OBIGON FRIDAY. - - - APEEL10, 1891 LOCAL AND PKBSONAL,. Peach trees are blooming in favored ' localities. '. The river is six feet above low mark and falling. water The Hon. G. W. Johnston of Dofur was in town Thursday. A. J Brigham the well-known "S. B, man from Dofnr was in town . Saturday. Mr. V. C. Brock, the county clerk of Sherman county was in the city Saturday, Mr. David Bens, wife and daughter left for the east via Portland on Tuesday . last. We had the pleasure of receiving pleasant call from J. F. Ellis president of the Pacific University at Forest Grove, Saturday. It is the proper caper now to call the city of Spokane Falls simply Spokane, so the people decided at an election held there last week. C. W. Haight of Cow Canyon has sold his Clydesdale stallion Black Prince Sam H. Douglas of Tygh Valley for one thousand dollars.. . Mr. Henry Stroud and Messrs. Rod - man and MacMicken of Prineville, were in the city after merchandise for mer chants of that central city, last week. . Mr. A. - S. Macallister ' received the ' model for the new steamboat Friday ' and it was on exhibit at the stockholders meeting today at . the board of trade rooms. ' Mr. Perry Watkins was in the city, and informs us the railroad surveyors have passed his place on lower Fifteen Mile and report fine . grades and an easy road to build. . The month of March has been the coldest and the most unfavorable one for our farmers for years. The difference in temperature for the month exceeds any for the past eighteen years, it being six degrees colder on an average. . P. P. Underwood, of Boyd, was in the city Friday. He reports farming opera tions in fair progress, and the farmers . all hard at work. Mr. Undewood will commence to teach a term of school at the liberty school house Monday April 6, Mrs. C. E. Dunham accompanied by Mrs. G. W. Phelps left on this morning's freight train for Sufus, where Mrs. Dunham's parents reside, she is gain- ing strength very rapidly and it is hoped ' the change will result favorably for .her, The first annual meeting of the stock. holders of the Columbia Portland and Astoria Navigation company was held . Friday in the board of trade rooms. A report of the proceeding will be furnish ed our readers in Monday's Chronicle ' - A. W. Fargher has 'returned to the ' city after a six weeks absence with his band of sheep at Bake Oven. He thinks lambing will average about seventy five per cent. Grass is backward on the ' range about Bake Oven as the snow lay on the ground late. Messrs. Tillman and Bendel, leading wholesale grocers in San Francisco, have . guaranteed one of our leading merchants in this city that there will be no decline - in sugar during the., month of April ' Those of us who expected to till our sugar tooth with cheap sugar, will be left. Verily the sugar kings have it. , Three' six and eight horse teams were being loaded with freight for Prineville, -on Friday of last week These. teams brought down 200 pelts, while one of them last year on the same trip brought down 1500. The roads are in inn i v kuuu ixiuuiuuu lui n tr 1 111 j 0 year. The time was when the State Insur ance company, of Salem, did not have the best reputation in the world for settling losses. We are assured, however that in the matter of settling with Ike Young, whose dwelling and household effects were lately destroyed, the co myany has acted promptly and liberally. The Goldendale Sentinel says, "The man who stole Colonel Pike's uniform -atTekoa last February., was sentenced to two years penal servitude. Sandy Olda the notorious Portland murderer was sentenced for one year. What does this mean? Ye Gods? Is it poesible that stealing is worse than murder?" The Oregon Agricultural Experiment ' station at Corvallia has sent to Mr. D. J. Cooper of this city a limited quantity of sugar beet seed and Mr. Cooper has left the seed at this office for distribu tion to all who are willing to experiment with the plant on. our Eastern Oregon soil. ' It is believed that a very large proportion of the lands of the Inland Empire is adapted, and specially so, to the successful raising of the sugar beet, and we shall be pleased to distribute the seed freely as long as it lasts. - The U. P. company are having trouble with the Mosier school district about school taxes which the company refuses to pay. The district, through the sheriff, levied an execution on the company's property and the sale was to come off to morrow but the company has served no tice on the sheriff to stop the sale and the end is not yet. The Chroniclk had hoped to buy out Jay Gould's interest and add the road to the many other at tractions of this journal but is, for the present, disappointed. The directors of the Eastern Oregon Dis trict Fair Association held a meeting in this city Friday and decided to hold the agricultural fair in September, commenc ing on Tuesday the 22d, and ending Saturday 26th. Pamphlets and speed programmes will be published as soon as possible. The premium list will be put in the hands of the state printer and hurried through without delay. Let everything possible be done to make the coming fair a success. The Chronicle may be relied on to do its share. . Mr. Norton's surveying party has . reached Dufur where they are camped today. Mr. Norton was obliged to visit The Dalles to procure a new level. He reports being verv much pleased with the grade so far. No difficulties worth naming have been met with in locating the road. It is an easy gradual grade of 37)4 feet average to the mile. The road from Arlington to Heppner, Mr. Norton informs us averages 60 feet to the mile and is in some places 85.- There will be no greater rise than Mr. Norton has already met with till the summit of the elevation between Dufur and Tygh val ley is reached, and Mr. Norton is coafi-; THE DALLES, - - - j.i,iaa prcTitJrTrt; .--"A"-"'aurfrjjca" Friday from the Wasco warehouse for the Prineville country. The Klickitat Leader says that the Farmers' Transportation company which has the right of way on the Washington side of the Celilo rapids intends to begin the construction of their transportation road from Columbus to North Dalles at once, in order to have it finished in time to haul this season's crop of grain. Alex Fargher, well known in this city and county, T. G. Kelley, familiarly known as "Top," late of Kingsley and a man named Faucett have formed a joint stock company with a capital stock of $150,000, for developing a coal mine lately discovered by Faucett and Kelly, near Chehalis, Washington. They have two ledges, one ten feet and one six feet. At the meeting of the share-holders of The Dalles, Portland & Astoria Naviga tion eompany, held in this city today, 242 shares out of about 300 taken were represented and the following officers were chosen for the ensuing year : E. B. McFarland, chairman, C. L. Phillips, secretary, and B. F. Laughlin, D. M. French, A. S. Macallister, M. T. Nolan, Hugh Glenn, Kobt. Mays and O. Kiner sly, directors. The further proceedings of the meeting were under wav at the hour of going to press Saturday. Geortre P. Mortran and Colonel E. W. Nevius, who are doing business together at uarretson sold stand on becond street, as land office attorneys, desire to state to their clients and to the general pub lic as well, that it is now definitely known that specific written instructions as to filings on the forfeited railroad lands will De received bv the land office, by the first of next week. Thirty days' notice by publication is required before filings will be accepted at this land office. After such instructions are re ceived it will be well for all those who intend to enter this land to come in at once to have their papers made out and all the preliminaries settled, thus avoid ing the inevitable rush and securing the first chances at the land office bv beine ready. The New Steamboat Company. The Dalles, Portland & Astoria Navi gation company organized Saturday evening and elected the following officers: Kobt. Mays, president; M. T. Nolan, vice-president; H. M. Beall, secretary; G. V. Bolton, treasurer. The new company will let the contract for the first steamboat immediately and will push things. It is suggested and favorably considered too by the board that the new boat be christened the Gov. Pennoyer." The idea is a capital one, and surely no one is more worthy of the honor than his excellency, as he has been untiring in his efforts for an open river from the first of his official iife. He will leave nothing undone that that the portage road may be in readi ness for the steamboats when completed. . Economy and Ethics. The fruit of speculation and gambling are being reaped over on the sound by a whirlwind of seductions and murders. A dav does not pass without some of the boomed cities furnishing a victim of the depravity which follows the decay aris ing from excessive thieving, commonly described as over-booming and over speculation. Men cannot take some thing for doing nothing without suffer ing the penalty attached to injustice and robbery. East Oreyonian. These "seducers and murderers are badly in need of instruction in "economy and ethics," if the philosophy of the East Oregonian is to be believed. A great many of us would administer the 'economy and ethics" hypodermically at the end of the muzzle of a shotgun. AdTertlaed Letters. Following is a list of unclaimed letters remaining in the post office at The Dallas Oregon, April4, 1891. Persons calling for same will please say "Advertised." Almblade, Oscar Davis, Miss Helen C Uenmson, I) U Forinan, George Harris & Tim by Munsey, John Pickel, Florence Rice, Mrs E Forrest, Arthur Hansen, Laura Hanel, Miss Grace McClure, J M Phillips, John H sawyer, vv r Snow, 1 r Taylor, Kay Tottingham, Albert Waterman, A B Wright, Wm P Wood, George B M. T. Nolan, . M. A -Good Horse. Mr. S. H. Douglas of Tygh Valley has bought the horse Prince and will keep him at Wamic ai.d Tygh Valley for breeding purposes in future. Mr. Haight has owned and kept Prince at Cow Canyon for the past five years and he is authority for the statement that no horse in the state can show a better rec ord than his during that time. Prince is eight years old and weighs 1,850 lbs. He will be a valuable addition to the part of the country where he will be kept henceforth. Seeking Information. Goudyville, S. D., March 27, 1891. Dear Sib. Will you please send me by return mail all the information of The Dalles and the neighboring county, I re main, Yours very respectfully, R. 8. Frayne. The above letter was received yes terday by the secretary of the board of trade. It was naturally handed to this office and we promptly sent Mr. Frayne copy of the Chronicle. A committee consistfng of Paul Mohr, E. G. Hughes, Osburn, J. K. Gill, J. Lang, H. S. Rowe and J. R. Allen, from the Portland chamber of commerce, vis ited The Dalles yesterday to examine the north bank of the Columbia in connec tion with the location of the portage railroad there. The ccinmittee informed some of our citizens that they expected to have the road finished within the next six months. Work is to be menced immediately. The forces that held up the price of of sugar on the Pacific coast are too potent to yield to any such trifle as the removal of a two-cent duty. The price of raw sugar in the east fell two cents per pound the moment the sugar in the custom house was released from bond yesterdajr, and all other grades promptly followed it. Though San Francisco re finers pay the Hawaiian planters the price of Cuban sugar laid down id New York, prices here did not follow the de cline irk New York, falling off only three fonrths of a cent. Sugar is now nearly three cents per pound higher here than . i . I in the east. That is curious. Why are two young ladies kissing each other like an emblem of Christianity? Because they were doing to each other as they would men should do unto them. "Have you ever been a member of the California legislature?" is now the dis trict attorney's first question to a crimi nal." Helena Independent. Whist seems to be on its way to be come the national game. . Oregon Weather Bureau,) Central Office,Portland, Oregon. )" REMARKS, This bulletin is made up from reports received from 173 correspondents. The various conditions and prospects as re ported are given. Statments made are from written reports of reliable men in every section of the state. weather. Cool temperatures, frosty nights, showers, fresh winds and two cloudless days have been the weather character istics for the week. While the temper ature has been below the normal for this season of the year, yet there has been a gradual raise, but slow, in the heat each day. The frosts were general and frequent, but owing to the retarded state of fruit buds and vein tat ion there was no dainatre done. The showers helped to keep the soil wet, thus delaying spring seeding, the dampness and cool winds have not been favorable to yonng and some loss therefrom is reported Light hailstorms doing no damage, oc curred in many sections on the 26th and 27th ulto. Snow fell in Lake county to depth of two inches on the 2(th. CROPS. While the weather conditions are not favorable to a rapid advancement of vegetation, yet it is rather beneficial, as it allows the roots to gather strength and gives a slow but healthy growth Fall wheat is reported to be better stooled and rooted than for many years Spring seeding in bouthern Oregon is well along. In the Willamette valley it is greatly delayed, except on the higher land. In .hastern Oregon in some sec. trons it is half done, in others just com mencing. The acreage of spring sown grain will be larger than last year. The cool weather continues to check advancement of fruit, hence is beneficial to it, as it is less liable to be injured by late frosts. Fruit is farther advanced In Jackson, Josephine and Benton counties than in any other sections of the state. The snow is gradually leaving the , foot hills and in the Coast range it is nearly all gone. Warmer weather seems ap proaching, the grass is growing and stock are getting along very well. HEALTH. The general health conditions are re ported to lie good. Colds are less fre quent and no unusual sickness prevails. n. S. Fagub, Observer U. S. Signal Service. Is -Disease a FnnlRbmeat? The following advertisement, published by a prominent western patent medicine house would indicate that they regard disease as a punishment for sin : Do vou wish to know the quickest way to cure a sever cold? We will tell you. To cure a cold qickly, it must be treated before the cold has become set tled 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 punishment for some indiscre tion, you are lo 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 tongue. What to do? It is only necessary to take Chamberlain's Cough Remedy in double doses every hour. That will gTeatly 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 & Kinersley, druggists. Forfeited Railroad 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 of the Interior. Persons for whom we have prepared papers and who are re quired to renew their applications,, will not be charged additional for such papers. THORNHURY HUDSON, Rooms 8 and 9, Land Office building, The Dalles, Oregon. The Best Cough Medicine. "One of my customers came in today and asked me for the best cough medi cine I had," says Lew Young, a promi nent druggist of Newman Grove, Neb. "Of course I 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 most pefect satisfaction." 50 cent bot tles for sale by Snipes & Kinersly, drug store. fc FOBSALK. A choice lot of 'brood mares ; also a number of geldings and fillies bv "Rock wood Jr.," "Planter," "Oregon Wilkeg, and "Idaho Chief," same standard bred, Also three fine young stallions by "Kockwooa Jr. out oi nrst class mares. For prices and terms call on or address either J. vv . Condon, or J. H. Larsen, The Dalles, Oregon, On Hand. J. M. Huntington sc (Jo. announce that they are prepared to make out the necessary papers for parties wishing to hie 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 H"se Block next to main entrance. - Merino Sheep for Sale. I have a fine band of thorough bred Merino sheep consisting of 67 bucks, about dw ewes and about 200 yonng lambs, which I will sell at a low price and upon easy terms. Address, D. M. French, 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 lay eggs the year round without having to pen them up to keep them from setting, get thepure bred Brown Leghorn. Mrs. D. J. Cooper on the bluff, near the academy, has the eggs for 75 cents per setting. Horsemen Attention. The spring rodero for horses will meet at Bake Oven on the first day of May. '- R. BOOTEN, Chas. W. Haight, J. N. Burgess. The American Market. The best stand in the city will be UUCIOU IVI MID 1U1 FT, .l rAW ..la 4l. next ten days. Good chance for a live man to make I money. 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. A. V ARNEY. City Treasurer's Notice. AH City Warrants registered prior to July 6, 1889 are now due and payable. Interest ceases on and after date. -. J. S. Fish. February 7, 1891. CityTreas. DISCOURSE PREACHED BY T, DE WITT . TALMAGE. Baleful AmnaeaaMts the Sotyx A Great Coaoonno Present The Speak er Specifies Amusements That Are Harmful and These That Are Not. New York, March 3 The aeries of ser mons Dr. Talmage is preaching in this city and Brooklyn on "The Flagues of the Cities" is attracting general attention. At the morning service in Brooklyn and at the evening services held - under the auspices of The Christian Herald, in this city, the number of persons who come to hear the sermons is far larger than either of the buildings can accommodate. The sermon to-day, which is the fourth of the series, is on "Baleful Amusements." The text was II Samuel, ii, 14: "Let the young men now anse and play before us. There are two armies encamped by the pool of Gibeon. The time hangs heavily on their hands. One army proposes a game of sword fencing. Nothing could be more healthful and Innocent. The other urmy accepts the challenge. Twelve men against twelve men, the sport opens. But some thing went adversely. Perhaps one of the swordsmen got an unlucky clip, or in some way had his ire aroused, and that which opened in sportful-iess ended in vtorence, each one taking his contestant by the hair, and then with the sword thrusting him in the side, so that that which opened in in nocent fun ended in the massacre of all the twenty-four sportsmen. Was there e better illustration of what was true' then, and is true now, that that which is inno cent may be made dealt uctivef What of a worldly nature is more im portant and strengthening and innocent than amusement, and yet what has count ed mora victims? I have no sympathy with a traitjacket religion. This is a very bright world to me, and I propose to do all I can to make it bright for others. YOUTH'S SFOSTTVENESS SHOULD SOT BE BUT FBS8SBD. I never could keep step to a dead march. A book years ago issued says that a Chris tian man has a right to some amusements, For instance, if he comes home at night weary from his work, and feeling in need of recreation, pats on his slippers, and goes into his garret and walks lively round the floor several times there can be do harm in it. I believe the church of God has made a tremendous mistake in trying to suppress the sportfulness of youth and drive out from men their love of amusement. If God ever implanted anything in us he implanted this desire. But instead of providing for this demand of our nature, the church of God has, for the main part, ignored it. As in a riot, the mayor plants a battery at the end of the street, and has it lired off so that every thing is cut down that happens to stand in the range, the good as well as the bad, so there are men in the church who plant their batteries of condemnation and fire away indiscriminately. Everything is con demned. But my bible commends those who use the world without abusing it, and in the natural world God has done every thing to please and amuse, us. In poetic figure we sometimes speak of natural ob jects as being in pain, but it is a mere fancy. Poets say the clouds ween, but they never yet shed a tear; and the winds sigh, but they never did have any trouble: and that the storm howls, but it never lost its temper. The world is a rose, and the universe a garland. And I am glad to know that in all our cities there are plenty of places where we may find elevated, moral entertainment. But all honest men and good women will agree with me in the statement that one ot the worst plagues of these cities is corrupt amusement. Multitudes have gone down under the blasting influence never to rise. If we may judge of what is going on in many of the places of amusement by the Sodomic pictures on board fences and in many of the show windows there is not a much lower depth of prongaey to reach, At Naples, Italy, they keep such pictures locked up from indiBcriminate inspection. Those pictures were exhumed from Pom peii and are not fit for public gaze. If the effrontery of bad places of amusement in hanging out improper advertisements of what they are doing night by night grows worse in the same proportion, in fifty years New York and Brooklyn will beat not only Pompeii, but Sodom. To help stay the plague now raging project certain principles by which you may judge in regard to any amusement or recreation, finding oat for yourself whether it is right or whether it is wrong. BY ITS FECITS KXOW IT. I remark in the first place that you can judge of the moral character of any amuse ment by its healthful result or by its bale ful reaction. There are people who seem made up of hard facts. ' They are a com bination of muKiplication tables and sta tistics. If you show them an exquisite picture they will begin to discuss the pig ments involved in the coloring. If you show them a beautiful rose they will sub mit it to a botanical analysis, which is only e post-mortem examination of a flower. ey have no rebound in their nature. y never do anything more than smile. here are no great tides of feeling surging from the depths of their soul in billow r billow of reverberating laughter. ey seem as if nature had built them by tract and made a bungling job of it. But, blessed be God, there are people in world who have bright faces, and hose life is a song, an anthem, a paean of victory. Even tbeir troubles are like the vines that crawl up the side of a great tower, ob the top of which the sunlight sits, and the soft airs of summer hold per petual carnival., They are the people you like to have come to your house; tbey are the people I like to have come to my house. If yon but touch the hem of their gar ments you are healed. Now it is these exhilarant and sympa thetic and warm hearted people that are most tempted to pernicious mmummt In proportion as a ship is swift it wants a strong helmsman; in proportion as a horse is gay, it wants a stout driver; and these people of exuberant nature will do well to look at the reaction of all their amuse ments. If an amusement sends you home at night nervous so that you cannot sleep. and you rise up in the morning, not be cause you are slept oat, but because your duty drags you from your slumbers, you have been where you ought not to have been. There are amusements that send a man next day to his work bloodshot, yawn ing, stupid, nauseated; and they are wrong kinds of amusement. They are entertain ments that give a man disgust with the drudgery of life, with tools because they are not swords, with working aprons be cause they are not robes, with cattle be cause they are not infuriated bolls of the arena. If any amusement sends yon home long ing for a life of romance and thrilling ad venture, love that takes poison and shoot itself, moonlight adventures and hair- bceadth escapes, yoo may depend upon it that you are the sacrificed victim of anctified pleasure. Our recreations are intended to build up, and if they poll down as to our moral or as to our physical strength you may come to the conclusion that they are obnoxious. There is nothing more depraving, than attendance upon amusements that are full of innuendo and low suggestion. The yonng man enters. At first he sits far back, with his hat on and his coat collar up, fearful that somebody there may know him. Sev eral nights pass ov He takes off hia hat earliar and puts his coat collar down. The blush that first came into his cheek when anything indecent was enacted comes no more to his cheek. Farewell, yoong man! You have probably started on the long road which ends in consummate destruction. The stars of hope will go out one by one, until you will be left in utter darkness. Bear yoa not the rush of the maelstrom, in whose outer circle your boat now dances, making merry with the whirling waters? Bat you are being drawn in, and the gen tle motion will become terrific agitation. Yon cry for help. InvainI You pull at the oar to put back, but the struggle will notavaUl You will be tossed and dashed and shipwrecked and swallowed in the whirlpool that has already crushed im its wrath ten thousand bulks. t YOCNQ MAS BE OS TOOB SUAE. Yoong men who have just come from to city rec-dejace all do STRONG REV. be all around. ' Still further. Those amnsemunts art wrong which lead you into expenditure be yond your means. Money spent in recrea tion is not thrown away. It is all folly for bs to come from a place of amusement feel ing that we have wasted our money and time. Yoa may by it have made an in vestment worth more than the transaction that yielded you hundreds or thousands of dollars. But how many properties have been riddled by costly amusements. The first time I ever saw the city it was the city of Philadelphia I was a mere lad. I stopped at a hotel, and I remember in the eventide one of these men plied me with his infernal art. He saw I was green. He wanted to show me the sights of the town. He painted the path of sin until it looked like emerald; but I was afraid of trim. I shoved back from the basilisk I made up my mind he was a basilisk. I remember how he wheeled his chair round in front of me, and with a concentrated and diabolical effort attempted to destroy my soul; but there were good angels in the air that night. It was no good resolution on my part, but it was the all encompassing grace of a good God that delivered me. Beware! beware! oh, young man. "There is a way that seemeth right unto a man, but the end thereof is death." The table has been robbed to pay the club. The champagne has cheated the children's wardrobe. The carousing party has burned up the boy's primer. The tablecloth of the corner saloon is in debt to the wife's faded dress. Excursions that in a day make a tour aronnd a whole month's wages; ladies whose Uleume Dusmess it is to "go shopping;" large bets on horses have their counterparts in uneducated children, bankruptcies that shock the money market and appal the church, and that send drunkenness staggering across the richly figured carpet of the mansion and dashing into the mirror and drowning out the carol of music with the whooping of bloated sons come home to break their old mother's heart. A SAD BTOKT. I saw a beautiful home, where the bell rang violently late at night. The son had been off in sinful indulgences. His com rades were bringing him home. They car ried him to the door. They rang the hell at 1 o'clock in the morning. Father and mother came down. They were waiting for the wandering son, and then the com rades, as soon as the door was opened. threw the prodigal headlong into the door way, crying: "There he is, drunk as a fool! Ha, hal" When men go into amusements they cannot afford they first borrow what they cannot earn, and then they steal what they cannot borrow. First they go into em barrassment, and then into lying, and then into theft; and when a man gets as far on aa that he does not stop short of the peni tentiary. There is not a prison in the land where there are not victims of unsanctified amusements. Merchant of Brooklyn or New York, is there a disarrangement in your accounts? Is their a leakage in your money drawer? Did not the cash account come out right last night? I will tell you. There is young man in your store wandering on into bad amusements. The salary you give him may meet lawful expenditures, but not the sinful indulgences in which he has entered, and he takes by theft that which you do not give him in lawful salary. How brightly the path of unrestrained amusement opens. The young man says: Now I am off for a good time. Never mind economy. I'll get money somehow. What a fine road! What a beautiful day for a ride! Crack the whip, and over the turnpike! Come, boys, fill high your Drink! Jong life, health, plenty of rides just like thisl" Hard working men hear the clatter of the hoofs and look up and say: "Why, I wonder where those fellows get their money from! We have to toil and drudge. They do nothing." To these gay men life is a thrill and an excite ment. They stare at other people, and in turn are stared at. The watch chain jingles. The cup foams. The cheeks flush. The eyes flash. The midnight hears their guffaw. They swagger. They jostle decent men off the sidewalk. .. They take the name of God in vain. They parody the hymn tbey learned at their mother's knee: and to all pictures of coming disaster they cry out, "Who cares!" and to the counsel of some Christian friend, "Who are you?" Passing along the street some night you hear a shriek in a grog shop, the rattle of the watchman's club, the rush of the po lice. What is the matter now? Oh, this reckless young man has been killed in a grog shop fignt. Carry him home to bis father's house. Parents will come down and wash his wounds and close his eyes in death. They forgive him all he ever did, although he cannot in his silence ask it. The prodigal has got home at last. Mother will go to her little garden and get the sweetest flowers, and twist them into chaplet for the silent heart of the wayward boy, and push back from the bloated brow the long locks that were once her pride. And the air will be .rent with the agony. The great dramatist says, "How sharper than a serpent's tooth it is to have a thank less child." HFX AH KST THUfO. I bo further, and say those are unchris tian amusements which become the chief business of a man's life. Life is an earnest tiling. Whether we were born in a pal ace or hovel, whether we are affluent or pinched, we have to work. If you do not sweat with toil, you will sweat with dis- You have a soul that is to be trans figured amid the pomp of a judgment day; and after the sea has sung its last chant and the mountain shall have come down In an avalanche of a rock, you will live and think and act, high on a throne where seraphs sing, or deep in a dungeon where demons bowl. In a world where there is so much to do for yourselves, and so much to do for others, God pity that man who has nothing to do, Your sports are merely " to an end. They are alleviations and helps. The arm of tail is the only arm strong enough to bring up the bucket out of the deep well of pleasure. Amusement is only the bower where business and philanthropy rest while on their way to stirring achievements. Amusementsare merely the vinesthat grow about the anvil of toil and the Uoasoming of the hammers. Alas for the man who spends his life in laboriously doing nothing, his days in hunting up lounging places and loungers, his nights in seeking out some gas lighted foolery! The man who always has on his sporting jacket, ready to hunt for game in the -mountain or fish in the brook, with no time to pray or work or read, is not so' well off as the greyhoand that runs by hia side, or the fly bait with which he whips the stream. A man woo does not work does not know how to play. If God had intended us to do nothing but laugh he would not have given us shoulders with which to lift, and hands with which to work, and brams-with which to think. The amm-BmentB of life are merely the orchestra playing while the great tragedy of life piunges through its five acts infancy, childhood, manhood, old age and death. Then exit the last earthly opportunity. Enter the overwhelming real ities of an eternal world! I go further, and say that all those amusements are wrong which lead into bad company. If you go to any place where you have to associate with the in temperate, with the unclean, with the abandoned, however well they may be dressed, in the name of God quit it. They will despoil your nature. They will un dermine your moral character. Tbey will drop you whi-n .you are destroyed. They will give not one cent to support your chil dren when you are dead. They will weep not one tear at your bunaL They will chuckle over your damnation. I bad a frk-nj at the west a rare friend. He was one -.f the first to welcome me to my new home. To fine personal appear- auce he added a generosity, frank nes ntul ardor of nature that made me love hiiu like a brother. But I saw evil people gath ering around him. They came up from the saloons, from the gambling hells. Tbey plied him with a thousand arts. They seized upon his social nature, and he could not stand the charm. Tbey drove him on the rocks, like a ship full winged. shivering on the breakers. I used to ad monish him. I would say, Now I wis.i you wo a Id quit these bad habits and be come a Christian." "Oh," he would reply, I would like to, I would like to, but I around her pictures and toys and every thing that could make her happy; and then, as though hounded by an evil spirit, he would go out to the -nflmiT,pr cup and the house -of shame, like a fool to the cor rection of the stocks. A DEATHBED SCEXX. I was summoned to his deathbed. I hastened. I entered the room. I found him, to my surprise, lying in full everyday dress on the top of the couch. I pot out my hand. He grasped it excitedly and said, "Sit down, Mr. Talmage, right there." I sat down. He said: "Iast night I saw my mother, who has been dead twenty years, and she sat just where you sit now. It was no drem, I was wide awake. There was no delusion in the matter. I saw her just as plainly as I see yoo. Wife I wish you would take these strings off ol me. There are strings spun all aroond my body. I wish you would take them off of me." I saw it was delirium. "Oh," replied his wife, "my dear, there is nothing there, there is """"g there." He went on, and said: "Just when you sit, Mr. Talmage, my mother sat. She said to me, 'Henry, I do wish you would do bet ter.' I got out of bed, put my arms around her, and said: 'Mother, I want to do bet ter. I have been trying to do better. Won't you help me to do better? You used to help me.' No mistake ahoot it, no delusion. I saw' her the cap, and the apron, and the spectacles, just as she used to look twenty years ago; but Ido wish you would take these strings away. They annoy me so. I can hardly talk. Won't you take them away?" I knelt down aud prayed, conscious of the fact that he did not realize what I was saying. I got up. 1 said, "Good-by; I hope you will be better soon." He said, "Good-by, good-by." That night his soul went to the God who gave it. Arrangements were made for the obsequies. Some said, "Don't bring him in the church; he was too dissolute." "Oh," I said, "bring him. He was a good friend of mine while he was alive, and I shall stand by him now that he is dead. Bring him to the church." LAST SCENE OF AJL. j As I sat in the pulpit and saw his body coming up through the aisle I felt as if 1 could weep tears of blood. I told the peo ple that day: "This man had his virtues, and a good many of them. He had his faults, and a good many of them, butfif there is any man in this audience who is without sin let him cast the first stone at this corns lid." On one side the pulpit sat that little child, rosy, sweet faced, as beau- tuui as any nttie cnud that sat at your table this morning, l warrant you. She looked up wistfully, not knowing the full sorrows of an orphan child. Oh, her coun tenance haunts me today like some sweet face looking upon us through a horrid dream. On the other side of the pulpit were the men who had destroyed him. There they sat, hard visaged, some of them pale from exhausting disease, some of them flushed until it seemed as if the fires of iniquity flamed through the cheeks and crackled the lips. They were the men who had done the work. They were the men who had bound him hand and foot. They had kindied the fires. They bad poured the wormwood and gall into that orphan's cup. Did they weep? No. Did they sigh re pentingly? No. Did they say, "What a pity that such a brave man should be slain?" No, no; not one bloated hand was lifted to wipe a tear from a bloated cheek. They sat and looked at the coffin like vul tures gazing at the carcass of a lamb whose heart they had ripped out! I cried in their ears as plainly as I could, "There is a God and a judgment day!" Did they tremble? Oh, no, no. They went back from the house of God, and that night, though their victim lay in Oakwood cemetery, I was told that they blasphemed, ami tbey drank, and they gambled, and there was not one leas customer in all the houses of iniquity. This destroyed man was a Samson in phys ical strength, bnt Delilah sheared him, and the Philistines of evil companionship dug his eyei out and threw him into the prison of evil habits. But in the hour of his death he rose up aud took hold of the two pil lared curses of God against drunkenness and uncleaaness. and threw hhnaBtf tor ward, until down upon him and hia com panions 'there came the thunders of an eternal catastrophe. Again, any amusement that gives yon a distaste for domestic life is bad. How many bright domestic circles have been broken up by sinful amasemental The father went off, the mother went off, the child went off. There are today the frag ments before me of blasted households. Oh, if you have wandered away, I would like to' charm you back by the sound of that one word, "home." Do you not know that you have but little mere time texgive to do mestic welfare? Do you not see, father, that your children are soon to go out into the world, and all the influence for good you are to have over them yoo must have now? Death will break in on your conju gal relations, and alas! if you have to stand over the grave of one who perished from your neglectl AT HIS WINK'S DXATHB-EO. I saw a wayward husband standing at the deathbed of his Christian wife, and I saw her point to a ring on her finger and heard her say to her husband, "Do you see that ring?" He replied, "Yes, I see it." "Well," said she, "do you remember who i put it there?" "Yes," said he, I put it there," and all the past seemed to rush upon him. By the memory of that day when, in the presence ot men and angels, vou promised to be faithful in joy and sor row, and in sickness and in health; by the memory of those pleasant hoars when you sat together in your new home talking of a bright future; by the cradle and the joy ful hour when one life was spared and an other given; by that sick bed, when -the little one lifted up the hands and called for help, and you knew he must die, and be put one arm around each of your necks and brought you very near together in that dying kiss; by the little grave in Green wood that you never think of without a rush of tears; by the family Bible, where, amidst stories of heavenly love, is the brief but expressive record of births and deaths; by the neglects of the past, and by the agonies of the future; by a judgment day, when husbands and wives, parents and children, in immortal groups, will stand to be caught up in shining array or to shrink down into darkness; by all that, 1 beg you give to home your best affections. Ah, my friends, there is an hour coming when our past life will probably pass be fore us in review. It will be our last hour. If from our death pillow we have to look back and see a life spent in sinful amuse ment there will bo a dart that will strike through our soul sharper than the dagger with which Virgmius slew his child. The memory of the past will make us quake like Macbeth. The iniquities and rioting through which we have passed will come upon us, weird and skeleton as Meg Mar rilies. Death, the old Shylock, vt-ill de mand and take the remaining pound of flesh, and the remaining drop of blood. and npou our last opportunity for repent ance and our last chance for heaven the curtain will forever drop. The Scotch Bemdto. Of course he was fond of hia snuff, and made free with the "mull," aa the Scot terms his stiuff box, right and left. An old beadle himself tells of having got a sharp reproof from the pulpit because of his too devoted attention in this particu lar. "When the minister was preaching," says he, "a neighbor asked a snuff, and I gave him my box. The minister saw us and just leaned over the pulpit, looked straight in our faces, and said, "There are some of you more concerned about your noses than abont your souls' salvation. After that I was very careful never to pass my box in church again." Gentleman's Magazine. Two Opinion of 8outliT. One year when I was up in the lJ:e country I was sketching at Rydal Water, when a gentleman came up behind me. and after watching me as I painted for some time said, "The man who can do that should have a name" I answered just as he moved away, "The man who can see that ought to have a name, too." He looked very peculiar, and 1 asked some men whe were working in a stone quarry close by if they knew who be was. "Oh, yea," thej said; "why, that's Souther, the poet. He's funny fellow." "How funny." I askrd. Why, he's mad," they answered. . a. , ' In the last two weeks large sales oiTotfT 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 Man 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., 72 WasMncrton St.. PORTT.ATSm Or. Or O. D. TAYLOR, THE : DEALERS IN: SiapiEi and Fancy Grocefies. Hay, Grain and Feed. No. 122 Cor. Washington and Third. Sts. GEC. II. THOMPSON. Notary Public. The BEST Investment in. the Northwest, for sale by Thompson & Butts, 114 Second Street, THE DALLES. OREGON. Dealers in Real Estate and all kinds of Personal Property. Collections Promptly Made. Land Filings Prepared. H. Herbring, Dealer in Fore FANCY GOODS AND NOTIONS, CLOTHING, HATS AND CAPS, -Doots JExnci Sboes etc. PRICES LOW AND CASH ONLY. FISH & BKRDON, DE3-A.XjE.RJ3 JUST Stoves, Faraaees, Ranges, GAS PIPES, PLUMBERS' GOODS, PUMPS, We are the Sole Agents for the Celebrated . Trinmpl Raup anfl Rama Coot Stove, . Which have no equals, and Warranted togi v e Entire Satisfaction or Money Refunded Corner Second and Washington Streets, The Dalles, Orep. ; D. W. EDWARDS, DEALER IN Paints, Oils, Glass, Wall Papers, Decora- tions, Artists' Haterials, Oil Paintinas, Clircmos and Steel Enirayincs. Mouldings and Picture Frames, Cornice Poles Etc., Paper Trimmed Free. -Picture Fra 276 and 278, Second Street. C. NICKELSEN, DEALER IN- STATIONERY BOOKS AND MUSIC. Cor. of Third and Washington Sts, The Dalles, Oregon. NEW FIRM! loseoe & -DEALERS IN- V STAPLE V AND Canned Goods, Preserves, Pickles, Etc. . . Country Produce Bought and Sold. Goods delivered Free to ' any part of the City. Masonic Block, Corner Third and H. C. NI Clothier and Tailor BOOTS AND SHOES, tyat5 apd Qap5, O-exxts' vLXxlBtJxlXLS Goods, CORNER OF SECOND AND WASHINGTON ST8., THE DALLES, OREGON- in he Wont The New - Boot and Shoe FACTORY. - rare Ml?. Wire Works Chemical Laboratory. NEW BRIDGE. Several Fine Cottages. Jleoi Railroad DALLES, Or. W. H. BUTTS, Auctioneer. EWZA.de to O r clear The Dalles, Or. NEW STORE Gibons, V FANCY V Court Streets, The Dalles, Oregon. Jrui?K5, Ualises, NOTIONS