Cole's Air Tight and Hot Blast H E ATE RS '1 I 5re When A Fellow s 4- Well Dressed Life goes with' a swing. There's no greater luxury than good clothes and surely none more sensible and eco nomical. There's a' feeling of satisfaction in a perfect fitting suit nothing else can . give. " You'll find it in bur celebrated H S. & M. clothes. This is the label. V HART, 80HAFFNER & MARX. - 111 '" "" . ft s&sd in i. ..n..,... ,.. mil r r , ., ,,,,- .1 GUARANTEED CLOTHING. I ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. PEASE & MAYS. I The Dalles Daily Chronicle. WEDNESDAY NOVE WAYSI it R 17, 1897 ANINGS. v- easc of town, last summerA This morn- i ii luc jui j was UlftCU lu buc ci.cuc ui j the alleged robbery in Ward & Robin son's wagonette, returning about 9 o'clock. Attorneys Fred Wilson and B. j S, Huntington are for the defense. ' , The balL Friday evening will be given in the Vogt opera boose. The price 'of admission is one dollar for gentlemen ; ladies free. Music will be famished by Prof. Birgfeld, and it will be of a high order. Grand march to begin at 8 :30. The management expect a large con course of guests. A good set of commit tees has been chosen to wait on those attending, so no one will be neglected. Everything will be done to make the evening an enjoyable one. ' Count Achilles de Vecchi, a distin guished Italian nobleman, died at Wash ington City a short time ago from eating mushrooms. His death has caused the subject of mushrooms, edible and non edible, poisonous and otherwise, to be largely oiscussea. . ine secretary of ag riculture is going to print a book on the subject for the benefit of the fungivora. The scientists of the department say at thsy are nnable to hazard an opin- as to the character of some particn fungi, as the varieties frequently run o each other. Ibis being true, it Since the reopening of the commer cial club the attendance has been much larger and the bowling alleys have been keept warm all the time. All members of the United Artesans are earnestly' requested to be present at the regular meeting tonight at the K. of P. hall at 8:30 o'clock. Don't miss the lecture Friday evening thinking it will be dry. It is seldom one has an opportunity to hear so good a speaker as W. H. Iliff. The White Star Line has reduced the' passenger fares between The Dalles and Portland again, and the rates are now $1 one way and $1.50 for round trip. Those awarded premiums at the last meeting of the Second Eastern Oregon Distrit Agricultural Society, or words to that effect, can get their drafts by calling at the D. P. & A. N. office. Mr. Emit Schanno was at Hood River yesterday, and assorts that it was nasty a day as he ever saw. The snow AN OLD OLD-TIMER. -H 1. . I ZA. t . . . 0 , , . . seems like a waste of time and money to - 1 iry iu A. Y. Marsh and Geo. Joles will have a turkey shoot on the beach on Novem ber 24th and 25th, (Thanksgiving day). There will also be trap and pigeon shooting at the same time and place. . 8-24 The "Cradle 'Songs of the Nations," which will be given in costume at the Vogt opera houBe on December 4th, will be sometbing entirely different from the general . run of entertainments, and is well worth looking forward to. . . The steamer Maria left Portland this morning for the first trip. It is the in tention to have her domost of the local freight work, thus enabling the Regu " lator to make quicker time. She will now regularly make trips every other day. Rev. William Duncan, father of ' the Methlakahtla Indian village, on Annette island, Alaska, is in Seattle. He de nounces the rumors of throuble between the miners and the Mathlakahtla In dians as all lies. He , says there is no mineral on the island worth speaking of, and there were 827 Indians on the island in 1890, but they have not been counted since. The steamer Nixon left the ' landing, on the Columbia, with a load of eighteen cars of wheat for Wenatchee last Friday. About six miles further down the river she struck a rock, caving in her bottom. The steamer was at once headed for shore, and now Batnds with her stern under water and her bow rest ing on the shore. Seventeen cars ' wheat were injured by the water The case of the State againet Simmons was taken op yesterday afternoon and a jury impaneled. Simmons is ono of the three men accused of .beating and rob bing several Indiana near the ice house, try to described for the benefit of others that which they cannot distinguish themselves. We have a remedy to sug gest for those who insist on eating the deadly mushroom, and that is to change their diet and fill up on Oregon prunes. PKKSOSAl, MENTION. counted Orondo u xb of the ; County Judge Mariner of Gilliam county is in the city. Hon. D. W. Pierce of Goldendale ar rived in this city last night. - Mr. J. L. Taffe of San Francisco is vis ing bis brother, the Grand Duke of Ce lilo. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth McRae left this morning for their home in Grant county. , Col. Frank Parker, of the Walla Walla Statesman, was a passenger on the 9 :2b train this morning. Miss Myra Helm went to Portland iuia muming tu remain bum winter wua her sister, Mrs. Stratton. George Maloy was in from Tygh val ley after the casket for D. L. Powne's wife who died last night. x Mr. .Bernie Sellick is in from Boyd to- i day. Bernie is a former typo, and al ways gives ine office a call. Hon. A. F. Snelhnic of North Yackima arrived in this city yesterday, and will take the position of editor of the Baptie sentinel. Hon. A. J. Dufur came in trom Dutur odav, and will leave on the boat to morrow for Portland to remain during he winter. Miss Effie Manning, of. McMinville irrived on the steamer last night and re frained over till this morning visiting Mrs. C. F. Stepbene. She leaves on the 5 :30 train this euening for Walla Walla. MAKK11D. Near Chicken Springs, Nov. loth, at the residence of George Kennedy, father of the bride, Benjamin F. Mitchell and Effie L. Pouting, both of Wasco county, C. Sumner Smith, justice of the peace, performing the ceremony. Invitation to the Firemen' Bull Held uoro u tf uij - AO 4 While the lower part of the building now occupied by the Commercial Club was being cleared out preparatory to putting in the bowling alleys, Mr. Joseph Bonn found an old invitation addressed to Mr. William Grant, who erected .the building and ran a general store there The invitation reads as follows : The Dalles, Or., June 16, 1877. Mr. Wm. Gbant: Yourself and lady are cordially invited to attend the second annnal ball of Co Inmbia Relief Hose Company; No. 2, to be given at the JNew Umatilla House, in this city, on the evening of the Fourth Ot JUly, JS7. Committee of arrangements Messrs, Z. A. Moody, Omer Sylvester, C. M. Da- vail, John McDonald and Frank Mc- Farland. Tickets, admitting gentleman and ladies, $2. x Accompanying the invitation was a card containing the "order of dances," which were twenty in number, with an intermission of one hour at the end of the tenth dance. The dancers ot these days, or nights, would hardly be satis fied with the program, for of the twenty dances.- ten were quadrilles . and only three waltzes and two polkas. Many changes have taken place in The Dalles, and neither he to whom the invitation was sent nor any of the com mittee that sent it are at present resi dents of The Dalles. Z. A. Moody is at Grants Pass tcratcbing gravel for gold nuggets ; Omer Sylvester Is dead : C. M DuYall vanished, almost from the mem ory of man : John McDonald was in Sherman county the last the writer knew of him, and Frank McFarland is in Southern California. Men have gone, but the old Columbia Hose Company fs istill on deck, ready to face duty at a fire or beauty at a ball. It will be noted, too, that the tickets were Bold at $2, double the price usually asked now, and no doubt the red-shirt" ed boys had a grand time and added largely to their exchequer. Money was more plentiful then, and people had not acquired the trick of hanging on to it. Accidentally Shot. La HRE THE BEST They heat a room in five minutes. They save enough fuel the firtt . year to pay for the stove. 4 cents a day is the average coet of heating a largo room with our stoves. They burn anything and every thing combustible. A cord of wood equals a ton of hard coal in any of our wood heaters. It is only necessary to remove ash es once in six weeks from our wood stoves. They an eaft and have a catch to hold the cover while putting in fuel. You have a fire every morning. Our hot blast draft furnishes a hot air feed, not cold air, and saves fuel. ' - :; ;. " They are easily moved and set up. Our wood stoves are made with either sheet iron or cast iron tops in all sizes, for all purposes. They are jointless the connections - being so made that the greater expansion of the lining don't af fect the body. v There are no bolts exposed to the fire to burn off or draw or open up a joint. Our. coal stove will burn slack and makes a ton of soft coal equal to a ton of hard coal. BEWARE of infringers and inferior imitations, they never equal the origin al and cost as much. MAIER &, BENTON. j Uil5or I 7Vir-Jir?t Jal of anyone would -be inhuman enough to leave a pistol like that lying around with a leaden load on its stomach, but hereafter they will know that unloaded guns are the dangerous ones. Officer Coming Yesterday evening Webb Varnev and Willie Kasberger found an old 32 pistol in a desk in Mr. Varney's place of busi ness, and as there was not much for them to do just at that time, they be gan fooling with the pistol, which, of onrse, was not loaded. .The Kasberger oy, who is about 14 years of age, was sitting down, the Yarney boy standing in front of him with the pistol. Kas berger grabbed the pistol and tried to pull it away from Varney, and in the scuttle the pistol was discharged, the ball striking the Kasberger boy in the left sidejJIdrtnMB"tely the bullet took a course around the boy's body just nnder the skin, instead of passing straight through, and Dr. Doane, with a slight incision, removed it.' The wonnd will be . healed in a few days, but the ' lesson will not soon be forgotten . by. either the shooter or the ehootee. Of coursJ they did not suppose The commander of the North Pacific forces, Salvation Army, Major Stephen Marshall, of Portland, accompanied by Miss Ensign Parks, the divisional M. B agent, will visit The Dalles Thursday and Friday of this week. A meeting will be held at the Methodist church Thursday evening at 8 o'clock, at which time Major Marshall will speak on '"Full Salvation" and Ensign Parks will sing a solo and explain the M. B. scheme. Friday night an old-time free and eaey at the barracks on First street, led by Major Marshall, assisted by Miss Parks and the officers and comrades of the local corps. Admission 10 cents. Saturday night EnBign and Mrs Smith, now visiting near town, will be present and lead the indoor meeting, Ensign Smith was formerly in command of The Dalles crops and Mrs. Smith was a soldier. - Did Ton Ert. Try Electric Bitters as a remedy for your troubles? IX not, get a bottle now and get relief. This medicine has been found to be -peculiarly adapted to the re lief and cure of all Female Complaints exerting a wonderful direct influence in giving strength and tone to the organs, If you have Loss of Appetite, Constipa tion, Headache, Fainting Spells, or are Nervous, Steepness, Excitable, Melan choly or troubled with Dizzy Spells Electric Bitters in the medicine von need. Health and Strength are guaran teed by its use. Large bottles only fifty cents and $1.00 at Blakeley& Houghton Druggist. A Home Like a. Woman's Head. ' Of the many ideas put forward' for the r-sris exposition or liwo, none is more original than the proposal to build, a iiouse (to toe devoted to the world of women) in the shape of a beautiful woman's head. The suggested en rtrance will be at the base of the neck, and the -eyes are to'be illumined by eleC' trie are lights. The chance for some echamcal genius to invent mechanism work the jaw up and down is obvious "The worst cold I ever had in my life as cared by Chamberlain's Cough lemedy," w.ites W.H. Norton, of Sutter eek, Cal. "This cold left me with a ough and I was expectorating all the I ime. The remedy enred me and I want i 11 myiriends when troubled with a t jugh or cold to use it, for it will do t lem good. Sold by Blakeley & Hoogh tn. : . - Ui Wanted. Freight teams to load for the interior, or particulars inquire at the Jacobsen JJOOK and Music store. ' lb-zc larger Has been so. much than we anticipated, that our stock has been demoralized,- but ' we have just' received, another shipment, and can supply your wants. , - , '. . - The "Wilson has Outside draft and cast sliding top. Sold only MAYS & CROWE. J. T. Peters & Co., -DEALERS IS- 7 Agricultural Implements, Champion Mowers and Reapers, Craver Headers, Bain Wagons, Randolph. Headers and Reapers, Drapers, Lubricating Oils, Axle Grease. Blacksmith Coal and Iron. Agents ior 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. tVhere will also be found the largest and most complete line of Pianos and other Musical Instruments in Eastern Oregon. Mail Orders will recetva prompt attention. New. Vogt Block, The Dalles,' Oregon. PIONEER BAKERY. I have re-opened this well-known Bakery, and am now prepared to supply every- .... body with Bread, Pies and Cakes. Also all kindsf of Staple and Fancy Groceries. GEORGE RUCH, Pioneer Grocer. Closing Out Sale -OF- FURNITURE CARPETS Are going to close out their business, and -they are offering their large Btock at COST PRICES. Now is the time to buy good Furniture cheap. All persons knowinic themselves indebted to said firm are requested to call and ". - . settle their account. ' - B S HUNTIKGTOS. H 8 WILSON. HTJNTIXGTON fc WILSON, ATTORNEYS AT LAW; THE DALLES, OREGON. Office over First Nat. Bank. FRED. W. WILSON. ATTORNEY AT LAW, THE DALLES, OKEGOX. Office over First Nat Bant. , Jl?e postoff iee pharmacy, CLARK & FALK, Proprietors. Putfe Drugs and JVIediGines. Toilet Articles and Perfumery, ' ' . . pipst Ijr) of Imported a rjd Domestic iars. Telephone, 333. New Vogt Block. .3u.l3SC2?rbe fox The Chronicle and. get the news.