1 OUR SPECIALS IN $ Summer Underwear Hosiery $ Ladies' Underwear. Style 001 Plain Ribbed Vest, no sleeves, color ecru...........:.. $ 05 Style 0090 Plain full-length gar ment, V neck, no sleeves.: 10 Style 6153 Full fashioned Jersey Ribbed, no sleeves............ 15 Style 0223 Full fashioned Jersey Ribbed, short sleeves 25 Style 6252 Fine Ribbed Vest, in lace front, no sleeves ... 25 Style 6228 Extra large size, low neck, no sleeves 25 Style 6294 Fine Maco Yarn Rib bed Vest, low neck, no sleeves" , 35 Style 6394 Extra Fine Ribbed Vests, made from best grade of Maco Yarn.......... 40 Style 646 Jersey Ribbed Silk and . Maco, low neck, no sleeves .... 50 Sfle 6643 Summer-wgt: Union Suits, color ecru.. 75 Sty le 6803 Oneita Union Suits, made from the best Egvptian Combed Yarn 1 00 Hosiery. No. 06 Fast Black Seamless, full length. .1.:.. .5 and 10c No. 9952 Warranted Fast Black, Seamless ..15c No. 9100 Genuine Maco 40-gauge Hose, full fashioned in regu- . lar and extra sizes............ .......!..25c No. 516 Extra weight, full fash ioned, double soles, with high spliced heels........... .25c No. 360 Fine Two-thread Hose, ; . Balbriggan foot; a good Hose for ladies with tender feet 30c No. 140 Extra Fine Hose, with long ribbed tops............. ............40c No. 8740 Genuine French Bril liant Lisle Thread Hose.. ....... ...50c No. 397 Full Regular Extra Long ' Clocked Lisle Thread 50c Just received all the New Shades in Dresden Ribbon, -4-inch., -will only cost you 35c per yard. ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. PEASE & MAYS. Maier & Benton have moved their Grocery and Hard ware Store in the building' formerly occupied by ' I. C. Nickelseh, opposite A. M. Williams fc Co., in the French Block, Where they can be found with a complete stock of Groceries and Hardware, Stoves, &c. Telephone No. 4 on both phones. Don't be Bamboozled by Smooth-Tongued Peddlars : Into paying $70 or $75 for a Steel Range when you can 7 I.' ii ' T " 1 j ' j l e A-j r .' aaa i LFujr cb kcuucA j-iaugu liguu au xiuuxc ivi iiic lj We will sell you a better Range, the " SUPERIOR," with copper reservoir, for $55, arid we guarantee it to be as good as any, and better than many; '. We do not come around once in 5 orr10 years.- We live here, do business here, and are here to stay. This space is reserved for Joseph ThG Dalles Daily Chronicle. TUESDAY. .- APRIL 14, 1896 WAYSIDE GLEANINGS. Random Observations and Local Events of Lesser Magnitude. Tonight "Confederate Spy" The Baldwin opera house. The river roao six inches last night, standing thi3&rjr-ning at 11.1 feet. Forecast Today and tomorrow occa" sional rains. Continued cold weather. man advertised a horse for sale : "Horse with halter, $5 ; horse without halter, sixty cents." "Miller's Harmony" is the name ol a new march now being published by the R. W. Hall Publishing Co., Gillespie, ' Pa., dedicated ; to Mr. J. G. Miller of . this city, publisher of Harmony. v Carl Thomas of Antelope, who was ar-. rested for burglary committed April 2d at the house of G. H. Reeder, and in carcerated in the county jail, is out on bonds. These were .named in the sum of $300. which he secured yesterday. Mr. J. H. Sherar has a force of men I and teams at work on the road between! Antelope and Bakeoven, and is going to make a new road from Thorn Hollow to Bakeoven. They will soon have thei road in good shape for wool-hauling. . J The shearing season in the Antelope locality will begin about the first of May, and the unfortunate sheep will soon be robbed of the last stitch of clothing on their backs. Already' the sheep are be ginning to flock in from every direction, and Antelope will soon be herself again. Mr. Chas. Cramer of Mosier sold thirty-nine boxes of apples early in the month, for which he received the fol lowing prices: Twelve boxes, $1.50; thirteen boxes, $1.75; fourteen boxes, $1.60. Mr. Cramer takes g6od care of his fruit, and conseauentlv receives a top price. John Cradlebaugh'a party ia 14 day overdue, and yesterday a party was dis patched to the what was the matter. Arriving vy niie oaimon ne iouna tney naa pro visioned up for about two months longer 'and he returned, well knowing that Mr. Cradlebaugh would not come until the commissary department was reduced more than that. Judge Fulton of Sherman county paid The Chronicle a pleasant call today. He ' says the Rattlesnake Road is in fine con-' dition and a great help to the people of his county. . He says the grade on this side ought to have some work and we ' trust our county court will not lose sight of the fact that the work ought to be' done during the wet season and should not bo delayed. A device for saving fine gold is on ex hibition at the Columbia hotel. It is an improvement of the old-fashioned rocker, and, it is claimed, will save three times the amount of fine gold that can be saved by any other process. The name of the invention is.the "Gold Bug Chief," and the rocker motion is given it by the action of water. Mrs. Mary Scott Myers, department president of W. R. C, returned last eve ning from an extended trip in the val ley, visiting corps in McMinnville, In dependence, Corvallis and Albany. .bach corps greeted Mrs. Myers most cordially, giving a reception in her honor in the evening. At Independence she made the neceseary arrangements for the delegates in June to the annual conven tion" Mr. Leslie Butler's team, attached t& ix In a western Kansas town recently aa carriage, ran awav this afteunoon. In t m residence hfownag has. Bas- reaching the both the carriage was seated Mr. com and Mr. Butler. the corner by the Jolea buggy was overturned, t gentlemen out in the etreetA Both sustained severe bruises, but no serious injuries. The horses were stopped by one of the lines tangling on a wheel, and were caught. The top was taken off the uggy. The Long Creek Eagle says that Hugh Arbuckle recently found the skeleton of a human being in an alkali lick on the middle fork of . the John Day, near the mouth of Granite creek. While looking after some stock, Mr. Arbuckle was at tracted to the lick by a peculiar forma tion 'caused by the incessant licking of the animals and the action of the ele ments for years past. What appeared to be a knee joint protruding above the surface, led Arbuckle to vigorous efforts, and with the aid of a pick and shovel what proved to be the remains of a white man were soon unearthed. Notwith standing the fact that they must have lain for many years in this alkali forma tion, the bones were all well preserved. Fire Alarm System. The committee on fire and water of the city council hare decided they will put in a complete fire alarm system, if the citizens take Btepa to procure the chem ical engine. The engine will cost $1,425. A fire alarm system is a system of divid ing the city into wards or districts.so that the locality of a fire may be indicated by the strokes of the fire bell. If The mining camp to find out IDalles were subdivided Into say fifteen at districts, each would contain but a small space, and the fire could be easily lo ta ted. The bell would strike once, then a' pause, then five strokes, indicating the number 15, if that was the district in which was the fire. The corner houses surrounding an alarm box are usually se lected as the places for depositing keys, so that' but little time is lost in sound ing an alarm. Mr. Jud Fish informs a reporter that he ia in correspondence with the chemical engine company on the price and expects a satisfactory an swer daily. . "Give me a liver regulator and I can regulate the world," Eaid a genius.- The druggist handed him a bottle of De Witt's Little Early Risers, the famous little pills. For Bale by Snipes-Kinersley Drug Co. . 'THE CONFEDERATE SPY." Tbe Plot of the Interesting Play Brief Related. r The following is the story ojr "The Confederate 'Spy," which wiUbe pro duced at the Baldwin operar house to night: George Waterman, a Northerner, meets a Southern belle with whom he falls in love. She reciprocates his devotion, but the two are separated in sentiment by a gulf which appears insurmountable. His sympathies are strong for the North and he enlists, while the girl is an ardent devotee of the Southern cause. She has a brother who is a Confederate spy. He is captured and condemned to Ldeath, and the Northern lover is captain of the guard. When the guard discov ers the relationship of his prisoner and tbe girl wheta he loves a plan is made to save his life by substituting the body of a dead soldier for the spy. The spy is then required to sign a parole. The plan is successful and the spy goes to the North, where he remains until the ose of the war. Waterman, however, is discovered, and is himself sentenced to death. He escapes the guard, and his love for the cause prompts him to apain engage in battle.' In the-etruggle with Aineley, a Confederate, Gen. Banks is wounded and Waterman ren ders him such valuable assistance that he obtains a reprieve for himself and the spy, who in the meantime has beejo discovered and placed under guard. Waterman ia himself wounded, how ever. When the lovers next meet it is in the North, at the close of the war, and it does not take long to facilitate the happy denouement. Following the cast: Geo. Waterman (a young Unionist). N. J. Slnnott Philip Bradley (a Confederate siv)K. H. Lonsdale Fred Ainsley . a rebel) F. V ilson Mnjor-General Banks (U. 8. A.) D. ft. Herrin Colonel VMllard U. 8. A.) J. hTmcAvojt Officer Muigarry (one of the finest wSen out of dancer) Job Hamphire Clay (a gemmen of color what-kufews whar de chickens roost . .. . . John. Hartnett Sockery fcehnel .ltbecker (the'drrfwd Dutch- raanj '..... wm. Kasmus Rastus (the unknown) Ixrdale-Hamishlre Mrs. Waterman (mother of Gybrge and wid- ow ol (Japt. Waterman. ..Mrs. G. i: Blakeley Maud Bradley (a Southern bUe and sister of spy) . .. Rose M ichell Nora McLeREin (down anhe "hay then Ghi- neezer'' , . ; . . . Lillian Snell Kose Suuthwick (lady presenting flag) Lena Suell ' Among the interesting specialties is a sword fight between Ainslee and Water man, a song and ance by J. F. Hamp shire and J. Hartnett, solo by N. J. Sin nott; quartette by Artisan club, dance by Eastus and an instrumental duet by the Misses Myrtle and Eetta Stone. nal shore, ready to welcome those who have been his faithful' followers. Mr. Goss drew some beautiful word-pictures, and his hearers could not. but be bene fited by his words of love and encourage ment. . . Sunday School was also started, and will hereafter be held eacn Sunday morning at a quarter to ten o'clock. ; It was a great satisfaction to the rector and to.all that there was such a large atten dance at the Sunday School, after so long a season without one. A Little Boy Killed By tbe Cars. The little 8-year-old boy of Mr. Dan Daffron, car inspector at Umatilla, was run over by tbe cars about 8 o'clock last evening at Umatilla and was killed. The accident could not have been avert ed, for no one knew of it until some of the trainmen came upon the poor little fellow's bleeding body. His leg had been cut off diagonally following its conjunc tion with the body. He was alive when found, and lived, for 'about six hours. It is thought he had fallen from a box car when in motion, as he was in the habit of playing around moving cars in the yard. - Mr. Daffron was at one time car in spector in The Dalles, and ia well-known among railroad men here. Mr. Jamea Brennan of this citv is hia son-in-law. Jacobson Book & Music Go. and : Harry Liebe have moved in the old Vogt Store on Washington Street, opposite The Chronicle Office. Injuries By Insects. A young lady before retiring recently noticed a blow fly on her pillow, and would not go to sleep until she bad killed it. 'The following incidents will excuse her alarm: The Oregonian re cently pnblished a story about a fly de positing eggs in a sleeping person's nose. The eggs hatched and it was with much difficulty life was 6aved. An incident capable of the fullest corroboration is that of a lady living near Hood River, in whose ear, about two years ago, a spider deposited eggs. They soon hatched, and large numbers of infinitesimal spiders commenced crawling out of her ear. This caused her intense pnin, and she nearly lot her hearing." Cases are fre quent of spiders biting children, but be yond a slight swelling and -some pain no harm is done. - . St. Paul's Charch. At St. Paul's Sunday the same , music was rendered as on the Sunday pre vious, with the exception of the Easter anthem. Mr. Goss' sermon was from the 21st chapter of St. John, 4th verse, "But when the morning was 'now come, Jesus stood on the shore, but the disci ples knew not that it was Jesus." The rector gave a beautilul description of that ecene, likening it to this present life of darkness and doubt (that seems to some but a dream), which will end at the awakening on toat great morning when Jesus will be standing on the eter- Subscribe for The Chronicle. Awarded Highest Honors World's FArt Gold Medal, Midwinter Fair, Mc"st Perfect Made. 40 Y'ars the Standard. . GEORGE RUCH PIONEER GROCER- Successor to Chrism an & Corson. 1 1 FULL. LINE OF STAPLE and FANCY GROCERIES. Again in business at the old stand. I would be pleased to see all my former patrons. Free delivery to any part of town. Try a Bottle OF- Atwood's Syroip of Tar, Horehonnd and Wild Cherry for that Cough. DOlWEIilt'S DRUG STORE. Tbe Tyeh Tal- . 1 A d --mm Ia ley Creamery Jd -ft. t I " Delicloan. Ask Vanbibber & Worsley for it. : 45c. Every Square is Full Weight. CREAMERY Tygh Vai ey A. A. B. rT33XDE!n2:02iirEl.asrO- so. "Live and let live. 55 You are invited to FRED. FISHER'S New Grocery Store, where you -will rind all the Lowest Prices. Goods delivered to any part of the city. Telephone 270.