The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, May 16, 1896, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    X 7TT V 2 have we taken hold of the VICTOR BI
'V V II 1 J CYCLE as our leading Wheel.
Our
1 H-- ""imi-
Specials
e are Sole Agents for Laird, Schober & Co.
Footwear makes that are well known to the public.
Ladies'
Genuine Hand-turn, plain cloth, needle and square toe, black and tan, $3.
Ladies' Vici Kid, French-cut vomp, fancy heel foxing, patent -leather tip; eye
lets worked in silk; color black; $3. .
Tan Vici Kid, turn sole, fancy cloth foxing, needle toe, white Kid lined; $3.50.
Black French Kid, patent leather tip, Turkish toe, hand-turn sole, $3.50.
Ladies' Patent Leather, whole foxing, cloth top, needle toe, $4.
In Ladies' Lace and Button Boots, we are showing all the up-to-date and
swell things of the season. ' '
ALL GOODS MARKED IN
PLAIN FIGURES.
Ths Dalles Daily Gbronieie.
SATURDAY.
MAY 16. 1896
WAYSIDE GLEANINGS.
liandom Observations and Local Events
of Lesser Magnitude.
Sheep shearing is in full blast;
Forecast Tonight and Sunday, rain.
nana concert tomorrow at me scuooi
yard. The program is very fine.
- - Robt. Lovegrove and Daisy Wheeler
were married today by Rev. I. H. Hazel Jl
Martin Qninn, the Populist orator ana I
. canaiaate tor congressman irom mis dis
trict'. SDeaks tonight at the courthouse.
Good lot on the bluff for sale at one-
. nan value it applied lor immediately.
For information address Enquirer, P. O.
box No. 211. mayl6-lt
- Yrn nan hava a i rl 1 tt annA tima of tKa
.! J. O. G. T. social onMonday evening at
t Fraternity ball. No lodge session, only
', a good time. Come early.
A
The first arrival of lumber forRowe'
new lumber yard in the city was this
morning. A scow came np from the
. 1 : . in 1 : . u an tnn ( . f
lumber. S
lbe first ripe boteie-grown straw ber-V
. . . .
Ties were receiveo-tday Dy The JJaiies
Commission Co. ThSywere beauties
an i r-a m a mm SVslpman farm rtn
Mill creek. -
Judge Northup, the ' sound money
candidate for the Second Oregon con
gressional district, will address the citi
zens of The Dalles at the court house
Monday evening, the 18th inat. jnl6 2t
When the thermometer is qt 95 in the
shade in one of the northern ntatsa of
..this beautiful country, t is refreshing to
i cau fcua uu tiio uuruurn . ui .. tile iuuiq
state the ice has just carried a railroad
bridge away. ' -- ,'.
Evangelist Crittenton, now at Walla
Walla, writes positively thai he will be
hereon the 24th inat., and to look for
the car VGood News'' on that date. The
place. for the meetings has not yet been
decided iinon. .
V I
A band of 21,000 head of sheep wait
driven through the city today for
summer range in Washington. They
belonged to Kerr fc Rncklev. and ia one
of three bands which will be driven to
pasture. -
Th,e report from the Columbia today
is that the river is raising now gradu
ally and the people hope the spring
waters will pass away without a dis
astrous flood. .The Willamette is ' up
and running almost banks full. '
Judge Bradsbaw and Attorney H. S.
Wilson arrived from Prineyille last even
. ing. The trial of the murder case of
State vs. Isaac Mills for the killing of J.
K. Wagner resulted in an acquitfaT, the
testimony showing that the killing was
donq in self defense.
Several weeks ago Mrs. Mary J.
Davenport sued 8. M." Meeks, botn of
Moejer, for $227 and costs, and received
a judgment. "Today-a suit in equity was
begun to sell the property under mort
PEASE
gage to pay the indebtedness. In 1893
Meeks mortgaged his farm to his mother
Kate Ann Meeks for $2,250. The plain
tiff will claim that the mortgage was
fraudulent and should be set aside.
Willis Brown, manager of the Oregon
Fruit Onion, offers a prize of $6 for the
first crate of Hood River shipping ber
ries. At Milton and Portland ' he offers
$5. The crates of berries will be sold on
commission in whatever market thev
The prosecution failed utterly to make!
their case yesterday in the case of the
State vs. Robins, Miller and Templeton.
The defendants were completely exoner
ated,- the evidence showing ' without
doubt that they were entirely innocent
of the charges. The case was dismissed
without taking any testimony wbateveV
for the defense.
A merry party of young folks wenS
down the river this morning for a dayi
of pleasure at the locks. Thoy' were,
Lepa Liebe, Sibyl Cushing, Hatte Cram,
Edie Fisher, Grace Hobson, Vesta and
Effie Bolton, Martha Schooling, Katie
Sargent, Edna VanDayn. Florence Hil
ton, Florence Sampson, Bertie and Grace
Glenn. Jennie Young, Lena Thompson,
Maud . Kuhn, Leo Newman, Walter
Reavis, Chas. VanDujn, Curtis Edward
Chas. Buntet, Boy Grimes, EugenJ
Moore, James McCowen and Willie
Michel bach.
The high school graduating exercises
will be held at the O. N. G. armory Sat
prday, May 23d, aad will begin at 8 p.
m. Reservedatf tickets will be given
to the relatives aunear friends of mem
bers of the claea the school directors,
teachers and a few ottiecs specially con
cerned in the work of the school. A
general admission fee of 10 cents will be
charged to pay incidental expenses.
Every effort will be made to have the
entire armory comfortably seated, thus
furnishing chairs for 700 to 1000 persons.
Strawberries in the Willamette Valley.
Tuesday's Oregonian says: "The con
tinuous cool, showery weather is not
favorable to the early development of
strawberries-,' and many are anxiously
inquiring as to the prospects for the
strawberry crop this season.' A reporter
yesterday -met Mr. N. B. Harve, the
ft well-known grower of berries at Milwau
kee, who is inqlined to take rather a
gloomy v.ew of the situation. He says
that in not one of the 15 years he has
been . engaged in growing strawberries
have the vines or plants' looked so un
promising as at present. In fact, they
are not more than half an well grown as
is usual at this time of year, and where
he plants make a poor growth he says
there cannot be a big crop of berries.
He says the fruit will be 10 days later
than usual this year. Generally-speaking
he has commenced picking berries
for market from the 23th of May to the
1st of June, but he thinks it will be June
10th before, there will be any picking
done this: year, and then there will not
be over half a cropl
For Kent.
cottage. Inquire
A .4 -room
Keller.
Of A.
Ladies
Footwear
For this week.
and J. & T. Cousins Fine
Oxfords.
& MAYS. 3
MORE COAL FOUND.
The Shaft at the Klectrlo Light
Sustains the Buchler FlDdi
A five-foot vein of coal was struck this
morning in the shaft at the Electric
Light Co., at a depth of forty feet. " Di
rectly above it was a formation of' soap
stone, and beneath it hard carbonated
rock. So far the measures tally exactly
with the formations at the Buchler
shaft. If they continue another layer of
coal will be found, forty feet beneath the
first layer and six feet below that a vein
of water. The two shafts . tallying so
closely, proves beyond doubt that vast
coal beds underlie The Dalles, and war
rants . the full investigation that will
now be made. From the two points the
dip of the vein can be ascertained, which
is now believed to be south and west.
The soapstone is of good quality and
valuable commercially in itself.
After the matter of leases is attended
to, justifying the prosecution of the
work and expenses of development work,
sufficient funds will be collected to sink
a shaft of the required wilth to get opt
the valuable coal - deposits. The first
vein of coal found is lignite and is of no
great value, but deeper down the veins
will improve, being more matured with
age. The best' specimen of coal ever
found in this vicinity 'was not over a
: 1 I . . 1 "I .' t - T T 1 . 1 . T"l
the vein Irom whicti it was taken is only
a. law lnphpi thiolr. It ia ritPAnK v asmaa (
the river and was found while drilling a
well. The welt 19 a perfect success and
lows' a large stream of -water con
stantly. '.-.
With the establishment of coal mines
in our.
midst
our prosperity as a city
woum r pur moat sanguine
11 j . - -
..uu, ip x-irKUrW .But vo. u y Mr Leon Rondeau of Kingsly left for
thought to be pure anthracite, thoughfl Vancouver to visit Mr. Pavette, who is
iiupcB iu movant, .employment wouia the city today. The prospect for crops
e given to hundreds of -miners to fcup-l is excellent at the present time, though
ply the demandof the Pacific elope. at.rowth. of " vegetables is' slow, owing to
T
present imperfectly filled by- Wyoming f
and Colorado. The freieht rates almost
exclude coal as an article of commerce
on the coast. A big local railroading
business would also be built up, em
ploying many men. The growth of The
Dalles would receive a .stimulus never
before dreamed of. - The prospects 'at
present are flattering for the full reali
zation of this state of affairs.
v Married 48 Points Ahead.
The third bowling contest' between
the married and unmarried forces re
sulted in the deieat of the single 'men by
the following score : -
SINQLB.
Fdday Bat
Bills 19 3.1 22 SO
McCully....M 19 S3 40
Fredden, W.27 27 12 18
Frank, S 25 31 21 27
Johns 23 22 15 19
Vogt, J. '....24 19 27 28
Frank, W... 23 23 21 80
Dietzel, F ..27 24 15 81
E Williams.25 23 24 24
Ketchum...l8 16 SO 18
V&BSIRD.
' Friday Sat.
Whealdon..l8 27 ' 26 18
Korman....27 22 '27 26
Scbanuo...34 29
Funk 23 17
25 80
16 19
22 23
28 89
23 20
Sit
28 40
Ketchum ..46 17
Maier.
82 27
Doane
DeHuflT....
Kuck
Kerns
..2i 27
.31 32
.33 24
.29 20
Total Single, 981; married, 1029.
Memorial Kermon.
Memorial serrnotj for Josephine Cam p
beil, daughter, of T. r.'and" Alice" A.
Campbell, at St. Paul's chnrch, Sunday
morning (next). May 17th, at II q?qlock.
Friends and acquaintances invited.
PIER & MJT0N
Are now located at 167
Second' Street, opposite A.
Williams &: Co., -with
a complete' line of
Hardware,
Stoyes and Ranges,
Groceries,
Cord Wood,
Cedar Posts,
Barbed Wire,
Rubber
Garden Hose.
and Tinning?
a specialty.
Also agents for the Cele
brated Cleveland Bicycle.
The Hand Concert.
We republish today the excellent mu
sical program, which will be rendered
tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock at the
public school yard, weather permitting,
by The Dalles band. '
March "Kansas City Exposition" Rose
Overture "Red Hot'
tJl. xseytr
A Berio uomio Jamboree.
Tuba Solo "BatiRO Profundo"'
.Ferrazxt
Cris. Paulsen.
March "Harmony" R. W. nail
Dedicated to J. G. Miller, The Dulles, Oregon,
' publisher xl Harmony, a musical monthly).
Wnltz "Daughter of Love" ." .Bennett
Baritone Solo "The Floetonian" Catey
J. G. Miller.
Descriptive "D nce of the Goblins" Zorafjte
Synopsis Adagio P. P. near 12 o'clock at night;
crickets and nightbirdK are heard; the steeple
clock strikes the midnight honr. Modeiato,
The Goblins assemble Crenendo, At the old
churchyard. A'.Ugio, They begin the dance;
.the dance is on ; frightened by the watchman's
pistol; confusion. Moderato, They return cau
tiously. Allegro, They ds'ice again; getting
warmed np; ihov dance livelier than before;
steamboat whistle s artles them; they rally
again; another shot frightens them away.
Allegro conuoco. t-cattering in all directions.
March "The Regulator" Peterson
O. A. Peterson,
Musical Director.
PERSONAL MENTION.
Mr. D. H. Sears of Hood River is reg
istered at the Umatilla bouse.
Misses Nellie Michell and Nellie Syl
vester wept to Cascades today.
Mr. Dyger( of Meston A Dygert re
turned to Portland this morning.
Mr. Wm. Brune of Rockland was in
the city today and called at The Chron
icle office. ...
Vreported very ill
Dr.G . C. Eshelman and wife returned
today from Klickitat. The doctor re
ports extreme backwardness and' cold
weather in that section.
' Miss Oman Smith of 10-Mile was
railed away yesterday ' evening to tb$
bedside of "her mo ther at' Juniper Flat;
who was reported to be dying.
u Mr j Vy. Pennington of 10-Mile is in
Mr I
he cold weather.
Bzearslon.
On Monday, May 18th, the D. P. & A.
N. Co. will make a rate of 75 cents to
Hood River and return, including trans
fer to and' from the landing. General
Coxey and General Weaver will address
the people on political questions.
Awarded
Highest Honors World's Fair,
Gold Medal, Midwinter Fair.
Most Perfect Made.': '
40 Years the Standard.
mm
:rr ' H ills' liTI " ' "
' ' t-r jk ! I i ii i mi .
Bffrx i -i op after thoroughly testing a dozen different
t'LctU.oC makes, we have come to the conclusion
' . ' r that the VICTOR is the BEST.
- ; - . -
Ton'-nOsC. Jt is mechanically perfect, and while not
frrz VVr r'V .Liuil tor our bad roads, yet it
' runs the easiest. .
Because
; all puncturess free for the season on 189G
Victor Tires.)
We have 189fi Ribycles that list at ?100.that we will eell for $75, bnt they ar
uufc - ItlUiVO. - UUi loau YlUlUnQ sell
For medium prade bicycles, w have
rinJ .1 i. .1 i-. 1 nr A r
Bicycles and Tandems for rent.
nana a goou stock: or compressed -air,
your tires inflated.
Wall Paper-
Latest Designs,
Ne-w Combinations,
Harmonious Colorings.
At Very Low Prices.
Call and see our samples before buying.
JOS.
One Minute Cough Cure touches the
right spot. It also touches it at the
right time if you take it when you have
a cough or cold. See the point? Then
don't cough. . Sold by Snipes-Kinersly
Drug Co. ' '
T. A. Vau Norden, the watchmaker
and jeweler, can be found in his new
quarters, opposite A. M. Williams' store.
- - . . ' my8-lm
It not only is so, it must be eo, One
Minute Cough Cure acts quickly, and
that's what makes it go. Snipes-Kinersly.
Drug Co.
Jacobson Book & Music Co.
and rlarry Lie be '
have moved in the old Vogt Store
on Washington Street, opposite
The rh
XXV V '111 UllXWV
GEORGE RUCH
PIONEER GROCER,
- Successor to Cbrisman & Corson.
!'!!. . , FULL LINE OF
STAPLE and FANCY GROCERIES.
Again in business at the old stand. I would be pleased to
see all my former patrons. - Free delivery to any part of town.
w -
Pure Glycerine Spap? only 10c a cake,
or 25c a hox. !
Genuine Briar. Pipes, with Amber Tip
and Leather Cases, only 50c each at
Ddnnell's Drug Store.
The TyarH Val
lejr Creamery '
Ask: "Vanbibber &c Worsley for it.
45c Every Square is Full Weight.
. Taex.E!iE3:o3srE zrsro. so.
it has a tire that, while light, is almost
PUNCTURE PROOF. (We will repair
iur jflUU.
the Waverley and Crescents $50 to $85.
Wheels repaired. We keep constantly on
lor inflating tires, and give it away. iet
T. PETER & CO
' "Give me a liver regulator and I can
regulate the world," said a . enius. - The
druggist handed him a bottle of DeWitt's
Little Early .Risers, the famous little
pills. For sale by Snipes-Kinersley
Drug Co. "
Soothing, heating, cleansing, De Witt's
Witch Hazel Salve is the enemy to
sores, wounds and piles, which it never
tails to cure. Stops itching and burning.
Cures, chapped lips and cold-sores in two
or three hours." . For sale by Snipes
Kinersly, Drug Co.
AlllU
Is
Delicloas. :
CREAMERY
Tygh Ya loy
' A. A. B.