r s O 3 3 5' HOW COMFORTABLE MAKE LIFE. THEY HOME What a conspicuous place Wrappers occupy in every 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 " " 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. 3 2 o 3 ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. PEASE & MAYS O O Q "V yf, s-Q, tfmG, i vg-g. r r L O O The Dalles Daily Chronicle. FRIDAY. JULY 16, 1887 WAYSIDE GLEANINGS. Random ObserTations and Loci Events of Leaser Magnitude. Auction sale In front of Bayard's office Tomorrow (Saturday) afternoon At 1 :30 o'clock. Be there on time. Tonight and tomorrow fair; Sunday fair and warmer. This has been a dandy day for cool, and two for dust. B. B. Pague, the weather obeerver. last Tuesday said that Friday the wea ther would change to cloudy and cooler, and he certainly called the turn. To the program already published for the teachers' institnte, Composition, Bookkeeping, General History and Phy sical Geography have been added. Remember that Frazier's orchard, which will be. auctioned off tomorrow, is one ot the finest sites in or around The Dalles. Only twenty minutes walk from the courthouse. Six young Lutheran ministers, gradu ates from Saginaw, have arrived in Portland and will engage in missionary work, establishing new parishes in the Willamette valley. The Elite Candy factory has just put in a line new soda fountain, and is pre pared to furnish its customers soda-ice cream as well as soda, with the most de licious flavoring. Try one of its milk shakes. 2-16 tf Leon Rondeau came in from Tygh Val ley this morning. He states that he has wheat on his place 6 feet 5 inches high that is headed and filled perfectly. He says that section will thresh the biggest crop ever raised. there. 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. R. A. Millard was arrested yesterday morning, charged with indecent expos ure, and tried before City Recorder Sin nott yesterday afternoon. The recorder took the case under advisement, and this morning hsld the defendant under $200 bonds to the grand jury. The barbers have agreed to close their shops Sundays and have provided a pen alty for anyone of the profession violat ing the agreement to keenr his shop closed Sundays, the penally being no less than a wine supper for the balance of the fraternity. As vrfne suppers come high and shaving itheap, it is not at all likely the agreement will be violated. Mr. Hngh Glenn arrived from Goble last nigbt, bringing a railroad surveyor for the purpose of running out the lines for the proposed railroad from here to the Deschutes. The. object is to get an accurate knowledge of the altitudes and grades, and a rough estimate of the cost of building the road. The survey will be made both to the mouth of the Deschutes and up' that stream. By go ing to the mouth of the river the road would open the portage and make steam boating on the upper river possible. Signs of Prosperity. If the ability of a people to meet their pecuniary obligations is any evidence of their financial condition the predicted wave of prosperity has surely struck The Dalles with the force of a cyclone. Wool raisers are selling their clips freely at 10 to 12) cents a pound, whereas 12 months ago the same wool was scarcely considered sufficient security for the freight and advance charges necessary to carry it to Boston. Rumor has it that 60 cents a bushel is offered for wheat, to be delivered after threshing, with few or no takers. Said a leading banker of this city at the close of yesterday's business : "Our bank, during the eight banking hours of today, took in more money on old collections than we . have taken for the entire two years previous. In fact, money is piling up in the bank to such an extent that it won't be long till we won't know what to do with it." SHEEP ON RESERVES. Exceptions. They May tared in Oregon. Be Fas- Wild West Tournament. Mr. Harry Heikes, who was with Buf falo Bill for 10 years, is in the city and arranging for a wild west tournament, to be given at the fair grounds one week from Saturday. The entertainment is to include a parade in which there will be 300 Indians and. cowboys, many Warm Springs and Yakimas having vol unteered to take part. Several of the Indians who were with the Buffalo Bill wild west show are here and will take part. Among other things on the pro gramme will be the celebrated scene of an attack on a stage coach, the riding of bucking horses, Indian dances and games, an illustration of the rush to Oklahoma, and dozens of other things of this kind. No Shaving Sundays. We, the undersigned., wish to announce to the public that we will close onr re spective places of business on Sundays. H. D. Parkins, BSABDSLET & McCoY, Chas.G. Stacey, F. Drews, . Tom McCoy, Frazer & Lynch, M. Wareen, Jared S. Pintleh. A Great Bargain. From now on until all are sold, $50 will get a large-sized Chicago Cottage organ at Jacobsen Book & Music Co., The Dalles, Or. jyl6-tf "Last summer one of our grand chidren was sick with a severe bowel trouble," says Mrs. E. G. Gregory, of J Frederickstown, Mo. "Our doctor's remedy had failed, then we tried Cham berlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy which gave very epeedy relief. For sale by Blakeley and Houghton. The merchant who tells you he has something else as good as Hoe Cake soap is a good man to keep away from. a2-3m A pamphlet, entitled "Rules and Re gulations Governing Forest Reserves," issued by Binger Hermann, general dbm missioner of the land office, promulgat ing the rules and regulations created un der the act of congress of June 4, 1897, to insure the objects for which forest re serves were created, has just been re ceived by the local United States author ities. The following sections will be, of interest to sheep men and mining men : "The pasturing of livestock on the public lands in the foreet reservations will not be interfered with, so long as it appears that injury is not being done to the forest growth, and the rights of others are not thereby jeopardized. The pasturing of sheep is, . however, prohi bited in all forest reservations, except those in the reason that sheep-grazing has been found injurious to the forest cover, and therefore of serious conse quence in regions where the rainfall is limited. The exception in favor of the states of Oregon an Washington is made be cause the continous moisture and abund ant rainfall of the Cascade and Pacific coast ranges make rapid renewal of herb age and undergrowth possible. Owners of sheep are required to make applica tion to the commissioner of the general land office for permission to pasture, stating the number of sheep and the lo cation on the reservation where it is de sired to graze. Permission will be re fused or revoked whenever it shall ap pear that sheep are pastured on parts of the reserves specially liable to injury, or upon and in the vicinity of the Bull Run reserve, Crater Lake, Mount Hood, Mount Rainier, or other well-known places of public resort or reservoir sup ply. Permission will also cease upon proof of neglect as to the care of fires made by herders, or of the violation by them of any of the forest reserve regulations. "The law provides that any mineral lands in any forest reservation which have been, or which may be shown to be such, and subject to entry under the existing mining laws of the United States and the rules and regulations ap plying thereto, shall continue to be sub ject to such location and entry, notwith standing the reservation. This makes mineral lands in the forest reserve sub ject to location and entry under the gen eral mining laws in the onual manner. Child Study. During the general discussion yester day, the teachers considered child-study. The subject was viewed both from a sci entific or theoretical,' and from a prac tical standpoint.' The United States leads in child-study. The present de cade will be acknowledged in history as the period of psychological research, just as the two preceding ones have been known as evolutionary. The scientific study of the child was begun in this country, in Boston. From there it has extended to all the educational centers of this country and Europe. Some startling facts concerning the "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 waiv, and prettier than either of them. Call and see the MAIER& BENTON'S 167 Second Street. contents of the child's mind on entering school were discovered. It was found, too, that just as the different faculties of the mind have their periods of nascent growth, eo have the various organs of the body. To exercise an organ or fac ulty before it begins to develop properly is to dwarf or stunt its growth. To de lay its exercise till after the period of ac tive growth is to waste energy. When we know the periods of most active development of each organ of the body and faculty of the mind, and can adapt to each of them the study or ex ercise that is most conducive to its prop er growth, we shall haye a perfect peda gogy, a complete science of teaching. While the average teacher in the schools of Oregon may not be able to do much along the line of scientific child study, he can, at least, acquaint himself with many characteristics of child nature, and peculiarities of each child, that may be of great assistance in properly direct ing the young mind. The teacher should know the physical defects of each child, if there are such. If any pupil has defective sight, it is the teacher's duty to know what it is, and endeavor to have it corrected, and to provide the most favorable conditions for it while in school. The same is true concerning the hearing. Proper seating and correct position should receive the attention of the teacher. TLe teacher should know : First, the attitude of each pupil tow ard school. Second, why this pupil cannot under stand Arithmetic. Third, why that one does not like Grammar. Fourth, what are each pupil's likes and dislikes. Fifth, what each pupil thinks right, what wrong. Sixth, what the dominant idea of each pupil is. ; L. personal F. MENTION. Gerlinger of Vancouver is this morning for George in the city Mr. C. Cleary left his home in Seattle. Mr. Buckley, of the firm of Kerr & Bucklev, will leave tonight for New York City, t- G. S. Carpenter and wife went down on the Regulator this morning. They go to Ilwaco. Otto Birgfeld went down on the Reg ulator to meet his wife, who is coming up on the Dalles City. Miss Nell Butlerleft this morning for Portland, where she will join a party who are to spend six weeks in Southern California. Miss Nettie Hollister and three friends from Chicago will arrive here tonight on the Dalles City from Portland. Dr. Hollister went down on the Regulator this morning and will meet them at the Locks. Howard, son of Napoleon Davis of Portland, will arrive tonight on the boat to visit Ray Logan, who went down on the Regulator this morning to meet him at the Locks. After a few days spent here both will visit friends in "Klickitat county. . BOBNt In this city, Wednesday July 14th, to Mr. and Mrs. dyce, a son. It Don t Seem Like the Same Old Smile." - Say husbands, you will not have occasion to hum the above song, if you will come to Mays & Crowe's and buy yourwife one of those elegant ' , BLUE FLAME OIL STOVES They 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, Randolphs 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 terms to suit purchaser. New Vogt Block, The Dalles, Oregon. afternoon J. N. For- GEORGE RUCH PIONEER GROCER. Successor to Cbriaman S Corson. 1 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 ail kinds. Headquarters for Feed Grain of ail kinds. Headquarters for Rolled Grain, ail kinds. Headquarters for Bran. Shorts, mTId Headquarters for "By ere' Best" Pendle ton Flour. This Flour is manufactured expressly for family use : every sack is guaranteed to give sauaiackiuu. We sell our goods lower than any bonse in the trade, and if you don't think eo call and get our prices and be convinced. Highest Prices Paid for Wheat, Barley and Oats. J i.