Every Four Items j of Interest. F0 House R Ladies' Shirt Waists AT A BIG REDUCTION. Our Regular $ .75 Waists . ...... . Sale Price, $ .60 Our Regular $ .85 Waists...... Sale Price, .70 Our Regular $1.00 Waists Sale Price, $ .75 Our Regular $1.25 Waists Sale Price, $1.00 Our Regular $1.50 Waists Sale Price, $1.20 Our Regular $1.75 Waists Sale Price, $1.45 Our Regular $2.00 Waists.. Sale Price, $1.G0 Summer Wash Fabrics- AT A MARKED , REDUCTION". Our Regular 12e Goods '......'..'.'.Sale Price, 9c Our Regular 15c Goods Sale Price, 12c Our Regular 20c Goods. . '..: Sale Price, 16c Our Regular 25c Goods Sale Price, 20c Our Regular 30c Goods .'. Sale Price, 24c ' Our Regular 35c Goods' ; .". .Sale Price, 27c Our Regular 50c Goods 'i : ......... . .Sale Price, 37c T.1NON BATISTE and SILK COLLARS at 50 per cent deduction. We will continue our Sale of SUMMER UNDERWEAR for an other -week. ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. PEASE & MAYS Fishing Tackle, Loaded Shells, Powder, Shot, wife -AND A- GeneraL Line -OF- Camping Supplies -GO TO- MAIER & BENTON 167. Second Street, oppo site A. M. Williams & Co. Would rather have nice bright Tinware, than heavy granite or enameled ware, if it did not rust. This has at last been overcome, and we have a line of Tinware that will not rust. We fully Guarantee our Anti-Rust, tinware not to rust, and will replace with new any article that does free of charge to our customers. EffiuOLlTS CROWE eep One the flies. j SCREEN WIRE, SCREEN DOORS, WINDOW SCREENS. Now in Stock. New Styles and LowPrices. Odd Sizes made to order on Short Notice. JOS. T. PETERS & CO The Dalles Daily Chronicle. THURSDAY. JULY 16. 1896 Weather Fotecast. Portland, July 16, 1896. Fob Eastern Oregon Fair today; Friday cooler. Pague. Observer. WAYSIDE GLEANINGS. Random Observations and Local Events of Lesser Magnitude. M i .fo At A. M. Williams & Co.'s 30-inch percales at 5 cents a yard. . The band proposes to give a moon light excursion in the course of a week. There is a scarcity of silver in town , for the purposes of makThjf change. John M. Davis brought in a band of mutton sheep from the Bakeoven coun Ntry today.' John Cradlebaugh made the most ac-. curate prediction yesterday morning when he said we were going to have a cbinook in the afternoon. President Campbell, of the Monmouth normal school, was present at the insti tute this afternoon and took part in the discussion of "What constitutes a good teacher." f The ladies of the M. E. church real ized about $20 from their ice cream social last evening. Previous to the re freshments they furnished a very enter staining program. The hot weather is a feature of the entire state. From Southern Oregon and the valley of the Willamette arise protests irom the extreme heat; protests vain, but none the lees fervid. .Wool teams ford the John Day at the wreck of the old Leonard bridge but it is risky business. , The Moro Observer says an emigrant lost a horse fording the day after the wreck. The corps of United btates geological surveyors that will work in Southwest ern Oregon this summer has arrived in Coos and is at work. They will this season make a survey of the Sixes river mining belt, and make a thorough in vestigation thereof. ' . Honey man, DeHart & Glenn, con tractors for the railroad line to Goble, have already let a number of eubcon- tracts for the clearing of right of way, etc., and will commence work at Ranier. Between 700 and 1000 men will be em- t1 fM'oil gn f-ViA wnrlr. RAVn thft Ant.nrmn AUIV UlA u - - - ..... vv WMUU other were observed this morning at the point asceuding the river.' A ecow is not a very graceful boat, but the spread of canyas looked very pretty this morn ing, resembling an old fashioned picture, and indeed, forming a very good subject for an artist. The fine plate glass windows were yesterday put in at A. M. Williams & Co.'s store. There are four of them, all the same size, 84x132, which with the smaller ones in the doors cost $350. The glass comes from San Francisco, and is called French plate. It is of an inch thick and is without a flaw; Its surface has no inequalities whatever. The firm expect to move into their new store the 1st of September,. The postmaster of Weston,- L. Van Winkle, has been compelled by the post office department to make good the money which was taken from the Wes ton branch, some $400, when Mr. Van Winkle was in the mountains and the postoffice was in charge of his deputy, George Reynolds. Mrs. Lucien Parker, of Pleasant Hill, has been called to Portland by the Supreme Secretary of the United Arti sans to receive the money due her from that order. Her husband was a mem ber of the assembly at. Arlington. The order is 22 months old and has grown to a membership of 2400, yet this is the first death loss to the order. Eugene Guard. Charles G: Millett'a loss in goods, throngh the falling of the John Day bridge, is at least $150, and perhaps much more', says the Fossil Journal, in horses, wagons and' harness. Sam Grant estimates his loss at $250. Sam paid $3 for toll, and thinks he is enti tled to $1.50 of that .back, as he was only half way over when the bridge went down. State Supt. G. M. Irwin will deliver an address in the Congregational church tomorrow at 8 p. m. Mr. Irwin is well known to Dalles audiences as an able speaker. The subject of the address will be some topic connected with educa tional work and will be definitely an nounced in tomorrow's paper. No ad mission will be charged and all are in vited to attend. Governor Lord has issued bis annual proclamation warning the people against the crime and penalty involved in the setting afire of timber or other property of the state or individual under the act of 1893, general laws of Oregon, and this important ' document is now in the bands of the state printer. When printed it will be forwarded to the vari ous sheriffs of the state and duly posted by them in their respective courthouses. In consequence of a blunder in the U. S. Land office, made years ago, Fred C. Walton and J. H. Reed each claim the same piece of land near Moro. Fred has cultivated it ; when he began harvesting last week Reed claimed the crop. Before shooting was done they submitted the case to arbitration, and the -arbitrators, Judge Meader, Wm. . Walker, and Sam McDonald, decided that Reed should have one-third of the crop. The govern ment ought to be compelled to pay heavy damages for the trouble caused in such cases. Moro Observer. TOO MUCH MONEY. Story that the O'Nell Boys Fall to Several Millions. Two Cases Settled. Heir Mr, John Booth, while riding on a train a few days ago, engaged in conver sation with a Catholic priest, who, ac according to Booth, lived at Foesil. The priest, learning he was from- The Dalles, told him of the good fortune of two of its residents, who fall heir to $30,000,000 each. An immense p'operty in Ireland, which had been in litigation for fifty years has finally been settled by the courts. The estate comprises a whole county and is valued at many million pounds. It is the Roderick O'Neil estate which the priest " says is to be divided, among six O'Neils who will each receive six million pounds. Two he said lived in The Dalles, two in Seattle and two in Sacramento. . If the priest's story is true, the O'Neils of The Dalles meant, may be Will and John O'Neil. No other O'Neils are known. Both are now absent from the city and and their family history could not be learned. Jobn O'Niel is at present in the Greenhorn district near Canyon City, where he went over a week ago. Wm O'Neil is working at Seufert's cannery. Mrs. O'Neil is also away from home to day. Mrs. Johns, her mother, knew but little about the family history of her son-in-law, merely knowing that the boys' father, and believing that the boys' grandfather was born in America. . The story can scarcely be true. Sixty million dollars is too much money to fall into The Dalles at one drop. One or two hundred thousand dollars might have been credited, but the larger amount well hardly. If the Cows Would Eat the Thistles. The marshal's order that the cows shall be in and the thistles out works adversely, for the cows are out and the thistles in. The most persistent nuis ance is the town cow, an animal that soon becomes intelligent enough to pick the most intricate lock and onen all kinds of gates. The time . between turning her out by the owner and being picked up by the herder is sufficient for her to accomplish a good deal bf mis chief, if the cow could be taught to eat the thistles, a vexed problem would be solved, but even if taueht. a cow's perverse nature would not admit of her dotag anything beneficial to the human race further than supplying that verv useful and general household recessitv the lacteal fluid. "Things are not what they seem J The hot wind of yesterday was an east wind, but came in from the west. The same hot, withering . blasts which left us gasping for breath passed over us in the opper air a short time before,.- The current was deflected upon striking the mountains west of us, and turned down ward and in an opposite direction, Many people wondered why the usually refreshing Dreeze irom the west was bo debilitating. It was an east wind In disguise. . . Stockmen Reported Killed. Word bas just been received from Canyon City, says the Baker City Dem ocrat, of a fight between the cattlemen of the Izee country and the sheepmen of Crook county, in which two sheepmen and one cattleman were killed. The particulars of the . fight were not re ceived, farther than that it was a con flict over the range of . the Sontb Fork country. ,' Another messenger brings the news that' it was the same sheepmen that bad their wagons and provisions destroyed over there several : weeks ago. Judge Bradebaw made two decrees yesterday. Tbev were in the cases of W. S. Meyers vs. Godfrey and J. M. ,McCIure vs. H. S. Davidson. "former eaue UHtTone where Meyers sued Godfrey lor half the value of eome partition fences, of which Godfrey had the benefit for a number of years. Godfrey was summoned to appear as a defendant a certain ' Saturday. He failed to appear, afterwards asserting the summons read the Monday follow ing. Thereupon Godfrey failing to ap pear and answer, Meyers' attorneys got out an execution, through default. At tempting to sell some of Godfrey's prop erty upon it, he issued an injunction and the case decided yesterday was on the injunction. The court decreed that the injunction be dissolved and the ex ecution mav therefore be issued. The other case is that of J. M. Mc- Clure vb. H. S. Davidson. Davidson sued McClure on an account for $50, and got judgment by a jury trial before Justice of the Peace Chandler at Wa- mic. It appears the, trial was irregular from the decree of the fcourt, Judge Bradebaw yesterday reversing the action of the lower court. )When yog wmt to buy Seed Wheat, Feed Wheat, Rolled Barley, Whole Barley, Oats, Rye, Bran, Shorts, Or anything n the Feed Line, go to the WASCO : WAREHOUSE. Our prices are low and our goods are firet-claes. A trenta for the celebrated WAI8TBURG "PEFRLESS" FLOUR. Highest cash price paid for WHEAT. OATS and BARLEY. Mr. Schanno Returns. Mr. Emile Schamno has returned from a recent tripNhrough Sherman county and the John Say country. ' He finds the grain considerably damaged by the hot winds in Sherman county. In the Jobn Day valley there are fine crops of alfalfa hay. The valley is also a splendid natural fruit country. Mr, Schanno tells of an apricot tree on ' Mr. Hilton's place which is four feet through' at the base and thirty feet high.. All kinds of fruit trees are very large and thrifty. The only drawback to the coun try is its lack of railroad facilities, other wise frnit raising would be more gener ally followed. We are selling the famous Soap Foam washing' powder. It will not "yellow the clothes" nor burn the hands, and is the finest ' thing in the world tor the bath. In extra large packages at same price of common goods. Sold by Pease & Mays. inay22-eod-2m - Awarded Highest Honors World's Fair, Gold Medal, Midwinter Fair. george: ruch PIONEER GROCER. Successor to Chriaman & Corson. 1 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. REMOVAL. Jacobson Book & Music Co. and Harry Liebe have moved to New Yogi Block. -DEALER 155 Most Perfect . Made. . 40 Tears the Standard. PAINTS, OILS AND GLASS. -- And the Most Complete and Latest Patterns and Designs in WALL PAPER. WALL PAPESR. PPAfTTTPAT. PArWTPVR Truif PAPKT PT A NfiTTTS. TJnm hnf. the hst brands of J. W. MASURY'S PAINTS'- used in all our work, and none but the most skilled workmen emnloved. A cents for Maaurv Liauid Paints. No chem- icel combination or soap mixture. . A first-class article in all colors. All orders promptly attended to. . - . Store and Faint Shon corner Third and Washington Sts., The Dalles. Oregon RUPERT & GABEL, . Wholesale and retail manufacturers and .dealers in Harness, Saddles, Bridles, Collars, TENTS and WAGON COVERS. REPAIRING PROMPTLY DOSE. : Adjoining E. J. Collins fc Co.'s store.