3J CO CD 1-4 UJ DC Removal Notice. Q o o O I Pi Qreat Ba rais ! Qreat $aes ! 02 CD O On and after July 15th the BOOK We desire to call the attention of the public who have not favored us with a call during the last few days of our Clearance Sale, to do so at once and look over the values that we are offering. Your choice of our Uasty Qoods 5to;K at io; per Yard Has been appreciated by the crowds that visited us Saturday. Other goods sold at sweeping; reductions. Permanent reductions ii ) ( Standard patten. o O STORE of M. T. Nolan will be at 54 " -CJ Second St., next door to Grocery, cor ner of Union and Second Sts. c3 Beginning August 1, Standard Patterns that were 50 cents will hereafter sell at u ti Standard Patterns that were 30 cents will hereafter sell at ii it it Standard Patterns that were 20 cents will hereafter sell at "15 " " ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. The Dalles Daily Chronicle. ntcred a the Po&tofnce at Tbe D alios, Oregon as second-class matter. 10 Ceuu 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. SATURDAY. AUGUST 3, J 895 BRIEF MENTION. Lstu From the Notebook of Chronicle - Reporters, Additional Local on Fourth Page. The city council meets tonight. Weather forecast for tomorrow is fair and stationary. Wheat dropped lc in the Chicago market yesterday. The Regulator had a good sized pas senger list this morning. ' The Regulator will not make a trip to the Cascades tomorrow as expected. The Regulator carried a small band of sheep for the Cascades this morning. A plat of South Waucoma was filed to day with the county clerk by Kitty Coe. A fruit car loaded mainly with berries, will leave The Dalles for Denver this evening. lve cars of wheat from Hums were received by the Diamond Mills this morning. t Collections in town were reported bet ter vesterday than at any time for sev eral months. A large quantity of hay comes into town every dav and stock are going to have something good to eat next winter All that was left of Caroline was buried yesterday and a familiar character aronnd The Dalles will be seen no more Eight cars of cattle went west last night from Saltmarshe'a stockyard They were driven from near Antelope to The Dalles. Union services will be held tomorrow . evening id the Methodist church. The Congregational and Methodist churches will unite in worship. lbe b nance commute held a meeting in the recorder's office last niebt and re ported tho bills preeented- Some of the claims provoked warm debate. No freight trains have run east of here on account of the big blast near Seuferts The passenger train will run as usual to- night and tomorrow all trains will go on schedule time. Is The Dalles going to Jet other towns tget ahead and be represented at the hose " tournament ..while no team goes from here? Nearly all the sprinters are in town and a splendid team could be picked. Who has patriotism enough to start tbe ball rolling? The wool press in the Wasco warehouse is etill running, though the amount of wool remaining is very email. A few , more days will see all the wool shipped and the baler will be quiet till next season opens. The Dalles has bad: 1895, the reductions in most :;at 40 " ' n ! at 25 " " " 10 PEASE prosperous wool season thanks to com- pptitive transportation, which made this the best market. Next year we may ex- pect still larger business. Isacc C. Matney received his commis sion today as postmaster at Matney a new postoffice just created. Its location is twelve miles from town up Mill creek, five miles thia side of the Dalles Lum bering Company's mill', along the line of the flume. It bad been supposed that the bicycle contest, between two of our well known citizens, had been allowed to drop, but this morning one of them was seen rid ing at 5 o'clock, so there will probably be a challenge issued next week. Jockeying is evidently going on. 1 here will be a basket meeting at the camp ground on Three JUile, bunday August 11 th. Preaching at 11 a. m. and 3 p. m. Rev. J. H. Wood of The Dalles and others will be present to take charge of the preaching services. All are in vited to come with well-filled baskets. The excursion from Eaetern'Oregon to tbe Cascade Locks will be the largest ever given by the people of tbe interior. Tbe arrangements are made on a large scale. Eveiybody in the Eastern part of the state is desirous of attending, and tbe locks will see tbe greatest crowd in its history. The Chronicle hopes the subject of a band stand will not be allowed to drop Tbe summer is hurrying past and if we are to have any evening concerts the stand should be built at once. Fifty dollars could easily be raised and this would be a cheap price for the muBic that will be beard. itie contractors at tbe locks bave tin- ished building the large dredge which baa been in process of building lor sev- erai days, as soon as the water gets low enough the dredge will be put to I wora sluicing tne upper entrance to tbe canal and when this is finished the paratue win be taken to tbe lower end.l i ne dreuge is a buge anair and will dis lodge the dirt very rapidiy. The telephone to Dufur, Tygh Valley and Antelope will be a great benefit to the country through which it passes and to The Dalles. Tbe stages are slow and it takes four days for an answer to come from Antelope. When the telephone line is complete the volume of business will be greatly increased and the position of of this city as the distributing point of a large radius of country be all the more strengthened. Word was received yesterday evening that tbe government buildings were on fire, and it was feared that a geneial conflagration would ensue. By bard work, the fire was confined to the build ing in which it started, tbe stables, which were a total loss. It will not in terfere with the work in any manner, and it is safe to say the eonnd of the steamboat whistles, that are now heard only on tbe lower river, will awaken tbe echoes here at Christmas time. A man named W. J. White is being looked for by the officers with a warrant charging him with forgery. He came into R. E. Williams store thia morning cases are as follows: 25 cents 20 CENTS 15 CENTS .10 CENTS 5 CENTS & MAYS. and bought a bill of goods tendering in by "S. 8. Johns, Dalles Lumber Co." Mr. Williams becoming suspicious took the check to Van Bibber & Worsley and afterwards to J. T. Peters. After exam ining the check it was agreed that it was a forgery and so it proved to be. The imitation was not a very good one and the forger had neglected to perforate the corner with the amount as is the custom with Mr. Johns. A warrant was im mediately issued for White but up to a late hour this afternoon he bad not been found. A Trimendoni Blast. In company with E. E. Lytle, P. De huff, Yardmaster Hoean, Ed. Howell and several other gentlemen connected with the railroad, a representative of The Chboniclz visited the scene of the big blast this morning. The switch en gine, box car and a flat car loaded with ties made up the special train, which after a few minutes run and a short stop at Seuferts cannery reached the place where the work of improving tbe road bed and track ia going on. Just around the bend beyond 3-Mile creek a gang of men are tearing down the hillside and moving the track some distance from its present location. This morning at 5 o'clock a blast one of tne biggest that ever occurred on the road was fired and tbe whole hillside torn from' its in nermost depths. Tbe exact location is what was known as the half bridge, where the river washes along a per pen dicular bluff and where only a bride e WAR D(twPAn thA raar flnrt tka torvihla J depth of the river. Nineteen charges of powder, amounting to over 6000 pounds. Were touched off at a little after 5 this iorniDg. All the charges went at once, being fired by an electric battery, frh result nn hnnilv h fo.rihi frbe basaltic cliff tODDled into the river ap-jfanl pieces of bridge, rocks and clouds of dirt filled the air mevon iiinn The smoke was eeen fro m town and the low rumble heard several miles away. The experiment if such it may be called proved a great success and the railway officials and those who had charge of the work feel well satisfied. A Weat mass of rock filled the river for a p. distance of over 50 feet from the track nd made a sure foundation for the road bed. The track was torn for several undred feet. A large force of men were mmediately put to work and by tonight a temporary track will be finished so that trains can pass in safety. This im provement will be a great benefit to the roadway and remove a cause of worri ment that bus always been present to train men. Wm. MrH.r. ia th nn.r nf n curious relic, which to any collector of curios would possess preat value. Mr. Marders, while on a hunting expedition . . to Waukiakus springs, on the Klickitat river, became acquainted with the In dian chief, Waukiakus, from whom the springs are named and in the course of their friendship tbe old Indian presented Mr. Marders "with ' a pipe of quaint de sign. It is of wood inlaid with silver O n3 O C3 O o o 60 - 03 2 a CD CD r t "t & w S-i r cr co h-- CO p, DC UJ H o rr o W S-i CD c3 CD CD T"? S-I O Cl"PJ and lead and instead of having a bowl the piece is perfectly straight. The In dian gives his age as 100 years and says his wife is 110, The old Indian felt that his days along the Klickitat would not be many and that in the happy bunting grounds he would get a new pipe. Waukiakus remembers when there were no white people In tbe land and says he recollects distinctly when the Lewis and Clark expedition passed down the Co lumbia. At that time he was about 9 years old. He still has the eye and look chieftain and in spite of a bent form and the heavy weight of years, carries him self with dignity. : Mr. Marders highly prizes the "pipe of peace" and intends giving it to the Red Men's society to be preserved in its archives. It is now at The Chronicle office. PERSONAL MENTION. J. O. Mack returned today from Port land. Mr. Polk Butler from Naneene is in the city. Mr. C. D. Willets of Portland, is regis tered at the Umatilla. - Mr. A. M. Balfour of Lyle came up on the Regulator last evening. Mr. Charles Lord left on the early morning train for the coast. D. W. Vanse and Al. Rease went to Cascade Locks this morning. Miss Lizzie Bonn will return today from an extended visit in Portland. Dr. Hugh Logan left this evening for .Portland and a short stay at the coast Mr. Fred Houcbton and wife left to day for a visit at ilwaco and the coast Al.. w. hi. Wilson was a passenger on tbe local today bound for the coast. Mr. Ben Wilson and family have gone to Moffit Springs for their summer so journ. Elder Starbnck came up from Master last night, where he has been camping several days. Mr. H." Herbring went down on the Regulator this morning for a short stay at ins etevnson camp Mr. Theodore Prinz went down on the boat this morning to spend Sunday witn bis lamiiy at btevenson. Mrs. C. T. Donnell, who has been visiting Mrs. J. R. Warner at White Salmon, returned home last night. Mrs. W. C. Curtis left on (he boat this morning tor Cascades, where she will spend a week visiting Mrs. Morgan Mr. William Marders and George Harrison have retcrned from a hnntinz and fishing expedition on the Klicktat. Mr. C. L. Gilbert, deputy county clerk, accompanied by his family went to Hood River on a fishing expedition this afternoon. Miss May Enright started on her sum mer vacation thia morning. She will visit San Francisco and betore returning make a trip to the Puget sound country. Mr. A. L. DuPrey of Portland was in lao c,l7-l"'B morning. J"r. ioirsy I t . . i - r t t-v t ng. lamarl Alius JIoaaiA kihbav a. ftrmtr pballes girl, who is well remembered here. 1 Vc fa r. and Mrs. W. 11. u or low oi wamic 'ere in the city yesterday.- Mr. Forlow c ime in to give notice before tbe land ffice of making final proof on his home tead. Mrs. E. B. Dufur is quite sick at the louse of relatives in Dufur. She had ntended going to the mount-tins vester iay, but by the doctors orders she will lave to remain quiet several days. ,. Scissors, Shears and Razors. Our Warranty is- If not perfectly satisfactory, return them and get another pair. CARLOAD -AT- Jaeobsen Book 162 Second St., nJAlauPJUUUA.yv 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. JOS. T. PETERS & CO., -DEALERS IN- BUILDING - Telophono SJo. 25. Insect Powder, Poison Fly Paper, Sticky Fly Paper. Donnell's Deutsche Apotheke. American Ivlade Goods. EIGHTS & CROFO. OF PIANOS & fasie Go.'s, The Dalles, Or. x AND - We handle the Celebrated "Tanglefoot" Sticky Fly Paper and " Dutchei 's " Poison Paper. .Do not be deceived into baying any other brands. Omg Stoi?e. MATP.BTAT.fi Telephone Jlo. 15.