The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, September 11, 1900, Image 3

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    Boys'
School
Suits.
When you start in to buy
your boy's School Clothing, you
want to got all for your money
that it will bring. You know
that prices everywhere are not
alike.
There's an opportunity to
do double justice to your
self and boy.
Boys' all-wool blue, black and
gray Cheviot Suits always neat
and serviceable, strongly and
neatly made, reinforced through
out in fact everything double
about these suits except price
Just
Two
Shoes.
DOUBLE SEAT.
DOUBLE KNEES.
DOUBLE ELBOWS.
lioinforced throughout. With patent elastic waistbpnd. War
ranted hold-fast buttons.
N. B. Wo carry the largest and best selected stock of Youths'
and 1 Joys' Clothing in Eastern Oregon.
SEB WINDOWS.
Children's Kangaroo Calf, but
ton and lace.
Children's Kid, button and lace.
Heavy Soles plump stock.
Sizes 6 to 8 $1.15
Sizes 8 1-2 to 11, - $1.35
Sizes 11 1-2 to 2, - $1.65
Excellent School Shoes. Your
money's worth in every pair.
Pease & Mays'
Shoe Department.
Fall
Dress Goods..
PLAID BACK GOODS for
rainy-day skirls in all tho latest
cloths.
NEW PEBBLE SERG-ES in
navy and black.
. VENETIAN CLOTHS for
tailor suits.
Suit and Skirt
Department.
In our Suit and Skirt Depart
ment tho stock is now complete, and
we have some startling bargains to
t)ffer.
Have you seen our RAINY
DAY SUITS and SKIRTS? The
correct thing for Fall wear.
Give the department a call.
FREEH ! ooc aso,a an(' Bat or a 1900 Daisy Air
Rifle with an' boy's suit or overcoat.
All Goods Marked
In Plain Figures.
PEASE &, MAYS
The Dalles Daily Chronicle.
TUESDAY
SEPT. 11, 1000
ICE CREAM and
ICE CREAM SODA
At Andrew Keller's.
. . (
WAYSIDE GLEANINGS.
Suae o1 Tennessee
At thi; Vogt opera house tonight.
Crook county ie redeeming nil war
rants indorsed prior to January 12, 1899.
Girl wanted to do general housowoik
in u family of two; no children. May
attend school or otherwise. Bll-lw
Members of Columbia Chapter O. E.
will please observe that this is their
regular meeting night.
Mrs. Phillips is prepared to furnish
cut (loners and all kinds of floral de
signs nn fihort not ice. Phone number
307. alO-lm
The ladies of St. Paul's Guild will
meet at the residence of Mrs. C. J.
Crnndttll tomorrow afternoon at 2
o'clock.
Ayent James Irelnnd, of tho 0. K. &
X. Co.. has purchased tho D. V. Maun
residence on the corner of Kelly avenue
nnil Sixth street. Tho price is said to
be$IOt)0.
The ordinance of baptism will be ad
ministered nt the Christian church tliis
evening. Everybody ie invited to be
present. Rev. Paul Kruger will con
tinue services for the balance of the
week.
The body of a man was fouud on thi
tank of the river at Biggs yesterday.
It was recognized as that of a man who
was drowned nonr that place on tlio
eecoml Instant, lie had been a laborer
on u work train.
At noon today an incident happened
lo the wheel of a car belonging to a
Kuwel train, on the main track at Cehlo,
which resulted in tearing up the track
'or several hundred yards and deloying
Hie westbound passenger over an hour,
Two Indiana, one from Celllo and the
otlior from Warm Springe, got Uniting
"unk hist night and were placed in the
cooler by Marshal Driver. They were
""alined this forenoon beforohie honor,
Jutlgo Gates, who fined them $6 each,
which they will have to work out on the
BtrcotH.
The Dalles, Portland and Astoria Nav
igation Company has leased the steamer
G.iimcock to be placed on the run bo
tweon here and Portland. She will be
ued exclusively as a freight carrier and
HI bo In command of Captain John
Hone, who has been master of tho
"learner Reliance. The Gamecock was
to make her first trip from Portland to-
0. N. Burnett arrived this afternoon
'oinShaniko wjlh the remains of the
We Francis Ross, who died suddenly of
appoph-xy last Sunday. The funeral
will take place from the residence of
Mrs. Maud Eddon, on Fourth etreet, at
10 o'clock tomorrow morning, and the
interment will be in the Odd Fellows'
cemetery.
Open hostilities between the con
tractors and union lubor were resinned
Saturday in Chicago when at noon about
iiOOO union carpenters quit work. They
demanded a half holiday Saturday.
The contractors refused to accede, save
during the summer. Tiie carpenters
had returned to work for tiie contractors
under special permits from their unions,
although the big building trades strike
Btill continues, afleeting 40,000 men.
Here ie a bargain for any one looking
for u pleasant little home in one of the
most desirable locations in the city;
quiet und nice neighborhood ; no dust:
near to Echool ; well finished; newly
painted; fonr-roomed house. Fine lot;
bearing fruit trees; good garden spot;
small barn ; chicken houee, etc. Purty
must have the money, mid we are in
structed to tako any reasonable ofTer.
For further particulars call or write to
Hudson & Brownhill, The Dallos, Or.
A denizen of the tenderloin district
started in to hold an Irish wake in that
part of the town last night and succeed
ed in getting arrested by Nightwatch
man Like. Kite was booked as a drunk
and disorderly, but aa she had no money
and the marshal could not well put her
to work on the streets, und in the event
of imprisonment would lie worse than
an elephant on the hands of tho city
authorities, she wub discharged this
afternoon after she had sobered tip. Iu
the shindy last night she hud one of her
aniis badly chewed ami got a pair of as
handsome black eyee aa you would tee
in a fair.
James McLane, aged 03, was roasted
a, a prune drier on the farm of Samuel
McLuno, noar Philomath, last .Sunday.
He was alone nt the drier, which he was
attending. Smoke from the drier brought
his brother to the Bcene, when the vic
tim was found lying at the mouth of the
furnace in which there was a very hot
(Ire. He was lying on his back, and
was dead. The flesh on his neck,
shoulder, right breast and right side, as
far as the apino and as low as the hip,
was literally cooked. The coroner's
jury returned a verdict of accidental
death, with indications that the eaueo
might haye been an epileptic fit.
George Mncey, alias Dill Davis, was
arrested yesterday at La Grande under
information sent from here by Marshal
Driver, charging him with obtaining
money under false pretenses. Last Fri
day Macey succeeded in obtaining f'10
from nob Halm ou a check for fbO, bear
ing the forged name of J. T. Armstrong,
who llvos ou the old Jensen ranch above
tho Judlan Tillage on the other aldu tho
river. Mr. Hahn had cashed other
checks of Mr. Armstrong and supposed
this ono was all right. He was unde
ceived when he presented it at French's
bank for payment. Meanwhile Macey
bad skipped, He wae traced by Mar
thai Driver to Arlington, from thence
to Pendleton, and from Pendleton to La
Grande, where he was captured. Con
stable Hill went up to La Grande last
night to bring Macey here for trial.
MisB Laura T. Sharp, of Salem, who
ImB been visiting relatives at Klamath
Fails, has returned home and is the
possessor of a very peculiar and un
usual trophy which she captured during
hersoourn there. It ia a two-headed
snake, about fourteen inches long, of
the water enake variety, perfectly de
veloped and healthy in every way,
except in tho matter of the extra head.
The two heads siart from the neck on
even termB and grow out clearly inde
pendent of each other. Sometimes they
lie close together and parallel, and again
they diverge to an obtuee angle. His
suakeship is a great curiosity, and Miss
Ktiarn linn Itupn nfTpicit nnitn 11 nrtpu fnr
It.
Meade Hughes was arrested here yes
'terday for a crime he ie alleged to have
committed on the Sth of last July. On
that day Hughes and another man
whose whereabouts is not known drew a
pistol each on a number of fellow car
penters who refused, ut the bidding of
Hughes and his companion, to stop
work on one of the D. P. & A. N. Co's.
boats because of a misunderstanding
with the captain. After the alleged of
fense Hughes and his companion skipped
the town. Hughes had no sooner re
turned than he found himself in the jail.
He was urraigned before Justice Brown
hill this morning and, on pleading not
guilty, his trial was fixed for tomorrow
morning at 10" o'clock. In default of
$2o0 bonds Hughes was remanded to the
county jail.
The play nt the Vogt opera house laBt
night was well attended and gave gen
eral satisfaction. The pity Is that when
wo have a respectable company like the
Crawford?, we have not a house fit to
give an entertainment in. The acous
tics of the Vogt cuuld not be worse if it
had been specially built with the sole
object of having no sound or articula
tion heard so as to be understood. It is
impossible to hear one-fourth of what is
said. To three-fourths of tho audience
at any play the playing ia simply a pan
tomime and nothing more. There were
at one time wires strung across the
building that surely mitigated the evil
to some extent, but these have been
taken down. The situation Is such that
if nothing is done to remedy the evil we
complain of, players will avoid the town,
or should they come, the' people will
avoid playing that under existing con
ditions it la impossible to enjoy,
At the meeting held iu tho council
council chambers last night to luke
measures for holding u street fair nud
harvest carnival in this city, some time
in the opening days ol October, the fol
lowing gentlemen were appointed as a
genoral committee to meet tonight at
the same place and come to a final de
termination iu the matter: R. B, Sin
nott, E. C. Pease, G. C. Dlakeloy, H. W.
French, Ghas, F, Stephens, J. P. Mela
eruy, Den Wilson, J. M, Tooiaey, J. O.
Hosteller, N, Whealdon, H. J, Muier,
E. Schanno, J. A. Douthit, C. L. Phil
lips, Chas. Key, F. W. L. Skibbe. It
was the general opinion that no great
difficulty will be experienced in raising
the necessary funds. The committee
will be pleased to have the preeence and
counsel of all who are interested in the
matter. The committee will convene at
8 o'clock and a large attendance of mem
bers and citizens is earnestly solicited.
Claim Agatont the County.
Following is a continuation of the bills
allowed at the September term of the
county court :
H Herbring, blankets for jail
Maier & Benton, supplies
Jacobsen Book & Music Co, sta
tionery I C Nickelsen, stationery
C H Crocker, stationery.
Irwin Hodsou Co, stationery ....
L B Thomas, deputy assessor . . .
Frank Menefee copy of opinion. .
Victor Doyne, lumber
Glaes & Prudbomme, typewriter
J E Adcor, care of court house
clock
Mays & Crowe, eupplieB
G L Phillips, groceries pauper. . .
M M dishing, board pauper ....
Chionicle Publishing Company,
supplies
J W Blakeney, hauling
Drs Ferguson, medical attend
ance J M Tootney, board
ChaB M Cluike, medicine
St Vincent's Hospital, care John
Conner
I)r Logan, medicine, etc
R B Hood, Jr, hauling
A A Brown, groceries
Stadelman Commission Com
pany, Ice
Robert Kelly, board of prison
ers, Frank Hill, clerical services.....
Times-Mountaineer, printing. . . .
C L Gilbert, meals pauper
A E Lake, lumber
Mrs R Mathews, board
S E Bartmess, catiins for two
paupers
Dalles Water Works, water
European House, board
J F Watt, M D, professional ser
vices Mt Hood Hotel, meals
Sam McAferty, meals
Mrs Thompson, room
E S Olinger, nurse ,'
J B CroBEcn, meals
Hixon Bros, team hire
Ward & Robertson, buggy hire,.
John Dalrymple, work on county
road
1 50
9 58
G 35
80
124 70
3 50
15 00
3 50
43 30
175 00
10 00
2 55
2 35
02 28
29 50
2 00
15 00
3 00
5 45
75 00
11 00
1 00
2 00
8 03
!)2 18
12 00
8 25
2 25
17 08
30 85
40 00
12 70
2 00
5 00
1 75
4 50
5 00
2 00
75
2 50
1 50
8 00
The Iloyd 1'ubllo Schools.
The Eoyd public schools will open on
Monday, Oct. 1, 1900. All grades, with
ninth inclusive, will be taught. We
wish to call special attention to the
eighth and ninth grade work:
Eighth grade Arithmetic, written
and mental, physiology, civil govern
ment, literary reading, grauniar, his
tory, spelling and penmanship.
Ninth grade Algebra, rhetoric, liter
ary reading, general history, physical
geography, book-keeping and penman
ship. Tuition $4 per quarter. Good board
and rooms can be furnished at reasona
ble rates. For particulars call on or ad
dress C. R. Deems, principal, or II. C.
Southern, clerk.
rEOl'MC COMING AND GOINO.
CASTOR I A
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature of
Green River, "the whiskey without u
headache," the niOBt noted of Ken
tucky, itself famous for producing the
finest whiskey in the world, ie prescribed
in all tho leading infirmaries of the
country for its purity, superior excel
lence' and medicinal elllcjcy. Green
River is tho official whiskey used in all
the naval hospitals of the United States
government. O. J. Stubllng, distributor.
'Phone 234, The Dalles, Oregon.
Buy a meal ticket at the Umatilla
House restaurant; $0.50 for $5, el-tf
Miss Merrill, of- Portland, is visiting
the family of W. G. Wood.
Hon. F. N. Jones, of Bakeoven, ie reg
istered at the Umatilla House.
John C. Hertz, late a well-known
merchant of this city, now of Salem, is
iu town.
Miss Bertha Butts and Miss Maggie
Bolton went to Portland on this morn
ing's boat.
Mrs. Emile Schanno and daughter,
Miss Alma, went to Portland on this
morning's boat.
Mrs. Isaac Perry, son and daughter
went to Yakima "yesterday to spend a
month visiting friends.
Eugene Looney, a wealthy Wheeler
county sheepman, ia in the city looking
after the sale of his wool.
Mrs. Simeon Bolton and daughter,
Mies Eflie, went to Goldendale yoitor
day to spend a few days with relatives.
George A. Young, wife mid daughter,
Mibs Georgia, and Fred Young, wile
and children nro in tho city on their
way home from the Portland carnival.
Through the months of June and July
our baby was teething ami took a run
ning oil' of the bowels and sickness of
the stomach," says O. P. M. Holliday,
of Demiug, Ind. "His bowels wou'd
move front five to eight limes a day, I
had a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic,
Chnieni and Dianhim Remedy in tho
house and gavo lilm four drops in u tea
spoonful of water ami he got better at
once. Sold at Blnkelej 'a drugstore.
A full line of boys' clothing ut thu
Now York Cash Storo.
GROCERIES....
A l'MXi: LINK Ol'
Staple anil Fancy 6
AT
Third St., near Court. DUNCAN'S
CORD WOOD....
(iix)J 1'lno mill I'lr WoiclMellveiul to any part
of ttiu city tit wa.no ir com.
mays 4 Crowe
Tho only store ft
this city whero tin
Genuine Imported
Stransky-Steel
Ware is sold,
A little higher in
price, but outlasts
n dozen piecesof so
called cheap enam
eled ware.
BEWARE!
Other wares look
has tho name
Stransky - Steel
Waro on each piece.
Do not be deceived
First prize nt ie
International Exhi
bitions. Highest
award at Worlds
Columbian Exhibi
tion. Chicago Pre
ferred by tho best
cookingauthorities,
certified to by the
most famous chem
ists for purity and
durability ifc is
cheapest because
BEST.
Remember this
celebrated enam
eled ware isspecial
y imported for and
sold in this city ex
clusively by us.
a
It does not rust
nor absorb grease,
does not discolor
nor catch inside; is
notaffectedbyacids
in fruits or
vegetables
will boil,
roast
Phone No. 00,
TliliU Bt.i near Court
MUgG-lUlQ
DUNCAN'S
--sassB. stew
previously
c o o k o u
food nnd
wit! last
for
years.
We cau
tion thu
public,
imaiust
imitutio -i
Tho largest and yjost complete line of
fall and winter millinery ever displayed
in the city at the Campbell & Wilson
millinery parlors. The prices will sell
the goods. tStf
Lost Bunch of keys. Finder will be
suitably rewarded by leaving at this
office. f.9 3t
School
Shoes
for
Girls
and
Boys,
that stay together,
Ut all over
and don't
coat much,
are the kind
j ou Und here,
and HERE ONLY.
A. m. Williams & go. j
Ice Cream and
Oyster Parlors
Mrs H. L. Jones haa ope nod ice
cream nnd oyster parlors in Carey Bal
lard's old stand, bla cirriui
A full line of Candies,
Nuts and Cigars.
The nlnco litis been thoroughly ren
ovated, and a share of the public patron-
age is solicited.
J)lt. K. K, riCIUIUHMN,
Physician und Surgeon,
Office, Vogt Mock (over I'oitoMce),
20lmo-dw TJ1K IMI.MHi OHBUON.