X 053 SCHOOL .SHOES. PEASE The Dalles Daily Chronicle. Kntered a the Poetoffiee at The Dalles, Oregon, as second-class matter. Local Advertising. 10 Cents per line for first insertion, and A :ent per line for ench subsequent insertion. Special rates for long time notices. All local notiees received later than a o'clock will appear the following day. TUESDAY JULY 12, 1892 LOCAL BKKTITIKS. Ked ripe currants are plentiful in the market. 8. B. Parriah has had to go ; for Capt. E. W. Spencer, as chief of police in Portland. Judge Bradshaw was amongst The Dalles early risers this morning. He look his departure on the 3 a. m. train for Lafayette. There is a greater demand in The Dalles for residences than at any former period in the History of the place for many years. Mr. J. J. Kuykendall, who has been - instrumental, in the building line, in -adorning The Dalles, leaves for Portland for a similar purpose. Messrs. Cram and Estabrook returned last night from Trout lake with a fine lot of speckled beauties, and complex . Ions after the style of Raphael. Mr. A. W. Coffin, of Coffin, McFar land & Co., Arlington, was in the city . yesterday on his way to California. Mr. Lester Coffin was also in the city. Dr. G. E. Sanders is now fully pre pared to receive patrons at the dental - office lately occupied by Dr. Tucker. See card in professional classification. Writing from Idaho to the Heppner Gazette, Geo. French says there are more sheep on the trail than . there Are fleas in a California barnyard. How- - ever, the sheep are all fat and grass is plentiful. Mechanics inform us there are still many now buildings contemplated in The Dalles, residences and stores, and the prospect is that building may be - carried on successfully all the coming fall and winter. Mr. J. F. Nowlin and Miss Leonora Morris, of Tygh, were made happy this forenoon by Justice E. Schutz pro nouncing them man and wife in the parlors at Skibbe's hotel. The Chbon iclb joins in the greetings. One of the pleasing incidents of the reception of the college students at Mrs. S. L. Brooks' Saturday evening was the presence of Mrs. W. S. Myers, who had the early training of nearly. all of them. Mention of this, and the name of Miss Annette Michel, was accidentally omitted. Mr. J. C. Baldwin, of Tekoa, Wash., is in the city, partly on a visit to his family and partly on business. In case that The Dalles isn't hoodooed , out of its prospects by some at present un known methods, Mr. Baldwin is liable to again tkke up .active business pur . snitfl in our midst. - Teamsters from Grant county state rtbat the entire wool clip of that ounty f and Harney will seek a railroad outlet at Baker city this year. The reason for this is deviation for a new trail is not that better inducements are offered the producers, bat it is money in their pock ets to go to Baker city with their sbip- ments because of the condition of the toads, and the little ' railroad out of Baker city. , it JUST RECEIVED . A Full Line of the CELEBRATED WAVERLY Waverly School Shoes. XzamliM ou CUT SHOE. it Italy ASS Capt. Frank Coe made the city a hasty visit yesterday, returning to Hood River last evening. Yon want to call in at Harris' sale before all the bargains are closed out. See ad. on front page. Mr. Geo. Runyon has quit rat killing and has started off for the more profit able occupation of mining for gold. A fine place to build a hall on Second street has been left between Prinz & Nitschke's new building and the cor ner. The Heppner Gazette says Hon. W. R. Ellis is getting along as well as could be expected under the circumstances and his early recovery is hopeful. Messrs. J. D. Wilcox, J. Donahoe and Casper Gressli, of Kent, are attending the land office hearings today. Mr. Wilcox says wheat is improving, day and night, in Sherman county. The front iron -work and galvanized cornice is all up on Prior & Nitschke's new store building. It makes a very imposing appearance. The lettering in the cornice will be elaborately finished. Con. Howe, the faithful and vigilant Dalles City night-watchman, Was com plaining this morning that he never before saw times so dull. He scarcely bad the company of a canine last night, to relieve the monotony of the hours. The extensive tract of sand between the city and Three-mile, which has been under water so long, is rapidly coming to the surface. The' Cosmopolitan for July has an excellent illustration of just such another trackless waste, and tells how it may be redeemed. But for some cause people seem to think sand waste about The Dalles ien't worth redeem ing. - The Condon Globe says the survey of the Oregon Pacific crosses Butte creek a few miles east of Fossil, runs through Condon and will intersect with the Union Pacific at Pendleton. The man agers have contracted for 10,000 ties with which to repair their road between Albany and the front, and are making other demonstrations indicative of their intention of pushing the road to an eastern terminus. A massive stretch of dark and lower ing clouds from the west beat old Sol into The Dalles this morning, but Sol won the . supremacy in about one straight hour. This is the kind of a day that rendere a prediction morally cer tain that long, before December, rolls around you will find the stock of sum mer days missing. They'll all have been used up by the weather clerk. We have just learned who the.railway magnates ae, over at Trout lake. C. J. Eddy, general agent of the C. M. and St. P. ; W. S. Henline, general agent of the Canadian Pacific; and Gen. J. W. Casey, traveling passenge agent of the C. M. and St. P. They are having a glor ious time. They came by the way of Portland, and had they not left in sueh a hurry, forgetting their fishing rods, would probably catch some trout. They are well supplied with mosquito netting. As I Looks to a Candidate. Washington Independent. It is a pleasure for lawyers and editors who work hard to get out among the noble people of the county and drink the spirit of their hope and enterprise and view the nice farms which have been carved out by their industry and hard labor and intelligent exertions.- Success to a worthy people who are laboring to build up a great country. shows bow all 4 & MAYS o V MADE. jf Vt TXAM MARK KEGISTEMa. f"V. Cyras W.. Field Dead. News flashed over every electric tele graph wire in use in the known world today that Cyrus W. Field is dead. His death has been expected for some time. He died this morning. Peace to his ashes. . The Fountain Arrived. The handsome drinking fountain, for man, horse, and dog; the gift of The Dalles Epworth League, to the city, arrived today, and by permission of Mrs. Chapman will be erected on the west side of Washington street, in front of the poatoffice. The League: will set it up with an appropriate ceremony. Con sidering the numerical strength of the league in The Dalles, this must be taken as an evidence of perseverance in a good cause. Last Tear's Fruit. At the residence of Messrs. Joles Bros, in this city is a cellar' worthy of investi gation by the state horticultural society. From it, yesterday, Mr. George Joies took some red cheeked pippin apples of last year's crop, that are actually too good to eat, ; We have two of them at this office which we keep to show to people, who may have been told that Wasco county can't raise apples. They are of very fine flavor, and we occasion take them out of the box to smell of them. Such fruit is worth two bits a smell. Mr. Joles informs us that this fruit was not cased, nor in bins ; but was stored on shelves, placed at dis tances apart convenient to receive the fruit in tiers, but not close enough to come into contact with each other. The temperature of the cellar is very nearly regular and must have something to do with the keeping of the fruit. THE BUTCHERS TRUST. Beef Business Beginning to Look np. Yes, up the Spout, Perhaps. ' The Dispatch says beef cattle in Crook county is beginning to look up. No less than 1,500 cattle have been driven from the Willamette valey to this county this season, and more are coming. The next paragraph, perhaps, may be explana tory. It says: "Good beef cattle can be bought for about 2 cents on toot, or double that if dressed, in Polk county, and milch cows can be had from $15 to 25. This leaves the inference that the Portland "rule or- ruin" butchers trust is responsible for the "beginning to look up" view of the Crook county business. At this season of the' year the drive ought to be the other way, and prices considerably in advarice of the above quotations. The business is "looking up the spout,"so to speak ; but we pay just as much for stakes, and brisket, and flanks, as we did when tho producer got a decent price for his cattle, before th'e organization of the Portland but chers trust. Which is flourishing like a green bay tree. It controls the' beef market both in this country and abroad. The railroads are in its grasp, and what are known as the cattle ships are nearly all in its power.. The beef producer in this country was never before forced to sell at so low a figure as now prevails. He gets at present only 3 or at most 4 cents per pound while in' Portland and London the price on the block rules at 12i to 25 cents. . Is That True-. Lebanon Expresss. Joe Wasson lost about 500 prune trees sn his beautiful orchard by spraying them with kero sene. He got ths advice from the state board of horticulture. C . F : STEPHEN S, DEALER IK Dry Goods Qlqthing Boots, Shoes, lists. Etc. FanciJ oodg, flofcioiig, Ktc.. Kto.. Ktc. 13-1 Second St., next to Dalles National Bank, Dalles City, Oregon. 4 J. FOLCO, ' DEALER IS Candies, Frniis, Nnts, Soda Water, Ice Cream, Tobacco and Cigars. MANCPACTCRF.lt OT , First Class Syrops for Saloons and : Soda Fountains, Ete. Second Street, Next door to Wingate's Hall Marriage Bell. This afternoon the Rev. A. C. Spencer officiating, at the residence of the brides parents, in this city. Mr. George E. Phelps and Miss Mattie R. Johnston, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. W. John ston, were united in the holy bonds of matrimony, and started happily to gether upon the voyage of life,- with the best wishes of hosts of friends. Mr. Phelps is one of the worthy young men of Dalles City, and Miss Johnston has always rated as one of the most 'estima ble youngladies of The Dalles. There were" present quite a number of the im mediate friends of the bride and ' groom, and members of the families. The bride was dressed in a handsome cere monious costume, of cream peau do soie silk, draped in .mousseline de soie Duchesse lace and ribbons, and her queen-like appearance betokened her happiness. The groom, "every inch a gentleman" was faultlessly attired, 'and seemed.at his best. They leave on the train this evening for Portland aud the valley, after which they will return to the Wind mountain hot springs to spend the summer months. MNKKKTON II THE DAL1IS. The Country Has ho Use For Them cept in Such Cases. The terrible scenes at Homestead and Couer d'Alene cause a shudder at the mention of the name of Pinkerton, and when Col. Sinnott introduced the writer to J. B. Pinkerton, at the Umatilla house, today noon, we at once gave our views of the lessons of Homestead and Couer d'Alene. There must be no in termediate force of baronial likeness, as a worthy contemporary has remarked ; no. armed forces gathered by rich men and corporations responsible neither to the people nor to centralized govern' nient. This conviction has been inten sified more that - ever before by the bloody.conflict between "the Homestead strikers and the so-called Pinkerton guards sent in by Mr. Carnegie. Before proceeding farther we were gladly in formed that the guest of Col. Sinnott was here upon a peaceful mission. As contracting agent for the C. M. and St. 12, Ry., he is here looking after a victory over his competitors; which hath ail the pleasures, and none of the horrors of life. In such cases as this Mr. J. B. Pinkerton will' be made agreeable in The Dalles, After certain apologies, on part of the introducer, who has such "a world wide reputation for truth and ver, acity that the introduced couldn't doubt his honest purposes, in this particular instance. ' The Homestead tragedy is being re peatea m the uoeur d'Alene mining districts of northern Idaho. - Four men have been killed and many wounded. Valuable property has been destroyed by dynamite, and the end is not yet. The. union forces blew up a mill at Gem Sunday night and a fight followed yes terday which lasted several hours. Four men were killed and about ten wounded. The miners got around the hills up the canyou above the mine. f Here they loaded a .Union-Pacific car with 750 pounds of giant powder and sent the car down the track towards the mine. Di- recti y in front of the mill the explosion occurred, shattering the mill to splinters and making it a complete wreck. About 8 o'clock a truce occurred, and the sher iff, district attorney and deputy United states marshal appeared on le scene . ' ; Suggestive at Least. 1 Portland Telegram. There is some thing in a name. Weaver and Field are suggestive of labor. .Everybody seems to be complaining of " " HXRD TI1VE ES But if yon only stop and see the fine line of Gents' Furnishing Goods and Hats of JOHN C- HERTZ, You will find that he ran save" you con siderable money. 1 Give him a call and be convinced. .109 Second Street, - The Dalles, Or. GN THE DOLLAR. My entire stock will be closed out at the above figure. TV1 -B3-FTTT .T ,T13ffr. 1 H. STONEMAN. Practical Shoemakers and Dealers In BOOTS and SHOES ) S14 Sooond Street. Only Exclusive Boot and Shoe House in the City -j All Kinds of Footivear Always on Hand. Mew Style of Coon Hunting. The inhabitants of the mountains west of this place are gTcat coon hunters. Some nights ago Bill . Benchoff and Colonel Yingling started out with half a dozen dogs and two boys to carry the pine torches. A coon was raised on the east side of the Monterey, and the dogs chased it down through a deep and rough ravine and np a rocky spur on the west. After a climb of an hour Benchoff and Yingling at last came up with the dogs. They had run the coon into a troe and were marling and bark ing around, underneath. .The boys whirled the torches and Benchoff hanged away at what he thought was the coon, bat no animal tumbled. -": ' ' Yingling in the meantime 'had been tearing paper and trying to ignite a match, but it was damp and would only splutter. Benchoff was deriding him when suddenly a great ball of. fire illn minatod space. Yingling had succeeded in igniting his match and was emptying a roman candle into the tree. The first, ball struck a branch and burst and the second hit the coon "plumb ' center." Its fur caught fire and with a -yell it came rolling down among the angry dogs. The third ball revealed two more coons in the tree, and Benchoffs rifle dropped one, while Ying ling, with 'the last ball in the candle, hit the limb, on which the third' coon clung with pitiful terror, and it lost its hold and tumbled into the months of the waiting dogs. They got six more coons that night with the help of Yingling's candles, and now the colonel ' regularly shoots the romans and Benchoff Shoots the gun. They are the most successful coon hunt ers in all the region. Gettysburg (Pa.) Sentinel. . " A Sad Leap Year Story. - Leap year is with us once more, and if reports are true a number of Chicago's young ladies have already proceeded to make the most of it. However, there is one story circulated which proves that the comao of true love does not run smooth even when directed by the rrfem bers of the sex that is supposed to know most about it. . . ' V " . "Let me tell you a story about my friend 'Lill,' " said one of Englewood's fairest daughters. "I don't suppose I ought to tell it, but the incident is one that most men who have tried lovemak Sng will know how to appreciate. Loirs bean., who came from Boston a year ago, had been paying attention to her for months and calling on her about two nights a week. ,- -' "But he seemed to be so bashful and so afraid of coming to the point that she finally grew desperate and said to mo: 'Yoa just wait till leap year comes and I'll teach, that bashful young man !a lesson. -Such diffidence and such de lay are wholly inexcusable. "Well, New gear's, cam and the young' man called. I expected" Lill to come down to my house the next morn ing to tell me how she had happily set tled matters, bat she didnt.come, so 1 called on her in the afternoon. She ap peared to be indisposed and melan choly. " 'What's the matter? ! asked.- ''Her eyes filled with .tears, and after a little cry she said: - " 'I took him by the hand and said to him: "Now, my boy, 111 show yon how we Chicago women do things. Will yon avail yourself of this opportunity to be come my promised husband?". And he' here she sobbed 'oh, the brute! he said. VI can't, .lor Vm already engaged to a girl in Boston." " 'And what did yon 'say then? I asked sympathetically. ' "Her eyes flashed as-she replied, Isaid to him, "Mr. Falsette, there's the door, and please be Tery quick about it, too." "Chicago News, ' Pope never could compose well with out first dec laming for some time at the top of his voice,, and thus rousing his- nervous system to its fullest activity. HENRY FIEGE. A Similar Feeling Inland. , - . Spokane Review. It is small wonder that citizens of The Dalles gave vent, to their feelings by an' enthusiastic ratifi- , cation meeting on receipt of the news that the river and harbor bill had passed and the .cascade locks would be finished by contract. For years they have waited, with what patience they could muster; ' for the opening of one of the ' greatest rivers in the country, to relieve them of their bottled-up condition, and now that there is some prospect of a speedy com- pletion of this work their enthusiasm knows no bounds'. .The -opening of the entire river will create a similar feeling among all the residents of the Inland. Empire. ' , . i . . t WANTED. - A girl to -do general housework, good wages, apply at this office. - Girl Wanted. -To do general housework in a small family. Inquire at this office. -T.lldtf Will Want The Chronicle. After the. Fourth the usual hegira to the sea coast and mountains will begin. Orders may be left at The Chkonicxx office for the paper, which will be mail ed free of postage daily, and which : in ' camp, cottage or tent, will be found a welcome visitor from home. You will want The Chronicle: Don't forget to At Cost. For the next thirty days we will sell wall paper at cost. 10, 15, and 20 cents double roll to make room for new stocks Snipes & Kineksly, . 9.6t Leading Druggists, The. Dalles , Or. LOST. , Between the postoffice and the Wasco academy grounds, or on the grounds, two small gold pins attached by a chain with initialed bangle. Finder rewarded at this office.. - ' Std . Chamberlain's Colic, (iholera and Diarrhoea Remedy can always be de-; pended upon, it is pleasant to take anoL will cure cramp, cholera' morbus, dysen tery and diarrhoea in their worst forms. Every family should be provided with it. 23 and 50 -cent bottles for sale by Blakeley & Houghton, druggists. . d&w The Ice Wagon.- The ice wagon of Gates & Allison is on the streets every morning from 6 to 8 o'clock. Any orders for ice left with Will Vanbibber's express or at the store of Chos. Lauer will be promptly at tended to. Gates & Alusom. Fisher's Shaving and Bathing Parlors From and after this date my place of business will be closed on Saturday, evenings after 10 o'clock, and. open- on . Sundays from 7 a. m. until 12 o'clock , -noon. .- .' J UUUS FlSHEB, . Second Street, The Dalles, Or. PHOTOGRAPHER. I nstantaneous Portraits. Chapman Block, The Dalles, Oregon. . Children Cry. for Pitcher's Castoria. When Baby was sick, we gave aer Ossloria . . When she was a Child, she cried for Castorkw : Whoa she became Miss, she chmg to Castoria When shehsrt Children, she gave them Casta