SORROW. r the post's heart has wruna. t yea blame his song were it sadly sung? wounded bird that with drooping wins tsaosxnfal plaint can bat feebly sing? ) In her beauty smiles not so hric-hi Wfcew the son has withdrawn his kindly light, his mimic orb. with the night dews wet tears that be sheds when his god has set. T may hare lost that which yon love the best. Ast chide not your bosom's deep unrest. and flower and heart may be pore and sweet for their agony. Exchange. DISENCHANTED. Of all things,' a night iournev is the Mt tedious. said Clarence Hatfield as -ke let himself fall heavily into the stiff mmt uncomfortable seat of the railway -aw, with its faded velvet cushions and tfes back at exactly the wrong angle for cnt approacmng a nap. "1 say, Ulif- M, do yon think we might smoke- ""Well. I rather imagine not," said 1, win a motion of my head toward the otter passengers. "There appears to be meo on board. Hatfield shrugged his shoulders. "Soch ladies!" -Well," laughed I, "they don't appear fee particularly stylish in manner or Mtame, bat nevertheless, my dear fel las, the divinity or their sex hedges asnsa aroana iixe a wall. "Divinity of their bumbngr shortly wi uptea ttatneia. "As if these ill id dowdies, with babies and band , could Dossiblv belomr to th same 1 with Beatrice Hale!" To this I made no answer. It did nnt Mm to me exactly appropriate to lag ww sacred name of Beatrice Hale into a ttacsssion in a nlace like this. Yet whit Kl 1 do, except to feel my cheeks flnsh i ne roots or my naur tingle? For I nnmistakablv in love with Ftm JTaJ mi ma was Clarence Hatfield. If I were to waste quarts of ink and I of rjaner in trvmo tr n mi)m tio. oifold charms and excellencies to the r, it wouldn't do any good. Such shave been tried before, and failnrl. m him imagine the fairest brunette sun ever shone on, and he may u somewhere near the mark. Suffice to amy that she was as beautiful as a -tow lu, and that Hatfield and I were aa&h slaves at her feet. Which of os did she like beat? Ah! was the unestion! It was : like the children's old game of see- ip i go, aown yon come. Some 1 1 fancied I had a ghost of a ehun Betimes I was convinced that TTat. I was altogether the preferred, and i naa better emigrate to Australia "Hello r cried Hatfield, breaking un- noniousiy in apon tne thread of my nga, "there goes the whistle. We ill be off di recti V. Thank amdnm -r thatr AbswI Ka Mtr kia .S- 4.1 . UU MM VipuSiM9 mmr hoars' ride as possible. Clarence Hatfield and I, be it nhder tas)d,wr employes in the extensive hwfoeas of Messrs. Jenkins, Jnmpertou -JfcOs., auctioneers, and had been down the country "putting up" a sale of awampy lots, cut into streets and squares, kim ding to the most approved metro aitan methods of doing such things. It had been a dismal business. No ssber is not an inspiring month at the "haat, and a three days' fog had conspired -ajEsinat the success of 'Mount Morra Ark," as Jenkins, Jumperton & Co. had christened the new speculation. Yet we ha4 done reasonably well, and were now Thankful enough to get back to New . Tack. As the train gave its starting lunge the door flow open, and in came a tall d lady, in a prodigious black bonnet "d fur cloak, surrounded by a perfect atevanx-de-frise of squirrel cages, leath er bags, brown paper parcels and sand wich boxes. She was followed closely ay younger lady, dressed in black and lesely veiled, and paused hesitatingly front of our seat. "Tonng man," said she, in a low voice, as gruff as that of a man. "is this seat csigaged?" "Yes," said Hatfield; "it is." - "For your feet?" "No matter what for," superciliously replied the head clerk of Jenkins, Jump erton & Co. "Please to pass on. old lady. You'll find seats enough beyond." But this was a stretching of the truth. There were no seats beyond, as the "old lady could easily perceive, unless she hose to sit directly opposite a red hot owl fire or upon one of those corner ar langements close to the door, which was equivalent to no seat at all The old lady hesitated and changed her heavy carpet bag from one wearied am to tho other. I thought of my own good Aunt Polly at home, and rose at "Pray, take this seat, ma'am," said L ""And let me put your parcel up in the rack for you." "Clifton, what a fool you are!" cried Hatfield, in an impatient sotto voce. "Why couldn't you have sat still and minded your own business?" "It is my own business," 1 answered hrusquely, "to see that evety ladv is Made as comfortable as it is in the irnt r of things to be. Now the squirrel oage. ma'am it'll go very comfortably under the seat. I think." - ' . Hatfield uttered a contemptuous grunt, bat he never offered to trust his feet off the opposite cushions, although , the younger woman stood in the aisle, un comfortably swaying backward and for ward .with the motion of the train, uutii a woman beyond, observing the state oi affairs, drew a sleeping child into hei lap and beckoned the other to take the place thus vacated. By this time my old lady ' had estab lished herself to her entire satisfaction and opened her sandwich lox. - "Much obliged to you. young man. said she. "It's easy to see that you've a mother of your own at home, and that you are in the habit of doing reverence to her gray hairs.. As for this person," -with a nod of her poke bonnet in the di OMMto fhawJE1 SSt, OB rection of Mr. Hatfield "if bV. mother, I can't say much for her bring ing or nun up. Perhaps he may be old himself one day, and stand in' need of a .'little politeness and consideration from the young." "When Tm anxious for your good opinion, ma'am, I'll let you know," re turned Mr. Hatfield, rather flippantly. The old lady could only express herself by a vehement sniff. And even I was a little annoyed at his manner. "Hatfield," said I in a low tone, "you might behave like a gentleman." "So 1 will," he retorted, with a shrug, "when I find myself in company that calls for such measures." I said no more, but leaning np against the side of the door, prepared to make myself as comfortable as possible until the train should stop at Stamford, its first way station, and some descending passenger might make room for me. Reader, did you ever stand in an ex press train in full motion? Did you ever feel yourself swayed backward and for ward, bumping one of your phrenolog ical developments against one side of the car, and bringing the base of your spinal column against the top of a seat at the opposite swerve of the train? Did you ever grasp blindly at nothing for support? Did you ever execute an in voluntary pas seul, by way of keeping your balance, and then grind your teeth to see the two pretty young ladies be yond laughing at your antics? If so yon will know how to pity me during the hour and a half between B. and Stamford. Hatfield went to sleep and snored; the old lady in the gigantic bonnet ate sand wiches and drank from a wicker flask of excellent smelling sherry; the young lady sat as noiseless as a black veiled statue; fretful babies whimpered; old gentlemen ' uttered strange sounds in their sleep; the lamps flared like sickly moons overhead; and the shriek of the train as it flew through sleeping villages sounded like the yell of a fiery throated demon. "Stamford!"' bawled the conductor. At last I succeeded in dropping my weary and stiffened limbs into a seat, where slumber overtook me in just a minute and a quarter, for I had been asleep on my legs once or twice even in my former disadvantageous attitude, and I could scarcely believe the evidence of my own senses when we finally thun dered into the echoing vastness of the Grand Central depot in New York. Hatfield, alive to the necessity of catching a car before all the world of travelers should crowd into it, stumbled over the old lady's ankles with small cer emony. "Oh, take care! You have knocked the squirrel cage over!" cried she. "Confound the squirrel eager shouted Hatfield, gnashing his teeth as the an cient dame placed herself directly in the aisle to set the furry pet up again, there by completely blocking up bis egress. "Serves you right, Hatfield," said 1, as 1 Rtooped to assist. Just then the young companion of our lady advanced, flinging back her veil. "Grandma," said she, "the carriage is waiting. Ill send Thomas for the par cels. Mr. Clifton, 1 am very much obliged to you for your politeness to my grandmother, who is unused to travel ing. As to Mr. Hatfield, the less said about his courtesy the better." And Beatrice Hale's black eyes flashed dis dainfully on Clarence's cowed visage. "Miss Hale." he stammered, "if Pd had the least idea who you were" - "You would have regulated your con duct accordingly," impatiently inter rupted Miss Hale. Thanks I prefer to see people in their true light Mr. Clift on," turning graciously to me, "youH call and see how grandma stands her journey tomorrow, won't you? Oh, thank you! The carriage is close by." And to this day I believe that is the way I won my wife, for Clarence Hat field was a brilliant, showy sort of a fel low, who far outshone me in general so ciety, and I think Bee was inclined rather to fancy him until that night. But she was disenchanted now for good and .all. And Grandma Hale comes to see us every Christmas with a hamper of good things from Hale farm. Boston True Flag. . Cariosities About Boots. Boots, which are onlv a lencthenAd variety of shoes, were among the most ancieut articles of attire. Shoes extend ing a certain heiirht un the leo- I ornamented and of fanciful colors, were in use Dy the aucient Egyptians. Greeks and Romans. Different kinds of half boots were worn bv the Anrln-Kana and Anglo-Normans. In the reign of Edward IV the boot nroner. with tniw and spurs, was established as an article oi anignuy areas. In the reisn of Charles I a honr. urirla at the top, made of Spanish leather, came mio use. unaries 11 introduced a high ly decorated French rmnt gay courtly attire. Meanwhile the boot, or jack boot, as it was called, had be come indispensable in the mutnmn nf cavalry soldiers and horsemen generally a - . . - ana was regularly naturalized by Will iam HI and his followers in England. The jack boot was strongly made, ex. tending in length above the knee, was large at the top and had a very high heel, and around the ankle hA fl leather band bearing a strong spur. St I r , i uuuui evepuuue. An Kiperlmm with Hot Water.. In support of the theory Oiat retentiou of waste is a potential cause of corpu DUlencv. it is instanced that raw nhvai. cian cured himself by the use of hot water. While under treatment he was careful npt to overeat, and excluded from his diet some of throw rivl! nrtii..i are richest in fat producing elements. out ine dietetic restrictions were not at all severe, so that the credit m-.ist 1. given to the hot water, a mil Inn of which was drank daily. By thus means the accumulated waste was well washed out of the system, and a r-9Tti? reduction in weight took place. Ami wnnt is even more important, a perma nent cure was effected, for when lie stonued the treatment and and everything he craved, there was no re i urn oi me rronoie. lioston Herald. HOW FIFTY ESCAPED. CONFEDERATES WORKED -,A CLEVER SCHEME AT -CAMP BUTLER: Disguised as Citisena In Smarc'ed Clothes and Armed with Forged Passports m row at a Time Passed the Vigilant Onards on Visiting Days. A man in prison is like a man without hands, whose brain is constantly contriv ing to overcome physical deficiency. The ingenuity of a brain unrelieved by dis traction of employment is capable of schemes which rival fiction. Many thrilling tales are told by prisoners of war about their privations and advent ures while under the espionage of an alert and relentless enemy. An experi ence worthy of record was told an Amer ican reporter, the other night, by a man who now stands high in public life in Tennessee. He was once a confederate soldier. He had the misfortune to be numbered with the captured at Fort Donelson, and with hundreds of his . comrades was hurried across the Ohio and incarcerated in Camp Butler, a spot which will long be remem bered by those who were so unlucky as to be imprisoned within its battlements. After pining for several weary months for an exchange that was never effected these southern patriots set about to ac complish their own deliverance. Vari ous plans were concocted, but were all successfully thwarted by the vigilance of their custodians. Finally the inspira tion of this story hit upon a scheme which for audacity and cleverness is un precedented, and won for its originator a title and distinction among his com panions which time has not yet obliter ated. Among the prisoners at Camp Butler were a number of boys who served the Confederacy in the capacity of "powder monkeys," a t function well known to heavy artillerists. . - IT WAS A ULRVKB PLAN. The duties of these youngsters were to convey powder charges from the magazines to gunners in trenches or to assist in like manner on the floating bat teries which annoyed the federal gun boats in the Mississippi river. Two of these little fellows, who had fallen into the hands of the enemy, were treated with the dignity due prisoners of war, and consequently found themselves hundreds of miles away from home and mamma and subject to all the heartless discipline of military prison. The manly fortitude of these two juvenile warriors attracted the martial soul of Colonel Morrison, who commanded the post. To make their imprisonment less ardu ous he made them his office orderlies, and sent them on; the hundreds of er rands' which a commanding officer finds a daily necessity in the discharge of his duty. The Utile fellows were true patriots, and no persuasion or punishment could dissuade them from the cause of their fathers. It was through them that . the hero of this story accomplished bis de signs. The boys had access at all time to the colonel's office, likewise the adju tant's desk. One night they were bidden to steal from the adjutant's desk a lot of blank passports. But what good were passports to a soldier whose very .uniform forbade exit from the inner stockade of the prison, might be asked. Fortunately, however, hi the prison there was a sutler who pos sessed all the venality characteristic of his cloth. Among the prisoners in Camp Butler there were several confederate soldiers who were the sons of wealthy parents and occasionally received money from home. From this element a general fund was collected and appropriated to the use- of the plotters for deliverance. With the sutler, whose loyalty to the American dollar exceeded his fidelity to the Ameri can Union, it was an easy matter to smuggle in a suit of citizen's clothes now and then. A FEW GO AT A TIMS. On visiting days hundreds of people from the country around would throng to the post to look at the fiery rebels. They were shown, under the escort of a guard, through every part of the prison, and on several occasions these parties, in some unaccountable way, would number one or two more on . coming out than they did on coming in. Each individual, however, displayed his passport to-the guard at the gate, and retired unques tioned from the portals of the fort into the loyal prairies of Illinois. . Had the guards counted their guests npon their arrival and departure some startling surprises would have resulted. On one occasion two confederate officers escaped by the guard with forged passes and had taken seats in a carriage which was waiting to serve visitors at the gate of the fort when Colonel Morrison him self came out and, addressing them, asked if they had Been all they wanted to see. : '.,'. ' "Yes, sir," replied one of the fugitives suavely. ' "They are a hard looking set, ain't they, colonel?" At the' same time he was so alarmed that his tongue al most refused to articulate. By this process half a hundred Con federates were released from custody and returned to their commands in the field. The reader must not imagine that these men were not missed by their guardians, for after every muster the guards were doubled . and many commissioned and non-ronmiissdoned officers relieved, it be ing suspected that they were responsible for the mysterious disappearance of the prisoners. So cleverly did the plan operate under cautious restrictions that the leak throngh which the human contents of that noto rious pen- escaped was not discovered until the man who created it had been duly exchanged and was fighting under his own flag on the fields of Georgia, where he was known to the army as Colo nel Morrison's adjutant -Nashville Am- Stlll Unimproved. Slasher I hear that Jawkins has taken wife from the washtnb. Stabber That is not so; she U thars yet. Ram's Horn. SJIIPES 1 DLY, :Wlctale and Detail Dnfflists. -DEALER& IN- Fine Imported, Key West and Domestic CIGARS. PAINT JJow is the time to paint your house and if you wish to get the best quality and a tine 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. L. 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 EflST EJ1D 50MOJI, . MacDonaia Bros., Props. , THE BEST OF Wines, Liquors and Ciprs ALWAYS ON HAND. (J. E. BiYAlD fJO., Real Estate, Insaranee, and Loan AGENCY. Opera House Block, 3d St. Chas. Stublingr, i- ... rnOPBIBTOB OF THE 0ERrWii. ' M Yogi Block, Second St. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL- Liquor v Dealer, MILWAUKEE BEER ON DRAUGHT. Health is Wealth! rmATMENT D. E. C. WBST'8 JfBBVK 1KB BKAIK TMAT- mbnt, a guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dizzi ness, Convulsions, Fits, Nervous Neuralgia, Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by the use oi 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 S5.00, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price. WK GUABAHTII SIX BOXES To cure any case. With each order received by us for six boxes, accompanied by 15.00, 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 BLAKELIV t HOUGHTON, Prescription Druffg-lsta, 175 Second St. The Dalles, Or. YOU NUED BUT ASK:; Mi ddlb Vallbt, Idaho, May 15, 1891. ' Da. Vakdekpool: Your 8. B. Headache and Liver Cure sells well here. Everyone that tries it comes for the second bottle. People are com ing ten to twelve miles to get a bottle to try It and then they come back and take three or four bottles at a time. Thank you, or sending dup licate bill as mine n as diKnlueed. Respectfully, M. A. FLETCHER. Forsale by all Druggists. The Dalles 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 it satisfied with its The four pages of six columns each, will be issued every eveningexcept 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 er position as the Lteading City of 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- PQ 1 rtOTtro onrl vrrri n -"!- 4-V. n 4- ! J. of our object and course, be formri fWvm the contents of the rasn assertions 01 THE WEEKLY, sent to any address 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. TUT nUDniimi r nun nn int unnumuLC ruo. uu. Office, N. W. Cor. Washington and Second Sts. rriTTTTS 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 4 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. .1 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, r 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, niore 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 dorner stones she stands. cmoiiicle course a generous Eastern Oregon. paper, and not from outside parties. for $1.50 uer vear. a -r -r nn Daily