The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, July 07, 1897, Image 3

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    The Delft"
WE GUARANTEE OTJR J:
St
Split.
Need
Anti-Rust Tinware
k
Not to Rust, and we will Replace
Free of Charge
i
If yon do, we invite your attention to
Our Special Sale
o
t
t
t
Mill !$MWiH$ 1
fi.5i ufom &s m m I
mmmmi
Mwmmm&m
111
mm ft
mm
i m
1 f I
illW
mm
gg Iftiisl ill
BBlillill!
for the balance
of this week.
Fancy Bosom Shirts.
Our regular $1.25 line for .7 $1.00
Negligee Shirts.
Our regular $1.00 Laundered for .......
Our regular 1.25 Laundered tor
Our regular 1.50 Laundered for
Our regular 1.75 Laundered for
With or without Collar.
Our regular $1.00 Unlaundered for
Our regular 1.25 Unlaundered for
Our regular 1.50 Unlaundered for
Our regular 1.75 Unlaundered for
Our regular 2.00 Unlaundered for
Our regular 2.50 Unlaundered for
With Collar.
Pongee Shirts.
Our regular $3.00 line for
Jee Display ir; purr)i8l?ir) (Joods Uipdou.
...$ .75
. . 1.00
. . . 1.25
... 1.50
..$ .75
. 1.00
. 1.25
. . 1.50
. 1.75
.. 2.00
.$2.50
ALL GOODS MARKED IN
PLAIN FIGURES.
PEASE & MAYS
The Dalles Daily Chronicle.
WEDNESDAY.
JULY 7. 1897
WAYSIDE GLEANINGS.
Random Observations and Local Events
of Lesser Magnitude.
The weather forecast for Thursday is
lair and warmer.
The stock shipments are falling off
materially, today there being bat one
carload of cattle, which was shipped to j
Trontdale.
Justice Filloon yesterday joined in the
bonds of matrimony Henry H, Maxwell
of Sherman county to Miss Isabel Noyes
of Wasco county.
Alma Howe was today granted a di
vorce. Judge Bradshaw had the case
under advisement for several weeks, but
filed his decision today. .
Commissioners' court met today, the
list of bills is long, and will probably
occupy the attention of the county's
represehtatives until Saturday night.
Up on Burnt river there was a hail
storm July 2d that was evidently of the
Kansas variety. It destroyed crops,
broke windows and killed sheep and
hogs.
The Golden Rule hotel at La Grande
waB burned Monday night. There was
an insurance of $3500 on the building,
and $1000 on the furniture, which will
cover about half the loss.
E. E. Lytle is at Biggs pushing the
Columbia Southern railroad proposition.
The intention is to have the road finished
in time to move the grain crop of '97,
which is to be a 2,000,000 bushel job.
We call attention to the advertisement
in another column of proposals for
school building of The Dalles High
School.' Plans and specifications can be
seen at the office of C. J. Crandall.
A band of sheep that were being driv
en to the Cayon creek range, back of
Strawberry, in Grant county, ate some
poisonous weed just before reaching the
range and several hundred of them ; died
on the hillside.
The wool buyers and the wool sellers
are still on opposite sides of the street,
and looking cross eyed at each other.
Prices range from 10 to 10 cents, but it
looks as though one party was afraid to
bid and the other to accept.
Miss May Ennght desires to state that
she has information concerning a cer
tain tenor.singer who has a voice like an
angel and who is a fortune to the mana
ger who secures him. Inquiries left at
this office will receive prompt replies.
Rev. B. C. Roberts has ' circulated a
petition among business men and others
in Waterville, announcing that it is
their desire that saloons comply with
the law and shut up, like other business
places, on ' Sunday. He has secured
quite a number of signers to the petition.
The celebration of the Fourth began
on the Umatilla reservation Monday,
and will last six days. There will be
present representative braves from many
tribes in Oregon, Washington and Idaho
and Peo estimates the number who will
ride in procession will reach at least
1000.
The Oregonian yesterday morning
says that but one accident occurred at
Astoria on the Fourth, and that hap
pened to our old townsman, Balfe John
son, who sacrificed one of his thumbs to
his patriotism. He was setting off fire
works in the evening, when one of the
pieces exploded.
Mr. Wilcox, of Eagle Creek, missed
one of his cows a few days ago, and
when he finally found her, he discovered
that she had adopted a young fawn, and
was taking proper care of it. A few
days later she gave birth to a calf, and
now the calf and fawn receive the same
motherly attention.
Mr. Ed Williams and party, who re
turned from Cloud Cap Inn yesterday, re
port having bad a lovely trip. The
ascent of the mountain was not at
tempted on account of the severe snow
storm, which Mr. Langille says is unu
sual for this time of the year. Quite a
number of guests are at the Inn.
At a meeting in Spokane last Satur
day night of the board of directors of the
Le Roi Mining Company, a dividend was
declared of $25,000, payable July 6.
This is the 16th dividend, the 15th hav
ing been paid last Wednesday. Anothe
will be paid this month. The total
dividends paid aggregate $450,000.
Another idiotic exhibition of shooting
backward with a rifle at a woman, the
aim taken from a looking-glass, has
proved fatal, this time at Berlin. An
expert named Kruger, after shooting va
rious objects from the hands and
shoulders of his ' sister, put a bullet
head in the presence of
through her
4000 persons.
Company
prize in the
D of La Grande won the
competitive drill at Hood
River Saturday. It is suggestive at 'east
that Company D won the prize at The
Dalles at the last encampment, and at
that time the company was located at
Hood River. It is according to the
eternal fitness of things that the old
company should win honors on its native
heath.
The Wasco County Teachers' Insti
tute begins next Monday and will con
tinue until August 7th. The program
has been made with the idea of making
those attending get - in and work, and
with Superintendent Gilbert and Profs.
Gavin and Landers in charge, "the insti
tute will prove the most, interesting one
ever held here.
There was in Ashland Monday night
the largest crowd of Christian Endeavor
workers ever gathered in that part of
the state, including about 200 excursion
ists, who arrived by special train from
Portland after a delightful daylight trip
through the Willamette, Umpqua and
Rogue river valleys.- Tne excursionists
were unanimous in saying that the - day
has been an enjoyable one throughout.
1 The clouds raked the hills about Ore
gon City yesterday and deposited their
needless moisture in showers that in
creased in frequency and copiousness as
the day advanced. A little before 2
o'clock p. m. a hailstorm visited Oregon
City, the hailstones being as large as
bullets, and coming with a torrent of
rain, that made canals of the streets
while it lasted. This storm missed
Gladstone park, where the celebration
was in progress, but it continued' on
down the Willamette to Portland.
The scale of prices for wool has been
gradually climbing up since the first of
this season's clip began coming in, says
the Pendleton Tribune. The opening
price was 6 cents, and a fraction has
been added to that price with almost
every sale. Several small lots were sold
in Pendleton Friday' for 8 and 9 cents,
and Saturday W. J. Furnish sold al
together 200,000 pounds, the price being
from 8 to 10 cents. ' The buyers were
Charles Green, representing Koshland
& Co., and Jacob W oolner, of San Fran
cisco, each getting about 100,000 pounds
A distressing accident occurred on the
Lower Columbia river Sunday night, re
sulting in the drowning of the 13-year-old
eon of John Lungdren. The man
and the boy were drifting off Tongue
Point, when the tug boat Fannie, with a
ship and barge in tow, loomed up in the
darkness. Lungdren holloed to the tug
with all his might, and pulled out of the
way as far as he could. He did not see
the scow until it was upon him, and so,
to his horror, his boy was struck and
disappeared beneath the scow. The
boat was overturned and Lungdren , by
accident, caught one of the guy lines of
the barge and climbed upon the barge,
hoping in some way to save the child
The Fannie lay to all night and put
back to the cannery and landed the
fisherman there Monday morning.
Proposals for School Building:.
Sealed proposals will be received until
noon of Tuesday, August 3, 1897, at the
office of Dr. O. D. Doane, The Dalles,
Or., for the erection and completion of
the foundation of the proposed High
School Building for school district No.
12, of Wasco county, Oregon ; also bids
for the construction and completion of
the superstructure of said building.
A certified check for 10 per cent of
the amount of each bid' must accom
pany the bid. Plana and ' specifications
can be seen at the office of C. J. Cran
dall, The Dalles. Or.
The Board of Directors reserve the
right to reject any and all bids.
O. D. Doane,
Chairman of the Board of Directors.
The Dalles, Or., July 7, 1897. lw
Xotlce to Water Consumers.
The hours for irrigating are from 6 to
8 a. m. and 6 to 8 p. m. every even day
under the bluff and every : odd day on
the bluff. I ask every water' consumer
to strictly observe these rules from
now on. I. J. Norm an,
jy7-lw Supt.
Hundreds of thousands have been in
duced to try Chamberlain's Cough Rem
edy by reading what' it' has done for
others, and having tested its merits for
themselves are today its warmest friends.
For sale by Blakeley & Houghton!
Enameled
Ware.
Mixed Blue and White out
side and White inside.
"The Delft" is the latest
ware out in cooking utensils.
Prices are about the same as
granite ware, and a great deal
cheaper than the aluminum
waro, and prettier than either
of them. Call and see the
goods at
MAIER& BENTON'S
167 Second Street.
A Mining- Giant Adrift.
At the Grant Brothers' mine, on the
north fork of the John Day river, ten
miles west of Granite, one of the giants
got' adrift the other day, and began
throwing its stream of water eight
inches in diameter in a circle. B. F,
Grant ran to set the machine, but was
hurled aside like a bit of paper. A
miner named Berry sprang at the giant,
and his arm was broken in two places.
But this brave action no doubt saved
several lives. The mighty bolt of water,
eight inches in diameter, swung in every
direction. One of Mr. (jrant a sons, a
lad of 14 years, was sitting on a bowlder
about 100 feet distant, and when the
water struck it threw him ten feet in the
air. When the lad fell, be struck on his
head among some ragged rocks, sorely
bruising bis face and narrowly missed
destroying one of his eyes. The men
were rolled and crushed against the
banks and rocks, six of them being
badly bruised and cut. A young miner
named Montgomery had his shoulder
dislocated, being injured so he will not
be able to work for at least six weeks
An idea of the danger may be gleaned
from the fact that this bolt of eight
inches in thickness, considerably larger
than the thickness of a common stove
pipe, was hurled front a pressure of
about 160 feet fall.
PERSONAL, MENTION.
on the
Jos. T. Peters & Go.
' :
DEALERS IN
Agricultural Implements, Champion
Mowers and Reapers, Craven Headers, Bain
Wagons, Randolph Headers , and ; Reapers.
Drapers, Lubricating Oils, Axle Grease,
Blacksmith Coal and Iron. :
Agents i or Waukegan Barb Wire.
2nd Street, Cor. Jefferson, THE DALLES.
Ferd Dietzel was a passenger
boat last evening.
C. M. Cartwright is in the city, and
he has wool to sell.
Ray Logan was a passenger on the
Regulator yesterday,
H. H. Mathney of Salem is a guest of
his couBin, Dave Garrison.
H. W. Wells is in the city looking
askance at all tne wool buyers.
Miss Tina Rinton! spent the Fourth
in Portland, returning last night.
Misses Bertha and Edna Glenn came
up from Portland on the boat yeBterday,
Thomas Purdy, who has been in Port
land for several days, arrived home to
day.
Mr. J. Ii. Miller, who has been in
Portland for a few days, came home yes
terday.
Misses Chriutne, Clara and Julia
Nickelsen returned from Hood River
last night.
Mrs. Marquiss and daughter, Mrs. A
Urquhart. came up from the metropolis
last evening.
H. H. Walker, of the hospital corps
O. N. G., is in the city on his way horn
from the celebration.
Mrs. O'Learv is in the city, coming to
meet her son, Bert, who has been taking
the medical course at Ann Arbor,
D. M. French and family and Smith
French and family were passengers on
the boat this morning, bound for the
seaside.
Mrs. . Truman Bntler and Miss Carrie
Butler, who have been visiting in Cen-
tralia. and Miss Nellie Butler, who has
been, in Portland for a month, returned
borne last night.
Soap' Foam'
compounds.'
excels all other washing
a2-3m
Subscribe for The Chbonicxk.
Any piece that does. This is the cheapest
and best Tinware to buy. Sold only by .
MAYS & CROWE.
Fire .
Works
t i T-m i o " jt
j acobson jdook cz iviusic o.
Flags, Rockets, Torpedoes, Roman Candles, Bombs
and Fire-crackers. Large Assortment. Prices
the lowest.
Mall orders promptly attended to.
New Vogt Block, The Danes, Oregon.
Uasco Warehouse Gompany
Headquar t ers for Seed Grain- of ail kinds.
Headquarters for Feed Grain of an kinds.
Headquarters for Rolled Grain; ail kinds.
Headquarters for Bran. Shorts, rMtED
Headquarters for "Byers' Best" Pendle-
"C1! on TV This Flour is manufactured expressly for family
-- I " use; every sack is guaranteed to give satisfaction.
We sell onr coods lower than an v house in the trade, and if yon don't think bo
call and get our prices and be convinced.
Highest Prices Paid for Wheat, Barley and Oats.
GEORGE RUCH
PIQN JEER GROCER-
Successor to Cbrlaman & Corson.
' FULL LINE OF
STAPLE and FANCY GROCERIES.
Again in business at the old stand. I wonld be pleased to
see all my former patrons. Free delivery to any part of town. .
NEW SPRING GOODS
NEW SPRING GOODS
JUST ARRIVED
JUST ARRIVED
G. F. STEPHENS: