A PICTURE IN FROST TIME. A window, with wide panes embayed And half moon seat of old gold cloth, Looks forth to where the trees are swayed By winds whose breath is chill and wroth. Aad on the glass a filmy veil Extends, on if to shield the bloom . That nods in greeting to the gale From midst the warm and cheery Haeea and lilies, hothouse pinks -And pansies that no garden dew Ver wet, and ferns whose fragile links No woodland pool with shade did And showing multi-colored tiuta. Fall clusters of chrysanthemums Ylash back the roseate flame that glints Where cosily the hearth log hums. While near at hand sits one who reads The pages of a book of art. And naught outdoors or indoors heeds, - Ist in some spirit realm's fair mart. William Strutters in Detroit Free Press. Plain Living. To the ordinary hoiuekeeping youth plain living is usually the every day -diet to 'which he has always been accns " tomed, with little regard to its fitness or wholesoinenees. With a royal contempt Jor divergent tastes, he is 'apt to give a domestic version of the old saying, "Or thodoxy is my doxy, so heterodoxy mast 1m yours." What suits him. should suit every one.- The same spirit animated Ht. Johnson when he gave his famous definition of "oats" as "in -England, food for horses, in Scotland for men." But the whirligig of time has so twisted af Sairs around that the food at which the great lexicographer sneered little more "than a hundred years ago is now an ar ticle of daily diet in thousands of En glish homes. The plainest of plain liv- -ing it is to as nuwauays, out mo uija thinking of the Seventeenth and Eigh-. '"ieenth centuries was cultivated on a very different aliment. Vet who is prepared to say that greater intellects have ever "been known in the English nation than were produced in the days of roistering, wine bibbing and high living, when such minds were developed as those of Shakespeare, Ben Jonson, Dryden. Addi son, Swift. Pope and countless others whom time fails even to mention? "Christine Terhune Herrick. Sbstanee nil Form in Literary Judgment. And is it not true that from the nature of things the contemporary judgment lays most stress on substance, and that kte "final" judgment is favorable to form? Substantially speaking, how many historic things of immense contemporary - vogue seem insipid to us, whereas scarce ly anything of very great formal merit : has been allowed to perish? .In other .words, is there not an element of universality about perfection of form which significance of thought does not jHHesr ur, at any rate, is not pen ecu on more nearlv attainable in form than it ia . au Bouiuiuuer ahu . notuing is so pre servative as perfection or any approach to it. One thing is very certain neglect of form involves the sacrifice of an element mt positive attractiveness as well as of fending positively by perverseness and ec centricity. Whether rhyme and rhythm, cadence, purity, lawlessness, melody are essential or not to poetry, the aban donment cf the artistic quality which they imply is obviously a loss. Scrib- i i j An Indian Challenge. Two tribes of Indians in the upper pmxt of California had as boundary be tween their districts a low ridge where the streams headed. If you should go to where one of these streams. Potter river, rises you would see still standing a tall pile of stones beside a. never- failing spring. On one side of this cairn, was the territory of the Porno Indians, and on the other the "land of the Chnmaia. These tribes were enemies, and were often at war. When the ; Chumaia wished to challenge the others to' battle they took three .little sticks, cut notches round their ends and in the middle, tied them at the ends into a fagtrot and laid it on this cairn. If the Pomoe accepted the challenge they tied a string around the Kiddle of the three sticks and left them ia their place. Then agents of both tribes met on neutral ground and ax xmnged the time and place of battle, which took place accordingly. St. Nich olas. Origin of an Old Saying. In the Sixteenth century it was gener "ally stated that "spiders be true signs of great stores of gold." a saying which - arose thus: While a passage to Cathay was being sought by the northwest a mariner brought home a stone which was announced to be gold, and caused nch a ferment that several vessels were fitted out for the express purpose of col lectins the precious metal. ' Frobisher. in 1577. found on one of the islands .' where he landed similiar stones and ' an enormous number of spiders. Cornhi 11 Magazine. - ' A Brazilian parrot once succeeded in making a railway party believe that they had run over a child. Sudden cries, fol lowed by a low moaning, rang out from beneath the wheels. The train was stopped, and the employes nervously searched the track, but no child was to r-be seen.' No clew to the situation could he found until a large green parrot. ' swinging in his cage, uttered a mocking laugh. There has been some dispute as' to the descent of the dog whether it is an im proved progeny of the wolf or a distinct -variety. That it is not a different species is proved by the fat that the dog and the wolf will mate and produce offspring Nevertheless it is probable that the dog is merely descended from the same orig inal stock with the wolf. It was not until about fifty years aa;o that cut ice became a commodity ad quitting of purchase by persons of mod crate means. In New York city alone at the present day, the yearly consump tiou of ice amounts to about . 1.000.000 "tons. The small bronze bells found in the -ancient palace . of Nimrod contained ninety parts of copper and but ten of tin. In our day the proportions are, ay, eighty parts of copper to twenty of 41a. ABOUT DARK AFRICA. MISSIONARY HORN TELLS ABOUT HIS EXPLORATIONS. The Climate Is Health -Many Phiiw of Physical Character Are Seen The Pen ple Are Grown TJp Babes Slave Trading Is the Curse of the Continent. There arrived in San Francisco from Australia an English gentleman, who with , his wife, has passed the major portion of the last thirteen years in Central Africa. His name is Capt. E. C Horn, and under the auspices of ths London Missionary society he has been employed building vessels on the great J Lake Tanganyika and traveling through the dark continent. Capt. Horn in a conversation with a reporter said: "Reports on the land and people of Africa are varied, but all who have penetrated into the inmost recesses are unanimous in their conclusions that the slave trade is the chief obstruction to civilization and commerce. Africa had. until the past twenty years, the name of being an arid, unheal thful country, be cause outside of a given distance little was known of the land. While it is true that great tracts of country are barren and no water exists, still by ex ploitation it has been proved that abundant supplies of water can be ob tained which will make the country blon som into a perfect garden of flowers. 'In the most arid part I ever visited Ogogo-the people dig wells and find water, which is carefully stored for a time of drought. Perhaps no tropical country has a more healthful climate than Central Africa. In the interior the land rises to a high elevation. The many deaths and sickness among Euro peans are caused more by the conditions of life, absence of accustomed food and good doctors and nurses than from cli matic causes OCCUPATIONS. 'On the shores of Lake Tanganyika there are at least nine tribes distinctive in physical characteristics, language and fashions and weapons, clothing. 'archi tecture and domestic life. They are all expert fishermen, rising seines and traps, and as the lake teems with fish their ventures are well repaid. Iron and cop per are smelted for manufacture, but in the crudest style. Both of these metals. -J in the form of small bars, ivory, rubber, palm oil and dried fish are articles of circulation among distant tribes. Pot tery of a rude description is also made, while the art of weaving cotton cloth if well known. "The character of these natives is in fantile. In confidence and suspicion, in easy anger and reconciliation, in, unde veloped instincts they are essentially children. Under evil influence, such as the introduction of spirituous liquors and other vices of civilized nations, they rapidly become demoralized." ' The idea of regarding these Central Africans in the same light as Australian or Indian aborigines is absurd. When better known they will be looked upon as healthy children, imitative and eager to acquire knowledge. Deprecating in every possible manner the horrible features of the slave trade, the explorer thinks that by honest trade, a selection of good employes by the many organizations now engaged in Central Africa, on the Congo and the great lakes; by justice, development of the resources of industries, together with the earnest co-operation of the mis sionaries, the prosperity of the great country and its people will be an assured fact. THB SLAVE TRADE. ! have lived in Africa.' continued Capt. Horn, "long enough to assure my self that many a so called 'savage attack by African natives was in reality 'a gal lant defense' from their point of view; that the low type African of whom we hear is often but a noble savage degraded by contact with Arab ivory and slave dealers. During the past ten or twelve years many white men and women huve lived among the tribes of the far interior, and it has been discovered that they are people of much the same passions as Caucasians. Although easily degraded, they are also capable, when surrounded by favoring circumstances, of rising in civilization and of grasping higher and better things. ' 'In the far interior numbers of people in every tribe are slaves. Prisoners of war. those condemned for witchcraft and other offenses and their families, weakly persons or those in distress, be come slaves. They pass from hand to hand, traveling toward the coast as the direction where the value is greatest. There they are collected by traders. Arabs, half caste and African. This system of slavery can be abolished with the aid of the Arab - traders. Assure them other . modes of living and they will cease to barter slaves with the tribes that exchange ivory. 'That the Arabs have been invited to the slave trade by the natives; that they prefer ivory, and frequently take slaves only as the alternative; that the natives suffer more at the. hands of each other than of the Arabs: that the great traffic and most horrible features of the same are essentially African and the interior 'are facts testified to by Burton, Baker, Livingstone and Stanley. The slave trade is in my opinion an African, not an Arab question, and while stories nave been published of horrors and pil lage committed by Arabs at the south end of Lake Tanganyika and the north end of Lake Nyanza they were untrue and ' exaggerated. - The depredations were committed by the Wawemba and Wagaraganz-.' tribes after the departure of the Arab trader, who kept peace among them." San Francisco Chron cle. . - - v - Maeanlay's Memory. It is well known that Maeanlay's mem ory was prodigious. He could pass from the minutest dates of English history or biography to a discussion of the compar ative merits of different ancient orators, and repeat whole 6trophes from the Grreek dramatists. He could rehearse every word of every article he had writ ten without prompting. New York Ledger. Strangely YoigeUUI. 'A poor memory for names and faces la a serious disadvantage to a clergyman. Dr. John Hall was leaving his house in Fifth avenue not long ago, when he saw young man looking at the numbers on the doors. From something in his dress and manner Dr. Hall concluded that he must be a recent immigrant from the Emerald Isle, - and therefore a fellow countryman. The stranger was evidently at a loss, and Dr. Hall asked him if he could be of any assistance. "I am looking for Dr. John Hall," said the young man. "I am he." modestly replied the cler gyman. "Are you Dr. Hall?" . "I am." "Did you come from Ireland l I had the -good fortune to be born ! there." The stranger looked at him for a mo ment. "Don't you know me, Dr. Hail?" said he. "I regret to say that I cannot place you at this moment, though I may have seen you before." - "Well, I think you have. Why, you baptized me twenty-five years ago in the old country, and yet you have forgotten me entirely!" "It was not a time for levity," said Dr. Hall afterward, in relating the inci dent; "otherwise I might have reminded the young man how strange it was that he should have forgotten the face of one who had sustained such an important relation to him in his infancy." New York Tribune. Swift Fijian Sailing Craft. We saw to windward a native boat bearing down upon us under full stress of sail. A Fijian boat is made of a hol lowed cocoanut log, sharpened at both ends. About ten feet on one side of it is placed a long and slender log of lighter wood, both parts of the craft being at once connected by and supporting a raised platform of bamboo. Such a boat floats on the water like a cork, and offers no more resistance than a racing shell. A mast set in the center of the platform supports a triangular sail of matting, with the base of the figure up most. A very top heavy effect is thus produced, but nothing can overturn the light vessel owing to the breadth of its base, and it flies through the water like the wind. The catamaran that pursued us easily kept up with the launch, although we drove it at full speed to keep ahead, and with the huge, misshapen mat sail flap ping and rolling like a great bat's wing as the boat thrashed through the billows, and sent showers of spray over the glis tening bodies of the dozen natives who stood or squatted upon the deck, the pict ure was something fascinatingly strange and barbaric and never to be forgotten. When the boat was near us our launch ran under a jutting point, where thickly clustered palms cut off the wind, and the catamaran becoming becalmed got out oars and turned in for the shore. Cor. Boston Journal. , Held by Etiquette. When Dom Pedro, then emperor of Brazil, was entertained at the White House he had been told by a confused senator that it would be expected that he, the emperor, should be the last of the guests to depart. The president's wife, however, inform ed her other guests that they would be expected to follow, not precede, the royal party in leaving the house. The result was that no one dared to go for fear of a breach of etiquette. But at 3 o'clock in the morning a tired woman pretended illness and the deadlock was broken. Great is etiquette, but common sense is sometime allowable. Washington Anthropologist. The Inn In Literature. The social importance of the inn in days of old is proved by the conspicuous position it holds in our fiction and poetry. The "Canterbury Tales" of Chancer start from an inn, along with the motley company of pilgrims bound for St. Thomas' shrine, to whom the genius of the poet has given an immortal life. Its site and name, the "Talbot," or "Ta bard," still preserve the memory of the famous inn thus associated with our first great English poem. It was not, how ever, until the reign of Elizabeth that the tavern attained to a permanent place in literature, reflecting the important place it held in the daily life of the ; people. All the Year Bound. A Very Old Hat. Mr. George Allen, the Auburn second hand dealer, has a hat in his possession which he estimates must be over one hundred and fifty years old. "The hat my father wore," "grandfather's hat" and "where did you get that hat?" aren't a circumstance compared with this an cient tile. It is a beaver, with a genuine bell top, and was made in New. York city. A bit of silk facing is on the top part of the rim. This was to allow the raising of the hat without ruffling the fur. Auburn (Mass.) Gazette. They TPrefer Old Styles. One American manufacturer ships 1,000 lumber wagons to South America every year, and yet the natives come into cities like Buenos Ayres with carts of the same style and make as were used 1,000 years ago. It takes one yoke of oxen to draw even an empty cart, but the people don't care to experiment. Detroit Free Press. Crawling- Oat. Wife (in a new costume) What d you think of this? Husband (in disgust) What a gown I Wife (angrily) You brute! This is the very latest style--the Watteau gown. Husband (scared) That that's what I said, m' dear. Watteau gown. New York Weekly. Probably Satisfactory. . Sharpson Phlatz, what makes youi nose so red? Phlatz It glows with pride because it never pokes itself into other people's business. Chicago Tribune. SIPESrKWLY, Wholesale and Retail Druggists. -DEALERS IN- Fine Imported, Key West and Domestic OIG-AH. PAINT Now is the time to paint your house and if you wish to get t he best quality and a fine color use the Sherwiii, Williams Co.'s Paint. For those wishing to see the quality and color of the above paint we call their attention to the residence of S. L. Brooks, Judge Bennett, Smith French and others painted by Paul Kreft. Snipes & Kinersly are agents for the above paint for The Dalles, Or. Don't Forget the EflST EIID SflLOOH MacDonald Bros., Props. THE BEST OF Wines, Lipors and Cigars ALWAYS ON HAND. (J. E. BiYAI(D (JO., Real Estate, Insurance, and lioan AGENCY.- Opera House Bloek,3d St. Chas. Stubling, - ' FROPKIKTOR OP THB New Vogt Block, Second St WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Liquor v Dealer, MILWAUKEE BEER ON DRAUGHT. Health is Wealth ! Dr. E. C. West 8 Nerve anb Brain Treat ment, a guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dizzi ness, Convulsions, Fits, Nervous Neuralgia, Headache, NervouB Prostration caused by the use of alcohol or tobacco, Wakefulness, Mental De pression, Boftening 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, f 1.00 a box, or six boxes for 15.00, 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 by $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 BLAKELEY & HOUGHTON, , Prescription Druggists, 175 Second St. . ' The Dalles, Or. YOU NJSED BUT ASK" The S. B. Headache and Jl.iveb.Curi taken according to directions will keep your Blood, Liver and Kidneys In good order. The 8. B. Coooh Curb for Colds, Coughs and Croup, in connection with' the Headache Cure, is as near perfect as anything known. The S. B. Alpha Pain Curb for internal and external nse, In Neuralgia, Toothache, Cramp Colic and Cholera Morbus, is unsurpassed. They are well liked wherever known. Manufactured it Dufur, Oregon. For sale by all druggitta B'-PfeiK.l 5 VST Tie Dalles 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 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 fift3 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 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. 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. GO. Office, N. W. Cor. Washington and Second Sts. THE DALLES. The Grate City of tlie Inland Empire is situated at the head of navigation on the Middle Columbia, and is a thriving, prosperous city. ITS TERRITORY. It is the supply city for an extensive and rich agri cultural an grazing country, its trade reaching as far south as Summer Lake, a distance of over twe hundred miles. THE LARGEST WOOL MARKET. The rich grazing country along the eastern slope of the the Cascades furnishes pasture for thousands of sheep, the -wool from which finds market here. The Dalles is the largest original -wool shipping point in America, about 5,000,000 pounds being, shipped last year. ITS PRODUCTS. The salmon fisheries are the finest on the Columbia, yielding this year a revenue of $1,500,000 which can and will be more than doubled in the near future. The products of the beautiful Klickital valley find market here, and the country south and east has this year filled the warehouses, and all available storage places to overflowing with their products. ITS WEALTH It is the richest city of its size on the coast, and its money is scattered over and is being used to develop, more farming country than is tributary to any other city in Eastern Oregon. : Its situation is unsurpassed! Its climate delight ful! Its possibilities incalculable! Its resources un limited! And on these corner stones she stands. Daily