Sale of Silks at Special Prices all week. Shirt Waists and Materials. Free Free Free Willi any Boy's Suit, Spalding Base Ball and Bat or a Twentieth Century Daisy Air Rifle. (Shoots cither BB shot or darts.) SEE WINDOWS. SEE WINDOWS. SEE WINDOWS. PURSES. An assortment of Purses that defy competition. 25c to $3.00 each. COMBS. Large or small metal or bono. 10 up. HAIR BRUSHES. A good brush will'last a lifetime. 15c up. HAIR PINS. All the latest little fancies in stock- CUBE PINS. Assorted col ors or black. 5c, 10c, 15c per cube. TOOTH BRUSHES, NEW BORDER VEILS, HAIR NETS, just in. National Toilet Cases. A. neatly put up package of all kinds of pins and needles, worth 25c, for 15c. NEW PULLEY BELTS. Though a little late, yet the warm weather is bound to come, and now is the time to prepare for it. This season's styles of Shirt Waists have never been equalled for beauty. $1.25, $1.50, $1.75, $2.00 and $3 00. COLORED WAISTS. prices, from 50c up. All MATERIALS. The assort ment of Ginghams (both imported and domestic), Silk Ginghams, Dim ities, Lawns and Percales, is so lai'ge that it's almost confusing. 8Jc to 50c per yard. BICYCLE SUITINGS, COVERTS, CRASHES, LINONS, &c. ' All Goods Marked In Plain Figures. PEASE & MAYS fhe Dalles Daily Chronicle, Telephone A'o. . Hil DAY MAY 125, lilOO ICE CREAM and ICE CREAM SODA L At Andrew Keller's. l) . m WAYSIDE GLEANINGS. FUSIONISM RIPPED UP THE BACK Cut ihwora for cotiimoncHinuiit will bo on Haiti at Aire. Murgnn'a art roouie to morrow. Furnished rooms for rent on Fourth etr. ot, in tht! I)Volf Iioubl'. Apply to MrcJ. 0. lione. niL'5-lw At tiin li mil rehuitrsul toduyt for the public fichool untortiilnimuit tonight nil tin impiln of the public scIiooIh were ud niltted free. Tor the untertuintmsnt to night iIih ohiiruu will be, udulte 25 conte ; Uilillllltll 15 Ct'lltH. Tim rcmiiiiiB of the infant child of Mr. mid Mrc J. O. Olipliaut, of Port lmiil, who died at that place yoBlerdny, impeded to airive here on tonight's tmlii fur interment in the Beezley lot in tlm Masonic cemetery. Mm. Oliplmnt tin- urainlriitUKlitor of the late Joseph llft-zli-y. The funeral will tuko place from Cnindiill &. Burgot'e tomorrow at 10 . in. It"Kcr Sinnott Is able to appuar in public today for the II ret time in ton day, h lurein he has been confined to Ms room millering from a very severe iIomi u( poiHun oak. lie came in contact with it like many other, through not kuowiiiK it, and imvitu: udmired its lienuty to the extent that he plucked u Imimh of it fur n nosegay, What ltojt. ilo - not. nuw know about poison oak is not worth knowing. A b leclul grape-vine telegram to The Gnu .mci,k iuforuiH uh of a hold-up that ouuurr-d it nliort time ago ui the other im rt-Hpi-ctitble precinct of Columbia. A- K. Itke, the republican candidute '"f county clerk, wiih the victim, but l amount extracted from him In only known to himself. While a picuic was in lum-ri'i-H nt that place a few days ago I'ifly w en iiurrounded him and pre- "utii I him with a written dumand that lurniHh ico ereain and peanuts fur ''' whole outfit. Ho is the pink of gal I-Mitrv , mid 'it U needlenB to say those Hiumii m, urmiui and peauuts till "i")' cried quilt), r Httle. '''imiiitd Intts and patterns ut cost for xi thirty days at the Campbell & W oion millliierv parlors. 23tf rihitulnt' houso of eleven rooms for r,,m mid furniture for sale, Apply t ''" ollice. tnl7-lw Your chuicTTiT waists, or base balls, "Hi taps or belt with boys' BUlts at M Wll"""H A "-'B-Von will not nave bolhj if you take 0l'ikn ft Fttlk's sure cure for boils. Kx-OuticriiHuiiinu M. W. llowurtl of ilu lllllllll Hllll lion, .1. It. Unborn of (i imi relit Toll I"llHllllllt Wliut They Tliltik of Them. The speeches of the middle-of-the-road populists at tlio .Baldwin lust night were the severest urritigntnent of I!ry uniem and Bourbon democracy The Dalles lius ever lihtened to. The force of the arraignment consisted in its ab solute conformity to' the truth of hie tory. The men spoke not of the bastard democracy of the north nnd west, but of genuine liourbonism as they knew it on its native heath. The courtesy of the meeting was ex tended to Miss Morrow, a representative of the National SuH'rago Association, who made un earnest plea for the suf frage amendment to the Oregon consti tution. Mr. Oaborno followed. He arraigned the Bourbons of the south for disfran chising the Negro, and pointed out tliut in his own state of Georgia 1-10,000 of them had been deprived of the ballot through a law that demanded us a qual ification for voting that the voter must oweur that he had paid all biicl; taxes since 187II. Uo held that Bryunite free silver was twice as bad us the gold stundurd, and that the Bryanito system of u national currency was twice us bad us the republican national bunk cur rency. In 3pite of all the" Bryunite zeal for un increased per capita, there was uot a dollar of any kind t i money in circulation in the United States that the democratic parly had authorized. Dem ocrats and populists were as wide asun der as the poler. They were going difl'erent ways. One was going east, the other west J one north, the other south ; one to heaven, the other to hell, The populists of the south had made it pos sible for u man south of Mason and Dixon's to vote an independent ticket and live. The democratic party was ulways for reform when it wus in the minority, and ulways against icforin when in the majority. Hero it was in favor of direct legislation; in the south it wub bitterly opposed to it. lie and Congressman Howard were accuesed of working in the pay of the republicans. There were two of them against four southerners in the pay of the fusionists. If Bryunism could support four, Mark Ilanna could surely all'ord to support two. Uuubrul Weaver and Cyclone Davis don't live on wind. He had left the democratic party forever. He felt toward that party us an emigrant from KansuH did, who, after living two years In that state, prlntod on the praliie sohooner that wub bearing hint out of it : Knro thee, well olit Kiiumih, 1 lilil you ii fond mlloii. I Mayan to hell orTexim Hut I'll never ooiuo liiu-'k to you. He would not vote the fusion ticket if they had Christ for a candidate and the ten commandments for a platform for the demaerata would afterwords crucify tbecandidrtteaud repudiate the platform. He predicted that Nebraska would go re publican and bury Bryau and fuslouism forever. Fuilou had been the curse of populism. It alone bad made repubh- can ascendancy possible. As long as populism stood apart from Bourboriisin it prospered ae no political party ever did. In Oregon and California fuMon had killed populism till you could hard ly smell the remains. Ex-Congressman Howard followed. He held that fusion was illog'cil and hishonest. It was simply an organized appetite for pelf. The democrats and 'Sunday, nonnlists were onlv agreed on one prop-, from the osition, 10 to 1, and they were not agreed on that. In 18 twenty-three democratic states had passed reeolutionB indorsing the wise administration of Grover Cleveiond, and if there was any thing that distinguished the Cleveland administration it was its intense opposi tion to free coinage of fcilver. Mr. Howard was in favor of government ownership of public utilities but he con tended that the trusts had come to stay. Bryan would license them. The popu lists would put them under government control the moment they become u monopoly. That was the true remedy for the trusts. The populists were in tavor of direct legislation. The d?mo ci tits favored it only in stoles where they were in the minority. In a num ber of eastern states the democrats were bitterlv opposed to free silver. There are no democrats in the west. The THE TROUT LAKE TRAGEDY. Further Particulars Furnished liy Coroner of Klickitat County. genuine old Bourbon, who never learns and never forgets, is only to be found in the South. Democratic runt about im perialism wus a delusion and a sham. They were lighting windmills and thev knew it. We had expanded and it was now a (juestion of policy what we should do with our new possession. When William Jennings Bryan deserted his regiment and rushed to Washington and persuaded a necessary number of democruts to vote for the ratiUcation of the treaty that put us in possession of the Philippines, at that moment the (juestion of expansion was settled for all time. There were enough of senators opposed to the treaty to have defeated It if Bryan had kept hip fingers out of the pie. Mr. Howard spoke flatteringly of From an advance copy of the Agricul turist, kindly mailed us by the editor we learn the following additional par ticulars of the death of Ida Fos? at the hand of Ben Wagnitz at Trout Lake last The Auriculluriet had them coroner, Win. Hart, who had just returned from the scene of the tragedy. Mr. Hart says that on Sunday even ing about 7:15, Mr. Wagnitz and Miss Foes, who was teaching school at Trout Lake and boarded with the Wuguilz family, were out walking and were met by County Supt. C. L. Colburn and wife near the bridge croseir;g the Trout Lake outlet. Wagnitz and the young lady seemed to be quite happy. Air. Colburn and wife ehook hands with them and then drove on to Mr. I'ear eon's, near by, for the night. Mr. Wagnitz and the young lady then returned home. The family consisted of Mrs. Wagnitz and two eons', Benja min and Auguet, the husband of Mrs. Wagnitz residing in Portland. the mother and son, August, were at the time out a short distance fiom the house attending to the milking of the cows. She and her son, shortly after the tir rival home of Mr. Wagnitz and Miss Foss, heard n loud scream, followei im mediately by the report of u rille. The mother and con rushed to where they could see the house and saw Wagnitz, with gun in hand, leaning over the body of Miss Foss, who was lying on the ground, apparently dead. Wagnitz then stood up and waved the gun in the uir und ctlled to his mother to come, saying that Mies Foss wished some water. The mother, however, mid son, August, would not approach, being afraid of Wagnitz, but went to the home of Mr. Pierson closo by. The reason of this, Coroner Hart learned, was thai Wagnitz had on several occasions threatened to shoot hU mother and brother, and they dared not go nt-ar down and nominate an eastern man who would be known to be secretly opposed to free silver. He predicted that the democrats would iioiniuatH u gold bug for president in 1004 on practically n gold standard platform. The great trouble with the democratic party was, you never know where to llnd it. Bad us republicanism was, you could tell what it stands for. The democratic party was simply an nut! party anti gold standard, uuli-pioteelion, untt-ex-punsion, unti prosperity, nnti every tiling. It lives in the past. You people out west talk of your great country, good tiuiea, etc. ; down south the Bour bun talks only of things that are dead and gone forever. For the convenience of parties want ing ice in the afternoons, the Stadelman Ice Co. will carry a stock at their store, corner Third and Washington streets, Phone No, 107; lung distance 163. "King 'em up." 18m-tf Charley Towne, but predicted that thulium, bhe did. before going to nersons, Kansas City convention would turn him so it was ieurn-d, say to uagnii:'. uitt it he would throw uwuy tlierille slie woui.i come, which lie declined to do. Ah she left she heard him say, "Oh, what have ldone! What have I done !" In u U- minutes a second shot was heard an I Wagnitz fell dead by his own hand. Miss Foss wus shot In the back, tin bullet going entirely through the hodv and through the right lung. Wngnitz had placed the butt of the till. on Hie ground, with the muzzle pressed uguinl his heart, and then touched the uign" with a sniull foot rule. Thus ended ihe life of theeo young people, Mr. Wugnnz being 27 years of age and Mies Fot- 25 The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which lias liccu. in use for over 30 years, lias borne tho Hlfjimtiiro of and has been made tinder his ncr- &yWijfc sonal supervision since its infancy. Yt 'Ctcc4M Allow no ono to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-Rood" aro lmfc Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of 'Infants mid Children Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Nnreotie substance. Its ago is its guarantee. It destroys Worm and allays Fcvcrishuess. It cures Diarrhoea and "Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates tho Food, regulates tho Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of 9 The KM You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THC CCNTUH COMMNV, TT MURRAY STRICT, NEW YORK CfTV. F r V V V V V h V V Special Sale! .Steel Ranges m oil stoves Of To reduce our large stock we will sell Stoves and Steel Ranges at Greatly Reduced Prices for a short time only. See our roods and get our prices. . . . . I JWflYS & CHOUXE. I I'r urani ( xemli.ru I The folliiwin.' prnKnuii will betiiven hy tin utmln. ni i he imliiic! m-IiooI fur tho betielit f 'li -i" ol lilirnry ut the Vout 0iern h n-e ' hie ( l-Viiioy) evening, May L'otii, ut S o'clock : 'ciprlntr Joys" Girls' Chorus "Tliu TYstl valor the IllnU" ' I'ujillb of Court titrcct -chool 1'1'iiK) Solo Vesper Kuvdrlcs ..Zlpphorn Ilnrrls Kocltiitiou "Too I.-ito for tho Twin" llcblo Kllildl Vocut Solo Klin Hiiiibi-u " I'liu Apple Tree's story" ili Is nl Acailemy Park School "Yo, Uo! (iiilliiiit Sailors" Hoys' chorus "T11H ItKAI.M (IF TIME." (A Muslc-il Allegory.) C ii a inert: its ... Wllllii Cross . .Lulu Nicholas . .Anita Hi illicit . . Dtnimi llelat Mia (iuthriu l.Mlih ( la'im Ilatlio Markliam Lucy Fox .... Winnie ! ritzier .Florence Uumpsou Mhcrtii l outs .Tcicmi Markham .... Martha llaltell Helen I'elers I.ela Kelsiiy CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Havi Always Bought Bears the Signature of Father Time January February March , April May lime July Auuiist September uciouer I November i December I Valentine i Fairy (Jilceu. Sl. mines I.luerty Hoience Morton Truth Hannah Schwabe t Jusileo llertha Itoblrnou Twelve Milliter liUiht Iteapeis sui'ta CI us lbert l-.lton hnl'iUL "I'luiiikvKl.'hiK' I.uelle Crate Tableau "luilher 'llmo'i HlessliiK". . . .VI minion ',' cent-; children, 15 uts. tipeoiill rcr-erve, oh) piVfl'llinoiit wills ke, leiiojniz il hy thu highest llU'ilioul iiiiihoriiy in ihu luiiil ; especially recoin nieiiileil hy ho board of health ol San Kr.nfM!o lor horpititl nee, nlo A, 1'. O'lirieu, Al. 1)., captain mill niirycon, unti Win, 1). McCirthy, imtjor und siir tceon U. S. army , as tho purest un idiil tended t-tiitinliuii (or ciiuviiluFi'f n'e, in valids uuil iHimly um. riuld hy Uhnrles SinhlitiK. h)I20.(I1iii Subticriliu lor The, Uhrtiniula. Garden Hose We have laid in a largo stock of (lanlen lloso and aro carrying tho .same brand of Hoso that we have boon carry ing for the lust (ivo years, which is tho celebrated Mal tese Cross lirand. We carry tho samo brand of lloso that fcho Dalles City Fire Depart ment has booh using for tho last twenty years. Tho Mal tese Cross lirand is without doubt tho best grade of lloso on tho market . Call ami got our prices before buying. JUaiep 5 Benton Solo Agonts. It. C. T, .SMITH, Osteopath. Koouu 10 anil II, Cbuimiuu 11 look, Tho Ihilles, Oregon, Tuetclajti una Fridays, ft u. in. to 1.'. luitylb-lm