Ready for Business in Our . - ' . ; New Store, Fifth and Washington. ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. - PEASE & MAYS, JOLES, COLLINS &' GO. Back at Their Old Stand, 7QO-7Q. QLTPHMH OTDCrT m a . an m aM r m -s. mamr awm mam at Where they will be pleased to see all their old patrons. The Dalles Daily Ghroniele. Entered a the Postofflce at The Dalles, Oregon, as second-class matter. Crabbing List. Regular Onr price price ftroiicle ail S. I. Trilim. $2.50 $1.75 " d Weekly Orcgoiiaa 3.00 2.00 ' ui Coimopolitai laguiie 3.00 2.5 Local Advertising. 10 Coma par 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 8 o'clock will appear the following day. The Daily and Weekly' Chronicle may be found on gale at I. C. Nickelsen's store. Telephone No. 1. WEDNESDAY, - T JUNE 20, 1894 JUNE JUNGLINGS. Leaves From the Notebook of Chronicle Reporters. Independence day two weeks from today. ' The street sprinkler is getting its work in on Washington street. The New Columbia has opened up again and is ready for business. Mays & Crowe commenced moving their goods back to their store building this morning. Slowly the streets are taking shape again, the rocks, lumber and rubbish being removed. Eight hundred crates of strawberries were brought up from Hood River last night, bound for Omaha. The Wasco warehouse Monday and Tuesday took in 225,000 pounds of wool, most of it coming from Dayville and Prineville. N. Harris is putting his big stock of dress goods back on the shelves, and will be ready to wait on his customers tomorrow. A big band of sheep were ferried across ttie river today and will be taken to the fine pastures around the base of Mt. Adams. Portland will soon have another free bridge, that at Burnside street being about completed. It will be opened for footmen this week. Mr. Everding reports a good catch of salmon yesterday, twenty-five tons com ing to the cannery, most of which were caught in dip nets. x The express office is located tem porarily at Agent Hill's residence, on the hill. It will be moved to the old rooms just as soon as the doors become dry enough to close. - The Regulator brought up a crowd last night that made one think of old times when boats were the only means of communication with the outside world. - The Umatilla house was filled with guests from her. ' An engine coupled on to the freight cars that have been standing on the trestle this side of the shops and hauled them down town this afternoon. It seems like a year since the engines have railed through the streets. Watsons Triumph is the name of a new seedling strawberry propagated by W. P. Watson of Hood River. Eighteen of the berries weighed thirteen ounces and the largest one measured eight and a half inches in circumference. Walter Rowe's case will come up for trial as soon as court meets, which will be next Monday. He is charged with burglary, in breaking into Mays & Crowe's store, and was indicted by the grand jury among its last acts. H. Herbring is back in his store and the clerks are all busy getting goods on the shelves. Mr. Herbring was very careful in moving out, commenced in time and tells us he has not lost a dollar in the shape of damaged goods. Riparia reports a fall of .1 of a foot up to S o'clock this morning. Umatilla the same. Here the river is stationary at 47.6. Mr. Pague says there will be but little fall until tomorrow night, after which the water will again start down wards. Superintendent Borie, of the Union Pacific, tells us the Almota will run hereafter leaving Celilo every Friday morning. It may be possible extra trips will be made, but the Friday trip is the only regular one that will be made until further notice. The electric light plant is being put in order as fast as men and money can do it. It is expected that it will be in con dition to turn in the lights tomorrow evening, but this is not certain, as there is lots of work to be done yet before the plant can be started up. The newly elected county and city . officers will take charge of affairs one week from Monday. In view of this we believe it would be proper if the finan cial condition of both city and county were published. Let us know the con dition of affairs when the change takes place. A bridge carpenter just up from Bonneville gives a more hopeful account of the sliding mountain. He thinks the road can be built all right, and in a week, but that it will be a source of constant trouble. His estimate of the time in which trains will be running from Portland to Bonneville is not less than a week, nor over ten days. This ib one of the days that make the reporter weary. The news fountains re fuse to flow, and the old reliable sluice boxes show not a color. The county court is not, the justices ot the peace long in vain for a case. There is no marrying or giving in marriage, no births, no deaths. The sheriff sells not, and the elections are over. In fact there are just two places where there are no items, one is inside the courthouse and the other outside of it. Ayer's Pills are invaluable for the cure of Headache, Constipation, Stomach and Liver troubles, and all derange ments of the digestive and assimilative organs. These Pills are sugar-coated, safe and pleasant to take, always relia ble, and retain their virtues in any climate. Cord Wood. We again have an abundant supply of dry fir and hard wood for immediate delivery at the lowest rates, and "hope to be fayored with a liberal share of the trade. . Jos. T. Peters & Co. " Watch I.ost. One silver hunting case watch. The inside plate is engraved "Presented by Troop n E, 2nd U. S. Cavalry, Louis Burkhard." A liberal reward will be paid for its return to the Skibbe hotel. The Union Pacific. Superintendent Baxter, of the Union Pacific system, is making every exertion to have the line of roads in his division again in complete running order at an early day. A force of over 600 men are at work between Bonneville and Cas cade Locks, building a new line of road way. At points along the old route the river has cut the ground away, close to the mountain sides, and in such locali ties the greatest amount of new work will have to be done. An immense quantity of powder and dynamite will be used in blasting away the side of the mountain so that a good roadbed can be established, and a new track laid a con siderable distance south of the old line of track. It is a difficult matter to keep the various camps in supplies at present. Everything required has to be taken overland from Bonneville on the backs of men, across the mountain, as the bridges are all out. Owing to the diffi culties of such a trip but small loads can be carried at a time, an,d a large number of men are kept thus employed. It is expected that repairs on the road will be completed as far east as Bonne ville tonight, and trains for freight and passengers between Portland and that point, and all intermediate stations, will begin running tomorrow morning. Trains will leave Portland, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, until further notice, returning the day following. It is expected that trains will be run to Cascade Locks in ten days. The water has gone down so that men have been able to go over the line for some distance east of Bonneville. They report a pretty bad condition of affairs. The grade has been entirely washed away in numerous places, many of the filled bridges have gone out, and at places large sections of track have disappeared. The work of repairing will be commenced at once, and pushed vigorously to completion. New and heavier rails will be used in laying the entire track. It is hoped that trains will be run through to The Dalles in about three weeks. " Superintendent Borie, of the eastern section of this division, has also a large force of men at work. The greatest amount of work will have to be done be tween Willows station and Arlington, and in the vicinity of Grant. A force of men and a pile-driver are now at work at the latter place, and the track will soon be in proper shape again. Con siderable work will also have to be done at Coyote and Columbus Rock. The Union Pacific steamer Baker lies at the foot of the cascades, near Bonne ville, and the crew is getting everything ready to make the climb over .the swift waters of the station above the locks. It will be two or three days before any attempt will be made, and then those in charge of the steamer will take their time. It is the purpose to line the vessel over the rapids, and the officers of the company do not think there will be any difficulty in making the trip a successful one. Tuesday's Oregonian. Large Wool Shipments. The wool shipments from here this year will, from present indications, be the largest ever made. The shutting off of railroad communication has forced wool here that does not usually come, and this because supplies have given out and The Dalles is the only place they could be procured. There are a large number -ot teams here now loading goods for interior points. As soon as the Regulator can get loaded from the portage daily this number will be in- W! Will 1 We. have just received one scow" load of Choice DRY FIR WOOD, cut especially for family use. Orders filled promptly. Office in basement of the Baptist Church. MAI ER & BENTON. creased, as, although there is an im mense amount of goods here, outsiders imagine that the supply will run short. The Regulator is now bringing up about twenty-five, tons daily, and will handle all freight offered. Real Estate Movements. ' The following deeds were filed for record this morning : Wasco Independent Academy to school district No. 12, blocks 28, 29, 32 and 33, Gates addition to Dalles City, being the academy property ; consideration $2800. William Tack man and wife to school district No. 12, lots 8, 9 and 10, Tack man's addition to Dalles City; con sideration $400. T. A. Ward, sheriff, to Geo. A. Liebe, administrator of the estate of Wm. Allen; the e of sw)i, and Br of sw, sec 30, 1 1 n, r 14 e; consideration $1390. T. A. Ward to A. D. Bolton, nwJi of sec 14, tp 2 s, r 14 e ; $787. T. A. Ward to Johnson Bros., se!, sec 24, tiefr 12 e; $685.50. T. A. Ward to Walter Breeze, all of block 10, situated in military reserva tion addition to Dalles City ; $150. T. A. Ward to MaryJSpink.all west half donation land claim of Talbert Low and wife in t 1 n, r 13 e, except ten acres ; consideration $1680.50. Clond Cap Inn. H. D. Langille, one of the managers of Cloud Cap Inn, came up from Hood River last .night. He tells us that fa mous inn will be opened July 1st. The snow fall has been extraordinarily heavy, and some tremendous drifts have formed on the old mountain. The road is in pretty good condition, as far as it is visible, and no doubt it is all there safely above high .water. In this con nection, we want to say that those who have not visited Cloud Cap have missed ' a trip that would ' never be forgotten. It you have not made it, make it this summer. I have two little grand children who are teething thi hot summer weather and are troubled with bowel complaint. I give : them Chamberlain's . Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and it acts like a charm. I earnestly recom mend it for children with bowel troubles. I was myself taken with a severe attack of bloody flux, with cramps and pains in my stomach, one-third of a bottle of this remedy cured me. Within twenty four hours I was out of bed and doing my housework. Mrs. W. L. Dnnagan, Bon-aqua, Hickman Co., Tenn. For sale by Blafceley & Houghton druggists. fc Fobtv-two dollars and fifty cents a pound was the price recently paid at auction in London for a smaU consign ment of tea from the Mount Ver non estate, Ceylon. The tea was pro nounced to be absolutely the finest ever grown. Mrs. Eva Blackmas, who is a mem ber of the police board of Leaven worth, Kan., recently removed two po licemen because they were bachelors, and appointed married men in their placet. One of the appointees is her husband. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss,' she clung to Castoria. When she had Children, she gave them Castoria. The Rose Hill Greenhouse . Is still adding to its large stock ' of all kinds of Greenhouse Plants, And can furnish a choice selec tion. Also CUT FIiOWEHS and FiiOflJut DESIGNS MRS. C. L. PHILLIPS. Harry Liebe, PRACTICAL Watchmaker? Jeweler All work promptly attended to, t and warranted. , Can now be found at the residence of Geo. A. Liebe, on Third street. " A FRESH LOT OF. NEW STYLES siiMMFR mii i if.FRY nnnnQ STILL LATER STYLES OF 'Summer Hats and Bonnek Something New In Flowers. MRS. M. LeBALLISTER, The Dalles. Just , Ieeeived. THE EUROPEAN HOUSE Complete and clean in all its furnishings, and ' CETTALLT ' LOCATED. The Culinary Department is under the immediate super vision of Mrs. Frazier, and the table is better supplied than any other in the State for the money. Union Stfeet, THE DALtLtHS, ORHGOfJ. .Familiar Faces in a New Place , O. IS. BAYARD, Late Special Agent General Land Office. J. E. BARNETT Bayard 33a,rnett, Jl?e leal Instate, Ijoai?, Josuraijee. COLLECTION ACENTJY. - - - 350" OTA aHLYP TCT J3, LIC. Parties having Property they -wish to Sell or Trade, , Houses to Rent. c . Altract of Title furnished, will find it to their advantage to call on us. We shall make a specialty of the prosecution of Claims and Cmttr before the Unitep States Land Office. 85 Washington St. THE DALLES. OTi 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. Calt at the fac-, tory and examine our goods,' or drop a card in the ' office, and our agent will call and secure your order. B ARRABAS. . .By Marie Corelli THE KING'S STOCK BROKER v... By Archibald Gunther M ARCELLA By Mrs. Humphrey Ward TOM SAWPER ABROAD .By Mark Twain MARION DARSHE .By Marion Crawford MONTEZUMA'S DAUGHTER . :By Rider Haggard SHIPS THAT PASS IN, THE NIGHT ..By Beatrice Herraden I. G. NICKELSEN, The Dalles.