The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, July 29, 1898, Image 3

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    o o
WE
SAVE
YOU
MONEY.
'
'. ll
If We Saw You
Losing Your Pocket-book
We would not apologize for yelling at you. There
is a chance for your saving mone' money that you
are not saving now and we point it out to you. What
is the difference? AVhen you don't save the money
you could save, you lose money, do you not?
We honestly believe you can save money BY
TRADING WITH US and do not apologize for yell
ing the fact.
PEASE & MAYS.
"All sufferers from. High. Fricss cured here."
ANTELOPE PROPERTY.
A Fine Business House In that Great
Stock Center Offered at a Great
Sacrifice.
For sale, on easy terms, a large 2-story
business house, 24x40 feet in size, in
Antelope, Wasco county, Oregon, on a
55x100 foot lot on the west side of Main
streel in the heart of town ; built in 1893 ;
sealed throughout with finely seasoned
3 inch lumber, rustic outside, with large
glass front. Gronnd floor at present
used for printing office and residence,
and np'per story for A. O. TJ. VV. lodge
hall. With little work can be converted
into a store, bank building, hotel or sa
loon. Will take $700 less than it cost
me. Address E. M. Shutt,
Htppner, Oregon.
Farm for Sale.
A good farm for sale four and a half
miles from town, consisting, of 420 acres
good land, 120 being in grain, four
horses, 10 head of cattle and 6 of hogs.
Also a good dwelling house and barn.
The land will produce anything g-own
in Wasco county. A good school within
a quarter of a mile of the farm. No
mortgage or land agent in the way. Call
on or address ' Sbth Morgan,
july2-lm-w The Dalles, Or.
NOTICE.
Ail dogs running at large, without a
license tag, after the 1st of August, will
be impounded. . Chas. F. Later,
City Marshal.
Business Chance.
I expect to go away next week. What
will you give me for my lodging house
near the depot. Mrs. Hughes.
Cleveland wheels are selling in spite
of all the cheap wheels that are offering,
Call and see our '93 models. Maier &
lien ton.
Clarke & Falk have the pnrest and
ar.rnnrvA&f. "Pnrla dravn in thA mnrb-Af.
One Minute Cough Cure, cured.
That is what it was m-de for.
Use Clarke & Falk'a Rosofoam for the
teeth. ' - tf
DeWitt'a Witch Hazel Salve
Cures Piles. Scalds. Burns.
O
Of Course You Are
n mo1dk
uit 3rd.
B to Portland
on Aug
ine popular exc
krsion to .Portland
August 3rd, inngara
fed by the Evening
Telegram, promises
to be the event of
the season. The fa
at the exceedingly 1
round trip, and as t
has been placed
w price of $2 for the
s train leaves The
the morning and
Dalles at 7 o'clock if
Portland at 7:30 o'flock in the evening,
it will afford people
l nice long visit to
are going to join
that city. Hundreds
this excursion party.
Kobbed the Orave.
A Btartlmg incident of which Mr. John
Oliver of Philadelphia, was the subject
ib narrated by him as follows : I was in
a most dreadful condition. My skin
was almost yellow, eyes sunken, tongue
coated, pain continually in back and
sides, no appetite gradually growing
weaker day by day. Three physicians
had given me np. Fortunately, a friend
advised trying 'Electric Bitters,' and to
my great joy and surprise, the first bot
tle made a decided improvement I con
tinued their use for three weeks, and am
now a well man. I know they saved
my lite and robbed the grave of another
victim." No one should fail to try them
ATTENTION.
A special meeting of Azalea Rebekah
lodge, No. 99, 1. O. O. F., will be held
Friday, Jnly J29th, at 8 p. m., for the
purpose of initiation and such other
business aB may come before it.
By order of
Lulu D. Cbandall, N. G.
Alice Lyle, Sec.
Cash In Sour Cheeks.
All county warrants registered prior
to July 12, 1894, will be paid at my
office. Interest ceases after July 7,
1898. C. L. Phillips,
County Treasurer.
Bob Moore, ot La Fayette, Ind., says
that for constipation be has found De
Witt's Little Early Risers to be perfect.
They never gripe. Try them for liver
and stomach troubles. For sale by the
Snipes-Kinersly Drug Co.
H. M. Ryan, teacher of Mandolin,
Guitar and Banjo. Headquarters at
Jacobsen's. . - " tf
DeWitt's Little Early Risers,
The famous liill? pills.
Tb3 Dalles Daily Chronicle.
FRIDAY
JULY 29, 1898
WAYSIDE GLEANINGS.
Monkey Brand Soap.
Monkey Brand Soap.
. Monkey Brand Soap.
See it displayed in Maier & Benton's
window. july27-lw
Frnit jars and cans at Mays & Crowe's,
Sewing machines, four-drawer cabi
net, $25, at Mays & Crowe's. 3t
Situation wanted by a girl as waitresp,
chambermaid, or cook. Apply at Mrs.
E. Julian's.
Now is the time to spray with Paris
Green. Clarke & Falk have the strong
est you can get. tf
Crushed violets, the latest flavor for
ice cream soda at the Columbia Candy
Factory. Give it a trial. tf
Furniehed rooms to rent, also suites
of rooms suitable for housekeeping. Ap
ply to 19 and 20, Chapman block. tf
Trains Nos. 3 and 4 will carry excur
sion parties from Dalles to Oneonta
Gorge or Multnomah Falls and return
on Sundays for 50 cents.
The ladies of the Christian church
will give a . moonlight social at the
church on Friday evening. Ice cream
and cake will be served.
Ice Cream wholesale and retail at the
Columbia. Candy Factory. Orders to fur
nish lodge sccials and ice cream festi
vals solicited. Don't forget that our
ice cream sodas are the beet in thecity.
Patriotic music, home melodies, class
ical productions, everything musical that
is good, will be heard at the Oregon In
dustrial Exposition this autumn, for the
best band west of Chicago has been en
gaged for the full month.
Supt. Baker is actively engaged, and
every committee ditto, arranging for a
most excellent display of all Northwest
ern products at the Oregon Industrial
Exposition Sept. 22d to Aug. 22d. No
part of the Northern Pacific coast will
be neglected.
. Graders on the C. S. Ry. extension are
now in Moro finishing np the work for
1898, followed by the track layers. The
length of the new portion will be seven
teen miles. Mr. Lvtle states that trains
will be running from Biggs to Moro by
the first of October.
The attraction at Bonneville park for
next Sunday, July 31st, will be the en
gagement of DeBoe, the aerial wonder,
late from Hammerstein's, Olympic and
Koster & Bial's, New York City, with
other attractions. DeBoe's perform
ances are beyond belief, except to eye
witnesses. Fare only 50 cents for round
trip from Dalles.
Large crowds of excursionists are tak
ing advantage of the low Sunday excur
sions via the O. R. & N. to Hood River,
Cascade Locks and Bonneville. The
fare being only 50 cents for the round
trip to these points, this arrangement
affords the cheapest and most enjoyable
outing within reach ot Dallesites, who
are not slow to take advantage of it.
Yesterday Mrs. Price, of Hood River,
was examined by Judge Mays and Dr.
Shaw and pronounced insane. She will
be committed to the insane asylum.
Mrs. Price is well known in the city and
is a highly esteemed lady. She has
served as teacher'in the public schools
and ia a lady of culture and refinement.
Her many friends will be grieved to hear
of her misfortune.
Watkins cave, so named last week for
the discoverer, Frank Watkins, is situ
ated in Pine Hollow, thirty-five miles
from Moro. The discoverer and Art
Barnaul entered it and found the first
room as c rid as ice, about feet ceiling,
12x12. They had no appliances for de
finite observations, but from what seen
and felt they are quite enre that an
abundance of ice may be secured there.
Charles Young, while attempting to
climb between two cars at Wallulu
Sunday night, fell nnder the wheels,
and his right foot was badly crushed.
He was taken to Walla Walla Monday
evening, and had to lie at the O. R. &
N. depot several hours before medical
attention could be secured. He was
finally removed to St. Mary's hospital
There will be an excursion train leave
The Dalles about 7 a. m., August 3rd,
for Portland, returning train will leave
Portland about 7 p. m. same day,
Special tickets will be sold at The Dalles
for $2.00 for the round trip to Portland,
good going and returning on this excur
sion train only. Passengers will not be
carried on any other train on these
tickets. This will give the passengers
about nine hours in Portland. aug3
Yesterday morning the case of the
State of Oregon vs. Thomas Diasender
fer was tried in Justice Bayard's court.
Dissenderfer was charged with assault
and battery, the action Jgrowmg oat of
an accident that occurred on Mill creek
last Sunday, in which the defendant
drove into the carriage of John Filloon,
occupied by him and his wife. Dissen
derfer was dismissed on a demurrer to
the complaint. A. A. Jayne appeared
for the state, while N. J. Sinnott was
the attorney for the defense.
Headers are rnnning at full blast in
the interior, and by next week much of
the crop between The Dalles and Dufur
will be in the stack and ready to thresh
Owners of threshers are getting them in
shape for a big eeaaon'a run, and by
next Monday their busy ham will be
heard at variouB points in the interior,
while in Sherman county the massive
combines will be uti'issd to cot and
thresh the rich harvest as rapidly as
possible. Although the weather is ex
tremely warm, it is fine for harvesting,
and the farmers will take advantage of
it to get their grain under cover.
The Salem Statesman says : We learn
from a private source that there ia some
danger that the new beet sugar factory
at Union will not be able to handle all
the beets raised thereabouts to supply
it. The acreage was based on the pro
duction of Utah lands ; and the Grande
Ronde valley lands are eo rich and so
well adapted to the cultivation of sngar
beets that there may be a eurplun, a
tonnage beyond the capacity of the fac
tory." Prof. C. V. Piper, botanist of the Pull
man agricultnral college, after having
carefully estimated the coast gives' it as
his opinion that it will necessitate the
expenditure of $10,000 to eradicate the
Russian thistle from the wheat fields of
Umatilla county. If the matter is post
poned two years $100,000 would not bo
enough to do what the expenditures of
$10,000 would accomplish next spring.
This is a serious matter to the owners
of wheat land throughout the entire In
land Empire.
Yesterday morning Dr. Doane re
ported to the city anthoritiea a family
residing in the pines on the hill, eouth
of I. J. Norman's property, that was
afflicted with scarlet fever. The fami
ly was promptly quarantined,. The par
ties afflicted are named Eastbarn, and
live in a small house where they have
no means of caring for the eick, though
as yet the disease has not appeared in a
malignant form. Every precaution will
be taken to isolate them from others,
and there is little danger of the disease
spreading.
On Monday and Tuesday evenings
of next week the people of Hood River
and Cascade Locks will have a musical
treat, as the instrumental quartet of the
Alpha Mandolin and Guitar Club of this
city . will play in these towns on the
evenings stated. The quartet consists
of the well-known musicians, Prof.
Ryan, J. R. Reese, Irwin Parkins and
Clinton Alden. The playing of the
young men in this city baa delighted all
who have heard them, and that they
will please the public in other places as
well as here, cannot be doubted. They
will be at Hood River Monday evening,
the 1st, and at the Locks on Tuesday,
the 2d inst.
Colonel Robert W. Mitchell started
Wedneeday evening from Portland on
his annual trip of inspection over the
Willamette valley and Cascade mount
ain wagon road. At Salem he expects
to be joined by "By" Geer, and at Leb
anon the start by wagon will be made.
At Fish lake Colonel Mitchell will camp
several days in the fragrant hay that
grows rank on the trees there, and will
see if any of the trout he and Colonel
Jackson rubber-stamped their initials
on have 'returned from South America
to again snap horse flies on their old
grazing ground. Colonel Mitchell will
traverse the entire length of the road,
passing Prineville and winding up at
Ontaria, on the mystic Malheur, from
which point he will return by rail.
RED MEN ELECT OFFICERS.
John Michell. of The Dalles, Is the Kcv
Oreat Sachem.
The most important business before
the great council of Oregon, Improved
Order of Red, which was held in Port
land Wednesday, was the election of
chiefs, which resulted as follows :
Great sachem, John Michell, of The
Dalles; great senior, J. H. Howard, of
Oregon City ; great junior, A. B. Cherry,
of La Grande ; great prophet. Otto Schu
mann, of Portland ; great chief of rec
ords, W. C. A. Pohl, of Astoria ; great
keeper of wampum, J. H. Griebel, of
Portland.
John Michell was also elected great
representative to the great council of
the United States, which meets in In
dianapolis in September. There are
now two great representatives, Fred H.
Saylor, who wa3 elected at the last great
council, being the other.
Pendleton will probably be chosen as
the place of holding the next great
council
The speeches of the great chiefs were
read and referred to the proper com
mittees.
The reports of the great chief of rec
ords and the great keeper of wampum
Bhow the Oregon reservation to lie in a
very prosperous condition. There are
now 15 tribes in the state, an increase
of six over last year. In membership
the increase is about 500. The receipts
for the year were $10,127.65, and dis
bursements, $9,507.45. Of the latter
sum, $3,000 was for relief and funeral
benefits. ..
The report of Great Representative
Saylor showed that the membership of
the order in the United States is nearly
160,000, and that over $1,500,000 waa ex
pended during the last great snn for re
lief. .
The degree of Pocohontaa was also re
ported to be in a flourishing condition.
There is only one council in this reser
vation, but it is expected to institute
one each in Astoria, Baker City, The
Dalles and Pendleton during the next
great sun. . '
tflll
Si,
We have just received a shipment of Gents' Victors.
The name is sufficient guarantee of quality.
Cloudy Weather Preferred fov Sittings.
MY WORK
Chapman Block.
FEB 8 ON At SIESItO.V,
Miss Catrie Jeffers, of Goldeudale, is
in the city.
Mayor Nolan is spending a few days
at Clatsop beach.
J. B. Crossfield and wife are in the
city from Portland.
H. D. Parkins returned last evening
from a trip to Bridal Veil.
Dr. Frazier went to Moffatt yesterday
to spend a days with his family.
Mrs. C. N. Hess, of Goldendale, is
registered at the Umatilla House.
Z. T. Key a and son, of Antelope, are
in the city on a short business trip. v
Rev. L. Grey returned on the Dixon
last evening from a trip down the riyer.
Miss May Cushing was among the
passengers who came up on the Dixon
last evening.
T. S. Houghton, of Crook county, who
is a leading wool-grower of that county,
is in thecity attending to his wool sales.
Vlrs. M. Parkins was a passenger on
the boat last evening from Bridal Veil,
where she attended the Hoskins-Arm-6trong
wedding.
M. R. Elliot and wile, of Prineville,
returned on the night train from Port
land, and are among the guests at the
Umatilla House.
John Summerville, of the Baldwin
Sheep and Land Co., lett for his home at
Hay Creek yesterday, he having been to
Portland on business.
Bert Phelps, of Heppner, Is in thecity
on his way to Moffatt Springs, where he
will spend a week in company with his
eister, Mre. Dr. Frazier.
Fred Houghton and wile returned last
evening from a ten days outing at Glen-
wood, Wash. They report having bad a
splendid time, the only disagreeable fea
ture being the shortness of their stay.
A PLEASANT WEDDING.
Rev. W. II. Uoskiiis United In Marriage
to Hiss Berttio Armstrong at
Bridul Wll, Or.
A pretty weeding took place at Bridal
Veil at 8:30 Wednesday evening. The
contracting parties were Rev. W. H.
Hoskins and Miss Bertha Armstrong,
the ceremong being performed by Rev.
J. W. Rale, of the M. E. church of Van
couver. The bridal march was played
by Mrs. Jarvia. Miss Bertha Palmer
acted as bride's maid, while G. W. Arm
strong, brother of the bride, acted as
best man, the bride being given away by
A. A. Palmer.
The echoolhouse in which the cere
mony was performed was gaily deco
rated with cedar boughs and a profu
sion of flowers, while above the bridal
couple hung a bell of moss decorated
with roses.
There were over one hundred guests
present, among those from other cities
being Mrs. Falsley, of Spokane; Mrs.
L. E. Hall and Miss Mae Hall, of Van
couver; Mrs. M. E. Wade and Mrs. C.
Bailer, of Cascade Locks ; Mrs. M. Par
kins, H. D. Parkins and Mae Cashing,
of The Dalles.
After the ceremony congratulations
were showered npon the bappy couple,
and many beautiful presents were re
ceived by them. . '
Mr. and Mrs. Hoskins left on yester
day morning's train for Portland and
the coast. D.
' Start the day right with
Schilling's Best coffee. It
has an unusually charm
ing aroma and flavor.
Schilling's Best
tea. -baking-powder
coffee " flavoring extracts -"
. soda and spices
are all money-back right
m
acre.
103
For sale by
L. Rorden & Company
f7S
MY SUCCESS.
THE DALLES, OR.
Fruit Caas.
1 quart 50c doz.
2 quart .. 65c doz.
jflasQix Fruit Jars.
Pints 60c doz.
Qiiarts.. 75c doz
2 quarts $1.00 doz.
Yacuiii Fruit Jars.
Pints 90c doz.
Quarts $1.00 doz.
2 quarts $1.25 doz.
FOB SALE BY
...piaieifileiilii!
..THE tffiflDWRUE DEaiiElJS-
167 Seconi St. THE DALLES, OR.
The Pocket Kozy Camera
It measures l?ix4JL&ii Inches when closed.
Strictly a film camera. Pictures 41-1x3.
NO GLASS PLATES,
PLATE HOLDERS
OR DARK ROOM.
Loaded la broad sun-light for 12 T!cturc nX
a loading.
Clear fi oder, three stops and time or instaa-
taneous exposure
catalogue tree on application-.
M. Z. DONNELL,
DRUGGIST,
THE DALLES, OREGON.
$2.50
The Lightest
and Simplest
of
Plate Cameras.
Eastmans No. 2 Eureka Jr.
Makes Pictures 314314 inches; weighs 125 n.
THE SNIPES-KINERSLY DRUG CO.
Kodaks, Cameras and Supplies.
THE DALLES, - - - OBEGOS.
Send for Catalogue-.
S2.50
. C. Blanks, of Lewisville, Texas.
writes that one box of DeWitt'a Titeb
Hazel Salve is worth (50 to him. It cared
bis piles of ten years standing. Us ad
vises others to try it. jfr also core ec- .
zema, skin diseases and obstinate sores.
For Bale by the Snipes-Kinersly, Drug
Company.. -
You be the doctor for a little vrltil
and make a critical, examination of a
bundle of onr laundry work anl see if
you cannot conscientiously recommend
the Dalles Steam Laundry, Telephone
No. 341.
Use Clarke & Falk'a Floral Lotion fo
sunburn and wind chafing. ti