The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, September 29, 1896, Image 3

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    BIG DRIVES
IN
O
t
todies' and Children's SHOES
3
at Sacrificing Prices.
See Our Window for Goods.
ALL GOODS MARKED IN
PLAIN FIGURES.
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PEASE & MAYS
LADIES' SHOES.
Ladies' Fine Kid Cloth Top.. . .....Regular $2.50 Sale $1.80
"Godman" Fine Shoe...'. , " 2.00 " 1.25
Tan Oxfords .. Regular $2.50 and 3.00 " 1.50
" Heavy Glove and, Pebble Grain Shoe " : 1.25 " 1.00
J. & T. Cousins'. Fine Shoes .......... :Regular $2.50 and 3.50 .. " . 2.00
CHILDREN'S SHOES.
Children's Foster School Shoe, 7 to 10 :. ...... ......... :7.!'.v.....:....;.-.$ .85
- Foster School Shoe, 11 to 2 . 1.00
Waverly School Shoe, 5 to 8 , .' :85
Waverly School Shoe, 8 to 10 : 1.00
Waverly School Shoe, it to 2 : 1.25
Cowles-Bros. Fine Shoe ...........Regular $1.75 and $2.00 Sale 85.
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MASON
What's the Matter with your Tire?
DTJ-SOC Will Make It Hold Wind.
7
FRUIT
REDUCED TO
A
Pints, 55c per doz
Quarts, 65c per doz
1-2 gal, 90c per doz
-AT-
MAIER & BENTON
The Dalles.
One can of Du-Sock;
Tire full of air;
No more blue talk
No more swear. .
MAYS &, CROWE.
Sole Agents
Keep Oat the Flies.
screen wire,
screen door
window screens;
Now in Stock. , New Styles and LowPrices.
Odd Sizes made to order on Short Notice.
JOS. Ty PETERS & CO
The Dalies Dally Chronicle.
Weather Forecast.
Portland, Sept. 29, 1S96.
Fob Eastern Oregon Tonight jirobable
showers; Wednesday fair.
Pague. Observer.
TUESDAY,
SEPT. 29, 1896
WAYSIDE GLEANINGS.
Random Observations and Local ISrents
of Lesser Macnito.de. '
"A Bowery Girl"
At the Vogt opera house ' ,. k
Wednesday evening, Sept. 30th.
DeMoss concert tonight.
Senator Mitchell Friday night.
Admission to DeMosa concert 35 cents
and 15 cents.
Three loads of hogs were shipped to
Seattle today to John Parrott and one
load of cattle to Trout dale by C. M.
Grimes.
The regular drill of Co. G, Third
Battalion, will be postponed from
Wednesday, Sept.. 30th to Saturday,
Oct. 3d.
The victorious hose team are going to
have their pictures taken in costume
one picture standing fn front of the hose
house and one in the gallery.
W. H. Hitchcock and W. 11. Arbcckle
bave purchased R. B. Hood's auction
' room and collateral bank and will con
tinue the business as heretofore.
The finance committee of the McKin
ley club met with gratifying success in
securing funds for carrying on campaign
work here from the Republicans of the
city. . '
A mammoth squash 6 feet, 4 inches in
circumference, was brought to the city
today by Cbas. Sandoz, which was rais
ed on his place fonr miles from the city.
It will be shipped at once to the Port
land Industrial Exposition.
Pease & Mays are showing the most
exquisite line of stamped linens ever
shown in the city. The designs include
several patterns in dresden, jeiwel, em
pire, delft and drawn work goods. We
. have their goods on exhibition with sev
eral pieces partly worked.
Rowena, the 16-months-old daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Bonney of Eu
gene, died a horrible death-last night
from burns received yesterday morning.
The child was playing about the house
with her brother, while the mother was
in another room. There was a fire in
the fireplace, and the child fell into the
fire. The mother heard screams and
ran to find the child's clothing in flames,
which were extinguished as quickly as
possible, but not, however, until the
child bad been horribly and fatally
burned. The father of the untortunate
child is an ancle of Mr. A. A. Bonney of
this city.
. Senator Mitchell will doubtless be
greeted by one of the largest audiences,
if not the largest, that ever assembled
in the city. Especially will every free
silver Republican be anxious to bear his
views because of the past well-known
record of the senator on that subject.
His reasons for desiring -the triumph of
the Republican ticket bave been gained,
therefore, from a comprehensive study
of the situation. He will assure them
that the great principle of protection
alone is far too important to relinquish
tor the minor issue of finance. Senator
Mitchell is making a gallant fight for
the Republican- party in Oegon, and
few there are who' hear him that are
willing to fasten another four years of
depression and panic upon themselves
by following off Grandfather Democracy
and Boy Bryan. ,
MAY BECOME MILLIONAIRES.
Sirs. G. L. Gilbert One of the Heirs to
Vast Fortune,
A Lecture to Parents.
On the 15th 'day of September, 1896,
at Maomee, O., there was a gathering of
all the families 'who are descendants of
Jonathan Carver. He was one of the
early explorers of the headwaters of the
Mississippi river, and during this time
made peace between several tribes of In
dians, and was given a tractof land sixty
miles square where St. Paul and' Minne
apolis now are. This vast estate still re
mains unsettled, and the heirs are now
endeavoring - to prove their claim.
Among the number are Mrs. Harriet
Gunn of El Dorado, Kan.; Mrs. C. M.
Fizer of Andrews, Ind.; Trainmaster C.
E. Wells, Conductor F. W. Wells, Con
ductors L. C. Gunn and Geo. Gunn of
Toledo, O. ; and Lucian Gunn of Van
Wert. O. Should they succeed in estab
lishing their claim, each claimant would
undoubtedly be made a millionaire.
When Mrs. C. L.' Gilbert's'' attention
was called- to the above she was not in
the least surprised, although she is one
of the heirs. She remembers well when
a little girl of hearing her grandfather
say that he would not live to see the
claim settled, bat that the children
would. Of the heirs spoken of above
Mrs. Gilbert is the daughter of Mrs. G.
M. Fizer, and sister of C. E. Wells and
F. W. Wells.
v A Qnefctlon of Veracity.
-. A Chinese trial is going qn this after
noon at Justice Filloon's court. Tom
Louie owed Loy $16, and was offered $10,
which be took. While following him
up to collect the $6 remaining, an alter
cation arose,, resulting in the defendant,
Loy, who was also the creditor, striking
Louie over the head with a pistol. The
prosecuting witnesses exactly disagree
with the defense, the. latter disclaiming
that trouble of any kind occurred. . It is
a question of veracity, and it is hard
to tell which side is lying outright.
The Chinese have little regard for our
form of oaths. Now. if Justice Filloon
would bring in a chicken, and have the
witness, as he was called, chop its head
off, no earthly consideration could in
duce him to lie upon the witness stand,
for that is the form of the Chinese oatb.
Female Help Wanted.
Wanted Red-beaded girl .and white
horse to deliver premiums given away
with Hoe Cake boap. Apply to any
where. ... .
The lecture last evening by Rev.
Parker was attended by a "large audi
ence, in the main youthful and of the
gentler eex. It would have been more
fitting had there been more parents in
attendance, for the lecture was directed
to them ; but as a large proportion of
the attendance who, if they are not, -will
most probably be parents some time,
they will remember the wiBe precepts
they haye heard and turn them to ad
vantage in the. future. The labor of
Mr. Parker is purely philanthropical,
and is calculated to make better men
and women of the little ones now grow
ing up around us. In his opening re
marks he stated that the work was an
old one, as old as ' the public school
itself. " ' - :-
The true mother is the one who rears
the child and guides its mental develop
ment with unfaltering care. He has de
cided the old question as to which is
the mother of the chick, the hen which
lays the egg, or the hen which batches
it, in favor of the latter. She it is who
cares for it, feeds it, and watches over
it until it is able to care for itself. The
same rule applies to the human mother,
and there is a distinction between off
spring and children. He bad known
mothers who administered an opiate to
make their babe sleep till morning so
that they might spend a social evening
away, from home, unencumbered by it.
With rare beauty of language he pic
tured the delight of the . young mother
who, in the joy of seeing her first born
smile up into ber face for the. first time,
calls quickly to her husband: "John,
John, the baby can talk !"'
He paid a high tribute to oar public
schools, calling them the bulwark of our
liberties, and urged his bearers to pre
serve (hem as the most important insti--tution
of this land. He finds that eev-enty-five
per cent of the insane are illit
erate, and only four per cent ot the
criminals have a high school education.
The greatest source of crime is parental
neglect. It has been said that whenever
you build a school yoa close a prison.
He has decided that the work .of the
teacher is more important than that of
the minister, for two excellent reasons.
He has but fifty-two hours each year to
inculcate morals and education, while
the teacher has 1400..' Then the minis
ter talks to those whose minds have'be
come set and calloused, while the teach
er's audience have plastic minds that
receive and retain the minutest impres
sion. It is therefore important that the
teacher bave - a good moral character,
and be believes parents should always be
vigilant over teachers, and if one is dla
covered "who - lacks in this requirement
to at once make it known to the proper
authority. ' From this on he pursued
the central thought of his lecture, the
relation of the parent to the teacher's
work, and urged that the parent should
work jhore in harmony with the teacher,
not always-to take the child's view of
the case when it has been chastised, and
to talk over the faults or virtues and
make know to the teacher, as far as pos
sible, the child a characteristics: to
sometimes visit the school ; and to fre
quently speak encouraging words to the
teacher, who really has more time in
hand to spend npon the children, than
the mother herself, sleep and play sub
tracted. The lecture was interspersed
with wit and readily adapted himself to
the good graces of the audience, who
learned lessons they will always remem
ber. -. "
Two beautiful duets were sung, one
by Misses Ethel Deming and Elizabeth
Bonn, and one by Bess Rowland and
Elizabeth Bonn: - i .
The Bowery Girl.
Miss Ada Lee Bascom is more talked of
than any other lady who has ever at
tempted play writing. She is the cele
brated Western authoress who created
Harry Williams' very successful play,
A Bowery Girl." It was the dramatic
feature of the country last season. It is
repeating its past triumphs, this season.
A beantiful story of the typical Bowery
character. A melodrama interwoven
with delightful comedy. It is perfect in
its construction, and the plain, simple
story is told with such artistic ability
and 6tyle which has made Miss Bascom
famous as a most successful of lady
playrights. At the New Vogt opera
houee Wednesday night, September 30.
A rare treat to musical people at the
DeMoss concert this evening at the Con
gregational church.
Stockholders' Meet Inc.
Notice is hereby given that the annual
meeting of the. stockholders of the
Wasco Warehouse Company will be held
at the office of French fc Co., The Dalles,
Oregon, on Wednesday, September 30,
1896, at 3:30 o'clock p. m., for the pur
pose of electing directors for the ensuing
year, and for the transaction of such
other bnsinees as may come before the
meeting. - W. Lord, Pres.
AtteBt: G. J. Farley, Sec. 4w
The Dalles, Or., bept. 1, 1S9C.
Excursion rates over the Regulator
Line to the Portland exposition as fol
lows: Round trip ticket including ad
mission to the exposition. Three day
limit, $2.25; 10 day limit, $2.50; 30 day
limit, $3.00. Regulator leaves at 8 p. m.
W. C. Auavay, Gen. Agt.
When you mant to bay
Seed Wheat, Feed Wheat,
Rolled Barley, Whole Barley,
Oats, Rye, Bran, Shorts,
Or anything in the Feed Line, go'to the
WASCO : WAREHOUSE.
Oar prices are low and our goods are firtt-class.
Agents for the celebrated WAISTBURG "PEFRLESS" FLOUR.
Highest cash price paid for WHEAT. OATS and BARLEY.
GEORGE RUCH
Successor to Cbriaman & 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.
Awarded
Highest Honors World's Fair,
dold Medal, Midwinter Fair.
..'.DR:
CQEAFJ
im
: t a rr,"rrrTT '
Most Perfect Made. .
40 Vears the Standard. - -
School Books
bupplies.
Jacobson Book & Music Co.
' V No. 174 Second Street, ','..,'
New Vogt Block, The Dalles, Oregon.;
"W.VV.A.TJ.
DEALER IN
PAIN TS, 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 Masnry 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 comer Third and Washington Sta., The Dalles, 0reOB