PEHSB 5t MRYS. All Goods lyiarkod In Plain Fifeuro3. !COVHiOHT I 0 1 HART, HCHAIFHtH 1 MAIIX CtllCAOU Hart, Schaffner & Marx RE Tailor Made Clothes Men's Neckwear. Special this week See display in window. f 5c For Originality of Design, For Workmanship, For Material, Our Suits stand pre-eminent possessing merit quali fied only by the' highest am bition of manufacturers in sustaining a reputation al ready established. Every new thing in Cloth ing worth having, which men or young men ol fashion will want to wear, is always to be found at Tease & Mays'. Military Cut Sack Suits in fancy cheviot, eassimere, worsted-cheviot fabrics, gray and greenish tints made up in plaids, stripes and mix tures. Prices ranging from $12.50 to $25.00. Men's Crash and Linen Suits, 1-3 off this week. GOOD VALUES. E. W. Coila's and Onfl's 25c Arrow brand Collars and Guild. . 'J for 25c Stiawknit IIni! 25e New Straw lints 50b to $2 00 Offers that assure Great Selling-.... Last week's sales of Linen Cloths and Lawns were most gratifying. Tt is because wo arc offering the best values the department ever gave. We will make a special offering FOR WEDNESDAY ONLY of our entire stock of High-class Organdies & Silk Mulls They're thu lateet goods that Fashion lias created. Soft-finish Cotton Foulards, regular 30c values; Wednesday price 22c Satin-finish Foulards, our regular 40c values; Wednesday price 29c Silk-stripe Ginghams, our regular 45c values; Wednesday price 31c Silk-stripe Organdie, our special 05c; Wednes day price 44c Silk Grenadines, regular 05c and 75c values; Wednesday price 49c Silk Mull, special 90c; Wednesday price 67c ...One day (Wednesday) only... Outing Shoes.... for Men, Women and Children. Men's Canvas Lace $1.50 Men's Canvas Oxfords.. 1.50 Men's Tennis Shoes 1.00 Men's Bicycle Shoes 1.75 Ladies' Tennis Shoes 90 Mays' Tennis Shoes . 65c, 90c Boys' Canvas Lace 90 Child's Tennis lace 60c, 75c SPECIAL. Ladies' Tan or Black Ox fords $1.00 Ladies Tan Lace 1.25 Idi It Pay to Itny Cheap? A cheap remedy for coughs anil colds in all right, hut yon want point-thing that will relievo and cure thu mote se vero a ml darigoiouo r Its of throat and lung inuiblt;. What shall yon do? Go to a warmer hi d num regular climate? V9, if possible; if not po.iiil (or yon, then in Hither cine take I lie oxi.v rem edy Hint hits hewn introduced in ail civil ized countries with succtvs in severe throat and lung troubles. "l$usehen'B German Syrup." It not only heals and stimulates tho tissue:) to destroy tho germ disease, hut allays inflammation, causes easy expectoration, gives a good night'B riot, and cures the patient. Try one hottle, Recommended muny eara hy nil dniuvi-if in tho world, iimi r-nld hv Clarke k Falk. Get Green's piizo almanac. 'J Dyspeptics cannot be hint? lived be cause to live requires nourishment Food is not nourishing until it is digested. A disordered stomach cannot, digest food, it must have, aflsistnr.ee. Kodol Dvspep sia (Jure digests all kind of fond with out aid from the stomach, nllou Inr it to rest and regain its natural functions. Its elements are exactly the same its the natural digestive fluids and it simply can't help hut do von tood. Clarke & ! Falk'a 1". O. Pharmacv. Why not spend thu vacation at Va qnina hay, where can he had excellent fare, uooil fishm.', gfod boating, safe bitlnmr, alluring rides and rambles. ' 'tie cour-es and exereices Bt the summer school of 1901 at Newport will afford great variety of instructions, diversion and entertainment. No other tesort offers equal attractions anil like advan tages, tunll-tf Drop into Mays & Crowe's etorc and see the Perfection oil stove work. It la simply perfect. One v.ilve does the wholo work. No complicated parts to eel out of order. 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 UTtirln TheTalles. 19-tf The Dalles Daily Chronicle. 'IT !.-.( V Y .JUNE 25, 1001 (Ci- lCS Oream m and Ice Cream SocJa At Andrew Keller's. TREASURER'S NOTICE. All Wiim(n Cuuiity wiirruiitx nxl" tured prior to .Inly 5, IKIIS, will Ihi pulil mi iirimriitutluu at my cilllce, Interest I'liiiHim itrinr .1 tine :!(, 1 1)0 1 . .loiiN r. iiAMi'siiiieii, County 'I'reHKurer. WAYSIDE GLEANINGS. Girl wanted To do general housework ; Thu best of wages paid ; Apply at this ollice. Wallace Wilson, after a very short partnership in the New York restaurant, sold out his half interest yesterday to Churles Miehelbach. Marion county folks are congratulating themselves that the rain is holding oil' pretty well considering that the Turner camp meeting is iu session. Lost this morning, a now Smith & Wesson hammerleHH revolver. Finder will bo rewarded by leaving it at The DalleB 'Employment ollice. j25-2t The FosBil Join mil Hays: Hon. II. E. Mistier returned this week to Mitchell from Klondike, muesli richer, in exper ience, than when ho went up there a few months ago. The weekly crop bulletin saya tho Hood River tipple crop will lack a good deal of being a full one, as many young tipples have dropped from the trees dur ing tho last few weeks. Yesterday's Ciiiionu'i.i: inadvertently omitted to mention that Mish Catherine .Sargiint.accompanied Mr. and Mrs. I. N. Urgent and Miss Rachel Morgan, on their trip to tho Pan-Aineriern exposi ti in mid Toronto. Classical work will bu given on thu hereon at tho Baldwin tonight tit I ho entertainment by tho Woodmen of the World. The life of Christ will bo given in pletiiriiH on screen, lifuliku In repro. dilution, and splendid irusic may be enjoyed. Admission 15 cents. While the birth of u girl ia not mourned over in France, us in certain Oriental countries, still it cestalnly doeH not call forth tho trimnphniit joy caused by the advent of u boy. The tiny outfit hati been tied up with blue ribbons in expectation of the hoped-for hoy ; should a girl be born these ure changed for pink. July Ladles' Home Journal. Representative Neabitt, of Klickitat county, while iu Tacouia u short time ago got a promise from Nelson Dennett, a prominent railroad man ot that plnce, to come to Klickitat county in the near future with some capitalists to look over the railroad situation in that county, with special reference to the building of a railroad from Golderidale to l,yle. Jamestown, Virginia, where the English gamed their first foothold in the New World in 1(107, was burned in 1G70. Today nobodv lives there. Little re mains to mark the site except a crumb ling church tower, dilapidated grave stones, and remnantB of the foundations of a few houBeu. July Ladies' Home Journal. Grant Mays, hnving concluded a horse round-up through northern Crook and southern Wasco hua gone to Port land to make arrangements for shipping a train load to Kansas City. Den Allen and Taylor Hill of Prineville, will help make up the train, which will probably start from Shaniko about the 3th of Julv. r J III Willi ted. A thoroughly competent girl to do general housework ; good cook. The best of wages paid. Call at this office. Mr. Levin is arranging for tho presen tation of "My Partner," shortly after the Fourth. This ia in tho nature of a farewell, as he will leave for Chicago early In August, where ho expects to join the Hopkin Stock Comnanjj in that city. "My Partner," by Hartley Camp bell, is different iu M.yl from any other play Mr. Levin has produced, being a romantic comedy drama of life under the shadows of Mt. Shasta, during the gold excitement of M9. The cast will be announced in a few days. Mr. 1). J. Cooper ha just recoived a letter from his daughter, Miss Ruth, who is teaching suhool at Genoa, Ne braska, announcing that she has been appointed by the government to n position as teacher iu tho government j schools at Manila, P. L, at a salary of I a tl.oueand dollars a year. She expects ! to Hoon sail for her new field of labor, ' the government paying her passage and her salary commencing from tho time I she sets sail. Miss Cooper has a host of j Dalles friends who will lejoico in her good fortune. I Tho city jail has four runaway lads ! who were captured yesterday afternoon by Marshal Driver and who ure kept hern until their relations aru heard from with instructions vhat to do with them. ; Tho boys say they ure from Vancouver and that their nunies are Joseph M. Dugati, Henry J. Doherty, Robert 10. Anderson und James Levau. Their uges are from 13 to 10. The marshal found them camped beneath some willows about a mile west of town and not fur from tho bank of the Columbia. They had some blankets and were cooking a morsel of rice in au old lard pail ; these being the only food and utensils in their possession. The lad" claimed they were on their way to the harvest fields of Eastern Oregon and were trying to make an honest living. The following "testimonial" appears in the Detroit paper. Sirs: We fed our baby on modified cow's milk the first six months, but the milkman did not understand how to modify his cows properly, and in consequence the child lost flesh until he weighed but one pound. I now procured some of your celebrated Infant's Food. ThiB the baby managed to trade off to the dog for some dog biscuit, which he ate, and is now well and hearty. The dog died, but dogs are cheap. We are grateful to you, in Ited. You may use my name if yon like. John Jones. The phono-stereoptican entertainment given hy Mt. Hood Camp, W. O. W., last evening was an excellent production and another will he given tonight at tho Baldwin. While the one last evening was free, tonight the program will be entirely different, dealing with music and art, in pictures of humor and pathos and of much finer order, and 15 cents admission will be .charged. These en tertainments are put on by Head camp, Woodman of the World, and have been seen iu city and hamlet. In different places, Portland included, these enter tainments have been given as benefits to Sunday echools on second night stands and hnve been well attended. The program ae to be given tonight was given in Taylor stieet M. E. church, Portland for ten consecutive nights. Admission 15 cents. Mies Ann Smith, of Hood River, who is visiting with the family of Mr. John Marden, had a letter from home yester day that gave au account of an appalling accident that one day towaids this end of last week befell Mrs. Maggie Reid, who was teaching a term of school in the Mountr Hood district, towards thu upper end of Hood River valley. Mrs. Reid was returning home from school on horseback when from some cause she fell off and, one foot remaining fast in the stirrup, she was dragged a distance of two miles and a half before tho horse was caught and her foot was releimd. Meanwhile the horse had fallen on her prostrate body three times. When re leased she was alive, hut utterly un conscious, and still remained uncon scious at laet accounts. These are the meager particulars that have come to hand of a disaster that surely must have proved fatal before this. Mrs. Reid was well known in this city, where she grew up to young womanhood and went to school, iiB Maggie Roberts, daughter of R, G. Roberts, at one time lessee of the Wasco warehouse. Martin Spealix, Tumwater Indian, had an experience last night that he would remember as long as he lived were it not that he was too full of alco hol to remember anything. Martin hud come across the river from the his home at the Indian village and after filling himself full alcohol, started back iu his skiff. It was late for that kind of exer cise, probably 9 or half past nine o'clock, and as the skiff struck the foaming waters of Three Mile rapids the Indian rolled over the gunwale of his little craft into tho seething current. Drunk as the Indian was he managed to hold on to the boat and in a short time to crawl back into it. Meanwhile Mr. Rorick of North Dalles, had seen the Indian fall into the river and without a mo ments delay had jumped in his own skiff and pushed out toward him, only to find as Mr. Rorick neared the Indian in a much slower boat that the latter let his skiff drift with the current and eventually pulled for the south bank near the foot of Washington street where thu Indian landed and was taken to thg city jail and booked on a charge of drunkeneES. This morning Recorder Gates fined him $5, which he paid. Spelix will be remembeied ae the Indian who did some ingenious carving of scenery at the booth of Adcox & Co. at the carnival of last year. V. It. II. IJufur Wnrmly Indorsed. June 21, 1901. Enrroi: Tm: Ciiuomcm; : Haing seen in the columns of your paper tho name of Hon. W. II. II. Dufur in connection with thu office of the U. S. marshalship, when the time of the present incumbent expires; also having seen many complimentary articles in different papeia throughout the otate, of Mr. Dufur, permit me as a friend to add my mite with the many others in say ing, "he is the proper man for tho place, and no better selection could bo made." I have known W. II. H. Dufur for the last fifteen or twenty years, both iu private and public life. In bin business circle his word ia his bond and when Harrison gives his word no one ques tions but what it will be kept. As in business so has it been in politics ; and bu has been the man to champion the cause of his friends, even to bis own political detriment. An honor to his family, an honor to the community in which he liven, au honor to thu county from which ho is a candidate, should thu delegation roni Oregon see lit to recommend him for the position of IJ. S. marshal, ho will bo an honor to thu delegation from Oregon and thu McKiuley administration of which he has been au earnon and fcarlos supporter. An A I ) m 1 it i: 1! . The wholo island of New York was originaly bought of thu Indians for an equivalent of about twenty-five dollars. Today New York bus a population of about 3, 500,000, which ia exceeded hy only one other city London, Its wealth is enormous; its annual expendi tures aie more than twice those of the Republic of Mexico, and almost one third as much au those of the German empire with its population of 53,000,000. And it has become thu financial center of the world. July Ladies' Home Journal. NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that the co partnership heretofore exiting between W. Wallace Wilson and L. Y. Hong in this citv under the name and stvle of the W.'W. Wilson Co., has been" dis solved by mutual consent of both parties and that Mr. W. Wallace Wilson will retire from eaid business and that Mr. L. Y. Hong will continue said busi ness and will pay all debts contracted by and that are due from said firm, and collect all mnnev duo to said linn. Dated at Dalles City this 23th day of June, 1901. L. Y. IIono, j25 Otd W. Vam,ack Wilson. Fur Sale. Twenty head of horses, ranging in weight from 1100 to MOO pounds. All halter-broken, and some broken to work Apply to Straubo Brothers, Eudersby, Oregon. jly 25 lmw CASTOR J A Po" Inlands and Children, !he Kind You Have Always Bought Bears tho SIguature of C&2S If you want to retain your hair you have to keep your scalp clean. Soap will make your hair harsh, dry and crispy. Now we hav9 two of the yery best preparations for cleansing the scalp Egg and Pine Tar Shampoo. It will leave your hair soft and glossv. Price, 25 and 50 cents a bottle, at Frazer's barber shop, The Dalles. tf I'lre Work. New novelties in both day and night displays just opened at Menefee & Parkins. j24-20 A surgical operation ia not necessary to cure piles. DrtWiU'a Witch Hazel Salve saves all that expense and never fails. Beware of counterfeits. Clarke fc Falk'e P. O. Pharmacv. When vour hair appears dry and to have lost ita 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 i the Crown of Science Hair Grower and Cocoannt Cream Qsf Tonic. They will cure (land S!tt8l rull" nnd all scalp diseases. For sale at Fra.cr's bar bur shop. Price 50u and Toe a bottle. A fnll line of Eastman films and sup plies just received by Clarke k Falk. Subscribe for Tin: CintoMri-u. The bilious, tired, nervous man cannot successfully compete witli his Lealthy rival. DoWitt'a Little Early Risers the lamoiis pills for constipation will remove the cause of your troubles. Clarke & Falk'a 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 oil stoves at Mays & Crowe's. 19-tf Subscribe fur Tin: Ciiuoniclk. WM. MICHELL, Undertaker and Embalmer Cor. Third nnil Washington Sts. All orders attended t.i promptly Long distance ph( in I'M. Lica!, 102. HOI ...The New York Cash Store... 138 and 142 Socond Stroot. The BARGAIN STORE of the City. Men's and Boys' Summer Underwear. Wo lutypjusl oppnoil (ho best line of Un derwear over shown in tho city, and wo tiro soiling thoso goods at tho lowest prices. Hoys' line ribbed, light weight, shirts and drawers, per garment 25C Boys' jersey ribbed, heiivy.bllver grev, shirts and drawers, per garment 25C Men'n blue mottled, light weight, shirts ami drawers, per garment. 25 Men's white, blue mercerized silk stripe, ribbed, light weight, shirts and drawers, per garment , 5QC Men's jersey ribbed, heavy, silver grey, shirts and drawers, per garment 48C Men's fancy striped, heavy ilbbtd, shirts and drawers, per garment .502 Men's grey mixed, meiiuo, shirts and diawors, per garment 30C .Men's brown und ecru, lace weave, light weight, shirts and drawers, per garment 50C DON'T OVERLOOK THESE BARGAINS.