rrrz1 5T" LADY OF THE CLICKER. "aily Bound, and Hedced Up Dignity ot . the Woman Who Telegraphs. It occurred to a citizen the other day m approaching the fair telegrapher in am uptown hotel that a woman in each a place most often have her temper and her fortitude taxed by thoughtless mem tests of the opposite sex. The young woman in question was possessed of a personal makeup that would attract attention in a crowd, yet through all the rush of business and hur ry of work she never once seemed con scious of herself. Men came and went, their messages were received, the words picked off by the lead pencil measurer, tiie charges announced, and her seat re sumed without, as Francis Wilson has it, her "moving a muscle or wincing a wince." To the inquirer after facts she turned, and for the first time raised her eyelids, that disclosed a pair of sharp, honest, -Mae gray eyes, full of business, yet sag- etave of a happy, laughing tempera ment, if you only knew her outside her eage." Oh, no," she said, "we are too busy for idlers, and always of necessity too deeply interested in our work to allow tm to pass the 'conversation lozenge.' r mere are tnose who fancy we are tare only to look pretfy and impress the gentleman guest with the idea that he has delayed for a whole week to send a telegram of utmost importance." "This is not the case, however, and the man most likely to forget liimse'f and bother us is not the fellow who spends a quarter for an unnecessary tel gram as an opener to conversation. We see him, of course, occasionally, but his business generally amounts to inquiry as to tho location of the perfectly visible hotel desk or of the nearest postofSce or letter box. We make short work of him, and in a discreet way can force the . lalnsh on him that sets him on his gen tlemanly feet again. "Others there are, and thank goodness they form the great majority that rules, whose business is transacted promptly, politely and with an evident sense of the fact that they are dealing with a lady, xnese persons it is a pleasure to serve. lor there is no superfluous dialogue or attempt at jesting, or suggestion of any thing but the perfect gentleman. "A Door gets loose at us once in a while, to be sure, but we manage him on the plan of 'the quiet answer that turneth away wrath.' He's apt to be old and gouty, and to find fault with us for that his 'd'arter hasn't tellygraffed' him since his arrival. On a suggestion to Bnch a one that perhaps his worthy girl at home has not been informed of his topping place in the metropolis, he is frequently awakened to his own sense of -carelessness, and then rises the smile that shows the good heart underneath, and all is serene again.' - - xes, we woric constantly, ana we must work well, for oftentimes much -depends on the correctness of our trans- muuwon; but we have no cranky over- aeer, we are well paid for' young wom en, ana our trials are fewer and not so - spirit rending aa those that fall to the lot of the saleswoman." New York Her ald. - The Yosemite Valley. For every hundred persons living west of the Mississippi nver who have seen St. Peter's at Rome hardly ten, I think it may be safely said, have visited the Yosemite. Two small hotels in the val ley are ample for all who may at any one time seek accommodations, and on aa average two coaches a day during the season will carry all who seek convey ance to that place of grandeur. One thing is certain, the foreigner "doing' the United States seldom omits the Yosemite; yet many an American tourist "traveling in California leaves the coast in ignorance of the wonders and beauties of the famous region. On a beautiful Sunday in May, out of sixty-five guests at the Stoneman house over forty-five were foreigners, most of them on a trip around the world; and that proportion is not unusual during the season. . To the foreign tourist the Yosemite ranks with Niagara, and from those who have seen the wonders of nature on every continent the verdict seems to be that the Yosemite stands pre-eminent the greatest of all. New England Magazine. The Wandering Jew. Calmet's "History of the Bible" has this to say of the Wandering Jew: He was the porter of. Pontius Pilate, and was called Calaphilus. When the mob was dragging Jesus to the judgment hall Calaphilus struck him, saying: "Go faster, Jesus! Go faster. Why dost thou linger!" Jesus replied, "I am in deed going; but thou shalt tarry till come." Soon this man was converted and took the name of Joseph. He is supposed to live forever, but every 100 years he falls into a trance, upon awak ening from which he finds himself at tho same age as when the Saviour said these words to him. The Wandering Jew is grave and stern, is never seen to smile, and perfectly remembers the death and - resurrection of Christ. No place is his home for more than a few hours, and thus does he fulfill his title of "Wander ing Jew." Detroit Free Press. Canada and Kewfoundlusd. When was the Dominion of Canada constituted? Is not Newfoundland in it? The Dominion was formed in 1867, and is composed of the provinces of Quebec, Ontario, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward's Island, New Brunswick, Mani toba, British Columbia, with certain territories and arctic islands. New foundland was invited to come in by the act of confederation, but she holds aloof, and remains an independent crown col ony. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. , Better Not Sigh. A chemical analysis of the food coolied by our grandmothers, which men sriyh for once in a while, would show it 3 per cent, more dangerous to the stom ach than food prepared in the modern kitchen. As a matter of fact, American women knew nothing of cookery up to twenty -five years ago. Detroit Free Press. ' NOTED BOOK THIEVES. HISTORICAL PERSONAGES WHO UNIQUE VOLUMES. STOLE The Well Dressed and Intelligent Look ing Class Which Librarians Fear A Bishop, an Inspector General, a Pope and a Noted Priest Were Thieves. Book stealing is an art upon which much ingenuity has been expended. One never knows in what form it will next break out. It is an incident by no mean? uncommon in Booksellers' row for a bibliopole to be offered a book which had been stolen from his next door neighbor. There is something more than a tradition to the effect that a bookseller has on occasion purchased a book taken a minute or two previously from the shelves outside his shop! A favorite mode of stealing books from public libraries is to procure a book, sit down to read it and then wrap it np in an overcoat, and after this to take up a paper or magazine. The rest is easily guessed. The public libraries suffer in all sorts of ways, for here the accumu lated wisdom of the thief finds plenty of scope, some of the tribe have a mania for old directories. Librarians complain frequently of the clerical thief of ser mons and theological literature. Novels and "books of the bibliophile (as the French call them) one can under stand being stolen: but sermons and theology! Women, more or less gen erally more respectably dressed, are often objects of suspicion with libra rians; for the "receptivity of cloaks is infinite, and the "feelings" of the culprit must also be considered. As a general rule, the thief is well dressed and edu cated, and frequently well to do. HISTORICAL THEFTS. j Whatever may be the causes which prompt a person to steal books there is always this consolation he is in good company. This balm may not be a very healing one to the soul of the person whose books are stolen, but it must be consolatory to the thief, when repenting in prison, to know that some great and good men have been touched with the same species of insanity. Hearne, in his "Johannes Glastoniensis," more than hints that Sir Thomas Bodley had a weakness in this direction. . "If you hold," he warns Sir Henry Saville, "any books so deare as that yon would bee loath to have him out of your sight, set him aside," etc Moore, Bishop of Ely. has likewise come nnder such a stigma. The anecdote runs to this effect: A gentleman calling on a friend who had a very choice library found him unusually busy in putting his best books out of sight. "Upon asking his view in this he was answered, "Don't you know the Bishop of dines with me today?" The very king of book stealers was Libri, who, as inspector general of French libraries under Louis Philippe, had special facilities for helping himself and whose known thefts have been valued at 20,000. The most interesting illustration of this man's depredations was exposed in 1868, when Lord Ash burnham issued a translation of the Pentateuch from a Latin MS. which had been purchased by the late Lord Ash burnham from Libri, who had sold it under the condition that it was not to be published for twenty years. It had been stolen in 1847 from the Lyons library and the last clause of the agree ment, therefore, could be easily under stood. Libri evidently was not one of those whom Jules Janin describes as "people who don't think it thieving to steal a book unless you sell it afterward." . POPE AND PRIEST. Innocent X, when still Mgr. Pam philio, stole a book from Du Moustier. who was himself a book thief, and ought to have been en courant with the de vices and designs of his own weaknesses. It is refreshing to come across an ex ample when the tables are so completely turned; and if any thing would induce an honest man to turn book thief it should be the exhilarating fun of stealing from another thiet. It is reported, however, that Du Moustier recovered the book, and kicked the Cardinal out of the house. Catherine de Medici went in for stealing . books by wholesale and bare faced ; she seized the fine library of Marshal Strozzi and promised to pay his son for it in installments, but never a farthing did he get. Of another and equally extreme type was the Spanish priest Don Vincento, who sold books and then murdered the purchasers to regain possession of his coveted treasures. Like most of the biblioklept tribe he came to grief at last. The original edition (1482) of the "Furs e ordinacions fetes per los gloriosos Keys de Arago als regnicois del Regne de Valencia," was offered for sale by auc tion, and after a long and obstinate com petition was knocked down to a book seller named Paxtot. A week afterward, Pax tot's shop was burned down, and he was suffocated at the same time. Suspicion was directed toward Don Vincento, whose residence w.is searched, and there at length was discovered the incunabula above named. The priest was arrested,' and at the hearing he confessed not from contri tion or the fear of torments in the next world, but because it appeared that the volume was not unique, as had been supposed. He sobbed violently when he was condemned to be strangled, and the only defense he vouchsafed was, "Ah 1 your worship, my copy was not unique." St. James Gazette. Married Women Don't Work. As to married women working there is a bit of statistics that shows how few married women do work for wages. Out of -over 200 women who had received training as professional nurses thirty five afterward married, and only one of these thirty-five ever- again worked at her profession of nursing the sick for pay. Boston Transcript Those who say that our soldiers cost as much as Germany's count the expense of the pensioners with that of the regu lar army. On the average there is about one commissioned ofilcer to every twelve enlisted men in the United States army. Thronging tbrousii tlt j jud-rirs. whose aro they the faces ! plu Faint reveoleJ, yet -sure divined, the famous ones of old? -"What," they smile, -'our names, our deeds, so soon erase Time upon hU tablet, where Ufa's glory lies en rolled? ........ , .. "Was it for mere fool's play, make believe and ; mumminjc - - - - - So we battled it like men. not. boy like, sulked and whined - ' Each of us heard clang God's "Coms!' and each was coming; .' Soldiers oil, to forward faoH, not it to lag behind! "How of the field's fortune? That concerned our - Leader! Led, we struciuour stroke, nor cared for doings left and right; Each na on his sole head, failer or eucceeder, - Lay the blame or lit the praise; no care for cow ard;, fight!" , ., Then the cloud rift broadens, spanning earth that's under. - . Wild our world displays its worth, man's strife and strife's success; All the good and beauty; wonder crowning won - der, - ' . .... .- Till my heart and soul applaud perfection, noth ing less. i Bobort Browning. Cupid vs. Clothes. When Elizabeth held the fort in Eng land, and Sir Walter Raleigh used to go abont with clothes on that if he had got hard np he could have gone around to bis uncle's and put them up for thou sands of pounds, not to mention a cer tain pair of shoes of his which were said to be worth 6,000 crowns, then it be came the fashion for a man who was in love to neglect his apparel, as if he were too much occupied to bother about such trifles. . " There was one mark in particular his garters were not to be tied. So that when an Elizabethan dude walked down the Mall with these useful appendages hanging on behind him it was equiva lent to saying that his heart was gone. Here we have Shakespeare in "As Yon Like It" putting these words into the month of fair Rosalind, "There is hone of my -uncle's marks upon you; he taught me bow to know a man in love. Then your hose should be ungarted, your bonnet nnbanded, your sleeves un buttoned, your shoes untied, and every thing about you denoting a careless des olation." Clothier and Furnisher. The Personal Pronoun In Conversation. The inordinate employment of the possessive case is a vulgar solecism, and not used to excess by those of gentle breeding. There are both men and wo men who are forever talking about "my carriage," "my house," etc., until they disgust their hearers. One is apt to im agine that such persons are the possessors of newly acquired wealth and its appur tenances, when this small, two lettered word slips from their lips with unseem ing frequency. The pronoun "I" Bhonld not be too often repeated, as it gives too personal and egotistic a turn to conversation, and the frequent recurrence of "I said so and so," ana "I did so and so," reveals a nat ure weighed down with a sense of its own importance, and caring little about what other people are doing or thinking. Jenness-Miller Magazine. People Who Eat Alone. In all thoroughly civilized countries the members of a family and their guests partake of meals while collected around a central board, but this is not so with the majority or even a fraction of the semi-civilized and barbarous nations. The Mardivian islanders dine alone, re tiring to the most secret parts of the'r huts for the purpose of eating their food. This custom probably arose among them in an early period of their history, for fear, perhaps, that another with equally as sharp an appetite and more bodily strength would deprive the feaster of his meal. St. Louis Republic. Declaration of War Not Necessary. Wars are often engaged in without any set declaration. This is the case in Europe, and has been so here. The Unit ed States made a prononciamentoof this sort when it entered into the contest with Great Britain in 1813, but no such formality was observed by us in the con test with Mexico or in the civil struggle of 1861-5. In each case the government recognized that a state of war existed and acted accordingly. St. Louis Globe Democrat. Canine Intelligence. One of the intelligent dogs lives in Bar Harbor, Me. He was carrying a paper the other day when several canine com panions began to bother him. " He put the paper down on the ground, ani when a dog attempted to touch it sprang on him and gave him a good shaking. These tactics he repeated several times, till at last he could not get any dog to touch the paper, and then he craickly picked it np and walked away. Kennebec Jour nal. A "Hello!" Raise. One telephone was put in at a small town in Kansas, and the owner of a house to rent immediately raised the price $5 per month. Then he went over and called up a 6awmill half a mile away, and burst a blood vessel trying to keep up a conversation over the wire. Detroit Free Press. A Mournful Accompaniment. Best Man (at churcb wedding) Gee whittaker! You addle-pated old apology 1 What in the creation are you tolling the beU for? New Sexton Sure, didn't' Oi hear th' young leddy say wid er own lips that she'd be married wid a ring? New York Weekly. A Sew Plate Glass Polisher. Thomas Todd, of Eutler, Pa., has in vented a method of fire polishing plats glass whereby the grinding and polish ing of one side of the sheet is saved, and the fire polished surface is said to be of brighter polish than is obtainable by artificial polishing. rNew York Journal. A Touching AppeaL ' "Were you touched at the minister's eloquence last night?" inquired Weeks. "Yes," returned Wentman gloomily, for $10." American Grocer. J. M. HUNTINGTON & CO. Abstracters, Heal Estate and Insurance Agents. Abstracts of, and Information Concern- ing Land Titles on Short Notice. Land for Sale and Houses to Rent. Parties Looking for Homes in COUNTRY OR CITY, OR IN SEARCH OF Bugiqe Location?, Should Call on or Write tois. Agents for a Full Line of Leaiii Fire Insurance Companies, And Will Write Insurance for on all nESIEABLE 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 Lunoli Counter, 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 a call Open all Night C. N. THORXBURY, Late Rec. U. S. Land Office. T. A. Hl-DSON. Notary Public. THORHBURY & HUDSQJI. ROOMS 8 and . 9 LAND OFFICE BUILDING, FoHtottlce Boi 385, THE DALLES, OR. pilings, Contests, And all other Business in (he ft 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 nub- lie at the earliest date when such entries can be made. Look for advertisement in this paper. Thornburv Hudson Health is Wealth ! -3iTR f ATM E NTJ Dr. E. C. West's Nerve anb Brain Treat ment, a guaranteed speciiic for Hyiiteria, liizzi- Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by the use of alcohol or tobacco. Wakefulness, Mental De pression, Softening of the Brain, resulting in in sanity and leading to miserv, decay and death Premature Old Age, Barrenness, Loss of Power in eitner sex, involuntary iosses ana Bpermat orrhcea caused by over exertion of the bruin, self- abuse or over indulgence. Each box contains one month's treatment. $1.00 a box, or six boxes ior va.iu, sem Dy mail prepaid on receipt ot price. "WE GUABAXTEE SIX BOXES To cure any case. 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 BLAKELEY & HOUGHTON, Prescription Druggists, 175 Second St. The Dalles, Or- Opera '.' Exchange 2s o. 114 Washington Street. BILLS & WIIYERS, Proprietors. The Best of Wines, Liquors and Cigars ALWAYS OX SALE. Thev will aim to sunnlv their customers with the best in their line, Doth of m ported and do K5J5.vlri3 - ... brau mestic goods. ' Tie Dalies s here and has come to stay. It hops io win its way to public favor by ener gy, industry and merit; and to this end4 we ask that you give it a fair trial, and if satisfied with its support. The 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 helping THE DALLES to take her prop er position as the Leading City of The paper, both daily and weekly, will be independent in criticism of political matters, as in its handling of local affairs, it will be JUST, FAIR "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 For the benefit shall print the first issue about 2,000 copies for free distribution, and shall Tvpinf -fWm time r timp fvjrt.-m prliinns YJ- AAA U AA V J A m, V A . W .WW J t J J f so mat tne paper zen of Wasco and 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. As your Postmaster for a copy, or addssssJ THE CHRONICLE PUB. GO. Office, N. W. Cor. Washington and Second Sts ctnicie course a generous Daily the resources of the country, to assist in an open river, and in Eastern Oregon. politics, and in its AND IMPARTIAL. outside parties. of our advertisers we A . . V WA. WA WbAWAWAA, 11 1 ' A win reacn every cili- adjacent counties.