1 Yoa May ave Heard Such expressions as "The Coat seoms to be alright, only tho collar doesn't seem to fit;" or 'I think the back wrinkles alittle.'" Thoro is whero tlio average clothier "falls down;" he dot'hii't try to avoid tho wrinkles in his clothing; he is neglectful of details. When wo sell you a suit of clothes we want your friends to ho able to say - 6 t Who's You Clothier?" Foil Stylos in Gents' Suits and Overcoats, Top-coats and Ul sters. Wo never have shown a greater collection, and from the im mense sales already we know that our prices a little lower than else where. jIany exclusive things here, too. You'll gel a better idea of this stock jf 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-da 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 offer. Have you seen our RAINY DAY SUITS and SKIRTS? The correct thing for Fall wear. Give the department a call. All Ciooclu Marked 1 In Plnln Flijuron. PEASE & MAYS fhe Dalles Daily Ghfoniele. Til fits DAY SKIT. L'O, 11)00 10)- ( ICE CREAM and ICE CREAM SODA At Andrew Keller's. 6) . - ( WAYSIDE GLEANINGS. New aboes for fall iiml vvintur jiiHt io ceived ut the New York Cash Store. 1 1 live you fit; en tho elegant Hue of eatiik'3 from tho Crown Tailoring Co., carried by I'nnhek, tho tailor? The Antulopu Republican will horo pter bo isared twlco a wook, ench issue being a live-column four-page paper. Tin: Cniio.Nioi.u man acknowledges the conrtuay of a numh'ir of big biuichoB of delicious grapes from tho vineyard of Mr. Henry Klindt. A I'ountry paper in England adver tises for "a steady man .to look aftor a Eordon and mill: a cow who has a good voice and in accustomed to Bint; In tho choir." Elder A. I). Skuggs will preaoh at tho Christian church tonight at 8 o'clock. Subject, "Sot thy lioimo in onlur, for thou shall die mid notlivo." Everybody Invited. Mrs. Annio Luokcy will bo plo.ioiJ to meut, at room fid, Umatilla Houeo, lailk-o dtsiring hair dressing and chain, pool ntr and fm-ial troatmont. Hotira from 0 to 12 a. m. and 1 to 0 p. in. A eouplo of carloads of (lab that woro shipped front Tho Dalles laat week ar rived at,Aatorla Saturday, but woro not It for uso upon thoir arrival, so thoy worn turned over to tho Do Force oil works. llr. U. K Smith, osteopathlat, haB lo cited purinanoiitly at lOnnd 11, Chapman "lock, Tho Dalles. Consultation freo every day in tho wook except Sunday. Office houre, 0 a. m, to 12 m., and 1 :!10 to " p. in. 203-wtf Tlioro are now twolvo presidential tickota in tho Hold aoolaliat labor, bo cial democracy, united Christian, poo pla'ri party, mlddle.of-tho.road, Del.eon eociuliat, prohibition; Bilvor republican, "iiticiial party, union lefurm, republi can, dumocrutio. I'-d Kurtz, ogont of tho Pacific KxproaB Co. at thla place, asks ua to nnnounco Hint any money or clothing, or anything intended for tho relief of tho anli'erora hi tlio GiiveHtun horror, will boahipped to tinlvcaton freo of charge by tho Pacific Express Company. A recant issue of a Dawson paper baa a" account of tho finding of a coin by a couple of minors fourteen feet bolow tho I'Oiteu surface of the earth and under 'eatb a flvo foot layor of solid ice. Tho win, according to tho account aa given, is In almoat perfect condition, although nil the evidences 'point t6 the faot that it has lain there for countless centuries. It ia covered with hieioglyphies that ore absolutely unintelligible to several ex perts in that line to whom it has been submitted. It was found m Big Skook u id gulch. Professor Sandvig'e opening dance of tho Reason will bo given at the Baldwin next Saturday night. Theao dances proved vety popular last BeiiBon,and the profeasor will spare no effort to have them conducted along tho lines that have already met the approval of tho public. 202t A. J. Dufur, while superintending the unloading of chopped food Tuesday tu ilia barn at Dufur, fell from a plank and sustained a bad fracttue of the hipbone. At laat accounts he waa doing aa well as could bu expected, but it will be months beforo ho is able to use tho injured member. Rev. C. 1'. Cutley will leave hero next Monthly to take charge of missionary work in connection with tho Corvallis llaptist Association. Mr. Bailey will come back hero to attend the Baptist convention, which meets next month and on his return to Cot valliB will take his family witli him. Do not fail to hear Mrs. Helen D. Harford Friday evening at 7:i!0 at M. E. church. Mi a. Harford ia one of the most pleasing platform speaker of the day. Friday at 2 p. m. slio will hold a uieoting at tho Congregational church. A most cordial invitation is extended to everyone to attend both of these meet ings. - II . 0. Gordion loft at this ofllco today two apples of tho British Columbia va riety, ono of which weighs eighteen ounces. They woro grown on a tree set out three yeais aco. From tho same treo Mr. Gordion filled two boxes of three tiers and sixty apples to a box. They aro of a rare variety hero, but are very much thought of by tho owner. A vote was polled on a Sonthorn Pa cific train recently as a result of a wayer between two prominent citizens of Southern Oregon H3 to tho relative nu tim ber of McKinloy and Bryan mon on t'i'.' train. The result was very interesting. It nhowed that of tho 177 voters on the train 110 would vote for McKinloy and 01 for Bryan. As tnuuy of those on board tho train wore Oregon people re turning from tho fair, it is perhaps a fair test of Oregon's political opinion. Tho examination of Meado Hughos, who is charged with insault with a deadly weapon, took place today before Justice Brownhill. In thft absence of Mosara. Monefee and Wilson at Condon, Senator U. B. Dufur appeared for tho state and Ned Gates for tho defendant, Tho roault was tho binding over of HuglioB to nppear before tho grand jury In tho an in of $200. In default of bull, Hughes waa remanded to the county jail. Pell Slmlaon, a stockman from Monu ment, Gilliam county, bad the misfor tune to gut kicked by a horso yesterday evening which he waa unloading from tho Dalles City on her arrival here, Mr. Simpson had taken a band of Jiorses to Portland and was bringing back a few J that he was unable to dispose of to ad vantage. Tho animal kicked Mr. Sirap Bon in tho abdomen, causing great pain. Ho waa able to walk to Dra. Ferguson's office, wiiere Dr. K. E. FeiguBon attend ed him durim: the night. This morning he was removed to the Umatilla House. Although bis temperature was abnor mally high this morning, Dr. Ferguson anticipates no serious results. The hospital to bo erected by Drs. Ferguson will be to all intents and pur poses a public hoppital asfar as the pub lic are concerned. Patients will not be restricted to tho treament of the pro prietors, but may employ any physician they choose. The building will be rushed to completion r.s faBt as it is pos sible to do so underthe existing scarcity of carpenters. When completed it will be furnished with tho best modern ap pliances and will be up-to-date in every respect. Dr. 13. E. Ferguson ie some what annoyed at an impression that prevails in some quarters through a mistaken local newspaper paragraph, that the hospital will bo a sort of eye and ear infirmary. This is a mistake. Dr. ForguBon makos no pretention of being an eyo epecialiet. If ho has a specialty It is that of surgery. At the liueh Medical College, of which ho is a graduate, ho studied surgciy under Dr. N. Serin, whom every medical man in America recognizes as tho most luv.om phahbd surgeon in ;tho States, if not in o world. Dr. Sonn, it may be romem- Kbered, was given charge of the lield If. ... -...I.. .,...!.... ii... !... c. I. WtirK 111 VjUUU uuiiuk niv mm uiuiiiicu war. It was only natural that Dr. Senn should inspire his pupil with some of liia own zeal for this brancli of tho pro- ifession. A poor old fiiuaw, who goes by the name of Isabel Joseph, of the Klickitat .tribe of Indians, although at present a resident of St. Helena, was found sitting on a sidewalk last night by Mr, Wettle in a most demure condition. She is well nigh an hundred years old and had been visiting relatives iu the High Prai rie country, Klickitat county, when sho was thrown from her pony and sustained n deep gash In tho forehead, a severe bruise In tho side and a fracture of tho wriat. Sho had como here to procuro medical treatment, and, at tho timo Mr. Wettle found her, woe almost exhausted. Her case. was reported to tho night watchman, and she waa furnished lodg ings for tho night in tho city hostlery and had her injuries tenderly attended to by a local physician. Mrs, Joseph is neiulng the century mark. She le tho mother of three children, all of whom have gone long aluce to the happy hunt ing ground. Ono of them had his thaoat cut by a St. Helena' white man some years iv,o and her husband joined the silent majority almost a score of years earlier. She boasts that sho was once rich enough to own twenty ponies, which, ut about $2.50 a head, must have given her, among her tribe, tho social standing of a plutocrat, Clarke & Falk'e flavoring extracts are the beat. Aak your grocer for them. OREGON HISTORICAL SOCIETY. Its IiooniK in Portland a l'laco of Interne Interest. While in Portland last Saturday the editor of this paper spent a short.Ume in the rooms of the Oregon Historical Society on the top floor of the city hall. The visit was a revelation. He had no idea of the hundreds of intensely inter esting relics of the discovery and settle ment of the Oregon territory that this useful society has gathered together. These relics All a number of large rooms. Many of them are heirlooms of families that figured in the early history of this country, and date back to periods long antedating the birth of any ono now living. Many of them are connected with important crises in Oregon history or with pioneors whoso names have be come household words in the Far West. They are of every conceivablo kind, from a big sea chest.lthat was in the ship Columbia when the great River of the West was discovered to the first wagon that crossed the plains, the first printing presB ever operated west of the Rockies, hooka and pamphlets and newspapers fifty to one hundred years old, a chair owned by Genera', then Lieutenant Sheridan J one of the cannon balls that ho fired at the Iudians at the Cascades iu the memorable attack on the block house in 1830, dutch ovens and pans and spiders and guns and rifles that crossed the pjains with tho early pioneers, aud hundreds of other things each and all having a history, than which the writer can conceive no sub lunary subject more interesting to an Oregoniau. We write this that others may enjoy a treat ttiat for us was, alas, all too short. We could have spent a week in the rooms and enjoyed every moment of the time. Tho rooms aro freo to visitors who are cordially welcomed by tho officials in charge. Mr. Ilimes politely left his deek aud spent nearly an hour pointing out the objects of more than ordinary interest and answer ing questions. If tho reader of these lines is an Ore goniau and haa never visited tho rooms of tho Oregon Hiutorlcal Society ho haa missed the treat of a lifetime. We shall certainly 4oy them another visit at the very first opportunity. Votes for umm of tlm J.'uinlvul, The election of queen of the carnival commenced last evening and the result at 2 o'clock this afternoon, which is only n starter, 1b aa follows: Cora Jolos 17 Grace Scott 11 Mvrtlo Michoil 11 Minnie Gosser 0 Rose Mieholl 5 May Cushlng 5 Mrs George Blakeley 2 Maude Clarke 1 Lizzie Bonn 1 Hattle Cram 1 Emily Croeeen 1 Georgia Sam peon 1 Mary Mclnerny 1 Florence Hampeon 1 The New York Cash Store ie the sole agent for the Hamilton Brown Shoe Co.'b lino of footwear. To Delinquent Taxpayers. The County Court having authorized the immediate collection of delinquent taxes, I am compelled to comply witli its request, and will thereforo proceed at once to advertise. If you are delinquent you will savo cost and expenses by im mediate payment. All personal prop erty unpaid will be attached at the cost and expense of the owner without fur ther notice. Robekt Kei.lv, Sheriff of Wasco Co., Or. The Dalles Sept. 17, 1900. 17-29d-w CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Signaturo of Mrs. Helen D. Harford, stato presi dent of the W. C. T. U., will address a public temperance meeting in tho M. E. church on Friday evening at 7 :30 o'clock. Mrs. Harford is a very logical thinker, a clear reasoner, and a very pleasant and winniii'; speaker. The local union be speaks for tho lady a large audience. A full lino of Eastman films and sup plies just received by Clarke & Fulk. mk Iownevs KCS'llCHIS. CHOCOLATE BON BONS. FRESH TODAY. DIRECT from the FACTORY AT EASTERN PRICES. Geo. C. Blakeley, The Druggist. Ice Cream and Oyster Parlors Mrs II. L. Jones has opened ice cream and oyster p irlors in Carey Bal lard's old stand, bhe c.mles A full line of Candies, Nuts and Cigars. The placo haa been thoroughly ren ovated ,'hd a ibareof the public patron, age ie solicited. Wantprt. Four or five boys, going (o school during winter, to board. .12 n month with room and plain washing. Aerona street from High school. Apply at Chronicle office. dtwlin Iitixtirirn. Healthful drink-) aro not luxuries, they are necessities. A full lino of cool and refreshing porter, ale, mineral water and beers kept, on ice. Take a bottle home for lunch. C. J. Stubling. Phone 234. Hustling young man can mako l;G0 per month and expenses. Permanent posi tion. Experience unnecessary. Writo quick for particulars. Clark & Co., Fourth and Locust Streets, Philadel phia, Pa, 18 If Tho largest and most complete lino of fall and winter millinery ever displayed' in tho city at the Campbell & Wileon millinery parlors. The prices will sell the goods. t8;f Why pay $1.75 per gallon for inferior paints when you can buy James E. Patton's Etin proof paints for $1.50 per gallon, guaranteed for 5 years. Clark A Falk, -agents. ml Floral lotion will cure wind chapping' and sunburn. Manufactured by Clarke & Falk. mays & mm V.iW-fJj-iRj V The only store ft this city whero tht Oetiuine Imported Stransky-Steel Ware is sold, A little higher in price, but outlasts a dozen pieces of so called cheap enam eled ware. BEWARE! Other wares look has tho name Stransky - Steel Ware on each piece. Do not b? deceived First prize at 16 International Exhi bitions. Highest award at Worlds Columbian Exhibi tion. Chicago Pre ferred by tho best cookingauthorities, certified to by the most famous chem ista for purity and durability it is cheapest because BEST. Remember this celebrated enam eled waro is special ly 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 notaft'ectedbyacids in fruits or vepretnblos, will boil, Ktew, roast and bake w i t h o u t imparting flavor of proviously ti o o 1c o l food aud will last for years. Wo cau tion the pi ibl in UKnliift imitation VOGT Opera House F. J. CLARKE, Manairer. TWO NIGHTS, Commencing Monday, Sept. 24. The Macoy Comedy Company. WITH Speoial Plays. Speoial Scenery. Special Cars. Thirty Clever Artists. Hand and Orchestra. FIRST NIGH r The Farce Comedv, entitled 'A Circus Girl." SECOND NIG 1 1 T The Up-lo-D.ito Play, "Quo Vadis." Popular Prices, Seata on sale at Clarke & Falk'a.