The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, July 02, 1894, Image 3

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    JOLES, COLLINS & GO.
Back at Their Old Stand,
390-394 SECOND STREET,
I iW 10T1SST5 T I Have moved back
K ; at 133 Second St.,
S and Corner Union
x and Third Streets.
1 i amwaEgn- PEASE & MAYS.
Where they wilL be pleased to see all
their old patrons.
The Rose Hill Greenhouse
la still adding to its large stock
roi all kiuds of
Greenhouse Plants,
' And can furnish a choice selec
tion. Also
CUT FLOWERS and piiORUt DESIGNS
MRS. C. L. PHILLIPS.
Harry Liebe,'
, i .
PRACTICAL
Watchmaker
I Jeweler
All work promptly attended to,
- and warranted.
Can now be found at 162 Second
street.-, v
The Dalles Daily Chronicle.
Bntered a the Postoffice at The Dalles. Oreeon.
as second-class matter.
Cluta'biiig List.
Begular Our
price price
V T T.:i... o ki i tc
" n4 WmUj Orfgoiiai ,3.00 2.00
' ud Couiopolitai Bauiie. . . . 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 8 o'clock
will appear the following day.
The Daily and Weekly Chronicle may
be found on tale at I. C. Nickelsen's store.
- Telephone No. 1.
MONDAY,
JULY 2, 1894
JULY JINGLINGS.
Leaves From the Notebook of Chronicle
Reporters.
This is St. Platypus day.
The river is on a stand today at 39.5.
Don't forget the Novelty Tea tonight,
K. of P. hall.
County Clerk Kelsay took charge of
. that office this morning, with A. G.
Johnson as deputy.
More than 400 sacks of wool were re
ceived at -the Wasco warehouse today,
about 160,000 pounds.
Sheriff Driver took possession of the
books, papers, business and prisoners of
the sheriffs office this morning.
The D. P. & A. N. Co. will carry pass
engers on the Fourth the round, trip to
the Cascades for $1 and to Hood River
for 75 cents.
A dead horse in the water ' down by
the coal bunkers is liable to lift the
latter if he gets any stronger. . It should
be sent out to sea, and sent soon. J
It is quite probable there will be no
mail up tonight, unless it came up from
Portland to the Locks yesterday, as the
Union Pacific is not turning a wheel.
Mr. A. W. Patterson of the Heppner
Gazette, is in the city. He tells us
privately that he is not staying on ac
count the strike, but because he is
infatuated with the place.
Sunday night a light sprinkle of rain
fell which has continued nearly all day
The street sprinkler gets a rest, and the
pedestrian picks up any desired quantity
of Columbia river mud.
Through the kindness of Messrs. Sin
nottjfc Fish the Smith Bros, have se
cured the dining room of the Umatilla
house, for the night of July 4th and will
give one of their old. time parties.
Henry A. Brainard of San Francisco
has sent Mr. Emil Schanno a lot of lady
bugs, with instructions to put them on
a tree infested with San Jose scale. It
is claimed for them that they will ex
terminate that pest in short order.
The Baker was reported at the locks
yesterday evening, which report was
also denied. Another report is that she
will be brought up today. This story is
getting to be a genuine horse-chestnut,
but if she can be brought up at all the
water is at the right stage for it now"
The itrike is on here, the firemen re
fused to work, even on the engines en
gaged in the work of repairing the lines
The Union Pacific has one advantage
over its competitors, at least for this
part of the road. Its employes ' may
strike, but they can't tie it up. (
. Mr. F. Chase brought us some speci
mens of cherries raised on his place on
3-Mile that are simply perfect. They
are of theKoyal Ann, Black Republican,
Murilla and an unnamed variety. They
furnish proof conclusive that this section
is adapted to the growing of that kind of
fruit as well as nearly all others.
Brigadier-General Otis, commanding
the department of the Columbia, and
Mayor Tully McCrae arrived here Sat
urday from "Walla Walla, having com
pleted a tour of inspection of the de
partment. They were guests of the
Umatilla bouse yesterday, and left by
the Regulator tor Vancouver this morn
ing. ' ,' '.
Hon. Al A. Jayne began the work of
his office early, commencing; at Mr.
Wilson's request Saturday, by "impanel
ing the ' jury in the case of the state
against Maloney and Snelling. Eleven
jurymen ; were secured baturday after
noon, at which time the panel was ex
hausted and a special "venire issued.
The case is on trial today.
Recently we have been shown pear
limbs taken from orchards near . here
which were afflicted with blight, the
leaves being dead. Mr. Schanno tells
us he sent some apple limbs similarly
affected to a horticulturist in Portland
who says the blight was caused by sud
den falling of temperatures, followed by
bright sunshine, or else, that there is
too much water in the ground. The
latter cause would be removed by under
draining. . .
Harvesting will commence in this and
Sherman county this week. Several
would have commenced today had the
weather been clear. The volunteer will
be cut first. Reports ' from Sherman
county are tD tne enect that the very
lowest yields of volunteer will not go
below ten or twelve bushels to the acre,
and the yield of fall and spring sown
both, will run from twenty to forty
bushels. Sherman county will have
two million bushels of wheat, alone.
Dissolution Notice.
Notice is hereby given that the part
nership heretofore existing between the
undersigned, under the firm name of
Paul Krett & Co., has been dissolved by
mutual consent. Paul Kreft retires
from the business, and the same will be
continued by D. W. Vause at the old
stand, who will assume all the partner
ship liabilities. "
Dalles City, Or! May 26, 1894.
Paul Kkeft,
' D. W. Vause.
When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria.
When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria.
When she became Hiss, she clung to Castoria,
When she had Children, she gave them Castoria.
The Burglar fled.
Saturday night or . Sunday morning,
somewhere about .midnight any yay,
the residents .on Third, near Liberty,
were aroused by a series ot screams Jin a
feminine voice, commencing in ' high C
and running up to the fifth added line
and then over the roof. Windows were'
raised and heads protruded therefrom,
and soon Mr. W. S. Myers, .Judd Fish
and other neighbors had gathered at
Mrs. Forward's place, where the trouble
seemed to be. They had dressed hastily
and were not in costume for an evening
party, even of the kind ; for Rome were
in pants and slippers, while the ruffled
pajama was all that others- could boast.
The trouble was caused by some bold
tramp, who deliberately undertook to
break in the door. Mrs. Forward
looked out the upper window, and when
she ordered the tramp away he replied
with an oath that if she did not let him
in he would smash the door, and then
she screamed.'
When the neighbors arrived she was
of course much excited, and insisted to
Mr. Fish that the ' burglar was still
around. "Madam," said the imperturb
able Judd, "when you screamed the
second time he lit in Sherman county,
and is now on the North Platte." .No
loss ; no damage.
The Dlvlnest Thing in Childhood.
teams, also a work train. Arlington has
more appearance of a mining camp than
the quiet city it was two weeks ago.
The empty houses are being used for
sleeping quarters. The hotels are doing
a rushing business. The saloons of an
evening remind one of the days of '49. -
While every, person is anxious to have
the road put in repair as soon as
possible, the residents would be glad to
keep the crowd here. Arlington is the
only place where accommodation can
be had nearer than The Dalles or Uma
tilla, and we presume the men will be
kept there until the repairs are com
pleted.
Oregon Again Ahead.
Under date of June 20th, the San
Francisco Chronible says :
"The following young men from the
Pacific coat will receive honors at the
commencement of Notre Dame Univer
sity tomorrow night : Bachelor of law,
Roger B. Sinnott, The Dalles, Or.;
Francis D. Hennessey, Portland, Or.;
Michael McGarvey, Los Angeles.
Sorin gold medal for Christian doctrine,
J. B. Murphy, Port Townsend, Wash.
She Has failed, so Far.
The very finest expression on the face
of a child or infant seems to me to be
that of open-eyed and often open-
mouthed curiosity and wonder. The
objects of nature charm and entrance
the soul, which for the moment becomes
almost one with the face. This divinist
thing in childhood, which only bad
school methods can kill, which prompts
the primeval experiments of infants in
learning to use their senses, limbs, and
minds upon nature, is the root of the
spirit of research, which explores, pries,
inquires so persistently, and otten so
destructively in older children, and
comes to full maturity' in the invest!
gator behind the telescope or microscope,
in the laboratory, seminary, library, or
on exploring expeditions. At its best,
this spirit of research has awe and rever
ence enough in it to give it a high and
positive religious character, and the best
and "most characteristic feature about
the new movement in higher, education
I am trying to describe is that its up
ward tendencies can best be character
ized by the word "research," a word,
alas, now more often praised than" under
stood. Jfreeiaent G. Stanley Hall, in
the July Forum. -
A Sneak Thief at Work.
Hall's Vegetable Sicilian Hair Re
newer has restored gray hair to its ori
ginal color and prevented baldness in
thousands of cases It will do so to you.
For Colie and Grubs
In my mules and horses, Fgive Simmons
Liver Regulator. I have not lost one
I gave it to. ' .,
E. T. Tayxob, Ag't. for Grangers of Ga.
Saturday - night ' some petty thief
entered' Mr. J. ,E. Barnett's resilience
between 2 and 3 o'clock in. the morning
and got away with sixteen dollars. En
trance was .made through a window, and
the thief got away without being dis
covered. ' The money was taken from
Mr. Barnett's pants pockets, and in the
morning that garment was found in the
kitchen door which was open. Tracks
were found under the house and the im
print of bands and knees where the
robber had hidden behind one of the
posts on which the house rests. The
thief was both considerate and careful
for he left both Mr. and Mrs. Barnett's
watches, and other jewelry which was
lying on the bureau:'
Repairing the Railroad Track
adouc three hundred men are now
stopping at Arlington with quite a lot of
The steamer Baker has been trying to
get over the rapids at the cascades all
day, and has broken several cables in
doing so. . Shortly before 4 o'clock she
parted a line, after getting half a length
out of the canal, and is , now lying back
in the shelter of the locks. Opinions
seem to differ widely among "those
watching her, the majority being of the
opinion that she cannot make it.
Real Kstate Movements.
The following deed was filed for
rocord today :
Richard Sigman' to Melvin Sigman,
the nwJi of sec. 24, 1 1, s of r 13 e ; con
sideration, $2,500.
Woodmen Attention!
Public installation of the officers of
Mt. Hood Camp, No. 59, is postponed
until the second Tuesday of July. By
order of the camp.
Committee.
The Only Thing
Ever high in our store was the Columbia,
and that is marked down; but it is not
jet as : '' . ,
Low as Our Prices.
We can give you bargains in everything .
in Ladies', Gentlemen's and Children's
Clothing from Hat to Dress. Call and
see us at the old corner.
N. HARRIS.
just
Ieeeiued.
A FRESH LOT OF NEW STYLES
... .
OF ('
SUMMER MILLINERY GOODS.
STILL LATER STYLES OF
Summer Hats and Bonnets.
Something New In Flowers.
MRS. M. LeBALLISTEK, The Dalles.
THE EUROPEAN HOUSE
Complete and clean in all its furnishings, and
OBITTEALIjT' 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. .
A horse kicked H. S. Shafer, of the
Freemyre House, Middleburg, N. Y. on
the knee, which laid him up in bed and
caused the knee joint to become stiff.
A friend recommended him to - use
Chamberlain's Pain Balm, which he
did, and in two days was able to be
around. Mr, Shafer has recommended
it to many a, bruise or sprain. This'
same remedy is also famous for its cures
of rheumatism. For sale by Blakeley &
Houghton. .
Pbof. Erjtst Haeckel, the "German
Darwin," is sixty years of age, and has
been connected with the University of
Jena thirty-three years.
.The gifts to missions of the women
of the United States, in only seven de
nominations, amounted last year to
over one million dollars.
Pallor, languidneas, . and the appear
ance of ill-health being no longer fash
ionable among ladies, Ayer'a Sarsapa
rilla is most largely resorted to as a
tonic-alterative, nervine, " stomachic,
and builder-dp of the system generally.
This is as it should be. Ayer's is the
best. " v.
1 Malaria in any of Its .Forms,
Chills and fever'congestive chills, can
be prevented or cured by the use of
Simmons Liver Regulator, a purely veg
etable medicine, superior to calomel and
quinine.' :' V ' -
Union Sttfeet,
TflE DALtliES, OREGON.
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 fao
V tory and examine our goods, or drop a card in the
' office, and our agent will call and secure your order.
FHE 1TBWSST BOOKS.
BARRABAS ...... . . . . .'. ' .By Marie Corelli
THE KING'S STOCK BROKER .By Archibald Gunther
MARCELLA . . .-.By Mrs. Humphrey Ward
TOM SAWPER ABROAD .By Mark Twain
MARION DARSHE ........By Marion Crawford-
MONTEZUMA'S DAUGHTER By Rider HaggardT
SHIPS THAT PASS IN THE NIGHT By Beatrice Herraden
I. C. NICKELSEN, The Dalles.
1