(3) THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1897. in 'i K'r I The Weekly Chronicle. THE DALLES, OKEOON OFFICIAL PAPEE OF WASCO COUNTY. Published in two parts, on Wednesday and Saturdays. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. BT KAIL, rOSTAGI I'M PAID, IM ADVANCS. " One year .' 1 ' Six months J Three month 60 Advertising rates reasonable, and made known on application. " Address all communications to "THF CHRON ICLE," The Dalles, Oregon. Telephone No. 1. LOCAL BREVITIES. Wednesday s Daily. Thirty-four of our merchants have signed the agreement not to collect until Monday, the 4th. Collection day, owing to it falling on Saturday, has, by general consent, been postponed nntil Monday, Oct. 4th. A few flocks of wild geese have made their appearance from the north, which indicates that the Klondikers are hav ing some winter weather. . ,T , The wheat market is weak and the price is going slowly but steadily down. Quotations today are 73 cepts, and the market very weak at that. ' The ladies of the Methodist church will givea social Saturday night,. at which a program will be rendered, and ..pies, cakes etc';,' will be-eerved. All for 15 cents. Tuesday evening the 10-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Tbos. Haslam was . playing osL7tbe fence in front of their residence'when he fell and one of the sharp iron pickets penetrated his lung. The wonnd is a dangerous one, but it is thought-tbe boy will recover. We note the ladies bats continue to be worn larger and more of them, and the indications are that the once popular Gainsborough is to again be the fashion. To our notion it was the prettiest hat the fairy fingers of a milliner ever trimmed or the face of a lovely woman ever adorned. ' The Columbia Southern expects to get its road completed by Friday night. There is lots of work piled up for it to do, and it will be kept busy nntil Christmas moving the wheat crop. The road is losing $300 a day by not being completed, as farmers need money and are hauling their wheat to Rufus. The Salvation Army desires to express their thanks to the kind friends of The Dalles who so generously aided their harvest festival by donations to the social work, which is just beginning to be , understood and appreciated by the public as practical Christianity or help to the helpless. Ensign W. Hayes. . Members of the Commercial Club look as disconsolate as a lot of bees whose hive has been destroyed. The club rooms are all torn up and they baye no place to go. It will be several weeks yet before the finishing touches are pat on, bat when they are the club will have as handsome rooms as there are in the state. Frank Pickett, who has been em ployed on the Columbia Southern in laying track, was Sunday sitting astride an iron bar need in holding the rails in place while they are spiked down, when the bar slipped and be fell, injuring himBe'f severely. He was sent here ;PEASE & MAYS present their compliments and request the pleas ure of your presence at their Fall Opening, Monday evening, October 4th, 1897, from 7:30 to 10 o'clock. this morning, and is at the Umatilla House under the care of Dr. Logan. Mrs. L. H. Scott, who resides near Wapinitia, while gathering muskmelons one day last week was bitten on the hand by a snake supposed to be a rattler. She at once went to the house and ap plied bluing nr indigo to the wound. Whether it was the efficacy of the bluing or that the snake was of a non-poison-oat variety, the bite bad but little effect on her. The Umatilla House office is being changed so that old-timers feel lost on entering it. The counter has been moved up to the front, the big safe placed in the corner of the bar-room, the door between it and the office being removed, and everything else is moved as systematically as a ' woman changes the bedstead and furniture in a bed room when she has nothing else to do, Portland has been having genuine webfoot showers for the past few days, but fortunately they have not yet reached this side of the mountains, though, the clouds have threatened rain for a day or two. The harvest is all completed except in, the Palouse, and there it ie about done; so that little dam age could now be done except to the threshed wheat that remains uncovered in the fields. . ''; The Hood River fair begins Wednes day next, and the display of fruits will be one of the finest ever seen in the Northwest. The railroad and boat lines have made special rates for the oc casion, and we urge all interested in fruit-growing and all who like to see beautiful displays of orchard and vine products to attend. The' lair beginB Wednesday and holds over Thursday and Friday. The funeral of the late Charles John ston took place from the Masonic hall this morning at 10 o'clock, the funeral services being conducted by Rev. W. C. Curtis, followed by the rites of the order of which deceased was an honored mem ber. The casket was covered with flowers, simple tributes of love and friendship. The long procession that wound its way out to the city of the dead, spoke more eloquently than words of the esteem in which the dead engin eer was held. , Even gum-ehewing may stand one in good stead upon occasion, as one young woman of Camden, Me., found during an ascent of Mount Battle. She wore a short skirt and it caught on a broken bit of shrubbery and was torn. She calmly took the gam she was chewing from her mouth, pat the torn parts of the dress into place and fixed them there with it. Anybody who has inad vertently stepped upon a piece of gum put to less good ate will have no diffi culty in believing the- story. - The weather this morning was quite chilly, cold enough at least to set the beads of the households thinking about the winter's fire-wood. There is plenty of it on the beach and more coming, and now is the time to get it stored in wood shed or cellar. It is said that an abund ant ' crop of acorns indicates a revere winter, and if this be true, you can't get too much wood. There are 50,000 bushels of acorns in Hood River valley, great big fat fellows that would fatten hogs as well as corn ; hut nearly all of this mast is going to waste. The O. K. & N. is doing a large amount of work in straightening its track. At M osier a dozen teams and twice as many men have been engeged for a couple of months in taking two or three bad kinks out of the track, and next week work of the same kind will be began at the Cascades. One of the most troublesome carves on the road is the long trestle across Mill creek, which sticks every heavily loaded train going west. A survey has been made with the intention of overcoming this, but work has not yet commenced on it. At Coburg assizes, Canada, Tuesday morning, J. F. Hendricks, a white' haired man, aged 76, was sued for kiss ing his pretty niece, Mrs. Effie Pilkey, a school teacher. The kissing occurred at midnight, be driving her to her mother's house after a visit. The suit was for $2000. The judge said that a man had a right to kiss his relatives without 'his character being- suspected, and evi dently with no improper intentions as in this case. The jury awarded 20 cents damages. Thursday's Daily. Fern Lodge, Degree of Honor, ie going to have some kind of "doins" on Hal lowe'en. The Regulator this morning carried away 1600 sacks of wheat, or something more than a hundred tons. The lone, after her regular trip yes terday, went down to Lyle and brought up fifteenor twenty ton 8 of baled bay. ' The crosswalk on Second street, east of Court, needs fixing, and should be attended t6 before an accident is caused by it. Mrs. Mary Pepper, who was so se verely burned near Walla Walla Mon day morning, died the afternoon of the same dav. The O. R. & N. is having bad luck recently. Yesterday a broken axle on a freight train tied traffic np near Bonne ville for a short time. Frank Pickett, the man hurt recently on the (Jolnmbia southern, is at the Umatilla House under the care of Dr. Logan, and will soon be entirely re covered.. The recorder's court for the month of September had only three drunks to deal with. This indicates that every body is busy, and that the fellows who occasionally slop over are at work in the harvest fields. Messrs. Walter Pogh and Charlts Gray, who had the contract for putting in the water system at the Warm SpricgB, arrived here yesterday, having completed their work. They say the agency has the finest water system in the country. A dispatch from Independence, this state, dated Sept. 25th, says: "The at tendance at the normal school is now greater than that at the same time last year. Miss Ellen Chamberlain, of Se attle, will take charge of the mu9ic de partment next Monday, and will also be preceptress." The funeral of the Jate William Hock man took place from the Methodist church this morning. Rev. J. H. Wood preaching the funeral sermon. After the services at the church the body was taken in charge by the Knights of Pythias and buried with the usual cere monies of the order. The church was filled with the dead man's friends, the casket being covered with flowers. He was a member of the Hook and Ladder Company, the members of which were present, as were all bis fellow employees on the railroad who were in the city, and the boys from the shops. W. E. Kahler arrived from Hardman a few days ago, and has shipped the stock of groceries he bad Btored here to Sumpter, Baker county, where he will open a store. He goes as far as the Wil lows this evening, meeting his family there, and catching the overland tomor row morning. ';- .The Columbia' Southern it was' ex pec ted would be completed to Waeco to morrow. While this will probably not be done, it will be finished within a day or two. The road would hare been fin ished some time ago, but was delayed because the rails for the curves had to be bent by band, which, of course, is a slow procees.' . The Simmons and . Forest Queen groups of mines in Union county were sold Tuesday to Eastern capitalists. The price paid is not known, but for the Simmons groun alone $100,000 was of fered and refused. The mines will be developed and will soon be adding their million or two a year to that $25,000,000 a year prod rot which we have predicted for Eastern Oregon. C. W. Wing of Wamic, in driving across the railroad track yesterday afternoon, was thrown from his wagon by the eeat giving way. fie fell on his face and head, and was unconscious for qniteawhile. Dr. Logan, was called to attend him, and he tells us Mr. Wing has suffered no serious injuiies, but will be all right in a day or so. His face was scratched and his head cat slightly. At the state insane asyium Monday, Drs. W. T. Williamson and L. F. Grif fith, assisted by Dr. Carl, of Oregon City, trephined the frontal bone of Rob ert Bettle, the expectation being that the reason of the man will be reetored. Mr. Bettle was sent to the asylum a few weeks ago from Clackamas county. -His brain trouble was caused by a hart re ceived on his head by the explosion of a shotgun in his bands several years ago, and physicians were of the opinion that his insanity was caused by an abnormal growth on the inside of his skull, mak ing an unnatural pressure on the brain The operation is said to have been sue cessful. -"-' A yellow dog, the property of a China man, has been trying to die all over town this afternoon. The nnfortunate animal evidently got hold of something to eat that had strychnine on it. His owner fed hitn a setting of eggs, and it may be that they saved his life, for at 1 o'clock when the Chinaman was doc toring him be was having terrible con vulsions that indicated there was rumpus going, on inside of him that most have made him feel like a sheep- herder drunk on a mixture of tobacco juice, aqua lortis and embalming fluid. He attracted quite a crowd of idle peo ple, who were apparently moved only by curiosity or a desire to note the toxic effects of the. drug instead of pleasure at his sufferings. Even as we write this we learn that the dog is dead, somone having come to the assistance of ' the poison with an ax. Mrs. Briggs millinery parlors were crowded this atternoon with ladies who had gathered to see the very latest in feminine head gear, and when one after another blonde, brown and brunette placed those handsome creations on top of the still handsomer heads, there were visions of loveliness that would make an anchorite let go his anchor in the sea mat rimonial. There were dreams in blue, poems in brown, visions in green, and idyls in purple, each upborne in turn by the prettiest women in Oregon, and therefore in the world. There will be another crowd this evening when the electric lights are turned on, aid then, indeed, art and beauty meet. Just peep in the windows this evening and see if the old man isn't right. A feature of the Spokane fruit fair which will prove both interesting and instructive to a great many farmers will be that of the daily lectures on subjects of interest. The large basement of the Auditorium building, adjoining the fruit fair building, has been secured for that purpose. Robert Graham, of the Ar-. mom Packing Company, will deliver a couple of lectures, one on "How to Pack and Ship Fruit," and the other on "What Fruit to Select for the Eastern Market." Mr. Graham for -years has been with the Armour company, and is one of the best informed men on that Bubject in America. Prof. Leckenby, who will have in charge the Northern Pacific exhibit, will speak to the farmers on what grasses are best adapted to arid lands. Mr. Leckenby has just come from Kern county, Cat., where he has has been engaging in experiments along this line. Professors from the Pullman college and university of Idaho will also lie among the lecturers. Through the courtesy of Congressman Jones several thousand government bulletins along the line of the lectures will be secured and given to those attending, thus mak ing the whole a decided feature for the fair. . " ' Friday's Dally. The state fair opened at Salem yester day with a better attendance than usual. The Gesang Verein will have its anni versary meeting in K. of P. ball Sunday evening next. . AH members of the Woman's Relief Corps are earnestly requested to be pres ent on Saturday evening, October 2d, at Schanno's hall at 7:30 o'clock. Mr. R. J. Gilmore, who went to Baker City some time ago to start a bowling alley, has joBt opened the same and is being liberally patronized. Mr. C. M. Cartwrlght has 600 bucks at the Saltmarshe yards. Some of them go to Wyoming, some to Idaho and a few . . . i . : 1 - ril. are to db taxen oy panics ucic. iuej I ' !. , - i! .mzzy BSackwelFs Ton will and ono coupon Instdo each S ounce bag and two coupon Inside each 4 onnos oas. Buy a hag, read the coupon and see how to get your share of $2X1,003 In presents. came from the Baldwin Sheep & Land Co.'s ranch at Hay Creek. L Sheriff Driver did not leave for Can yon City last night as we stated he would, bnt we saw him about the mat ter today, and be then promised to leave tonight. The board of equalization will meet the first Monday in October, at which time all who are dissatisfied with their assessment, will be given the opporton ity to correct any error. s7-d&wtf. The regular annual meeting of the Second District fair begins here on the 12th. It promises to be more than usu ally interesting. The exhibits will be numerous, and some first-class horses will enter fur the speed contests. The exact date for the rendition of "Pinafore" has not been decided upon ; but those who have attended the re hearsals are delighted with the manner in which each character is taken. The music of the opera is so catchy that all will enjoy it, whether they have an ear for music or not. One by one the appointees of Presi dent Cleveland drop out,'- and their places are filled by Republicans. The, first change to take place here occurred this morning In the land office, Mr. George Gibons, the clerk, retiring, and Miss Annie Lang succeeding him. Miss Lang ban had considerable experience in the office and understands its duties thoroughly. Miss Lizzie DeMoss was more seri ously injured in the recent accident at 30 Mile than was, at first reported. Ac cording to the Condon Globe, the shot gun fell from the top of the stage, the hammer striking the tire of the wheel. The entire charge struck her left leg above the knee, tearing away at least a pound of flesh, and also tearing away the flesh of the left hand between the thumb and fore finger. She Is recover ing rapidly and the company expects to go East November 1st. In a swell New York hotel a table was spread for a wedding party of fourteen persons. One young man failed to come. The bride would not sit down till the hotel bouncer got himself into an even- ngsuit and took the vacant chair, thus avoiding the thirteen superstition. It was afterward discovered that the 'miss ing man had sent his society trousers to be pressed, and the tailor had burned a big hole iu the seat. So it seems the bad luck was not with the thirteen, but with the fourteenth fellow, who didn't go at all. Mr. Peter Roech was in from Dnfur and made the heart of the printer glad by a viBit. He remarked : "Times have been pretty hard for several years and news paper bills had to wait, so now that things have got better, I thought it was time to pay the printer," and this he did, and a year in advance besides. This paper, realizing bow hard a strag gle the farmers were having, made no attempt to collect subscriptions for the last two years, but now that our farmer friends are getting on easy street, we would like it if they would invite os to walk with them. Our subscription clerk wears a smile that will make you twenty years younger. Call and eee him. 1,000,000 IN the United States now enjoying food cooked in the MA JESTIC affirm that the half has not been said in its praise. The manufacturers of this Range pledge them selves that all parts of the MAJESTIC except the firebox and the new series Nos. 201 to 212, are made of steel and mal leable iron, and purchasers are assured that it is as good and as honest as skilled labor and money can pro luce. If the parts now in malleable iron were (as in other so-called steel ranges) made of cast iron, the price could be greatly reduced ; but the MAJESTIC is not made with a view to furnishing extra parts for repairs. MAYS & CROWE, Sole Agents. This is the very best Smoking Tobacco made. Genuine MAM A LIVELY RUNAWAY. George Williams' Team Takes a Little, Spin On Its Own Account. The team of white horses used by George Willams to haul his ice wagon, ran away Thursdaynight in fine style. At the time they were bitched to a wood wagon, and when passing Kinersly's bouse the king bolt dropped through the bolster, letting the wagon uncouple. The horses having but the front wheels hitched to '.hem, thought it would be a good time to have a little fun with the thing, so they started to run away. James Hannon was driving them, bnt was thrown to the ground. He bung on to the lines until he was dragged a cou ple of rods, when, not liking that sort of riding, he let go. Then the horses ran up Union to Eleventh, turned down Eleventh in front of Julius Wiley's, where they took a turn across that va cant block. There they caught op with a man in, a top buggy and gave bim an interesting chase. He circled around the block, but no matter which way he turned the team followed him, bat final ly went off at a tangent, running over -the fire plug and colliding with a post in the alley back of Lempke's, between Ninth and Tenth. Then they ran down the alley, crossing the slreet by the old Lutheran church, and there one of the wheels caught on to a telephone pole and everything was brought up with a suddenness that was astonishing to the horses. . ' One of the horses broke loose, burst ing a tug and breaking a single-tree, and continuing his flight to the stable: The other apparently thought the wagoa had stopped to deliver ice, for he was as cool and unconcerned as though he had never heard of a run-away. The dam age was slight. Perils of the Snake. Last week as a prospector was floating down Snake river on a rudely construct ed raft, which served the purpose of a boat, en route to the Seven Devils and some of the numerous barb below Hunt ington, be had to pass the placer mine of Mr. Ruckman at the mouth of Pow der river. Mr. Ruckman has a large wheel that hoists the water out of Snake river on to a bar be is mining. In some unaccountable manner the prospector, who is a Dutchman, allowed his raft to get into the current, which drew the raft and the Dutchman into the wheel. In a few seconds the whole outfit was ground through blankets, rocker, grub. Dutchman and all. Strange as it may seem, the man escaped with about enough clothes on him td wad a shot gun, a wetter but wiser man. The bal ance of the outfit was swept down the stream. The only explanation the Dutchman gave was, "Mine Gottl Dot vos bell." Baker Democrat. Excursion Kates to Hood River. The O. R. & N. Co. will sell round trip tickets to Hood River Oct. 6th, 7th and 8th, for 90 cents, one fare for tthe round trip. Good returning until . Oct. 11th. Jas. Ibkland, Agent. For Sale. Six lots, house and stable in Lyle, ap ply to G. Magan, Lyle, sept!8-d4wla People i