(3) A NEW HAT o 9 For Fifty Cents. Displayed in our Furnishing Goods Window is a line of Hats that retail regu larly at $1.00 to $3.00. All styles and a variety in colors. We want to close them out, and have made a price that will sell them. Any Hat in the Window For Fifty Cents. PEASE & MAYS 3 9 o I ALL GOODS MARKED IN I PLAIN FIGURES. Th3 Dalles Daily Chronicle. THURSDAY, - - - AUGUST 5, 1897. NOTICE. All persons having claims against The Dalles National Baok, of The Dalles, Oregon, mast present tbe same to H. S. Wilson, receiver, with tbe legal proof thereof, within three months from the date hereof, or thev may be disallowed. Washington, D. C., June 5, 1897. James H. Eckels, Comptroller. WAYSIDE GLEANINGS. Rwilom Observation and Local Event of Leaser Magnitude. Scblitz and Hop Gold Beer on draught at Stabling & Williams'. Shot gnn shells loaded to order at Maier & Benton. The weather forecastfor tomorrow is fair and cooler. See the new line of delft that juBt ar rived at Maier & Benton. Wheat is quoted in Portland at 78 to 80 for Walla Walla and 82 for valley. The Pendleton Wool Scouring Co. ad vertise elsewhere that they wish to pur chase tallow. jul30-lw Tbe Dalles City was loaded to the guards this morning, the larger por tion of ber cargo consisting of flour. Rev, W. C. Curtis will not return un til Friday evening and the usual mid week meeting appointed for this even ing will be omitted. The Dalles City went down the river about a mile this morning to tow a wood scow up to tbe beach, and in conse quence was a few minutes late in getting away on her regularttrip. Wasco county will have a damage case soon if the large rocks are not removed from the DesChutes grade. Tbe rocks are large and easily lift a wagon off its balance. Moro Observer. A rumor got started last night that a man named Elva Hollingsworth, who came here recently, bad the smallpox. Tbe rumor ran on all fours and traveled fast, and all there was behind it was a mild attack of measles. There is nothing eo thoroughly appre ciated by the ladies during the hot wea tber as a deliciouB dish of genuine ice cream. The Elite candy factory serves just that kind. Also soda, ice cream Boda and milk shake. a5-tf E. E. Martin, deputy county clerk of Clackamas county, has been arrested on the charge of embezzling $400 from a banking firm in Denver. He is also charged with having issued fraudulent county warrants in the sum of about $400. Col. Sinnott and Mr.- Vanbibber have a Clondyke scheme that they think there is lots of money in. It is to drive 500 milk cows to that country, keep them as long as possible, and then as winter comes on kill tbem for .beef. Col. Sinnott has tbe thing elaborately calculated, and tbe results, on paper, equal tbe beBt things in the line ever worked up by the immortal Col. Sellers. Yesterday wna the first day of tbe year on which the atmosphere showed tbe presence of smoke, but today tbe air has the regular August blue color from it. It is supposed to have come from fires near Portland and they were not set by Eastern Oregon sheepmen either. Grasshoppers are fast disappearing from Umatilla county. It has been dis covered that the destruction of these pests is due to the large blow flies or blue bottles, as they are more commonly called. An experimenter found upon examining a number of the grasshop pers that there was nothing tinder the outer Bbell but a mass of maggots which bad sprung into life from tbe deposits of tbe blowfly. Tbe school census Tof this county for last year shows in round numbers 4000 schoolchildren. Tbe census gives us a population of a little less than 11,000, which is now probably about 12,000. This would make tbe population three times as great as the number of school children. If the proportion is tbe same throughout the state, the population of Multnomah county would be 72,000 and of the state about 390,000. John L. Austin, esq., who returned to his borne at Union Sunday morning, while in Pendleton last week stated that the new woolen mill now in the course of construction at Union is about en closed, and the water power, machinery and entire plant will be in running order by this fall. Tbe mill cost, com plete with all its fittings, $20,000. The mill is three stories in height, covers a space of 60x80 feet and will get power from Catherine creek. At an early hour this morning a light rain feel here. The shower was accom- anied by a thunder storm of quite arge proportions tor Oregon, though it ould not pass muster for sucb in the last. There was one double-ended peal at shook things up, but it was tbe only one out of tbe usual order. The night was extremely sultry, a condition that pontinued after the rain, and still continues. This is considered by the weather-wise a sure sign that morn mi is to loiiow. Mrs. Bolton, mother of Simeon Bol ton, was stricken with paralysis yester day morning while in camp at the Meadows, near the Johns' mill. She was sitting in a chair, and being spoken to and not answering it was discovered that she was paralyzed and speecbl Dr. Doane was sent for and went yester day afternoon, and at this writing, 2 o'clock, had not returned. Mrs C. B. Cnsbing was in camp at tbe time, com ing in yesterday afternoon. When she left, Mrs. Bolton's condition was some what improved. . . . Ht. UoiMt Hose Co. A PECULIAR RAILROAD. Skamania Has One That Belongs to a Class of Its Ow: Skamania county, Washington, has railroad that is a curiosity. It is lesi than four miles long, but is said to hav cost $3,000,000. It is tbe old portagi road from the Upper to the Lower Casf cades, and was built by the old O. S. Nj Co., and is now the property of ' iha company's successor, the O. R. & Nj There was a time when the road did art immense business, carrying all the prod' uctB of the Inland' Empire to tide water, all the freight destined for the mines of Idaho, Eastern Oregon and the vast re gion east of the Cascades. The days of its glory have departed, and today it is scarcely more than two streaks of rust and a right of way. Its sole use now is to carry salmon from tbe fisheries along the rapids to the Lower Cascades, from which point they are shipped to Warrendale, so the road really "runs" only with the run of fish. Mr. Jones, who has been employed on the road since it was first built bas en tire control of it. He is superintendent, engineer, conductor, brakeman, fireman, section foreman and section crew the Alpha and Omega and all tbe balance of. the alphabet. Mr. Jones . has grown gray in the service of the company, yet every day be gets out the solitary en gine, gets up steam and makes the round trip over the road. The engine has gotten wheezy, and to get up steam a fire has to be built in tbe smoke Btack to get up a draft. Recently the railroad commissioners made a trip over the road, and to do honor to the occaeion Mr. Jones got oat the "directors' car," the one solitary passenger coach. It had been used for a long time as a storehouse for chicken feed, and occasionally the chickens bad used it as a sleeper, but Jones oiled the ben coop up and gave the commissioners a ride over the road. He is good Da tared, happy, contented, and thorough ly enjoys his unique position as a whole railroad company. A Beet 8 agar Factory. Tbe members' of Mt. Hood Hose Co., No. 4, are hereby notified that there will be a department meeting in council chambers on Friday evening, Aug. 6th, at 8 :30 o'clock. John W. Lewis, ' Secretary. T. A. Hudson, who returned last night from San Frauciaco, tells us that while here be bad several conversations with parties engaged in the manufacture of beet sugar,, during which he mentioned e fact thatJWasco county sugar beets ad shown a greater percentage of sac- harine matter than any raieed on the oast. This statement at once interest d tbem and they expressed a desire to have a ton or more of sugar beets grown in this county eent them, promising that if the beets tested well and tbey could be assured of a sufficient crop be ing raised, that they would put in a plant here for extracting tbe sugar, to cost not less than $300,000. It is too late, of course, to experiment this year, but Mr. Hudson thinks that among our farmers from one to five or ten tons might be secured. If this can be done he will forward the beets to the factory at San Francisco, free of charge, and have the sugar returned here. Here is an opportunity that should not "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 wan,, and prettier than either of them. Call and see the goods at MAIER & BENTON'S 167 Second Street.' be neglected, and those farmers who have sugar beets, even though in small quantities, will do well to call upon Mr. Hudson and assist in getting the indus try established. Important Decision. Among the decisions handed down by the supreme court in Pendleton Satur day waa one in tbe case of McKennon vs. American Fire Insurance Company, garnishee. The main point in the case is that of sustaining the validity of the homestead exemption law passed at a former session of the legislature. Tbe ppeal grew out of tbe Cotner insurance se. McKennon garmsned the insur ance company for a debt owed by Cot- er and the company refused to pay on he grounds that the amount of tbe pol icy, about $900, was exempt from execu tion. Tbe homestead exemption act pro- iviaes mat a iree noicier may ciaini ex emption to tbe amount of $1500. Nearly all the circuit courts of the state have decided that tbe law is inoperative, but the supreme court bas now affirmed the validity of tbe act. Netted a Cariosity. ohn Nelson, the well-known flsher- an, caught a curiosity ot a Chinook salmon on Saturday afternoon about three miles below tbe bell buoy, says the Astoria News. As he pulled a fish out of bis net he noti.ced.that something was hanging from its mouth. Upon ex amination be found ft to be a troll hook, spoon and a couple of feet of line. Tbe hook must have been in the salmon a long time, as with a light pull it broke loose from the under law, pulling a part away with it. Tbe fish weighed about thirty pounds and did "not differ in ap pearance from the run now in the river The spoon and book gsTve evidence of being of Indian manufacture, but from where it came is a matter of curiosity, as the Chinook salmon is known not to take a book in these waters. Several years ago fish were caught in Tillamook bay with similar books and spoons fust to them, and at tbe time it caused eome inquiry. A Volcano Kills 500. A dispatch to the Chronicle says : "Five hundred reported killed up to July 1st is the record of the terrible out break of the volcano of Mayon, on the island of Luzon, one of tbe Pbillippine group. On the night of June 26th tbe volcano began throwing up ashes and lava in immense quantities, and flames were thrown upward considerably over 100 feet. The next day fifty-six bodies were recovered at a considerable dis tance, and tbe recent dispatches to Hong Kong np to July 8th state that not less than 500 were known to be killed." . Jackson Knglne Co. All members of Jackaon Engine Co., No.. 1, are requested to attend the meet ins to be held at tbe council chambers at 8:30 Friday,' August 6th. All mem bers failing to attend are liable to fine. By order of the board of delegates. . F. W. L. Skibbe, Secretary Bio Drop ii) priee5 of Bieyels. The season is getting late, and to close out our stock now on hand we have marked them down to Ij385'tr)arj Qpst MAYS & CROWE. Jos. T- Peters & Co. DEALERS IN Agricultural Implements, Champion Mowers and Reapers, Craver 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 terms to suit purchaser. New Vogt Block. The Dalles, Oregon. GEORGE RUCH PIONEER GROCER- Successor to Chrisman A Corson. FULL, LINE OF STAPLE and FANCY GROCERIES. Again in business at tbe old stand. I would be pleased to see all my former patrons. Free delivery to any part of town. who has the best Dress Goods has the best Shoes has everything to be found in a first-class Dry Goods Store. C. F. STEPHENS. Wasco Warehouse Company Headquarters for Seed Grain of ail kinds. Headquarters for Feed Grain of an kinds. Headquarters for Rolled Grain, ail kinds. Headquarters for Bran, Shorts, -SiSo Headquarters for "Byers' Best" Pendle- f-s-lTi "C1! nn -r This Flour is manufactured expreeBly for family livJ.il. J. XUUi ' use: every sack is guaranteed to give satisfaction. We sell our goods lower than any bonse in the trade, and if you don't think bo call and get our prices and be convinced. Highest Prices Paid for Wheat, Barley and Oats.