3 School Has Commenced o C. 9 and we wish all the Boys to appear in Nice New Clolthing'. We will do our part. For the balarice of this week we shall allow a Discount of 33 1-3 percent On Boys' and Young Men's Clothing. TODAY BOYS' FALL SUITS ARE READY, STYLISH, RIGHT, HONEST CLOTHING. Large number of patterns to select from. The Suits are for Boys from 6 to 16 years. ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. PEASE & MAYS The Dalles Daily Ghronicie. MONDAY - - SEPTEMBER 13, 1897 WAYSIDE GLEANINGS. Random Oommtroni ana Local Events of Lesser Magnitude. Weather Tonight and Tuesday, fair. County court has adjourned until Monday, October 4th. Prineville will have five daye of racing beginning October 28th. On Wednesday, Sept. 15th, the steamer Dallea City will leave The Dalles at 7 a. m. The wharf boat is crowded with wool, and shipments will be heavy for several days. There is no change in the local wheat market, the price remaining a.t eighty cents. Sunday was the prettiest day of the season and evervone who could was out of doors to enjoy it. Fresh oysters in every style at An drew Keller's bakery and confectionery store. 7-5t The Dalles City took 130 bales of wool to Portland today. Thirty head of cattle were consigned to Trootdale. Nearly everyone having returned from their summer outings, all the churches report good .audiences yesterday. The 3-Mile school, Dist. 24, at Seth Morgan's, will commence on Monday, Sept. 20th, with Minnie Etlon teacher. The enrollment of scholars in the public school this morning was 116, a gain of thirty-six over the first day of last year. Furnished rooms, with steam heat, to let by the day or month, in Chapman block ; also in Vogt block. sl3-2t. The handsome residence of Mr. E. O McCoy is receiving ita dress ot paint and will be ready for occupancy about October 1st. There seems little fear of a wood fam ine this winter, as the beach is com pletely covered now and a scow load ar rives every day or two. Now is the best time to order your roses. They are now in full bloom, and you can take your choice at the Stubling Greenhouse. Also winter - blooming plants very cheap. s6-lw ' Columbia Chapter. Eastern Star, will meet Tuesday evening, Sept. 14th, at 8 o'clock. As this will be the first meet ing since vacation, every member is earnestly requested to be present. The board of equalization will meet tbe first Monday in October, at which time all who are dissatisfied with their assessment, will be given the opportun ity to correct any error. s7-d&wtf. The Dalles Lumbering Co. intend moving this week to tbe Wingate build ing on Second street. This change was made necessary by the Commercial Club having rented all of the Grant building. Prineville - will have an advanced school this winter, to commence Sept. 20th, and will possibly continue for eight months. Prof. Ullery of Canfield, Ohio, has been secured to take charge of the school. Pendleton is agitating tbe project of establishing a distillery. Hezekiab Keys has been in that city since Thursday-interviewing business men regard ing the plan, and is meeting- with good success. The new building built for Mr. Wolf in the East End is a handsome addition to our business houses. The plans were drawn and the work superintended by Contractor A. Anderson, and he may well feel proud of bis work. The Regulator received ber annual in spection yesterday in Portland and was granted, papers for the ensuing year. Tbe Dalles City will be inspected on ber arrival in Portland Wednesday. Both these boats have done honest service and deserve the best the inspectors can give them. The public schools began their session this morning with an increased attend ance. The enrollment is not yet com plete. Bright faced children were eeen hurrying to school this morning, in eager anticipation of renewing pleasant associations and incidentally doing some studying. Now is the time to huBtle for the fair. There can be no excuse for not holding the best meeting we baye ever had. There is plenty of money in the country and everybody is in good humor over tbe preeent prosperity. Little time can be lost, however, in arranging the neces sary preliminaries. Sheepmen report the grass as getting very dry in the mountains, and the sheep will be brought in early this fall. The rain of the last few days will start tbe grass and this may slightly change the time for coming home. Antelope Herald. The Bible Institute Colportage Asso ciation, sj. l,. raooay president, is ni need of more colporters. Earnest young people desiring to give the whole or a porlion of their time to Christian work, with remuneration, should address A. P. Fitt, Supt., Box X, 250 La Salle Ave., Chicago, for particulars. Many complimentary remarks are heard concerning the sermon of Rev. W. C. Curtis at the Congregational church yesterday morning. . Had we the space, Wasco we eiiouia giaaiy pnoiien it. lhe eer vices at the Episcopal church were en hanced by the singing of Miss DeForreet, whose voice caused delight in all who heard her. "Miss Carrie St. John wishes to an nounce that she has returned from her summer outing and is again established at the dressmaking department ot A. M.Williams & Co., where she will be pleased to meet ber many old, as well as new, friends and customers. Orders with goods bought elsewhere will receive our .prompt, attention as well. A. M. Williams & Co. Fletch Faulkner and John Hampshire have gone into the horse trading business. They have purchased a thoroughbred "Hambleallamont"for$15 and are so sat isfied with their prize that they are 'going to start a man out in the country to see if his mate cannot be found. They in tend sending him on the racing circuit this season and ship him to Klondike in the spring. A great many Dalles people "are in teresting themselves in mining and as a person walks along the street they hear frequent references -to nuggets, quartz, dividends, big things, etc., till the need of a mining bureau becomes apparent. We sincerely hope our friends will strike it rich and then spend their money in The Dalles. There can be no doubt but that some large fortunes are going to be made in Oregon mines and the com ing year will see some revelations. The desire has been expressed by many people that the Commercial Club in arranging its new improvements will make provision for a swimming tank. The building they have leased is well suited for the building of a tank, as the excavation is already made. -Swimming is a pleasant sport and healthful recrea tion, but . little of it is done here, be cause of the Columbia's waters being so cold. It is a dangerous, as well as an unpleasant stream in which to swim. Shonld the club put in a natatorium it would be the chief attraction during the summer months. TALKS ABOUT THE DALLES. The Pendleton Tilbnne Gives The Dalles Some I'retty Straight Talk. How Does It Strike Ton? The Dalles, has become so seriously alarmed, the Chronicle says that ' with out tbe $1500 state appropriation, no meeting could be held in Wasco county. Tbe proposition in Pendleton is quite different. Here a number of represen tative citizens have concluded to organ ize a fair association, feeling confident that such an undertaking would be of great benefit to the community and could be made a financial successY To that end a stock company will be organ zed with a capital of $25,000. This amount'will all be paid in, grounds pur chased, a tract built, buildings erected and a fair held, regardless of lhe state appropriation of $1500. This item was not considered or thought of when the matter was first talked up and is not now considered ot vital importance. However, since attention' has been drawn to the subject by The Dalles press, and since Umatilla county is a part of the district, and the richeet and most populous county in Eastern Ore-' gon, since fendleton is the foremost city and the geographical center of the In land Empire, since The Dalles has had tbe benefit of $13,500 state appropria tion and Pendleton never a cent, the district commissioners will, in all prob ability, be asked to designate Pendleton as the place of meeting of the Eastern Oregon District Apricnltural Society in 1898. Fendleton Tribune. 1,000,000 People IN the United States now enjoying food cooked in the MA JESTIC affirm that the half has not. been said in its praise. The manufacturers of this Range pledge them selves that all parts of tbe MAJESTIC except the firebox and the new series Nos. 201 to 212, are made of eteel and mal leable iron, and purchasers are assured that it is as good and. as honest as skilled labor and money- can produce. If the p'arts now in malleable iron were (as in other so-called Bteel ranges), made of cast iron, the price could .bp icreatly reduced ; but tbe MAJESTIC is not made with u view to furnishing extra parts for repairs. MAYS &. CROWE, Sole Agents. J. T. Peters & GOOD WORDS FOR THE DALLES What Is SM Abroad About Oar Thriv ing City Some Good Advertising. According to The Dalles papers that city is considerably exercised over the movement that has recently been insti tuted in Pendleton, looking to the estab lishment of a fair association. Fear is expressed by the Times-Mountaineer and the Chronicle lest Pendleton ask that the next district fair meeting be held here and for the $1500 appropriated by the state each year to be offered as premiums. And why should not Pen dleton petition the district fair commis sioners to do this very thing, pray? The four.state appropriations of $1500 each are for four district. fairs two in South ern Oregon and two in Eastern Oregon. No appropriation was ever intended es pecially for The Dalles. The first East ern Oregon district comprises the coun ties of .Baker, Union, Malheur, Grant and Wallowa: and tbe second Umatilla, Gilliam, Morrow, Sherman and Crook. A commissioner appointed by the county court of each of these coun ties comprise what is called the Eastern Oregon District Agricultural Societies. The commissioners thus appointed meet once a year and designate the place of meeting in each district. In the first district fairs have been held at Baker City, La Grande and Prairie City, but The Dalles is the only point in the sec ond district where a fair has ever been held and that city has bad the benefit of the state's annual appropriation of $1500 for the past nine years, or $13,500 in all. . Why, then, should not Pendle ton now ask for tbe meeting, and with very good reason to believe she would get it? In speaking of the matter over which General Agent Harder, of the Great Northern railroad, always puts in a good word for Tbe Dalles, and as be is a man who travels widely and observes closely wherever be goes, what he says has more weight than any other means of advertising. . All tbe statements made in the following interview, published in yesterday's Oregonian, are true, and are well worth the perusal of any one with capital looking for an investment: I found a general feeling of returning prosperity pervading all classes. Tbe recent rains have done no damage of any amount to the crops. In some counties where much grain was yet standing, it was thought that tbe rains would bleach the berry; but such is not the case. All is turning out in the best of condition, and the yield is enormous, in some places over fifty bushels to the acre. At The Dalles everything is humming, all the merchants are busy shipping goods in all directions by team into the interior. Farmers and ranchers are pouring ' into the place with wheat; which they readily dispose of at eighty cents a bushel. Wool shipments have been going East for several weekB, all the buyers having purchased their quota and left for home. W. E. Jones.'part ner of the firm of Hbllowell & Dona'd in Boston, is the largest shipment, and is still grading and baling, bis output amounting to over 2,000,000 pounds. He expects to finish in about ten days. The Dalles Commission Company has shipped a large quantity of green fruit, which has realized good prices in the East. Considerable cattle and sheep traffic has been going on all summer, but during the next two monthB ranch ers and stockmen expect to make very heavy fail shipments to Kansas Citv and Chicago. Portland and tbe Sound cities also draw their supplies of cattle and sheep from this section. Hogs are very scarce in Oregon and Washington Prices, of U kinds of live stock have advanced in sympathy with all other commodities, and stocfcraisers leel very comfortable over the prices tiiey now re alize as compared with thoso of a year ago before McKinley was elected. Fall salmon-packing has also begun Tbe Dalles. Mr. F. A. Seufert started his fish wheels on the morning of thelOtb, and in less than twenty-four hours be had secured over thirty tons of 6ilver side -salmon. He reports the Columbia teeming with fish, and expects to put up many thousand cases. The Dalles is a smart city, being the distributing point for a vast territory in all directions. Its merchants are a live and progressive lot of men, fully deter mined to make their city an important commercial center, and with every in dication of success. If you suffer with headache or pain in the eyes, if print blurs when reading, you should have your eyes examined. Possible defective vision is the cause of the pain and if corrected will relieve the pain. -Dr. Lannerberg, eye epecial ist.'office in the Vogt block, will. examine your eyes free of charge. Bread, cakes and everything of that kind, as well as confectionery, icecream, etc., at the Elite, next door to Parkin's barber shop. 7-tf Nebraska corn for sale at the Wasco warehouse. Best feed on earth. ni9-tf Co., DEALERS IX Agricultural Implements, Champion Mowers and Reapers, Craver Headers, Bain Wagons, Randolph Headers and Reapers, Drapers, Lubricating Oils, Axle G-rease, Blacksmith Coal and Iron. Agents for Waukegan Barb Wire. 2nd Street, Cor. Jefferson, THE DALLES. Complete Line of Fishing Tackle, Notions, Baseball Goods, Hammocks, Baby Carriages, Books and Stationery at Bedrock Prices, at the Jacobsen Book & Music Co. Where will also be found the largest and most complete line of Pianos and other Musical Instruments in Eastern .Oregon. Mail Orders will receive prompt attention. New Vogt Block, The Dalles, Oregon. Three Trainloads of..... STEEL SUPERIOR A NEW JARKET. FRUIT, VEGETABLES, POULTRY, FISH AND GAME. Chickens Dressed to Order. Promt Delivery to any part of the city. A. N. VARNEY, Phone 12. Third and Washington .Sts. RANGES Have been sold already this year. All prices, From $30.00 up. . Eighty styles, from small family size to as large as wanted. There are more Superior Stoves and Ranges in use in this territory than all other makes of Stoves combined. This is con clusive evidence of the superiority of Bridge & Beach Co.'s cele brated SuDerior Stoves and Ranges. On sale at - . MAIER & BENTON, Sole agents for SUPERIOR Steel Ranges. THE DALLES, OREGON. 3Me - . has tbe best Dress Goods i has tbe best Shoes . has everything to "be found in a r first-class Dry Goods Store. C. F. STEPHENS. MO