The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, August 02, 1901, Image 3

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    Four Tlmn More Water Than rnlr.l
White
t Goods
1
i
Fancy-Hosiery
Economy is Wealth !
That is the reason why so many people do not be
come rich. Money saved is money earned.
For this week we are going to Offer yon some
Big Bargains. Every piece of Fancy White
Goods in the house must go, so we will give the
public the henetit of
20 per cent Discount on any piece
of Fancy White Goods in the house
including Satin Striped, Fancy, Dotted Swiss
Checked and Fancy Striped Dimities.
Have you Boys' and Girls' (rood Hats for this
wai l 1 1 weather? Here is an eye-opener in that line:
Men's
Cotton
Sweaters...
Navy blue and black
75c and.
Values,
SPECIAL
$1
65 c
5C
Misses' Sailors . . . 39c
50c, 35c and 25c values . '. 19c
Now if you
want to save money you should not
miss this opportunity.
MEMBER, FOR THIS WEEK ONLY.
Silk
Goods
tmmmmmm
Sailor
Hats
Telescops,
Grips,
Dress Suit Cases
and Trunks
in a large
very low
assortment and at
prices.
PEASE 5t MKYS.
;ik w iixiu:
K. "a.
r'!:: 'A. ijfli;
V V V
'V v
A: vfim
ftf A:
8' 1
9 1
The Dalles Daily Chponiele.
FRIDAY
Ice Cream
AU. 2. 1901
and
Ice Cream
Soda
At Andrew Keller's.
of this month Mr. Gumbert will have
another drawing with the same tickets.
The many friends of Mr. I). M. French
I will be pleased to learn that hie health
j has steadily improved ever eint;e he
I went to Seaview two months ago, and is
j now in a fairly good condition, with a
promise of continued improvement.
I "I sent away a dol'ar," she sadly said,
"to a party in New York who offered to
I tell for that amount how to make the
j guests at Bummer resorts love your chil
jdren." "Oh, did you?" her Iriend
asked. "What do you have to do?"
"Leave them at home !" Chicago Record-Herald.
J. W. Hinriche, of Hood Kiver valley,
j last week sold his ranch of 180 acres on
j the East Side to Charles Davis.of Kings
! ley, for $6,000. Mr. Hinrichs has since
I purchased the 8. P. Shntt country reBi-
" dence and grounds at Frankton, one of
Goldendale is going to put in a sewer ; tl)e pieasantest suburban retreats in
1 Hood River.
at C.J. Stubling'e, a: A f18iiermftn from tue r-itv who was
is likely to be effected till tomorrow, and
possibly none even then. The managers
of the show have the sympathy of many
ot The Dalles people as it was really
very far from being a fake affair as one
might judge from its untimely collapse.
Mr. Yager, the head miller of the new
flouring mills, returned heme yesterday
1 from a visit to White Kiver falls. Me
! reports that sixty niin are employed on
, the several works eoBWt ted with the
Wasco Warehouse Milling Company's'
I power plant at that, place, and that the
j work is being rushed with all possible
speed so as to have the plant in opera- I
tion, if possible, Dot later than October
' 1st. The power house i expected to be
ready for the machinery hv the lirst of
? September. The flume, with its fall of :
135 feet, will be com pie. cd about the I
ijj same date and the dam is expected to '
jfi le finished by the 15th of August, j
.h Measurements of the volume of water in j
jjf White river at this time, and a com pari- j
t'S j son of these measurements with those I
j taken some time back, revelled the j
gratifying fact that since the 4th of July ;
j the river has fallen only three-fourths j
I of an inch and only four and a half!
J I inches since the first of June.
W 1 White river, although a glacier stream, !
ft 1 is now clear and bright. List week, j
ft for the first time since the contractors,
ml 1 went to work, the water turned milky
for part of a day and ttie river rose half
an inch. But the most gratifying fact
of all is that by actual measurement the
actual volume of water at the falls dur
log this tirat week in August is four !
times as much as is needed for the two
generators about to be installed. These 1
are of 500 kilowats each, or nearly equal,
combined, to 1400 horse power. Thus,
V : at this time, if these two generators!
tj& ; were in use, there would still be in the
JOL neighborhood of 4000 1 oree power run
ning 10 waste, ui course ttie river will
fall still more between this and the fall
rains, but the above figures would indi-
I
! cate tnat there is still vastly more,
power in the stream than the Wasco
Warehouse Milling Company is liable j
to use or dis.iose of to others for years to
come.
It remains to be added that the ma-!
obinery for the flouring mills is on the 1
way from the Fast, and that a force of
millwrights will arrive here next week j
and go to work on the same.
ft
I
i
...The New York Gash 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' Suits.
DON'T OVERLOOK THESE BARGAINS
f
I
TREASURER'S NOTICE.
All Vt'aacu .unity warrants registered
prior to September 0J, 1808, will be paid
on presentation at my ofllce. Interest
ccMca after . I uly 12, 1001.
.IOHN F. HAMl'SHIRK,
County Treasurer.
WAYSIDE GLEANINGS.
Strawberry Crop li l inen In SSS.OOO,
If. F. Davidson, of the Davidson Fruit
Company, and G, J. Gepslin, secretary
of the Hood River Fruit Growers' Union
Wall Henderson, of Kingsley, eamtTtyiave furnished the following facts rehi-
into town today and reoorted that a i ive to the 1WM straw berry crop:
threshing party had juet finished a field j "These two ehipping concerns Hub
i of twenty-one acres of fall barley on the (year shipped 32,000 crates of the 40,000
j old Jack McMnllen place a farm that crates of strawberries shipped from Hood
j has been cropped for over thirty years,) River, or four fifths of the entire crop,
j and that some people claimed, a fewll They shipped thirty-three straight car
i years ago, helore Pat Bolton's bovsll loads under refrigeration, and between
New Grocery Store
We luiYc added a Grocery Depart
ment tt our Btore. A new fresh ,
clean stock. live us a call. Pronipt
delivery to any part of the city.
...MAYS CROWE...
bought it, that it wouldn't grow rye
and the twenty-one acres had yielded
1400 bushels, or nearly eC'g bushels to
the acre. When asked how the wheat
15 and 20 cars bv express or about 50
care all told. The cash returns to the
Igrowere for their 40,000 crates amounted
jto about $85,000. A deduction of $ir,-
PolnMd I'araKrapb.
It's easy for the man who suffers no
pain to talk of patience.
Occasions do not make a man ; they
only Bhow what there is in him.
It sometimes happens that a woman's
hair is a bit of fiction founded on fact.
The imprudent man reflects on what
was looking, Walt's answer was : "Wheat IfOOO for cost of picking and crates leaves j ne has gajj ali the prudent man on
Milwaukee bottled
enjoying greet sport fishing telegraphed
lyitetr, .
lust received,
carload of Schlitz
jiy-.t iw liia wife: "I've got one. WeighB eeven
Young lady wishes to do sewing by j pounds. A beauty." He nearly lost
the day. Telephone 1S4 for further par-1 his breath when the following reply
jy31-lwk signed by his wifecamo back to him.
engaged to "So have J. Weighs eleven pounds.
He ten t a beauty. Looks like you.
ticnlars.
Miee Dora Neileen has
teach a four months' fall school in the
Boyd neighborhood.
The Collins hot springs are now open
to the public, as will be seen in the ad
vertisement in another paragraph.
Wanted A thoroughly competent girl
to do general housework. Wages $20 a
month. Apply ut thiB office. jy29Jw
The Collins hot springs are now open.
No hotels, but the finest of camping
grounds. Hunting & Hosford, man
ners, Collins, Wash. au:;-lm
some Gilliam county cattle were dying
l a disease thought to be black leg, but
'urinary diagnosis proved it to bf
Noted by eating rusty grass.
bwii i.ang s illness is pro
nounced by her physician to be typhoid
WW. Hers is, however, a mild case
her speedy recovery is confidently
otloipated.
Apple will he apples this fall. A
'food River fruitgrower informs Tine
llltUM.
Goldendale's Cosmopolitan C'lub has
come to grief and ite president is under i
bonds of $200 to answer before the mi
perior court for selling intoxicating
liquors without a license. The Cosmo-1
politan Club ie a very thinly disguised
scheme to run a saloon in a "dry" town. I
Its ostensible object i.- educational anil
social. lie real object is whiskey and
plenty of it.
The farmers in gome districts in Was- i
co county report that prairie chickens I
have greatly increased in numbers Bincc
the law afforded them protection and
1 i especially since the coyotes, which are
verv destructive of the voting bird,
have been thinned out under the incen- j
Ittve'of the ti'.ilp bounty law.
The committeee that have been solicit- ,
ing snbscriptionB lor the coming fair
have made
during the
i just couldn't be better than it is
i We see by a letter from Henry E.
I Doiob, in the Oregonian, that more
Oregon Irott iB wanted at the Pan-1
! American exitosition. So far as this j
district is concerned there is plenty of j
j fruit that might be shipped, but the J
: question will naturally o-icur to the i
! grower or shipper, Who is going to pay
! the express charges of ti cents a pound?
The express company will not receive a j
pound of fruit for shipment unless tiie
cbargei are paid in advance. When
Mr. Doecb knows, or recalls to memorv j
if he ever knew, that the shipping of a
ft little 100 pound box of fruit costs the
shipper an outlay of $( cash money in '
advance, he will n.it be surprised that he
isn't getting much fruit from this sec-
tion.
"Fvery expensive looking Panama !
hat," remarks The Philadelphia Record, !
"hasn't cost its owner the small fortune j
that its appearance would seem to indi
0kt. There are a lot of young men
wearing hats that would cost $25 or (80 j
apiece in the store, which were really j
purchased at an outlay of not more than
$7. They have been especially import
ed in the rough. One large business
house with headquarters in this city has
branch offices all over the world. There ,
ie one down in Venezuela, and when the
Panama hat fad came !u vogue ibis
Tlu'v li..ve rei-eived nledireR u:n..mit ii.tr
B that down his wav fruit bnv- 4- -i . a ann .,a u. i
fel'H ui-u tv I 11 HUVU1 T'-i,'wv, wij'j ...... u.'pvD ui i-
1- I-.... a UV IUI 1IU1MUR tU.,. n.. i I1.. U
J. II I
to insure
be delivered this fall.
L ' Stubling has just received u
rue oonilgninenl ol Boblils' mult ex
striclv non-alcoholic and one of
"e Ogtt remedieB in the world to build
a weak or broken-down conatitu-
fhe pries of salmon at Astoria, since
IUH In , ... i . .. ' ....
Ast . "H8 fa"en to 4 cents and the through overheating, an Irish
onan thinks this price will probably ! which lie valued very highly.
P'Vai until .1 -i . .. I
nm ciose oi tne eeason, !
Hffw unle88 that is to 8a-'
"ould be another famine of fish.
Nobody baa vat
ticket i ""toiou me winning
tore Tue, Pr Ht b.rf. clg.r
ikTT. luok-v number is 208;. If
Hiano is not claimed
most gratifying progiess j summer a lot of men in the home office
past three or four days, flubbed together and instructed the
Venezuelan agent to ship to Philadel
phia a consignment of hats. Baying
the j them in the quantity desired, they coet
financial succbbs of the undertaking. each man SO. WUftO they arrived they
Yesterday being the first da? oT7h7i ,n O'lftael state, but for $2 a
aeason for prairie chickens a number of 'i12' llttt,er wiil blo, k ,ue"' in, an-v
sportsmen wont out to the Lower Fit- ,leired 8t'f,e a,ul I,ul ,he Unisblim touches
teen-Mile district and returned before t t0 them."
noon with weli filled game bags. Among
the nun. tier wan Mr. Crosby, of the Ji, T"fCJ I
Blakeley drug store, who lost, probably W I Wll
setterU For inlands and Children.
r-Sm ui .... i. n .
ioe Mim tou nave Always uougM
on the 27th day
The Whitney dog and pony show that
exbibitei here last night, is stranded
and unable to leave town for Hood Kiver,
where it was due tonight, for want of
funds. Several plans were suggested
today for the settlement of its affairs but
none materialized and no settlement
Bears the
ttguature oi
Gifford's Potos Never Fade.
Subscribe for Ten. Chuoniclk.
the growers about $60,000 above all ex
penses something over $150 per acre.
"The output of Hood Kiver strawber
ries should be gradually increased until
we have three or four times as many as
we have now. The markets are taking
more each year than they did the pre
vious season, and tnere will be no trou
ble about the markets increasing with
the production. There was no market
this year that got all it asked for. l'oth
the Fruit tirowers' Union and the
Davidson Fruit Co., made several Hales
of strawberries for shipment to the
Klontlyke country, and the berries were
reported as arriving there in good condi
tion, and selling at 16 per pound box."
Niriti-ugxan Canal.
It is evident that public sentiment in
England is twinging around in favor of
having the obstacles cleared out of the
Niearaguau canal. Lord Pauncefote
gave expression to such sentiment in his
recent interview in which he gave it as
his opinion that a satisfactory treaty
would be arranged, and the papers of
Loudon arc now talking in a very con
ciliatory manner. They do not see why
any special rights of jrea! Britain's un
der the old treaty should be permitted
to interfere so long as the commerce of
all nations is to be treated fairly. They
realize that treaties must come to uu
end when the purposes for which thev
were MgOtlatfd have been subserved
and conditions have iq changed as to
render them obsolete..
With such a feeling prevailing in
Knglaud there is no reason tod. ml! that
we shall have a new treaty that ill
meet tl.c requirements of I he situation
if English people desire no to build
thec.inal under such conditions tl shall
be satisfactory to us, their government
will not insist on treaty Stipulation!
that we could out accept.
Commencing Sunday, until further
notice, the O. K. A N. will wll round
trip tickets, Dalles to Cascades, for $1 .
1 h rate applies only to panics of five
or more. Good for Sundays only, laglui
Floral lotion will core wind chappiug
and sunburn. Manufactured by Carga
& Falk.
Subscribe for Tug Ciihonh i.t.
I what he ie going to say.
The man who boasts of being able to
spell every word correctly may not be
much good i t anything else.
When a buf begins to wash his face
! without being told he is passing through
the ordeal of his first love affair.
I A went giile business man is so scrup
' ulously exact in all his transactions that
j every time he pays a visit he insists up
j on taking a receipt for it. Chicago
J Sews.
Adterfelead Letter.
following is the list of letters remain
ing in the postoffice at The Dalles on
I called for August 2, 1901. Persons
calling for the same will give date on
which they were advertised :
i Arndti John Armstrong. R .1
P.urns, Mrs. tieorge Mean, William
Cox, Lillle Cartmell, A
Craig, John C ('base, Al
I Doyle, C D Davidson, W Y
K lgbert, J F Frogley, A W
Herald, Mrs Fannie Johnson, Oscar
Locke, Mrs M B Lappier, Kdith
MoorehcmLKev.t i KWashhurn, Laura
Martin, Dora McDonald, Herman
WoCaafey, Mary Oideld, H J
Powell. Jas Hush, Imu
Hose, j o Robinson i Rufui
Sbuppe, Mabel Scott, Maguie
Smith, i M Taylor Y C
Thompson, Victoria Yates, F L
Benardi Sypben A Co.
J. M . P vi I IBION
Another ILIi. Mhlp Found.
Anol her Viking ship, or rut her boat,
! has been unearthed near Kiel, bul this
i new discovery cannot compare In di
I menaiona with the finest specimen of
j its kind, which inu.v be seen by tour
1 lata nt the museum In ( li rial la n in. In
fuel, this clinker buill Viking vessel,
which is about the size of one olaPur
modern fishing boats, is perhaps the
most interest iirg thing to Ite seen in
all Norway. Those who sre it will
realize for the first lime why "star
board," or "steer-board," is applied to
the right side of a vessel, as the helm
protxuded from thin side, and nut from
the stern, which lpracticallj the same
as the bow. There is a popular im
pression that "Viking" is etymologic
ally synonymous wiih "Bea-King"
but this la erroneous. The word ia not
"Yi-king," but "Vik-ing," or "!uy
man" "Vik" meaning "sea, inlet." or
"bay," (ta counterpart is found In
such Bnglish place names as Warw ick,
w ick in the Orkneys, and elsewhere.
London hronicle.
v
Kirat stu Ptsmlat.
Of nil the myriads who play the
piano, hOW man j kltOVI that "Tom
Howling'' Dlbdill WUS the lirsl man
who played the iii i rument in pub
He? Thai was in 1787, ti.nl i he lent
whs performed at the lirst uighl of
"The Beggar's Opera." Kven the
piano was not regarded us a solo
I Instrument, for thai privilege was
mill reserved for the harpsichord,
Invent ion.
WM. MICHELU
I
Undertaker and Embalmer
Cor. Thlril anil Waulilnuton Sta.
P. M.
Nolle.
All orders a tended to promptly,
distance phi. lie :U. Local, ID'.
FOR CAMPERS.
Long
Mis. Nellie L. Oustin, state organizer
of the Knights and I. tilted of Sttcutity,
assisted by her In ot her (hai les Marrihall,
is ill this city lor the purpose of organ
izing a council uf this order, Which is a
a fraternal insurance society admitting j
both sex. It pays purl ial and total dis
ability benefits and does not increase
with, advancing years. D. will be well
for all who wish to interest themselves
in this matter to call on Mrs. Oiistin or
Mr. Marshall at the Farmers Hotel foi
further informal ton. SUMl'Sl
Aiieiiiii.n. Wttahlugtouiaui
The regular meeting of Continental
Union No. 70, will be held Saturday,
August 3, at 8 p. in.
I'ai'i. Km i, ta, Sec.
u - - P?r
FOLDI Nl 3 HEAT.
CLUSEO
Just the thing to take along when you
go camping or to the saacoast. For sale
by SEXTON A WALTHKR.