- - OREGON FEIDAY, - - APBIL3.1891 LOCAL AJTD PERSONAL. Birds In their little nests Sffree, And 'tis shameful sight, When two "retired ministers" Fall oat and chide and fight. Dr. Davenport, the dentist of Wamic was in town Friday . C. P.Healdof Hood River gave ns pleasant oall Saturday. John Parker the Hood River saw mill man was in the city Friday. Mrs. Thomas the milliner of Dnfur was in the city .Friday. . Fred Skibbe and N. Harris went Portland Friday morning. , to John Roth of Kingaley left Friday for Port Townsend with a car of beef cattle. Walla Walla is afflicted with measles. There are said to be 160 cases in the city. Five car loads of wheat were shipped from" the Wasco Warehouse Saturday morning. An immense amount of freight is now being handled at the freight depot and warehouses at the East End. ' A freight team was being loaded today at the Wasco warehouse with supplies for the Baldwin Land and Live Stock Company. Mr. C. P. Heald of Hood River informs ns that he never saw a brighter prospect for fruit in his section than there is this year. .. Milt Akin and Elisabeth MacPherson both of this city , were married . at the Cosmopolitan hotel Thursday of last week. -' . It is understood that Representative Carter of Montana will succeed L. A Groff as commissioner of the ' general land office. . The court house is getting a nice new coat of red paint on the outside. . When finished it will greatly add to the beauty of the structure. During the last ten days 19,000 bushels of wheat were bought and shipped by the Wasco warehouse. The average price paid including storage was ' about 65 cents. The Wasco Obterver says : It is quite a relief to our waste basket that the dis appointed politician "(T) of Emigrant Springs now pours forth his woes in the Mountaineer. ine new . granger, store is now open and ready for business all but the show windows, and Pap Chandler bid ns say nothing about them till after he closes a treaty with China, . A telephone system, for the use of the fire department, has just arrived. One will be placed in the Umatilla House, one in the company's shops and one in the city engine house. . Mr. John .Bonn of this city baa pur chased 20 acres of land in the Hood River valley, and we understand he' in tends going to reside there. Mr. Bonn is an excellent citizen and we shall be sorry to lose him. , A carrot of the white Beligan variety is on exhibition in front of the store of Barnett & Rice of Clarence Barnett of Lower Fifteen Mile, and on high prairie land without irrigation. It weighs 7J pounds. From Mrs. John Barnett, who retur ned Saturday from Huntington we learn that her sister Mrs. Monroe Grimes is still very low and very little hope is entertained of her recovery. Mr. L. Tir ril is still living but may pass, away at any .moment, .r From the Wasco Obterver we learn that there is considerable sickness on the ranch of Messrs. Kerr and Buckley, in the Grass Valley section. Mrs. Buck ley is sick and twelve hired hands are also under the weather. Dr. Beers made a trip out there last week. The sheep-raising industry, with all its risks, has never before had such a S remising future. But it is harder to go lto it now, because of the high price of the animal. To procure a sufficient band would take a large sum but those who are in the business must be careful to stav in, for they, have before . them a rapid fortune by the certain increase of the price not only of the meat but also the wool of their animals. Grant Coun ty Newt. Mr Norton's surveying party have got as far as the ranch of Mrs. Dick Brook house, on Lower Fifteen Mile Creek. They have met with no difficulties, and report that the farmers, through whose lands the road is being surveyed, are so well pleased, that no trouble will be ex perienced in procuring right of way. ' The Dalles dailies are engaged in tell ing the truth, so they say, about each other. Michell's latest is that Gourlay is an . ex-pounder of the Gospel. - It strikes us that both gentlemen used to l 1!x1 1 A. 111. 1 J 1 preach a little, but this would never be suspected from their editorials. By the way, didn't the pot make some personal allusions to the kettle? Hood River Glacier. Marshal Gibons has got word two or three times of a crazy man who is out in the Kingsley neighborhood accompanied by a boy and who undoubtedly is the man Tecrarden ' who registered at the Umatilla house last ' week. It is to be hoped he may be arrested and his state inquired into before he does any damage to himself or any one else. - The state of Washington has passed one good law which escaped the veto power of governor Laughton. It is law "giving any person who may do any labor upon any farm or land, in tilling or sowing, harvesting or - threashing any grain, as laborer,, contractor or otherwise, a lien upon such crops for his work or labor, and every landlord shall nave a lien upon the crops grown or growing upon demised lands, for rents during the year ; the liens shall be pre ferred hens.'' Again it becomes our duty to record a very sad death that occurred at a happy home in Klickatat valley, about fifteen miles from this city last night at about 10:30 o'clock, when the wife of Larsen O'Brien passed away with only about fifteen minutes, .warning, in her 48th year. At eight o'clock yesterday even ing she appeared to be in as good health as she ever was in her life. Two hours and a half later she was dead. The trouble was heart disease. She leaves a husband and one girl of ten years to whom when the warning came she had barely time to say good bye. She will be buried next Sunday at 4 o'clock in the Catholic cemetery at this place beside an infant child already laid thsr. THX SALLKS, Editor. Chronicle. A man and boy answering the discription of the missing ones from the Umatilla House were here Tuesday going towards Prineville, and went as far as Mutton mountain and seeing snow on the high points turned back, fearing they might perish in the snow. They were seen the same day going towards Tygh valley. The man is evidently off. Not heard from them since. Steve Kertner and Miss Nettie Confer, of this place, were married yesterday. Their many friends gathered together at the home of the bride's parents. In the evening a splendid supper was spread, after which the dancing was kept np until the wee' small hours. They ex pect to make Portland their future home. Your humble servant got in . on all the good things and hopes that Steve will be as happy as he deserves. A larger amount of grain has been sown here than ever before. Prospects are fine. Every one says good for the Chronicle, it is shouting for a road up the Tygh hilL 8. E. F. Looking- out a. New Koatf. Emil Shanno and Charley Schmidt re turned last night from Hood River. They and Jim Hamilton of the Cascade Locks were appointed by the last county court to survey and locate a new county road in the mountains south of Parker's Mill. They did so, but under such difficulties as one may imagine when he is informed that three to four feet of snow lay over the route, and Emil says it snowed like well like Sam Hill dur ing the time they were at work and had it not been for the service of a guide they would have been lost. Mr. Shanno says the new road will tap as fine a body of tim'ier as he has ever seen. Advertised Letters. Following is a list of unclaimed letters remaining in the postoffice at The Dalles Oregon, March 28, 18JI. Persons calling for same will please say ' Advertised." Bagley Mrs L (2) Burr C E Frazer Walters Carlson Charles Harris Mrs W G Hartman Rosena Hinman Henry Kernel! John Moore Fred Ramsey Herbert Smith Dick Wone Bosh Walter Mrs Lusie Harper Mrs C Harmon Miss Nina Eaidera Miss Mary Ludwig Miss Emma Pewrser Joseph Smith Mr Stone D A Wallich Geo E Weiler Mrs Clara L Tourtillott Thomas Richardson Mrs Mary A Turner Albert M. T. Nolan, P. M A Queer Find. ' Salem Statesman. Mr. Van Man, a farmer near Zena, in Polk countv, was engaged in cutting cordwood on his place. He chopped down an oak tree of about three feet in diameter at the butt, and alter sawing it into proper lengths, proceeded to split ft in the usual manner, in the section about five feet from the ground he stuck his ax into what he supposed was bunch of knots, but as the chips un mediately crumbled he made closer ex amination and discovered a great curiosity one that will put the Eugene pe trifaed dwarf away down in the lower class of museum specimens. The curiosity consists of the rieht side of pair of deer horns imbedded into the very heart of the oak tree. There are evidences that it had five prongs, and from the growth "rings" of the tree, has been m that position for at least century and a half. The tree is thought to be a least ZUU years old. ' flow the horns got there is a query, but different conjectures are numerous. One is that the quadruped who first possessed them might have been scratching his head against said tree and just at that particu lar time shed them where they remained and were drawn into the embraces of the oaken shrub. Another is that Mr. Deer may have become enraged over the idea that the legislature would not vote an pproprlation for Oregon's display at the world's fair at Chicago, and at tempted to scrape tho moss off his skull ornaments, thereby becoming entangled, and hnaiiy grew fast. A New Band Stand. The elder Mr. Crandall has drawn very neat design for a band stand which the citizens of The Dalles intend to build for the use of the band boys during the ummer evenings just as soon aa they are able to procure the right to a suit able location for it. It is an octagon figure fourteen feet in diameter, with wainscoting on the outeide reaching six feet from the ground and eight feet from the top of the wainscoting to the eve, or fourteen feet in full height. The enter ance will be from a door in the side reaching to the center from whence steps will lead to the stand proper. The roof will be in form of a minaret surmounted by a handsome flag pole. It is intended to be lighted by electricity and will be an ornament to the place on which it happens to find a location. We know not what the powers that be may think about it but there is one place above all others where it ought to be located and that is on the open space on the east side of the court house building, and we hope the county officials may see the matter in fie same light and grant permission, if it be so desired, to place it there. Real Estate Transaction. T. J. Keen an and wife to Rosa Perry, lot Fin block 29, Fort Dalles Military Reserve Addition to Dalles Citv. Con sideration $900. Hood River Town Site Company to trustees of Riverside Congregational church. Hood River, east half of lot F, in Hood River proper. Consideration 87.50. To stop the bleeding of a horse or other stock from a snag or wound, says a cor respondent make an application of dry manure, and it will stop the bleeding of a wound every time. This information may be worth a (rood deal to many, While away from home recently, a wean ling con oi mine DroKe tnrougn a barbed wire fence and cut bis tore leg badly, It had been bleeding for eight hours when I got home. I took dry . horse manure and held it on the wound for one minute and the blood stopped at once. " Re Is Now a ttood Indian. Colfax, Wash., March 30. "Hush Hush,"a pawnee chief of the Snake river Indians died last night at his home on Snake river. A runner was sent this morning to call the tribe together to participate in the funeral. - ' The Beautiful Geraldine Married. London, March SO. Miss Geraldine Ulmar, an American actress until re- centl prima dona in "Lagigale" was married this morning to Ivan Carill a young Belgian musical composer at St. George's church. Jno. Woods shipped two cars of cattle from the stock yards to Portland this morning. Filoon Brothers have just received a car load of Baker barbed wire from Chicago. Brief History of a Leading- Drug House of The Dalles. Jt is the intention of the Chronicle to write up a short discription of the different business houses of this city, and of its various manufactories and thus spread that information to the world. As fast as time and space will permit this object will be pursued until all are reached. In pursuance of such course we today have looked over the drug house of SNIPES A KINKKSLY And give a few facts in regard to that ex tensive concern. The firm is composed of Ben E. Snipes and O. Kinersly. Ben is one of the well-known characters of Eastern Oregon, a man full of pluck and daring, who was one of the early stock men of this part of the country and with whose deeds of bravery and various es capades all the old settlers are familiar, and many of Ben's doings have passed into legends. He has won a fair share of this world's goods and is yet in active life and bids fair to largely augment them. He is now a resident of Seattle, but will always retain a warm spot in his heart for The Dalles. Mr. O. Kinersly is the resident partner and has the entire management of what has grown to be a fine business. He is a young man with a level head and full of pluck and resource, and every year the business is growing in volume under his skillful handling. THE BUSINESS Was established in 1864 by H. J. Waldron, who ran it until January 15, 1879, when it was purchased by Snipes & Kinersly. Their store is 30x100 feet and three floors are constantly packed full of goods. They are in the heart of the city on Second street between Wash ington and Court streets, and their loca tion could not be improved. The store room is a very handsome one and is filled with everything that can be thought of in the line of drugs - and patent medicines, as well as artist mater ials, toilet and fancy goods. Their trade in cigars is a large one. They carry Key West, imported goods and many favorite brands of choice cigars, and many of pur smokers drop in there for the fragrant weed. THEIR WHOLESALE TRADE Is a large one. Snipes & Kinersly buy direct from the patent medicine and drug manufacturers and as they have capital to buy extensively, have built up a large wholesale trade. Thev have a number of customers at Prineville and on up the country for 230 miles, and their customers are constantly increas ing. The firm carries a stock of about (40,000 and all doing a business of some 50,000 per year with a fair prospect of greatly increasing that amount in the near future. THE EMPLOYES. Mr. F. J. Clark is the book-keeper, while Mr. R. L. Simmons and Mr. Donnell are salesmen. All are popular and obliging, and draw much trade to the concern. They are all good fellows and have the Chbokicle's consent to hold their positions till The Dalles has 50,009 inhabitants or they grow rich enough to set up large establishments in North and West Dalles. It is with pleasure that we can point to the growth and success of as fine an establishment as that of Snipes & Kiner sly's and we hope from time to time to chronicle their increase of trade and popularity. The trade of the country around us make such establishments a necessity and it speaks well for all that they are so successful. Is Disease a Punishment? The following advertisement, published by a prominent western patent medicine house would indicate that they regard disease as a pumsnment lor sin : "Do you wish to know the quickest way to cure a sever cold f We will tell vou. lo cure a cold qickly, it must be treated before the cold has become set tied in the system. This can always be done if you choose to, as nature in her kindness to man gives timely warning and plainly tells you in nature's way, that as a punisltment for some indiscre tion, you are to be afflicted with a cold unless you choose to ward it oft bv 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 bv a prosuse watery dis charge irom the nose. In severe cases there is a thin white coating on the tongue. What to do? It isonlvnecessarv to take UhamDeriain s uough Kemedy in double doses every hour. That will greatly lessen the severity of the cold and in most cases will ettectually 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 & Kinersley, druggists. Notice to tax 1'ayers. All state and county taxes, become delinquent April 1st. Taxpayers are here by requested 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, f lease call and settle before the time mentioned and save costs. D. L. Cates, Sheriff of Wasco County. FOK SALE. A choice lot oi brood mares ; also a number of geldings and fillies bv "Rock- wood Jr.," "Planter." "Oregon Wilkes." and Idaho Uhiei, same standard bred, Also three line young stallions by "Kockwooa jr." out oi hrst class mares. For prices and terms call on or address either J. W.Uondon, or J. H. Larsen, rne Dalles, Oregon. On Band. J. XL. Huntington & (Jo. announce that they are prepared to make out the necessary papers lor parties wishing to nie 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 Hose Block next to main entrance. Merino Sheep for Sale. I have a fine band of thorough bred Merino sheep consisting of 67 bucks. aDOut &H) ewes and about zUU young iamD8, wnicn i will sell at a low price and upon easy terms. Address, D. M. Fbenxh, The Dalles, Or. Stock Strayed. Three 3-year-old fillies (2 sorrels and one bay,) two 2-year-olds (both bays) all branded i on the left shoulder. I will give $5 apiece for the recovery of the same. J. W. Rogers. Boyd, Or. Improve Tour Poultry. If yon want chickens that will lav eggs the year round without having to pen' them up to keep them from setting, get the pure bred Brown Leghorn. Mrs. D. Cooper on the bluff, near the academy. has the eggs for 75 cents per setting. New Addition. For one week I will sell shade trees. elm, maple, ash and box elder, also sur plus fruit trees at half price. j J, A. VaMIT. 1 TAL- Prkem ess Is the Topic and This Is Che Text, "Noah Planted a Vineyard, and He Drank of the Wine and Was New York, March I. Dr. Talmage continued today the series of sermons he commenced last Sunday on the "Tea Plagues of New York and the Adjacent Cities.' The plague which he places second on the list is intemperance, and on that subject he discoursed this morning in the Academy of Music, Brooklyn, and this evening in New York. At the close of the service in the New York Academy of Music Dr. Taimage went over to the Union Square Theatre, where his son, Mr. Frank De Witt Taimage, was holding an over flow meeting, - and briefly addressed the crowded house. Both the New York ser vices are under the auspices of The Chris tian Herald, of which Dr. Talmafrs is editor. The text of the doctor's sermon was taken from Genesis lx. 20, 21: "Noah plantaul a vineyard, and he drank of the wine and was drunken." This Noah did the best and the worst thing for the world. He built an ark against the deluge of water, but intro duced a deluge against which the human race has ever since been trying to build an ark the deluge of drunkenness. In my text we hear his staggering steps. Shem and Japhet tried to cover np the dis grace, but there he is, drunk on wine at a time in the history of the world, when, to say the least, there was no lack of water. Inebriation, having entered the world, has not retreated. Abigail, the fair and heroic wife, who saved the flocks of Nabal, her husband, from confiscation by invaders. goes home at night and finds him so intox icated she cannot tell him the story of his narrow escape. Uriah came to see David, and David got him drunk and paved the way tor the despoliation of a household. Erven the church bishops needed to be charged to be sober and not given to too much wine, and so familiar were people of Bible times with the staggering and fall ing motion of the inebriate that - Isaiah, when he comes to describe the final dislo cation of worlds, says, "The earth shall reel to and fro like a drunkard." A WORLD WIDE TEMPTATION. Ever since apples and grapes and wheat grew the world has been tempted to un healthful stimulants. Bat the intoxicants of the olden time were an innocent bever- flxtt- a harmless nrfincpjulft. a aniet Kirnn n peaceful soda water as compared with the : liquids of modern inebriation, into which a ' madness, and a fury, and aglooni, and afire, and a suicide, and a retribution have mixed i and mingled. Fermentation was always known, but it was not until a thousand years after Christ that distillation was in vented. While we must confess that some of the ancient arts have been lost, the Christian era is superior to ail others in the bad eminence of whisky and ram and gin. The modern drunk is a hundred fold worse than the ancient drunk. Noah in his intoxication became imbecile, but the victims of modern alcoholism have to struggle with whole menageries of wild beasts, and jungles of hissing serpents, and perditions of blaspheming demons. An arch fiend arrived in our world, and he built an invisible caldron of tempta tion. He built that caldron strong and stout for all ages and all nations. First he squeezed into the caldron the juices of the forbidden fruit of Paradise. Then he gathered for it a distillation from the har vest fields and the orchards of the hemis pheres. Then he poured into this caldron capsicum and copperas and logwood and deadly nightshade and assault and battery and vitriol and opium and rum and mur der and sulphuric acid and theft and pot ash and cochineal and red carrots and pov erty and death and bops. But it was a dry compound and it must be moistened, and it must be liquefied, and so the arch fiend poured into that caldron the tears of cent uries of orphanage and widowhood, and he poured in the blood of twenty thousand assassinations. -And then the arch fiend took a shovel that he had brought up from the furnaces beneath, and he put that shovel into this great caldron and began to stir, and the caldron began to heave and rock and boil and sputter and hiss and smoke, and the nations gathered around it with cups and tankards and demijohns and kegs, and there was enough for all, and the arch fiend cried: "Aha! champion fiend am I! Who has done more than I have for coffins and graveyards and prisons and insane asylums, and the populating of the lost world? And when this caldron is emp tied I'll fill it again and I'll stir it again, and it will smoke again, and that smoke will join another smoke, the smoke of a torment that ascendeth for ever and ever. I drove fifty ships on the rocks of New foundland, and the Skerries, and the Goodwins. I .have ruined more senators than gather this winter in the national councils. I have ruined more lords than are now gathered in the lipase of peers The cap oat of which I ordinarily drink is a bleached human skull, and the upholstery of my palace is so rich a crimsSn, because it is dyed in hu man gore, and the mosaic of my floors is made up of the bones of children dashed to death by drunken parents, and my favorite music sweeter than Te Deum or triumph al my favorite music is the cry of daughters turned out at midnight on the street because father has come home from the carousal, and the seven hundred voiced shriek of the sinking steamer, because the captain was not himself when ha pat the ship on the wrong coarse. Champion fiend am II I have kindled more fires, I have wrung out more agonies, 1 have stretched out more midnight shadows, I have opened more Golgothas, i have rolled more Jug gernauts, I have damned more souls than any other emissary of diabolism. Cham pion fiend am I!" THE KATJON'B GREATEST KVTU Drunkenness is the greatest evil of this nation, and it takes no logical process to prove to this audience that a drunken na tion cannot long be a free nation. I call your attention to the fact that drunken ness is not subsiding, certainly that it is not at a standstill, bat that it is on an on ward march, and it is a double quick. There is more rum swallowed in tins coon try, and of a worse kind, than was ever wallowed since the first distillery began its work of death. Where there was one drunken home there are ten drunken homes. Where there was one drunkard's grave there are twenty drunkards' graves. It is on the increase. Talk about crooked whisky by which men mean the whisky that does not pay the tax to government I tell you all strong drink is crooked. Crooked Otard, crooked Cognac, crooked schnapps, crooked beer, crooked wine, crooked whisky because it makes a man's path crooked, and his life crooked, and his death crooked, ana his eternity croozea. If I .could gather all the armies of the dead drunkards and have them come to resurrection, and then add to that host all the armies of living drunkards, five and ten abreast, and then if I could have you mount a horse and ride along that line for review, you would ride that horse until he dropped from exhaustion, and you would mount another horse and ride until be fell from exhaustion, and yon would take an other and another, and yon would ride along hour after hour and day after day. Great host, in regiments, in brigades. Great armies of them. And then if you had voice stentorian enough to make them all hear, and you could give the command. Forward, march!" their first tramp would make the earth tremble. I do not care which way yon look in the community to day the evil is increasing. HSBKDRABT APrKTRK. I call attention to the fact that there are thousands of people born with a thirst for strong drink a fact too often ignored. Along some ancestral lines there runs the river of temptation. There are children whose swaddling clothes are torn off the shroud of death. Many a father has made a will of this sort: "In the name of God, amen. '. I bequeath to my children my booses and lands and estates; share and share shall they alike. Hereto I affix my hand and seal in the presence of witnesses." And yet perhaps that very man has made will that the people nave never ism, ana case dm ec pssm jhvu hi hki THE SECOND SERMON IN DR. MAGE'S PRESENT SERIES. read something like this: "In the name of disease and appetite and death, amen. 1 bequeath to my children my evil habits, my tankards shall be theirs, my wine cup shall be theirs, my destroyed reputation shall be theirs. Share and share alike shall they in the infamy. Hereto I affix my hand and seal in the presence of all the ap plauding harpies of hell." From the multitude of those who have the evil habit born with them this army is being augmented. And I am Borry to say that a great many of the drug stores are abetting this evil, and alcohol is sold under the name of bitters. It is bitters for this and bitters for that and bitten for some other thing, and good men deceived, not knowing there is any tfaraildom of alcohol ism coming from that source, are going down, and some day a man sits with the bottle of black bitters on his table, and the cork flies out, and after it flies a fiend and clutches the man by his throat and says: "Aha! I have been after yon for ten years. I have got you now. Down with youl down with youl" Bitters! Ah! yes. They make a man's family bitter and. his home bitter and his disposition bitter and his death bitter and his hell bitter. Bitters! A vast army, all the time increasing. It seems to me it is about time for the 17,000,000 professors of religion in America to take sides. It is going to be an out and out battle with drunkenness and sobriety, between heaven and hell, between God and the devil. Take Bides before there is any further national decadence; take sides be fore your sons are sacrificed and the new home of your daughter goes down under the alcoholism of an imbruted husband. Take sides while your voice, your pen, your prayer, your vote may have any influ ence in arresting the despoliation of this nation. If the 17,000,000 professors of re ligion should take sides on this subject it would not be very long before the destiny of this nation would be decided in the right direction. THE CUBSK OF STRONG DBHTK. Is drunkenness a state or national evil? Does it belong to the north, or does it be long to the south t Does it belong to the east, or does it belong to the west? Ahl there is not an American river into which its tears have not fallen and into which its suicides have not plunged. What ruined that southern plantation? every field a fortune, the proprietor and his family once the most affluent supporters of summer watering places. What threw that New England farm, into decay and turned the roseate cheeks that bloomed at the foot of the Green Mountains into the pallor of despair? What has smitten every street of every village, town and city of this con- I tinent ; drink. with a moral pestilence? Strong To prove that this is a national evil I call up two statesin opposite directions Maine and Georgia. Let them testify in regard to this. State of Maine says, "It is so great an evil up here we have anathematized it i as u state." State of Georgia says, "It is so : great au evil down here that ninety coun . ties of this state have made the sale of in toxicating drink a criminality." So the ' word comes np from all parts of the land. Either drunkenness will be destroyed in this country or the American government will be destroyed. Drunkenness and free institutions are coming into a death grap ple. Gather up the money that the working classes have spent for rum during the last thirty years, and I will build for every workingman a house, and lay out for him a garden, and clothe his sons in broadcloth and his daughters in silks, and stand at his front door a prancing span of sorrels or bays, and secure him a policy of life insur ance so that the present home may be well maintained after he is dead. The most per sistent, most overpowering enemy of the working el rumen is intoxicating liquor. It Is the anarchist of the centuries, and has boycotted and is now boycotting the body and mind and soul of American labor. It annually swindles industry out of a large percentage of its earnings It holds ou its blasting solicitations to the mechanic or operative on his way to work, and at the noon spell, and on his way home at even tide. On Saturday, when the wages are paid, it snatches a large part of the money that might come to the family and sacri fices it among the saloon keepers. Stand the saloons of this country side by side, and it is- carefully estimated that they would reach from New York to Chicago. This evil is pouring its vitriolic and damnable liquors down the throats of hundreds of thousands of laborers, and while the ordinary strikes are ruinous both to employers and employes, I pro claim a universal strike against strong ; drink, which strike, if kept up, will be the relief of the working classes and the salva- I tion of the nation. I will undertake to say that there is not a healthy laborer in the United States who, within the next twenty years, if he will refuse all intoxicating beverages and be saving, may not become a capitalist on a small scale. CANNOT SOXKTHXHG BB POKE? Oh, how many are waiting to see if some thing cannot be done for the stopping of intemperance! Thousands of drunkards waiting who cannot go ten minutes in any direction without having the temptation glaring before their eyes or appealing to their nostrils, they fighting against it with enfeebled will and diseased appetite, con quering, then surrendering, conquering again and surrendering again, and crying, "How long. O Lord! how long before these infamous solicitations shall be gone!" And how many mothers are waiting to see if this TiqHonl curse cannot lift? Oh, is that the boy who had the honest breath who comes home with breath vitiated or disguised? What a change! How quickly those habits of early coming home have been exchanged, for the rattling of the night key in the door long after the last watchman has gone by and -tried to see that everything was closed up for the night! . Oh! what a change for that young man. who we had hoped would do something in J merchandise or in artisans nip or m a pro fession that would do honor to the family name, long after mother's wrinkled hands are folded from the last toil! All that ex changed for startled look when the door bell rings, lest something has happened; and the wish that the scarlet fever twenty vears axro had been fatal, for then he would have gone directly to the bosom of his bavioar. dux, aiasi poor old soul, sne nas lived to experience what Solomon said, "A foolish son is a heaviness to his mother." ' Oh! what a funeral it will be when that boy is brought home dead! And how moth er will sit there and say: "Is this my boy that I used to fondle, and that I walked the floor with in the night when be was sick? Is this the boy that I held to the baptismal font for baptism? Is this the . boy -for whom I toiled until the blood burst from the tips of my fingers, that he might have a good start and a good home? Lord, why hast thou let me live to see this? Can it be that these swollen hands are the ones that used to wander over my face when rocking him to sleep? Can it be that this swollen brow is that I once so rapturously kissed? Poor boy! how tired he does look. I wonder who struck him that Mow across the temples? I wonder if be uttered a dying prayer? Wake np, my son; don't you hear me? wake up! Oh! he can't hear me! Dead! deadl dead! 'Oh, Absalom, my son, my son, would God that I had died for thee, oh, Absalom, my son, son!' " THE WOHDS OF THE RCM KIK.SU. 1 am not much of a micbematician and I cunnot estimate it, but is there any one here quick e.iouh at figures to estimate how many uiolai-rs tiieiv are waiting for something to be done? A;', tbnre are many wiviit wjtithiu (or donntie rescue. lie iruiise.l something difiV.-ren: from tixni when, nil r the l'-ir; ajij .i.iiutaucc and sin curcftil scrutiny, uf chaiiw-ier, thf !mnvl and tiii- iic-jirt were o'.-e'i :id a'-c:';iuii. Vn.:t a iiell un earth :i v.iinan lives in who iuis h drunken 'lntsbaua! O death, b-w .v!y thou arc to her, hu1 lioirsoft. ani vvarai thy skeleton hand! The M.'ijiil-ii'-r ttt mi l night in winter in kiiin drarin room compared with that woman's home. It not so mucii t-:if blow on t:ie head that hurts an the !' v on the In-art. The rum fienJ cnine to the door of that beautiful home, nd opened the i or hii'J stood there audsaid: "IcursethMiiiivHii: with an nmvienlin;; curxe. 1 curse tual father into a maniac, I curse t ii.it mother into a pauper. I curse those sons into vagabonds.. I curse thode daughters into profligacy. Cursed be bread tray and cradle. Cursed be coach -and chair, and family Bible with record of marriages and births and deaths. Coxae upon Bhake these frosts of the second death oil the orange blossoms! Yea, God is wzutang, f hn iwvl whn WArVO thrnno-h knmtin in. stru mentalities, waiting to see whether this nation is going to overthrow this evil, and if it refuse to do so God will wipe out the nation as he did Phoenicia, as he did Borne, as be did Thebes, as he did Babylon. Ay, he is waiting to see what the church of God will do. If the church does not do its work, then he will wipe it out as be did the church of Ephesus, church of Thya tira, church of Sardis. The Protestant and Roman Catholic churches today stanl side by side, with an impotent look, gig on this evil, which costs this country more than a billion dollars a year to take care of the 800,000 paupers, and the 315,000 crimi nals, and the 30,000 idiots, and to bury the 73,000 drunkards. Protagoras boasted that out of the sixty years of his life forty years he had spent in ruining youth; but this evil may make the more infamous boast that all its life it has been ruining the bodies, minds and souls of the human race. THE POLITICIANS ARE DOING MOTHDKL 1 Put on your spectacles and take a candle ' and examine the platforms of the two lead- j ing political parties of this eoonfary. and j see what they are doing for the arrest of Oi this evil and for the overthrow of this j abomination. Resolutions oh! yes, reso- lutions about Mormonism! It is safe to attack that organized nastiness two thou- j sand miles away. But not one resolution ) against drunkenness, which would torn this entire nation into one bestial Salt Lake i City. Resolutions against political cor- ! ruption, but not one word about drunken ness, which would rot this nation from scalp to heel. Resolutions about protec tion against competition with foreign in dustries, but not one word about protec tion of family and church and nation against the scalding, blasting, all consum ing, damning tariff of strong drink put upon every financial, individual, spiritual, moral, national interest. I look in another direction. The Chnrch institution on earth. What has it in solid phalanx accomplished for the overthrow of drunkenness? Have its forces ever been marshaled? Xo, not in this direction. Not long ago a great ecclesiastical court assem bled in New York, and resolutions arraign ing strong drink were offered, and clergy men with strong drink on their tables and strong drink in their cellars defeated the resolutions by threatening speeches. They could not bear to give up their own lusts. I tell this audience what many ef you may never have thought of, that today not in the millennium, but today the church holds the balance of power in ! America; and if Christian people the men and the women who profess to lore ; the Lord "Jesus Christ and to love purity and to be the sworn enemies of all unclean- ' ness and debauchery and sin if all sucli would march side by side and shoulder to shoulder, this evil would soon be over- j thrown. Think of three hundred thou-; sand churches and Sunday schools in i Christendom marching shoulder to slioul- ; derl How very short a time it would take ; them to put down this evil, if all the churches of God, transatlantic and cisat lantic, were armed on this subject? Young men of America, pass over into the army of teetotal ism. Whisky, good to preserve corpses, ousht never to turn you into a corpse. Tens of thousands of young men have been dragged out of respecta bility, and out of purity, and out of good character, and into darkness by this in fernal stuff called strong drink. Do not touch it! Do not touch it! LOOK HOT UPON THK WINK. In the front door of our church in Brook lyn, a few summers ago, this scene oc curred: Sabbath morning a young man was entering for divine worship. 'A friend passing along the street said, "Joe, come along with me; I am going down to Coney Island and we'll have a gay Sunday." "No," replied Joe; "I have Btarted to go here to church, and I am going to attend service here." "Oh, Joe," his friend said, "you can go to church any time! The day is bright, and we'll go to Coney Island, and well have a splendid time." The tempta tion was too strong, acid the twain went to the beach, spent the day in drunkenness and riot. The evening train started up from Brighton. The young men were on it. Joe, in his intoxication, when the train was in full speed, tried to pass around from one seat to another and fell and was crushed. Under the lantern, as Joe lay bleeding his life away on the grass, he said to his comrade: "John, that was a bad business, your taking me away from church; it was a very bad business. You ought not to have done that,. John. I want you to tell j the boys to-morrow when you see them ! that rum and Sabbath breaking did this for me. And John, while you are telling them I will be in hell, and it will be your fault." Is it not time for me to pull out from the great organ of God's word, with many banks of keys, the tremolo stop? "Look not upon the wine when it is red, when it moveth itself aright in the cup, for at last it biteth like a serpent and stingeth like an adder." But this evil will be arrested. Blncher came up just before night and saved the day at Waterloo. At 4 o'clock in the after noon it looked very badly for the English. Generals Ponsonby and Pickton fallen. Sabers broken, flags surrendered Scots Grays annihilated. Only forty-two men left oat of the German brigade. The En glish army falling beck and falling back. Napoleon rubbed his hands together and said: "Aha! aha! we'll teach that little Englishman a lesson. Ninety chances out of a hundred are in our favor. Magnifi cent! magnificent!" He even sent mes sages to Paris to say he had won the day. But before sundown Blucher came np, and he who had been the conqueror of Austerlitz became the victim of Waterloo. The name which had shaken all Europe and filled even America with apprehen sion, that name went down, and Napoleon, muddy and hatless, and erased with his dis asters, was found feeling for the stirrup of a horse, that he might mount and resume the conflict. Well, my friends, alcoholism is imperial, and it is a conqueror, and there are good people who say the night of national over throw is coming, and that it is almost night. But before sundown the Conqueror of earth and heaven will ride in on the white horse, and alcoholism, which has had its Austerlitz of triumph, shall have its Waterloo of defeat. Alcoholism hav ing lost its crown, the grizzly and cruel breaker of human hearts, crazed with the disaster, will be found feeling in vain for the stirrup on which to remount its foaming charger. "So, O Lord, let thine enemies perish!" . Pbolas, the Shell Miner. The pholas, a small species of bivalve shell having the remarkable faculty of boring into the hardest rock, is one of the greatest wonders known to the concholo gist. Great blocks of granite and marble that have fallen overboard or been sunk in foundered vessels have been found years afterward completely honeycombed by these curious little borers, they themselves being imprisoned in the cavity, obtaining their food from the water that flowed in and out. Many explanations have been giveu as to the method by which they bore into such extremely hard rocks. The shell is known to contain aragonite, and some suppose that constant fnction ena bles the shell to subdue the rock. Others, again, are of the opinion that the shell secretes some corrosive fluid which dissolves the rock and enables the creature to bore its hole. Some of the most interesting samples of its work known to the scientists may be seen in the pillars of the Temple of Serapis, Italy. There the land became submerged long enough for the shell to do its curious work. After a lapse of ages the land has now risen, and the holes with their empty shell are plainly to be seen, the marble pillars being completely permeated by them. These and other exhibitions of its work have caused -pholas to be called "the shell miner," and, curiously enough, it is fur nished with a lamp, a rich blue white light that shines over the entire body. Some re markable experiments have been made with the shells of pholas. St. Louis Re public Great pictures, great books, great ac tions, great souls, are simple. A dozen authors might be quoted to show how uni form is the belief in the beauty of simplicity. ; - - ' - ' ' ' - in me last, iwo weeKs have been made at Portland, Tacoma, Forest Grove, McMinnville and The Dalles. All are satisfied that North Dalles Is now the place for investment. New ufactories are to be added and large improve ments made. The next 90 dajs will be im portant ones for this new city. Call at the office of the Interstate Investment Co., 72 Washington St., PORTLAND, Or. D. TAYLOR, THE DALLES, Or. o. H Dealer in Fori FANCY GOODS AND NOTIONS, CLOTHING, HATS AND GAPS, Boots and Shoes etc. iiKlJt .LOW AJMJJ (JAISH ONLY. FISH & BAR DON. DEALERS TIN" Stoves, GAS PIPES, Faraaees, PLUMBERS GOODS, We are the Sole Agents for the Celebrated Trimnuli Range ani , Ramona Coot Stove, : W hich have no equals, and Warranted to giy e Entire Satisfaction or Money Refunded Comer Second anil Washington Streets, The Dalles, Oregon. -. ' - - . ' , . . Q Crandall & Budget, MANUFAOTUKERS AND DEALERS IN , FURNITURE Undertakers and Embalmers. NO. 16G SECOND STREET. E. W. EDWARDS, DEALER IN Paints, Oils, Glass, Wall Papers, Decora tions, Artists' Materials, Oil Painthf s, Clroinos anJ Steel EniTraYinp. Mouldings and Picture Frames, Cornice Poles Etc., Paper Trimmed Free. Pioturo Frames Made to Order 276 and 278, Second Street. - - - The Dalles, Or. -: DEALERS IN and Fancy Hay, Grain Cheap Express Wagons flos. l and 2. Orders left at the Store wiHJreceive prompt attention. Trnnktt and Packages delivered to any part of the City. , , Wagons always on hand when Trains or Boat arrives. No. 122 Cor. Washington and Third. Sts. f I. C. NICKELSEN, & - DEALER IN- STATIONERY, NOTIONS, BOOKS AND MUSIC. Cor. of M . ani Washington Sts, The Dalles, Oregon. :. NEW FIRM! foseoe & -DEALERS V STAPLE'.' AND Canned Goods, Preserves, Pickles, Etc. Country Produce Bought and Sold. Goods delivered Free to any part of tfie City Masonic Block, Corner Third and The Largest large saies oi lots . . in the WeC The NeM Boot and Shoe FACTORY. Firnitiire fly. Wire Works Ma- Ctoical v ' LuUUiulUif. NEW BRIDGE. Several Fine Cites. Heoi Railroad Herbring. flanges, PUMPS, fcr CARPETS. and Feed. NEW STORE ' Gibons, IN- V FANCY'.' Court Streets, Tha Dalles, Oregon. Groceries,