- Cole's Air Tight and Hot Blast v HEATERS v HRE.THE BEST 0173 5a of You Must Decide .... Before long where you will buy your new outfit The earlier you make your resolution and act upon It the more use you 11 get of the ciotnes. 11 you think we can give you any new ideas or be of assistance in any way, call on us. , In any event, before you buy you ought to be posted on the new H. S. & M. fashions. . . HART, SCHAFFNER & MARX. i: .... a. .s-. GUARANTEED CLOTHINQ. The finest tailor-made ready-to-wear garments in America bear this trade mark. You'll find them very different from the other kinds. 9 i ALL GOODS MARKED If PLAIN FIGURES. PEASE & MAYS. Ths Dalles DaHy Chronicle. Friday November 19, i897 W AYSIDEGLEAN I N GS. Hear W. H. IliflTs lecture tonight at the M. E. church. Weather Tomorrow and Sunday, ra'n ; temperature turning decid ily c oler. Don't forget tbe Circle ball th's even ing. It prorrises to La the event of tbe season. . " Ho.-ea Drown . a veteran of the war of 1812, d:i d at Grarts Pass Tuesday, ajjed 105 years snd 4 months. A. Y. Marsh and Geo. Joles will have a turkey Bhoot on the beach on Novem ber 24th and 25 tb, (Thanksgiving day). There will aleo be trap and pigeon shooting at the same time and place. 8-24 Work is being pushed as rapidly as possible on the new Ov R. & N. bridge Bcro3S Mill creak. Everything ia in read'ncja to begin the pile d.ivlng, and in a Bbort time this badly-ne . ded im provement will be finished. The Catholic fair begins next Tuesday and lasts tbe balance of the weak. The fair will ta held in the Vogt opera house, and will, no doubt, cause the assembling of one of the largest cowds ever gathered in the building. Lust night the Solvation Army held a -meeting in the basement of the Method ist church, when Major Marshall spoke on "Full SalvRtion." Tonight they will have and old-t'me misting at their bar racks on First stn at, led by Major Mar shall, assisted by Miss Parks. Tuesday night at Albany Tom Cul bertsoa, a bay 14 years old, boarded a freight train. He was ordered off just aa tbe train was starting. As he climbed down he. slipped and fell, al most nnder the wheels. One of his feet was badly injured. It is thought the foot may be saved. The rain, which has been falling al most constantly since yesterday, makes everyone think that this side the mount ains is becoming somewhat of a webfoot. The farmers are the only ones who ap ' preciate it, and expect to commence plowing immediately if the ground does not freeze up bo as to prevent. ' " As near as we can learn, the excursion of the Portland merchants will arrive in The Dalles on their return trip Monday afternoon at 3 o'clock. This is a little more like it, aa it Beams very etrange that the merchants should pass through a town of The Dalles magnitude and business Btanding without staying over for at least a few hours. J. W. Nesmith Woman's Relief Corps will hold a memorial service in Schanno's hall next Saturday evening at 8 :30 o'clock. This meeting is called in pur suance of general orders received from national and department officers, in memory of Mrs. E. Florence Barker, past national president, who died at her home in Maiden, Mass., on September 11, 1897, and Mre. Julia Abraham, past dep.-rt sent president, who died at tbe fcm!'y borne in Rcsebr-g, Or., on Oc tobor 6, 1897, and our own membars who have ".'-Cj.-cd over" dnro the p." ent ye.-. All friends of the order are in vited lo La pr. Gilt. Interest 5t I jwiinj is incrp-!ng eveiy c'.iy at tbe club a'leye, which re in fine bnifon. Lot r:;ht M". John Don b oke the ord of the?? alleys with a Ei'o' e of 80, the fo-uier rc o.'dtc'oj held by. Mr. Cbus. Lard at 73. Mr. Bonn nvde spares on the fi'et r id bi::th in?cs. the rest b-'ag Bt:!'it2, with tl'ce sU-ik.3 on tbe final frame. A number ot new crosswalks are being put in, and this is certainly a very com mendable step, as many of them are so low that they are .covered with mud continually - and have hoi:-3 broken through them which makes it dange oaa for persons trave'ing over them, and shop'd an ate'deat o-.-our, there is no oubt that tbe city would have a dm- e suit on its bands. Byron, the 14-year old son of Mr. and 'Irs. Wiley Norton, of Blodgett, in Ben- jton county, was found dead in a ditch a -"few yards f .om the family home Thurs day of last week. The lad, who was subject to epileptic fits, went after the cows and it was supposed that he was attack." i by a fit while crossing on a featioz, rnd fell into the ditch, which is on'y two test diep fid a few fect wide. The cr.se of the State of Oregon vs, Jake Prahl is bsing tried today. The following jprors have bran selected : Geo. Ccjper, M. V; Rand, Frank Aljcr nathy, M. Dichtpamuller, J. L. Cooper, G. W. Miller, W. B.' Rodman, H. C, Butcham, Grant Ashby, Hans Lagei W. Obrist, W. H. Kodenheiser. This prom ises to be a long case, as well as en ex ; msive one for the county. A few evtn'igs ago Mr'. J. Robeils, living out on the John Day, wan ' taken iito Wasco to ba patched up by Dr. Sut c?;3e. - He had got mixed up with a brrb-wire fence and a horse, and came out with a d'slccated shoulder and not many clothes. He was trying to lead a fractious horse over . the wire, and the animal reared and catching in the wire tangled him up so he was unable to free h'mse'f. There was a fight at the freight house Tuesday night betwean a freight con- doctor and h's brakeman. Those who saw It eaid that tbe conductor swung bis colored lantern, giving the brakeman a danger signal, and as this was not h. -i-ed, Be used the lantern ta ben tht brakeman into a state of subjection. The blood was scrubbed off the platform next morning, but the lantern was de molished. No cake, na cads, no " rests, and no names. Tuesday evening about 8 o'clock Mrs. Forb, the wife of an engineer on the Sumpter Valley Ry., who resides in Ba ker City, was terribly burned by the ex plosion of a kerosene oil lamp, says the Baker City Democrat. In some un accountable manner the burning lamp exploded and the blazing oil inflicted painful injuries on the lady's head and breaet. Dr. Snow was hastilv sum- fieringL moned and greatly relieved the so of Mrs. Ford. It is not thought tbit her injuries will endengor her life. Rev. ChWs Nickelsen tells of the big gest spuds so far beard from. Eight or nne years ago, while helping to dig po ta; vrs on the ranch now owned by F. H. Batton, he found two potatoes in one hill, one of which weighed 9' pounds pud tbe other 8 .pounds.- Two hills of pof'i.3 filkd a bushel basket. An other p JtatD, dug n the sme p.ch tbe s?..ne day, weight i 8 pounds. The speds were welg': .i by George T. ibe;- oj b's . v ,les. Jco Po-ser, tbe ampion pc'. ttn d;gA3r, was pi--?ent aid can verify this story. Glacier. Big; Gala t Astoria. dispatch from Astoria on tbe 16th sa 'A f jrious gaie has been raging since 'clock this morning, and is now in- easing. The wind is blowing sixty les .an hour at the cape. No ships have arrived or departed. The mouth of the river is obscured by a beayy fog and rain. The steamer State of Cali fornia, Can tbis t.5o, . "ns, it ic prewmcd, is lying ouf.jiau c. i fie lightship. In Astoria, fences -.veia' blown down, awn ings swept away, and the old Anglo Americpn crnery was trnabli i over onto tbe railro-i ti id "n East Astoria, comnolling the work train to stop and the hands to clear away the jwrcck ba- ore the train could proceed. A runaway sk'ff was blown across tbe bay at a high late of spird, and passengers on river s.eamers were se.isick. " - . r' A ma l just ia from Elsie, in the Up- ipe rehalem valley, reports that the storm is very severe all through tbe Ne haleiii couctry. The Big Fishhawk is f so swollen it is difficult lo crosa it. A large tree was blown across the Clat skanie bridge, knocking out four spans. It is feared there will be much damage." Ha Was a Big Man.' He was big of cheat and limbs, and as he came in he said : ''I'm going to give you all the trouble I c:n till I get w hat fits me." Laes than five minutes lat. r the eat 3 man said, "Try this one." It was a first rate fit, one of these clay wors'.H, size 48. The vest perfect ; the trousers 48 around the waist, 30 in length perfect, wUhout an alteration of button or anytb'ug the most trifling. He wore it away on his back, a more than pleased man. Couldn't have been filled better had it been made to his measure, and it cost fully one-half less. Everybody, big man or not, can be Gte at A. M. Williams & Co.'s. Your moit. 'ack it you want it.' Sea tlia CttryMDthemama. - The public is invited to come1 and see the chrysanthemums.. They are now in full bloom, and this is the best time to g;t your plants. The lily, hyacinthe, tulip, early and late narcissus and jon quil bulbs are now ready to plant for spring and winter blooming. Now is the time, to get your plants for early spring blooming. 19-2w Mas. A. C. Stubmng & Son. 0 They heat a room in five minutes. They save enough fuel the first .year to pay for the stove. 4 cents a day is the average cost of heating a large room with our stoves. They burn anything and every thing combustible. A cord of. wood equals a ton of hard coal in any ot our wood heaters. It is only necessary to remove ash es once in six weeks from our wood stoves. ; They aro safe 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. Tbey are easily moved and set up. Our wood stoves are made with either sheet iron or cast iron fops in all sizes, for all purposes. They are jointlees the connections being so made . that the greater ' ' expansion of the lining don't af . fect the body. There are no bolts expoeed to tbe fire to burn off or draw or open : ' up a joint. Our coal stove will burn slack and makes a ton of soft coal eqaal to a ton of hard coal. BEWARE of . infringers and inferior imitations, they never equal the origin al and cost as much. MAIER BENTON: t j ,r r j f i PERSONAL MENTION. i Gol-N I N. J. Call of Fulda, Wash., is in the city. John McAllister and wife of Glenwood are visiting in tbe city. J. M. Recder, one of Antelope's ehee kngs, is at tbe Umatilla. Mr. N. B. Brooks, an attorney ot dendale, was in tbe city yesterday. A. J. Douglass, one of Dufnr's pros perous farmers, is in the city today. . Mrs. N. Eaton of Wasco is iu tbe city visiting her daughters and their fam ine.. . - Mr. A. C. Cramer is in the city from Moeier, and called at Ths Chronicle office today. Dr. J. A. Geisendorfer ,of "Arlington, who will in all probability locate perma nently in this city, is at the Umatilla. Mrs. S. P. M. Briggs returned home last evening from Cbehalis. ' Neddy ia still with his grandparents, and is in a fair way to recovery. L. Samuel, who formerly edited the West Shore, and who at present is in the real estate and insurance business in Portland, is a guest at the Umatilla House. AdTtrtUed Letters. Following is the list of letters remain ing in the postoffice at Tbe Dalles un called for Oct. 29, 1897. Persons call ing for the same will give date on which they were advertised : Aldi-icb EM" . .' Lage Mattie " Adleson Pese Linch T E Alley Geo M Lowerv Cbas F Aldrich Frank Model Feath CIrCo BennisGeo Myers W C . Barnes Lizzie Moe Frank 5 Blue Mrs L Margan Lou BarbarCO , McDonald J M - Bat-on B B j . McAllister Jos Connolly Delia A Mayer Lizzie Campbell Mrs NitlieOlson John Darvia T F Poole Chas Davidson Chas E Rogers Dick Davidson Harrv Rob bins Minerva Davidson Daisy Robins May . : Davis J A Selden Sarah Defoy A Sears H FlemmmgA- - . State Olive Floory Mary ' Schanner Joban Grove Sadie Shane I A Gordon Lela ." Wmith Friiz Groves E Swanson Jno Gro9ney Lue . Tull Geo Greenleaf Lewis Thompson C F Hoyt M Thomas J D Hawleylra ' VVren Clay Hairis G W Vermont Mar Wks HammonCH Vo der Helen H Johnson J A Vineyaro S W Jolms Bess Wail le Jno . Johnson Frank Watt J N Johnoon Hi'ds ' - . Walker Mary .IjioIcs Mf ' Warfield KdW Johnson Dave Waketie'd A Jncob. Johnson C A Warner M Jenkins JW Wilson "R E .Tniks Amanda WcodTordWT King Mchael Woodcock Wm Lemons Josah . Wing G L Laukins Snsie Wright J T Lona Mrs H M . - Wictbam Clarence Leinenger Martha Witham Ve-ona T J. A. Crosses, P. M. NOTICE. ' I bave a stray horse, a roan, 9 years old, branded with a figure 2 on the right bip, at my place on three mile. The owner can have the same by paying the cost of tbis advertisement and proving property. - Seth Morgan. The Dalles. Try Schilling's Best tea and baking powjar Uilsop nir-Jil?t jieater$ j Has , ' been so much larger than we anticipated, that our stock has been demoralized, but we have j ust received another shipment, and can sup -ply your wants. .-v -' The Wilson has Outside draft and cast sliding top. Sold only by i -.;'."'': MAYS & CROWE, J. T. Peters & Go -DEALERS IN- 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 , acobsen Book & Music Co. here will also be found the larireet and most cnmnletn linn of Pianos and other Musical Instruments in Eastern Oregon.. Mail Orders will receive prompt attention." NewVogt Block, The Dalles,r 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 kinds of Staple and Fancy Groceries. GEORGE RUCH, Pioneer Grocer. Closing Out Sale -OF- FURNITURE S CARPETS Are going tb elope out their business, and they are offerina their large stock at COST PRICES. Now is the time to buy good Furniture cheap. All persons knowing themselves indebted to said -firm are requested to call and settle their account. . CllARK & FALK, Proprietors. Pate Dmgs and JVIediGines. . .. Toilet Articles and Perfumery, .. , pirpst of Imported ard Domes tie Qiars. j-eiepnone, rnscs. - iew vogt UIock, Subscribe for The GBpooicIe and. get tlie neivs.