The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, October 01, 1896, Image 3

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    s the Matter with your Tire ?
DTJ-SOC Will Make It Hold Wind.
IN
i todies' Md GhildM's SHOES
TO
o o rGsrLireMLrL'? o
BIG DftlVES S
b ' , . . . ,. , &
MASON
6
o
5
6
at Sacrificing Prices. "
See Our Window for Goods.
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..;... A.... ... " 1.25 " 1.00
. " J.& T. Cousins' Fine Shoes ..Regular $2.50 and 3.50 u 2.00
CHILDREN'S SHOES;
Children's Foster School Shoe, 7 to 10 ...:....v.:.:...,...l.:..;....: .. ..$ .85
Foster School Shoe, 11 to 2 . 1.00
Waverly School Shoe, 5 to 8 ..: ..85
WaverlyjSchool Shoe, 8J to 10 ... "1.00
Waverly School Shoe, 11 to 2 ....... :....;,... 1.25
Cowles Bros. Fine Shoe Regular $1.75 and $2.00 "Sale 85.
ALL GOODS MARKED IN
PLAIN FIGURES.
PEASE & MAYS
a
c
t
t
O
o - "
FRUIT
JARS
REDUCED TO
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
Remembei
We have strictly First-class
FIR, OAK and
MAPLE WOOD
To sell at LOWEST MARKET RATES.
Phone 25. JOS T. PETERS & CO
The Dalles Daily Chronicle.
Weather Forecast.
Portland. Oct 1, 1898.
For Eastern Oregon Tonight and tomor
row fair.
Faoub. Observer.
THURSDAY.
OCT. 1, 1896
WAYSIDE CLEANINGS.
Random Observations and Local Exenta
of Lesser Maguitude.
. Senator Mitchell Triday nieht.
Air tight heaters at Maier & Benton's.
R. A. Habersham has been appointed
surveyor general of Oregon. .
Hon. W. R. Ellis will speak at Hood
River Saturday evening next.
There are a number of children and
older people sick with typhoid fever.
' Two loads of sheep were shipped last
night by Saltmarshe to the Union Meat
Co. at Ttootdale.
There was an unfounded report today
that the exposition building at Portland
burned this morning. Inquiry by tele
graph showed the report to be without
foundation." ' '.
The Fossil Journal damns its Gilliam
county court in some . very expressive
and forcible language adapted from a
like damning by the Corvallis Gazette
of Benton county.
Mrs. D. C. Herrin has been doing a
rushing business in the past week pho
tographing babies, many mothers avail
ing themselves of "her free offer for ex
position purposes.
The civil case of Blakeley vs. Ganger
was settled out of court yesterday, the
defendant, who had made forcible entry
and residence on some land near Crates
point, yielding possession.
Unless something unforeseen turns up
within the next six weeks- the town of
Antelope wil be declared a municipal1
itv and will assume the duties, im
portance and responsibilities oi incorpor
ation. '
Miss Mattie Cowdell and Jessee Gre
gory finally married on the 22d. This
is the young lady whose angry parent
invoked the law in Moro recently to res
cue her from her betbrothed. Moro Ob
server. . . .
Martial music la always inspiring.
Though it was adopted last evening in
the interest of a losing cause, it attracted
the attention of a considerable number
of people, particularly the veterans of
the late war. -
Coin Harvey, who ought to be called
Gold Harvey now, is organizing a secret
political order, the Patriots of America,
all members of which must buy his n6w
book. If the scheme works Harvey will
soon have another batch of gold to lock
up in a safe-deposit vault.
Miss Dorothea Eliot of Portland hat
resumed her lessons m singing in The
Dalles.' She may be. conferred with,
either in person or by telephone, at
Mrs. Leslie Bntler'a, on any Thursday
afternoon or Friday morning. The les
sons will bo given either at Mrs. Bntler'a
or at the homes of the pnpils, if ' pre
ferred. i . , . ;
We've heard there is a very sensation
al entertainment on the boards a week
from thia Saturday, in the shape of a
tragic farce gotten up by some of pur
ladies for the benefit of one of our
churches. If all ia true that is said, we
hope ye reporter will be there. '
The north wall at the locks ia now up
ten feet, and the first course of atone
has been laid. There are nine more to
lay. -The south -wall, made of cement,
was finished a week ago." The' contract
ors expect to finish the work and open
the locks to navigation some time before
the contract ' date, November 15th.
Dredgers are working at both 'ends. - -
Senator Mitchell, whom Oregon is
proud to know as one of the ablest sena
tors in our present congress, will address
our citizens tomorrow evening. The'
opera bouse will be patronized on this
occasion not only by the ladies and gen
tlemen of The Dalles, but extensive pre
parations to hear him have been made
by people residing throughout. 'the en
tire county. Dufur, Kingeley and 8-
Mile, will eend laige . delegations, one
McKinley club postponing it sregular
meeting in order to attend in a. body.
Mrs.'W. W. Brown, who ia one of .the
leading members of .the Good Intent
Society, will leave soon' to make her
borne in Crook county, and the meeting
of that society yesterday at the home of
Mrs. Wm. Michell was a farewell in her
honor. About twenty, members were
present, and had it not- been for the
thought of losing one of their earnest
workers, would have been a pleasant
aieeting. During the afternoon lunch
was served, at which time, the presi
dent, Mrs. W. H. Biggs, presented Mrs.
Brown with a Ret of silver teaspoons aa
a token of the regard in which she is
held.
WHEAT AND WOOL.
Prices KIsIdc, BnslnefM Improving anil
Confidence Returning. (
-Business ia improving. Whether it is
because of the assurance that McKinley
will be elected, or whatever the. cause,
that mysterious factor called public con
fidence is surely returning. . . -" '
Wheat is now worth 45 cents in Port
land and is rising. The warehouses are
paying 49 cents for .first' grade, and the
Diamond Flouring Mills : 52 for best
quality Klickitat. About" four carloads
of wheat per day is .leaving The Dalles.
There is a disposition on the part of
some farmers to hold it, in anticipation
of a further rise. ' ; ;
.The wool market, also, is not station
ary by any means, though most of what
is leaving now ia upon consignment.
About 4,00O,0Q0 pounds of this year's
clip- has' left he city, already. Last
week's shipment amounted to half a
million -pounds. ' About .100 carloads
have already gone to Boston, and ay the
large furniture cars which arrive' in The
Dalles are sidetracked in the yards to re
ceive further shipments. Tne priceof
wool baa not materially improved of late,
but an indication of the feeling may be
learned by the fact that a buyer recentlv
offered io . contract a grower's crop for
10 cents in case McKinley was elected.
The increaee of railroad business in
the carrying trade ia denoted by the in
crease in the number .of trains, two
extra crews having been added in the
past week. ' . ' ' ' -' ; v " .
Deceased Persons Estates.. '
and elegant language, and then merci
lessly destroyed that home (in imagina
tion) by a houlful dissertation on the
evils (?) of the gold standard. However,
the speaker pleased his. Populist friends,
and they assembled after the meeting,
gave him the glad hand, ' and expressed
their mutual admiration, while the
great majority of the large audience pres
ent filed sadly, .thoughtfully, but quick
ly out into the refreshing night...
Increasing Efficiency of the Band.
The band makes constant efforts to
increase its efficiency. Advertisements
have been inserted in musical journals
for an experienced musical director, who
can live in The Dalles by some other oc
cupation. A place is now open for a
good leader and cornetist as a barber,
tailor, table waiter or printer. A pho
tographer fulfilling all the requirements
recently promised to come, as the resnlt
of a series of letters, but a better opening
presented itself to him at jast the wrong
time for the band. The band has al
ways been short of alto players, as well
as the leading born, and it ia with pleas
ure we announce that Mr. M. H. Howell
of 'Ashland, a brother of Mrs. D. C.
Herrin, a solo alto of much merit, ia
soon to arrive. ' ' -
One or - two gentlemen may secure
room in private family, with or without
board. Address L. E. A., Lock box
221. : . sep25-dlw
Take your watches, clocks and jewelry
repairing to Clark, the East End jeweler.
.Save . money and cordwood by buying
the air-tight heater at Maier & Benton's.
The law provides' that administrators
and executors shall mak,e semi-annual
reports to the. county ; court, and one of
these periods has. now arrived from
October 1st to 10th. Judge Maya ia in
town today for the par pose of receiving
these reports. In. conversation with
him this morning a Chronicle reporter
was told that there has been a great
neglect generally by administrators and
executors in the matter of making out
and filing these reports. In this way
creditors have suffered on account of not
receiving their just due, and the widows
and orphans have been subjected to
many deprivations and annoyances aris
ing from the 'neglect of these appointed
officers to settle up the business of de
ceased persons' estates in- the shortest
convenient time. We are informed by
Mr. Mays that lie ia here not only for
the purpose of receiving these reports,
but of insisting, by every lawful means,
that they be promptly made' out and re
turned. . In some cases years have
elapsed without a report, to the great
detriment of the beneficiaries and cred
itors. Mr. Mays' efforts to this end are
commendable. " V- ' 1-
Harry Watkins'
"A BowerGlrl."
When yog mant to bay
A large audience greeted "A. Bowery
Girl" last evening at the - New Vogt,
larger than the merits of the production
warranted. Theater-goers were gen
erally disappointed and there was a
manifest lack of applause, which could
not be stirred at the last by the one re
deeming featnre of the whole play, the
fire scene, at the close of the last act.
A Bowery Girl" does not come up to
its pretensions and the fine quality of
its advertising paper. Its tragedy is
weak and its comedy 'insipid. The
specialty songs and -dances are fair in
their way, but are nothing above
mediocre. "A Bowery Girl" assumes to
be a melodrama, but the plot is hyster
ical and the situations impossible. The
heroics of the star in the title rele are ho
plainly for Btage "purposes that the at- :
tempted counterfeit of real life betrays
itself too plainly. The heroine, a girl
stripling of 16 years, who foils the heavy
villain by her physical prowess in- a
parlor full of people, Is always behind a
table or a box to listen to his .-plans, and
in the last act, after fair warning, fall a
victim to his stiletto, with faint resist
ance, has too much of the essence of the
dime novel to suit an intelligent audi
ence. There are redeeming features of
the production', but they are apart from
the plot. and the actors. They consist in
the properties. The special scenery is
perhaps the finest ever shown in the
city. The palisades on the Hudson, the
bowery in New York City, and the scene
of the roof tops of the city, the latter
culminating in the finest fire scene the
writer ever witrieseed, are ' worth v of
generous praise. . .: v
Seed Wheat, Feed Wheat,
Rolled Barley, Whole Barley,
Oats, Rye, Bran, Shorts,
Or anything in the Feed Line, goto the
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.
"Opening of fall and winter millinery
at Mrs. A. Schooling's on Thursday,"
Oct. 2d. : All are invited. e30-2t
. Awarded ;
Highest Honors World's Fair,
Gold Medal, Midwinter Fair.
GEORGE RUCH
. ' - '"- Successor to Chrisman Sc Corson.
'. FULL LINE OF
STAPLE and FANCY GROCERIES.
Again in business at the old stand. I would be pleased to
v see all my formet patrons. Free delivery to any part of town.
School
Books
Suppl
Night Out.
Populist presi
at the Baldwin
and indulgent
Bargains at pianoB
Book & Music Co.
at - the Jacobsen
Harry ' Watkins, a
dentlal elector, spoke
opera house to a Jaree
audience. Mr. Watkin is possessed of
considerable oratorical ability, lut is de
ficient, like all Populist haranguers, in
the essential regard of logic. v He drew a
beautiful picture of borne life,' in refined
::vr:..
IME2IPI
Most Perfect Made.
40 Years the Standard.
ies.
Jacobson Book & Music Co.
; . No. 174 Second Street,
New Vogt Block, The Dalles, Oregon.
I . W. ViLU S ES ,
-DEALER IN-,
PAIN TS, O I LS AN D GLASS.
' And the Most Complete and Latest Patterns and Designs iri
WALL PAPER; WALL. PAPER.
PRACTICAL PAINTER and' PAPER HANGER. None but the beat brands
of J. W. MASURY'S PAINT8 used in all our work, and none but the
most skilled workmen employed. Agents for Masury 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. 0reoi