XV Baptizing m Chinese Baby. There is a pretty baby in Chinatown who enjoys the proud distinction of hav ing been baptized in a purplo velvet brocaded dress imported . from Paris. Her name is Sney Mey Lan. The bap tismal name, Sney Mey, means crystal. She is the daughter of Tom Yin Kim Lan. a well known dealer in Chinese and Japanese curios. ; The little one is ten months old... Her handsome costume, although "of" expensive European ma terial, was made up in the Chinese con volitional style for babies, that is, with loose blouse and wide trousers. Little Sney Mey was baptized on Sun day in the Chinese Methodist mission by the Rev. F. J. Masters, pastor of the church of which Suey Mey's parents are members. 'She has one sister, eight years old, who was baptized somo time ago. The number of Chinese babies who have been christened in a style similar to white babies is surprisingly large. Chinese mothers who have adopted the -Christian faith carry their babies to ifhurch as early as possible, and Chinese parents often take their children with them to the communion table just as booh as the little ones are old enough to be taught. They are beautifully dressed, often in rich silks, and 'the infant class in the Chinese Sunday school locks liter ally like a convention of oriental dolls in all the colors of the rainbow. San Francisco Chronicle. Narrow find Broad Gavacea. How many people remember the fa mous "battle of the gauges?" The vic tory of what was once known as the "narrow 'gauge." but is how the stand ard or national gauge, since narrower . ones are not unknown, is -so absolute that this is the last year of the existence of Brunei's measurement for the Great Western Railway company's permanent way. For many years on that line the broad gauge has been disappearing, and. as announced la our report of 'the com pany's half yearly meeting, the change is to be complete by the 20th of May next. The disappearing gauge, origi nally adopted on the -Great Western railway on Brunei's plans, is 7 feet, The common gauge now roughly called the 4-foot way, is really 4 ft. 8 in. That is the difference between the rails, the fractional measurement 'being, we believe, explained by the fact that origi nally tbe width of the rails together made apaa additional 3J inches, and gave a wheel track of exactly 5 feet to suit the earlier locomotives and trains. The heads of rails are now much broader, varying ou the different lines from 2$ to 21 inches, or together from 5 to 5 inches. London .News. A Bf an -of Narva, A pretty exhibition was given by the students of Springfield Medical college, under the avtwpicee of the Young Men's Christian association. - It was the resus citation of a man who had been smoth ered by aaoke. In a large hall had been erected a wooden-structure, which was filled with Soman candles, firecrackers and other combustibles. In the midst of all these the unfortunate had ' been placed for -suffocation, and the building fired. - , ' --; v. Shortly afterward the victim of the experiment was taken from the house of smoke ia a thoroughly unconscious con dition, fie was put through a process of pumping and rubbing, and in the course f thirty-minutes was again walk ing around the hall This Mr. Taylor thinks the -quickest process he has ever seen for bringing to life a person who has been smothered or one who was suf focated from smoke. Richmond . Dis patch. A- Sen Use. for Tetooaoa. The telephone is about to have a new application, namely, that of foretelling storms. A -new discovery has been made as to one of the properties of tibia means of transmitting sound. By placing two iron bars at seven or - eight meters dis-' ' taace from each other, and then putting them jn communication op one. aide by a copper Wireioovered with rubber, and on the other side with a telephone, a storm can, it is said, be predicted at least twelve hours ahead through a dead sound beard in the receiver. y. .. ' According as the storm advances (ha sound resembles the beating of hailstones against the window. Every flash, of lightning, and, of course, every clap of maaaac tan aooompanies tbs storm pro duces a shock similar to that of stone east between the diaphragm and the in strument. Cincinnati Commercial ;.Oa xette. ' - . -' . ";; : :SincfWr Colueldanc. . Quite a singular coincidence occurred a few days since.. Some, tea years ago while at mdzk sin. a ;.Now Jersey mine haft. George Smith fell and found him self confined maxwell 125 feet ifrom the surface of the ground. He was finally rescued froia bis nncomfortahle poaition - by a -roaj4-which - was thravra Aidnv. While relating the circumstance the other day to hia room mate, he vwaa not a little surprised to learn that this res ewer of ten Mars ago; was nosve other than bis present ; conpanlon.'-T-eeverly ; r ' r 'j '. i'J iJ ' J ... ' .1 r .-J -i it 'i- a V J. Parker, t Liuooin Creekv tfruh killed fourteen bear eleven full grown jind three cubs ia one week's hunting at ear his home two weeks ago. He .bagged : five.: the first, day that he . was .oat. Bears are exceedingly plentiful in that section ' of the -state, and another .hunter killed twelve bears there a monti) rseago. Mr; Parker bold the record ' -A&wiss engineer, backed by . the Swiss government, is just now seriously con templating the construction of an under ground railway , up Mount JuDgfrau to its sumnut. ; It, will be completed, early in ISJla u everything goes well. : ; . i; I -Air-i , r- ' it r. i A dog, iear Hannibal, Mo. was bitten a few days ago by a copperhead snake. and was cured by, ammonia, .given in- temaljy, and a mixture of ammonia and carbolic soap applied to the wound. It is not generally known that the new ynobting .cap iisftfR-' adaptation of the. German military cap, made famflir in many portraits of Stanley. Bis Prices for Literary "Work. - It is announced that Mark Twain has sold .the new novel which he has about completed for $12,000, and this includes only the serial rights, and it is also an" nounced that he is to be paid $1,200 apiece for a number of letters ' from Europe, With the exception of the "Innocents Abroad" and possibly "Roughing It," no one of Mark Twain's novels has brought him the sum of $12,000. The "Gilded Age" yielded him nearly $75,000, but that was because it was dramatized and played by John T. Raymond.- : He told me only a few weeks before he sailed for Europe, that leaving the "Innocents Abroad" out of the consideration, his other books iu this country have brought him only a fair return, and that his largest profits had been" as a publisher and as a maker of plays for the stage. It is also announced that Mr. Howells has sold the lights to a new novel for serial publication for $10,000. That is more money than Mr. Howells has re ceived for any of his stories. Were it not for the serial publication of .his stories in the magazines he would not be able to support himself with his pen. Even the most popular of his recent novels brought him royalties of less than $1,200 for the sale of it in book form. The largest sum ever paid for serial pub lication of a novel was $15,000, which the Bonners paid or are to pay Mrs. Burnett for a new novel,, and even her "Little Lord Fauntleroy" in book form did not bring her any such sum as that. New York Cor. Philadelphia Press. The Urvp Test for Car Wheels. The Pennsylvania Railroad company has begun, to put its cast iron car wheels to a very severe test. For each fifty wheels which have been shipped or are ready to ship, one wheel shall be taken at random by the railroad company's in spector either at the railroad company's shops or at the wheel manufacturer's, as the case may be and subjected to the following test: The wheel shall be placed flange downward on an anvil block weighing 1,700 pounds, set on rubble ma sonry two feet deep and having three supports not more than five inches wide for the wheel to rest upon. It shall be struck centrally on the hub by a weight of 140 pounds, falling from a height of twelve feet. Should the wheel break in two or more pieces after eight blows or less the fifty wheels represented by it will be reject ed: if, however, the wheels stand eight blows without breaking in two or more pieces the fifty wheels will be accepted. The wheel for test to be furnished by the manufacturer in addition to the fifty wheels ordered. Pittsburg Dispatch. ' Chased by a Bear. a xxazeiton man, Williams oy name. will be more careful in the future what he strikes at with his whip when in the woods. The other day while riding horseback along a mountain road he saw in the bushes close at hand what he took to be a black dog.. As be passed he struck it a blow and the next moment he was horrified te discover that it was a bear. Bruin immediately started in pursuit. ' and although he . lashed his horse the steep hill was against him, and the bear soon was close-enough to make a jump and fasten iiis claws in the back of the buggy, v -' - Williams gave him a push that com pelled him to drop to the ground, but before he reached the top of the hill the bear . succeeded in getting a foothold again, only to be again dislodged. When the summit of the mountain was reached and Williams' horse had level ground before him Bruin waslef t behind. Phil adelphia Ledger..., i Prince SiglsmoiMrls Sarcophagus. A small, sarcophagus has just been added to those in the chapel at Potts dam, where the Emperor Frederick and his iwo little sons are boried. It is that of Prince Sigismund, for which the Em press Frederick herself has drawn the design. ' : The I sarcophagus, r inside of which the little purple Tlvet coffin- has been placed, is of white marble, and by its side the figure of the mother, also in marble, is sitting with ibsr dead child in her isms.' 1,-t - A medallion portrait. of Prince Sigis . mund, lying on a crahion, has its place on the lid of the saroopbagus, the front f wbich bears the inscription: i'Here rests - in God, Frank iFxiedrich igis mund. Prince of Prussia, the beloved child of Crown Prince iFriedrich WH-. helm and of- the Crown (Princess Victo ria. Bonn Sept. 15, 1964; died June 18, 186$. 'Blessed are the (pure in. heart, for they shall see God.' raU Mall Ga me tte. - - ' ' -- .- ' 1A. Hon STaeanmart The fiahexsmen of Kittezy were sur prised, on going out to their weirs the other ? Jnoroiog, to fiiid t.di occupied by a injrse ;.tuackeTel edghing ; 1,500 pound, ' espeeially'as T the tm-p had been shut .close. The eurmise is that in his : wanderings . be. was at tracted to 4 the -weirs by tiie snackerel in it, and, finding no way of ingress, on the high i tide jusnped over the netting. The point. n -rtereapture bun without tearing jthe seine er nettings srliich was finally accomplished, after a four' Jiours' bard straggle, byrthe aid of a harpoon. "He was towed out to sea and set adrift Exchange.:.- , '( t- )J it- ii i (!.:: ) ' '; CI i ' John G. Whittier as so modest that his niece, who is preparing a biography of him, has found it .ery difficult to ob tain any Aid from him in her work. - Hit strength is gradually failing, and he is forced to give np the long walks which he formerly took. ; . . Balzac's house and the grounds about it in Paris have been purchased by the .Baroness Rothschild, who intends to pull down the house and add the grounds to those already surrounding her fine resi dence on the Rue .Berry er. The new city hall of Philadelphia will be the tallest building on the continent, excepting only the Washington monu menti f Ji will be two inches more than 547 feet in height, and will cover an area of four and a half acres. A Salt Against Ike Brooklyn Bridge. In a short time the 'most important damage suit that has ever been brought against the Brooklyn" bridge will be tried. It is for $1,000,000. and will in volve some ' nice " points of . law.J 7 A Franco-American inventor named Du Bois is bringing the suit, ; He claims that in sinking the caissons of the bridge certain patents belonging to him were, infringed upon, and that without the use of his inventions 'the-bridge could not have been successfully built. - So iui-' portant does District Attorney Clarke consider the case, and of such - grave moment to the interests of the two cit ies, that at his request the services of a well known patent lawyer have been secured as counsel, and he has al ready received from the bridge $1,000 as a retaining fee. ' . There is an interesting story told of Bridge Secretary Henry Beam in con nection with the sinking of these cais-i sons.' He ays . that it was at first in tended by the bridge engineers to sink a regular coffer dam, and on this place the big piles that snpport the bridge struc ture, but that William C. Kingsley op posed this plan, giving as his reasons for so. doing that no ordinary coffer dam would hold in the fierce currents of -the East river. Then it was that the sink--, ing of the aissons was decided upon. In other words, they used a coffer dasnr not in the regular fashion, but upside down. And now the wooden box rests on a bed of rock forty feet below the bottom of the river. Mr. Beam says that Mr. Kingsley would have been the last man in the world to have allowed the invention of another man to be used in the con struction of the bridge without paying him for it, and that if Du Bois' patents were infringed upon it was by accident and because the bridge engineers did riot know that that style of coffer dam had been patented.- Brooklyn Eagle. Haraau Discontent. A rich man of Boston has one son. He led him about, he instructed him, he kept him as the apple of his eye. The son became of age this summer: The father has no other occupation save that of nursing his income, and as he is a man of sense- and. liberal views he told his son that he must not stand idle, yet left to him the choice of business or pro fession. At the same time he wrote pri vately to twenty-four friends and ac quaintances asking their ' advice in the matter. The twenty-four were, promi nent each in his own calling.. , ., ' i ; . And each replied in turn, -complaining of his business and advising the father to seek elsewhere for the future prosperity of the young man. The law was crowd ed, journalism brought but little money, banking was an uncertain prop, and "so on throughout , the catalogue. The fa-; ther is still undecided, the boy is idle; and all. because no one of the; twenty four is contented with his lot, while he admires the fortunes of other men. Bos ton Post. :: .-..J-;- Xew Lunar Crater. A careful examination of a i photo graphic negative of the moon " recently obtained .. by means of the Lick -telescope revealed the picture of a most important lunar crater whose existence had never been " suspected previously., The explanation lies in the fact that the human eye ilfemot so constituted, that steady gazing will bring out the minuter details of the object looked at; on, .the contrary, the eye grows tired and details are lost.. Not so the photographic plate, however; the effect of a constant pour ing in of rays of light into the camera has a cumulative effect. The longer the exposure under suitable circumstances, the greater the display of detail in the result . So in this case, the "photographic eye of science" takes cognizance of a crater on the moon's surface that has never been, and in all probability never will be, seen by human eyes. New York Recorder. Over Three Tears In a Mattress. In July, 1888, Captain Joseph Lowe, of York, filled his bed with grass, Which he had cut for that purpose.- Soon after Mrs. Lowe thought she felt something moving under her side, of the. bed, but the captain told her it was imagination. Captain Lowe was afterward sick and laid, upon that side of the bed, when he felt the same motion. ' " In April,' -1889, he died, but not until Tuesday of last week was the bed opened and emptied, when out. came a, Uye healthy, but ; terrible hungry turtle. : He was- ravenous, and would snap at anything offered him, it is said. The straw or. hay for two feet across was "chewed very .fine." York (Me.) Conrant.:. . : - 'i ... ..?.'-;.; ..... ..': : .-r. ' A Kaw Instrument. . A scientific instrument has been gotten np by Professor Bigelow which is called the aurora' inclinometer. ' By extensive researches he has found that the same law which underlies the working of elec tricity and magnetism is operating on the sun. and that sunlight is a magnetic field in which the magnetized earth i ro tates as does the armature of a dynamo. The instrument will- be sent to AlttaVa where it will be used in the study of the aurora, as it is there seen in tbs best con ditions. New York Times. . .:.A Traveled Baby. , There was in this city recently oh. a visit a baby only about nine months old which has seen more traveling than commonly falls to the lot -of most older people. . .it was . born near Chicago and has since been to the City of Mexico, thence to Massachusetts, then to Port land, Me., and return, and is now living in Ma'ynard. At that ; rate most Of the world will be. familiar ground -in fifty years. Marlboro Enterprise. 'J . ' i: ' Hill Paid After. Many V A young man in the employ of . Emer son Hall over a quarter of a century ago contracted a little bill with Dr. H. C Newell. It slipped his mind at the. time and he always thought : it paid nntil a few days ago. when he accidentally came across a bill . from the doctor dated twenty-six years ago. He at once paid it. ; Such honesty is indeed worth notic ing. St. Johusbury VVt.) Caledonian.' No bath should be taken while the pa tient is weary from labor or excitement. Rest is then indicated. But if the tired feeling is due to' chronic or long con tinued conditions, the bath is not there by con traindicated, . ; ; . . fl. K Wells, of Imlay City, Mich., J irho enlisted -in a Michigan regiment and was captured during the war, has aot Bhaved since he left Andersonville prison. ' His beard is now 5 feet 9 incites in length. Jules Verne has a son, Michsi, who ia developing a talent for wri&ng stories very much in his father's "highly imag inative style. 'omen, ' The comi-.iou ufilictio-os of women arc Exk-heo.ii-nclic, ii:0ig-:tiou a::d iu.-rvo;:s troubles. Tlioy arUu l.irscly from f-tcmii-jU disorde. As Joy'a Vccstablo Farsaiaril!a Is tho ouljr towel reiju lati:?s litvparatloj, yoa con sco why it ia mora effeciivo llitui any other Eoraaparilla in those troubles. It is dally relieving hundreds.' The a:-tio:i i:t mild, direct and effectived. We have scores of letters from grateful women. Wo refer to a few: . Xervous debility, lira. J. Barron, 142 .Tib. t, S. F. Nervons debility, Mrs. Fred. Loy; 327 Ellis St., S.F. General debility, Mrs. Belden, 610 Mason fit, S.F, Nervous debility, Mrs. J. Lamphere, 735 Turk St, Nervons Oebility, Miss R. XU, S. F. r.oscnblura. 232 17th Stomneli troubles, Mrs. It. L. Wbeaton, 701 Post 'tit.fS.I'.' Bick headaches, Mrs. M. B. Price, 16 Prospect Pluce, S. F. Sick headaches, Mrs. M. Fowler, 827 Ellis St,S.F. Indigestion. Mrs. C. D. Stuart, J221- Mission 8U, Coustipation, Mrs. C. Melvin, 126 Kearny St, S.F. JOil'Q Yege!table y U y Sarsaparilla - Most modern, most effective, largest bottle. Eame price, fl.00 or 6 for 15.00. For Sale by SNIPES &. KINERSLY. THE DALIES. OREGON. . Cleveland, Wash., ) ' June 19th, 1891.) S. B. Medicine Co., ' ' - ' Gentlemen Your kind favor received, and in reply would say that I am more than pleased with the terms offered me on the last shipment of your medicines. There is nothing like them ever intro duced In this country, especially for La grippe and kindred complaints. I have had no complaints: so far,-and everyone is ready with a "word of praise for their virtues. Yours, etc.; ; ' r '" ''("-- M, JFi H ACKLET. i . is Wealth ! - SnAif. ! Da. E, C. Wbst'b Kikvk s Bkajic Tbsai kkkt, a guaranteed specific for Hysteriir r2zi ness, Couvuliioms, ' Fits, Nervons XeuraVgia, 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, sell abuse or over, indulgence.' -Each box-contains one month's treatment. . 11.00 a box, or six boxes for f5.00, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price. WE GUARANTEE BIX BOXES " To cure any case." With each order received b us for six boxes, accompanied by 15.00, w 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 BLAKILBY HOUGHTON, V r Prescription DrsffUU, 175 ftaeond St. : The Dallas. Or.' A Revelation. . bright blulsh-greea color of tb ordinary teat exposed in ths window Is sot the nat- ral color, rrnpleaaaatsa the faet xsay be, it isjaeTertheless:' artificial; ' jainorai ; coloring : matter being: ased : for, this:. i .- pupne iiw nuni M two. iSsa-.''ifcld.i it lul mlrnilMtlM tea bright, sbiny green, bmt also xraiits the -aa of " offotor? and worthaM tear, which. one under 'tb' Teenr cloak, ' ar readily: worked off as s good quality ol Ua. An etniaeat ' authority writes on this sub- eot: TbamaniiHilatioBof poor team.to girft : tbaot sissr appearanca, is carried a cxtaa- sivsly.iMJieeiLess, being in . thia f ountry, ' aapaetaliy. popalar, era produced , to meat tha - demand hy coloring cheaper .Week, kinds bj; glaaing or facing witsrprnssian blae, tumeric,, gypsum, and indigo. TMw meUuti it se pr roJ tKat ry tittle oenyiint untvlefed gre tea . offered for ai." :ir ,T ' ; U was the knowledga of this condition of ; - aflkira teat prompted tha placing of Bwf ; Tea. before the pablie. . It la absolutely par ' and, without, .colop. . pid yoa eret see .any i genuine ajocolored Japan tea? , Ask yoor grocer open a paekagcAf Beech's, and yea ! will, see it,; and: probably for the very first ' . time. , It win be found in color to fee just be- ; : tweau the artificial green tea. that, you have ' -. been accustomed to and the black teas. . It draws a delightful canary color, and ia so ' fragrant that it will be a revelation to tea- - drinkers. . its purity makes it also more economical than the artificial teas, for les ; of it is required per cup. 'Sold only in pound . packages bearing this trade-mark: S. B i.'JSaavCli! . " IM-' :u- P- ' - fHianood.; ' - If your grocer does not hare it, he will gel it for you, FxtceeOsper poand. Fersaleal . - THE DALLES, ORFGON. THE DflliliES CHRONICLE is here and has come, to stay. It hopes to wm its way to public lavor by ener gy, industry and merit: ami to thi cm we ask that you give it a fair trial, and Z I? j a t i i . . li saiisnea. witn its support. will be to advertise th a The adjacent country, to assist in developing onr lndUgtriGS. "in AVtonr1irio0'nr1 nnam'nn. -i lor our trade, m securing an open river, and in helping THE DALLES to take her proper position as the . . . v Its Obi will be to advertise the resources of the 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. 5 TnTIT TISl.troci nt citt nnlTimTC .- . . ttiiu wiii oe aeiiverea in the city, or sent by mail for the moderate sum of flftv cents a month. . - ; JUSt ; We -wlllendeavcr to give all the local news, and we ask that your criticism of out object and course be formed from the contents of the paper, and not from rash assertions of outside parties. THE WEEKLY, sent to anv. address far iJftl Fin contain from four, to six Baxajjt rieiiueavor . mane it tne equal of the best. Ask your Postmaster for a copy, or address. Office, N. .W. Cor. Washington and Second. Sts Dry IGoods and Clothing at Your Own Price, The entire stock of N. Harris; consisting of General- Drv , Looas, Uiptnjng, tfoots i . 7 Gents'1 -Furnishing Auction to the " r- -: ' - esh Salesheld Vwfwy jnighi '" '-':-TECE IDALLES, OREOON. ' Best Dollar a Day House on the Coast! FirstrCIass1. Meals, 25 Cents. First Class Hotel in Every. Respect. ! . - ' " None but the Best of White Help Employed. :..;;.-",.,.,T.;T. j(4icfciblas, Pt6p. SITUATED AT THE Destined to be the Best Manufacturing Center in . the Inland JEm pi re. . , " ' For Further Information Call at the Office of . Iflfepstate Mestment Go., 0. MICR, THE BAUS. 72 J51iMr3l3r.;?)iirUKJ course a generous Daily eets T. 111 i - "V vwvi, win uo isbucu every eight column pages, and we I and Shoes, Hats, Caps; and Goods .wilk be sold at highest bidder for in .hand. V . ieommeneing at 7 p'eloek. Washington) HEAD OF NAVIGATION. Best Selling Property of the Season in the North west. : , .