TRIALS AND TEMPTATIONS OF RUN AWAY BOYS IN NEW YORK. .Jk ftmiu Mllr r Karl Talk frra S-w Crk'a Chief Irp-tur Hoy Get Thxtr Sdnma r the Clt.r from l-orl.l Bunti A Wmw KimilM from the IWMtinf. Having alrvady referred in a general wnjr to the evil effects that usually fall ' "to the lot of u boy who in m foolish and JkeadatroiiK as to rnn . away from home and try hia fortunes in the great city, 1 -will cite a few canes of the many with which the records of imr police depart ment abound. All teach the same lesson. In January, year. or two ago, a ljoy eleven years old left his home in Albany ' and came to this city, as he afterward id, "to nee the- sights." As day after , 4ay passed and lie did not return, his . -parent, preatly worried, made inquiries lor bim in many directions. The police - tf this city were asked to join in the earch. ( . u . The boy had been absent about three ; -weeks when one day an officer who was : patrolling a post in the neighborhood of r the ducks came1 upon a boy who stag T jrered as he walked. The officer's first impression was' that the boy was intox icated, but upon making a closer exam .inatiou and questioning him it turned oat that he. was not intoxicated, but weak from lack of food and from ex posure in the wintry weather. The policeman took him. to headquar &era and gave bin! a good tneaL . After ward it was discovered that he was the boy from Albany whose disappearance had caused so tunch concern. His parents were promptly communi cated with, and he was very glad indeed to go home with his fattier, who caine after him without delay. A few months . after this occurred pur police were requested to look for two boys one fifteen years old, the other thirteen who had .run away from their' -homes in a New England city.. They had good homes and kind pareuts, but they had tired of going to school. 1 The idea of wonderful adventures had been put into their heads by the books . they had been alipVed to read,- and they determined to see life for themselves in a larger city than the one. where they . had leen brought tip. ' . They wandered about New York for five days, but fofthd life here a sterner reality than they had supposed. The little money they hod was soon spent, and at the end of the five days they were' glad to give themselves up to the police, and tearfully asked to be sent back to their homes. One day a policeman attached to one of the down town precincts saw a bpy. evidently a stranger in the city,- sitting on the porch of a house, and soon found that he was exhausted from hanger and partially overooifi by the, heat. The "boy was only eleven years of age. He had come here alone' from a town . in Massachusetts, first because he wished ' t see what the great city was like, and also because he had an uncle here; and expected to be hospitably received. He I the address jof his uncle, but as - he i totally unfamiliar with the city he could not wfcifly find the honsel . When at last, after much wandering, -We did succeed ' in getting to the street and number, to which ' .he. had. been so often directed, he was worse off than if, he had not found them. The hope of finding his Ancle had been the one thing that cheered him daring his journeying through the labyrinth of streets. But now his uncle refused to aid or harbor him. Giving him a little bread aud butter wrapped in a paper, he turned the boy adrift upon the cheerless streets. Under our law the ancle was arrested for his inhuinau conduct, but he was .discharged in court on his promise to eee that the boy was taken back to his parents. After the ambition to go. went ami fight Indians perhaps the desire to go upon the stage is. the strongest motive animating boys' who take a plunge into the wide world , for, themselves. More girls than boys' are stage struck." but the girls do not run away as the boys do at least not when they are so young a most of the runaways of the other ' Mo .donbt the experience gained in running away from "hoihe is often sain tary. The glamour and glitter that are imagined to surround life in a big city are speedily seen to have no existence save' in the fancy, and the difficulties in the way of a strange lad in a strange place who is seeking a situation, even of the humblest land difficulties which amount practically to an' insurmount able obstacle are soon deeply impressed upon the mind. . Fortunately, before the matter has gone much further, in most ases a successful search is made for the missing one ' and he eagerly .seeks his father's door again. "' But this experience is not one that rational parents would choose tor- their growing., boys.,; The -stern realities of life will come all soon enough in the natural course of things. . . . T . - , As I have already more than intimated many years of experience in police work convince me that scarcely anything worse could. ' happen to a boy reared, in the country or in a small town than to be thrown upon, his own, resources in a busy and bustling city like New York. " The chances are all against, his earning livelihood, even in an humble way, and all in favor of falling into bad company and leading a worppless. it not. a posi tivelv wicked, life., w J . The alluring pictures of city life which are drawn in certain .books": and papers that are widely circulated have no .corresponding . reality, and , pnee more 1 would caution parents to use the tmoaUcaee-in .the selection kof .their, chadr'S iMWitof mMfe. Herfc U- prie aVenne.oi ditoon.tent.that can easily be cloned un. or. rather, never opened. Moreover, the hard and . bitter experi nce of boys who .have attempted- to eek their fortunes in the great city; and the gladness with which they welcome an opportunity to get back within " the hadow of the roof tree from which they Jiad lately-fled; teach thoroughly the-lea- -,oa that "to stay at nome u poss.' bomas Byrnes in Youth's Companion. user's. H ( j ; . WONDERFUL n. Jtofc itrntw DM Nt .'Bsc. tot Marie a Ctwk. liynuuMt or the Wemrer. I am somewhat of an athlete,- and am in the babitbf 'performing various exv cises when I have nothing else to do, and yet held a position where it i important that I should prenent a gentlemanly ap pearance. The problem of how to prevent trons- ers from bagging has for a long time re curred to my mind and pressed for solu tion. . I have tried the various device advertised for cure or for . prevention, 1 have consulted my fashionable friends, and even the tailors, fondly hoping they could be induced to "give themselv-.w away. Some of my friends have solved the problem , by hanging np in their ward robes 1.095 pairs of trousers, which liia-r nenver enables them to put on a fr-sh pair morning, noon and night, : .'. Now,' iny friends and employers est i mate my brain power and business qual ifications very nearly as highly as I do. Unfortunately they do not attribute to them a very high exchangeable cash value. . i . - . '.. ':-. " - , The important thing, therefore, for me seemed to be to discover a way of . ma k ing one pair, of trousers last 365 days without baggiug. . Fortunately, 1 have a, practical knowl edge of mechanics, and am of an invent ive, turn of mind.; ,Ihuve sprut the ssiv iugs of all inypat life in patenting car couplers, motors a la Keely, and flying machines which very nearly succeeded in flying. My necessity hatched a new invention. I went to one of the most skillful and artistic tailors on the Bowery and told him what I wanted, . and at the same time warned him that I had a patent on my idea. . v- My idea was to get some of the cement which enables a broken plate to support a ton of cobble stones and a sheet of the genuine, old fashioned gum such aj the old fashioned gum shoes worn mlule of and paste back of the .knee, an oblong piece, wide enough and long enough to cover all that part of the trousers which generally bags. The tailor entered into my idea enthusiastically. He offered to buy the patent outright for Jwenty dol lar, and .tw give me a royalty of five cents a pair on' the first hundred pairs which should be sold..'" I refused his mag nanimous off er. and am ' "holding for a rise." He fhought that if a little elasticity was a good ruing a great . ueal . more Would be better. I think he must have pasted inside those trpusers the soles of his grandmothers gum shoes. The first time I went out with those trousers on strangers accosted me, and said they should not have known that 1 had no legs from my walk if they had not leen informed . that I was a Grand Army man and bad had both legs shot off .at the. battle of Antietam. The cause of their delusion was that as I lifted each foot from ' the 'ground the leg from the kuee suddenly snapped forward. - On the way home from business 1 went into the M. A. C. gymnasium. I had no time to put on my gymnasium tights, and coutented myself .with taking off coat, vest, collar and cuffs. I started in for a run. My friends and the director thought 1 showed . poor judgment i upstarting at such a pace. Some of the crack runners were on the track, and at the outset 1 al most equalr-d their fastest spurts. But, great Scott, bow they were dum- founded when 1 spurtedl They said I got around the track lit such a rate of speed that I was only visible as a con tinuous curve, diabolic rather than para bolic. I felt that if I ran my fastest again 1 should need a pedometer with ;ui air brake attachment. The swift waj- in which my feet, glided, forward and the exteut of their reach were especially ad mired. A crack oarsman's "recoverv," they said,twas nothing in comparison. . I jumped the high jump. In fact, if 1 stooped down suddenly. I felt obliged to jump up straight into the air several feet. . I broke the records and left the pieces far lehind me in "high" and broad jam ping, I smashed the lifting machine, and in. short did astonishing feats' in air thaY grade of work where the action of the knees comes into playl I was heralded far and wide as a new and marvelous sprinter and jumper. . And, best of all. my trousers now never bag. t They keep, their virgin form as long as they hold -together. New York Herald. . , How Ho Clot Off. ' f One night Brown came home very late and found his wife evidently prepared to administer a Caudle lecture. Instead of going to bed' lie took a seat, and rest ing his, elbows on his knees, seemed ab sorbed in grief, sighing heavily and lit tering such exclamations as "Poor Smith, poor fellow!"" ' MrsBrown, moved by curiosity, said sharply. ' "What's ', the . matter with Smithr - i "Ah," said Brown, "his wife is giving him fits just now," .. v '-' 't 'Mrs. Brown let her husband, off that time. Exchange. : ' v ' - . ' ' " Reptile IVlth ,000 Teeth. ' " ilany herbivbr'ous reptiles of the mepo zoic period had enormously long hind legs,-ot which they were able to wade far out into th,e deep water after sea weeds' and other food. These creatures were par ticularly extrabrdinaryiin point of their dental equipment, inasmuch as each of thepi had about 2,000 grinders to chew ' with, arranged in magazines of -500 each like cartridges. rlnterview in Washing tQTfStar. - r ' . The Points of a BtnrhouA. ' ' The boarhound is, like many other dogs, 6f high temper and courage, but: quiet when" its' natural game is out of it is beaten. 'It is not a dog to keep in town. English Mechanic. Not Wsrnlaf. " Your'time is up," remarked the con tractor .to the sexton, having jnat. fin ished' 'fitting the chhfcU "steeple' -with a brand new clock. American Grocer. erlV train e, t has unfljnjchi hgcpuTige.J and when attacked does not know when ijsoWN M TliKIlt TICKS. CHARACTER READING . THROUGH ' V MANY M.UES OF '' WIRES. , - I Tcleitrmph Optntani Know the J)tapoi- ! . tlona .of KiM-h Other from the Way Me- ! j Mtn Are Kent from One City to An other fetrae of the Frenkit.- '. The telegraph, operators f this.city are noted the world over as experts, j Not only are they masters of .their art as . a class, but many of them , have, de- eloped the wonderful faculty of read- ing character by the sharp ticks that j emanate from the little brass jnstrn- ' men to. For instance, any old . time ot-1 erator who ranks as. first rate can tell by the tick of the machine in . Philadelphia what munnpr of mail is at the ntriAr mil of the wire, no matter whether he be in i Chicago, New York or any other distant i city. Just : jis the bank cashiers , recog- j nize . the signatures . of old customers, ; so do telegraphers identify friends by their' "sending" or writing. : . The .fast, .jerky ..sender, .who stops every few miiintes to tighten this screw or loosen tliat spring,, or to talk with his desk, mate easily tells . the receiver that he is a nervous, irresponsible young man hje; warns the receiver to be on constant ! j watch for errors, for which he will shirk ; any respon nihility. Without having def- , ; inite reason to ' say so, the receiver will ; not hesitate to assert that such a sender ': j would lie himiself ont of any difficulty ; that might arise. i ' The feailess, manly telegrapher is the . j man who inds even, well spaced Morse ! fast . of conrse, but steady withal, and ' I sends "all the time." . This man seldom . j has "cases." He impresses the receiver I it once tliat . he i. invariably correct, j He never stops for bad copy, because he always reads a me.t-tage ahead of the one l he is sending, and returns any he cannot : decipher t the clerks before starting it. i ms sort or man uas a mend in every office. All the students and operators in way stations know him. They recognize his sending and appeal to him as would a child to an older brother. This man's character is well known to every one ! with islimii lm wnrt . wiin wuom ue works. .. SNEAKS, JOKES AKD DUDES. , The sneak is . quickly discovered and promptly "roastexL" , He sends slowly, and with an aggravating drag.. He. never swears on :the wire,, which, by the, way. la certain .to. be rewarded by dismusal if reported, although a majority of oper ators are more or less profane. While this man may not have been in the business at tli ? time of any strike, he is certain to bo culled a "scab" by all the ota of town men, with whom he has fre quent spate. Practical jokers, and., witty vmejire generally indifferent operators.but usual ly have a reputation, reaching fr;m San Franciacoto w Boston, which always se? cures' them work at gopd salaries. Tlieir. characteinsrics'ttre denoted" by the small amount of business-they handle, not withstanding the. fact' that they seem to work every minute. They make , all sorts of blunders and worry the receiver sick, depending upon their good humor and new stories to square matters. Dude operators, like their funny breth ren, are poor artists, but .they are pot fortunate in the way of acquiring frepu tation." .They ueyer need , tell ,tbe. re ceiver that they love drejss. and. think of little . else. -. Their frequent stops, and silly chatter between messages tell it for them. : After six months' working with an operator of this sort the receiver could describe him almost to a positive exact ness without ever, having seen him or beard him described. , . ' FKMAf.KS. ANrj TRAMPS... Burly, inorone and tramp operators are alike as to ability. They are all fine tel egraphers. Their characters are well defined by 'silence, and. they are distin guished one from the other by bits of in formation regarding other cities dropped from day to day by the tramps. .They tell their story when .they. correct errors discovered in the addresses, of .messages relayed frpni one city to another, and. by suggesting, some word to take. the place of one badly written by some newspaper man whose "copy" they had' "handled. Lady operators .are identified by the lightness of their sending, few. of them being , able to work , on long distance wijes. , On thifj account ."Clara" is a. fa- vorite name for light . senders of either ! sex, and their character as well as .their j sex ia revealed by their constant anxiety and ever faithfulness, as well as by their disposition to talk. Few people understand why telegra phers use so much and such a variety of slang. This . is easily accounted for. The men in New York and San Francis co communicate all the latest phrases to Chicago, from which point Galveston, Denver. New Orleans and Ogden receive the 'new talk." and the forces at Phila--delphia. Pittsburg, Richmond and Bos ton acquire their stock from New York. In this way' a bright saying heard by an operator in New . York is repeated the I '"world over the 'same day, as the cable . 1 operators are quite aa slangy as the rest t of the craft. Philadelphia Record. Where Every MTn- ! Fir. Alarm. An original, .mode of sounding a fire I alarm is adopted in a town in Colorado. J In that tegiou the revolver is poasidered j an mdispensiible article of daily wear, and' afforda the quickest ,meana of. an nouncing U. the. rest . pf .the. cbnunxmity the impending: danger. Whenever a fire is discovered a fupidand promiscous dis charge of this firearm'- .spreads' the news through the towiij This method,' though crude, is found to work' fairly well, ', ; It," has, however, one drawback in that the. nre'id'epartniei)tr-ase.lf as the prj,bliC4 is often uncertain whether, fife, or a fight is in progress, -and whatever- the troth may turn out to be somebody is snreto be disappointed. Louisville . Courier Journal. ' - ' .' . .; - . .1. u..'. i ... . .,.' Tk Dew Girl. ) a,,.' Ethel I arn, going tor rnarry for kv, . Maud-jCertainly, dear; but what do yon expect ybuV prospective' husband to marry for?' You are not rich. Mnnsey' Weekly. -P. a SIHPES & : KIIIERSIY, j - WllOieSale JBtt Mil DEALERS IX- Fine Imported, Key West and Domestic PAINT Sow is the time to paint your house d if yon . wish to get the. bwt quality and a li ne color use the - - , , . . ' . . . . ! Sherwhi, Williams Go.'s Paint ' For those wishing to see the qnality and -color of the above paint we call their attention to the residence of S. L. Brooks, Judge Bennett, Smith French a nd others P'""1 ,yal Kreft. Snipes & Kinersly are agents for the above paint for The Dalles. Or. : - IR. K. C West's Nbbvk and Kkaik Tbbat M BNT. a fniHranteed pHtie for Hysteria, llzzl nesH, i'onvulsioiiH, Fits, Nervous Keitnilgia, Headache, Xervoug Prontratlou ciinaed by the uhe of alcohol or tobacco, WakefulneHS, Mental Ie presHion, Hofteuinn the Brain, reHulHiiK in in sanity and leading to misery, decay and death. Premature Old Age, Harreniiesn, 1js of Power in ffthpr Ill volnntjtrv Ijiwpm tit 3tifrmfit orrhoea caused by over exertion of tlie brain, nelf- abuse or over liidulReuoe. Each box contains .,,11,,th'iimiirini ti ni . tw, k.v for fb.UO, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price. WK GrARASlEE six boxes ns for six boxes, accompiiiiied by J5.00, 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 i ; B1AREI,E : HOUGHTON, Prescription Druggist, 175 Second St. . The Dalles, Or. i. d. iMkriEM, -DEALER IN- . SCHOOL BOOKS, ST A TIONERY, ORGANS, PIANOS, ' ' v WATCHES, ; JEWELRY. Cor. Third and Washington Sts. (J. E. BJArD X-do., Real Estate, and Loan AGENCY. Opera House l3loek,3d St. HURRAH ! . .' - FOR it yon get Colic, Cramp, JJiarrnoea or the Cholera Morbus' the 8. B. Pain Cure is a sure cure. r 1 - ' - - - The 4th of July ! If , you need the l Blood- and Liver cleansed yon .will find the 8. B. Head ache and Liver .Cure a perfect remedy. i For sale by all dryggiHts. ,. GhasJ Stubling- . raorairroB oubk ': 1 '."- , : : ! - , , - WHOLKSALE AND RETAIL - Liiquor Dealer MILWAUKEE EEEH ON DRAUGHT. Health is Wealth ! r.j . mmmm M Dalles Gltdiiiisle 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 ive it a fair trial, and 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 tor the moderate sum of fifty cents a month. will be to advertise the resources of t)ie city, and adjacent country, to assist in developing pur 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 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 eierht olumn pages, and to make it the equal of the best. . Ask your Postmaster for a copy, or address. Office, N. W. Cor. Washington and Second Sts. THE The . Gate City, of the Inland Empire , is situated at the head of navigation on the -Middle Columbia, and is a thriving, prosperous cityi - 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 gracing country along the eastern slopd of -the the Cascades furnishes pasture for thousands of sheep, the wool from which' finds market here,. The Dalles is the largest original, wppl shippings point in .America, about 5,000,000 pounds being shipped last year. - . V , , ,ITS PRODUCTS. ; JThe salmoii fisheries jare the; finest on the Columbia, -yielding this year a revenue of $1,500,00,0 which can and will be more than doubled in the near future, f.B1The;product;sof the, beautiful Klickital valley find -market here, and the country, south aiid east ; has this year filled the 'warehouses, and 11 aail&ble storage' places to dverbwingf' with heir .products. ite! xiiS'cSrlot'its size dii ;thecoasand' its' money is scattered over and; iVv-P-si morp .farpi tc6uul3y than is tributary to any other city in .Eastern Oreson-:.J:,.-'y Its situation is' unsurpassed! ti Its rclimatOi -delight- full Its possibilities incalbulable! Its resources uil limited! And on these corner stones she stands. Daily Obieets that vour criticisni we shall endeavor ",1j"