To WUaoa Barrett. no pessimist; he loved the tfaimra Its cheerfulness and sunshine, ita moato and its nana; Ho sever sihed or moped . around things went wrong x warrant me He'd mocked at fate with some de- l nant song. But, being he warn't much on tune, whenever times were blue, He'd whistle softly to himself this only tune he ' anew: -Wow mother, when she learned that tune which lather whistled so. would say: "There's something wrong today with Ephraim. I know: Be newer tries to make believe he's happy that ere way Xatthatrm eertoin as can be some trouble is to payr And so, betimes, quitetiatural liko, tons observant yontu 'There seemed suggestion in that tone of deep pa. wmsnuo' nrunam jomea tne war a lot of us went down Tease the gallant soldier boys right gayly out of town; A-comin' borne, poor mother cried as if her heart would break And all us children, too for hen, and not for William's sakel Bat father, trndgin' on ahead, ms hands behind nim so, . . Kept whistlin' to himself, so sort of solemn like and low. . -Jd when my eldest sister Sue was married and went west. Seemed like it took the tack right oat of mother and the rest; She was the sunlight -in our home why, father used to say It wouldn't soem like home at all if 8oe should go sway I "Tet when she went, a-leavin' us all sorrow and all tears. Poor father whistled lonesome like, and went to feed the steers. "When crops were bad, and other ills befell our homely lot. He'd set around and try to act as if he minded not; -and when came death and bore away the one he worshiped so. How vainly did his lips belie the heart benumbed with woe! Too see the telltale whistle told a mood he'd not admit He'd always quit his whistlin' when he thought we noticed it) Xd like to see that stooping form and hoary head again To see the honest, hearty smile that cheered his fellow men; On, could I kiss the kindly lips that spake no creature wrong, -And share the rapture of that heart that over flowed with song; Oh, could I hear the little tune he whistled long ago, "When he did battle with the griefs he would not have us know. London, Oct. 28, 189a Eugene Field. lt Christmas Stand for Pleasure. Christmas is the preacher who empha " Buses the fact that the religion which it celebrates is adapted to human nature. -Horace is called the laureate of the worldly, of the epicurean, of the pagan who would eat and -drink in view of to morrow. The gay adage dum vivimus is cited with a shudder as the gospel of pleasure, unnstmas was hunted in the Puritan parliament as a kind of god of pleasure who was only a masked devil It was confounded by Governor Brad lord with the Belly god. But why, said Charles Wesley, as he sweetly sang why give all the good tunes to Satan? The sweet singer might have enlarged bis view and his question. Why give Satan any of the good things? Why, above all, let him have Christmas, as Andromeda was abandoned to the drag on of the sea? Let Christmas stand for pleasure and for the reason that it is es pecially the Christian day. Then Chris tianity drops her weeds and smiles. Harper's. An Impostor Who Made Money. One of the men who made a fortune out of the Cardiff giant humbug nearly twenty years ago died in New York re cently. His name was George Hull. (, He was formerly a tobacconist in Bing iamton, and was the author of the fraud, which he engaged an Italian stonecutter .of Chicago to carry out. A. large gypsum slab was obtained in Iowa and cut into the form of a gigantic man. i ne stone was artificially colored, to give the appearance of great age, and then buried in the vicinity of Cardiff. where it was accidentally (of course) uiacoverea ana exftnmed, and exhibited aoout the country as a nrehifitoric fin-nm The imposition was so clever that many Bucnuoo men were deceived by it. Chicago Herald. Induction. -I wo Uetroiters were closing a large land deal the other day by telephone when there came a "zip!" and a female voice inquired: "Is Mrs. Jones home?" "No," answered another. "So sorry! Well, just the minute she comes do you tell her to come right up "Sickness?" "No. All my canned peaches have begun to work and must be scalded over again!" Detroit Free Press. Electricity has not been practically applied in the art of music heretofore, except, perhaps, in the operating mecha akjn of church organs. George Breed, of the United States navy, has devised a method by which the passage of a brok en current over a conductor in a mag netic field produces musical notes of arying pitch and volume. A farmer of Sumner county, Kan., has become a raving maniac by reason of the -whistling of locomotives through bis farm. He has been placed in the asy lum, and his condition is said to be most pitiful, as he crouches in terror from very noise under the hallucination that it is a train of cars. The Good Luck mine, in New Mexico, unit located less than six months ago, and in the last three months has produced $20,000 worth of ore, and dur ing that time there have not been more than five men at work on an average. A peculiar fish, of brown color, with out scales, and weighing twenty-one pounds, was caught in a net at New Dorp, S. L, by the lighthouse keeper. In forty years' fishing the keeper has never .-similar hah. Killed a Mountain Lion With His Knife. H. Woods went out to Bullock's ranch recently, and from there took a hunting trip into the mountains the next day with his shotgun to bring down some small game. . He liad not tJeen out long when he heard a peculiar noise in the underbrush, and, after some scouting around, a large-sized mountain lioness showed up. He had only small shot in his shells, but as soon as she came in reach he let loose, and she took the con tents in her body and dashed up the mountain. Woods, thinking that she had a mate, located himself on a rock where he could see into the canyon, and, true enough, in a few moments the lion appeared, and a monster at that, as large apparent ly as John Robinson's biggest circus lion, and he came directly to the spot where Woods was secreted, and when within a few feet he got the contents of the gun in the region of the heart. The lion rolled down the side of the canyon a short distance, regained his feet, and made up an arroyo. Woods followed him ap and soon came within hearing of the lioness, which was howling frightfully, and all of a sadden it emerged from a thicket and dashed at Mm, with eyes glaring and mouth wide open. He emptied the contents of his shotgun into its mouth, which dazed it for a moment. Instantly he jerked out his sheath knife and as he did so the lioness sprang for him. but only to re ceive the blade of the knife into its heart, and the fierce animal lav dead at Mr Woods' feet as the trophy of his hunt. He did not want any more lioness, but made ftia way back to Bullock's ranch. but not until he had taken the hide of his lion, which is now on exhibition. Tucson Star. Murphy's Lonjj Leap for Life. jonn JViurpiiy, a harness maker of Cleveland, sat up with a sick friend at Itocky nver and started to walk home next morning on the Nickel Plate track. While crossing th9 bridge over Rocky nver, wnicn is ninety-two feet above th? water, he was overtaken by a passengei train. He shouted to the engineer and started to run, but it was too late. Th shriek of the whistle, the roar of the train and the trembling of the bridge caused Murphy to become panicstricken, so that instead of lying down on the outer timbers, as he might have done with perfect safety, he leaped from the bridge into tne cnasm Deiow. The passengers on the train and three or four persons in the vicinity saw Mur phy turn over several times in his awful fall and strike the water, which is onlv six feet deep at this point, and supposed he was killed. The keeper of the boat- house, a short distance- below, pulled rapidly to the spot, found Murphy still struggling and hauled him into the boat He vomited freely, but quickly recov ered, and on the -arrival of a physician it was found that, although badly shaken up and bruised, he had sustained no seri ous injury. Cor. Chicago Herald. About Folding Election Ballots. If those distinguished New Yorkers really couldn't fold their ballots accord ing to the method prescribed by the new law they may console themselves by the thought that the greatest minds are often puzzled by trifles. Newton, who enunciated the laws of nature, cut a large hole in his study door for his cat and a small one for her kittens. Chaun cey M. Depew and Abram S. Hewitt can direct great public interests, but cannot fold a little piece of paper. Such is genius. As to a Brooklyn gentleman, who bears the euphonious title of doctor of pedagogy, but could not, after repeated attempts, succeed in folding the ballots to the satisfaction of the inspectors, his failure may perhaps 'have been due to the fact that he took his learned degree iisto the polling place and got tangled up in its intricacies. Munsey's Weekly. Sending Panoramas Abroad. A product purely American and prob ably in the nature of a revelation to the heathen peoples of England and Franc to whom Steamship Agent Low has just consigned it, reached here all the way from Minneapolis a day or two ago by water, it was a panorama, and as it was fifty-four feet long it had to be tar paulined and bolted to the deck of the steamship Lydian Monarch, as there was no room for it in the hold. A single ireigm smpment fcfty-four feet long is not to be sneezed at, even if it is only five feet and a half square in the other two dimensions, and this particular big roll of canvas weighed all of three tons. The manufacture of panoramas for the European market is a novel industry of recent origin. These canvas pictures are not shown over here at alL New York Letter. Electric Oil Well Drills. A patent has been granted for an elec trical drill for oil wells. The device con sists of a series of motors in tandem, connected in such a way as to make one motor. The design has been to get the power within a six inch diameter, so that the entire mechanism, which much resembles a common boiler, can be low ered in the well, and the power can be applied at the bottom. The drill bits are firmly fastened on the rod, which is worked rapidly in and out of c cylinder, after the manner of a piston rod. New York Telegram. Women Lasso a Vicious Deer. R. G-. Tdwiham, a farmer, was attacked on his farm near Sherman by a large buck deer, which escaped from the Bat sell park, and gored very badly. Lan ham's wife and daughter came to the rescue, lariated the sm'TnM and tied it to a tree. This is the second man this pet has nearly killed with his immense antlers. Fort Worth (Tex.) Gazette. Horse Sense vs. fashion. . McAllister I noticed you kent von front blinds open "all the summer.. Going out of society? Smith No; but we concluded that all the people we really cared to have think ns out of town were oat of town them selves. Puck. Kodaclca ait a Railroad Wreck. Superintendent Husted, of tha Cincin nati, Hamilton and Dayton, doesnt like the kodak, and his experience of the last few days does not lessen his dislike. When the wreck occurred at Oxford the -"kodak fiends" were out in force to make sketches of the scene. As a busi ness proposition Mr. Husted objected to photography of the affair being sent broadcast over the country, and many of the kodak manipulators consented to his request and left the place. One chap with a fine instrument would not - listen to anything and insisted on taking a picture. At last the superintendent told him he was trespassing on the company's grounds, and the man with the kodak remarked that he would go to an adjoin ing field and secure a view. The superintendent told him that he would be trespassing there also. This made the chap angry. Mr Husted is an exceedingly mild mannered man, but he grew warm under the collar. "I have tried to treat you as a gentleman," ex claimed he, "and you won't let me. Now, ni treat you like a tough. If you attempt to make a picture of this wreck I'll smash that kodak over your infernal head." The kodak fiend evidently be lieved that Husted woold make his word 'good, for ho went back to Oxford on a work train. While Superintendent Husted was thus engaged Chief Engineer Porter and his assistants were chasing kodak fiends over the surrounding country with clubs. The wary men with tho cameras didn't hold choice points of view, but it's fair to guess that they are loaded with snap shots at that wreck. Indianapolis News. A Story of 5,000 TJLa mi scripts. I know an editor who is at the head of a popular periodical which, from its pe culiar character, invites and receives probably more manuscripts in a single year than such magazines as The Cent ury, Scribner's or Harper's. This year he has already exhausted two manu script record books, each holding 2,000 entries, and the third is already half j filled. In other words, he has received ' in ten months more than 5,000 manu scripts. .. I had the curiosity to look into tne figures last week which this enor mous deluge of manuscripts told, and tney were interesting. There had been received, for example, a trifle more than ouo snort stones, yet only 11 of these had been accepted, less than 2 per" cent! r over 1,000 poems a few over 30 haA been accepted, a little better than 2 per centx ana yet every manuscript had been careruuy read, and the position of the magazine is such that it is in a way of getting mucn good material. Edward W. Bok's Letter. Epidemics Among Animals. The epidemics which show themselves at certain intervals in cattle and other domesticated animals have recently been the subjects of many reports and discus sions. Among these diseases none has at tracted more attention than that which has recently decimated canaries and other cage birds. Not very long ago upward of 1,800 canaries died in one year at Nor wich. England, and occasioned a loss to the owners estimated at about $5,000. A medical man is now stated to be hard at worK inquiring as to the true cause of the disease, which at present is thought to partake of the character of dirhthria. The subject is an important one, as the transmission of diphtheria to children from domestic animals has come to be not only frequent but occasionally most serious in effects. New York Commer cial Advertiser. Educating Farmers' Children. A movement is on foot in Denmark, corresponding with the needlework in dustries of England and Ireland, to ad vance the farming and dairy interests for the benefit of women. Little girls are being trained to raise paltry, make cheese and butter, and brana them with the badge of excellence. The agricult ural, industrial and scientific worlds are levied upon for improved machinery and appliances. Not only are the cattle fed in Danish fashion, but by the use of spe cial methods 10 per cent, more butter is extracted from a gallon of milk than ever before. These fancy products are put in the highest markets and yield a revenue not to be approached by the old system of women's work. London Let- Checks Found in sv Dump. Two checks for quite a large amount recently sent by a Saco, Me., man to a Portland firm have had quite' an inter esting history. As the Portland firm at first denied having received them, it was at first thought that they had been stolen, but it was at last concluded that they had found their way to the waste oasKec Dy mista&e. This supposition was followed up, and four men were kept at work all day Sunday turning over with pitchforks the dump heap on one of the Portland wharves. It was like hunting for a needle in a .haystack, but the search was successful, and the two checks were at last recovered. Philadelphia Ledger. While Mr. "Williams, of Montezuma, Qa., was driving under an oak tree at dusk the other day he was amazed to find his horse leave the ground and- re main in the air. . Investigation proved that the affair was not supernatural, as the animal got caught in a swing hang ing from a bough of the tree. Among the latest disinfectants is "lysol," which appears to be very much like carbolic acid. The emulsifying agent is resin or fat soap, tar acid being incorporated with the soap at the mo ment of saponification. It has been proposed to make the up per half of war balloons of very thin steel and the lower portion of ordinary balloon material, the whole so construct ed as to hold hydrogen instead of or dinary gas. Blackening the nose and cheeks rrmW the eyes has been found an effectual nre- ventave of snow blindness, or the injuri ous effect of the glare from illuminated now upon eyes unaccustomed to it. HUNTINGTON & CO. Abstracters, Heal Estate and Insuranee Agents Abstracts of, and Information Concern ' ing Land Titles on Short Notice. Land for Sale and Houses to Rem Parties Looking for Homes in COUNTRY OR CITY OR IN SEARCH OF Bngiiiegg Locations, Should Call on or Write to us'. Agents for a Full Line of LaSiBi Fire Insurance Companies, And Will 'Write Insurance for -Azrsr"5r amouitt, on all IDESIBABIiE EISKS. txnrespondence Solicited. All Letters Promptly Answered. Call on or Address, J. M. HUNTINGTON & CO Opera House Block, The Dalles, Or JAMES WHITE, Has Opened a Lu.n.c3a Counter In Connection With hia 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 a call Open all Night C. N. THORNBURY. T. A. HUDSON Late Rec. U. 8. Land Office. Notary Public. THOR HEUBY & HUDSON. ROOMS 8 and 9 LAND OFFICE BUILDING. - uBiuuice box THE DALLES, OR. Filings, Contests, And all other Business in the U. S. Land Office Promptly Attended to. Vehave ordered Blanks inr TTiUncra entries and the purchase of Railroad lianas under the recent Forfeiture Ant which we will have, and advise the pub he at the earliest date when such entries can be made. Look for advertisement in mis paper. Thornbury & Hudson. Health is Wealth ! P9 Dr. E. C. Wert's Nerve anb Brain Treat ment, a guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dizzi ness, Convulsions, Fits, Nervous Neuralgia, Headache, Nervous Prortration caused by the use of alcohol or tobacco, Wakefulness, Mental De pression, Softening of the Brain, resulting in in sanity and leading to misery, decay and death. Premature Old Age, Barrenness, Loss of Power i. ciuici ma, iiivuiuiiuiry Losses ana Spermat orrhoea caused by over exertion of the brain, self abuse or over indulgence. Each box contains one month s treatment. si.00 a box, or six boxes for f5.00, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES To cure any case. With each order received by us for six boxes, accompanied by 5.00, we wiu send the purchaser our written guarantee to re fund the money if the treatment does not effect a cure. Guarantees issued only by BLAEELET A HOUGHTON, Prescription Druggists, 17 Second St. The Dalles, Or. 2ES Opera '.' Exchange, No. 114 Washington Street. BILLS 4 WHYERS, Proprietors. The Best of Wines, Liquors and Cigars ALWAYS ON SALE. They will aim to supply their customers with tbe best in their line, both of imported and do mestic goods. - if - IT, ': is here and has come to stay. It hopes to win its way to public favor by ener gy, industry and merit; and to this end J we asK mat you give it a fair trial, and if satisfied with its course a generouW 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 the resources of the city, and adjacent country, to assist in 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 object and course, be formed from the contents of the paper, and not from rash assertions of outside parties. For the benefit of shall print the first copies for free distribution, and shall print from time to time extra editions, 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 o make it the equal your Postmaster for THE CHRONICLE PUB CO. Office, N. W. Cor. Washington and Second Sts. - - jL . Eastern Oregon. our advertisers we issue about 2,000 we shall endeavor of the best. Ask' a copy, or address.