What's the Matter with your Tire? Cord Early Fall Delivery of DtT-SOCK will make it hold wind. Wood. t Muslin Underwear. We have received our COMPLETE STOCK of the Celebrated PEER 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 goods we are showing. The styles are something beautiful; the designs en tirely different from what they have been heretofore; and prices surprisingly low, for the- quality of goods. Some of the c 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 bving. SEE OUR CENTER WINDOW. PEASE & MAYS ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. We have on hand a large stock of DRY FIR 100D That we are selling" at resonable price. Leave your order with us. MAIER & BENTON The Dalles. One can of Du-Sock; . Tire full of air; No more blue talk No more swear. MAYS & CROWE. Sole Agents- Ieep Oat the Flies. 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 Dalies Daily Chronieie. Weather Forecast. Portland. Aug. 20, WX. Fob Eastern Oregon Tonight fair; tomor row probable rain : cooler. I'agub. Observer. WEDNESDAY, - AUGUST 26, 1896 WAYSIDE GLEANINGS. Kandoui Observations and Local Events of Lesser Magnitude. The game season opens September 1st. There will be a meeting of the Macabees this evening. Jerome Lauer plead guilty to simple assault and was fined $25 by Justice Filloon this mo-ning. The 10-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lemon was buried this afternoon. The funeral took place from the houee on the hill. ' The public schools of the city will open a week from Monday. This will be the first Monday in September, which falls on September 7th. ' The Wyoming Republicans have nomi nated a woman for one of their presi dential electors. Her husband being a Democrat, she may have to sue him for non-support. - In some parts of the East the farmers are eo wrought on politics that they nalnt signs on their houses, barns or gates to show how they stand on th money question. Sre are scarcely any vacant house! fin the city. .Building, aitnougn it na been reasonably brisk all summer, fails to keep Tip with the reqduirementa. Tenement houses would vield a good re- turnon the money invRted. A notice is posted up on the poeloffi door asking everyone to watch out for Archie Beers, a 11 -year-old runaway from Chicago. The picture accompanies the notice and he don't look to. be any more valuable than the ordinary kid of that age. All that was mortal of E. G. Closter was laid to rest this morning by the Ma sonic fraternity, of which the deceased was a prominent member. The Odd Fellows also attended in a body. Dr. Leavens of the Cascades came np to at tend the funeral. There has not been a line of reliable news a tangible fact so far which would enable anyone to say there is any gold whatever in the new so-called min ing district of Lookout mountain in Ska - mania county. Even the enthusiastic Timothy O'Sullivan confines himself to extraneous subjects, and has more to sav concerning the people coming in than the finds anyone has ever made. It is reported that the game law is be ing recklessly violated by hunters who, instead of waiting for the open season for Chinese pheasants, are slaughtering them daily. A farmer who came to town yesterday said that he believed he heard five hundred shots fired daring the . forenoon. He said hundreds of pheasants are being killed. Oregon has good wholesome game laws and they should be enforced. The game warden should take prompt steps to prevent th"8 wholesale violation of law. Albany Democrat. McClnre's magazine for September will contain the first report ever pub lished of Abraham Lincoln's famous "Lost Speech," delivered at Blooming ton, before the first Republican state convention held in Illinois. "I never witnessed such a scene before or since," says Joseph Medill, editor of the Chicago Tribune, who was a member of the con vention and writes an introduction to the report of the speech describing the occasion. One of the neatest and altogether the most appropriate of the many campaign badges is a McKinley button originated by F. R. Mellis, of Baker City. It con sists of a diamond-shaped metal plate, half an inch long on each side, one-half of which is gold and the other half sil ver, the back of both being gold, and across the face in bine enamel letters is the word "McKinley." This teaches the Republican doctrine of maintenance of the parity of gold and silver, and the use of both metals as money, the silver be ing backed by gold. These campaign badges promise to become "very popular. coinplaintV FROM CRATER LAKE- The Mazamas Ar ICeturnlnff Fnrai' Highly Successful Outing. W. G. Steel writes to the Oregonian a very interesting account of the Mazamas at Crater Lake : - Friday morning tue heavy fall of smoke that had obscured Crater lake was gone, and Mazama day broke clear and beautiful. Daring the forenoon the club met in the crater of Wizard island, elected a number of-new members and ever attempted, and every one seemed sorry to seek again the ways of city life and civilization. PERSONAL. MENTION. When yoa mant to bay Dr. Plunder of Portland is in town. Mus Alley left this morning for As toria. . Sheriff Portland. Driver returned today from Mr. E. Locke town todav. of Hood River was in ""E McNiel has Elect a r - . -r . TT T.T T" . T against j. u. ana . i. uay lor me re1 plevin of engine No. 291. The Day, Bros, claim they bought it from the! Union Pacific and McNiel claims it was' not theirs to sell or at any rate it belongs to the O. R. & N. Co. since the road basi passed from the bands of a .receiver.! Sheriff Driver went down today to locate the engine, but the nearest he came to it was the number 291 marked with a lead pencil below the headlight. Other wise the present number of that engine is 1. An interesting suit will probably resul be Spokesman-Review is circulating r superbly beautiful publication entitled A Race for Empire . and Other Tree Tales of the Northwest." The resident of the East into hands the book may fall will be astonished to find that the "wild and wooly West contains so much substantial architecture, so many great industrial enterprises and so grand and varied natural scenery as is here represented by the engravings from life with which the book is as full as a plum cake is of raisins. The publication is among the very finest typographically which art has yet produced, and may well be preserved as one of the best pro duced during' the Nineteenth century. The only disappointment is that a Chi cago printing establishment did the work instead of some coast firm. r Mr. A. S. Hoering went to Hood River this morning. - Mr. F. A. Seufert left this morning for the Cascades. Miss Georgi:Kampeon has returned from Bonnevll ' . Mr. John Michell and family left this morning for Portland. Mr. Prinz and family have returned from their summer camp. Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Peters and Mrs. E. M. Wilson returned last syening." Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Rowe bave moved into their new house on the hill. Mr. B. F. Laughiin and family re turned last night from Glenwood. Capt. Waud has returned and re sumed command of the Regulator. Miss Lage returned to Hood River this morning from a visit in the city. Mrs. Sampson xJi daughter, Lizzie, returned today on jthe local train from Bonneville. Mr. D. Forest Fisher left for Stanford He is now in Under Agents Wanted. Ladies or Gents everywhere to intro duce our fast selling goods ; needed by all. "One agent made $93.50 in one week." Yoa can do the same. $1000 yearly earned and permanent position. For particulars, addresa with stamp, Swiss Herb Tea Co., Chicago. a28-l w female Help Wanted. Wanted Red-headed girl and white horse to deliver premiums given away with Hoe Cake Soap. Apply to any where. ' AfiQQ "Rr.tn Sfrwv lpffr. this mnrninv transacted such other business as wasf Hood River. MUi'ItDQIiri' Thn o f f a. m m n it-n a m nri nr to strolls and climbs, and an audience of 250 attended the exercises about the camp fire. The meeting was opened by an excellent recitation by Miss Newman,, and was followed by the president's ad dress, at the close, of which Miss Fay Fuller was introduced and recited an original poem on Crater lake ; then, with a few appropriate words, broke a bottle of water distilled from the snow of Wizard island's crater and officially bestowed the name of the club on the hitherto unnamed mountain. She was quickly followed by the lusty club yell and the explosion of firecrackers and Winchester rifles. Mr. W ilbur was then introduced as toastmaster, and the fol lowing responses were given : "Mount Mazama," by J. S. Diller; "That Tired Feeling," by Professor Everman ; "The Forest Trees," by Dr. C. Hart Memam; The Poetry of Nature," by Captain O. C. Applegate ; "The Cascade Range For est Reserve," by W. G. Steel. Professor Everman crave the result of his search !Uor fish food in the lake, of which he re ly ported an abundance. The entire party then adjourned to the walls of the lake, and gave a signal to Mr. C. C. Lewis and Professor Hutch inson, who were on tne island, ana lm mediately a brilliant red light shot forth in the night air, and again the old eraterf Lsr1BB Florence Lewis, who has been was ablaze. Aside from the large num- cured to teach school at that place. ber of campers around the lake, quite a re number of Indians bad come up from the agency, and were greatly delighted to see a fire that destroyed no timber. So, it came to pass that a day of general rejoicing closed in a halo of glory. There never was a happier band of mountain climbers than gathered on the walls of the lake to watch the brilliant light on Wizard island. So far no incident, however trivial, has occurred to rr.ar the pleasure of 'our party., The entire trip has been one succession of successes and unlooked-for pleasures have followed each other in quick succession. Six hundred people have visited the lake, of whom over forty were members of the ; Klamath Falls Crater Lake Club. '. On Saturday . morning Mr. and Miss Pit tock, Mrs. Middleton, Miss Leadbetter, Messrs. Parsons, Marmon, Scott and the writer left camp on the way home. I left the remainder of the party at Pros pect, and walked to Central Point, 45 miles distant, in time to catch Sunday evening's north-bound train. . The others will arrive in Portland Wednes day, and. those who left camp Monday morning will get here on Thursday. So cloted one of the most successful outings for university this morning. his third year. Wra. Hoskins of the Locks is visiting friends in The Dalles and will go to Goldendale Saturday. Mr. Geo. W. Rowland and family, who have been spending several weeks at the Meadows, returned today.. u IFrank Irvine of Antelope left this af ternoon for . Antelope, accompanied by se- K eduction In Wood. The Dalles Lumber Co. will close out their stock of 16-inch stove wood cut ready for stove at $2.00 per cord in order to obtain yard room for fall stock. jly25-dlm. . Awarded Highest Honors World's Pair, Gold Medal, Midwinter Fair. Seed Wheat, Feed Wheat, Rolled Barley ,Whole Barley, Oats, Rye, Bran, Shorts, Or anything n the Feed Line, go to the WASCO : WAREHOUSE, Oar prices are low and our goods are first-class. Agents for the celebrated WAISTBURG "PEFRLESS" FLOUR. Highest cash price paid for WHEAT. OATS and BARLEY. GEORGE RUCH PIONEER GROCER. Successor to Chriaman & Corson. 11 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. M acobson Book & Music Go. and Harry Liebe have moved to New Vogt Block. IT - "77". V-XT DEALER IN CHEAT! Ill Most Perfect Made. 40 Years the standard. PAINTS, OILS AND GLASS. ' And the Most Complete and Latest Patterns and Designs in WALL PAPER. WALL PAPER. PRACTICAL PAINTER and PAPER HANGER. None but the best brands of J. W. MASURY'S PAINTS naed in all our work, and none but the most skilled workmen employed. Agents for Masnry 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 Sts.. The Dalles. Oregon RUPERT & ' Wholesale and retail manufacturers and dealers in Harness, Saddles, Bridles, Collars, TENTS and WAGON COVERS. j REPAIRING PROMPTLY DONE. Adjoining E. J. Collins & Co.'s store