Kate to Pan American Exposition, PEMSE St MAYS. All Goods Marked In Plain Figures. Itet Summer Heats Gome Nom and lot it bo over so trying, yon will find the store cool and comfortablo to shop in, yon will also find a multitude ol summer comforts and necessaries at prices that will make your visit both a pleasant and profitable one. Linen Fabrics for Shirt Waists and Dresses. The lot covers) everything in the house in this line, from the plain linen skirting to the Arm luppet Htrtpe linen batiute. GooiIb running in value from lTiu to IIOc, Sale price, 10c per yd. Extraordinary Values in Duck and Pique Skirts. The HUiiBon tniH not opened on these goodB yet, and here we are making prices we have hereto- I fore made in August. The stock is divided into!! lots. Regular 75c and $1.00 Skirts, SALE PRICE, 58c Regular $2 and $2.25 Skirts. SALE PRICE, $1.25 Regular $3 to $6 Skirts, SALE PRICE, $2.93 One More Reduction for this week only. All the odds and ends of WASH FABRICS in Organdies, Dimities and Fancy Cotton Goods. I n the lot will bo recognized 20c, 25c and 30c sellers. Price for this week, 5e pet yatd. When in the store look at our 5e Summer Vests fur ladies. They are hot weather garments. Young men s Outing Suits Hart, Schaffner & Marx Tailor Made Clothes COPVRlOHr 1901 HKT. SCHAFf NCR 4 MAX Military Fashioned. New flannels in chalk line stripes, handsome scotch worsted-cheviot fabrics and navy blue serges. $9, $10 and $11. Boys' Sailor Wash Suits, age 3 to 10, from 50c to $2.50. New fancy Straw Mats, just arrived, in black and blue bandds, at $1.25 and $1.50. Crush Hats, for young men, with fancy bands, "cool and swell," at $1.50 and $2.00. New Negligee Shirts, fancy Hosiery, Summer Underwear, and Belts. See dieplay in window. , The Dalles Daily Chronicle, THl'liSDA Y - JUNE lil), li)0l Ice Cream unci Ice Cream Socln At Andrew Keller's. i i huon up- Governor TREASURER'S NOTICE. All IVuinn County wiirriinlH rt-ciHtoii-d lirlur to .Inly r, 1HI1H, will 1 imlil mi irHiiituCl(iii ut my ollltiti, lntitroHt :)uhhi( uftiir .1 hud IiO, 1 110 1 . .M1IIN P. IlAMrSllII'.IC, Uiiuuty TroiiHiirnr. WAYSIDE GLEANINGS. Out in the Antelope country they are dipping horHOH for the mange, Attorney .lohu Gavin hae pointed u notary public by Geer. Wunted Chorry-paekors at the Col umbia Commission Co., corner Third and Washington. Judgu G. C. Blakeloy and wife, of this city, were registered at the Amor House, New York, on the 18th. Found A pair of lady's kid gloves. The owner can have them by calling at this otlice and paying for this notice. Three carloads of bona in transit from Island City to Portland, were fed at the Company's Htock yards this morning. William Stauta, of Dufur, la hauling baled timothy bay of last year's crop to the Wasco warehouse, for which be gets $11 a ton. The local Odd Follows bad work in the second degree) last night, and the lodge work was followed by a generous refection of strawberries and cream. Yakima Indians brought across the river this morning HBO head of cayuses, which were taken to the O. It. A N. slock yards and shipped to the LinnUin cannery. Tease & Mays will put on sale Satur day their Hue of celebrated Geisha waists. The pricus made are astonish ly low and will bo a grand opportunity to secure sopiu of the finest goods on the market. - The Dalles Scouring Mills have for weeks been running to their full capa city night and day, They have already handled in the neighborhood of 2,000,000 pounds of wool, counting what is on band not yet scoured. ' UiM Guyton and another man from Sherman county shipped to Portland on the Dalles Oity this mornirg fifty-two head of range horses, which they expect to dispose of in that market, Tuey were a mixed lot of all sorts. The raid-summer party to he given to morrow evening at the M. K. church will be an enjoyable affair. A program is being arranged, besides a game and refreshments, in whirh all can share. Watch for program tomorrow. In some parts of the Willamette valley strawberries are selling at eight boxeB for a quarter. The loweBt price yet reached in The Dalles is three boxes for a quarter, and there is an impression that that is about as low as they will get. All those who have contributed to the Good Intent "wheel" will receives com plimentary ticket to the mid-summer party Friday evening. During the even ing the amount' raised by the "wheel" will be announced. General admission 25 cents. A basket social was given Friday, .Mine 1-ltb, in school district No. 04, one of the Mosier districts, for the benefit of the (school library. The proceeds amounted to $12.50, a very liberal con tribution in the light of a total enroll ment of only ten pupile. The monthly di ill of the lire depart ment will take place this cveuing. Husineas men will bear in mind that the board of lire delegates requeBt that all members of the department in their employ be excused at (l:!0 p. in., as the drill will take place promptly at 7. Married, at 8:110 o'clock last evening, Juuo Mich, at the residence of S. U. Adams, Hev. Robert Warner officiating, Mr. Ashford Ferguson and Miss Kdie L. Adams, both of this city. The bride groom is the son of A. P. Ferguson, and the bride the granddaughter of S. 1$. Adams. A copy of the Topeka, Kansas, State Journal, of July 14th, came to Recorder j Gates this morning under the address of "City Clerk," with the announce ment written in pencil on the margin that Sella A Grey's cnens, one of the largest in the world, will be in The Dalles soon. Copies similarly marked came to the sherill' and the Umatilla House. Owners of summer cottages on the north beach will he pleased to learn that the beach from North Head to Loaubet tor's Point has been declared by the Washington legislature to bo a public highway, to remain such for all time. The attempts of private parlies to get control of the beach have been frus trated, but it took some hard work to da it. Articles of incorporation were filed to. Iday in the oflico of the county clerk of jtbo Hood River Commercial Company. The business of the corporation is to conduct a general merchandise store ; to buy and sell cattle, hogs, sheep, poultry and other stock, and to conduct a meat market. The principal office is at Hood River; the capital stock !s $0,000, and the incorporators aie Donald Ross, I'd ward Mayei atid Joseph Mayos, , Mayor K. K. Dufur yesterday sold to Ed Williams his house and several lots in DufurV Grand View Addition, re serving to himself a lot and a half of the vacant property east of Rev. D. V. Pol ing's residence. Mr. Dnfur will leave here in the near futnro to take up his residence near his mining interests in Jackson county, or, possibly, he may conclude to open a law office in Portland and move his family there. ""-" The teachers of this section seem to appreciate the opportunity which is ottered them at Newport this summer, and a large nuirbeT are planning to go. No doubt thiB is the chance oi a life time to spend a summer at the sea coast bo pleasantly and profitably at so little cost. In mentioning the summer school in Tuesday's issue through a mis take we published the regular course as the lecture course. The best instructors and speakers have been engaged lor the lecture course, which in iteelf will be worth the price of the entire trip. A dispatch from Shauiko announces the sale at that plane yesterday of 870, 000 pounds of wool belonging tJ the Haldwin Sheep A Land Company at 121.. cents a pound. Sealed bids were taken auu the highest bidder was E. W. Rrig- ham, representing the firm of Whitman, J Famsworth it Thayer of Boston. Ai number of other clips, aggregating 400, 000 pounds, were sold at prices ranging from 11.' j to 121;, cents a-pound. The above is taken from the Oregonian, but the buyers who returned to The Dalles this morning from Shauiko decline to confirm any 12'a cent sale. Articles of incorporation of the Moln tyre Lumber Company were filed today in the office of the county clerk. Tho business of the corporation is to buy and sell loge, timber and timber lands, and deal in logs and general log products and carry on a general logging business; to operate either as leasees or owners or otherwise sawmills and planer mills, and carry on a general Bawmilling busi ness. Tho incorporators are D. D. Mc Intyre, Clyde T. Ronney and Howell Metcalf. The principal office of the corporation is at Hood River, and the capital stock is $23,000, in shares of $100 each. There will ba USI.000,000 bushels of wheat in tho crop of 1001, according to tho figures of the statistician of tho New York Produce Exchange, based upon tho acreage and the condition as set fortli by tho department of agriculture. This, of course, will break all tho records if it comes. Tho largest wheat crop ever harvested thus far was that of 1SUS, which was (!7i,000,000 bushels, and none has come near that previously since 1891, when the yield was 018,000,000 bushels. The (184,000,000 crop for 1001 would please the country exceedingly. Eu rope's yield is apparently going to be considerably short of the earlier expec tations, nud there will be a market on the other side of the Atlantic for all the wheat which the United States will have to spare. Deputy Sheriff E, II. Wood .this noon arrested a man giving hia name as Will iam Anderson, of Portland, for selling whiskey to Indians, The arrest was ,Tnade in the old stone building near the southeast corner of Fiist and Washing ton. Mr. Wood suspected what was going on, and, following Anderson and two Indians into tiie vacant building, arreBted the former just as he had hand ed a bottle of whiskey to one of the In dians known as Scar-Faced Charley of Celilo. Anderson and Charley were both taken to the lock-up, the Indian as a witness. Later "Anderson" said his true name was Henry Green, and as such pleaded guilty to the charge against him and was bound over by U. S. Com missioner T. A. Hudson to the graud jury in the sum of $200. George Swarthout, a lad of 15 yeare, was brought here today oh the No. 2 passenger train, suffering from an injury received this morning from a passing freight train near Rowena. According to the lad's own story he was driven from his home at La Camas, Wash., by the cruelty of his father. He had been to Hood River and was on his way to The Dalles, when he became tired and sleepv and fooliehly lay down on the track to take a nap. A passing freight train struck him in the back, but fortu nately did not kill him. On his arrival here he was examined by the company's physician, Dr. Logan, who pronounced the injuries as not necessarily fatal. The boy was then placed in The Dalles Hospital, where his injuries ae being attended to by Drs. Ferguson, at the ex pense of the county. The O. R. & N. and Columbia South ern railroad companies put into effect on June 8th a joint tariff from The Dalles to Columbia Southern points, whereby the merchants of The Dalles are enabled to ship goods of all kinds from The Dalles to Columbia Southern points ami compete with Portland for that trade. Heretofore the rates from Tho Dalles to Columbia Southern points have heun the fcume as from Portland tollies' points; but under the new tariff the difference between the rates from The Dalles to Columbia Southern points and Portland is the local tariff from Portland to The Dalles. For instance, heretofore tho fiist class rate fiom Portland to Colum bia Southern points was sixty cents, umi the same rate applied from The Dalles to these points. Under the new tariff, where tho rate from Portland to Colum bia Southern points is sixty cents, the rate fiom The Dalles on tho same class of goods will be 155 cents, being a diflVi enco of the local rate from Portland to The Dalles. These concessions are very gratifying to The Dalles merchants, who considered that they were unjustly dis criminated against under the old rates. They weie made, as far as the O. R. A N. Co. is concerned, under the expecta tion that in future The Dalles merchants would make their eastern shipments by way of the O. R. A N, to Portlaud. If anything alls your hair, go and see Frazer; he's the headquarters (or all hair remedies. Remember that he makes a specialty of these goods. tf Subscribe for The Cuko.nici.u. Docs It 1'ay tn ISuy Clienp? A cheap remedy for coughs and colds is all right, but you want something that will relieve and cure the more se vere and dangerous results of throat and lung troubles. What shall yon do? Go to a warmer and more regular climate? Yes, if possible; if not possible for you, then in either case take the only rem edy that has been introduced in all civil ized countries with euccess in severe throat and lung troubles, "BoBchee's German Syrup." It not only heals and stimulates the tissues to destroy the germ disease, but allays inflammation, causes easy expectoration, gives a good night'B rest, and euros tho patient. Try one bottle. Recommended many years by all druggists in the world, and sold by Clarke it Falk. Get Green's prize almanac. 2 CASTOR I A Por Inlands and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears tho Siguature of Round-trip rates via O. R. it N. from The Dilles, $81.00. Tickets on saIc first and tnlrd Tuesdays during June, July, August, September and October, good for continuous pnsHnge, going on dale of sale. Return limit thirty days from date of sale. Stop.overs will he allowed wept of Missouri river or St. Paul on return trip within limit of ticket. Arrangements can lie made hy apply ing to Hgent O. R. A N. Co., The Dulles, wberel'y tickets will be honored on lake steamers in one or both directions be tween Detroit and Buffalo. tf Jamkh Iiiki.anij, Agent "Cottnifn Sein." A pood piano for sale, only $00; in perfect condition ; made by T. A. Stone A Co., of New York, and is a rare bargain. Also a Weber for $250. Every one knows what the Weber piano ia. We have nn organ, only $15, mado by Luring A Blake, and a W. W. Kimball organ, used but a short time, at $50. We carry the three high-grade pianoe Kimball, Weber and Checkering. Me.skkkk A Paiikixs, jumS The Dalles, Ore. Dyspeptics cannot be long lived be cause to live requires nourishment Food is not nourishing until it is digested. A disoi tiered stomnch cannot, digest food, it must hnveassistat.ee. Kodol Dyspep sia Curt' digests all kinds of footl with- I "lit aid from lh stomach, allowing it to rest and regain its natural functions. Its elements are exactly the same as the natural digestive fluids and it simply can't help but tlo you good. Clarke A Falk's P. O. Pharmacy. Next Saturday, June 22nd, at 2 p. ni., the balance of the estate of the lato Walter Fish will be sold ut public auction at the front door of the court house. The unsold portion consists of one lot, 50x100 feet, atlj )ining the store of Walthers A Sexton on Second strett, and about five acres, including a brick residence, in I.aughlin's bin!!' addition to Dalles City. junlO 3t When your hair appears dry and to have lost its vitality it wants something to give it life and vigor. We have what the hair needs when it gets in that con dition. We have the Crown of Science Hair (fg&jlfS Grower and Cocoannt Cream MBSh Tonic. They will cure dand Wlv ruff and all scalp diseases. For sale at Frazer'a bar ber shop. Price 50c and 75c a bottle. Drop into Mays A Crowe's store and see tho Perfection oil stove work. It ia simply perfect. One valve does tho whole work. No complicated parts to get out of ortler. Cheaper than wood. No hot kitchen. There are no others just, as good.' Investigate before buying, for these stoves are not sold by any other llrm in Tho Dalles. 10-tf Clarke A Falk have on sale a full Hue of paint and artist's brushes. WM. MICHELL, Undertaker and Embalmer Cor. Third and Washington Sts. All orders attended to promptly. Long distance phone l,'S,'. Local, 102. If you want to retain your bair you have to keep your scalp clean. Soap will make your hair harsh, dry and crispy. Now we have tvo of the yery beat preparations for cleansing the scalp Egg and Pine Tar Shampoo. It will leave your hair soft and gloasv. Price, 25 and 50 cents a bottle, at Frazer'a barber shop, The Dalles. tf Tho bilious, tired, nervous man cannot successfully compete with his healthy rival. DeWitt's Little Early Risers the lamous pills for constipation will removo the cause of your troubles. Clarke A Falk's P. O. Pharmacy. It is rumored that a very rich strike in oil has been made near Pendleton, and the housewives of The Dalles have struck just the thing in nil etovt-s at Mays A Crowd's. . 10-tf For rent Two Inrnis-heil front rooms. Inquire of Mrs. K. I. Sylvester, Third Btreet. jlO Iw ...The New York Cash Store... 138 and 142 Second Street. The BARGAIN STORE of the City. Men's and Boys1 Summer Underwear. Wo havojunt o onod tho best line of Un derwear over shown in tho oily, and wo tiro soiling thoso jioodri at tho lowest prices. Boys' fine ribbed, light weight, shirts and drawers, per garment 25C Boyb' jersey ribbed, heavy .feilver grev, j shirts and drawers, per garment 25C Men's blue mottled, light weiuht, shirts and drawers, per garment. 25C Men's white, bleu mercerized silk stripe, ribbed, light weight, shirt and drawers, per garmeut 50c Men's jersey ribbed, heavy, silver grey, shirts unit drawers, per garmeut. . 48C Men's fancy striped, heavy ribbed, shirts and drawers, per garment . .50C Men's grey mixed, merino, shirts ami drawers, per garment 30 Men's brown and ecru, lace weave, light weight, shirts and drawers, per gatment 50C DON'T OVERLOOK THESE BARGAINS.