ACROSS THE WAY., joa no friends across tbe way! Mjr littW city darting laid; -''And wnao there comes a rainy day. Can't you look out. and nod your bead To some one else, as I can do To Will and Fred and baby Sue? I beard you tell mamma today w .' Ton bad -no friend across tbetay. "But Thare friends dear friends." I cried. With quick, remorseful thought of home. "A band of brothers, side by side. To ereet me if 1 co or come. - Bow dear they are. I cannot sayl ' . . Nor how it cheers me day by day To see across the valley far. Bow strcng and beautiful they are! "And you should see the robes they Their mantles thick and soft of green. , Thea rainbow tinted, yet more fair. Or ermine wraps with, silver sheen. But yet I think 1 love them best When, all in somber shadows dresV Their broken ranks in siience lie . Beneath the solemn midnight sky. "Sometimes a misty curtain drawn Betweea'us hides these friends from me; But when at sunset it is gone. Dear child, how fair the sight I seel . For where the nearer ranks divide. The gates of glory open wide; . And lo! in that unearthly light The farther hills transfigured quite; While yet another and another Peeps o'er the shoulder of his brother. And smiles through rosy mist and seems to sav. 'Heaven lies beyond us such a little way.' " - . 13uch friends are nice," she softly said, "For any one as old as you; And when I'm old and you are dead. Perhaps m go and see them too. But now I'd rather watch to see Children across the street from me; And nod to . Will, and play peep-bo With canning little baby Sue.'- Susan H. Ludlum in Harper's Bazar. Two Doctors. Almost every one has made his jest about the pronenesa of doctors to dis agree, the one prescribing exactly an opposite conrse from that ordered by an other; but not every one has had anop portunity to conduct such an experiment on was uiaus oy me tare tsaron i-iutz, formerly rjrime minister of Rv-ri The baron was once severely wounded m Dame in ootn legs. The wound in one leer was much lilrp t.hnr. i-n fVia ntlior It struck him that here was a chance to study the ways of the surgical profession anu oegnue ine long Honrs or his con valescence. He accordinclv mllori ir. one doctor and gave him charge of his right leg, but told him nothing about ine wouna in the other, and then called in another surer eon for hin lnft. loo- bann ing him similarly in ignorance about the a a , , wouuueu ngnt leg. The doctors ado-ntod method of treatment, but both wounds healed at about the sune time. When the baron's legs were quite well he de rived a great deal of amusement from getting the doctors together and mysti fying them with questions about the way each had treated ' 'his leg. " Tooth's Companion. .... -W.;. Curious Old Indian Kln-n. . About five miles above Morven ' is a mystery which the people of that com munity cannot explain. In a hummock near the river are two complete circles, one 90 and the other 140 feet in diameter, the smaller circle inside the larger. The circles, which are much like those left by ' a circus performance, are com pletely barren of vegetation of all kinds. These circles have been there since the xecoll'ection of the oldest citizen, and jjoue know how or when they came there, ft must be that they are Indian signs, relios pf by gone days, when the svage warrior WW lord tf all he sur veyed. Macon (Ga.) Telegraph. .- ' . L Hich ruyallup Indians. - There are scores of Indians on the reservation worth from $50,000 to $3!0, 000 each, und when the reservation Is thrown open by congress, as it will be in a very few years, there will be in Pierce county a dozen or two of the richest Indians in the United States. Following are the names of some of the wealthy Indians: Mrs. Joseph Douette, a full blooded Indian widow, with $250,000; Chris Laughlet. a widower, with 120 acres and G0,000; Joe Coates, 1C0 acres and $30. 000. and the Coates family, worth $123, 000, are some of the richest. Puget Sound News. Hebrew Choirs, In such of the Hebrew synagogues of - this town as employ paid choirs many of the singers are Christians who are totally unacquainted with the Hebrew tongue and alphabet. By way of aid to such members of the choir hymn books are printed in Roman letters.. The lan guage, however, is Hebrew, and the singers really sing what to them is non sense verse. Musically, however. , the result is fine and the choirs of several synagogues are famous. New York Let ter. Tomato Pol ho nine. A singular disease has just been called to notice by a prominent physician. It is a form of recession of the gums of the superior molars, which is said to be due to the use of tomatoes as food. Great sensitiveness is manifested along the line of recession, similar to that of an ex posed nerve. The only remedy has been xouna to De aDstmence from tomatoes. If the disease continues the teeth fall out; not usually more than one being lost in a season. New York Commercial Advertiser. . Washington's ThankogivUiff. The first Thanksgiving proclamation of Washington as president of the United fc tales was made in New York on Oct 3. 1789, setting apart Thursday, Nov. 26. of that year, "to be devoted by the people of these states to the service of that great and glorious being who is the author of all the good that is. that was, or that will be." Exchange. -. The most interesting feature of Mr . Gladstone's face is bis eyes. 'They ai described as of a "splendid, flashing. dark brown color.'' They show his tire and genius, and give bis face an ever changing expression. .Mexico is cauea a republic, but as a matter of fact it is governed by an oligarchy of landlords. Some of these men own vast domains, one possessing 6,000,000 acres of land. 1.4 ilNo,.VottU.T U W :VTad.J !j- , There are times when wc.-d -fail ade quately to express the force of pent up Feeling. A portly, elderly , gentleman itood at the Brooklyn bridge ticket win dow, got his ticket, and, glancing' to ward .the . step, saw the vanishing heels of several scainp?rin passengers flying nn m hrnui m,. arau -mt fm I, n Pr ing up his change he dashed past the ticket box, dropping his ticket deftly in, and, cording up hisr tendons. b"gan the ascent of the ' steps as rapidly as his portly frame would allow. He wheezed and puffed and gasped, but struggled on. His ears caught the rush of a train com ing down along the platform, and he felt that to catch It his time was short, ' He strained hard on up the stairs, the veins on his forehead standing out like cords with the effort. Finally with a deep gasp he gained the top just as the cars rolled up to stand stiU. A broad smile of satisfaction spread itself slowly over bis glowing features as he stepped toward the cars. It was a hard pull, but he had gotten there. He was no doubt mentally congratulating himself upon his success when the voice of a bridge policeman suddenly sang out on the night air with, "This tram don't gor New. York Times. , Bridget and the Speaking Tubes. There never was anything like that girl's terror of the bell-and-tube arrange ment in our flat. The first time a caller came she rushed in to me with eyes like soup plates and gasped out: - "Mann! Marm! There's somebody a whistling somewhere, and, if you please, I don't Know where! I explained and encour aged her to put her ear to the tube and get the message. She never did it with out first crossing herself: I know she was convinced the whole process was operated from a place considerably south or our lower hall. I urged her the next time she heard the call to -go to the tube and call "Yes?" The whistle came; and, my dear, the roar she sent down that tube would have raised the scalp of a Pawnee Indian. 1 fled downstairs in terror to see what ef fect it had had, and Mrs. De Nerfs yon know what a shattered condition she is in, just recovering from nervous pros tration! was sitting on the lower sten. quite limp and faint, clasping her vin aigrette. "Martha," she said, "even if you didn't want to see- me, why need you fire a gun down the tube?" Boston Commonwealth. - Slim Jim's Strategy. ' .During a lull in. business the dealers in the "Ma'sh market" occasionally get together and swap yarns to kill time. The other day a German butcher gave in his experience of a "beat" as follows-. "Dere Vas a tramD Used to hanir arnrmrH- de market vot we called 'Slim Jim.' He looked like he vas yust about starved most of de time. He come to my stand und picked up a string of sausages and hoHt it up and say, 'How much is dis? Pefore I could sav a vort a lean enr dog jumps up, snatches abondt dree pounds of sausage, and was off. "De man yelled and say, 'Take off VOUr doT. j Vat for VOIl 1mn tano-arnim . w- -- - " wru..' vw animal to bidte your gustomers?' I oga- piainea aot it vos not my dog, but he Vent awav shwearinc Dot Tollm- aa i aftervords foundt ondt. ownedt rl An and had him trainedt for dot biznesa. He followedt him to th KmitharvmaT, grounds and got de sausage. Pooty goodt trick, don't it? But I bate von rW. 'sn Jim' don't come aronndt bv mv stall some more." Washington Post What's In a. Name. In the Massachusetts Reports, if one would take the trouble to look there or. indeed, whether one looks for it or not there is one of the coincidences which do so much to keep the theory alive. Therein it is recorded and set forth how one Aquarius Breen was convicted of ad ulterating milk. It must be evident to any theorist that the name was respon sible for his departure from the paths of probity. How could it be expected that a man with the name Aquarius would fail to water his milk? - - His whole conscience might rebel against the sin. but bis destiny was set tled when he was christened, and how could he resist it? Had justice been done punishment in this case would have been meted out, not to Aquarius tireen, but to the parents who by inflict ing upon him such a name had made it impossible for him to do otherwise than to water his milk. He was the victim of circumstances over which he had no control whatever. Boston Courier. It Didn't Work. . A HallQwell husband tried a suicide scare on his wife with ill success. The couple had quarreled, and the husband. taking a bottle of red ink, 6trewed part on the floor and daubed the remainder on his throat Then he laid down on the bed, feigning death. , The wife came into the room, saw her husband and at once comprehended the - trick. " "My God!" she exclaimed, "he's committed suicide. I must get the neighbors to help lay him out." She then left the room, and returning & few minutes afterward saw that her husband had moved. "He has turned over; I guess he'll -live," she remarked, and he did live. Cor. Boston JournaL Transplanted Britons. " . Transplanted to new countries, such as Australia, the British race becomes very much more vigorous and of better physique. i Yet in Australia, strange to say, the children of British emigrants are more likely to nave decayed teeth or to lose them earlier than their parents. Probably the soft foods requiring little mastication with which we are pam pered in modern times is one of -the rea sons for dental decay. London Tit-Bits. . Heretofore reports in relation to the comparative power of different illumi nants, as seen through fog and haze, have been against the electric light Lately,-however, .three, prominent En glish scientists say that when the elec tric light is deprived in a measure of itg highly refrangible ways by the haze ita further progress is not more cut down than the light from oil or gas. BLESSEDNESS ' OF ferVINO. Philosophy of Blakinz Gifts and Why :t -j . Doing So Gives One Pleasure.- ) . There most bo something yery good in human nature or people would not ex perience so much pleasure in giving: there" must be' something very J? ' m human nStnfe otmonj people would try me eipf i lLu-ui vi giyuig. 'iuosb wno do try it become enamored of it and get their chief pleasure in life out of. it; and so evident is this that there is some basis for the. idea that it is ignorance rather than badness which keeps so many peo ple from being ' generous. Of course it may become a sort of ' dissipation;, or more than that, a devastation, as many men who have what are called "good wives" have reason to know, in the grad ual disappearance of thir nrirlrnlw if they chance to lay aside any of it temrj poraruy. ; . ;..:; , . The amount that a good woman can give away is only measured by her op portunity. Her mind becomes so trained in the mystery of this pleasure that she experiences no thrill of delight in giving away only the things her husband does not Want. Her office in life is o teach him the joy of self sacrifice. She and all other : habitual and irreclaimable givers soon find out that there is next to no pleasure in a gift unless it involves some self denial. ...... Let one consider seriously whether he ever gets as much satisfaction out of a gift received , as out. of one given. It pleases him for ? moment, and, it is useful, for a loiV, -Amo: he turns it over and admires it; he may value it as a token of affection, and it flatters his self esteem that he is the object of it But it is a transient feeling compared with that he has when he has made-a gift That substantially ministers to his self esteem. He follows the gift; he dwells upon the delight of the receiver: his imagination playsabout it: it will never wear out or become stale; having parted with it, it is for him a lasting possession. It is an investment as lasting as that in the debt of England. Like a good deed, it grows, and is continually satis factory. It is something to think of when he first wakes in the morning a j tune wuen most people are badly put to it for want of something pleasant to think of. This fact about giving is so incontestably true that it is a wonder that enlightened' people do not more freely indulge in giving for ' their own comiort. it is, above all else, amazing mat so many imagine they are going to get any satisfaction out of what they leave by will. They may be in a state where they will enjoy it if the will is not fought over; bnt it is shocking how little gratitude there is accorded to a de parted giver compared to a living giver. He couldn't take the property with him, it is said; he was oblisred to leave it t.n somebody. - By this thought, his generosity is al ways reduced to a minimum. ' He may build a monument to himself in anma in. stitution, but we do not know enough of 1 1 . , . . . . iuw wwiu rc wmcn ne nas gone to know whether a tiny monument on this earth is any satisfaction to a person who is free of the universe. , Whereas ' every giving or deed of real humanitv done while he was living would have entered into his character, and would be of last ing service to him that is. in anv fntnra which we can conceive. Charles Dudley warner in tlarpera. Bress of Americana. Americans are the best dressed men of all nations that wear what is known as European attire coat, pants and vest The English are outlandish and the French too foppish, but the American is known throughout Europe by the quiet richness and practical fit of his clothing. I often reflect upon this when lounging about the brilliantly lighted assembly room of the Southern hotel, as I note the faultless attire of the gentlemen, partic ularly those from the east and the large cities of the central states, as they spend a half hour before going out to the thea tre or other engagement. The English tourist, with his abominable "fit," is as easily recognized as a western miner. A New Yorker can be told at sight; so can a Chicago man: the latter more by his manner perhaps than his clothes. Inter view in St Louis Globe-Democrat American Shears tbe Best. ' English scissors are still called for by ladies, but tailors and others using scis sors in their daily work have long since ceased to look for the Sheffield mark. This is very significant, and the fact that a tailor insists on American made shears is a great compliment, as the very best article is needed in cutting out gar ments. - Ten years ago English scissors brought double an apparently similar article of American make. Now. the most costly shears in these days are of home manufacture, and every year a greater quantity . of them is being ex ported. It is the boast of an eastern house that they ship shears regularly to Sheffield, and by so doing discount the oft repeated story and fable about "ship ping coals to Newcastle." Interview in St Louis Globe-Democrat . . A Speech That Was 3iot Heard. Once a speech that was to be delivered by a well known political orator in Mu sic hall never reached the public, al though it had been carefully prepared and was in type in the offices, of all the morning dailies. The speaker was pres ent at the meeting all ready to address the great audience, but the. time con sumed by tho speakers who were given precedence was so great and the audi ence so wearied that the hall was cleared before the presiding officer had a chance to do more than to shout after the re treating forms that the meeting was ad journed. -r-Boston Transcript Thomas Silver-thorn, "a hotelkeeper at Coral, Mich., has a spectacle case five inches long that dates back to the misty past . The lid and bottom are of brass, the sides of copper. On the lid and op posite side are seven . rude engravings, and under each is written in the Polish language tbe scriptural account of the birth of Christ. It is claimed to be from' BOO to 600 years old. J.-M.' HUNTINGTON & CO. Abstracters, Heal Estate and Insurance Hfjet its. Abstracts of, and Information Concern ing Land Titles on Short Notice. r Land for Sale and Houses to Rent. Parties Looking for Homes in COUNTRY OR CITY, OR IN SEARCH OF , Bugiqe Location Should Call on or Write to us. Agents for a Full Line of LeaSins Fire taraiice Companies, .'. And Will Write Insurance for : on all EESIEABIiE EISKS. Correspondence Solicited. All 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 Ci'der, and the ' Best Apple Cider. If you want a good lunch, give me a call. Open all Night ' C. N. THORXBURY, ' T. A. HDDSOX, Late Rec. U. 8. Land Office.' Notary Public. THOpm&JiiSOJI, ROOMS 8 and, 9 LAND OFFICE BUILDING, Pontofflce Box 325, - . THE DALLES, OR. pilings, Contests, And all other Business in the U, S. Land Office Promptly Attended to. We have ordered Blanks for Filings, Entries and the purchase of Railroad Lands under the recent Forfeiture Act, which we will have, and advise the pub lic at the earliest date when such entries can be made. Look for advertisement in this paper. Thornbury & Hudson. Health is Wealth ! BRAIN Dr. E. C. Webt'b Nerve anb Brain Treat ment, a guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dizzi ness, Convulsions, Fits, Nervous Neuralgia, Headache, Nervous Prostration caused bv 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, Loss of Power in either sex, Involuntary Losses and Spermat orrhoea caused by over exertion of the brain, self abuse or over indulgence. Each box contains one month's treatment. $1.00 a box, or six boxes for $5.00, 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 bv f 5.00, we will send the purchaser our written guarantee to re fund the money if the treatment does not effect a cure. Guarantees issued only by ItLAKKLEY & HOUGHTOX, K - Prescription Druggist, 175 Second St. The Dalles, Or. Opera '.' Exchange, : No. 114 Washington Street. . ; BILLS & WHYERS, Proprietors. The Best of Wines,. Liquors and Cigars . ' : ALWAYS ON SALE. They will aim to supply their customers with the best in their line, both of imported and do mestic goods. .a Be Danes Chronicle is here and has come to stay. It hopes to win its way to public favor by ener--gry, industry and merit; and to this fend we ask that you give it a fair trial, and if satisfied with its course a generous; support. The Daily V , 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 fiftjr cents a month. Its -Objects will be to advertise the resources of the city, and adjacent country, to assist in 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 Leading City of The paper, both daily and weekly, will, be independent in politics, and in its criticism of political matters, as in its 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 obj ect and course, be formed from the contents of the paper, and not from 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 THE CHRONICLE PUB. CO. Office, N. W. Cor. Washihgrton and Second Sts. ". IT-"--- Eastern Oregon. a copy, or address. C