The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, June 15, 1897, Image 3

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    ?! WARNING.
A Stylish
Jacket of Gape
FOR
We wouldn't be human if we didn't make mistakes.
We bought a large lot of Stylish Jackets and Capes because they were
cheap a few more than we could handle that was a mistake. Very low priced
originally, we shall now offer them until cleaned up at
Just Fifty Cents on the Dollar.
ALL GOODS MARKED IN
PLAIN FIGURES.
PEASE & MAYS
Our attention has been called to the advertisements of a Dalles firm, other
than our Agents, ottering Haker Barb Wire.
Pease & Mays have been our Exclusive Agents
At The Dalles for manv vears for the sale of our Baker Perfect Barb Wire.
Genuine Baker Wire Can be Bought Only of Them.
This Wire is manufactured under our patents; the name is copyrighted,
and our attorney is now preparing to bring suits against the manufacturer
of this spurious Wire, and we desire to give notice that nil,
SELLERS and PURCHASERS ALIKE, are LIABLE.
Cheap, undesirable articles of no morit are never imitated.
The great superiority of our wire has caused other wire to be stamped Baker.
You buy Baker Wive, not on account of the name, but because of the su
perior excellence of the wire which has boon tested to your entire satisfaction.
Then Purchase Your Wire of PEASE & MAYS,
Our Accredited Agents at The Dalles,
For no other firm there has or can secure Baker Porfeet Barb Wire.
205 Oregonian Bldg., Portland, Or,
BAKER DEPARTMENT,
CONSOLIDATED STEEL & WIRE CO.
H. J. McMANUS, Manager.
The Dalles Daily Chronicle.
TUESDAY.
- JUNE 15, 1897
WAYSIDE GLEANINGS.
I'.unrtom Onnervatinng and Local Events
of Lesser Magnitude.
Three carloadB of bogs were ebipped
toTroutdale this morning.
The Dalles City took a load of eheep
to Collins Landing this morning.
The fourth quarterly meeting of the
Methodist church will he held tonight.
' Max Vogt, Jr., left for Baker CityTh7sTarmval next Saturday evening in the
morning, where, we understand, he ex
pects to start a bowling alley. ...
Five, four and six-horse teams loaded
with merchandise pulled out for Gilliam
county points this morning.
Between IL',000 and 15,000 sheep will
he shipped to Dakota this week. They
have been brought up by a Mr. Wright.
Yesterday a train load of sheep went
out for White Earth, Dakota, carrying
away -1950 of Wasco county's wool grow
ers. Commencement exercises of the St.
Mary's Academy will be held Thursday
at 2:30 p. m. The invitations state that
children under 14 will not be admitted.
Seventeen carloads of sheep were
shipped to Chicago tliia morning, and
twenty-eight cars went out to Dakota
points. They were shipped by Wright.
A big Balmon run is reported on its
way up the river, and our fishermen are
anxiously awaiting its arrival. The
catch improves here steadily, but is yet
very light.
Mr. A. Urqulmrt, at present residing
in Portland, is in the city, representing
The Farmers' Market, and is trying to
get together a carload of cherries for
shipment.
At the recent meeting of the board of
examiners, Professor Aaron Frazier, of
Dufur, was recommended for a state life
certificate, which last week the state
board granted.
It costs bat 16 cents to hear the pro
gram and get a dish of ice cream tomor
tion before Justice Filloon yesterday
afternoon, and was held to await the ac
tion of the grand jury, with bonds fixed
at $300.
The recorder's office failed to furnish
an item today, other than this one, even
the hoboes have ceased to trouble. The
camping season is on, and the profes
sional tourists are enjoying their sum
mer outing.
A Michigan paper gives an account of
the sturgeon fisheries on Fox islands,
and the danger the
getting the big 30-pound fish landed.
Our Columbia river fishermen would
use a fish of that size for bait.
The Good Templars will have a Gypsy
Email K. ot l'. hall. This lodge nas a
..imputation of giving excellent socials,
and the committee intend making this
excel all others previously given.
The magnitude of the shipping in
terests and the stock interests of The
Dalles and vicinity may be judged from
the shipments made daily. Yesterday
twenty-eight carloadB of stock and today
forty-eight carloads were sent away.
Owing to several circumstances, the
moonlight excursion, which was to have
come off tonight, has been postponed.
The weather is unpropitious, and the
matter has not been sufficiently can
vassed to permit the excursion to come
off without it being a failure.
From the program received of the
Gladstone Park Chautauqua Assembly,
we note that MrB. Alice Hamill-Han-cock,
who formerly had a class in elocu
tion in this city, will again have charge
of that study this year. This will be ,
good news to those who attend from
this place, as she is a favorite.
The Snipes-Kinersly drugstore win
dows look like a Chrietmas ox 5today, or
the aftermath of a prize fight or any old
thing. The amount of advertising mat
ter stuckj in the windows is simply
immense, and besides all that, pills
warranted to find a fellows kidneys, if
he has any, are being given away.
Mr. Webber brought about twenty
horses over from Yakima county, arriv
ing here this morning. He will take
them to Portland either oy uoat or uy
collected this year, and the everlasting
delinquent roll put an end to.
yrpi. ii i .
S -iiie n-year-oiu son ot A. Arnold was
''thrown from a horse yesterday aftemoou
near his father's place on Cheuoweth
creek, and very seriously injured. One
arm and two ribs were broken, and he
was lmiirpfl intprrinlUv lint tn u-liof av.
. d M " V WW .fcV
tent is ag yet unknown. I Dr. llollister
reauceu me iractuiesrnrimade the little
fellow as comfortable as ciicumstanoes
would permit. Hie condition is danger-
fishermen run from ous, but he mav pull through.
The rain yesterday morning reached
the country south of us, watering it
well, the rainfall increasing in amount
as iar out as Tygh Kidge, where it was
quite heavy, the -water standing in the
roads when it was over. The Juniper
Flat section was the center of the
shower, which seemed to exhaust itself
before it crossed the Deschutes. Sher
man county got but little of it, but was
favored with a good shower last week
that passed over tie.
Mr. 13. S. Huntington is a gentleman
of excellent judgment. The other duy
he was about to purchase a iioree, but
out of an abuudance of caution, con
cluded to drive her first. The horse
traveled all right around town, and Mr.
Huntington concluded he would take
the horse he owned out to the pasture,
having made up his mind to make the
purchase. So he drove out, leading his
buggy horse, but when a couple of miles
from town the horse balked and would
not move a leg. The result was that
the old stand-by was put in the barnees,
and the proposed purchase was led home
behind the buggy. The sale was off.
The city election takes place next
Monday; but little interest seems to be
taken in it so far. The usual custom
has been to call a citizens' meeting
Thursday or Friday before election for
the purpose of nominating candidates,
which cuBtom will probably be observed
on the present occasion. We under-,
stand Mayor Menefe'e will not accep
that office again, and candidates do not
gram and get a dish of ice cream tomor- tbom oyer Barl(W rQad T,,e
row night at the Methodist church, fry ! ougbt tQ fae o disposition,
as they came from that portion of Ya
kima county kuown as "horse heaven."
Yesterday afternoon George Husted,
to be there, and thus assist the ladies
in their commendable work.
Commencing Thursday, June 17th,
the steamers of the Regulator Line will
change lime of leaving Portland and The (
Dalles as follows : Leave Portland 7 a.
m. and The Dalles 8:45 a. m
seem so numerous an they are for places
with more money in them. But one
name hae been mentioned for the place,
and that is Hon. W. II . Wilson. W'd do
not pretend to say that Mr. Wilson will
accept, for we do not know ; but others
mention him as the only available man,
Notice to Taxpayer. V
On and after July 1, 1897, costs will La
swlHwl trw ttt ettittf rf fill iuvua A tit
of Fossil, while unloading wool at one ; on de
of the warehouses, stepped on a Email . . . , , . ,. .
OJ ll IV niu"l i nnir In thn litlmlti nf th alioriir Thin In
: rock, turn nir h s right ank e, and break-,
rot, tumult mo I 'an imperative order from the county
in? the bones of the leg about two inchee t . ... , u . i
ingiun uuuMwm 'court, and the sheriff has no option but
to collect such taxes by levy ori property
The weather is not at all pleasant, ,lVlf..,rt u nr. Hollister reduced the
being windy and dusty, still it is just frflcture, and Husted last night expressed
what is needed for the wheat crop, and
60 is welcomed as heartily aa though it
were of a more comfortable variety.
A number of tickets tor the moon
light excursion, which was to have
taken place tonight, have been sold.
The excursion is only postponed for a
abort time, and the tickets will be good
then.
Shurtz, the man charged with stealing
S0 from Taylor Hill, had hie examiua-
his determination to start home today,
but this morning changed his mind and
will remain.
Commissioner Blowers was up from
Hood River last night, to advise with
Judge Mays concerning taxes. An alias
warrant for their collection was at
tached to the roll.and nothing further will
be done until the regular meeting of the
board. Taxpayers, however, can make
up their minds that the taxes are to be
if not paid voluntarily by property own
ers. All parties concerned are hereby
notified that no leniency will be shown
in the collection of taxes after July 1,
and that levy will be made on all prop
erty delinquent after that date.
T, J, Dm v eh,
j!4-td Sheriff of Waaco County.
English aud Belgian cement, very
best imported brands, for aale by Wasco
Warehouse Co. tayi-lm
Oplulon of Wood Ticks.
Sticking to the sagebrush, the grease
wootrond the natives m .Mauieur county
is a species of exodus albipictus, and by
people in a hurry culled wood ticks, says
a Eastern Oregon editor.
They are dipterous, with steel traps
their feet and a diamond-drilling ap
paratus attached to each palptiB. They
eometimes feed on dous, but prefer boys
and printers. They are without wings,
but can jump 300 feet, and when they
get beneath your pajamas, the damage
they do is not so much in what they eat
as what they tramp down. A wood tick
is not so large as a bull dog, but ho is
more to be dreaded than a book agent or
a Spanish mule. Some people, when
they find an exodus albipictus sticking
to them, take the bullet rnoldh and ruth
lessly tear away what there is in sight,
but this is not the correct way to do, as
it leaves the mandibles still in your
company, and a sore that will not quit
itching for mine yearB. The only proper
thing to do when yon find a wood tick
screwed (they are never nailed) to you
is to take a gold-headed needle, run It
into the tick at the point that offers
the least resistance, until it penetrates
the pons vuroliof the medulla oblongata,
then hold a lighted lucifer match to the
protruding part of the needle; this car
ries the heat to the aforesaid pons
varoli, which causes the tick to with
draw his corkscrew and also to get out
of business.
Drive Tliein Down.
Whatever else may be said of and
concerning The Dalles sidewalks, they
cannot be charged with having ingrow
ing nails. The measly spikes stick up
promiscuously, knocking the veneering
off the iew shoes and" the soles off the
old ones. It is not conducive to pleas
ure, nor an adjunct to good morals to
perambulate these aids to proficiency in
the art of profanity. When a lady htubs
one of her Trilbies on a projecting hand
spike and ruins a pair of fft shoes, and
before 6he recovers her equilibrium of
body or temper another spike reaches
up and catches on to the bottom of her
EkirtB and brings her to a dead halt, the
air is not redolent of profanity as it
would be were she a man, but the ago
nized look of utter disgust ut not being
permitted to give audible expression to
herJeelljigJrlejtbljcally touching.
The city council wourdil6 welITorfasH
an ordinance compelling property-owners
to drive down the measly nails.
One business man wanted in every
'city (not already taken) for exclusive
sale of manufactured goods. Applicant
must furnish few hundred dollars cash
capital to carry small stock of saleable
merchandise with which to supply his
own customers after orders are first se
cured. Two hundred dollar monthly
profit assured over all expenses. State
references, qualifications, etc.
F. E. Vaii,
186-140, Nassau St., New York.
junlO-Ct
Nebraska corn for sale at the Wasco
warehouse. Best feed on earth. m9-tf
Be Not Alarmed
Uy tho so-called "WARNING" of onr competitors. The threat
made to our customers is nothing more nor leas than a big bluff of a
would-be monopoly.
Our linker Hurbed Wire was purchased from one of the largest
concerns in the United States; u.icb spool is branded "Genuine Baker
Warranted," and wo invite comparison with any other maku of Wire.
Wo have bought nearly 100,000 poundH of this wlrn for SPOT
CASH, at tho right price, aud propose lo give our customers the benefit
of it. Wo nro not holding it for a fancy price, and claiming it to bo tho
best Wire on earth. It is worth no inoro than any other good Wire,
but is UN good as any, and wu nro tu)llug it as low as any. Comparu
our so-called "Spurious" Wire with tho ONLY linker IMCUFKCT, bu
fore buying! and gut our prices. Wo are making prices that should got
your trade.
MAYS & CROWE.
Baby Carriages
JUST ARRIVED AT THE
Jacobson Book & Music Co.
Whore will also bo found tbo largest and most com
plete lino of Pianos, ami other Musical Instruments
in Eastern Oregon.
Complete Line of FISHING TACKLE,
Ne5
Notions, Paso Hall Goods, Hammocks, Rooks and
Stationery at lied rock Prices.
Vogt Block, The Dalles, Oregon.
GEORGE RUCH
PIONEER GROCER.
(fiiicccuhor lo C'lirUiiian A Curvon,
1 FULL LINE OF
STAPLE and FANCY GhOUERIES.
Again in business ut the old stand.
mm all my former patrons.
I would Iim iil((iiH('(l tn
i'A'o delivery to any part of town.
Lumber, Building Material and Boxes
TradediorHay, Grain, Bacon, Lard, &c.
ROWE Sl CO.,
Tin Dalles Or