0 . 'A Marvel in yjilk Weaving. STUART'S FAM OUS Portrait of Washiii gton Reproduced in a (Dasterpieee of the itoom. It takes three expert weavers two and a half months to weave a single copy; Only black and white silk is used, all the exquisite shading being obtained by the slcillf ul use of the Triple Loom . It cost $8,000 to transfer the design from the Oil Painting to the Loom and to produce the first copy. ' " ' ! ' ' On Exhibition In Our Center Window. "We have some handsome patterns in the new fabric, " SWIVEL SILK," especially designed for Ladies' Waists. We are showing an Elegant Sample Line of . . Printed Silks. ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. Exclusive Patterns. PEASE & MAYS. Deliver. - We do it. W-e are al ways at "the old stand," ready to deliver anything in the line of - Hardware, ' Graniteware, Tinware GROCERIES, ETC. JOLES, COLLINS & CO., Successors to The Dalles Mercantile Co. and Joles Bros. - -SPECIAL AGENTS FOE- Posson 'rV " Little Gem" Incubators and Bee Supplies. Come and see the Machine in operation. Our prices on Granite Ironware have been re duced. Call and be con vinced that our prices are the lowest. Maier & Benton, Cor. Third and Union, - and 133 Second Street. , . ALSO HEADQUARTERS FOR , - - : ; 390 and 394 Second Street, TO STOCKDQHN: We have just received Fifty Ton of Stock Salt, Lime, and Sulphur. Call before buying. The Dalles Daily Chronicle. Entered a the Poetoffice mt The Dalies, Oregon, as second-class matter. Clubbing List. flkreiitle i K, T. Triktie-. . " iii Wllj Ortgtiiai . . .'. " u4 Gsutfolitii I?aiia. Regular Our price price ..$2.50 $1.75 .. 3.00 2.00 . 3.00 2.25 Local Adrertlsing. 10 Ceau pr line for first insertion, and 5 Cents per line for each subsequent insertion. Special rates for long time notices. . All local notices received later than S o'clock will appear the following day. The Daily and Weekly Chronicle may be found on sale at I. C. Nickelseri ' store. Telephone No. 1. WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 1894 MAY MINORS. Leaves From the Notebook of Chronicle Reporters. River rose at Umatilla 1.1 during the past twenty-four hours. Businessmeeting of the Epworth League tonight at 7 :30. St. Paul's Episcopal Guild will meet with Mrs. T. A. Hudson tomorrow after noon at 2 o'clock. The water is now within three feet of Prinz & Kitschke's basemenr, and the; will move their goods out tomorrow. Astoria reports the salmon as running well for the past tw or three days. They should be here then about the first of June. The public schools of this city will give very-entertaining commencement exercises at the Baldwin opera house Saturday evening next. One of Rudyard Kipling's greatest stories, amply illustrated, will appear in the' June number of McClure'a Magazine. There will also be a story by Octave Thanet. . Charles T. Powne declared his inten tion , to become a citizen of the United States this morning, having heretofore been a subject of the good Queen Victoria. B. S. Pague left San Francisco this morning to take charge of the Oregon weather bureau. This will be good news, for no one else has been able to handle weather in webfoot. A few more days and the Chinese will have to get a move on, and at the same " time the rats will come up town, a source of delight to the small boy and of terror to his larger Bister. Rev., S. M. Driver, formerly well knownvin Eastern Oregon, abandoned his wife and children at Placerville, Cal., absconded ' with a pretty widow and about $1,000 borrowed from his friends. , While handling wool at Moody's ware house this morning a fellow workman ; accidentally struck Frank Egan on the hand with a hook ned in handling the bales. The hook struck the back of his left hand, going clear through and mak ing a very ugly wound. J erome Lauer this morning com inenced work on his building next to Young'g blacksmith shop. He intends opening a shop for the manufacture and repair of wagons and hacks. He will have a paint shop in connection with it, and as he is a first-class workman should have plenty of patronage. The posse that went after Hawthorne, ixowe and others returned this mornin?. having seen nothing of their intended victims. A report from 8-Mile is to the eiiect mat the gang was seen there yes terday morning, having camped there the night before. They left earlv. strik ing to the south, and according to this report are six in number. Dr. Siddall has just returned from an extended visit to the Midwinter, fair. While there he was a constant visitor to the State Dental University.5 and made a special study of crown and bridge worki He also obtained many useful pointers in other branches, particularly in saving teeth after the nerve has been exposed, without killing it. E. C. Baker and wife of Nanaimo. B. C, canvassed the town Tuesday taking up subscriptions for an orphan asylum somewhere, and in spHe of hard times secured quite a snug sum, at least Mrs. Baker says so. In the evening the lady delivered a sermon on the sidewalk in front of the Umatilla house, and thanked the people of The - Dalles for their "splendid aid." Wallace Semple Killed. News reached the city yesterday even ing that Wallace Semple had been killed about 4 o'clock in the afternoon, on Chenowith road near Vanbibber's. He, with others, was working on the road under M. Doyle supervisor, and were engaged in widening the grade, which at that point is verynarrow. Semple and Mr. Doyle's son- had put in a blast, which failed to remove the rock, and they climbed up on top of the bluff and were drilling a hole down from the top. Semple was on top of a bisr rock, inst above where the blast had been exploded. J. heir added weight and the jar caused by striking the drill caused the rock to slip, and Semple and Doyle were carried oown with, it and a Jaree amonnt of loosened rock and earth, which - com pletely filled the road. Doyle stopped in the road, but Semple was carried over it, and the bluff below, fallincr a distance of nearly fifty feet. He struck on' his head and shoulders, his skull being crushed. Doyle escaned with a few Blight bruises. Wallace Semple was an industrious man, aged about 30 years. He is a nephew of the McDonald brothers of this place, and leaves a large number ot friends, for such were all who knew him. A. Little uie for a Kit. Tacoma is to have a "fair" and exnecfa a portion of the Midwinter exhibit to be brought up. We do not blame Tacoma, but it strikes ns the fair business is rat ting unfair. It is tapering, tapering down until in the natural . course of events the last fair will be held at Celilo or Pasco.' However we will agree to stand in and help boom it, if the mana gers will promise on their "honest In juns" neverto allow any pictures, port folios or other abominations to be sent out, save and except only the pictures of CoL Sinnott'a hump-backed whale. Water Marks. District Court. The high water of the flood years is as follows: Of this date, 18S0, 29.02; 1882, 20.8. In 1876 the record was not kept by gauge, but on the 17th was within 8 feet of the company's old bridge, about 28 feet. The highest waters each year were: In 1876, Jnne 23d, 51.3;. 1880, July 2d, 48.7; 1882, June 14th, 48.2; 1891, May 31st, 26.5. " The May term of the district court be gins next Monday. The docket up to date contains the following cases : LAW DOCKET. , J E At water vs E T Glisan. Same vs I H Taffe. - . Ed Henderson vs'T A Ward and Jacob Craft. A O McCain vs L H Roberts. Richard Banker.vs Philip Willig. E BDu'fur.vs W T Rogers. E P MU1 and Fixture Co. va First Baptist Church. Mary Hartwell vs E M Aldrieh. The Smith Label and Lithograph Co vs l a. Xafle. S P Conroy vs N Harris. Joshua Hendy Machinery Co vs J G & IN Day. T G Mitchell vs O D Taylor. Portland Savings Bank vs P T Sharp. W H Wilson, district attorney, vs Amos Root et al. EQUITY. M J Wingate vs A M Williams & Co. Assignment of A A Bonnev. Assignment of the E O Co-operative Association of Patrons of Husbandry. Mary Denton vs Thomas Denton. Horace Rice vs Wm Tackman et al. Geo A Liebe vs A A Bonney et al. Assignment of Adolph Keller. C W Rice vs A A Bonney et al. Jos T Peters et al vs John Donovan et al. Assignment of W E Garretson. The Solicitors Loan and Trust Co vs D J Cooper. Rose J Nicholson vs Richard Nichol n. Assignment of Frank Vogt. Max Vogt et al kvs Augustus Bunnell et al. L L McCartney vs John W Adams et al. Elsie J Adams vs William A Hanna. American Mortgage Co vs James Dor- ris et al. " E L Smith vs M V Harrison. Jennie Thomas vs M C Thomas. R F Gibona, executor, vs W C Skin ner et al. Max Vogt & Co vs John Irvine et al. Dalles City vs Geo Watkins et al. G V Bolton vs Emily B Rinehart et al. W S Woodcock vs Anna L Woodcock. Dalles City vs Mary L Booth. Shronfe & McCrum vs R G Closter. Son. Koiwell G. Hon to Speak day Klgnt. . "rl- Hon. Roswell G. Horr, ex-member of congress and now associated editor of the New York Tribune, will deliver an address on the political issues of the day, at the Baldwin opera house, Friday evening, the 25th. He has spoken at numerous points in the state and the local papers have for him only the high est words of praise. As a writer he has a national reputation and as a speaker few if any superiors. It will be, we think, the largest political gathering ever held in Wasco county. Quite a number will be here from Crook' county, coming over a hundred miles .by stage for the sole purpose of hearing him. Gilliam county will also furnish a goodly number, and Sherman "county will be well represented. . . : - Stock TnleVes, Too. - - Now that young Hawthorne and his gang have gone, there may be an end to horse stealing in this immediate vicin ity. It is quite evident the boys ex pected : to 'leave, and they were only waiting to get arms, ammunition, a good horse each and some coin. ' They now probably have all these things ex cept the money, and a few good work horses driven along to sell will supply that'heed. From The Dalles to Hood River nearly every man who had any horses on the range . has lost ' some. Louis' Davenport was out two, bot one gut away from the thieves, and' came home. They still have a big gray mare belonging to him. - Wool. . . The wool press at Moody's is running steadily. Mr. George Green, one of the oldest and best known graders on the coast, is in charge of the work and the wool is being put up in better shape than ever before. Owing to the rains last week, which stopped the shearers, there is but ' little wool coming in so far this week, but heavy consignments are ex pected. The price is unchanged, but the wool can be sold, and in this reepect the season is better than last. . PERSONAL MENTION. J. C. Lucky is in the city. Louie Davenport is in town from Mosier. Hon. A. A. Jayne leaves for home this evening. Dick Gaunt was over from Centerville yesterday. . J. M. Patterson went to Hood River today on the Regulator and politics. Mr. Thomas F. Lvons of Walla Walla. after a brief visit here, leaves for home tonight. C. R. Bone of Hood River was in the city today, going on to Grants this evening. - Mr. Hal French, who went to Portland Friday to meet his mother, returned last evening. The Rev. Father Felix Bucher left this morning for Yaquina to take charge of that parish. ' . 7 Misses Jeannette and Maie Williams came up on the Regulator last night from Portland.: -. inz for Cleveland. Ohio, to be absent several months. - Mrs. M. E. French returned last night from a visit to San Francisco and the Midwinter fair. . Miss Olga Hewitt, daughter of Judsre Hewitt of Albany, is visiting her cousins the Misses Rowland. Dr. D. Siddall, who has been absent for the past- month at San Francisco, returned home last -night. Mrs. J. P. Stewart departed this morn ing for Portland, where she will visit with her son, Mr. Wm Stewart. Mr. Short, representing Luce & Man ning, wool dealers of Boston, arrived yesterday' and is soliciting consignments. Right ReV. B. Wistar Morris, of the Episcopal, church, will be here Sunday and conduct services morning . and evening. . Mr. T. F. Lyons, a graduate of the University - of Michigan in pharmacy, and a former drnggist of Walla Walla, having spent two years in the Golden state, is visiting friends in The Dalles, where he is glad once more to enjoy the healthful breezes of the mighty Colum- Dia. A party ot tourist stoDued ' off the through passenger train and took the' steamer Regulator for Portland. Tbev were Mr. W. Rea, jr., of Fargo, N. D., L). Graham of Kushville, Ind., Mr. and Mrs. John M. Rose and mother and Mr. Wm. J. Reed and mother from Pitts burg, Ind. . .' . ; - ' Put on Your Glasses and Look at This. Gre t' Price Redu -IN- GENTS' YOUTHS' BOYS' VlyU JL JLJLJLJLW GENTS' vnl itup X BOYS' .Good Boys' Suits from $2.00 up. ' SPECIAL VALTJES I1T Staple papey Dry Qoods, loots and Shoes. Ginghams, Calieos, (Duslins and Overalls, at Cat Prices. TERMS STRICTLY CKSH, From $100 to $2,000 to loan. Apply to - ' Geo. W. Rowland, . 113 Third St, The Dalles, Or. The Cheosiclk prints all the news. Tyillipery. The Latest Styles -IN- Hats, Bonnets - AND ' Trirnrxi.irigs. The ladies of The Dalles are invited to call and inspect our large and varied assortment of Mill in ery Goods, which is the finest in in the city. MRS. M. LeBALLISTER, The Dalles. What? Hand-Corded Corsets, Health Reform Waists, Nursing Corsets, Misses' Waists, Children's Waists, Shoulder Braces and Hose Supporters made to order. Where?4 At the Pacific Corset Company's Factory, north east of the Fair Grounds. It desired each garment . will be fitted before being finished. Call at the fac tory and examine oar goods, or drop a card in the office, and our agent will call and secure your order. THE LATEST BOOKS RECEIVED AT " : I. C. NICKKLSEN'S BOOK AM) MUSIC STORE. A MARRIAGE ABONE ZERO, by Nevada . AN APOCALYPSE OF LIFE, by W. T. Cheney. MARION DARSHE; by Crawford ............... ..$50 .. 50 . . 1 00