''Stand JOLES, COLLINS & CO. ' - Successors to Tlie Dalles Mercantile Co. aiiUoles Bros. ; ' . Just I Mandelay Glo k! Al A Choice Summer Jz. v 0 Dress Fabric. T ' ; X I n ' 1 I Per Yard 1 PerYardj j ; B; $ MME PEASE & MAYS. $ Deliver." We do it. We are al ways at " the old stand," ready to deliver anything ifi the line of Hardware; Graniteware, Tinware, ' GROCERIES, ETC. -SPECIAL AGENTS FOR- I osson ' " Little Gem " Incubators ell IVA J-V- UJJJllt'-. Come and see. the Machine in operation. -ALSO HEADQUARTERS FOR- v 390 and 394 Second Street, . , tie-hub dalles, oEO-cD2sr.. Our prices on Granite Ironware have been, re duced. Call and be con vinced that our prices are the lowest. v . . - Maier &. Benton, Cor. Third and Union,. and 133 Second Street. TO STOdGQEfl:-1 We have just received Fifty Ton of Stock Salt, Lime and Sulphur.' Call before buying. The Rose Hill Greenhouse la still adding to its large stock -of all kinds of i Greenhouse Plants, And can fnrniah a choice eelec- tion. . Also . . CUT FLOWERS and pitOiUt DESIGNS MRS. C. L. PH5LLIPS. Harry Liebe, PRACTICAL Watchmaker? Jeweler All work promptly attended to, and warranted. Can be found at Jacobsen's Husio store. No- 162 ... , . Second Street.. t . , The Dalles Daily Chronicle. Entered a the Postoffice at The Dalles, Oregon, as second-class matter. . Clubbing List. CkroiieU il Jf. T. Tribue " lid WmIIj Orfjooiai . . . . " . ui kunepolitu Iieuiid. Regular Our price price ..$2.50 $1.75 . . 3.00 2.00 .. 3.00 2.25 Local Advertising. 10 Couui per 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 rill appear the following day. The Daily and Weekly Chronicle may be found on sale at I. C. tfickelsen's store. Telephone No. 1. FRIDAY, JUNE 1, 1894 JUNE JUNGUNGS. Leaves From tUe Notebook of Chronicle Reporters. The wire king will be at Peaae & Maya tomorrow only. The Spokane is again rising, but slowly. 1 . The grand jury today indicted Dan Maloney and Snelling. - Wanted, by a lady a position as clerk in store. Inquire at this office. The grand jury expects to conclnde its labors either tonight or in the morning. A few gentlemen nfay secure room and board with a private family by applying at this office. Charley Hall lost one of bis fish wheels yesterday. It is lodged at the old Regulator wharf. ' The Regulator will land at the bluff this side of the old Laugblin farm resi dence, above the brick yard. D. C. Herri n is taking a series of pho tographs of high water scenes,- with some of our prominent citizens fairly in it. . V By common consent, owing to high .jcater and everybody being moved, col lection day has been postponed until Monday. as we go to press Orion Kinnersly is fishing in the street in front of bis drag Store. He does not seem to be catching enough to lower the river. . . A telephone message from Arlington at 9 :30 this morning says the Snake has not risen iu the past 24 hours at Lewis ten. This tallies with the message from . that point yesterday arid indicates the . Snake has reached its flood and will go down. It is to be hoped that it will re cede rapidly enough to make room for the increasing volume of the Columbia, Many of our people having nothing else to do are catching drift wood and . storing it up for winter. As we write several big poles that have drifted from the upper regions are being chopped into pieces that can be handled, in the street in front of our ' window. It is . quite probable some of this drift came in from British Columbia, without pay ing the customs duties. A statement has been circulated to the effect . that Capt. A. S. Blowers, re publican candidate for county commis sioner, will not carry his precinct. This ' is the veriest nonsense. Captain Blow era will not only get bis party vote, but be will also receive one-half of the dem ocratic vote ot that precinct. He will have not less than 100 majority in Hood River besides.' ;. v Our old townsman Mr. Drews came op on the Regulator Wednesday. He has been developing a coal prospect on the Clackamas, but was driven out by the high water. He thinks he has a down-hill haul on the world, and we hope he has, but he should remember that-tnan proposes, God disposes, or as the French put it: "Man appoint?, God disappoints." Those of our subscribers who get their paper delivered by carrier, and who do not get it, are requested to let us know of the fact, and also their new places of abode. In the numerous changes hur ridly made, the carriers naturally make many mistakes, but this being a part of the flood experience, we hope it will be taken like all other inconveniences, as good naturedly as possible. A dispatch from Wenatchie, a point on tlie Columbia idU miles above trie mouth of the Snake, received this morn ing, says the river at that point has been on a standstill for two days, bat another ise was expected. At the same time a dispatch from Lewiston says the Snake is beginning to rise. This should give us a day or so with the water at a standstill, commencing tonight. Mr. Judd Fish invites all those visit ing the Umatilla House, especially the ladies, to register, that in the future the hotel records may be a souvenir of the high water we did not want. Already the register contains-the names of many of the handsomest ladies in The Dalles, and therefore Oregon, and consequently the world, and when all The Dalles ladies put down their names it will be a record Indeed. It is quite probable the Hood River county bridge dps ' gone out ere this, Wednesday morning the " approaches were afloat, and the bridge like some of our democratic friends was bobbing on the waves, uncertain what was to be come of it. A telephone message re ceived just as we reached the preceding period tells as the bridge . is all afloat but secured with ropes so that it cannot float away. There is no current and it may be saved. . , Judge Condon has ' soma handsome young elms growing in front of his resi dence, although of rather .slow growth, the elm is one of the most beautiful of trees, and on this coast one of the rarest, Mr. Condon had a very handsome big fellow brought from Hartford, (if we re member rightly) but is was destroyed in the fire. Whilejup that way this morn ing the judge asked us to come in , and examine his handsome roses, which hav ing done we came away with a beautiful bouquet which now is mingling its per fume with that of our pipe in the edito rial sanctum. Advertised Letter.. Tbe Flood at tbe Lockt. Mr. Balfe Johnson, who visited Cas cade Locks yesterday gives a graphic ac count of the situation there. The bulkhead -which keeps tbe Col umbia out of the upper end of the lock has been in danger of going out for sev eral days, but a gallant fight has been made and is being made to save it. A dam has been built across from the rail road track to the bulkhead, the bulk bead itself raised, and all that human efforts could accomplish or ingenuity suggest has been done. Superintendent Borie, of the U. P., generously donated 1,000 sacks, which are filled with sand and. ready to be dropped into any cre vasse that may occur. The water yes terday when Mr. Johnson left was well up to the top of the bulkhead, and those who were protecting it stated that vsix inches higher water would destroy it, Should it go out, it will, quite likely,"" destroy all the riprap work and possi bly destroy the entire works, entailing a loss of over a million dollars. The Union Pacific is also in bad shape in that vicinity. Just below the mouth of the canal, where the current strikes the bank alongside of the railroad, the sliding mountain is again moving, re sembling a huge glacier. . Immense masses of the blnff are continually fall ing into the river, while the big fir trees as they tumble over the bank, bang . for a little while top downwards, reaching half way down the face of the bluff, and then go sliding and plunging into the wild whirlpools of the raging floods be low. For a quarter of a mile the river has cat into the mountain, and the mountain crushed into the river, until' the bluff, where the railroad formerly ran now presents a face three hundred feet in height. Tbe U. P. track is not alone gone, but its right-of- way has gone with it. .. The mountain is moving down so rapidly that the old Dalles and Sandy wagon road is now almost ready to top pie over into the Columbia. The telephone line bad been moved down until the poles were within a few feet of the bank, and as communication with Portland over the telephone ceased last night, it is reasonably certain that the poles went down the - bank some time during the night. 1 Until this land slide stops it will be impossible for the U. P. to lay tracks over or around it. And. when it will stop no man can con jecture. ' ' ' Water Probabilities. what is yet to come,, but while hoping the end is almost -reached, we see noth ing to justify the hope. If the weather remains warm the high mark cannot be guessed ; but with with present indica tions there will be yet higher water for two weeks. . Following is the list of letters remain ing in the postoffice at The Dalles un called for, Friday, May 31st, 1894. Persons calling for same will give date on which they were advertised : Baldwin, Mrs Agnes Jeasee, J Barker, Miss Nellie Pearse, Mr E S Copeland, Mrs Jos.: Lues, Alvin Cronin, Miss Katie Meeker, Mr I M ferikseii, Mr Mats Musser, Babie h, Esmond, M C J inn,. J Johnson, Mrs W Van Vahie, Mr H Wenast, Mrs Rose Rains, Mr E L' Keed, Mrs L W Smith, Mrs Augusta M . - - . Windall, Mrs R A M. T. Nolan, P. M. The water question is reduced to matter of guessing ; but from all reliable reports received, we fail to yet fjpe any bow of promise. ' The following is tbe substance of reliable dispatches received today: At Lewiston, on the Snake, the river had been at a standstill for forty- eight' hours, ending at 6 o'clock this morning, at which time it began to rise, At Wenatchie, on the, Columbia, 130 miles above i be mouth of the Snake, a dispatch this morning says : "The Col umbia has been at a standstill for forty eight hours, but the weather is ex. tremely warm and a further rise is an ticipated.", - Yet another dispatch says the Spokane is again rising. - From all of which we conclude that a check should occiii tonight, last from thirty six to forty-eight . hours, after which still further rise must be expected From all points the snowfall is reported as unusually heavy, and the high water limit is simply a question of weather conditions, which so far seem to be per' feet for an overwhelming rush, of water W confess to a feeling of dread of High Water Notes. The river gauge at 10 :15 this morning recorded 54 feet above zero. Cbas. F. Stephens has moved his stock of dry goods in to the basement of the M. E. church, and will continue businees. The water came on to the floor of Snipes & Kinersly's at 10 o'clock this morning, but it will not prevent them from continuing dispensing drngs and medicines, etc., as usual. , McCrnm baa moved his confectionery to the O. D. Tavlor real estate office. Julius Fisher has taken quarters at Pab Fagan'e, where his tonsorial depart ment will he operated as usuak Pease & Mays are as busy as can be in making preparations for the flood. and by. tomorrow will have their immense stock of goods above danger, and will continue in business as though 1S94 was not in it. ,.. Photographers were on the alert today, taking snap shots of the high water and its destructive work. - Charlie Hall's mammoth 'fish-wheel that was three miles up the river from this city, was carried away last evening and came to anchor on the upper piles of the D. P. & A. N. Co.'s incline. The loss is estimated at $3 ,500, The water is running all the" way through first street from the Waeco warehouse to the bluff of rock on the west, and in its .career has . crossed Third street at G. J. Farley's residence, The Dalles Lumbering Co. have moved their office to H. H. Campbell's grocery store; ; ' v W.' A. Kirby has vacated .his place of businees on Third street and has gone in to a tent near the Methodist church. Mr. N. Harris, at last, was compelled to move his stock of dry goods to the bnilding in front of bis residence on the bluff. - i A Kellar, the confectioner and baker, has put in a false floor and will continue business as usual. ' Pease & Mays are putting up a build ing on the northeast corner of Laughlin and Fourth streets, and will place all their heavy groceries, ttock jBalt, sul phur, etc.," there-. It has now reached the o4.1 point. Maier. & Benton, grocery dealers on corner oi ibiru ana -union, are sur rounded by the flood,. but say notwith standing the water, they will hold the fort there as well as on Second street. . Charles F. Lauer is moving his fruit establishment and provisions to the East Fnd. The water has just turned- the corner at The Chronicle office and only lacks 15 inches of 'coming on its floor now 2:15 p. m. One foot more of rise it will reach French & Co.'s bank side walk. ' ' ' ' Tbe water invaded the Times-Mountaineer office this morning. Reduction -IN- GENTS YOUTHS BOYS' GliOTHING GENTS YOUTHS - BOYS' .Good Boys' Suits from $2.00 up SIE'IEaLA-IEj VALUES IZCsT Staple papey Dry (Joods, Boots zxyxcL Slaoes. Ginghams, Calieos, (Daslins and Overalls, at Cut Prices. TERMS STRICTLY ' ORSH. L A FRESH LOT OF NEW STYLES just Reeeiued -OF- SUMMER MILLINERY GOODS. "Many of the citizens of Rainsville, In diana, are never without a ' bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy in the house," says Jacob Brown, the leading merchant of the place. This remedy has proven of so much value for colds, croup and whooping cough in children that few mothers who know its worth are willing to be without it. For sale by Blakeley & Houghton druggists. ' STILL LATER STYLES OF Summer Hats and NBonnets. ' " Something New in Flowers.' MRS M. LeB ALiLiISTER, 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 ? 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 our goods, or drop a card in the office, and our agent will call and secure your order. BTETJUEST BOOKS.. BARRABAS . . . ., ....... THE KING'S STOCK BROKER MARCELLA .' . . .-. TOM SAWPER ABROAD MARION DARSHE. . . . ........ MONTEZUMA'S DAUGHTER . By Marie Corelli By Archibald Gnnther . .By Mrs. Humphrey Ward - ........ By Mark Twain. .By Marion Crawford . . . .By Rider Haggard SHIPS THAT PASS IN THE NIGHT .By Beatrice Herraden I. C. NICKEL.SEN, The Dalles. V.