The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, July 23, 1901, Image 3

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    A . et -A- A. A SB A S A
. 11 a a W
lvlen s
This is to be the
I Greatest Bargain Week
X
f of the Summer.
i
i
jr,
Now that Summer is here in earnest, we realise
tlio fact that you are in need of cool, dressy Summer
Goods, so we offer you for one week some splendid
inducements.
50c Silk Chambras, this week 42c
45c Fancy Striped Chambras. this week 37c
30c Mercerised Foulards, this week 22c
week 15c
Fancy
Hose
Combed Maco,
Extra spliced heel and toe.
Latest colorings in
Fancy Hosiery:
20
Dimities in latest effects, this
Special
3 pairs for
50c
(
L2i(
Lawns, this week .
Lawns, this week.
Lawns, this week
12c
11c
08'c
M
onarch Shirts.
We were so well pleased with our
last week that we have decided to close
maining few dozen at 23c.
'orset Sole
out the re-
Arrow Brand Collars, 2 for
25 cents.
Kumchunda
Windsors and hows
s ana nrenaaine
REMEMBEK. FOR ONE WEEK ONLY.
50c.
Summer Suspenders, 35c.
The Dliinonil Morning Mill.
To MM whose knowledge of tl.nu BID'
ufscturing is minted to a very rudi
mentary conception of the old burr mill
and bolter ot fifty year two t tie opera
tion of aetrktly up-to-date roller prefers
mill if af bewildering ae that of a mod
ern Hoe perfecting printing press is lo
one whose knowledge of printing is
limited to tne operation ot an out-style
Washington hand press. He sees an
endless lot of shafts, pulleys and eleva
tors and odd-looking machines, concern
ing whose particular use he has no more
idea than the man in the moon. At
least that is the way it was with the
CmioNin.K matt when, at the invitation
of Mr. Groat, the head miller of the
Diamond Flouring mills, he took a look
the other day over that establishment.
Thanks, however, to the courtesv of Mr.
'Groat, who answered our numerous
kindergarten qaetUoBI with great pa
tience, the newspaper man came I Way
f.oui the place deeply impressed with a
sense of the marvelous revolution that
human invention has effected for the
'production of the m st necessary and
! staple of all our food products from the
' crude process of a generation ago.
Notwithstanding that the machinery
J in these mills could hardly be called old,
and that with it a reputation has been
established and maintained for the best !
; flour 'n the Pacific Northwest, the old i
J machinery has been set aside and an en- j
tirely new bolting system installed.
Ten reels or bolters, as the layman would
probably call them, have been replaced
by two Universal bolters, immense big
jsiu cylindrical things like monster drut&l
...The New York Cash Store...
138 and 142 Second Street.
The BARGAIN STORE of the City.
Some Bargains
IN
Boys' Knee Pant Suits
THIS
ONLY.
20 per cent Discount on all Boys'
DON'T OVERLOOK THESE BARGAINS
41
Suits.
i.
PERSE
5t MAYS.
s
The Dalles Daily Chronicle.
Tr
(
!DA V
Ice Cream
JULY 28, 1901
and
Ice Cream
Soda
At Andrew Keller's.
TREASURER'S NOTICE.
AH tVaacn County warrants registered
prior t September 8 . ikk. will ie iiattl
on DrHspiititriiiii ii t lnv iitlii- liwiTi-m
ceanea after .1 uly 13, 1 HO 1 .
JOHN P. lUSII'SblltE,
Couuty Treasurer.
created a disturbance He didn't ex
tinguish the (lames because be couldn't
turn over to do so, and to fall off meant
instant death. When the traiD, after
several ages, finally pulled into the
station fie was a candidate for a pro
tracted stay in the nearest hospital.
A. I.. Anderson, the railroad con
tractor, and late an extensive wheat
Oregon City where he goes to I raiser of the Klickitat valley, arrived
McKelvay, of Antelope, on a here today from Kalama, where be has
WAYSIDE GLEANINGS.
Ad Keller is confined lo Ins room with
sickness.
P. D. Hinrichs writes the Weather
P.ureaii that fruit ie not bo plentiful in 1
the Hood Liver valley as it was a year
ago. Still, he adds, there will be many
prunes and pears.
Now is the time for low shoes, and in
preparing fur an outing don't forget that
A.M. Williams & Co. will be selling,
their regular $5 patent leather Oxfords, I
on Saturday, at $4.15.
The Bailey Gatsart stops at the follow- j
ing landings: Hood River, White Bal
mon, St. Martin's Springe, Cascade
Locke and Vancouver. Arrives at The
DallM at 3 p. m. ; leaves for Portland at
p. m., arrive at Portland 10 p.m.
Daily except Monday.
The wool market iu The Dalles is prac
tically over and before another week is
eoaedall outside buyers will have left I
fur other tarfils. A few nllna remain in I
--r- ..
ie waretiouaes unsold, but these are for
: Locks, which compelled a change of pro
gram in the run of the other boats. The
Regulator arrived here at 7 :.'!0 this
i morning and left for Portland half an
; hour later; hence she did not make her
; daily down trip this afternoon. The
Dalles City will arrive here tonight in
; place of the Reliance.
Constable Jackson ieft on the morning
, train for
arrest D.
warrant sworn out in Justice Brown
hill's court charging him wit to stealing a
mare from C, W. Haight of this city,
j McKelvay. it is alleged, picked up
I the animal on the range and took her
with some other horses to the Willamette
' valley to dispose of them there.
The Bpecial committee appointed at
the last meeting of the city council to
j report on the Court street sewer met
i yesterday and after carefully looking
! over the situation concluded to report
i on this sewer being drained into Mill
Creek through the alley back of the Co
; lumbia hotel, instead of under the rail
road track as now and out at tbp.weet
end of the Regulator warehouse. 'y
Beyond any question the majority of
the people of The Dalles want a street
fair and it is eijualiy beyond question
that it would pay The Dalles to have it
a hundred fold. But it will take money
to make suifable preparation for a street
fair and Btill more to make suitable
preparation for the district fair, and the
one must not be held without the other.
Are the business men of The I fallen will
ing to put up the money to make this
preparation? That is t he question ttiat
a volunteer com m it lee will try to solve
been working on the new road being
built between that town and Vancouver.
Mr. Anderson has obtained a sub-contract
from J. H. Smith, of Portland, for
building part of the new grade about to
be built by the O. R. & N Co. between
The Dalles and tunnel No. 3, some nine
or ten miles west of here. Mr. Ander
Bon came here today to Belect a location
for his camp, which will be made for
the present somewhere below Crates
Point. He informed Tut Ubboniclb
that his men and horses and equip- I
merits will reach bere early next week,
and work will be commenced as soon as
possible after their arrival. Most of,
the other sections of the road have been !
l sub-let and the chief contractors have'
bound themselves to have their part of .
the work finished by June, The!
work will employ 1000 to Jo00 men for i
nearly a year.
The presidents proclamation of July
let reserves from settlement and entry ;
the following lands iu Wasco county :
The south haif of Township one South, I
townships two south, three south and I
four south, range elevtn east, Willamette I
meridian ; tow nships five south, range
nine and ten east . and ou much of'
that sit on end chock fell of an endless
number mid varietv nl sinva un.l. In.
TfT j stead of revolving like the old-style bolt
Op I ere, have a motion w ben in operation
similar in principles to that of the hand
sieve or riddle of early day".
But the one thing that Interested the
newspaper man most was the purifying
machinery. Your old burr mill was
run on the principle that every man
must eat his peck of dust. The modern
mill is constructed on the principle that
if dust must tie eaten it shall not tie eat
en with flour. Foil' big metal cylinder
tapering towards the bottom end, and
called Cyclone Dust Collectors, because
their inwards are said to be constructed
on the spiral principle of a cyclone, re
ceives the wheat from the bins, as it
passes to the rollers, with a current of
air strong enough to drive off every par
ticle of loose duet. But the purification
does not end here. When the wheat is
in a half ground condition it passes over
sieves through which is driven, by a
powerful fan, another Btrong current of
air that separates any dust or impurity
that may have escaped the Cyclone Dust
Collectors. Tbe result of these processes
of purification is that the fionr is always
as free and pure from dust or other im
purity as it is possible for humau skill
and labor to make it. The result too is
apparent everywhere throughout the
i mills whose floors are as clean and free
of dust as any ordinary well-kept kitten.
The new machinery increases the ca
pacity of the mill about 26 barrels a day
above what it was before. Two grades
of floor are now produced instead of one
as heretofore, the second quality as good
as the first of any mill within 600 miles
of here, and the first quality equal to the
best Hour on the American continent.
If you think this is putting it too strong
weaek vou to remember the murmur
inge and complaints of The Dalles house
wives during the past two months when
the Diamond mills were shut down and
the family cook couldn't get Diamond
flour.
New Grocery Store
Wo have added a Grocery Depart
men! to our store. A new fresh,
clean stock. Give us a call. Prom pi
delivery to any part of the city.
...MAYS CROWE...
F. S. GUNNING,
...Blacksmith, Horseshoer and Wagon-maker..
DBALIB in
Iron, Steel. Wheels, Axles, Springs and Blacksmith Supplies
Agent for Bueaell v 0o.'s Engine, Threshers and saw miiin.
Telephone 157.
Long Distance 1073.
Hor. Second & LausUin Stl, THE DALLES. OR.
probably tomorrow.
Representative Moody received a tele
gram yesterday afternoon, too late to
appear in The CHtlOMCl.g, announcing
I that the boat conveying the conifression-
oife owners
sacrifice.
1 (...... A Inbl.n I....I .
"if most part ot inferior grades :and mav f . . a . , , . ,
l. . , . , , " i'arrived at Seattle and would be a dav
HBVe 10 be held nuer if nnt nlM ul ivlint I. ....
... . Mate. 1 he onlv eflect of this delay will
would probab v consider a i. .. . A . , , ., . ..
' Jbe that the dates arranged for the visit
1 of the committee to
1 lie W I. if u ('.-.) I l..ii.... r' ...... ... ... .
" wwnni Hue, i.in.r. Moi.cu, east ol tiere wili
""i sen ttirougb roaud-trip tickets to
BMide und return. Tickets good going
lnB) 1'ortland over the White Collar
Hot, I '. B. A N. Co., V. T. Co. or the A.
,v C. U, 1;., and return over same lines.
Baggage checked direct to either North
Beaeb, beavie, Long Beach, Breakers,
Ooean I'ark or Nahcotta. Limit of
Uoket September loth. J. M. F.lloon,
a,'eru.
Vmg Hing, the Chinaman
111 l"e back and arm Uxl u.-.-L i.v
another Chinaman named Wang Fob',
Wh town as soon as his assailant was ar
Nlttd and he was able to get out of bed.
r"b isstili in jail but as his victim is
"ver likely 0 come back lie will have
be discharged. Which reminds us
hat for ways that are dark and tricks
"'at are vain the heathen Cninee is
culiar.
The Reliance met witu an accident on
"erdown trip yesterday, at the Cascade
the several points
ie one day later in
each case. Messrs. Moody, Schenck
and McCoy will leave The Dalles tonight
for Lewistou on the special train that
will arrive here about W o'clock with
the Portland delegation. The congres
sional committee and party will arrive
here Thursday Instead of tomorrow, as
previously announced.
The railroad men of this piace, save
the La (irande Chronicle, leporl a
who was peculiarly unfortunate accident that
befell u trauip who was riding the brakes
of a train on the Short Line last week.
The tramp e clothing became ignited on
the back by a spark from the engine and
h?, like the stoic Greek of old who
rather than disturb a sacred meeting by
his movements let a spark on his sleeve
burn to the bone, permitted the flame
to burn all the clothing from his back
and fairly cook tbe skin. His reasons,
however, wore not so exalted as those
of the Creek and it is probable that he
townships six south, ranges nine and j
ten east, as lies uarth of the Warm
Springs Indian Reservation. From the!
force and edect of the proclamation are
exempted all lands which may have
been prior to July 1st, embraced in any
lagtl entry or covered by any lawful
tiling duly of record in the proper I.'nit
ad States Land Office, or upon Wblcb
any valid settlement has been made pur
suant to law, und the statutory period '
within which to make entry or filing r.f
record has not expired: Provided that
this exception shall not continue to ap
ply tO any particular traet of land I nil -tbe
entryinan, settler or claimant Don
tinnes tO com pi v with the law under
HI Ssris I.OCAI.H.
Wanted A girl to do general house
work. Inquire at tbia nfflee. jlyi.viw
For rent Two or three rooms fur
ished for housekeeping. Apply at this
office, jlyV2lw
Clarke A Falk have received a carload
of the celebrated James K. Fatton
strictly on re liquid paints
R. B. Uilbretb & Sons will keep at all
times a supply of hay, giaiu and leed
which thev will retail at the lowest
; market rates. jL'ti-tf
Wanted A competent gir! to dogen
cral housework for family of three in the
! country ; wages per month. Inquire
at O.tlles Hospital. jyl!-lwk
WantP'I A small family to occupy
i ttie home and keep house for an aged
widower. Liberal terms can be had.
j A pply at this Offtoti jly'J2-l w
Miil-summer clearance sale of milli
nary at the Campbell A Wilson Milli
nery parlors. Kvervthing iu the line of
beadwear at one half the actual val
'ue. j-JH-lm
Dyspepsia can be cured by lining
Acker's Dyspepsia Tablets. One little
Tablet will give immediate relief or
money refunded. Sold inlnwidhoiiie tin
boxes at 26 Otl. Jilakeley the druggist.
. When your hair appears dry and to
be received at the ru nnier i i,uitu i,,u. it. wi.uliit, it ....m u .t......
to give It llle and vigor. We have whul
tbe hair needs when it gets !n that con-
Why pay 1.7.r) per gallon for inferior
paints when you can buy James K.
Patton's sun proof paints for 11.50 per
gallon, guaranteed for 5 years. Clark A
Ka!k, aients. mf
FOR CAMPERS.
CASTOR I A
For Infants and Children.
Tbe Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Bi-.-'.u: c Ot
SEALED BIDS.
fOLOINO JwL SCAT
CLOSCO
Just the thing In take elORg wlien JTOQ
go oamnlns or to the seaooast. For sale
by BEXTON A WALTHKR,
Bids wi
Omca of Balles (Jity, for the city lot on
the south side of Third street between
Court and Washington streets. All bids
to be deposited at tbe reroi der's ofliee on
or before August 1, ItOJ, and addressed
Bids for Lot." The size of lot is "ihx
100 feet.
Ilxted i The hull
which the entry, filing or settlement Wa Jy ot J0y, 1Q01, by order ol tbe OOUO
made. Warning is given to all perrons cil.
not to make settlement upon the tract of ' Doiikkiv,
lan J reserved by the proclamation. jySJO-augl City recorder.
pe-
"1 am indebted to One Minute Cough
cure for my present good health and my
life. I was treated iu vain by doctors
for lung trouble following la grippe. 1
took Due Minute Cough Cure and re
covered my health." Mr. E. H. Wise,
Madison, Qfe Clarke A Falk's P. 0
Pharmacy.
We offer for a limned period the
twice-a-week Chkumi i.m, price $1.00,
and the Weekly Oregonian, price $1.50,
both papers for 2 a year, (subscriptions ! weighing 4 and ft1 pounds
Just received at (iilbrelh (V Son's
lumber yard, a few csrloads of No. 1
cedar posts and A shiugles. They '
are agents for Heath .. Miliigan's cele
brated shingle paint. Call on them;
their prices are all right. Wood not
fiumed is better by oOc a cord than wood
that is. jyfi)
MOUM.
This morning, to Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Moore, of upper Three Mile, twin boys,
ditiOO. Wehuve the Crown of
Science Hair jjjgHggfr (i rower and
Coeoanut Oeam Tonic. They
will cure (land MlT roll and all
scalp disease. For sale at FrBHr's bar
tier shop. Price 50c and 7oc a bottle.
Just received a new supply of North
rop A: SturgiB1 pure food products, as
i follows: corn starch, shredded cocoa -
nut, baking soda anil high giade leaven
i er. H it's Northrop & Kturgis, it is
good. iet a package and try it. For
1 snle by Conroy, Son A Co., K. L. Brooks'
old stand, The Dalles, Or. jylL' L'wd
sV
li ij;iee Made.
aro groat ii tyli".
it-
lIlUO shown
under
, vai.ee
this oiler must be paid iu
ad - I
i j Gifford's Fotos Never Fade.
WM. iYIICHELL,
Undertaker and Embalmer
Cor. Third and Waehlnjrton 8ta.
All orders attended to promptly. Long
distance phone 433. Local, 102.
1 1 -
w are groat m
We believe In it
i t . .: i . . v i
.ll 1K' HII Lilt lewus
! Hunt tor the belt.
The laD'iit leather
above costs $5.
I ( )thera s-ll five-dollar ones
If you compare them yon 11
say our'i too cheap
t )r, the othen too daar
Saturday, only $415
A. M. Williams (EL Co.