Never Before SiNV Summef Clear ance ale (9 Have wo afforded the people of The Dalles and vicinity the advantage of a MID-SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE. When we say "Clearance Sale," we do not moan to say that every article in the house will he given away for a more nothing. We propose to lake Seasonable Goods, such as you are now buying, and make you prices that are more or less below cost. Many of the lines of goods we will oiler you havo been in stock less than a month. Our stock in all departments has never been so brim-full of new and attractive goods. The lines that we offer you will have to leave our house in order to make room for a Heavy Fall Slock. You will hear from the following departments in a few days: SILK WASH FABRICS, SHIRT WAISTS, Silk and Cotton ; EMBROIDERIES and LACES, SUITS and SEPARATE SKIRTS. The MEN'S FURNISHING DEPARTMENT will also have something to say. Sale Commences Monday, July 2d. AM Goods Marked Irt Plain FlerureB. PEASE & MAYS The Dalles Daily Chronicle. Telfphnnr No. 1. .MONDAY - - - - - JU-NK 23, 1000 ICE CREAM and ICE CREAM SODA At Andrew Roller's. WAYSIDE GLEANINGS. the cat tongue, of course. Finally, the little boy, with his hands covered with scratches and with teara in his eyes, pave up the eil'ort to effect the regenera tion of this eat. 'Dog-none you I' he cried notice the choice of epithets in the use of the word dog 'go and be nn Episcopal oat if you want to!' " Louis Comini writes from St. Vin cent's Hospital that he has had three operations on his noru eye bince going 1 1. .1... ,...1 ....... ...wt line unMi.ritfl IJUCK UIU rei:uuu uuir, iwm iiuo cuitv-ivv. I ' terribly. lie fears that the eight of one I is loHt forever, but Is full of hope that he will soon bo back at his work with the eit;ht of one eye unimpaired. The Herald says Alex Kireheiner will If you are looking for bargains, bo at an early date start the publication of mre and call at the New York Cash i another paper at Antelope. M. Ji. store. Miller, who will have charge of the Mot of Hheop pelts were sold Satur-1 mechanical part of the new paper, left day for 12'.. cents a pound.which is con- mere iasi .uonuay .or j u.i...u " ..I .1 ...r, l.ll.l It. Ill llttUVvtllllll nlured a good .irice For want of bidders -:he two sheriff's eales of Cueuar vh. Eraser and Bhirrell vs. Knapp were postponed today to this day week. Hood lilvor has now two saloons, 11- ei'iiHHS having been grunted last week to j W. II. Allen and Jakes A 1-oute. 'ihe chase the presr, type, and everything necessary towards a complete equip ment. Parties who had the best possible op portunity of knowing what they were talking about say that the picnic at Honneville yesterday was a dit-grace to civilization. It was composed, to an ieiiiBB fee in each case was uUU. i Tlio Dalles City came up from Port atul this forenoon with a load of rails for the Paul Molir portage and re turned this afternoon for another load. The ladies of the M. li. church will give ft .lawn social at tho residence of MrH. Smith French next Wednesday evening. lee cream and cake will bo served. Dr. Smith, the Oateotiathist, was pre vented from making his appointments ai The Dalles last week on account of sickness, but will be in his ofllco Tues days and Fridays as usual from 7 a. in. to 12 in., beginning Tuesday, June With. Cascade Locke will celebrate tho 4th of July in a very elaborate way this ear. All kinds of racuB will be indulged in for prizes. There will bo fireworks on the heights in the evening nd a grand ball tit tho Iv. of P. and Odd Fel owfi hall. Tho Crool: County Journal sayo Ore gon Short Line surveyors aro supposed to bo surveying a preliminary line Mirough the Malheur country went by way of Prineville, and olliehilB of the road are making an observation tour over the road. Tim r.l.mi.tr ravh II. 1). Lanifille, be fore leaving for Taconm Inst week, ao- uncomfortably large extent, of a howling, lighting, swearing, drunken mob. iliere was at least half a dozen fiat lights In which three or four men were severely handled, and one at least nearly mauled to death. If yesterday's picnic was a sample of these Sunday excursions, the sooner respectable people avoid them the better for their reputation. When John Taylor Oilman, a mem ber of congrees, visited tho log houses which chiefly constituted Saratoga in its early history, ho whb accompanied one day on a hunting ramble by a young sou of tho woodsman with whom he boarded. When they returned to the woodsman's cabin tho boy enthusiastic ally shouted, "01 a, we've found a new spring I" "Who tound it?" Turning to tho distinguished lawmaker the little fellow admiringly exclaimed : "Why, the Congress!" And to this day the naino has clung to one of the moBt celebrated of tho flings which made the plncu a sanitary resort long before it became tho seat of summer fashion. July Ladies Homo Journal. Saturday night, well on towards mid night, about u dozen young bloods fell on John Connors as ho and another man were trying to compel u young fellow, w ho was under the Influence o! liquor, In un liiime. According to Conners' v, . .... . cured the services of Hobt. Leasure. who story he licked tho whole out It ..' it i.. ik. ltnl ,t Pitiniuru' fill will tako his pluco on the mountain mis tiunmer and act ntt guide for tourists who wish to sue the wonders of the glaciers or climb to the mountain lop. "A little boy 1 knew of in the West," writes Kev. Cyrus Towimowl lltady, in the July Ladies' Home Journal, "be longed to n family who had trained him to believo in the deep-water form of 1'Hptlsm, and waa experimenting with the household cat and a bucket of water, The animal evidently did not believe in immersion, for she resisted, bit and scratched and used bad language In Ac- cording to the look on Conners' face, the honors must have been Uiviueu. ine fight occurred near the court house cor nor, and while It was in full bluet Night Watchman Phirinan swooped down on them and captured one of the bloods and lauded him in jail, but tho lest die. appeared in the dense darkness. The young fellow put up money for his ap pearance and will probably huvo a trial tomorrow. Comparatively few people have ever seen a modem warship, and oven those who have seen and were familiar with the old style wooden ships with their intricate net-work of rigging have little if any idea of what a modern steel man-of-war is like. The U. S. cruiser Phila delphia, which has been ordered to Astoria to participate in the celebration of the Fourth, is one of the modern kind and it will be a liberal education to anyone who has never Been such a vessel to go through and tee all that is to be neen on board of her. Her length is :i27.5 feet ; breadth, 48 tt feet; draft, li). 2 feet ; displacement, -1,1)24 tons; her speed is 19.7 knots an hour, derived from engines of S.815 horse-power. She carries twelve (i-lncu rilles, besiues fifteen auxiliary guns; she cost, when built, if 1,350,000. Everybody will be permitted to inspect her on the Fourth, which will be worth twice the cost of a Y. M. C. A. excursion ticket. Tickets on sale at all the drug stores. Supt. Gardner, of the Hoys' and Girls' Aid Society, is in town cn his return trip from visiting wards of the society placed out in Gilliam, Sherman, Crook and Wasco counties. Mr. Gardner says that the society has in the neighborhood of 300 children in family homes under their immediate surveillance So far all havo been found in good hande, attend ing school and properly clothed. The oflicetB of tho society consider the peo ple of The Dalles their best friends. The interests of the society are looked after in this city by Judge G. C. Hlakeley and Miss Anna Lang, although a large number of tho leading people are inter ested in the work. The superintendent says that tho management feel deeply grateful for the kindly aid given to their support both by tho county and the charitablv inclined citizens. All the children committed from tills county I are in good family homes and doing well. From an employe of the Paul Molir portage we learn that all the men that can be profitably employed are at work on tho portage. All the grading and bridge work have been completed and the rails have been laid on two miles of the western end of the load. Sullicieut ties for eight and a half miles of the track have been received at the western terminus, and tho remaining 7,500 are practically on tho way. About one third of the rails, or 1237, aro laid or are on the ground alongside the track, and a contract has been made with the Dalles City to bring the remainder from Portland as fast as that boat can carry them. Tho company expects to place orders today for 200,000 feet of lumber to be used on tho incline at tho termin man from Seattle. She was originally from Albany and has two sisters living in Eugene, who arrived here today on the noon train to see Bfter her iuterment. Yesterday was the birthday of the "landlady" of the joint where the woman died, and the "boarders" cele brated the event in due style. These things were brought out in the evidence before -the jury and more. But why enlarge? It is the old story and the fitting end of a life of shame, extending from early girlhood for fifteen or eixteen years. No evidence was produced to show why the woman took her own life, and the jury returned a verdict in ac cordance with t he few facts here recited. The remains will be taken on the morn ing train to Eugene for interment at that place. SEVERE WIND AND RaTn STORM. .Saturday Wltiit-NI an UmiMial Storm In th Inland Kmjilre. A eloud-buret, preceeded by a storm of wind that almost rose to the propor tions of a cyclone, visited, laet Saturday afternoon, a strip of country lying be tween Fifteen and Eight Mile creeks and extended from there in a northeasterly direction to the Columbia river. The amount of damage done is not yet fully known, but it must be considerable. From various sources we have gathered the following particulars, whicn may be modified or corrected by later reports : The warehouse of the Dufur flouring mill was blown down and wrecked. It contained a large quantity of flour and feed, which, happily, was not materially injured. Hail fell to a depth of more than a foot on the ridge between Dufur and Eight Mile, beating down to the earth hundreds of acres of standing grain and cutting oil' the heads of wheat and barley as if with a knife. The hail in places had not melted till twenty four hours after the storm. In boine places rocks were moved and piled up in heaps that weighed from a ton down. The ft nit trees in one orchard on the ridge were blown out by the roots. Johnston Pros., of Dufur, estimate the damage done to their grain crop at .f 1500. Other crops were damaged to a lesser extent. Water ilowtd through tho etieet at Dufur a foot deep. At Dry Hollow, between Hoyd and Dufur, tho storm etruck a six horte team, driven by a Warm Springs Indian. The leaders, a span of mules, turned short, broke the reach of the lead wa gon and piled the entire team and front wheels of the wagon in a ditch some ten us at the big eddy. Tliev hope to have I feet deep. The horses and mules were the entire work completed and tho road open for traflio by tho first ol August. Coroner Units held an inquest this forenoon on the body of a woman who died yesterday evening in a house of ill fame in this city from tho effects of a dose of carbolic acid administered by her own hand and, according to the evidence submitted to the jury, with suicidal intent. The woman's maiden uaine wjmi Clara Hard, but she was kuowo hero as Dickie Wood. She came here week ago with a fellow named Campbell, who claims to be a railroad barely out of the ditch when a Hood of water came rushing along that would have drowned the whole outfit. A flood of water six feet in depth ran through the Frank Huot barn at Eight Mile, and with difficulty a number of horses in the barn were cut loose and saved. The chickens on the Huot runch were swept away and most of them de stroyed. The apples in the Drake or chard, half a mile this side of Eight Mile creek, were beaten oil" the trees by the hail and ecattered by the wind and washed by the flood all over the road Tlio Kind You Havo Always Bought, and which has been, iu uso for over 30 years, has horno tho signature of ami has been made tinder his ncr- f&jy77tjfa, sonal supervision since its Infancy. , 4CM( Allow no ono to dennlvn von in tills. All Counterfeits, Imitations and Just-as-good" aro hub Experiments that trifle with and endanger tlio health of? Infants and Children Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its ago is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Fcvcrishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates tho Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THC CCNT.Un COMPANY, TT MUMMV STHCCT, NCWVORK CITY. between the orchard and the creek. Later Saturday alternoon apparently the same storm struck the railroad track this side of the Deschutes and covered it from two to three feet deep with sand and rocke to tuch a distance that it took fifty men all Saturday night to clear the track. A teamster brings in word that a cloud-burst struck him Saturday after noon on the Sherar grade, this side the Deschutes, and that to save his team from being washed away he had to un hitch then! and take them to higher ground. The peculiar thing about the storm was that it followed no well defined path. It was worst in the draws and hollow places; but, apart from the few j spots where it rageu with most violence, the rainfall was more of a benefit than an injury. The Tygh ridge country suffered no injury that we have heard i of, but had a rainfall that was highly beneficial. . r.dkt List Saturday, a lady's watch, at tached to a ribbon fob. Finder will re ceive a liberal reward by leaving the same at this oflice. 125-27 fur Suit-. We have at Portland a stock of flue lubricating oils and greases. Prices and terms aro light. Write for prices. Cen tra! IMining Co,, Cleveland, Ohio. Clark & Falk'a drug stcck la new, ' fresh and complete. mags i Gmwe Garden Hose Wo havo laid in a largo stock of (! anion Hose and are carrying tlio same brand of; 1 loso that we havo been carry-! ing for tho last fivo years, which is tho celebrated Mal tese Cross Brand. Wo carry tho same brand of Hose that tho Dalles City Kiro Depart-! ment has been using for tho last twonty years. The Mal tese Cross Brand is without doubt tho best grade of Hose; on tho market. Call and got our prices before buying. , IVIaier & Benton Sole Agents. The only store in this city where the Genuine Imported Stransky-Steel Ware is sold, A little higher in price, but outlasts a dozen pieces of so called cheap enam eled ware. BEWARE! Other wares look has tlio name Stransky-Steel Ware on each piece. Do not be deceived First prizo at 10 International Exlii bitious llipchoBt award at World h Columbian Exhibi tion Chicago Pre ferred by tho best cookniRauthoritieu, certified to by tho ino:t famous chem istn for purity and durability it 13 cheapest beeauso BEST. Remember this celebrated emuu tiled ware Especial ly imported for and f,old in this city ex clusively by us, It docs not rust nor absorb urease, does not discolor nor catch inside; U notaileoted by acids in Hints or vegetables, will boil, stew, roast and bake w i t li o u t i m parting flavor of previously cooked food and will last for years. Wo cau tion tha public against imitation AilinliiMil"i'" "r l'rt'lrily Notion h hereby Riven Hint from ami lifter tlio ninth (hiy of June, iwn, I .l i-roeuM to n'U "t Mlviitutule. for lahh, tlio foll.AUlu: 'Ueril)ea J.ro-erly beloiiKlim t" the ittiite of I'atilek llrowii.deceiueil, to wlj; Lots .V, II, V, 1), H, t, it, II. li Ji 1 "I'll I . u block f7 of tort Dallen .Military rcunutiim, in Forli'iforiiiiiiloii liniuiio lit oilleu of nlnliott A: Pliwlc't'.it built City this lOtli 'b.v of My. J900. AlmliiUtratrixof tho ettutu of 1'iitrirU llrown, ilcevuM'tl, I?UKI), W. WliJSON. , , OUlce over Ftrtt Nat. llnuli.