" ts a vory good world to live in To lend, or to spend, or to give in But to buy, or to borrow, or to get a man's own Its the very worst world that evor was known." And Worst of all The dear old world is busy, trying to Forget how to give a lot for a little. ts a fad of ours to be frank And besides, If wo advertised it all time To give you more than " your money's worth" It would bo an insult To your intelligence. This is CUhat We DO do We give you One Hundred Cents' worth of Merchandise for One Dollar every time. Ask some of your friends they know. Men's all-mool Suits $5.00 to $25.00 Boys' all-rjuool Suits $1.85 to $10.50. SEE WINDOWS.- ...WASH GOODS... ENGLISH DIMITIES Neat little patterns in delicate colors at 20c per yd FOUL AD1UNES The great leader in Wash Fabrics at 15c SPOT CREPE In solid colors, popular goods for wrappers 20c DRESS GOODS Homespuns, Covert Cloths, Serges, etc., for unlined skirts, 52, 54 and 50 inches wide, at $1.00, $1.50 and $2.00 per yard. Summer Vests. SILK VESTS An assortment of extra pink and blue, at G5c, 75c, $1.00 and $1.25 FINE WHITE JERSEY RIBBED High neck and long sleeves, low neck and sleeveless, short sleeves 10c, 12lc, 15c, 20c, 25c and 35c ON THE COUNTER Cleaning up odds and ends we have placed on the counter vests sell ing in the regular way for 25c, 30c and 35c, at 19c All Goods Marked In Plain Figures. PEASE &, MAYS The Dalles Daily Chronicle. Telephone No. 1. TUESDAY .TV . MAY L'oTlOOO ICE CREAM and ICE CREAM SODA j At Andrew Keller's. & WAYSIDE GLEANINGS. Mays & Crowe will cloee tomorrow at 10 u. tn. Tomorrow being Memorial Day, no paper will be issued from thin office. A. M. Williams it Co. will cloee their pliico of buBitieBH at 10 a. m. tomorrow. Fiirnitihud rooniB for rent on Fourth street, In the DeWoir house. Apply to Mrs. .1. O. Hose. tuL'5-lw Dr. Hudeon was called today to Mo Bier to visit Charley Gratam and hie daughter, who are ill with pneumonia. 1'eiiHe & Maya HHk their customer? to send their orders in an early as pobsiblo tomorrow, ua theit store will cloee at noon. A populist paper up in Wallowa coun ty reports the recent naturalization of an Irishman, who was "a former subject of Queen Klizabetli." The members of the Commercial Club are culled to meet next Thursday nijsht to consider the proposition of the Y. M. 0. A. to rent the lower floor of the club rooms. The Ladies' Aid Society, of the thu Congregational church will not meet this week but will meet on the Wednes day of next week at the home of Mrs, Hoatetler. One hundred and sixteen sacks of t wool were received today at the Regula tor warehouse from G. A. Young & Son of Hiikeoven, being part of their clip of 130,000 pounds. On account of the distressing calamity that has befallen Hon. IS. 8. Hunting ton, in thu death of his only child, the memorial addreeH which he was to deliver at the M. IS. church tomorrow n'ht will be read by Professor Landers. Last Friday Joe Uonn sent up to ArN Ii'Kton six of his earner pigeons. The station agent nt that plhce turned them loofe m 0:38 the next morning. After "Ircllng in the air for a few moments, the birds struck for home and arrived 'wont 11:20' The distance by rail Is filly-four miles. lh. Kellogg, pastor of the Taylor trout M. K. church of Portland, will Kivo two of his celebrated stereopticon lectures in the Meihodlst church of this on June 7th and 8th. One lecture WH1 be upon the famous "Tlssot" pic tuies, which are now exciting the admi ration of all art loven. The teachers and scholars of the Con irrational Sunday school are requested tomeetatthecburch tomorrow (Werfnei dy) at 0 o'clock a. tn, to make arrange ments for attending the funeral of the late Wilson Huntington. Mrs. Roche deeirea that the pupils of her room in the public schools shall also meet at the same time and place for the same pur pose. Hon. C. W. Fultnn, of Astoria will speak Thursday night, 31st met., on the political iesues of the day at the Vogt opera house. M. P. Ifenburg and F. W. Wilson will speak at the Dutch Flat school houee on the night of the 1st July, and at Upper Mill creek on the night of the second. Hngli Gourlay will 6 peak at the'Fairview school house next Saturday night. R. B. Lindsay, a brakeman on Hub division of the O. R. & N., had a cloee call for his life yeeterday afternoon While attempting to mount a horse the animal threw him violently to the ground aud kicked him. in the face, Mr. Lindsay waB rendered uneousdoue for about six hours. Dr. Geisendorfler, who was called in, reports that Mr. Lindsay was much better this morning and that no serioU9 results are antici pated. The candidate he kiesed the babe and rubbed the heads of Sam and Sue; he swore thu twins were beautiful, and wished that he had two but that don't count. Ho asked about the corn bread, which ho vainly tried to chaw, and forthwith begged for the recipe. Of course that tiekoled ma but that don't count. But just before he left he stopped and winked, closed rp his jaw, and slipping out behind the burn he took a drink with pa and that's what counts. Myrtle Point Enterprise. The circuit court, that opened here Monday, was practically through with its business at noon today. The docket was an unusually light one. No grand jury waB impaneled, and the trial jury was discharged today. Two prisoners who had been Indicted, one for aseault aud the other for horBe-stealing, were both discharged on motion of the prose cuting attorney, on the ground that there was no evidence to sustaiu the charges. A case for the recovery of money lost at gambling was disposed of by a judgment of non-suit. ""The full list of ttuu'eusus enumera tors for the Second district was made publiu yesterday. The taking of the census will begin next Friday, June 1st, and in The Dalles, us in ull cities of less i han 8.000 nonulation. and in the coun try the enumerators will have u full month to finish ;heir work. The enum erators for Wasco county are: For The Dalles, Homer D. Angell, Max H. Rar tell, J. M. IJattersou, Richard J. Gor man, O. L.i Schmidt; Cascade Locks, Clifton K. .Hickok ; Mosier, Sidney M. Ilriggs; Hood River, M. H. Nlckelsen ; Dufur, Henry Hudson; Kingsley, Jas. Kelly; Tygu Valley, A. U. Stogsdill; Antelope, Max Lueddeman. John Haverly, of Boyd, left at this office today a Jew heads of beardless barley, which he eay ia making a fine record for itself in the couutry tributary to Dufur and Kingsley. The first seeds were obtained a few years ago from a Mexican who Hopped for a night at a farm house on Tygh Ridge. The prod uct of these was carefully saved until beardleEB barley is now very extensively sown for hay. For this purpose many consider it far superior to wheat hay. BeeideB it yields larger returns to the acre of either hay or grain, and in addi tion the giain is said to be second to none for brewing purposes. A well known Tygh Ridge farmer says he has a field of beardless barley, of fall Bowing on Bummer fallow, that he expects to yield him four tons of hay to the acre. Other fields are1 spoken of that give promise of seventy to eighty bushels of grain to the acre. Beardless barley does best when sown in the fall on sum mer fallow. John Phillip, a Bhoemaker who has been working at times for Ness Simon sou and J, Twohig, was arrested yester day by Sheriff Kelly and Marshal Hughes for selling liquor to Indians. It iB an open aud notorious fact that for months and years Indians have been able to obtain in this town apparently all the liquor they wanted. Phillips has long been suspected, and more than suspected. Yesterday the sheriff and marshal eecreted themselves in Crandall & Burgett'a undertaking rooms and watched Phillips enter the little shop opposite, where he has been doing odd jobs of work lately. Ho was followed by old Wasco Charley, aud both paeeed into a back room. In a minute or two Wasco Charloy came out on the street, where ho was met by the sheriff, who ordered him to fork out "that bottle of whiskey." Charley handed the eheriff a quart bottle full of alcohol, which he admitted he got from Phillips. Both men were arrested and placed in tho county jail, where they remain pending the airival of an officer from Portland. After Waecu Charley had been a little while in the jail with Phillips he changed his tune aud said he found tho bottle of alcohol. This avail Phillips little, how ever, us a number ot witnesses of tho highest character have been summoned that will prove his guilt beyond u shadow of question. (irt't-lry': Wit. While in Peekskill Mr. Greeley was sitting on a hotel piazza, ecauuing the columns of the Tribune, when a stranger amo along, glanced contemptuously at the paper and remarked "Fine sheet you've got hero, mister I I u Bed to read it myself, but I've sub scribed for a decent paper now, anil aB fast as the Tribune comes along I feed it to my goat. That's all Its lit for." Greeley glanced up over his paper with a quizzical smile. "So you feed your goat on Tribunes, do you?" he usked in tho mildest of au cldents, "Yes, sir, I do," blustered the stran ger. "All right, my friend, said Mr. Gree ley, "keep right on reading some other paper and feeding your goat on Tribuues, and I'll guarantee in three mouths' time the goat will know a darn light more about what is going on in the world than lie owner does." Llppln cott's Magazine. A DISTRESSING ACCIDENT. Wilaon. the (Inly Child or It. M. anil Mrs. Huntington, SulTcra Death by Fall Inc from a Tree Last Night. A distressing accident. and one which has caused a feeling of sadness to per vade many hearts happened last evening when Wilson Bela Huntington, the young son of Mr. and Mrs. B. S. Hunt ington, was killed by falling from a tree shortly after 7 o'clock. It seems that the little boy, together with some com panions of his own age, were playing in the yard of Mr. Broneon when Wilson in a venturesome spirit dim lied into one of the large poplar trees near the house. He climbed to a distance of thirty-live or forty feet when the limb he was upon broke aud the boy fell to the ground. Ho was unconscious when taken home and remained in that condition two or three hours when he quietly passed away. All that surgical skill could do to save the younglife was done but the injury was so serious that all efforts were in vain. The accident ia a peculiarly Bad one and the nympathy of the entire com munity goes out in large measure to Mr. and Mrs. Huntington in this time of deep allliction. Wilson was their only child and the love and hope of the father aud mother centered around thu young life which had been such a sourco of pleasure and comfort during tiie eleven short years that lie had lived. His was an unusually tender and affectionate nature. His teachers at school, one and all, speak of his manliness aud kindly spirit, and tho earnest way he under took the taeke before him. With his playmates he wa9 a cherished com panion, eager to join tho sports of boy hood but never forgetting his courteous and gentlemanly behavior . To thu older people he was looked upon as a boy who in the days to come Mould develop those sterling qualities so pr'zed among all men. The writer of this article has been told many times 1 1 1 i h morning what a pleasure it afforded to note the affection ate feeling that Wilson constantly dis played towards his pareutw, and their loss and Bonow now has for its partial solace the remembrance of the bright, young life which came and lilessed (hem and left such u comforting memory. Words ure weak at a time like this mid avail but little us ministrations of comfort, but in thu days of loueliuess to follow it cannot be otherwise than that Mr. and Mrs. Huntington will be soothed aud sustained by the knowledge that in every home in The Dalles there is deep sympathy flowing towards them. Smli In lour Oliuuaii. All couutv warrants registered prior to June 3, 1890, will be paid at my office. Interest ceases after February. 'Jt, WOO. O. L. Piiii.i.ii'8, Couutv Treasurer. For the convenience of parties want ing Ice in the afternoons, the Stadelinan Ice Co. will carry a stock at their store, corner Third and Washington streets. Phone No, 107; long distance 183, "Ring 'em up." 18uitf The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been, iu use for over 30 years, has borne the slgnatnre of ami has been made under his per- jyT sonal supervision since its infancy. All Counterfeits, Imitations and" Just-as-good" are but; Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infimts and Children Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups It is Pleasant. 16 contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Naruotio mbstancc. Its ago is its guarantee. It destroys, Worms and allays Fcverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep The Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of Si The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THE CCNT.Un COMPANY, TT MURRAY STREET. HEW VO CITY. i Special Sale! ...Steel Ranges anil M Stoves... To reduce our large stock we will sell Stoves and Steel Ranges at Greatly Reduced Prices for a short time onlj See our goods and get our prices. . . . jvravs & chouie. K l'lngi-ain of Mciiuiriul Nvrvluvti. In compliance with memorial orders from national and department head quarters, the members of J. W. Nosmith Post, No. H'J, will assemblo tomorrow, Memorial day, May ISOtli, at post hull ut 1 o'clock p. m. The ladies of the W. 11. 0., Company 1), O. N. G., tho I), C. & A. O. band, uml all citizens who detire to join in memorinni of their dead, are cordially invited to join the procession to march from tiie comer of Court and Second street at - p. m. to tho G. A. H. ceme tery, where appiopriate memorial ser vices will be observed. On returning from the cemetery the members of the O. N, G,, the band, and comrades of the G. A. II, are requested to report ut post hull. Members of the post will assemble at the post hall at 7:110 p. m, and march to the M. h, church, where Hon. II, K, Iliiiitiuyton will deliver the memoiiul address. The W. I!. 0 Company I), O. N. G., ami ull citizens are cordially invited to hu proa cut, Special invitation is extended to nil ox-soldicis, sailors mid maiines of the late civil and Spanish-American war to join the G, A. It. in ull itho exeicises of the day. By command, H. L. Aiickn, Post Com'dr. O. II. Hmiw-N, I'oit Adjt. W uii tuil. A girl to do general house work. In quire ut the Dalles l.umheriint Co, 'a oflice. niuylllMw IJuir llnvditiiiu tfiilubly. Haldwiti's sparkling effervescent Cel ery Soda. A harmless and ell'ectlve cure for headache, uervousness, sleeplessness, brain fatigue. 10 and 25 cents, Sold by Clarke & Fulk, druggists, jai)240 Garden Hose Wq have laid in a largo stock of Garden lloso and are carrying the same brand of Hose that we havo boon carry ing for tho last (ivo years, i which is tho celebrated Mal ! lose Cross Rrnnd. Wo carry the sanio brand of lloso that' the Dalles Oily Fire .Depart ment, has boon using for tho last twenty years. The Mal tese Cross Brand is without doubt tho best grade of Host on tho market. Call and get our prices before buying. (daier & Benton Solo Agents". J)tt. O. T. SMITH, Osteopath. IUxiiiu lUuud II, (:iiii)iimii lllnck, Tiie I).illu, Ori'Ciui. TuoMlu)ti uml Ki'lilnya, 6 ;i. in, t. I'.', inuylb-iia