Beilii Prices 01 Bicycles. Eagle New " 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 orices for the Batiste Lace Collars These goods will be the season's popular sellers. Favorite shades are Linen, Butter, Black and Butter Colors. We are now offering some exclusive designs at very atttractive prices. These goods come in both the lighter and heavier makes of lace with Maltese-cross pattern or gathered Epaulettes. We are still in the Shoe business, and are showing Ladies tailor made boots, and Oxford Shoes in Tans and ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. Tho Dalles Daily Glmmieie. ntered m the Fostofflce at The Dalles, Oregon aa second-clan matter. - WEDNESDAY. - MARCH 18, J89 BRIEF MENTION. Leares from the Notebook of Chronicle Beporten, Ice cream at Keller's bakery. Political forecast for Saturday Warm- The local was an hour and a half late this afternoon. A. Keller will open up his soda foun-l tain tomorrow. J Lecture by Mr. Hugh Gourlay tonight' at the Baptist church. Forecast Today and tomorrow fair; stationary; light northerly winds. A marriage license was issued today to Robert Haves and Marv J. Frentz. ... . .. ' 1 A laborer at tne uascaaes was killed Tneeday, by a block falling from the top of a derrick and striking him on the Mr. T. A. Hudson reports that half the grain fields of Sherman county will J have to be re-sown, owirto the damag- I ing effects of tke late cqld soup. 4- Mr.'F. H. Rowe today commenced the construction of of his new residence on the hill. It is to be one of the hand- Bomest and costliest residences ot tne city. J Circuit court at Moro adjourned last night. There were no convictions in criminal cases, unless in the case of the State, vs. -Mcllvane for forgery, which was the last case heard and in course of trial at laBt accounts. . v ' inera are ninn mpmlifiro in htranA pective '96 graduatingblass of The Dalles) high school : Daqie lAUaway, Homers Angell, Edward Baldwin, Pearle Butler Virgilia Cooper, Curtis Egbert, Edward Jenkins, Mabel Riddel! and Nona Row. The city co uncil met last evening and listened to the report of the committee to appraise lots. The necessary ordi nance not having been drawn up under which lots might be sold, the council adjourned to meet Tuesday evening - next. Tickets for the Stevens-Jones musical entertainment Friday evening are on Bale at the drug stores and by Rev; -.W. C. Curtis. The young ladies come to our city with the highest possible in dorsements, one as a pianist and the other as a vocalist. The choicest candies in the city may always be found at A. Keller's. Candy making has developed into a fine art with Keller. His older patrons cannot be surprised any more with the new and choice confections he is continually pro ducing. The public generally are' in vited to ,call and see hia delicious can dies. , .The finishing touches were made on the bowling alley yesterday, and it was at once used. It must be a very entic ing sport. . Attorney "W. H. Wilson PEASE limped np home yesterday evening after bowling all the afternoon, and the last tiling be said as be lelt the club was ,s: A "I'll be back, boys, in about three-qaar ters of an hour." Chautauqua Circle. The Chautauqua Circle was delight fully entertained last lag by Mr. In "Some and Mrs. B. F. Laughli Steps "of Human Pro; Age" of the primitive the "Stone discussed under the leadership of Laughlin, bringing out the metho cb the' Btone implements of warfare and , do meatic use were manufactured. y The poet, Journalists Bryant.Whi itfier, Poe, and the early magazine writers were brought out under the quiz of Mrs. W. H. Biggs. Quotations from Whit tier and Poe's "Amabel Lee" by Miss Hall, and Bryant's "O Fairest of Rural Maids" by Mrs. Crandall, and Whittier's "Peace" by Miss Adams, followed by two papers, one on "Copper and its Uses' by Miss Alma Taylor, the other by Mrs. Donnell, "Manitoba and the School Question," closed the lesson on American Letters." The C. L. S. C. might appropriately be called a women's club, but last even ing proved an exception. Evidently by preconcerted plan the gentlemen arrived about 9 o'clock, much to the surprise- of the ladies. After a tenor solo by C. J. Crandall, "Maid of Athens, Must We Part?" Mr. Laughlin came in bearing a tray of Iragrant coffee, steaming hot, flanked by rich cream, cake, etc. Much merriment and games were indulged in until a late bojar, when .the circle dis persed, tacitly voting the gentlemen in as honorary members of the C. L. S. C- biographical. Uol. James i niton, wnose death was as announced in Tuesday's Chronicle, was born in Peola, Ind., in 1816. He was married in the city of his birth to Pris cilia Wells in 1840. He moved to Mis souri in 1841, and to Oregon in 1847, to Yamhill county. In 1854 he was elected colonel of the O. N. G. In 1856 he served as. quartermaster in the Yakima Indian war. He moved from Yamhill to Wasco county in 1857, residing first on 10-Mile creek. In the year -1870 he represented Waeco county in the legisla ture, and in 1873 came to The Dalles to rpoli I Tn 1RR1 Ha mntyarl fn tKo Tkoo Chutes. He had seven children, all now living. They are Mrs. H. P. Isaacs Mrs. Louis Scholia, Anna Fulton, James John, David and Frank Fulton. Ther are fourteen grand children and ' fo great grandchildren. : Card of Tlianki. .. We desire to thank the friends who so kindly gave their assistance" during the last hours of life and the burial of our beloved child, Stella. Me. and Mas. A. Kaufman. For Rent. A good, responsible tenant can rent a fine farm of 160 acres, situated ten miles from The Dalles. Apply to W. E. Campbell, Endersby. - ill-dtw2w 'en 4 gtessr- L la x; maixwas Alrsv rTs Viv some swell things in Blacks. & MAYS. A DIVERSION OF 1857. uilt an 80-Ton Boat and Hauled It From Dofor to tne Klrer. If anyone imagines that the days of daring enterprises in the far West began with the advent of the railroad and tele graph, they, will be undeceived when they read the following truthful inci dent of a task performed which seems herculean, and If a similar one were projected today it would be pronounced visionary and impossible of execution. In 1S57 R. R. Thompson and Jonathan Jackson built a saw-mill on the present Wiley place on 15-Mile, five miles above Dufur. One day, at a time when there was a temporary lull in busineess, Mr. O. Humison, then residing In The Dalles, appeared at the saw-mill with an as tounding proposition. It was to build a boat to navigate the Upper Columbia and enter the field of commerce as a common carrier. The plan was to build the boat at the saw-mill, and haul it overland to a point above Celilo falls and launch it in the Columbia. The saw-mill men were very Bkeptical over the virtue of the plan, as may readily be imagined, but were finally, persuaded to enter into the scheme by the very mag netism and confidence of the projector. So they began work on it. The boat was 70 feet in length, 11 feet beam, 5 feet deep and having a carrying capacity of 80 tons. It was at length finished, and the most difficult part of the work was before them, how to get this unwieldly river monster, weighing many tons, to the water. Three daya were spent in sur veying a route for it. . It was then de cided to gain the ridge between Des chutes and 15-Mile and follow it down. This leads into a 'precipitous canyon, and just how that part of the trip was accomplished, is unfortunately not known at the present day. . But the boat was hauled along by eight yoke of oxen, on slides, or long sleds, and it took three weeks to haul it to the river, a distance of thirty miles.' Talk about Napoleon crossing the Alps. His heaviest artillery was but a toy to this gigantic river craft two-thirds as large as the Regulator. The men of '57 on this coast were built of the stauncheat kind of staff, and nothing conld daunt or appal them. They didn't think about Prince Albert coats, immaculate shirt fronts nor toothpick shoes, but they just Bet themselves to some task for the de velopment of the country, and they went ahead. If .they lacked any refinement of science or mechanics, any labor sav ing device, implement, tool or appli ance, they simply conjured up a substi tute or got along-witbout it. And they launched their boat. And they christened it the Mountaineer. With the aid of pike poles and lines from the bank, they ascended the river to Wallula and returned, carrying freight and passengers both ways. When the round trip was accomplished, and they counted np the money in' the till, it was found that there was enough funds to pay for all the expenses undergone, of building the boat, hauling and launch See the Cleveland and Eagle before "buying; both, are high-grade and stand ard Wheels. The Cleve land has a -wood rim, and the Eagle has an alumi num rim. See our stock before you buy. Sole Agents for the above named Wheels. ing it and operating it up the river and down again, and a handsome surplus over and above all. 7 Afterwards the proprietors put sails on the boat, and besides being the first boat on the river, it was for many years the fastest, as well. This company was the nucleus of the old Oregon Steam Navigation Company, afterwards merged into the O. R. & N. Before the days of the Mountaineer nothing navigated the river except the batteaus of the Hudson Bay Company and .the Indian canoes. The Mountaineer opened ; the way and pioneered steam navigation on the Upper Columbia. A massive shaft of California granite in Sunset cemetery today marks the last earthly resting place of this pioneer of navigation on the Upper Columbia. Chiseled out of this durable stone near its base appears the name "Humison," and this is the man whose memo'y The Chronicle, in this humble way, deisires to recall. He wasa pioneer. The McCoy Ditch. Work on the McCoy ditch is about to commence in earnest. Mr. F. Ehrichsen, the contractor, has been in the city since Monday, and will go to Wapinitia in the morning. His advertisement appears in The Chronicle today calling for" teams. He has just returned from California, where he has been to satisfy himself as to the financial backing of the scheme. He comes back- fully satisfied and pr6 poses to work men and teams as fast as thoy apply for work. He expects to em ploy at least 300 men and to complete the work in 90 days. The ditch is fed from Clear lake and the work is partly done from there northward. The ditch will be from 8 to 10 feet deep and 8 to 10 feet wide, ac cording to grade. Mr. Ehrichsen is a member of the large contracting firm of CEas. Ehrichsen & Co., incorporated, one of the largest of the kind in California. . He was accom panied to The Dalles by his wife. WANTED. Twenty teams for slip scrapers work. Apply to - F. Ericsson." I7-2td Umatilla House, The Dalles. - Awarded Highest Honors World's Fair, Gold Medal, Midwinter Fair. EMI Most Perfect Made. -40 Years the Standard, rfST-?"1" J. . . - 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 cycles rented at 25c per hour. Bicycles repaired. Removal Nolan's Book Store now located at No. 54 Second Street, near Union. The TygH Val ley Creamery Ask Vanbibber &c Worsley for it. 45c. Every Square is Full Weight. TELEPHOITB Our entire stock of Pianos to be sold before April 1st. We must vacate our store building', and anything in our line at cut prices, itatner tnan to move bur whole stock we will sell you anything you may want before we move, AT COST. Jacobsen Book & 162 Second Street, Try a Bottle. Atwood's Syrup of Tar, Horehound and Wild - Cherry for that Cough. DOHNEkk'S DUG STORE. The Dalles -DEALERS 131- Coal, Ice an! FroSnce, Foreip .ana Bomestlc Fruits awl TeietaMes. Oysters, Fish, Poultry and Came In Season. NORTH POWDER ICE, which is noted for Its purity and lasting qualities. ROCK " 8PBING8. BOSLTN, ANTHRACITE and GEORGES CREEK Phone 123 and 25o. Corner Second and Washington Streets. Consignments Solicited. Goods received for Cold Storage and Forwarding. Notice Is -Jellcloaa. CREAMERY Tygh Valley A. A. B. 80. jusic Company, THE DALLES, OR. OF- Commission Co., FOR FUEL ami MANUFACTURING PURPOSES.