Talking. About Shoes 9 o 9 We have decided to close out our entire line of todies' Ox-Blood and Tan Lace and Button Shoes, That sell regularly for from $3 to $5, at $2.50 PER PAIR Until sold out. They will not last long at this price, and first comers have first choice. Displayed in center window. Travel in Style Traveling Bass & Grips. A Complete Line of Leather and Wicker Grips, TraTellng; Bags and Telescopes Leather Grips at from $1.50 to 7.50 Wicker Gripa at from 50 to 1.25 Wicker Telescopes at from 30 to 75 These goods are displayed in our furnishing goods window. ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. PEASE & MAYS w .. The Dalles Daily Chronicle. TUESDAY, - AUGUST 10, 1897. NOTICE. All persona having claims against The Dalles National Bank, of The Dalles, Oregon, must present the same to H. S. Wilson, receiver, with the 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. Random Ooservations and Local Krents of Lesser Magnitude. The weather forecast for tomorrow is fair and warmer. Schlitz and Hop Gold Beer on dranght at Stublmg & Williams'. Creamery butter, sweet potatoes, lemons, etc., at Maier & Benton's, al-tf The regular quarterly examination of teachers begins tomorrow afternoon at 1 o'clock. Quite a party of picnickers went up Mill creek today in Ward & Robinson's wagonette. The Pendleton Wool Scouring Co. ad vertise elsewhere that they wish to pur chase tallow. jul30-lw Wool is changing hands slowly, there still being quite a large quantity in first hands. The balers are busy getting that purchased in shape for shipment. The monitor Monterey, which baa been at Portland for nearly six eeks, has received orders to go to Seattle, and left this morning in obedience tnereto. Several big teams were loading mer chandise at the Wasco warehouse thin morning when our reporter visited that section. The goods were going toPrine ville, Antelope and Mitchell. There is nothing so thoroughly appre ciated by the ladies during the hot wea ther as a delicious dish of genuine ice cream. The Elite candy factory serves just that kind. Also soda, ice cream soda and milk shake. a5-tf William Crawford, who livep on the other side of the Columbia, while fool ing with a ehotuun Saturday, managed to get the muzzle towards him, when it was discharged. Fortunately the shot missed him, but the powder got in its work on bis face. The close season for salmon begins to day according to Jaw;, but practically the salmon have been observing it all summer. The catch has been about the poorest ever known, and unless the fall run proves good, Dalles salmon will not cut much figure for the year 1896. The scores at the Umatilla House bowling alleys for last week are remark ably good ones, and are as follows: Monday, C. E. Porter 59 ; Tuesday, H. Maerz 61; Wednesday, F. JobsonSO; Thursday, Estabenet 59 ; Friday, Un er 52; Saturday, J. S. Fish 51; Sunday, Estabenet 46. From records extending back to 168o M. Camille Flammarion finds that the rainfall of Paris has gradually increased about three inches, being now a little more than 22 inches a year. The amount of difference seems to indicate that the increase is real and not due to greater accuracy of observation. -The galvanized iron tops for the steeples of the Catholic church came up on the Dalles City last night. Work on the church building is progressing rap idly, and it will not be long until it is ready for use. A young Philadelphian was arrested for scorching. His excuse was that it was getting late, he was going to see his best girl, and that the constitution guar antees the right ot liberty and the pur suit of happiness. Pat Flannigan, deck hand on the Dalles City, and William Dunn, pilot of the Tone, had a circus in Portland Sun day, slugging a lot of bystanders, and finally getting slugged themselves 'and "thrown in" besides. The took-him-for-a-deer banter has been out gunning near Grant's Pass. His name is Kirk, and the man whom he took for a deer, and who is now dead, was named Edward Jones. It is strange that a man who couldn't hit a barn usually, can take a pop-Bhot into the brush and get his victim every time. motive and car will be pressed into se" vice. It will take a train an hour fo) months to move the immense croDS, The oldest married couple ilT""tb"e world is Mr. and Mrs. Hiller. The aged ppeople reside near La Grange, Indiana, he being 107 and she 105 years old. Xhey have been .married 87 years, their oldest child being 82 and the youngest 67. A better idea of what his age means a conveyed in the statement that he was 22 years of age when the war ot 1812 was declared. Thursday morning, about 9 o'clock, while quite a number of people were standing on the Nail Works' and Mer chants docks in Everett, a monster whale passed within a few feet from the docks. E. E. Carter and wife, B. W. Sherwood, Elmer Goldthorpe and others who saw it say it was about sixty feet in length. Quite a number of shots were fired at it, but took no effect. Some of the mill handa from Bell's mills got into boats and gave chase, but before they could get near it it took to flight and was lost to view. Others who saw it de clare that it was not a whale, but a large sea serpent; The committee appointed to solicit funds for the firemen's tournament ves- Tbe killing occurred Monday. J terday, did not meet with as liberal re- George Brown is the happy owner of phponses as it expected and today felt a pi b to 1 that he purchased at a second- jomewhat discouraged. Our people a. v.. .. . . I i 1 1 A 1 hand store. It is of the revolver style. somewhat resembling the old Colt, bnt is a self-cocker and weighs something less than a six-pounder cannon. It would be a handy weapon if a mm 'were traveling on a steamboat, where he could ship it aa freight, but for land one would require the services of a horse. The ladies of St. Peters church will give a moonlight excursion on the steamer Regulator next Saturday even ing, leaving here at 9 p. m. and return ing at 12. The profits arising from this excursion will go into the fund for the new church, and being a worthy cause, should be liberally patronized by the people of The Dalles. Music for the ex cursion will be furnished by the band. Tickets 50 cents. Tne directors of the great Siberian railway are already figuring on a time card from London to Vladivostok, which will go into effect July 1, 1901, or in less than four years. The distance from London to Tcheliabinsk, where the Si berian railroad actually commences, is in round number, 3000 miles. From that point to Vladivostok- is 5800 miles, or a total of 8,800 miles. The trip will take twelve and a half davs, and the a I iooold take a broad view of the matter, and recollect that they are not giving, put are oniy paying a small sum lor tne the fire protection tne nre department gives (hem. If the department is to be kept tip, it should be encouraged, or it will go to pieces. The money contributed pac&JiU be left here and much more with it. and it will be a short-Bigbted policy in deed if the tournament is allowed to fall through for lack of funds. A difference of opinion as to whether the father or mother should have pos session of a young child, caused consid erable discussion this morning on the bill, it taking a range wide enough to include the kicking in of a screen door by the child's mother, and her subse quent arrest. Family troubles are bad enongh, without being vented in the newspapers, hence we refrais from giv ing names. The lady in the case was accompanied by another, and it is said that it was not entirely a motherly "spirit" that caused the rumpus. The other lady was fined $5 by the city re corder this afternoon, and the tother one is still in jail. i "Last summer one of our grand chidren was sick with a severe bowel trouble," says Mrs. E. G. Gregory, of speed will be thirty milea an hour, The O. R. & N. Co., under the receiv-V,nQedy had failed, then we tried Cham ership of Major McNeil. prosoered aa ierlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea never a railroad prospered under like Remedy which gave very epeedy relief." conditions before, and the good work F or Bale Dy p'e'ey na nougpion J 1 us : 1 1 i r ... . M . ... . done by him will bear fruit for a long time. The present manager, Mr. Moh- ler, ia following the liberal conrse pur- lfedy by reading what sued by hia predecessors, and the road is steadily increasing its business. When the wheat crop .begins to move there will be such a rush of business aa the road has never seen, and every loco- Hundreds of thousands have been in- - . . i , - , r-t i n tuuceu to iry isoamuenain e uougp nem it has done for P l .1 kanrn x.. utuoia, ctuu ucvxuk icdicu ibs luonie lur themselves are today its warmest friends. for sain by Ulakeley & Hougbtoo Nebraska corn for sale at the Wasco arehouse. Best feed on earth. m9-tf "The Delft" Knameled 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. BIG GRAIN FIRE. It Occarred Late Saturday Nlajnt fiear Adams The Lota Severe. Late Saturday night Pendleton people were startled by a big light in the east ern horizon. It was supposed to be a wheat fire, and the supposition proved correct. Up near Adams there waa a blaze that ought to prove a warning to farmera in future as to the business wis dom of wheat insurance. The fire occurred between 10 and 11 o'clock, and was fanned to fearful fury by a wind and dust storm that raged along the Wild Horse. Parties who wit nessed the fire from a distance of three miles say that a sheet of flame, seem ingly a mile wide, advanced rapidly toward the northeast, its roar and crackle being plainly heard, and the odor of burning wheat perceptible to the nostrils. When a "setting" was reached the red demon of the fire leaped higher and higher Btill, and mingled with huge volumes of black smoke. It waa a fascinating sight and yet a sad one, for thousands of needed dollars went up in that smoke. Jamea T. Lieuallen, fprmerly a mer chant at Adams, suffered much by the fire. Just southeast of the town a quar ter section of fine wheat belonging to Mr. Lieuallen had just been harvested and he lost it all. The stubble was heavy and burned fiercely. The field was dotted with straw stacks and piles of wheat in sacka, and these were re lentlessly consumed. Out of about 6000 bushela of wheat naugbt was left next morning save smoking piles throughout the field. The veering of the wind, and a long strip of summer-fallow across the path of the fire, stopped ita progress. Had the wind been blowing south, it is likely the flames would not have stopped until they reached the Umatilla, after . licking up miles of rich grain fields and a dozen threshing outfits. It ia reported that the fire is supposed to have occurred from sparks dropped by Mosgrove's steam threshing outfit in Bergevin Bros.' field near by. These, no doubt, smoldered and were fanned into flames when the wind storm oc curred. Bergevin Bros, lost by the fire part of a 160-acre field, and Charles Marsh also lost some wheat. The chief loss falls on Mr. Lieuallen, however. The crop lost waa insured for $1560 in the Norwich Union, LeeMoorhouse hav ing written the policy. This does not near cover the loss. East Oregonian. A driver of a truck in Salem Saturday night met with, a serious mishap, which came very near proving fatal. The man, whose name could not be learned, had unhitched his team in the barn of the Salem Improvement Company, and was in the 'act of stripping the harness off one of the horses, when the animal kicked him, both of its hind feet strik ing the man's breast just below the heart. The- physician, who waa called to dress the injuries, said that the onlv thing that saved the man's life waa the fact that be etood so near the horse as to make it impossible for the animal to ranch more than push him, while, if he bad been further away, the probabilities were that he would have been killed by the kick. Bi 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 less tr)ai Qpst MAYS & CROWE. Jos. T. Peters & Go. -DEALERS IN- Agricultural Implements, Champion Mo-wers and. Reapers, Craver Headers, Bain Wagons, Randolph Headers and Reapers, Drapers, Lubricating Oils, Axle Grease, Blacksmith. Coal and Iron. Agents for Waukegan Barb "Wire. 2nd Street, Cor. Jefferson, THE DALLES. SPECIAL SALE! PIANOS and ORGANS, i For ONE WEEK ONLY at n Jacobson Book & Music Co. Bed-Rock Pries and terms to suit purchaser. New Vogt Block, The Dalles, Oregon. Wasco Warehouse Company TTaa rl n ii a tt Drc Fnr fiaorl fir a 4 n n Vi'tis Headquarters for Feed Grain of ail kinds. Headquarters for Rolled Grain, an kinds. Headquarters for Bran, Shorts, SmTL'ufeed Headquarters for "Byers' Best" Pendle- "T- 'p'lOUT' This Flour is manufactured expressly for family A . UBe . every Bacfc i8 guaranteed to give satisfaction. We sell our goods lower than any honse in the trade, and if you don't think so call and get our prices and be convinced. Highest Prices Paid for Wheat, Barley and Oats. GEORGE RUCH PIONEER GROCER. Successor to Cbrlsman & Corson. FULL, LINE OF STAPLE and FANCY GROCERIES. Again in business at the old stand. I would be pleased to see all my former patronB. 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 G-oods Store. C. F. STEPHENS,