V V LOCAL AND tKKBONAL. -rr;. The other engine from the - Coyote wreck passed down this morning, look - ing like a late salmon. . , ; ' Schools close for Christmas Wednes day and will commence again January 5th. ; Three cars of cattle from La Grand were fed At the yards here, and shipped on to Portland yesterday. . : Filloon Bros, report their plow trade excellent, which' indicates that plowing is being carried on extensively. Mr. W. R. Kirk of the Brownsville woolen mills is in, the city, looking after wool. He-has come to the right spot. F. P. Taylor has a conple of Christmas porkers at bis shop that will weigh respectively 480 and 508 pounds. The court house, which was damaged by fire recently, is nearly repaired. We are" pleased to note some changes in the judge's desk. The wheat shipments from this point during the month of November amoun ted to 2,623,370 pounds or 1312 tons. The warehouses are still filled with it, but nong is exposed to the weather. The failure in Chicago of S. A. Kean, doing business under the firm name of 8 A. Kean dfc Co., yesterday disclosed liabilities to the amount of $1,400,000 with assets of $1,353,000. Mr. C. G. Abbott, the fine stock man, of Kingsley arrived here from' Portland, yesterday with some fine blood mares which he has had below during the summer. - . , stable every morning except Sunday at 7 o'clock. Miss Jessie McDonald, of Grant, came down Saturday and -was the guest of Mrs. Corson. . Mr. A. C. Sheltpn has sold his inter est in the drug business at Goldennale to I C. Richards. The total receipts at the recent church fair were about $500, which means that it was a magnificent success. The physicians of the city complain because it is distressingly heatthy, for which everybody is thankful. It is raining in the Willamette valley and snowing on Mt. Hood. Strange that every time the valley takes a bath the old mountain puts on a white shirt. The holidays seem to have stirred up our secret societies, nearlv all of which are increasing their membership. . We understand a lodge of the A. E. O., will bo organized here in a few days. The outside of the court house is again in good repair and the inside is getting a general overhauling. The plastering in the court room was ruined by the fire .and is being replaced. The work will be finished in a couple of weeks, at most. The East Oregonian thinks theCHKON icxe a venturesome youth to begin life In The Dalles, and that judging from other ventures in the newspaper line in these parts tt will not get sufficient support to keep it alive. We are glad to inform the brother that it already has that, and it has'nt began to canvass its territory yet. Thank you brother, we are all right and hope these few lines may find vou en- The churches .;of the citv were well filled yesterday.? At' the Congregational joying the same blessing, or words to SundajShctol Prof. Barrett made some that effect. - .- - liveli jremarkaVhick were well received ' The ehute. BrWe. by the scholars and teachers. dUor of Chr(mic The -Dalles Ire Company is the only What right or where is there a law one so far that has put up-ice enough to giving Sherman county the privilege of Won't Sit 1b the Front Bow For Rose bud of Karrimfe Pretty Souvenirs. What Miss Potter Has Done Will Wo men Combine? Wedding Gowns.- The recent appointment of two wo men as ticket agents at the isoerum place station of the Kings County Ele vated railway has led others to apply for places. They ore told there are no vacancies at present, but their names often are taken and reserved for future reference. In the absence of General Manager William T. Goundio a repre sentative of the company said recently that positively none of the men would be turned away to make room . for women. "But," it was asked, "is it to be the rule hereafter that women will be ap pointed to fill vacancies as they may occur?" "There Is no reason why women should not be appointed," was the reply, 'We believe they will prove honest and capable." The official, however, would not com mit himself as to whether or not this was to be the future policy of the com pany. There are drawbacks to the em ployment of women. A ticket agent on the elevated roads, as everybody knows, has -often to deal with some pretty ugly customers. The two women who are now actum as ticket asrents are not de terred by ttiis consideration. Of the two female ticket agents, one goes on duty at 5 a. in. and stays until 3 p. m. ten hours. She is relieved then by the other, who remains until 1 o'clock the next morning ten hours. They will be expected to work seven days in the week, the same as the men. He said they understand this, and had offered no objection. It is said the road had economy in view when it introduced flu, fnnAvafinn TVia -man Am na.id S112 per week, whereas the women receive $9. A saving of $3 a week out of tiach of the eighty-eight ticket agents on the road would mean 364 a week for the owners. New York Sun. LIC HiHi iL-fwuuj-vr ADMINISTRATORS. supply all customers for the entire sea son. The fact that it did this entitles it to confidence. " ' " The toboggan slide looks exceedingly lonesome with the green grass growing around it. ' It may have a season of use fulness jet, but we are pleased to know that it must necessarily be short. The Diamond flouring mill was tem porarily; closed down last Saturday, on account of the head miller's sickness. Mr. Curtiss expects to start up the mill in a few days. He has a good supply of flour and cracked wheat On hand. The company's boats are still making daily trips from . Portland to Bonneville, so passengers? desiring to go by boat through the grandest part of the Colum bia canyon, can do so by transferring at that point. President Harrison has signed the to bacco rebate bill which was omitted in the McKinley bill by the enrolling clerk. This will' be good news to the manufac turers and dealers. Mrs. George Stapleton, Mr. Shelton and Mr. A. B. Leveratt came over from Goldendale Monday, and went to Van couver. , We understand Mr. Stapleton has formed a partnership with Mr. Abe Miller in the law business at Vancouver and will make that his future home. ' A deed from the state of Oregon to Hampton, Kelley for forty acres of school land, the southeast quarter of the north west quarter of section sixteen, township . five, south of range ten, east, was filed . this morning. . " ; : ! ' - ' ' We 'understand a proposition to locate - a woolen mul here has been made by v solid business parties in the East. They ask that our citizens take stock to the amount of half the cost of the plant. The matter is before the Board of Trade and we will give particulars as soon as i is made public property. . The subscriptions to the daily are coming in so fast that it is almost im possible for our . carrier to get his route book in shape. vThis will be done In a few days and then every paper will be delivered, We ask bur patrons' induU gence for; a short time until this can be accomplished. ; . ' Cardinal i Gibbons has sent a letter of sympathy on the persecution of the Rus sian Jews for publication, and says: "Friends of humanity must deplore these persecutions. For my part I can not connive how Christians can enter tain other than kind sentiments toward the Hebrew race when it is considered how much we are indebted to them." Some days ago the .Oregonian con tained an article on Ghost dances and the Messiah craze, in which the old dreamer and medicine man, "Smohol la," ws-called a Sioux Indian. Smo holla was a Columbia river Indian, who inhabited Jthe ..country around White Bluffs, and was a man of great influence as a dreamer. A pleasant surprise party was given Mr: and Mrs. si. i J. Wiley one evening this week,' the occasion being the second anniversery of their wedding. A large number of their young friends called on them taking them entirely' by surprise, but they had a splendid time just the Bame. , Prof. P. S. Barrett, at one time pro fessor of our public schools, is in the city visiting old-time friends. Prof. Barrett hails from Baker City, Oregon. The professor for the past few years has . been living ia -Lincoln, Nebraska, but his love for the genial climate of Oregon overpowered him and he returned to make this state his permanent home. . The school exhibition at Hood River is said to have been one of the finest things of the kind ever given. Prof. P. A. Snyder and Miss Cora Butler, in charge of the school have done exceedingly good work, and the way they trained the children for the exhibition Bhowed deep interest and much patience and hard work. Their services are thororoughly appreciated and Hood River will hardly let them go. . , ;. Who says Oregon is not a wonderful country, especially its climate T We saw on the Congregational church pulpit, yes ; terday, a beautiful boquet of roses, Jac quiminot, Safrona and Mad Raduts, which were plucked from the bushes out of doors in one of our citizen's residence grounds, they reminded us of springtime when every: filing ie clad in robes of beauty. -Just think .of it, in latitude 45 degree and 36 seconds and the mer cury 60 degrees above zero on December 21st; while in the eastern states, old Boreas and the fierce wintry storms are stilling lifes blood. Who would not live in Oregon? . making the road to the free bridge across the Deschutes river a toll road? Before Sherman county was cut off the road and bridge were built by Wasco county funds and by the Board of Trade 'funds of Dalles City. There is something wrong somewhere ; there is an injustice done to the people of both sections, and should be remedied. Taxpayer. ' . Much complaint is being made con cerning Sherman county's action in al lowing toll to be collected on the road leading to the new bridge across the Deschutes. The road in this county leading to the bridge and the bridge "are free, but Sherman county allows a Mr. Jones to collect toll on the road the other' side of the bridge, presumably for the purpose of keeping the road in re pair. It looks like folly for Sherman county having so valuable a piece of road,' to allow it to be turned into a toll road, thus compelling the people who paid the taxes, and furnished the money to build it, to pay tolls for using their own property. It is unjust to her own citizens and doubly unjust to citizens of this county who keep their portion of the road free. 1 In this connection we would say that our portion of the road leading to the bridge needs putting in shape and needs it badly. .The atten tion of the Board of Trade is called to this matter and we hope they will ex amine into it at their meeting to-night. It assisted materially in building the bridge and it is an entirely proper mat ter for them to take cognizance of. ' WoaH 81t la the Front Bow. The custodian of the large hall in Cooper Union undertook to perform a gallant act on the occasion of the Munic ipal league mass meeting, and he is now wiser in the ways of the fair sex than he was. Before the clamoring crowd in front of the building was admitted to the hall he told his assistants and the policemen on guard that he wanted the front row of seats reserved for ladies. He was very particular on that point and admonished the police over and over again not to let any men occupy those front seats unless they escorted ladies. The wielders of the persuasive night stacks said all right. Then the doors were opened and the rush came. Of course, every man and boy scurried down in front and swarmed over the front row of seats. Several seated themselves in that forbidden quarter, but they were unceremoniously expelled. It cost the police and the custodian and the custodian's assistants a great deal of trouble to keep that front row vacant, but they succeeded. Several ladies entered the hall and were politely invited to "step right down in front. They were shown to the front row, but after glancing at the empty seats they turned back and found other places not bo far forward. Not one woman could be induced to sit down in that front row. The gallant custodian, was sorely puzzled, and finally he mustered suffi cient courage to ask one lady who de clined to accept his invitation to sit in the front row why she objected. "I don't want to sit there," she exclaimed impatiently, "because there is no place to put my feet." New York Times. The Grange Store. M. W. Freeman, one of the stockhol ders of the grange store to be established at The Dalles, gave us a call yesterday. He is traveling in the interest of the store soliciting stock. The company is organizing with a stock of $4,000 the greater part of which was taken by gran gers in Wasco and Sherman counties. The first day of Mr. Freeman's work among us was not in vain, and there is no doubt of his ability to get the requi red amonnt subscribed. The stock holders meet in The Dalles January 27, to decide on their course of business. The store is bound to be a success as it will be the centre for about 1000 grangers besides otners that will patronize it. If the stock is not all taken we would ad vise all brother grangers to take a share immediately. Klickitat Leader. The Missionary Concert. " The Congregational chureh was well filled Sunday night, it being the occa sion of the home missionary concert. The exercises were began by the rendi tion of '-The Lord is my Shepherd," by the choir consisting of Mrs. Bardon, Mrs. B. S. Huntington, Miss Atwater and Miss Crandall, with Mrs. Bonny as me organist oi tne evening. . JSext in order came the reading of an essay by Miss Annie Roberts, in a well modulated voice and a pleasing manner, entitled "A Strange Personal Experience, or what I give I keep, and what I keep I lose." The essay was written by Mrs. P. G. Barrett of Hood River and was the fea ture of the evening. If space can be found during the week in the columns of the Chronicle the essay will appear. Mrs. E. M, Wilson then took the plat form to present the cause of the Congre gational church at Condon and made a spirited and interesting appeal for aid which met with a generous response in money by the audience. A hymn by the choir was followed bv a short and eloquent address by the pastor. The exercises throughout the evening were varied and interesting and we onlv re gret that we have not more space for a report. , Masonic Election. - ' At the regular communication of DaHes Chapter of Royal Arch Mason No. 6 held at Masonic hall Dec. 17th. the following officers were elected to serve for the en suing Masonic year. R. F. Gibons, H. P; C. C. Hobert, K ; E. Shannon, S ; Thos. Olsen, Cap. of H ; W. S. Myers. P. S; John Marden, R. A. Cap; 1. 1. Burget, G. M. of 3rd V; G. V. Bolton, G. M. of 2nd V; D. L. Cates, G. M. of 1st V ; G. A. Liebe, Treas; Geo. Knaggs, Sec; R., G. Closter, Sentinel. Installation Jan. 12th 1891. For Rosebuds of Marriage. Let me venture a few little points to those of my girls who tmnf& the summer have worn a bright ring on their third finger: My dear, don't let the man to whom yon are engaged to be married pay any of the expenses of your living or trous seau until you are his wife. A calico dress and contentment are much more to be desired than a fine silk one garnitured with scandal. Dont complain to the man to whom yon are engaged of the different mem bers of your own family; it is not a good preface to matrimonial blia. Don't write silly letters to him, even if he is fond of affection given in that way. Let it be by word of month rather then with pen and ink. Don t expect mm- to love you as no man has ever loved before. The methods of loving are very much the same all the world over. Be satisfied if yon have got a good, honest love. Dont believe that he is a combination in beauty of all the ancient gods, of all the gallant knights and of all the great statesmen, but conclude that he is a gen tleman, and that should be your ideal. . Dont believe that he is thinking of yon every hour of his life. . He is not; be satisfied if he is working away, with every now and then giving a thought to the girl for whom he is making a home over which he expects her to preside as a loving, thoughtful wife. Ladies' Home Journal. Pretty Souvenirs. A lady who has just returned from the seashore showed me some souvenirs of her vacation. Among them were several jewel receptacles made out of the shells of the sea urchin. Three of these shells, about four inches across and of a delicate lavender, were lined with pale pink silk and fastened to triangular pieces of heavy cardboard with beveled edges, thus TrjnVmg a dainty addition to a bu reau or toilet table. To prepare these the opening was made larger by carefully cutting or breaking away the shell; then a small piece of cardboard was placed iu the bottom of each, and the shells were fastened by a few stitches to the trian gular piece. Some delicate cotton was sprinkled with sachet powder and placed - - An Aiiauimaiod Fountain. The apparatus employed in the electric fountain in Lincoln park, Chicago, is quite simple. A number of arc lamps with horizontal carbons and each provid ed with a parabolic reflector are located in a vault or cavern beneath the fountain pool. Openings covered by plate glass and inclosed by brick spouts, permit of the upward projection of the light into the streams of water and spray. By means oi colored glass slides interposed Detween the lamp and the lower open ings in the spouts a great variety of beau tiful combination effects are secured. Western Electrician. - ' Strange Searches tor Heirs to Lsrr Fortunes In Brooklyn A Strange Dis appearance The Fond la Charge of the State Treasurer Keeps Xnereaslng. Speaking roughly there is at the pres ent time over $5,000,000 in hard cash in the hands of the various state treasurers in this country awaiting the claim of legal heirs. This large amount has been deposited with the treasurers from time to time by public administrators. ' Of this $5,000,000 the New York state treas urer has about $250,000, and although he pays out now and then certified claims from the administrative fund it keeps steadily increasing in a ratio with the population of the state. The public administrator of Brooklyn furnishes the following cases from his record books: Thomas Wilson sold newspapers in Brooklyn's Twentieth ward for a gener ation. His route was an aristocratic one, comprising such streets as Clinton and Clermont avenues, in which are the homes of millionaires. He peddled his wares in all sorts of weather, appeared on the streets in rain and shine every day and far into the night, and even made a feeble attempt to brave the fury of the big buzzard of March 12, 1888. He had no friends, no confidants, no as sociations, and he lodged in the attic of a miserable tenement house. One day in the spring of 1889 his legs refused to carry him along his route, and he went for succor and shelter to the Brooklyn hospital. Here he was warned that he had but a short time to live and was told to com municate with his friends, if he had any. Old Tom shook his head negatively and died that night without making sign. Five bank books were found under his pillow, showing . three or four thou sand dollars to his credit insdiffarent in stitutions. The administrator could learn nothing about him in the banks, where he had told different stories about him self. It is thought he was of Swedish origin and that his real name was Nil- son, not Wilson. , TBB CASE OF LANGZEB. Then there was Joseph Langier, same common enough in the south of France, in Marseilles especially. Langier was also a ' solitary man, living or. rather, grubbing in an Atlantic avenue garret.' He paid the janitor a dollar a month for his miserable room. He went out and he came in, spoke to nobody and answered questions by phaiHng or nod ding his head. . One day he went forth for the last time staggered and fell at the next corner, was taken into a saloon, thence conveyed in an ambulance to Long Island College hospital, where he died after a few hours. In the pockets of his coat were found bonds, mortgages and bank books worth $17,000 to the owner, also a will drawn up in excellent legal phraseology and written in a beautiful hand. His signa ture was affixed to the will, but it lacked the names of witnesses. So careful had he been in preparing the instrument that he affixed an explanatory . para graph, underlined in red ink. In a codi cil he revokes the will, so that he really died intestate. Rumor says Langier's heir is a nephew bring in Marseilles, a Bister's son, whom, if the administrator could locate, would inherit $17,000. William Cato is another of the great intestate for whose heirs the adminis trator is looking. ' Cato was no tramp or news vender: - He was a marine in the service of the' United States, and had been one for such a length of time, that he had only a vague memory of what he had been before. His comrades, had an idea that he was Scotch, and that is all they could tell about him. He died sud denly while still in the service, leaving $1,000 or so he had saved out of his small pay. ...... Patrick Cresham uvea on Third ave nue, near D arty-sixth street, aontb Brooklyn, and was in good circum stances. His wife died in the spring of and the loss drove him crazy. A week later he committed suicide. He left a good deal of property to which his little 4-year-old daughter was heiress. His brother, a well to do New York car riage builder, was the legal guardian of the little girl, but there happened just then to be in the house a sister of the child's mother. She was on a visit from Ireland, and had arrived just in time to see her sister die. The night of the day Cresham committed suicide the aunt took the little girl stealthily out of her bed and out of the house, went over to New York, and on the morning follow ing sailed for Queenstown in the Um bria, Mr. Cresham, the uncle and legal guardian, reported the theft to the pe nce, and they cabled to Queenstown to have the aunt arrested on her arrival in that port. Now, it happened that owing to a great storm the TJmbria could not put in at Queenstown, and so went di rectly on to Liverpool, where no police were waiting for a handsome lady of the name of Miss Crowe and her 4-year-old niece. . Miss Crowe and the child are still in Europe, and the legal fight has not yet been decided. New Tk Tele gram. same color. Then he led them to a pool i of water and bade them jump in and j bathe. One of them, obeying at once, leaped in in advance of his fellows, and 1 came out clean and white. The other hesitated, but one soon fol-! lowed the first. When he went in the j water had become somewhat stained ' and he came out copper colored. j Then the third man went in. By that time the water of the pool had become black, and he was consequently black , when he had bathed. Thus it happens that there are white -men, red men and black men in the ' world. Then the Great Spirit laid down three packages before the three men, which ' contained their future fate. Out of pity ; for the black man he permitted him to ; have his first choice of the parcels. The black man, without hesitation, took the largest of the parcels; the red j man, whose turn was next, took the , next largest parcel, and the white man ' got the remaining one, which was very i Then the men opened their packages. That of the black man was found to j contain shovels and other implements of ' labor; the red man's contained bows and ! arrows, and the white man's small par- j eel consisted of pens, ink and tools for j fine, light work. I From that time on each man made ! use of the tools he had chosen. Cor. Youth's Companion. Kew York's Ink Industry. New York is entitled to consideration as the leading city of the Union in the manufacture of ink. Fifteen years ago English ink controlled the market. Since then the American article has been gradually pushing the British product out of the market by its superiority and excellence. There is a great difference between the wholesale and retail price of the fluid. A little bottle of ink con taining two ounces, for which a person pays five cents, costs at the factory one cent. The bottles are really more valu able than the ink they contain. The best black ink is made from the gall nut and iron. The gall nut is fouud in Arabia, ' and is about the size of a hickory nut and grows on a small, scrub by oak. A large majority of the col ored inks ure made from the extracts of coal tar. " Tun most expensive colored completely cased in silver and the silver life's monotone. , She learnta oft the ancient pOs And psBssta by. Yet I bare never seen her smfle, Nor caught her eye. Her bands are very white and small, And those who know Bay thja an Fever's brow they fall Like flakes of snow. They say her voice is soft and sweet In Sorrow's ear, Wooing the sool to Mary's feet From doubt sod fesr. ' Ah, me! And yet her youthful face dad though tt be ' In cold religion's saintly grace ' Is fair to see. Her eyes, so modestly cast down. So introspect, . Could light a smile or arm a frown With dire effect I Tis just such orbs that steadiest burn With passion's fire; Can all the tears in Virtue's urn Quite quench desiref Her mouth is red, and shaped for bliss; It seems a loss That it should only kiss and Idea Her rosary cross. Oh, Little Nun! Tbou art too fair 1 It had sufficed If one leas sensuously rare Had wed thy Christ. ;'' The devil oft in form of saint , Entraps the eyes; - - Thou art a soul without attaint In devil's guise! . George Horton in Chicago HerakL 4 The Decoration of Prayer Books. The prayer book that the Vanderbiltej the Astors and other families use for ev ery day, that is to say every Sunday oc casion, costs about $50 each. Mrs. An son Phelps Stokes has just ordered two $80 silver bound prayer books, and theae will be given to her two daughters on the occasion of her silTer wedding. Prayer books are used now a great deal for presents in society, and particularly for wedding presents. The really cor rect thing, it may be mentioned, is a small prayer book bound in white moroc co, with elaborate silver trimmings. The resulting ornamentation is very rich ana very nanasome. me -aesigns are either flowers or allegorical figures that have a quaint and mediaeval character. The work is open work that shows the cover of the book, and this supplies a very effective groundwork. In some cases, however, the book is Fafffi Implements and Mieleso THE DALLES, OR- ; UNCLE SAM GANG PLOW. I We call Special Attention to our Stock of Gang j Plows, which are Uneqrialed in this market. Sold j on easy terms, and a Liberal Discount given to Spot Cash Buyers. Call and Examine our Stock. , ; FILLOON BROS. 0 COMPLETE STOCK OF VV ink used for ruhBsr is carmine, made from the cochinerj bug. The cocaineal bug is raised v.-U'i much cars in Mexico. The dye from th:s bug is worth V, a pound. i.'iuce cochiufal dyo is becom ing scarce ink lnuers are compelled to use an inferior red color from coal tar. The ten different colored inks are all made from the extract of coal tar. White ink is made for writing on black paper, but the demand for it is not very great. New York Telegram. A Line Throwing Gun. Another addition to the bat of recently invented life saving devices is the shoul der line throwing gun, invented by Capt. IArcy-lrving, of the KngHsh royal navy. The invention consists of a shoulder gun, having the cop or coil of line, suspended in a case, carried under the breech of the gun. A rod is inserted in the barrel, the fare end of the rod being connected with the end of the line, which is in the center of . the cop. The line is 144 yards long, and the charge of powder used is two drama. Upon the gun being fired at a high elevation the rod is projected up ward and forward, carrying the lwe trail ing after it. The object is, of course, to land the line over the ship or other object. the rod dropping behind it. By this means a rope can be made fast to the tail end of the line by the succoring party, and be hanlen on board by those in distress. New York Commercial Advertiser. is very "artistically worked. There is still a slight demand for ivory covers, but the demand is so slight it is scarcely worth mentioning. The covers of the prayer book are embellished with a silver cross if the morocco is retained on one side and the bride's initials on the other, The books themselves are generally of English make and what is known as the Oxford edition. The type is beautiful ami the binding is in the highest style known to the art. ' , In the original covering the Bible or prayer book is about the cheapest book of its quality that can be found. After its manipulation by a fashionable jew eler it is about the dearest. A pretty cook mars usually ' accompanies the prayer book composed of three white nbbons. They are marked with a heart, a cross and an anchor, signifying, of course, faith, hope and charity. New York World. An Ugly Habit. I wonder -what saccharine or succulent qualities inhere in wooden toothpicks that so many persons cling so persistently to those unlovely little instruments long after they have performed the service for which they were designed. ' On any ele vated railway train ones sure to see one or two men with toothpicks protruding from their hps, as if to advertise to the world a recent breakfast. Not all of those who make this exhibition are ill dressed or boorish, and one is left to con jecture in vain why a particularly private portion of the toilet is thus thrust upon public attention. New York Star. Call for Meeting. All members of the Patrons of Hus bandry, Farmers' Alliance and Knights of labor are requested to attend a meet ing at The Dalles, Tuesday, December 30, at 7:30 p. m., in the Knights of Pythias hall. .' By order of Joint Committee. The revenue cutter Rush, late from a northern Pacific tour, brought home a walrus skin over fourteen feet long. It was captured by some junior officers on Walrus island, and will be sent to the Smithsonian institution at Washington, where, after being properly prepared, it will form one of the Alaskan exhibits at the World's Fair. A Bridge to North Dalle. There now seems no doubt but that the great bridge which- is to cross the Columbia river between North Dalles and The Dalles will be built before high water is again reached as most of the money has been raised. For catarrh snuff up considerable salt and water from the hollow of the; hand every morning. Salt and water nsed as agargle just before going tobtd strength ens the throat and helps to prevent bron chial troubles. - It is alao excellent for sore throat. It Is Hard. ' 'Why don't yon shave yourself and save time and money . 'Because I cant bear to cut an old ac quaintance. lafet ..... Mrs. Tanderbllt's Change of Heart. Mrs. Frederick Vanderbilt is credited with an effort to bring back summer country life in her world to the simplic ity which means summer rest. ' Last season at Newport she wore cool and simple toilet -with few ornaments, she turned ' her children out to play in the plainest and most serviceable garments, she invited guests to quiet pleasures, and set her whole life to the key of un ostentatious comfort and leisure. ' It is said that her missionary labors resulted in some conversions from the - painful worship of Mammon. Harper's Bazar. ' ...A Girl at the Throttle. Miss Nellie Tetreau, who resides at Lumpkin, has proved herself an expert at handling the lever on one of the im mense road engines used for hauling logs into the saw mills.'' Miss Tetreau is not more than 14 years of age, and her courage in the line mentioned is something remarkable. She steered the mammoth engine and wagon through the woods and up and down the Tiillg with a dexterous hand. She surprised the men at the mill with her aptness, and conducted the engine as well as any man could. Oro villa (CaL) Mercury. A Story of BehlUer. A curious incident is handed down from the boyish life of Schiller. One day, in a tremendous thunderstorm, the family gathered together in ill disguised terror. But Fritz was missing, and the father, alarmed fcr his safety, sought farm in vain in all the rooms of the house. He went outdoors to search for the tenant, and to' his surprise found him perched on a branch of a solitary tree, eagerly watching the heavens and the flashes which lighted np the gloom. He was wholly indifferent to the rain, which Lad wet him to the skin, and to the dan ger be incurred. To the sharp reproof of the father the boy replied with a glowing face: ' "The lightning is so beautiful I wished to see where it came from." Boston Herald. VThj Bojrs Are Fond of Nature. I have often read in stories of boys who were fond of nature, and loved her sub limity beauty, but I do not believe boys are ever naturally fond of nature. They want to make use of the woods and fields and rivers; and when they become 1 they find these aspects of nature endeared to them by association, and so they think they were dear for their own sakea, but the taste for nature is as purely acquired as the taste for poetry or the taste . tor tomatoes. I have often seen boys wondering at the rainbow, but it 'was wonder, not admiration, that moved them; and I have seen them excited by a storm, but because the Btorla was tre mendous, not because it was beautiful. W. V. UojveUs. George William Curtis' Wife. I very often see a matronly looking woman with a bright, intellectual face on Broadway, m the vicinity of Wash ington square. Her manner is simple ana uigninea, ana altogether she handsome and agreeable. She is rather old fashioned in her ideas of dress. Her gowns have all the quaintness of twenty- five or thirty years ago, and this rather pleasing effect is heightened by the man ner in which she wears her hair, pressed flat on top and folded neatly down the sides of her head. Who is she? The wife of George William Curtis. She was a Miss Shaw before her marriage to the brilliant litterateur. . Mrs. Curtis leads a remarkably simple lite at her pleasant home on Staten Island. The house is a neat frame cottage. It is surrounded by spacious grounds4n which are many fine old trees. A winding drive leads np from the gate to the house. The appointments of the interior betray at once the literary man and cultured scholar. The house is furnished in ex treme good taste, and an air of refine ment and culture is prevalent everywhere within. Mrs. Curtis is not known in the literary world except as the wife of Mr, Curtis. She very rarely goes into society, although she has friends by the score. Mrs. Curtis' pleasant and genial appear ance does not indicate that she has found the companionship of a literary man irk some or uncongenial. New York Cor. Springfield (Mass.) Homestead. Corporations Were Ever the Same. 'Horporations have nd souls" is a much older expression than most people im agine. It originated with Sir Edward Coke, who in the Sixteenth century was considered one of the best legal writers of the age. He says, in one of his treat ises, "Corporations cannot commit tres pass, nor be outlawed, nor excommuni cated, for they have no souls." Detroit Free Jtress. T.llllan Bnssell's Panghter. Little Lillian Russell, aged 6, is a miniature copy of her beautiful mother. She has the same hair and eyes, but her complexion is tanned by the jolly out door life she has led. She was never separated from her mother until the last two years, and as a natural consequence of her trips on "the road" she has strong theatrical preferences. She is now at the Sacred Heart acade my, where her mother visits her every week, and takes her home occasionally for a few days. She considers life ' a dreary waste unless she attends a mati nee frequently, and her interest in the play and criticism of the characters are extremely refreshing. She is a warm admirer of Little Lord Faun tleroy. New xors. ljener. Mourning Watches. ; - Black onyx has lately been utilized in making cases for mourning watches; they are usually open faced. Chains composed of oblong blocks of onyx joined by slender golden links accom pany the watches. Jewelers' Weekly. . It is a curious and inexplicable thing that a cigarette or a pipe will spoil the flavor of the best cigar that was ever made. All smokers are aware of this. A man with a cigarette can spoil the comfort of fifty cigar smokers, and a pipe of strong tobacco will ruin the flavor of every cigar within reach. ' Female Artists la Paris. - Mme. Leon Bertaux, president of the Association of Women Painters and Sculptors, supported by many men of note, is trying to obtain the admission of female students to the classes and privi leges of the Ecole des Beaux Arts, in ran8. Several of the members of the council of the school favor this enlarging of their borders, and the minister of fine arts has promised his consent, so that the famous museum is likely to echo to the footsteps of that pernicious Bister hood which its founders counted it very stun o the conscience to keep out. Paris Letter. , Colors of Noted Writers. I notice that the majority of literary ladies seem to affect certain colors for their gowns. Mrs. Ella Dietz Clymer is generally in browns, Mrs. Mary Bryan in pink or black, Mrs. Hodgson Burnett often wears crimson, Mrs. Frank Leslie prefers handsome black costumes; Miss Gilder, v brown or gray; Mrs. Louise Chandler Moulton, a light gray, and Mrs. Bose Hawthorne Lathrop, black velvet Probably they study what is suitable to their special style, for they always look becomingly dressed. New x era star. Germany employs 5,500,000 women in industrial pursuits, England 4,000,000, France 3,750,000 and Austro-Hungary about the same number, and still women are the weaker sex, the lesser half, the clinging pensioners cn man's beneficence. Sewer Gas in the Household. It is a well known fact that many peo ple, on their return to the city after spending the grimmer in . the country, are soon taken down with fever. Some of the reasons for this are known to us, but probably there are many yet to be discovered. An unmistakable cause is found in many city homes which are shut up for months, during a portion of which time they are filled with sewer gas. Very few, indeed, have the traps under their sinks sealed up when they leave home, nor are they filled during their absence. Of course the water in inem soon evaporates, ana there is no longer any obstruction against the free passage through them of gas from the sewer. With this pervading a house there is certainly a bad outlook for its returning tenants. In such a condition it ought to undergo fumigation; if that remedy is not applied then all that is left is thorough airing of all the rooms and everything therein, with curtains up to admit every possible ray of sunlight. And the longer . the windows are kept open the better. A house infected by sewer gas is scarcely likely to be made safe, even by thorough ventilation, un less it is prolonged for days and days. Boston Herald. Stoves, Ranges, Tinware, House Furnishing Goods, Carpenters, Blacksmiths' and Farmers' Tools, Fin3 Shelf Hardware, Cutlery, Shears, Scissors, Razorc, Carvers and Table "Ware, and Silverware. Pumps, Pipe, Plumbers' and Steam Fitters' Supplies, Pack ing, Building Paper, Sash, Doors, Shingles, Terra Cotta Chimney, Builders', Hardware, Lanterns and Lamps. 4 : SPECIAL SND EXCLUSIVE AGENTS FOR Charter Oak Stoves and Ranges, Acorn' Stoves and Ranges, Bellville Stoves and Ranges, Boynton Furnaces, R. J. . Roberts' "Warranted", Cutlery, ' Meriden Cutlery and Table Ware, The Grand Oil' Stoves, Anti Rust Tinware. Goulds and Moline Power and Hand Pumps.' . v All Tinning, Plumbing, Pipe Work and Repairing, Will; be Done on Short Notice. ' ' ; ABRAMS & STEWART. 174, 176. 178. 180. SECOND STREET. Brooks & Beers, The Dalles, Or. - . JOBBERS j-1T1D 3DE.IL,BILS I2T : Hardware, Flour, Bacon, Etc. Headquarters for . T:as, Coffees, , Dried Fruits, Canned Goods Etc New Brands of Choice Gro ceries Arriving Daily. Hay Grain and Produce. Of all Kinds Bought, and Sold at Retail or in Car. Load Lots', at Lowest Market Rates. Free deli v-' ery to Boats and Cars and all Parts of the City.! . ; 30Q AND 394 8ECONB 8TRBBT. " - Snipes&Kinersly, Dealers In HieacLm Dru ggists Piis, Oils, il Wire Gib, COAL and PINE TAR, 1 Artists Material, mpoPted Wet and Domestic (Jigafg. 129 Second Street, The Dalles, Orn. C. STUB LI NG, ' ' PROPRIETOR Vv.'' The Gef mania Beef Hall. Keeps on Draught COLUMBIH.BReWERYBeER. WINES, LIQUORS AND KEV WEST CIGARS. New Umatilla House, THE DALLFS, OREGON. ,, .- . , ' HAND LEY & SINNOTT, PROP'S. , THE LARGEST AND FINEST HOTEL" IN 0RIG0N. Ticket and Baggage Office of the O. E. & N. Company, and offie f the Wetem '-. ' Un ion Telegraph Office are in the Hotel. . ; Fire-Proof Safe for the Safety of all Valuables. A.