S&16 Of UnderiHUSlillS No donbt bnt yn surprised to read of thfs sale now ft m -r TTTl. x ri i mo"th ahead of its usiial time but you will agree with ua that 8HCL J? anCV W Jllte GOOdS. th0 ,,nnol, is move in the right direction. Regular stocks lriirtlturmnrn hnt inw nnntiln iavo luff ina.,. o . - i .Laru "irKer fresher and newer now than they would be in June. . to nTree ex ten Thave con mfi ? '1 i herea" ,n l",nlher monlh most interested In the purchase of these goods to SlMnta t0Wn l"U 8UmmBr- W ,mV Prl'pftre,, li8t f "t"1 tt"'at' h.t will prove profitable an vm K1 GOWNS. Women's extra quality Muslin, plain finish; rum or edged with luce; regu lur (ijc, 75o, .fl and $1.25 Sale 58c, 63c, 83c, 98c AIbo in this Bale Women's Gowns of the choicest and best materials, and of the best.and moBt popular ttvles, at prices ranging up to $5.00. Chemise, Corset Covers and Drawers offered at the same reduction. All Goods Marked In Plain Figures Underskirts. Women's Muslin Underskirts, dust ruf fle, cambiic flounce; regular 0!)c, 75c, $1.00. Sale 59c, 60c, 87c- Sale will commence Tuesday morning and continue for bal ance of week. Underskirts. Space will not permit the mention of many other exquisito designs wo are dis playing in Women's Underskirts at the present time. Prices run like this : $1 50, $1.75, $2, $2.25, $2.50, $3, $3.50, $4, $4.50, $5, $5.50 and $0 reduced to $1.29, $1.43, $1.09, $1.98, $2.08, $2.59. $2.97, $3.39, $3 97, $4 37, $4.89 and $5.20. CANVAS SHOES. Every man in town will want Canvas Shoes this summer. Our line of these shoes is comfortable in every way, and every shoe has a price attached that will please the buyer. Men's Khaki Lace $1.50 Men's Covert Cloth Lace 1.50 Men's Canvas Oxfords 1.50 Men's Khaki Bike Shoes 85 Bovs' Khaki Bike Shoes 75 You can buy a suit of clothes anywhere if you are easily satisfied and not particular about the styles and the fit. If you want clothes that will look right and keep their shape, come to us. Wo have the trade of the men who are hard to please. Our Hart, Schailncr and Marx suits will satisfy the most critical. Strictly all-worsted navy blue serge suits, Italian d -t r cloth and serge lined tJXVs All-wool Scotch cheviot suit in plain and striped 4i e goods, gray, blue and greenish colorings J) J. O Our best sack suits in imported Scotch cheviot and worsted goods comprises everything ClC Cfl tn COO CA that is new and up-to date.' 4I0.0U 10 4ZZ.uU Tor prices and styles see our display in window. Black Cat Brand Hose vi half hose in red, blue, tan and black. Positively the best value ever shown in The Dalles. -Q1 Guaranteed strictly fast colorings; per pair la.jG AMmMW HART, KHArrNI k MANX 9MW CHIOAOO Hart, Schaffner & Marx Tailor Made Clothes Balbriggan Summer Underwear in I "Arrow" brand collars, all new and fancy or plain, per garment 50c 1 stylish shapes 12c "E. & W." collars and cuffs; only, Our " Monarch " negligee shirts are place in town to get this well-known shown in large variety of styles and brand 25c colorings " $1 to $2 PEASE & MAYS. The Dalles Daily Chronicle. Till' ItS DAY - M AY 10, 1901 i I mm served Oysters ' At Andrew Keller's. j (5) MEASURER'S NOTICE. All Wasco County wurrantx reel 8 1 red )rlor to npti)inbnr 1, 1K!)7, will lie al! uu irtiRrutatlou nt uijr ottlctt, I lite rem cuh aftttr November B9, 1000. JOHN V. It AMI'SIllKK, County Treasurer. WAYSIDE GLEANINGS. Inquire at the Euro iiil4 -It J A girl wanted pean House. A fresh consignment of delicious craw ObIj is now on tap at the Owl. J Fait & Co., proprietors. inlG-tf. Wanted A womnn to do plain sewing. About three months' work on hand. Apply at this office. niM-lwk Parties wanting to lay in their cord wood for the winter will do well to see ue before buying. Maler & Benton, '-it Jay Bird bicycles at $115.00, and Pen nant bicycles, brand new while they lust, at !fl4.50. Maier & Benton. l.'J 3t Only eight counties have paid their state tax in full up to this time, two of the eight being Wasco and Sherman. Miss Louise Riutoul will teach a sum mer school near Baker City on the com pletlon of the public school term heroM The first sale of wool at Shuniko for the season took place Tuesday when n San Francisco buyer paid eleven cents u pound for a clip. Twenty-seven hundredths of an inch of ruin fell here since last night, and we could Btaud twouty-Beveu times as much without growling. " Don't overlook the special sale at Pease & Mays' on Saturday. Ladies' shopping bags retailing at 50, 75 uud if I, will be sold for 25 cents, a rare burguin. Wanted Ten homesteaders at once. The lust chance to get good timber claims near the Columbiu river. Ad dress II, W. L., care of the Chronicle office, ml 5-21 A number of horsemen from outside points, us far all' as Pendleton, were here this morning to utteud the speed inutinee. Like the rest of us, they are pleased, always, to give way to a good shower of ruin. O. J. Danty was arrested last night by Officer Cbaniplin and lodged in the calaboose till this morning, when he was Arraigned before Recorder Gates on a charge of being drunk and disorderly. He was fined $5. -,,,- The river this morning stood at 27.8 eet, a rite of oue foot and seven inches in twenty-four hours. The Dully River Bulletin predicts that the river will but it is probably reach 31 leet Friday safe to say it wont. Brent and Frank Driver recently sold their flouring mill at Tygh Valley to a man named Taylor, from Woodburn. Mr. Taylor went out from here today to his newly acquired property, in com pany with Bruce and Percy Driver of Wamic. It is very gratifying to learn that The DalleB hoBpital is now half filled with patients and, judging from the number of letters of inquiry that arc coming to Drs. Ferguson, there iB every prospect that it will be filled to its fullest capacity before many weekB. -The "benefit of clergy" waB a legal custom which allowed priests to with draw their cases from a secular to an ecclesiastical court. The evidence of being a clergyman was an ability to read. If a man could read only a single verse he was entitled to the benefit of clergy. The Dalles district Epworth league annual convention will be held this year on June 7-9, atGoldendale, Washington. The district embodies all the Epworth leagues In Kittitas, Yakima and Klicki tat comities, Washington, and tlioso of Wasco, Sherman, Gilliam and Morrow counties, Oregon. Another comical number on the Char acter concert program for next Tuesday night will be the Irish recitation in cos tume by a "Mick" who makes his first appearance on a Dalles stage that eveu ing. Keheareals for the "ekule" and """kfor the sketch "Per Telephone" take lace each evening. The owners of the Bailey Gat.ert have hired a force of men who will go to work in the morning, if the weather is favor able, to build an oflice and freight house . t fin on tne scow nseu as n tanning, me building will be 24x4-1. Work would have commenced this morning but for Ithe break in the weather. The new wooden pipe to be used as wuter malnB on the bluff arrived yester day from Olympiu and -a ill bo put down at once, as all the trenches have been dug. The iron main to bo uBed on the Second street extension, from Taylor street to the new flouring mill, has not yet arrived but is on tho way from the foundry in Alabama. Mr. Carnaby, of the American market, sayH the first man to bring strawberries to Tho Dulles market this your was John Bunn, whoso place 1b near tho 'old gar rison property. Mr. Bunu brought in nine boxes which he sold to tho Ameri can market, which retailed them at ilO and 35 cents a box. This was on the !)d of May. On the following, duy Alex Anderson brought in one box. Among the additions to our school Isws enacted by the last legislature Is a section that provides that "no dancing .shall be permitted in any ichoolroom ; jnor shall any furniture which is fastened l tka flnAP lui vamnvad . anil urlmAva- U till UWI . removes any school furniture for any other purpose than repairing shall be Vguilty of a misdemeanor, and shall be fined not less than $5 nor more than $10 for each offense." The rain during the early morning justified the postponement of the speed matinee, notwithstanding that the sky leared up somewhat before 2 o'clock. be long grass bordering on the race track, wet with rain, wou'd have made it very unpleasant, especially for lady spectators, who were expected to be present in large force. Let us hope for more favorable circumstances a week jfrom now. D. Ellis Caldwell, doctor of medical psychology, has secured rooms 10-11, Chapman block, and makes this un paralleled offer : "I will give free treat ments to all sufferers, until further notice. A few of the many diseases I treat and cure lung, asthma, kidney and liver, rheumatism, stomach and blood disorders and all female trouble. Exception : A charge will be made for the treatment of stammering and for private calls." Oflice hours 9 to 12; 1 tc 4. ml5-10 It is thought to be a rather remarka ble coincidence that the only rain we have had for many weeks should come on the day appointed for tho driving matinee by The Dalles Gentlemen's Driving Association. If these gentle men can make u perpetual contract with Mr. Jupiter PluviuB to have a good soak ing rain every time they make an ap pointment for a Bpeed contest, the peo ple will accept the disappointments with out u kick, provided always that the contract docs not run during a month or two in harvest. It is reported that the late Sam Bren nnn, who died two weeks ago and was the first inmate of the new I. O. O. F. cemetery, was burled with his feet to the west. The transposed position of tho remains is attributed to Grand Mas ter Welch, who assisted in tho burial and dedication ceremonies, and who, it is whispered, made the mistake pur posely in order thut Sam, when he heard Gabriel's horn, would arise and go towards ABtoria. As everyone would bo traveling in tho opposite direction, this would make Astoria u one-man town in the next world the same as it is in this, Fossil Journal. The Dalles, Portlund A Astoria Navi gation Company have just issued a very attiactive little twelve-puge pamphlet, entitled "Crags, Cascades and Cloud Capped Hills of the Columbia," descrip tive, as its name would imply, of the ever-varyiug panorama that meets the oyeB of a passenger on board one of the company's steamers from the moment the boat leaves the hurbor oi Portland till she touches her wharf at The Dalles. The pamphlet is generously illustrated with lialMoue pictures by Giflord, open ing with a magnificent viow of the port of Portland and closing with a surpass ingly beautiful picture of The Dalles, with Mount Hood lu The background. The body of the pamphlet contains a well-written description of the points of interest to the tourist and traveler. The work is mechanically perfect and does credit to the Chronicle office that produced it. Copies of the pamphlet will be sent free to any address on ap plication to W. C. Allawoy, general agent, The Dalles. It was quite a disappointment that the rain stopped the matinee this after noon and the affair had to be postponed till the same hour this day week. The disappointment, however, has not rallied our equanimity for if we had been compelled to choose between the rain and the matinee we should have chosen rain every time. Rain is always welcome here in May, and we never can have too much of it. But just at this particular time it is more than welcome for the ranchers within ten miles or less of the Columbia river were complaining, some of them, at least, that this is one of the dryest Mays thev have known for many a year. Chatham Island, lying off the coast of New Zealand, is peculiarly Bituuted, as it is one of the habitable parts of the globe where the day of the week changes. It is just in line of demarkution between dates. There at high 12 Sunday, noon ceases and instantly Monday meridian begins. Sunday comes in a man's house on the cast side and becomes Monday by the time it passes out the western door. A man sits down to his noon day dinner on Sunday, and it is Monday noon before he finishes it. There Satur day is Sunday und Sunday is Monday, and Monday becomes suddenly trans ferred into Tuesday. It is a good place for people who have lost much time, for by taking an early start they can always get a day ahead on Chatham Ieland. The Chicago Record-Herald asserts thut in tho opinion of ull engineers a sea level canal across the isthmus of Panama is the most desirable, although it would bo the most expensive. The greatest objection to it is the length of tune required for its construction, which is estimated at twenty years. It is be lieved that with the work already done a canal with locks across Panama could bo completed in six or seven years. Ten years is the time fixed (or the Nicaragua route. The reason that the sea leyel canal at Panama would take so long a time is that the space is limited and it would he possible to work only a small number of men und excavators. The J heavy digging is all at the water sheds, within the limits of a few miles, The Bailey Gatzert steamed up to her wharf iiear the Umatilla House Tuesday on her first trip to this city in fine style, All who went aboard were unanimous in the decision that she is a fine boat. She returned to Portland, leaving here at 4:20 o'clock p. m., arriving in Port land at 10:110. She brought ii good many round-trip passengers as well as through passengers. The schedule for leaving The DalleB is 4 p. m, every day except Mondays. There were a great number of our citizens at the lauding to see the new steamer arrive and leave. Wednesday she arrived at her dock here at 3:30 p. m. and left promptly at 4 p. in., passing from the locks at 6:20, mak ing the trip down in two hours and a half. "Kalnbow" Party. One of the pleasant parties of the sea- eon was given yesterday afternoon by Mrs. T. Baldwin at her palatial home on Fourth street, in this city. "Rainbow" was chosen, from which the ladiea were to form words, Mea dames E. C. Pease and E. L. Luedde munn winning the first and second prizes, respectively, being in the firtt instance a solid silver souvenir spoon, and the last an engraving. The mental task ended, the guests were asked to partake of a splendid luncheon of sandwiches, icecream, cake, etc., one of the novelties being a small bouquet at each place, snugly placed in an imitation flower pot, which proved to be delicious orange gelatine, covered with chocolate, in which the flower stem was ensconced. The decorations were very beautiful, und were of the rainbow. Mrs. Baldwin was assisted by Mes dames Douthit, Moody and Bettingen and Misses Rosemary Baldwin and Mary Mclnerny. Those present weie: Mesdames Mar killie, Doutnit, Kuck, H French, Van Norden, Mac Allister, Johnston, Wood, Schenck, Sheldon, Hosteller, C E Daw son, J W Dawson, Filloon, Bennett Tolmie, F Chrisman, Gleason, E French, D M French, Otis Patterson, Moody, Logan, Houghton, Croivo, J Weigel, H 1 S Wilson, Phillips S Bolton, Morris, McCoy, Geisendorffer, Fordyce, .1 Bonn, E M Williams, Bettingen, PeaBe, Lued- deuiaun, and Miss Mary Mclnerny, Don't. Don't expect a "cheap" enameled utensil to lust long. It doesn't. Don't think such u one can he kept clean. It can't. Don't believe tho "cheap" enamel isn't steadily crumbling away. It is. Don't imagine in using such you're not eating tho enamel. Ymi are. Don't figure you are ouviiiit money buying tho cheapest. Yon'ro not. Don't forget the "cheap" haa but one coutlng of enamel. JiiHt one. Don't fuil to recollect that imported Stransky steel-ware lasts for yonm. Don't buy that kind if health and economy are of no consequence, Don't try to get the genuine else where, for it's sold exclusively by mlO tf Mavh & Oitowu. When your iiuir appears dry and to have lost its vitality it wants something to give it life and vigor. We have whut the hair needs when it gets in that con dition. We have the Crown of Science Hair (SMfil Grower and Cocoanut CreamBHT Tonic. They will cure dam Mamm ruff and all scalp diseases. For sale at Frazer'a har bor shop. Price 50o and 75c a bottle, I'EKSO.NAL. MENTION, Mr. and Mrs. Wvres were in town to day from White Salmon. Mrs. T. W. Sparks arrived in town on the noon train from Portland. Duncan Chisholm, the sheep king of the Kent country, is in the city, the guest of the European House. Mrs. 09car Nelson, who has been vis iting trends and relatives in this city and vicinity for a month, returned to her home in Goldendale. Mr. NelBon is a typo on the Goldendale Sentinel. Look at these Bargains. A ranch 25 miles south of this city, 447 acreB. fenced and cross fenced, and consisting of six fields ; plenty of water in each field; 300 acres good tillable land, 150 in fall wheat; alt farm build ings; handy to school. Price, $5000; f 1500 cash, balance on time to suit purchaser, at G per cent interest. A fine little place, consisting of SO acres, three miles from tho Wasco county court house; plenty of water, and having the finest Bpring in Oregon on the place. Price, ifGOO. A place of 100 acres, 14 miles south of The DaMes; 40 acres in cultivation. This place will he sold for less than government price; must be sold at once. The above places are only a few of tho many snaps Dad Butts has in his hands for sale, mlO-22 Alumul Notice. There will be a special meeting of the Alumni association of The Dalles High school, at the residence of Mr. C J. Crandall, on Friday, May 17. 1001, at 8 o'clock p. m. The nreseuco of all members is desired, By order of 14-2. Emv.vnn D. Baldwin, Pres. Auction r Humea. On Friday, May 17th, ttiore wili D3 sol 1 at auction, ut Ward it Hobertfon'a stables, lu-twten 30 and 40 head oi horses weighing from 1100 to 1600 pounds each. The horses may be seen at tho sttblea on and after Wednesday, Sale will commenc. at 2 o'clock p. in. For further particulars n. quire of Jeff Dripps. ml4 3t You will not have boils if von take Clarke k FalkN sure cure (oi boils. CASTOR I A For liitautB nut Children, Be Kind You Have Always Bought Bears tho Signature of WM. MICHELL, Undertaker and Embalmer Cor. Third and Washington Sts. All orders attended to promptly. Long distance phone 433. Local, 102,