Grocery Dep artment. See Our Corner Window: 10 Gts. Preserved Stra-wberries in G-lass. " Peaches in G-lass. " Cherries in Glass. " Pears in Glass. Preserved Blackberries in Glass. ". Raspberries in Glass. " Plums in Glass. " ' Apricots in Glass. Jams in all of above in glass, ordinarily sold for '25c and 35c. The above are all the Golden Crown brand, which is a guarantee of excellence. Winslow Corn, per can 10c Forestville Corn, per can 10c Schepp's Cocoanut, half-pound package ..10c The goods mentioned cover only a portion of what we shall offer for 10c. An examination of the window will disclose the rest. ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. PEASE & MAYS. mwAii or Pruning ; Shears, Pruning Knives, Budding Knives, Pruning Saws, Tree Pruning Shears, Bean Pumps. Myers Pumps, Sulphur, Lime, Salt, Dunne's Solid Sprays, Reiliicesl PiIcgs on Bicycles. AT PEE t BEflTBU'S We have the largest assortment of Bicycles that has ever been carried in this city, and to reduce our stock, have decided that to all CASH buyers we will sell at greatly re duced prices for the mm . NEXT TEN DAYS ONLY. Prices made now will only hold good for wheels already on hand. Call and see our display. SECOND-HAND BICYCLES for sale cheap. Bi cjcles rented at 25c per hour. . Bicycles repaired. Removal Notice. Nolan's Book Store now located at No. 54 Second. Street, near Union. The Tygfe "Val ley Creamery DeHclon. Ask Vanbibber & Worsley for it. 45c. Every Square is Full Weight. CREAMERY Tygli Valley A. A. B. TIEXilEIF'IEIOIISriE: SO. The Dalles Daily Citfonieie. ntercd a the Postoiltee at The Dalies, Oregon as second-class matter. FRIDAY. MARCH 6. 1890 BRIEF MENTION. Learei From ttie Notebook of Chronlclo Reporters. McKinley club meeting tonight. An entertainment by the children will be given at St. Mary's academy on the 17th of Ireland. Fern Lodge, No. 25, Degree of Honor, will give a fine entertainment at the Baldwin opera house, March 11th. Programme will appear later. A meeting ot the McKinley club is called for this evening. Business of im portance is to be transacted, and every good Republican should ba present. ing the blame by imputation upon Mr. J. H. Sherar. What possible reasons Mr. Brown had for doing this, if he really meant what he signified, is beyond our ken. There is no more public-spirit broad-minded a citizen in the country than J. H. Sherar. He is always fore most in every work to benefit his fellows in the locality where he resides, and as a matter of fact throughout thia entire Bection of country, t would be as diffi cult to conceive of Mr. Sherar cutting down some one's private bridge at nifiit or even hiring it done, as it would be to conceive of DeWitt Talmage "bucking he tiger," or Robert G. Ingersoll seek -ing the mourner's bench at a Methodist revival. There are some things certain natures are incapable of doing, and Mr. Sherar's reputation for good sense, as well as his straightforward character in all business and social life, protects him Ifrom the insinuation, we hope inadver- Brown, that be de- Prof. Shellev has eranted the Mosier D . I- 1 HIT - petition for a division of the school dis- l"nuy maae oy mr, trict. A chantre oTWuridaries was funded to any such petty and senseless . ... . .1 made, wnicn proved satsractory to an t parties. The Goldendale Sentinel blows cold on the incipient mining boom near that city, and says that while a piece of the best ore from the mines assayed over $100 to the ton, the average is but a little over $2. An attempt is being made to get arte sian water in the desert lying south and southeast of Prineville. Harbin Bros, are the experimenters, and are sinking a five-inch hole near Powell Buttes. This desert, with water, would reclaim to agriculture a large and valuable atrip of country, A professional hobo went to a certain dwelling house this morning and de manded something to eat. The lady gave him some food, and while he was eating stepped to the telephone and wired for Marshal Blakeney. The officer soon arrived and took the tramp to the recorder's office. He now languisheth in the city jail. That solved the tramp problem in this instance. . r n i i n I ur. j. ocone,a wen-Known nsnerman, was struck on the head by a falling tim ber, while working on a fishing scow this week at Memalonse island. The acci dent made a severe scalp wound and ren dered him unconscious for a time. An artery was severed by which he lost con siderable blood. The timber also glanced to his shoulder, making his right an temporarily useless. He is now gettin better of his injuries The party given by Miss Moore at the .Baiawin opera nouse iasc nignt was a pronounced social success. Though but four pieces of the Birgfeld orchestra far- " orchestra is conceded to be one of the very best in the state. Several of the new dances were executed, and they are very pretty, showing that Miss Moore as an instructor is par excellence. - action as cutting down a to divert traffic from it. No Assessment for March. The following letter was received this morning by T. A. Hudson from the Su preme lodge of United Artisans : ' To the Master Artisan, Officers and Mem bers of The Dalles Assembly, No. 25y, umtea Artisans, Ureetmg: We take pleasure in announcing that there will be no assessment for the month of Match, and also call your at tention to the fact that this is the third month of the year 1896 without an as sessment, making fifteen straight months without an assessment since we com menced active work in tho organization of the society. No other society in ex istence can boast of such a record. Yours Fraternally, Fkancis I. McKbnna, Supreme Master Artisan. Mining; Boom Collapses. NEARER HOME, A Rich olt Field Ten Miles from The Dalles. Word comes to this city today from samples of ore, sent to Portland to be .assayed, which is representative of the re belt thouzht to exist near- Golden- ale. The samples comprised about two ounds in weight. The answer came ack that it does not contain a trace of gold nor silver, and the material is char acterized by the aBsayer to be a volcanic ash, technically called tufa. The as sayer epoke of ore coming from that vicinity which contains a faint trace of gold, red oxide of iron being the promi nent characteristic. . PERSONAL MENTION. An Unjast Insinuation. A letter appeared in Tuesday's Chkon icle from James Brown of the Deschutes country, telling ot tne timbers oi a bridge being cut, and apparently throw Mr. Henry Steers of Fossil is in the titv. Mrs. B. S. Huntington left for Pnrt. v, anu mis morningN. 4 MrS. J. H. Wood ttTirl r-hllilf-nn orsnf Portland this morning for a short time. - Mrs. Wm. Johnson of Mosier, who been visiting in the city, went home mis morning. If. T X TT'11 t 1 1 . .. 1 a-j. nui, woo hbs seen in tne mining country aronnd Canyon City since September, 1894, is again in the city, and is shaking hands with old ac quaintances. ' Two hundred and twenty acres ground, and every foot of it pay dirt from the surface down L Articles of incorporation have been filed in the clerk's office of the Cape Horn Mining Co., with a capital stock of $3,500. The incorporators are Messre. I. H, Taffe, R. Hesse, J. P. Mclnerny, E. J. Collins, C. B. Johnson, A. Bettin gen and James L. Taffe. The business of the corporation is to engage in placer mining on the following-named claims, situated -in Wasco county: "Evening Star," "Morning Star," "Kitty," "Blue bird," "Sixteen to One," "Sunrise" and "Golden Fleece." The above-named and designated claims comprise a little gold field all by itself, containing 220 acres of gro'und below Celilo Falls, and within the space comprised by the Columbia' river and the railroad from north to south and bounded by ridges of rock on the east and west. Every foot of it is pay dirt from the surface down. It is part of the old river bed where once flowed the Columbia. It has been worked over for years by Chinamen, who were satisfied to work with the primitive rocker and clean up from $1.50 to $4 per day, TUB IWRiuan y have Cwned the claims about eight months, and have done more than enough development work to entitle them to hold the property. This work consists of a flume, from Celilo Falls to the diggings, and a shaft. The deeper the -ehaft has been sank, the richer has been the pay. They are now in a black gold-bearing sand, which averages 25 cents to the pan. Twenty" five cents a pan, or' even one cent, means fabulous riches, if the pay dirt holds out. There is no fear on this Bcore. It is uniformity impregnated with the precious metal, having been deposited aa placer by centuries of ac tion of the rolling currents of the Col ombia river. If bed rock is once struck it will be literally coated with gold. The company having plenty of water and fall for it, and sufficient capital be hind it, will operate the field according to the latest approved method. They will flume the water to a. bulkhead, where it will enter a large hose and turn the force loose from a nozzle the rezu lar hydraulic process. The dirt will thus be forced through flume boxes, when the gold, being heaviest, will sink t3 the bottom and be held by cross pieces or riffles, while the dirt, robbed of the precious metal, will go onward through the boxes and form piles of what is caled "tailings." -. The shaft has been sunk to the present level of the Columbia, where water was encountered. Pumps -will be employed to keep the water out. There is no doubt that paying gold fields can be found wherever there has been an old river channel, and though the Celilo field in nrnfttr wpll vrrallrl- pthere are undoubtedly others both above fund below it. It is very likely that the Columbia river once floated at the base of the Klickitat hills, about four mi les from its present channel, and should the present channel ever shift, though no one will feel disposed to wait for that, old may be found a foot thick on the bed rock at the bottom. This is proven by the sand everywhere along the river, which always Ehows "colors." Real Kstata Transfer. James M Smith and Mary Jane Smith to John P Thomsen, lots G and H, block 53, Ft Dalles Mil Res ; consideration $250. Mary D Axe to A S Bennett, undi vided fifth interest in forfeited railroad land claim of Rogers' heirs, ne qr nw qr, sec 5 and lots 3, 6 and 7 ; consideration $200. R F Gibons to A S Bennett, quit claim deid, to certain lots in Trevitt addition : consideration $1. - , State of Oregon to A S Bennett, lot 4, sec 5, tp 1 n, r 13 e ; $26.63. Thomas R Coon and wife to Lyman Smith, lots 3 and 4 and pouth 37,1 feet, lots 1 and 2, block 8, Winans addition to Hood River; consideration $200. Helen J Smith to Lyman Smith, lot 6 and nw qr sw qr, sec 35, tp 3 n, r 10 e; $1 and other valuable considerations. Annie Sylvester and W E Svlvester to D Siddell, two feet' of east side lot 5, block 8, Bigelow addition to Dalles City ; 1 and other valuable considerations. Emma B Emerson to John J Wosley lots 32, 33, 34, 35, 36 and 37 in block 9 of Irvine's and Watson's second addition t) Hood River; consideration $600. Henry C Coe and Kitty Coe to J R Galligan and Mary G Galllgan, lot 9, block 2, Peck's addition to East .Port land ; consideration $3,000. Wm John Ashby to Mary R Steers, (quit claim) lots 3 and 10, block 3, Laughlin's addition to Dalles City ; con sideration $1. J B Ashby et al to Mary R Steers, (quit claim) lots 9 and 10, block 3, Laughlin's. addition to Dalles City; con sideration $1. Kitty Coe and H C Coe to L N Blowers, lot 5, sec A, South Wancoma; consideration $800. For Rent. A five-room cottage on Fonrth street. Apply to Wm. Michell Cleveland bicycles at Maier & Ben Awarded Highest Honors World's Fair, Gold Medal, Midwinter Fair. CEEA 1E16 Most Perfect Made. 40 Years the Standard. OFFICE and SCHOOL SUPPLIES, Sk Pianos Organs. For Low Prices, go to the Jaoobsen Book & Music Company, 162 Second Street, THE DALLES, OR. Try a Bottle. OF- Atwood's Syrup of Tar, Horehound and Wild Cherry for that Cough. I T T T T"" TT T T T f ft y- 1 I 1 I T - f 1 J T ss. . - i nL UMLLilb vjwiVliVilbblUN UU., -DEALERS IM- Coal, Ice and Prota, lorip ant Domestic Fruits ail YeietaMes. Oysters, Fish, Poultry and Came In Season. NORTH POWDER ICE, which is noted for Its purity and lasting qualities. ROCK SPRIT OS. ROSLYM, ANTHRACITE and OSUBGE9 CBIIK FOB FFEE, ud HANVFACTUKINO Phone 128 and 253. Corner Second and Washington Streets. Consignments Solicited. Goods received for Cold Storage and Forwarding.