63 3 See us before you buy. Removal Notice; say! do you have "llts? 1 ' All nod Marked in k Plain Figures. The Dalles Daily Chronicle. ntered a the PostoBlce at The Dalles, Oregon as second-class matter. 10 Ceii us 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 will appear the following day. WEDNESDAY, - JULY 10, 1895 BRIEF MENTION. LeaTCi From the Notebook of CUronicle lleporters. Additional Local on Fourth Page. The weather forecast for Thursday is fair and stationary. The Redmen will meet tonight at their wigwam. Important business will be transacted. The river here tell three-tenths this morning. The highest point for this season has been reached. Thomas Haslain is acting aa night watchman in the place of Frank Con nelly,during the latter's absence from town. The Regulator carried fifty bales o wool down this morning. There still re main a large amount of the Sherar snip xnent yet to go. , The farmers are very busy just at. present. A larger number than usual are cutting hay and the rest getting ready for harvest. Yaomi Marsh made a large shipment of peaches to Portland by the boat this morning. The first brought to the market was last Friday. Strawberries are disappearing from the markets and black berries have come to take their place. Raspberries ' are present in large quantities. The early morning passenger was an hour an fifty-five minutes late this morning. Part of the delay was caused beyond Umatilla and a part at Columbus rock. A large excursion of Dalles people will leave for the coast tomorrow by the Regulator. - The exodus from the city to cooler places has begun in earnest and those who are fortunate enough are making plans to go where the billows Bound upon the shore or the wind sighs among the mountain trees. In the services at the cotton taber nacle this evening, the subject of ''The Covenants," and kindred features of Christian faith will be discussed from such scriptures as Jer. xxxi :31-34 ; Heb. viii:6-13; Eph. il -14-16; Gal. iv:21-31 ana ll ixr. in :b-!3. All people are cordially invited to come and hear. The change in time of the Regulator and Dalles City will be a great conven iehce -to the travelling public. The American people, with all their energy and push, like an hour's extra sleep in the morning and will find it pleasanter to take the boat at 8 o'clock instead of 7. The change at the other end wHl be still more agreeable. W. H. Turner, the real estate agent of Goldendale who ro mysteriously disap peared Bezer.il days ago, Las been found This dainty little Grecian maid seems fitly clad for weather such as this. That's what you need, brother to be fittingly clad in the Celebrated Guaranteed Brand of Happy Home" Clothing. FIT in Style. . FIT in Weight. . FIT in JPrice. FIT in FIT! Come in and have a Fit in our Store; PEASE The searching party discovered him at a place about four miles from Goldendale, The unfortunate man is undoubtedly de mented and refused to go with the men who came to find him. At the la accounts he was untaken. Chief Moore, of the weather bureau, has notified Weather Observer Bland ford to send daily to every display man in his district, the regular weather fore cast. Mr. Brooks will receive a tele gram every day from Portland, giving a forecast for the next thirty-six hours and the weather signals will be dis- pitveu Hi tuts uiu piacv. v Word came in this morning that Mr XT 1 1 " . r ,T . U uaywuou, a respecteu citizen 01 wamic, dropped dead yesterday morning. He was working in a field and was suddenly seen to careen and tail. Aid was im mediately given him, but it was too late as the end had come. Mr. Haywood 3 had lived In Wamic about six years an was much esteemed as a neighbor an friend. The latest report from Sherman county received this morning, stateB that the grain is in good condition. The rain on the Fourth did a great deal of good and lotne of the volunteer, which was sup posed to be lost, will average six or eight bushels. The fall grain -looks fine. Harvesting will commence next week. We earnestly hope the report is true and that Sherman county farmers will rean a rich reward. Floyd VanVactor, a brother of Mrs. Charles Johnson, was severely bitten by a dog yesterday. The boy was playing with a velocipede in company with some other children when the animal attacked him. The wound is not believed serious but is now quite painful. This makes the second case of dog biting within a ehort time. Several days ago the 5-year- old boy of Theodore Seufert was bitten in the same way. Frank Connelly, Harry Hampshire, Rocky Chenowith and' J. W. Fisher started on a camping trip to Wind river this morniug. They are thoroughly equipped with necessary paraphernalia and are going to enjoy themselves, They are provided with a small boat and will bunt and fish np the BtreamB emptying into the Columbia. All the details of the trips are settled except as to who shall cook and wash the dishes These latter questions may cause some dissensions. - All JS.. of is.. a are requested to repair to the temple of Kaaba, Thursday night. after' the A. O. U. W. lodge adjourns Oft in the stilly night, when Morpheus holds full sway and the stars are twink ling like diamonds in the skies and the moonbeams are 'flitting hither and thither, like a hobo looking for work, there comes a voice far-reaching and distinctly audible to all, calling for ad mittance to our eacred temple amid the grand old mosques of the ancients. Let us confer the boon, that he may sit within our glorious temple and with us counsel o er the woes of fallen men. Direct from factory and offered on tvery easy terms, Kranich & Bach pianos. rst-class in all details, at -fuckeiaea'a ueic store. izv-lw. On tbe rierlts of Happy Home Clothing &D HVCATSrS. X V From tbe 7'rttlt Market. Eelow is published the latest advices ceived from the Eastern fruit market. ur fruit raisers cannot watch the im ports too closely, as it is the only way of becoming thoroughly posted: The past two weeks have seen more cherries shipped from Oregon than ever befoie - and while prices have ruled higher generally ' than heretofore, it is not an unusual price. California cher ries have cold in past years for better prices and the prices ruling prior to July 4th is simply an eye opener to the cherry growers of Cregon ; 5 cents per pound to the shipper is a trifle .higher than Eastern, markets warranted, not withstanding commission houses paid that price for several carloads. A repre sentative of the Oregon Fruit Union left Portland June 25th and attended the auction sales, where the cars of cherries hipped by local commission houses jointly, were sold, prices varying from 75 cents to $1.20 per box. On July 2d, two cars arrived the same day In Minn eapolis, one shipped by Levy & Spiegle, Mark Levy & Co. and Page & Son, the other by W. S. Offner and Dr. N. G. Blalock. This, of course, is the reason why some ruled somewhat lower than they need have farther comment is un necessary. Two shipments sold in Chicago, July 3d ; one car of 1900 boxes from Levy & Spiegel, Mark Levy & Co, and Jac Fischel & Co. for $1675 or an average of 88 cents per box, what the shippers had left after paying 50 cents per box for fruit, box furnished 5 cents, 35 to 40 cent 8 for transportation and expenses of sale, you can figure. W. S. Offner also had a shipment sold in Chicago for 50 cents per box." till- Another Runaway. Of all the runaways The Dalles has ever had the most exciting and fatal occurred last night, about 9 o'clock. Mr, Ferguson's team had just brought the Umatilla House 'bus from the depot and was being unhitched in front of the Cos mopolitan, when tbe engine that was making up a train came down tbe track, The horses became scared and started to run down Front street. They were headed for Portland and going at pae eenger train speed. The horses struck the switch stand at the east end of tbe bridge and overturned it. The horses then parted and one started up Union street while the other kept on tbe rail road bridge and ran to the end of the passenger walk and over the end into Mill creek. The horse fell about forty feet and struck on his head by the water's edge. His neck was broken. The portion of town where the run away occurred saw more excitement than for a long time and people rushed oat on the bridge to where the horse made his Steve Brodie jump., A boat towed the carcass out into the river this morning and it has started for the sea coast. Experienced middle-aged lady would like a position for general housework or chamber work in the city. Call at tbe Farmer's Restaurant. j9-10. We carry a Complete Liae 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 G-arden Hose, Groceries and Provisions, Oak Fir and Maple Cord wood and General supplies, MAIER & BENTON. PERSONAL MENTION. Dr. D. Siddali has gone to Yakima on a business trip' Mrs. A. J. Totime returned last night from a ehort visit in Portland. Mies Bena Snelling of The Dalles is visiting; friends in McMinnville. Henry Dietzel returned yesterday from a months' trip in the mountains. Hazel Waud, Capt. Waud's little girl. has returned from a visit to Portland. Miss Clara Davis and Miss Minnie Lay left this morning for a visit at the coast. . Judge Bradshaw and family left on! he morning train for a sojourn at the seaside. Mr. Brent Driver and Frank Chandler, two of Wamic'e solid men, came into town last night. Mrs. B. S. Huntington and Mrs. H. S. Wilson were passengers to Portland this morning on the Regulator. Messrs. Bert Barrett, Carl and Robi Williams started for Trout Lake this morning, where they will enjoy a sum- meroutirg. Mr. M. Herrick, of the cannery, has gone to .Portland for a two-days visit. There are no fish running, bo he can well spare the time. Mr. David Garrison, a well-known resident of The Dalles, has beeh quite sick for some time. Ha is suffering' from inflammatory rheumatism. MisB Claudia Dnvall ofGoldendale, who has been attending the Anna Wright Seminary at Tacoma, stopped in The Dalles to make Miss Georgia Samp son a visit. - Mr. David McCully and wife of Salem are in the city visiting tbe family of their son Mr. A. McCully, engineer on the Regulator. Mr. McCully is an old pioneer of Oregon and at one time was heavily interested in the transportation business on the upper Willamette. Mr. Lee Wigle of Prinsville is in the city today. Mr. Wigle is a former Dalles boy, having been raised in this city and attended the Wasco Indepen dent Academy, of which institution he is a graduate. For several years be has been in the stock business near Prlne ville. BORN. J To the wife of W. HI Sharp, July 9th, 1 a daughter. 1 Notice. S All persons are hereby warned not to purchase that certain note given by the undersigned in favor of Mrs. Pearl Clark for the sum of $3,000, dated March 26, 1895, nnd due in live years after date. Said note was given without considera tion, and will not be paid. Dalles City, Or., June 13, 1895. junl5-lm ' J. F. Gomez. . Up to Date. The latest methods ef examination of the eyes are used by Dr. Le wen berg, the eye specialist now at .the Umatilla House. If you need bia services don't delay, but consult him at once. See advertisement in other part of tbe paper; " " jlO Notice. . The Columbia Ice Company will de liver ice to any part of the city. Thank ful for past favors we solicit a continu ance of the same. Gioegk Williams, j20-dtf Manager. On and after July 15th the Book store of M. T. Nolan will he at No. 54 Second St., next door to Grocery, cor ner of Union and Second Sts. The "Clauss" Scissors, Shears and Razors. Our Warranty is- If not-perfectly satisfactoby, return them, and get andther pair. A CARLOAD OF PIANOS -A.T Jaeofcsen Book & JVTusiG Go.'s, 162 Second St., The Dalles, Or. I And other high grades to select from. COMPETITIVE SALE now on, and you must remember we always lead and let the others follow. " OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT. Pianos from $150 up ward, on the installment plan. FREE CONCERT to all music-loving people will begin Tuesday night and continue during the week. JOS. T. PETERS & CO., DEALERS ITS- BUILDING : Telephone SJo. S5 "There is a tide in the affairs of men which, takenat its flood leads on to fortune" uj The poet unquestionably had reference to the Closii-Oil SalE Hi Firi at CRANDALL Who are selling those goods MICHELBACH BRICK; American Made Goods. MATERIALS AND- & is &. BURGETS, out at greatly-reduced ratee. - - UNION 8T. Carp 111!