The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, December 22, 1898, Image 4

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    Tfcs Dalles Daily Ctooniele.
THE SINGER'S FORTUNE.
Wn Deatli Separates the Great
Pavttl from Her Money.
The death of Nicolini, coming as it
has before that .of Adelina Patti, prob
ably means that a large share of her
fortune will fall to American heirs.
Mme. Patti has few living relatives.
Her nearest kinsman is believed to be
Alfredo Barilli, a popular musician of
Atlanta, Ga. Mr. Barilli is the son of
the prima donna's half-brother, who in
his day was also a musician. The half-
brother was almost grown at the time
of the diva's birth, and it was by him
that the voice which was to make her
fame and fortune was discovered and
given its first development. Many tales
are told in the Barilli family of the
strict measures resorted to by the
elder Barilli to force his young charge
and pupil to diligent study, and of the
oft-repeated but harmless punishments
which resulted when in the exuberance
of youth she Blighted her tasks and
failed to live up to the possibilities oi
her wonderful voice.
Although in the brief annals of Pat
ti's life little or no credit has been
given to Sig. Barilli for his part in hei
musical education, the singer herself
has acknowledged her indebtedness to
him on the back of a large photograph
of herself sent to him before his death
and just after Patti's first great Euro
pean triumphs. On the back of this
photograph, beneath his name and
hers, she has written: "To my first and
only teacher." This souvenir, furnish
ing as it does almost the only proof of
the elder Barilli's intimate connection
with her career, is naturally greatly
prized by the family of his son, who still
have it in their possession. , , ul t J
Alfredo Barilli, an artist and a man
of taste and culture, has always been
a favorite with his aunt, and has spent
several summers with her at Craig-y-Nos.
Two years ago his wife and chil
dren were invited to accompany him to
her castle in the Welsh highlands.
Every preparation was made to accept,
but Bickness prevented them from go
ing as a family, although Mr. Barilli
himself paid his respects and expressed
his wife's regrets. During Patti's last
American tour, when she sang in At
lanta, the Barilli family were invited to
dine with the singer at her hotel, and
were the recipients of affectionate fa
vors at her hands. - -. -The
death of Nicolini, therefore,
places the Barillia in the direct line of
inheritance, as the indications are that
the great singer holds them in high re
gard. They have an attractive and
artistic home just outside of Atlanta,
in a suburb known as College Park, al
though Mr. Barilli's musical studio is
in the city. There they live a quiet and
unpretentious life. They have never
flaunted their relationship with the
great prima donna, nor by word or deed
encouraged the belief that they had any
expectations from her. Her photo
graphs, however, are enshrined in state
in their home, and every detail of her
life is followed by them with the great
est interest. N. Y. Times.
r. LIBERTY OR REVENGE?
Woodealesr Mtsht Have Got of Ja.ll
Bat Preferred to Keep Corlclegr In.
' Two one-legged .men were confined
recently in a jail ini a little Kentucky
town. One had a wooden leg and the
other, who was a. greater rascal and had
had more means at his command, wore
a cork leg. Apparently well-behaved
and quiet, both men got the privilege of
the prisoners walk which ran around
outside of the cells. Beyond this was
the jailor's walk and beyond-that was
freedom.
The, cork-legged man was really a
desperate character, but sly and cun
ning. He meditated much ontherelationr
of the jailor's walk to the outside world.
It was only a "step farther," he face
tiously told his com p anion., who ad
mired his humor. In some manner he
became possessed, of a file, with which
he converted a case knife into a saw.
With, this he succeeded in sawing in
two one of the bars of his cell. He
made a confidant of his fellow prisoner,
who expected to join, him in his es-cape?-;
The plan was so well concealed
that finally nothinir but one iron Yv
wnich couid easily be sawed in two dur
ing the night, stood between them and
liberty.
At almost the critical moment, Wooden-leg,
-thrusting his . hand into his
trousers' pocket on the side where he
didn't feel, found, that Corkleg had
robbed him of his pile, a five-dollar
bill. He hesitated a moment. Free
dom is sweet; he knew that, because he
had been deprived of his joys. But re
venge, to him, was sweeter. Just as
his companion, flushed with success,
was almost ready to step out into the
wide, wide world, Woodenleg squealed,
and the escape was frustrated.
The two are still confined in the jail,
and, white the one meditates -upon
honesty being the best policy, the other
ponders over the question: "Is liberty
r revenge the sweeter?" N. Y. Sun.
Boiled Chocolate Glase.
Place a small saucepan over the fire
with one pound sugar, one-quarter
pound grated chocolate and one-half
pint water; stir and boil till it will
form a thread between two fingers;
remove from fire and stir until a thin
skin forms on top of glaze; then use
at once; spread evenly all over the ;
cake and set a few minutes in a cool j
oven. American Queen. j
ELEPHANT BLOCKED THE WAY.
EmgHsh Cleicymiin While
Cycling
Hu a St.ra.nare Experience.
This story comes from Birmingham,
England: The clergyman of a neigh-
boring town was returning home on bis
bicycle. He had been preaching in an
adjoining village, and this means of
locomotion was the one most suited to
his tastes and to his convenience.
The
night was dark, and the rays of the
reverend gentleman's lamp did not
pierce far into the gloom. Suddenly
something seemed to loom large, vague
and ominous before his eyes. He had a
short sensation that he was rushing
on to' some unknown doom; there was
a collision with something soft and of
shape most curious, and away flew the
machine one way and the cleric the
other. When the reverend cyclist had
pulled himself together he heard noises,
and there was a gleam of a lantern
near at hand, flickering as though in
dicative of much agitation. Through
the darkness came a sleepy-looking
man, rubbing his eyes. From him the
cleric discovered that there was an ele
phant stretched across the rather nar
row road. The animal had been as
awkward as "My Lord the Elephant'
of Rudyard Kipling creation. True, he
was not blocking a rars, tmt he had
fallen in the road on his side, ard had
stopped there, refusing to move. He
belonged to a circus, did this trunked
obstruction, in course of transition
from one town to another, and since
his fall had been left in charge of two
men with lanterns, who appear to have
fallen asleep. Beyond a few quiet and
quaint utterances, the elephart did not
mind. What the front wheel of the
bicycle thought about it is not known.
SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY.
A Chinese typewriter has been in
vented by Dr. Slieilield, of Jungcho,
China, which has a wheel carrying over
4,000 characters, arranged in 30 circles.
It is said to exuted so far the speed of
the swiftest Chinese writer, that its
value is assured.
Heretofore, perfumery has been de
tached from flowers by soaking them in
lard. A Parisian has now found a way
of gathering the fragrance by simply
soaking the flowers in water, a process
which can be repeated several times
without destrojir.fr the flowers.
Nearly 48,000 patents were granted
by the United States patent office last
year, or more than in any preceding
year. Inventive genius is evidently
active in this country. Not one in a
hundred of these inventions will per
haps ever come into practical use.
The total value of the mineral prod
ucts of. this country last year is re
ported to be shout $740,000,000. The
greatest loss is in silver. The yield
was 2,370,000 ounces less than in 1896,
and the value dropped about $5,700,000.
The gain in gold was 127,000 ounces, or
$2,650,000.
"During the course of a recent lec
ture at Montevideo," says Science, "Dr.
Sanarelli stated that the serum he has
obtained from the animals with which
he has been experimenting, is effective
against yellow fever, and that it will
very probably cure yellow fever in hu
man beings."
The Massachusetts cattle commis
sioners' annual report, just issued, says
that the number of cattle paid for as
victims of tuberculosis during the year
was 5,255, and the amount paid for them
was $179,867. Quarantine and killing
expenses and arbitration brought the
average amount paid for condemned
cattle to $34 per head.
INSECT NURSES.
Beea aad
d Anta That Look After the
Sick.
The care of the young is always con
sidered one of the most important ol
the industries of the commune. Among
the bees and ants the care of the young
is relegated to the younger sisters, al
though the elders do not scorn these
duties if they find their performance
necessary. However, the first work oi
the ant or bee just emerged from the
pupa state is that of nurse, and a most
tender and devoted one she is. Espe
cially are the ant nurses solicitous
about the health and comfort of their
small charges. In some species the
young ant grubs are assorted into sizes,
those of the same age being kept in the
same apartment, suggesting a graded
school. When the ant babies are hun
gry they tstretch up like young birds.
and their nurses regurgitate partly di
gested food into the gaping, hungry
mouths. The nurses keep them very
clean by licking them with their long
tongues, and, what is more interesting,
are very careful to keep them in the
right temperature. When the sun
shines hot on the nest in the morning
the nurses carry their charges to the
lower compartments, but toward night
they carry them again to the upper
nurseries. The nurses show great in
terest in the young when they emerge
from the pupa state, helping them to
straighten out their newly freed an
tennae and legs, then taking a hand at
their education by leading them around
the city and showing them the ways of
the formic world.
All the members of the insect com
mune are shining lights in their devo
tion to the young. The moment an ant
nest is attacked those citizens who are
not detailed to fight the intruders will
snatch up the babies and flee with
them to places of safety, or when hard
pressed will fight to the death for their
protection. This is worthy of note,
since it is not the mother instinct for
saving her yountr but is a race, instinct
f
instead, it may here be stated that
ihe objects popularly known as ants
eggs are not the eggs, but the young i
grub ants; the eggs are too small to be
seen well with the naked eye. Insect
Communities, by Anna Botsford Com
stock, in Chautauquan. -
THE CARE-FREE VIENNESE.
They Rarely Take Life Serloasly, Umv
. leaa at a Faaeral.
The native Viennese is a jolly, good-
natured, shiftUess creature.
No people on the earth are so jolly, or
so easily and so much amused. Go to
the Prater, the largest public park in
Europe, and from a hundred different
beer-gardens comes the noise of toot
ing brass bands and stamping feet and
beating-drums. Merry-go-rounds swing
old and young, and dime museums and
music halls are as full of people as they
are empty of decency. Go to the thea
ters on any night, and you will find
them crowded by an enthusiastic audi
ence, the galleries filled by noisy stu
dents and working girls. The court
theaters, which present only legiti
mate dramas and operas, have also their
numerous devotees. Go to the coffee
houses, of which there is one on every
corner, and you will find them full,
especially in the afternoon, with mer
chants with their , noses in the news
papers, and clerks sipping their Mocha,
and officers smoking their cigars, and
cue-pushing and card-shuffling youths.
At night these coffee houses become tihe
rendezvous of the lower element. I
have never seen the Viennese serious,
unless it be at a funeral, and I suppose
that even out of that he manages to get
some fun.. Yet he is easily excited, and
although loyal and law-abiding, his
good nature may quickjy turn into a
fiery passion, end a Viennese riot is a
serious matter. Edward A. Steiner,
in Woman's Home Companion.
REMOVING THE KINKS.
Colored Ministers In AVaslilnsrton
Preach That "fleah In Vr.rMty. "
The colored ministers of Washington
are preaching that "flech is vaxitj"
from a point of view which dees not
give their white brethren any trouble,
says a correspondent in the St. Louis
Globe-Democrat. Dis-piayed in a show
window on one of the principal shop
ping streets is thissin:
"Attention, colored pe3plc! Blank's
take-out-kink will take the kink out of
your hair and make it silkj scft, pliable
and beautiful."
Then follow instructions for the
use accompanied hy the guarantee of
harmlessness. and by other statements
calculated to encourage the application
of thepreparation. Hut the sign is not
what draws the colored peopie to the
window and causes them to remain
there with admiring- eaze. The bottom
of the show window is piled high with
black hair in the natural state. There
is enough to make a good beginning
with a mattress. Above are exhibits of
what "Blank's take-out-kink" can do.
Switches and bangs and braids and
otlher forms of black hair. Foft and
glossy and wavy, are shown in strong
contrast with the raw material under
neath. The sight is temptation. Col
ored pastors of Washington have dis
covered that the fashion to experi
ment with "take-out-kick" is sweeping
through their congregations. They are
denouncing from the pulpit in vigorous
language the wickedness of trying to
change the natural order of capillary
growth.
ANXIUUS I U IVlAUrt 1.
Bo Popped the Question Before Ila
Wife Waa Dud.
I Widowers, as well asi widows, are the
targets for many jokes. Here is a
story they tell of a farmer in a certain
county' not 50 miles away from St.
Louis, says the Republic:
His wife had been in poor health for
some time, and one day he was called
in from his work because she was so
much worse. The neighbor women told
him to hurry to town for the 'doctor. He
rushed out to the stable, saddled a horse
and galloped toward the village, a few
miles distant.
As he rode he met an interesting wid
ow. Shewas interesting because she had
been a widow but six months, and the
departed one had left a good farm to
her. Of course, she wondered why
Neighbor Jones was hurrying so. She
called to him to know what was the
matter. He pulled up his horse, turned
toward her and said: .
"My wife is very sick. They don't
think she will live, and I am on1 my way
for the doctor." He paused and seemtd
L about to ride on, but a thought 6truck
UIi TT 1 J, J 1 . 1 , .
mm. nc ivuueu over xowara xne wiaow
and asked, anxiously:
"If she does die, will you have me!"
She Waa Coatly. '
"The man I refused," she said soft
ly, "is now rich, while the man I ac
cepted is poor."
"Of course," replied her dearest
friend, "it would be just the same if
you had married the other."
The young matron could readily see
that this was a reflection upon her,
but it was two days before she was
able to see in just what way, and even
then she wasn't sure of it. Chicago
Post.
Manitoba Soil.
In Manitoba you can turn a furrow
many miles long and not encounter a
stone as large as your fist. The earth,
for a distance down from three to five
feet is a rich, black loam, made by cen
turies and centuries of .decaying vegeta
tion. . ..
LOOK OUT FOR A STRAY MOON.
Rennd Black BodyUO,000 Mllea Avray
Wanted by an Aatronomer.
-American astronomers are requested
to keep tl:eir eyes' open for a stray
moon, which Dr. WaJtemath. of Ham
burg, is anxious to find again. His ob
ject, says the New l'ork Sun. is to ac
count for and control certain irregular
ities in coming to time on the part of
the old noon that we are accustomed to
see. He knows exactly what sort of a
moon he wants and where it ought to
be. Its apparent diameter is 140 sec
onds, but its real diameter is 420 miles,
its surface about one-twenty-fifth and
its bulk one-eightieth that of the visi
ble moon, and it is 615,4300 miles distant
from the earth, and two and two-thirds
times as far as our moon.
This little moon has been seen a num
ber of times in the Inst 300 years. Dur
ing the seventeenth century it "ap
peared as a fiery red ball with a white
streak across it. Later observers de
scribe it as of the dark gray color of the
spots on the moon, and as a round,
black body, so that it had probably
cooled off in the interval. Cassini, the
father, saw it at Montpelier November
7, 1700, and seven other appearances are
noted in that century. Dr. Hitter, a
Hanover school-teacher, saw it with the
naked eye in broad daylight in the
neighborhood of Naples June 11, 1855.
It crossed the sun from right to left.
Mr. Gowey saw it at North Lewisburg,
O., September 4, 1879. None of the ob
servers had any idea of its true nature,
however, till Dr. Waltemath made his
discovery.
February 3 of this year the little
moon passed over the sun, and it will
do it again July 30. Its mean synodic
course is 177 days,- and its daily mo
tion a little over three degrees. Any
one noticing its wanderings will please
inform Dr. George Waltemath at Ham-burg-on-the-El
be.
A WELCOME TO A MONARCH.
Reception Given by Mayor Col-rln, at
Chicago, to Kins Kalakana.
Three men were discussing the pro
priety of the call made by President Mc
Kinley upon President Dole. The dis
cussion brought out this story:
"I think old Harvey D. Colvin knew
how to do things when it came to enter
taining folks from abroad, especially
hand-me-idown-kings," said one of the
two. "He was mayor of Chicago when
Kalakaua passed over the country in
search of a loan. Colvin was rough and
ready, and wore a shirt with a ruffle
front and a diamond in the middle,
which always made me think of a bar
keeper on his day off. When the king
and his suite arrived in Chicago, Colvin
and his staff were at the station, and the
mayor took the king by the hand as
warmly as if the king had been a ward
politician. The carriages moved quick
ly to the Grand Pacific hotel. Clark
street was jammed with people clamor
ing for the king to come out. The
hour was early in the day. At the re
QUCSt of Mavor Col
stepped out on the veranda and bowed.
The populace, unused to sights of kings
in flesh, yelled. Mayor Col vin waved his
hand and shouted:
" His majesty, the king of the Sand
wich islands.
"The populace veiled. laiicrhfvT iml
hooted. Then the mayor, remembering
tne eariy nour, turned to his royal guest
and said:
" 'Well, kins', von mnt Ye tli-oii. Rot
ter go and wash up and then well have
HOSTILITY TO EDUCATION.
The English Are Opposed to the
Teaching of Servanta.
An American visitor to England who
spends some little time in the country,
says J. N. Lai-new, in the Atlantic, can
hardly fail to become conscious of three
serious facts: (1) That there is a
strong class-feeling against much educa
tion for those who ere looked on as un
derlings and servants a feeling more
prevalent and more pronounced than the
shamefaced sentiment of like mean
ness that is whispered in some snobbish
American circles. (2) That the "school
rate" seems to be the most begrudged
of English taxes, the most sharply criti
cised, the most grumbled at; and this
to a degree for which there seems noth
ing comparable in America. (3) That
the opposition to secular schools, fos
tered by the church and ostensibly
actuated by a desire for religious in
struction in the schools, is largely sup
ported in i eality by the two sentiments
indicated above. Looking, there
fore, to the increasingly democratic
conditions that are inevitable in Eng
land, the reluctance and factiousness of
disposition that appear among its citi
zens touching the vital matter of popu
lar education are ominous of evil to the
nation, and gravely lessen its chances
of holding, under the reign of democ
racy, the high place to which it rose
under the aristocratic regime.
The Meeklenoars; Declaration.
The Mecklenburg county (N. C.) com
missioners have given a plot of land 30
feet square in front of the new court
house in Charlotte for the erection of
the monument to the signers of the
Mecklenburg declaration of independ
ence. Four thousand dollars of the
$6,000 desired for its erection has been
subscribed. '
Grain in Brazil.
The facilities for inJand transporta
tion are so limited im Brazil that theh
habitants, of the ports find it cheaper
to import grain from North America
than from their own- farms.
SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY.
Greenwich observatory claims that
4t has little clear weather, sun and
stars are wholly invisible every other
day in winter, 'one day in four in fall,
one in eight in spring and one in six
teen in summer. In the 20 years end
ing with 1896 there were only eight in
stances of sunlight for 14 continuous
hours.
" The number of asteroids discovered
up to the present date is 423. A num
ber of these small planets have not been
observed since their discovery and are
practically lost. Consequently it is
now a matter of doubt, until the ele
ments have been computed, whether
the supposed new planet is really new
or only an old one rediscovered.
Oil can be automatically fed to rap
idly revolving shafts and pulleys by a
new attachment for ordinary oil cups,
consisting of a tube curved the way the
shaft runs, with a screw cap at the in
ner end, the outer end being left open
to receive air as the wheel turns, thus
forcing the oil through the cup instead
of letting it run to the top of the cup
from centrifugal force.
It is supposed that a Centauri, one
oi the brightest stars of the southern
hemisphere, is the nearest of the fixed
stars to the earth. The researches on
its parallax by Henderson and Maclear
gave, for its distance from the earth, in
round numbers, . twenty billions of
miles. At the inconceivable rapid rate
at which light is propagated through
space, it would require more than four
years to reach the earth from this star.
The president of the Agassiz asso
ciation, Mr. H. H. Ballard, recently
caught an ant near its hill, shut it up
in a box, carried it 150 feet away, and
set it free in the middle of n shady road.
What followed he thus' describes: "It
seemed at first bewildered. Then it
climbed to the top of a ridge of sand.
erected its body as high as possible,
waved its antennae for several seconds,
and then started in a straight line for
home."
Last year Dr. Abbott, of Philadel
phia, published some researches which
tended to show that microbes which
could not accomplish the death of
healthy animals proved fatal to ani
mals under the influence of alcohol.
A French investigator has gone a step
further, and has succeeded in demon
strating on irrefragable evidence that
alcohol not only destroys what we may
call natural immunity, but tends to
prevent the acquisition of the immu
rdty conferred by the various serums.
, Stories of the ravages of termites,
or "white ants," come from the curator
of the Australian museum at Sydney,
Some time ago they destroyed the roof
of the museum building, and it had to
be replaced with a covering composed
largely of steel and copper. Their
work, being carried on in the interior
of the timber, does not reveal itself un
til the structure is about ready to fall
to pieces, and so it was only recently
that the fact came out that the ants had
also destroyed the underpinning of one
of the important floors of the museum.
COULDN'T FIND HER.
Lady Who Sent Senator: Perkins Her
Card Wore Male Attire.
The. owners of probably half the
cards that are sent in to the senators
are unknown to their recipients. Sen
ator Perkins one day recently,, in re
sponding to one of those unknowns,
who happened to be of the feminine
gender, told the page who brought the
card to show the lady to the marble
room. He went out there a few miu
utes later, expecting, of course, to be
recognized by the lady who had called
on him. None of the three ladies in
the room came forward," so he politely
asked each of them in turn if she
wished "to see Senator Perkins." Re
ceiving a negative to each inquiry, he
started back to his seat in the cham
ber when he met, in the corridor of the
marble room, the weather bureau man,
who is stationed there, and who is
often called upon by visitors to point
out senators whose faces are unfa
miliar to the former. Seeing the sen
ator with a card in his hand and a per
plexed look on his face, he asked him
if he were looking for some one. ,
"Yes," the senator replied, "I re
ceived this card,, and told the page I
would see her in the marble room, but
she isn't there."
The weather man "glanced at the card
and grinned. "But she is there, sen
ator," he said, at the same time point
ing to an individual clad in broadcloth
trousers and Prince Albert coat seated
on a soft in a corner of the marble
room.
The card bore the name of Dr. Mary
Walker. N. Y. Sun.
- ' A Fine Point in Hanking-.
Banks do not usually accept checks
which call for one dollar more than the
amount of deposit, unless the customer
is well known, and the officers are con
fident that he will promptly make up
the balance. Thus, if a check for $200
is presented and the maker has only
$192 to his credit, the paper will usually
go back stamped "no funds." But one
attorney recently got around that. He
had, after long dunning, secured a
check from a slow-pay debtor. When
it was presented for collection he
found that the deposit lacked eight dol
lars of the amount the paper called for,
and payment was refused. Thereupon
he promptly deposited eight dollars to
amount of the creditor and gained $192
by the operation, for the check was
cashetL Worchester (Mass.) Gazette.
i! A n
III litis U!i Ida
It
dlpabt tims bch1dul1. abktvs
fob. . From Daixxs. Fkom.
Fast 8alt Lake, Denver, Ft Fast
Mall Worth, Omaha, Kan- Mall.
11:50 p.m. caa City, St. Louis, 8:10 a.m.
Chicago and East.
Spokane Walla Walla, Spokane, Spokane
Flyer Minneapolis. St. Paul, Flyer.
5:30 p.m. Du lut h, Milwaukee, 6:50 a. m.
Chicago and East..
s-p. m. From Portland. 4 p.m.
Ocean Steamships.
All Sailing dates subject
to change.
For San Francisco
Nov. 28, Dec. 3, 8, 13,
18, 83, 28, Jan. 2, 7.
8 p. m. 4 p. m.
Ex. Sunday Columbia Kv. Steamers. Ex.Sunday
, To Astoria and Way
Saturday Landings.
10 p. m.
6 a. m. Willamette Rivkr. 4:30 p. to.
Ex.Bunday Oregon City, Kewberg, Ex.Sunday
Salem & Way Land's.
7 a. m, WiiXAMETTE and Tak- 8:30 p.m.
Tues.Thur. hill Rivers. Mon.,Wed.,
ondSst. Oregon City, Dayton, and Fri.
and Way-Landings.
6 a.m. Willamette River. 4:30 p.m.
Tue-.Thur, Portland to Corvallis, Tue-.Thur
and Sat. and Way-Landings. and Sat.
m Leave
lv Riparla Snake River. Lewiston.
dany Riparla to Lewiston. dally
except except
Saturday. Friday.
For full particulars call on O. R. & N. Cc'a
agent The Dalles, or address
W. H. HUBLBNRT,
Gen. Pas. Agt, Portland. O
ORTHERN
flj PACIFIC RY.
H
Ll
n
s
Pullman
Elegant
Tourist
Sleeping Cars
Dining Cars
Sleeping Car
ST. PAUL,
HINNEAFOLI
DULUTH
IAKOO
GRAND FOB
CBOOKSTON
WINNIPEG
HELEN1 an
BUTTE
to
Through Tickets
CHICAGO
WASHINGTON
PHILADELPHIA
NEW YORK
BOSTON AND ALL
POINTS EAST and SOUTH
For Information, rime ftarrtit- mam and tickets.
cal on or write to
W. C. ALLAWAY. Agent,
The Dalles, Oregon
A. D.
ARLTON, Asst. G. P. A.,
rrison Cor. Third. Portland Oregon
WE DO
Job sin
Printing
FIRST-CLASS WORK.
REASONABLE PRICES.
Chronicle Pub. Co.
THE DALLES, OREGON.
Are You Interested?
The O. R. & N. Co'a New Book
On the Resonrses of Oregon, Washing
ton and Idaho ia being distributed. Oar
readers are reqaeeted to forward the
addresses of their Eastern friends and
acquaintances, and a copy of the work
will be sent them free. This is a mat
ter all ehonld be interested in, and we
wonld ask that everyone take an in
terest and forward snch addresses to W.
H. Hcrlbubt, General Passenger Agent.
O. R. & N. Co., Portland.