" v. tHI AV8TKALI4H BAUOMAWr- Sec. 39. Immediately after each certi ficate of nomination is.filed, th: county fclerk shall enter in a book marked regis ter of nomination!, the date when the " certificate was filed jrith him, the" name of each candidate, the office for which he is nominated, and the name of theoartv. 'or convention, or assembly - making -the nomination, together with the names of the ' chairman and secretary certifvini? the same ; and in case the- certificate of nomination is made . by individual electors, the names of the two eieners who make oath thereto, ' and - the total nnmoer 01 signatures inereto. Aa soon as the acceptance or withdrawal of the candidate ia filed, it shall also be entered . upon said register. - - . ' ; . Sec. 40i All such certificates, of . nomi nation, acceptances, and withdrawal, as soon as filed, shall be public, records, aud shall be open to public, ingpection . under proper regulations ; and when a copy of any certificate -of. nomination, acceptance, or withdrawal is-' presented at the time the original is filed, or at any time hereafter,-and a request is made "to have ' such copy- com pared and certified, the officer with -whom such certificates of nomination . was filed shall forthwith compare such copy with the original on file," and,- if necessary, correct the copy and certify and deliver 'the copy to the persons 'who presented it." All certificates of nomina tion, acceptance, wi t hd ra wals , pollbook e , . tally sheets, ballots, and ballot-stubs shall be preservfe as other records are, for two years after the election to which they pertain, at which time, unless other wise ordered or restrained by some court, the county clerk shall destroy the ballots and ballot-stubs by fire., without anyone inspecting the same." Sec. 41. Any person who lias been nominated and accepted some nomina tion, as provided in this act, may cause his name to be withdrawn from nomina tion at any time prior to the election, by a writing declining the nomination etating the" .reason,' signed, and ac knowledged by him before some of ficer authorized by the laws of this state to take acknowledgment" of deeds, and certified by such officer, and by filing the same, with the secretary'- of state or county clerk or clerks with whom me certificate nominating hi in as a can didate was filed. Such withdrawal may be sent by telegram to the secretary of state through a county clerk, as provided by section 44 of this act in the case of certificates of nomination. ' Sec. 42. If any person nominated as herein provided dies or withdraws be fore the day fixed bylaw-for the election, and the fact of the death becomes known to the satisfaction of the officer, the sec retary of state Or county clerk or clerks In' whose "office the certificate of nomina tion nominating such person was filed, hall forthwith give notice by posting a certificate of the fact in a conspicuous place in his office. In : every such' rase the name of , the candidate who has died or withdrawn shall not be printed upon the ballots, and if already printed, shall be erased or cancelled be fore the ballots are delivered to the elec tors --, , - Sec 43. If the original nomination thus vacated was made by a convention or as- sembly,' and the convention oi assembly can reconvene, it may fill the vacancy before the day fixed by law for the elec tion If the convention' or assembly has delegated to a committee the power to fill such vacancies, such com mute may likewise fill the same. In every case where the original candidate dies or withdraws, as many certificates of nomination made by electors to fill the same office shall be filed as are duly presented to the proper officer before the " day fixd by law for the election. iJThe certificate to fill such vacancy shall sub stantially conform with the require ments for an original certificate of nom ination, and shall be filed with the same officer the original certificate was filled with. - . . - Sec. 44. When such original certificate of nomination, thus vacated, was filed with the secretary of state, the certificate to fill the vacancy thus occasioned shall be filed with him, and it may be filed di rectly with the secretary - of state or in the following manner; It may be pre sented in duplicate to any county clerk, who. shall file one of the certificates in his office, and' upon being tendered the cost of transmitting the same, it shall be the duty of such county clerk to forth with cause the certificate of nomination -to.be telegraphed to the. secretary of state and repeated back, and he 'shall, al so forthwith mail the duplicate, thereof by- registered letter to the i secretary of state. The .secretary of state shall file said telegraph copy of the certificate the same as if it was the original, and he shall, also; file the duplicatewheri the Banae arrives by mail The secretary of state shall, in certifyingthe nominations to the county clerks,- omitnaraes of each au4Xe: fOBd:wiliiTbimt-jeoi) die or withdrawals a foresaid,and instead there of he shall certify the name or names of the person b who pavfr thus been nomi nated to iiU such.yacancy. In the event that be has already sent forth his. certifi cate, he shall forthwith certify to each eountr lerkrby telegraph if necessary, the namerfcnd TeeMeooe of each person so nominated -to-fill such vacancy j the ffi ha-isotiiinateduforfthe party or PEiociple.be represents, and the name of the. person: for? whom, auch nominee or nominees, are aubstHated. Every county clerk shall proceed thereafter in confor mity with, said later, certification. , . 1 - (T k Caatiaa.)' , 1 BOOK flSTRATlUr A T.OCID EXPLANATION OF 80ME DIFFERENT PROCESSES. Bow. Many of the Fine Picture in Books, Magaslnes and Papers An . Produced. ... Thr Difference Between Cheap and ; Costly Work Made Plata tof Buyers. . ."-i t '''..- :"-v i'v f iu, i ' With the incrfeasinir nsA nt -hair ku work and.- the numerous processes for DooK .illustration tnat xiave been devel ODed or adaDted dnrimr "th nsmt tm- m fifteen years, there has steadily grown a tendency on ine part or pnmisnera, proc ess men and in Born instances among critics: to arrIvf entirelv , . in annmnri a.tjt names to the reproductions that are mis leading in the extrerae and cannot but do an injury to the better classes of work by vving their-nanies to prpoesses innch their inferiors, in quality. $!'Mrt$!T Let us first consider the ordinary' naif tone photoengravjiig of which so much bas lately been seen in, thesway:; illns trations for the higher class '-periodicals and works of an art and toc-hniral nshmi We sludHind: that'these prints all render ine nan tone or tne original: or, to be !efi& chnidll- fthow th vnrinna rlotmuM pflltghtand jshide in masses of color. uinenng m degree, out in nat tints, pro-lnyed-by breaking the Original subject, may tutve been either a wash tirawimr painting in color, portrait from life or -view, rrotn natnre. into and immense number of dots, obtained by photograph ing throngh the fine meshes of a ruled glass in a manner npt necessary of de scription here.'" """ - " - - The resulting picture is transferred to the metal that is to serve as the finished plate: the chemical motion ia nrrvHiH with and the naif tone plate that reunite nKn ... n . ... : 1 ' l . 1 t ouvno iiu.mii; m i ci iv i nuci ine en tire surface of., the plate a mass of fine points or dote, separated by fine furrows running in transverse directions,- the points in relief being the printing sur faces. The plate being blocked on wood or metal to render it of, the-same height as type, it. is, inked np with a roller in the same manner that type is. and the ink. adhering to the points, is impressed into the paper that is brought in contat-t with them in the printing press. TUK. HALFTONK KNORAVINU ' It should here bet noted that the points or dots making up the printing surface of the plate, being all of the same height, the amount of ink deposited on the paper is of tile same depth or thickness from each and; every: printing point, and it natnrally. follows, that variations in the light and shade making np the picture are dependent on the nniuber and size of such dots within a given radius: thus a heavy, shadow in a picture i printed from relief plate will be seen to be com posed of a large number of these dots, ofteu so close together as to merge into oue another. whi1. the high lights are the results of a 'preponderance of the clear transverse lines thur uarvu t- con. - . v arate the dots, more widely, ouly show iug theiii sufficiently to give form and color to their object.,-- '..-, . The above are the principal points of identification of; a print made, from a half fbne" type plate in relief, and are easily, to be distinguished from pictures produced from intasrlio nlatei Thcro ia still, another kind of .half tnnA roliof rwork; however; that is not so easily dis- .nngnisnen, ana tnis is the puotogelarine or heliotne and kindred processes, which in rendering the gradations of color do not cut them np into dots, but lay the ink in smooth uiasses of different tones on the paper from a surface, of gelatine. - PRINTING r-BOK .AN INTAOMO PIRATE. ... The photogravure is printed from an intaglio plate, and is not capable of be-" ing nsed in a type press under any con ditions. t It can only, be successfully printed by an espert. and wherewith a relief plate the office boy might "kick" off." say 1.000 a day: or the steam cylin der press 10.00O. the expert printer with his iutaglio plate, wonld not. produce aboveOOgood impressions. ;The intaglio plate 'is filled while warmed with a hard, stiff ink. which is pressed into every depression, and after the high lights of the plate are carefully "wiped off." by hand, the plate is run through the press, in connection with the paper, and the latter lifts from the sunken unr- face of the plate all the ink it has pre viously received, holding it on the sur face of the paper in masses of color that differ in depth and consequently in tone, according to the depth of intaglio in dif ferent parts of the plate, the result of which is a series of graduations from the pure high light of the clear paper to the rich, velvety' black of a solid body of irik spread over the surface of - the paper and not pressed into it. The sfrain. too. of this nlatA inor. i,i of being, composed of noticeable cross unicuingsoi lines ana dots, is a scarcely discernible "tooth," that is. obtained by a peculiar chemical .. action on the metal plate" before" the'-picture to be etched is transferred thereto. Carbon tissue being the medium through which the transfer is made and the finished print very .'closely resembling in most of its features that beautiful pigment, it is a wonder that the feeling of those in terested in eeeing justice done to all has not been more forcibly expressed on this subject before.'" . . ( ; A name that would "answer the pur pose and still be meritorious, ia the old title photoglyph, as it applies to all plates which give reproductions from re lief surfacea, while" photogravure; is properly used .only in the opposite con nection.., 4et all. then, who know befc ter, be- houest' enough' to ' call things What'thev are and'-thns da tthutthur can to avoid further complication of the aireauy mumcuamoufl. collection or pro cess' names' "in existence both in this country, and abroad. Anthony's Photo graphic Bulletin. ' '-' : - ':' y ,: , . , - -.-TUe Antipodes. Don't speak of China as our an tip;, odes.. Our. antipodes "is the . point on the other side of the wnrld nuu-hml hv -straight'-line passing through the place vu wuco'weauum ana ine center or tne earth. -Our antipodes is in the ocean southwest of Australia. Goldthwaite'a Geographical Magazine. - ; J HrW v : That cattle andihorsos -can oomuiuni- cate intelligence to each other, and are endowed. - with a ', 'certain: : . . aiponnt '. flf reasoning-faculty,; the . following facts are pretty conclusive proofs I pnee pur-i chased a station in Australia on which large number of cattle .and horses- had gone wild. rT6 get the t attle in 1 fenced the permanent water (a " distance- of twenty miles), leaving traps at intervals. At first this answered all right, but soon the cattle became exceedingly cau tious about entering the traps,' waiting outside for . two or , three nights, before going in, and if they could smell a man or his tracks, not going , -in at. alL,'., A mob would come to.-the-trap gatei and one would go in- and: idrink - and .- come out,- and then another; would, do the same, and so on till ; all had watered; They h evidently-arrivexl at" the con clusion that 1 would not catch one and frighten all the others away. To get in the wild horses, 000 of which were running on a large plain (about 80,000 acres), 1 erected a stock yard with a gradually widening lane in a hollow where it could not easily be seen, and by stationing horsemen at intervals on the plain galloped the wild horses in. My first hunt (which lasted for same days) was successful, the wild horses heading toward the month of the'lane without mnch difHnnltv. Vint nf .some escaped " by charging back at the block yaru gaie ana in other ways. My. second hunt, about a month Later, was a failure; . every mob of horses on the plain seemed to. know where, the yard was and wonld not head tliat way. This seems to show that the horsesthat es caped from the first hunt told .all the others where the stock yard was. Cor. Londou Spectator. " Origin or the Piano. "' The pianoforte was invented by Bar tolommeo Cristofori, a harpsichord maker of Padua, Italy, who exhibited four instruments in 1709. The honor was formerly claimed by Marios, a French maker, who produced a piano in 1716, while Germaii writers maintained that Schroeter. of Dresdenrwas the in itiator of the instrument. The earliest date ascribed to the latter's achievement, however. i 171 1. During , the. present century, however, au Italian document was discovered, written by .Marehese Scipione Maffei, a Florentine scholar, in 1711, which testifies that Bartolommeo Cristofori. of that city, exhibited four pianos in ; 1709 which statement ' was originally published in The Giornale an that year, accompanied by a diagram of Cristofiiri's action principle, employing hammers, which coustitntel the chief difference between the harpsichord and the piano. ' - .--"' hi Maffei's writings Cristofori's name is given as "Cristofali," but this : is proved to be an error, because inscrip tions upon existing pianofortes give the uame as "Cristofori." .. Father Wood, an English monk, living at Rome, is also said to have made a pianoforte similar to Cristofori's iu 1711. which ; he exhib ited in England, where it attracted much notice.-' .i.,'.' r - . . . Cristofori' did not remain idle after in troducing his first" instrument. He be came.. -prominently known as a maker, but -died in 1731. comparatively poor.- Dauiel. Spillane in ' Hoonlur Sfinni r . --.-"-.. : The New Tear la sVotland. Everv honseholiler ing day monies round (because of the People who 'come ronnil with ii-i anil also New, Year day. . Even the. oldest o us are wisneu a nappy, return, of it. ror "tnere is no one. says Cicero, "who does not think be. may" live a year." Moreover, if we do not crive 'tmr familv the usual presents on that, day they' do not KcniDle to remind nu r.r it Hvm. ever a'rtiiiciai. indeed, may , lie the divi sion or our-year, the hrst day stands out in it in a peculiar manner, and really seems to separate the old from the new, inonj;ii we must nave lived in Scotland to know bow very much New Year's day iuhv mean. . In that conntrv'it is Christmas daw ami an tne; saints-days rolled into one. Everj body sits np till 12 o'clock to "see the New Year in." and in the more en thusiastic households the: house door is unbarred with erreat formalitv to sruwul . 0 j ..j. ...... the parting and welcome the ; coming guest. In England the New. Year has never been made so much of, and such customs as belonged to. it are dying out, but in America it is "kept" with enthu siasm. Illustrated London News. - . TeIltiiC Tlniu at Nlglit from the Ulpper. The time can be approximately told at flight by the position of the dipper. If the position of the "pointers" is taken at any given hour, say tt o'clock in- the evening in the winter time and as soon as it- is dark in the summer, the hour thereafter can be pretty' accurately measured by the eye during the night. .Frequent ob servations of positions will bave to'be made at the given hour, as owing. to. the constant changing of the earth'sposition in space, the position of the "pointers" in relation to our point of observation and the star also change. Yankee Blade. ' The Coeoaout as a Vermifuge. The cocoanut has been used as a ver mifuge' in India for - generations by the beef eaters of the country, and is so well known there as a means of expelling the flat worin that we cannot' understand why the information of that fav't has not reached v before.) .When" properly and intelligently administered the cocoanut Is equally efficacions with -male fern oil. kousso. pomegranate root or turpentine.' Sthihj.it :.. is. .s pl?.nt to the palate as they are offensive, and ih uo way ihjuri-' onsOoldtbwaite's- UeoKrapbical Mag- ' Couldn't Stand It Luntrer. - ' ' 1 ' At tbs'durher .given -by.iiljs.: Anson Phelps Stokes the;, Olympia, lear,i ab solute,; ondispntoble, . jualj- ..beauty' of opo man was Ret in high-belief by. a cos tume. It was an ' authentic Byzantine costume, with its accessory weapons and jewels," and" cost at the lowest estimate $10,000. -The man wore it .with, perfect grace for Eve minutes,' and then here tired. New York Times. ' ' -AsstM The.auits. of Texas. Ferer. ... The department of agncnltare lsat present-, giving earnest attenon. to the Studyof .r animal parasites,, with Ta .view tcs finding T onfc methods f or:; fighting against some: of them wbich: cause a loss of many : millions; of dollars yearly- to farniers It has made a-big discovery recently in relation., to the f sital disease of -.cattle, called', Texas fever; which is caused by a niinnte-animal called a pro tozoon ; that feeds on the.- red corpuscles in the blood and-destroys themi- j- j .-(' ;rtocent,.deyelopmeutsr of knowledge reveal the protozoa as producers of mor bid complaints, has leen asoertained that the cause of malaria is a protozoon which feeds on the blood corpuscles, and another microscopic f oe of . ,like descrip stion.ijis.. responsible for certain forms of dysentery ,;; U ndoabtedly: .inaiiy j disorr dere. not now on,deretopd will-eventually .be-, referred-, to a similar rigin.Wash-ington.tar..,-,..r;i;.; 1;. .."-.'".,. A! Pal belle. Story. ' ', '; A few .Snn.flaysagojthe .conjugation in, 014 1 Market lialli, Richmond, waited for the pastor to 'tipen'tb'e service,;; A woman, clad in deep wourn4ng rose in a far.end, of the large MIC and, steadily presged ,her."wy toward", the) stand ; jn Jfrontpf ..the cninatiori.;.4.e pastor saw - her., approaching ; "ar4 stepp " tp .meet her. . As he grasped her," haid, ihe said .vrith fH.Itering Voie, want fo give yon five vents, which, iny, litjiejboy handed .' me.; as; he; was ,dying,; and said. 'Please givlp this to help., build, .the ;Ofd Market cbiirc-h. ' ahd. continned his' sor- .rowing inotner.r:;.i. want .you to have it. and; IjWauttt put it in; your band''iny 6elf.v . And. placing the pretions oin in the pastor-V handihe retraced her steps auu iook ner pmce Hmnng tne congrega tion. Richmond Times.- -. ' - imples. c The . old. Idea of 40 years ago: was -that fscisl rpptians were due to a " blood .hnnipr," ; tor wbirli they gnyo jotash, Thas all (he old Ears nariUag contain Dotash. .drastio , mineral, that instead 'of' decreasing, actually creates more Eruptions. You "have'no- ui-eu mis wncn tatiug otixTKarsaparillaa than Joy's. It is however now known that the stom ach, the blood creating power. Is the scat oi all rUiatins- or clcanslne . , , ... nVWl.li clogged by. Icdigestioii or oinstipation, vitiates " uumju ..rcsui pimpics. a clean stomach, and healthful diirestion DnrifiM 11 .Thus Joy's Vegetable Sarsafarilla is compounded r . 1 . 1 . 1 ." . muuerii iupa 10 regulate tno bowels and stimulate tho digestion. The eflect is immediate au J most tatisfactprj-t A fehort testimofeiol to contrast tho action ef the i.otas'a SarsaparHlas and Joy' modem vcgi table preparation, i Mxs. C D. Etuarr, cf 400 IlBjx-ht.. S. F.writesij'I save lor .years tiaa Hiili2i?t.iuii, I trifid a popular Sarsaparllia but it Kcluutlinu-ea more pimples to breflk out 0:1 my. tare. . li.a.-,iiig that Jot's was a later nrcpa-a.ioH an, I actej 'Jifieiciifly. I tried .Hand the pimples immediately disappeared."' Vegetable .Sarsabarilla 'tiKesftSottlSi iniost effti-irVeiisaniiiir'lce;l ror sais' oy snipb'A uneRSLY - -fO 'l lAUJa;.qBJBCif?t..-,t;,-. "J uoiiiK a. xi.. ueamoneiia:-j.iver i;nre, ana s. Ji. Cough ure as directed for pqlds . They were in years agn aunng tne LA onppe epi demic, and very iiatteiiug testimonials of their power over that disease are at rand. Mannfact- uy lue a. n. .ueuicine Aug.- to., at xiufur,' Uireiton. For sale bv all drueirists. A Necessity- , The consumption . of' tea largely in creases every year in England. Russia, and the principal1 Euro pean . tea-drinking countries. . But ' it does not grow ' in .. America.' And net alone that, hot thou sands of Europeans who leave Europs ardent lovers of tea, upon arriving in the -United States rrailit. ally discontinue its nse, and Anally cease it altogether. ' -. - , This state of things is due to the fact that the Americans think so much of business -and so little of their palate that they permit ' China and Japan to ship them their cheapest and- most worthless . teas. '; Between the wealthy classes of China and Japan and the exacting and . cultivated tea-drinkers of Earope, the. finer teas And a ready market.' The balance of the crop comes to America. Is there any wonder, then, that our taste for tea does not appreciatef " - ' "' view. ot these facts, fa there not an lav x, mediate demand Jot the iapprtatioq of a .brand of,, tea that guaranteed to be an , .cokrd," unmanipulated. . and, of . absolute PurityT 1 We. ,thlnk. ther is, . and; present eh's Tea. , purity, is gmaraoteed ln . very, respect;, Jt .bs,; Uwtfjr'jwi- in- ' herent strength than the cheap (aj you bave v bee Wnjtlag, JfuPy, one. third, less' being re- . paired lor aa,iniMjfln.;Tils xoa'wtu.dis- .cover the first time you make it, JJkewlse, , 1 the flavor is delightful, being the aatural aa, yor ot an anadalterated article. . It is a rerela ' Oon to.tea-driiikera Sold, only la packages bearlsc this marl: ' - 'JJ ' 1 f:T fc'ij BEEC urlildhood: rZlflM stflfl TksWf Ua-WTKrl Vsm s B JQUS Tie Dalles GlioiiiGle IS r WTri fit J-,-jf,?.-f .:". . ' e . '- r "' Of the Leadjiiir City of Eastern Oregon. . ; Paring the little over a year of its existence it 'lf t0 objects for which it was fOTAnded, 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 anl.the Phrenonienal support it has received is accepted as the expressionof .their approval. Independent in every thing, neutral in nothing, it will live only to fight for what it believes to be just and riht.- Commencing with the first number of the second vdume 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 moie reading matter for less money than any paper published in the county. " YOUR DONE AT lEGjli tin job BqoK ar;d J Done on LIGHT BINDING Address all Mail Orders to Chronicle THt dalles; Mm M-iy aim rf -r.lin;if. ob priptip Short Notice. NEATLY DONE. Pub. Co., OREGON. ittas, jeuwoh. -. . .