o l SATURDAY'S SPECIAL! Q) o 2 Black Skirts. We would suggest a Fine Black Skirt for wear during our rainy season. We have an excellent assortment of all the up-to-date things in Fine English Percaline Umbrella Skirts, Double Warp Sateen Skirts, the latest fabric for winter skirts.' f ...NOTE THE PRICKS t i o o o English Percajine Regular $1.50 English Percaline Regular 2.00 English Percaline Regular 2.25 Double Warp Sateen .Regular 2.25 Double Warp Sateen.... Regular 2.50 Double Warp Sateen :. Regular 3.00 Double Wa;p Sateen .Regular 3.25 Sale Price $1.20 Sale Price 1.50 Sale Price 1'70 Sale Price 1.50 Sale Price 1.85 Sale Price 2.10 Sale Price 2.35 ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. PEASE & MAYS I O 2 9 flip Tight Heaters. Air Tight Heaters are the best, and most Economical heaters made.. Call and Seeour STOVES and get our prices before buying1 else where. MAIER & BENTON The Dalles. The Original Air-Tight Stove, : a-A Hagey's King Heater. Take a look at them "before you buy something, else. They are all right. Sold only by MAYS & CROWE. Remember We have strictly First-class FIR, OAK and MAPLE WOOD To sell at LOWEST MARKET RATES. Phone 25. JOS. T. PETERS & CO The Dalles Daily Chronicle. FRIDAY. NOV. 13. 1896 Weather Forecast. Portland, Nov. 13, 1896. For Eastern Oregon Tonight and tomor row! rain. Saturday cooler. Paguk. Observer. WAYSIDE GLEANINGS. Random Observations and Local Events - of Lesser Magnitude. day at noon at tf per month. In-novl2-6fc with board C. Adams, nov!2'6t Hot clam broth every Ad Kellar's. House to rent for $6 quire of George Such. ' Furnished room for rent, if desired. Address Mrs. Jackson street. Marsh and Joles will give a turkey and pigeon shoot the day before Thanks giving and on Thanksgiving day. The Junior Endeavors will give an entertainment at the Christian church this evening. Admission 15 cents. Invitations are out for a banquet given by the Ladeis' McKInley Club at the Umatilla House Saufislay evening. It promises to be a very pleasant affair, The Woodmen's Uircle will give a dime social at Fraternity ball this evening. There will be a program and a' sociable time. Everybody invited The criminal docket this term is about the shortest wB hade bad for some time, The law docket itrthit long and probably the jurors will be aischarged before Thanksgiving. . I The rain still falls and the lea of slop continues to grow. Second yetreet is an infringement on the Venetian ' canal patent, though the slop ia shallow Boots drawing over two feet are not safe to navigate it with. Mr. Wm. Kelsay of Antelope lost package of dry goods between Pease & Mays store and the brick yard east of town last night. The package was marked Wm. Kelsay & Bon, and the finder will confer a favor by leaving the same at this office, or at Pease & Mays The case of Ed. Marshal, charged with larceny from a dwelling is on trial today. Mr. Marshal is charged by the grand jury with stealing from a trunk in the dwelling house of Mrs. Ann Garfield, more commonly known by the title of Irish Molly. Mr. Roger Sinnott iB con ducting the defense. Mr. B. F. LaughlinA who has been buying wheat at Grant for some time, is again home. The ESaVyraina made the roads so bad that oraVbile de livering wheat at the railroad will cease, and in such weather as permits, the farmers will devote their time to plow ing. Mr. Laughlin tells us the bulk of the wheat from Klickitat baa been de livered, but that there ia still a large amount in Sherman county. If you have nothing else to give thanks for, comqarounil and subscribe fot The Chronicle, and by Thanksgiving day yon will be glad yon are alive. Our columns are running over witb wisdom, news, wit and general information. Sense and nonsense can both be found, together with some fresh ideas direct from the factory. Try our - original panacea for all earthly troubles, the Daily Chronicle at twenty-six doses for half a dollar. Expert Testimony 'falls to Establish Korgerj, and Plaintiff Wins. Report of Grand Jury. In the circuit court of the state of Ore gon, for the county of Wasco. In the matter of the final report of the grand jury, November term, 1896: Comes now the grand jury emparj- nelled for the November term of circuit court for Wasco county, 1869, and re spectively report as follows : We have been in session three days and have found and returned into court from time to time, four true bills and two not true bills. We have also examined into such other matters as came before us. We have visited the office of the coun ty clerk, sheriff and treasurer and ex amined the records ot each office, and we find the same kept in excellent manner. The county jail was also visited, and we found it in good condition and . the in mates well attended. We visited the poor farm, and found all county, charges well provided and satisfied with their treatment. Having completed our labors, we ask to be discharged. Polk Butler, L. N. Blowers, Foreman. Clerk.' Junior Entertainment- Following is the program to be ren dered by the Junior Endeavorers at the Christian church this evening: Song "Crowned with Roses" Junior Choir Instrumental Solo . Prudcmee Patterson SThe Match 'feov You Cad't Find He ' Between J-ove and Duty Kecitation "Naming the Chickens" . Josie Keller Lecture "A Hard Boad to Travel" Rev. . Caesar Shinbones Tableau "Cinderella's Slipper' Dolly's Doctor Tired out Junior Art Gallery- trmpng (jnnaren to jsea Recitation Selected Mrs. M. E Briggs Crazy Medley J. Topsy Turvy Club Song "Twilight is Stealing" Junior Choir Recitation "Rum ing a Race".. Blanche Miller ) Sunshine or Shower Junior Art Gallery S Dresi-ed for the Party V The Young Artist Rec. (musical acl The Drowning Singer . Mr. George Ernest Stewart Short Talfto the Juniors Rev. A. D. Skaggs Mrs. Jarley'sWax Works. The admission fee has been placed at 15 cents. Come out and help the chil dren. Advertised Letters. Following is the list of letters remain ing in the postoffice at The Dalles an called for Nov. 14, 1896. Persona call ing for the same will give date on which they were advertised : BeH, Wm ' . v Balch, H E Babbington, Kate Clark, Leon a Caryannie, M Farley, Frank Hamiltyn, Th6a Jndkine, Lottie Kerr, Florence . Mobr, Fred Morse, Mrs C W Roberts, M E Stringer, O A (2) Smiley, Thoa Turner, Bertie1 Cover, Lee Frenks, Fricker Holt, O G j ouch, minnie , Mitcneu, w ' McDonald, John Marie, Miss Robins Remington, J R Sparks, TW Staack; P ' Waver, Dolph J. A. Crossen, P. M, AN INTERESTING CASE. The suit of Annie Urquhart against C. E. Jones, was tried yesterday and late last night was submitted to the jury which soon arrived at a verdict. It was quite an interesting case, the action be- ng brought to recover the sum of about 700, due on a promissory note. The defense put up was that while Jones had one time owedJUrs,- Urquhart about the sum sued for, that he had paid the? came, and in support of this state ment produced a cancelled note, and claimed that the present note was a for gery. Expert testimony was introduced, the weight of it being to the-effect that the signature did not appear to be Jones1, but all hesitating about swearing it was not. " The plaintiff set up that Jones came to her, and stated that his other creditors, particularly one in Sher man county, was pushing him and about -to sue, that if he was given a little time he could pull through, and then asked that plaintiff surrender the note and take a new one in its place, that by doing eo he could show the note, and by making bis other creditors believe be was paying off his debts, be could get time. Mrs. Urquhart 'first objected, but finally consented and Jones made a new note, signing the same while seated in his buggy, which plaintiff insists was the reason of bis signature being some what crude. The case was well argued, and being submitted, the jury found for plaintiff, giving her judgment for the full sum sued for, and $75 attorney's fees. W. H. Wilson for plaintiff, J. B. Hosford for defendant. The Coal Question. .... . . , cause ot tneir making yery slow pro gress ; in fact their average drilling for the last three months has not exceeded one inch a day. This is altogether too slow, and has demonstrated the fact that further Vork cannot be accom plished without ,the use of a diamond drill. This will cost about $ 1,000. Now these men are asking "the people of tbis city to furnish $500, or one-half of the amount, and they stand ready to put up the other $500 or more if it requires it, and will drill the hole to a depth that will settle the question of coal or no coal in this neighborhood. None of us can say that these men are asking any thing unreasonable, for the, matter ia one that should engage the earnest and earliest attention of our people. They certainly have the energy to raise' the small amount, knowing, as they all do, that if these men are successful, it will be the crowning glory of this city, and insure its prosperity tor the next hundred years. Imagine trains coming in from the mines half a dozen times a day and a dozen steamboats barges and schooners receiving it at our wharves. There would be eight hundred or a thousand men at work in the mines. There is no excuse for leaving this matter drop. Fifteen hundred dollars were easily raised here for celebrating the opening of the Cascade locks, and self interest should wake the raisirg of $500 an easy task. A Coal Miner. A Valuable Cow. Editor Chronicle: Being deeply interested in the matter of coal mining, I bave read witb much interest your valuable editorial on that subject. Being an old coal miner I have ventured a few suggestions, which I ask The Chronicle, as well as its contem porary to print. Doubtless the majority of the people in this city are not aware of the splendid sonasione ana conglomerate coal meas ures lying flat and extending for miles to the south and westward from the Catholic cemetery, undisturbed by any fern pt ion a. These coal measures are ex actly the same as thosetbat cover the splendid bituminous coal veins of- Van couver island, known at the Wellington and Nanaimo coal mines. Those mines furnish more than . one-third of all the coal consumed on the Pacific coast, and employ thonsande of men. The whole people of our city are aware that five of our townsmen bave been at work about four miles west of The Dalles, on Chenoweth creek, for several years, and have expended several thousand dollars drilling down through these coal measures with a steel bit and connect ing rods, in search of coal, and by hard work and perseverance have reached a considerable depth, but the fine grain and hard character of the rock encoun tered during the last year have been the Mr. G. A. Van Anda of Rockland, Wash., has a cow that is capable of making a world's record. She is fifteen-sixteenths Jersey, and. has made the following amounts of butter, besides furnishing the family with all the milk and cream used. The variation in tbe monthly yield, which was caused largely by the use of the milk for other than butter making purposes, shows how large that use was. The butter yield by months, commencing a year ago was aa follows : Nov. 35 pounds, Dec. 4o, Jan. 33, Feb. 37, March- 46, April 48, May 47, June 36, July 26, Aug. 19K, Sept. 22, Oct. 20, Nov, 12Ji. Total 431)4. This at 25 cents a pound would bring $107.87. Awarded Highest Honors World's Fair, Gold Medal, Midwinter Fair. The VOGT GRAND OPERA HOUSE, Just One Week, Beginning MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9th. JVIiss OHHIS OBEH And Her Eastern Company of 15 Artists, In a New Play Each Night.; .FRIDAY NIGHT. -4 TRIL-BY 9 9 METArrrCT COMEDIES and DRAMAS, IMlIVV ClO 1 SONGS and DANCES, - Electrical and Musical Specialties. T T 1 You want to L I A You Love Mus 1 I You Enjoy Co You want to Laugh isic Good Comedy GO Prices, 10, 20 and 30c. GEORGE RUCH PIONEER GROCER. Successor to Cbrisman dc 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. CEIEAM Most Perfect Made. 40 Tears the Standard School Books Supplies. Jacobson Book & Music Co. No. 174 Second Street, New Yogt Block, The Dalles, Oregon. Job Pointing at this Office