The Shoe Man s " ir " "" '- Offerings Men's Chocolate Calf, lace, vesting top, best workmanship and material. Men's Chocolate, tan and ox-blood, lace, needle, coin or square toe.$2.50 Men's Satin calf, lace or congress an' style of toe 1.50 Ladies' Oxfords, in ox-blood, tan, chocolate and black 1.50 LadieV Chocolate, lace 2.50 Misses' School Shoes, all grades of stock, sizes Hi to 2 1.25 Misses' Dress Shoe, in tan or black, sizes 11 to 2 1.75 Boys' Shoes, all styles; solid, reliable goods 1.25 Displayed in FURNISHING GOODS WINDOW. ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN TIGURES. The Dalles Daily Chronicle. FRIDAY APRIL 29, 1898 WAYSIDE GLEANINGS. A lndy cook ib wanted at Isbell's res tnurnnt. U7-3t The weather forecast for today is fair anp warmer. Don't forget that Keltar keeps the best ice cream eoda in the city. tf Tillamook creamery butter 50 cents ut The Dalles Commission Co.' a. Wanted, suitable rooms for houBe keeping. Apply at this office. nprL'S St Oranges and lemons direct from grow ers at lowest prices at Dalles Commis sion Co. 'a. Joe Vey, of Umatilla couty, last week sold 2100 yearling sheep for $2 50, after shearing. Leave orders for ice with the Stadei miin Commission Co. Office cold storage building. Phone 49. tf Extra choice, full weight, Tillamook creamery butter at 50 cents per square at Maier & Benton's. License to wed wits issued yesteiday to John B. Cestner and Miss Uattie M. Newcombe, both of Hood River. "Eagle" Acetylene Gas Generators are superior to all. Agency at Hansen & Thompson's planing mill. a'JMm dw Mrs. Mary Ellen Lease, delivered a le.tture in Colfax Monday evening. Her subject was "Christ or Ceasor?" For sale cheap. Twenty-eight acres of good land, just outside the city limits. Inquire of G. R. Rowland. b212w. Dr. Bonham, dentist, Chapman block. Gold fillings, crowns and bridge work a specialty. All work warranted. Commencing Monday, May 2d, the steamers of the Regulator Line will leave Portland at A :30 a. m. and The Dalles at 8:30 a. m. A train load of cattle, which have been purchased in the Willamette val ley, passed through the city yestorday en route to North Dakota. At present Company G consists of 52 members. The limit is 00, and if appli cations continue to come in it will be reached before the boys leave lor Port land. The Whitman county populist pri maries will be held May 25, and the county convention May 31. The demo cratic county convention 'will be held May 25. Yesterday Roe Grimes returned from Idaho with nine cars of cattle, which ho purchased in that state. He was ship ping the same to the Union Meat Co. at Troutdale. A businrn meeting of the Epworth League at the usual place at 7 :90 ibis evening. All members are requested to be preeent s matters of grave import ance will be considered. A meeting of the Foresters of America will be. held at their bull at 8 o'clock this evening. All members are earnest "We'll wake up to find ourselves famous some of these mornings," says the shoe man. If prices count for anything, we'll find ourselves talked about. Precise ly what we are after. like these will do it. ly requested to be present as there will while the other two will ro in as pri bo work in the first degree. vates. Tomorrow the ladies of the Good In- The civil action of Phil Brogan ve. tent Society will have on sale, in the flames Bowman, was tried before Justice Vogt building, next door to the post- (Filloon yesterday. The action waB over office, pastry of all kinds. Rest from I cooking on that day and patronize them. F. M. Bowman was severely injured in a runaway accident in Walla Walla on Tuesday morning. He was thrown from his wagon, and Buffered a number of bruises and a slight concussion train. of the EarneBt Jensen, WilliamB' window trimmer, is certainly ud to date in everv line. In his latest window creation ha proves himself to be somewhat of a mil-1 tary man, and has made a very appro priate window for tbeBe war times. Judge Mc Donald of Colfax has in-l structed Prosecuting Attorney Matthews' to cite the publisher and editor of the Spokane Outburst to answer for con tempt of court for publishing articles ridiculing him as a dishonest hypocrite and ignoramus. The East End was extremely quiet yesterday afternoon. A few loads of wool came into the warehouses and some wheat changed bands at a good figure, while business at the stockyards was very quiet, as nothing but a band of hogs for Chrisman Bros., came in during the entire day. The McKinley club, of Aumsville, met Monday, and elected the following of ficers for the ensuing two years : Pres ident, H. C. Porter; vice-president, G. J. H. Fryer; secretary, W. D. Shaw; treasurer, Ed T. Judd. Delegates to the county league meeting at Salem were also elected. Th.e Huntington Herald says; J. F. Moore, who is engaged in placer mining at the month of Powder river, arrived in this city Thursday, bringing twenty-five and one-half ounces ot gold, the result of the first clean-up on bis claim this npring; Mr. Moore will take the gold to the assay office at Boise. Alimus lodge No. 15, I. O. O. F., of Goldendale, celebrated theseventy-nlnth annlvery Tuesday evening at the armory hall. A beautiful program was rendered, after which the Odd Ft Hows and Re bekahs went to the Goldendale restau rant where a sumptuour repast had been prepared. The next attraction in the way of the atricals will be Tira Murpby in "Old In nocence." Tim Murphy has gained a reputation on the American stage that but few actors enjoy. In fact be is un excelled in his particular line and to see him in "Old Innocence" is certainly a rare treat. He will be at the Vogi, Mon day, May 2d. Numerous additions were made to .Co. G yesterday, Three recruits are per sons who have served their time ie the regular army and got their discharges. When tbey beard of the call Issued, for recruits in Co. G, they were outpf work and immediately came down rora the upper country and enlisted, Onq of the new recruits is a flute player and will be able tc figure in a fife and drum corps Story. ...$5.00 to 4.00 to 3.00 to 3.50 to 4.00 to 2.00 to 2.50 to 3.00 PEASE & MAYS. I 3 a piece of property at Kingeley, belong ing to Brogan, which the defendant had rented and refused to give up.- The case went by default and the plaintiff was given the right of title to the property and the defendant was ordered to vacate PtDe premises. Yesterday Blakeley & HoUghton put P a iarRe wumm Doara m ironioi meir Pluce of business, and in the future will receive the important dispatches at in tervals during the day over the long dist ance telephone line. The beauty of a morning paper is that it gives not only a full acceuut of the bulletin reports, but all the principal events that transpire after the receipt of the last report re ceived the evening before. A movement is on foot at present among the young men of this city who take an interest in wheeliug, to have a bicycle club organized in the near future. Such clubs are found in other cities and there is no reason why one could not be organized here It would cause an in crease in the interest taken in wheeling and have mane pleasant features. We heartily approve of the measure. A farmer and his family passed through Albany Monday afternoon in the old way on their way somewhere from California, anything to get out of that state, which he gave a very black eye. He said the fruit crop was entirely ruined by the frosts, being worse than has generally reported, and that there could be no wheat crop practically at all. He had had all he wanted of the golden state. After next Monda?, May 2d, the ordi nance concerning cows running at largo on the streets of this city will be etrictly enforced, and any cows found at large will'beput in the pound and the owners will have to pay the regular fine befoie they will be set at liberty. Owners of cowd should take heed that the ordi nance is kept and they will then have no cauBe to find fault. Eleven students of the agricultural college left on Wednesday morning's boat to join the corapnay of Captain Ralph Terrell, now recruiting in Salem. The college men are all bld scool mates of Captain Terrell, who was erututed from the agricultural college last June. Each has seen from one to three years' drill service, aud all are fitted for,any position in a military company. H. L. McAllis ter, the well known foot-ball-player, and Ed Lance, left last night to jain company B in Portland. The most exciting occurrence 'yester day was a dog-fight that took place in the evening a Geo. Rush's corner. Dr. Shackelford's pointer and a large canine belonging to Ben Eben, between which bad blood aeeiua to have existed for some time, decided to settle the matter then anil there. The Eben dog did the prin cipal part of the fighting, while the one belonging to Dr. Shackelford, did suf ficient howling for both. A crowd soon gathered and it was with difficulty that the owners succeed in separating the arguing brutes. Pereons who came up on the boat last evening stated that It" was repotted tt Hood River and other to-vns along the river that a number of The Dalles mili tia were not to be found, but were in hiding for fear that they would have to go to war. This is us fa se a report as has ever been started, as Adjutant Riddell informs us that nono are really compelled to go; bnt, in spite of that fact, as soon as the chII enme tlx! boys of Co. G flocked to the ranks gladly and are at present impatiently waiting the time to leave. An effort is being tnnrie to secure a summer mall service across the Cascade mouotalns by way of the MnKanzle route, v A petition to the postoifice de partment asking that the route be es tablished far six months out of the year between Belkntp Springs in Lanccounty and Sisters in Crook nnuntjjQ! the service begin July 1st each year and continue until December let, ha? been prepared. The distance from Belknap' Springs to Sisters is about thirty miles. It is ex pected that if the new rout! Is estab lished a stae lino will be put on, tin-. -f making through mail and stage service from Eugene to Sisters, a distance of about one hundred miles. .It is said that Crook country people are anxious for the service. Mr. J. W. Coovert, chief enginer of the P. V. & Y. railroad, came up the river recently with a surveying party on the Sarah Dixon. He come as far as White Salmon, from which place he strikes north and reached the summit of the railroad survey as it is now located. He expects to put on two crews and work both ways from that point. The soil, coal prospects, mineral belts and stone ledges along the route will all be thoroughly examined, and an exhaustive report made on them to headqutaters of The company when work is completed. The party was well supplied with all the tools needed for the work, but ex pected to met their fpod supplies, pack horses, etc., at White Salmon or Trout Lake. Mr. Coovert's report will be of special interest to the people of Ska mania county, as it will publish to the world our resources of timber, coal, gold, sliver and copper mining, building stone, farming and grazing and whatever other enterprise can be engaged in with profit, that will make business for a railroad. There is a new disappointment in store for some of the patriotic young men, not yet attining their majority, who are anxious to enlist and fight Spaniards, says the Oregonian. Capt. H. F. Kendall, lately assigned on duty with the Oregon Militia, will muster the regiment raised by Governor Lord as Oregon's quota of the call for yolunteers. Captain Kendall has received no official notification! of bis appointment, but there are a large number of mothers and sisters who take the published announc ment as correct. He has received nu merous letters from this eource request ing him not to accept as volunteers their sons and brothers, as they were not of age, aud their families did not want the boys to go. Under army regulations no one can be accepted as a recruit under 21 years of age without the written con sent of their parents, and with the for mal protest now filed withhim, Captain Kendall will have to turn down more than one enthusiastic youth who has en listed and thinks he will soon be on his wav to Cuba. A Choice. It rests with you what instrument you buy. Soiu-i persons prefer stringed in struments, others wind instruments. It's all a matter of preference. If youv want a piano we can sell it to you at n saving, or if your desire is for a mando lin, we can supply your wants aud give you the sweet, aristocratic honey bee tone which is found only in the best in struments. All our musical merchan dise is of the highest grade. Wo have everything in the line. I. C. Nickelsen Hook 6t fllusie Company, WITH THE MILITIA. A lionjr Day for Oldcm--More llrcrulti Action of llii Cnmmrrclal Club. The armory continues to be the busi est place In the city. All day yesterday the officers were kept busy getting the men out with necessary equipments, and throughout the day hundreds of visitors thronged around to watch the preparations. The day was spent in drilling, while in tho evening n street drill was held. At 7 o'clock Adjutant Riddell held a guard mount drill. 1 Fifteen enlistments to Co. C of Pen dleton were received yesterday, while eighteen new names nave been added to Co. G during Wednesday and Thursday. An application was received from D. Q. Allard, nf Boyd, asking that a placo be reserved for him in the company un til he arrived tonight. The detachment of the hospital corps ot Hood River, consisting of seventeen men, are ready and will join Co. G Sat urday morning on their way to Portland. The action of the Commercial Club in providing for the troops while here is certainly a commendable one. No pro vision having been made by tho state for them, the officers found themselves at a loss to know how to provide for them until Saturday. Tne board of di rectors of the club took action and will see that the boys are kept at the ex pense of the Commercial Club while in the city. IN VARIED CHARACTERS. Tim Murphy's Artistic Succeti Double lllll. in a A recent issue of the Oregonian says: ' "Tim Murphy in 'Old Innocence' last night at the Marquam Grand, gave one of the best character studies that has been seen in Portland for many a night. The comedy revolves nbout the figure of an old matifWell-to-do and prosperous, yet not rich, for ho steadily refuses to make profit out of other people's suffer ings. The dominant feature of the play is the portrayal of this ingenious, simple-hearted old man, who finally, after being directed to a tenement house in the slums, where he was to climb n lad der to the seventh story, and find a blind pauper, with a paralyzed wife and seven starving children, discovers in stead drunken sots and a collection of empty rum bottles. This undeceives him. He suddenly veers about and becomes suspicious of the whole world, including bis wife, his nephew, his faith "Very Much ..reseept 1898 Models are now. ready for inspection. Prices from $27.50 to New Ideas at The Wheel that sells 5 Bicycles Cleaned and Repaired. REMEMBER. Wo Fir, Oak and Maple Wood. To he sold at the Lowest Market Rates. Phone 25. Cloudy We o the it Preferred ton Sittings. MY WORK Chapman Blook. ful old butler and all his statmcheet friends. The changeable moodp, quick sympathies and kind, erratic Impulses of 'Old Innocence place Tim Murphy on a high plane of the actor's art. "The olher characters in tho piece nre planned to btlngaout in strong relief, cither by contrast or underplay, tbi central figure. "After the cui tain went down on the three-act piece, Mr. Murphy showed his versatility by his clean-cut and strong preBtntment of Mathias, Henry Irving' famous role In 'The Bells,' as different aline ot work as couid well lie imagined. This showed unquestioned power, anil was followed by the portrayal' of Colcnet) Mulberry Sellers, tho late John T. Ray mond's great character; Sol. Smith Russell's Noah Vale, and Stuart Rob son's Bertie the Lamb, all very cleverly done." The same hill will be presented at the Vogt on Monday evening, May 2d. One thousand styles and sizes. For cooking and heating. Price from $io to $70. Often imitated. Never equalled. next In quality to "Garlands." MAIER & BENTON to tho Good." Bieyeles.. $50.00. every point. at an honest price. MAYS & GROWE. have strictly First-Class J. T. Peters & Co. MY SUCCESS. THE DALLES, OR.