Sale of Undermuslins No doubt but yon will be surprised to mad of this sale now a month ahead of its us.ial time hut ynu will agree with us that the innovation is n move in tho right direction. Reanlar stocks and Fancy White Goods. iri,rtlw.rmnrn hut fnw tmmiln Imim h.rf t,.,.. i . . iresner anu newer now man they wou (I no n .lune. o S I reflS ,n.?,n,thor raonth thfi ne" mot interested in the purchase of the eoods I .111 ?lnA TihSitSl fr lh B"mmer' W httVe Pretmrt!(l a 1181 f Pecial attractions that will prove profitable GOWNS. Women' extra quality Muslin, plnin iiuimi; ruius or edged with luce; regu lur (ijc, 75u, $ 1 und $1.25 Sale 58c, 63c, 83c, 98c Also in this sale Women's Gowns of tho choicest, and best materials, and of the best and most popular styles, at priceB ranging up to $5.00. Chemise, Corset CoverB and Drawers offered at the same reduction. All Goods Marked In Plain Figures Underskirts. Women's Muslin Underskirts, duet ruf fle, cambric flounce; regular G9c, 75c, 1 .00. Sale 59c, 60c, 87c Sale will commence Tuesday morning and continue for bal ance of week. Underskirts. Space will not permit the mention of many other exquisite designs we are dis playing in Women's Unders lilts at the present time. Prices run like this : $150, $1.75, $2, $2.25, $2.50, $3, $H 50, $4, $4.50, $5, $5.50 and $0 reduced to $1.29, $1.43, $1.00, $1.98, $2 08, $2.59, $2.97, $3.39, $3.97, $4 37, $4.89 and $5.20. CANVAS SHOES. Every man in town will want Canvas Shoes this summer. Our line of these shoes is comfortable in every way, and every shoe has a price attached that will please tho buyer. Men's Khaki Lace $1.50 Men's Covert Cloth Lace 1.50 Men's Canvas Oxfords 1.50 Men's Khaki Bike Shoes 85 Boys' Khaki Bike Shoes 75 You can buy a suit of clothes anywhere if you arc easily satisfied and not particular about tho styles and the fit. If you want clothes that will look right and keep their shape, come to us. We have tho trade of the men who are hard to please. Our Hart, Schaffncr and Marx, suits will satisfy the most critical. Strictly all-worsted navy blue ecrgo suits, Italian d f cloth and serge lined All-wool Scotch cheviot suit in plain and striped J5 "1 fc goods, gray, blue and greenish colorings Q1Q Our best sack suits in imported Scotch cheviot and worsted goods comprises everything tfIC Cfl fn COO Cfl that is new and up-to date. 4ID.0U lU 4ZZ.3U For prices and styles see our display in window. Black Cat Brand Hose rino ,cttoI ,,alf n red, blue, tan and black. Positively the best value ever shown in The Dalles. .Q Guaranteed strictly fast colorings; per pair Jl2'C Mm m Hart, Schaffner & Marx Tailor Made Clothes 'OOPYRiOMT 1901 MART, SCHAFFNCR I MARX CHICAGO Balbriggan Summer Underwear in j "Arrow" brand collars, all new and fancy or plain, per garment 50c 1 stylish shapes 12Ac " E. & W." collars and cuffs; only1 Our " Monarch " negligee shirts are place in town to get this well-known ' shown in large variety of styles and brand 25c colorings $1 to $2 PEASE & MAYS. The Dalles Daily Chronicle. TUESDAY - MAY 14. 1901 ift served Oysters i,. At Andrew Keller's. . TREASURER'S NOTICE. All H'urcu Comity warrant, regiittered prlurtu Hitmubi)r 1, 1KI7, will le paid on preoeiitBtlon at inr otttco. IntereHt cemiei arter November 119, 11)00. JOHN K. II AM 1'HH IKK, County Treiwurer. WAYSIDE GLEANINGS. A girl wanted. Inquire at the Euro pean House. in 14 It New Hhiptneut of Strausky enameled ware juet received by Mayp & Crowe. Wanted A woman to do plain eowing. About three montliB' work on band. Apply at this office. inM-lwk The Builoy Gatzort, Unit was duo to arrive bere today at 2 o'clock, did not get to her wharf till 3:40. The Ladies Aid society of the Congre gational church will meet with Mrs. Snipes tomorrow afternoon. Jay Bird bieyclen at f 13.50, and Pen nant bicycles, brand new while they last, at ifM.no. Maier & Bon ton. l.'i lit Charley Wing, of Wamic, brought to town today nineteen head of block hogs, at 5lcts. worms at work will be in the city next week. This will be an attractive and iiiRtructive flight to all who have not be foro had a like opportunity. J5"""' The Bteamer lrulda, that is due here at 10 a. in., met with Borne kind of an accident on tho way and 1h anchored on the river bank opposite Moeier. No word Iiub been directly received from Iter but it 1b presumed that something hue gone wrong with her machinery. Among other numbers on the pro gram at the Character concert, to lie given at the Baldwin next Tuesday even ing, will be tho closing exercises of the old "deestrick skule," presidod over by fikule Master Lucas. A one-act sketch, entitled "Per Telephone," will also (111 a prominent place on the program. It pays to advertise in Tiik Ciiiion hi ms. This morning Superintendent J. B. Crossen called at thiB office to notify Thk Ciikonioms that he had lost a pocket folder, containing several bank chocks and city warrants and a number of pa pen relating to his business of collector ot water taxes. In less than ten minutes afterward he found the folder in the cellar of tho Clarendon restaurant, where he had dropped it out of lua pocket yesterday evening. The state normal school at Monmouth reports that the demand for its gradu- which he sold to Wood Bros u pound. -f-f An exhibition of one thousand Bilk'jregret8 that he didn't know a good thing ates during the past year has been much beyond the supply. Graduation from the school practically assure a place worth from $40 to $75 per month. The students take the state examinations during the regular course, and are easily able to pasB on all subjects required for state papers before graduation. The school has a well equipped training department, consisting of a nine-grade town school and of a typical country school. The train men of the last Sunday ex cursion triune report that they had a rough time of it on the home trip with the drunken young hoodlums that were bo much in evidence while they were in The Dalles. Last night's Telegram puts it yery mildly when it sayB: "Some hoys of a low element had unfortunately gained admittance to the cars on the home trip, and attempted to assume charge of things, but were quickly aud unceremoniously ushered into a state where they could do no harm. 'Hood lums of this class,' a passenger re marked, 'should be Bblpped to some desolate desert, for the sight of water itself gives them Bofteniiig of the brain and then they are dangerous.' " Tm: Ciikonici.k lias it on excellent authority that Rev. O. D. Taylor, of this city, some time ago bought for a mere song a targe interest in a quartz mine in Southern Oregon that has since been developed to an extent that, ac cording to our informant, it is certain to make Mr. Taylor a millionaire. Our informant is a gentlemau who was offered, by the discoverer of the mine, the same proposition that was afterwards accepted by Mr. Taylor and who now 1 jwhen he saw it. While Mr. Taylor has undoubtedly some bitter enemies he I'haa many friends who will bo glad to be assured of his good fortune. In any event O. I). Taylor ia u man that noth ing less than death itself can down. The Medical Age is responsible for the following : "One of the Italian journals has recently recorded an extraordinary case of fecundity of which it guarantees the authenticity. Klavia Granota, who, It appearB, is well known at Rome, Iiub recently given birth to her sixty-second child. This woman is now 59 years old. She was married at years oi uge, aud has successively given birth to a daughter, then six sons, then five sons, then four daughters, and then long series of twins atinually, and ended recently by having four sons. It is much to be regretted that this interest- iiiic woman did not marry earlier, as she thus lost ten precious years 'of her life, and so missed the distinction she might have enjoyed of being the mother of a hundred children." s - From the Oregonian it is learned that . i I a !.....! In T) 4 a company nab uecu uuuiu un land for the purposeOf developing the. coal prospects in tb Antelope country. II A luioing engineer lias just made a thor ough inspection oi these prospects and reported that the measures are valuable and the coal of excellent quality. This is 'not surprising to any one familiar with that country. It 4 many years Bince the editor of this paper used to. see Johnny Clarnofun his little ama teur blacksmith cop with a very goo quality of coal that he picked from seam croppingyout of the ground on the breakB of the John Day, not many miles from Antelope. The wonder is that in thai practically treelesB country Bomebody did not develope the coal prospects years ago, - The city marshal put a couple of men to work yesterday to take the planks and timbers from the bridge acioss China creek, bo that they might not be carried off by high water. The men had a quantity of booze with them, which they partook of freely till about the time the work was finished, when they were both more than "fcalf seas over." When tho whole structure was removed one of them found that be bad left his veBt on the other eide of the creek, which is about ten feet deep at this time. Noticing a piece of board lying on the water and extending part way across the stream, the man stepped on it, the board upset and he was plunged overhead into the creek. After struggling for a little while for his life his companion had the sense to throw him another piece of board by which he was able to keep his head above water till ho had paddled to the bank. Yesterday Coroner Dad Butts received an urgent telephone message from the .ast End announcing the finding of a "stiff" in a, trench in a vacant lot eaet of Gilbreth & Son's lumber yard, and asking him to hurry thither with all possible haste. Tom Ward accidental ly (?) happened to be present when the message was received and he was easily persuaded to accompany Dad as a wit ness, and in order that no time might be lost on the way Verry Burham's ex press wagon was hired to got there on a dead gallop. Ned Gates and his type writer wou'd haye been added to the partv but Ned couldn't be foil rid aud Dad couldn't aflbrd to wait. Arriving at the vacant lot a small crowd of the "boys" was, found gathered around a little hollow place, gazing solemnly and intently on the corpse of a dead monkey that belonged to the Edison circus but had given up the ghost while the show was in town. Dad saw the joke and immediately headed a processlou to the nearest liquid refreshment institution, where the boys laughingly took some thing at Dad's expense. CASTOR I A For Ini'anti and Children, Dm KM Yov Hivi Always Bought FKKSONAL MENTION. Bears the aVgaatarsof Clarke & Falk's flavoring extracts are the best. Ask your ' yser for them. J. B. Havely was in town today from Boyd. Colonel B. F. Pike is registered at the Umatilla House from Moro. E. E. McGreer is registered at the Umatilla House from Antelope. A. S. Mac Allister has returned from lepending three months on his ranch near Twickenham. Mr. and Mrs. A. Scberneckau, of As toria, are In the city, the gueslB of Mr. and Mrs. George A. Liebe. ThomaB Smith, the well-known wool buyer of S. Moses & Co., of San Fran cisco, arrived here last night on bis an nual wool-buying trip. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Gottfried and child, of San Francisco, arrived here to day on a visit to Mr. and Mrs. Herbring. Mr. Gottfried ia a brother of Mrs. Her bring and a former resident of The Dalles. BOKN, At Hood River, this morning. May 14th, to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Clarke, a daughter, .New Kind of Glolje-Trotter. of Copenhagen he intends to write a book on his travels. County Court Proceeding. Valdemar Cbristensen, a new variety of globe-trotter, arrived here today on bis way Eaet, and may, possibly, re main two or three days. As the Orego nian said of bim when he Btruck Port land, Cbristensen is not riding a bicy cle, nor advertising patent medicines, nor trying to win a wager, nor carrying his country's flag, nor spongeing off his countrymen, nor delivering lectures, now taking snap shots. He is juet working his way. Christeneen is a na tive of Denmark, and apparently on the sunny side of 40. Ho was formerly a station agent at Buenos Ayrea and cur ries aceitificate to that effect. Ho left Buenos Ayres June 3, 1000, with the intention of traveling around the earth in one year, earning enough on the jour nev to pav his way. Hie start was on an animal transport for East London, South Africa, where lie landed with three pounds sterling, having worked abourd ship taking care of horses. From thence he shipped on another transport to Capo Town, thence to St. Helena, St. Vincent, London and Copenhagen, his native city. Here he sold articles to the Folkets Avis, a newspaper of wide circulation, and then shipped as sailor and deck hand to Antwerp, Port Said, Singapore, Vladlvostock, Moje, Kobe and Yokohama, where he remained a month. He then shipped as common sailor on board the German ship AN elierschwan, wtiich arrived in Portlaud, Orettou, on the 5th of this mouth. From here Mr. Chrlstensen will try by some sort of honest toil to reach New York City by rail. Should he suc ceed within the next twenty days, he will have journeyed around the earth in one year. He would very much like to get a job on a sheep or cattle train that was bound for Chicago, or, preferably, some point further Eaet. Besides his native tongue, bespeaks English, Span ish and German. He is well educated and when he returns to bU native city The following arc tho bills allowed at the last term of county court where the wages or amounts are not fixed by law Dalles Electtic Light Co, lights and fixtures 5 00 I F I Dunbar, certified complaint. 21 00 J u Benson, road worq 44 50 Lost Lake Lumbering Co, lumber for Dist No 6 3 14 Johnston BroB, sunplies for road district 44 10 J T Peters & Co, supplies for road district.". :.. 53 87 Alex Eraser, labor road district No 16 18 00 F S Gunning, blacksmith work. . 9 60 E E Savage, supplies for county. 67 20 Geo W Covert, work on road dis trict No 15 30 00 W II Wolfe, supplies road dis trict No 14 33 00 J C Benson, work road district No 17 42 73 Ann Fitzgerald, rebate on taxes. 2 42 Louis Burkhard, work in road district No 35 19 00 P H Hendrich, work on roads. .. 9 00 Maier & Benton, supplies (or county roads 3 05 Mays & Crowe, supplies county roads 142 85 A S Cathcart, work on county roads 12 00 S A Helmer, nails for road dis trict No 8 100 Menefee & ParkiiiB, stationery . . 1 65 Chronicle Pub Co, printing and supplies 72 00 Glass & Prudhomme, supplies . . 18 21 Pacific Bank Bjok Company, ooe gross pens 1 00 Irwin, Hodson Co, supplies 25 50 II C Crocker & Co, supplies 55 25 I C Nickelsen, supplies 1 30 Crandall & Burgett, burial of pauper 20 00 Skibbe Hotel, board of pauper . . 4 00 .1 M Toomey, board of pauper.. . 5 00 D S Dufur, work for tho assessor 2 50 Dr J A Geisendorffer, medical services pauper 5 00 Multnomah county, burial of Kirk 30 00 D P Crabtree, work done on Tygh trade 106 25 W D Chamberlain, rebate on tuxes 2 00 European House, hoard for a pauper 7 00 Black &. Ash, supplies for a pau per S5 00 Bee Hive Restaurant, board pau per 5 00 Johnston Bros, supplies for Mrs Greenly 4 50 W A Johnston, supplies for coun ty roads 124 75 C L Gilbert, Hiipplies and sta tionery 23 85 h L lirooKs, rope jor the election booths 85 St Vincent's Hospilal, cure ol Dollee 102 00 Good Samaritan Hospital, care paupers 167 00 J M Filloon, work on tax roll . . 38 75 J E Burnett, work on tux roll ... 38 75 Eflie I) Sanford, rebate on taxes, 14 14 C D Thompson, teachers' exum- lner 15 00 Ward & Robertson, team hire. , 6 00 L Rorden, supplies for pauper. . . 2 75 Dr E E Ferguson, visit to a pau per 5 CO J E Nell", teachers' examiner. ... 15 00 E B Wood, deputy assessor 46 00 Dr Hugh Logan, medical ser vices 28 00 M M CuBhing, board non-resident paupers 15 00 Friend & Buskirk, lumber road district No 27 18 75 J S Snvder, nursing pauper 3 75 W H Farlow, transcript 6 25 Sinnott & Fish, board of paupers 4 25 Dra Ferguson, hospital care indi gent .patients 29 80 G G Blakeley, medicine and transportation of paupers 53 70 Dr Wm Shackelford, medical ser vices 45 00 Wm Michel), burying Ben Fo ley 20 00 W R Brown, work on Hood Riv er giade 60 U0 Auction of Horses. On Friday, May 17th, there will be sold at auction, at Ward & Robertson's stables, between 30 and 40 head of horses weighing from 1100 to 1600 pounds each. The horses may be seen at the stables on and after Wednesday. Sale will commence at 2 o'clock p. m. For further particulars inquire of Jeff Dripps. ml4-3t Alumni Notice. There will be a special meeting of the Alumni association of Tho Dalles High school, at the residence of Mr. C. J. Crandall, on Friday, May 17. 1901, at 8 o'clock p. in. The presence of all members is desired. By order of N 14-2t Enw.u:n D. Baldwin, Pres. , Notice. There will he a regular communica tion of Columbia Chapter No. 33, ,0. E. S., this Tuesday evening, May 14.h. By order of the W. M. Makv Scott Myuus, Sec'y. Don't Hub It lu, Just wet tho affected part freely with Mysterious Pain Cure, a Scotch remedy, and the pain is gone. Sold by Clarke & Falk. For Sale. - Black mure, 9 yeara old; weight 950 lbs; broke to ride or drive; also cart and single harness; mare is uentle. Ad dress, Box 356 or this otlice. 1116 2wks If anything ails your hair, go and seo Frazer; he's the headquarters for all hair remedies. Remember that he makes a specialty of these goods. tf For sprains, swellings and laments there is not him: so good as Chamberlain's Pain Balm. Try it. For salo by Blake ley, the druggist. DeWitt's Little Early Risers seurch the remotest parts of the bowels the im purities speedily with no discomfort. They are famous for their ellicacy. Easy to take, never gripe. Clarke & Falk'e P.O. Pharmacy. WM. MICHELL, Undertaker and Embalmer Cor. Third and Washington Sts. All orders attended to promptly. Long distance phone 433, Local, 102,