HUMDRUM ABOLISHED. SERMON PREACHED SUNDAY, MAY 8, BY REV. T. DE WITT TALMAGE. -A Stirring Kxhortation to Chriatiaua to Mako Their Religion Lively, Baaed I7p n Mi Visit of the Queen of Stiebw to Sol o, the' Great King. ". ". 1 ' Bbooklyn, May 3. The capacity of the Sp Tabernacle was fully tested this morn-. Ing by the vast audience which assembled t hear Dr. Talmage in his handsome and 'Spacious church.. He is now preaching there morning and evening, and 1'he Christian Herald services in New York have been discontinued.. This has caused much regret to many people in that city. A memorial was prepnred and signed hy influential citizens asking Dr. Talmage to continue the services. He could not see Ms way to comply at the time, bnt, as he was evidently impressed by the warmth of 'toe welcome given bun in the metropolis. and deeply moved by the1 good that was one, it is not improbable that in the near future he will again be found duplicating mis usefulness by ministering to two con jrregations, as he has been doing during the past seven months. His subject this morn ing was "Humdrum Abolished," and his text II Chronicles ix, : "Of spices great aoandance; neither was there any such apice as the (jueen of Sbeba gave" King Sol A WONDERFUL BUILDING. What is that building out yonder glit tering in the sunf Have you not heard? It is the house of the forest of Iebanon -tying bolomon has just taken to it his bride, the princess of Egypt. Vou see the pillars of the portico, and a great tower, uurueu witn one tnonsana smeias or gold hang on the outside of the tower five anndred of the shields of gold manufact ured at Solomon's order, five hundred were captured by David, his father, in bat tle, see now they blaze In the noonday on! Solomon goes up the ivory stairs of his throne between twelve lions in statuary, and sits down on the back of the golden ball, the bead of the bronze beast turned -toward the people. The family and at tendants of the king are so many that the Caterers of the place have to provide every ay one nunarea sneep ana thirteen oxen, besides the birds and the venison. I bear the stamping and pawing of four thousand une horses in the royal stable. There were important officials who had charge of , the work of gathering the straw and the barley for these horses. King Solomon was an early riser, tradition says, and used a take a ride out at daybreak: and when in bis white apparel, behind the swiftest . horses of all the realm, and followed by mounted archers in purple, as the caval- -eade dashed through the streets of Jarmu. )em I suppose it was something worth get- Ting np at live o'clock in the morning to look at. Solomon was not like some of the kings the present day crowned imbecilitv. All the splendor of his palace and retinue was eclipsed by his intellectual power. Why, he seemed to know everything. He - w the first great naturalist the world ' ever saw. Peacocks from India strutted . "the basaltic walk, and apes chattered 1n ua mto auu tieer staiKea tne paries, and there were aquariums with foreign fish and aviaries with foreign birds, and tradi tion says these birds were so well tamed that Solomon mightwalk clear across the city under the shadow of their wings as toey covered and Bitted about him. SOLOMON AND HIS KIDDLES. ure lubu luis, iie nau a great reputa tion zor tne conundrums and riddles that be made and guessed. He and King Hi ram, his neighbor, used to sit by the hour ana asK names, each one payingun money it do couia not answer or guess the riddle. The Solomonic navy visited all the world. and the sailors, of course, talked about the ' wealth of their king, and about the riddles and enigmas that he made and solved, and " tne news spread until yueen Balkis, away off south, heard of it, and sent messengers witn a lew riddles that she would like to have Solomon solve, and a few puzzles wnicn sne would like to have him find out, -She sent among other things to King Sol omon a uiamond with a hole so small that a needle could not penetrate it, asking him to thread that diamond. And Solomon . took a worm and put it at the opening in the diamond, and the worm crawled through, leaving the thread in the diar mond. The queen also sent a goblet to Solomon, asking btm to fill it with water that did not pour from the sky, and that did not rush out from the earth, and immediately Solomon put a slave on the back of a swift horse and galloped him around and around the park until the horse was nigh exhaust ed, and from the perspiration of the horse the goblet was filled. She also sent King Solomon five hundred boys in girls' dress, and five hundred girls in boys' dress, won dering if he would be acute enough to find out the deception. Immediately Solomon, when he saw them wash their faces, knew from the way they applied the water that it was all a cheat. - THE VISIT OF THE QUEEN. Queen Balkis was so pleased with the acuteness of Solomon that she said, ''I'll just go and see him for myself." Yonder it comes the cavalcade horses and drom edaries, chariots and charioteers, . jingling harness and clattering hoofs, and blazing shields, and flying ensigns, and clapping cymbals. The place is saturated with the perfume. She brings cinnamon and saf- fron and calamus and franUwicense and 11 manner of sweet spices. As the reti nue sweeps through the gate the armed guard inhale the aroma. "Haiti" cry the charioteers, as the wheels grind the gravel in front of the pillared portico of the king.. Queen Balkis alights in an atmosphere be witched with, perfume. As the drome daries are driven up to the king's store- hnn8PB and tlia t. iYI, n ..1 1 - " wmuuao, ui uuujuur are unloaded, and the sacks of cinnamon, and the boxes of spices are opened, the purvey ors of the palace discover whav mv text announces, "Of spices, great abundance; neither was there any such spices as the Queen of Sheba gave to King Solomon." ' Well, my friends, you know that all the ologians agree in making Solomon a type of Christ, and making the Queen of Sheba type of every truth seeker, and 1 shall take the responsibility of saying that all the spikenard and cassia and frankincense which the Queen of Sheba brought to King Solomon are mightily suggestive of the sweet spices of our holy religion. Chris tianity is not a collection of sharp techni calities and angular facts and chronolog ical tables and dry statistics. Our religion is compared to frankincense and to cassia, but never to nightshade. It is a bundle of : myrrh. It is a dash of holy light. It is a sparkle of cool fountains. It is an opening of opaline gates. It is a collection of spices. Would God that wa were as wina in taking ' "was wise in taking the spices to the earthly Solomon I What many of us most need is to bare the humdrum driven out of oar If.- . 1 . . . . , .nii..twM nw EIUK11DU UU 0WI1-AI1 ' U . 1 " 1 1 J ' . . v , Kuuruu win uib oi numarum unless tnera be a change. An editor from San Francisco a few werks ago wrote me saying he was getting i;p for his paper a symposium from many clergymen, discussing among other thinirs "Why do not people go to church" and he wanted my opinion, and I gave it in one sentence, "People do not go tochur?b because they cannot stand the humdrum ' Th fact is that most people have so"mh humdrum in their worldly calling that they do not want to have added the humdrum of religion. We need in all our sermons and exhortations and songs ' and prayers more of what Queen Balkis "brought to Solomon namely, more spice. ' y LIFE 13 HUMDRUM. The fact is that the duties and cares of this life, coming to us from time to. time, are stupid often and inane and intoler able. . Here are men who have been barter ing and negotiating, climbing, poundirig, hammering for twenty years, forty years, fifty years. One great long drudgery has their life been. . Their face anxious, their feelings benumbed, their days monotonous. What is necessary to brighten up that man's life, and to sweeten that acid dispo sition, and to put sparkle Into the mau's spirits? The apicery of our holy religion. why, if between the losses of .life there dashed a gleam of an eternal gain; if be tween the betrayals of life there came the gleam of the undying friendship' of Christ; II in dull times in business we found min istering spirits flying to and fro in our office and store and shop, everyday life, instead of being a stupid monotone, would be a glorious inspiration, penduluming be tween calm satisfaction and high rapture. How any woman keeps house without the religion of Christ to help her is a mys tery to me. To have to spend the greater part of one's life, as- many women do, in planning for the meals, in stitching gar ments that will soon be rent again, and de ploring breakages and supervising tardy subordinates and driving off dust that ' soon again will settle, and doing the same thing day in and day out, and year in and year out, until their hair silvers, and the back stoops, and the spectacles crawl to the eyes, and the grave breaks open under the thin sole of the shoe oh. it is a long mon otony 1 But when Christ comes to the drawing room, and comes to the kitchen, and comes to the nursery, and comes in the dwelling, then how cheery becomes all womanly duties. She is never alone now; Martha gets through fretting and joins Mary at the feet of Jesus. AH day long Deborah is happy because she can help Lapidoth; Hannah, because she can make a coat for young Samuel; Miriam, because she can watch her infant brother; Rachel, because she can help her father water the stock; the widow of Sa repta, because the cruse of oil is being re plenished. O woman! having in your pantry a nest of boxes containing all kinds of condiments, why have you not tried in your heart and life the spicery of our holy religion? "Martha! Martha! thou art care ful and troubled about many things; but one thing is needful, and Mary hath chosen that good part which shall not be taken away from her." SOME RELIGION IS INSIPID. I must confess that a great deal of the religion of this day is utterly insipid. There is nothing piquant or elevatin&r about it. Men and women go around humming psalms in a minor kev. and culturing melancholy, and their worship has in it more sighs than rapture. We do not doubt their piety. Oh, no. But they are sitting at a feast where the cook has forgotten to season the food. Evervthinu Is flat in their experience and in their con versation. Emancipated from sin and death and hell, and on their way to amag nificent heaven, they act as though they were trudging on toward an everlasting Botany bay. Religion does not seem to agree with them. It seems to eaten in the windpipe and become a tight strangulat ion instead of an exhilaration. All the infidel books that have been writ ten, from Voltaire down to Herbert Spen cer, have not 'done so much damage to our Christianity as lugubrious Christians. Who wants .a religion woven out of the shadows of the night? Why go growling on your way to celestial enthronement? Come out of that cave and sit down in the warm light of the Sun of Righteousness. Away with your odes to melancholy and Hervey's "Meditations Among the Tombs." Then let our songs abound. And every tear be dry; We're marching through Emmanuel's ground To fairer .worlds' on high. I have to say, also, that we need to nut more spice and enlivenment in our relig ious teaching, whether it be in the prayer meeting, 'or in the Sabbath school, or in the church. We ministers need more fresh air and sunshine in our lungs and our heart and our head. Do you wonder that the world is so far from being converted when you find so little vivacity in the pulr pit and in the pew? We want, like the Lord, to plant in our sermons and exhortations more lilies of the field. We want fewer rhetorical elaborations and fewer sesqui pedalian wools; and when we talk- about shadows, we do not want to say adumbra tion; and when we mean queerness, we do not want to talk about idiosyncracies; or if a stitch in the back, we do not want to talk of lumbago, but in the plain vernacu lar preach that gospel which proposes to make all men happy, honest, victorious and free. . . . In other words, we want more cinnamon and' less gristle. Let this be so in all the different departments of work to which the I Lord calls us. Let us be plain. Let us be earnest. Let . us be. common sensical. When we talk to the people in a vernacu lar, they can understand they will be very glad to come and receive the truth we pre sent. Would to God that Queen Balkis would drive her spice laden, dromedaries into all our sermons and prayer meeting' exhortations. LIFE AND 'SPICK UNCHRISTIAN" WORK. More than that, we want more life and spice in our Christian work. The poor do not want so' much to be groanod over as Bung to. With the. bread and medicines and the garments you give them, let there be an accompaniment of smiles and brisk encouragement. - Do not stand and talk to them . about the wretchedness of ' their abode, and the hunger of their -looks, and tne hardness of their lot. Ah! they know it better than you can tell them. Show them the bright side of the thing, if there be any bright side. Tell them good times will come. . Tell them that for the children of God there is immortal rescue. '- Wake them up out of their stolidity by an in spiring lauph, and while you send in help, uxe tne yueen oi bneba also send in the spices. There are two ways of meeting the Door. One is to cocas into their house with a nose elevated in disgust, as much as to say: "I don't see how you live here in this neigh borhood. It actually makes me sick. There is ttat bundle; take it, you poor, miserable wretch, and make the most of it." Another way is to go into the abode of the poor in a manner which seem? to ssyt "The blessed Lord sent me. He war uw ami tne uumaram out or our religl'i.t. poor himself. It is not more for the good I am going to try to do you than it is for t he good you can do me." Coming in that spirit the gift will be as aromatic as the spikenard on the feet of Christ, and all the hovels in that alley will be fragrant with the spice. - We heed more spice and enlivenment in our church music Churches sit discussing whether they shall have choirs, or precen tors, or organs, or bass viols, or .cornets. I say, take that which will bring, out the most inspiring music If we had half as much zeal and spirit in our churches as we have in the songs of our Sabbath schools it would not be long before the whole earth would quake with the coming God. Why, in most churches nine-tenths of the peo ple do not sing, or they sing so feebly that the people at their elbows do not know they are singing. People mouth and mumble the praises of God; but there is not more than one ont of a hundred who makes "a joyful noise" unto the Rock of Our Salva tion. Sometimes, when the congregation forgets itself, and is all absorbed in the goodness of God or the glories of heaven, I get an intimation of what church music will be a hundred years from now, when the coming generation shall wake up to its duty. WAKE UP. , I promise a high spiritual blessing to any one who will sing in church, and who will Bing so heartily that the people all around cannot help but Bing. Wake up! all the churches from Bangor to San Francisco and across Christendom. It is' not a matter of preference, it is a matter of religious' duty. Oh, for fifty times more volume of sound. German chorals in German caf' thedrals surpass us, and yet Germany has received nothing at the hands of God com pared with America; and ought the acclaim in Berlin be louder than that in Brooklyn? Soft, long drawn out music is appropriate for the drawing room and ap propriate for the concert, but St. John gives an idea of the sonorous and resonant congregational singing appropriate for churches when, in listening to the temple service of heaven, he says: "I heard a great voice, as the voice of a great multitude, and as the voice of many waters, and as the voice of mighty thunderings. Hallelujah, for the Lord God omnipotent reigneth." Join with me in a crusade, giving me not only your hearts but the mighty uplifting of your voices, and I believe we can, through Christ's grace, sing fifty thousand souls into the kingdom of Christ. An ar gument they can laugh at, a sermon they may talk down, but a vast audience join ing in one anthem is irresistible. Would that Queen Balkis would drive all ber spice laden dromedaries into our church music "Neither was there any such spice as the Queen of Sheba gave King Solo mon. " Now, I want to impress this audience with the fact that religion is sweetness and perfume and spikenard and saffron and cinnamon and cassia and frankincense, and all sweet spices together. "Oh," you say, "I have not looked at it as such. I thonght it was a nuisance; it had for me a repulsion; I held my breath as though it were malodor; I have been appalled at its advance; I have said, If I have any religion at all, I want to have just as little of it as is possible to get through with." Oh, what a mistake you have made, my brother. The religion of Christ is a present and everlast ing redolence. It counteracts all trouble. Just put it on the stand beside the pillow of sickness. It catches in the curtains and perfumes the stifling air. - It sweetens the cup of bitter medicine, and throws a glow on the gloom of the turned lattice. It is a balm for the aching side, and a soft ban dage for the temple stung with pain. It lifted Samuel Rutherford into a rev elry of spiritual delight while he was in physical agonies. It helped Richard Bax ter until, in the midst of such a complica tion of diseases as perhaps no other man ever suffered, he wrote "The Saint's Ever lasting Rest." And it poured light upon John Bunyan's dungeon--the light of the shining gate of the shining city. And it is good for rheumatism, and for neuralgia, and for low spirits, and for consumption; it is the catholicon for all disorders. Yes,' it will heul all your sorrows. . ' . , ALL, HAVE HAD BORROW. Why did you look so sad today when you came in? Alas! for the loneliness and the heartbreak, and the - load that is never lifted from your soul. Some of you go about feeling like Macaulay when be wrote, "If I had another month of such days 'as I have been spending, I would be impa tient to get down into my little narrow crib in the ground like a weary factory child." And there have been times in your life when you wished -you could get out of this life. You have said, "Oh, how sweet to my lips would be the dust of the valley," and wished you could pull over you in your last-slumber the coverlet of ' green grass and daisies. You have said: "Oh, how beautifully quiet it must be in the tomb. I wish I was there." I see all around about me widowhood and orphan age and childlessness; sadness, disappoint ment, perplexity. If I could ask all those to rise in this audience who have felt no sorrow and been buffeted by no disap pointment if I could ask all such to rise, how many would rise? Not one. - A widowed mother with her little child went west, noping to get better wages- there, and she; was taken sick and died. The overseer Of the poor got her body and put it in a box, and put it in a wagon, and started down the street toward the ceme tery at full trot. -The littte child the only child ran "after, it through the streets, bare headed, crying, "Britfg me back my mother! bring me back my mother!"' And it was said that as the people looked on and saw ber crying after that which lay in the box in " the wagon all she loved on earth it- is said the whole village was in tears. - And that is what a great many of you are doing chasing the dead. Dear Lord, is there no appeasement for all this sor row that I see about me? Yea, the thought of -resurrection and reunion far beyond this scene of struggle and tears. "They snail hunger no more, neither thirst any kmOre, neither shall the sun light on them, nor any heat; for the Lamb which is in the midst of the throne shall lead t'uem to liv ing fountains of water, and God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes." ' Across the conches of your sick and across the graves of your dead I fling this shower of sweet spices. Queen Balkis, driving up -to the pillared - portico of the house of cedar, carried no such pungency of perfume as exhales today from 'the Lord's garden. It is peace. It is sweet ness. It is comfort. It is innnite satisfac tion, this Gospel I commend to you. Some one could not understand why an old Ger man Christian scholar used to be always so calm and happy and hopeful when he had so many trials and sicknesses and ail ments. A man secreted himself in fh house. He said, "I mean to watch this old scholar and Christian;" and he saw the old Christian man go to his room and sit down on the chair beside the stand and open the Bible and begin to read. He read on and on, chapter after chapter, hour after hoar, . until his face was all aglow with the tid ings from heaven, and when the clock truck twelve be arose and skat bis BiblsyJ and said: "Blessed Lord, we are on the same old terms yet. Good night. Good night" ', .-.. ., Oh, -you sin' parched and you trouble pounded, here is comfort, here is satisfac tion.. Will you come and get it? I cannot tell you what the Lord offers you hereafter so well as I can tell you now. "It doth not yet appear what we shall be." Have you read of the Taj Mahal in. India, in some respects the most majestic' building on earth? ' Twenty thousand men were twenty years in buildinc it. It cost about sixteen rxmllions pf dollars: The walls are of mar ble, inlaid with carnelian from Bagdad, ana turquois rrom Thibet, and jasper Irom the Funjanb, and amethyst from Persia; and all manner of precious stones. A traveler says that it seems to him like the shining of an enchanted castle of bur nished' silver. The walls are two hundred and forty-five feet high, and from the top of these springs a dome thirty more feet high, that dome containing the most won derful echo the world has ever. known, so that ever and anon travelers standing be low with flutes and drums and harps are testing that echo, and the sounds from be low strike up, and then come down, as it were, the voices of angels all around about the building. There is around it a garden or tamarind and banyan and palm and all the floral glories of the ransacked earth. . But that is only a tomb of a dead em press, and it is tame compared with the grandeurs which God has builded for your living and immortal spirit. Oh, home pf the blessed! Foundations of gold! Arches Of victory! Capstones of praise: And a dome in which there are echoing and re echoing the hallelujahs of the ages. And around about that mansion is a garden the garden of God and all the springing j fountains are the bottled tearsof thechurch in the wilderness, and all the crimson of flowers is the deep hue that was caught up from the carnage of earthly martyrdoms, and the fragrance is the prayer of all the saints, ana the aroma pats into otter for getf alness the cassia, and the spikenard, and the frankincense, and the world re nowned spices which the Queen Balkis, of Abyssinia, flung a the feet of King Solo mon. When shall these eyes thy heaven built walls And pearly gates behold. Thy bulwarks, with salvation strong. And streets of shining gold? Through 'obduracy on our part, and 'hrough the rejection of tha.t Christ who makes heaven possible, I wonder if any of us will miss that spectacle? I fear! I fear! The queen of the south will rise up in judg ment against this generation and condemn it, because she came from the uttermost parts of the earth to hear the wisdom of Solomon, and behold, a greater than Solo mon is here! May God grant that through your own practical experience you may find that religion's ways are ways of pleasant ness, and that all her paths are paths of peace that it is perfume now and perfume forever. And there was an abundance of spice; "neither was there any such spice as the queen of Sbeba gave to King Solomon." Origin of "Dp Salt River." The following derivation of the slang phrase "Rowed up Salt river," to express the condition of a defeated candidate for office, is thns explained by Bayard Taylor: "Formerly there were extensive saltworks on Salt river, Ohio, a short distance from its mouth. The laborers employed in them were a set of athletic, belligerent fellows who soon became known far .and wide for their achievements in the pugilistic line. Hence it became common for the boatmen on the Ohio, when one of their number be came refractory, to say to him, 'We'll row you up Salt river,' when, of course, the bufly salt men would have the handling of him. By a natural figure of speech, the expression was applied to political candi dates rat'. I believe, in the presidential campaign of 1840." A better explanation pf the phrase than that given by Mr. Tay lor abo ve seems to be that in the early days the lliouth of Salt river was a favorite stronghold of the river pirates, who preyed on the commerce of .the Ohio, and rowed their plunder up Salt river. 7 A friend suggests a third probable deri vation of the phrase. He says that he has heard it applied to defeated candidates' as far back as 1833, and that it originated in 1812, when Henry Clay, as candidate for the presidency, had an engagement to speak at Louisville, Ky. He had employed a boatman to 'row him up the Ohio. Now this boatman was a Jackson Democrat; he pretended to have losv his way, and instead of reaving -up the Ohio turned into Salt rivert - This caused Clay much delay, for he did not reach Louisville until the day after election. St. Louis Republic i- ..: . ' . "''' .. ' After a Match.' ; The' average person notices the arrange- meuc oi a room surprisingly little. Its di mensions and the relative positions of -the furniture may seem to be familiar to him, but in reality they seldom are. The way to become convinced of this is to hunt for something, a match for instance, in . the dark.' . Yoh have the mantel, and make a grab where you imagine the match safe stands. Down goes a piece of bric-a-brac to the floor ! More care is used. . You find the end of the mantel, and run your hand along the marble slab. Off goes a verse or two. You strike the clock; you've got it. No, it's on the other side. ' Not there! Ah, then it's on the table. After running against the stove and tripping over the chair, you find the sofa. Keep cool and take your bearings. The table is north of the sofa, and the sofa runs east and west; north, therefore, is in front of you Now you have it. That article that dropped to the floor sounded like the match safe But it's the ink well. onA your fingers are dyed with a color warrant ed not to fade. .. ,- A .bright idea the stove! You burn "your lingers -and warp your- patience," but you secure a ugut. And the match safe? It is on the mantelpiece in front of the clock the only place you didn't search. Albany Argus. A Spring IdjrL. There has been a stirring among the cold roots of the Symplocarpus for some tim now in the marshes, and its red spotted spathe is all ready thrust np, fresh and glistering, amid the oozy sponge and gray debris of the marsh side.' where as vet green is barely the dominant color, .while ostensibly,' as if to celebrate these aniet parturitions (or apparitious) around him, but in good sooth for private matrimonial reasons of his own, the innocent little hyla frog inflates his throat and Alls the dim vault of Night and the blue urn of rw with the shrill, clear music of his two noted flute; said Day and Night seeming in so wise displeased by this incessant lovenom?. althongh monouraoiu in its nature as that Chinese fiddle in Harrison avenue. Bos ton Transcript. : '-''.'' - Drew a Crowd. ' Jorwm : I bear you had dog show in yor town last week. How did it go off? Adams Splendidly. It was a bowling necesB. Rat s Field's Washington. - ' The Dalles Cfpqicie 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 ajl ettuisiitja wim its 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 fifto 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 The paper, both daily and weeklv. will be independent in . A criticism of political handling of local affairs, it will be JUST, FAIR AND IMPARTIAL We will endeavor to give all the lo cal news, and we ask 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 "t 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 Klickital 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 climatA VtAHtrht- ful! Its possibilities incalculable! Its resources un limited) And on these corner stones sh stands generous Eastern Oregon. rtoliti AAA matters, as in its that your criticism course a