THE D AXLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 25, 1891. THE OLD TENOR. Did yoa say the si aging only fair? Sir, if the chance fclven. roe v To change from him on lite, etr.zc up there ' Straight to an angel's symphony . Well, it might stagger my poor old brain. Bat I think, on the whole, I back should come - To hear these worn, sweet notes again, ' And see yon form that is cumbersome. The Why of it all? It fell, my friend, A matter of fifteen years ago. . A certain man was nigh his end. Lying racked in a fever glow, And a line young star, in his flush of fame. ' ' Stept to his bedside, took his hand. And tried to waken life's spent flame By singing songs of the lovely land. Cod, how he sang! till the sick man turned Hiii face from the wall and tookfldeep breath. And said, as his eyes with new light yearned. That life ran sweeter far than death j seventeen, evidently mother, brother and ; sister. ; The mother attracted my atten- tion first, and I was idly admiring her still unusual Beauty, sublimated, but not destroyed by age, when the young lady turned around. "Aunt, she might hare been the origi nal of your picture, so like she was in every detail. I was astonished and could hardly believe my eyes. I watched her quietly and studied her featurea '. until there was no doubt about it. There was the broad brow, the dark brown hair fcoeely confined, the dark gray eye, the sweet, firm mouth, and above all the ex pression of intellectuality, unselfishness and ingenionsness. I forgot the story. njiertalningl wa-j Topu: r.d I found her ' all T had expecletl fcr be-from ber j face, and became locr in love than ever. I told her that I wa : !rmger, having recently come to i; kind enough to invire "I had no time to A DETECTIVE'., STORY. ee: ?, r.ud she was ro call. How the Finding of a Visiting Card Led tu an Important Arrest.. . Two men sat in a secluded corner of j the- Ebbitt House lobby and enjoyed a i I i .r.nii ni i Qet chat over their after dinner cigars. attempt to take tiie Hir;.-?.v by storm, a , ,, . , , ' , i dangerous Unug to ,-o. .,.., there was no j of th lue.n "one f ihe oest known opportuuity to V r,:. s,fer plan of a ; members m las profession, and if he I THE DALLES MERCANTILE CO., (Successors to BRQ0K8 & BEERS.) The Dalles, - - Oregon. thing in my favor: I was on the spot and J the other fellow 4"I soon availed Biv?:f tion to call and snu t evenins: one of i iro.-e 'momenta of de light' thii are :it oooe so tweet and so her invita- i ery. pleasant ; and I could not take my eyes off her one ! painful tc reinemoer it. 1jss lu-.ppy times. If one might hearken to strains like. this. And he swore he would live In death's de-. spite. Then sleep dropped down on him like a kiss. And he woke with his blood all cool and - right. ' ; Perhaps' yon can fancy who was the man. And who is the singer there on the stage. And why I listen and sob and can But love his faults and his hints of age. Some folks will say, when they pay their coin. The perf eetest singer is their choice. Where youth and art and genius join. Bat I like a man behind the voice! Richard Burton In Harper's Weekly. AN IDEAL "When I find the girl who .looks like that picture I am going to marry her." George Mil man, who made this re mark, and his aunt, Mrs. Henderson, were standing before a picture of hers almost beautiful enough to justify such extravagant admiration. It was called "Future," and represented at half length- a girl in all the sweet freshness of budding-womanhood. "Yes," he continued, "note, the char acteristics of this picture and their sig nificance and yoa will see why l say so. The figure is graceful, the head, deli- jmaIv rmieojl ia tfiflloi lai-cro and rrtA brow, of unusaal breadth, is brought into full relief by the dark brown hair, brushed straight back, with its wavy abundance only slightly confined by ribbon around the head. The eyes are a dark gray, large and at fnce bright and thoughtful; the mouth and chin, though marked by the tender lines of youth yet, - show sufficient decision of character, T i IT . . i l.'l 3 ' 2 .uiieiicxjcuz&iib.y juiu uiiaeiusiiueta aio in dicated, but the one characteristic most prominent brought out its ingeniousness in the noblest sense of that often mis used word. . - f "It is more than innocence and does not depend on ignorance. It is most often seen as a characteristic of a noble woman, and is retained by them in some miraculous way in spite of much intel lectual knowledge of the world's wicked ness. Such a woman as is portrayed in this picture would naturally be clinging . and dependent, but finding herself with out a support, or her chosen protector proving unworthy, would meet the emergency heroically and stand nnf al tering. Such a woman I most admire, and such a woman, if I have the good fortune to find her, I shall certainly marry." "But she might be the original of this picture, and yet not have the character you describe," said Mrs. Henderson. "No. that is impossible; a woman could not look that way without being all that I have suggested." ' "But if you find her you still might not win her." .' '"Yes I would, no matter if she was engaged to be married and ' her wedding day was appointed." "It is like you Jo be so sure, and like you, too, to fall so desperately in love .with a picture." . . . In this Mrs. Henderson . was right; such a determination was characteristic' of George Milman. Though born in this country, his father was a native German and his mother of German descent. This, with a practical American train ing, gave him a curious combination of German and American characteristics.' His peculiarly intellectual head, so large that all his hats were made to order; some of his features, especially his brown and rather . dreamy eyes, and occasion ally his manners and conversation, were German, while his figure and usually his manner were American. He had the German' 8 ideality, romanticism and love of deep thought, philosophic and specu lative, with the American's . keen ob servation, eye for the machine and prac tical attention to details. His dual nature was shown in bis busi ness. He was a drummer for a large mannfactorv. aelline to iobbine houses. and so had to take long trips from city' to-city. When actually at work he was all attention to business and put his whole soul into it with distinguished success. On the intervening trips he yielded to the speculative side of his na ture, spending his time in reading -the best novels, histories and philosophical works from Carlyle to Henry George. He would sometimes feel and express the deepest disgust for his work, but he al ways remembered that it brought him a handsome income and held on to his posi tion. 1 Some three months after the above conversation George again called to see his aunt, who asked him if he had yet found the object of his adoration. "I can't exactly say that I have, but your question reminds me that I have a story to tell yoa, and I suppose I might just as well begin at the beginning." "Please do. It is about that picture, I know," she replied. . ;, U a11 mvn ol? all AAA uraa 4-Via va spouse, and he began: " . - . ''I was on the Nashville, Chattanooga and St. Louis train on my way to Nash ville. I had been traveling twelve hoars and was rather tared. I was reading the "Tale of Two Cities" trying to read it, that Is, for my mind was stranglye wan dering in spite of my interest in that re markable story the best Dickens ever wrote. Looking up in one of these fits of inattention, I happened to notice a party which must have got on at the iast station, and had taken seats diago-' nally in front of me. It consisted of an minute I fear she must have noticed it, J" "I know she did," interrupted Mrs. Henderson. "You must have stared her out of countenance." "I suspect I did, and all the time I was endeavoring to realize my good for tune, and thinking how I should manage to find out the young lady's name and how I could make her acquaintance. "After, an hour's ride in this way I went into the smoking car for my cigar case, which I had left there. I was de tained by a friend whom I met there and left the car just as the train was starting again after having stopped at a small station. Chancing to look to one side, I saw my new found ideal and her party just getting into a carnage, which apparently been waiting for them. Aunt, just one thought filled my mind that I could not afford thus to loose my ideal so soon, and that unless I followed her . she was lost. This was rather an impulse than a thought there was no time f or that, and I piled off after her. "The carriage had started, and there was only one man in sight the depot agent. I spoke to him and asked who the people who had just left were. He said that he did not know; that he had never seen them before; but I believe now that he did and that he must have taken me for a lunatic; my appearance was outlandish enough and I suspect my manner was excited. I tried to hire a horse, offered him a large price for the use of one an hour, but the fellow told me that he had none and there was none in two miles. The carriage was now al most out of sight, and still hoping to find out something about it I started out after it. "But I did not go far before I realized that pursuit was hopeless and that by such conduct I was making myself ridiculous, and I returned to the station then for the first time I remembered that I had left all my baggage, which was very valuable, my umbrella and overcoat, on the train, and even my hat, as at the time of the incident I was mak ing myself comfortable in a skull cap, which was all I now had to protect my ambrosial locks from the elements. "I was now sufficiently disengaged to find out something about- the place which I bad so unexpectedly visited. It consisted of the railroad station and one 6tore, which was unfortunately closed the agent informed me' that its owner was attending a camp meeting six miles away. 1 questioned the agent agam about the party I had pursued, but gained no farther information. I tele graphed to the conductor on the train I had left to take care of my effects, which he was kind enongh to do, and after twelve hours in this neglected spot, spent sitting on a barrel, realizing my ridiculous conduct and bemoaning the loss of my ideal, I took the next train and finished my journey in safety." Well, that is quite a story," said Mrs. Henderson, and you have seen how I have enjoyed it. Who but you would have fallen in love in such a way, and it is too bad that yon lost her. But it can not have gone very far, even with you, and yoa will soon find some one else." We shall see about that. I don't know whether it is love or not, bat I be lieve that 1 shall find that girl again some day, and I am not going to marry until I do." Two years passed daring which George had been true to his resolution, and used often to say that he was waiting for his ideal Then he was transferred by his house to the west and took up his abode in Texas. Not long afterward Mrs. Henderson received from him a letter giving the following account of his experiences: "I have another story to tell yoa, and as before I think I had best begin at the beginning. Hempstead is a nice place to live in, and I have had a pleasant time here and have made many friends. You know that I am not a society man, and steer clear of the profes sional Four Hundred which we find intevery city. But .the larger class of cultivated people I like, and go when I can to their occasional entertainments.. Three months ago I went to one it was given by a musical club, and combined a programme of the best amateur talent with social features that I am likely to remember. For one of the last pieces was a song by 'Miss Ethel Lyndon.' It was well sang; I noticed that, but my chief interest was in the' singer in whom 1 recognized my ideal. "I traced the resemblance in each par ticular, and tried to discover whether she was the woman I had seen in Ten nessee. She was so like her I thought she must be the same, though I could not determine, but there was no doubt about her being the woman in your pic ture, and so my ideaL "I asked my friend about her and dis covered that her father was a prominent business "man of Hempstead and had lived there for years, and that she was very popular among those who belonged to her society, so much so that half the young men of the town regretted her announced engagement and approaching marriage to a gentleman 'of Dallas. "I Was already in love, and you may imagine that this was discouraging in telligence. But my motto has always been 'nothing venture 'nothing .have," and I immediately determined to try the fortune of war, knowing that I had nothing to lose having so completely lost my heart already and that I might win. So when the musical programme was over I was introduced by my friend. I cannot tell you our conversation, or What made ii e(e. pleasing to me was that Mis Lytnioo .eenied to en joy it as much cs I mJ. I remember that you have of it ii lyigbed at love at first sight, but I tiiink- r'utr. my experi ence demontrate? ir muu. And that evening 8ugges!e3 another question which I endeavored to yo!ro, but could not. I will ask your c pinion. Not only j- did I feel pleasure iu oeiog; witu the wo man I loved, but I hwi aiso a feeling of being thoroughly en rx pi)ort with her', as if she felt the same .;,; sure and there was some subtle and mo kiwi sympathy between us. Now.'wa i oat feeling a creation of my ov-ii hviu, independent of any similar feeling on uer part, or was teresting experience it would fill vol- with the quiet demeanor is one of the keenest of criminal catchers, G. M. Fletcher, of Chicagq. Jlr. Fletcher re lated what he calls the strangest and luckiest piece of trailing in his life, and the end of the trail was in Washington, "although," says Mr. Fletcher, "it was only luck on my part that it did." j Fifteen years ago a wealthy old farmer i named Wilson was found murdered just outside his house, near Evanston, HI. The old man had that day concluded the sale of a piece of property, and was re turning with nearly $2,000 in his pocket, as it was growing dark, the cash having been paid over "after bankine hours in Evanston, and Wilson incautiously al lowed the remark to drop that he wished he had not made the sale until next day. He 'did not like the idea of carrying so j much wealth to his home, five miles dis- I a a ni jt x i i . ii i 1A ifc nrhat if. rppti,.! a.r,l .-m,.! T f.Wofrvra lao1" QcStj IUCIS, uesiaes me mUTder ant, know because I e pri-pl it that she j iteelf' an ,the owlge that a notori Jobbers and Dealrsin old lady, a young lady and a boy about I what she thought of it, but if I can be was similarly imprese!. "It would tire you io read the de tails; it iaenoagu to hy To at I made the most of our acquaintance. I called as often as I possibly oonlii. oftener than I had any right to; met ber at receptions and any other enteri&iotiuents where she was likely to go; wf-at with her. to the theater and to ihe Be-iboven club, at one of whose meetings I had first made her acquaintance i 0 sbori-. I took every opportuuity I conld find or make of see-' ing her. "Finally I went viiliVer, her father and a party on an exc-Hi sioa in a private car to a new city, wbeiv he was working up a real estate boom. "On our return 1 t-r-id a favorable opportunity and iokl ly-r That I loved her how I did it f o uuot tell even you and of course I received the reply that she was engaged. Bui i-.ue said it very sweetly, and made wie love her better than ever. Then I sid. "How I wish I i had known yon soorier." nd she said, 'I j wish so too.' " 'Then, darliug, if yon do wish it you need not; if it can hn t bat yon love me ah, you do, I see yon do- you can marry me in spite of al!.' " 'No, I will noulm.-Kk iu v promise, and I will have to give up your acquaintance unless you respect ir." " 'I promise;' I ws too happy at finding out my love return e l io care very much. It could not be kf-pr of course, and I very soon broke is by a sting Ethel if she did not think it wToog io marry a man who she did not love. . " I think it is wrong- to break faith with one who is faithful' to 'me,' she said, 'and so wouiu you ir you were treated that way yourself.' . "'Yes, lknow ibar, bur) as I am the one to profit by it I t hink that it is all right and the other iicw ought not to care. I certainly thin t that yon ought at any rate to tell him rbafc you love him no longer.' " 'Yes, I ought tc do vti&t, and I will; but I will offer ro i'ul till my promise, though it was made principally to please my parents, as I see tww, and, without the love that could alone justify it.' "This she did, and so-.-n thereafter re ceived a letter from her riance, in which he thanked her for ber frankness, and told her that she had relieved him from a similar embvi--staerjt, as he had lately discovered that hi? affections were engaged elsewhere, bnf. had felt in honor boun l to her. St:ch are lis carious -and inexplicable workings of the human heart, but I did not cirtairel with them, for they brought me my heart's desire. "One day Iaskc3 Ethel if she had ever been in Tennessee. " 'Yes,' she said; "-two yesrsagd in Oc tober, on a visit to my grandparents.' " 'Were you on the Ivssnville, Chatta nooga and St. Lor, is train and did you get off at Uxton staTion?" ' "'Yes.' " 'Then you are, I ure believed, the woman I saw on the i ruin i hen. Darling, I fell in love -wi tli you then, and have been hunting for yoa ever 3ince.' " 'And you are the man who stared at me so hard on the train and followed me off, leaving his hat behind; I recog nized you when wb -were first intro We were married, very quietly, al though in church, jnst a month before the time, originally set for Ethel's in tended marriage, a nd we are now on our wedding tour. . "So you see I did fii.d my ideal, and have won her, and yoa have to im agine how happy I ra, for it is beyond the power of worda lo tell yon." W. P. W, in Atlanta Constitution. A Well nper.-titlii. One of the compararivelymodern su perstitions of the ere cf All Saints is found at the bottom of old and aban doned lime kilns. Just where it began nobody can tell wi'h certainty, but in all probability Ireland has the best claim to it. At all events, it need to flourish in that country some years ago. A girl with no beau or a girl vrith too many beaux is pnzzled to find out who is the lucky cbap destined to become her hus bond.' In such a predicament all she has to do is fo arm herself with' a spool of strong thread and start off after dark on the eve of All SaioT9 to some old lime kiln reputed to be the abode- of evil spirits. Standing alone on i in- e Jge of the deep hole, the candidate for matrimony re peats the Lord's prayer backward. Then she takes the end of ths thread in her left hand, and after tosihig the .spool into the chasm before her, ?rif.i jEtly waits for a bite. Soon she v,il frc-1 three pulls' and she must politely L'k Ills s.-it;mic maj tjr to be liiud eiiouU to "tell her the namo cfliw' fnlrrrc lr.;t-KTi'I. A voice below will pronouctv.- ih? aaaw.-Galig-nani Messenger. ous gambler named Edmondson , had overheard, the speech, were all the cine offered the detectives, who were set to work on the case with a reward of $3,000, held out as an inducement for running down the murderer or murderers. Months passed', but no f arther trace of the gambler who was suspected could be found anywhere. During the early spring of 1877 Fletcher was sent east on amission by the agency of which he is a member, and in the j course of his trip concluded to spend a day or two in Washington before return ing to the Lake City. While passing up Pennsylvania avenue, near Sixth street, with a friend, his attention was attracted tp a small visiting card, which, after the manner of his profession, he picked up and examined.' "I wasn't thinking of business just then," said Mr. Fletcher, "but I suppose instinct led me to do as I did, and what do you suppose that pasteboard con tained? The autograph of the very man I had been looking for for months. Of course the signature was not familiar to me, but the first thought to suggest it self was, 'How did the card get there? and I could answer it only one way Edmondson had dropped it; but how did he happen to retain the same name if he was guilty, unless he did not fear detec tion? ' ' ' ' "Well," to cat a long story short, I de termined to stay in Washington awhile and see what . could be seen. I found out the most notable houses where a gambler of his typp wonld be likely to hold forth, and after ten days' shadow ing I found him in an old frame house on Four-and-a-Half street. Edmond son came with me without a requisition, and made no fight. In fact, he was tired of leading a hunted life and con fessed the crime. ' He said he always had an idea that the visiting card would prove his doom, but somehow or other he-could not destroy it, and knew at once when he missed it from his case that it would be a clew, for he had been traveling undy an assumed name since the murder. The card was the last link of his former life, i "Edmondson was hanged a few months later, and that ended the most carious episode in my twenty-five gears' expe rience, as a detective." Washington Post. . .- ' Something Wrong. "Well," said the ."brute" to his wife as he took his place at the breakfast table, "who are the new neighbors next door?" "Why, how should I know?" answered the wife. "Don't yoa know their name?' "Of course not." , "Are they , wealthy?' . 'Tin sure I don't know." "The man an old skmflint?" "I don't know." "His wife extravagant?" "You will have to ask some one else." "Any daughters? And are they proud and stuck up?' "Why, Harry? I don't know." "Anything mysterious about them? A secret connected with the family?" "I don't know anything about them." "What! You don't?" . "No." "They have been, here twentf-four hours rilsend the doctor up as I go down town." ; "What are you going to send the doc tor up for?" : "Something must be the matter with you. That family has lived next to us for one whole day and you don't know the first thing about them yet. You need attending to." , . And then he buried himself in his paper. Philadelphia Press. j&aple and FanciJ (jooi Gents' Furnishing Goods, Boots and Shoes, ' . Hats and Caps. Etc. Staple and Fancy Groceries, Hardware, Flour, Bacon, neoiuuuariers ior . Teas, Coffees, Dried Fruits, .Canned Goods, Eto.- HAY, GRAIN AND PRODUCE Of all kinds Bought and Sold at Retail or in Car- Free . load Lots at Lowest Market Rates. Delivery to Boat and Cars and all parts of the City. 390 -A-IsriD 394 SECOND STBEET. Snipes & Kinersly, Leading Druggists .-4 Dealers In Paints, Oils and Cttiudoui Glass COAL and PINE TAR, Artists Material, Imporled We and Domestic (Jigafg 129 Second Street, The Dalles, Oregon. MPLETE STOCK OF , Stoves, . Ranges, Tinware, House Furnishing Goods Carpenters Blacksmiths; and Farmers Tools, Fin Shelf Hardware, Cutlery, Shears, Scissors, .Razor Carvers and Table Ware, and Silverware. Pnmr Pipe, Plumbers' and Steam Fitters' Supplies, Pac j ing, Building Paper, Sash, Doors, Shingles, Te: Cotta Chimney, Builders' Hardware, Lanterns a b Lamps. " : '.;-, . : V. Special and Exclusive :- Agents fo Charter. Oak Stoves and Ranges, Acorn Stoves an Furnaces, R. J. Roberts" Warranted" , Cutlert Meriden Cutlery and Table Ware, the "Grand" Oj Stoves, Anti-Rust Tinware. . Gould's and Moline Power and Hand Pumps. All Tining. Plumbing, Pipe Work and Repairin will be done on Short Notice. TVmYS St CROWE, (Successors to ABEAMS & STEWART.) 174, 176. 178, 180 SECOND STREET. Farley (Succeeeora to L. D.. Frank," deceased.) OF ALT. 0"F" -- A General Line of Jam Good Authority. Congressmen "before, the war" were somewhat accustomed to the exchange of unparliamentary language, bnt per haps no American legislators were ever so practiced in vituperation as the mem bers of the much lamented,, vanished Irish parliament on College Green. Somehow they contrived to keep on friendly private terms while treating one another to most picturesque abuse. On one occasion a member, pointing a quivering finger across the house at his opponent, one Thaddy Burke, .con cluded with these words: . "And every mimber of the honorable gintleman's familee is benayth contimpt from the white livered hound that is shivering on the flure to the painted hag that is grinning in the gallery." "How did you know his sister was in the gallery?" whispered a comr&de as the orator sat down. "Sure, didn't Thiwldy himself tell me she was going to be prisint when we were coming down to the house af ther dinner?" Youth's Companion. Horse Furnishing Goods. ZRF1P A TTTgrrNTQ PROMPTLY and ITiE-A-TIjir IDO Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Eaniess,' BMes.-Wliij s, Horse BMets, Etc. Full Assortment of Mexican Saddlery, Plain or Stamped. ' j SECOND STEEET, THE DALLES. The Tirst Class Fastest ami Fteest la the World. KEft.YQBX. LQXQQNSERRr AHD 6US6&W. Erery Saturday, NEW YORE, GIBKALTEB and NAPLES, At regular intervals. SALOQM, SECOND-CUSS AND STEERAGE rates on lowest terras to and from the principle SCOTCH, ZXQUSH, X2XSH ALL COlTTnTZHTAL PCCTT8 Excursion tickets available to return by either the pic tureaqoe Clyde ft North of Ireland or Naples & Qibraitai Draft ud Uon7 (Mn lor isf Amnst it lovart Apply to any of oar local Agents or to HENDERSON BKOTHKIiS, Chicago, III. T. A. HUDSON, AGENT, THE DAH.ES, - ' OKECON Fop Sale at a Barga A GOOD Traction Engine Has only been run sixty daye. Buffalo Pitts Thresh Only used two months. ; , Chopping Mill, per Capable of 15 to 20 tons $31. - The above will be sold on eas j W.L. WARE? .. The Dalle