THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE. SATURDAY. JUNE 30, 1900. Our Mid-Summer Sale WILL SOON BE HERE in fall force. Just one month earlier than usual. We started with an $8.93 Suit Sale, which now develops into a general clearance a full-fledged bargain event. Not through any special effort on our part; not through unusual ad vertising. It seems as though each customer told a dozen oth ers, and so the sale has grown to a Christmas crowd looking for July bargains. Rest assured there shall be no disap pointment. The most pronounced bargain fiend shall be more than satisfied. It has come to us unsolicited, and we shall ac cept it with good grace. ' r $8.95 Few cofitora tailor could surpass these suits, though they were to charge $12 or $15; doubtless $20 would please you better at the to-order stores. Remember that it is not (or profit this sale wai started a Mid-Snmmer Sale at a loss if necessary. It is an estab lished feature of our business; some of the broken lots have been placed on sep arate counters, including values np to $12, your choice at $0 95. We have started a Hat Sale.... A lot of Men's Straw Hats, in either yacht or soft finish, rough or plain straw, plain or fancy bands; as good as any and better than many shown else where at $1.00 Sale pric?, 50c. Two lots of Fedora Hats. Two lots of Alpino Hats. The first lot gathered from such as sold all season at $1.50 and $1.75. your choice at $1.10. Tlu second lot, gathered from euch as sold at $2 to $2.50; your choice, $1.85. Here's a chance for swell dressers surpassing any offer we have yet made, and surely better values than you've ever seen before. Boys Clothing Clearance.... A lot of Boys' Summer Coats we bongbt to sell for 75c a fair price; half takes thetn cow Only 39c. Lots of good 25o Knee Pants in a variety of patterns; well made, in fact beet 25c; values you ever bought; your choice for 15c. BOYS' SUITS. Regular $1.00, $1.25 and $150 values (slightly soiled? ; your pick for 5'Jc each. A list of Men's Furnishings. Men's Silk Front Shirts in fancy stripes and checks ; you will admit they are good 75c values Going at 45c. ONE LOT of Silk Front Shirts which were good sellers at $1.25 and $1.50, have been reduced to $1.05. Special lot of Men's Bike and Golf Hose.... Good values at 90c and $1.00 ; your choice for 69c WHAT WE SAY WE DO. WE DO DO. .V..D-SUrV3IV.ER SALE Commencing Monday, July 2nd, 1900. A few days a-:o we announced to you through this jajer that we would greet you with a Mid-Summer Sale. The goods we ofier you do not show the rust of by-gone seasons, but are all new, bright and attractive patterns. Silk Department. This is a great silk year, and we are pra pared for it. 5(10 varda of high c'ass silks in a variety of designs and color ings. For instance there are Warp Printed Taffetiaa, Liberty Satin, Crink led Tatfettas, Lace Stripe Taffettas. When we assure you of the beauty and every high character of the silks, our prices will tell the rest. Trices at the Silk Counter. I Suit and Skirt Dept. I The values in this department lias ! surpassed anything heretofore ottered. Suits ranging from $4.00 to $23.00. Skirts from $1.35 up. ....WASH FABRICS.... Dimity Cords, a beautiful wash fabric, in some 30 colorinj 4 3-4 Cents, worth 8 Cents. Domestic Department. Unbleached Muslins. Albany C 44o Albany LL 5c Cabot W ...5,l,,c Cabot A 6c Indian Head 73e Bleached Muslins. Hollywood , . .5c Kutledge 5c Bric-a-brac 5c Hope 7.c Lonsdale 7'..c Fruit of Loom , 7,lsc Prints. Ceylon-Bines 4'ac Skirling Prints Light Color Dress Prints. . 4u A'l i Standard Prints 5'i.o Ginghams. Araoskeag 5,'4'c Lancaster 4'..c Embroideries and Laees Everyone knows that Embroideries and Lanes are h'gher than thev were a year ago, yet on the face of an advanc ing market we have reduced our prices one-fifth from old price. The Shirt Waist Season Is now at its best, and as soon as our stock is pretty welt cleaned up we are willing to sacrifice the balance at any old price. MONDAY Will be a gala da' with us in all departments. We want this sale to ov erlap all previous records Big Sales and sSo Profits... This is our object in this great sacrifice sale of Men's.Women's, Misses and Children's Shoes. If you know a good thing when you see it, buy now. Men's Tan Lace Shoes $2.00 Men's Calf Congress (elastic side) 1.00 Men's Calf Lace (narrow toes) 1.00 Here are the best values on earth. Ladies' Kid Button, sizes 2 to 4, .83 Ladies' Kid Button, sizes 3 to 5... 1.00 Ladies' Tan .Oxfords, all sizes 1.00 Children always want SHOES Buying at these prices is like find ing money. Misses' Kid, spring heel, button, sizes 2 to 0 $1.00 Missis' Kid, spring heel,laco, sizes 2 to C 1.00 Misses' Kid, spring heel, button, sizes 11$ to 2 85 Chikls' Kid, spring heel, button, sizes 8j to 11 75 Childs' Kid, spring heel, button, sizes 0 to 8 GO Wo do not quote the former prices for these goods, but simply request you to see for yourself if they are not the best values ever offered. All Goods Marked In Plain Figures. PEASE &, MAYS THE DALLES The Weekly Ghroniele. THK DALLES. OKKOON OFFICIAL PAPER OF WASCO COUNTY. Published in two parts, un Wednesdays and Saturdays. SUBSCRIPTION RATES, ay nail, rosTioK r repaid, in advanci. One year H " Six month 76 Three months 60 Advertising- rate reasonable, anil made known on triplication. Address all communications to "THE CHRON IU.K," The Dalles, Oregon. LOCAL BREVITIES. Wednesday's lully. Kev. D. V. Poling will deliver the oration at Goldendale on tbe Fourth. Professor J. 8. Landers will deliver the oration at Grass Valley on the Fourth. Two discharged sailors from the U. S. cruieer Philadelphia were in town to day on their way to their homes in the East. Charles McAllister, of North Yakima, was dangerously and perhaps fatally (hot Sunday whilo toying with a revol ver, which he supposed contained no load. C. V. Killing, of Prineville, shipped to Portland this morning on the Regula tor twenty-five head of magnificent draft horses that he expects to dispose of in that murkot. From a prif ate source we learn that 100,000 pounds of wool was sold at Pen dleton last Monday at '2i and 13 cents found. The scouring mill bought a lot of heavy wool at 9 cents. Conservative estimates place the value of this year's Hood River strawberry "op at $173 an acre above all expenses. ri,e O. R. A N. Co. report that they 've handled seventy-five carloads dur the season. The Dalles City is now making daily rour, trpg i,Ptween here snl Portland 'd!e hauling rails for the Paul Mohr Pf-'tiige. She does no way business and wris only through passengers or to locks. She is practically on the rfd all the time she Is not loading or ul"ading. t"k Chhonici.e is ssked to call the attention of the city authorities to the !'t that many parts of the city are in fested with tnistlei that if left a short time longer will have gone to seed and nive scattered over the whol town. It ' I'iKhly desirable that steps should be '4en to have these peats cut down be fore they g0 l0 gee(It Whest experienced another decline at tl''fiKo yesterday and July fell to 82 e"tn. The market at Portland did not rfpond to the full limit of the recent w, nor did It respond to the limit of n decline. The price yesterday at Place was BO to AO cents. The aI,e Prl tor No. 1 today it 82, which is, to certain extent, merely nominal, as very little is changing hands. The county jail Is practically empty, that is to say, it has one U. S. prisoner, who is only constructively a prisoner for he is allowed his liberty on condition that be report daily to the sheriff. The last term of circuit court occupied only two days' time, and the one proceeding it only three. If this state of things continues the office of circuit judge will become a sinecure. It is tough, how ever, on the lawyers who, like the pop ulists, fatten best on misfortune. A dispatch from Astoria says the case of the State vs. Berg, which is to be ar gued in the circuit court, before Judge McBride, on July 31, is of special inter est to every fisherman and laboring man. It is an appeal from the justice court, and relates to tho individual fishing business. Berg was arrested some time ago for fishing without a license, and was fined $50. The case was appealed, on the ground that the license was a tax on labor, and wus therefore unconstitu tional. This case was brought princi pally to test the law. Two nion named Jeffries and Plum raer were recently arrested in Harney county for horse stealing and taken to Burns for trial. They asked the authori ties to summon on their behalf Sam Hodges and Tom Long from Crcok county, and theso "buckaroo" experts got Jeffries and Plummer offtcott-free by swearing that the particular horse over which all the trouble arose was one that Colonel Nye, of Prineville, rode to California in 1842, and was afterwards used as a pack-mule by Barney Prine when he came up from Seio to discover the county seal of Crook county. The voucher for this characteristic cow coun ty item is the Harney News. Dr. Roberts, scientific optician and oculist, who for a few days longer will have an office in the Chapman block, room 4, is not a traveling optician. He has a practice in San Diego, Calif., where he has livpd for nearly ten years, second to none on this coast. This is the first outing he has had in that time, and he docs really scientific optical work to pay his expenses while traveling through Oregon and Washington. He makes free examinations. Cull and consult him and then pass judgment -as to whether ho is like the usual traveilng optician a fake. Thursday's Daily A clip of ninety-six pound? of wool from the Condon neighborhood wr.e sold today at eleven cents a pound. At Goldemlale yesterday evening the jury in the murder case of Geo. A. R. Ferris found him guilty of murder in the first degree. The wife of J. H. Hannan, cf Cheno weth creek, died Tuesday afternoon fter giving birth to a still born child. She leaves a husband and six children to mourn her loss. Miss Grace N. Smith, a very estima ble young lady of this city, was united in marriage at the Church of tbe Re deemer, Pendleton, lasl evening to Mr. Dean Swift Tatom, a well-to-do mer chant of that city. Judge Bennett today bought himself a Roose7elt rough rider hat as a signifi cant part of his equipment for his trip to Kansas City as a delegate to the dem ocratic national convention. He expects to leave for Kansas City tomorrow. Pete Nickelsen has been promoted to the appointment of telegraph operator at Pendleton and will leave for his new field of labor in the near future. Pete is a very worthy young man, and will carry with him the beBt wishes of aiiost of Dalles friends. Mrs. Driecoll, wife of the late Captain Driscoll, was a passenger on the mid-day train today for Portland. Mrs. Driecoll while here received a check for $2000 for insurance on tbe life of her husband, who was a member of The Dalles lodge of United Workmen, and who died on the 27th of last May. The wheat is so tall in the Colombia precinct that the farmers have conclud ed to head it for hay instead of cutting j it with a mower. At least that is what Harry Gilpin determined to do after cutting about fifty tons, which he made up his mind to feed to hogs because it had too much straw to the proportion of grain for horse feed. Twenty five dollars a month on a farm, says a man who is posted, is a great deal better than $50 a month in a city store. As a general thing, at the end of nine months the former has $150 in cash, three pairs of overalls and a straw hat, while the latter has two suits of clothes, a pair of bicycle pants and $17 in tho hole. Vet there are seventy-five appli cations for the latter job to one for the former. A Dutch Fiat rancher applied this week to Sheriff Kelly lor an injunction against certain parties w hom he accused of persistent and oft-repeated raids on his blackberry patch. Tho sheriff re ferred him to Ned Gates and Ned re ferred him to Attorney Jayne, who in turn referred him to Judge Bradshaw, I who informed the rancher that tho mat ter was outside hli jurisdiction. Tiie raiders turned out to be predacoons flocks of young grouse, which the rancher did not want to dispose ot without the authority of law. The strawberry season is over in the Vakima valley, ami those who were fortunate in having a good crop are counting their profits. William Lee, Jr., has completed the harvesting of one ere, from which he has taken an oven 435 crates of marketable berries. These have been sold on the Tacoma and Spokane markets, with some local sales, at from $3 in the early season to $1.50 per crate later. The average market price has been equal to at least $1.60 per crate. Those who think there is not $600 an acre In strawberries in tbe Yakima valley have some basis here upon which to figure for results. The Eugene Guard says : ' "A line got left out in the 'make-up' of The Dalles Mountaineer the other day causing no little exasperation in the newspaper office, and elsewhere. A justice court report was made to read thatt be defend ant and the complaining witness were both under the influence of liquor. As the the O latter is president of The Dalles Y. M. C. A., the consequent exacerbation of feelings may be easily imagined." The storm last Saturday enapped off, as if it were a pipe stem, an old pine tree, 12o feet in height, on the farm of August Longren, of Eight Mile. The peculiarity about this tree is that it was the only pine tree In the neighborhood, and that it carried on one of its branches an ox yoke that had been hung there thirty-nine years ago by Bill Campbell, the original owner of the ranch. The yoke was nsed by Mr. Campbell while crossing the plains in 1861, and no one ever attempted to pull it down from the place where he had hung it. Friday's Dally. census enumerators will cloee The their woik tomorrow. Will Coreen, formerly of thi city, has bought a half interest in a store at lone. Boys' blouse and shirt waists, .50, .58, .60, $1.13 and $1.43, at the New York Cash Store. Ilarveot is on in the Walla Walla val ley. Many machines went into opera tion the first of the week. The first number of the Wheeler County News, from the town of Mitch ell, was published yesterday, John G. Wool ley was nominated yes terday in' Chicago as the prohibitionist candidate for president of the United States. The rate of three cents a mile goes into effect on the O. U. & N., Great Northern and Northern Pacific next Sunday. The Mora correspondent of the Shan iko L?ader says wheat buyers are offer ing to contract for w heat at fifty cents a bushel in Sherman county. Tho recent rains have done much for the second installment of the Hood River strawberry crop, and shipment are nun In daily to Butte, Mont. The Shamko L"ader says J. N. Bur gess, of Antelope valley, is going to start a big creamery. He has placed an order for 50,000 feet of lumber for the neces sary buildings. Shanikoans have organized a school board with A. C. Sanford, N. M. Lane and F. II. limner as directors and Dr. Ray Logan as clerk. They w ill start a three months' subscription school as soon as they can find a suitable teacher. Tiik CrmoNK'i.i is indebted to the courtesy of Homer D. Angell for the June number of the "University of Ore gon." Tha number contains tbe vale dictory of Mr. Angell, w ho was editor-in-chief during the past school year. The very handsome cover design is the work of Miss DaBie Allaway. Tbe Ashland Tidings says a party of railroad surveyors from The Dalles have arrived at Silver Lake, Lake county, and are pushing on to Lakeview. They say the road will soon be built and that R. & N. is back of the movement. A disastrous bail storm struck the Prineville country last Saturday, de stroying the entire crops of half a dozen or more of the settlers west of town. Some of the hailstones measured over six inches in circumference. The Jour nal says that in some instances tbe de struction of crops was as "complete as if a fire had raged over the farms, even potatoes and onions in the ground being destroyed." At one house tho hailstones perforated in several places a galvanized iron tub that had been placed bottom side np. No railway mail was delivered here from 12:30 p. m. yesterday till 10 a. in. this morning, wb?n a large quantity ar rived on tho No. 3 passenger that was over fivo hours late. The mail from the west that should haye been left off here at 4:45 this morning appears to hove been carried to Grants for transfer, and hence did not get back here till 10 o'clock. Why tho Dalles mail should be carried past here to Grants and be come subject to delayed nest-bound trains is what we would like to find out. On his travels last week Sam McDon ald found a bee aviary in a queer loca tion, and the bees were at work in full possession, doing well, tells the Slur man County Observer. It is In a flue In John Battles' house, nearCelilo. When they were first discovered an effort was made to smoke them nut, but the bees choked up the flue and smoked the iHiuuy out. Mr. unities then gave them ample room to carry on their sweet operations, and Sam aniicipates a day when the Moro Farmers' Market will have nn abundance of unadulterated honoy. We publish in this issue an Albany , Oregon, telegram that will be of inter est, unless Tiik Ciiiionki.e is misin formed, to some 200 people In this city who, about three weeks ago, yielded to tho seductive story of a smooth young fellow, calling himself II. Bennett, and paid seventy-five cents each in advance as a year's subscription to the Cosmo politau or Munsey's magazine. There is little to add to the Albany story. The fellow played his game here with marked success, working, as elsewhere, among the business people and eliciting the sympathy of some of our leading business men as well as a host of clerks. We have one of the receipts before us. It is numbered 4825 and is signed in an excellent business band "II. Bennett." It is believed "Bennett" worked the town for not lest than from $150 to $200. ANOTHER VICTIM OF WHISKtY Kun Orer by the Train at Hood Rim Monday Night. Coroner Butts held an inquest JVIon. day at Hood River on the body of a man named Sam McGan, who was killed on the railroad track near Hood River the night before by the west-bound passen ger train, known as No, 6. The testi mony before the coroner's jury went to show that the deceased had worked dur ing the past winter with a construction crew on the O. It. & N. road ; that later he bad gone to work for the Oregon Lumber Co., and that last Saturday he called for his time and was handed what was coming to him, $32.20. He crossed the river Saturday and was known to have been drinking to some extent dur ing Sunday and Monday in Hood River. He was last seen alive near the place where he was killed at 0 o'clock Monday night. He had evidently lain down on tbe track and his body was dragged nearly 400 feet to a switch before the train could be stopped. His bead was split vertically from the nose to the back of the neck, his body was practic ally cut in two at the waist and his in testines were scattered all over the track. He bad had a bottle on bis per son, which was broken into fragments, but the odor was sufficiently suggestive of w hiskey to make it tolerably certain that the man had not lost his life through devotion to temperance princi ples. His funds had dwindled down to $1.10. The jury rendered the following ver dict : We, the jury impaneled by'W. II. Butts, coroner, to inquire into the cause of the death of the body now before ns, find, from the evidence and papers on the body, bis name to be Samuel Mc Gan. He was about 30 or 35 years old ; bight about 5 feet 8 inches; weight about 150 pounds; Scotch nativity; sandy hair and mustache; front teeth very prominent; and that ho came to his death by being struck and dragged to death by passcnuer train No. 0 at the west end of the switch at Hood River. J. if. F'kruisom. W. W. P.uow.v, W m. Thompson, K. S. Oi.ingkr, G. 8. Evash, W. H. Ai.i.k.w The Editor aut Ills Milrt. Back in tho summer of 1887 the red flannel shiit contingent of a sheep-herder's wardrobe was placed to soak in a pretty little mountain branch of tho John Day's middle fork, which branch does business just east of Dixie butte. If any of the railroad men, prospectors, huckleberry hunters or others who are using those grand old mountains for stamping ground this summer should run across the said red shirt, they would confer a favor by letting the Har ney County News know if it is thorough--ly laundered yet. Harney County New a. Subscribe (or The Chronicle.