The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, July 12, 1901, Image 3

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    5
3Mow
Bales
the
of
There's more than one good reason for phenomenally low prices
Sin the month of Julv. lti the beet clearing time for Summer Mer
'Vchandiee. It's easier to gel I it just when you can make the most use of
Ml. It's better to sell it, even a) a sacrifice, than carry it over to another
teason- it's against our plan of merchandising to carry goods over. It
means small profits for ns, but more of them, and it means BhTTFR
PtVALUES FOI! YOU.
Ladies'
Summer Underwear
10c values reduced to 8c
.2'..-: " " 9'4C
m&t-: " " " IDJo
o " " " 15c
He " " " 28c
mOc. Balbnggan, Special . 25c
2"c, I!jc Balbriggan, special. 18c
"Mother's Friend"
Waists for Boys
They come in white and fancy
colors, in sailor and ahirt waist
Styles.
85c values reduced to 29c
J""' ' , ' J.C
75c, 85c vals. " " 59c
1 values " " 70c
$1.25 " " " 89c
Our high class NOVELTY
DRESS (iOODS have been mark-
ed down to about Uj oft'. There
are stil! some Ot the good patterns
left.
Money Spent Here is
PERSE 5t MAYS.
u
IP
n mm bp
The Dalles Daily Chronicle.
aew v -.
FRIDA 1
JULY 12, 1901
Ice Cream
and
Ice Cream
Soda
At Andrew Keller's.
REASURER'S NOTICE.
JUH Waseo County wurrautH registered j
prlar to Hitutiilr ;;, l hok, will be paid
oa preMoiitHt ion at my otticn. lnterHt j
after .luly 1 l0l.
I
JOHN P. HAMPSHIRE,
County Treasurer.
WAYSIDE GLEANINGS.
Pease A Mays have just recieved some
"holetuff" in the shape of neckwear.
Don't forget A. M. WilliamB A Co.'s
special sale of shirts. Tomorrow is the ;
last day.
The Dalles militia boys returned this
morning from Camp Summers, near
L Grande.
Wanted To purchase a dwelling
bonee, in the city : inside water limit.
Oeil at this ollice. jylO 18.
fhe funeral of the iate Mrs. C. C. '
RObarl will take place from the resi
dence at 1 o'clock tomorrow afternoon.
Tbe shooting gallery iias put up a
80-30 new Winchester rifle which will be
given to the winner of the highest score
PBI of 200. j 1 1-12
It was Henry Greer and not Henry
Gfeen, e.s the types made us say yester
day, that won the Winchester rifle at
the shooting gallery.
Tbe tioldendale Sentinel says that
Messrs. Lord and Laughiin, of this city,
ete ottering all their choice lands in
Klickitat county, located ou the Swale
llftl in the Horseshoe bend, for sale.
E. Anderson has purchased the
roersbop formerly conducted by
Funk I .an", on .second street near Court .
He will conduct a first class place and
rejppeetiiilly solicits a share of the
tfflde. jyl2-15
We regret to learn of the death last
Monday of the wife of J. If. Rankin, of
White Salmon, assessor of Klickitat
eounty. The cause of death was dropsy
from w hich Mrs. Kaukiu had been suf-
Jtrtng for many months.
0
Home sacrilegious thief recently stole
ie American flag of the local Woodmen
the World from the miuwin opera
use. Au American nag was recently
jptured by the Portland chief of police
ich may possibly be the one tolejjl
km here
Among other discoveries made in
recent years, and one of value to farmers
throughout the West.C.K.Smead, of Bla
Jock, finds that brooms enermous, a
giant which sods very heavy, will kill
s c
Clearance
Tuly....
Wash
Fabrics
These are exceptionally good
values as there are no old pieces in
the lot.
Dimity Cords good assort
ment of colors, reduced to. . . 6'.C
Ladies'
"WaiStS
Only a few left $3 50, 4t M. 50
and r values all for ... $3.00
Summer Corsets
25C
.lust the thing for this weather.
Money Well Spent.
1
$8
; alPir iiflisr Sat
a A
h n wy?.
off ferns, so plentiful and obnoxious on
new fields, and that the remedy is one
that never fails, and that the cure is
permanent. The brooms is a valuable
pasture and hay plant.
Just received at Gilbreth & Son's
lumber yard, a few carloads of No. 1
cedar posts and A shingles. They j the death of Mr. Moore's son last Tues
are agents for Heath &. Miliigan'a cele- ! day, it is more than reasonable to con
brated shingle paint. Call on them ; j elude that the gun shot by which he
their prices are all right. Wood not ; lost his life was accidental. Judge
fiumed is better by 50c a cord than wood
that is. jylO
JuBt received a new supply of North
rtiD A Stureis' nure food products, as
follows: corn Btarch, shredded cocoa-
nut. baking soda and high grade leaven
er. If it's Northrup A Sturgie, it is
good. Get a package and try it. For
sale by Conror, Son & Co., S. L, Brooks'
old stand, The Dalles, Or. jyl2-2wd
The Ciiko.nici.k has been requested to
announce that a meeting will be held in
the Baldwin opera house next Friday
night at 8 :80 o'clock to organize a band
and that all musicians who are in sym-
patuv wUll tlie project are cordiallv in-
vited to attend. Musicians will please
bring their instruments with them.
jyll-12
Get ready for a good, hearty laugh
when you read the following which we
i clip from the Astoria News. "Afters
visit to The Dalies, Charles VerBchuren,
painter, thinks Astoria the best
residence place in Oregon. He states
that the heat is terrible in the up-river
town, and that it would be unbearable
were it not for fhe fact that the place is
60 clean."
Bruce JohnBtou, who is attending!
school at Stockton, California, writes
hie. grandfather, If. B, Hood, that he has
obtained employment in the leading
morpmg paper of the town and while
he attends Bchool daily he supports him
self by working in the newspaper office
fromL'::!0 in the morning to 5. A boy
like that is bound to make his mark in
tbe world. Tbe only way to keep him
down is to kill him.
The matinee yesterday afternoon and
eutertainment in the evening delighted
everybody that was present at either.
The flag drill and cake walk were sur
prisingly good ; the singing was excel
lent and the tableaux were the best ever
seen in The Dalles. The attendance was
not nearly equal to tbe character of the
entertainment, jet it is gratifying t o
learn that the receipts of the matinee
met the expenses of both entertain
ments leaving those of the evening us
net profit.
In the neighborhood ot the wooden
school house, on Union str et, yester
day some boys that were amusing them-
selves by firing off a 22 caliber rifle came
wjt!,in an BCe of kjng tne little son of
L. U. Worden. who was an innocent
party and was separated by a fence from
the boys who were doing the shooting.
The ball struck tbe lad in the forehead
hut fortunately glanced off, thus saving
his life. The parents of tbe boys who j
$ f
Men
Hats
Correct
Styles
and
Good Stock.
Special
Saturday
and $10 Suit
Still going at.
$5.85
See display in window.
A e ilk
A 1
HI !
V V V
did the shooting whoever they were
Tmo Chronicle doesn't know or care
ibould be mulcted in a good stiff fine or,
etter still, made to serve a term in the
penitentiary.
From the report given to Mr. John A.
Moore, by Judge Brink ot Prineville, of
Brink came to Shaniko with the corpse
of the dead man, and while there the
judge told Mr. Moore that his eon had
traded, a short time before his death,
for hammerless Marlin rifle
that only
a few minutes before bis death he was
chatting pleasantly with a number of
persons in a barber's shop adjoining hiB
store ; that he stepped out of the barber's
shop after making some pleasant re
mark, and that two or three minutes
afterward the shot was heard that ended
his life. On the floor where Moore was
found in the sgony of death were found
some rags that had been used in clean
ing the rifle. The ball bad entered
Moore's breast, and passing through his
body bad lodged in the plaster of the
wall. The remains passed through here
yesterday and were taken to Corvallis,
where they will be interred Sunday.
"One of the most amusing contests I j
ever saw in my life happened at my
place the other day," said a White Sal
root) rancher to a ChBONICM man. "It I
was between a blue racer snake, about
eleven inches long, and a half-grown
Plymouth Rock cockerel. My attention I
was called to the contest by the un-1
! natural noise aud antics of the cockerel. 1
In a moment he lay stretched ou the
ground as if dead, aud the next moment
I could see the racer unwind about aj
third of its thin body from the neck of
chicken, while the other two-thirds,
craw led out of its mouth. In less than'
a minute, and before the snake had
time to get out of the way, the cockerel
WM on his feet and, grasping the snake
bv the tail, again swallowed nearly two
thirds ot its length, when quick as a
wink the snake wound itself around the
lebioken'l neck, and shutting off its wind
again compelled it to drop to the earth
as if stone dead. No sooner was the '
chicken stretched out and still than the
' snake unwound itself and crawled out
of the chicken's mouth. This perform- i
; ance was repeated three times when the
i chicken cocked its head on one side,
; took a disgusted but amusing look at
1 the little rarer and, apparently conclud- j
. ing that he was too tough a customer
j for further attack, abandoned the con
I test and went his way."
CASTOR I A
For Infanta and Children,
I Tho MmA VftM HaVfi AlbYaVfi ROUtM
! ,Bi MIIU IBU W D0Um
Bears the
fHgoature of
Drath of a 1't.mi.cr of ISM.
Rachel A. Moore, wife of John W.
Moore of this city, died suddenly at her
home, at about H:30 o'clock this morn
ing, of heart failure. The circumstances
connected with Mrs. Moore's death are
very sad. Her son, M. A. Moore, of
Prineville, accidentally shot himself to
death last Tuesday. Yesterday after
noon the afflicted mother and her hus
band returned home after having ac
companied the remains of their dead
' son trom Shaniko to The Dalles while
j they were on their way to Portland for
1 cremation. As there was some doubt
i whether the body would be cremated or ;
I lkM M , a 1 1 1 a f,,r intarnant
inrii ii v .i i. i i .. i i ........... ,
! Mr. and Mrs. Moore dropped off the
i train at this point to await further ad
vices.
When the afflicted couple went to bed
last night everything was ready for their
trip below to attend whatever disposi
tion might be made of the remains of
their son. Shortly after midnight Mrs.
Moore awakened her husband and com
plained of a severe pain n the region of
the heart. Some neighboring women
were called in and Dr. Logan was hastily
summoned, hut before the doctor's
arrival she had quietly passed away.
There is hardly room for doubt that the
lady's grief over her son's death precipi
tated her death.
Rachel A. Robnett, the maiden name
of Mrs. Moore, was born in Boone
county, Missouri, in 1882, sixty-nine
years ago. She crossed the plains with
her parents in 1851 , and settled on the
Calapooia, above Rrownsvile. She was
married to John W. Moore, a pioneer of
1849. on the loth day of February, 1852,
and die and her husband made their
home in the Forks of the Santiam for
Suiiie thirty-five years, till about four
teen years ago when they moved to
Kasterii Oregom, making their home
since then about half the time in Sher-
man county and half in The Dalles,
i The deceased was a member of the M.
K. churcti for titty years.
I Mrs. Moore leaves an aged husband,
two daughters. Mrs. V. C. Brock, of I
Wasco, and Mrs. B. N. Wilkins, of Cor -
vallis, and one son, John W.Moore of
Shasta county, California. These out of
a familv of eight children.
The remains will leave here on the
early morning train for Corvallis when
mother and eon will be laid side by side
next Sunday, Mr. Moore having received
word from the wife of bis dead son this
morning that interment had been de
cided upon instead of cremation.
Couldn't Kat One 1'otato.
The following is clipped from a
marked copy of a Washington, D. C,
paper that some one was good enough to
send to Tiik Cmkonki.. It is from an
article on the climate and resources ot
Oregon and Washington, and savors much
of the rhetoric of Col. Pat Donan:
"During the presidential campaign of
185I2, United States Senator Charles J.
i Faulkuer, of West Virginia, came to the
Pacific Northwest on a stumping tour.
One ot the places on his speechifying
programme was Walla Walla and during
his brief visit, H. S. Blandford and a
few other wide awake citizens decided to
give him a little dinner. With the
! frankness of western hospitality , they
risked him to name his favorite dishes,
i He replied: 'Gentlemen, I have never
yet seen a day when 1 couldn t eat a
good baked potato, and a piece of fat
and tender roast mutton.' That was
enough for the Walla Wallans, w ho com-
bined humor and public spirit with a
generous inclination to 'welcome the
coming, speed the going, guest,' They
determined to give him an object lesson
in Columbia valley potato lore. The
dioner followed his speech in the even
log, There were plates on the table fur
Dint guests, ami the entertainers, at the ;
proper moment, had a huge platter i
borne in, upon which was heaped nine
baked Irish potatoes, aggregating 62
pounds in weight. The largest one,
weighing eleven pounds, was placed be- I
fore Senator Faulkner. He looked at it
in ama.emeut, apd asked what it was.
They told him it was a potato. 'But
my God,' be exclaimed, 'it surely isn't
til to eat!' They broke it open and
poured it out before him, mealy and
white, nearly enough to fill a Hour sack,
and filling the whole room with the
aroma of a perfect and delicious potato
The senatorial stumper whs 'stumped, '
and hail to admit that he had at last,
'seen a day when hecoilldn't eat a baked
potato;' and the Walla Walla jokers
were satisfied, although it had taken
them all day to get the potato baked."
i 1 1 'rum ne oieelofi
Saturday morning the Hood lino
White Salmon ferry was swamped just
off the upper dock, aud an hour after
wards the occupants 'of the boat, Will
Rankin and Fred Purser, were picked up
near tnderwood landing by the tug of
the Nicolai-Camerun mill. Tbe men
were crossing to the White Salmon side
for the mail and in attempting to hoist
the boom pole in tiie heavy wind the sail
flopped the boat on its side and a big
wave completely filled it with water. )
The boat, though, has too much of aj
center board to let it upset, so Rankin
and Purser climbed to the sides of t tie
boat and calmlv awaited the arrival of
assistance. The men on the mill com- ;
pany's tug saw the accident and imme
diatelv started after them.
R. J. F.llis has sold his home place on
Phelps creek, but it is safe to sav he will
not lunve Hood River, where himself '
anil family have made their home for
more than a dozen years. Mr. Kllis is
the kind of erren we can't affore 10
lose.
O. B. Evinger dug up an old relic in
E. B. Clark's straw berry patch the other j
day. It is a copper cent of the mintage
Of 17W.
A1ertlf1 Letter.
Following is the list of letters remain- ;
ing in the postotlice at The Palles uti-j
called for July 12, 1901. Persons'
calling for the same will give date on
which they were advertised :
Allison, John Bandy, Mrs Jennet
Bertwell, Mrs Film Blendenning, Mrs
Campbell, Cleas 1. GomptOD, J K
Cartwell, A Evans. Master Owen
Even, Sarah 0 Guild, Estella
(irennon, George W Qatewood, l.ueasa
Granted. Florence Graves, Chick
Grant, Samuel
llaight, Gertie
Jackson, Clifton
Leighty, E K
Matlock, Mat
Bobbin a. Mrs L s
Steal, Ida
Smith, .lack
Thomas, Julia I
Warconac, Maggie
Munsaker, Mr
Johnson, Flda
Kramer, Joe
Martin, Mrs Frank
Moore, Jennie
Simmons, Jennie
Spaulding, Harry
Smith, Grace
Wilkins, Joe
Wood. Kev. J II
.1. M. PVITKHSON, P. Mi
Working ."4 II i urn n Day,
There's HO rest for those tireless little
little workers Dr. Kiog'fl New Piils.
Millions are always busy, curing Torpid
Liver, Jaundice, Billiousncss, Fever and
Ague. They banish Sick Headache,
drive out Malaria. Never uripe or
weaken. Small, taste nice, work won
den. Try them. 25c at G. 0. JJlakelev's
drug store. -
N..I h ...
' This is to give notice to all owners of
cows' within the limits of Dalles City,
j that I have been instructed by the city
council to enforce the ordinance against
cattle running at large, and that the
same w ill be strictly enforced by me on
and after Monday, July 15, 1901.
CltAKLII Cll AMI'l.lX,
jy9-18 City Marshal.
Moki Tea positively cures Sick Head
ache, indigestion and constipation. A
delightful herb drink. Removes all
eruptions of the skin, producing a perfect
complexion, or money refunded. 25 cts
and 50 cts. Blakeley, the druggist.
New Grocery Store
We have added
ment to our
clean stock. live
delivery to any
MAYS
a a
...The New York Cash Store...
138 and 142 Second Street.
The BARGAIN STORE of the City.
NECKTIES ! NECKTIES !
Tecks, Clubs, Imperials, Four-in-Hands
mum
A
m in
w ffl
25c and 50c.
Special Values. Latest Patterns. Just Opened.
FOR CAMPERS.
uTOMtie
'OLOINO
OPEN
CLOStO
Just the thing to take along when yon
go ennminu nr to the seacnast. For sale
by SEXTON A WALTHFR.
Acker's Pyspeps: i Tablets are sold on
a positive guarantee. Cures heart-burn,
raising of the food, distress after eating,
or any form of dyspepsia. One little
tablet gives immediate relief. 25 cts.
am) 50 oil. Blakeley, the druggist.
DeWilt's Witch Hazel Salve should be
I promptly applied l cuts, burns and
! scalds. It soothes an. I quickly heals the
i Injured part. There are worthless
counterfeits, he me to get De itt s.
Clarke A Falk'- P 0. Pharmacy.
Mid Mimmer clearance sale of milli
li"ry at the Campbell A Wilson Milli
nery parlors. Everything In the line of
headwear at one half the actual val
ue. j28-lm
It is eailer to keep well then get cured.
DeWitt's Little Early Biser taken now
and then, will always keep your bowels
in perfect order. They never gripe hut
promote an easy and gentle action.
Clarke l Falk's P. O. Pharmacy.
"I wish to truthfully state to you and
the readers id these few linen that vmir
I Kodol Dyspepsia Cure is without qoei
! lion, the best, and only cure for dyspepsia
that I have ever come in contact with
j and 1 have used inanv other prepare
tions. John Beam, West Middlesex, Pa.
: No preparation equals Kodol Dyspepsia
I ('nre as it contains all the natural
jdigestants. It will digest all kinds of
1 food and can't help but do you good.
Clarke A Falk's P. O. Pharmacy.
A full line of Eastman film-'
and sup-
Falk.
nlies iust received bv Clarke A
WM. MICHELL,
Undertaker and Embalmer
Cor. Third and Waahlrmton Sta.
All orders attended to promptly Long
distance phone 488, Local, 109.
a Grocery Depart-
store, A ii!w fresh,
us a citll. Prompt
part of the city.
CROWE
a
1