The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, August 28, 1897, Image 3

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    Talking About Shoes..
o
2
2
We have decided to close out our entire line of
Ladies' Ox-Blood and Tan Iiace 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.
"The Delft"
Travel in Style
Traveling Bags & Grins.
A Complete Line of Leather
and Wicker Grips,
TraTeltng Bags and Telescopes
Leather Grip9 at from $1.50 to 7.50
Wicker Grips at from 50 to 1.25
Wicker Telescopes at from 30 to 75
These goods are displayed
in our furnishing goods
window.
ife5iiiiisi
ALL GOODS MAFtKED IN
.PLAIN FIGURES.
PEASE & MAYS
The Dalles Daily Chronicle.
SATURDAY - - - AUGUST 28, 1897
NOTICE.
All persons 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 they may be disallowed.
Wasbingtonfcrr4J., June , lay.
IME8 11. H.CKELS,
Comptroller.
SS7 M y
GLEANINGS.
a
Random OnserTations and Local Events
of Lesser Af agnltude.
Valley papers keep calling for hop
pickers.
There will be a special meeting of the
Elk's lodge tonight.
Wanted A suite of furnished rooms.
Address -'A" this office.
Leave your order for dry fir cord wood
with ns. Maier & Benton. a24-tf
The Dalles public schools will re-openjTi
on Monday, September 13th. iu
The Harrisburg Review hasnuspenped,
and the editor announces that the plant
is for sale.
Wheat took a decided tumble in the
big markets yesterday, dropping from
five to six cents from the previous day's
quotations.
The Good Templars will serve ice
cream and cake in the Bunnell building,
next door to the land office, next Tues
day evening.
If you are fond of sweet music, go and
hear the Clef Club next Wedneeday
evening at the' M. E. church. Admis
sion 15 and 25 cents.
The grain fleet now in or on the way
to Portland, consists of fifty-eight with
a carrying capacity of 106,410 tons, or in
round numbers, 35.000,000 bushels.
Earl P. Stanley, a well-known young
mining expert committed suicide in
Whatcom last Wednesday by taking ten
grains of morphine in a glaes of water.
The East End absolutely refused to
furnish an item of any kind today. I
Even Justice Fllloon's law mill was not
grinding, and the stock yards were
empty.
J. E. Lathrop writes a very vivid de
scription of the Chilkoot pass to the
East Oregonian. He thinks but few of
those encamped at Dyea and Skaguay
will get in this summer.
There will be no service in the Method
ist church tomorrow morning nor even
ing on account of the absence of the
pastor at conference. Sunday school at
12 :20, and League at 7 o'clock.
Lutheran services in the basement of
the new church tomorrow as follows:
Morning service at 11 a. m., Sunday
school at 12 :05. German service at 9 :30.
There will be-no evening service.
The 'longshoremen at the dock in
Whatcom were getting $3.50 a day, but
they struck for higher wages recently,
One of the men said they didn't know
why they struck or what for, but they
just Btruck.
The cannery at Marsbheld received a
few hundred salmon, Monday, but was
not quite prepared for packing. Charles
Johnson sent up sixty-eight chinooks
from the lower bay, but the largest num
ber was received from one boat.
Mrs. M. J. Chase has opened the Bet
tingen house across the street from
Mrs. Brittain'p, and can give rooms with
or without board. She would be pleased
to accept part of the patronage of the
public. a26-dlw.
The first consignment of Corvallis
fruit and vegetables, direct for Alaska,
will be shipped to Skaguay. It will
consist of apples, pears, plums, pota
toes, prunes, etc., and will be shipped
to Portland tomorrow.
Enough threshing haB been done in
Sherman county thna far to enable a
calculation as to acreage. Fall-sown
runs from twenty to forty bushels per
acre ; spring twenty to thirty, voluntee
ten to sixteen, says the Moro Obser
Owing to Mr. DeForest being at
rinity church, Portland, tomorrow
orning, there will be no morning ser
vices at St. Paul's. He will return in
time to conduct the regular evening ser
vices. Sunday school at the customary
hour. ,.
All the members of the Christian
church are urgently requested to meet
at 11 o'clock a. m., Sunday August 29,
Plans for future work, including the call
of a pastor will be considered after a
Bhort devotional service. By order of
the elders.
The beach is covered with wood and
still it comes as fast as the fleet of scows
can bring it. This morning a big scow
has been trying to sail up against the
current, and the wind anjl water are so
evenly balanced that she has made less
than a mile in five hours.
.tsnrgiars nave been busy lately in
Marysville, Snohomish county. Th Ar
cade hotel was broken into Sunday
nigbt, and a quantity of provisions
stolen, and Mondaj night Swinnerton's
store was broken into, and the cash
! register, in which there was no cash,
was taken
A single tree in thedooryard of Mrs
Dalaba, on Third street, Corvallis, this
season yielded 900 pounds of Bartlett
pears. The fruit was picked Monday, i
and is to be shipped EaBt. If 1 cent per
pound is realized the net profit from the
tree will be a very good showing for the
fruit buBinesa in Oregon.
The Haller Shingle mill, recently
burned at Arlington, in Snohomish
county, is being replaced by a new one.
New machinery, with the exception of
the boiler, will be purchased and the
new plant will be an improvement on
the old one. It will be a double blocker,
with a capacity of about 120,000 per
day.
In another week those Dallesites who
are now at the beadh or in the mount
ains will begin to wander home again,
and those of ns who didn't go away will
be really glad to see them. We are not
1,000,000
People
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.
moved bv malice or jealousy, and are
glad other people enjoyed the seaside,
even though we had to stay home and
assist in keeping the thermometer on
the earth.
Fruit shipments just now are large.
plums and prunes being the staples,
with melons running a good second.
The sidewalk in front of tbe commission
house and express office is jammed every
night with great piles of boxed fruit.
We note that shippers are packing their
fruit in good shape and this is the most
sensible thing they can do. It is the eye
that selects, the appearance that sells.
The Dalles City will leave Portland to
morrow morning at 4 o clock, and wilt
bring up the visiting congressmen and
party, fifteen in all. They will examine
the locks and then come on up to Tbe
alleB to examine tbe obstructions at
e dalles, and there take the train for
e East. Credit ia due SberifF Driver
r bi9 efforts in securing the Dalles
lty for the party.
Lena Collingsworth, a Tennessee
woman, quareled witb her husband a
couple of months ago and vowed she
would not eat until he acknowledged his
error. He -proved stubborn, so she
stuck to her word and 'fasted for fifty
eight days. When she died the husband
had not yet concluded to acknowledge
he was wrong, but he certainly must
have appreciated bis wife's firmness of
character.
The Dalles National bank i9 paying
out its first dividend of twenty-five per
cent. There are many claims not yet
proved, and those who hold them should
make their proof at once. All that is
necessary is to fill out blanks furnished
by the receiver and swear to the ac
counts. This can be done in tbe bank
and costs nothing. Claims unproved
cannot be paid.
Another load of huckleberries amount
ing to forty gallon a arrived in town from
the "patch" this morning. The berries
were brought in on a couple of cayuses
and a Siwash. This luscious fruit is ex
ceedingly plentiful this year, and tbe
bushes are loaded as they were never
known to be loaded before. As a conse
quence the price is way down, in spite
of the return of prosperity, and all can
afford to eat them as well as to put up
a supply for winter. Skamania Pioneer.
, Word was received here yesterday that
John Parker of Hood River died at his
home yesterday afternoon. Mr. Parker
had suffered for a long time from cancer
of tbe stomach, which was the cause of
his death. He was an exceptionally
good man, one the community can illy
afford to lose. He leaves & wife and two
children, and a long list of friends to
mourn his loss. He was a member of
Riverside Lodge, A. O. U. W., and aev
eral members of the order went down
this morning to attend the funeral,
which took place today.
Congressman Hooker, , iilmlf of
the committee on rivers and harbors,
and Sherman, of the committee of Indi
an affairs, will be here tomorrow, com
ing np on tbe Dalles City and arriving
about 2:30 o'clock. Senators McBride
IN the United States now enjoying food cooked in the MA
JESTIC affirm that the half has not been said in its
praise. The manufacturers of this Range pledge them
selves that all parts of the MAJESTIC except. the firebox
and the new series Nos. 201 to 212, are made of steel and mal
leable iron, and purchasers are assured that it is as good and
as honest as skilled labor and money can produce. If the parts
now in malleable iron were (as in other so-called steel ranges)
made of cast iron, the price could be greatly reduced ; but the
MAJESTIC iB not made witb a view to furnishing extra
parts for repairs.
Mays &. crowe,
Sole Agents.
Jos. T. Peters & Co.
e)
-DEALERS IN-
Agricultural Implements, Champion
Mowers and Reapers, Craver Headers, Bain
v 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.
and Congressmen Ellis and Tongue will
accompany them. Tbe Commercial
Club has made arrangement for show
ing the visitors around, the committee
being composed of the following: Hon
A. S. Bennett, J. W. French, B. S
Huntington, Chas. Hilton, T. A. Hud
son, W. Lord. An engine and car will
be placed at tbe disposal of the visitors,
and they will examine tbe obstructions
to navigation above here.
News baa been received at the police
station to the effect that William De
vine, who left Portland on the steamer
Eugene as foreman, fell overboard on
the way up to Pngst sound and was
drowned. Particulars of the affair have"
not as yet "been received, although there
is no doubt that it was an accident.
Devine was for a long time on tbe police
force of tbia city. His beat was in the
North End, and being a powerful man
and full of courage, wae a factor in keep
ing peace in that part of the city. He
was known as "Handsome Billy," and
was well liked by bis associates and ac
quaintances. He was made to realize
the uncertaintiea of the official life of a
policeman several months ago, and
wben the Klondike fever broke out in
this city he waa affected. . He secured a
berth as firen.an on the Eugene, and
started away for the gold fields in high
spirits. Telegram.
Money Enough.
Complete Line of.
Fishing Tackle, Notions, Baseball Goods, Hammocks, Baby
Carriages, Books and Stationery at Bedrock Prices, at the
acobsen Book & Music Co.
Where will also be found the largest and most complete line .
of Pianos and other Musical Instruments in Eastern Oregon.
Mail Orders will receive prompt attention.
New Vogt Block, The Dalles, Oregon.
General Buffield discussing the gold
discoveries in Alaska, says:
"If I were a young man," he said, 'I
should get about a seventy-five ton
schooner at Seattle, take auppliea and
engage tbe services of a firBt-class pros
pector. . Then I should cruise along he
southeastern part of Alaska, in what is
called Alexander archipelago. There
are a number of islands there and more
gold lodes than at any place with which
I am acquainted. The mining would
not be 'placers,' but the ore can be got
ten out very cheaply and being directly
on the sea, the transportation amounts
almost to nothing, except the time
spent."
The general overlooks the fact that a
young man with money enough to buy
a seventy-five ton scbooner, hire first
class prospectors and carry out hia sug
gestions, iias money enough and does not
need to go to Klondike.
Tbe Huh Tournament.
The hose tournament ia declared off,
but Mays & Crowe are going to give tbe
people of The Dalles, free of charge, a
treat in tbe musical line that cannot be
excelled. Don't fail to come and bear
Senator Vest and his celebrated Pica
ninny Band. Who's all right? The
Majestic Manufacturing Company is
all right every time. You bet! Wahl
Because they manufacture the b?st steel
range on earth. If yoa don't believe it,
sk some of your neighbors who have
(been fortunate enough to purchase one.
Schlitz and Hop Gold Beer on draugh
kit Stabling dc Williams'.
Nebraska corn for sale at the Wasco
warehouse. Best feed on earth. m9-tf
GEORGE RUCH
PIONEER GROCER.
Successor to Chrisman & 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.
Wasco Warehouse Company
Headquarters for Seed Grain ofaii kinds.
Headquarters for Feed Grain of ail kinds.
Headquarters for Rolled Grain, an kinds.
Headquarters for Bran, Shorts, SmSAkd
Headquarters for "Byers' Best" Pendle-
XfYI "rT1inT This Flour ia manufactured expressly for family
HJIJ. J- iv IAX . nae: every sack ia guaranteed, to give satisfaction.
Wa anil nnr onnda lower than anv honse in the trade, and if vou don't think so
call and get our prices and be convinced.
Highest Prices Paid for Wheat, Barley and Oats.
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.