"T V ,i is-;,- . THC . EMPTY HOU3C ' Tb rain een heavily bat nigbt I ! across tbe tragi in vain,' - Mad hope, to see your fUckering Ught ' Bhinatia tbe kMMlr roam agaia. A tnsnpeet shook the house last night. The torrents beat against yonr room: And not a star peeped from the height; -Tour koum was silent as the tomb, I wept the hours away last night, - O night more wretebed than the dayU . i Xotdonbtiiig but with morning light To-aee your face across toe way. The curtain was not drawn aside ' No face leant smiling on the aOl; The rain still fell, the bleak winds sighed, . Yearbouse waa desolate and still. New York Tribune. THE NEW TYPEWRITER . Mr. Bulles. the broker, had a newrtype--writer. Hevmade his head clerk try the dif- ferent applicants and test their skill and -engage the best one. - The one the head -3rk engaged was a large, impress re looking svornan of much beaaty and with ' thehaughtdnees of adneheaB. She dressed well and richly, and her manner when sitting before her machine was that of a grand woman ' of society' who'' conde scended to play' occasionally on the piano. She had mneh the air of a woman who "was employing the men in the offioe to -take care of her millions and make out her accounts. Mr. Bulles always felt as though be ought to ask her permission to smoke, and was almost afraid to ask her to take down any of his correspond? mice. "What work he dared to giye her he did as well as it could be done, so he ' had nothing against her except her pride. He determined finally to break down her pride. He had been uncomfortably im pressed with her dignity; now she should learn what it was to feel that way toward him. '"' So the next morning he called her in, and after dictating a few business letters he said: "Now, on the smaller paper, please. Are you ready? Let me see."" He mused as he bit carelessly at the top of his cigar and gazed out of the win alow: "Dear Jim," he began. "Thanks very aaoch, but it will be quite impossible. I have positively refused to go - into political life in any capacity, and though the position of minister, to so important a city as St Petersburg ; to succeed -Smith is highly complimentary, I could not leave New York and my work. ' Tell the president in the proper official language that he is very good, but that he must look for some one else. Give ' . -my best love to Mrs. : Blaine,' and accept my condolences at the loss of your house. Yours, .7 "The Hon. James CJ. Blaine, Washmg- ton, D. Cf- ;;';!;: . The typewriter girl took this down with a calm, unruffled countenance;her severity of demeanor was absolutely -unchanged. "Is that mill"' she asked. "Yea," said Bulles weakly yes, I be lieve that is all." He was not to be put down by a little thing like that, and called -'- her in again during the afternoon and dictated the following note: - . "DKUioiaoo's: Will you reserve one "of the largest private dining rooms for an this evening and prepare supper for ' MOP I find my rooms are too small,' and will have to have one of yours. Serve the same supper as ordered and prepare Soar for dancing, t Yoa can go to any feogth in the matter of decoration, but keep the cost of the flowers down to 91,000. "Yours truly." The other note was: . "DBA Old Mar: 1 should be very xfctd to accept, but Tuxedo never did agree with my digestion. Certainly, you ean have all the horses you want. The two leaders are in town, but I will have then sent out to you. I think the price wa offer for the coach is reasonable, and I will let yon have it for that, as I am going to give up ooaching and get a yacht. Yours." The third note was: v . . f jj,;;.,r ... "Dkab Kb. Bubobsb: The designs ar xived yesterday and were beauties. I sure, if looks go for anything, that she should beat anything afloat. I hope yoa are right in what yoa say about her being a better boat than the Mayflower, id I will certainly follow your sugges tion and enter her when completed for the cup. '. Yours truly." Mr. Bulles said:' "That win do. ( When they are finished let me see them." He thought he detected a slight unbending in the superior manner of the young woman, but be was not too hopeful. "If those dont impress her," he , said, "Til write a letter of regret to the queen to morrow, and one to Gladstone, telling him I can't come over this summer to vpend August with him." When the girl brought in the letters, finished and ready for his signature, he tossed -them carelessly aside and said: "I will sign them later, and 111 post them myself." lie signed them and slipped them in their envelopes under his other papers, where the clerks might not see them, and planned more for the future. On the day following he refused three invita tions to dine with distinguished people, - -ordered an architect to call and see him . about building a country house at New port, and wrote to order a diamond neck- . lace. - - '' The. typewriter girl .began to take., a little more interest, and said "Yes, sir," instead of simply "Yes," which was something. He felt that be was getting on. "- f But on the fourth day she appeared with even a colder and more haughty . air, and laid three letters down upon his desk, bne always opened his mail for him, and divided the private notes from the business letters. "Here," she said, "are three notes which I did not know whether to hand to you or to the clerk." . Bulles glanced at the bottom of one of them and read the name "Charles Bur gess." . The note ran: . "Hkkbt Bulles Dear Sir: I am in -. receipt of a note signed by you and bearing the number of your office, which refers to a yacht and an imaginary cor respondence which has passed between ns on the subject of such a yacht. As I do not know yoa or anything of any such , yacht I can only imagine that some one is imposing upon you, and return you . t yonr letter. Yours truly, "Charles Burgess." Mr. Bulles grew exceedingly red and dared not look up. . He .wondered bow far the girl had read. The seoond note said:,.' ; - .;.,'-.;..,,'; .(; "The private-dining room and supper ordered by. yoa for -Tuesday evening were prepared and in readiness for you as directed, but no one appeared. ' Are we to understand that there has been a mis take,, or is your Jotter, which we have re tained, to be considered in the nature of a hoax, or has some one ' forged your name? Awaiting your reply, etc., "DKLlfONJOO'S." Mr. Bulles sank still farther into , his chair: ; He opened the last letter with a trembling hand. The girl, still towered above him like an avenging spirit. - The letter was from a friend and con tained a clipping from a newspaper. . VDear , Hen,". , the ' note ran. "Have you seen this Associated Press clipping, and what in Heaven's name does it mean? Some one ha -evidently been playing a practical joke-on yoa, and one that must strike you as a most unpleasant one." The clipping read as follows: ; 18 HENRY BULLES INSANE f TBS WBLXMISK KBW VOBK BROKU SIVBS BIS .WHtKMOa OBMAT COHCUUf. WaSMUHrrua, . C-. s-The secretary of state M In receipt of a most remarkable comimmioatioo from Henry Bailee, the New York broker, in which that gentleman refuses to act' an minister to St. Petersburg; with much haughtiness. He is quite Unknown o either the- president or Mr. Blaine, and it is supposed here that bis mind is unsettled or that be is the victim of a pracycal Joke. -' ( J''i- !': '. - : ; Mr. Bulles laid the clipping down and gased desperately at the typewriter girl. "Did you post those letters"1., he, asked. " ' "Yes," said the duchess severely. "1 found them on your . desk after you had left, and supposed you had forgotten them, so I posted them myself. Wasn't thai right?" "I guess," said Mr. Bulles, "that 1 won't need you any longer. You know too much." .. "That," said the typewriter girl calm ly, "strikes me as the very reason why 1 should remain." Don't yoa think so? You can say you have been made the victim of a practical joke bat if I lost my posi tion I might say you had not. Don't you think yoa had better raise my salary a little and let me stay?" . Mr, Bulles gazed gloomily at the news-, paper clipping on the desk before him. "Yes," he said grimly, "you had better stay." New York Evening Sun. Peculiarities af the Golf Stream. This river is very warm because it comes from the Gulf .of Mexico and the Caribbean sea, where ' the sun has been heating it for, a long time. Of course after it has left its southern home, and is making its journey across the Atlan tic, it is gradually becoming cooler,, but, nevertheless, it maintains to .the shores of Europe, : even well . up toward . the Arctic .regions, a much higher tem perature than that of the surrounding air or water. ' " It has its own . finny inhabitants and other animal life; curious little fish and crabs that make nests in the floating sea weed; beautiful little jelly fish called thimble fish, floating or swimming near its surface in such countless numbers that at times the waters are brown with them; and the graceful flying neh, which dart out of the water in schools; and countless myriads of minute animal life floating about, so that when the Bun is shining high in the heavens, the water seems to be filled with motes. These little things, dying, sink to the bottom, and their diminutive skeletons or shells go to form an ooze, which, if exposed to the air and to pressure, resembles chalk, -..This ocean river is quite unlike -the rivers of the land in point of size. The Mississippi,, at a , point .below its lowest tributary, is about 2,000 feet wide and 100 feet deep. At places it is wider than this," but there it is shallower. The Gulf stream, at its narrowest point in the Strait of Florida, is more than 2,000 feet deep and over 40 miles wide. Lieut. J. E. Pillsbury. - ; v ' . a. Counterfeit Currency. ' '.-"More-counterfeit money is in actual circulation than people in general be lieve," remarked a teller , .in one of Chi cago's, leading , banks recently. "Of course only the better class of counter feits remain, in carrailation, and,. even" then do not pass undetected- long. The detection of a counterfeit bUl however, does not retire it from circulation by any means. A grocer, for instance, who finds a five dollar counterfeit bill in his money drawer at night, is liable to argue that he cannot ' well . afford to. lose the amoonV and also that a 'counterfeit which was good enough to deceive him is good enough to deceive some one else. "The next day some customer gets it in ... change,, and ten to one it is passed through a dozen hands before the' dis covery is again, made that it is bogus. But its mission does not end here. - Per haps the last holder of the bill can tell who - paid it -to him. If so the counter feit starts to retrace its course, but it rarely goes very far before it stops, and the whole scheme is worked over again. We frequently have counterfeit money offered , for. deposit. A merchant may bring in 'several hundred dollars, and among the bills is a single counterfeit. Of course it is thrown out as soon as it is discovered. But where does it go? Into the hands of the man that brought it in. Does he destroy it? Perhaps, if he is a scrupulously honest man." Chicago Mail. ','-.' . ; Old Kn ;l lh, Customs. Bail way ticket offices still retain the old name of ''booking office," which was appropriate enough in the coaching days, when the names of intending pas sengers were literally booked. Another curious survival is the prac tice of eating game and venison "high." -We never eat poultry or beef and mut ton "high," but game and venison used to be sent long distances and be a con siderable time on the road, so that they could not . be received in a fresh state. Hence it became , customary and even fashionable to eat them "high," and the practice has endured to the present day. Then there is the old fashioned greet ing, "God be with ye." Perhaps not all know that the meaningless words "good by" are a compression of the above pious wish. London Tit-Bits. '-- Thsatrlsal rns The business, of. the theatrical press -agents has been so .anhoyingiy overdone In uus city tnat tne boomers are under taboo in the newspaper offices, -and the critics of several of the greater Journals -deny themselves absolutely, to these vis itors.. When it is considered that, even after the destruction by fire of the, Fifth Avenue, - we have thirty-five dramatic theatres in New York and, the suburbs, besides . almost -as many more variety -shows, concert halls and other places of amusement, it is clear that the small Army of stalwart boomers would become intolerable , if permitted. ' ' The conse- quenee is that most of the local manag ers have abandoned the practice of send ing solicitors to the newspaper offices, but instead; mail the particulars of their plans and such other matter as they wish to have published.'. . . i .. This material is treated differently by the dramatic .editors,, according to the asagea of the various offices. The situa tion is sometimes a puzzle to the press agents of the traveling companies that come into town. . .The majority of these energetic gentlemen intermit their la bors largely upon being informed that they are likely to do more harm than good, but the" minority do. not take a va cation so lazily.. ; One of these , workers has this week poetized his usually prosa ic efforts. He has sent to each important journal an original and exclusive poem in praise of an actress who employs him. The verses are smoothly rhymed and metred and they extol the lady's beauty and ability with all the enthusiasm" of a knight of old exuberant over his lad love. None of these effusions, however, has yet gained publication. New York Cor. Washington Star. . - ' Bad Luek at the Funeral. -The funeral of the late Ephraim Geis singer, of near Blue Church, Upper Saucon township, was held with. con siderable . difficulty. ; At 'the home of the deceased's parents, about two miles from the church, elaborate preparations were made all day Tuesday for the din ner which was to be served at the con clusion of the obsequies. ' -A ; calf was killed and set aside to await the roasting process. When the hour arrived for this oh Wednesday the matrons having the affair in charge were greatly surprised to una - tnat during the night some person had stolen the. calf , together with other of the funeral meats. . .. , The excitement created by -this an nouncement had scarcely subsided ere one of the horses attached to the hearse of Undertaker Thomas Schaffer, of Lime- port, 'while being driven into the yard. stepped into a. hole from which a post bad been removed and broken his leg. The poor animal had to be shot on the spot. The hearse was also caught by a wash line and dismantled of its plumes AUentown (Pa.) Chronicle. Tbat Hallo KxpedtUoau - Xi , . A correspondent asks, "What time is the ; balloon - expedition to -start, for the north pole?,v : , ... 'There is some doubt now felt as to whether it will start at all. The men who intended to go are, French men, bat the French Aeronautic ' society, which has been considering the matter, think that no good could possibly be accom plished, even if the voyagers were able to pass over the pole and get back alive. The present programme is that they will send op pilot balloons next summer from Spitsbergen, and if these show the direc tion and force of. winds to be favorable to. the scheme the expedition will start in the summer of 1892. St. Louis Globe Democrat. "' ' .--. --.'.-.-. Oo incidences svt-sm Astntveraary. The golden wedding of & N. Ksk and wife, a highly respected couple, . was re cently observed at their home in Brain tree, Mass. A singular- feature -of the occasion was the faot -that the services connected with the affair were held in the same bouse and the same room of the' house, and the venerable' couple oc cupied .the., same- place in the room as when married fifty years, before. , There was the same carpet on the floor and the same paper on the wall as. when the orig inal .wedding took place. Springfield Republican. , I r Valiuhl Omn ii The census bureau, with all the rest of ita workbas been attempting . to., asoer tauvtbe valne of the carpi which have been introduced into American waters. One man to whom a schedule was sub mitted replied that the : carp in has pond had been worth $1,000 to him in the past six months. His wife had been sick and he had fed her exclusively upon carp, to 't.She ' was . worth $1,000 at .least, and tnererore ne estimated his gain on his in vestment at that sum. Boston Tran script. -: .' : ' 1 r n - , . ' i 5,lo Wnttlnc h Track.- .; ; : One Maine railroad finds that the practice of walking on the track in the winter time may cause a partial sus pension of its operations. '' People tread the snow so hard upon the;,tracks of, the Monson railroad that the 'company an nounces that it win be unable to keep its branches open . this ..winter, unless the practice ceases. . This .appeal ought to bring about the resultmost to be desired. Bangor (Me.) Commercial. t- A Prudent Kan, An EBkton (Md.) man -feared that he might be buried before he was really dead, 'and he therefore directed ..in his will that his body should be kept for forty days in a shed built for the pur pose. He wanted a bottle of water be side him, a -latch on -the inside of the door and a roof slanting to the west. He is now lying in the shed. Detroit Free Press."- ' ' ' YVPresenea of Mind. - ' Dr. Tremblay, of Quebec, swallowed by mistake the other day a quantity of aconite.- Realizing that:.'' the-: poison would cause his speedy death he hasten ed to a priest's house and received the sacraments. Returning home he made his will, and very soon died in the pres ence of his young wife and three chil dren. Toronto Letter. -, . J. M. HUNTINGTON & GO. flbstraeters, ; Heal Estate and v Itwanee 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 BuiiiBg Location, , Should Call on or Write to us. . ( Agents for a Full Line of .. . Leasing Fire Insurance Companies, .And Will Write Insurance for on all - . DESIEABIiE laiSIECS. 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 i ZjuhoIi Oounter, 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. THORNBURY, T. A. HtJDBOX. Late Rec. U. 8. Land Office. . , Nptary JP ublie. POSOjl. ROOMS 8 and 9 LAND OFFICE BUILDING, ' Postolnca B 35, v THE DALLES, OR. Filings, Contests, And alltther BasSess in the D. S. Land Office Promptly Attended U. 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. u '- . Thornburv & Hudson. Health is Wealth ! Db. K. C. Wert's Nerve anb Brain Treat ment, a guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dizzi ness, Convnlnione, Fit, Nervous Nenralfria, 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 misery, decay and death, Premature Old Aire, 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.- f 1.00 a box, or six boxes for 5.00, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price. WJC OFAKANTKE 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 HOUGHIOS, Prescription Druggists, 175 Second St. - ; , ,, The Dalles, Or. No. 114 Washington Street. BILLS 4 WHYERS, Proprietors. The Best of Wines, liquors and Cigars .' ALWAT8 OK SALE. They will aim to supply their customers with the best in their line, both of m ported and do mestic goods. . . , ! , - . ; ... i.t i Jl.-fl 1. ' Opera '.' Exchange, S i - i J X ? .1 i-3tr.!.. z.i is here and has come to stay. It hppek to win its way to public favor by enerA 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 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 obi will be to advertise the resources of the city, and adjacent country, to assist in developing pur 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 ,vfii.vtv;. y-?; Leading City of Eastern Oregon. 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 it ili i,- i , JUST, FAIR AND IMPARTIAL , y?e will endeavor to give all the lo cal news, and we ask that your criticism of pur 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 adjacent counties. .'' .- .. j ;.'"L. ' - - ' - '';,.- 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, AO your Postmaster for a copy, or addres. THE CHRONICLE PUB CO. Office, N. W. Cor. Washington and Second Sts- Daily cets f i '. I 3 , J i: