Close Your Eyes i i Lo quality and the world is full of cheap things. But with vour eyes wide open, the real good things are few and far between. When we buy our eoods wo look sharp for quality and workmanship. If they are right, we see about the price; if not, ten cents on the dollar won't tempt, us to buy, for wo havo a reputation at stake. If you buy anything of us it's right; no matter how little you pay for it- it's right. NEGLIGEE and FANCY BOSOM SHIRTS, Made in every way which FAD as well as" FASHION demands. They are cool, com fortable and dressy. $1.00, $1.25, $1.50, $175. ; Summer ; TTn c pr wpa t We are oflferinc the best values in Balbripgnn Under wear ever shown. Reliability has a value. It saves time, energy and money. Your con fidence in the above yoods will not be misplaced at 50c, $1.00, $1.50, $2.00 per suit. STAPLE HOSIERY.. We are favorably known as distributers of superior value in Hosiery. Those who have looked to us for such, need not be told that our direct con nections with the best mak ers, and our large handlings, are a guarantee always of the best sorts at proper prices. FAST BLACK, K'.1" per pair 10c CLOUDED COTTON HOSE per pair J2c LISLE THREAD per pair IGjje See Our Furnishing Goods Window ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. PEASE & MAYS The Dalies Daily GhFomeie. SATURDAY, MAY 15, 1897 WAYSIDE GLEANINGS. Random Observationit and Local Kvunts of Lesser MuRiiitiMlu. Choice potatoes 75c per sack at Mnicr it Benton's. ni8-lw Garden hose for 3); cents a foot at Mays & Crowe's. aSO-tf There will be Sunday school at St. Paul's church tomorrow at 10 o'clock. There will be a German Lutheran ser vice at the court house tomorrow at 0 :45 a. in. Fresh Oregon peas and strawberries ; also dressed chickens for your Sunday dinner at The Dalles Commission Co. Choice Burbank potatoes for 70 cents per s.ick, and good butter for 30 cts per roll at ,7. H. Cross' feed and grocery Etore. mylO-tf A gold watch-charm, with A. 0. U. V. emblems and initials J. A. M., has been lost. Finder please leave at this office. mlo tf liev. II. II. Wykofl'of Berkeley, Calif., is in the city and will preach at the Congregational church tomorrow, morn ing and eveniug. Do not fail to attend the social in Baldwin's opera house Saturday even ing. The latest dance out, tho Waltz Oxford, will be taught to all in attend nnue. ml4-L't The city marshal tells us that all dogs running at large in the city limits Mon day, upon which the license is unpaid, will be impounded. This is the last warning. The Medford Monitor says that Jacob l'heister ie 78 years old, but can ride a hicyclu as well as many a boy of 20 ; but then this is not strange, as his mother, who is still living, is 104. Iliyou Bkookum ictus copa A. M. NVilliauiB & Co.'s tomollow sun. Yaka ticko conoway liedmen tyhe chaco naiiitch. A. M. Williams & Co. iskum moxt lumyi cloochmen pe ict tenas wap Bina. A gentleman informed us today that he had juat received a letter from tho East, and times were bo hard there that the birds were laying their eggs in last year's nests. They could not ailbrd to build new ones. Tho postofflce at Dufur was broken! into lust night, but as Mr. Pitman al ways removes tho postoflice funds at niyiit, there was uo loss of office funds. , rhe thief got away with about $5 dollars In small change left in the store. There is a gentleman living in The Dalles who was at the first secession convention held in the South before the war. it was held in Charleston, S. 0., in 1858. There were present at that convention several delegates who after wards became famous in the confederacy. The weather report from Portland this morning says: "The hot weather of PftBt days in the interior has had a j telling effect on the snow in the moun , tains and the upper rivers are rising ! rapidly in consequence. The rise at The Dalles will be about 2 feet a day for next I three dayB." ' a nr it? mi -i i .i a.m. wiiiiams uo nave tneir east window very tastefully decorated in honor of the Redmen who will visit us tomorrow. The decorations are made from gaudily colored blankets, such as delight the aboriginal eye, Indian basket work, guns and Indian trappings. It is an artistic piece of work. The Prineville Journal gives an ac count of the finding of the body of Z. B. Oflett in his pasture Tuesday. His saddle horse was in the pasture with the saddle on, and it is suppoeed Oflett had been hurt in some manner by hiB horEe. When the body was found it indicated that death had occurred three or four days, previous. Oflett was an eccentric bachelor, about seventy years old. The river this morning was at the 32.0 mark, a rise of 1.2 since yesterday morn ing. From reports from un-river points it iB probable it will be at the 35. foot mark by tomorrow noon. Very warm weather prevails throughout all the country around the Columbia tribu taries. The Snake is rising, but it is thought its worst flood is over and that it will again begin to fall before the upper Columbia flood ia at the full. When Ike Perry cleaned out the Moody bowling alley this morning he discovered smoke issuing from the closet where the brooms and such things are kept, and upon investigation found that a piece ot waste which he had used yes terday morning for cleansing the alleys and which contained considerable ben zine, was attempting spontaneous com bustion, in which it would have prob ably been successful had a little more time been given. As it was, no damage was done. His Back Broken. Mrs. .Yeliule llufeno Dead. John M. Hamilton of San Francisco is lying at the Umatilla House with a broken back and partially paralyzed. With his brother, George, he came into town this morning on the brakebeam, they being bound for Umatilla, where they expected to change cars and take tho train for Spokane. Hearing the .i.iniu TTmntilln Hnnsn n.illpil. fieoree 1 1 1 1 1 1 I W III H ' ' I supposed thoy had arrived at Umatilla i and got oft". His brother was riding the rear brakebeam, and George called to him to get off, which he attempted to do. but before he could get out the train started and he was caught by the brake- beam and doubled up in such a manner that his back was broken. lie was un able to rise, and was carried into tho Umatilla House, where his injuries are being attended to. His condition has imDroved somewhat today, one leg re covering from the paralysis, but the chances are against his recovery. Hia brother, who is with him, says the injured man is a cook, and for a long time had worked on the steamship Colima, running from San Francisco to Panama. Subscribe for The Cjihonicxe. It waB with profound sorrow that the citizens of our city "learned of the death of Mrs. Jennie Rufeno, who pasBedawav at 2:30 this morning. The circum stances make her death a peculiarly sad one. Easter Sunday, Jennie Russell surrounded by joyous friends o'aced her hand in that of the man of her choice, and pronounced the words that made her a wife. Today her body lies in the house of her father, awaiting the coming of another sun, when it will be laid away, hidden from mortal sight forever more. Young, talented, loved, life seemed to promise so much, but its buds scarce opened ere Death, the silent one, touched with icy hand the tender petals and and it drooped and died. There are occasions when words are powerless to express ones thoughts, or clothe ones ideas, and this is one of them. Beside the grave of those we love, lan guage is mute, and the sympathy of silence alone is eloquent. There is no balm in words, no- partnership in grief, but each must bear as best he can the burdens placed upon him, and let the fountain of his tears put out the burning anguish of his woe. Jennie Russell was born in Oakland, California Nov. 3, 1874, married April 18, 1897, and died May 15, 1897. Brief span, short history, and yet her life was such that its influence has made and will continue to make itself felt, and memory will recall to ber bereaved hus band and relatives the many beautiful traits of her character. God's finger beckoned and she has gone home. Peace bo with her and with her's. Furev7tll Parly to Mis Weunor. Those who attended the dancing party at Schanno's hall last night felt that the evening's pleasure fully compensated for the dearth of such amusement dur ing the past winter Tho party was given by Messrs. R. Gorman, Leo Schanno and Miss Alma Schanno as a farewell to Miss Wenner, who for the past year has been yielting Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Seufert, and who will leave for her home in New Yorkon Monday. The hall, which! accommodate the was just tho size to number present and make them feel erfectly at home, was prettily decorate 1 In bunting, with bouquets of snowb ills scattered promis cuously around, u'hich, together with the cooling lemo'lado furnished, proba bly accounts for thti fact that tho warmth ot the evening was forgotten, for as soon as Mrs. Varnoy waa seated at the piano and the waltz began, all seomingly danced with the same enthusiasm as is displayed in the coolest weather. When the evening, was half over, Mr. Gorman, who acted '.as floor manager, requested the guests o form for a grand march, which, .o their surprise, termin ated in the cosiest little refreshment room, lit with .Chinese lanterns, which shed such soft light that it seemed like a fairy bower. TTherei ice cream and cake were served, and 'couples loitered in conversation 'until the music again enticed them. The general verdict was that the hosts j and hostess proved themselves adepts in the art of entertaining, and aside from the regret felt at parting with Miss Wenner, who has made many friends here, the guests coiiBidered it one' of the most enjoyablBparties ever 'given in The Dalles. Those participating were': Mr and Mrs T J Seufert, Mr and Mrs H J Maier, Mr and Mrs J S Fish, Mf- and Mrs G O BlakeJey, Mr and Mrs AVarney, Mieses A Schanno, M Wenner, Minnie Lay, Nona Ruch, Dorothy' Fredilen, Grace Lauer, Lizzie Lauer, Maie Cushing Mat tie Gushing, Annio Sandrock, Minnie Sandrock, Beulah Patterson, Georgia Sampson, Eva Hoppner, Clara Davis, Maybel Mack, Alma Schmidt, Virginia Marden, Etta Story, Maude Kuhne, Elizabeth Schooling Dollie Seufert, Sadie Redmond ; Bertha Burkhardt, Pearl Williams, Maie Beall, of Portland, and Messrs. R J Gorman, 1. A Schanno, W Fredden, J Bonn, Charlie Clatke, II II Hiddell, G W Phelps, Victor Marden, Ed Wingate, Grant Mays, Max Vogt, John Weigel, Victor Schmidt, II Liobe, A Clarke, R II Lonsdale, J F Hamp shire, F Sandrock, Arthur Seufert, J Purdy, II D Parkins, Harry Fredden, F Dietzel, Fred Weigel ; W Mielke, of Portland. To Whom It Slay Concern. Having heard Professor Vinter Cooper lecture at the Baldwin opera house May 12th, 13th and 14th, we can truly say that his lectures are very interesting. He uses casts to illustrate his lecturer, which were taken so as lo show the organs in their various stages of develop ment, which makes everything so plain .a child could not fail to understand, Realizing the benefit we have received, and wishing the public to phare in our good fortune, wo write this that yon may go, and going enjoy, nnd leaving say that phrenology, revealed in its true eense, is truth itself. This testimonial is given without solicitation on the part of Prof. Cooper. S. II. FiiAZiisit, J. F. Moohk, Gkokoi: G. Giuo.vs, S. P. M. BltKKJH, E. H. Mewum,, CJ. E. Sandkuh. Tho professor by request will lecture at the courthouse Monday evening at 8 o'clock, and we advifo all interested in phrenology to go. There will be mutic by tho high fcchool quartet. CurtlllcutrH (irantcil. Third grade Aline Ball, Edna Brown, Clara Moizlor, Madge Warren and tO,' II, Kerns. Second grade Maude Peabody, L II Hudson, Minnie Elton, A May Sechler and Lelah Driver. Flrnt Kroile icrcciitu(?c. (Second grutfu jiercentugu. Woman' ltuljrf Corp, Atteutlonl Just Received You are hereby notified to assemble at Fraternity hall at 1 o'clock Sunday, May ICt'n, to attend the funeral of our late member, Mrs, William Rufeno, By order of Mahy Lbau.vkd, Pres. Mamie Biuans, Sec, pro tern. 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 ot tin. Wonderfully light and beautiful, and very durable. Foods cooked in it do not scorch. Dron in and see it. We will be ph ased to show it to you, oven if von don't buv. MAYS & CROWE. We Carry s i full line of Builders' and Heavy Hardware, Lime and Cement, Farm Machinery, Bain Wagons, Champion Mowers and Reapers, Blacksmiths' Coal and Iron, Barb Wire, Etc. Phone 25. JOS. T. PETERS & CO Baby Carriages JUST ARRIVED AT THE Jacobson Book & Music Co. Where will also ho found the largest and most com plete line of Vianos, and other Musical Instruments in astern Orouon. Complete Line of FISHING TACKLE, Notions, Base Ball Goods, Hammocks, Books and Stationery at, Bedrock Prices. New Vogt Block, The Dalles, Oregon. GEORGE RUCH PIONEER GROCER. Hucc.'ci Mir to OlirlHiunii A l.'orson. FULL LINE OF STAPLE and FANCY GROCERIES. Again in ImsinoHH at tho old Kta'id. I would ho pleased to see till my former iatroiiH. Fujo delivery to uuy urt of town. 7V. Z. DONNELL, PRESCRIPTION DRUGGIST TOILET ARTICLES AND PERFUMERY. Opp. A. M. Williams tfe Co., THE DALLES, OK. Base Ball I FAIR GROUNDS, Sunday, Maj 16, 1897. Tde PORTLAND WILLflJTlETTES ACMJNBT THE DULLES PICKED TEflfH. Admission 25c. Ladles Free. Tickets on sale- at all the huslncss houses, Lumber, Building Material and Boxes Traded lor TTott- H-min Pannn T.aiH Am ROWE & CO.. The Dalles Or