EASTER OREGON'S GREATEST DEPARTMENT STORE. Our Third Shipment of French Flannelettes for this Fall, just arrived. Thoy arc tho most popular sellers of the season. Forty different patterns, selling at 18c per yard. New Arrivals of Ladies' Underskirts In all tho newest shades, at $1.00, $1.25, $1.50, $2.00, $2.50, $3.00, $3.50. Every one a special bargain. Pease & Mays. All goods marked in plain figures. All we ask is an opportunity to prove that our news paper talk is not simply the use of space and big words. Just a little of your time You'll find it time well spent, and we can convinco you of the. good points of our clothing. While you are here we want to show you a few of our specials: No. 1. Overcoat at $10.00 A handsomo dark blue and black garment, very stylishly made up. pood serge lining, medium length, box cut. We call tliis special becau-o nu values go ordinarily tbis coat would be cheap at $12.50. No. 2. Largo lino of. men's overcoats, from $5.50 to 20.00 No. 3. Men's all-wool wove suits 8.50 No. 4. Men's cheviot, oxford, kersey suits $10.00 and 12.50 No 5. Men's dark fancy worsted suits, single and d.-b. vest.. $15 and 16.50 tailor-made fancy and serge suits, $20.00 to 25.00 well known for mmenso variety fto. 67 Men's fine tweed, from ... cheviot Our Boys' Department 1' and economical prices that it in hardly worth while to mention it. the fall and winter stock is now at its best. We show nov elties and stapieB in great profusion. No trouble to show goods. 33333 WINDOWS. $2.00 Will buy Ladies' handsome cloth-top Lace Shoes. $3.00 Will buy Ladies' heavy-sole kid Lace Shoes; full coin toe. $8.00 Will buy Ladies' patent leather tip and trimmed coin toe, Lace Shoes. $8.00 Will buy the best wearing shoe you ever put on your boy. $2.00 Will buy a solid, serviceable shoe for men; four styles of toes; all new lace or congress. See Shoe Window for goods as advertised. Pease & Mays. All goods marked in plain figures. THE FOOTBALL GAME. The Dalles Daily Chronicle. MONDAY OCT. 15, 1000 ICE CREAM and ICE CREAM SODA At Andrew Keller's. WAYSIDE GLEANINGS. Judge Fulton, of Sherman county, was in town today. Nuw shoos for fall and wintur just re ceived ut tile Nuw York Cash Store. K. P. Ash, of tjio firm of Ash & lilac!;, has been appointed postmaster ut Cas cade Locke. While in town Saturday J. 11. Have ley, of ltoyd, sold 320 SHcks of potatoes at fifty cents a sack. The quarterly conference will bo held at tiie Methodist Episcopal chinch on Thursday evening nt 8:110 o'clock. Rout. Warner, 1 E. Ono of Mr. and Mrs. Al Bettingen's children hud the misfortune to breaks its leu today while pluying in one of the rooms of tho rosidence. . A social dunce will be given by the lUthboiio Sislers at the K. of 1. hull Thursday night. Tickets CO cents, ad mitting gentlamnn and lady. Shorlii Kelly has collected $10,500 ot taxes during the present month. Tho delinquent lax list will be published in tho Wj;i:kj,y,Qiuio.niui,k Wednesday. Senator 0. W. Fulton, of Astoria, passed up the road yoHttirduy on-his way to Sumptor, where im is billed to apeak tonight In tho interest of McKinloy and KoohovoU. The following personal 'appeared in iftit week's Grnso Valley Journal ; "Spookumdyko and Lop Suey went to The Dalles Thursday to take in tho Hoc uye Hoooyo." Mr?. LouIb.i I'. Rounds will speak on "Ohrhtlan Citizonship" tonight ut 8 o'clock, nt tho Congregational church. A most cordial invitation is extended to 11 lovers of law und order to como and boar this gifted lady. Mr, Bmead'H splendid exhibit of dried pruno from tho Moslor evaporator re. mlmh us that if a reasonable induce ment Is given to that gentleman, ho oilers, to put in u big drier at this placo In time for mid sufficient to handle next yonr'u crop. Tim Antolopo Republican nays: "At lrosenl cattle of ovory description aro in good demand. Men who raise thorn hern get at tho ranch cents a pound r steora and 8 cents for dry cows. Cows with oalvos bring $30 to $40, and voarllng steers tell At from $20 to $25. The carnival executive committee will receive sealed bida up to 8 o'clock this uvuiilug (or the lumbor used to fence the carnival grounds, as well as that in the committee')) booth. Bids must specify the price per thousand feet us tiie lumber now stands on the grounde. Found A gentleman's walking cane was found about a week ago, leaning against tl.o fence .enclosing tho E. 0. McCoy residence. It has a silver plate on it with a monogram initial of the owner. Owner can obtain it by calling- nt tiiis office und paying for this notice. A very joyous time was had yesterday nt the residence of Win. Davidson, on Eight Mile, the occasion being l he mar riage of his daughter, Daisy, to Hardy Allen. Rev. W. 0. Smith, of Dufur, performed the ceremony. The happy .couple woro the recipients of many nice presents. The carnival executive committee have been busy all day auditing the bills and checking over the accounts of the carnival. The result will probably not bo known till tomorrow and possibly not then, but the committeo feel confident that the income will be found equal to the expenditure. Tho Crook Gounty.Journal says : No mine in the United States has ever shown so exteiisiye and rich an ore body witli the samo amount of development as the Silver King on Trout Creek, in (this county. It is n veritable bonanza which grows richer und more promising at every stroke of fho pick, under the management of its competent superin tendent, Mr, Thomas. We have been instructed to eoII that elegant little home, consisting of nicely finished house of six rooms, bath room, closets, barn and wood-shed, line lawn, surrounded by beautiful shade trees, good lot 50x100 in n very desirable resi dence district. This property will be sold on very reasonable tonne ; in fact wo will sell sin monthly Installments little larger than actual rent. J'or fur ther particulars call on or address Hud son & Brownhill, The Dalles, Or. L. Gerlinger, president of tho Colum bia Valley Railroad Company, informs a correspondent of tho Spokesman-Review that maps of location and survey of the Columbia valley line, extending from Wallulu down tho north side of tho Columbia river to tide water, havo been accepted by the U. S. land ofllco ot Vancouver. Gerlinger refused to aay anything concerning the intentions of the company regarding commencement of construction, but it is generally be lieved that the company is getting ready to commence work in tho near future. Surveying parties have recently been ovor the lino in ttio vicinity oi Van couver, setting grade stakes, and aro now understood to he proceeding oner, ward. Tho greater poition of the right of way of the lino between Vancouver and Wullula has been purchased. Tho general understanding in tho former city is that the Northern Pacific Rail road Company Is behind the enterprise. The following appointments have been mado for campaign fpeaking in this county in the interest of the lepublicau candidates; Gon. Clark E,,Garr will speak in the Vogt opera house, this city, next Wednesday night, Senator 0, VV. Fulton, of Astoria, will speak at Ante- j lope on the 23d. In connection will' this appointment it may be said that on account of the Antelope fair the local committee may possibly change this date to one more convenient. Governor T. T. Geer will speak at Hood River, Saturday, 127th inst., Hnd on the same date Judge Magers, of McMinnville, will speak at Cascade Locks. Judge Lowell, of Pendleton, has been asked to speak at Dutur at some date near tho close of the campaign and it is hoped he will comply. General Clark E. Carr, of Illinois, ex minister to Denmark, will speak at the Vogt opera house next Wednesday night in the interest of McKinley und pros perity. Tliis will be the first republican spench of the campaign in Waeco county and the citizens of 'Die Dalles are to be complimented that one of the most brilliant campaign orators in the United States lias been sent here. General Oarr epoke in San Francisco last Friday night, and if ids speech, a synopsis of which appears in Saturday'8 Sau Fran cisco Chronicle, is any indication of what we may expect here, we can assure our readers that The Dalles people who fail to hear General Carr will miss a great treat. The county executive com mittee, having accidentally heard that Hon. E. L, Smith, of Hood River, had mado the acquaintance of General Carr when lie was doing ids first campaign work back in Illinois and Mr. Smith was attending college, have requested Mr. .Smith to net as chairman of Wedneeday night's meeting and that gentleman lias telephoned his cousent. Dr. D. Siddall returned yesterday from Cape Nome, whither he went last May. He looks rugged and hearty and enjoyed the best of health till the time oi hie ab sence. Ho acquired several claims that are vuluabla property were it not fur the muddle over the title. A New York syndicate, by some infamous species of giaft, claims title to the best of the beach claiinp, and by some kind of jug glery with tho, courts lias succeeded in compelling miners w ho use machinery to suspend operations till the courts liavo settled the question of title, liy that time most of the miners holding dis puted claims wll' havo becomo discour aged and left the syndicate in undisputed possession. Tho syndicate's method of operation is to file counter claims on any claim that shows golf) In paying quantities. The miner is ordered to suspend operations and on refusal is nriested or driven oil' by t he eoldiery, In spite of thete discouragements tho doctor was fortunate enough to hold his own, but that is nil. He will probably return next spring if he cannot diupoBe of his clulms mid machinery meauwhlle to advantage, CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. Tho Kind You Hivi Always Boughl THE CARNIVAL AT AN END. It Huh 1'roved the Most Succeodul En terprise) of the Klud Tho Dalles Ever Engaged In. The fair is over, the booths are de serted, the big crowds have gone their way, and in a few hours nothing will remain of The Dalles Harvest Carnival and Street Fair but a memory. But it 16 a memory of one of the most tuc ceseful enterprises of tho kind The Dalies has ever bad anything to do with. And best of all, our visitors carried away with them the kindliest recollections of the way they were treat ed by their hosts of The Dalles. It is to the credit of the hotels and restaurants that no case haB been reported where more than ordinary rates were asked or demanded for meals or eleepiuc accom modation, and big as the crowd was part of the time, there were ample ac commodations lor all. It was a subject of common remark that more orderly crowds of people were never Eeen. There was no rowdyism, no disorder, no drunken brawls. Tho visitors had plenty of money, which they spent royally and good naturedly. Most of the business houses did a rush ing trade, and all did well. The fair closed Saturday night in a blaze of glory. At S o'clock, the hour wheu Rex was expected to appear, tiie grounds from the Washington entrance to Federal street were packed like sar dines. It was nenrly 9 when Rex en tered the grounde, heralded by an im ported Chinese hand. If Rex who was none other than Mr. Strainer, dressed in a horridly fantastic, garb, witli n mask witli eyes that blinked fearfully and were as largo as an ordinary apple over revealed himself, it was later on in the night. The wedding followed at u little after 0. The bridegroom. Mr. Shirley Par ker, and bride, Miss Laura D. White, n handsome and modest young ujuple' from Wapinitla, were admitted at a side entrance and escorted by A. E. Lake, S. j Bolton and a number of young ladies to j t he band stand, where the marriage cor-1 emony was promptly performed by Rev. U. F. H.wk. Alter the congratulations of the minister and those immediately 1 present, Mr. Hawk introduced Mr. and, Mr. Parker to the assembled thousands, who responded with hearty cheers. Tliis practically closed the carnival, , although the big crowd did not all leave the giounds until long after 10 o'clock, the judicial writ in his inside pocket, feeling not the least fear of Indians nor road aeente because he was armed with the authority of the law. He was then much younger titan he is now. and the country was new to him. Later on, after he had become accustomed to the habits of the "wild and woolly west," he placsd more reliance on Colt's latest patent or a Henry repeating rifle than on asubpieria from a Dalles justice court. "His story awakened great interest and chained the attention of his audi ence until some inquistive individual inquired what mileage he was allowed for doing such eervice. This elicited no answer, and tiie thrilling story of a con stable serving a civil writ in Oregon ter territory, a thousand miles distant from the magistrate's court, came to an abrupt ending." Card of Tlinuks. Mr. and Mrs. Shirley Parker, who were married in the carnival grounds Saturday night, desire through the Chiioniclu to express their sincere thanks to the people of The Dalles for the handsome and valuable collection of wedding presents so generously donated them (in that ociv.slou. Why pay $1.75 per gallon for inferior paints when you can buy James E. Patton'e en n proof paints for $1.50 per Kalian, guaranteed for 5 years. Clark & Fa'.k, agents. ml Ilcpimer Carried Off the llnnnr in a llntlj'-Contf tpd Oiinin, When the Dalles team lined up againsT tho Heppner team last Saturday after noon the general expectation was that the visiting team would sift through tho home team's line at will, nod go off the field with a score of at least 20 to 0 in their favor. After five minutes of play it was very apparent to everyone that the game was to be close und very fierce- ly contested. Heppner got the kick-ofTnnd the ball was run in by Mays. A guards' back play was tried; the ball fumbled, and within ten minutes after play com menced Heppner tent right half Natter around the right end for a touch-down, from which Spaulding kicked n pretty goal, making tho score 0 0 in Hepp ner'e favor. Tho ball was kept in Heppner's territory during the remain der of tiie half, and time was called with tha b.Ul on their ten-yard line. In the second half tho ball was car-' rled up and down the field, neither goal bein in danger, until within a few min utes of the call of time. Natter was ecnt around the end for a 'gain of forty yards, being tho prettiest run of tho day. The next down Heppner fumbled and Tiie Dalles got the ball, probably preventing another touch-down'. Time was called with the ball on The Dalles' twenty-yard line. The boys of the visiting team played a good, clean and gentlemanly game, their playing at all times being very conspicu ous on account of the absence of any attempt at fouling or bruising. Tho best playing on tho visiting team was done by Uapt. Clark, Spaulding, Young and Natter. Tno Dalles team was an impromptu organization, captained by Max J. Bar tell, of Manila, P. I., and played like fury, the distinguishing features being tho defensive work by Fisher, Mays and Ward and the line bucking of Cooper. The three center men played a good steady gome, especially Brown, whose passing was always sure. Both teams showed a decided lack of organ ized team work. The line up was as follows : HEl'I'SKIl Beal r. g. Cowan I. g. Audetsoii r. t. Matlock . 1. t. Hisbee r. e. Ball 1. e. SpMildirie q. b. Natter r. li. Capt Clark Young Saling 1. h. full c. Till: DALLES T. Smiley E. Smiley Zirka Hagari Groehler Ward Capt Bartell Cooper Mays Fisher Brown Officials Umpire Emerson nnd Refereo Seymour gave general satisfaction. I'KOl'LK COMING AND GOING. Attorney W. H. Wilton went to Port land on the afternoon train. Mrs. Olivia Morgan went to Antelope ttoday to visit her parents und incidental- Jy attend tho fair. A. S. Mac Alliater returned yesterday from a visit to his sheep ranch on the John Day. Tik4i-d t mt a n t tnni-iiuniiiiliwl lit. h U UUU UIHUDIIlin 'UJ Mt I'M lilVll I' uVIessrs. Frank Menefee and li. S. Wil son, left yesterday for Prineville, where tiie October tirm ot circuit court opened today. lit) UN. Thia morning, June loth, to Rev. Robert and Mrs. Warner, ot this city, a. ecn. ' ' A full line of East man films nnd sup plies just received by Clarke & Falk. une ttiousand sHvles nnd sizes, &s t-or cooknifr and heatine. ym t'rwes irom cpg 10 $50. c Steel Ranges Catt Ranges m i"32 WST' t'onsiiiiiin'i) i.niii: Kiiie. Bears tho BigoAtore of 7 Specking of Wasco canity a writer In t'10 Ocober number of tho Oregon N itlve Son enya: "It may 11 it be generally kno.wi that when tills region was a portion of Cluck atiias county, lu the early 'oQ,, Mr. D, Butler was constable for The Dalles precinct, and had occasion to reive a subpwna on a witness residing near Fcit Hall, now in Idaho. That was then within the limits of the county nve wtilch a justice of the peace had juris diction. Mr. Butler vividly describes his ride through this wild regiou with 4 PThe genuJno all bear tho above TrnlerAlatk nna onii vuirii i wi'irrnin n mi n s' .v , auu tw tiuiu vrii.ti t it s t-bvwt huiuu.vi'i Awarded First Prize Paris Exuositlon 1000 OVER ALL THE WORLD. lm Sold by First-Class Stove Merchants everywhere y Mado ouii by i no Micinuaii move uomnnnv. Largest Makern of Btovtm and Uaagea lu tho World. 0k Stov,. MKIER St BENTON, SOLE XCiNTS,