WOMAN'S EDITION THE DALLES TIMES-MOUNTAINEER Contributed Articles . . . speak to tin: s i:ton. (First Whisper OM Lady.) "The rliurch is, exceedingly cold today I hope vou're. not chilled my poor Mrs. Grey? When" I hring a friend with me. its al ways the way ! I must speak to the sexton about it" (Second Whisper Young Lady.) "How frightfully hot the church is, mama ! Just see how dejectt-H my wretched bangs are. There's not a curl left! We must ask papa. To speak to the Sexton about it." (Third Whisper Hheumatic Old -Man.) "A current of air strikes my neck, sit ting here, The church isn't cold, but draughty my dear, There's quite too much air, for this time of year, I'll speak to the Sexton about it." (Fourth Whisper Healthy Young Man) "I say Dick ! This place is atrociously , close ! If they don't open something, we'll have to vamose If I catch the Sexton, I'll give him a dose He ought to be "blown up about it!" Service ended, the malcontents made their threats good, While, respectfully bowing, the bland Sexton stood. Assuring each one, he "would do what he could," (Nor did any one of them doubt it!) But wishiug within, as he'd oft wished before, That the calling of Sexton, required as of yore, The use of a spade (for when grumb lings are o'er Not a grumbler can well do without it !) That at length he might quit them, sick, well, young and old, Whereif they were hot, or if they were cold, 'Twould be out of the question for them to make bold, To "speak to the Sexton about it !" Henrietta II Eliot. JOURNALISM. Nearly fifty years ago an eminent Frenchman compared a newspaper to a "man standing at an open window and bawling to the passers by." In the time of our fore-fathers the "man at the window," was not bawling out sensa ' tions, crimes, fads and fancies (as he needs must were he bawling now) but of the short-comings and blunders of men in high places. This characteristic existed in our mother country, and still exists there today, with less change than it does in our own country. It was the American press which first established the idea of news gather ing as t he prominent factor in editing a successful newspaper. In the period of the last fifty years, education has become more general all over the world, and popular education in the United States has cultivated a taste for news paper reading among all classes of our people, and" in "'proportion the news papers have been obliged to 'supply that which is. most acceptable to popu lar fancy It is to be regretted that" this taste is fed largely upon sensational gossip, criminal cases and murder trial reports, with the excuse from the editors that the wishes of the readers must be gratified or the profits must drop off. Many papers are issued at what would be a ruinously low rate were it not that their circulation is so immense. For example the New York World, tri weekly, is sold at two cents a copy, the daily at one cent, and while they are .supposed to contain all that is of inter-. est to business men, statesmen and politicians, they are over-flowing w ith much that renders them unfit' for a family paper. Still they claim a profit of a million dollars a year on the capi tal invested. ' Of course this income is greatly enhanced by the profits from ad vertisements which are so great an element in the successful business en terprises of the present day. There are scores of other papers in our country doing almost as well in proportion to the capital invested. There is a vast difference in the plans pursued by jour nalists in this country and in Europe. In Paris (which generally means France) there is almost as much vari ety in journalism asin the -IT. S. but their success depends upon editorial writing and in this line such men as Theirs, (Juizot, Carnot and Brani weild ed great influence or rose into political power. In Europe, criticism and com ment are the rule, while in America, "news" is the one thing needful. This may be due to the slow spread of pop ular education abroad where the readers are more confined to the best educated classes who demand thoughtful criticism in a good literary form. In England great seriousness and regard for truth is a requisite in good correspondent and reportorial work, while in France no weight is attached to these things, if the articles are only droll or sprightly or written in a finished style. Their best writers in journalism gain fame from editorials of high merit, and it is said when a paper is started in Paris that the simple collection of news or re porter's work carries no weight with the proprietors of the paer, but their "leading article" and the art and theat rical criticism must be up to the best standard of that kind of work. It con sequently requires a much less capital to go into journalism there than it does in our own country. With us news paper work has become almost distinct ly a news gathering process, leaving the higher art of journalism a very small and insignificant place, and it is for this reason that it has become merely a step ping stone to literary work of a higher order. There has been some discussion as to whether newspapers were literature at all. Whatever is written and read is literature either good or bad. and news papers have taken an immense hold on the reading public in all civilized coun tries. The hold they are taking on the bulk of the people should be considered a serious fact, for it is said, and I do not doubt the truth of the assertion, that they "are exerting more, influence on the popular mind and the popular morals than either the pulpit or the book-press has exerted in five hundred years." An unfortunate influence in regard to such reading is that it unfits one's taste for book-reading, and ren ders it more difficult to concentrate one's mind on one subject. The ordi nary newspaper articles requiring four or five minutes each, give one a habit of drowsing about mentally, which is de structive to concentration of thought. In confirmation of this fact I quote from Mr. Godkin of "The Nation" who says: "There has grown up a deep and in creasing scorn on the part of the book reader and the book-maker, for the' man who reads nothing but the news papers and gets his facts and opinions from them. This is true in every civil ized country. Go into a circle of scien tific or cultivated men in any field in America, France, Germany or Italy and you will have the mental food which newspapers supply to the bulk of the population, treated with ridicule and contempt, the authority of a newspaper as a joke and journalism of that class used as a synonym for shallowness, ig norance and blundering. The conver sion of journalism into the highest channels of thought will be one of the serious problems to be solved by the coming century." This from one of the most eminent journalists of our country is entitled to respect although one deprecates his intensity and severity. All honor is due to the eminent men who have done so much to elevate jour nalism in America, but one cannot but remember that the ready pen has also be en in the hands of cultivated women. There is no branch of literature in which she has not shone and none where she has wielded a larger or more lasting in fluence. She has paved the way to a field of work wide, various and w hole some for herself and for her readers. A spirit has asserted itself, of late years, which makes way for women in almost all stations in which men are placed and she has had the intelligence to take the measure of the situation in reference to journalistic work, and one may speak with full assurance as regards the moral issue. Mrs. K. S. S. In Australia spring begins August 20, summer, November 20; autumn, Febru ary 20, and winter, May 20. . TAVO OLI PROGRAM S. On running across an old program of !So7, which had passed through one fire ami three floods, and yet had been pre served in a scrap book for these 31 years, my mind was filled with many questions, and I could not help contrast ing that time with the days of 1898. The concert to which this program calls attention was one given Dec. 11, 1867, for the benefit of the Congregational S. S., in Moody's Hall. This building was erected by Win. C. Moody, who con ducted a brokerage and commission business here, in the early 'f0's, but was no relative of the ex-governor of our state. The hall stood on the property directly east of the Columbia Hotel, and was the gathering place for all enter tainments at that time. Its career closed at the time of the big fire of 1879, which burned the Umatilla House. The admission to this concert was $1, an unheard of price, for this end of the century ; for who would dare ask such an amount at an amateur performance now? Eeither the people of those days had great cheek, or else had more money, or else gave a much finer enter tainment than we can give to day. As our old world has swung around the sun, these many years, it has grown into the habit of later hours, for what performance commencing "promptly at. 7 o'clock," would find more than a few boys in the front seat, at the first rising of the curtain? The orchestra for the occasion consist ed of Messrs r)ehm,Dettignen,Schultzand Ross; three of whom have been called to their long rest. A quartet "faith, hope and charity" was sung by Mrs. Ilogue, now living in Portland, and the mother of Harry A. Ilogue, Miss Pent land, now Mrs. S. L. Brooks, Messrs. Brooks and Hand. It seems, in looking over old programs, as if no concert were complete without the voice of Wm. M. Hand, w ho was an editor of the Moun taineer, before it was merged into the Times, edited by John Michell, and be came the Times-Mountaineer of today. Mr. Hand's ponderous, hearty, inflect ive laugh, will be remembered by the writer, and by many always, though 1 do not remember his singing. Tableau No. 2 was of peculiar interest to me, in that one of the actors was my sainted brother "Ally" Wilson, whose drown ing, near Mill Creek bridge, cast a gloom over our little city. A solo Then You'll Remember Me" was sung by Mrs. A. W. Buchanan, whose husband once owned the house now occupied by Mrs. Thomas Lang. A tableau which will be remembered for its beauty, and because the two par ticipants are now cut down by the Scythe of Time, was one in which Mr. Z. M Donnell, once a member of the legislature, stood with a long white beard, representing the Old Year, hold ing a scythe, while the New Year was personified by that blue eyed, light haired boy, his son Laurie, who entered the scene on a velocipede, a very new invention at that time. Another tableau which will be recalled by some of my readers, was one, where Gov. Moody was powdered, and dressed to represent "John Anderson" while Miss Annie Puck sang "John Anderson my Jo John" in the sweet voice that will long be remembered in The Dalles. Among the older names, 1 recognize those of Mrs. Comfort, now living in Arlington' and J. D. Robh, then prin cipal of our public school, and now teacher in the Reform school, near Salem. Preserved for 19 years, in a sewing machine drawer, I found a program of the first OM Folks concert ever given in The Dalles, dated Jan. 31, 1879. The program, which began, "To all ye peoples within ye settlement of Ye Dalles, and all ye country round about, and ye region beyond, greeting:" should le reprinted, but I have space for only a few of the foot notes, which 1 believe w ere largely written by Dell Hinderman, then in the employ of the). R. A: N.. and living at Celilo. "N. B. Now let silence reigne for some minutes, as ye singers doe sorely need to reobtain they're breathe. - . ' ' "N. P. Any olde ladyes whose foot stoves need fresh coals can nowe have them sente in from neighbor Warner's as her winnnen folkes will keep up a big fire on purpose. "N. B. All ye wimmen folks who bring small babies must leave them w ith our good Deacon Iirooks, so that ye may not be disturbed by ye crying. "N. B. And likewise ye maiden, should not cast sheps eyes at the younge meiie while they doe singe, for they are timid when many eyes be upon them. "N. B. Positively no live stock took as barter, as Elder Stons can't 1)3 pestered with 'em." Mr. C. J. Crandall was the "Tym eiste," his gifts in that line having been enjoyed many times since, by the people of our fit y, while the duties of Ilarpsi chordistes" were attended mainly by Misses Anna Lang ami Genevieve Wil son. All of the names on the program being ficticious I can refer only to those whom memory recalls. They were Clara McFarland, Grace Crandall. Anna Pent land Brooks, Viola McFarland, Emma Harmon Doane, Alice Mc F. Abrains. Annie Bunnell Fleck, Anna Durbin, now Mrs. Walker, of Gilliam county, Mrs. D. B. Grey, and among the men singers were Capt. Will Grey, who was one of the prime movers of the affair, Frank McFarland, Sam Gill, Wm Hand, W. R. Abrains, Capt. Coffin, Eugene Price, Emil Schutz, while Deacon S. L. Brooks and Cornelias McFarland were engaged in "finding ye wimmen flokes good place '' There is something very pleasant to me in recalling if but for a moment, of so genial an 1 aim s' picturesque a per sonality as hi, who was always called Father Harmo.i. He was indeed other wisea hitorie character, having helped to set up th. fi t locomotive ever run in the United States. There are many yet who remember him, but his kindly smile ami plea-ant greeting, wiU soon be a memory, with but few. His voice was phenomenal. I have heard it char acterized in musical technique by those who understand it, but was not old enough to remember it, to quote the statements now. His diminuendo was a thing, those who heard it can never forget. He could make a note sound as if dying away far over the hills, and it is nuKt surely rare that vocal powers are prolonged, as his were, to the eighties. Lucy Wilson Peters. A great many of Dr. Watson's stories have been dramatized, with his com plete sanction and such stories enacted on the stage can onlv exert the very best influence and tend to refine present day drama. An interesting conversa tion with Dr. Watson is found in the columns of "Amusements," in the March number of Woman at Home. Watson is asked ; "Don't you think that as there will be a theatre as long as children act by instinct, and the grown ups love to see good acting, what good people ought to do is not to ostracise the theatre but to purify it?" "How can they do that?" replied Watson, "why, by encouraging managers to produce pure and noble plays, and supporting well living actors, until the higher drama be profitable and the lower left to vicious people, where it will die through destitution. You can never reform by repressing; the Puritans tried that method, and the result was the grossness of the restoration. You only reform by replacing. I wish well to every man and woman who helps to make the stage a blessing and not a curse to society. A new enterprise in the hotel line has been inaugurated under prominent aus pices, and is creating great interest in the circles where it '-as thus far been known. A corporation, to. be called "The Woman's Hotel Company," is to be formed, with a capital of a million dollars, to erect one or more hotels for self supporting women ; the first one to oe for artists, teachers, clerks of the higher grades, and students in art, music and medicine. These women form a class for which no provision exists except the ordinary boarding house, which rarely supplies the com forts and refinements which many of them can afford. Mrs. Tyndall, the widow of Prof Tyn dall, has remitted to the Royal Institu tion a sum of 1,000 which she states that her husband desired her, at such time as should be convenient to herself, to present as an expression of his attach ment to the institution with which he was so long connected, and of his- sym pathy with its objects. A. SANDROCK IMRST-CLASS Wagon - Making, AND GENERAL REPAIRING Second Street, one block East of Pease A: Mays, THE DALLES, - OREGON Real Estate Insurance . And Collection Agency. Local agents for the Phicnix Insurance Co. of Hartford, Conn., and the Commercial l:nion Assur ance Co., L'd of Lon don, England. Office with The Dalles Chronicle. PATRONAGE SOLICITED Qregon Bakery and CJLr i i : A. KELLER, Prop'r. : Am prepared to furnish families, hotels ax.d restaurants with the choicest bVad. ( lakes and Pies. Fresli Oysters Served in Every Style. Second Street, next door to The Dalles National Bink. Cheap Cash Grocery J. II. CItOSS, Prop'r. ..BAY. GRAIN AND FEED... Seeds in hulk. Poultry and Eggs hought and sold. Head quarters for Morris Poultry Cure Cor. 2d and Union Sts., The Dalles. WOOD BROTHERS PROPRIETORS OF THE California Meat Market, All Kinds of Live Stock Bought and Sold. No. 89 Secnd Street, The Dalles, Ore. Telephone 76. GUNNING A- 1I0CKMAN Rl AND HORSESHOEING Dealers in Iron, Steel, Coal, Wh-eh;, Axles and Blacksmiths' Supplier. Special Attention to all classes of work. All Work Warranted. Telephone Second St., opposite .1. M. Filloon s. The Dalles GEO. T. THOMPSON, Sonerai ffitaccsmith ...IIojcsKsnoKiNii a Specialty .. Wagon Shop in Connection. . . EAST END, - - THE DALLES. ORE. A. S. Mac AUlster & Co