"I NATURE. I know aba loves mo. Every lay she fills Mr soul wkk Joy that only true lore thrills: : 80 tree, I cannot measure if 1 would Tills love unspoken yet well understood. Tia nerer once tbe same, this take of lore, far now lis written in the blue above; And if the baud be bid, yet still I trace The clearest limnings of her lovely fwe. - . Or yet she breathes it in my raftfured ear. No sweeter romance can we mortal, hear," for when amoutc tbe trees the houiU wiud plays 1 little trembling leaf ber love oetrays. Or now she drops, all lover like, a Sower: -. As if to company some quiet bom? , ' Or yet the throat of some sweet singing bird Repeat the tale, and all ray oul is stirred. So. like a courtier, everywhere 1 stray . . She smiling meets me. as tor noiiaay. -As If to draw me In her close embrace. And, like a lover, woo me face to face. Mary Woodward Weather bee in Boston Transcript- A BAD CASE. My husband is at last convinced of the error of his ways, and has implored me V give his free and frank confession to. tbe world My husband is or was a very enthusiastic man. and imagines that he baa a fine eye for the arts. Being a lawyer, he enjoys considerable leisure ia the afternoons, and it is this that has proved his niin. 1 shall never forget his first offense. It was very shortly after oar marriage 1 was wondering why he -was so late for dinner when suddenly a cab drove np to the door For one moment I fancied that it must be his mother (wives have their mothers in-law as we'l as husbands). Imagine mv astonishment when out jumps my hnaruinrl ' with a euiltv iauntiness of demeanor, presents the cabby with five shillings (1 noted this extravagance my aelf from the window), and is followed by that functionary, staggering under an enormous burden, swathed in brown bolland. up the steps. The usual loafer Tushes forward .and a' fresh gratuity i distributed, to the horror of my econom ical mind At last the thiug-r-apparent-ly a miniature of the great pyramid is deposited in our small hall with a reso mant bang, and its bearers depart. What on earth makes you so very un punctual, dear? Tbe soup will be quite spoiled And what, in heaven's name is this?' 1 thought you'd like it, darling (this -with a nervous flush). It's the most -wonderful bargain, and it would have een really wicked to have let it slip If a a genuine Elizabethan but. there Me it for yourself." The mummy like bandages were at last removed, and what do you think I But my presence of min.l did not desert me. I have tt f.troug will, and I vowed i that our child s inheritance should not be thus squandered. My husband kept a handsome volume in which he record ed minutely a description, the pricesaad the dates of his purchase of this miscel laneous collection. My niiud was made up. 1 numbered and tk-keted every one of these horrible knickknacks with my own hands. 1. compiled their catalogue, and I headed it as follows: MmriL Hummer A Tones have the honor to announce that on Thursday next they will sell by auction, in their sreat rooms In Blank treeu the valuable collection of pictures, por celain, furniture in tbe Sheraton, Adams aad nhimusndnle stvles. arms. Limoges enamcU quaint watches and clocks, formed with con lutnmale taste and at lavish expense by a svn tlemaa who has no further need for them. I myself arranged with the auctioneers. who. with some amplifications, naopttfl my catalogue.' and a day was chosen when my husband was at last occupied (I believed remuneratively) in court. Well, the time came, 1 was so excited that, although sorely tempted to be present, 1 did not dare to attend the rooms of Messrs. Hammer cc longs. The evening caine, and with it my hus band, in a frantic state of exhilaration. You've won the caser' I exclaimed. fondly and admiringly. Oh. never mmu the casei ne re joined impetuously; "it was settled, and I got away quite early. Having made the money I turned in now aon r ue angry, darling for a moment to Ham mer & Tong most exciting sale of an eminent virtuoso's curios, and you 11 aa- mit that after all my judgment was not BRITISH PHILANTHROPISTS i SNIPES & KINERSLEY, so bad; t of it was an exact replica of my own thins for thing and picture for picture, only that his Rembrandt and Rubens were, poor copies, and his George Morland evidently spurious. The whole lot were sroiuir for a perfect song, so V "Good heavens!" I ejaculated; "you don't mean to say that you bought your own" But at this crisis a merciful film came over my eyes, and I swooned away . My husband is completely cured, and we are gradually now trying to collect modern coins, which we pick up else where than in salesrooms. --St. James' Gazette. beheld? An enormous rusty, musty dusty and hideous clockl Yes," he continued, "a real, antique. Elizabethan musical clock.' It plays six tunes of the period; and, what s more took at the initials graven on the face "W. 8. I've very little doubt that it once belonged to Shakespeare himself -who was very fond of mechanical inven tions .' shall have, of course, to have it sepitvr Mid done up, and then it will look splendid in the dining room." He quite took my breath away; 1 oould only ejaculate, 'Where on earth did you pick it up. and what did you pay for it?" "At the sale of an old house. Every one said it was ridiculously cheap, and that they'd have gi ven twice as much if only they had known. Just think only a hundred dollarsl Why, 1 could get two hundred for it any day. White elephants were nothing to this disgusting "horologe," as 1 found it de scribed in the catalogue. I cost twenty dollars to put right, and then it smashed twenty dollars' worth of things in being fixed up.. Lt sometimes played its mis erable bo called tunes so rapidly that yon had to stuff your fingers in your ears, at others, it emitted a spasmodic aad raven like croak that was positively alarming At last, thank heaven! it stopped "never to go again, and 1 -firmly re solved that not one penny more should be spent in "doing it (and us) up." Add to this that 1 subsequently discovered a Geneva maker's name inside. 1 could wish that I had been more stern on this first occasion, but ( was weak, like too xaany young wives, and was satisfied with a scolding. The result was that we gradually became deluged with the most smserahle miscellany or ruDOisny Dnc-a- brac, damaged furniture, dubious pict res. and. in a word, the refuse of the auction room To believe my husband, we were the amad possessors of Cromwell's hat, By- son's toothbrush, one of Sheridan's 1 O U'a. a curl of Marie Antoinette's, a Ru bens, a Rembrandt, a George Morland (1 believe this latter is the evil genius of the Picker up) and a whole roomful of put and useless "Chippendale" aud Sheraton," etc. And all had been ac--muired at "sales which had a history,' at an "absurd sacrifice," and to the ad miration of the disappointed bystanders 1 saw that the fiendish habit was gradu ' ally growing upon him, like drink or gaming. 1 hope I know my duty. - I re solved to protect myself and him, and, after an awful scene ensuing on his ac quisition of an infected sedan chair, I ex acted from him a solemn pledge to give up this pernicious habit once aad for- When .Oue Sleeps. A shrewd man says, "A man can de ceive me as to his real character when he is awake, but if 1 can once see him asleep I can tell you what he is." And there ia a strange truth in it. In sleep a man is off guard. The will no longer dominates, and first nature -comes back and asserts herself. One can make his face say what he chooses when he is awake, but when sleep touches his face it tells the truth. . The forced smile slips away ;ind the cruel lines about the mouth stand out. The closed eyes shut out the look of determination that some times gets into a man's face without the reality in his sonl. and the childish inde cision" and irresolution that come back show you that the man is weaker than he makes vou believe. It was a half knowledge of this fact that a clever French woman used to phrase when she declared that she never would see any of her friends early in the morning, because she hadn't got her mask on yet. - Her face hadn't got the soul out of it yet-r-or hadn't got the soul into it. which was it? and she instinctively shut herself away from detection. We all jug gle with our real selves and appear to be what we are not, more or less, but the truth does manage to get itself said some how and sometimes. New York Even ing Sun. Strong Language of Curly le on. Those Who "Km barked lu Philanthropy." . Bv way of individualizing for ourselves the philanthrooist as Carlyle believed heJ found him in his own country, we ask first, I think. What is Mb place in society? what is his relation to others not philanthro pists? By way of answer to this question 1 we learn from Carlyle that society is di vided into two great genera, as they may be called the great dumb "inarticulate class" and "the articulnte class." This latter class we flud is further divisible into two a large ignoble majority, "intelligent and influential, busied mainly in persoiiHl affairs," who "accept the social iniquities and the miseries consequent upon them," and "a select small minority in whom some sentiment' of public spirit and hu man pity still survives, among whom, or not anywhere, the good cause may expect to And soldiers and . sovereigns." It is these last,- "the silent small minority," that are Carlyle'. philanthropists. If we say that in some measure they answer to the remnant) of old Hebrew times as trent- ed of by tbe late Mr. Matthew Arnold we shall not go far wrong. Passing to Carlyle s charges against the class now under consideration, those who, to quote his own words, "embark in the philanthropic movement," his first and heaviest charge, at bottom inclusive of all others, is that they misconceive the situa tion. It is not that they deoy the existence of great public misery we .have seen that they are even impressed and stirred to action by it. They at least do not call good evil and evil Kood, put "bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter-" No; but they seem never to have asked themselves how it came about that "any world or thing fell into misery," or if they flid the true an swer to the quest-ion seems never to have occurred to them, viz., that it was because it had "first fallen into folly, into sin against the supreme ruler of it, by adopt ing as a law of conduct what was not a law, but the reverse of one." . . The offenses aud omissions of the last 200 years, Carlyle believed, had been every one of them registered against his country men in heaven's chancery; bad all tbe while lain there generating frightful inter est and compound interest, until at last they had produced the frightful situation the philanthropist would cope with, hav ing for some of its palpable external feat ures abroad an "idle black peasantry," by the thousand, at home, 30,000 "discon tented needlewomen who can't sew;" scoundrels in jail treated by the method of love, the deserving poor, struggling hard outside to keep their heads above water, further taxed at the risk of their entire submergence, in order that among scoun drels the method of love may reign; 8,000, 000 paupers in the country, "Connaught potentially cannibal," and as 'the evangel of freedom and real programme of a new era," the "whitewashing" of the "scoun drel population" and the "sweeping out of the gutters." Lecture of Robert Nivens. Wholesale ana "Retail Umipsts: Fine Imported, Key West and Domestic Tfye Dalles (AGENTS FORI 1862. btd Don't Forget the EHST EP SflLOOJl ffiacDonali Bros., Props. THE BEST OF Wines, Liquors and Cigars ALWAYS ON HAND. But I was inexperienced; 1 should bavi known the male mind better. Deterred from the open pursuit of his nefarious dcBurna. he determined to smuggle his purchases in secretly. I bad observed him Unererine somewhat saspiooualy over the auction advertisements of the dailies. and 1 noticed also that bis coat pockets "bols-ed out curiously on his nightly re turn. One day I had occasion to tidy las a good wife should peribdieaUy do) he eTritfrire of his dressizw? room. What Jo yon think 1 found? The drawers. the nieeon holes, the interstices even. -were literally crammed with heaps of cracked and tarnished trifles pouncet ' boxes, enameled knife handles, embossed -watch cases. Docket revolvers and the like. I was horrified. It was too true; de larred y the dread of discovery from -niekine un" big things he had resorted. mdnr a miserable subterfuge, to small. fanny Mistakes of Authors. Everything lies in the application or a manuscript to tbe right channel. I have seen some funny mistakes made by au thora. One would imagine that any au thor would avoid the error of sending a short story or a serial novel to The North. American Review or a poem to The Fo rum, and yet scores of authors are doing these very things every month. I know a bright literary woman who persistent ly sent six batches of poetry at different times to The Popular Science Monthly and felt aggrieved because in each in stance her verses came back- "Misap plication' would be an appropriate epi taph for the tombstone ' of many a dead author. . The trouble is that there are a lot of careless, unthinking authors writing to day who ought to be in some other busi ness. They hear some one speak a cer tain title perhaps it may be in naming a list of dead magazines and they im mediately grasp at the name as a new channel for their wares, and next day off goes a manuscript addressed to the peri odical they heard mentioned. I know of magazines which stopped publication years ago to whom manuscripts are still being sent. Edwin W. HoH. An Improved Castor. A useful castor of novel form is being used in England. It is intended to obvi ate the difficulties arising from the ordi nary construction of castors, where the roller is carried on a cranked swivel arm which is easily broken off. The -center pin of the roller bearing is fixed in a small plate, rotating freely round a cen tre pin secured in the body of tbe castor. The plate named, when pushed round into any position, rests on the base of the cup or disc of tbe castor and is thus. while quite free to move in any direc tion, thoroughly supported in every posi tion. It is, in fact, a well supported universal joint. The castor is a great improvement on the older types. New York Commercial Advertiser. Do Ton Want Owif There are about thirty castles and pal sesin Spain which can be rented at from $3 to $10 per week, cash in ad vance, and any American who lands tiuere with $1,000 in his pocket can fling on more style for six months than he could get here in fifty years on an in come of $500 per week. Detroit Free Press. - An Eye to His Riparian Right. A youniz business man iu town recently bought a strip of land along the lake shore in Lake View, and a short time afterward moved up into the vicinity of the land. His friends say that he did it so that he could watcfi tbe land, but this be denies. However, he has a Rood eye lor the main chance. . "It isn't a big strip," he said, "but it srives me riparian rights; that is why I bought H." "Goinii to till in?" he was asked. "No. The waves are making half a foot a month for me by washing up refuse.'" This is to show that he has a good busi ness head, it was rumored in real estate circles that he got out on the shore in the morning with a hoe and a rake and pulled in everything that got within reach, but this could not be verified. Tbe following, however, can be: "He was standing at tbe window one morning, looking over his land, when he suddenly startled bis wife by exclaiming excitedly: "Great Scott! There are a lot of boys on mv land playing sailor!" "What of it?" his wife asked innocently. "What of it!" he cried. "What of i;! Why, they're digging harbors on my ri a- rian rights. Wait a minute and I'll nx in." He grabbed his hat and rushed out. "Did you settle it?" asked his wife when he returned a moment later. - "Oh, yes," he replied with the air of a man who had done a good stroke of busi ness. "It's all right now. I told 'em that that was no way to play sailor in Chicago; that they ought to build piers to land their boats at, and now they are building piers and making more land for me every min ute." That's the eye for business some men have. Chicago Tribune. 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, and if satisfied with its course a generous support. The Daily 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 the resources of the d. E. BilYjlRD & dO., 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 Real Estate, Insurance, and Loan AGENCY. Opera House Block, 3d St. Chas. Stubling, PROPRIETOR OP TBI New Vogt Block, Second St. . WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Liquor v Dealer, MILWAUKEE BEER ON DRAUGHT. He Vu Beady. A story overheard ran something like this: "I was sitting in a box at a theatre one evening when one of the men present said: 'I always look around in a theatre for the easiest way of escape in case of nre, or for some way in which I could reach the stage if any accident were to occur there. Now,-suppose that actress' gown should take fire. I would step on that garland there, steadying myself by the rail with tbe arm which held my overcoat, reach my foot across to that frieze in high relief and spring thence to tbe stage. In thirty-five seconds I should have reached her and have the flames smothered with my coat.' "I laughed at him. Well, as it happened that very actress' gown , did catch fire, and she gave a piercing scream that almost threw the house into a panic What did my friend dot Forget all about his fire scheme and lose bis bead like tbe rest? Not one bit of it. He did just exactly what he said he would do. . His coat was around the woman in less time than it took me to wonder at his activity, and the audience was cheering him. It was a sort of disci pline with him, vou see," Repeated in print for the benefit of those who may have a chance to play toe hero some tune. nw York Tribune. Health is Wealth ! i BRAU Wentman -1 dont think much of your poetry. Tenner. Tenner Collum No? I don't think much when I write it American .Gro cer. . . . Dr. E. C. 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Bandana of ladoieaaa None so little enjoy life and are such hardens to themselves as those who have nothing to do. The active only have the true relish of life. He who knows not what it is to labor knows not what it is to enjoy. Becreation is only valuable as it unbends us. The lule know nothing 01 ic It is exertion that renders rest delightful and sleep sweet aad undisturbed. The happiness of life depends on the regulai prosecution of some laudable purpose 01 calling which engages, helps and enlivens all our powers. New York Ledger. TTIiiSaeiims at tbe Mew States. Only four of the six states created with in the oast two years nave nicg names, so far as we have heard. These are the Da kotas, Montana and Washington. North Dakota has been dubbed tbe Flicker-tail State, South Dakota the Swinge-cat State, Mont nnn tbe-StoboeO-tos ft tale, ana wash- Ington theChmook State. St. Louis Giobe- Leading City of Eastern Oregon. 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 object 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, YOU NJSED BUT ASK reQr. sent to anv address for S1.50 per y v . - - It will contain from four to six eight column pages, and we shall endeavor o to make it the equal of the best. Askr your Postmaster for a copy, or address. Ths 8. B. HiiDiCHi and Liver Cubs taken according to directions will keep your Jtuooa Liver snrl Virinevn in crnnd order. " wn i-i . . Z . flnlila ffntm -jus D. u. V.OUItM v yj ita mi vAiiuo, vuueuD and Croup, In connection with the Headache Cure, is as near perfect as anything known. Thi 8. B. Alpha Pain Cubs for internal and external use, in NeuraUria, Toothache, Cramp Colic and Cholera MorDUS, is unsui Are wll liked wherever known. THE CHRONICLE PUB. GO. SS Office, N. W. Cor. Washington and Second Sts. Damocrat. - at Dnf ur, Oregon. , For sale by all druggists