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

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2
9
HOW
COMFORTABLE
THEY MAKE
HOME LIFE.
What a conspicuous place Wrappers occupy
in eyery lady's "wardrobe.
For SATURDAY Only,
We shall offer our celebrated line of
Heswyca Wrappers.
$ .75 Wrappers for $ .55
1.00 " " 70
1.25 " " 90
1.50 " " 1.20
2.00 " " 1.50
2.25 " " 1.70
2.50 "K " 1.90
For SATURDAY Only,
As a
Special Inducement
to close,
We shall offer the last of our
Regular $1.25 Percale Wrappers
for 50 Cents.
o
9
ALL GOODS MARKED IN
PLAIN FIGURES.
PEASE & MAYS 3
O
The Dalles Daily Chronicle.
THURSDAY.
JULY 15, 1897
WAYSIDE GLEANINGS.
Random OD.erT.tion. mncl I.oc.1 Kventi
of Lesser Magnitude.
Weather Tonight fair; Friday and
Saturday, fair, warmer.
The ladies of the Christian church will
give a lawn social on Friday evening,
July 16th, at the residence of Mrs. James
in the old Gilhoaeen place. Ice cream
and cake 10 cents.
The first trainload of Christian En
deavorers on their way home from San
Francisco, reached Portland Tuesday.
There were 450 of them, and the second
train arriving the same day' swelling the
number to 1150.
Reports from the lower river are that
the run of salmon is a good one and the
catch large. Here nothing is being done,
but it is hoped, now that the water is
falling and getting clear, that next week
the run will reach this point.
The corner-stone of the neif Lutheran
church, on . Union street will be laid
next Sunday at 4 p. m. The Revs! J.
DeForeat, W. C. Curtiyand L. Grey will
officiate. The musical part of the pro
gram will be fine, All are cordially in
vited to attend.
Rev. C. H. Maxson, pastor of the Mich
igan Avenue Baptist church, Rev. J. C.
Adair, pastor of the Grace Congregation
al church, and Mr. L. A. Burroughs,
cashier of Burroughs bank, all of Sagi
naw, Michigan,' will be the guests of
Rev. O. D. Taylor Monday
Monday the Oregon Mazam&s leave
Portland for Tacoma, where after having
a regular jollification the narty will start
for Mt. Ranier, which they will under
take to climb. They wfl! find that Mts.
Hood and Adams, compared to it, were,
in the language of he day, "puddings
Mr.
extended visit through Sherman county,
and is deeply impressed with the suita
bleness of that section for fruit-raising.
He thinks all that is required is good
judgment in selecting a place for an or
chard and that success will be assured.
He was astonished at some of the or
chards be saw, and came home with
quite a different idea of that section a
an orchard country from what he wht
there with.
A gang of about 30 gypsies are en
camped just outside of the city limits,
and there they will probably stay, or at
least that is as near town as they will
come. The city marshal notified them
that if they came into the town begging
and telling fortunes be would arrest
them, and that settles them. Their
leader stated he only wanted to remain
near towji long enough to get a wagon
repaired; when they would move on.
The gang is on the way to Colorado.hav
ing left the main company, which is on
its, way to California
people, will arrive here on the 23d and
will be the guests of Rev. O. D. Taylor.
The party comes to study the country,
and will remain several dayj&e water
power at Celllo will receivM;heir atten
tion, and they will also examine into the
fruit and other industries. Rev. Grant
will deliver a lecture while here, it being
the same which he is advertised to give
before the Chautauqua at Gladstone Park
Sunday, the 24th. The subject is, "The
Evolution of a Great General ; or, Two
Years With U. S. Grant."
BURNED TO DEATH.
San Francifco Markets.
Trading in wheat continues to be slow.
Buyers bid lower, owing to the state of
the English market. Very little new
wheat has been forwarded to tide-water,
holders being willing to hold back sup
plies until the season is further ad
vanced. Exporters seem to prefer oper
ating in new to old stock, and the in
quiry is decidedly in favor of the former.
The new season starts in with a compar
atively small amount of engaged ton
nage, which would indicate that the
earlier months will develop a slow
movement, and that the position of the
ade is a halting one. Exporters evince
aj cautious disposition, as if to anticipate
yants as little as possible, and that
there will be less of a speculative char-
uierxo ueaung ana more oi a legitimate
mess, based on a fair profit and
qnick sales. At the Produce Exchange
the feeling was very conservative, and
operations largely guided by the situa
tion abroad, to the neglect of local con
ditions. Quotations No. 1 shipping,
$1.22g ; milling, $1.251.30 per cental.
Oil In Alaska.
a
I i
. bus
What is said to be the greatest oil dis
covery ever made is reported from Alas
ka. Some gold prospectors several
months ago ran across what seemed to
be a lake of oil. The lake was fed by in
numerable springs, and the surrounding
mountains were full of coal. They
Emil Schanno last week made an .....
i piuvou lit iu uw ui as uigo graue as any
ever taken out of Pennsylvania wells.
A local company was formed and experts
sent up. They returned Saturday on
the Topeka, and their report has more
than borne out the frret reports. It is
said there is enough oil and coal in the
discovery to supply the world. It is
clos-fco the ocean ; in fact, the experts
say that the oil oozes out into the salt
water. It is said that the Standard Oil
company bas already made an offer for
the property. The owners have filed on
8800 acres, and are naturally very much
ex J ted over their prospective fortune.
By existing arrangements with the
publishers of the Weekly Oregonian, we
are enabled to club that excellent paper
with the Twice-a-Week Chronicle at
the low rate of $2.25 per year. Now is
the time to send. in your names.
Two Children Itse Their Lives Three
Had a Very Narrow Escape.
by a party of 18 Harvard and Concord For sale by Blakeley & Houghton.
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
Roland D. Grant, D. D., accompanTeijjlhemselves are today its warmest friends.
A blazing cottage, the charred remains
of her two youngest children showing
through the smoke and flame as the roof
fell in, her three other children suffering
from burns, standing ' in their night
clothing, sobbing and wringing their
hands in dismayed agony over the fate
that bad overtaken their two youngest
brothers, such was the scene presented
to Widow Besseeen, of Linnton, as at
midnight last night she left a neighbor's
house and reached her own.
The widow Bessenen's home is not at
Linnton proper, but some two miles be
low on the river bank, near the Phillip
postoffice. Mrs. Bessesen had been in
vited to spend the evening at a neigh
bor's some 300 yards distant from her
own home, where a pleasant festivity in
commemoration of some event in the in
viting family's household was to be cele
brated. Affairs of this sort are rare in
the sparsely settled section of conntry of
which Phillip postoffice is the center,
and the widow accepted the invitation
with pleasure.
She is the mother of five children,
aged respectively 12, 9, 6, 4 and 2 years
of age. Carefully tucking the little ones
in their beds, shortly after 8 o'clock, she
started for the neighbor's bonse. antici
pating an evening of enjoyment, and be
lieving that her brood left at home would
as usual drop off into the dreamless sleep
of childhood and continue to slumber un
til her return.
The widow was mistaken. To cele
brate the Fourth of July the children
bad been supplied with firecrackers.
These bad not all been exploded on the
Fourth and what were left were stored
on the shelf of the pantry, much to the
chagrin of the children, who wished to
continue the shooting of the firecrackers
as long as one was left. The absence of
the mother gave them the opportunity.
Becoming assured that she had reached
the neighbor's house, the three elder
children stole out of bed and climbing to
the firecrackers, dragged them from the
pantry shelf and began exploding the
sqoibB in the kitchen. With the last
fuse lighted and the pop of the cracker
sounding, the children stole back into
bed and were soon asleep. Shortly be
fore midnight the eldest child, a boy of
12 years, was awakened by the room fill
ing with smoke. Half suffocated, and
gasping for breath, the lad tumbled from
bis bed and awakened the two children
nearest him. By this time the lad was
dizzy and faint, and dragging the chil
dren after bim, made his way toward the
kitchen door. As he reached the ball
the whole structure burst forth in flame,
and it was but by bis last effort that
young Bessenen managed to get his
brother and sister into the open air.
In the interior of the blazing structure
there yet remained the two baby boys,
4 and 2 years old. The eldest boy made
a desperate struggle to reach ' them
through the front of the cottage. He
was driven back by the flames ana
smoke, hie bands and face being badly
"The Delft"
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.
burned in the effort.
By this time the glare of the burning
borne bad lightened the windows ot the
neighbor's house wheie sat Widow Bes
sesen enjoying herself. In a moment
the place was emptied, the frantic widow
leading the race across the 300 yards of
road to her blazing cottage. She arrived
DBt in time to catch a view of her two
babies, lying on their cots, the angry
flames curling about them, and then the
roof fell in, burying them beneath a
mass of blazing rafters and shingles,
from which, when extracted, it is prob
able nothing but a few charred bones
will remain. Telegram.
Kirn's Body Found.
After hours of labor the body of Kirn,
the Albina grocer, who fell over the pre
cipice at Mt. Hood, was recovered Tues
day night. W. A. Langille and five
others were six hoars in getting the
body to the Inn. It lay in a very dan
gerous place, and .bad to be dragged at
the end of a rope for quite a distance,
before it could be picked up. It was
then carried for quite a distance on a
litter, and finally was put on a pack
horse. Had the body slid 40 feet farther
it would have gone into a deep crevasse,
from which it could not have been re
covered. Indeed ft was only owing to the big
heartedness and intrepidity of Will Lan
gille that the body was eyer found, for
he risked his life in following Kirn's
trail to where he plunged over the pre
cipice. In no other way could the body
have ever been found. Coroner Butts
held the inquest, from which it will be
seen that Kirn fell not 400, bat between
800 and 900 feet. The jury's verdict is
as follows :
Cloud Cap Inn, July 13, 1897.
We, the undersigned juror b, duly
sworn by W. H. Butts, coroner of Wasco
county, to examine the body and inquire
into the cause of the death of one Fred
erick Kern, do hereby find that the de
ceased came to bis death by falling from
a point 400 or 500 feet from the summit
of Mt. Hood, a distance of 800 or 900 feet
to the head of the Newton Clark Glacier,
the same being on the southeast side of
Mt. Hood. The body was found lying
face down on the snow, with both legs
and his neck broken and several bad
cuts on bis head. We also find deceased
to be a resident of Portland, Oregon, oc
cupation unknown.
Foreman, W. A; Langille,
D. R. Coopeb,
- S. B. Hess,
Geokge Perkins,
Bert Stranaran,
Bert Sandman.
Did Ton Ever.
Try Electric Bitters as a remedy for
yonr troubles? If not, get a bottle now
and get relief. This medicine bas been
found to be peculiarly adapted to the re
lief and cure of air Female Complaints,
exerting a wonderful direct influence in
giving strength and tone to the organs.
If yon have Loss of Appetite, Constipa
tion, Headache, Fainting Spells, or are
Nervous, Steepness, Excitable, Melan
choly or troubled with Dizzy Spells,
Electric Bitters in the medicine yon
need. Health and Strength are guaran
teed by its use. Large bottles only fifty
cents and $1.00 at Blakeley & Houghton,
Druggist. 3
"It Don't Seem Like
Same Old Smile."
the I
. Say husbands, you will not have occasion
to hum the above song, if you will come to
Mays & Crowe's and buy your wife one of
those elegant
BLUE FLAME OIL STOVES
The' will do the work of any Cast Iron
Stove or Steel Range, and just the thing for
warm weather. The universal verdict of
those who have tried them is, "We would
not be without it."
MAYS & CROWE.
Jos. T. Peters & Co.
-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 ior Waukegan Barb Wire.
2nd Street, Cor. Jefferson, . THE DALLES.
SPECIAL SALE!
PIANOS
and ORGANS,
For ONE WEEK ONLY at
Jacobson Book & Music Co.
Bed-Rock Pries and erms to suit purchaser.
New Vogt Block. The Dalles, Oregon,
GEORGE RUCH
PIONEER GROCER.
Successor to Cbrisman & 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.
NEW SUMMER GOODS
NEW SUMMER GOODS
JUST ARRIVED
JUST ARRIVED
C. F. STEPHENS.
Wasco Warehouse Company
Headquarters for Seed Grain of an kinds.
Headquarters for Feed Grain of ail kinds.
Headquarters for Rolled Grain, ail kinds.
Headquarters for Bran. Shorts, mTL'lf
Headquarters for "By ere' Best" Pendle-
fOYl fT'lfYlIT This Floor is manufactured expressly for family
w-' JJ. nse : every sack is guaranteed to give satisfaction.
We sell our goods lower than any bonse in tbe trade, and if you don't think so
call and get our prices and be convinced.
Highest Prices Paid for Wheat, Barley and Oats.