- OBEOOS FRIDAY, - APRIL 17. 1891 LOCAL AND PKBSONAL. : Arbor day was observed by the schools " of this city ' with appropriate exercises . T. M. Thompson of Dufur and S. lleeks of Moaier were in the city Satur day. '- " The funeral of Mrs. Henry Gardner of . Dufur, aged about 45 years, took place there Friday of last week. ." Sherman countv is the first countr in 'Eastern Oregon to send in its fall quota .'"of stateAax for the year 1890. : H. Herbring, the dry. goods man, to- day removed his stock of goods into . -store in the French block opposite. Dr. Logan went out Friday morning to '. Shearer s . Bridge to visit one of the C 11. V4.V,.-' 1 " . - . 1 George Herbert has rented the 'Hood ' River hotel from its owner Robert Rand, and will take charge beginning of next v -m.- ut V abundant success. ' . --' Not many years ago the Portland . chamber of commerce nassed a solemn . resolution that the government appro priation for openmg the Cascade Jcks was a useless waste of the public funds The whirligig of time brings -many change. , : Mutton sheep are selling freely at $2.75 ' a head and sheep men hold . out for higher price. The Baldwin Land tt Live . Ct.V rin.nW mrSA 'a Vox ntW ' day for $3.00 a head. These are good prices and indicate prosperous times for flock-masters. i , Long Ward today presented the editor ' of the Chbomiclk with a beautiful Irish - tkl. .J.. tli. AnM An HI !! UU UVULA WMV - V Transgressors of all kinds will therefore be wars?, This jrticular shillaly is - dangerous thing to monkey with. - Mr." G. $i Farley . returned from Port land last Friday.-. , He informs us that -; tne contract for the ' steamer is let Joseph Pacquettthe j machinery to be furnished by the Willamette Iron works, , The total cost of the boat without fur nature is 125.000. She will be built in The Dalles and is contracted to be fin i ished in one hundred days. - C. E. Bayard brought into this office Saturday an egg which he vows was layed "by a hen belonging to the "bald-headed" Cochin yarietyjthe; property of C. W. DieueL. It measures 1, pj "i inches . The foreman' J of the Chboniclx says looks like the "lay of the last minstrel." ..The agricultural editor thinks it is -. goose egg. ... Charley Bayard says it is a hen's egg. The horse editor thinks it is ' an egg and knows that the measurements 7 given above are eggs-actly correct. any, "bald-headed" , rooster in Oregon can beat it let him now crow, v ' A: meeting5-of 'the directors of The ' JJallesi' Portland A Astoria Navigation Co.. was held in this citv Saturday. The coinnuitee wmcn was cnargea wiw me - aucy oi lening xne contract ior me duiiq- - ing of the new :boat reported that they bad let the contract to Paauett 4 Smith c& Portland, tot $25,000, to be finished on or before the nrat ot August next. The boat must have a speed of not less than 'fifteen miles an hour and shall give - tjmnl ff Vila Mnoifv; flAfnrA' Ytftfncr'. ftTW " rj o ; built on the Columbia river at anv mint 'from the Cascades to The Dalles' in clusive. , ... , ; 'Xne Dalles delegation to tne , roruana chambers of commerce meeting have had ' eonfernce with Governor Pennoyer and Hon. Phil Metchan, and were informed by those gentlemen that the construe tion of the Cascade' portage 'road will ' wimmenHi at once. The first work done will b (inn rtf tha jmnmnrhefi so as in -have them finished before high water. - By-the, time they are.finished or sooner it will be known whether the road will a m- i i - t - government or not. The governor and ,.Mr.. Metchan assured our delegation, however, that the road would certainly be finished and equipped inside of one The Union Pacific rents the O. A v 1 i :a a said, of an guarranteed six per' cent on : $40,000,000. -Or in other words the Un " tei. Pacific: pays $240,000 yearly to the U- ti. a n, JO., tor the use ot the road : Alia uj uiio - aiuu iud hialc. uuuuiv. V 1 .19 'l.'l. iV TT n 1 uiwui nuu iuuuucs wuiui uiv u . . una to payt and the, aggregate cannot fall far ?XA4 tt iJhfnOA an4 miivlu imam TViIb . , -. w ' fumth producers of the inland empire have to pay annually into the coffers of Jay Gould, In addition to the .cost of re- j-isi m muim vajiouogo miu wo uikic lice of .profits that such a modest man only requires.. It follows, therefore, that . do road built at such an outlay of capi tal can successfully compete with an openC river. 'j i' - '-f - t The Tima-3fountaineer says: There is no Ticmaihle btrf)t tn ha Utt 1 rived in holding a post-mortem examin ation over the old. charter bill. It has ' been very meritorously dead for many months, and the autopsy will not stimu late enterprise in the city or tend td stop jacuonai ngnta. : , Perhaps so. ' But then the publishing of the 'document will have the tendency to enow that tne men wno framed it are not ashamed of their record. Besides it ' don'f cost the' Timei-Mountaineer any- thing and pleases the Chbonicuc. Be- lldes too, Mr. Michell need not read it if be does not want to. In fact the Chbon- icli recommends him not to read it. 1Kb critic who wants to be in the fashion . ever reads anything he criticises. . , There is - nothing in Heaven or earth can equal the slowness of a Washington . m. .jc.:.l 1 . i r-i -it r 1 1 IVTCIUiUOUt UiilUMt AUO UUllB VI bllV gods, grind slowly,", it is said, but the burrs would be worn out before a Wash ington "official would fairly get started. .Five months ago' congress 'passed the forfeiture act. v Any intelligent land clerk, might, hayer formulated between two any suns the necessary instructions for the 1 land cfSces, yet for. five 'aeary months the secretary of state and th assistant secretary and the land com jnissioner and the assistant land com missioner and the attorney-general and all the assistant attorney-generals and judge advocates and land commissioners nd goodness knows how ' many more have failed to give the local land offices such instructions as are required to put the lav into effect. It is little wonder TBI DALLES, - - It is said the new boat will be the handsomest craft on the Columbia river. Mr. W. Foley, a Portland lawyer and a genuine "native of the soil" gave the Chronicle, a pleasant call today. County assessor Barnett leaves this city tomorrow to enter on his work of assessing the county. All the passenger trains now stop at the Umatilla house. It seems so nat ural for them to stop there and is a very great convenience to many. The directors of The Dalles, Portland and Astoria Navigation company have appointed Hugh Glenn superintendent of construction of the new boat. . The weather is beautifully bright and glorious, but the air is so cool that the grass is not growing as rapidly as it is wont to do at this season oi the vear. Prineville Newt. The druggists ot this city have unani mously agreed to close their stores on Sundays from one to 5 o'clock p. m. un less called upon for medicine prescribed by a physician. School district No. 8 at Mosier is hav ing some trouble over the question of division of the district. Superintendent Shelly is trying to adjudicate on the equities of the case. Henry Van Asslet, late of Hood River now of Seattle, has given a bond ' for deed for his property in Hood River, to James Chistian Nestergard in the sum of $2300. Washington at the world's fair, with her $100,000 appropriation, her 420 foot flagstaff and her higher hopes, will tow er above Oregon like the most elevated Fourth of-JuTy bunting above a pair of red flannel drawers on a bean-pole ! Klamath Star. From R. R. Hinton of Bake Oven who is in the city, we learn that Judge Bird is expected home about the first of May and hopes to be able to attend to his duties over the circuit. This will be good news to the many friends of Judge Bird. The committee of The Dalles, Port land and Astoria Navigation Company which was authorized to let the contract for the new boat - returned from Port' land Saturday It is already well known that the contract has been let and that the boat ' will be finished in one hundred days. ' Advertised Letter. Following is a list of unclaimed letters remaining in the postoffice at The Dalles Oregon, April 10, 1891. Persons calling for same will please say "Advertised." Carder, Miss Clara Clark, James W Carl, Dr A W Davidson, Bill Dver, George Frawley & Dial Fisher, Chas Hayden, George Manett, Cuthbert Matheney, M McCown, AC O'Dell, J W Plaster, George - Robinson Mr M . Vestig & Multun White, T W (2) Jtt. X. JNOLAN, f. M. Is Disease PnnlshmeatT The following advertisement, published by a prominent western patent medicine house would indicate that thajf regard disease as a punishment lor sin : uo vou wisn to xnow tne quickest way to cure a sever cold? We will tell you. TO cure a cold qicxiy, it must be treated Deiore the cold has become set tled in the system. This can always be done if you choose to, as nature in 1 her kindness to man gives timely warning and plainly tells you in nature's way, that as a Banishment for some indiscre tion, you are to be afflicted with a cold unless you choose to ward ' it off by prompt action. The first symptoms of a cold, in most cases, is a dry, loud cough and sneezing. The cough is soon followed by a profuse watery - expectoration and the sneezing by a prosuse watery dis charge from the nose. In severe cases there is a thin white coating on the tomrue. What to do? It is only necessary to take Chamberlain's Cough Remedy in double doses every hour. That will greatly lessen the severity of the cold and in most cases will effectually counteract it, and cure what would have been a severe cold within one or two days time. Try it and be convinced." Fifty cent bottles for sale by snipes & Junersiey, druggists. NOTICE. R. E. French has for sale a number of improved ranches and unimproved lands in the Grass Valley neighborhood in bherman county. They will be sold very cheap and on reasonable terms. Mr. French can locate settlers on some good unsettled claims in the same neigh' borhood. His address is Grass Valley, Sherman county, uregon. . . . Forfeited Kmllrostd Lands We are now ready to prepare papers for the filing and entry of Railroad Lands. We also attend to business be fore the U. S. Land Office and Secretary oi the interior, persons lor whom we have prepared naners and who are re quired to renew their applications, will not be charged additional tor such papers. TBOBKBURT d HUDSON, Rooms 8 and 0, Land Office building, The Dalies, uregon. Notice to tax Payers. All state and county taxes, become delinquent April 1st. Taxpayers are here by rea nested to pay the same before that date in order to avoid going on the de linquent list. The county court ' has ordered the sale of all property in which the taxes have not been paid. Please call and settle before the time mentioned and save costs. D. L. Cars, Sheriff of Wasco County. FOB SALE. A choice lot of brood mares : also a number of geldings and fillies bv "Rock- wood Jr.." "Planter." "Oregon Wilkes." and "Idaho Chief," same standard bred. Also three ' hue voung ' stallions by Rockwood Jr." out of first class mares. For prices and terms call on or address either J. W. Condon, or J. H. Larsen, The Dalles, Oregon. Oa Hand. J. M. Huntington & Co. announce that they are prepared to make out the necessary papers for parties wishing to file on so called railroad land. Appli. cants should have their papers all ready before going to the land office so as to avoid the rush and save time. Their office is in Opera Hflse Block next to main entrance. ' Merino Sheep for Sale. I have a fine band of thorough bred Merino sheep consisting of 67 bucks, about 340 ewes and about 200 young lambs, which I will sell at a low price and upon easy terms. Address. D. M. Fbknch, The Dalles, Or. Horsemen Attention. The spring rodero for horses will meet at Bake Oven on the first day of May. it. .BOOTBN, Chas. W. Haigbt, J. N.Buboess. ..' Stock Strayed. Three 3-year-old fillies (2 sorrels and one bay,) two 2-year-olds (both bays) all branded 1 on the left shoulder. I will give $5 apiece for the recovery of the same.- J. W. Rogers. ' Boyd, Or. Real Estate Transactions. Joel C. Johnson to' Ellen S. Johnson, the west 4 of the northwest of sec tion 28 in township 1 north of range 15 east, 160 acres. Consideration $1. He Will be at The Dalles May 7th at 11 0'Clock. WHAT "WE HATE TO SHOW HIM. President Harrison and party will pass through The Dalles going east on Thursday, May 7th, at the hour of 11 o'clock a. m. It will be in order for our civic and military organizations to take measures to give the party a fitting re ception. An effort will be made to have the party stop over a few hours to view some of our natural curiosities. It will be well worth a trip to the Pacific coast to see the only person now living who, according to Barney Goldsmith, crossed the Columbia bar with Sir Francis Drake in the year 1576. Or the man who used to walk across the Columbia river on the backs of the -salmon. Or the man who remembers the year when the river froze to the bottom, and when the thaw came in the spring the water ran for three months on top of the ice. Or the hand some lads of the O. N. G. and the gorge ous apparel of the drum major. Or the handsomest set of young ladies on the American continent. Or the signal ser vice bureau at the corner of Second and Washington foretelling correctly eighty times out of every hundred what the weather is going to be. Or the Cheon- j iclk staff receiving the associated press dispatches and grinding out, on its new steam power Cottrell press, at the rate of thirty to the minute, the best newspaper in Eastern Oregon. The G. A. B. Encampment. The annual encampment of the G. A. R., department of Oregon has met and adjourned. A new set of officers has been appointed and the department headquarters held in The Dalles for the past year is now removed to Portland with O. Summers of "Geo. Wright" Post No. 1, department commander. The past year has been the most pros perous of any in the history of this de partment. Seven new posts were organ ized and there was net increase of nearly 450 members as against 238 of the pre vious year. The order now numbers in this state 2300 members. It is very flattering to Ex -Department Command er James A. Varnev and Ex-Department Quarter Master Gen. A. G. Johnson to note that during the year of their in cumbency the G. A. R. experienced the largest increase hitherto, and that they were complimented by having organized the best encampment and produced the best reports of any previous year. As toria did handsomely and nobly. At the banquet on Thursday evening a pro gramme was arranged that would have lasted a week. , As it was the proceeding didnot end till a fewminutesbefore their departure. : At the parade Thursday the beautiful sight of 400 school children joined in the procession, together with five companies of O. N. G. Two eovorn ment steamers were placed at their dis posal and carried the happy crowd out to the end of the new jetty, one of them going outside the bar. Then they were placed on cars on the jetty and literally run "out to the sea" on a railroad. The encampment meets at Salem next year. and Salem will have to hustle to equal Astoria.' The delegation from this . post consisted of Department Commander J, A. Varney, Assistant Adgt. Gen. Myers and Mrs Myers, Assistant Quarter Mas ter Gen. A. G. Johnson, C. of A. J. M, Patterson and Mrs Patterson and dele gate J. R. Warner, of White Salmon. From an Old Dalles Resident. East Portland, Or., April 12, 185)1 Editor Chronicle. Perhaps a few items from this part of the world might be of interest to the readers of your spicy paper. , First let me say I like the ring of the Chronicle. It is on the right track- and gives no uncertain sound upon ques tions that vitally concerns this country east and west. The time has fully come when the people of this country must rise up enmasse and liberate themselves from the power that is sapping the life- blood from the toilers of this fair land, Let the watch-word be an "Open river to the sea" until that fact is fully ac complished when some of the profits of the products of this state will stay with the producer instead of going - into the pockets .of a few money kings Wall street. ' The all-absorbing topic in ' the local circles here is that of consolidation blending three lively cities into one large city. It is a mixed quantity, good and wise men are on ootn sides ot tne ques tion. Argument on both sides are un' answerable, what the results will be, the nrst Monday in June alone will tell. Our cities . never prospered more than they do now as we are will they do better when united who can till? If so, unite if not, better remain as we are, Yours for the right, Old Dalles, New Railroad A cent at This Station, Mr. William R. Mackenzie, traveling auditor of the Union Pacific Co., has been in the city for the past day or two checking over the accounts of Mr. Alla- way, preparatory to the transfer to Mr. E. E. Lytle, who succeeds Mr. Alia way here as agent. ..... Mr. Mackenzie says that the company is very sorry to lose the services of Mr. A la way who has served them faithfully for many years, and regret that he has seen fit to sever the very pleasant rela tions existing between them. Mr. Alia way is not going to leave our city, however, but will be associated with Messrs. McFarland & French. Mr. Lytle comes well recommended, having been agent for the company at Hood River and is a very pleasant little gentleman. Notice of Settlers. , The registei and receiver of the land office received a letter this morning in structing them to forthwith give public notice requiring claimants under the forfeiture act to, within sixty days of the date of such notice, come forward and designate the particular lands which they intend to purchase within the two years allowed by the act. Notice will be published on this date. The Best Conch Medicine. "One of my customers came in today and asked for the best cough medicine I had,'.' say Lew Young, a prominent drug- rt of Newman Grove, Neb. "Of course showed him Chamberlain's Cough Remedy and he did not ask to see any other.' I have never yet sold a medicine that would loosen and relieve a severe cold so quickly as that does. I have sold four dozen of it within the last sixty days and do not know of a single case where it failed to give the mos perfect satisfac tion." Fifty cent bottles for sale by Snipes & Kinersly, druggists. - . . I ; County conrtjis in session,. ' iY SEE THE THE PLACE LORD LAY." WHERE Test of the Eloquent Dtseonrso Detlv sred on Sunday. March 89, by the Bey. T.- De Witt Talmaffe Title of the Sermon, "The Split Hausolenm." Nkw York, March 29. Dr. Talmage preached an Easter sermon to his two audi ences today. Both at tbe morning service In Brooklyn and at the Christian Herald service in New York in the evening the Academies of Music were bright with a profusion of flowers, Easter lilies being conspicuous. A selection of music appro priate to the festival was beau ti fully ren dered at each service. The text of tbe preacher's discourse was Matthew xxviii, ft, "Come, see the place where the Lord lay." Visiting any great city, we are not satis fied until we have also looked at its ceme tery. We examine all the styles of ceno taph, mausoleum, sarcophagus, crypt and sculpture. Here lies buried a statesman, yonder an orator, here a poet, out there an inventor, in some other place a great phi lanthropist. But with how much greater interest and with more depth of emotion we look upon our family plot in the ceme tery. In tbe one case it is a matter of pub lic interest, in the other it la a matter of private and heartfelt? affection. But around the grave at which we halt this morning there are gathered all kinds of stupendous interest. At this sepulcher, I have to tell you in this sepulcher there was buried a king, a conqueror, an eman cipator, a friend, a brother, a Christ. Mon arch of the universe, but bone of our bone, and flesh of our flesh, and sorrow of our sorrow, and heart of our heart. "Come, see the place where the Lord lay." THE IIANOB OF JOSEPH. It has for surroundings the manor in the suburbs of Jerusalem, a manor owned by a wealthy gentleman by the name of Joseph. He was one of the court of seven ty who had condemned Christ, but I think he had voted in the negative, or, being a timid man, had been absent at the time of the casting of the vote. ' He had laid out the parterre at great expense. It was a hot climate, and I suppose there were broad branched trees and winding path under neath them, while here the waters rippled over the rock into a fish pool, and yonder the vines and the flowers clambered over the wall, and all around there were the beauties of kiosk and arboriculture. After the fatigues of the Jerusalem courtroom, how refreshing to come out in these suburbs botanical and pomological! I walk a little further on in the parterre and I come across a cluster of rocks, and I see on them the marks of a sculptor's chisel. I come still closer and I And that there is a subterranean recess, and I walk down the marble stairs and come to a port ico over the doorway an architecture of fruits and flowers chiseled by the hand of tbe sculptor. I go into the portico, and on either side there are rooms, two or four or six rooms of rock; in the walls niches, each niche large enough to hold a dead body. One of these rooms of rock is espe cially wealthy with sculpture. ' It was a beautiful and charming spot. Why all this? The fact was that Joseph, the own er f the parterre, of that wealthy manor, had recognized the fact that he could not always walk those gardens, and he sought this as his own last resting place. What a beautiful plot in which to wait for the resurrection! , MAKE WELL THE MAUSOLEUM. Mark well the mausoleum in the rock. It is to be the most celebrated tomb in all tha ages; catacombs oi Egypt, tomb of Napoleon, Mahal Taj of India, nothing compared with it. Christ had just been murdered, and his body must be thrown out to the dogs and the ravens, as was customary with crucified bodies, unless there be prompt and effective hindrance. Joseph, the owner of the mausoleum, begs lor the body of Christ, and he takes and washes the poor and mutilated frame from the blood and the dust, and shrouds it and perfumes it. . I think embalmment was omitted. When In olden times they wished to embalm a dead body, the priest with some pretension of medical skill would show the point be tween the ribs where the incision was to be made. Then tha operator would come and make the incision, and then run for his life else he would be slain for violating the dead body. Then the other priests would come with salt of niter, and cassia. and wine of palm tree, and complete the embalmment. But I think in this case em balmment was omitted lest there be more excitement and another riot. The funeral advances. Present, Joseph, the owner of the mausoleum; Nicodemua, who brought the flowers, and the two Marys Heavy bur den on the shoulders of two men as they carry the body of Christ down the marble stairs and into the portioo, and lift the dead weight to the level of the niche in the rock, and push the body of Christ into the only pleasant resting place It ever had. These men coming forth dose the door of rock against the recess. The government, afraid that the disciples would steal tha body of Christ and play resurrection, put upon tbe door "the seal of the banbednm. the violation of that seal, like the violation of the seal of tbe United States govern ment or of the British government, always followed with severe penalties. ' ' THE GUARD OP THE TOMB. ' ' A regiment of soldiers from the tower of Antonio is detailed to guard that mauso leum. At the door of that tomb a fight took place which decided the question for all graveyards and cemeteries. Sword of lightning against sword of steel. Angel of God against the military. The body in the crypt begins to move in its shroud of fine linen and slides down upon the pavement. moves through the portico, appears in the doorway, comes np the marble steps. Christ, having left his mortuary attire be hind him, comes forth in the sarb of workman as I take it, from the fact that the women mistook him for tbe cardener. ' There and then was shattered the tomb so that it can never! be rebuilt. All the trowels of earthly masonry cannot mend it. Forever and forever it is a broken tomb. Death that day taking the aide of the military received a horrible cut under the angel's spear of flame, and must him self go down at the last the King ot Ter rors disappearing before the King of Grace. "The Lord is risen." Htwannal Hceanna! O weep no more, yovr comforts slain: The Lord is risen; he lives again When one of the old Christiana ' dying he said be saw on the sky the letter " V, and he said. I cannot understand what that is I see against the sky; it is the letter 'Y.' " A Christian standing beside him' said, "I know what it means; that let ter 'V stands for 'victory.' " - I gather np all these flowers today and I strew them over the graves of your Christian dead in the letter "V" for "victory," "R" for "resurrection," "T" for "triumph," "H for "heaven." "The Lord Is risen." H6- aannal While ifrig around the place where tbe Lord lay I am impressed with tbe fact that mortuary honors cannot atone for wrongs to tbe living. If they could have afforded Christ such a costly sepulcher they could have afforded him a decent earthly residence. Will they give a piece of marble to the dead Christ when they might have given a soft pillow to the liv ing Christ? If they had put half the ex pense of that mausoleum in the n Hiking of Christ's life on earth comfortable the story would not have been so sad. He wanted bread; they gave him a stone. Christ, like every other benefactor of the world, was better appreciated after he was dead. Westminster Abbey and monu mental Greenwood are to a certain extent the world's attempts by mortuary honors to atone for neglects to the living. . Poets' Corner in Westminster Abbey is an at tempt to pay for the sufferings of Grub street. I go into that Poets' Corner of Westminster Abbey and there I find the grave of HandeL the musician from whose music we hear today as it goes down re verberating through the ages. While stand at the -costly tomb of Han del I , cannot forget the fact that his fellow musicians tried to destroy him with their discords. I go a little farther in the Poets' Corner of Westminster Abbey and I find the grave- of John Drydeo, the great poet.: Costly monument, great mor tuary honors, but I cannot forget tbe fact that at seventy years of age he wrote about j tha oppressions ot misfortune, and that be , COME, "btipcu'co aline. " 1 go a Tkuie iaruier in me Poets' Corner and I find the grave of Sam uel Butler, the author of "Hudibras." Wonderful monument, costly mortuary honors. Where did he die? ' In a garret. I move farther on in the Poets' Corner and I find the grave of a poet of whom Waller wrote: "An old schoolmaster by tbe name of John Milton has written a tedious volume on the fall of man. If it's length be no virtue it has none." Igoalittle farther on in the Poets' Corner and I find the grave of Sheridan. Alas! for Sheridan. Poor Sheridan! Magnificent mortuary honors. What a pity it was he could not have discounted that monument for a mouthful of something to eat! Oh, unfilial children, give your old parents less tomb stones and more blankets, less funeral and more bedroom ! Five per cent, of tbe money now expended at Burns' banquets would have made the great Scotch poet comfort able and kept him from being almost har ried to death by the drudgery of an excise man. Horace Greeley outrageously abused while he lived going out to his tomb was followed by the president of the United States and the leading men of the army and the navy. Some people could not Bay bitter enough things about him while he lived; all the world roseupto do him honor when he died. Massachusetts at the tomb of Charles Sumner tried to atone for the ig nominious resolutions with which her legislature denounced the living senator. It was too late. The costly monument at Springfield, Ills., cannot pay for Booth's bullet. Costly mortuary honors on the banks of Lake Erie honors that cost be tween $300,000 and $300,000 cannot pay for the assassination of James A. Garfield. Do justice to the living. All the justice you do you will have to do this side the gates of the necropolis. The dead cannot wake up to count the number of carriages in ttie procession or see tbe polish on the Aberdeen granite or to read the words of epitaphal commemoration. Costly mauso leum of the gentleman in the suburbs of Jerusalem cannot atone for Bethlehem's manger and Cafvarean cross and Pilate's ruffian judiciary. APPROPRIATE ORNAMENTS FOR TOMBS. Again! Standing in this place where the Lord lay I am impressed with the fact that floral and sculptural ornamentation are appropriate for the places of the dead. We are all glad that in the short time of the Saviour's inhumation he lay amid flowers and sculpture. I cannot quite understand what I see in the newspapers where, amid the announcements and ob sequies, the friends request "send no flow ers." Why, there is no place so appro priate for flowers as the casket of the de parted. If yonr means allow I repeat, if your, means allow let there be flowers on the casket, flowers on the hearse, flowers on the grave. Put them on the brow; it means coronation. - Put them in the hand; it means victory. Christ was buried in a parterre. Christ was buried in a garden. Flowers are types of resurrection. Death is sad enough anyhow. Let conservatory and arboretum do all they can in the way of alleviation. Your little girl loved flow ers while she was alive. Put. them in her hands, now that she cannot go forth and pluck flowers for herself. On sunshiny days twist a garland for her still heart. Brooklyn has no grander glory than her Greenwood, nor Boston than her Mount Auburn, nor Philadelphia than her Laurel Hill, nor Cincinnati than her Spring Grove, nor San Francisco than her Lone Moun tain. What shall I say of those country graveyards where the vines have fallen down and the slab is aslant and the mound is caved in and the grass is the pasture ground for the sexton's cattle. Are yonr father and mother of so little account you have no more respect than that for their bonrsr Some day gather together and straighten up the fence and lift the slab and bank up tbe mound and tear out tbe weeds and plant . the shrubs. After a while you yourself will want to lie down to the last slumber. If you have no re gard for the bones of your ancestors, your children will have ' no deference for your bones. Do you say these relics are of no importance? You will see of how much importance they are when the archangel takes out . his trumpet. Turn all your graveyards into gardens. FOUR ONLY PRESENT AT THE BURIAL. Standing in this place where the Lord lay I am also impressed with the dignity of unpretending obsequies. Joseph that day was mourner, sexton, liveryman had the entire charge of all the occasion. Four people only at the burial of the King of the Universe. Let this be consolatory to those who, throngh small means or lack of large acquaintance, have but little demon stration of grief at the grave of tbeir dead. It is not necessary. Long line of glittering .equipages, two rows of silver handles, cas ket of costly wood, pall bearers scarfed and gloved are not necessary. Christ looks out from heaven at a burial where there are six in attendance, and re members there are two more than he had at his obsequies. Not recognizing this idea, how many small properties are scattered In the funeral rites, and widowhood and orphanage go out to the cold charity of the world. The departed left enough property to have kept the family together until they could take care of themselves, but it is all absorbed in the funeral rites. That went for crape which ought to have gone for bread. A man of small means can hardly afford to die in one of our great cities! Funeral pageantry is not necessary. No one was ever more lovingly and tenderly put into the grave than Christ, but there were only four in the procession. Again, standing in this place where the Lord lay, I am impressed with the fact that yon cannot keep the dead down. The seal of the Sanhedrim, a regiment of soldiers from ths tower or Antonio to stand guard- floor of rock, roof of rock, wall of rock. niche of rock cannot keep Christ in tbe crypt. Come out and come up he must. Came out and came up he did. Prefigu ra tion. The first fruits of tbem that sleep. Just as certain as you and I go down into the grave, just so certain we will come np again. Though yon pile up on the top of us all the bowlders of the mountains you cannot keep us down. Though we be buried under the coral of the deepest cav ern of the Atlantic ocean we will rise to the surface. Ah! my friends, death and tbe grave are not what they used to be to us, for now, walking around the spot where tbe Lord lay, we find vines and flowers covering np the tomb, and that which we called a place of skulls has become a beautiful garden. Yea, now there are four gardens instead of one Garden of Eden, Garden of the World's Sepulcher, Garden of Earth's Re generation, Garden of Heaven. WITH TRUMPETS AND 8HOUTTKG8. Various scriptural accounts say that the work of grave breaking will begin with the blast of trumpets and shoutings; whence I take it that the first intimation of tbe day will be a sound from heaven' such as has never before been heard. It may not be so very loud, but it will be penetrating. There are mausoleums so deen that undisturbed silence has slept there ever since tbe day when the sleepers were left in them. The great noise shall strike through them. Among the corals of the sea, miles deep, where the shipwrecked rest, t he sound will strike. No one will mistake it for thunder or the blast of- earthly minstrelsy. There will be heard the voice of the uncounted millions of the dead, who come rushing out of the gates of eternity, flying toward the tomb crying: "Make way! Oh, grave, give us back our body! We gave it to you in corruption; surrender it now in incor rnption." Thousands of spirits arising from the field of Sedan, and from among the rocks of Gettysburg, and from among the passes of South Mountain. A hundred thousand are crowding Greenwood. On this grave three spirits meet, for there were three bodies in that tomb! Over that fam ily vault twenty spirits hover, for there were twenty bodies. From New York to Liverpool, at every few miles on the sea route, a group of hun dreds of spirits coming down to the water to meet their bodies. See that multitude! That is where the Central America sank. And yonder multitude! That is where the Pacific went down. Found at last! That Is where the City of Boston sank. And yonder the President went down. A soli tary spirit alights on yonder prairie. That is where a traveler perished in the snow. The whole air is full of spirits spirits fly ing north, spirits flying south, spirits fly ing east, spirits flying west. Crash! goes Westminster abbey as all its dead kings and orators and poets get up. Strange commingling of spirits searching Crash! go the pyramids, and the monarchs of Egypt rise out of the heart of the desert. Suapl go the iron gates of the modern vaults. . Tbe country graveyard will look like a rough plowed field as the mounds break open. All the kings of the earth; all the senators; all the great men; all the beggars; all the armies victors and van quished; all the ages barbaric and civil- j2 011 those who were chopped by guil- lotine or simmered in the fire or rotted in dungeons, all the infants of a day; all the octogenarians all I all! Not one straggler left behind. All! all! And now the air is darkened with the fragments of bodies that are coming to gether from the opposite corners of the earth. Lost limbs finding their mate bone to bone, sinew to sinew until every joint is reconstructed, and every arm finds its socket, and the amputated limb of the surgeon's table shall be set again at the point from which it was severed. A sur geon told me that after the battle of Boll Run he amputated limbs, throwing them out of the window, until the pile reached up to the window sill. All those frag ments will have to take their places. Those who were born - blind shall have eyes divinely kindled; those who were lame shall have a limb substituted. In all the hosts of the resurrected not one eye missing, not one foot clogged, not one arm palsied, not one tongue dumb, not one ear deaf. PEACE TOWARD HEAVEN AND EARTH. Wake up, my friends, this day, this glorious Easter morning, with all these congratulations. If I understand this day, it means peace toward heaven and peace toward earth. Great wealth of flowers! Bring more flowers. Wreath them around the brazen throat of the cannon, plant tbem in the deserts until it shall blossom like tbe rose, braid them into the mane of the war charger as he comes back. No more red dahlias of human blood. Give us white lilies of peace. Strew all the earth with Easter garlands, for the resurrection we celebrate this morning implies all kinds of resurrection, a score of resurrections. Resurrection from death and sin to the life of tbe gospel. Resurrection of apos tolic faith. Resurrection of commercial in tegrity. Resurrection of national honor. Resurrection of international goodwill. Resurrection of art. Resurrection of liter ature. Resurrection of everything that is good and kind and generous and just and holy and beautiful. Nothing to stay down, to stay buried, but sin and darkness and pain and disease and revenge and death. Let those tarry in the grave forever. "Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will to men." Christ, the Lord, is risen today. Sons of men and angels say. Raise your songs and triumphs high. Sing, ye heavens, and earth reply. Love's redeeming work is done. Fought the fight, the battle won. Lol the ann's eclipse is o'er; Lo! he sets in blood no more. Spoiled th Murder. A murderous melodrama held the boards at Jacobs' theatre last week. There was a sprinkling of comedy, how ever, through the third act on Saturday evening that set the audience agog. The hero oi the play had just described to the soubrette how himself and the boys had been down at the blacksmith's "shoeing" geese. He cracked a weak joke in explaining how the geese gath ered round a pool of water near the old forge, and how the boys amused them selves by shaking their hats at them, shouting "Shoo, shooP Tne gallery boys caught on at once, and every time tbe villain unfolded one of his horrible plots on the lives of the hero and heroine the "gods" completely drowned him out with their "shoos." It was at a very serious situation in the performance. The life of an unpro tected young heiress was about to be taken by the unscrupulous scoundrel. The sea rolled heavily and the storm raged fiercely; while the desperate deed awaited execution. "Ha! she comes; shell never see him again V He was within arm '8 reach of her now. He held a bloody knife in his right hand. In a moment he would plunge it into her body, bnt in the weirdest and most hair standing tones from among the "angels" came, "Shoo, shoo, shoo!" in rapid suo- The awful scene was broken. The vil lain jumped three feet in the air and forgot his lines. The heroine forgot her self, and looked her wonldbe murderer straight in the face with horror at the thought of a breakdown, but of course didn't see him. .Whether by an act providence, to save the villain from his nervous plight, or through the effect inclement weather on the electric wires, every light in the house went out in stantly. Affairs were righted after time. New York Telegram. Nnr Tack's SmmH Boy tn Wteter. A park policeman remarked recently that the winter has had no effect on the pet enemy of his comfort. "The howl ing wind and the falling snow," he said, "have no terrors for the venturesome small hoy. He is ont here in all kinds of weather. As soon as a thin coating of ice begins to form on the lakes he wants to test it. He races across the lawns, climbs trees and is np to no end of mischief all day long. . Of course we are constantly on the lookout to prevent the boys from doing harm and from coming to grief through their pranks, but they are active and fleet of foot, and can usually, get away from us. They are like locusts. They swarm all over the park at once and invent mischief as easily as they breathe. The other day a little chap who had been . wandering around finally brought np at the menag erie and handed a baseball bat to Tin, the elephant. Tip took a fancy to it, and his keeper was nearly three hours get ting it away from him. He narrowly escaped with a whole head at thai." New York Sun- Miss Kate Drexel will endow with $8,000,000 tbe new religious order she is founding, to be called "The Sisters of the Most Holy Sacrament," whose work is to be the amelioration of the coudi tion of Indians and negroes. She her self will be domiciled in the order, living like the humblest sister, with no exemp tions from the hardship of her lot, though she will probably become mother superior. The largest olive oil factory in the world will soon be built at Log Guilicoe, in Sonoma county, CaL The plant will cost a quarter of a mfffirwi, The com pany has sixty acres of 6-year-old trees, and is planting 700 acres. The largest barometer yet made has just been put in working order in the St. Jacques tower in Paris. It is 12.65 me ters high, was manufactured in St. Denis and was carried by six men to Paris in a strong wooden frame. Aubery Boucicault, son of Dion Bou- cicanlt, who is just about to be married, has written a new play expressly for his niotaer, iu waich Mrs. Boucicault will appear with her daughter Nina and the author. A study of the sea bottom, currents. temperature and lite of the Adriatic sea shows that there is a vast growth of marine algje af the great depth of 2.00C meters. . The Princess of Wales has given or ders that nothing need be submitted for her inspectiou or that of her daughters in which birds are used as trimming. Jean Ingelow is sixty, but her cheeks are as rosy and round aa a girl's. She writes bnt little now, and lives in an old (tone house in Kensington, England, jel. JierDrmg,, Dealer in Fore FANCY GOODS AND NOTIONS, CLOTHING, HATS AND GAPS, ZOootsi and Slioes etc. PRICES LOW AND CASH ONLY. "fish s bhrdon, DEALERS TUST Stoves, GAS PIPES, Faraaees, . . AVe are the Sole Agents for the Celebrated IT1 V Tl 1 - TMinp map ana Which have no equals, and Warranted to giv Corner Second anil Washington D. W. EDWARDS, DEALER IX Paints, Oils, Glass, Wall Papers, Decora tions, Artists' Materials, Oil Paintings, Ciromos and Steel Eipviiiit Mouldings and Picture Frames, Cornice Poles Etc., Paper Trimmed Free. Floture Pramea 3VXct.a.o to Order , 276 and 278, Seoond Street. - - . The'Dalleg, Or. DflliLiES, Wash. In the last. two weeks large sales of lots have been made at Portland, Tacoma, Forest Grove, MeMinnville and The Dalles.' All are satisfied that ... r.. iNUK I " LALLLb Wire Works Is now the place for investment. New ufactories are to be added and large improve ments made. The next 90 days will be im portant ones for this new city: - Call at the office of the . Interstate Investment Co., -rJ 72 Washington St., PORTLAND, Or. D. TAYLOR, THE DALLES, Or. Or JOLES : DEALERS IN Hay, Grain and Feed. No. 122 Cor. Washington and Third. Sts. I. C. NiCKELSEN, -DEALER IN- School Books, Stationery, WEBSTER'S t INTERNATIONAL , DICTIONARY. Cor. of TMrd anil Washington Sts, The Dalles, Oregon. New - Umatilla- House, THE DALLFS, OREGON. HANDLEY & SI NNOTT, PROP'S. LARGEST : AND : FINEST : HOTEL : IN": OREGON. Ticket and Baggage Office of the O. R. & Union Telegraph Office are in the Hotel. Fire-Proof Safe for the CHAS. STUBLING, -PBOPEIETOB CERMSNIK, ' New Vogt Block, WHOItESRIiE and fETAIIi LiIQOOf DEAltEf. Milwaukee Beer on Draught. Crahdall MANUFACTURERS FURNITURE .Undertakers and Embalmers. NO. 166 SECOND STREET. Ranges, , A''c. T 1 r4 . Kama -looi siove, e Entire Satisfaction or Money Refunded Streets, Tne Dalles, Oregon. The Largest ' in the Wert. ' The New Boot and Shoe FACTORY. . : Fnrnitire HTi h Cnemical Laooratori. . NEW BRIDGE. Several Fine Maps. fleoi Railroad Alan- Organs, Pianos, ' Watehes, Jewelry. N. Company, and office of the w eaters Safety of all Valuables. OF THE- Second Street. & Budget, AND DEALERS IN CARPETS, BROS.. MBS,