OUR SPECIAL SALE, I OUR SPECIAL SALE, $ Saturday, April 4. Grocery Department. Genuine Blue Point Oysters, In, cans 10c 2lb cans 20c These are the very best packed. Assorted' Pie Fruit, per doz ..........$1.00 Potter' & : Wrightington's Roast -Chicken, 2ft can ,' 20c Folger's Soda nothing better.... 05c Macaroni, lOib box , 35c Citron, per pound..... 10c Log Cabin Buckwheat Flour ...15c Log Cabin Griddle Cake Flour 15c These prices are for this day only. What have you been s paying for these or similar goods? See our Corner Window. Saturday, April 4. Dry Goods lartment. Dec All 25c Goods for ..21c Including plain, fancy and changeacle goods. All 30c Goods for .1. ...... ..........24c Including all fancy mixtures. 13 All 50c Goods for .. '...-42c Including a full line of colors in Mohairs in plain and fancy, navy Serges, and fancy wool mixtures. All 65c Goods for 52c Comprising the latest French Novelties. All 75c Goods for ....64c Including Plaids, plain Tailor Suitings, Mo hair Mixtures, and - a large line of Wool Mixtures. Our fine grades of Foreign and . Domestic Dress Goods will be cut in proportion. ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. PEASE & MAYS. See the Cleveland and Eagle before buying ; both are high-grade and standard Wheels. The "Cleveland has a wood rim, and the Eagle has an aluminum rim. See our stock before you buy. Only a few more Bicycles left that will be sold at the reduced prices. Ex amine our Crescents $50 and $75, as good as any wheel sold at $85. We give the same guarantee that you can get on a $100 wheel. MAIER & BENTON Sole Agents for the above named "Wheels. Removal Notice. '. ' it A ;. i- i tx. , . ....... Nolan's Book Store now located at No. 54 Second, Street, near Union. T1m Tygli Val ley Creamery.- Ia Delicious. Ask Vanbibber & Worsley for it. 45c. Every Square is Full Weight. CREAMERY Tygh Valley A. A. B. telephoioj nsro. so. The Dalles. Daily GUFoniele. THURSDAY. - ,- - APRIL 2j,1896 WAYSIDE GLEANINGS. Random Observations and Local Events of Lesser Magnitude. ' "Finnigan'a Ball" At'the-Baldwin opera house One night only, Monday April 6th, , Forecast Fair tonight and Friday. -The June election occurs on the 1st day of the month, Walter Lyons died last night near Dufur. He leaves a wife and two children. The sale of the ranch of the late Mrs. St ace has been postponed until Satur day afternoon at 2 o'clock. A full attendance of the Hathbone Sisters is requested this evening, as busi ness of importance will come before the meeting. "Finnigan's Ball" as interpreted by Murray and Mack and a merry company 'of clever people, is the attraction at the Baldwin opera house Monday, April 6th. No one saw the "Dispatch" yesterday morning and some people are uncharit able enough to charge The Chronicle with perpetrating an April fool joke on them. , v The work of excavation for A. m Williams & (Jo. s new building was susv pended today, owing to the old Jacobsen building not yet being moved. ' Some blasting will bave to be done, and while; the old .-building remains it cannot be1 done. The Umatilla house has discharged ita Chinese cooks and employed in place of them some famous imported chefs. "These are Mr. Carl Wagner, formerly of Chilburg's ' restaurant, Tacoma, and Albert Bersen. of the New Westminster. s xs Angeles. . . The building now occupied by A.M. Williams & Co. ia to be used exclusively as a shoe store by thaTAtterpriaing firm. They have a stock already orThqd suf ficient to fill it if properlfc displayed, but owing to their press for room, a great deal of it is stored away. . There is a giant ten and a half feet high in the country above Canton in China, and an American showman has lately been trying in vain to induce him to travel. The big fellow is ashamed of himself for being bo unduly long, and does not care to become an exhibit. A seven-foot giant is considered a good deal of a fellow, and they have been few and hard to find on this mundane sphere. Boston Transcript. About 3:20 this morning Portland was .visited by a single earthquake shock of brief duration. The Oregonian reports ' that the shock, though' over in almost a moment, attracted and alarmed the people who noticed and felt it, because , of the deep rumbling noise that accom panied, a thing new with such phenom ena here. The night clerk at the Per kins felt it, and said the . vibration of the building was felt so plainly as to waken some of the hotel's guests. The Southern Pacific office reports that the shock was felt as far south as Salem. Woodburn telegraphed that the . Bhock there was perceptibly felt. - - An inhuman spectacle was witnessed near Wedderburn, laBt week. A thing in human ebape called William Goff, captured an eagle by breaking one of its wings and a leg, afterwards arranging a fight to the death with two dogs. The eagle was large and powerful, measur ing over seven feet, and the battle lasted more than an hour, at the end of which time the bird lay dead on a feather-covered field. Moro Observer. The Oregonian makes the charge that within the last week from 300 to 400 toughs, many of them desperate, have arrived in Portland for the sole purpose of voting the Frank-Hume-Minto ticket at the primaries today. These hoboes have been given the tip. to come to Portland and they . have swarmed, in from. Tacoma, Seattle, Port Townsend and other places without fear of .moles tation or of being sent to the rockpile, and that they are there under police protection. The Portland Telegram eays that re turning parties from McMinnville, where excitable stories abound regard ing the new tinda of gold there, have not eo much to tell regarding the discoveries of oie as the attitude of the people tow ard strangers. There ia said to be a de cided disinclination to gt?e out informa tion regarding the ore, and the people are actually opposed to newcomers in vading the place and creating a boom. A game called "Editor's Delight," al though quite new, is worth playing and should become popular at this season of the year. The plan Is this: Take ordinary sheet of white paper, fold can fully and inclose a bank note sufficient! large to pay all arrearages and one yea! in advance. What adds immensely t the pleasure of the game is to send along the name of a new subscriber or two, ac companied by the cash. Keep you"r eye on the editor, and if a smile adorns hie face, which is almost certain, you win the game. . . The Elks met in Fraternity hall Sat urday night, and by an oversight some of the property of the lodge, was not placed under lock. The next: day the hall being used for other purposes, some party or parties rummaged among them, exposing them to the view of others, and then, not content, carried the newa of their discoveries to the etreets. It is idle to Bay that those who receive proper home , training will not meddle with what does not' concern them, for they already know it, and those who have not, cannot appreciate it. No, harm can accrue to the Elks from an exhibit of their paraphernalia, but one who peers through , keyholes, and windows,. or in vades privacies where they have no busi ness or interest, can. never regain the respect of theimeighbors. Easter' display. All this week at Mrs. M. E. Briggs, the leading milliner. 3t 4 GOLD NEAR PRINEVILLE. Quartz Mill Machinery Now En .Route to a. New Mining Field. Ice cream and' ice Keller's bakery. cream soda at A C. H. Gray, capitalist, A. T. Griffin, attorney, and Emil H. King?, mining expert, are the names of three Chicago gentlemen who arrived in the city Sun day, and left Tuesday for the Ochoco country, where they have mining inter ests. It is learned that Mr. Klugg - was in that country a year ago investigating the merits of some recently discovered gold-bearing quartz mines, and his re port must have been highly 'satisfactory to cause Mr. Gray to come out here,bring ing with him a Chicago attorney to attend. to- the question of title and draw up the incorporation papers. In fact Mr. Klugg stated to a gentleman of this city that the prospects were as good as any he ever saw, and that is say ing a great deal for a man of his exper ience. Further corroborations of the excellence of the ore and ita quantity is found in the fact that the machinery to reduce the ore baa been ordered and is now on the way to The Dalles' from Chi cago. . The Prineville country so far has been free from any great mining boom, but the above facts would seem to be quite likely to precipitate one in the near future. - . . , . jFrnlt Prospects. The weather of the past few days hast not been cold enough to destroy the fruit buds, and unless something un-j usual in that line happens, there will! be a tremendous output of fruit in Wasco county. ' Mr. P. J. Stadelman Bays thera will be a profitable demand for good fruit the coming season, and Mr Schanno, speaking upon that subject says that Alaeka will from this on fur nish a constantly growing market f fruit, especially winter apples. e trouble is thatTrgTeateaTbf fruit raised by the growers ia next to worth less. Some standard variety should be selected, and enough trees planted of one kind to-make it an object to pur chasers. There is no danger of over stocking the market. The best grade of apples are now selling for $2 a box, as good a figure as ever before, and the yield increases greatly each year. When a fruit grower hears of some one about to plant 160 acres of orchard it should not cause him alarm that the price for fruit will drop because of the increased yield. If every acre in Wasco county capable of nourishing a fruit tree were planted to a single variety of some good winter-keeping apple, there wonld be no trouble about selling every box of. the fruit. The competition would, not be among the growers, but among the buyers, ; who would. . be .here from : all over the western half of the United States to buy, WaBco county apples. '. Mark Levy, the commission man of Portland had a- letter yesterday from a Hood River grower, who writes: "Have had .very.' severe" weather up here; the thermometer went . down to 32 degrees. The peaches will have to be steel clad and copper fastened to withstand that." "The fruits," said Mr. 'Levy, "that will be chiefly damaged by the frost are the peaches and strawberries apples not - being far enough advanced yet. When fruit is in full bloom, as it ia now, it doesn't take much to catch it." B. S. Pague, of the weather bureau, takes a very optimietic view of the freeze up, and Bconta the idea that it has done any serious damage. Mr. Pague thinks that the frost l has merely pruned the blossoms and will not affect the fruit to any extent, aa the tress are now too heavily loaded with blossoms. McCoy rlteh All Right. Mr. W. G. Kerns returned from th .Wapinitia country today, and confirms all previous reports as to the celerity of work on the McCoy ditch. ' A feeling of security- is now - apparent " sjnoug all, caused from seeing a large force of men daily pushing the work.- - Mr. Ehricbsen, the contractor, ia vet firm in his predic tion . that the. work will be finished in ninetyjdays, and the work as progressing now certainly warrants the belief. This ditch, when completed, will open out a large and valuable stretch of country to agriculture and horticulture, which will quadruple ia value when nnder water. Mr. Kerns also reports there is, shortly to be erected ' near Wapinitia a sawmill of 20,000 feet daily capacity. It is to be greeted on the MacD. Lewis place. X - Trouble Over a Fish Wheel. Jacobson Book & Music Co. jnd Harry Liebe. i, John Gomez, a well-known river fish erman of Spanish i descent, and J. T. Rorick, justice of the peace at Rockland, have conflicting interests ae to fishing rights, which culminated this morning in the arrest of Gomez by Rorick. He was arrested and released twice, and at last accounts was again re-arreeted, and whether at this moment he is nnder ar rest or at liberty is a matter of conject ure. Gomez has a fish wheel across the river, upon which Rorick claims a mort gage. This morning a force of -men un dertook to cross the river to perform some work upon the wheel, when they were forbidden; to land. They: landed, however, -and began work.. They, were then ordered not 'to work. The trouble come into court. have moved in the old Voot Store, on Washington Street, opposite The Chronicle Office. Awarded . Highest Honors World's Fair, Gold Medal, Midwinter Fair. . .. t V 40 Years the Standard. Try a Bottle OF- At-wood's Syrup of Tar, Horeh.OTJ.nd and, "Wild (Cherry for that Cough.. DOtfEIill'S DRUG STORE. "Live and 1 et live. 33 I You are invited 'to PEED, FISHER'S ilTew Grocery Store, ;"where you - "will -find all the Lowest Prices.' Goods deli Veredlto any part of the city. V ' . :" - :' ;- Telephone 270.