The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, November 12, 1896, Image 3

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SATURDAY'S ..SPECIAL!
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Black Skirts.
We would suggest a Fine Black Skirt for wear during our rainy-
season.
e have an excellent assortment of all the up-to-date things in
?ine English Percaline Umbrella Skirts, Double Warp Sateen
Skirts, the latest fabric for winter skirts.
NOTE THE PRICES...
English Percaline.. Regular $1.50 Sale Price $1.20
English Percaline Regular 2.00 Sale'Price 1.50
English Percaline Regular 2.25 Sale Price 1'70
Double Warp Sateen Regular 2.25 Sale Price 1.50
Double Warp Sateen Regular . 2.50 Sale Price 1.85
Double Warp Sateen Regular 3.00 Sale Price 2.10
Double Wa;p Sateen Regular 3.25 Sale Price 2.35
ALL GOODS MARKED IN
PLAIN FIGURES.
PEASE & M AYS
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Mr Tight
Heaters.
Air Tight Heaters
are the best and
most Economical
heaters made. Call
and See our
STOVES
and get our prices
before buying elsewhere.
MAIER & BENTON
The Dalles.
The Original Air-Tight Stove,
- 3-S
Hagey's
King Heater.
Take a look at them before you "buy something
else. They are all right.
Sold only by MAYS &, CROWE.
Rememb
We have strictly First-class
FIR, OAK and
MAPLE WOOD
To sell at LOWEST MARKET RATES.
Phone 25. JOS. T. PETERS & CO
Tlis Dalles Daily Chronicle.
THURSDAY.
NOV. 12, 1896
Weather forecast.
PORTLAND, NOV. 12, 1896.
For Eastern Oregon Tonight and tomor
row, rain, warmer.
Pious, Observer.
WAYSIDE GLEANINGS.
Random Observations and Local K vents
of Lesser Magnitude. .
Hot clam broth every day at noon at
AdKellar'e. tf
House to rent for $6 per month. In
quire of George Ruch. ' novl2-6t
Mr. Clark Danlap of Wasco, Sherman
county, ia in the city making final oroof
on bis railroads lands.
Furnished room for rent, with board
if desired. Address Mrs. C. Adams,
Jackson street. novl2-6t
Marsh and Joles will give a turkey
and pigeon shoot the day before Thanks
giving and on Thanksgiving day.
The Woodmen's Circle will meet at
. Fraternity hall tomorrow evening at 7
o'clock. All members are requested to
be present.
The result of the work of Mr. J. L.
Mitchell was the initiation of seven can
didates into the mysteries of the order
of Maccabees last night.
Mr. Wilbur Bolton of Antelope is in
the city. He reports the rain as having
been very heavy in that neighborhood,
and with it some snow fell.
The case of .Mrs. Urqnhart against C.
E, Jones is on trial today,' and as soon
as It is submitted, that of the State
againet Ed. Marshall will be called.
Mr. Eoff, who was thrown from a ca
boose near Arlington several days and
was brought here for medical aid, was
taken to Portland yesterday, his condi
tion becoming more serious.
The yonng ladies of the Methodist
church will sell pies, cakes and dough
nuts at the jatore formerly occupied by
Herbring on Second street. 'Sale will be
held on the 23d, 24th and 25th of thin
month. .
Mr. Clark Dunlap reports the rainfall
as being heavy in Sherman county, and
doing an immense amount of good. It
would have been better bad it come a
month ago, bat it is welcome in spite ot
its being late. .
The regulator quarterly examination
of teachers began Wednesday and will
conclude tomorrow. Tnere are but two
applicants instead of twenty or more as
is usual, this being caused by an over
supply of teachers and a weakness in
the demand. i " -"
HHon. W. C. Wills, member of the
. state board of eqnalizatipn, is in, the
city. He came in from Prineville in
order to examine into the assessments
of the counties of Eastern Oregon prior
to the meeting of the board, which takes
in December.
Last night a couple of cars loaded
with grain left the track at the crossing
of Washington street. They bad to be
unloaded before they could be got
ten back on the track, and the reBult
was that the east-bound passenger was
delayed here a couple of hours.
The" jury in the case of the State
against L. T. North accused of indecent
exposure, brought in a verdict of guilty
last night in twenty minutes after the
case had been submitted to them. Mr.
Fred W. Wilson assisted in the prosecu
tion, and as it was his first case in the
circuit court he is much more elated
over the result than the prisoner,'''
Mr. E. Jacobsen arrived home last
night, after a trip . through t3rant and
other coanties of SouthernOregon. At
Antelope one of his horses gaye out and
he left him with Wm Wiley, getting
another horse from him. At the same
time an agreement Was made that if
Bryan was elected, yjacobsen was to re
turn Wiley's horse" and leave his own,
but if McKinley jfron, Jacobsen was to
keep Wiley's horse and leave his own,
or in other words swap even.
Thanksgiving evening Wasco Tribe,
No 10, 1. O. R. M., will give an enter
tainment at the Vogt operaboaBe.
Among the other good, things on the
program will be an exhibition by Prof.
Reed, consisting of tricks legerde
main, and we believe, an exposi
tion of some of the phenomena per
taining to spiritualism. The Redmen
do with their might whatever they un
dertake, and hence it is already safe to
say the entertainment will be a success.
Rosa Bonheur leads the life of a re
cluse in her chateau in the depths of the
Forest of Fontainebleau, near Paris,
She secludes herself from all, and it was
with the greatest difficulty that the
editors of The Ladies' Home Journal
succeeded in getting a proposition be
fore her that she should write her
autobiography for that magazine. After
nearly a year's effort they were sue
cessful, and once started on her work
the great painter found so much interest
in it that she made over a dozen spe
cial studies and pictures of animals to
accompany the text. The autibiograph
ical article, with the valuable unpub
lished drawings, will appear in the
Christmas Journal, together with por
traits of Rosa Bonheur as she works in
her studio and home.
A Neat Device.
Mr. Milton Harlan, formerly of this
paper, has accepted a position as1 agent
for the Chautauqua "Drawing.-Board
and Writing Desk." This is an ingen
ions aevice lor instructing the yonng in
the art of drawing, the first lessons in
arithmetic, letters and the presentation
of objects to the eye in connection with
the name. It needs bnt to be seen by
those who have the care of youngsters
to be appreciated. " Mr. Harlan expects
to visit Dnfur and other inland points In
the near future, to introduce the desks,
and will no doubt meet with a hearty
welcome and abundant success.
After Many Tears.
Tuesday evening a gray-haired gentle
man approached mine host of the Uma
tilla and asked if he wis Col. Sinnott.
Being answered in the affirmative he
proceeded as follows : "Do you remem
ber of a robberv committed . here in
1863?"
"Yes," said the Col.
"Do you remember who was robbed
then?"
"Yes." .
"The man's name was Louis Daven
port, was it not?" ' - -
"Yes.",
"The amount taken was about $8000,
wasn't it?"
"Yes."
"Where is Davenport now?"
"He lives near Mosier," was the re
ply. ;'
"Well," proceeded the stranger, "I
have been looking the matter up for the
past two years, and I can say that one
of his herders got awav with that
money." .
"Yes," said the colonel, "What have
you been doing the other thirtv-one
years?" ,
There was no answer, and the man
walkedaway. - . .
The colonel gave us the substance of
the facts of the robbery as follows: "In
1863, when ,the train palled in from
Celilo, Louis Davenport, who was at
that time a packer, got off the cars car
rying in his hand his saddle pockets, in
which was stored $8,000 "in gold dust.
Meeting some friends, Davenport de
posited the saddle pockets on the side
walk while he shook - bands with them.
Reaching after his valuables a moment
later, they ' had disappeared and from
that time to this have never been heard
of." Just what caused the stranger to
take such an interest in this robbery a
generation after it occurred js what fB
mystuying tne colonel. It seems at
least to have made a very vivid impres
sion on his tnemory.
AnTJnique Bet and Its Barren Basalts
- Wanted.
Thin hogs or feeders. For further
particulars inquire of John Parrot.
Election bets are easily made, and as
the person backing his opinion generally
feels certain that he cannot lose, he is
sometimes easily induced to put to the
hazard and die of a wager some things
.that in his calmer moments he would
not gamble on. That some of these
foolish bets are paid speaks well of the
Honesty of the better, but at the same
time often exposes the .seeming lack of
gray matter in his upper story. It is
impossible, however, to estimate a man's
mental capacity by the kind of election
bet he makes, because, as we have said.
he never expects to be called npon to
nay it. -It is only by accident that
many of these stray and unique bets be
come public property.
' Such a bet was made, so we are told,
recently by our excellent fellow-towns
man, Mr. Harry B. Morse.- As the story
comes to us, and of course we do not
ouch for -its details, Mr. Morse, al
though; a Republican, it seems had some
doubts as to McKinley's election. These
doubts being expressed tub rota to a
Republican friend, were the cause of the
bet which yesterday evening Mr. Morse
paid. It appears that who ever should
lose the bet was to confess his lack of
judgment by having his hair shaved of
a la Bill Nye, and thus show by pro
ducing an artificial forehead, running
nearly back to his shirt collar, what he
apparently needed. This operation was
submitted to last evening by Mr. Morse,
and the uncommunicative tonsorial
artist only admitted to our reporter the
facts in the case, as soon as begot a
chance. The excuse was made that the
hair was falling out, but the sly wink of
an . ontsider put the barber on, and
hence the record of this mournful inci
dent. There is nothing but a bat now
between Mr. Morse and heaven, but be
keeps the obstruction in place steadily.
Hatless he looks like some venerable
monk (this word not abbreviated) intent
only on the salvation of his fellow-man,
or like Socrates just before he took his
last drink, when . with uplifted eyes be
made that immortal statement, "She do
move." .However, the hair will grow
and the memory of election bets pass
away, and we chronicle this one only
that our friend may be saved the-annoy-ance
of questions by sympathetic friends,
and prevent his being mistaken for the
Wyoming humorist, William Nye.
Junior Kntertainment.
Following is the program to be ren
dered by the Junior Endeavorers'at the
Christian church tomorrow evening:
Bong "Crowned with Roses" Junior Choir
Instrumental Solo Prudence Patterson
The Match Aov
Junior Art Gallery You Cad'kFind Me
Between ajovb ana uuiy
Recitation "Naming the Chickens". Josie Keller
Lecture "A Hard Road to TAvel"
Revj. Caesar Shinbones
Tableau. . Cinderella's Slipper"
) Iiowy's Doctor
Junior Art Gallery Tied Out
j rpiung uniioren to ttea
Recitation Selected... Mrs. M. E Brings
Crazy Medley . Topsy Turvy Club
Son? "Twilight is Stealing" Junior Choir
Recitation "Rnm ing a Race". . Blanche Miller
Sunshine or Shower
Junior Art Gallp ry-x Dressed for the Party
, I J The roung Artist
Rec. (musical acl TThe Drowning 8ineer. . .
Mr. ueorge .rneHi Stewart
Short Talk to the Juniors Rev. A. D. Skaggs
Mrs-. Jarley's Wri Works
The admission fee baa been placed at
15 cents. Come out and help the chil
dren. .
Awarded -Highest
ConorsWorld's Fair,
Gold Medal, Midwinter Fair.
The VOGT GRAND OPERA HOUSE,
Just One Week, Beginning
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9th.
JVIiss OHHIS OBER
And Her Eastern Company of 15 Artists,
In a New Play Each Night.
...... ..-.THURSDAY NIGHT... .........
MIXED FIGKI.ES."
MUA'UrQrr COMEDIES and DRAMAS,
IMIwVV lLO 1 SONGS and DANCES,
Electrical and Musical Specialties.
T 1 1 You
I LA You
1 I You
You want to Laugh
LOV9 MUSIC
Enjoy Good Comedy
GO
Prices,
10, 20 and 30c,
GEORGE RUCH
JP ION EERJGROCER
Successor to Chriaman & 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.
" T"v taw
CREAM
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Most Perfect Made. '
40 Years the Standard.
School Books
Supplies. -
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Jacobson Book & Music Co.
No. 174 Second Street,
New Vogt Block, The Dalles, Oregon.
Job Pointing at this Office