What's the Matter with your Tire? DTJ-SOC Will Make It Hold Wind. New Fall Dress Goods. Our Fall Goods are arriving daily and w,e will soon have our complete stock open for your inspection. The Dress Goods Section has already made a good showing with some of the choicest materials. France, England, Germany, and last but not least, America, have contributed to our stock. Many of these handsomely woven materials are confined to us for this section of the country. Come and look them over. The Fall Importation of Black Goods. No woman's wardrobe is complete without at least one good Black Gown, and we are in 'shape to Gown the town. . Handsome Lustres, unique Brocade Effects, fine Figured Mohairs, standard All-Wool and Silk-and-Wool Materials, all fresh from foreign looms, and with a mod esty of price that will make you ready bvryers. " MASON FRUIT JARS REDUCED TO Pints, 60c per doz Quarts, 70c per doz See Our Center Window. ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. PEASE & MAYS 1-2 gal, 90c per doz -AT- MAIER & BENTON The Dalies. One can of Du-Sock; Tire full of air; No more blue talk No more swear. MAYS -& CROWE. Sole Agents pep Oat the flies. SCREEN WIRE, SCREEN DOORS WINDOW SCREENS. Now in Stock. New Styles and IiO"wPrices. Odd Sizes made to order on Short Notice. JOS. T. PETERS & CO The Dalles Daily curomeie. Weather Foiecast. POBTLAND, Sept. 14, 1896. For Eastern Oregon Tonight and tomor row, occasional rain; warmer. Pague. Observer. MONDAY. SEPT. 14, 1896 WAYSIDE CLEANINGS. Random Observations and Local Events of Lesser Magnitude. The river now Btands at 9.9. The funeral of J. II. Graham will take place at 10 :30 o'clock tomorrow morning. Ripe tomatoes for catsup Scents per pound at Dalles Commission Co. sl4-2w. Look at Maier & Benton's ad. and see what they are selling fruit jars for. The prices can't be beat. Mr. A. S. Roberts brought up fourteen thoroughbred Sophghire bucks from Troutdale Saturday night. The buildings and barns of Adams & Hiukle, together with nearly all the contents, burned last week at Glen wood, Wash. Seufert Bros, will follow their ship ment of 25,000 pounds of salmon last Friday with a like shipment tomorrow evening. No. 1 wheat is selling at the Diamond Mills today for 46 cents. This is a very good price for the times. There is said to be a shortage this year in the world's product. , Jacob Wollner, a wool merchant of San Francisco, is in the city. He states that if McKinley is elected he will pay wool raisers 15 cents a pound for their wool next year. Judge Liebe received a telegram today from GileB Patrick, stating that he ia in Ferndale, California. The telegram was forwarded from Eureka. Patrick is a beneficiary in Richard Cloater'a will. Major Jackson, of the regular army, and Col. Telfer, inspector general of the O. N. G., atrived in the city on the noon train today and will inspect the militia company at the armory tonight . Attorney J. L. Story left today for Portland on legal business in connec tion with the suits of the Eastern Ore' gon Land Co. vs. divers settlers in Sher man county who have patents to certain lands claimed by the land company. Mr. W. H. Taylor shipped some Hun garian prunes to New York last week that brought the remarkable figure 6f $K55 per box. The high figure was be cause of the superiority of the fruit and the excellent packing. Other fruit sold by its side for $1 per box. ' The case of the State vs. D. P. and Wm. Ketchum was settled at Portland Friday, resulting in the complete ex . oneration of defendants. The charge : waa herding sheep on the reserve heinous crime forsooth, but of which they were proven absolutely innocent. Charlie Heppner demonstrated a lee Bon in natural philosophy Saturday, which is naucn safer to learn from a school book that is, that powder when touched with a spark is instantly trans formed into a gas many times its own balk. He had about a quart of black powder which he touched with the lighted end'of a cigarette to "see how it burned." He now carries his arm in a sling and his face and hands are badly powder-burned. A former resident of The Dalles, now of Wimer, Or., writes to a friend in this city that - there is much dissatisfaction over the action of the government at Washington in granting patents to so much mineral land to the Southern Pa cific Co. He says he. can count ten mining claims within a . half mile that have been worked for forty years for gold ; one that has been worked with a hydraulic plant for fifteen years, and the plant was on the ground at the time of issuing tne patent, wmcn covers ana takes it in. These patents savor of the ' rankest jobbery, but it seems the min ing claimants are powerless to move in the matter, and the railroad company, in cahoots with the powers that be, can defy justice and the rights of mere American citizens. . C. C. Hobart feels so morally certain that the locks will be opened by No vember 15tb, that he is having the por tage road torn up and destroyed. Al though everyone now agrees with Mr. Hobart in believing the locks will be completed on or before the date men tioned, yet the baste noted in tearing no the portage road sets badly upon those who have taken an interest in the people's line of. boats on the river. They would have been glad to see the portage remain as long as there remained possibility that it might be needed, and that possibility, though remote, ex ists until boats actually pass through the channel. The road was not in the way, and seizing the first excuse to tear it up argues the possession of an un friendly spirit toward it. RESULTED FATALLY. J. H. Graham the Victim of a Railway - Accident at Orants. Forced to Increase the Number of Teachers. The public schools of this city have been in session during the past week and the attendance of pupils has been so largely in excess of last year's enroll ment as to tax to the utmost the seating capacity of the school rooms, as well as the efforts of all concerned, to prevent overcrowding. With the best arrange ment possible to make, it baa been found necessary bythe board of directors to employ another teatfaer to relieve the pressure, and at a spepiaV meeting of the board, held last Saturday Mrs. Ellen D Baldwin was engaged as an additional teacher at the academy park building for the present term,- or for such time as the number in attendance may require her services. . ' - : K. of P. Attention. The members of Friendship Lodge, No. 9, K. of P., are requested to be pres ent this evening, to make arrangements for the funeral of Brother J. A. Graham, of Bed Cross Lodge, No. 27, La Grande. By order of the C. C. D., W. VAtrsK, K. of B. and S. The oyster season is now opened at A. Keller's. Oysters in any style. e7-dlw J. H. Graham, otherwise . known as "Hank" Graham, was instantly killed and bis body horribly torn and mangled this morning at Grants. He was a brakeman on Conductor Bice's freight train, which at 10 o'clock this morning was switching cars in the yard. Graham was seen by half a dozen parties to swing himself up on the en gine, but no one . saw him fail to bis death, and just how the accident hap pened will never be known. Conductor Bice himself was among the number who last saw him aliye. Bice was perhaps a hundred yards in front of the engine, talking to Mr. Thos. A. Hud son at McCoy's house, near the main line. The locomotive was coming tow ard them from the end of the switch, with Graham riding in front. Turning his head away for a moment, and again looking toward Graham, he noticed that he was missing. He ' immediately guessed the. horrible truth, and said "My God ! have they run over Hank?" A second later the locomotive moved from the line of vision and disclosed to Mr. Bice's gaze the corpse of Graham. He was cut in two, half of the body ly ing outside and half inside the track. The exact time of the accident was 10:05. The remains were taken up .and conveyed at once to The Dalles, arriving here about 12 o'clock. Graham was standing on the left or fireman's side of the engine, and as it is customary to make a coupling from the engineer's side, it is surmised that he tried to change sides before the engine bad reached the' caboose, with which it was to be coupled, but made a mis step, slipping down the cowcatcher, where, his foot striking the track, the engine closed over him. The deceased was a brother of the master mechanic at Albina, who was at once notified and came up on a special train, arriving at 2:30 o'clock this after noon. Graham has been in The Dalles about two years. He is unmarried, but it is said had a wife some years ago. The inquest was held at 2:30 this afternoon, and the following is the ver diet of the coroner's jnry : We, the undersigned, the jury im paneled by W. H. Butts, coroner of Wasco county. Or., to Inquire into the cause of the death of the body now be fore us, find as follows : That the name of said deceased is J H. Graham, of the age of about 35 years, and from the evidence produced at this inquest we believe that said deceased was a man ot family ; that he came to bis death on the morning of the 14th of September, 1896, at about the hour ot 9 :05 a. m at or near Grants station that at the time of his death he was em ployed as brakeman on train No. 23. be longing to the O. B. & N. Co., and bound west, and was discharging his duties as such brakeman at the time of his death ; tnat tne cause ot nis aeatn, as near as we are able to ascertain from the evi dence of the witnesses sworn at this in' quest, was from slipping off of the pilot of the loeomotive and being ran over, thereby producing the death of said de ceased, and we further nnd tnat said de ceased came to his death through an un avoidable accident and that no blame attaches to any one. ' J. is. UBOS9ESI, E. Jacobsen, . C. L. Phillips, L. S. Davis, J.A.McAkthtjk, D. S. Dufur. The Concert. The concert yesterday waa not radic ally different than those which had pre ceded it. While the absence of Mr. Peterson's cornet could be noted J yet the music was quite as sweet and the sev eral selections so well sustained under the competent leadership of Mr. Long that the absence of Mr. Peterson .did not seem by any means irremedial. roe serenade "Pleasant Dreams," one of the sweetest selections in the repertoire of the band, was never exceeded in beauty by ita rendition yesterday. "The Mill in the Forest" was very fine also. Best of all was the clarionet solo of Mr. Mark Long. There are few musicians on any instrument who can pass from note to note with the felicity possessed by Mr. Long. Distinct and clear, without the trace of a slur, Mr. Long brings out a succession of b4th notes witu the dis tinctness of the written music before him, and wide changes of compass be instantly accomplishes, preserving every tone in its original and separate beauty. His solo yesterday was more difficult be cause of its length, otherwise the audi ence would have insisted on their en core. - . Mr. G. A. Clarke is becoming very proficient in the use of his traps, and his bird music never sounded so sweet, nor was it as brilliant, as yesterday. He has an able assistant in Mr. A. Kennedy. When yog mant to bay Seed Wheat, Feed Wheat, Rolled Barley, Whole Barley, Oats, Rye, Bran, Shorts, Or anything n the Feed Line, go'tothe WASCO : WAREHOUSE. Our prices are low and our goods are firt-claps. Agents for the celebrated WAISTBURG "PEFRLESS" FLOUR. Highest cash price paid for WHEAT. OATS and BARLEY. DIED. - At Olex, Gilliam county. Or., Sept. 8, 1896, Fritz Lanbinger, aged 58 years. The deceased was born at Kiel, Scbles- wig Holstein, Germany. Mme V. S. Dairy, the leading modiste of The Dalles. Elegant designing of evening gowns a specialty in tailor made costumes and fall jackets. Orer Pease and Mavs. sl2-2t "Hop Gold" heard, on every hand. The finest beer ever offered to the public. For sale by Stubling & Williams. s4-2w Awarded Highest Honors World's Fair, Gold Medal, Midwinter Fair. . GEORGE RUCH ITERJGROCER Successor to Cbrisman & Corson. FULL. LINE OF STAPLE and FANCY GROCERIES. Again in business1 at the old stand. I would be pleased to see all my former patrons. Free delivery to any part of town. School Books Supplies, Jaeobson Book & Music Co. . No. 174- Second Street, Ne-w "Vogt Block, The Dalles, Oregon, mm CC1EAFJ M s sTT.A Most Perfect Made. 40 Tears the Standard. - 23- "STITV VA DEALER IN- PAINTS, OILS AND GLASS, And the Most Complete and Latest Patterns and Designs in WALL PAPER. WALL PAPER. PRACTICAL PAINTER and PAPER HANGER. None but the best brands of . J. W. MASURY'S PAINTS used in all our work, and none but the most skilled workmen employed. Agents for Maaury Liquid Paints. No chem icel combination or soap mixture. A first-class article in all colors. All orders promptly attended to. , - Store and Faint Shoo corner Third and Washington Sts., ' The Dalles. Oreo