EOYAL BUBIAL IN INDIA. SOLEMN FUNERAL OBSEQUIES OF A MOHAMMEDAN RAJAH. ' Ceremonies Attending the Death 'of an Indian Chief An Imposing Procession to the Grsn of a Ruler In Hlndostan. An Tent That Interests Crowds. From an early hour crowds of Malays, Arabs, Javanese and other Moham medan races had gathered in the grounds of the house lately built for the descend ant of the Singapore royal line at Sam pong 61am. Before 4 o'clock the large rooms of the house were filled with white tnrbaned sheiks and Malays seated in long lines on the mats and murmur ing in low toned unison prayers for the dead. Within the house could be heard the splashing of water, where the corpse was undergoing ceremonial purifications previous to burial.. Outside stood the bier, an enormous structure some twenty feet by twelve, made of lashed rollers sad roofed in with yellow cloth, cut into a fantastic fringe at the edges. . .Really it was a bier within a funeral carriage, for the center was screened off to contain the coffin, a space being left all around for relatives of the deceased Tungku to stand and scatter golden rice ' over the crowd. In one corner of the ground the coffin was having its finish ing touches. This was a massive box of 8-inch thick planks, dovetailed at the corners and stayed across the top. It was in itself a great weight and took a dozen men to carry it. The tone of the crowd in the ground was quiet and sub dued, but by no means sad or despond ent. Behind the coffin itself, for instance, was a group of retainers quietly taking a meal. Swarms of Malay boys were tunning about the ground, and the men, some nicely dressed, many in their ordi nary clothing, chatted about their dead chief. A little distance from the bier stood the gravestones of granite, also swathed in royal yellow and lashed to a stage for convenience of carriage. THE COFFIN. The coffin, clean wood though it was, was carried away and also washed, be ing then placed in the porch of the house and half filled with clean white sea sand to await the body. A posse of Malay policemen arrived to keep order, and other police officials appeared. In front of the house a row of sixteen um brellas, eight white and eight yellow, was formed, and . from many windows peeped the women of the household. A lelah or cannon in the inclosure of the mosque had been firing at frequent in tervals, being tended by a gigantic negro. Meanwhile the occupants of the house remained nearly silent, interest being centered in a group of katips (priests) and Kalthis, who were seated in front of a curtain of striped satin, be hind which the body was being prepared for the nave. It was considerably after 5 o'clock when a movement among those seated in the house indicated that the time had wugu lliu IMljr VVUU1U LTO pub jlli. tilt? coffin. Amid a considerable amount of confusion and a perfect babel of excited cries, all that remained of Tungku Allnm was carried down stairs, wrapped in yellow cloth and infolded in a red edged mat. Borne on the shoulders of six priests the coffin was reached and the body deposited in it, H. H., the Sultan of Johore, reverently kissing it when the wraps were removed. The bystanders seemed perfectly frantic to get a look at the corpse ere it was placed on its bed of sand in the coffin. AT THE GRAVE. Then, in response to cries, a deathlike silence ensued, and an Imam, in a clear, musical voice, chanted some verses in Arabic, the bystanders responding in a deep toned murmur. Then the heavy lid was put up, and with difficulty (the sand making it exceedingly heavy) the coffin was put upon the bier or kranda. Round about it placed themselves young Malays with salvers, whence they threw among the crowd yellow rice, spices, money and scents. First marched a number of boys beat ing censers or cups, some with spices, many with incense. Next were about thirty women in two lines, each with an enormous yellow candle and a slip of yellow cloth tied round their necks. Then came the kranda, borne by a great number of men escorted by the umbrel las and followed by the gravestones and the immense concourse of people. -, The distance to the mosque, about 800 yards, was laid with yellow cloth. . The grave was in a small structure adjoining the mosque and abutting on the road. On reaching there the coffin was lifted from the bier. This was apparently the signal for the destruction of the latter. In ten seconds it was surrounded by an excited crowd who snatched at any part of it to secure a relic of what they be lieve had been sanctified by contact with the remains of their chief. Not a ehred of the precious yellow cloth was left on it and even the wood of the structure was taken. With much difficulty the coffin was then lowered into the grave and close upon dusk the ceremony which marked 1... -1 4.1 c. - M M A. 1 uno ut liio reign vt. uuuuier ruj&n was concluded. Singapore Free Press. , Old and, Touug. There is no surer antidote for . the ef fect which time has over ua all, in mak ing our age evident, than a young heart. "I should like to live to be as old as yon are, grandmamma," said little Helen, "but I don't want to be as old as Aunt Susan, evert?. "Why, why," said grandmamma. looking over her spectacles, "what do you mean, my: dear child? Your Aunt Susan is a great many years younger than I am r "I don't see how that can be," said Helen, much perplexed. "Ton always remember the plays you . had when yon were a little girl; but when I asked Aunt Susan one day, she said, 'For pity's sake, child, yon don't expect me to re- omember any of the games I had as a little girl. It's so long ago I've forgotten whether I ever played any!' " Youth's Companion. ; A Crael Joke on a Married Couple. Lieutenant P. B. Brown, U. S. A., and bride, who were married on Monday at Phillipsburg, were the victims of a ludi crous practical joke at the hands of their friends. They boarded the Pittsburg day express, which reaches here about 6:80, and like most honeymooners tried to look and act like old married people.. Meanwhile their baggage was holding an impromptu reception in the baggage tar. There were three brand new trunks, and upon one of them a huge card, care fully painted, was tacked with large brass tacks, with the inscription: i HONEYMOON BaOOAQS, : : "Bride's Trousseau." : This was further ornamented with a large bow of white satin. On the sec ond trunk was a placard like this: : BAKDU WITH CARS. I : . "Just Married." v j' And another huge white satin bow. The groom's trunk was spared a label, but the satin bow was a trifle larger and more conspicuous than the others. The baggage agent thought the thing too good to keep to himself, so he in vited everybody in to enjoy the joke. Of course everybody went through the car to find the young married couple, and equally of course the young married couple were easily found, and they won dered, as the people smiled broadly when they passed them, whether they were more conspicuously married than all the other young brides and grooms that had lived and moved and had their beings, or whether they were only suf fering what thousands had done before them. r They never found out, and it is pre sumed that the trunks thus belabeled rolled up to all prominent hotels and gave the baggage smashers a treat. Philadelphia Press. To Extinguish Prairie Fires. An inventive genius of North Dakota has just patented a device for making a fire break to fight prairie fires with. It is a sheet iron contrivance five feet wide and seven feet long and about two feet high. On top of it are three circular reser voirs for holding gasoline. Underneath is arranged a series of burners designed to set fire to the- grass as the machine passes over it. The main part of the ap paratus is followed by a sheet iron trailer in three sections, each five by seven feet. While the first two of these are pass ing over the grass it is supposed to be well consumed, and the final trailer is designed to extinguish every particle of fire. The invention is awakening much interest among the ranchmen, many of whom believe the machine will prove impracticable because it will not securely confine the fire and it will thereby cause serious conflagrations. . The inventor claims it will safely burn a strip five feet wide and twenty-five miles long in one day. Four horses will be required to draw the apparatus. New York Tele gram. . , The Dead Returned. ' ' The announcement of the suicide of Dr. F. D. Clarke, in Chicago, led to a sensational incident when Dr. H. V. Oldfield entered Fen wick's restaurant to take his dinner next day. With one ac cord the people arose from their chairs. "Has the grave yielded up its dead?" was the query, on every face. Dr. Old field looked startled himself. ,.; He turned red, then white, and tottered to the desk. The gentlemanly attendant drew back. At last one courageous man ap proached the desk and said, "Are you not dead?" This brought out an ex planation. Dr. Oldfield bought Dr. F. D. Clarke's business here two years ago, and, owing to the reputation of the place, continued the old name. Oldfield -is in feature, form, manner and voice the exact coun terpart of the Chicago specialist. De troit Cor. Chicago Inter-Ocean. Sickness In the Jury Room. The sanctity of a jury room appears to be so well guarded that even in case of sudden sickness a physician may not en ter except after due process of Jaw. In the Foss will case,, tried recently in Bos ton, the jury were deliberating, when late" one evening one of. them was sud denly attacked with what proved to be a stroke of apoplexy. The officer in charge notified the deputy sheriff, who not having authority to let any one into the jury room, drove across the city and informed the sheriff , but even this offi cial was not high enough to act, and an other expedition startedin search of the judge. As the latter happened to be at home, the requisite order was obtained to summon a doctor. Boston Medical and Surgical JonrnaL ' Raising Mushrooms All the Tear Round. A company in St. . Louis, is raising mushrooms in an immense cellar, 12 by 90 feet, for the western market. An in quirer who ventured into the subterra nean garden found an almost Egyptian darkness and a temperature of 60 to 52 degs. Fahrenheit. The company began operations in August last and has al ready sold 40,000 pounds of the succu lent fungi. The season of field mush rooms lasts only six weeks, and the St. Louis growers propose to meet the de mand for the remainder of the year. New York Post. . ' Not a All Gallant. . " ' "Do you know, Mr. Hicks," said Ara bella,, the i night, after Halloween, "I went down stairs last night at midnight with a candle and looked into the mirror to Bee the face of my future hus band reflected there, and tee-hee--I saw your face!" "What beastly ridiculous things these Halloween customs are I" said Mr. Hicks. Harper's Bazar. Big' Hickory Kuts. Stories have reached the division of pomology of hickory nuts in the Wabash valley as big as one's two fists. Much anxiety was felt to secure some of them, but it was finally learned that this esti mate of size included the husks, the ker nels being small and almost worthless. Washington Star. .. - Brown' Queer flee Tree. Joseph ' Brown, who Works ' in the lumber woods, near Galetoh, Pa, came into town aod got William Squires to go with him to Bald Hill to help him gather the stores from a bee tree he said he had discovered on his way in from the woods. "I heard the bees buzzing in the tree while I was five rods away from it," Brown said, "or I wouldn't " have dis covered it." The men took with them three patent pails to hold the honey, an ax to cut the tree down, and a lot of sulphur to burn in the hollow for the purpose of smoth ering the bees. Brown led the way to the tree, but they could not hear the humming. 'The tree was hit' with the ax and the humming struck up immedi ately and bo loud as to startle the two men. ;' They found near the bottom of the trunk a hole where the occupants of the tree had "made their entrance and the sulphur fire was started there, and its stifling fumes went up into the . hollow tree. ' For a time the buzzing inside was terrific, but gradually grew fainter and fainter as the sulphur had its deadly ef fect and finally ceased entirely. - r c "Now we'll cut her down and gobble that stock of honey?" said Brown. The tree was chopped down, and when it fell and displayed its hollow interior the two bee hunters were not only sur prised, but disgusted. - Instead of layers of rich honey they were greeted by the sight of a tangled -mass of rattlesnakes, which had been . suffocated by the sul phur fumes. The snakes had chosen the hollow tree for - their winter home. There were fifty-eight large rattlers and eight blacksnakes, a puff ' adder", and three copperheads in the collection. The noise Brown had thought was the buzz ing of wild bees was made by the rat tling of rattlesnakes in chorus as he was passing. Brown and Squires will get about two gallons of oil out of the rattle snakes, which will net them at least $100, so their queer bee tree will pan out a good day's work after all. Cor. New York Sun. Burled Cities of Mew Mexico. "New Mexico and Arizona offer as great a field for archaeologists as do the lands where the empires of ancient days flourished," said W. P. Metcalf , of Al buquerque, N. M. "An expedition left Albuquerque only a few days ago to seek for treasure which traditions say is to be found at Qran Quivera, 100 miles from that city. Before the pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock there were flourishing settlements of white men along the Rio Grande. - Coronado, in his history of the explorations made as early as 1540, wrote of the seven cities of Cibola, describing them as of fabulous wealth and magnificent beauty. The ruins at Gran Quivera are believed to be the ruins of one of those cities. "Coronado told1 of abundant gold and treasures in all of these cities, and many expeditions have explored about Quivera. The ruins indicate that a large city stood there. The limestone walls mark out the sites of palaces, monasteries and churches. A curious thing is that no water can be found for fifty miles around the site of the old city, although treasure searchers have honeycombed, the land trying to secure a supply' of water. . No5 treasuro has ever been found there, but the belief that it is located there ante dates any traditions of the Mexicans or Indians. Just what prospects induced the last expedition to start out I do hot know." Chicago Tribune. - Chicago's Highest Buildings, The highest building in Chicago. at present (and one which is not built on the new Chicago construction system) is the Auditorium. Its loftiest point is 296 feet above the sidewalk. :The Fair build ing, now almost completed in one sec tion, measures 241 feet to the coping, and it is possible that it will be carried higher to sixteen or eighteen stories. The new Masonic temple will measure, over all, 274 feet This is constructed entirely on the new system. The Ashland block measures 210 feet to the coping; the Woman's temple, whose topmost stories are now being finished, towers 266 feet from the ground; the Manhattan, 198 feet; the Monadnock, 194; the Hen ning and Speed block, 192; the Abstract building, 190; the Chamber of Commerce block, 180; the Home Insurance, 178; the Tacoma, 175; the Northern hotel, 174; the Rookery, 164; the O wings block, 161: the Rand-McNally, 148; the Chicago Opera house, 135, and the L. Z. Leiter building. 133 feet. Harper's Weekly. The Last Mourner. In May, 1890, there died at Perignat (Ain) a retired captain of artillery named Lesgourgnes. knight of the Legion of Honor. His dog, a spaniel, answering to the name of Black, accompanied the funeral procession : to the cemetery of Izernore. Ever since the date of inter ment Black has walked the distance of nine miles which separates Perignat from Izernore, climbed over the wall of the cemetery, and gone to lie down on the grave of his master every day at the same hour. . Neither "the stone throwing of the village children nor the efforts of passers by to -draw off his attention have prevented the accomplishment of his self imposed task. For the last sixteen months Black has performed this daily pilgrimage in all weathers. La Tribune de Geneve. . Telegraph Statistics. According to statistics ' furnished at the last annual meeting of , the Western Union company, messages ha Vet in creased from 5,879,282 in 1867 to 59,148, 343, in 1891. , The receipts during the same time: have risen from $0,568,925 to f23.034.826. The average tolls for mes sages have decreased from 104.7 in 1868 to 82.5 in 1891, while the average cost to the company of each message has been reduced from 63.4 to 23.2. . Quick Photographs. - ( The latest achievements in "instanta neous" photography have been the mak ing of twenty -four different pictures of a dog during the interval between its leaving and alighting on the ground in the action of jumping. New York Re corder. ' : , CANONitLfi"" Amid the busy multitude, moves soar r t." ' " -.. A queen uncrowned, av saint in earthly guise, With In the clear depths of her shining ejus And en her pallid face a rliancy - i" ; - Xbat seems reflected from tbe crystal Which stretches twizt our souls and .diSe. .. . . .'. - i . Some say that in her heart a sorrow lies Which contradicts her sweet tranquillity. A victor, no symbolic palm she bears: . Upon her face her triumph's sign she A peace that showeth all her stainless soul. Enthroned is hearts of erring and of good,: '. Bhe reigns in royalty of womanhood, . . t - Yet round her head there shines no aureole! Josephine Preston Peabody in Kate Field's ., Washington. . : Couldn't Fass the Note. ' Mr. Casilear told how he happened to be in New York at one time during the war looking out for a gang of counter feiters. - To avoid making his presence in the city conspicuous he put up at a second rate hotel, where he was un known. ' For some purpose he banded to the clerk at the desk a brand new fifty cent note. ' It was an issue just out, with General Spinner's portrait on it, the like ness having been substituted for a pic ture of Justice with her scales, which the forgers had imitated very success fully. .-..- ,x . The clerk looked at the note with evi dent suspicion, and handed it back. -' "I never saw anything like that be fore," he said. " "It is good, I assure yon," replied Mr. Casilear. " . . "I don't believe it," said the clerk. "Very well," rejoined Mr.' Casilear. "It doesn't matter, though I know it is good, because I made it myself." The clerk smiled sardonically. - "That is just what occurred to me," he said; "therefore I refused to accept it." Mr. Casilear felt that the joke was on himself, so he treated himself to a bottle of soda water at the bar - and left for Washington that evening. New York Sun. . - ST I PAT I ON. Afflict hull the Amer;cau people yet there is only one prej-4irtt:oH of Sorsupariila thut acts ou the bowels end reaches this iinr-ortiiiit trouble, end that is Joy's Vegetable Parscparilla. It re lieves it in 24 hours, and nu occasional doso prevents return. "Ve refer by permission to C. E. E'.kiiiston, 125 Locust Avenue, Eon Francisco; J. II. Brown. Fetaluma; II. S. Winn, Geary Court. San rranoiseo, and hundreds of others whohave used it in constipation. One letter is a sample of hundreds. Eikington, writes: "I have been for years subject to bilious headaches and constipa tion. Have been po bad for a year back have had to take a physic every other night or else I would have a headache. A f tor taking one bottle of J. V. 8., I am in splendid shape. It has done wonderful things for me.. People similarly trouoied should try l! and be convinced." . Vegetable Sarsaparilla s Most modem, injur effective, largest bottle. MM Price, UXS;. sit forJiOCU' " v For Sale by SNIPES 8t KINERSL.Y THE DALLES. OREGON. RIAL MERIT PEOPLE "". " Say the S. B. Cough Cure is the best thing they ever saw. ;v'.:We - are :not flattered for we known Real Mebit wm Win. AH we ask is an honest trial. ' For sale by all druggists. " S. B. Medicine Mfg. Co., Dufur, Oregon. A Severe Law. The English- pes- : pie look more closely ' 'to the genuineness ' of these staples than' we do. In fact, tbey ' have a law under 'which they .make seizures . and de stroy adulterated - ' products that are not what they are represented to be. Under this stsmte thoHsands of pounds of tea have been knrncd because of their wholesale adul ter alio u. Tea, by the way. Is one of the most notori ously adulterated articles of commerce. Not ' alone are the bright, shiny green teas artifl--il!y colored, but thousands of pounds of -xubr:t!.iutc for tea leaves ore used to swell the bulk of cheep teas; ash, sloe, and willovr ' leaves being those most commonly used. A;iii;i, sweepings'. fr-,m tea warehouses are colored and sold as tea. Even exhausted tea leaves gathered from the tea-houses are kept, . dried, and m&deovcrand find their way into the cheap teas. The English government attempts tn stamp " thik out by counxebtCwu; but no tea is too poor for U", and the renl. is, that probably - the poorest tcasnsed by any nation are those . consumed iuAmericc' - - leech's Tea is rrccnted with the guar n:i:y that it is uueolurert and unadulterated; In fact, tbe snn-enTd tea leaf pnife and sim . pie. lt purity lusarcl snperior . strength, , Unit one third less of it being required for an infusion than of thrs : Hi i si teas, and Its fragrance and exqul;:c flavor is at" once ap parent.' It -will -be a revelation to you. . In order that Its purity and quality may be gnac-' anteed, It Is sold only In pound packages -bearing this trade-mark : Joy BEEOgTEA 'PureAs-GHiTdhood: Price 60c per pound. , For ssle at Loslio :i3u-tXox'i9, THE DAILE8, OREGON. Still on Deek. Phoenix Like lias Arisen From the Ashes! . JAMES WHITE, The Restauranteur Has Opened the BaldiuiA estaapaiit ON MAIN STREET Where he will be glad to see any and all of his old patrons. : Open day and Night.' First class meals twenty -five cents. YOUR flTTEHTIOfl Is called to the fact that Dealer in Glass, Lime, Plaster, Cement ana uuuaing material of all kinds. Carries the Finest I,ine of To be foctnd In the City. 72 CUashington Street. A NEW Undertakinff Establishment ! PRINZ & NITSCHKE. DEALERS IN Furniture and Carpets. We have added to our business a complete ' Undertaking Establishment, and as we are in no way connected with tne undertakers '.Trust our prices will be low accordingly.- ; . Remember our place on Second street, next to Moody's bank. ' ; ' JOLES Hugh Glenn : DEALERS IN: Staple aqd Hay, Grain Masonic Block, Corner Third and Jeu o. Qolumbia o. ji o tel , THE DAIiLES, 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, Ppop. Washington 01?t ll D 11 6S 5 Washi"gton SITUATED AT THE Destined to' be the Best Manufacturing Center in the Inland Empire. For Further Information Call at the Office of Interstate Mestment Co., 0. D. TAYLOR, THEIDALLES. JOHN PASHEK, it - Tailor. Next door to Wasco Sun. Madison's Latest System used in cutting garments, and a fit guaranteed - each time. fepaiirincj and Cleaning Neatly and Quickly Done. R. B. HOOD, Livery, Feed and Sale Horses Bought and Sold on iorrvmission, and Money - Advanced on Horses Left for Sale. OFFICE OF s The Dalles and Goldendale Stage Line. Stage Leaves The Dalles Every Morning at 7:30 end Goldendale at 7;30. All freight must be left at R. B. Hood's office the eve ning before. R. B. HOOD, Proprietor. Opposite old Stand. The Dalles, Or. THE Dalles, Portland & Astoria NAVIGATION COMPANY'S Elegant Steamer REGULATOR Will leave the foot of Court Street . every morning at 7 A. M. for Portland and Way Points Connections Will be Made with the Faet Steamer DAliliES GITY, At the Foot of the Cascade Locks. For Passenger or Freight Bates, Apply to Agent, or Purser on Board. Office northeast corner of Court and Main street NOTICE. R. . French has for sale a number of improved ranches and : unimproved lands in the Grass Valley neighborhood in Sherman county. They will be sold very cheap and on reasonable terms. ' Mr. French can locate settlers on some good unsettled claims in the same neigh borhood. His address is Grass Valley, Sherman county, Oregon. '. BROS., and Feed. Court Streets, The Dalles.Oregop. HEAD OF NAVIGATION. ' Best Selling Property of the Season in the Northwest. mercnar r . - Gioceis, 72 WASHINGTON ST., PORTLAND.