The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, May 08, 1895, Image 3

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    Novelties
Noveltie
See . us before
you buy.
We have just received direct from the manufacturers, the latest
and choicest line of
Cotton Dress Fabrics.
Ever shown in the city. The goods are reproductions of the Fine
Silk Novelties making such a phenomenal run ahroad.
''.
Organdie de Beauvais. . ..'15c
Herring Bone Sorrento ...- 15c
Herring Bone Sorrento 30 16c
Herring Bone Sorrento- 40 .....25c
Satin Rochelle 20c
Glossy Threads........ .......20c
Polka Sorrento.... .........25c
Hanover Brocade..... : .'. ...........25c
Mulle Francaise '. 25c
We at all times carry the newest, freshest and most complete line sof Novelties.
ALL GOODS MARKED IN
PLAIN FIGURES.
PRA2?F MAYs
- JL. SJL V J X. T Jk- JL Jk a m
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 ftnd Provisions,
Oak Fir and Maple Cord
wood and General sup-
. plies,
JOS. T. PETERS & CO.,
-DEALERS IN-
BUILDIKC : MATERIALS
-AND-
Teleplione INTo. 2B
Great Shirt Sale
Commencing Tuesday and continuing entire week.
See
CO
Get
and Be Convinced,
JOH1T G. HERTZ.
MAIER & BENTON.
The Tjrrta Vl- r I I 1 II CT 13 '
lye Creamery I I Cm It
Dellelons.
Ask VantiblDer & Worsley for it.
Every Square is Pull Weight.
TELPHOKE USTO- SO-
CREAM ERY
A. A. B.
The Dalles Dafly Chronicle.
nlered a the Fcwtoffioe at Tde Dalles, Oregon
as second-class matter.
10 Ceuui per line for first Insertion, and 6 Cents
per line for each subsequent insertion.
Special rates for long time notices.
All local notices received later than 8 o'clock
rill appear the following day.
WEDNESDAY -
- MAY 8, 1895
She Ate Eight Million Ducks.
BRIEF MENTION.
Learsa From the Notebook of Chronicle
Reporters.
Seeds at cost at E. J. Collins b. Co.'s
Commissioner Blowers came up from
Hood River this afternoon.
Fern Lodge social at Fraternity haTl,
tonight. Admission 25 cents.
License to marry was issued today to
"William R. Menefee and Stella Newton.
Mr. Tony Noltner, of the Portland
Dispatch, came up from the metropolis
yesterday.
D not forget the social given by Fern
lodge, Degree of Honor, at Fraternity
hall tonight.
County commissioners court is in ses
sion, with a goodly number of bills and
petitions to act upon.
County Commissioner Amos Under
wood of Skamania connty, is in the city.
Mr. Underwood was one of the first
settlers on the middle Columbia.
The regular quarterly examination of
teachers began this afternoon. There
are quite a number of applicants.
Several Presbyterian ministers, accom
panied by their wives, came up on the
local this afternoon and will leave on the
passenger tonight for the East, where
they go to attend the general synod.
The Herrick cannery made a run-this
' morning puttiug up about fifty cases
most of them fine chinooks. The salmon
run is still light and will probably not
improve much until the water begins to
fall. The river is still cominz no stand
Dick CloBter recently figured out a
proposition by which in a few years he
could make a fortune, and with his
usual energy, at once went to work to
get. the scheme to operating. Dick's
idea was a duck ranch. He figured that
a good duck, with the maternal instinct,
well developed, would, with a few bot
tles of "Swellin's food," be able to
hatch and care for two broods of duck
lings in a year. Each brood would con
tain six ducks and eix dudes. Each of
the six ducks would in turn hatch two
broods, so that at the end of the second
year, not allowing anytbing for infan
tile duck diseases, he would have, with
a starter of one pair, 156 ducks and 156
drakes. Keeping the ducks and selling
the drakes, the third year he would have
2,040 ducks, and also 1,872 drakes
for sale.' The fourth year he would
have 26,520 ducks, and for sale 24,430
drakes. He had estimated ' that' the
sale of the drakes would pay all running
expenses, so that each year his ducks
would be left as clear profit. At the
end of the fifth year the ducks would
number 344,760, and the drakes, which,
of course, he would sell, would be 318,
240. The sixth year he would have
4,181,880 ducks and 3,837,120 drakes, or
a total of 8,019,000. These Dick would
sell at $3 per dozen, a conservative
price, and would . retire from business
with $2,004,750, which any one will ad
mit is a handsome sum to be accumu
lated in six years from one dozen duck
eggs as the original capital.
Last week Dick j purchased a round
dozen duck eggs of the Clydesdale
brand and took them home to begin the
creation of his fortune; but an unex
pected difficulty arouse. None of Dick's
hens showed any inclination to set, and
of course time was too valuable to be
wasted. Dick put the eggs in a nice
ice ne8t in a barrel, and then captured
a hen and enclosed her with them ; but
the old proverb says "one man may
lead a horse to-water, but ten men can't
make him drink." Dick found the
duck eggs under did Mother Goose, and
then went home to complete his calcu
lations. He went back in half an hour,
and arrived just in time to see the goose
eat the last of his duck eggs.
And that is how Dick Closter lost $2,-
004,750 in less than six years, in the
poultry business.
A First Class Tronpe.
ing at 22.2 this morning.
Velarde Bros, are unloading a' big safel same rule true among the gallinaceous
from the cars this morning, at the foot
of Federal street. The safe is the prop
erty of Mays & Crowe and weighs 11,000 ,
pounds. J. C. Crandall,-Hugh Glenn'
and some others are making a series of
calculations, endeavoring to discover
whether the safe will go in the building,
or the building in the safe. At present
the question is undecided, the proposi
tion being as doubtful as that timenonV
ored puzzle of trying to discover whica
was the smaller of two joints of stove
pipe -when each was larger than the
other. Tba safe will be gotten out this
afternoon and if the foot of Federal
street, when that safe rests on it, doesn't
cause the head thereof to swear it will
be because it has no corns.
Ktcoraion to Cascade Locks and Betsra.
E teamer Regulator will leave The
Dalles at 8 a. m. Sunday, May 12, arriv
ing at the Cascade Locks at 10 :20 a. m.
Returning will leave the Lock at 5 p. m.
Tickets, 50 cents. D. P. & A. N. Co.
birds, for his old; hen set standing, and
refused utterly and emphatically to
work. She was on an individual strike,
and would not listen to reason. She
scorned the eggs, she refused to set un
lees it was on her own terms, or rather,
to be more correct, on her wn lay
Dick, knowing the perverseness of the
sex, yielded to the inevitable and began
to look around for some other mother
for the ducklings. He bad a dog, but
he was of the yellow, short-haired vari
ety, aDd not a setter. The cow, the
horse and a pet lamb were all considered
as to their possibilities as incubators,
and all dismissed from the calculation.
By this time Dick was getting wild
and had about come to the conclusion
he would have to do the settiog himself,
indeed it is said that he had begun to
cluck when he got up in the morning,
when he discovered that' an old goose
had deposited two eggs in her nest and
had commenced to incubate. Dick was
happy, and at once placed his dozen
The Payton Comedy Co. concludad a
successful engagement of three nights at
the U. 8. hall in Jacksonville, on Satur
day evening. . It is a strong one, being
composed of competent ar fists headed by
Senator and Lucy Payton,-whose abil
ities are well known. On Thursday
evening "The Gold King," a popular
comedy-drama, was admirably presented
to a fair-sized audience. The excellence
of the performance brought out a much
larger crowd on Friday, to witness the
charming rendition of a "Noble Outcast,"
a play full of pathos and abounding in
thrilling situations. East Lynne was
put on at the Saturday matinee, to the
satisfaction of many ladies and children,
and the engagement closed that evening
with the production of "Uncle Joshua
Whitcomb," when the hall was again
well filled. The last proved a fitting
finale to the company's engagement, be
ing so well performed that Landlord
DeRoboam entertained serious fears for
the safety of his roof. The singing al
ways gained an encore, while D. E.
Curts' topical eongs and Lloyd Fansher's
sentimental ballads came in for a liberal
Bhare of approbation. The Times' space
is too limited to give the notice due each
individual member of the troupe. Suf
fice it to say that they are all clever and
painstaking, and received their full
meed of praise. The orchestra and band
which accompanies them is also more
than average in ability, and aided
materially in the good impression left
by the Paytons. Jacksonville Times. .
This celebrated troupe will appear at
the opera house here for the first time
Monday evening next, and will play for
six successive nights. Matinee Satur
day afternoon. Reserved seats at
Blakeley & Houghton's. A feature of
(he show Monday night will be the ad
mission of two persons on each reserved
seat ticket. . --:
Keal Estate Transactions.
Oregon stands seventh of the states in
the number of her sheep, having 2,456,
077. She is fourth in the production of
unwashed wool, having 19,648,616
pounds and fourth in scoured wool, with
6,877,016 pounds. Ohio ranks first with
Texas a very close second and California
third, with only 210,000 less sheep.
Texas produces the moBt unwashed wool,
but her product loses 68 per cent in
scouring, while that from Ohio loses but
52 per cent, eo that the latter outranks
her in the scoured product. Oregon
wool loses 65 per cent weight in scouring.
The average, weight of the Oregon fleece
is 8 pounds.
Notice to Water Consumers.
Emil Schanno to Grace Donnell, strip
118 feet by 5 feet Trevitt's addition ; 50,
Rebecca Williams f nd George Williams
to Nathan Harris, w lot 7, block 15,
Laughlin'a addition, to Dalles City ;
$1000.
United States to John W. Montgomery
sw4 se, sec 21, tp 1 s, r 14 e.
Milton D. O'Dell, administrator of the
estate of William O'Dell, deceased, to
John Tait Roberts, 133 acres in Hood
River valley; $3000.
James A. Parish and wife to U. D
Parish, lot 20, block 14, Thompson's
addition to Dalles City ; $1.
United States to James Darneille'
swi, sec 7, tp 1 a, r 14 e ; patent.
United States to Jamea Darneille, se,
see 12, tp 1 1, r 13 e ; patent.
A Wool Item.
Hi There!
The water commission has ordered
that the rules concerning the use of
water for irrigation be printed and
posted upon the gates of consumers, so
that all may understand what the rules
are. This has been done as ordered.
The great waste of water heretofore, and
the limited supply make the enforce
ment of these rules absolutely neces
sary. All consumers will please take
notice of these regulations, and in case
of a violation of the rules, the water will
be at once shut off and a charge of $1
will be made before again making the
connections
I. J. Norman, Supt.
From the Moment
of Birth use
CUTICURA SOAP
It is not only the purest, sweetest,
and most refreshing of nursery soaps,
but it contains delicate emollient
properties which purify and beautify
the skin, and prevent skin blemishes,
occasioned by imperfect cleansing at
birth and the use of - impure soap.
Guaranteed absolutely pure by analyt
ical chemists of the highest standing.
Sold throughout the world. Price. 15c. Pottks
Ditt-c ahd Chem. Corn-.. So e Props.. Boscra, Mats.
"All shout Baby's Slun, Scalp, sod Hair." fee
Ha O
Men's Straw Haft,
Boys' Straw Hats,
Misses' Straw Hats,
Ladies' Straw Hats.
Largest Assortment in the City.
ROBERT E. WILLIAMS, .
Bin Front Store, Opposite Diamond Mills.
GEORGE RUCH,
PIONEER GROCER.
Successor to Cbrlsman & Corson.
ffl!llT - FULL LINE OF
STAPLE and FANCY GROCERIES.
Again in business at the old stand. I would be pleased to
see all my former patrons. Free delivery to any part of town.
Keep Your Eye on.
Rambler and Waverley Bicycles.
IxDii.xAPOi.is, Ind., April 27, 1895.
MESSRS. MAYS & CROWE, The Dalles, Or.
Gentlemen: We have your telegram of the 25th inst., and take pleasure in
entering your order for wheels. - We are quite confident of the fact that
you will be thoroughly satisfied with the "Waverley," as it is a high grade ma
chine in every sense of the word, and you can euarontee to your customers that it
is the equal of any machine manufactured. We make no exceptions at all, and
are prepared to prove at any time that there is not a better bicycle in the market.
Yours very trnlv,
INDIANA BICYCLE COMPANY.
We Rent and Rrpmr Bicycles.
Wheels from S45 to SIOO.
MAYS & CROWE.
Take your Prescriptions to.
M. Z. DONNELL.
They will be Filled by Thorough
Prescription Druggists.
DEUTSCHE AFOTHEKE.