CO ALL OWING TO THE SOIL ; JOHN MOSSBACK, OF WAYBACK, TELLS SOME TALL STORIES. Log (irw Into a Pnuue Hooae In One Night nl Kverythlug Klse Kept Pee A Flock uf sheep Grew 80 Mjk twioafily That John Had to Leave. "Why. hello, John," said a man who chanced to be passing along the road to John Moswback, of Wayback, whom he met, "liow came yon ' in this section of fiae country? The last I heard you was in Aroostook county. Me., and here I ftntl yon way down here; what caused yoa to leave that place? I hear that it is the garden of Maine." "Well, yon see, mister, that it got too health v for me np there, and I bad to leave." "Too healthy ! How do yon make that out? I did not suppose that yon could ' find a place that was too healthy to live in." "Well, yer see, mister, 'at it is this -way, although I don't hardly like ter tell "yer, for fear 'at yer will think 'at I'm a lyin'; but I'll risk it anyway, and tell yer few facts, and then yer'U diskiver wo't I mean by bein' too healthy. NOT BUILT WITH HANDS. Wen I fust went np there I tnck up a farm on w'ot I supposed was about til' richest soil in the county, and I found arter a while that my jedgment was not far out o th' way. Th' fust day 'at I .got there I looked around and selected -ta' spot where I was goin' to build my boose, and as I conldn't find any stones for underpinin' I thought 'at I would build my honse, which was a log one, on th ground, hoping that it would ataud until I could build a better one. It was pretty late when I got at work, and I only got the four bottom logs to gether when I had ter quit, an' I had ter go about a mile ter th' honse where I nut boardin' until I could get my house ready ter move into. Th' nex' mornin" I started ter go ter my work, an' w'ot -was my surprise ter find th' four logs 'at X had laid for th' foundation fer my house had taken root an' grown into a two story frame honse, with ell and out bail dings attached, all shingled and dapboarded and ready to move into. I mentioned the fact ter my host, an' he aid that was no thin': 'at th' soil allera did that when it was fust broke, but that rd get used ter it arter a while. "I sent for my family the next day, which consisted of my wife an' a 10-year-old boy, an' in about two weeks they come np there, an' all went well until I el my boy ter harrowin'; he bein kind lazy, lay down and went to sleep on th fresh grown. In about two hoars he come np ter th' honse an' we didn't know him. Grown? Well, I guess so. Wen be went away he was about the size o' any 10-year-old boy, and w'en he come back he was plump six foot tall and weighed 225 pounds. "W'en it come time ter shoot deer my aired man started oat ter see if he eoaldnt get one. Well, sir, he started a drove and drew 'em ont inter one o' my fields and shot three of 'em, an, every ae of 'em fell on a piece of broke np 'at we had plowed that week, an' as he couldn't get 'em ter the honse alone he came for help, an' my sou and I to--Kether with a warden who had just got there ter my honse started back ter get them, an' sir, you may believe it or not, bat w'en we got there we found that them three deer had grown into three moose, an' it cost that man' $100 apiece for the two moose which he had, more'n the law allowed him. OBOWTH OF RAILROADS AND MORTGAGES. "Are they goin' to build that railroad, did you say? No, I don't think they will, for jesKt as soon as the sleepers strike the sile the blamed things would grow until the whole country would be cov ered with railroads. I 'member one of ay neighbors held a mortgage on one of the farms an' he happened to lose it, and didn't find it for two days, an' when he did find it it had grown until it had given him a mortgage of a whole town ship, and they sent him down the river fox forgery, even it was all the fait o' the sile. Oh, yes! Aroostook county is a nice farmin' country; all yer have ter do is tor plant yer crops and they will grow ter beat thunder. Why I have known men to go there without a cent and clear 1300,000 the first year all often potatoes, an' they didn't have only one potato to tart with, and that being a small one weighed only 600 pounds. "Everybody would be rich if the debt didn't grow equally with the profits. - 1 nember one man went ter sellin' ma chinery, an' he didn't pay np for a year, an' by that time the debts had grown so big that he never has been able ter pay it since. "Wot made me leave? WeUf IT1 tell yer. I turned my flock o' sheep out one night, and the next mornin' they had grown so 'at I had 'bout fifty morn'n 1 tamed out th' night afore, and one o xny neighbors hed lost his whole flock, which, strange to say, had drowned, as he never found 'em, bat he said that I got 'em, and he made it so nncomf ort ahle for me that I had ter leave. Well, good day, mister, I've got ter leave, as I got ter strike the next town afore night, as my time for leaving the state expires then." Bangor News. A Wicked Broker. Wall' street is not often reverent. As proof, or refutation, of this assertion may be cited the remark made by one of the street's "kings" when asked to cease his attacks on a certain stock. The man who urged the request gave as aa argument the fact that the "king's" -eldest friend had invested heavily in the stock, and was on the verge of bank wiptcy. ' "Loaded with it, is he?" said the other. "Well, we're told in the good book to -bear one another's hardens.' Fm going to bear his till I can get it at twenty." JJew York Times. School limy. Visitor Do you like going to school, ay little man? Little Man Yesm, I like goin', but I ant Eke stayin'. Good News. AN ANCIENT FARM HOUSE. What the French Hootelrlee Were Like Daring the Middle Ages. The houses of the farmers and the country people differed then as now, ac cording to their rank and prosperity, and also according to the district they inhabited. The yeoman former, and even the well to do husbandman, dwelt in a solid house of brick or stone, tiled or slated, with a paved yard separating it from the barn and outhouses, the dai ry and cattle pens. The farm honse which in England was always construct ed with a southern aspect as invariably faced the east in Aqmtame, while to the rear well open to the west was a long tiled veranda, where in winter after noons the hemp picking, the wool card ing, etc., were done. Within the vast kitchen glowed in the light of the fire almost as nnextingnish able as the vestal virgin's peat, coal and wood were each abundantly employed, and for a trifling rent, generally paid in kind, the lord of the manor would per mit the farmers on his land to cut their turfs from his. bog or their boughs from his forest. Fuel was not only actually but relatively cheaper in the middle ages than today, for the bogs were not drained in those days, the forest covered great expanses, and the cost of carnage made it almost impossible to transport their produce. In almost every shire of France and England the supply of fuel was in excess of the demand. This hospitable fire flared np a chim ney proportioned to its size, lighting the huge brick oven, the iron tiredogs, the bellows, shovel, gridiron, ladles, cal drons, saucepans, mortar, tin pails and other utensils that stood on the brackets of the hearth, and irradiating the brass and copper pots, the metal candlesticks, the lamp, the lantern, the not unfrequent silver beaker, and the glass drinking caps that were ranged on the chests and cupboards round the walls. Near this fire stood a high backed settle, the mas ter's corner, and nnder the great mantle of the chimney narrower benches were set in the brick. Within easy reach of the hearth a deep oak chest held the logs for burning. It was generally matched by a handsome wedding chest with carved or painted front, long enough to contain a grown person full length, but more usually filled, it must be admitted, with the best clothes, the trinkets and the savings of the house hold. The registers of the chatelet record no crime so common as the breaking open of such wedding chests; and it is surpris ing how many clasps of jewels, girdles of pearls, golden headdresses and rings, and purses full of gold were stolen from quite humble households. Onr fore fathers invested their capital in cups or trinkets of precious metal, pretty to look at, easy to hide, and readily con verted into cash when necessity demand ed a sacrifice. Fortnightly Review. A Daring Argument. A quick witted and daring western lawyer once saved a guilty client from sure conviction on a charge of poisoning. It was proved that the poisoning had been done by means of certain cakes, a portion of which was produced in court. When the counsel for the prisoner had finished his speech, he said: "And these. gentlemen of the jury, are some of the alleged poisoned cakes. We declare to you. gentlemen of the jury, that they are not poisoned cakes. They are as harmless cakes as ever were made, and in order, gentlemen of the jury, to show yon that these cakes are not poisoned, 1 will eat one of them right here in your presence." And he did eat one. He took good care, however, to leave the room at the earliest opfortunity, and to make a bee line for an adjoining room, where he had an emetic in readiness and an anti dote. But the jury never heard about the emetic or the antidote until the law yer's client had been acquitted. San Francisco Argonaut. Onr Son a Star. Most young folks now know that the difference between night and day on this planet of ours arises simply from the fact, that among the innumerable multi tude of stars there is one infinitely nearer to us than all the rest; being so much nearer to us that when we see it we have day. When by the earth's movement on its axis the sun has set in the west we have night; at which time we depend for light upon the more distant stars unless, indeed, the moon is shining. In the main, it is true that the enor mous difference in the intensity of the light that we receive from the sun in the one case, and from all the stars seen at night in the other, depends upon the fact that the sun is the star nearest to as, and the other stars are suns infinitely re moved. J. Norman Lockyer in Youth's Companion. To Measure the . Sea Level. A new apparatus for measuring the mean level of the sea has lately been in stalled at Marseilles. It is based on the principle that when a liquid wave trav erses a capillary tube or a porous parti tion, its amplitude diminishes and it is retarded in its phases without the mean level of the wave changing. It consists of a glass tube, the lower end of which communicates by a flexible pipe with a plunger which is lowered beneath the lowest water level. There are two cells in the plunger, the lower being filled with sand and open to the sea, the result being that the column of water in the tube rises and falls very little with the tides, and the mean sea level can be read from a graduated scale. New York Times. Everything Shipshape. Small Boy Say, dad, why does the leaves fall off the trees every fall? Dad (an old salt) Bless you, boy, don't you know? The winds is high ir. winter, an' the trees has to lower sail. New York Weekly. A Drop In the Market. He Darling, this engagement ring is worth $350. She The last one I had cost $400. He You are older now! New York Herald. THE RED MAN IN WINTER j HOW INDIANS EAT AND LIVE DUR-j ING THE COLD MONTHS. . Construction of a Tepee -Furnishings of the Tent How Their I tread Is Made. Process of Hunting iud Curing the Leather for Leggins and Moccasins. It is not strange that Indians are short lived nor that there should be so high a rate of mortality among their children. The tribes north of an east and west line coinciding with the northern limit of New Mexico use for dwellings what is known as the tepee. An Indian of wealth in the Ute country sometimes has an opportunity to purchase an A tent, and even a wall tent, at some sale of condemned quartermaster's supplies, but the very best and newest canvas af fords poor protection against the snow storms and freezing winds of the plains. The tent is usually staked down, with a shallow gutter dug round it to carry off the rain water, which would other wise flood its interior, and, beginning in the early autumn, a fire is built in the center of the earth floor, which is sel dom allowed to go out.- Overhead and hanging in lines suspended from the canvas are the rifles and other weap ons of the family, and the floor is cov ered with about six inches of dead grass I or hay. which in time is trodden down and pressed into a fair and tolerably ; soft mattress. Wrapped up in his blanket, i with his head resting on his saddle for j a pillow, the Indian sleeps through the j night, depending somewhat on the fire to keep him from freezing in extremely ! cola weatner. . LIFE d A TEPEE. In dry weather the ventilator at the apex of the tent may be kept open, but during storms, when it is closed, the at mosphere of the tent is stifliilg and reek ing with the odor of the unwashed fam ily and of the many damp" and badly cared furs which every buck accumu lates. Far from the agencies the In dians lay in a small stock of flour, coffee and sugar sufficient to be used sparingly through the winter, which, with his frozen beef or antelope meat, constitutes his bill of fare. In a tent ten feet in diameter, a buck, two squaws and five or six small children pass the winter months, and considering their uncleanly habits, it is not difficult to imagine the condition of the habita tion in the spring.- They themselves probably appreciate this, because rather than clean up they simply move their tent to some clean spot. With a little flour, water and salt the squaws make a thick paste, wMch is first cooked on hot stones until it be comes stiff, and then each cake is further cooked by standing it on its ' edge with its flat surface exposed to the flames an til it is thoroughly baked into quite palatable bread. Their meat is fried in. its own fat or roasted on a spit stuck in the ground, while a small child keeps it turning to equalize the roasting. The bread cakes serves as plates, while their fingers are both knives and forks, so the Indian has no dish washing process to go through with, for when the meal is finished he eats his plate and licks off his knives and forks with his tongue. MAKING LEGGINS. The hunting of deer' in the Rocky mountains has driven them north into British America, and in a few more years onr Indians will have no more buckskins for leggins and moccasins. Only the skin of the heavy hided deer can be used, that of the antelope and white tailed varieties being too tender for long service. The Apaches make their moccasins and leggins in one piece, in the style of hunting boots, while most of the Indians to the north wear slippers and leggins. - Whenever a deer is killed and cut up the bladder is carefully cut away, cleaned, and filled with the brain of the animal, and the little bag is most carefully guarded until a stream is reached, where the hide may be cured. The entire skin is then put into run ning water, and weighted down with stones. In four or five hours the soak ing has swelled it and loosened the hair at the roots, when it is taken out and stretched on a frame, whilo the owner, with the aid of a cleaned rib of the ani mal, Bcrapes it down until all the hair is rubbed off, very much in the same man ner as overheated horses are scraped to remove the foam and sweat. The skin is then pulled and stretched for three or four hours, and, at the same time, oiled with the brain until it is perfectly dry, Boft and pliable, when it is ready for use. When a tan color is desired it is soaked in an infusion of red bark. The Bole of the moccasin is always made of the raw hide of beef cattle and sewed to. the upper with the sinews of the deer's tendon achilles. Cleveland Plain Dealer. The Attorney's Dog. A Boston lawyer who resides in the suburbs is the owner of a dog that cer tainly possesses the instincts of an attor ney. The, other day he saw another dog carrying off a tempting looking bone. A second dog followed at a short dis tance. The lawyer's dog quickly con ceived a plan of action worthy of an em inent legal mind. - He immediately brought action against the dog with the bone.- The third dog at once quickened his pace, and lost no time in instituting supplementary proceedings in his own behalf.. This assistance proved equiva lent to a decree for the plaintiff, for the lawyer's dog left the third dog to bear the brunt of the litigation, and seizing the bone fled to his own kennel, where possession was truly nine points of the law. Boston Traveller. Thompson Was Strong. .- On March 28, 1841, Thomas Thompson lifted three barrels of water, weighing together 1,83d pounds. He also put an iron bar on his neck, seized hold of its two ends, and bent it until the latter met. On another occasion he raised with his teeth a table six feet long sup porting at its farthest end a weight of 100 pounds. . He also tore without serious effort a rope of a diameter of two inches and lifted a horse over a bar. Cham-' bars' Journal. ,,. m. HUNTINGTON & -co. Abstracters, Heal Estate and Insurance Agents. Abstracts of. and Information Concern ingjLand Titles on Short Notice. Laiid for Sale and Houses to Rent. Parties Looking for Homes in COUNTRY OR CITY, .OR IN SEARCH'OF Buiqe Location, Should Call on or Write to us. . Agents for a Full Line of Leallni Tire Insurance Companies, And Will Write Insurance for on all EESIEABIjE ZE&ISIKIS Obrrespondence Solicited. All Letters Promptly Answered. Call on or Address, J. M. HUNTINGTON & CO. Opera House Block, The Dalles, Or. JAMES WHITE, Has Opened a Xjtj-xxoItl 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. X. THORSBURY, T. A. HUDSON, Late Rec. U. 8. Land Office. Notary Public. THORHBURY& HUDSON, ROOMS 8 and 9 LAND OFFICE BUILDING, PoHtofHce Box 35, THE DALLES, 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. Thornburv & Hudson. Don't Forget the QBT E)1D SJLOOJI, MacDonali Bros., Props. THE BEST OF Wines, Liprs and Cigars ALWAYS ON HAND. $500 Re-ward! We will pay the above reward for any case of Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, In digestion, Constipation or Costiveness we cannot CUre With West'R Vnrotjihlo I.lvn Pill, whan th directions are strictly complied with. They are purely vegetable, and never fail to give satisfac tion. Sugar Coated. Large boxes containing 30 Pills, 25 cents. Beware of counterfeits and imi tations. The genuine manufactured only by BLAKELII A HOUGHTON, Prescription DrugRigts, 175 Second St. The Dalles, Or. FOR SALE. -) HEAD OF CATTLE CONSISTING (OF 1 jL, fnwa. PaItm anil YmrllnirK. A titi! v trt ' W. D RICHARDS. Near E. H. Waterman's, Eight-Mile. The Dalles is here and has come to stay. It hopes to win its way to public favbr 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 Daily r 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 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 handling of local affairs, it will be JUST, FAIR AND IMPARTIAL 4 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 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. GO Office, N. W. Cor. Washington and Second Sts. Clphicle an open river, and in Eastern Oregon. matters,, as in its