Voa May J4ave Hafd tkicli expressions as "The Coat seoms to Tdg alright, only the collar doesn't seem to fit;" or ' I think the back wrinkles a little." There is where the average clothier "falls down;" ho doesn't try to avoid tho wrinkles in his clothing; ho is neglectful of details. When we sell you a suit of clothes we want your friends to he able to say 6 t Who's Voup Clothier?" Foil Sjylcs in Gents' Suits and Overcoats, Top-coats and Ul- sters. We never nave snown a greater collection, anu irom tne lm- ' nicnse sales already we know that our prices a little lower than else where. Many exclusive things hero, too. You'll get a better idea of this stock if you look through. It costs nothing to look-. Just Two Shoes. 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 skirts in all tho latest cloths. NEW PEBBLE SERGES in navy and black. VENETIAN CLOTHS for tailor .suits. Suit and Skirt Department. In our Suit and Skirt Depart ment the stock is now complete, and we have some startling bargains to offer. Have you seen our RAINY DAY SUITS and SKIRTS? The correct thing for Fall wear. C4ive the department a call. All CoodB Marked In Pluln Figures. PEASE & MAYS The Dalles Daily Chronicle. TL'KSDAV - - - "WptTiB.ToOO (0)- ICE CREAM and ICE CREAM SODA At Andrew Keller's. WAYSIDE GLEANINGS. Girl wanted to do general housewoik inn family of two; no children. Muy attend tehcol or otherwise, sll-lw Thu ludiuB of St. l'uul'ri Guild will meat with MrH. J. K. Moore tomorrow aftvrnoou. A full attendance Is desired. A imtrriago license wua issued yepter day to Stanley McMunony and Molllo Knioteur, hoth of tho Dufur neighbor hood. Tin: Ciiiionku.i: regrets to loam that the infant son of James Ilenson, Jr., of Fivo Mile, died nt tho fiimily residence this morning of BpinnI meningitis. llev. A. D, SksffS, former pastor of the Cln ibtitvn church in Thu Dulles, will preach in tho Christian church nt 7:110 Wednesday evening. All cordially In vited to attend. Kii3.ui 11. Anthony, thu woman sull'ra yiet, is ill ut hor home in Uoehestur, N. V., having suffered from n collapse. Meuitiors of hor family nay hor condition ia not alarming. Shi) in 80 years old. Tho Seventh U. R. Infantry band pawed thruuuh town from Vancouver visti-rduy on tho way to Pendleton to fill a week's engagement to play for tho ftni't dur that commenced thorn thin inuriiiiiK. """" A yojiiy hotninn pigeo.i belonging to Sam Wilkinson who taken up tho road ami eut frcu Saturday morning nt a point near I,u Grande, 87 miloa from hero. The bird got back hero at 10 o'clock thin forenoon. The ladles' Good Intunt Society will "lent at tho residence of MrH. Smith French tomorrow i Wednesday) t 2 "'clock. Thu president des'iiee all who possibly can to come, aa there in buei nues of importance. Out) of tho largest feoa ever paid a gen ral practitioner for services in a einglo case will bo received by Dr. J. N. Mc Connack, of Howling G rcen, for litfl at lendanco upon William Goebol after he was Phot at Frankfort, Ky. Tho fee palil id $10,000. Next Friday afternoon at 2 o'clock at Hie Congregational church, Mm. Helen Haiford, state preBidout of the W. O. T. u. will meet with tho union. A most cordial Invitation in extended to thu public to attend this mooting Joaquin Miller, the poet, who ia in China, credlte LI Hung Chant' with pay lnK that if it had boon known that there was not much loot in Pokin. tho allied forces would not have been In such a Imrry to get there, Mlllor met tho old statesman tit Canton, nnd had a long I interview with him. travel train was wrecked this fore noon ut u point tliie tiidu Celilo and fourteen care thrown off the track. It occurred iust In time to obstruct Ko, 2, that arrives here at 12:15. Transfer was mudo with Ko. 1 west-bound, and tho substitute for No. 1 passed through here west-uounu at i:.SU p. in. Whinnle Bros. & Douidas, of tho Des chutes nrecinct. have iuM finished threshing a crojrof 7000 bushels of wheat and barlev from a IMO-aoro field, sixty acrea of which they cut lor nay, wlille fifty acrea of thu wheat, as well as the barley, were spring sowing. The boys have 400 acres of summer fallow ready for seeding. Mrs. Helen D. Harford, stale presi dent of the W. G. T. U., will addresB a public temperauco meeting in tho M. E. church on Friday evening at 7 :30 o'clock. Mrp. Haiford ie a very logical thinker, a clear reasoner, and a very pleasant and winning speaker. The Ioc.ii union bo epeaks for thu lady a largo audience. Labor ia so hcarco that tho hop-growers at Puyallup wait at the tiains and quarrel over who shall have any men in search of woik. That goes to show that if Mr. Bryan depends upon thu army of niL'in ployed for ids uupport in Wash ington, his voto ie likely to he as numer ous as tho proverbial corporal's guard Walt and Charley Douglas, of the Des chutes precinct, have just closed n threshing run of thirty-two daya with a J. I, Case 312-Inch thresher, during which thttv nvernired over 2000 bushels a day, or a total of 03,000 bushels. The latest run wiih 1525 sacks of wheat in one day. They would like to hear of any machine of tho same bIkb that has beaten thla kreeoid. Theru are ninety-one veterans of the different warH in the Oregon Soldiers' Home, classified as follows: Nine Mex ican, twenty-five Indian, fifty-six Civil and one Spanish war votciiui. Of these twenty-one are hospital patients, most of them permanently such. There are but two empty nous in tne nospiuu, n number inadequate to meet emeigencies which may arise any day. Uncle Johnnv Graham, who returned vi.ftrdiiv from a visit to Sherman county, Bays all the farmers over that way say they aro coming to ino mines fair, sure, He says, what is quite .true, that hardly any of tho farmers attended , Portland fair. They weie too busy; but moat of them will bo froo to take a two or three days' lay oil" by the time tho Dalles fair opens, and they arc going to do it. w. II. Vnn Dibbor has abandoned the dairy business and sold the younger por- Hon of hie mlloh cows to u. t. uoiiiue. Tho older cows he will fatten and dis pose of for beef. Mr. Van Bibber has been In the dairy business for thirty-live years. Every morning of these long years, with ono exception, if memory serves us, at a little after midnight Mr. Vun Bibber oovorod tho threo miles be tween here and hlu ranch and delivered to his customers the two mllklngs of the previous twenty-four hours. He has grown rich and prosperous and might, years ago, have retired from business on an ample competence bad not old habits kept him in the harness. On his last visit to England Bishop Potter, of New York, was addressed aa "your grace" until the phrase became a nightmare. When he arrived home again it happened that the first person to address him as he walked down the uansrniank was a longshoreman who knew him. "Hullo, bish, how are you .' Baid the man, nnd the bishop fell to thinking which of tho two styles he pre ferred. Dr. II. E Smith, of the Oregon In firmarv of Osteopathy of Portland, and graduate of the American school of oste opathy of Kirkavillo, Mo., under the founder. Dr. A.T. Still, will open an ollice in The D.iiles Tuesday, Sept. 18th, where lie will be prepared to treat all (lirnniR and ncuto diseases. OillCO ro-juis 11 and 12, Chapman block. hours 9 a. m. to 12 in.; 1 :30 to 4 p. m. every day except Sunday. Thero seems to be no money in the cayuso-canning business and consequent ly the abattoir at Linnton will sliut down within a short time. The expor tation of canned horee-meat to European countries '.has been discouraged by re strictive legislation, and by the acts of foreign countries in every way. This being the case, the peaceful career of the herds of horses on thu hillsides of Eastern Oregon will no longer be inter rupted. J. It. Burton, a prominent lawyer of Abilene, Kan, made a republican White river route and expect to com mence operations this fall. It will take nine miles of flume to bring the water on the flat, at an eatiinated cost of $0000, or Eome $50 for each quarter section lo be benefited. It is calculated to build a V flume, with three foot sides and a ca pacity of 1100 miners' inches. The flume will have a grade of a little less than an inch to the rod, which will give a flow of four and a half miles an hour. These estimates will give each quarter section to bo benefited fivo miners' inches of water. The ranchers will erect a saw mill of their own for the purpose of getting the lumber needed for the flume. They expect in a short time to have their organization perfected so that they can accomplish a3 much work as possible before winter i;ets in. 1'KOPLK COMING A' GOING. Chris Dethman, a prosperous Hood River fruitman, was in town last night. Office I Mre- C. W. Taylor, of Walla Walla, nrriveu ueru oamruijy uh vicn iu her mother, Mrs. E. M. Wileon. Representative M. A. Moody and M. T. Nolan went, to Portland this afternoon on tho delayed train in order to hear the speech of Senator Fairbanks tonight. Mr. F. II. Hurlhurt, cashier of thu Shanlko bank, and Mr. Hammond, an official of the Columbia Southern, were in town today and left for Shanlko on tho noon train. Mrs. G. W. Eeelv, of Watsonvillo, Calif., and Mrs. D. L. Mann, of Oik land, Calif., accompanied by Mrs. Mann's daughter, Mrs. Leonora Martin, of San Francisco, aro visiting relatives and friends at The Dalles anil Boyd. Mrs. Maun and her daughter were resi dents of The Dalles twenty years ago first visit heiu tnico . . . ... I ftUU IUIB IH lUUlf eueech at Sedalia, iMo a snort time ago t ,L t tim0 . . .i ; to an immense auuience biiu iwuivru llmvo .lien Fall Victims to stomach, liver aud kidney troubles aa well aa women, and all feel the results in loss of appetite, poisons in lite blood, backache, nervousness, head ache and tired listless, run-down feel ing. But there's no need to feel like that. Listen to .f. W. Gardner, Idaville, Ind. He says: "Electric Bitters are just the thing for a man when he is all run down, uud don't caro whether he lives or dies. It did more to give mo new strength and good appetite than anything I could take. I can now eat anything and have a new lease on life." Only 50 cents, at Blakeley's drug Btore. Every bottle guaranteed. 3 Mrs. E. Julian has bought tho Cates wood saw. Partiee wanting wood sawed will please leavo ordeie at the Julian lodging house, or communlcato with 'phone 201. slO-lw Mrs. Phillips is prepared to furnish cut flowers and all kinds of floral de signs an short notice. Phone number .'J97. slO-lm JTur Sulu. Ilubber-tii'o buggy, at Porter's stable; nrly now; good condition. sepGlw Clark & Fulk are never closed Sunday Don't foraei this. Clark A Falk's drug fresh and complete. slock iu new, Working Might nnd lift The busiest and mightiest little thin that ever was made ia Dr. King's Now Life Pills. Every pill is a sugar-coated globule of health, that changes weakness into strength, listleesnesa into energy, brain-fag into mental power. They're wonderful in building mi tho health. Only 25 cents per box. Sold by Blakeley, the druggist. 3 For Male. Tho two buildings owned by Mrs. E. Julian, on Court street, between Second and Third, now occupied as n lodging hoiiee and dressmaking shop. Tho buildings will be sold, furnished or un furnished, cheap for c.ifih. Apply to Mrs. E. Julian. (3-lmd Wltlitrii. Four or fivo hove. Koinir to school' during winter, to board. $12 a month with room nnd plain wnshinir. Across street from High school. Apply at Chronicle office. d.iwlm Luxuries. Healthful drinks are not luxuries, they are necessities. A full line of cool nnd refreshing porter, ale, mineral water and beers kept on ice. Take a bottle hotne for lunch. C. J. Stubling. Phone 234. . Hustling young man can make $60 per month and expenses. Permanent posi tion. Experience unnecessary. Write quick for particulars. Clark & Co., Fourth and Locust Streets, Philadel phia, Pa, s8tf Tho largest and most complete line of fall and winter millinery ever displayed in tho city at the Campbell & Wilson millinery parlors. The prices will sell the goods. t8tf Why pay !f 1.75 per gallon for inferior paints when you can buy James E. Patton's sun proof paints for $1.50 per gallon, guaranteed for 5 years. Clark & Falk, agents. ml Floral lotion will cure wind chapping and sunburn. Manufactured by Clarko & Falk. Drying preparations simply devel op dry catarrh; they dry up tho secretions, which adhero to tho menibrano and decom pose, causing a far more serious trouble thau tho ordinary form of catarrh. Avoid all dry ing inhalnuts, fumes, smokes and enuffa nnd use that which cleanses, soothes aud heals. Ely's Cream Balm is such a remedy and will euro catarrh or cold in tho head easily cad pleasantly. A trial sizo will bo mailed for 10 cents. All druggists sell tho 50c. sizo. Ely Brothers, 50 Warren St., N.Y. Tho Balm curc3 without pain, does not irritate or cause sneezing. It spreads itself over an irritated and angry surfaco, reliev ing immediately tho painful inflammation. With Ely's Cream Balm you nro armed against Nnsal Catarrh aud Hay Fever. plays & Giowe the ch)6est attention. Only once was he interrupted when a Bryanito on a front seat called out in stentorian tones:; "The republicans have nominated two kings." Burton stopped and in tho most Htiivo manner said : "My friend, don't you know that two kings always Doat two jacks?" "If 1 were to givo you an orange," said n learned judge, "1 would simply oay, 'I give you tho orange, ' but should thu transaction be intrusted to a lawyer to put in writing he would udopt this form: "I horoby grant, give and con vey to you all my intereet, right, title and advantage of and in eald orange, to gether with its rind, skin, juice, pulp and pits, and all rights and advantage therein, with full power to bite, euck, or otlierwiso eat the eame, or give away with or without tho rind, skin, juice, pulp or pits, anything herolnbeforo or in any other deeds or deeds, instruments of any nature or kind whatsoever to the contrary in any wise notwithstanding." County survoyor J. B. Goit has re turned from Juniper Flat, where he made two surveys, ono fiom Clear creek aud tho other from White river, for thu purpose of determining which lo the more practicable way to get water for irrigating and domestic purposes on the Flat. The ranchers, who have made up their minds to do the work without ask ing outside help, finally decided on the To Dolluijiif nt Tuxiuiyerx. Tho County Court having authorized tho immediate collection of delinquent taxes, I am compelled to comply with its request, and will therefore proceed at once to advertise. If you aro delinquent yon will save cost und expenses by im mediate payment. All personal prop erty unpaid will bo attached at tho cost and expense of the owner without fur ther notice. RoiiKitr Km.i.Y, Sheriff of Wasco Co., Or. 1 he Dalles Sept. 17, 1900. 17-28d-w Annual fall and winter opening ot millinery will tako place at thu Camp bell & Wilson millinery parhis Tues day and Wednepday, Sept. 18th and 10th. Everyone cordially invited to call nnd inspect un elegant display of patturu hats, ladies' and children's trimmed hats, stieet hats and tain ' chanters. ... 12-18 CASTOR! A For Infauts and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought gifluatu.ro of ass- mmm :S -v fcJ RE GUT i CHOCOLATE BON BONS. FRESH TODAY. DIRECT from the FACTORY AT EASTERN PRICES. Geo. C. Blakeley, The Druggist. Ice Cream and Oyster Parlors Don't forgot thu vltascopo exhibition at the Baldwin tonight at S :30 o'clock. Mrs H. L. Jones has opened ice cream and oyster p uiors in Uarey nai lard's old stand. 6he ciri loa A full line of Candies, Nuts and Cigars. The place has been thoroughly ren ovated, and a share of the public patron age is solicited. Tho only store it this city whero the Genuine Imported Stransky-Steel Ware ia sold. A little higher in price, but outlasts u dozen piecesof so called cheap euani cled ware. BEWARE J Other waves look lias tho name St mucky - Steel Waro on each piece. Do not be deceived First prizo nt 1C International Kxiii bitions, Highest award nt World t Columbian Exlubi Hon, Chicago Pre f erred by tho best cooUingnuthonties, certified to by the most famous chem ists for purity und durability it is cheapest because BEST. Reraombor this celebrated enam eled wave ia special ly imported for and Fold in this city ex clusively by us, Xt It does not nisd nor absorb grease, does not discolor nor catch Inside, is notaffectedhyiicids in fruits or vegetables, will boil, etow, roast nnd buko with on t imparting flavor of pi-ovinusly nook o d food mid will Inst for yenra. Vo can. tion tlu pi i bl w ngalnnt imitutioJi