Hw Co Rcdun KufrllKli Fonndi to Their Kiact Equivalent in American .Dollars. Multiply by 4.8683 and point off fonr places for cents imd fractions (hereof. Thus 13 13x4.8605, that is $03.26 and 5-100 of a cent. But for sterling ex change multiply by $ 4.84 in an ordinary New York market. flw to Pronounce Words wltH Certaiu Teruiinala.7 " ;. Foil value tshould be given' to most of the terminals o word in the English language, but there are exceptions. Careless speakers who would speak more correctly may find the following rules of value: Pronounce words terminating iu i spelled, :not inn, furnace, not furnfss. suelled. not Mere, as cabbaere. couraee. postafte, village, etc- - -not iu. aaoertmn,oerturi, not certtx. spelled, not it, oa moderate, not mod- spelled, riot cu wpecf, not anper,- sub ject, not Htibjec. d as spelled, not id or. ud, as wicked, not wickuiiir wicktid. spelled, not . as nov-et. not nov, mod-el. not raodf. spelleil. not it, as suddeit, not sudd it. Burden, Hun hen, garden, lengthen, seven, ntrengtheu, uften and a few other words have the e nilent. - . as spelled, not uuce, as influence, not lunu-Miur. . i spelled, not (, as plea, not pleasuc Oa should lx pniiionacml tt, a ferti', not fertile, in all words except camomile, ' exile. Kentiie. infantile, reconcile and . senile, in which, the full value should -be given to t he Uc- --.-..-in as spelled, not n, as Latin, not Latu. ad with full value, as h unhand, not huaban; thousand, not thonsau. Bess as spelled, not oiss, as carefulness, not carefulnus. DC sot n, as slnginff, not slngfn; speaking-, not speak in. actb not nth, as strength, not stretifft. . ' am the o should be silent, as in treason: trc-zn, not t re-Mtni. ' tel uut tlf, as capiiti, not capifte; metal, not mettle.' mortut, not niorttc,- periodical, not periodic. -Jit not x, as ne t t, uot uex. t .How to Save a Broom, Dip in boiling suds once a week; ' The straw h will become at once- tough and more pliable, lasting longer and not cut ting the carpet so much. ' : How to Ascertain the State of the I.uiit. Persons who wish to ascertain the true state of their lungs are directed to draw iu as lunch breath as they couveuiently can. They ure tlieu to count as far as they are able, in u slow and audible voice, without drawing in more breatli. The number of seconds they can continue counting must bo carefully observed. 'A person with consumption cannot count more than ten seconds and frequently after eix is exhausted. , In pleurisy and pneumonia it ranges from nine to four seconds. When the lungs are in a sound condition the time will vary from twenty to thirty-five seconds. : Mow and When to Wear a Scarfplu. ' A scarfpin should never be worn merely as an ornament. When it does not serve a useful purpose it should be ieft ia the pin cushion at home. . For instance, a properly, made sailorVknot stays in place by itself, and. a scarfpin should never be worn with it. With the made - up . scarfs Jn imitation of the bailor's knot a pin should never be used. Indeed, made up scarfs are not consid ered good form by men who are particu lar as to dress. There is only one cravat in which a scarfpin- should - be worn. This cravat ia called by various names, but is probably better known now as the four-in-haud. It is really a scarf.' 4 itsiiouiu be tied in one hard knot and then the ends folded over in front and fastened together with the scarfpin, "which should be run through the cravat twice so that half an inch or so of the pin itself will show in the cravat. Its purpose is thus made manifest. A man should never wear anything which does not serve a useful purpose. How to .Make a Feather Brush. . Boil the wing feathers of a turkey or chicken for tive or ten minutes,' then rinse them in tepid water, dry and tie . np in a bunch suitable to use in greas ing pans or brushing egg over tarts or pastry. Row to Treat for an Overdose of Opium or I.uiidiiu ni. Give any quick emetic " you have at hand. If there is none, tickle the roof of the tongue and throat with finger or feather till the patient vomits. Then pour in hot strong eoffee as long as the patient can be made to swallow it. .This should be done from the first, without waiting for the vomiting, if the latter be delayed more than two or three minutes. Keep the patient moving and sweating. If necessary to the latter, place the feet in hot water or hot cloths. Of course a physician should be sent for whileIl this is going on. . Opiates are uot taken up by the stomach as rapidly as is gen erally supposed, and life may often be saved long after the poison is swallowed. ' How to Prevent Bleeding. - ; Put a little sugar in .the linen cloth : rosed for. a bandage,, moisten sugar with saliva and lay directly vover the cut, binding as tightly as possible. The agar will quickly .'stanch the flow of blood. ' ' . A r. . w tw.Glve Medicine.-- i ' v " -. t, .Medicines .should be "given. in such a . manner , that the effect of . the first dose ' shall not have ceased when the next dose is given, therefore the intervals between the doseoshonld.be regulated according ly. It .is well also to remember that fluids act quicker than powders and pow ders sooner than pills. " ' : Mow to Make Wainscot for the Hall of . a Country House, -, A striking and beautiful wainscot .for any hall where it can be suitably placed is made by fastening dry cornstalks side by side in an upright position against the wall. They should be cut off slant ingly at about the height of a wainscot from the floor, and when all is in place varnished. ri v Matte oaaarts. Soon after Fitz-Greene Halleck h&4 published bis stirring VHaf co Eorzaris," he repeated, the poem to a lady, an inti mate mend of his. She expressed great admiration . of the beautiful lines, but when he was in full enjoyment of what he considered; her perfect appreciation she surprised him by the innocent query: . "Well," said Mr. Halleck, despondent ly, "what's the use of becoming martyrs for liberty or of poets celebrating heroes if ladies won't even inform themselves about the events of the day?" The remembrance of another incident connected with the poem never failed to elicit a' groan from its author. -At a certain dinner party, at which he was present, it' was expected that each man should sing a song or make a speech. - Among the guests was a Dutch Jew, whose. English.. was execrable, "and he had been previously persuaded by a joker to commit the whole of Marco Bozzaris to memory that he might recite it for the gratification of the poet and the' poet's friends. . . - ... The day came and the Dutchman was called upon to speak. . ' "Shentlemans," said he rising, "I can neither make de speech nor sing de song, but I vill deliver von grand poem.M This he proceeded .relentlessly to do, and Halleck,. when he heard his harmo nious measures delivered in a mixture of English and Dutch, was divided be tween the temptation to laugh and cry.' Youth's Companion. , He Reckoned He Would Run. . Oue of the nioet interesting character! in American history is General Zachary Taylor, "Old Rough and Ready," hero of Buena Vista, father-in-law of Jefferson Davis and twelfth president of the United States.-. We all recollect how Daniel Webster sneered at him, before he us nominated, as a "backwoods colonel, and refused to let his friends put him on the ticket for vice president with Taylor for first place, thereby missing his bast and, as thj sequel showed, best chance of beccukins president. Millard Fill more, of New York, took the despised second place and thereby had nearly three years in the White House. ' General Sherman used to tell an amus ing little story of Taylor anent his nomi nation for the presidency. At that time General Taylor was stationed at New Or leans. He was a Kentuckian and the Kentuckians were very properly proud of him. ' One day shortly before the conven tion met at Baltimore he was approached at New Orleans by an old Kentucky friend, who said: "General, we want you to run for presi dent." -.. . . "Who wants me to run?" asked Gener al Taylor seriously. : "Why; we do all your xold neigh bors." . "Well, then, if that's the case," replied the old hero, without changing the ex pression of his face, "I reckon Til have to run." Detroit Free Press. ' Finding His Bride, In one part of the Canton of Ticino a very quaint marriage ceremony prevails. The bridegroom dreSses in his "Sunday best," and accompanied by as many friends and relatives as he can muster for the fete goes to claim his bride. ( Finding the door lacked he demands admittance; the inmates ask birri his business, and in reply he solicits the hand of his nlin.vn Timid aw t If his answer be deemed satisfactorv , ne is successively introduced to a nuni- ; ber of matrons and maids,' some perhaps aerormed and others old and ugly. Then he is presented to some large dolls, all of which he rejects, with scorn, amid general merriment. The bewildered bridegroom, whose impetuosity .and temper are now sorely tried, is then in formed that his lady love is absent and ; invited in to see for himself. "j He rushes into the house and searches from room to room until he finds her in her bridal dress, ready to go to church. ! Then are his troubles over and his state as a benedict assured., SwissJRepublic. ! Trying to Buj Back His Own Body. This queer story comes from Massachusetts!- A man who lives in a suburb of Lowell is seeking to have a deed given by him twenty years ago recovered. The deed conveyed his body to a surgeon now practicing in Great Falls, N. H., for the sum of ten dollars and other considera tions, possession to be taken on his death. Since -the deed was made- the giver has made a fortune in South America and has decided that he would like a Chris tian burial. The deed provides that the body shall be dissected and the skeleton articulated and presented to a medical university. , The laaByers . have decided that the deed holds good and that the only alternative is to buy off the doctor. The giver of the deed has "made a big offer, but "it has been refused- Hartford Cburanfe. J .- ' -. , Instinct of the Messenger Pigeon. Upon what the messenger pigeon's wonderful faculty of finding its way homeward over great distances depends, opinions differ. Some ascribe it to an exercise of highly developed intelligence, others to an : almost inconceivable per fection of sight and; yet - others to . in stinct or intuition. The fact of the matter is, it is one of those mysteries of nature that perhaps will never be reveal ed, and stands side by side with the ac tion of the; grilseor young salmon, which jfindsy tajwj4back .unerringly to the same stream that it left 'nearly three years before as a tiny par. Denver Re publican .''U'i.o'-.i.j.cisTBirs a, raat tan.J The largest cigar actually smoked is by the better class of the Philippine Is landers, especially at Lozon a place not ed for the universal habit of smoking, practiced by all classes, ages and sexes. It is no uncommon thing to meet re spectable islanders puffing away at cig ars a foot in length and thick in propor tion. Boston Globe. --. One Thfng That Kill. , . The thing that really kills a great many people is laziness, though the doctors generally manage to find a more respect-S able name for it. Ram's Horn. J The Progress of Tolapak. . - 'It is 8 Very interesting fact that the world ' language, - Volapuk,. is , not . only coming to be spoken conversationally by its -enthusiastic votaries, '-"trot is "toVbe made a medium of interlingual commu nication at the World's Columbian, fair. A complete record of progress .made in spreading Volapuk since- ihat delightful held in .Boston, considerably more than a year ago, would astonish, all but the few who keep closest watch on themove ment.:'.Bignificant circumstance is that recently the Young People's Society of Christian Endeavor of the People's church, Boston, formally adopted Vola puk as a study for that organization, and a class of forty members (expected to double shortly) was formed, to meet each Monday evening -in the church's reading room for instruction. Other noteworthy instances are as fol lows: The people of Newton, quite at their own request, are to have a lecture on Volapnk under the auspices of a ladies' association there. Salem and Gloucester are to have lectures in Janu ary, and t the interest all over the conn try is similarly manifested, y Newspaper lessons, published ; simultaneously all over the maritime provinces, "Canada and the United States, have been given weekly since Oct. 10. Th Btudenta write ont the exercises of the lessons and send them to convenient points, as desig- natea, tor annotation, and immense numbers of young and old of both sexes are following the lessons. Boston Ad vertiser. Area of the Canadian bomlDlon. In the last issue of the Statisti cal Year BooK of Canada, com piled by Mr. Sydney C. D. Roper of the statistics, branch., of,, the de partment t of, agriculture, we find that the total area, of the dominion is com puted to be 8,456,383 square miles. . In this, estimate 140,736 square miles are assigned' to water and 3,515, 047 to land surface. . : The . table .which yields . this total is said to be an entirely new one, having been specially prepared at the request of the compiler of the Year Book by the Topographical Survey branch of the department of the in terior. ... "The measures have all," we are told, "been made anew and checked, and may be depended on, in so far as war ranted by the . present geographical knowledge of the country. No change will be made in these figures unless based upon new information." As this is a question on which there has been a good deal of discussion and much differ ence of -opinion, it is satisfactory to receive this assurance from what we may regard as the highest official and professional authority. Montreal Ga zette. ' - Dr. Talma;e'i New Year's Maxims. Make it the best year of all your life the brightest; the happiest and the best. Imbue your heart with the freshness of ; the morning, your soul with the sparkle of the dawn. -Resolve 'by good -deeds ana thoughts to make this the most tri umphant year of your life. As a series of . short minims - to carry with . yon through this jear, let me give yon these: Make every day begin and end with God .. t . ; . - .: Be content with.what you have. . Have a hearty, joyful family altar in your domestic circle. Fill your home with as much trood reading and briSnt music as your means will allow. Think ill of none, but well of all. ! If fortune favors you. think of others. .. Don't sham; be real. -i Keep busy and' you will keep healthy. Respect all sacred things. ; Love God. Dr. Ta Image in Ladies' i Home Joamal. Something That ' Has Been Needed , For some time past the public have been looking for an adjustable grille, with shelf attachment, upon which to place bric-a-brac, the whole to be ar ranged over windows or doorways to re lieve thi3 portion of a room, which is usually dependent upon a curtain pole. The great trouble has always been that they had to be made to order, as win dows and doors vary in width. Now, however, a device is made narrow enough to go into the narrowest doorway.- It is in two sections, running upon a sliding top bar. ' By drawing these pieces apart Uthey can be extended . to the width of the door, and the open place left in the center of them is furnished with a short drapery. Philadelphia Upholsterer. The Boys Did the Job. . " An East Dover (Me.) farmer had a mare something over 20 years old, and not thinking it advisable to winter her, spoke to some boys to take her but, shoot ber and bury her for a money cbn- i sideration. Boys-No. 1 . and 2 did the job all right, but No. 3, not knowing the mare had been killed, went the follow ing day to the farmer's barn,, and find ing an animal in the stable, took him out.; and led" him down . to a( piece of woods, shot and buried him. Imagine the farmer's surprise on coming home to find that boy No. 3 had shot and .buried a nice 5-year-old, worth in the'neighbor hood of $300. Boston Transcript. : " '.S-rt ' i . Big Coon.. Big Tree, Small Man. '. -: A party consisting of D. M. Rawlins, H. C. Brown and .others., of .Brown's Mill, went out - coon hunting the other night and caught the largest, coon and cut down -die largest tree yet on, record. The coon weighed twenty-seven, pounds and the tree-was nearly fifteen, feet across' the.'stuinp. ;The tree, was-very hollow, and Mr. NathaU Singletaryj who is not .a very large, man. went into the hollow of 'the tree "and came ont .at a knot hole. -v-Cor. Atlanta Constitution. . iJolng Penance. u - An old woman has taken up her abode in a wood on Lord Annaly's estate at Kildysart. She has made a bed of fern leaves between the trunks of trees, sticks and ferns forming a rude thatch. : The only article of furniture is a crucifix. She subsists on bread and water, and says she has resorted to this wretched mode of existence as a penance. Lon- don Letter. .TeaebeifA of the F!-enf:u'c?orirvat;ire. : j. The piano 'playing of, the French '"W tion has been : ably educated " by that noble institution the Conservatoire'' of Paris, which - was Jfounded during the great revolution. "The first teacher was Adam,; father of .the composer of ithe "Postilion . de Lonjumeau;" , his pupil, Zimmerjniann, long occupied the leading place in Paris musical circles; it was : at his salons . that-Moscheles and Thalberg first made their bow to a Parisian audi ence. . " Kalkbreiiner continued the great traditions of the past; his contemporaries speak of him in the most glowing terms, "and his favorite pupil, Stamaty, had. the . . -1 1 1 , . gooa rortune oi guuung tne musical ; genius of Gotfechalk. Music. . Manufacture of Toothpicks. . . Toothpicks are made ' of the 'wood ' of . the spindle tree' (Ehbnym'us 'Europaens) 'm'Gennan'vThis manufacture' is .said 'to employ large numbers ef the peasants in the Grand Duchy of Hesse during, the Vrinter evenings.'-.-.. Tbere are four . kinds .made-No. 6' selling at 2s. per thousand, jNo. atSs., No lO at W andNb. ,15 at ,4s., 6dVi 'Parietos,.6r toothpicks of willow 'wood '. of iiice ' finish-especially ' those ' called Flor du Parletos are sold in Por 'tngal at prices ranging from 5d.'to 4s. per thousand Chambers'' Journal. . , -n, Aristocratic Grain. .Could plants lay claim to aristocratic position, as" representing an old 'family, rice' might safely claim to be of the most ancient pedigree.- It is the earliest cereal known.- Originally a native of. India, it has crossed the oceau.and lnake n home for itself .'where, heat -and ..moist, soil could be found... -It grows in all - warm portions of the globe, and furnishes the principal fooQ'of nearly one-third of the , human 'ace. GoosT Housekeeping! STIPATION. Afflicts half the Amerkau people yet there is only one preparation of Sarsaparilla that acts on the bowels and reaches this important trouble, and that 1 Joy's Vegetable Sarsaparilla. It re lieves it la 24 hours, and au occasional dose prevents return. "Ve refer by permission to C. E. Elkington, 125 Locust .A venae, Ban Francisco; J. H. Brown, Petaluma; n. S. Winn, Geary Coart, San Francisco," and hundreds of others who have used it In constipation. One letter is a sample of hundreds. Elkington, writes: " "I.bave been foi years subject to bilious headaches and constipa tion. Have been o bad for a year back have had to take a physic every other night or else I would have a headache. After taking one bottle of J. V. 8., I am in splendid shape. - It has dona wonderful things ,Jor. me. People similarly doubled should try It and. be oon vinced.'. Sarsaparilfa Most inoilcr:!, ,:m v-t verpH, iurgest bottle, (me price, $1.0.3, sU Xms jiOD. .- t , , ., For Sate by SNIPES & K1NERSLY . THE DALLE?. OREGOV. ' OUKED By using 8. B. Headache and Liver Cure, and S. B. Cough Cure as directed for colds. They were STTCOXlSSFTTXjri-'Sr used two years ago during- the La Grippe epi demic, and very fluttering testimonials of their power over that disease are at r-and. Manuf act uredbytheS. B. Medicine Mfg. Co., at Dufur, Oregon. . For sale by all dru ggists. - A Severe Law. The English peo ple look more closely to the genuineness of these staples than we do. In fact, they have a law under '"Which they make seiznres ' and da- , ftroy adulterated products that are t bt what they are represented to be. Under this statute thousands of pounds of tea have been burned b cause of their wholesale adul teration. .. r : 'Tea.bytfie way, is one of the most. uotori . ously adulterated articles of commerce.. Not . aioue are the bright, shiny green teas artlrl . cialfy colored, but thnufands of pounds of . snbstliutoi for tea leaves are used to swell , the bulk of cheap tea;; ash, nloe, and willow ( leaves TLei . those mo-tt commonly used. ; ; Agl:i, sweepings fr..m tea waroh. uses are -" colored and sold as tea.' Even exhausted tea leaves gathered from I ho tea-houses are kept, - dried, and modeoverund find their way Into the chenp teas. ' - The Eugiish gcvcrniiMirjt at'empts to stamp: . i (hl. out ,by-,co:iCscatJ ..n;, but no .tea is too JPorfp u..."J?4 .the result .1?, that prtbably , the poorest teas used iiy auy nation are (hose . cousumed in, America. ' "! ',J T' 'J , ' I..C.. Beech's Tea ls. ?presented:Sirlttt;tne:guai " uty that it is uncolored and nrjadul tars ted; . in fact, the suu-curea tea leaf para aJtd sim ple. ; Its purity Insures svperiarastrength, ' '- about on third less oi It being required for " art infusion than of Jhea-Uflcial teiSiand Its ' fragrance and exquisite flavor is at, once ap parent It will be a revelation to"'ybti t In Older that its purity and quality may be guar- - - anteed. It 1 sold, jmly ia poandpackages '.hesririgthls trsjOfirnMKrk:, fT ' BEECI si 'Pure AsWdhodd: Joys rrfoaeooper pomnd. Tor sal at '. Zieslie Sixtlec'i THE DALLES, OREGON. The Deiies Of the Leading City ol' Eastern Oregon. During the -little orer a year of its existence it has earnestly tried to "fallfil the objects for. which it was founded, namely, to assist in developing our industries,' to advertise the resources of the city and adjacent country and to work for an open river to the sea. . Its record is before the people ani. the phenomenal support it has received is accepted as the expression of their approval. Independent in every- ........ thing, neutral in nothing, it will live only to fight for what it believes to be j ust and rij ht. -Commencing with the first number of the second vclume the weekly has been enlarged to eight pages while the price ($1.50 a year) remains the same. Thus both the weekly and daily, editions contain more reading matter for less money than any paper published in the county. GET YOliK DONE THE GHBOtlLE JO BooK 3T)6 Job prirtip Done on Short Notice. t, 1 j r. ii Y'l LIGHT BINDING Address all-Mail drderg to THE DALLES, ulHOQICle $TlflG AT NEATLY DONE. .CO., OREGON, BIOPI.