Another of tbe Wu'i Strange Stories. The suit of Joseph Troop brings out c most remarkable story. Thir ty-one years ago Troop was married to ilim Elizabeth Carter in Ohio. Four weeks after the wedding Joseph weut to the front as a soldier. He fought for four years, and finally was hit by a Confederate bullet and was left for dead on the field. News of his supposed death reached his Ohio j home. t ' j Nevertheless, he ' recovered after sev-1 eral months' suffering in a hospital, and In 1866 he returned to Ohio to claim his bride. But she had left and could not be found. He hnnted for her for months . and years, and finally heard that she was de;id. Meanwhile ho had met another charming young lady and the two were finally married. For twenty-threo years they have lived together, and in addition to accumulating a handsome fortune they have been blessed with several sons and daughters, one now of age. A week ago, while at the state reunion of soldiers at Grand island. Troop was introduced to a widow by the saino name. A few minutes conversati- ' '-levelled the fact that the grayiiair: y was his bride of over thirty years ..y. The old soldier was dumfounded, and hurried to liis Lincoln home to bear the tidings to the mother of his children. He assured her that nothing blit death could part her from him, and 6ent word to his long lost wife that he would have to 6ue for a divorce from her. Cor, St. . Louis Republic. SuvmI from Suicide bjr His Ij;. Au intelligent pet dog owned by Louis Schmidt, of Camden, has prevented him from committing suicide. Schmidt is just recovering from a seri ous, attack of typhoid fever, which left him very nervous and subject to fits of melancholia. He was seized with one of these siells Monday night, and while his wife was asleep he stole to the kitchen. . Here he procured a rope and making a noose tied one end to an iron hook in the walL Then procuring a chair he adjusted the rope, and kicking away the chair swung himself off, as he thought, into eternity. But, unknown to Schmidt, his faithful dog had followed him, and instinctively knowing something was wrong the intelligent animal went back to the bedroom whining pitifully. Final ly he awoke Mrs. Schmidt by tugging at the bed -clothing and rubbing his cold nose iu her face, and she followed the dog down stairs as soon as she missed her husband. .. , There he found him hanging from the hook. She managed to cut him down in time to save his life. Philadel phia Times. Slta Had " Trust In ltauUn. Over $ 7,000 iu greenbacks has been found hidden among a lot of rubbish in the trunk of an eccentric widow, who pent her summer in a cottage near Stoniugtou, Conn., and who died re cently. Always on leaving Stonington at the end of the season she left the. trunk with a friend, telling him that it ' contained nothing of account, but that she didn't care to liave burglars rum maging through it, which would be the case if she were to allow it to remain in her cottage. After her last visit the trunk was stowed away iu the garret of the friend, and he thought nothing more of it until sometime after her death. His mind then happened to run on the old box and he opened it, finding the money. It is supposed that she accumulated it from allowances made her every now and then by relatives. Philadelphia "Ledger. " Wonderful Pigs. Joseph Stevens, an Oxford fanner, has a bow and four well grown pigs, which run in an orchard where, the limbs of the trees are quite low and laden with apples. The old.- ow springs, up and catche u limb and shakes it, thuB bring ing down the apples, which she and her family quickly devour. After getting in this way all she can reach, one rig climbs on the mother's back and reaches a higher limb, which she shakes vigor ously, bringing down a fresh enpply of fruit. Worcester Gazette. . , Valuable llrr. The Atreets of Helena, Mob., are not exactly paved with gold, nor can one pick np a livelihood in nuggets from the roadway, but cellar digging is apt to un cover enough gold to pay for the labor, and sometimes quite a part of the cost of the house. In digging the founda tions of a business block there tlie inter ested parties are faking out $100 per day in pay dirt, and do not eeem to think it a very remarkable find Transcrii. either. Boston yiKifjimliilnl Objection. 1 uotioe by the papers," said McCor- kle to u chance acquaintance in the street car, "that one man has saved four teen lives this past summer in. the surf at Atlantic City." "Yea, and it does seem as if people - ought to mind their own business." "Are you alluding to me'f "No, to the life savers. You see, I am an undertaker." New York Epoch. A rare reptile, a white rattlesnake, was exhibited at a fair in Clarion coun ty, together, it is said, with a photo graph of the snake's eye, in which can . be distinctly seen the likeness of a far mer who narrowly escaped death from the reptile. A new type of .drawbridge is being1 built in Chicago to. span the Chicago river. By a folding instead of a swing ing process no central pier is needed, and . greatly increased facilities for navigating the narroW river are obtained. Western farmers are now' urging the trial of a modification of the rain pro ducing system to see if mists cannot be formed at times which will reduce the radiation of heat from the earth and thus save the crops from frost. Professor Chaplin, the new chancellor of Washington university, is professor of civil engineering at Harvard. He is forty-three years old, a native of Maine, and a graduate of West Point ABOUT MOTHER GOOSE. THE AUTHOR OF THE OLD RHYMES STILL A MATTER OF DOUBT. One Authority Places Her in Bovton, bat Documentary Evidence Goes, to Show That Gol.lniuith Wrote the Jingles for Children A Bit pr History. ,' T The question. Who was "Mother Goose?" arises periodically in various journalistic query departments, and in recent years has generally been answered in one way. In fact, the tradition of this venerable character's Boston origin is now so ingrained, as it were, into cur rent belief that very few dispute it. The 6tory is that Mrs. Elizabeth Goose, widow of one Isaac Goose (or Vergoose), was the mother-in-law of Mr. Thomas Fleet, a printer in the early part of the Eighteenth century in Boston. She seemed to have been a troublesome mother-inLlaw, too, for her' multiplied improvised songs to her little grandson greatly annoyed the printer. Fleet. He, however, found his account and revenge by finally collecting them and making the book known as "Mother Goose's Mel odies." This accords substantially with the reply the New York Ledger gives as to the authorship of the Mother Goose jingles. . But it is probably one of the cherished myths, flattering as it is to local pride, when, like that of the William Tell leg end and many others equally dear, the solid verdict of history does not, in my opinion, serve to sustain. There" never was, I think, any just foundation for it. While it is possible that Mr. Fleet, of ancient Boston fame, may have issued a "Mother Goose" book, no copy of such an issue can be found, nor can its former existence be proved. If he did print such a book he merely reprinted one that was imported in his time. CONCLUSIVE EVIDENCE. According to the best accounts that we have on this subject the first look bearing the Mother Goose name was by Perrault, a French author. This was titled, "Contes du Terns Pasee de Ma Mere L'Oye." The first English trans lation of this was by Robert Samber. Very soon, as Mr. Welsh's catalogue shows, it appeared in Mr. Newbury's list of publications in London. He says the seventh edition was printed May 16, 1 1777. Thomas Carman entered for copy right ."Mother Goose's Melody or Son nets for the Cradle," and was brought out in Worcester, Mass., by Isaac Thorn- j as. Carman was Newbury's stepson, : who formed a copartnership as his sue- j cessor iu business with Francis New- j bury, the original Newbury's nephew, j It was from Mr. Newbury's efforts, ! therefore, that "Mother Goose" got its j circulation in English the Newbury I once celebrated story of "Goody Two ; Shoes. " Both these books appeared with out recognized authorship; but there is .Very strong evidence ' for believing that the "Goody Two Shoes" was written by no less a personage than Oliver Gold smith. The facts supporting this as sumption it would take too much space to relate here, but they seem, in addition to internal evidence, to make out a very plausible cue?.. .-It is belieyod also by Mr. William IL Whitmore,- - a' noted Boston historical scholar, that Mr. Goldsmith had a hand in the "Mother Goose" book likewise. The stories of this fable, like Topsy, have grown in number from time to time, . and some of those from the Newbury press were no doubt additions, and pos sibly additions from Goldsmith's own muse. A curious piece of evidence on this point is furnished by Mr. Whit more, who saysr "Forster, in liis 'famous 'Life of Goldsmith,' gives proof that Goldsmith was very fond of the chil dren and was familiar with nursery rhymes and games. He writes that Mrs. Hawkins says, '1 little thought what 1 should have to boast when Goldsmith told me to play Jack and Jill by two pieces of paper on his fingers.' " INTERESTING HISTORY. ' Air. . Whitmore also adds the following acrap of history: Jan.. 29, 1763 Goldsmith's play of 'The Good Natured Man' was produced. He went to dine with his friends after it Nay, to impress his friends still more forcibly with an idea of his magnanim ity he even sung his favorite song, 'An Old Woman Tossed in a Blanket Seven teen Times as High as the Moon,' and was altogether very noisy and loud. Our readers will find this identical 'favorite 'song in the preface to 'Mother Goose's Melody,' page 7, dragged in without any excuse, but evidently because it was fa miliar to thewriter." Mr. Whitmore has lately brought out j an edition of the Newbury "Mother Goose," to which he adds twenty-eight pages of historical and biographical notes. He has undoubtedly settled the whole history of this vexed question of authorship so far as it can now be settled, and with no little pains to himself, and has certainly exploded the alleged Boston origin of "Mistress Goose." Forty years ago "Mother Goose" was much more current than it has been of recent years; but within ten years past a variety of editions have been on the mar ket some full and padded with later rhymes and a few containing only those Ithat are the oldest and best known.' To those who are greatly interested in that form of literature, "Halliwell's English Nursery Rhymes," edited with minute notes, as becomes a great Shakespearean Commentator,' is a book that will richly repay perusal. It seems to contain the i 'whole of "Mother Goose," and nearlv ' imitators, but it lacks the amusing and two k,"e"" ha.1 recently d,i from what almost necessary adjunct of pictorial 8edh ? t-fw and . illustration.-New York Home Journal. na fluently fassed them. Dr. ! Coleman does not doubt that the dipb Advice to College students. j theria was contracted from therm. Dr. "Take care of your health,'' President J- Lewis Smith in Babyhood. .. m- Patton tejls the Princeton boys. "You may not need binomial theorems, but yon ! will peed your digestion every day. l wish I had thought of my health. A frequently recurring headache, a bad ap-; .petite and sleeplessness are solemn warn- ; ings that you must heed. Dyspepaa is' not a thinir to make fun of." TtfE. ELDER BOOTH AND THE PiATE. How the Tragedian Saved His Money and His Life and Made a Friend. One night in Louisville a number of people called on Edwin Booth, among them ' a doctor of local celebrity, who wanted to place in his hands a valuable relic that had once belonged to the elder Booth. . He was shown upstairs by a little darky, who .. carried something wrapped up in a newspaper. It proved to be a wen preserved skull, thoroughly cleaned and the parts joined by springs and hooks. . r - The doctor told us this story of the bkull, which proved romantic and inter esting: Many years before Ted's visit the elder Booth had played an engagement in Natchez. After the closing perform ance he was taken down to the river with his trunk to wait for the upcoming steamboat. He found at the saloon at the wharf it rough looking , set of men who by their talk he decided were thieves and cutthroats. . - . Booth had $ 1,000 in his muey belt, and from motives of policy he invited the ruffians to take several drinks, which only served to increase their peculiar looks in his direction. There was no help near and escape was out of the question he would probably have been followed and murdered. Selecting the roughest and toughest man'in the crowd, old Booth called him outside to say a few words. "Look here," said he. "my name is Booth; I'm an actor: you may have heard of me. I've a thousand dollars here in a belt and I'm afraid of being robbed. I want you to take it and keep it safe for me until the boat comes along." . The fellow looked earnestly at the" old man, and then reached out for the belt. Booth never expected to see a dollar of the money again; lint was glad to insure i his personal safety. He slept on a table j iu the saloon, and was awakened early j by the custodian of his treasure. ' ' j "Get up." said he; "here's your money. The boat's in sight." Booth" was thoroughly surprised, but of course delighted. "Wliafs. your name?" he asked; "1 always like to remember an honest man's name." The fellow hes itated, lowered his voice and answered: "It's Morrill; folks call me the chief of the. river pirates. You trnsted me and I appreciated the trust." ' A year later Morrill was sentenced to the penitentiary for life. When Booth visited Natchez again he visited the prison and took Morrill some money and delicacies. At the last of his visits he found the man dying of consumption. "Booth," said he, "I've not long to live; i should die happy if I had something to. leave you to remember me by. Yon have been good to me and 1 cannot re pay you." Booth laughed and'said, "If you are 6et on leaving me a legacy, let it be your head." "'-. He spoke in jest, but the pirate took it n earnest, and.on his death it was found that he had willed the tragedian his fckull. Booth gave it to the - doctor in Louisville to put in order, bt. dying himself soon after never claimed - his bequest. The physician gave it to Teck, We used it for Yorick's skull in "Ham let." V ' --' " - When on a visit to his mother in Bal timore, she unpacked Ted's trunk while be was out. and came across the skulL Not knowing what it was used for, she decided to get rid of it with some other rubbish. So when'Ted came in she told him how she had thrown that nasty skull out of the window, and that a coal cart., passing by. had crushed it into : a hundred pieces. Interview in New York Epoch. " - . .: 'Some Familiar Quotations. Walpole, the prime minister of the Georges, is misquoted in the expression, "All men have their price." He never said so, and entertained no such narrow views of mankind. Ho was referring to certain persons, and said. "All these men have their price." "Money is the root of all evil" is another misquoted quotation, and a wide deviation from the truth. -"The love of money is the root of all evil" is the correct quotation. "Love . me little, love me long" is a household phrase sometimes supposed to have originated with Charles fteade.bet cause he wrote a novel by that name. Those who are familiar with the poets know that the expression originated with Christopher Marlowe, and is found in his "Jew of Malta." It was afte ward given a new impetus by Robert j Herrick. Philadelphia Ledger. - j Teddy Was Surprised. ' j Teddy, a little three-year-old, was one , day following his father about the farm,. H when he saw a terrapin for the first '1 time. "Oh, papa." he called, "come and help i me catch the bug with a shell on his j back. ' - "Just cut his head off," his father re- i plied, "and you have him." . Teddy excitedly hammered away, but the terrapin, after the manner of his kind, scenting danger near, diemr to his heml. "Well, is his head off?" asked his f&- j ther. ' "Oh. no," cried the astonished little tellow; "he lias swallowed his.headl" : Springfield Homestead. .' ... Diphtheria Taken from Kitten. P. C. Coleman, of Colorado, Tex., states that after a residence of five years at Colorado he saw the first case of diph theria. A child of four years, living thirty miles distant in the country, and with do neighbor within six miles, had diphtheria, followed by paralysis. , The child was far away from any source of human- contagion and had rarely Veen other children , The father stated that , Timely Teoen. "That was an appropriate bit of music they bad at the cattlemen's annual din ner." .. . "What was it?" ; . 'The band played Beethoven s -'Concerto in Gee.'" Harper's Bazar ' : . Irish Literature. It is stated that Sir Charles Gavan Duffy is engaged on a long cherished project the preparation of a series of notable Irish publications somewhat after the style of Cassell's "National Library" volumes. -The veteran states man, though in ' rather weak health; is still as great an enthusiast in the matter of popular Irish literature as when, nigh fifty years ago, in conjunction with Thomas Davis and John Blake Dillon, he started the Dublin Nation. London Star. . . : .. . ""' . : A Curious Hunter. " Dunbar Jack, who is one of the best hunters in all the down- east region, is deaf and dumb. He has a camp near Beddington. He trapped four bears and a large number of otters, muskrats and minks last season. Trapping and hunt ing is the greater part of his business. Bangor Commercial. ,.'. SICK Head Aches. Sifrk-hcmiuches are tbo outward indications of l.-r:!iii;cmcnts of the stomach and bowels. As Joy's Viwtablo Sarsaparilla Is the only bowel riTiliitiuj; preparation ot Sarsaparilla, it is seen why. if is tbe only appropriate Sarsaparilla in :i l:-;:i;ilnrhes. It is not only appropriate; itia in :.itsliire enrer After a course of it an occa s'o:i;t! iIksc nt intervals will forever after prevent reurn. . .Inn. M. Cos, of 7:15 Turk Street, S.m Francisco, v.rit: " I bavc been troubled with attacks of sli-k -ht'rtducbe for the last three years from one to t!:ric times a week. Some time ago I bought two bottlusuf Joy's Vegetable Sarsaparilla and have or.ly liml o'jo attack since and that was on tbe seco:: 1 ilay after I began using it." iniiV Vegetab,e tJUy O Sarsaparilla For Sale by SNIPES: & KINERSLY. THE DALLES. OREGON. Health is Wealth ! 3RAII4 TRfATMENT2?: Dr. E. C. West'b Nkbvk akb Bbatn Treai Mekt, a guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dizzi ness, Convulsions, Fits, Nervous Neuralgia, Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by the use of alcohol or tobacco. Wakefulness, Mental De pression, Softening of the Brain, resulting in in sanity and leading to misery, decay and death, Premature Old Age, Barrenness, Loss of Power, in either sex, Involuntary Losses and Spermat orrhoea caused by over exertion of the brain, self abuse or over indulgence. Each box contains one month's treatment, tl.00 a box, or six boxes for $5.00, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price. WE OlABASTKE SIX BOXES To cure any case. WIm each order received b us for six boxes, accompanied by 15.00, we will send the purchaser our written guarantee to re fund the money if tbe treatment does not effec a cure. Guarantees issued only by BLAKILEI HOUGHTON, Prescription Druggists, 175 Second St. Tbe Dalles. Or. ' Cleveland, Wash., ) June 19th, 1891. S. B. Medicine Co., Gentlemen Yourkind 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., M. F. Hackley. A Revelation. Tew people know that the bright bluish-green color of the ordinary teas exposed in the windows is not tha nat ural color. Unpleasant as the fact may be, it is nevertheless artificial; mineral coloring matter being used for this purpose. The effect is two fold. It not only makes the tea a bright, shiny green, bat also permits tbe ass of off-color " and worthless teas, which, once under the green cloak, ra readily , worked off as a good quality of tea. An eminent authority writes on this sub ject: "The manipulation of poor teas, to give . them aCftaer appearance, is carried on exten sively. Green - teas, befog in this country especially popular, are produced to meet the demand by coloring cheaper black kiuils by , glazing or facing with Prussian blue, tumeric, gypsum, and indigo. Thit method U to gen eral that very little oiut ncalort& green teas it offered for Bale." It was tbe knowledge of this condition f affairs that prompted the placing of Iteecb's Tea before the public It is absolutely pure and without color. Did you ever fro any genuine oneolored . Japan toe T Auk yout grocer to open a package of Beech's, and yt-n will see it, and probably for the very first time. It will be found in color to bo jnt be tween the artificial green tea that you hare -been accustomed to and the black ta. : It draws a delightful canary color, and Is so fragrant that it wl!l(bo a revelation to tea- drinkers. Its purity makes it also more ' economical than the artificial teas, for le of It Is required per cup. Sold only iu pound ' packages bearing this trade-mark'. , lECHil. TEA y r.We-J B urn 'fcj v'Pure As 'SRndhoodT If your grocer does not hare it, he will gel ft foryou. Price 600 per pound, i'orsala at . K TKE I.U.LE8,"oRFf!ON. THE DALLES is here and has come 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 satisned with its support. Its Obi will be to advertise the resources of the city, and adjacent country, to assist in developing our industries, in extending and opening up new channels for our trade, in securing an open river, and in helping THE DALLES to take her prop er position as the Leading City of Eastern Oregon. four pages of siy columns each, -will he issued every evening, except Sunday, and will "be delivered in the city, or sent by mail for the moderate sum of fifty cents a month. JUST, FAIR AND IMPARTIAL. We will endeavcr to give all the local news, and we ask that your criticism of out object ana course, be formed from the contents of the paper, and not from rash assertions of outside parties. THE WEEKLY, . t .... 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 CIIRONICLE PUB. CO. Office, N. W. Cor. Washington and Second. Sts AUCTION SHLE I Dry Goods and Clothing at Your Own Price. The entire stock of N. Harris consisting of General Dry . Goods, Clothing, Boots Gents' Furnishing Auction to the . , . cash Sales held.evepy night flew THE DALLES, OREGON. Best Dollar a Day House on the Coast! First-Class Meals, 25 Cents. First Class Hotel in Every Respect. None but the Best of White Help Employed. T. T. Nicholas, Pvop. Washington Qfth DcIUBS, SITUATED AT THE Destined to be the Best Manufacturing Center in the Inland Empire. For Further Information Call at the Office of Merstate Mestmect Co., 0. D. TAYLOR, THE DALLES. CHRONICLE to stay. It hopes course a generous eets and Shoes, Hats, Caps, and Goods will be sold at highest bidder for in hand. eommeneing at 7 o'clock. J. B. CROSSEN, Auctioneer. HEAD OF NAVIGATION. Best Selling: Property of the Season in the North west. v 72 WASHINGTON ST., PORTLAND.