The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, August 03, 1894, Image 3

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    t
CO'
-O- .
, . ... a
ixraw jams, a - i
Your choice of our v
entire stock of Men's
straw hats at ; ,
50 Cents.
Fancy ;
Wove Cheviots.
New Goods,
Desirable Patterns,
Stylish.
16 2-3 Cents.
Kid Gloves.
We desire to close a
lot of Black and Col-
ored Kid Gloves, and
have marked them
45 Cents.
We Do
Not Want
to carry over from
pile season to the
..other any unneces
sary stock. We be
lieve it to' be good
store-keeping to close
out goods even at
less than cost.
Have you taken ad
vantage of the bar
gains offered in our
Semi-Aonual Clearance Sale
All Goods Marked in
Plain Figures.
PEASE & MAYS.
Silks.
vvnv a
Silks.
The lines -we offered at 25 cts.
are about sold, we have made
up another handsome assort
ment, the regular values be
ing from 65 cts. to $1.00, that
we offer at the uniform price
of :. -:, ' - ' :' :': v:--
5
Gents
Clothing.
Our regular prices -were very (
low, our goods were desirable
and we did a large business.
We are selling what we now' '
have at
1. ....
20 Per Cent. Discount.
Go to
Africa ? ;
to seek wealth in
gold mines - among
savages and the un
healthy' climate of
the Tropics. Here
- at home is a , mine of .
great richness, the
v returns sure and cer
tain. Had you not
-better invest in this
Gold-Mine our "
Semi-Aoriiial Clearance Sale
All Goods Marked in
Plain Figures.
PEASE & MAYS.
Men's Shoes.
Not the latest point
ed toe Shoes, we con
fess; but are just as
good for service and
wear, nevertheless V
, and far more com
fortable. Were $4
and $5; now
$2.50.
Madras Curtains.
Have your rooms
look home-like and
cheerful. See these '
handsome Curtains
in our show window
at 85 Cents.
Swivel Silks.
The choicest of the
New Fabrics made .
for this summer's
use; now
47 1-2 Cents.
The Dalles Daily Chronicle.
Bntered a the Poatoffice at The Dalles, Oregon,
as second-class matter.
' 01x11)1)1112 List.
Ckroiielt ud N. T. Tribme. . .
Regular Our
price price
. .$2.50 $1.75
. 3.00 2.00
Local AdTertlalntr.
10 Cent inr line lor first insertion, and 8 Cents
per line for each subsequent insertion.
Special rates lor long time notices.
All local notices received later than 3 o'clock
will appeal the following day.
The Daily and Weekly Chronicle may
be found on sale at I. C. Nickehen's store.
Telephone No. 1.
FKIDAY,
ATJGDST 3, 1894
AUGUST AUGURINGS-
Leaves From the Notebook of Chronicle
. . Reporters.
Boat wanted, for ten days. Inquire
at this office.
Yesterday would have been a splen
did day to take a buggy ride inside of
the street sprinkler.
The west-bound passenger came in
this morning shortly after 7 o'clock bat
with rather a small number of passen
gers. There was a slight sprinkle of rain
about daylight this morning, not enough
to dampen the ground but just enough
to make pretty little freckles in the dust.
It was sinfully hot yesterday ; so sul
try and close that even the dogs left the
streets and crowded into some secluded
spot, where they could pass the day
without their pants.
. Yesterday afternoon the city marshal
gathered in three individuals suffering
.apparently from sunstroke as they were
lying in the alleys and utterly uncon
scious. They all recovered after a night
in tbe jug. .
We are told the thermometer at
Grants yesterday registered 106 in the
shade, and men woiking on tbe section
tell ns that in the sand cuts about Celilo
it was like an oven and .they had to
quit work there.
Although it was quite sultry this
morning the hot wave has probably
swept by. Clouds have come up from
the west, and the breeze has also shifted
around, and what there is of it is coming
from that direction.
Tbe steamer Columbia plying on the
upper Columbia river between Bevel
stoke, B. C. and Northport Wash.,
caught fire at 1 :30 Wednesday night
and was entirely nestroyed. She was a
fine boat costing about $75,000.
From present indications the connty
indebtedness will be reduced in round
numbers $15,000 this year. The delin
quent tax list is quite large, and if this
Is collected closely the reduction will be
fully up to the amount named. The
county judge and commissioners deserve
commendation for their good work.
Yesterday five men who had been
working for the O. R. & N. were dis
charged at Arlington, and undertook to
come to The Dalles to get their time
checks cashed. They made a raft and
started down the river, but on the way
one of them fell off and was drowned.
The state portage road is being put in
condition for handling freight, and al
though a portion of the lower incline is
gone the transfer will be made over -it
tomorrow. The O. It.' & N. did not act
handsomely towards the D. P. & A. N.
Co. concerning the use of the Washing
ton portage, but tbe inconvenience the
latter were put to did not last long.
A man named T. S. Moore was killed
near Hood River yesterday afternoon
about 2 :30 o'clock. He was working on
the pile driver and was under a bridge
putting on some braces, when the "nig
ger head" fell from the pile driver,
striking him on the .head and crushing
his skull. Deceased ' lived in - the Mt.
Hood settlement at the head of Hood
river valley. He leaves a wife and two
children. ,
The connty clerk's office for the month
of July shows receipts from civil busi
ness of $164.40. This amount was col
lected and turned over to the treasurer,
and will go a long ways towards paying
tbe salaries of tbe office. There is no
doubt but that the new law will save
the county, in ' the clerk's and sheriff's
offices, in the neighborhood of $5000 a
year. ' ""
Judge. Blakeley has made arrange
ments for having a cement floor laid in
the vault where the records are kept
and also in the jail corridor. He has
also been considering the advisability of
having the jail ceiling covered with a
net work of steel rods. As there is
nothing but the plaster and tin roof be
tween the prisoners and liberty. This
is almost a necessity.
Centerville Burned. 7
A fire broke out in Harvey's black
smith shoo at Centerville. Wash., about
3 :30 this morning and burned all that
portion of the town south of the road
before it quit. Among the buildings
burned were the two hotels, a warehouse
belonging to Crofton Bros, and about a
dozen residences, fourteen or fifteen
buildings in all. The fire occurring in
the night, . the inhabitants had no
knowledge of it until it had gotten such,
a start that nothing: could be done. Thn
residents got out, many of them' with
nothing but their night clothes, and
buildings and contents were a total loss.
There is no doubt some insurance bnt
neither that nor the value of property
destroyed can be learned today.
. Fir at Will to Salmon.
Mr. J. R. Warner of White Salmon
met with a serious loss Monday evening
by fire, his barn, with forty tons of hay,
two horses, harness and a wagon and
two calves being bnrned. Besides this
there was quite a quantity of freight be
longing to people in Camas Prairie
stored in the barn, and this was also
destroyed. We have not been abla to
learn the cause of the fire. The total
loss, exclusive of the freight mentioned,
is about $2,000, on which there is some
insurance.
i . ,
When Baby was stele, we gave her Castoria.
When she w a Child, sbe cried tor Castoria.
When she became Kiss, an dung to Castoria.
When sh had CbBdren, she gave t&em Oestoria,
Card of Thanks.
We desire to sincerely thank all the
kind friends who Offered their help and
sympathy in our late deep bereavement,
Mbs. R. C. Bbusb and Children.
Market Review.
Friday, August 4th. There have been
no changes in the .merchandise market
the past week, but business has been
good and large quantities of supplies
have been sold and forwarded to interior
points. - ' ; . - ,
In the produce market there is a
healthy condition. Eggs are firm and
scarce ; dealers are paying from 11 to 14
cents per dozen, and complain that they
can't get what they want; poultry is
slow sale, owing to tbe fact that offerings
are 'in excess of demand. Vegetables
and green fruits are in abundance and
the market is weak.
There is some movement in wool, but
few sales, as both buyer and dealer
realize ' the ' action ' of congress will
materially affect the price, the wool
market has degenerated into a guessing
contest. , Last week as the senate and
house seemed drifting apart the ' price
advanced sharply, touching 10 cents per
pound. . As the chances of some kind of
an agreement become better the . price
has gone down until the price may be
put at 8Z cents, though yesterday one
lot brought 92. cents.
- The wheat market is quiet, prices for
the new crop not yet being established,
the opening of the O. R. & N. for freight
traffic removes one element of annoy
ance, and lightens the heart of the wheat
grower. The prospects for an extra
large crop in the United States are not
so good. Southern California reports a
total failure, while the recent hot wave
in the middle states will have some
effect though the wheat harvest was
nearly over. .
A Month In a Sail Boat.
A sail boat was noticed at one of Sa
lem's wharfs today that at once attract
ed the attention of the reporter. Tbe
"stranger" is a craft with 6-foot beam
and 20-foot keel, neatly fitted out, with
all the necessities for camping attached.
Our inquiring led us to learn that the
masters of the ship were Edward G.
Patterson and a Mr. Fisher of The Dalles.
Patterson is the son of J. M. Patterson,
cashier of the First National bank of
The Dalles, and ( a grandson of G. G.
Gray of this city. These young men
left Tbe Dalles two weeks ago last Mon
day and they expect to be gone on the
trip a month. They have sailed all the
way, excepting from the mouth of the
Yamhill, they took a steamboat for
Salem, as the wind died out on them.
Next Friday they will leave Salem for
Astoria and then return to their home.
Their mode of rusticating is an odd one,
but interesting. The scenery along the
Columbia river is grand, beyond de
scription, and they are loud in their
praise of the grandeur - of the rivers of
Oregon. Salem independent.
-Mast Be Sold..
Several beautiful upright pianos, dif
ferent 'grades. I now offer for sale all
my ne and second-hand pianos at a
great sacrifice, regardless of cost.
Twenty-five dollars cash at time of pur.
chase and on installments of $10 per
month. For cash five per cent discount.
All pianos are marked in plain figures,
and as I have but a few of them, tbey
will sell fast at the price offered. There
fore, if you want one of these fine in
struments do not delay, but call early
Monday morniDg, August 6th, at I. C.
Kickelsen's music and .book store,
Second street. This' sale, commencing
on that date, is instituted for the pur
pose of making room for new styles and
to raise money to purchase fall and win
ter goods. The sale, therefore, will con
tinue till all are sold.
I. C. Nickelsen.
PERSONAL MENTION.
Mrs. L. S. Davis went to Portland
this morning.
Miss Morgan and Miss Heieler of
Sinemasho school are visiting friends and
relatives in Dufur.
- Mr. Prinz and family were passengers
on the Regulator this" morning bound
for Collins Landing.
M. George McCoy came up' from Port
land last night on his way to the big ir
rigation ditch near Wapinitia.
Mr. J. W. Armsworthy. of the Wasco
News, is in the - city. He made us a
pleasant visit, and when we said wheat
be smiled like Colfax and told us Sher
man county would have 2,000,000 bush
els. , , , '
- Mr. Julias Baldwin, a Dalles boy, who
learned the art preservative in, the old
Wasco Sun office, and who is at present
foreman in the Walla Walla Union
Journal office, as well as one of the pro
prietors of that paper, arrived on the
west-bound train this morning, and is
shaking hands with his many friends
here. He is accompanied by Mr. Ar
thur E. French of Dayton, Wash., for
merly an employee in this office. They
will procure a small boat here and take
a camping trip down the river for a
couple of weeks. ' -
, BORN.
In thiB city, Friday .morning, August
3d, to the wife of F. J. Clarke, a son.
Farrell & Co.'s table syrups are easily
digested by children.
M GOODS!
Aluminum ,
Drinking Cups,
Aluminum
Ikying Pans,
Aluminum
, Sauce, Pans,
Aluminum
Preserving Kettles,
Aluminum
I . Milk Pans,
Aluminum
Tea and Coffee Pots.
MAIER & BENTON.
DRY FIR WOOD,
$3 per cord, delivered.
Joles, pllii?s 9 Qo.
ar Our trpe porta
with a fresh stock of Groceries. In
our large stock of G-eneral Merchan
dise we have many special bargains in
STOCK SALT,
DRIED FRUIT,
BACON, (Klickitat)
CASE GOODS.
390 to 394 Second Street.
The
Balance .
-OF OUR-
Summer Dry Goods,
1 : : :
Clothing, Hats,
Shoes, Etc., Etc.,
WILL BE CLOSED OUT AT A-
TER7UTS STRICTLY CRSH.
The Only Thing
Ever high in our store was the Columbia,
and that is -marked" down; but it is not j
. yet as .
Low as Our Prices.
We can give you bargains in everything
in Ladies', Gentlemen's and Children's v
Clothing from Hat to Dress. Call and ' :
see us at the old corner. ' . .
: - n. Harris:
2