The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, January 29, 1896, Image 3

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    lor?
Snow
Shovels
Lot No. 1.
Ladies' Black, Full-Fashioned Seamless Hose,
Plain and Ribbed Tops. Regular price, 25c. Closing out price, 15c.
Lot No. 2r
Ladies' Black and Grey Extra Fine
Regular price, 30c.
Lot No. 3.3
Ladies' Extra Fine, Full-Fashioned
in Plain Black
superior finish.
Lot No. 4.c
Children's Fine
Full Length,
Lot No. 5.
Children's Extra Heavy Ribbed Bicycle Hose,
in Black and Dark Grey. This is an extra good Hose for
Boys Regular price, 30 and 35c. Closing out price, 20c.
ALL GOODS MARKED IN
PLAIN FIGURES.
The Dalles Daily Chronicle.
ntered a the Postoffice at T&e Dalles, Oregon
as second-class matter.
WEDNESDAY. - - JANUARY 29, 1896
BRIEF MENTION.
Leaita From the Notebook of Chronicle
Reporters.
Effie Ellsler
At the Baldwin
Thursday and Friday.
Cooler weather ia predicted for to
morrow. A gent's diamond ring for sale. Ap
ply at thia office. j29-2t
. Seata for the Effie Ellsler performance
are now on sale at the usual place.
A marriage license was granted this
morning to F. J. Wright and J. E. Phes
terer. One car of cattle from Echo passed
. through The Dalles for Trontdale this
morning.
The billiard room in the Commercial
Club ia completed, and the table waa
put up today.
A new .crosswalk is being built on
Second street at the middlejbfshe block
between Union and Court streets.
Our city's streets seldom get any mud
dier than they are now. A apemal effort
should be made to keep the crosswalks
clean.
The next lecture in the winter course
will be delivered by Rev. P. S. Knight
of Salem. The subject will be "Why
We Laugh."
Every business man of The Dalles
should be a member of the Commercial
club. Socially and in a business way it
ia a fine thing for the city.
School district No. 12, Dalles City, has
outstanding warrants not paid , for the
want of funds to the amount of $6,580
This, Clerk Jacobsen reports, ia all of
the district's indebtedness.
A bond for a deed from John Prall to
Melissa Hill, binding the former to de
liver a deed for eighty '.acres of land.
three milea from The Dalles, waa filed
with the county clerk today.
The Junior Order of United American
Mechanics will meet next Friday even
ing in Schanno's hall, over A. A.
Brown's grocery store, at 8 o'clock, and
after that time, every Thursday evening
at 7 :30 in the same place. -
Deputy Sheriff Kelly received a lettej
from Sheriff Holder, of Sherman county
Baying that the residence of Alexander
Scott at Grass Valley had burned to the
ground. The loss will be Severe, as very
little of the contents waa saved.
Since the re-op&niBg of the distillery
at Grant, that plae ia doing consider
able snipping of axocKT. Nearly every
day sees one or mote cars loaded with
live stock and shipped from Grant to
Portland or Trontdale;
Carpentera and dealers id building
materials' expect the coming season to be
a lively one. Enough houses are known
and Grey. These goods are all
Regular price, 35 and 40c.
Ribbed Cashmere Hose,
with Cotton Heel and Toe. Reg. 25c. Closing, 15c.
PEASE
to be in contemplation of bnilding to
make a good showing, and all indica
tions point to a year of many improve
ments.
Last Sunday Rev. J. H. Hazel, of the
Christian church, announced to his con
gregation that it waa possible he would
not be in his pulpit the coming Sunday,
as he contemplated, going to California.
That plan is changed, however, and he
will conduct services next Sunday at the
usual time and place.
Practically all -the wheat in the ware
houses has been sold, and the roads
are in such condition that hauling from
the country is almost impossible. The
rise in wheat will not be of much bene
fit to this immediate community, aa
moat of last year's crop has been dis-
poseu oi. V '
j
Mr. H. Kaseberg, a prominent farmer! 1
of Sherman county, waa in the city
today and reports that fall-sown grain in.
that section ia growing very well, and
the people are correspondingly happy
in the prospects of of a large crop. The
wheat acreage will be very large in
Sherman countytbis year.
The county clerk is sending out no
tices of appointment to the road super
visors who were selected at the last term
of the county court. It is provided by
law that any one who ia appointed road
supervisor and refuses to serve, is sub
ject to a fine of $25. The county court,
however, ib very seldom bothered with
declinationa these dava.
i
The settlers on the north side of the
Columbia, between The Dalles and Cas
cades, are .anxlDtMOgrthe Regulator .to
resume her regular trips. As the steam
boat ia their only communication with
the outside, the eettlera : feel the incon
venience of the boat's withdrawal. The
Regulator will be ready for service by
the middle of February, and regular
trips will begin some time between that
date and the first of the following month.
In a notice in yesterday's Chronicle
a mistake was made, which was ana us
ing, but not harmful. In speaking of
Effiie Ellsler's performance - in Portland
of "Aa Yon Like It'.' and the Orego
nian's Write-up of her performance,
thinga got mixed and the criticism of
"Camille" followed the caption of "Aa
You Like It." But aa the mistake waa
extensively noticed and attention there'
by called-to the coming performance of
Miss Ellsler, the interests of the play
received a better advertisement.
The committee' of the Commercial
Club trustees which has in charge the
construction of the bowling alley, is
makioz good progress. Plans of alleys
in different cluba ' have been carefully
considered and the specifications that
have been drawn for the Commercial
Club alley provide that it shall be simi
lar to that in the .Multnomah Athletic
Club of Portland. ' Work wilj be begun
upon the active construction of the alley
very shortly.- -There
promises to be a large attend
ance at the Baldwin this week when
Effie Ellsler and her company will ap
pear. Manager Birgfeld has made t
Wool Hose,
Closing out price, 20c.
Hose,
Wool and of
Closing outrice, 25c.
& MAYS.
laudable effort in' securing a high grade
attraction, and the house will be crowd
ed both evenings. The people of The
Dallea appreciate good acting, and .for
thia reason the pieces presented by the
Ellsler company cannot fail to please.
The dancing class of Miss Anna
Moore will begin tomorrow evening at
8 o'clock in the Chrysanthemum ball,
over Brown's grocery store. This class
will be for beginners, and members will
be charged 50 eta per lesson. Private
lessons $1.' The hours of teaching will
be from 8 to 10. Mias Moore has just
returned from Portland, where she has
acquainted herself with ail the latest
dances. " , V
. - I - - j tV
Articles oi incorporation were meu
with the county clerk today by the
Hosier Mercantile Co. This is a con
cern formed to carry on a general mer
chandise business at Mosier to erect
buildings, buy and sell real estate and-
do whatever else ia necessary to the
proper conducting of a country store.
Amos Root, R. E. Hard wick and George
Sellinger are the incorporators, the capi
tal stock being $2000, divided into shares
of 410 each. With the opening of the
silica mines at Mosier and the starting
of a new store, our neighboring hamlet
ia in a fair way to boom.
All Taxpayers Should Attend.
On next Friday afternoon will occur
the meeting of legal voters in thia school
district. Though all meetings of this
5
kind are important, the coming one is
especial interest to the taxpayers.
Then will be decided the tax to be levied
for the year, and if there ia anything of
more Importance, juat at thia time, than
the amount of taxes our citizens have to
pay, we would like to know what it ia.
For some reason or other the assessed
valuation of property in the district is
smaller this year than it waa last, and a
larger levy will have to be made to ob
tain the same amount of revenue.
. The question of providing an addi
tional building for the district will also
come before the meeting. In any con
tingency the taxpayers will be called
upon for an additional sum for thia pur
pose. Whether a brick or wooden build
ing ia erected, or temporary quartera
rented, the decision should be made by
a meeting where the taxpayers are well
represented. Up in La Grande they
have been having trouble in getting the
taxpayers to attend the Echool 'meeting,
and the Chronicle of that city very ju8tly
complains of the lack of interest, in an
article which the East Oregonian re
prints under the caption of "The Same
Here." Let not The Dalles be open to
the eame criticism as that made by the
La Grande paper in the following : :
It seems almost incredible that a spe
cial school meeting called for the pur
pose of levying a tax for school purposes
in a district that baa almoet one thous
and persons of echool age and which
pridea itself on the efficiency of its
school management, should attract but
six voters. Yet that was the case with
the special school meeting for this dis
trict which was. held Thursday after
noon. The people of La Grande have
never faltered in providing the best in
the way of school maintenance. Money
.1AIER fr BENTON.
required for school pnrposea has been
voted and expended without a murmur
in seasons of adversity as well aa pros
perity. And to this fact may probably
be ascribed the lack of interest in the
special meeting. ' .
Bon. li. P. Thompson's Lecture,
Every seat in the Congregational
church waa occupied last evening, the
large audience being gathered to listen
to the lecture of Hon. D. P. Thompaon
upon "The Holy Places of Palestine."
Mr. Thompson baa Bpoken in The DalleB
before, and the assemblage of people who
greeted him. last evening showed the
appreciation in which he ia held aa a
lecturer.
In a few well-chosen worda Mr. J.
M. Patterson introduced the speaker of
the evening, Mr. Thompson prefaced
his remarks by Baying that what he was
going to say was more in the nature of a
"talk" than a lecture, as it consisted of
personal observations, and was not ency
clopedic in nature. ' He began by briefly
describing the tnp'on the Mediterranean
down the shore of Palestine, ' past the
once opulent cities of Tyre and Sidon,
now little. more ttan a memory, their
harbors full oi sand. Mr. Thompson
and hie party landed first at Yafa the
port in ancient daya called Jaffa. Here
the steamer waa left and the travelera
began their journey through Palestine,
visiting the most famous of its holy
places. Mr. Thompson in his address
made apt quotations from biblical lore,
and connected the places he was de
Bcribing with the events narrated in the
Old and New Testament. HiB remarks
.about Jerusalem were especially inter
esting, and some touches of humor now
and then added to the pleasure of the
audience.
Few men 'have the happy gift of nar
rative telling like that possessed by Mr.
Thompson, and the close attention given
by the audience waa the best mark of
appreciation.. Among his hearers were
a number of high school students. Prof.
Gavin having wisely recommended them
to attend. . . .
The lecture waa one of the most inter
eating ever given in the city, and the
ladiea of the church who arranged the
course, and the audience who listened to
hia worda, feel very grateful to Mr,
Thomppon for the trouble be took to
give them a pleasant evening.
Awarded
Highest Honors World's Fair,
dold Medal, Midwinter Fair.
WMMB
't"f"""v
Most Perfect. Made - '
40 Years the Standard.
Removal
Nolan's Book Store now located at
No. 54 Second Street, near Union. .
Ask Vanbib'ber & Worsley for it.
40c. Every Square is Full Weight.
TELEPHOISTE 05TO. 80.
OFFICE and SCHOOL SUPPLIES,
Pianos Organs.
For Low Prices, go to the
jacobsen Book & Music Company,
162 Second Street, -
Holiday Perfumes.
Prices to "tickle"
"Long" or "Short"
Purses.
fm '.3ES.' CRO
-DEALER IN-
Hay, Grain, Feed, Flour and Groceries,
Fruits, Seeds, Eggs and Poultry.
' Do yon -want.your horses fat and sleek? Buy Hay, Oats and Barley of Cross.
Do you want your cows to give good, rich milk and plenty pf it? , Buy Alfalfa Hay
and Bran and Shorts of Cross. Do yon want your chickens to lay fresh eggs? Buy
Imperial Egg Food and Chicken Feed of Cross. Do yon want to be happy and en
joy good health, live lone and increrse yoor bank account? Save money by buy
Hot Cakes, Buckwheat Flour, Maple Syrup and Groceries of .
J. H. CROSS.
' Comer of Union and Second Streets. Free Delivery. Goods sold at Bedrock
Prices for CASH
THUMBS teROWK
6.
Is
Dellcloa.
CREAMERY
Tygh Valley
A. A. B.
THE DALLES, OR.
35 c
Buy a nice, clean, sweet Perfume or Toilet
Water, elegantly put up. It makes a hand
some and much appreciated present.
DOEIili'S DrtfJG STOfyE.
Telephone Ho. 15.