$ Early Fall Delivery of I Muslin Underwear. We Lave received our COMPLETE STOCK of the Celebrated PEER K LESS UNDERWEAR. The goods are well known to the ladies of The Dalles, and lovers of dainty and up-to-date Underclothing will appreciate the guous we are snowing, xjie -siyies are sometning oeautnui; tne uesigns en tirely different from' what they, have been heretofore: and prices surprisingly low, for the quality of goods. . " Some of the New Things. Colored Lawn Robes : "at $1.25. Skirt Drawers ;.. .....at- 1.25 Umbrella Skirts at $1.00, $1.25, $1.50, $1.75, $2.00, 2.50 Drawers : ; ...at 50c, 65c, 75c, 1.00 Umbrella Drawers at $1.00, $1.50, $1.75, 2.00 Night Robes........ ..at 75c, $1.00, $1.25, $1.50, $1.75, $2.00, 2.50 Chemise... at $1.00, 1.50 Corset Covers . .......at 25c to .75 Black Rustle Percalin Skirts from $1.25 to 3.00 We will take pleasure in showing our stock to ladies who anticipate buying. Maltese Cross SEE OUR CENTER WINDOW. ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. PEASE & MAYS Maier fc Benton are Sole Agents for the Maltese Cross Fire and Garden Hose for The Dalles. Anyone once buying this brand of Hose will never buy any other. It is carbol i zed and guaranteed to stand a pressure of 350 pounds to the square inch. This city has just purchased 500 feet-of the Fire Hose and the School District 200 feet of the Gar den Hose. The city has some of the Maltese Cross brand that was bought seven years ago and it is better today than some other brands that were bought . only four years ago. The Maltese Cross has been the standard Hose for years, arid is manufactured by the Gutta Percha Rubber and Manufacturing Co. Parties wanting hose for spray pumps and lawn purposes will do well to buy the Maltese Cross. It will cost a little more in the start, but it is the cheaper in the long run. MAIER & BENTON Sole Agts., The Dalles. Special Sale of Garden Hose. To close out our -present stock of Garden Hose, we -will make extremely low prices on -what -we have. You can save money by buying your Hose now. The whole stock is in our center window. When this is gone we will not sell any more at the prices we are now making. ErXiLlTS (S GEOWE. Keep Oat the pies. SCREEN WIRE, SCREEN DOORS WINDOW SCREENS. Now in Stock. New Styles and LowPrices. Odd Sizes made to order on Short Notice. JOS. T. PETERS & CO The Dalles Daily Ghronieie. Weatlier forecast. Portland. Aug. 18, 1890. For Eastern Oregon Tonight and tomor row fair and stationary. Pauuk. Observer. THURSDAY, AUGUST 20, 1896 WAYSIDE GLEANINGS. Random Observations and Local Events of Lesser Magnitude. Henry Term ant was fined $25 by Jus tice Fllloon. In default of payment be was remanded to jail. ' Our real estate men receive many let ters daily inquiring about. Wasco county resources and products. Tbe civil case of Freeman vs. Barnes, garnishee, was set for trial thU after noon before Justice Filloon. Tbe warehouse door adjoining J. T T. f a? i. i 1 1 xeicrs uiiiuB was pusueu parity ope. last night by would-be burglars, but the; Mr. vv. H. H. Sherwood of KalatSa and Miss Minnie Boardman of Wasco county were married this morning at the Umatilla House by Rev. John Wood. The marshal sold a bay and a gray horse at public auction on the street to day. We did not learn the result of the sale, but bidding was not very spirited. The D. P. & A. N. Co. are to be com plimented on their heroic efforts to get along without the portage. It is a mys tery why it can't be operated. Wasco News. - The Regulator will have transported altogether about 750,000 pounds of this season's wool clip tbe coming Saturday night. The sales were made some time ago at a low figure. Inoki is having a cement sidewalk put nvfrom the gate to the doorstep of his feSMence. 'Mr. J. W. French will have the same improvement ide at his residence. Four head of cattle in Walla Walla county were killed last week from eat ing Kaffir corn. It was green and about 18 inches high. Some hogs got into the field and ate some of it. All of the bogs got sick and one of them died. essrs. F. W. Wilson "and Max VogtJ jr., left on this afternoon's train for As-' toria. Fred tookwith him a mascot cause many deaths, but it did not even create discomfort in The Dalles. There are two reasons for this. The heat of summer, like the cold in winter, is not so penetrating as in the trans-Mississippi country. Then there is nearly al ways a west breeze, which being freight ed with the life-giving oxygen of the ocean air, invigorates, instead of debil itates. Oar climate is all that could be desired. Hon. Robt. Mays, who has . been out threshing, says he found the banner threshing crew. They are Capt. Van Woodruff's outfit, sixteen in number, all enthusiastic McKinley supporters. They say : "Give us 'old-time Repub lican rule and then we can always find something to do, and with ample em ployment comes good wages and plenty of money." Mr. Mays says this is the second threshing outfit he has seen who shout McKinley at every opportunity. Mr. J. W. Lauderbach of Stevenson, who was in the city yesterday, stated that there were about 80, miners in the Rock creek country digging gold. Tbe pay does not run high, but as a rule miners can easily pan out from $1.50 to $2 per day. Tbe way. in is over a very high aiouutain, inaccessible in winter, and arrangements are already being made by miners to get enough provision stored by this summer to run them through the winter months. Once in the mining district the altitude is little great er than at Stevenson, and there need be no cessation of labor on account of the season. There is abundance of water everywhere. A. Popular Defendant. DON'T WANT THE LOCKS OPEN which Dalles will insure Nje team for one ol victorv of The' e prizes. This . priznacions be attired in was "Augustein,' Chronicle pup. He wil 'scarlet blanket, appropriately worded and will alwavs ba found where th steam is. Tbe decadence of the antelope is thtfs told by the Moro Observer : While look ing after some of his cows on the John Day breaks, some time . ago, H. Smith discovered three antelopes in the band. These are probably the last of once large herds of antelope roaming this region.' A few years ago Lloyd Smith saw a band of thirteen in Pine Hollow, and it is thought these three were the remnants of that band. The maximum temperature yesterday was 91 degrees. This beat would be con sidered extreme in the East and would Ten Dan t is again in the toils, having been arrested today on complaint of Georgie Smith for larceny of ft watch by bailee. According to the story told Jailer FitzGerald ,by defendant the fair Georgie had been arrested and brought before Recorder Phelps and fined $10. Failing to pay the money she was given five days in jail. After serving out half the sentence she became tired of res traint and gave her watch to Tennant to pawn. He got $6 on it, paid tbe $5 to the recorder thus setting her at liberty, and blew in the dollar remaining.'. Now she instigates the arrest. Whether this story will be entitled to as much con sideration as the remarkable saddle ex perience remains to be seen. A S6400 Cleanup. Walter Brown was in Long Creek a few days since, having just completed cleaning up at bis placer mine at the Black Butte mines. His cleannp was a neat sized gold brick amounting to $6400, and while not as large as he expected, yet it is sufficient to enable him to de clare a dividend of $500 to each of the seven shareholders - of tbe mine. The Dunlap placer mine, of which Mr. Brown bas had,contr6l for the past two years, has ranked among Grant county's best gold producers, and is good to hold such a record for several seasons yet. No more BOILS, no more PIMPLES Use Kinersly's Iron Tonic. Tbe Snipes Kinersly Drug Co. Telephone No. 3. Portland Jobbers Belittle the Inland Empire and Create Ad rem Sentiment. A party of Indiana tonristsj business men and their wives.cameup on theReg ulator last night. With them were a mer chant of The Dalles and his wife, whom we will call Mr. and Mrs Jones, as they do not desire publicity in the matter. They became acquainted with them on the way ud from the locks, and the story of their acquaintance is worth telling. . Mrs. Jones happened to be sitting near them in the ladies cabin, when' the con-, versation turned upon the locks. The gentlemen were telling their wives all about them with that peculiar satisfac tion every man feels when he thinks be is imparting valuable and exclusive in formation to his better half. The woman, noticing the grand walls of masonry and other evidences of the great work at the lock 8, had inquired of their " husbands concerning their utility. . "Those locks are a fraud," said the gentleman addressed with all the confi dence born of a complete information. "They have been building over twenty years. The reason they have not been completed- long years ago is because they are of no use when they are built. There is nothing to ship when they are completed. It was just a political scheme in the first place to' furnish, jobs to pay political debts. Tbe country which they command is nothing, but a barren waste just a stock range, not very good for that. . The only part of Oregon worth anything is tbe Willam ette valley country and its outlet is Portland. Mrs. Jones could not help overbearing these remarks, and looking in the face of the lady addressed noticed the look of commiseration gradually assuming ex pression thereon. The fearful misrep resentation troubled Mrs. Jones and she spoke to her husband about it. He made up his mind to remedy the im pression, if possible. Before he got j inrouga ne discovered that the tourist was merely reproducing the sentiments'! and misstatements of some Portland jobbers, and in this way they are influ encing the sentiment of tbe East against the locks and Eastern Oregon. The spirit is one of blind selfishness. Most of tbe Portland business men imagine that when tbe locks are opened they will lose the trade of Eastern Oregon, and in conjunction with the railroad in terests will do as they have done, retard the work at the locks by every means in their power. : Before these particular ' tourists had finished with Mr. Jones, however, they were made aware of their false esti mate, and hereafter they will champion the cause of the Inland Empire when ever they hear it assailed. The gentle man had concluded his talk with the ladies and was taking a kodak picture of one of the beautiful scenic points of in terest on tbe Columbia which even Portland business men are powerless to disparage. Mr. Jones found him a very pleasant gentleman and they had' sev eral mutual friends in Indiana, which had a tendency to promote tbe best of feeling. Mr. Jones found an early opportunity to take up tbe question of the locks and their importance as a commercial factor in our development. He impressed upon him the magnitude of our annual wool and grain interests, our immense -stock interests, the large number of carloads of fruit which leaves every season for the north and middle west, and the fishing , interests, which employ hundreds of men every year; that the wool shipments alone amounted last year to between six and seven mil lion pounds, and that this year they would be increased by a million more. The tourist was impressed with tbe truth of Mr.' Jones' statements, and be ing invited to tbe house, be was shown enough documentary evidence of the re sources ot our country to everlastingly remove the veil of misinformation placed before bis eyes by certain Port land jobbers. That Portland has antag onized the construction "of ; the locks with all the power she could command, has long been known, but it is not often that the particular way in winch she does it comes to light, as in this in stance. . They do not talk in this man ner to our oven people who go down there. - A Straw. Perhaps tbe younger generation would give us tbe trueet index of how tbe country will vote. It may be sup posed they will have the same leanings as their fathers from hearing them talk. A Btore in tbe city has McKinley caps, also the Bryan article. Both cost tbe same, invariably 15 cents, and both are handsome' and .well ' made.., Tbe Mc Kinley and Hobart cap is in "gold" trimmings with tbe names of tbe candi dates in bold letters, and the Bryan and Sewall caps have silver trimmings in the same style. Asking one of the little fellows, who more a McKinley cap, how they were selling, he replied that about thirty boys bad the McKinley cap, while about four had the Bryan head gear. This is probably about the fatio their papas would vote. Mrs. E. Sharon and Mrs. Bassett have opened dressmaking .parlors .in the Chapman block. aug20-lw Awarded Highest Honors World's Fair, Gold Medal, Midwinter Fair. 9 a.r w s. sua CREAM Most Perfect Made. . 40 Years the Standard. When yog mmt to ky Seed Wheat, Feed Wheat, Rolled Barley, Whole Barley, Oats, Rye, Bran, Shorts, Or anything n the Feed Line, go'to the WASCO : WAREHOUSE, Our prices are low and our goods are first-claps! -Agents for the celebrated WAISTBURG "PEFRLESS" FLOUR. Highest cash price paid for WHEAT. OATS and BARLEY. GEORGE RUCH (Successor to Cbrlsman & Corson. - " FULL LINE OF STAPLE and FANCY GROCERIES. Again in business at the old stand. ' I would be pleased to see all my former patrons. Free delivery to any part of town. REMOVAL. Jacobson Book & Music Co. and Harry Liebe - have moved to New v ogt Block. DEALER EN- PAIN TS, OILS AN D GLASS. And the Most Complete and Latest Patterns and Designs in , ' WALL PAPER. WALL PAPER. PRACTICAL PAINTER and PAPER HANGER. None but the beet brand" of J. W. MASURY'S PAINTS used in all our work, and none but tbe most skilled workmen employed. Agents for Masury Liquid Paints. No chem icel combination or soap mixture. A first-class article in all colors. All orders promptly attended to. - Store and Faint Shoo corner Third and Washington 8ta. The Dalles. 0reoB RUPERT & GABEL, , -'. . Wholesale and retail manufacturers and dealers in Harness, Saddles; Bridles, Collars, TENTS and WAGON COVERS. REPAIRING PROMPTLY DONE. Adjoining E. J. Collins fc Co.'s store.