A" BOOKWORM.' Jfyltnvd is books. loved almost as myself ; M boras, I pat them on the op par shelf : 4t friends. I dally as a lover dallies With his heart's choice in the sweet garden alleys, wjm the rich vines to tangled riot ran, . And luscious peaches blush against the son. Steadfast I And them here from day to day, Brawn op like soldiers in their stanch array: I open one; behold the trace uf toars hed by some heart it touched in vanished years; Some are new comers, and smile cheerfully; Auw are worn old and sod by constancy; ( low them all. the beaming face or sad. Those that have made me weep, or made me glad, . , AH bat the dull ones on the apper shelf, Tbam I would fain exchange for needed pelf. Sometimes I leave them, and eo calmlv ont T where hearts faster beat, where children , shout, Twfael the impulse of the eager crowd, And hear traffic's babel, harsh and loud; . 1 test tbem as a man might test his wife. To teach her she is not the whole of life: A schoolboy's trick it is, for soon I find ! toft my better self, my heart, behind.- - Tsm hundred souls whom I go forth to meet Are strangers to me in the greedy street: The world seems nearest when my lamp is lit. sm Dy its midnight glow 1 oulct siu Tolumea with welcome greeting then look down... -A ad night shots out the noisy, restless town y nia is my haven, this my marriage bower, Wedded to my books and haDDv everv hour. Mrs. Napoleon B. : Morange in Arkansaw Traveler. The Insect World. ISntomologlHts generally concede that upward of 100.000 species of insects have seen recognised ana cxa seined; some au thors even place the number as high as 150,000, while it is not at all improbable that this vast number may not represent wore than one-tenth of the number ac tually inhabiting the globe. Not less than one-half of the whole number be long to the order coleopatera, or beetles, "which order is by far the most nnmer asly represented of alL The lepidop tera, or butterflies, havethns far yielded ome 15,000 species, or about one-thirteenth of the total number (200,000), esti mated by Speyer for the world at large, and an equal number may perhaps be credited to the hvmenontera fhws. tc), the ' hemiptera (bugs) and diptera The orthoptera or straight winged in sects,' which include the loctists, grass hoppers, etc, are considerably less nu vterons. The species with netted wings fneoroptera) probably number some place "between 2,000 and 8,000. Insects are, of worse, most ' numerously developed in She tropica, but they are not rare by any steans in the coldest regions which have yet been visited by man. St. Louis Ee poblic' Peculiar Taste in Dress.'' " Sir Humphrey Davy, it is said, "rarely washed himself; and on the plea of sav ing time he used to put on his clean linen --over his dirty, so that he has been known - to wear at the same time five shirts and five pairs of stockings." Here is a rare ' xample of the indifference of the man of genius to the mere husk, or series of bosks, which keep that royal part of trim, his mind, in working order. Yet -was not Sir Hmnphrey a mere sloven, content at all times with the first article -t clothing upon which he might lay his band. - - Though he was so reckless in the matter of shirts upon common occasions, when he used to go fishing "he Would wear green," to resemble vegetable life much as possible, so that the tront 'might have some difficulty in ; distin-' pushing the biped from the mere roots of the field; and when shooting he wore a carlet cap, "toBhield himself from acci- ' -dent from other guns." All the Tear - Hound. in every town of good size in Mexico there are public schools. These are well attended, though most of the rich Mexi cans send their children to the schools of the City of Mexico or to foreign coon tries, or have private teachers for them; nd to finish . theirT education : they' are ften sent to Europe or the United States. The great majority are left at korne, however, and the schools are well fined. In a very judicious dietetio outline for educing obesity, from ten to twenty drops of liquor potasete are given in a Class of water three times a day, and the food is largely' composed of uncooked local fruits, lemons, oranges, "succulent alad vegetables, acid wines, lean meat, white blooded fish, game, ' and poultry, lemonade, buttermilk, and tea and toast. Art is always its own best reward, and the poet's dearest object in life must always be to give to the world "the message that in him burns." Still, he needs friends, requires leisure, wants bread. Thackeray once wrote to a friend, "Our twopenny reputations get us at least twopence-halfpenny." One peculiarity of the principal dances of savage nations is that in nearly every instance they imitate the movements of animals. ' This is evidenced in the buf falo and bear dances of the North Amer ican Indians, the bear dance of the Kamtcnatkaos and the kangaroo dance of the aboriginal Australian. Bells are mostly cast from a composi tion of copper and tin, though other in gredients are often used. When the right proportions of these two isetals are osmlanedand reduced by intense heat to liquid form the mass is poured into a "Ciay moid oi trie dewed shape and It is wicked to be wasteful; is it not as wicked to be penurious? Both habits en tail misery on others; but as a personal" matter it is more agreeable to have to do with a spendthrift than, a miser, and - therefore the world loves the one and hates the other. . . ' Judge Holmes, son of the "Autocrat,? im said to be the1, only justice on the IVtas-" sachusetts supreme court bench wV en joys writing out an opinion. His asso ciates prefer oral utterances. The Duke of Edinburgh has one of the largest collections of postage stamps5 in England. There is one private collec tion in the kingdom that is valued at 250,000. THE ENGLISH CLUB. It Is Radically IMffnriit fro in the. Social Organisations of America. The Eugli.su club is a place to live in. In one of these clubs a member lives for five hundred pounds a year alxmt as well as he could live for five thousand a year in his,' own house. He of course wishes to make the club bis own ' house as far as may be. This fact explains the solitariness of these institutions. The member wishes to find in them the independence, the privacy, and in a sense the solitude of his own house. The great clubs are therefore de signedly unsocial.' Many of the features of the club accord with this intention. This is perhaps the reason of the plain decoration and the ab sence of pictures from the walls. It is thought tiiat a club should be prevented from looking like a drawing room; the no tion is that rather than look like a drawing room it should look like an hotel the sug gestion being, perhaps, that the members are strangers to one another, as people who meet in an hotel are. But of course it should look like neither. There is no treating, the feeling of 'the member, perhaps, being that bis liberty would be interfered with by beiug expected to drink; or even by being asked to drink. Those pleasant weekly or monthly suppers usual in American clubs are unknown. Comfortable solitude rather than society being the object of these great Ixrodon clubs, it is obvious that society is hot to be sought for in them. Social enjoyment and social position are to be sought elsewhere. Men do not acquire position by belonging to clubs. The intention, of course, is that only men of a certain positiou shall be let into these clubs. If, as sometimes hap pens, a mail of a different position gets in the advantage he receives is slight. It is also true that the fact of belonging to a good club is of little advantage in gen eral society. Membership of a good club whatever may have been formerly the case nowadays confers no social position. E. S. Narl.il in Scribner's. A Palace Car for Hens. 1 . fvtuu.j U C UOW wrinkle in transportation business. The first one of these cars that has come to In dlanAnnKR wh Injuul tli. Tl i. t - - v . . v jm.uk? itnguu depot, and is intended exclusively for the wooden coops and placed in an ordinary . .Hi . siAjcK. cm-, i ue new car, in a general wav. reriresents an nrriinjiinr frt rrYt f .a . Tt- sides, -however, are fitted with wire screens vi c iwuid juHbuueeuougDto preventtne chickens and geese, seen inside, from t.hmint-.inor t.hoit. nanVft fhmnl. . . U n . . ' - -T- uvuu? vtutruu lu bUOV JJOIU' f ul way they have, and mistakenly choking The car in nt.jit.1 v HivirUwl ints. ton maneut coops or cages about ten inches l. : u uu i ... u',u, wiui wuuueu uoors ana wire doors. Each coop has a galvanized iron water and feed trough. An aisle runs through the leniTth nf t-.hn At u 1 ;,, t-Ua. .... . . l. " . - . m tuc doom iM Hri linArtmimk fn. tli. ,1 . i .... .. t ...... . w cuuaub. Above this compartment is a water tank i i .i - i i ., . iiumiuK Huout tau gallons, to be tilled at va.iiuim nioiious, ana oeiow the noor is a place to stow away feed. The chief claims for the cftr turei t.hnt. twM. ia lac. Kt.iikMj of suffocation, and that with the improved system of feeding there is less shrinkage in weight and the advantage of holding the poultry for the market. The cars, it is said, will contain 5.04O r-Mr-kana Indian apolis Journal. ''. A Natural Incubator In a Farm Yard. James Rankin, who a few miles from Carlstadt, N. J., has a big heap of manure outside of bis barn door. The heat that very grateful to the' hens, and they per- siawukiy gatnernrouna its Oase. Kecently the extreme cold tamntial th ksh, closer proximity than ever, and when Mrs. T T I . r 1 . . . .. cvauB.iu ineu h scatter tnem some of them positively refused to go. Mrs. Rankin, as tonished at what seemed to be an incipient rebellion in' the , poultry, yard, stood and watched her hens, and she soon saw that their interest in the manure heap was awakened ..by something more- absorbing than its beat. Groin If Ciora t hA ariflA ark am ..... an conirretratea sne neud a Fh m nnimi that plainly came from the interior of the mass. With a pitchfork she removed a little of the manure, and liberated five lit tle chickens with pieces -of eggshells still Sticking to them'' ThrW wm imnnn) in a hole about six inches below the sor- lace, ana all around them were unbroken eggs. Some winter laying-hen had- de posited the eggs in the manure, and the combustion of the decaying substance bad hatched ' them: out. v Two' of the chickens died as soon m tlm (nhnlixl K teTnal air.. The other three are thriving by Mie ukwd nre. xvew x or it baa. When Salmon' Were Thlk. " A huee salmon shinrwl tn .Unot xffb.ki ell from Oregon some days ago by CoL James B. Montgomery, of Portland, formed the piece de resistance at a lunch in the senate restaurant. Among Senator Mitch ell's guests were the vice president. Speaker Reed, nearly the entire senate officials and a number of correspondents. The salmon had preserved its delicious flavor, despite its long journey overland. Of course it was a great occasion for fish stories. , Many wild and weird tales of bat tles with criant salmon wan ralnuv) tu great enjoyment of those whose credulity was equal to the task of believing every thing that was said. When, however, Rep resentative Hermann, nt Ctm that when he went to the state, thirty jrcara ago, ue iouna me salmon so thick in the smaller streams that his horse had to carefullv nick his. wv tmm . -v. lest he step upon tbem, his listeners thought ma Docuing was lext to be said. Mr. Her mann acknowledged "that his statement was hard to believe, but added that he had the.evidence of -his own eyas tor the fact. Cor. Chicago Post. - . - v - Boys the Same mm lOO Years A. SneakilUr Of snow anrl nnarrlHnM VA Boston street bov hi nnt Ukn ii v v i, rival. Perhaps this is because Ronton 1. not so old in VOunff thinm Tfc i. as man's life Is worth to walk through the common in' Boston after the first good taQ of snow. PcJiowrnen there mmMw common snowball the policemen on the common, for t2A r-u r- AmM . these njoUnsoatatddof the common. Jnst so toe Doya who- -are on- the commoi fire volley after volley of molded snow and ice at the blue coated policemen of the regular woo oyuwi cnase vhear persecutors into or through 'the common. ' When tha Wymlar tiAllAi'. their dose their brothers of the common grui at tnem .satirically and ...vice versa. Boston people; by the way. are a little bit nroud of their vontAfnl .i v i merry with the police of both departments, by turns. " .They profess to see in this the same spirit that made the youngsters in Gacre's time soowhoJl tha dfamtfit Tuiui. soldier on exactly the came spot. New HLGS OF THE ANCIENTS, STYLES WORN BY THE EGYPTIANS, . ROMANS AND HEBREWS. Bimrs Are Regarded OUTarently Now Than Formerly Worn Not So Much for Ornament ax for Thrlr Iatrlnsie Valae. Some Famous Kknirit in History. Looking at the exhibition of modern finger rings, the old timer is forcibly struck by the fact that, whereas in the good old days the decorative art and de sign were almost wholly expended on the gold band itself, modern jewelers confined themselves almost exclusively to combinations of valuable stones. It is a very ungrateful task to spoil a ro mance, but cold truth compels the ad mission tha t this is a practical age, which looks largely to the matter of converti bility in rings, watches and valuable presents ' Actors and actresses on their travels are seldom seen without a diamond pin, brooch, necklace or solitaire ring, be cause these articles represent a condensa tion of money in small bulk and unde preciable form:' The finest workman ship on the gold itself goes for nothing. It is simply "old gohTV-sold by weight. It was very .different in "the days of old," though there were plenty of pre-; cions stones available if they had been needed. The Pharaohs and their states men, the princesses of Egypt and their fa vored attendants, undoubtedly wore rings, for quite a number of mummies have been found with a dozen finger rings liberally distributed on the eight fingers, besides the indispensable thumb rings. For it is a singular fact that for hundreds of years after the Christian era the custom still prevailed of wearing the wedding ring and the masculine token of wealth and power on the thumb. EGYPTIAN SIKGS. The ring is so frequently alluded to in the. Old Testament as to make it plain that the greatest importance attached to it, eveu in the pastoral age. In Gen. xii, 42, it is stated that "Pharaoh took off his ring from his hand and put it on Joseph's hand," as a signal mark of favor. In Esth. iii, 10, mention is made of Bang Ahasuerus taking his ring from his hand and. giving it. to Hainan, and the context shows that certain written documents were "sealed with the king's ring." The old time rings, were made of all sorts of material. Pliny mentions that iron rings were commonly worn by be trothed persous. It seems tolerably cer tain that rings of gold and silver were worn only by kings, princes and nobles, while les3 expensive circlets of brass, ivory, iron and porcelain . or glass were worn by the average citizen. The oldest gold Egyptian finger ring actually preserved belonged to. Amu noph III, who.reigned over Egypt four teen centuries before Christ was born. Rings of the date of Osirtasen and Thoth mes . Ill, who. . were contemporaries of Joseph and Moses, have been found, but they are, of common matesial and doubt ful authenticity. The scarabaeus, a beetle which formed the Egyptian token of im mortality (from being a sexual) is a com mon emblem in Egyptian: finger rings, and one of Poe's most extravagant "tales of mystery, imagination, and humor" has a well established foundation, so far as the' scarabaeus ring , is concerned. . . It seems to be tolerably certain that Egyp tian women wore as many rings as they could crowd on their fingers. , ANTIQUITY OF RINGS. " ' The Egyptians and Romans undoubt edly preferred the left hand for ring pur poses, while Caesar, Livy An4 Tacitus all seem to insist that the Gauls and Britons wore their rings on the right hand. ' In any case, it seems to bare been tacitly agreed that the third finger was the place of honor. The Hebrew rings worn in those good old days were very ornate and beautiful. Quite a number of them have been pre served, and. they put the ar of the mod ern jeweler entirely to the blush.' The most beautiful ' were the pledges of be throthal or wedding gifts. . The ceremo nies in connection with these rings seem to be foreshadowed in the redemption process specified in 'Ruth iv, 7. The workman&hip'of these Hebrew bethrothal rings grew still more elaborate in the Middle Ages, when towers and minarets of gold were most exquisitely built up on the hoop. The Jewish bride' of this era wore the wedding ring on the first finger, but in later days shifted it for convenience to the third. ' The old style gemmel" or "gemmon" ring (evidently associated with the French jumeau jumelle, uncommon, meaning "twin") is not at all an object in col lections of antique rings. " The 'meaning of the indivisible links ia self evident. Usually at the marriage of the parties the links were severed, each party wearing one 'of the rings." George IV gave a gemmel ring to Mrs. Fitz herbert. The toadstone ring was another quaint medheval conception.' ' It was an outcome ' of superstition and died when superstition died.1 The idea of the toad stone ring was to prevent mothers and small children from the evil infmenpes of the fairies.' The . smallest wedding ring; ever fashioned was that used at the mar riage of Mary, the infant daughter of ffenry Vin of England, to the Dauphin of France, son of Francis X'The marriage was performed by Cardinals Wdtoey and' Campeggio, the bridegroom being, 8 months., old . and the bride 1 year and 10 months cid. Boston Globe. ! XfealtrfeV'of'xt.! ' When aooae one bragged that only one public, execution, -had . taken, plape ' in Turkey in five eara, an,Engnsbxnan in vestigated and fliacvered that nq duiprit who could raise $1(X) to bcibe officials had suffered death during the last twenty years. There is always a good reason for anything that happens in Turkey. De treat Free Press. . : New York, is ahead of an the other cities if individual riches running up into seven or more figrires are meant. . It is said that New York has over 1,000 millionaires, while London hits BOO, Paris 600,' Berlin 200 and Vienna 100. j snipes & kineejsley, WMesale anfl Eetail Drn'ilsts. Fine Imported, Key West and Domestic CIGARS. (AGENTS FORV CSTD x F 1863. Don't Forget the 1ST EP SflLBDJI, MacDoDalJ Bros., Props. THE BEST OF Wines, Lipors mi Cigars ALWAYS ON HAND. C E. BiYAI(D CO., Real Estate, Insaranee, and Itoan AGENCY. Opera Houise Block,3d St. Ctias. Stubling, PKOPRIKTOB OPTHK New Yogt Block; Second St.r WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Liquor -." Dealer, MILWAUKEE BEER ON DRAUGHT. Dr. E. C. Wkst'b Keeve anb Bbain . Treats ment, guaranteed peciflc for Hvsteria, Dizzi ness, Convulsions, Fits, Nerrous Neuralfria, Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by the use of alcohol or tobacco, Wakefulness, Mental De- ?i!Jlon' tenAnft ' the Brai". resulting in in sanity and 'leading to misery, decay and death, TKtXln 01? Afe' Barremiesa, 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 ""j2,"? s treatment. 1.00 a box, or six boxes lor 15.00, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price WK GUARANTEE 8IX BOXES To cure anv case. With each order received by us for six boxes, accompanied by $5.00, we will end the purchaser our written guarantee to re fund the money if the. treatment does not effect a cure. Guarantees issued only by BlAKEtFT HOUGHTON, . ' Prescription Druggists, 17S Second St. The Dalle., Or. YOU NJSKLV BUT ASK the B. B. Hkaa3hb and Lives Cube taken according -ta rdireotions will- keep your Blood, Liver and Kidneys in good order. th-8. B. Cough Otoe for CoWs,' Conghs anA Croups in. connection with the Headache Cure, is as near perfect as anything known. , . The 8. B. Alpha Pain Curb for internal and external use, in Neuralgia, Toothache, Cramp Colic and Cholera Morbus, ivunsnrpassed. - They are well liked -wherever known. Manufactured at Dufur, Oregon. For sale by all druggists. Da w les is here and has come to stay. It hoQs 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, arid 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 Obeets will be to advertise the resources of the city; arid 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 he 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 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 froin the contents of the rash assertions of For the benefit of 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 THE WEEKLY, sent to any address It will; contain from' four Ho' six' eiit column pages, and we siiall: erideavbr to make it the equal of the best. Ask your Pdstiriaster "for a copy, or address: TH CHRONICLE PUB; COi- Office, N; W. Cor. Washirigrtbh and Second Sts. cnroniGie Daily an open river, and in V Eastern Oregon; politics, and in its paper, arid not from outside parties. our advertisers we adj acerit counties. for $1:50 per ypar.