0yzysy&y&'syyy JOS. T. PETERS & CO. See us before you buy. -DEALERS IK- BUILIfflC : MATERIALS Watch this Space We carry a Complete Line of Fishing Tackle, Ammunition, Stoves and Steel Ranges, Wire Cloth, Wire Poultry Netting, Sewer Pipe, Iron Water Pipe, Garden Tools, Sheep Shears, Barrell Churns, Rubber and Cotton Wrap ped Garden Hose, Groceries and Provisions, Oak Fir and .Maple Cord wood and General sup plies, ' ; -AND- G-SBTSHilEi: SUPPLIES. Toleplxono Uo. 20' Bay Th Right. em Buy your Hats of a merchant who mak es this line a specialty, and get ify Proper Mm at tie int Price. We carry the largest stock and can save you money. Call and see. jomr c. herts!- ALL GOODS MARKED IN I PLAIN FIGURES. I PEASE & MAYS. MAIER & BENTON. The Tygh Val lye Creamery BUTTER la Delicious. Ask "Vanbibber & Worsley for it. Every Square is Full Weight. CREAMERY Valley J. A. B. The Dalles Dafly Chronicle. ntered a the Postofflce at The Dalles, Oregon as second-clans matter. 10 Cents yvr line lor first luaeraon, and 6 Cents per line for each subsequent Insertion. ' Special rates for long time notices. All local notices received later than o'clock will appear the following day. MONDAY MAY 6, 1893 BRIEF MENTION. Leaves From the Notebook of Chronicle Reporter. Seeds at cost at E. J. Collins V Co.'s The river stood this morning at 21.1 feet. ." Drop your eyes on Pease & Mays ad tomorrow. There was considerable "bock" in the beer yesterday. County court met this morning for the transaction of probate business. The weather bureau forecast for to morrow is stationary temperature and showery. A. M. Williams & Co. will have some thing to say in their ad tomorrow. Watch out for it. Next quarterly examination of appli cants for . teachers' certificates will be held Wednesday. Attorney Wilson and E. B.' Dufur will go to Pendleton tonight to attend to business in the supreme court. ids aeaa wans ana Dill Doaras are blossoming today with the gay circus poster and the small boy is wildly happy Hood River has ripe strawberries, but none for market yet. There will be plenty of them by the last of the week if the weather is favorable. Upon complaint of Mrs Stella Gray, mother of Alfred Gray, that young gen tleman was today ordered sent to the reform school. : We observed a crowd of small boys looking at the circus posters this morn ing and heard one of ihem remark "why its two whole months yet and a feller might die of old age 'fore that gets here.' The Seufert & Condon telephone sys tern, known as "The Dalles Exchange' is about completed. Most of the instru ments are in place, and connections made. ' This is the cyclone season in the East, and it opened with a destructive blow in Iowa in which nearly a hundred people were known to nave been killed, and the count' may make the- number much larger. . Dr. 1. .Logan ot The uaiies. Or., is in the 'city visiting his cousin, Dr. Calla way, and family. He is on his way to Chicago to attend the National Aasocia tiorrof Railway Surgeons and will leave for that point tomorrow. Nevada (Mo, Post. . Quite a number of our young gentle men met at the council chamber Satur . day, for the purpose of organising a base ball club. The arrangements were not completed, but it was agreed to organize a club and another meeting will be .held soon to perfect the organization. The rain Saturday night and Sunday was as gentle as a turtle dove and mild as the first kiss of puppy love. It was as good too. ' The steady drizzle and lack ot wind was a peculiar feature of the rain. It all went into the ground and the amount of good it has done is incalculable. The salmon run does not seem to im prove any but, the rise in the river puts more wheels at work so that the catch is increasing steadily. Mr. Herrick re ceived quite a fine lot of Chinooks today but will hold them until tomorrow morn ing, at which time he expects to make a pretty good run. Walter L. Tooze has shipped from Woodburn and vicinity this season, 98 carloads of potatoes to all points in Cali fornia and to several points in Texas, Arizona, and New Mexico. He also shipped five cars to Chicago, 111., being the first shipped out of the valley, or at least from Marion county, to Eastern points. The rainfall yesterday was .29 of an inch, making the total fall for the month of May to date, .75 of an inch. This is .11 of an inch more than the average rainfall for the entire month during a period of 22 years. The reports from neighboring towns indicate that the rain has been general. Good crops all over Eastern Oregon are now assured. Professor Gatch has resigned the office of president of the University of Wash ington. In accepting his resignation the board of regents adopted resolutions very flattering to him, and then elected him senior professor of philosophy. be will continue to act as president un til his successor is chosen. Poofessor Gatch has many friends here,' he having at one time been in charge of the acad emy here. There is no excitement, nor is there very much talking being done about the mining industry in southern Oregon; yet it is a fact that there are more mines in active operation in this section than any other in the state. Considerable gold is being taken out right along, and people do not notice it any more than in any'otber branch of business. .Some of the mines have been yielding a hand some income to their owners for years and others just as valuable are being opened up every week. It is probable that an application will be made to Judge Hanna soon for per mission to resume work on the Ashland mine nnder the receiver. Messrs. Kelly and Sinnott have been there for the past fortnight, trying to make arrangements to that end, "and an agreement has about been reached. The object is to pay off indebtedness which has been incurred lately, and afterward, if it is satisfactory, to continue- work. The mill has been running for several days on tailings from the dump below. Something new in photographs at Herrin's, for only 75 cents per dozen. Call at studio and see samples. 30-lw LATE LITERABI NKW8. Radyard Kipling to Revisit India. pubFe Hf nfri interpsfc will rwi ff1fr. Viv t.h nnh lie in the return of Rudyard Kipling ton India. He has just agreed to furnish a regular contribution to The CoaBreJ i politan Magazine for the coming year, beginning his work upon bis return to India. India has never been critically considered by such a pen as Kipling'p and what he will write for the Cosmo politan will attract the widest attention, both here and in England. Perhaps the most beautiful Thomas politan -r v - ii - . .i v-t ... K ims issue m tne smpoiuan loaded by Frank Hampton for D win oc a souvenir wortuv oi preservation. This number contains fifty-two original drawings, by Thomas Moran, Oliver Heford, Dan Beard, H. M. Eaton, F. G. Attwood, F. O. Small, F. Lix, J. H. Dolpb, and Rosina Emmett Sherwood, besides six reproductions of famous re cent works of art, and forty other inter esting illusrations ninety-eight in all. Though the. Cosmopolitan sells for but fifteen cents, probably no magazine in the world will present for May so great a number of illustrations specially de signed for its pages by famous illustra tion. The fiction in this number is by F. Hopkinson Smith, Gustav Kobbe, W. Clark Russell, Edgar W. Nye, and T. C. Crawford. A Dial On Sis Face. Col. James B. Eddy, . of the Oregon Railway commission,' has returned from the scene of the bridge collapse on the Oregom Pacific, fifty miles Vest of Cor vallis. ' On the part of the commission, Col. iiddy made an investigation into the source of the accident and found it difficult to give a definite answer. It appears that the bridge had been' in spected bat a short time ago and pro nounced sound and train worthy. In connection with the terrible acci aent, tne ixrvains Times relates a strange incident, ine conductor was Johnny Campbell and after the crash was over and search was made in the debris, on , Mr. Campbell's face under the left eye was a perfect picture of his ! watch dial, showing the time to be ' 15 minutes past 3 o'clock,' just the time of the accident. It is supposed he had his watch in his hand looking at the time when the crash came and he fell with his face on the dial and it left the imprint.- ' - - : Heme Business. . cars. Besides this it snipped in less than carload lots, miscellaneous merch andise weighing 2,459,261 pounds and eceived miscellaneous freight weighing 3,408,814 pounds. She received be sides 56 cars of lumber, merchan dise 52 . cars, oil 13 cars, and . coal 88 cars. In all for carload lots 1,620 c&ifij. were used and for the miscellaneous freight 300 cars more were required or all grand total of 2,000 cars. Two train- loads a week or six carloads a day.Qowj is mat ior uubidcsb tor & nuiau bunu : Hi There ! Loading Cattle. series of1 A lrcr number nf nennle have been pictures ever presented of the Rocky at the depot today witneaeing the load. mountains will be found in a collection ot ing of the cattle t0 dipped" away, fourteen original paintings, executed b Johli Stewart furnishes 600 head of the Moran for the May ttosmoV- n nr. rro t trQi xt,. To those who have been in theJ Una while beadn the Bame" train M. French & Co., of The Dalles. The cat tle are one and two year old steers. They will make a full train load, and a special train will deliver them. The Messrs. Hampton are also loading a fall train load of similar 'cattle at Miller's station in Linn county for French & Co. Mr. Stewart has purchased 2000 head more cattle for other parties which he will deliver in June. In that month A. J Pickard will also deliver 600 head to parties in Crook county. Guard. Real Rstatr Transactions. P.K. Anderson to J. P. Thompson, d, swj, sec 34, tp 2 n, r 11 e ; $1500. J. P. Thompson and wife to P. N. An derson, s2, wj, sec 30, tp 2 n, r 10 e; $1500. , Matilda Durbin to T. J. Harper, part of lot 7 and lot 8, block 13, Baird's sec ond addition to town of Antelope ; $50. Matilda C. Durbin and husband to Mamie E. Dunn, lot 6, block 7, Baird's second addition to Antelope; $60. Geo. T. Prather and wife to Humphrey Pugh, e of lots 7 and 8, block D, first addition, west to town of Hood River; $400. ti. IS. .Benedict to . 1. Kemper, s, sec 21, tp 2 n, r 14 e ; $5. Joseph Taylor and wife to J. C. Will mon, sa, sec 21, tp 2 n, r 14 e; quit claim. S. T. Kemper to J. C. Willmon, same property as above ; quitclaim.' When Baby was sick, we gave her Caetoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castorin. When she became Miss, she clung to Oastoria, When ana had ChlHrwn, she gave them Castorta. w Men's Straw Hats, Boys' Straw Hats, Misses' Straw Hats, . Ladies' Straw Hats. Largest Assortment in the City.1 ROBERT E. WILLIAMS, Blue Front Store, Opposite Diamond Mills. GEORGE RUCH, PIONEER GROCER, , Successor to Chrism an fc Coraon.) IT FULL LINE Off STAPLE and FANCY GROCERIES. Again in business at the old stand. - I would bft pleased to see all my formei patrons. Free delivery to any part of town. Crescents! Crescents! Crescents! Wh-rr -nn.Tr JfclOO firvp a. "Rinvnlft When you can get one for $55 ? The Dalles did some business last year, despite the high water. Although the railroad was washed away so that trains did not run for more than two months during the summef , yet The Dalles ship ped the following products in 1894 by rail, and not. counting the immense amount shipped by boat. Wheat 705, other grain 80 cars, sheep 203 cars, cattle 208 cars, hogs 69 cars fruit 21 cars, sal mon 55 cars, wool 150 cars, potatoes 10 Clothing! Clotlilngl We invite you to inspect our new spring stock of mens' suits, boys' suits and childrens' suits, latest cuts. Also a very large assortment of mens' and boys' pants in all the new styles. 'Never in the istory of low prices has such been offered. We will guarantee to save you fully 50 per cent.' Remember the loca tion. . Robkbt E. Williams, Blue Front store, opposite Diamond Mill-.,- - - alStf. We buy direct from the makers, and save yon the jobber's profit. . We sell our High-grade CRESCENT, with wood rim and Clincher tire, for. .$80 00 The same wheel, with Morgan & Wright tire, for. . . : 75 09 - This wheel weighs 23 pounds. Our SPECIAL CRESCENT, with either wood or steel rims, M. & W. tires. $55 00 This wheel with wood rim weighs 28 pounds; with steel, 30 pounds. Our SPECIAL CRESCENT will compare favorably with any $75 wheel on the market, and we will give the same guarantee that ie given on the highest priced wheel sold. Come and see our samples or send for catalogue. MAYS & CROWE, The Dalles. Take your Prescriptions to. M. Z. DONNELL. They will be Filled toy Thorough Prescription Druggists. DEUTSCHE APOTHEKE.