hsterTspbcikEsI Three Spring Clotlies. Days ! Only. New Styles, New Colorings, New Ideas ex pressed in the Suits, Top Coats and Trous ers that make up our New Spring Stock. The very latest and best the country affords is here for our customers, and the prices are less than usual. Every man who likes good cloth and perfect making should look at them. 1 9 io Per Ct. Discount on Clothing. $8.00, $12.50, $10.00, $15.00 and $18.00. Three Days Only. IO Per Cent. Discount on CAPES. Ladies' Capes. Light Tan Broadcloth, single and doublo Capo ... t $3.50 to 5.00 Tan Broadcloth, braid trimming, lino quality .... 7.00 Tan Broadcloth, braid trimming, bottor quality. S.00 Tan Broadcloth, silk lining, elegantly trimmed.. .10.00 Black Gros Grain Silk, cut bead trimming 9.00 Black Moiro Silk, braid and cut bead trimming... SI 5.00 and 10.50 LADIES' JACKETS. In Black, Tan and lied, lined with silk. Those are good bargains at prices ranging from $0.50 to $12. TAILOR-MADE SUITS. Navy Serge Blazer Suit, braid trimming $15.00 Black Serge Jacket Suit 12.50 Tan Covert Cloth Blazer Suit 12.50 Black Serge Blazer and Jacket Suits, trimmed, $12.50 and 15.00 ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. PEASE & MAYS. 1 ct rti c cj m mm mm t -. - . me uaiies uaiiy unronicie. FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 1S97 WAYSIDE GLEANINGS. Random OtiTvutunn and Local Events of I.enser Magnitude. Forecast Tonight and tomorrow, fair, cooler. New line of step ladders at Maier & Benton's. A b:g drive in matches. Five papers for 5 cents at Maier & Benton's. C. J. Hayes and Mrs. Ann Stranahan were married at Hood River one day this week. The steamer Ainsworth sunk in Lake Kootenai Sunday morning. She will be raised. Mr. McGann ot Lyle will conduct ser vices at the Episcopal church Sunday Pease & Mays have their windows beautifully decorated, but that is no un usual thing with them. Stubling & Williams now have the celebrated Hop Gold Bock beer on draught. It is all right. ' Tha roads all over the country are in fine condition, and as a result all the stages are arriving ahead of time. Fresh nsparagus, onions, lettuce, etc., and Chinook salmon every morning at Dalles Commission Co.'b. 14-lw The little Brown boy, who was eo badly scalded, is much better thts morn ing, and his recovery is now only a ques tion of time. A. Ullery of Waunie, while at the table at Wtn. Davis' houee at Wamic Monday last, without a moment's warn ins fell out of his chair, and in a mo ment was dead. Rev. O. D. Taylor, pastor of the First Baptist church, preaches on Sunday morning at 11 o'clock. Subject of ser mon "God Rules." There will be no evening service. The river was at the eighteen-foot mark thia morning, and if the present weather holds for any length of time, we we apt to see a rare thing, and that is h water in April. One by one all those who appeared eo Prominently in the great Btecber 6uit ave passed away. Yesterday Mrs. Theodore Tilton, wife of Beecher'e ac cuser, died at her home in Brooklyn. The Champion baseball club will meet in the council chambers tomorrow night t 8:30 o'clock. All members of the club are requested to be present, as there business of importance to attend to. Raker City is to have a hospital, which will be opened about June 1st. It will w called the St. Elizabeth hospital, and iU be under the direction of the Sisters St. Francis, with the mother house in Wdiadelphia. Tbe Dalles just now is at her prettiest, ti her fruit trees masses of bloom, jd her shade trees rapidly taking on Jfcelr foliage. It is just a trifle warm l( comfort, but we have no kick com- ing, the more warmth the more grass 1 and grain, and we cannot have too much , of either. The Columbia is coming up rapidly and steadily, but we are not like the people along the Mississippi, who get drowned out with a 26-foot rise. It is not classed as high water here until it passes the 42-foot mark, and in '94 it went within an inch of the 60-foot mark. It made some of us move at the latter figure, but anything under 50 feet is all right. A. M. Williams & Co. have a very handsomely decorated window in honor of Easter. The floor is covered with loosely-draped swiss, from' the folds of which peep many prettily colored eggs. The center piece isan immense egg made of handkerchiefs, the top chipped off and a couple ofnandsorne dolls peep ing therefrom. At is a dainty and artis tic bit o'f decorating that must be seen to be appreciated. The Snipes-Kinersly Drug Co. has a very pretty and unique Easter display in its windows. Each window is car peted with sod, and in one two large white rabbits, with acouple of baby rabbits, are at hometo all who call to see them. In theyother, a hen, with a brood of ducklings, divide the honors with the rabbits; A swimming tank is provided for the youngsters, and they seem to enjoy themselves as thoroughly as though they had the whole world to roam in. Have you seen those beautiful Olive Platin photos that Mr. Hammond is making at the Herrin gallery? They are, without a doubt, the finest finished photos that have ever been made in the West. Photographers in tbe East charge $8 to $15 per dozen for them. To introduce them in The Dalles, Mr. Hammond, for a short time, will make tbem at $4.50 Ier dozen, for cabinets finished on large, heavy or other fancy cards, which is very reasonable consider ing his is the only gallery in the North west where they are finished as they should be, or he will make you a present of one Olive Platin with a dozen of the polished photos, prices of which are still as low as at inferior galleries. al6 3t Change of Time. Commencing April 8th, the steamers of the Regulator line will leave The Dalles at 7 a. m. instead of 7 :30. W. C. Allawav, Agent. As usual always in the lead. Hop Gold Bock Beer on sale today. See that you get it on draught at all Star brewery saloons. a!5-lw STILL IDLER MUSINGS. Concerning; Other Thine Madding Dance. Ihan the Schilling's Best is a pub-, lie as well as a private good. ) It means such 1 tea coffee soda bak'tiR powder flavoiuigextracts ana spices as you and your neighbors want at fair prices. For sale by W. E. Kahler We regret that our young friend "Consistency" has concluded that "'tis folly to be wise," and so prefers the ig norance he has, to that sweet knowledge he knows not of. His Pegasus with spurning foot caused Hippocrene to pour forth abundant waters, but alas! he refused to drink of the Helicon spring, preferring the bitter waters of Lethe. 'Tis related that when Ulysses' crew fell under the spell of Circe, she changed them to suit her fancy into lions, bears, asses, ewine, and other ani mals. They, returning not to the ship, Ulysses went in search of them. Against the charms of the beautiful enchantress he had a eingle talisman a simple flower. As long as he held this her charms were powerless. I have al ways thought that the story was sym bolical ; that her charms were only the power she had over ignorance, nud this ignorance was typified by the animal condition of her victims; while, on the other hand the little flower which pro tected Ulysses was the sweet bloom of knowledge. May our young friend yet pluck a bouquet, and so, farewell. Death is said to be a great mystery, and yet all things tangible that have life, die. Nay! Even the rocks are metamorphosed, and becoming some thing different from what they were, may be feaid to have peristied. Where does the essence, the will, the spirit, the intangible, incorporeal thing we call life go to? What becomes of it? We do not know. Hence, I take it, that not Death, but Life is the unsolvable mys tery. Whence cometh it? What in visible spirit moves the grass and the leaves, to carpet the brown earth with verdure? What makes the crocus bloom beneath the protecting leavee, the violet to perfume the glade, the columbine to play with the invisible baby zephyrs? Whence comes our own life, and when and how does it enter into the babe, touching its heart until it beats, its lungs until they begin to perform their func tions, its brain until the divine essence we call thought is evolved, and intelli gence springs into being? Out of the nowhere it comes to enter into that which was not, and we call it life. Out of that which is, it goes into tbe fathom less elsewhere and where it no longer abides, there is that which we call death. There is another mystery almost as deep as life, and that is love. Who is there can explain the mystery of the human heart, who even theorize on the divine attributes the affections? Who can tell by what subtle charm someone steals into the iumoet sanctuaries of one's heart, filling it with the fragrance of tin- r-i! blossoms of Paradise? By what alchemy of nature is love distilled, too often alas! from weeds instead of lilies and roses. Fairness of face, beauty of form, limpid eyes, silken tresses, or even the intellectual charms are not all powerful. Intelligence, beauty, grace, learning, wit, all united, may fail to produce the effect that pome, lacking perhaps most of these charms, may accomplish. Psyche may wiu Cupid, Phryne set all the world's youth wild ; yet Phyllis may meet them both on their own ground and vanquish them without an effort. Why is this? Is it not because love is born not of the isenses, but of the spirit? Beauty of form, face and mind may attract, but there their power ends. While love born of the spirit, glorifies its object, and supplies a beauty as superior to earthly charm as imagination is to reality. It is true the object is often unworthy, but that only proves our con tention, for we love not what is, but the imaginary being wo have created. Yet what would you? Idols of brass with feet of clay, such are all the images of earth. The ideal and the real will never be harmonized, and yet what man or what woman is not better for the idols, he or she has created. Yet love intangible, is but typical of life. We know not from whence either comes, wo know not whither they go. The autopsy may show that through this bullet hole, or that internal disturb ance life ceased, and the post mortem examination of a case of defunct love may show what was responsible for the deeeaee. There Ih Boine difference too. At the end of life, the body remains to be disposed of. There is a funeral or a cremation. At the end of love there are no remains. It has performed hari-kari, incinerated itself and scattered its own ashes upon the waters until they are lost as utterly as those of Lycurgus, in the Aegean sea. Generally after a short period of rest, while nature docs a little summer fallowing, the fertile soil gives place to the seed of another love, Clotho again holds the distaff, Atropos spins the thread and Lachesis, with her re morseless shears, cuts it off. Yet it comes again, and yet again. Not the same love, of course, for dead love is like a dead mule a total loss. But we get another sample off the same chunk ; we get the same kind of sugar in a clean bit of rag, and suck the dainty niorjel just like the suckers that we are. Tomorrow Nlght'tf 1'rojrrmn. The following program will be ren dered tomorrow evening at the "Pink and White" social to be given by the Good Templars in the K. of P. banquet hall, commencing at 8 o'clock : IuatrumenUl duet Kilythu Kuiidull and (,'luru Nfcklcfeoii Dialogue . . Clyde JMddell und i'runclx Hexton Mixed Quurn-t Itt-citatloii Vocal Duet . . .MUk Kdnit und Arclilo Jiurnutt Dialogue "JSuckwood Wedding" Ml (ten Kthel und Mabel ftlddcll Jiiitrumeutitl Duet .Kdie Finder und Kmc Jlolton Drill Fourteen Young Iridic Ice cream and caky will be served. Admission 15 cents. Do you want your windows cleaned, carpets taken up, beaten and re laid, or janitor work, of any kind done by a first-class man? If so, telephone Henry Johnson at Parkins' barber shop, 'Phone 119. . alO-lf 1 ii Just Received. A stock of Pure Aluminum Ware Cook ing Utensils. No enamel to flake off. Solid metal. No plating to wear off. Absolutely pure. No verdigris, or salts of tin. Wonderfully light and beautiful, and very durable. Foods cooked in it do not scorch. Drop in and see it. Wo will be pleased to hIiow it to you, even if you don't buv. MAYS & CROWE. GEORGE RUCH PIONEER G ROCER. (Kutui'ftMir to Chrlsiuttu A Corkmi. FULL LINE OF STAPLE and FANCY GROCERIES. Again in business at the old ntu:sd. I would he pleased to see all my former patrons. Free delivery to any purl of town. 7V. Z. DONNELL, PESClPTIOfl DRUGGIST TOILET ARTICLES AND PERFUMERY. Opp. A. M. Williams & Co., TKK DALLES, OK. Down Go Prices. On PIANOS and ORGANS. Call and see us, for now is the time to get Jacobson Book & Music Co. LATEST NEW SONGS. A complete Line to Seleot from. New Vogt Blook, The Dalles, Oregon. i