The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, June 18, 1896, Image 3

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    .o.
.O,
SATURDAY'S
SATURDAY'S
THE
BEST
OFFER
OF
THE
SEASON.
We have just received Four Hundred Yards of the Choicest
0'
o
IN SOTVIK FORTY DIFFERENT PATTERNS.
These goods were bought to sell for 50c a yard, but owing to their late arrival we will offer them for one day only at
25 Gents per Yard.
These goods will be sold in Waist Lengths only. Don't miss this opportunity in securing a Silk Waist.
pect them to go early
We ex-
ALL GOODS MARKED IN
PLAIN FIGURES.
.0.
PEMSE & MHYS
.0.
The Dalles Daily Chronicle.
THURSDAY.
JUNE 18. 1896
WAYSIDE GLEANINGS.
Random Observation and L.ocl Brents
of Leaier Magnitude.
Forecast Tonight and Friday fair and
cooler.
Maes meeting of citizens tonight at
council chambers.
The distillery at Grants has closed
down for two months.
Bachelor's version : "Whatever a man
eeweth that shall he 'also rip."
The race horse Oregon Eclipse died at
Portland recently. He was said to be
worth $6,000.
It is said Gov. Pennoyer will appoint
Martin Quinn superintendent of the
street cleaning department in Portland.
A new daily is to be started in Port
land. It is to be an evening paper, and
will be conducted by the Metropolitan
Printing Company.
The D. P. &. A. N. Co. has lost some
of the piles at the foot of the incline,
which were pulled up by the lifting
force of the water. y'
Mr. H. Herbring proposes to move
his dry goods and clothing store to the
New Vogt block on July 15th. See his
advertisement elsewhere for bargains.
The members of the W. C. T. U. will
meet with Mrs. O. D. Doane tomorrow
afternoon at 3 o'clock. Notice the
change of time, from Tuesday till Friday.
A special telegraphic report of the pro
ceedings at the National Repub'ican Con
vention today appears on our first page.
This report will be taken by The Chron
icle throughout the week. '
To celebrate or not to celebrate is the
question to be decided at the council
chambers tonight. Everyone, interested
in a fitting celebration of the nation's
great holiday should attend the meeting.
The river rose eight inches since 8
o'clock yesterday morning. Reports
from above show a steady rise at Wen
atcbee, Lewiston and Umatilla. At 8
o'clock this morning the river stood 40.2
at The Dalles.
The Ancient Order United Workmen,
of which Mr. B. T. Conroy was a mem
ber, was represented by several mem-
Mrs wno followed him to the grave yes
terday. Mr. Conroy was not a member
of the Woodmen.
. The band will render the strictly clas
ical overture "Poet and Peasant" next
Sunday at the school grounds. This is
one of the. finest productions of the old
masters, Voa Sappe being the author
It is a very difficult, but beautiful over
ture, and is of a class not heretofore at'
tempted by any band in The Dalles.
i The militia last night were practiced
H on the skirmish drill. Though this was
a their first practical lesson on the drill,
they accomplished it very creditably,
'I under the direction of Capt. Chrisman
' The drill is a very Important one, estab-
lishing from a compact line of men in a
f very short space ef time, a line of ekir-1 the news.
misbers five paces between men. Alter
the skirmish drill they were marched to
the armory, where they executed fault
lessly the remainder of the tactics in
military discipline. '
At Aicjumnviiie last week the xanf
hill union-bimetallic central committee,
with several leading members ef the
party, voted unanimously to call a state
convention at that place for July 9th to
arrange for a state organization of the
party, to be composed of men of all par
ties who favor the use of both gold and
silver as standard money and are op
posed to the single gold standard and
who favor the unlimited coinage of both
metals. The convention will consist of
298 delegates appointed from several
counties.
6
An Imperial Verdict.
TEN FEET MORE OF WATER.
That 1 the News Seat Ont by Observer
F(i Today.
N
Justice Davis decided a case yester
day which will not appear on the docket.
A camp of Indians gave three white
visitors $1.50 to buy some whiBkey for
them, and the Indians were told to stay
in camp till they returned with it.
About 10 o'clock the Indians became
anxious, and coming to town noticed the
white men around the streets celebrat
ing with the $1.50. They were expostu
lated with by the Indians, and were told
to return to camp, they would come up
in a little while with the whisky. They
did not appear by midnight, and the
Indians went to the white men's camp
and took what they thought was about a
dollar and a half's worth, the booty, conl
sisting oi two oiantets, a coat and aV
enirt. Returning to camp a squaw said
the two blankets were stolen from her
on circus day. The white men then
hunted the Indians up and all agreed to
go before Davis as an arbitrator. After
two hours of investigation, Day is re
stored the coat and shirt to the white
men, and held the blankets until Satur
day, when if the white men will pay the
$1.50 back to the Indians they may re
gain them. If they do not, the blankets
go to the Indians..
Breeding; for WtlnUti.
Alex. G. Ogilvie finished shearing this
week, and the shearers are ' unanimous
in saying that his clip is the finest they
ever sheared, and some of them have
shorn sheep for years in Montana and
California. Alex has been breeding his
sheep for this for years, and he has got
there at last; but is not quite satisfied
yet, and expects by breeding his best
ewes to the best bucks in the state to at
tain even finer wool still. Tears ago he
and bis neighbors, who also had very
fine sheep, were breeding for wrinkles,
bnt they have learned a- new wrinkle
since then, and that is that they. can get
finer wool and more of it, without
wrinkles. Fossil Journal'. : .
BlTer Reading-.
Umatilla 23.9 ; rise of .4
Wenatchee 34.9
Lewiston 21.4 ; rise of .4
The Dalles, 40.2 ; rise of .8
If Subscribe for The Cbbokicle and get
Portland, Or., June 18. Tour river
will rise about ten feet more. " A con
tinued rise is probable until the maxi
mum height is reached. Cooler weather
for the next three days.
This is the text of a telegram received
this morning by Mr. S. L. Brooks. from
Observer Pague, and was confirmed by a
telephonic message. This would bring
the river to a height of fifty feet, lacking
only nine and six-tenths feet of being up
to the 1894 rise. In telephoning to Mr.
Pague, the latter said that ten feet he
considered the maximum figure to
be attained, and that six feet more than
the present stage was positive. This
will do a vast amount of damage and
cause considerable trouble and expense.
The largest loss might be the destruction
or partial destruction of the locks. The
railroad company would also suffer a
great loss. Some of the fish wheels
would be liable to go with a rise to fifty
feet. The D. P. & A. N. warehouse
would be compelled to put in a false
floor to raise the wool, with which the
warehouse is almost filled. It is now
about seven feet above the surface of the
water.. There is such a vast floor space
ef this warehouse that the expense
would not fall short of $1,000. Many of
our merchants, with a rise of ten feet,
would have to look to their basements,
and some expense would be entailed in
moving goods. The memory of 1894 is
yet strong enough to remind us of what
are me evils oi an unusuaiiy nign water,
In Uaraorlam
U. W.,
Hall of Temple Lodge, A. O. U. W.,)
. The Dalles, Jon 17, 1896. J
Whebeas, It has pleased an all-wise
Providence to suddenly remove from our
midst our worthy brother, Bartholomew
T. Conroy, be it
Ketolved, That we deeply deplore his
untimely death and the loss of a worthy
brother Workmen.
Resolved, That we extend to his be
reaved family onr heartfelt sympathy ;
Resolved, That our charter be draped
in mourning tor thirty days ; that these
resolutions' be spread upon the minutes.
transmitted to his family, and to the
daily papers for publication; - ; '
H. Hansen,
C. F. Stephens,
... Patl Kreft.
Committee
Care for Headache.
As a remedy for all forms of Headache
Electric Bitters has proved to be the very
best. It effects a permanent cure and
the most dreaded habitual sick headache
yields to its influence. We urge all who
are afflicted to procure a bottle, and give
this remedy a fair trial. In cases of
habitual constipation Electric Bitters
cures by giving a needed tone to the
bowels, and few cases long resist the use
of this medicine. Try it once. Fiftv
cents and $1.00 at Blakeley and Hough
ton's Drug Store. :. 2
A chance for the ladies to head off
hard times, as Mrs. Phillips will cut 25
cents on the dollar of all sales of mil
linery. ' ju!2-2d2w
Her SnlTerine; Knded.
The Fossil Journal tells the story of
little Banna Knox and the efforts to save
her by skin grafting:
On Thursday, June 11. 1896, Banna
Knox, third daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
George Knox, died at Fossil, Or., aged 6
years, 6 months and four days.
Little Banna sustained' the injuries
which resulted in her death, through
being accidentally burned at the Knox
farm at Lost Valley, on March 19th last.
She was playing in the yard when her
clothes caught fire from the embers of
a pile of rubbish that had been burned
the day before, and on which the child
sat down thinking there was no fire left
in them. When she found herself afire,
she became frightened and ran in an
opposite direction from . the house, so
that she was fearfully burned before her
mother caught her and wrapped a
blanket around her, thus extinguishing
the flames.
Dr. Howard was called from Fossil,
and after examining the burns, informed
the parents that her only hope of life lay
in skin-grafting, and advised them to
move her to Fossil bo that she could be
under his constant care. This they de
cided to do, and so, when the child was
able to be moved, two weeks after 'the
accident, eight sturdy, " noble fellows
tenderly carried the little one on a cov
ered litter to Fossil twenty miles over
the mountains through enow, mud, rain
and swollen creeks.
Grafting was commenced and con
tinued about four weeks, during which
time the skin took hold and spread, and
would soon have covered the whole sur
face of the sores about one foot wide
by two feet long on her back, hips and
legs had it not developed that the burns
were so deep that no Luman aid could
save her. The whole fleBh was burned
off the hips and the fire must have pen
etrated to the kidneys, as' Bright's dis
ease soon set in, and this it was that was
the immediate cause of death, which,
however, was hastened by a severe at
tack of la grippe, which at the same
time prostrated the other members of
the family, who- were weak and worn
out with incessant watching over their
suffering loved one. Loving friends
from their bodies supplied the skin for
grafting.
Down
Go
Prices.
Awarded
Highest Honors World's Fair.
Gold Medal, Midwinter Fair.
Most Perfect Made. '
40 Years the Standard.
To reduce our large stock of Bicycles, we will sell them at greatly reduced
prices while present stock lasts. This is your opportunity to get a wheel cheap.
Call and see what we have.
Out the Flies.
SCREEN "WIRE,
SCREEN DOORS,
WINDOW SCREENS.
Now in Stock. New Styles and Low Prices.
Odd Sizes mads to prder on Short Notice.
JOS. T. PETERS & CO
Bee Hives and Bee Supplies,
Fertilizers, Imperial Egg1 Food,
Ground Bone for Chickens,
Chicken Wheat for Sale at
J. H. CROSS'
Feed and Grocery Store.
The Tya-h Val
ley Creamery
Is
Delicious.
Ask Van'bib'ber & Worsley for it. -45c.
Every Square is Full Weight.
CREAMERY
Tygh Valley
A. A. B.
rrzEiiiEnoitsrzK: iro. so.
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