leXXXV XIII THE DALLES, OREGON, SATURDAY, JUNE 5. 1897 CONSOLIDATED 1882. NO 39 OUSTAUJEBK. Vol " - KOFESSIONALm o. ajbLitirtii, - Physician and Surgeon, Rooms am Dilie Nttooal Bank. Office hours, 10 .j inH IS m, n.i from t to 4 p m. Kon deoce Wat Bad of Third Street, A S. BBXNET Attorney at Law 0le ir SchsAno buimllng, upstairs Oregon: The Dal yM. TACKMAN ' - Dentist. Rooms 8 and'lO. Vogt Block, The Dalles. Or. t SOCIETIES. fTEMPTjE LODGE. NO. S. A. O. U W. I Meets in Keller's Hall every Thursday evening at 7:30 o'clock. TAS. NESMITH POST, NO. K G. A. R- O Meets every Saturday evening jat 7:a in . a. 01 . nail. lOURT THE DALLES. A. O. F. NO.-8630 1 7 Meets everv Friday evening at their hall at 8 o'clock. - BOF L. E. Meets every Friday afternoon in K. of P. HaU - TTTASCO TRIBE, NO. l, I. O. R. M. Meets v v everv vv euQsuay eveiuuK ui w . Hall. -- GESANG VEREIN HARMONIE. Meets every Sudday evening at Baldwin Opera House, BOF L. F. DIVISION, NO. 167. Meets in K. of P. Hall the first and third Wednes day of each month at 7 :30 P. M. WASCO LOEGE, NO. 15, A. F. & A. M. Meets first and third Mondayiof each month at 8 P.M. niHB DALLES ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER X NO. 8. Meets in Masonic Hall the third Wednesday of each month at 8 P, M. COLUMBIA LODGE.' NO. 5, I. O. O F j Meets every Friday evening at 7 :S0 o'clock. In K. of P. Hall, corner of Second and Court streets. Sojourning brothers are welcome. TtRIENDSHIP LODGE, NO. 9 K. of P. r Meets every Monday evening at 8 o'clock, in Schanno's building, corner of Court and Second streets. Sojourning brothers are in vited. TTOMEN'S CHRISTIAN TEMPERANCE UNION Meets every Friday at S o'clock n the reading room. rODEEN WOODMEN OF THE WORLD-- IYI Mt. Hood Camp, No. 6, meets every Tuesday evening at 7:30 o'clock, in Kellers HalL n All sojourning brothers are Invited to be present. . COLUMBIA CHAPTER, NO. 33, E. S. Meets in Masonic Hall on the second and fourth Tuesday of each month, visitors cor diaU invited. ; THE CHURCHES. oT tattt s ohtthch Union street, oppo. v site Fifth. Sunday school at :30 A.M. Evening prayer on iTioay at i:m. T7VANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH lj Rev. L. Grev. Pastor. Service in the Eng lish language at First Baptist Church every Sunday :3u A. u. ana 7-.su w. m. ME. CHURH Kev. J. H. Wood, Pastor. . SAt-vlces everv Sundav morning and eye ing. Sunday school at 12:20 o'clook P. M. A ' cordial invitation extended by both pastor and people to all, CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Rev. W. C. j Curtis, Pastor, Services every Sunday at -11A.M. and 7:30 P. M. Sunday school after morning service - - OT. PETER'S CHURCH Rev. A. Bronsgeest Pastor. Low mass every Sunday a 7 A. M. ' High mass at 10:30 A. M, Vespers at 7:30 P. M. " "T71IRST BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. O. D. Tay Jt? lor, Pastor. Corner Fifth and Washington streets. Services each Sunday morning at 11 , o'clock. Sunday School and Bible class at 12 :1& Pastor's residence Northeast cor. of Washing ton and Seventh streets. "HURST CHRISTIAN CHURCH Rev. I. H. - X Hazel, pastor. Preaching every Sunday morning at 11 and In the evening at 7 o'clock , Sunday school at 10 A M. Prayer meeting every Thursday evening. Y. P. S. C E. meets very sunaay at o:sur. m. AVALRY BAPTIST CHURCH Corner 1 i Seventh and Union. Elder J. H. Miller. . pastor. Services every Sunday at 11 A. M. and 7 :S0 P. M. Prayer meeting on- Wednesday evening. Sunday school at 9:45 A. M. All are cordially weloomed. . ADMINISTRATRIX'S NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been duly appointed by the County Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of Wasco, as administratrix of the estate of Henry Pont ine, late of Wasco Countv. and now deceased. All persons having claims against said estate are hereby notified to present tne same to me. t duly verified, eitner at my residence bi nings lev. Oreson. or at the office of G. W. Phelps, ii Dalles City, Oregon, within six months from the date of tnis notice. . . Dated April 10. 18W. MRS. EFFTE PONTING. alOw - Adminlstrairl: .. NOTICE FOB PUBLICATION. , . Lakd Office at Thi Daixis. Obb., May 21, 1897. f NntlcA In herehv riven that the following - named settler has filed notice of his intention - to commute and make final proof in support of his claim, and that said proof will be made before the Register and Receiver at The Dalles, Oregon, on June as, iot. viz: ANN HOOK, (nee ANN SOUTHWELL) Hd. E. No. 4771. for the NWM. SWA Sec. 19. . Tp. 2 N., R. 15 E.. and EM SEX Sec 2. Tp. 2 N., R. 14 E. W. M. , She names the foUowuur witnesses to Drove her continuous residence upon and cultivation OI said land, viz: . Emma Southwell, of The Dalles, Oregon, and John Beatty, William Shelly and George Cozel, of ceiuo, Oregon. - . JAS. F. MOORE, - May. 22 Register. " ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that by an order of the County Court of the State of Oregon for Wasco County, made and entered on the 17th day of May, 1897, the undersigned was duly appointed administrator of the estate of Albert Cilery, deceased. All persons having claims against said estate are notified to present them, with the proper vouchers, to the undersigned at Victor, Oregon, or to D. H. Roberts, at his ' office in The Dalles, Oregon, within six months from the date of tnis notice. Dated May 18th, 1807. L. C. HENNEGHAN, Adm'r of the estate of Albert Ullery, deceased. - m22w5. - ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned. I . uiminUtnitnF of the estate of Christina Phil lips, deceased, will on Monday, the 21st day of June, lw, at toe nour 01 s o ciuck r. a. vi wuu day, at the front door of the County Court . House In Dalles City, Wasco County, Oregon, sell to the highest bidder for cash in hand, the following described real estate belonging to the said oeceaseu, town 1 Ttu eleven (11). twelve (12) and thirteen (13) In the town of Kingsley, Oregon, and according tn the recorded maDS and plats of said town. Said sale will be made in pursuance of the former order of the Hon. Ccunty Court of the State of Oregon, for Wasco County, and subject to confirmation oy saia court Dated this 13th day of May, 1897. S. B. PHILLIPS, Adm'r of the estate of Christina Phillips, dee'd. A NiW vf UNDERTAKING ESTABLISHMENT Prinz & Nitsctilce BSAtxmsJnr FURNITURE AND CARPETS w itt? oai bnsinej'a r-lele Under taking EsUbUhment, and u we an in no way conawted with the UndertaenTTnist, our pr:c wlU be low accordingly For mining stock Quotations, and r facts concerning British Columbia and Was hington mines, address FRED FLOED, No. 4 South Monroe Street, Spokane, Washington. 0 In. TO THE- GIVES THE Choice of Tio TnrrcoatlDeDtal Eo tts VIA VIA SPOKANE rJIMFElPOLIS v DENVER 0AEA At-D ST. PAUL KANSAS Low Rates to All Eastern Cities OCEAN 'STEAMERS leave five days for Portland every SM FRANCISCO. CAUUg For full details call on the O. R. & N. Agent E. McNElLL, President and Manager. W. H. HUKLBURT. Gen. Pass. Art., Portland, Oregon The New O. R. ft N. Time Card. Train No. 2 east via. the Union Pacific and Oregon Short Line, arrives here at 1:00 A. m., departs at 1:05. No. 4, east by Spokane and Great Northern, arrives at 5:55 p. M., departs 6:00. No. 1, west from U. P. and O. S. L., arrives at 3:55 A. M., and departs 4:00. No. 3, west from Spokane and Great Northern, arrives at 8:25 A. M. and de parts at 8:30. Freight trains Nos, 23 and 24, second divisions, will carry passengers. No. 23 arrives at 5 p. M. and No. 24 leaves at 1:45 p. m. Going East? If you are, do not forget Fliree Important Points FIRST. Go via St. Paul because the lines to that point will afford you the very best service. SECOND. See that the column bevond St. Paul reads via the Wisconsin Central because .that line makes close connections with all the trans-continental lines entering the Union De pot there, and its service is first-class in every particular. THIRD. For Information, call on your neighbor and friend the nearest ticket agent and ask for a ticket via the Wisconsin Central lines, or address JAS. C. POND, or GEO. S. BATTY. Gen. Pass. Agt., General Aeent. Milwaukee, Wis. 248 Stark St., Portland.Or "Tie taolator Line" The Dalles, Portland and Astoria navigation Co. THROUGH FieisiU ana Passenger Line PASSENGER RATES One way $2 00 Round trip 3 00 Freight Shipments for Portland received at any time, day or nig ht. Shipments for way landings must be delivered before 5 p. m. Live stock shipments solic ited. Call on or address, . Br a), Cakes mPie0. Frish Oysters Served in Every Style. Second Street, next door 1 3 The Dalles National Pank. Everybody Says So. Coscarets Candy Cathartic, the most won derful medical discovery of the age, pleas ant ana reiresning to tne taste, act gem. and positively on kidneys, liver ana bo cieausmg we enure system, aispei cure headache, lever, habitual ci ana biliousness, tr lease buy si oiuu.u to-aay ; ju, 20, au ce; guaranieea to cure oy au arr Rates Reduced W -M. S Gbnkrai Agent U1IUCI 111 -5 THE - DALLES - OREGON. V - Eiiaill!! I . . . ... m. ... is. We want bright felP "nUNSON", . I TZZeTus 2 ..TYPEWRITER S fl everywhere. UftttttO ;W Wri"s L I M- MONARCH CYCLE CO., yl 0 ' Chicago New York - London, g E-fSsMrjamcnski i wounded . . mm$gm&mMm'mm&&m&& la "The Best" "Writiriff Machine Ben Wilson Saloon co?tre$ .. Second Street, opposite Diamond Mills,. The "Munson" possesses many distinct points THP HIITF! (IRFfimV of advantage over all other writing machim s, IHLi UtxLiLiLtj, UlluUuil The most uunDie or all. Address for catalogue, - THE MUNSON TYPE WRITER Co., . 4 Jf4 W.LakeSt., . . Chlcago.nu FinQ qj& . $faXl(i Free Lunch served at all hours. ; You and iOkretron Bakerv mnn Js and O-AJS JJ Am prepared to famish families,- hotels and ' sa restaurants with the choicest FsT A TA E - 7 gmmmmmmmmmmmnnummmmmmmmmmmK 1 g 2E 89 jCist !Pricef - - - - - - "' '96 Gamblers, uAu tAy iast, -Second Hand Wheels $25 and upwards 3f Send for catalogues, free, and 2d hand list. FRED T. MERRILL CYCLE - 127 Sixth Street. Portland, Or. I r Hranches Spokane, Seattle, Taconia and Walla Walla. LIVE AGENTS WANTED g LEO 8CUANNO, Agent, iiiiiiiiiiuiiuiiiiuiiiiiaiiiiiiuii ..uimmmmmmuimu.. New BARBED "WIRJS : NAILS : GRANITE WARE TIN "WARE MAIER & BENTON 167 Second Street 1 You Can't Pl O Js&v fJvS a white P'o0 from a A v1i.J'llr Crow's Tail, nor a good v . SisL-Ofc. Bicycle from Castings. J?) The MONARCH 0 v Jf& Sj5?SX is good all through. ...J.V23lUJ3 Light runni" and Headed For sal S 3 S80 S60 CO. THE DALLES. New line of Stoves to" arrive from $6 up to $00 Steel Ranges Don't be deceived by buying second-hand goods. We have nothing but new goods and. up- to-date stoves. Goods ! ROUTED BF CUBANS Garcia's Forces Ambush Two Detachments of Spaniards AFTER THEIR SCALPS Senator Tillman Wants the Senators Who Speculated in Sugar Stocks Investigated and Expelled. Spanish Guerillas Attack a Cuban Hospi tal Bat are Driven Off by Wounded ' Inmates S 'ions Wreck In Colo ado. New Yoke, May 28. A special to the World from Havana says: General Garcia ambushed two de tachments of Spaniards nearVintegas. Puerto Principe province. After fight lasting all of one day he attacked them at night and got them separated For a while they were so confused they fired at each other, One detachment finally became panic-stricken and fled, Garcia fell on the other and defeated it, inflicting a loss of 100. He then pursued the retreating force, and, catching up with them ten miles from the coast, killed off wounded 64 more Spanish. The Nunez brother recently cap tured a Spanish fort near Palacios, Pmar del Rio, and after occupying it three days burned it, taking away large supply of ammunition and pro visions. There also was a guerilla fight at Minas and St. Felipe, Havana prov ince, the Cubans under Martinez and Carillo compelling the government troops to retire in both instances. The Spanish loss in not known, but more than 200 wounded soldiers have been brought .into Havana since Friday, the men being brought in at night so as to avoid observation. The Span iards say that Carillo is wounded, but the report is not believed. Delicate articles, such as edgings, ruching, laces, and gossamer will not stand much rubbing. Soap Foam Washing Powder cleans them perfectly without damage or trouble.. TILLMAN TO THE FRONT. He Introduces a Senatorial Rosolution in the Senate. Washington, May 28. Senator Tillman introduced in the senate a reso lution for the appointment of a special committee of five senators to inquire into reports of speculation in sugar stocks by senators, and as to advance information by New York speculators as to the sugar schedule of - the tariff bill, and also to continue the investiga tion made in 1894. The resolution recites that one man is serving a sentence in jail and 'an other was yesterday acquitted on a technicality and piovides for conduct ing the investigation so all questions shall bo pertinent. Senator Frye in the chair, promptly referred the resolution to the commit tee on contingent expenses. Tillman was allowed to speak on the subject by unanimous consent. Tillman said the democratic members of the finance committee were under a cloud on account of the sugar schedule of the tariff bill of 1894. The republican members were now under suspicion. Ooe party was as deep in the raud as the other was in the mire. Pettus, democrat, of Alabama, de manded that Tillman specify his charges and that the whole senate should not be subject to his sweeping assertions. Tillman said the present tariff bill was made in the rooms of. the Arling ton hotel with close connection by telephone and telegraph with New. York and in close touch with the sugar trust magnates. - Tillman had numerous extracts read from papers showing that the sugar trust secured the schedules asked in the new bill, and also an extract from a paper making a charge that Senator Smith, of New Jersey, had -been spec ulating in sugar. Tillman closed with a declaration that the senate should either prove the correspondents liars or prove the senators corrupt and then turn then out. . When the sprine time comes, "gentle Annie," like ail otber sensible persons, will cltanse the liver and renovate the system with De Witt's Little Early Riser?, famous little pills for-the liver and storuache all the year' around. . Snipes Kinnersly Drug Co. CUBANS FOUGHT WELL Unsuccessful Attrck by Spaniards Upon an Insurjrent Hospital. New York, May 28. A special to the World from Key West, says: A Cuban hospital near Matrua, Ha- Only One vara province, was attacked by Spau h guerillas. The insurgents were in formed of their approach, and, as some of the wounded could not be moved those able to get about, fortified Uie building, which is of stone, as well as they could. When the guerillas demanded the surrender of the place the inmates re plied with a volley, killing five Span iards. The soldiers then set fire to the wooden portion of the building, but the stone part remained intact, and the beseiged made such a valiant fight that the enemy finally retreated. Sixteen guerillas raided a camp ef pacificos in Matanzas province and carried off seven women. One day one of the women managed to secure some kind of poison, which was put in tne iooa Kettles oi tne Dana ana every guerilla died in agony. Croop and whooping cough are child hood's terrors; but like pneumonia. bronchitis and other throat and lung troubles, can be quickly cured by using One Winute Cough Cure. Snipes Kin- ersly Drug Co. A MASSACRE BY INDIANS. Lame Deer Agency, Mout., Cheyeimea on the Wurdath. Denver, May -21. A special to the Republican from Helena says: Cheyenne Indians have gone on the warpath and are said to have killed a dozen men including five United States soldiers. The Indians have no reserva tion, but make the Lame Deer agency their headquarters. A man named Hover, a sheep herder, was recently shot by Indians, because he caught several of tbem killing sheep. The settlers armed themselves to pro tect their property. Two companies of colored cavalry from Fort Custer were ordered to the agency on Wednes day. On Saturday a courier. arrived from the agency with the information that George Walters, postmaster, and Lou Anderson, a stockman, had been shot and killed, and also that the In dians shot into the cavalry and killed five, men, and that they had sixty armed cowboys surrounded. Cavalry from Fort Keogh and company E. in fantry, left Saturday for the scene. The settlers have moved their families from near the reservation to Miles City. - Ranchmen and stockmen at the Cheyenne agency" demand the Indians who killed Hoover. The names of the Indians are known, and they are protected by 50 bucks. Thirty years is a long time to fight so painful a trouble as piles, but Jacob Mitchell, of Unionville. Pa., strueeled that long before he tried DeWitt's Witch ' Hazei Salve, which quickly and' perma- I uciiuv t-ureti mm. -11 is equally eneciive . I - I 1 Tr . - , er in eczema and all skin affection Snipes M'KINLfSV TO ACT. Important Developments In the Cuban Situation Imminent. . New York, May 31. A special ' to the Herald from Washington says: From now until June 10, when he will start on his trip to attend the Nashville exposition. President Mc Kinley's attention will be devoted almost exclusively to the Cuban ques tion. Important developments may be looked for within that period. A new minister to Spain and probably a new consul-general to Havana will be ap pointed, the report of Special Commis sioner Calboun considered, and a for mal note to Spain drafted and placed in the bands of the new minister for delivery upon his arriyal in Madrid. The instructions to the new minis ter will of course be treated as confi dential until he ' has communicated with the Madrid authorities and a re ply from Spain has been received. There is practically no doubt, however, that the president's note to Spain will be a formal tender of the good offices of the United States. It will be firm in tone, reviewing the whole situation in such a way as to show that the United States is interested in the present devastating war, and that on the ground of humanity and for com mercial reasons we have the right to use all legitimate means of bringing the war to a close. Personal. The gentleman who an noyed the congregation last Sunday by continually coughing will find instant re lief by using One Minute Cough Cure, a speedy and harmless remedy for throat and lung Uoubles. Snipes Kinersly Drug CP. : Railway Wreck In Colorado. Denver. May 28. A special to the Times, from Glenwood Springs, Colo., says: An extra freight going west on the Denver & Rio Grande ran upon Cabeza siding this morning to allow No. 4 passenger, the Atlantic express, to pass. A switch was left open. The first section of the passenger ran into the open switch, derailing the engine, mail and baggage cars and one pas senger coach. Engineer John West and Fireman Denny Donahay were in stantly Kiiiea. ine passengers wer shaken up. Some had to be r through holes cut in the were bruised and a none were se pass 1 2 AN IMPORTANT MOVE A Big Stir Created in Western Railway Circles. ACTION TO BE TAKEN After Three Months of Inactivity the President Will do Something; With the Cuban Question. Cheyenne Indians Bave Bernn' Hot-till. ties A Number of Settlers and Five Soldier Killed Families are Moved to Safe Qoatters. Portland, Or., May 31. It was grand news for Oregon as a state and Portland as its metropolis that came over the wires last night announcing that the Oregon Short Line had thrown off the Union Pacific yoke and opened the Ogden gateway to all connecting lines. Not since 1883 has anything happened which presages so much of prosperity and increased population, through im migration, as does this move. Where formerly the Union Pacific had a monopoly on the transportation of all freight consigned to points in the Northwest, and which it was necessary to send via the Missouri river, now six other roads, which have heretofore been barred will be able to make Port land a terminal point. These roads are the Burlington, Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe, Mis souri Pacific, Rock Island, Denver & Rio Grande and Rio Grande Western. In addition to these will be, as now, the O. R. & N. anu Southern Pacific. . The importance and value of this letting in of the great railroad systems of the West, to Oregon, can hardly be estimated. It means the advertising of this state by hundreds of men whose business it is to advertise, for the rail road companies employ them for noth ing else. It means the booming of Oregon just as the railroads have boomed southern California, simply through showing up the splendid op portunities presented by the country. Southern California has the sunshine and flowers, and the railroads have made the most of them. . Oregon has the land and fertility and now that the railroads have been given the oppor tunity to do business with this fertile land, its praises will be sounded from one end of the Union to the other. - This opening of the Oregon Short Line, or the "Ogden Gateway," as it has-been generally termed, has created a stir in the railroad circles of Port land, such as has not been known since the separation of the O. R. & N. from the Union Pacific, and there is general rejoicing, naturally, the Union Pacific being excepted. . BILLY'S JOKE. The Story or a Mountain Goat Who I ot a Humorous Turn of Mind. A mountain goatthatl once kept in confinement was about as cunning as the average street ara'b, and, had he lived to maturity and Hcept on acquir ing knowledge, the chances are 1 would have had to move ont and give him the ranch . He usually -foHowed me, says a writer in Forest and Stream, on short excursions into the woods, and gen erally kept right at my lieels; but on one occasion he lagged 'behind, and, although I .called him several times, he paid uo heed. .1 finally walked back to see what he was interested in and found him busy feeding on some moss that grew at the roots of a fir tree, so I left him and continued my tramp. But after I had got away a short dis tance the thoucht occurred to me to hide and see how he would act; so I slipped, into a hollow stump close by the trail and awaited the result. Pres ently I heard him coming bounding along the trail, and after he had passed I stuck ont rny head to watch him. When he got twenty feet beyond me he stopped and commenced looking around, and the ccmical expression of his face as he Bconncd every, object that bore any remblanee to a hnman beiny caused ma to burst out laughing, when ho turned ad taw me. Then he commenced to ev.11: and would not go any further, I Lr.d1o ro heme. The nest day lu followed me as usual, but in the mid: t of some thick brush and down timber I got interested in a bird that I wai following up, and forgot the goat, and when I came to look for him ho wagone. Walking back to where I last saw him I called, but no "Eilly" came in sirfh't. Then I com menced a diligent search, and present ly I caught sight of something white beneath a brush heap. Stooping down and looking in, I saw the little brute curled r.p in a heap, and not a move could I get out cf hun. Kcaching in, I caucht him by the leg and pulled h out, and gave him a good cufib both hiC.cs of his head. not mind it a bit, and tj the joke immensely. bis usual raanm if he wraii yesterj norns wnn astomsmng rapidity, Daeit ing off, stamping his feet with a quick jerk, and propelling himself at his foe J ike a sure-enough battering ram. The great yellow puma, ae-ile and watchful, leaped aside or into the air to escape the onslaught of the tartar he had caught, and with a lightning like spring he would aim to clutch the ram behind the horns. But not once did the interested observer see the ram caught unawares. The heavy horns were swung quickly on the pivot of his sinewy neck, and received the clawing of the cat with no effect whatever. Col. Denton watched the sport with all the zest of a bportsman, and, on in dications that the belligerents were becoming mutually disgusted and about to separate and disappear, he embraced a moment when the ram stood stamping his fore feet preparing to dart forward, and gave him a bullet behind the shoulder. The ram leaped upward and forward, game to the last, and tumbled forward on his horns. CoL Denton then turned to pay his respects to the lion, but as the brute had already received more than it had bargained for, it was out of sight. The splendid horns of the ram were secured by the hunter as a trophy. SUNSET BLUES AND REDS. How the Gorgwnns Colorings of Twilight Skies Are I'rodaoed. Observers of the gorgeous sunsets and afterglows have been most particularly 6truck with the immense wealth of the various shades and tints of red. Now, if the glowing colors are due to the presence of dust in the air, there must be somewhere a display of the colors complementary to the reds, because the dnst acta by a selective dispersion of the colors. The small dnst particles arrest the di rect course of the rays of light and reflect them in all directions, but they princi pally reflect the rays of the violet end of the spectrum, while . the red rays pass on almost unchecked. Overhead deep blue reigns in awe-inspiring glory. As the sun passes below the horizon, and the lower stratum of air, with its larger particles of dust which reflect light, ceases to be ' illuminated, the depth and fullness of the blue most in tensely increase. This effect is pro duced by the very fine particles of dust in the sky overhead being unable to scatter any colors unless those of short wave-lengths at the violet end of the spectrum. Thus we see, above, blue in its intensity without any of the red colors, aays the Popular Science Monthly. When, however, the observer brings his eyes down in any direction except the west he will see the blue mellowing into blue-green, green and then rose color. And some of the most beautiful and deiicate colors are formed by the air cooling and depositing its moisture m the particles of dust, increasing the -.;ze of the particles till they arc suffl iently large to stop and spread the red ays, when the sky glows with a strange lurora-like light. - . . - , . GrflN GQNHJ PBQ ARJ3 Iha Vessel Fad No Conductors and the Captain Was Knocked. "My father was walking the poop of his vessel in Sydney harbor, and, as it was rather a close, warm evening, the awnings were furled," says a writer in London TU-lfits. . ''It was thundering and lightning. He had just go aft and turned around when he saw something exceedingly bright drop before him, and he was knocked down. In falling he struck his head. against the rail, which stunned him for a minute. "When he got up he found that the front part of his legs were severely scorched. Two of the planks in the deck were charred about an inch deep for a length of seven feet, and the main royal mast of a ship lying about a quar ter of a mile astern was broken off, though whether by the same stroke he could not tell. . "When the deck was repaired my fa ther kept the charred portions, and he still has them to show to anyone who doubts his story. "The ships that were struck by the lightning had no conductors on their masts. Most ships have them now. In the ship on which I served my time we hod a platinum red on each truck, with wire conductors passing through glass insulators down the backstays. "On the least sign of thunder the ends of these wires were thrown over the side. On dark nights when there was any lightning flashing the points of the platinum rodi used to have a blue light glimmering on them, and the effect wa very weird and uncanny." THE VESTIBULE TRAIN.' A Arrangement which Save the Health of the Callroad Conductor. Much has been said about the ad vantages and comforts of the magnifi cent vestibule trains that run over the great railroads of this land. A new idea was advanced by a veteran railroad man, who is posted on all matters con nected with railroad affairs. "The vestibule train vantace." said he, "to ductor." It has alwa New York ' ductorsJ is. k ill : . POUBEEi Absolutely Pure . Celebrated for Its great leavening strength and healthfulness. Assures the food against alum and all forms of adtulteration common to the cheap brands. Royal Baking Powder Co., New York. EFFECT OF HEAT, The Haitian System Can Become Used t a High Temperature. No one can tell how high a tempera ture man can endure until he is sub jected to the trial. The effect of an in- , tensely-heated atmosphere in causing leath has been but little studied. 'Some years since," says Dr. Taylor, the eminent jurisprudent, "I was con sulted in one case in which the captain of a steam vessel was charged with man slaughter for causing a man to be lashed within a short distance of the stoke hole of the furnace. The man died in a few hours, apparently from the effeots of his exposure. Yet the engine rooms of steamers in the tropics have been observed to have a temperature as high as 140, and engineers after a time be come habituated to this excessive heat without appearing to suffer materially In health. In certain manufactories the body appears to acquire a power, by habit, of resisting these high tempera tures; still, it has been proved that many suffer severely. In s report on the employment of children (London) it is stated that in a glass manufactory a thermometer held close to a boy's neaa stood at 130 degrees, and as the in spector stood near to observe the In strument his hot actually melted out of shape. Another boy had his hair singed by the heat, and said that bis clothes were sometimes singed, too, while a third worked in a temperature no less than 150 degrees. Amid this tremen dous heat they carry on work which re quires their constant attention. They are incessantly in motion." In the Turkish baths higher tempera tures than this have been noted, but there is reason to believe that eerioua symptoms have been occasionally pro duced in persons unaccustomed to them, and that in one or two cases death has resulted. All sudden changes from a ipw4o a (Mghjemperalure are liable to "' cause death in aged persons or thosa who ere suffering from organic dis eases. In attempting to breathe air bested to temperatures varying from 180 to 200 degrees, there is a sense of suffocation, with a feeling of dizziness and other symptoms indicative of an effect on the brain, end the circulation is enormously quickened. An 'inquest was held on the body of a stoker of an ocean steamship. He had been by trade a grocer and was not accustomed to excessive heat. While occupied before the engine furnace he was observed to fell suddenly on the floor in a state of Insensibility. When carried on deck It was found he was dead. All that wis discovered on a post-mortem examina tion was an effusion of serum into the ventricles of the brain. It has now be come one of the recognised causes of death in this countrty. In some cases a person may sink and die . from ' ex-, haustion, or symptoms of cerebral dis turbance may continue for some time and the case ultimately prove fatal. Death from sunstroke, when it is not Immediately fatal, is preceded by some well-marked symptoms, puch as weak ness, giddiness, headache, disturbed vi sion, flushing of the face, followed by oppression and difficulty of breathing, and in some cases stupor, passing into profound coma. The skin is dry and hot and the heat of the body is much greater than natural. Walk slowly and don't frsi and you will not experience anything; of that sort. Philadelphia Time. THE YXUS