C h 3 AMONG MOONSHINERS. A TRAVELER IN THE CUMBERLAND , . RANGE HAS TO PROVE UP. JL Philosophical Colored Boy Halted by a Mountaineer The Process of "Prov ing Up" iirlm Possibilities of Being 8hot Before Identification. As I was to take a short cut over a pur of the Cumberland mountains in northern Tennessee I hired a colored boy about 15 years of age to go a part of the distance with me. He had a solemn, serious look, and I soon discovered that he was a philosopher. I had been told that there were moonshiners in the Com berlands, and that the chances were I "Would be stopped and sharply investi gated. When ready to part from the yonth, I asl:ad: "Do yon think Til meet any moon shiners?" Dat depends, Bah." "On whatr "On whedder somebody hidin' behind de bresh or rocks doan' pop you ober be to' you kin meet. If he'nn's gun hangs fiah yo'un will probably meet." It was a hot day in July, but I asked him if he thought the weather would hold, and he looked at the sky and re plied: "Doan want to say,' Bah. If you should hold, you'n wouldn't give me no credit; and if it should snow, you'n would cuss me all day. Good day, sah. r Keep to the right arter you cross de fcranch. If dat doan' bring yon out, den cum back an' keep to de left.' I had gone about a mile when the trail branched, and after debating the case I took the right hand again and went forward, with the comfortable feeling that I had half of a big state at my per sonal disposal to get lost in. IS A STBANQB PLACE. -. . The path suddenly ''ended, and about that time a mountaineer stepped from a thicket on my left and confronted me, and inquired: "Whar from, stranger?" I told him: "What you'n doin' hyarr" "Traveling.'' "Look hyar!" he said, as he came near er. "You's kin either prove np or ye can't" .' "That's bo." "You's either all right or you's cum fwssin'.". "Well?" t ' "Ban ye prove up?" .' ' "111 try." ' -'Then walk along." He walked beside me, or behind me, through thickets and over rough ground -to a shanty just at the mouth of a ravine. There was a man, a woman and a boy of 12 there, and my nose detected the odor of a still. The three people mentioned stood at the door as we came np, and the man queried of my conductor: "Who's he'un?" "Gwine ter prove up." ' I sat down on a rock, and, leaving the boy to watch me, the other three with drew a few yards and held a consul ta ' tion. This lasted about five minutes, and when they returned the man who bad captured me said: "We 'uns is agreed on it. You's either revenue or not. You's kin prove up or ye can't." "Can any of you read?" 1 asked. "We kin or we can't," replied the woman, who was smoking plug tobacco in a clay pipe. "Well, perhaps you've heard of at Monroe?" We mought or we moughtnt," re plied the husband of the woman. PROVING UP. "Well, here's a line from him, 'if you are moonshiners you have sold him whisky, and know him to be all right. Here's my card, here are letters addressed to me at Monroe, and you can overhaul my knapsack." . They couldn't read a line of writing, and put up a job to catch me. After consulting together a bit the woman said : "What did you say he'uns first name was George or William?" "Neither one; it's Henry." "And does he'un live in a single or double log house?" "In a frame house." "Which eye is he'un blind in?" "Neither one. - Come, now, he's a big, fleshy man, wears long whiskers, is bald on top of the head, and has a front tooth out His wife is a little cross eyed wo man and has two children." That settled it, and I was at once given ' a bite to eat and told to make myself at home. I had some tobacco for the man and pins and needles for the woman, and the present of a harmonican set the boy wild with delight. ' " 'Sposin' you'n had shot he'un down thar!" suggested the woman to my cap tor. "Then he'un would hev bin dead, of co'se," he calmly replied. By and by the men went up to attend the still, and the woman unrolled the pa per of pins to the last row, opened the paper of needles, and, placing the two spools of thread, beside, them, she called to the boy: "Danny, cum hy'ar." . "Yaas." "Look in my eyes." "Yaas." "Is I flighty?" "Skeercely, ma'am." "Well, Tze either flighty or the richest woman on these yere mountain, an' I wish pop would hurry back an' tell me which!" Detroit Free Press. v The Other Thing. An Iowa justice of the peace didn't actually fine a man $11 Tor declaring that the world was flat, but because he knocked the postmaster down for insist ing that it was round. It was a narrow escape, though, and the defendant was cautioned to look out next time. De troit Free Press. The Same Thing. "That let's me out." exclaimed Miss l&eecker. - "Yea," assented Miss Beacon Street, of Boston, "that permits your exit." Judge. STAMP SAVINGS BANKS. A SYSTEM OF SMALL SAVINGS THAT IS POPULAR IN DETROIT. . It Appeals Especially to Young Children, bat Men and Women Are Also Anion, the Stamp Book Depositors How the Method Is Conducted A Boon to Many. "The 'saving stamps' have let us into an almost new and profitable field of business," says Edwin F. Mack, cashier of the Citizens' Savings bank. "It has increased our business more in eight months than we were able to do by other methods in five years. The beauty of the arrangement is that it reaches a class of people who ordinarily .have no busi ness with any bank. When it is consid ered that we get this new business at the rate of less than one-half a cent on the dollar, and that this expense is more than covered by the actual operation of the system, we are pretty well pleased. "The cost of the stamps is only one cent for fifty," the cost of the books is very small, and the expense- of -getting the stamps in the hands of depositors is also very slight. To offset this we have the use pf the money from the time it is re ceived for stamps until the stamps are turned into us as record of deposit. The persons buying the stamps let them ac cumulate for weeks and even months before having the amount entered on their regular bank books. We get in terest on this money for that time with out charge, and as this amounts to sev eral thousand dollars the profit is quite an item. HOW IT WORKS. "Of course we are not philanthropists, but we take much satisfaction in know ing that the system is inducing a large number of people to save money who never did before. We have agents in many of the large factories, and . the young employes after getting their pay buy a few stamps, while otherwise they would spend every dollar of their wages. They would not come down to the bank and open up an account with the small amount. . But after they have a little start with the stamp process they very frequently come to the bank with a five dollar or ten dollar deposit. We have some depositors with hundreds to their credit who made fifteen and twenty cent starts. These are the ones that are liable to be the big customers of the future, and we are very glad to have their early trade. v . ' "The corner grocerymen, who are our agents, tell how the system works. For instance, a woman goes in with $1 to buy groceries, and has five, ten or per haps twenty-five cents left, which she invests in stamps. ' She leaves her book with the grocer and he cares for the stamps. The children, if they have no books of their own,vare instructed to in vest part of the small change in stamps. Her husband, instead of spending his small change for cigars, lends a helping hand by -placing a few stamps in his wife's book. ' - .. "With the children the stamps are like the merit cards which you and 1 used to get.at school. Each Sunday we got a little card and when we got a dozen of those we got a large card, and so manj of those deserved a still larger and more brightly colored card. The delight of accumulating these cards you can well remember. It is the same with the chil dren and these stamps.' They hustle around until they get twenty stamps to fill a page and are much tickeled when they can make the first entry in their bankbook. "We have ninety-five agents in this city and agents in Saginaw, Port Huron and other cities. Of our thousands of depositors a large per cent, of them are children, but : as many of them brought their parents with them we are well pleased." HIGHER DENOMINATIONS. "The stamp" saving system has proved to be a very good thing for us," said E. C. Bowman, cashier of . the Detroit sav ings bank. "Unlike any other stamp system of savings, our stamps are of dif ferent . denominations' and different classes of customers are accommodated. For instance, we have 5 cent, 10 cent, 25 cent and 50 cent stamps, and $1, $2, $3 and $10 cards. That is to say, when u card is filled it has these respective val ues. Our customers have learned this, and those who make enough money so that they frequently can deposit 25 cents at a time do not bother with 5 cent 8 tarn pa, which require so much 'licking' and 'pasting.' We were somewhat sur prised ourselves to see the popularity of the larger denominations. "Of course the working of the system is pretty well understood. We have 125 agents at present, and the stamps are placed in their hands. It requires i sev eral thousand stamps a day to supply their demands. The depositors place the stamps on a card, and when this card is full they get a credit on' their bank book. We make the feature incidental to our banking business, and think it ad mirable because it enables us to reach every class of people who may be induced to save money. It has largely increased our business, not only by the depositors who use the device, but the. people who come with them. Fully 75 per cent, of the., depositors are children,, and, of course, their accounts are small, but very frequently their fathers come to the banks where the children are doing business.". While the reporter and Mr. Bowman were in the basement .of the banking building looking over the record of the stamp business, the cashier called atten tion to several wooden cupboards which he said contained all the saving bank books issued by the bank from 1849 to the present date. They were numbered from 1 up to 73,000. Then he showed No. 13, which was issued to a young man who was then employed on a railroad. The man is still a depositor .in the bank, and there has never been a time since when he did not have a small balance. He stOl has the same number, is still in the employ of the same company and ought to have a snag bit of property by this time. Detroit News. A PALE OF PET LIONS. ANTICS OF THE TERRORS OF THE FOREST THAT ARE AMUSING. They Were More Playful Than Kittens. Seemed ' to Have a Human Lore for Pan They Played Havoc, However, with Tame Animals at Pint. Previous to making up country trips in South Africa I always laid in a sup ply of calico dresses and pound packages of tea to serve as presents for the wives of the Boers in the outlying districts. Tea is used by them only in cases of sick ness, and the donation of a calico dress is always met by an interchange of dairy and hen roost products. In one of my trips, while in the neighborhood of an old vtouw, finding that the larder needed replenishing, I jumped on my shooting pony and cantered over .to her house, followed by my Kaffir henchman "Jan uary," carrying a basket containing the tea and dress. The noise of my pony's hoofs on the sunbaked earth caught the old lady's ears, and she met me at the door with the explanation: "I'm so glad you have comer "Why?" . "Because I have a pair of young lions for you." "Where are they?" "Knocking about the house some where." . - I immediately dismounted,' handing the reins to January, started' indoors, and finally brought up in the kitchen, where I found the whelps asleep on the hearth. On asking how they were capt ured she informed me that some two weeks previous ' her son had shot a lioness, and, finding her in milk, hunted around until he picked np the youngsters. I immediately bargained for them with the understanding that they were to be given all the milk they would drink, not teased, and kept until my return, some three months ahead. The tea and dress were then produced, and January had to enlist the services of one of the farm Kaffirs to assist in carrying to the wagons the butter and eggs which were received in exchange. On . my return I found the cubs had been partially weaned, which was fort unate, as it would have been impossible to get fresh milk for them daily. Taking them in my arms I started toward my cart, which had been driven up in front of the house, for the purpose of throwing them on my bed; but the oxen bolted on catching scent of them, and it required a deal of patience before they would al low them to be loaded. On coming up with my train of wag ons, loaded with antelope, guns, etc., the cart was prudently kept some distance in the rear, for fear of a stampede of the teams, and it was fully a week before the oxen became thoroughly accustomed to lion odor. . . The whelps would pass the time while traveling lolling about on my bed, which I shared with them at night, but as soon as we stopped and the-oxen were turned loose for grazing their heads would be thrust out from the front of the cart waiting to be lifted out, so that they could have their customary game of romps with the dogs and myself. We had reached the more thickly set tled portion of the country when one day, just as - we were outspanning, a couple of young Boers cantered up to the wagons, one of whom carried a fine chacma seated behind him. "On dis mounting the reins were handed to the baboon, who had seated himself just in front of the horses, and I started for the cart in search of the "square rigger" i. e., gin flask in order to pave the way to purchasing the baboon. On reaching it the heads of both whelps appeared, expecting to be lifted out, as was customary. On catching sight of them the baboon gave a scream, the horses a snort of terror, and each one took a separate path across the veldt, followed by a pair of blaspheming Boers. I saved my gin, but lost, the chance of buying a fine chacma, and sulkily re fused to join-in the usual frolic. The trip home was made without fur ther incident, and on arriving the young sters were allowed the run of the house, but at night they would persist in shar ing my bed with me. After having been nearly smothered by a trick which they had of lying across my face, I finally compromised matters by arranging a cot alongside my bed with a stout wire screen intervening. " Of course the arrival of the young lions was soon noised about, and I did not lack company, especially on Sunday afternoons, when -my establishment re sembled a miniature zoological garden, and the female whelp seemed to select just such occasions to play pranks on the bipeds of her own sex. ' Her favorite ambush was under the table of the dining room, the door of which opened on the passageway through the house. So long as males passed she would remain ' quiet, but as sure -as a single female or a party of them - at tempted to pass through she would spring out and crouch just in front of them, invariably causing a hasty retro grade movement, accompanied by a se ries of screams. Once, while in the rear, giving some directions to the Kaffirs, I was startled by a piercing shriek, and turned just in time to see a frightened female dart out of the back door and come at racing speed toward me. In so doing she had to pass directly under .a tree in which was chained a baboon. So soon, as she was fairly under it the brute dropped on to her shoulders, whisked off her bonnet and wrap and was up on his perch in a jiffy. She dropped in a dead faint, and before I could dash some water into her face and bring her to her senses the bonnet and wrap were torn into shreds, and on look ing toward the house I saw the head of the lioness lyinjg over thedoorsill, seem faagly enjoying the" mischief she had wrought. Forest and Stream. . ? . Indignant. Mr. ' B. Have you attended "Die Walkure," madam? Mrs. S. (superciliously) Certai 1 y.not. I dont feel the slightest interest, ia these pedestrian matches. Demarest's. siiifes & mix Wholesale and Retail Dmoists. -DEALERS IN- Fine Imported, Key West and Domestic PAINT Now is the time to paint your house and if you wish to get the best quality and a fine color use the ' Sherwin, Williams Co.'s Paint. For those wishing to see the quality and color of the above paint we call their attention to the residence of S. Li. Brooks, Judge Bennett, Smith French and others painted by Paul Kreft. ..Snipes & Kinersly are agents for the above paint for The Dalles, Or. Don't Forget the EflCT EJID SJLOOJI, Mactaali Bros., Props. THE BEST OF Wines, Lipors and Cigars ALWAYS ON HAND. (J.,E. BiYAlD CO., Heal Estate, .. Insurance, and Loan , AGENCY. Opera House Sloek,3dSt. Chas. Stubling, PROPRIETOR OF THB 0EF?IMip, : New Yogt Block, Second St WHOLESALE AND RETAIL - , Liquor v Dealer, MILWAUKEE BEER ON DRAUGHT. YOU NUED .BUt ASK Thb 8. B. Headachb and Liver Cubs taken according to directions will keep your Blood. Liver and Kidneys In good order. The 8. B. Cough Cube for Colds, Coughs and Croup, in connection with the Headache Cure, is as near perfect as anything known. The 8. B. Alpha Pain Cdbb for internal and external use, in Neuralgia, Toothache, Cramp Ixmc and Cholera Morbus, is unsurpassed. - They IV?11 uked wherever known. Manufactured t Dufur. Oregon. For sale by all druggists Health is Wealth ! BRAIN f ATM B NT: Dr. E. C. West's Nerve in Brain Trkat ksnt, a guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dizzi ness, Convulsions, Fits, Nervous Neuralgia, 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 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. 11.00 a box, or six boxes for 15.00, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price. WK GUARANTEE SIX BOXES To cure any case. With each ordereoeived 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 BLAKELEI tt HOUGHTON, Prescription Druggists, 175 Second 8s. The Dalles, Or. 5' : MM- I AS ill J W I- "' HOtSjTR Te Dalles is here and has come to stav. It hones 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 it satisnecL with its course a generous support. The Daily 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 an open river, and in helping THE DALLES to take her prop er position as the 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 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. 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. CO. Office, N. W. Cor. Washington and Second Sts. THE DALLES. The Gate City of the Inland Empire is situated at the head of navigation on the Middle Columbia, and is a thriving, prosperous city. ITS TERRITORY. It is the supply city for an extensive and rich agri cultural an grazing country, its trade reaching as far south as Summer Lake, a distance of over twe hundred miles. THE LARGEST WOOL MARKET. The rich grazing country along the eastern slope of the the Cascades furnishes pasture for thousands of sheep, the wool from "which finds market here. The Dalles is the largest original -wool shipping point in America, about 5,000,000 pounds being shipped last year. ITS PRODUCTS. The salmon fisheries are the finest on the Columbia, yielding this year a revenue of $1,500,000 -which can and -will be more than doubled in the near future. The products of the beautiful Blickital valley find market here, and the country south and east has this year filled the warehouses, and all available storage places to overflowing with their products. ITS WEALTH It is the richest city of its size on the coast, and its money is scattered over and is being used to develop, more farming country than is tributary to any other city in Eastern Oregon. Its situation is unsurpassed! Its climate delight ful! Its possibilities incalculable! Its resources un limited! And on these cornef stones she -stands. r