The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, September 29, 1897, Image 3

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    Where
That
Boy
One thousand styles and sizes.
r or cooking ana beating.
Price from $10 to $70.
1,000,000 People
II
'
Of yours going for his new ounfit? , We
have not forgotten about him and his "Winter
needs. He will want a new suit to Avear to
school he must have good, warm clothes for
the cold weather, and a neat Sunday Suit,
perhaps.---" bh-
Our Boys' Departnept
Is full of interest to parents. The clothes
are stylish and good and made of dependable
cloth, and so strongly sewed that they will
keep the small fellows busy to wear them out.
We believe you will acknowledge that THE
PRICES ARE LOWER HERE THAN
EVER BEFORE. There certainly never was
a time when you could dress a boy so well for
so little money.
9
1
Our purpistyir (Jood5 Department
Is displaying the latest things in Neckwear, Shirts, Underwear, Hosiery
and the like everything a man needs at right prices.
ALL GOODS MARKED IN
PLAIN FIGURE3.
PEASE & MAYS 9
o O
Often imitated. Never equalled.
V. 7 nest in quality
ALSO A NEW LINE.
TRILBY
AIR-TIGHT
HEATERS
XT
MAIER &, BENTON'S,
BOLE AGENTS FOR
Garland, Michigan and Sr
perior Steel Ranges, Cook
and Heating Stoves.
Tt3 Dalles Daily Chronicle.
WEDNESDAY- SEPTEMBER 29, 1897
WAYSIDE - GLEANINGS.
Random Observations nd Loeal EtcoU
of Lesser Magnitude.
before the finishing touches are put on,
but when tbey are the club will have as
handsome rooms as there are in the
state.
Frank Pickett, who has been em
ployed on the Columbia Southern in
laying track, was Sunday sitting astride
an iron bar used in holding' the rails in
place while tbey are Bpiked down, when
the bar slipped and he fell, injuring
himse'f severely. He was sent here
this morning, and is at the Umatilla
House under the care of Dr. Logan.
1 Mrs. L. H. Scott, who resides near
Wapinitia, while gathering muakmelons
one day last week was bitten on the
hand by a snake supposed to be a rattler.
She at once went to the house and ap
plied bluing or indigo to the wound.
Whether it was the efficacy of the bluing
or that the snake was of a non-poison-out
variety, the bite bad but little effect
on ben
Umatilla House office is being
changed so that old-timers feel lost on
f The wheat -market is weak and tqe entering it. The counter has been
price is going slowly bat steadily dowi. moved np to the front, the big safe
I Quotations today are 73 cents, and the placed in the corner of the bar-room,
market very weak at that. the door between it and the office being
The ladies of the Methodist church removal, and everything else is moved
' :i 1 - T a il R p vstpm tirll v nH a wnm n n n a 11 (ypn
win give HLnjiii oaburuay uikuw avm j - e
which a program will be rendered, andfi tne bedstead and furniture in a bed-
.... . . . . u -1 1 iv. : i . .a
pies, cakes etc., will be served. AH for,uul" wucu euo u uuiuiuk eiee w uu
Just received another large shipment
of fruit can 8 at Maier & Benton's. e24-tf
Thirty-four of our merchants have
signed the agreement not to collect until
Monday, the 4th.
Wanted A girl to do housework
family of three. Inquire at
office. b24
Collection day, owing to it falling
Saturday, has, by general consent, been!
postponed until Monday, Oct. 4th. j
A few flocks of wild geese have made!
their appearance from the north, which!
indicates that the iUondikers are hav-T The
- . 1 JT .
ing some winter weaiuer.
r
15 cents.
The funeral of the late William Hock
man will take place frcm the Methodist
church tomorrow morning at 10 o'clock,
and the interment will be in charge of
the Knights of Pythias, who will con
duct the burial services according to the
rituals of their order.
Tuesday evening the 10-year-old son
of Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Haslam was
playing on the fence in front of their
residence when he fel! and one of the
sharp iron pickets penetrated his lung.
The wound is a dangerous one, but it is
thought the boy will recover.
We note the ladies hats continue to be
worn larger and more of them, and the
indications are that the once popular
Gainsborough is to again be the fashion
To our notion it was the prettiest hat
the fairy fingers of - a milliner ever
trimmed or the face of a lovely woman
ever adorned.
he Columbia Southern expects to get
its road completed by Friday night.
There is lots of work piled up for it to
do, and it will be kept busy until
Christmas moving the wheat crop. The
road is losing $300 a day by not beintk
completed, as farmers need money and
are hauling their wheat to Rufus.
ahha purple, tanninbrown and
rousse green are the ihree popular
shades in millinery, and the walking
hat has superseded the so-long favorite,
the sailor. AH these popular shades
and shapes will be suown at the grand
opening at Mrs. Brings' millinery par
lors tomorrow afternoon and evening.
Members of the Commercial Club look
as disconsolate as a lot of bees whose
hive has been destroyed. The club
rooms are all torn up and tbey have no
place to go. It will be several weeks yet
vertently stepped upon a piece of gum
put to less good use will , have no diffi
culty in believing the story.
The weather this morning, was quite
chilly, cold enough at least to set the
heads of the households thinking about
the winter's fire-wood. There is plenty
of it on the beach and more coming, and
now is the time to get it stored in wood
shed or cellar. It is said that an abund
ant crop of acorns indicates a eevere
winter, and if this be true, you can't
get too much wood. There are 50,000
bushels of acorns in Hood River valley,
great big fat fellows that would fatten
hogs as well as corn ; but nearly all of
this mast is going to waste.
The O. R. & N. is doing a large
amount of work in straightening its
track. At Mosier a dozen teams and
twice as many men have been engeged
for a couple of months in taking two or
three bad kinks out of the 'track, and
next week work of the same kind will
be begun at the Cascades. One of the
most troublesome curves on the road is
the long trestle across Mill creek, which
sticks every heavily loaded train going
west. A survey has been made with the
intention of overcoming this but work
has not vet commenced on it.
Too l.ate for This Term.
Portland has been having genuine
webfoot showers for the past few days.
but fortunately they have not yet
reached this ' side of the mountains,
though the clouds have threatened rain
for a day or two. The harvest is all
completed except in the Palonse, and
there it is about done, so that little dam
age could now be done except to the
threshed wheat that remains uncovered
in the fields.
The Hood River fair begins Wednes
day next, and the display of fruits will
be one of the finest ever seen in the
Northwest. The railroad and boat
lines have made special rates for the oc
casion, and we urge all interested in
fiuit-growing and all who like to see
beautiful disolavs of orchard and vine I
products to attend. The fair begins
Wednesday and holds over Thursday and
Friday.
The funeral of the late Charles John
ston took place from the Masonic hall
this morning at 10 o'clock, the funeral
services being conducted by Rev. W. C.
Curtis, followed by the rites of the order
of which deceased was an honored mem
ber. The casket was covered with
flowers, simple tributes of love and
friendship. The long procession that
wound its way out to the city of the
dead, spoke more eloquently than words
of the esteem in which the dead engin
eer was held. '
Even gum-chewing may stand one in
good stead upon occasion, as one young
woman of Camden, Me., found during
an ascent of Mount Battle. - She wore
a short "skirt and it caught on a broken
bit of shrubbery and was torn. She
calmly took the gum she was chewing
from her mouth, put the torn parts of
the dress into place and fixed them
there with it. Anybody who has inad-
167 Second Street,
Opp. A. M. Will
iams & Co.'b.
William Otr Killed.
William Orr, an employe of the Walla
Walla - Gas & Electric Co.,' suffered
horrible . death Saturday morning by
being crushed beneath a falling pole.
Mr. Orr, in company with John
Mayer and Henry Lunsford, was en
gaged in removing the electric light
wires on Fourth street, near the old W.
& C. R. depot, when a rotten pole gave
way, dashing him a distance of sixty
feet to the ground. Orr waB beneath
the pole when be struck the earth, the
full weight of the pole resting on his
breast and crushing the lower -part of
his body beyond all semblance of hu
manity. While, falling he made repeat'
ed attempts to swing clear of the-pole,
and when, as it neared the ground, it
seemed to become evident to him that
he could not succeed, he was heard to
exclaim, "Oh my God!"
'Although frightfully mangled, he ear
vived until he had been taken to St
Mary's hospital where he expired while
Drs. Cropp and Nelms were endeavoring
'to ascertain the extent of his injuries.
Orr had been a resident of Walla
Walla for a considerable time and bore a
good reputation. He leaves one child, a
daughter, who is at present in Spokane,
His wife deserted him in 1894.
IN the United States now enjoying food cooked in the MA
JESTIC affirm that the thalf 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 Kos. 201 to 212, are made of steel and mal
leable iron, and purchasers are assured that it is as good and
aB 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 is not made with a view to furnishing extra
parts for repairs.
. ' MAYS &. CROWE,
Sole Agents.
J. T. Peters & Co.,
-DEALERS IN-
Agricnltural Implements, Champion
Mowers and Reapers,' Craver Headers, Bain
Wagons, Randolph Headers and Reapers,
Drapers, Lubricating Oils, Axle G-rease,
Blacksmith Coal and Iron.
Agents for Waukegan Barb Wire.
2nd Street, Cor. Jefferson, THE DALLES.
Complete Line of
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.
New Vogt Block,
The Dalles, Oregon.
Several suits that were intended to be
brought in the November term of court
will have to lay over until the February
term. The law provides that in the
service of summons by publication the
summons shall be inserted in a weekly
newspaper for such time as the judge
shall direct, but not less than once-a
week for six successive weeks. The su
preme court has decided that ibis means
the summons must be printed seven
times, and that the defendant must be
cited to answer by the first day of the
term after the expiration of the sum
mons. As there can only be six inser
tions in a weekly paper before court
meets, November 8th, service by publi
cation cannot be had for the November
term.
Taxpayer, Attention.
This ia my last and final call to you,
as the county court has issued 'an im
perative order.
By virtue of a warrant to me directed,
issued, by the clerk of the county court
of the state of Oregon for the county oL.
Wasco, commanding me to collect the
delinquent, county, state and other
taxes, I will, on the 1st day of October,
1897, without lurther notice, levy upon
and sell all property upon which taxes
remain unpaid. T. J. Driver,
Sheriff.
Meeting Notice.
An Experiment in Sowing.
The officers and members of Friend
ship Lodge, No. 9, K. of P., are hereby
notified to meet in Castle Hall tomor
row at 9 o'clock, to attend the funeral of
our late brother, W. M. Hock man. By
order of the lodge. D. W. Vacsk,
K.of R
Farmers near Garfield are trying an
experiment in. sowing fall wheat. A few
sowed their early summer fallow to
wheat in June, and the grain is now
from four to six inches high and grow
ing nicely.' The object of the early sow
ing ia to get the seed in the ground be
fore the June rains so that all of it will
come np and get a good start before cold
weather. .. .
Besides getting well-rooted, the wheat
makes fine fall pasture, lasting until tbe
ground is too damp to Allow tramping.
Another advantage claimed is that the
wheat will be high enough during tbe
winter to hold the snow from blowing
off, and thus the roots will be protected
by the tops arid the snow from the freez
ing and thawing of the ground, which,
in the past, has proved so. disastrous to
winter wheat. .
Senator McCroekev has 200 acres of
this wheat, which now affords splendid
pasture for stock, and there are several
other fields in this vicinity. One field
between Garfield and Farmington is
fully six inches bigb, and covers the
ground with a perfect carpet, giving the
appearance of a field in June, and mak
ing a beautiful contrast 'with the fields
of ripened grain which surround it on
all sides. .'.'" '' " .
Pioneer Baker; Ready for Boilneit.
Wasco Warehouse Company
Headquarters for Seed Grain of an kinds.
Headquarters for Feed Grain of ail kinds.
Headquarters for Rolled Grain, ail kinds.
Headquarters for Bran, Shorts, VXSS&T
Headquarters for "Byers' Best" Fendle-
rTI "r4,1rTlT This Flour is manufactured expressly for family
IAJ1A Jv 1UU1, use: every sack is, guaranteed to .give satisfaction.
We sell our goods lower than any bruise 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.
Bread, cakes and everything of that
kind, as well as confectionery, icecream,
etc., at the Elite, next door to Parkin's
barber shop. 7-tf
GEORGE RUCH
PIONEER GROCER.
Successor to Cbrisman & 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.
In connection with my grocery store
I have again reopened ' this well-known
bakery, and am now prepared to furnish
my friends and patrons with fresh bread
every ;morning.-' Thanking, you all for
snd S.' . J favors received in the past, I would ask
for tbe continuance of tbe same.
- " . Geo. Ruch,
spt29-lf . Pioneer Grocer.
Try Schilling's Best tea and baking powder.
has the best Dress Goods
has the best Shoes
has everything to "be found in a
4- fhrst-classSDry;GoodsStore.
C. F. STEPHENS.
WHO