THE "ADSY WERE MIXED. S OPBJi iop t t 6 BUSIflESSI We wish to inform our customers that we now have our Departments in such shape that we can attend to the wants of all. t c t Although our extensive improvements are not completed, we are so situated as to make it comfort able for our patrons. OPEN fop ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. BUSINESS I d PEASE & MAYS, t The Dalles Daily Chronicle. SATURDAY, - - - - FEB. 27, 1897 TIME CARD FOR TRAVELERS. Below is published a correct time card ot trains and boats which leave and ar rive at The Dalles. Travelers may trust it, as The Chuonigxe is kept fully in formed of revisions : 1). P. & A. N. O. STEAMERS. Steamer Regulator leaves every Monday, Wed nesday and Friday at 7:vO n. in. Arrives every Tuesday, "Thursday and Satur day nt 5:S0 1. m. OREGON RAILWAY Ac NAVIGATION CO. fast mail. Arrive. Leave: No.l West-bound 4:15 a.m. 4:50 a.m. No.'J East-bound 10:15 a.m. 10:20 a.m. DALLES VASSENQF.lt. Xo. 7 West-bound, leaves . 1 :00 p.m. No. 8 East-bound, urrives 11:55 o.tn. All passenger trains stop at Union Street, us well as the depot. Advertising Kates. Per inch Duo inch or less in Bally U 50 Over two inches and under four inches 1 Over four inches and under twelve Inches. . p5 Over twelve inches DAILY AND WEEKLY. One inch or less, per iuch ?2 50 Over one inch and under four inches 2 00 Over four inches and under twelve inches.. 1 50 Over twelve Inches 1 00 WAYSIDE GLEANINGS. Kanaoui Observations anit (Local Evonts of Lesser Magnitude. "Is marriage a failure?" At the VogtHtj, time.ogo the writer of this arti arnli 9rl I . . j. j-,- -i March 2d. The weather forecast is rain tonight; fair and cooler tomorrow. The minstrel show will be given Monday, Marcn 8ch. It is going to be a hummer. Wanted Employment in general mer chandise or grocery store. Best of refer ences. Address H, Umatilla bouse. " Dr. Hines of Portland exchanges pul pits with Rev. J. H. Wood of this city next Sunday, both morning and evoning. Tho Herrin photograph gallery is re opened by Mr. H. E. Hammond. Strict ly first-class photos, turned out. Prices are very reasonable. 26-3t The Pay ton Comedy Company plays a five nights' engagement at the Vogt, commencing March 2d. Their opening bill will bo the roaring comedy, "Is Mar "aRo a Failure." iteserved seats are now on sale a Snipes-Kinersly drugstore, fqr the Pay lOH LOiuedv Gnmmnv tmrmunmfmt I . , n r n which opens March 2d for a five nights' engagement. Yesterday the city recorder had two men before him, charged with, being urmu end disorderly. They were fined w each, and are doing som,e mucb needed workJarJiMLclty.-- - JOB". A. Wllsnn an rl W A T.anmllA nn ... . " " """- weunesday measured the height of I water in the Columbia, and found it tog thorough steamboatman, will resume ue oo feet and 4.10th below the hlg wr mark of the flood of '94. And th V preienUtagiwater la not very low. Glacier. " The vote upon the question of bond afternoon, but the result was not known at the hour of going to press. From conversation with voters, we judge there is no doubt but that the bonding propo sition will carry. J This morning a d. and d. was before the city recorder. It seems that a diy or so ago the same man was up on a similar charge and let go with a limit fine. Last night when arrested he threatened to whip the officer, but as pe did not do it, the recorder very properly took his action into consideration in fix ing the fine, and gave him $15. M. A. Moody came down from The Dalles Saturday and was met here by W. Leadbetter, of the Oregonian, Thofi. Balfour of Lyle and W. A. Langille, and the party started for Cloud Cap Inn. They made the trip on snow Bhoes from Hood river. Tho party returned from the mountain on Monday and reported a very eniovable trip. Glacier. A lodge of the Rebekah degree, I. O. V -k rf l . l ffc.f I i -. : 1 . I L j. r., was organizeuni Auiuriiiai ii.ui, Dr. O. D. Doane, deputy district grand master, officiating. This lodge takes the name of "Star, No. 24," and has the fol lowing officers: Noble Grand, Mrs. Cynthia Heisler; Vice Grand, Mrs. Arabelle H. Slusher; secretary, Mrs. Edith Peabody ; financial secretary, Mrs. Lois Balch: treasurer Miss Anna Dufur. The lodge meets Wednesday evening of each week. This wasn't ground-dog day, bat Billy 'Hoering had one on exhibition at the Umatilla house at noon, just the same. It managed to crawl into a pile of wood on the sidewalk, and uite a crowd! soon gathered to superintend the get-fl ting of it out. There vfas n wire around! its neck, and one paty was trying tol pull it out by thiswhile another bad! managed from thar other side of the! wood pile to grsp the unsuepectingi chuck bv the tail Each nartv thought he could pull Kim out, but as bothO pulled at once they only succeeded in causing the unfortunate animal to prof test atthe top of his lungs. When the tail-ender letgo, the beast came out in a hurry, preferjing the ills he knew nqt of to those he had, and was soon can I away to be kept in captivity. dayj cle was requested to deliver a lecture in the Congregational church upon the sub ject of "The Hatching of the Sage Hen." He immediately began the search for some sage-ben eggs warranted to batch, and has been incubating at odd momenta ever since. He will come off the nest next Tuesday night at the Congrega tional church at 8 o'clock, bringing his brood with him, and if you are there you will hear him either cackle or cluck, he isn't sure which ; but he wisely re serves the right to retain possession of the spoiled eggs, if any, until the audi ence has dispersed. Steamer Ealles City Again Heady to Busluess. After several weeks on the ways, the DaIIbs Cltv is aeainin the water. The steamer has been thoroughly over hauled from stem to Btern, and goes into service again in much better shape than she was in, at the time she was sunk, during tho freeze-up last winter. It will require several days yet to com plete her equipment, but she will prob ably be on the route next week. As soon as sho is ready for service, the .Reg ulator will be laid up for a few days to undergo some necessary repairs, on completion of which both boats will be SJ operated on a daily schedule. Captain William Jounsione, a very popular umu with the traveling public, as well as a tnOrOUgll BVOUUiuuBiiimu, nm i"' I . - I r, j command of the Dalles City, and the f hether Schilling S Best Roffnlatnr will continue in command of tea B"wf??f. her m-esent master, .Captain Waud, who If ndnlc has the honor of being the first man toare good enough for VOU. bring a steamboat fromTheDaJlaa-'Wl M He Hail n I'ull. The "Evenings With Dickens" enter- ainment closed last night, the program being a very good one, and there being less noise and confusion than on the preceding night. The quartette was fine, and most of the scenes were well put on. The attendance was not. so large as on the first night, but the scenes were, if anything, better. There has been so much in the way of entertain ments lately that the public is getting somewhat tired, and yet every night for the next week or more will have some kind of a Bhow. The "Evenings With Dickens" required an immense amount of work, and certainly the exercise of un limited patience on the part of Mr. Ernst. Fined Fifty LtolUra. . Ed. Marshal, a gentleman of leisure, was arrested night before last charged with vagrancy. Being taken before the city recorder, he demanded a jury trial, which was given him. He conducted his own case, and did it so successfully that the jury was out only a minute, when it returned with a verdict of guilty. Marshal was then fined $50 and costs, and given the privilege of working out his fine on the streets or leaving town never to return. Last night he con cluded he would accept the latter alter native, and we are perhaps rid of him for some time. ciuu uruugcii. Mr. Joseph Knebel presented us a uple of orangee this morning grown by pt. Anlauf, formerly of this city, in ntura county, California. The widen apples of Hesperldes were not handsom er, and for size they wer? almost, equal t( the average muskmelon. Mr. Knebel t lis us seventy of them filled a crate, a story we can readily believe when we gi ze at the single-standard beauties. Costs nothing to find out For sale by Salvation Army Improved on the Pouter of the Clrcaa. Last year one of the big circuses ex perienced considerable annoynncq throughout central Indiana because of the wnrfnre waged against it by tho Salvation Army. Tho Salvationists met the circus men on their own ground and declared war by pasting tiny strips of paper, bearing scriptural texts and iu ligious warnings, upon the circus bill board displays. Some ot these Salva tionist warnings were startling, and in conjunction with tho show's lithographs produced effects never before drennicd of, always incongruous and striking and often apparently blasphemous. The trouble began at Munclo. A member of the Salvation army at that point, seeing popular attention directed toward tho circus billboards, decided that they furnished a medium by which to introduce his scriptural texts to the public. Within tho next half hour these circus displays were completely metamorphosed. Tho picture of an aeronaut falling in a parachute from a balloon bore the inscription, "Sinner, you are bound for hell. Go tho other way." The long neck of the giraffe was labeled, "The straight and narrow way is best." A small negro boy was pictured as gazing, horror stricken, into the open mouth of a hippopotamus, and across its cavernous expanse were the words, "Prepare to meet thy God." The snake charmer, wrapped in the folds of a monster serpent, was admon ished to "Shun the deadly cup; it stingeth like an adder." An ucrobat, turning a somersault in midair, appar ently grasped in his hand the question, "Where will you spend your eternity?" and the tights of a woman trapeze per former were decorated with the. state ment that "God sees everything." Tho lion tamer, in a cage with seveial beasts, which apparently were about to make a meal of him, was admonished to "watch and pray," and the "human cannon ball" being fired from a huge cannon was confronted by the question, "Where are you going to heaven or to hell? It is safe to say that no circus bills ever attracted more general attention or caused more comment. A CAR-LOAD OF TJGGIES BUGGIES JUST EECEIVED at MAYS & CROWE. Ceclle Knssell's Criticism of the ltelKUn - VloliuUt. Herr Walther's playing is remarkable in this instance; that from the moment he first draws the bow across his instru ment, he holds his audience with him spell bound. One Bees the jntense ex pression of his playing never falls to carry his audience into realms of fancy and delight, which only ceases as some exquisite melody dies away into silence, to awaken an endless and deafening ap plause. His tone is unique in its purity and breadth, never losing even in the most intricate passages, that accuracy of intonation, so very rarely found to per fection. Having heard an artist such as Herr Carl Walther one comes away filled with intense enthusiasm for the divine art, admiring almost as much as the noble gift of melody, the dignified bearing and romantic appearance of this Belgian violinist. Herr Walther is certainly a player of the romantic school rather than the purely technical though that he ap pteciates the works of the old masters was well shown by the rendering of tho Clecoune of Back, and one or two de lightful bits by Corelli. With the Hext Company, at tho Vogt Monday night. Tliuuk You. The committee in charge of "Even ings with Dickens" wish to sincerely thank those who bo kindly assisted in making tho entertainments successful. F. A. Eunst, MltS. G. C. EsiIEIiMAN, Mas. C. E. Bayakd, Miss Rowland. Dalles-Moro Htuge Leaves the Umatilla house 8 n. in. Tuesdays, Thursdays und Saturdays. Douolah Aj.li:.v, Prop. FreBh lot of Tillamook butter just ar rived at Maier & Benton's. Remember. We have strictly First-class FIR, OAK and MAPLE WOOD To sell at LOWEST MARKET RATES Phone 25. JOS. T. PETERS & ' CO Jefyool BooIs, Stationery, xl MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS, tx AT Jacobson Book & Music Co. No. 174 Second Street, New Vogt Block, The Dalles, Oregon. Northern Grown Seeds. Fresh Garden and Grass Seeds in Bulk, Seed Wheat, Heed Hye, Seed Oats. Reed Barley, Seed Corn, Flax Seed. Alfalfa Seed, Timothv Seed. Red Clover Soed, Millet Seed. Crimson Clover Seed, Blue Grass Seed. White Clover Seed, Orchard Grass Seed. Ileu Supplies, Fertilizers, Oil Meal Cake. Hay. Grain, Feed and Groceries, Early Uoeo Potatoes. Poultry and Egs bought and sold at J. H. GROSS' Feed and Grocery Store. Goods Sold nt Bedrock Prices for Cash. Store open from 7 a. in. to 9 p. m. GEORGE RUCH PIONEER GROCER HiiccuMior to (JlitlBiuun & C'orxon, " FULL LINE OF STAPLE and FANCY GROCERIES. Again in business at the old stand. I would b pleased to see all my former patrons. Free delivery to any part of town. Job Printing at This Office. the VOGT OPERA HOUSE Monday Evening. March 1st. H EXT CONCERT COMPANY EPFIE ELAINE HEXT, A most Realistic Expressionist. A Great Variety of Readings from Modern Authors. Statuesque Posing in Grecian Costume. Forty-five Human Emotions Perfeotly Expressed. REGINALD HEXT, Ib one of the Most Soulful Interpreters of the Great Masters before the public, TICKETS 76o and $1.00, Reserved seats now on sale at Snipes-Kinersly Drug Company, as ng the district was voted upon thii Portland via the lockB.-fOregoni W. E. Kahler