WOMAN'S -WORLD.- - JSWEfll NT ENOENT PORTER PftABES TKE CENSUS BUREAU WOMEN. ITaAiagton ExtraTHiDcc-KIMu Waul i tenable Pet What Ona Girl Cuk XKMl Liability of Womeo TTmj KatlM- J Council of Woman. We bav in the census office nearly 3,100 cornea. With the- exception of 10 employed as skilled laborers the; lave all passed an examination in the twrions branches required. It ia safe to ay that over half the number hare stood high in arithmetic, receavoar all the 'way from 83 to as high na 100 per cent. We have in the ceneoa office one room la which 200 young ladies are en gaged xtnder a woman chief mxlring comparisons for the final tables of the . wenaua. Women are engaged in what is called working oat the equated Kfe of ."mortgages, -also under a woman chief. A -woman has had entire charge of the Insurance dmsion w the cemras office. 1r -which, though smaller than those refer red to above, nevertheeses invoices Tory -.important work. In this work I -find , women very satisfactory and conecien tioaa. As a rale women jns out of school are better for jueehr- work than those who cornopj later in Kfe. There are instances,' however, in the censos of . fioe of women who hare for the first time met with misfortune and been obliged to earn their own hring who .Aave made good records as computers. The, following is a list of the ten women clerks who made the best record in -tabulating the census returns on the electrical machines, with the average aade by eacw m ten dayac Kbam. A. Kiggma, of Tnmemee KM Haa Ktto Sirtti van. of Missouri 80,000 xussm. JL (Jura, oC lrtc of Oofcnabta. 8&M UssA.U.OeasweU,or Sorta Carolina.... 81.ol Mam K. M. Ou-rtco, of Maryland R0.il T Him Jaui Silvester, of VTrfrtnia. .... 7MM Aire. E. W. Eargeo, of Htcoigaa 79.408 Mix Kate F. Spunoar. of Michigan 79.0ns Mint Alica Priest, of HicbiKaa 78, 9 W jsa C n. Crook, of DMncI of CndnriM. TB.161 These facts, and indeed the records of be entire six weeks, show that women re -better adapted for thm particufcu werk than men. They are more exact in touch, more expeditious in handling Jfceschedules, more at home in adjmt iijg the delicate mechanism of the ma chine, and apparently more anxious to jziake a good record. For this reason 1 contend tha all work of this kind should he done by women. Robert P. Porter in Home Magazine. iS'm Waafclagtoa Extrayanao. . It is almost impossible to estimate the oet of keeping up a house like that of "the Mortons. He rives as fine dinners as did President Arthur, and Arthnr dinners cost $5,000 apiece. 1 renture to asy that it costs him $30,000 a year for "boa Washington entertainments, and the same may be said of Postmaster Gneral . Wanaxnaker, though' his ' expenses are materially cut down by his not using "wines. He spends a great amount in flowers, and the flower bills of the. capital are by no means a small item. Mme. Romero, the wife of the Mexican minis ' tor. spent $800 in the flowers she need at ' . aof her receptions. She turned the mktcAa legation building into a bower of - . Xragranos and beauty, and she, for the time, transformed winter into summer. '. The fiowecs of many a dinner cost more -than the dinner itself, and Washington - -tsJtaat becoming one of the great flower ; markets of the United States. Nearly all the flowers used in Baltimore are sup :plied from our green houses, and flowers ' J shipped from here all over the south i mn"d north. 1 , One of ihe biggest florists of the capi ; . 41 tells mrf that Postmaster General ; Jganamaaw spends from $8,000 to $10, j -600 a yetar in flowers, and Vice President .. Morton bay a the choicest and rarest of : Jjorfers and ferns for his house decora ' -ftiois. Mrs. Morton personally superin i, -tmds the arrangement of her floral deco tstioDS. She ia a practical business wo and a gC'ji housewife, and she un ' derstands just 'what things ought to cost and knows how to make a bargain. Mrs. Whitney spent an immense amount of money on flowers. She always gave her florist carte blanche and lot him bring the beet he had. Mrs. Hearst and Mrs. .Stanford invest fortunes in flowers every .year, and Mrs. Hearst arranges with her own hands the elaborate decorations of her reception rooms. Many of the sen ators' wives, and also the wives of the con gressmen, get flowers from the govern- moat greenhouses. These they do not pay for, but the supply is by no means qual to their social necessity. Wash- ington Letter. KJttena Am the Fashionable Pet. ' The girls on Murray hill are craxy wver tortoise shell Angora kittens. These little animals are rtfte in America, and cost anywhere from $25 to $30 a piece. 1 j calling on a pretty young woman, when a tiny kitten trotted into the room, jumped on its mistress' shoulder and sat -there contemplating me 'and the other furniture of the place. My charming hostess had brought this example home -from Paris, where Angoras cost $1 each. All the girls, she said, were devoting themselves to kittens now instead of -dogs. it is the fashion to put largs aUk rnf--fiea on one of the forefeet. Angora kit v4enn really possess enough wisdom to vender them admirable pets, and as it is a .passion with them to sit on a woman's honlder and press their faces against iora, their value as an ornamental com panion can be imagined. A perfect tor . taise shell kitten in a pale blue ruffle, on "the shoulder of a girl with golden hair, "brown eyes and a creamy skin, is really ' one of the prettiest sights you will come ' .across in a day's search. I dont suppose the fad will last long, however; probably until the present lot of regnant kittens shall have grown to cat hood. New Tork .Letter. What One Girl Cost. Here are some figures regarding the - .cost of a little girl of 14 for the past year. She is the only daughter of a teller in a New Tork bank. The family lives in a private boarding house, and the ambition of her parents is to make the child a tiri;At, bwm. srwaaMa wo man. Her wvwurobe coate W yac including tannery. She attendschool uptown whore she pays $SG0 a year. Last season she sent to dancing' school at an expense of $90. For thwaccomplistiinent she seeded a special supply of slippers, four little danctng frocks, a long quilted ulster and fifteen yards of sash ribbon, for which a bill of $71 was presented. During the aammer -she learned to swim, and the cost of her bathing suit and the services of the bathing master amounted to $3 3. Her board for the en tire year cost $350. .Here are some trifles, as the mother calls them, oopied Eromtne little girra expense account One pug dog, $5; eight silver bracelets, $15; one doXL $3; one doXTs carriage, $2.C0; to mender, three days services, $4.50; hospital attendance for dog, $7 burial of aame, $1.75; ooe gold rixM. $350 rent Of tricycla, $&5; medical treat ment. $53-. gifts for reiatrvea,$7; monkey mutt oad cape, : gum, ice cream, soda . .water, tripod, $24: tenia racket. $3.SD; opera glass, $8; alrver wnfc h$& treatment for stuttering. $80. - Making the annual cost of this sweet Httle tyrant, $1.311. TO. Sew York World. bpri LtaMSitr of W The court of appeal has just decided that a married woman may be a partner in trade wifcti her nuaoand, and that be cause she is married it is no defansein an action brought to charge her with a partnership debt. While it time that the decision was carried by a bare ma jority of one, three of the seven judges gallantly voting against the startling proposition, it ia now the settled law of the state. The legal status of woman has progressed amaarngly within the last twenty years. She now incurs all the liabilities of a man, though bereft of many of hia privileges. She is liable on all civil contracts, and her name to a promissory note or in a partnership trans action inflicta udoq her all the naina and penalties incident to the situation. But she cannot vote and she escapes jury semee. The freedom from the performance of the latter public duty women may deem a boon, although, to quote a cynical lawyer, 'there are many spinsters who would gladly serve on juries for the opportunities afforded. Many a fair juror might meet her fate in a twelve hour discassiou of an im portant ease in the jury room." However, tlie great majority of wom en would be more apt to tell innumer able white has to escape the ordeal. The male juror does it habitually, un less he is rich enough so that he can af ford to have hia name called in court. his default entered and a fine of 350 im posed for non-attendance. New York Times. r - : , r .. - The If atlonal Council of Women. . ' The first triennial meetinar of thn Na tional Council of the Women of th United States will be held in AJhamrVa Opera house from Feb. 15 to 18 inclu sive. This orcranisation ia thn rmtwrv of the International Council of Women. neid at waabington in 1883, at which Daners were read bv 100 wnm a- seating seven different countries. '.At that time two permanent orgaai satiofiftwere formed the International Council of Women, of which aTnii,t Garrett Pawcett, of England, was elect ed president, and the National Council of women or na umted States. Too latter body receives into auxiliarysbip aD n tional orKanixationa of women intwut. ed in the advancement of wnmMn'a mfe in philanthropy, reform and social cult ure, it nas no special theories for re form, its fundamental principle being unitv for the creiraraJ rml -f nm and through them of all hnmanity. This convention will probably be the largest representative body of women ever assembled. Eleven of the most im portant national organizations have al ready entered the council. Washineton Dispatch. For the Medical Training ml Women. The ladies who set out to manfcion ntv to secure the admission of women to the medical school of Johns Hopkins univer sity have obtained the whole amount. The trustees of Johns Hopkins have ac cepted the gift, and have pledged them selves that the medical school, when opened, shall admit women on the damn terms as men. This is indeed, as the dean or tfryn Mawr says, "a splendid triumph." The trustees sav that hefnr a medical school worthy of the univer sity can oe established $500,000 must be raised. The remaining $400,000. beintr for tlw general interests of the school, is not to oo suDscnoed Dy women alone, but by all persons interested in securinar for both men and women an opportunity in this country tor tne advanced medical study which can now be pursued only in Eu rope. The ladies mean to do their full share toward raisinc tlu mmimTii, $400,000. Boston Woman's Journal. Pretty Bridesmaids' Costnmee. ' Five bridesmaids at a recent' fall -nmrl. dimr wore beautiful cwtnmm nf colored bengaline, with lettuce green velvet yokes and fichus of Valenciennes lace. The epaulets were of the same haflft of velvet, whila tb rraxOii wristbands were of slightly (Lsrker vel vet, t he broad brtmmed green fait hats were trimmed with softlv RarKnc -arhife ostrich feathers, and each fair maid ear ned a pretty silver wicker basket con taining white iiaqs partially veiled with mamfinair iern ana uea with hght green ribbons. Bach also wore a pretty brooch of diamonds encircling a pink tonax. the erift of the cronm Waio Vni-v Ledger. Fall Capea. The most stvnsh cloth m nt ttu season are full and deep, extending con- sideraoiy Deiow tne waist line either in sinarle or double rows, and Iuiva imA crirla carelessly draped upon the opposite shoul der, wnere u is sometimes confined with a cord and tassel. Fur capes are still verv much worn. Thev are ro fijurilv re moved, so comfortably put on over th high, full sleeves, and so serviceable for most weather that they are destined to a long season of popularity. The choicest al ssad -oftbafiratspseoh of Fairbanks, you knew, is a gonial. wnoie iaad geatlesnaa, with plenty of Tory enarueneo. tmt at the time of which . I speak had no experience on the atoms. One day I net him and be seamed con- saderabiy worried. Urabam. satd be, 1 liain beam in vited to address a political meeting at and you know I never did any thing of the kind in my lifs. I havenU a bit of confidence in myself and I am afraid I cannot bold the crowd. You are up ia this kind of thing and I want you to post me a kktie. 1 never wanted to limgh so moah in my hf e, but Fairbanks' woebegone lace tota me ptaaaer than words thas h was rerymweh in earnest. So I gav nm su ebb pnmss i could bring to mind. I remember that I saxd ahasao w fis sw m always hesd has aowd by eotertaasmg , and toM bam tojaoiagine himeell an auetieneerw hm went .to hia xneeung, and ,mwmij thing w vui wrong. tit was planed so tea a atrong wind djsw MvowgJi Mm poem, tossing his hair ovwr hia fe ard grviag him a torribU cold aod sore throat. "Tne braes band drew and half he said, and the small boy gov in his deadly wore i . me torn a bwbm or so later, and he toW me his experiences. 'Svery time 1 would feel myself giving way.' ne exclaimed. 1 would think of your in mtojoib to uoagme myseir an auc tioneer, and I guess I entertained them. for I made myself more of an auctioneer than I did a political speaker.' But Fairbanks is all over that now. There is not a better or more effective speaker in Indiana than be is." Indianapolis Fnetearaafcy Applied to Si pojina. Surveyors are becoming more and more indebted to photography for the way in which it facilitates and improves their work. For reconnaiaaazice the cam era oScrs'some pleasant features. The public is always anxious to know what an engineer ia doing with a transit. out ir ne has a map of the country and an aneroid in his pocket, so that, by leoces or otnerwwe, he can tell pretty nearly where be is, he is only an ama teur artist, making views of scenery, and the farmer is not suspicious that he wants to run a railroad throuch his corn crib. Such pictures as may thus be se cured, uaderstandingly used, may help to decide where a line will probably be best, to far as the general features of the country are concerned. Progress is the order of the day. It is not long since the engineer who used a camera to take occasional or semi occasional records of the progress of his wort was looked upon as putting on airs. Now,- however, the blue print and the camera come in very handily so much so that it is not the engineer who uses them, but rather the one who does not, who is the exception. The engineer is not likely to dispense just now with his transit, but he who avails himself of such help as photography can irive "m especially in such work as making close topographical surveys, will hav a verv great advantage over him who does not. Now York Comxnercial Advertiser. Cnta a Caxoa An acute observer of eootenrDorarv life remarked the other day that the typical eat devoted each one of his nine hves solely to the cultivation of his voice. The statement, although obviously ex aggerated, serves very well to convey the impression which the eat has made upon those who know him best. The weasel having largely supplanted -him as a rat and mouse exterminator he has come to be regarded as an animal cf leis ure, much given to music',' but bearing few or none of the practical burdens of existence. But attention has lately been directed to the fact that the Chinese use eats to tell time. A Celestial who was asked what o'clock it was took up a cat and examined it, and replied that it was two hoars past noon. On being asked how he told time in that way he explained that the pupils of a cat's eyes were largest in the morn ing, and that they gradually grew smaller as the light increased till they reached their minimum at noon; that then they began to widen again till at night they once more became large. New York Tribune. Karl; Minstrel Snows. It was in the early fifties that minstrel shows first became so popular in the States, and in 1857 Jack Raynor, who used to be middleman and bass singer for E. P. Christie when his troupe played in old Mechanics' hall, at No. 472 Broadway, New York, started the first Christie minstrels ' in London. Raynoi is one of the few old timers still alive, and he lives in Paterson, N. J., to-day. Another of the old leaders to the front is Dick Hooley, who used to be with Campbell's for years and afterward run a minstrel theatre of his own in Brook lyn. ' What's he doing ' now, d'you say? Why, it's the same Dick Hooley, pi Hooley'a theatre, Chicago, today, and the same Cool White that was middle man and stage manager of the Hooloy Opera house of the war times, is mana ger of Hooley's theatre today. J. W. Me Andrews in Chicago Herald. Mooted FrenanoiaUon. The chorus "O ho ro, i ri ri cadul gn lo" in Sir Walter Scott's poem "The Lul ' laby of an Infant Chief" means, f reel; translated. "Bye, bye. lullaby, sleep till the morn." The pronunciation is, "Ohoro, erere, cawdlegulaw at least, so say two Scotch women, members of my house hold, who are direct from the highland! of Scotland, and who daily speak the Gae lic in preference to the English language, Cor. Boston Transcript. It is not in color only that domesti cated cats differ widely. There is the gloved cat of Nubia, the Chinese cat with ears turned down instead of up, the twisted tail cat of . Madagascar, the short, truncated tail cat of the Malay Archipelago,- and the entirely taiilest cat of the Isle of Man. than Chor J. M. HUNTINGTON & CO. flbsfraeters, Heal Estate and Insaranee Agents, Abstracts of. and Information Concern ing Land Titles on Short Notice. W for Sale and Houses to Rent. Parties Looking for Homes in COUNTRY OR CITY, OR IN SEARCH OF Bniqe Location, Should Call on or Write to us. Agents for a Full Line of Leaiini lire Insurance Companies And Will Write Insurance for ' IEsTX" ZMZOTTHSTT, on all DBSIKABIiE RISKS. Correspondence Solicited. All Letters Promptly Answered. Call on or Address, J. M. HUNTINGTON & CO. Opera House Block, The Dalles, Or. JAMES WHITE, Has Opened a Lxinolx Oouxiteir, In Connection With his Fruit Stand and Will Serve Hot Coffee, Ham Sandwich, Pigs' Feet, and Fresh Oysters. Convenient to the Passenger .Depot. On Second St., near corner of Madison. Also a Branch Bakery, California Orange Cider, and the " Best Apple Cider. . If you want a good lunch, give me acall Open all Night C. N. THORNBUKY, T. A. HUDSON, "lie tteo. u. b. idina Office. Notary Public. THOPDRY &H0DSDH. ROOMS 8 and 9 LAND OFFICE BUILDING, THE DAL.LES, OR. Filings, Contests, And all other Business in the U. S. Land Office Promptly Attended to. We have ordered Blanks for Filings, Entries and the purchase of Railroad Lands under the recent Forfeiture Act, which we will have,'and advise the pub lic at the earliest date when such entries can be made. Look for advertisement in this paper. Thornbury & Hudson. Health is Wealth ! "Air Dr. E. C. West's Nerve anb Brain Treat ment", a guaranteed Btieciuc for Hysteria, Dizzi ness, Convulsions, Fits, Nervous Neuralgia, Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by the use of alcohol or tobacco, Wakefulness, Mental De pression, Softening of the Bruin, resulting in in sanity and leading to misery, decay and death. Premature Old Age, Barrenness, Loss of Power in either sex, Involuntary Ixisses and Bpermat orrhcea caused by over exertion of the brain, self- one month's treatment. 1.00 a box, or six boxes ,ui tw.w, Ki.b-uj uiui prcpaiu on receipt 01 puce. WK GUARANTSI SIX BOXES To cure any ease. With each order received by us for six boxes, accompanied by $5.00, we will send the purchaser our written guarantee to re fund the money if the treatment does not effect a cure. Guarantees issued only by BLAKELET HOCGHTOS. V Prescription Druggists, 178 Second St. The Dalles, Or. -L' H T3 Opera 7 Exchange, No. 114 Washington Street BILLS 4 MYERS, Proprietors. ' ' - ... , The Best of Wines, Liquors and Cigars '':' ALWAYS OS SALE. They will aim to supply their customers with the best in their line, both of imported and do mestic goods. 1 "J c.WfJ Tj8 Dalles fiioiiiBte Ill . , is here and has coihe to stay. It hopes to win its way to public favor by ener gy,, industry and merit; and to this lend we ask that you give it a fair trial, and if satisfied with its course a generous support. The Daily four pages of six columns each, will be issued every evening, except Sunday, and will be delivered in the city, or sent by mail for the moderate sum of fifty cents a month. Its Objects will be to advertise city, and adjacent developing our industries, in extending and opening up new channels for our trade, in securing an open river, and in helping THE DALLES to take her prop er position as the Leading City of The paper, both daily and weekly, will be independent in politics, and in its criticism of political matters, as in its handling of local affairs, it will be JUST, FAIR AND IMPARTIAL . We will endeavor to give all the lo cal news, and we ask that your criticism of our obj ect and course" be formed from the contents, of the paper, and not from rash assertions of outside parties For the benefit of our advertisers we shall print the first issue about 2,000 copies for free distribution, and shall print from time to so that the paper will reach every, citi zen of Wasco and adjacent counties. : THE WEEKLY, sent to any address for $1.50 per year. It will contain from four to six eight column pages,,. and we shall endeavor to make it the equal of the best. Ask your Postmaster for a copy, or address. THE CHRONICLE PUB. CO. l Office, N. W. Cor. Washington and Second Sts. the resources of the country, to assist in -1 Eastern Oregon. time extra editions,