C31 "The Delft" 1,000,000 People 2 9 WATCH THIS SPACE ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. PEASE & MAYS 3 o 'CI 9 9 9 The Dalles Daily Chronicle. WEDNESDAY - SEPTEMBER 1, 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. Wasnington, u. w., jpne o, ioa. LME4M. IjCEELS. I pomptroller. ZS -II nAV GLEANINGS. Random Obnenationa and Local Kientl of Lesser Magnitude. TJniversity Students At the M. E. church tonight. Admission 25 cents ; children 15 cents. The members of the Clef Club arrived in the city today. They are fine singers, so don't fail to hear them tonight. At the Methodist conference at Pen dleton, just ended, Rev. J. R. Warner was re-appointed presiding elder for this district. This is a deserved com pliment, and a recognition of his good work heretofore. The score at the Umatilla House alley last week was a remarkably good one. Some one erased it from the board, but one of the pin-setters had copied it. It was as follows : Monday, Estebenet,53 ; Tuesday, Porter, 54 ; Wednesday, Por ter, 77 ; Thursday, Maetz, 57 ; Friday, Pundt, 49; Saturday, Porter, 57; Sun- dav. Bennett. 53. Average 5 1-7 Mrs. Mary Brittain went to Mosier this morning, having been here to settle with the insurance company for the loss of her bonse. The building was insured in the Firemen's Fond Co. for $900, and she promptly received a check full amount. J Henrv Bins had his per sonal property, which was in the house, cars have been ehipped to date, and there is an abundance of fruit if a mar ket can be found for it. The trouble is that Idaho, California, Oregon, Wash ington and Utah are pouring their prod ucts into the East faster than they can be consumed, and prices are so low that freights and commissions leave nothing for the grower. C. Rafferty, well known in Eastern Oregon, was stricken by paralysis near Huntington last Thursday. He had been offered a position in a hotel in Huntington, but thought he could get a better one in the new hotel in Baker City, so he started with a companion to walk to Baker City. When out eight or ten miles he was suddenly stricken with paralysis, and fell helpless to the ground. As it was growing late his companion remained with him until the next morn ing, when he notified the authorities in Huntington, and Marshal Hannon sent a conveyance out and had the unfortun ate man removed to town. He is still in a helpless condition, and as he is get ting well along in years his friends fear hia affliction may prove permanent. Conference Ended. insured for $190, which was also paid. The score for last, week at the Uma tilla House alley was unfortunately erased from the blackboard before it was copied. The average was 57 1-7, the lowest being 49, and the highest 77, the latter being the record to date made by C.'E. Porter. The record yesterday was made by Victor Sampson, 62, and the high average for last week shows that there is a steady improvement among the bowlers generally. Mrs. C. L. Phillips is now receiving and opening one of the largest and finest stocks of fall and winter millinery ever brought to The Dalles. Part of the stock comes from San Francisco and part from New York, and includes the very latest things in shapes, colors and textures. As soon as the goods can be unpacked, a grand opening will be given, and the ladies of The Dalles and vicinity can rest assured that they will find an assortment from which they can find plenty of things to please them. Returns from fruit sent East are com ing in, and are anything but cheerful. The first shipments are all right; but later returns indicate that nothing will be left for the growers. . About thirty A THUMPING SOMNAMBULIST. B Jata a Traveling Companion Nearly to Death While Asleep. The last day of the Columbia River conference opened yesterday morning with devotions, which were continued for thirty minutes. The adoption of the constitution for the Columbia River conference was con sidered, and, after several articles bad been amended, it was adopted. At the afternoon session a proposition by the citizens of Sprague, Wash., for es- ablishing an academy there, was not ccepted. The Preachers' Aid societv of the Co- umbia River conference was organized. ev. N. E. Parsons was elected aB its rst president. Some of the appointments were as fol lows: Pendleton Rev. John Uren. La Grande Rev. Perry Chandler. Union Rev. A. E. Thompson. Milton Rev. W. C. Mitchell. Waitsburg Rev. J. S. Anderson. Asotin Rev. John La Cornu. Pomeroy Rev. N.'E. Parsons. Dayton Rev. Walter S. Skip worth. Walla Walla Circuit James -Greens-dale. Dixie Rev. Richardson. . Lewiston Rev. Henry Brown. Walla Walla Rev. W. C. Reuter. The Dalles Rev." J. H. Wood. vMoscow Rev. G. M. Booth. Colfax Rev. Todd. Spokane, First church Rev. P. R. Cool. Enterprise Rev. W. Deweese. Tues day's Pendleton Tribune. Mrs. M. J. Chase has opened the Bet tingen house across the street from Mrs. Brittain's, and can give rooms with or without board. She would be pleased to accept part of the patronage of the -"Ttoublic. a26-dlw. do light children. a24-tf . Dr. Sutherland this morning had a lece of crazy-quilt patchwork in the lurgery line that is seldom equaled. 'he man who furnished the job was Henry Butcbeck, who hails from near Corvallis, the work covering the entire scalp, which was cut in twenty places, and there would have been more if many of the cuts had not been of ths confluent kind. When we called at the doctor's office he was engaged in giving the man a hair cut under serious difficulties, pre paratory to stitching and dressing the gaping wounds. Where there were no cuts the scalp was a pulp, and it was all done by a friend and traveling com panion of Butcheck'e, with an Iron bar and without malice. Butcheck say's that he and his friend had been working near Dillon, Montana, and were beating their way home by the box-car route. The friend carried an iron bar to defend himself against the brakemen in case they were too forcible in inviting them off the trains. Butch eck 'a companion is an acute somnambu list, a dreamer of dreams to some pur pose, for, in the early hours of morniDg, about an hour before the train arrived here, this friend, so he told Butcbeck, dreamed a brakeman was choking him and, trying to put him off the train ; that to defend himself he grabbed the iron bar aforesaid and began slathering away at his antagonist. Unfortunately for Butcheck the brakeman was only a vision, but he was' a tangible reality. The blows disturbed Butcheck, and finally awakened him, and then the other fellow woke up and the trouble ceased, the man who did the beating abandoning bis companion, probably fearing that he would get into trouble. Butcheck, however, believes the story of the dream, and says that his friend is a good fellow. From the appearance of the man's head, his friend is an artist in the fight ing line, and, judging by the work done while he was asleep, he would be a terror if awake. MISSED THE SCOOP. Our Reporter Catches On. lint the Giggling- Hello-Girl Switches Hlra. Wanted A young girl house work and take care Apply at this office.' to of Subscribe for The Chroxicle. As we eat in our den last night about 10 o'clock, we heard a voice faint and far away, and applying our best ear to the telephone, we were delighted to find that the hello-girl ' had accidentally, or otherwiee, connected us with the 'phone in the Perkins hotel private '. parlor.. With an eye single for news, we glued our auricular appendage to the instru-' meat, and, recognizing the well-known voices of Senator McBride and Repre sentatives Tongue and Ellis, a vision of a glorious scoop danced tantalizingly through our mind. . "Beauty," said McBride, "may be a fatal gift, but it isn't in it with the gift ot having patronage to give." "True! Too true!" asseverated the classical Tongue. "The golden apple inscribed 'To the most beautiful,' 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 ware, and prettier than either of them. Gall and see the goods at MAIER& BENTON'S 167 Second Street. raised h 1 in the mythological heaven 3,000 years ago, and the lady who got the prize lost ber reputation thereby, while Paris, who recommended her for the prize, got only a grass widow as a reward and was killed over her." "My friends," said Ellis, in a may-it-please-the-court tone of voice, "you are dealing in reminiscences of an obsolete mythology, legendary lore, that comes ghost-like from the mists of superstition, that fades into the dreamless chaos be fore time was or eternity began. Who the-dickens cares who got the apple, any way ; nobody wants apples. This Is the plum season, and the fellows who do not get plums, and that pretty soon, you will find full of prunes. Let's get down to business and shake the fruij trees. 1, lor one, am in favor of recom mending for district attorney a candi date from one side of the Cascades, and for U. S. marshal one from the other side, and I therefore propose the names of Here the hello-girl switched' no off, and all tb,e satisfaction we could get in response to our anguishing demands to be coupled on again, was the mocking answer from that same girl, who sang to us: "Hello! Hello! Hell o-Hell ' And then she giggled. It was the Port land hello girl, of course. The Boatmen's Strike. There has been a general strike of the deck hands on the river boats on the lower river for some time, but it did not affect the D. P. & A. N. Co.'e line until this week. It seems there is some kind of a union to which nearly all the boat crews belong, and the strike was ordered by the union. The wages paid by the D. P. & A. N. were $35 per month, and the hands were satisfied with this and disliked to quit. At the same time they did not like to go back on the union, so reluctantly walked out, the Regulator crew quitting Monday night, and of the Dalles City Tuesday night boats left on time with new crews, and while the work is new to most of them, they will be on to their jobs in a few days. The Pickaninnies. IN the United States now enjoying food cooked in the MA JESTIC affirm that 4b e half baa 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 MAJ ESTIC is not made with u view to furnishing extra parts for repairs. MAYS & CROWE, - Sole Agents. 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. Complete Line o Fishing Tackle, Notions, Baseball Goods, Hammocks, Baby Carriages, Books and 'Stationery at Bedrock Prices, at the Jacobsen 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. Ne-w Vogt Block, The Dalles, Oregon.t ascoUareliouse Company Headquarters for Seed Grain of ail kinds. Headquarters for Feed Grain of ail kinds. Headquarters for Rolled Grain, ail kinds. eadquarters for Bran, Shorts, mTluf ead quarters for "Byers' Best" Pendle ton Flour. egulator J ind tbabK itThe The Pickaninny band gave one of its inimitable concerts at Mays & Crowe's last night and attracted a large crowd that was delighted with the perform ance. The pickaninnies are genuine thoroughbred little coons, they make good music and dance well, but their singing, like that of most youngsters, is strained. The little fellows are well trained, though, and the smallest one has a mouth that will make him a for tune. We honestly believe he could swallow himself . without any trouble. The band is well worth going to hear and the price of admission, which is free, should not keep any from at tending. 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 ehake. ao-tf' call This Flour is manufactured expressly for family 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 so .and get our prices and be convinced. ifghest Prices Paid for Wheat, Barley and Oats. 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. 3Hfr has the best Dress Goods has the best Shoes has everything to be found in a - first-class Dry Goods Store. C. F. STEPHENS. WHO