, choking, smothering dust. It came from all points of the compass at once, and went in all directions at the same time, filling store and residence with its gritty presence, - and the air with profanity that traveled far and fast. Yes, there is some dust in The Dalles, and we are iree to confess that our' statement yesterday entitles us to the highest office in the gift ot the Sazerac lying club. Council Meeting;. An adjourned session of the city coun cil was held Saturday evening, the mayor and all councilmen being oresent. The ordinance taxing the Bale of liquors by the bottle or flaa'a was read, and the motion to place it on its final passage was lost. On motion the fur ther consideration of the ordinance was indefinitely postponed. ' . The ordinance providing for the num bering of houses was read and action on the same was postponed until the com mittee on streets and public property reported. ' The finance committee, to which had been referred the matter of loaning city funds reported, recommending the loan of $2500. Also . recommended that the claim of M. A. Moody for $53.50 be paid. On motio'n the recommendations ot the committee were adopted. On mo tion the claim of Dalles City water works for $32, was ordered paid. - It was. ordered that the city proceed to sell. nil city lots in Gates' addition, ac cording to last appraisement. An ordinance providing for the Bale of city lots was then read and placed on ita final passage, and was passed by a vote of 6 to 3. On motion the Catholic church was al lowed the usual privileges of the streets for building purposes. No further business appearing, council adiourned.