:r DEATH AT THE .' END. j Wanld I were dead and lying in my gnn, ' At res from fretting doubts and carting cares! Be kind, O Heaven, and listen to my prayers; rant me toe only favor that I crave Sx feet by three of earth to hide my dust. 1 aak no tombstone or memorial bust; 1 aak tor death: what is beyond I'll brave. ) of good or erQ have I wrought: No happiness or pleasure have I kaown ' Hut it bath been with sorrow intersown; -All hath slipt from my grojp that 1 most sought. My Ufa, though short in years, is Ions in grief; ' Night follows day, but brings me no relief. Aad passing years nave only sorrow brought Tbers is one goal to which our courses tend; The way lies over mountains, torrents, plains. Through velvet pastures and quiet country lanes.' Ibaorat the pleasant scenes enjoyment lend. While others weary toil up rocky slopes Dejectedly, and almost void of hopes. Ikjt one fate waits for all Death at the End. Chambers1 Journal VAN BIBBER'S WAGER Mr. Van Bibber and the other men of fcia particular set were grouped around Hbm club window after luncheon, or "breakfast, as it happened to be, when Van Bibber said he thought seriously of entering upon a career of crime. Van Bibber was given to making disturbing .statements of this sort, which required one to think, evea if one did not reply to . -tfaem, and the other men rather wished fee would not. "For instance," said young Van Bib ber, "I went to a dance last night, and the room where you were to put your hmt was filled with old silver, little bits of it snuff boxes and. spectacle cases and bonbon boxes and buckles and girdles. The chap had made a collec tion of " them, and had them ' all lying Around loose. I had a good mind to fill my overcoat with half, of 'em, and then 1 thought it would be much more fun to fill every other man's pockets, and wait askI see the row, but some one came in. And 1 couldn't do it. Now, there "are these teas and receptions and days and jlU that sort of thing that women go to. Why shouldn't 1 start out some after soon and sweep the places bare, and melt the silver down and get rich? 1 anight become a sort of "Jack the Rip per' or 'Louis the Lifter.' I'll bet," ex claimed Van Bibber, becoming more in terested in his idea, '"that lean go out . this afternoon and bring back more ' than five hundred dollars' worth of edl Ter and bric-a-brac, and I'll do it, too, . if Any of you have any sporting blood." There was no question as to the men feaving sporting blood. They jumped at the chance. Van Bibber found not the - least difficulty in dividing up his wager Among them all "But wait, said Travers; "how do -we know that Van Bibber won't fix it -with the people in the house? Even- if bis friends did see him . handling . the bric-a-brac or even if he put a fork down inn coat sleeve, they'd not say anything. They'd think he was joking. Or he may let them into it beforehand." "Well, 1 must say 1 appreciate your confidence,'' growled Van Bibber; "111 play fair, of course, and I'll tell, yon -' what I'll do; to make sure, IH only go bouses where they don't know me. ask Til bring back spoons marked with the people's initials." This recklessness delighted his friends. "Yon are a sport. Van Bibber," they ried with admiration, "and youll be in 3il before 5 o'clock," The servant brought them a society paper that made a feature of printing the announcements of coming social events and Van Bibber carefully selected the names of five estimable ladies who were .giving receptions that afternoon, and who were making a desperate fight to get Into society, as the proper people to rob. At 4 he ordered a haneom, put his last inside his hat, placed a fresh chrys anthemum in his coat, and started smil ingly forth on his career of crime. His friends watched him from the window . with keen delight and with much excite- - merit. ... "Now, then," said Travers promptly And decidedly, "the thing for us to do is to send a detective after him and have him arrested." "Exactly." said the rest. Mr. Van Bibber alighted first at a very handsome brown stone house, just a few doors off the avenue on Forty third street. There was an awning over the door, and a line of carriages oo either ' side of the street. The name of the lady who was paying for this he discovered, ' by referring to his slip, to be Nobles. ..The man saw him through the door and opened it, saying, "Third floor,- front." Mr. Van Bibber pushed his way through the crowd of women and girls - and old men and pots of chrysanthe mums, and threw his overcoat in a cor ner. There was no one in the room. And Van Bibber, while adjusting his . cravat, cast a wandering eye over the dressing table. - It was littered with sil ver toilet articles.' He picked some of . these up and bit them,' in a most pro- " Sessional manner. "Plated," he re marked, with some disgust: "lady prob ably gets her silver, from a caterer. Hardly worth while to try down stairs. CJmess IT1 move on to next place." He picked up his overcoat and hat again, and went ont without having fazed upon Mrs. ' Nobles. The next place was on the avenue itself, and was very crowded. Van Bibber rushed his way slowly up stairs to the second floor, and, without a moment's hesitation. . gathered up four silver . photograph frames, a complete manicure set of sil ' ver, a gold watch, which hung in a slip per at the side of a bed, and a pair of sil ver backed, hair brushes. He placed ' theae carefully in his overcoat, and went down stairs in a stately and dignified manner. He avoided the iirst uoor where he guessed the hostess was uta , tioned, and made his way toward the rear. There was a terrible crush, and yet he saw no one he knew. In the rear room there was a long - table overloaded with things to eat. ':' He gathered up three ? four spoons, one at a time, after examiniug them carefully, and stored them away back of a bit of china on a sideboard, then he went back after more spoons. Nobody paid any atten tion to him; and he paid no attention to any one else. Ha carried a plate with some salad on it in his hand. and. pich-i at this daintily with the spoons as ho transferred them from the table -to the sideboard. When he had a dozen he covered them with his handkerchief and slipped them into his coattail pocket. Then he put on his greatcoat, and went out as calmly as he had come in. He found the stolen articles somewhat heavy, so as soon as he was in the han som he took them out and put them under the seat.. Mrs. Charles T. Van Dyke was the name of the hostess at the next place. Van Bibber shot quickly up stairs and opened two or three bureau drawers, a writing desk and a secretary, but found nothing of value. There was an immense silver water pitcher in one corner with two goblets, which he thought of tak ing, but he could think of no way of getting it out unobserved unless he low ered it down the elevator shaft with a rope. In the dining room, however, the spoons were undisturbed as yet, and lay in cozy little rows on the white cloth. Van Bibber placed a dozen of these in each of his trousers pockets and told the servants as he turned from the tea urn, over . which he had been . bending, that he would take two lumps and lemon. . , A large, heavily mustached stranger, with a cup in his hand, nodded pleasant ly to Van Bibber, and asked him, with a glance at the tea, if r he had got what he wanted. : . "Yes, thank you," said Van Bibber cheerfully. "I think I have." , : - At the next place he was somewhat surprised to see the same stranger drink ing more tea and apparently watching him. But Van Bibber put this down to the fact that he was unduly suspicious, and that his imagination was excited. He was just going out without having made any seizures, when a fat, pompous gentleman, who he was sure must be the. host, took pity on his apparently neglected condition and said: "I see you are looking over my bric-a-brac sir. It is not much of a collection, and I have not had time lately to give it the atten tion it needs." Then he proceeded, at great length and with evident satisfac tion to himself, to describe each separate piece of crockery on the walL Van Bib ber was greatly bored, but he was too polite to say so, and was rewarded when the gentleman said, "This piece of Sat suma cost me five hundred dollars." Van Bibber kept his' eye on the plate, and, when his host turned to greet a new arrival, slipped it into his coattail pocket and bowed himself out. . He placed it under the seat of the han som very carefully, and drove on to the next place quite assured that he had won hi3 bet, but anxious to settle it without a question or doubt. He did not see the stranger with the heavy mus tache pass him in a close cab and dart into the house to which he was' going just a minute before him. Van Bibber elbowed his way, with many apologies, to the third floor.' There was a dressing table covered with silver trifles, and Van Bibber smiled complacently. There was. a bed in the room, and he could see this as he looked in the mirror. But he could not see under the bed. His overcoat -was on a chair, and he made several tripe to it and filled the pockets with silver backed brushes and combs. But on the third of these trips his heart stood still, for out from under the bed came the big stranger with the heavy mustache. He came very leisurely and determinedly. "Don't make a row," he said; "you're under arrest." . At that moment two young men came iniv the room, pulling off their over coats. - - "Help!" screamed Van Bibber; "lookl" he shouted, pointing at the detective. "There's a eneak thief under the bed." Then he fell on the officer's head just as relentlessly as he would have dropped on a football, and banged his nose into the carpet and sat on his shoulders. The two young men got out of their coats much more quickly than they had in tended doing and fell with their knees on each of the detective's . arms, and while they thus pinned him to the floor they punched him vigorously in the ribs and yelled. ' "Look at thisr said Van Bibber, catching up his overcoat by the tail and spilling all the silver over the floor. "Look at what he had stored awayt Hold him, will you? while. I get . a po liceman." . , Every one was running up the front stairs, so he could not go down that way, and so ran to the back and went down the kitchen stairs and on into the din ing room, whence all the waiters had fled. He was quite unobserved in the confusion, and accordingly took time to fill his pockets with spoons and forks of heavy silver. Then he walked out through the excited women, and stepped' into his hansom, and told the driver to go to the club. "That detective of yours," he said calmly, as he produced his treasures from . the bottom of the hansom, "will probably be around here when he gets his nose patched up- . In the mean while 1 will ask you .to value these articles roughly and ring for some messenger boys." An , authority said the lot was worth $700, and tho separate exhibits were promptly returned to where they be longed by messenger boys, who were in structed to leave them at the. door and run. Tho detective was pacified by some of the club's Vest brandy and a twenty dollar bilL But .whenever Van Bibber enters the club now the men feel nervously for their watches and the waiters count the forks. New York Sun. , Christmas Figuring. Biffers I'm a pretty good hand at figures, but there a one thing I can t un derstand about Christmas. Wiff era What's that? Biffers How is it that everybody gives more than he gets, and yet nobody gets as much as he gives? Hang me if 1 ; can' see what becomes of the surplus! ' New York Weekly. . - Explicit. TTasperated Property Owner (to organ grinder) W hat II you take to clear out? . Orgad '"viuder (coolly) Me takka me time. Epoch. ON AN OSTRICH FARM. AN AFRICAN INDUSTRY TRANSPLANT ED TO CALIFORNIA. Ostriches Are Proittstble Minis to Raise. Something About the Unfitness Popu- . lar Superstitions Exploded Hatched . by Means of Incubators. There are at least half a dozen ostrich farms in southern California. They have ceased to be a curiosity there, and each now represents a commercial enterprise. Americans, bny one-half the millions of ostrich feathers 'produced annually. . It is estimated that this country expends $3,000,000 a "year for these ornaments. Each ostrich when full grown yields a feather income of from $200 to $300 per annum. The elegant, long black and white plumes sell for $3 each at the farms, and readily, bring $10 each at retail in New York or Chicago. Every feather has a value. If it is sufficiently large for use it is worth at least 10 cents. The very small ones, otherwise useless, mak6 up into cheap souvenirs and are eagerly purchased by visiting tourists at prices varying from 10 cents to $1. The plumes produced in southern California are fully as valuable as those from the far away Cape Colony. The eggs, 'if fertile, sell for $25 each, and generally from 75 to 80 per cent, of all eggs produced will hatch. If not fer tile the shells are. in demand at from $3 to $3 each as curios and ornaments. - A young ostrich just out of the shell is con sidered equivalent to $50, and his value increases until he is' full grown, when $500 is a low market price. The expense of maintaining an ostrich farm is comparatively slight. The birds in this country are usually healthy. Their appetites are appalling, but they : are satisfied with alfalfa, cabbage and crushed bones for a regular diet. On occasions they expect large and small pebbles, bits of iron, old shoes, tin cans and such delicacies. A hungry ostrich is not particular about his food. It is merely a question of deglutition with him. If what he eats will go down or rather up his somewhat elastic throat (for he eats and drinks head downward), he feels safe to trust his digestive organs to oo tne rest. The ostrich has long been maligned. In our schoolboy days natural history taught us to despise the ostrich, first, be cause of its lack of sense, and second, for its want of parental instincts. We were told that this great, ungainly bird, when chased by a native South African upon tne bacK of a fleet horse or a tame os trich, would hide his weary head in the sand, under the impression - that if he could not see his pursuer the pursuer could not see him. This fable is no more true, at least of the domesticated bird, than the other, which actually says that the mother ostrich lays her eggs in the hot sand and leaves them to the tender care of the sun and the Hottentot. The ostrich egg shell is sometimes one- sixteenth of an inch thick. It is fully twenty-four times the size of an ordinary hen's egg. Incubation requires forty days, during which period the male and female alternate in the domestic duty of keeping the eggs warm. Most of the hatching is now done by incubators. A 800 egg incubator has a capacity for but 27 ostrich eggs. At the farm near Santa Monica I saw the birds on the nest, however, and the young ostriches after they were removed from the nest. The eggs at this Bit ting nearly all hatched, and as I visited the farm frequently I grew very much interested in both parents and children. The nest consisted of a pile of sand in the center of the field assigned to the two breeders. The male bird manifested the utmost interest in the business in hand, and devoted more than fifteen hours a day to the maternal duty of sitting on the eggs. - When his mate was on the nest he would shield her from the excessive heat of that semi-tropical sun by extending his ample wings over her. The two os triches were models of parental affection. The exemplary conduct of the mala specially won my admiration, for he was ever on the alert to render assistance to his patient spouse, and when the little fellows pecked their way through the hard shell he kept vigilant watch over them. The old story of neglect of its offspring is clearly disproved. There are no feathered animals more dutiful. The old birds are not awkward, but the young ones have no sense whatever, and so it is necessary to remove the lat ter as soon as possible after they escape from the shell to prevent them from wandering into danger. It requires skillful coaxing and no little maneuver ing to entice the fond parents from the nest, but this accomplished the young ostriches are transferred to a sand box in the sun, where they must have close at tention all day long to keep them from mishaps which their, utter lack of dis cretion and extreme awkwardness would certainly bring upon them. ' . At night they are- placed in an incu bator.' Until they are several months old the absurdly heedless and tender things require very great care. After they pass from infancy, however, they generally thrive. The losses , usually oc cur within the first month. When the birds are seven months old the first plucking occurs, and from that time forward they give up their feathers twice a year. The females begin laying eggs at three years of age, and produce from thirty to ninety eggs each an nually. . ' . In South Africa, until about thirty years ago, the natives killed the ostrich for his plumes. Since tjiat ' date . the domesticated bird3 have f uruibhed moat "of the feathers of commerce. Each bird ' when fully grown has twenty-five plumes on each wing, with two rows of floss feathers underneath. Above the white plumes are a row of long feathers And under them are a smaller size. In the male these are black and in the female drab. The tail has also a tuft of feathers similarly ar ranged. The first feathers are not usually as fine in quality, as large in size or as great in quantity as those of subsequent plnckinge. Cor.' Chicago News. J. M. HUNTJNGTON & CO. flbstFaeters, Real Estate and Insurance Agents. Abstracts of. and Information Concern ingJLand Titles' on Short Notice. - Land for Sale and Houses to Rent -. Parties Looking for Homes in COUNTRY OR CITY, OR IN SEARCH OF . Bngiqe Location?, ' Should Call on or Write to us. Agents for a Full Line of - LeaiiiiFire Insnrancs Companies, And Will Write Insurance for on all IDESIBABIiE lESISICS. Correspondence Solicited. . All Letters Promptly Answered. Call on or Addreee, J. M. HUNTINGTON & CO. Opera Houee Block, The Dalles, Or. JAMES WHITE, ' Has Opened a Liinoli ; Counter, In Connection With his Fruit Stand and Will Serve ; Hot Coffee, Ham Sandwich Pigs' Feet, s and Fredr 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. THORNBCRY, T. A. HDDSON, 1MB nee. u. u. Laaa Omee. Notary Public. TliPURUPDSOH, ROOMS 8 and 9 LAND OFFICE BUILDING, roitomee Eox sij, - THE DALLES, OR. pilings, 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 tne earliest date when such entries can be made. Look for advertisement in this paper. Thornburv & Hudson. Health is Wealth ! ' Dr. E. C. Wkrt's Neeti anb Brain Tkkat mbnt, a guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dizzi ness,. Convulsions, Fits,. Nervous Neuralgia, Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by the use o alcohol or tobacco. Wakefulness, Mental De pression, Softening of the Brain, resulting in in sanity aud leading to misery, decay and death, Premature Old Age, Barrenness, Loss of Power in either sex, Involuntary Losses and Spermat orrhoea caused by over exertion of the brain, self abuse or over indulgence. Each box contains one month's treatment. $1.00 a box, or six boxes for 15.00, 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 will send the purchaser our written guarantee to re fund the money if the treatment does not effect s cure. Guarantees Issued only by BIjAKEIjEY & HOUOHTON, Prescription Druggists, 175 Second SU ' 1 The Dalles, Or. Opera " Exchange, No. 114 Washington 8 tree t. BILLS 4 WEYERS, Proprietors. The Best of Wines, Liquors and Cigars ALWATS ON SALE. Thpv will aim to BUDTilv their customers with the beet in their line, both of m ported and do "vVl. , BRAIN mestic goods. .. The Dalles 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 we ask that you give it a fair trial, and if satisfied with its course a generous support. The tour pages ot 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 riverj and in helping THE DALLES to take her prop er position as the Leading City of Eastern Oregon, j 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 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 our advertisers we shall print the first issue about 2,000 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 adj acent 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. COf Office. N. W. Cor. Washington and Second Sts. Daily politics, and in its