.a - - fin urns i -ww jsmi'f.- - w-a mm m fa m m m a mm c Snoiu Shovels, I 35c j LOt NO. 1-S3SSSSSS& Ladies' Black, Full-Fashioned Seamless Hose, Plain and Ribbed Tops. Regular price, 25c. Closing out price, 15c. Lot No. 2.-3 Ladies' Black and Grey Extra Fine Wool Hose, : Regular price, 30c. Closing out price, 20c. SKATES Lot No. S.b Ladies' Extra Fine, Full-Fashioned in Plain Black and Grey. These goods are all superior finish. Regular price, 35 and . 40c. Lot No. 4. 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 It PLAIN FIGURES. The Dalles Daily Chronicle. ntcred a the Postoffice at The Dalles, Oregon as second-class matter. WEDNESDAY. - FEBRUARY 5, 1896 BRIEF MENTION. Lcarea From tbe Notebook of Chronicle , Reporters. Forecast Fair and cooler 5th and Cth. School Clerk Jacobsen is busy on enumeration work again. Services will be held in St. Paul's Episcopal church this evening at 7 :30. The annual meeting of East End Hose Co. occurs tonight. The secretary sug gests the law of fines for non-attendance. Members of the Hook and Ladder Co. are reminded of a meeting this evening. Officers are to be elected and a full at tendance is desired. rMr. Max Vogt .has rerdered the oldr walls of his once namlsome buildings l braced, and workmen ihetoday engaged in making them safe. The funeral of Wm. DeWolf occurred this afternoon from the residence and was largely attended. The Odd Fellows officiated at the burial. The high wind which blew last night tumbled dawn a brick chimney of the residence occupied by Rev. I. H. Hazel, which awakened the family. The chim ney was about six feet high and the fall was sufficient to jar the house. A lady was heard to remark last even ing that she did not like the "Uncle Josh" show at all; it was not interest ing; that in the sawmill scene she had to close her eyes she was so much afraid the old man would be too slow to rescue the lady moving into the saw teeth. The wife of a well-known citizen was bathing her feet at the unearthly hour - the brick wall fell this morning, and hearing the crash, supposed it was fire. Prompt to the rescue, she withdrew her feet, grasped the pail, and threw th.e contents in tbe stove she was sitting by. . The ' moral of Puck sometimes comes home to the best of us. "Grandpa" John Brookhouse left fo Spokane Falls last night to join his daughter, Miss Mollie, who together will attend the burial of Mrs. Sarah Hagen, daughter of Mr. Brookhouse. Deceased resided in. Wasco county for many yean prior to seven years ago, when she rei moved to Spokane. She leaves threl sons and a daughter. She was aged 4 years. . . The joys of wedded bliss were entered into today by Mr. DeForst Baker and) Miss Emma Eastman, both of TyghH Ridge.. The ceremony took place at th clerk's office, Justice Davis officiatin An event of this sort always brings bacj the smiles of the regular habitues of that office, in lieu of their accustome! laded iook. xneir oiase lnainerence i replaced by an ineffable Bmile of peace, innocence and good will. Perchance it recalls to life fond memories of a similar event in tneir own existence ot sweetr trysts, rustling boughs and balmy inA Ribbed Cashmere Hose. with Cotton Heel and Toe. PEASE cense, when life was gay as the poet's rhyme and the heart was light as the eider down. At any rate, as the bridal procession filed out and away there was a wistful expression on the faces of those who remained, and unbroken silenc3 gave, consent to their various ruminations. The remains of Clarence V. Lane of Antelope, who died Feb. 3d, were brought to this city last evening and will be interred in the Odd Fellows cemetery tomorrow (Thursday) at 2 o'clock." Deceased was 39 years old, bora at New Brunswick, Canada, Janu ary 2d, 1857. He has been in Eastern Oregon since 1878 and was a well-known personage of Wasco county. Deceased leaves a wife to mourn his loss. The funeral will take place from Crandall & Burgett'a undertaking parlors. Chantanqna Circle. The Chautauqua Circle met with Mrs. W. H. Biggs last evening, and were most pleasantly and profitably enter tained. After quotations from Gold smith the lesson, "Initial Studies in American Letters," by Henry A. Beers, professor of English Literature in Yale University, and "The Growth of the American NatioD," by H. P. Judson, professor of Political Science in the Uni versity of Chicago, was led by Mrs. Shackelford and Mrs. Crandall. Ques tions on "Current Events" and "Ameri can Literature" followed. The process of etriking fire, as need by the civilized and uncivilized nations of the earth, and the evolution of the Lucifer match, was presented by Miss Laog. A book review of Goldsmith's "Vicar of Wakefield" by Mrs. Crandall, and an extensive paper on "Japan" by Mrs. Myers followed. Also a short' history of the Red Cross work and Clara Barton by Mrs. S. French and Mrs. Donnell. Several musical selections by Mrs. Eshelman and Miss Deming added greatly to the pleasure of the evening, especially Mrs. Eshelman's rendition of Ryder's transcription of "The Old Oaken Bucket" with variations. Jackson Hose Officers. he regular annual meeting of Jack- n .bngine Co. JSo. 1 took place last vening. lhe following officers were elected : A. Sandrock, president. F. W. L. Skibbe, secretary. R. Sinnott, foreman. Harry dough, treasurer. W. H. Butts, first assistant. Tom Maloney, second assistant. Finance committee Geo Liebe, John Blazer, W. Klindt. Standing Ben Ullrich, J. W. Fisher, G. Bartell After the meeting the members of th company went to the Skibbe hote where a fine lunch was served, and otherwise enjoved themselves in the j oiliest manner. The second annual masquerade ball of J tne workmen and- Woodmen will be I given at the Baldwin opera house on Hose, Wool and of Closing out price, 25c. Reg. 25c. Closing, 15c. & MAYS. February 14th. Prizes will be given for ,he finest costume, both lady and gentle- man, and second prizes lor tna best sus tained character. These prizes are ex hibited at the stores of L. Rorden, Prinz & Nitscbke, Snipes & Kinersly and E. Ja'cobsen's. Mr. C. L. Phillips will be floor manager. The floor committee is composed of tbe following named gen tlemen : C. F. Stephens. S. P. M. Briggs, Hans Hansen, A. L. Reese, W. H. Young and Wm. Hoering. All mas- queraders will be ' presented with a valentine. A FALLING WALL. Peril of Mr. and Mrs. Hogan Tlieir Property Destroyed. Mr. J. J. Hogan and wife were rudely awakened from slumber about 2:30 o'clock this morning by being euddenly thrown from their bed, tbe floor of their room sinking three feet in an instant, while the noise of the falling walls of their domicile, the crash of breaking dishes, the creaking, twisting' and turn ing of demolished woodwork, furniture and apparatus apprised them that some thing terrible out of the ordinary had happened. . Such was indeed . the fact. The skeleton brick wall adjoining their house had given way with the "violence of the wind, which at that hour amounted al most to a gale, and the solid mass of mortar and brick found little resistance in its earthward descent by the com paratively feeble barrier interposed by Mr. Hogan's structure. The forward part of the dwelling fell prostrate to the ground, completely destroying all the valuable photographic apparatus, plates and fixtures. The remainder of the house, though standing, is destroyed as completely. It has been wrenched and tristed, broken and torn, till it is fit only for kindling wood. A reporter visited Mr. Hogan's de molished premises this morning and found things in a sorry plight. Here was chaos exemplified. Broken crockery and bric-a-brac, valuable pictures and kitchen furniture, torn carpets and splintered boards, a tireless stove, broken windows, all contributed to an extreme cneerlessness which seemed greater, if possible, by contrast with what it had been a moment before. The Chronicle man found Mr. Hogan in a much more hopeful state of mind than might be sup- losed. While he deplored the loss of ia goode, it was lost to sight by his hankfulness to Providence that himBelf nd wife were not instantly killed. rs. Hogan alone sustained some slight bruises by her experience, but life and limbs are spared them, and a feeling of gratitude was uppermost in their minds that it was no worse. He expressed a determination to re-engage in the same business, but will be compelled to pur chase everything again from the founda tion up. . . The wall which fell is the remains of a brick store owned by Mr. Sherar, for merly Mr. E. P. FitzGerald's, which perished in the great Dalles fire of 1892, and recalls the death of Michael Dia mond, who perished by fire at tbe time in the same building. . MAIER & BENTON, The Dalles, Oregon. "Uncle Josh Sprnceby.1 The "Uncle Josh Sprnceby" troupe as ereeted with a full bouse last even ing, and they deserved it. The play iB one of a species purely American 4 Inch, well rendered, never fails of ap preciation. Though the plot is neither deep nor intricate, it serves admirably to introduce several thrillinz situations. is well as pleasing novelties, often ap proaching the vaudevjlle. Mr. Burt Hodkifts in the title role well portrays the unsophistocated Yan kee farmer, both in his borne surround ings and bis confident, yet timid, entry into urban life. He avoids a tendency of the times to vulgarize the part, or "play to the galleries," and gives a natural, truthful counterpart of his adopted character. The part of "Luke Fay" by Frank Holstead, who leads "Uncle Josh's" daughter away from her rural home to the city, was well sustained. "Hank Mont," a city sport, was cleverly taken by Maurice Haynes, who invested tbe character with a sprightliness and dash seldom equalled, and makes a capital foil tor the villian. Chief among the specialties is the skirt dancing of Miss Pearl Height, most gracefully executed, and the marvelous gun and baton spinning of Major O'Laughlin. As to the latter the claim is probably truthfully made that he is unexcelled in the world. Tbe sawmill scene easily takes first place among the scenic effects and con stitutes the most thrilling climax of the play. An innocent and abused young wife is thrown before the real whirling saw that is really sawing real boards, and before she is rescued is so near the rasping teeth of the saw that the audi ence involuntarily shudders as they witness seemingly impending and awful death. Very strong in this act is Frank Holstead, whose glaring eyes., ghastly contortions of countenance and fiendish malignity so well portray the supposable conduct of a multi-murderer. - AS a whole the cast is well-balanced, and supplemented by a fine orchestra of nine pieces, is well worthy of patronage in any center of population. v Awarded ' ' Highest Honors World's Fair, Gold Medal, Midwinter Fair. i9L warn Most Perfect Made. 40 Years the Standard. pro CREAM Removal Notice. Nolan's Book Store now located at No. 54 Second Street, near Union. Ask VanbiblDer &; "Worsley for it. .' jyg Valley 40c. Every Square is Full Weight. , TBLEPHOHSTE INTO. 80. OFFICE and SCHOOL SUPPLIES, Skates; FEE iPillH. Pianos Organs. For Low Prices, go to the Jacobsen Book & Music Company, 162 Second Street, Holiday Perfumes, Buy a nice, clean, sweet Perfume or Toilet Water, elegantly put up. It makes a hand- some and much appreciated present. Prices to "tickle" "Long" or "Short" Purses. Seed Wheat, Seed Oats, Seed Rye, Seed Corn; Afalfa Seed, Clover Seed, Timothy ' T5"5 Seed and other Grass Seeds; Northern eh5 Grown Seeds, Garden Seeds, Early Minn- esota Corn, Dakota Yellow Dent Corn and Stowell's Evergreen Corn. Yellow Dan vers Onion Sets, Choice large, Mealy Bur- bank Seedling Potatoes. Poultry and Eggs Bought and Sold. Choice Assortment of Groceries Sold Cheap. Terms Positively Cash or Produce, at H M J. H. CROSS' FEED CREAMERY A. A. B. THE DALLE, OR. DOflflEMt'S DRUG STOHE Telephone No. 15. 5S . . and GROCERY STORE Delicious. S3