MISERERE. Deep ka chnrchymrd green, -with sprtag's gtaniw, I bear the strokes that mark the noontide hear; Dark yew trees stand to imiwmorial sadness, And tvy girds the gray old Norman tower. And while the lark above is never weary. Outpouring clear his midday ecstasy. My eyes are bent upon the "Miserere" That from a time worn stone looks up at ma. Ho word but this; naught yields a faint suggestion jz man or woman, or oi youugw oiu;. Yet there sleeps beyond all doubt and question Borne tragic story to the world untold. Tain all the mind's conjectures and surmises Before so sad an epitap'1 as this: And yet the thought resistiessly arises Of faith forsworn and perjured love's abyss. Of long heart struggle and self immolation In ways where tried and wounded feet must wend. Of ernel trial and supreme temptation And then the enshrouding darkness of the end. Thus to a wanderer doth the mournful "Pity Plead mutely o'er the unrecorded dead; Oh, may the soul have reached that peaceful city Where ne'er a "Miserere need be said! Clinton ScoOard. A POSTBOTS BRAVERY. About a mile from the Pennsylvania village where I lived when a boy was the old north and south turnpike, the main artery of travel in those days across the northeastern tier of counties. Down this road came rolling every af ternoon, the big four horse stage coach, bringing passengers and mail from the south bound for the county town. The mail bag for onr postoffice was thrown off from the coach at the point where our village road joined the turn pike, and as my father was postmaster it was my duty to carry it from the turnpike to the village postoffice. I had the choice of two routes for my daily journey; one by the public road and a much shorter one which cut through the woods that bounded the vil lage on that side, and it was along that path that I usually carried the mail We were at that time in the midst of the civil war, and the mails were filled with tidings from the soldiers at the front, and not infrequently contained packages of money and valuables sent i TT 1 C 4. AT t- 1 But the particular afternoon of which I write, the stage, for some reason which I cannot now remember, was very late. I watched the sun as it went down be hind the wooded hills to the west, and 1 saw the twilight come creeping in across the eastern field. I sat quietly upon a roadside bank wishing for the coming of the stage, and calling to mind the prob able appearance of the impatient and anxious group at the postoffice. But the twilight grew deep, and actual darkness fell around us before the far off rumbling of wheels announced the ap pearance of the belated conveyance. I had been debating for some time whether I had not better go home without the mail, for I was naturally timid, and the prospect of the night journey alone through the wood, even though it was but a short distance, had terrors for me which 1 could not subdue. But I had been reluctant to start on account of the ridicule which 1 knew would follow me from one end of the route, and the dis appointment which would meet me at the other, and now the stage was here. ' The horses were drawn sharply up, the clatter of the wheels ceased, a cloud of dust moved forward and enveloped the coach, and out from the door in the midst of the dust stepped two men. They parleyed for a few minutes with the driver about the fare, and then dis appeared in the darkness. I had a good view of their faces as I went up close to the forward wheel, and I saw that both of them, though well dressed, were evil looking in the extreme. "Is that you, Harmon?" asked the j driver, peering down at me through the shadows before throwing the mail pouch into my hands. . "Yes," I replied, complainingly, "and I've been waiting for you just two hours." "Well, it won't take you long to get home now," he said, cheerily; then, bending down still further and beckon ing me to come still closer, he added in a low voice: "You want to hang on to that mail bag tight to-night, Harmon. It's got" A sudden starting of the horses interrupted him, he swung back x " r ii x i - . -i uiw uis seuii, turn muling lxlhi, ne couia not readily quiet the impatient animals, he cracked his long whip over their heads, shouted out "good night!" to me, and the next minute coach, horses and driver were far down the road, swallowed up in the darkness. "Are ye 'fraid to ' go down alone?" asked the farmer who had come out to see the stage go by. 'Til bet a cookie he isl" exclaimed the farmer's boy. "No, I ain't afraid," I said stoutly, dreading ridicule more than robbers. "There won't anything catch me to night," I added, flinging the pouch across my shoulder and starting rapidly down the road toward home. For a little way the road wound through .fields, and this portion of my route 1 traversed with a stout heart ' But just ahead lay the woods, a long stretch, of unbroken forest, and I approached them with a dread and premonition such as, 1 think, I had never before nor have ever since known. I plunged into litem, how ever, without halting or hesitation, know ing that they must be passed; but, in stead of peering about for dangers in the darkness, I kept my eyes turned to the ribbon of starlit sky above the tops of the tall trees that bordered the road. When I reached the point where the footpath started in, at the left, I stopped for a moment, debating whether I should take the short cut or follow on around by the highway. I quickly decided upon the latter course. The short distance of the narrow path, winding under inter lacing tree tops, down steep embank ments, through intense darkness, was no offset in my mind to the broader, lighter and less terrifying, if longer, route by the public road. Suddenly 1 became aware that two men were walking with me, one on each side of me. They had come up so noise lessly that I had not heard the sound of their approach. . Good evening, my voting friend," -tail the one on my right, "what's that you'ra a-carryingr' - 'It's the mail bagj said I, stopping and standing still in surprise and fear. "Is that so?" he exclaimed. - 'Tve often wanted to lift a mail bag. Is it very heavy?" " . "Not very," I replied, actually hand ing it to him in my bewflderment. He took it, held it up by the end strap as high as his head and shook it gently, as if to make test of its contents. "I believe there's a letter in there for me, Bill," he said to his companion , "and if there is it's necessary that I should have it at once. Delays are dangerous." "The only way to find out for certain," replied the other man gruffly, "is to open the bag." , . "True," responded the first "speaker, "but we must not open it on the public highway; some evil minded passer by might seek to appropriate the contents thereof, which would be a crime against the government, Indeed an unpardon able offense. Suppose we retire to some secluded woodland dell, and there study the situation. Young man," he added, addressing me, "you are cordially in vited to accompany us." "I I'd rather not go," 1 replied, be ginning for the first time to fully realize my position. "If it's all the same to you," I added, "111 go on home." "Well, my dear young friend and fel- low worker," began the man, but his gruff voiced companion interrupted him: "Oh, let up on that, Andy! We ain't got any time to lose. Come along, young fellow!" And before I had time to protest I was seized by one arm, hurried to the roadside, across the ditch and in among the trees. I believe I began to cry and beg; it would have been strange if I had not done so; but, in language more force ful than elegant, 1 was ordered to hold my peace. In the mean time the first robber was threading his way carefully through the thin underbrush among the hemlocks in thick darkness, and we were following him. It seemed to me a very long time that we journeyed thus. In reality it must have been only a few minutes. When we stopped the leader said: "Here's a kind of an open place; let's hold up here. Bill, where's that can dle?" Presently I heard the snapping of a match, and saw Bill lighting a piece of candle which he had unrolled from a bit of newspaper. Looking around me, by the light of this candle I was not slow to recognize the place. We were in th. path of which I have 6poken, on a little plateau just above the . brook. Indeed the soft ripple of waters could be heard at no great distance from us. . I now for the first time recognized the two men as those whom I had seen step from the stage coach at the crossing, and I knew instinctively that they had follow ed me for the very purpose of. robbing the mail. The one addressed as Andy had already laid the mail pouch flat on the ground, and with an open jackknife poised in one hand was passing the thumb and forefinger of the other hand carefully along the leather surface, fls if considering the proper point for the blade to penetrate. I had seen butchers do the same thing before cutting up a side of beef, and the similarity of move ment now was very suggestive. "Here goes!" he said finally, pushing the knife point firmly into the leather; then, with a strong, dexterous sweep, he drew the blade down lengthwise of the bag, and laid it open nearly from top to bottom. "Give the candle to the boy, Bill," he said, "and you help me sort this stuff over. Here, you," he added, addressing me, "hold it here, here where I can see. If you move it an inch 111 HI excom municate you!" With trembling hand, teeth chatter ing in my head and too greatly overcome with astonishment and fear to speak, 1 sat and held theflaring candle while he spread wide the gap in the ruined mail bag and poured the contents of it to the ground. The packages of papers were quickly cast aside and the bundle of let ters taken up. In those days each separate bunch of letters was carefully folded in brown paper, and the postoffice address placed on the outside before intrusting it to the mail bag. These wrappers were pulled hastily off by the robbers, and the letters inclosed in them were looked over rapid ly, many of thcu being torn open before they were thrown down. Nearly the en tire contents of the mail bag were gone over in this way before any money was found, and both men began to look dis appointed and angry. At last Andy came upon a thick envelope of brown manila paper, with a seal in red wax on the back. "Here it is!" he said, holding it up triumphantly for Bill to see. "I knew 1 couldn't be mistaken about its being here. Bob told me, you know, and Bob always tells the truth." He had risen to his feet in the mean time, scattering the remainder of the letters from him disdainfully, had opened his coat, and was about to put the package into an inner breast pocket. "Hold on!" exclaimed his companion, rising also. "Open it up, Andy; let's see how much they is in it, anyway." "Oh, that's all right!" was the reply. "I know how much there is in it. Well open it when we get to a safer place. Come, lef s fix the boy and get out o' this." I trembled till the candle nearly dropped from my hand. What did he mean by fixing the boy? I presume I should have begun to cry and beg again had not Bill spoken up somewhat threat eningly: , "Look here, Andy! That's the trick you played the last time. You pocketed the swag an held off an' spent it, till it turned out I didn't get more'n half my lair share. That's played oat. I want a diwy on this, and I want it how." Andy looked at him coolly a minute before replying. -r" . "You had your fair share of every thing that wasn't spent in common," he replied at last. "Now, don't be a fool, Bill. . Til keep the money, an' when we get to a safe place youll get what be longs to you." He made again as if to put the package in his pocket, but be fore he could do so Bill had seized his arm. , "Divider he exclaimed gruffly. 'I say divide, an do it now." Even by the dim light of the flaring candle I could see the red and white passion glowing in Andy's face. ' ' . "Hands off, you dog!" he cried, "hands off, or ril hurt you!" . But the other only tightened his grip and muttered the one word: "Divider For a moment there was rfin The two men . stood there glaring into each other's eyes, and I, with the candle tap ping in my hand and the melted tallow burning my fingers, 'stared at them in stupid fright.- Suddenly there was a whirling fist, the sound of a sharp blow, and the next instant the two men were writhing in each, other's arms. The package 'fever which they fought was hurled from Andy's grasp, struck the candle in my hand, and both pack age and candle fell at my feet. Invol untarily I stooped and picked the treas ure up, and even as I did so the candle spluttered on the damp ground and went out. The darkness was intense. But the fight went on. Curses, blows, the tearing of garments, all sounds of a hand-to-hand contest told that the men were still fiercely engaged. In that moment I gathered my wits together long enough to plan my escape. Starting out along the path, crawling on my hands and knees, feeling my way, I moved rapidly down the rn'n . After a little I gained sufficient cour age to rise and walk, and presently I found myself at the bank of the stream. Here I dropped again upon my hands and crept across the log that spanned the brook. On the other side I stopped for a moment and listened. The fight was still in progress. I could hear the curses, the thrashing -of the leaves, the cries of rage and pain, then the sharp re port of a pistol, and after that silence. But in a minute some one appeared to be coming down the path as I had come. I thought they were giving chase to me, and I turned and scrambled up the MIL The way was long and steep, but the woods on this side of the brook were not so heavy, and my eyes, accustomed again to the darkness, were of much service to me. But I imagined that the robbers were still following me. I thought I heard the crashing of the underbrush, and once I was sure they called out to me to -stop. Familiar with every foot of the path, and clambering rapidly as I was up the steep hillside, it still seemed to me that r was going at a snail's pace. I had had the presence of mind to cling to the package, and I now thrust it into the pocket of my coat that I might use both hands in climbing, grasping roots, twigs, sod, anything to accelerate my progress. Finally I reached the top of the hill, and soon afterward the end of the path where it met the highway. From here on the road was level, and I ran.. Behind me I heard shouting, calling a confu sion of noises, but I never turned.' Down through the village street I sped, past the light in the houses, in at the open door of the postoffice. and stumbling at the door sill, fell headlong upon the floor.', -t "TheyVe robbed the maiir I cried to the astonished assemblage. "They've robbed the mail they're after me I saved the money." And drawing the package from my pocket I placed it in the hands of the clerk and sank exhaust ed in a chair. For a few moments the excitement ran high. Everybody ques tioned me at the same time, but I man aged to make enough of my story under stood to give them a clew to the situa tion, and in a very short time a party started out in search of the robbers. . Not fifty yards from the door they met my father and a neighbor, who had gone out half an hour earlier to meet me, and between them they supported the drooping form of a man. It was Bill. He was covered with wounds and exhausted from the loss of blood. It seems that my father and his companion had gone out to the turnpike by the public road, and then finding that I was already on my way home they had come back by the path, hoping to overtake me. Near the foot of the hill they had come suddenly on the wounded robber, the cut mail bag and the scattered let ters. Though greatly alarmed for my safety, my father waited to gather up the mail and to help the wounded rob ber along; but I shall never forget his look of relief when he Raw me sitting safe but exhausted in the big chair at home, in the midst of an adrniring and sympathizing circle. Bill recovered from his wounds, and served a term of years in prison for his offense, but Andy was never captured, and even his identity was never known. The mail package contained $500 in crisp, new government bills. Homer Green in Philadelphia Press. Indian Currency. J. At Smithers says: A good deal of Indian, wampum, or money, is occasion ally found in the southeastern parts of this state, and a curious feature of it is the fact that it exactly resembles that found in the Tndian graves of New Eng land and Canada, showing that the same kind of currency must have been in cir culation among the Indians all over this continent. There are two kinds found everywhere in America the white and the purple, the former being, common and cheap, the latter scarce and costly. The purple was made from the eye of the clam shell, the white from the stem of the periwinkle shell. The- aim of the wampum makers seems to have been to have the beads uniform, smooth and highly polished, though by what means they bored a hole through so hard a sub stance is unknown. The labor expended on the shells must have been enormous, and fully justified the estimation in which the wampum was held. St. LouiH Globe-Democrat. It was formerly supposed that clay was useful only for embankments, for making bricks or pottery. But now a most useful and beautiful metal is ex tracted therefrom, and clay banks, rich in almiiinium, will soon be as valuable as iron mines. J, M. HUNTINGTON & CO. flbstfaetefs, Heal Estate and Insurance Agents. Abstracts of. and Information Concern ing Land Titles on Short Notice. Land for Sale and Houses to Rent. Parties Looking for Homes in COUNTRY OR CITY, OR IN SEARCH OF Bniqe Location?, Should Call on or Write to us. Agents for a Full Line of Lealii Fire Insurance Companies, And Will Write Insurance for .AJISrsr -A-ZMZOTTHSTT, on all I3ESIBABLE RISKS. Correspondence Solicited. ,A11 Letters Promptly Answered. Call on or Address, J. M. HUNTINGTON & CO. Opera House Block, The Dalles, Or. JAMES WHITE, Has Opened a In Connection With his Fruit Stand and Will Serve Hot Coffee, Ham Sandwich, Pigs' Feet, and Fresh Oysters. Convenient to the Passenger Depot. . ' . ' . On Second St.,-near corner of Madison. . . . - Also a . .. Branch Bakery, California Orange Cider, and the Best Apple Cider. If you want a good lunch, give me a call. Open all Night SUMMONS. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the countyof Wasco. O. D. Taylor, plaintiff, vs. Thomas J. Freden burg, . L. Smith and L. Francisco, defendants. To Thomas J. Fredenburg, the above named de fendant. In the name of the state of Oregon you are hereby commanded to appear and answer the complaint of the above named plaintiff, filed against you in the above entitled court and cause on or before the first day of the next regu lar term of said Circuit court, to-wit: On or be fore the 9th day of February, 1891, and if you fail so to appear and answer, for want thereof the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief grayed for in his complaint, that is to say: for a ecree foreclosing that certain mortgage, made, executed and delivered by you, to said plaintiff, on the 5th day of September, 188M, upon the south half and north-west quarter of the north east quarter, and the north-east quarter of the north-west quarter of Section twenty-eight in Township one, north of Range ten, east of the Willamette Meridion, in Wasco county, Oregon, and for a sale of said real estate, according to law; that the proceeds of such sale be applied upon the costs and disbursaments of this suit, and upon the costs charges and expenses of such sale, and upon the note mentioned in said mort gage, said note being for 400.0U and bearing interest from the 5th day of September, 1888, at the rate of ten per cent, per annum until paid, which note is now overdue and unoaid. and a reasonable attorney's fees of 140.00 as provided and stipulated In said note, and for judgment and execution over against the defendant, Thomas J. Fredenburg for any amount remain ing unsatisfied after all the proceeds of such, sale properly applicable to plaintiff's demands have been applied, and also that said defendants and each of them and all persons claiming by, through or under them, or either of them, be for ever barred and foreclosed of , all right, title, claim, lien and equity of redemption and Inter est in said premises, and for such other and further relief as shall be equitable and just. By order of Hon. Loyal B. Stearns, one of the Circuit judges of the Fourth Judicial District in Oregon, dated December 23d, 18'JO, this summons is directed to be served uqon you by publication thereof. Dated December 26, 1890. BUFUR, WATKIN8 & MEN FEE, Dec27 Attorneys for Plaintiff. Health is Wealth ! Db. E. C. West's Nbbvb amb Brain Treat ment, a guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dizzi ness, Convulsions, Fits, Nervous Neuralgia, Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by the use of alcohol or tobacco. Wakefulness, Mental De pression, Softening of the Brain, resulting in in sanity and leading to misery, decay and death, Premature Old Age, Barrenness, Lots of Power In either sex, Involuntary Losses and Spermat orrhoea caused by over exertion of the bruin., self ubuse or over Indulgence. Each box contains one month's treatment. $1.00 a box, cr six boxes f ji rr.ot; sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price. WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES To cure any case. With each order received by us for six boxes, accompanied by $5.00, we will send the purchaser our written iruarantee to re fund the money If the treatment does not effect a cure, uuarantees issued only Dy . BLAKELEY A HOC6BTON, Prescription Druggists, 175 Second St. The Dalles, Or. F. TAYLOR, PROPRIETOR OF THE ' City Market. TUe Dalles 36 is here and has come to stay. It hopes to. win its way to public favor by ener gy, industry and merit; and to this end we ask that you give it a fair trial, aid if satisfied with its support. The four pages of six columns each, will be issued every evening, except Sunday, and will be delivered in the city, or sent by mail for-the moderate sum of fifty cents a month. Its Objects will be to advertise city, and adjacent developing our industries, in extending and opening up new channels for our trade, in securing an open river, and in helping THE DALLES to take her prop er position as the Cjty of Leading The paper, both daily and weekly," will, be independent in politics, and in its criticism of political handling of local affairs, it will be JUST, FAIR AND IMPARTIAL We will endeavor to give all the lo cal news, and we ask that your criticism of our object and course, be formed from the contents of the rash assertions of outside parties. For the benefit of our advertisers we shall print the first issue about. 2,000 copies for free distribution, and shall print from time to time extra editions, so that the paper will reach every citi zen of Wasco and adjacent counties. THE WEEKLY, " sent to any address for $1.50 per year. It will contain from four to six eight column pages, and we shall endeavor to make it the equal of the best. Ask your Postmaster for a copy, or address: THE CHRONICLE PUB. CO Office, N. W. Cor. Washington and Second Sts. Cfinwicle course a generot; Daily V the resources of the country, to assist in Eastern Oregon.. matters, as in its paper, and not from