A MORNING THOUGHT. "What if some morning, when the atarawere paling. &Ad the dawn whitmind. ahil I be rant was clear. Strange peace and ret lull on me from the presence Of a benignant spirit stamliuic near: -Awl 1 should tell hliu. as he stood braide mis. This is aur tutrtli mil Trtandlv earth, anil j fair: - ! Paliy its sea and shore through sun and sha- ' dow ! Faithful it turns, robed in its azure air. j There is blust living bere, loving and servinu. j And quest of truth and serene frieiiilKhii i dear: nt stay not. Splritl Earth tins onedestroyer . Hia nanie is Death: nee. lest be find thee here!" Jand what if then, while the still morning brightened. . And freshened In the elm the Summer's breath. 'I Should gravely smile oh me the gentle angel. , And take my bund and say. "My name it- j Death." Edward Rowland Sill in Chicago Lrraphits. BIG BILL Back of Lmramie. Wy.. there is a range of hills that would be called mountains anywhere else. Here yon Cn find deep gorges, ravines and valleys Some twenty miles above the city there is a road that winds up and up into the lulls, over acres of barren rock, and theu descends down into a beautiful valley where grass is growing luxuriantly, and jibeep and antelope are grazing. Follow the road by a miniature lake, and by and ty it will lead you aronnd the base of a tall mountain, and there you will find a little log cabin beside a willow lined stream, and you will see there a large sheep corral. I was ionnging on the ground a few years ago in front of the little cabin smoking peacefully, and listening to the 'wind sighing through the willows and pides, the bleating of the sheep in the corral and the howl of the coyote np in the hills. "As far as 1 know. Big Bill and me 'were the first white men who herded sheep np here in the bills," said the oc cupant of the cabin, as he eat in the doorway with his pipe in his mouth. "We came op here from the ' home ranch down on the Laramie river and built this cabin and . the corrals in "77 We had about 5,000 sheep to look after -with the dogs to help us, and it ' was jretty hard, work, for then the hills were fall of mountain lions, and they din't . know the difference between the sheep and the antelope, but we got along aJL right. As the old man sent some of the sheep down on the plains and others to Ah home ranch,. Bill and me didn't have anything to do, so we went up in the northern part of the state rounding cat tle, but in the latter part of 1887 the old man sent for us, and so we came back and took about 3.000 sheep up here to look after. "We hadn't been here long before a yoong tenderfoot came up from Omaha to help us, the old man said, but in real ity he only wanted a little outdoor exer cise. Jim was a mighty good fellow though, if he was a tenderfoot, and he ' and Bill became warm friends. Jint was small, thin and pale, and Bill was big bronzed and full bearded, with hair that fell down on his shoulders. Jim just used to stick by Bill as close as a sick kitten to a hot brick, and used to follow Jam away over by Dirty Em mountain aad Ragged1 Top. and when he came in t sundown he would look like a corpse, but after a while he got as strong as an x and slept like a horse. After supper they would take their pipes and tobacco and go out there under yonder tall pine, and would talk until long into the night, and I used to sit here and wonder what the mischief they would talk about. But -Jim was the best natured fellow that ever lived, excepting. ofcourseJBig Bill All that summer they were as insepara ble as the lamented Siamese twins, and when'one went down to the home ranch or to Laramie the other would go too. "One day Jim wasn't feeling well, and Pm blessed if Bill didn't camp right by hia bedside all day long, and me and Shep, the dog. had to look after the sheep. Jim was only sick a couple of days, and the next Sunday when the sten from down on the ranch came up to bring us some papers and canned stuff they brought a letter for Jim from his employers down in Omaha asking that he come home at once. . When Jim got ready to go 1 am an Indian if he and Big Bill didn't cry. and Bill he walks clear up to the top of the hill, and sat down on a bowlder, and kept his eyes fastened on the wagon as it turned around the serpeutine road, and watched . it until it disappeared on the plain be llow, and then he came back here and sets' down aw f ul glum, and says he to me: " 'Jake, Jim's an all fired good feller.' " You bet he is." "That's all 1 said, but Big Bill under , stood me. Every Sunday when the men from the ranch didn't come up Bill used to walk clear down there and get the - letter that would 'be sure to be there for him from Jim. and he would bring it hack up here, and we used to work pretty hard to read it, even if it was written with a typewriter, for you know neither -BUI tor me had ever had anyschooling. They were awful good letters, though, and "once he sent us some fine woolen -shirts and mittens, and some crack to bacco and a couple of pipes; this is one of them now. About a month after be left we got a letter saying be was going to be married, and he was dead anxious for Big Bill to come down and take it in, bat Bill wouldn't do it, because he said Jim might be ashamed of him; but Jim wasn't that kind of a fellow, as I'm going to tell yon pretty soon. "About three years after his marriage Jim wrote a letter asking both Bill and aoe to come down and see him and his wife and the kid, and there was a lot of - scribbling, which Jim said was the baby's invitation. Coarse I knew it Vas - SOg Bill they wanted to see, although Jim and me were good friends, oat as Bill allowed he wouldn't go if 1 didn't go with him, I consented to go, and so ' when the sheep had been moved down to the ranch we went down to Omaha. TWe didn't tell him ws were coming, for Bill tiiou&it it would be big fun to sur prise him. When we got into Omniia we were kinder scared, seeing all lue people anil the. rustle, but a policem.ui comes up and asked us who we wanted and we told him the name of the fiinii Jim worked for and he explained how to' get there. Bill and me started out nrul crossed the viaduct. I believe that's what it's called, a big bridge over the railroad tracks, and when we got to the other end and walked around a bit we saw the sign np and we crossed over and went in There were lots of men work ing there, and Jim was standing up talk i : ing to a g:rl who was a-writing liKe a congressman When Bill saw him lie walks right up and shoves out his hand and says hi-in a loud, cheery voice: . 'Hullo, ole Jim. how be ye?' ' ' j Jim just looked np and then jmnpeil a yard and grabs Bill's outstretched hand j in both of his and then he. grabs mae. a-talking like a politician all the time j He excused himself for a minute .-.ml reads a little more to -the girl and then i he introduced us to tliree or four people and got his coat The girl turned ! around and commenced hitting a ma- j chine and Bill went up and took off Ins i hat and his long hair fell about his face J and he said " 'That's one of those typewriters, ain't it, miss?" "And the girl looked up and smiled awfully nice and says. "Yes, sir.' and then Jim came along and we left. We went out. and 111 be switched if I con Id see how Jim, could find his way aronnd with all the wagons and people and elec tric cars, but we got on one of them trains and rode for about half an hour and then we got off and walked up a hill. A pretty little house stood up above the street and we went up. for that was where Jim lived. The house was fixed up in great shape, and as Bill and me stood there kind of awkward the curtains were shoved aside and a young lady came in. She stood for a second, and Jim just said "my wife,' when she stepped forward with the sweetest kind of a smile and taking my pard's hand and says: ' 'This is Big Bill. I know, and Jake. I am glad to see you. "Bill just looked all broke up for a min ute and then he turned to Jim: " 'No wonder you married, Jim.' says he. - "Jim and his wife just laughed, and while they were enjoying themselves a little child came into the room and ran up to his father, and he took him up in his arms and kissed him and then set him down on the floor, and he ran over to where Bill was sitting in one of those big chairs and climbed up in his lap, and Bill held him like he was glass, and he was pleased if he did feel foolish, and the kid ran his little hands through the big man's- beard and long hair, and seemed to enjoy it immensely, and pretty soon Bill tarns to Jim and says he "You had better take this, Jim I ain't used to handling such lambs. "Jim reached out for the child, 'but he clung close to Bill. A Bush of pride comes into my pard's face.' and he looked np and said " 'What's the kid's name, Jim? "But before Jim could answer the boy said 'Bill" just as plain, and the big fel low looked op first at Mrs. Jim and then at her husband and he read the answer in their faces, and then he pressed the child close to his bosom, and two big tears came into his eyes and fell on his cheeks. We felt at home right . away, and that afternoon - Jim got a carriage and drove us all over the city and out to the fort. Bill looked awful happy sit ting on the back seat with Mrs. Jim, and the kid and Mrs. Jim laughing softly and talking merrily while her husband and Bill spoke of when Jim was up here in the hills. We staid there for three days, and Jim just showed us all the big buildings aud took us up to one of those swell clubs and introduced as around as though we were millionaires instead of poor sheep herders, and a reporter gave Bill a great write up too. "About a month after we were down in Omaha we saw a man from the ranch riding up, and so we went over to see what was the matter, for it was on Thursday and we thought something was up. He had a letter with a black margin from Bill and he tore it open and it was from Mrs. Jim. saying that Jim had been taken suddenly sick and had died. Well. sir. Bill just took the letter in his hand and turned around like one that's' paralyzed and be walked straight over yonder under that pine tree-where he and Jim had laid so often and threw himself down on the ground, t looked after the sheep, and at sundown 1 drove them all up here into the corral and then Shep and me went over, and the dog. when he saw Bill lying flat on the ground with his face in his arms, gave one long and agonizing howl and began licking Bill's face and Bill reached up and pulls Shep right down by him and said awful soft like: s - 'Your heart's broken, too. ain't it. Shep?" "He lay there for a long while, and the mooplight came' out from behind the clonds and bathed the hills and the val leys with the soft light, and it fell upon. Big Bill, lying with his head on the dog and sobbing to himself. It was almost morning, and the moonlight had died away, and the eastern heavens wer tinged by the light of the rising sun and a soft wind stirred the willows there by the brook, and murmured through the pines, when he arose and come over here to the cabin. s 1 was so dead tired that-! had sltpt all night, and when he opened the door 1 was just getting up. ".'Jake,' he said. 1 have got to go down to Omaha.' " 'Because.' he said. you know Jim was pretty extravagant and he didn't get much of a salary, and 1 wouldn't be surprised if his wife and the kid was pretty hard pressed.. 1 must go down and look after them, for 1 know Jim would like to have me do so.' "1 saw there wasn't any use of talking, and so he shook hands with me and started out over the hills for the ranch. Be drew all the money coming to him. and 1 didn't see or hear anything from him until along toward the close of. the summer, when :ie evening, as Shep and me were sitting out here, and I was a-poffing my pipe, 1 heard a . step, and looking np. 1 saw. Big BilL ' - "I didn't know him at first. . He had on store clothes. His ' hair was short and he only wore a mustache. He looked like a corpse. His cheeks and eyes were sunken, and he had a cough that pained him terribly He had walked all the way up from Laramie, and as he was pretty well pegged out 1 didn't say much to him, but just got him some thing to eat and put him to bed. He used to sleep like an ox, but all night he was-restless, and pitching backward and forward on the bed. -Next day he j told me that when he got in Omaha he ! went up and saw Mrs Jim and the kid and that she was all broke vup. You see j . Jim hail spent money pretty - freely and when his debts was paid she didn't have a cent, and Bill told her that 'Jim had lent him a lot of money, which, of course, was not' so. and - that be would pay it back now You see.- if Bill had offered to have helped her she wouldn't have taken a cent, but as long as she believed Bill owed the money it was all right. "So Bill got a" job working on the grades, but he told her he was just rest ing in Omaha, and every Saturday night he used to give her nearly all his earn ings, and just starved himself and slept in a tent with the horses out in the suburbs at night in all kinds of weather, and breathing the dust and dirt all day and the stable at night, and not eating at all regularly, his health broke down and he was taken to a hospital. About this time an old aunt of Mrs.- Jim's died and left her a pile of property. Mrs. Jim kinder suspected something was wrong with" Big Bill, but she couldn't get anything out of him. though she tried awful hard. She 'lowed to tell Bill the next Saturday night when- he came, but be didn't come, and she couldn't guess what was the matter until she saw by a paper that he had been taken to the hospital She went up there to see him and he was delirious, and when he was out of his head he told all about what he had been doing, and it liked to have killed Mrs. Jim. When he got better she used to take him out driving, and said she would pay him back, and she did make him take about a hundred dollars, and she was just bound he would be paid in full, and so he skipped out and came back up here. "For a while he was a good deal better, but his cough got worse, and by and by he didn't pretend to do anything but just walk around with his head down and his hands behind him and talk about Jim and little Bill and Mrs. Jim, and he would lay out there in the cold night air with his head in bis hands, looking np t the star dotted heavens and listening to the wind moaning through the pines, i got a letter from Mrs. Jim asking if Bill had come up here and how he was, and I managed to write back, how he was Well, one morning Bill didn't get np and 1 saw that he was pretty bad, and so 1 didn't go out with' the sheep but just left them in the corral while 1 attended to Bill , Along about noon I hea rd Shep bark, and looking out 1 saw a carriage coming aronnd the mountain there, and I thought it was ft doctor which the old man had sent "up. but when it drew up Mrs. Jim and little Bill got out "' " ls there anything .the matter? He isn't dead, is he? she asked me. I have come and will take him back where he cau have the best of medical attendance. I can never forget what he did for Billie and 1, just for Jim's sake.' "I didn't say anything, but just pointed into the little cabin, and she and the kid went - in and leaned over him. He opened his eyes, and when he saw her he tried to raise himself, bnt he couldn't. " 'Am ( dead? he asked. " 'No.' said Mrs. Jim, "Billie and 1 have come up here for you, and we will take you back with us to Omaha, where you will soon get well.' " 'You are very kind, he said, and then smiled softly, drew a heavy sigh and died. Mrs. Jim leaned over him and her tears fell upon his face as she kissed him. and little Bill and me were crying too. ' We buried him next day. when the men came np from the ranch, out there under the tall pine, where be and Jim used to lie so much, and where he spent so much of his time after he got back from Omaha, and a few days after Mrs. Jim came up in a carriage from Laramie, acting as the guide for a man who brought up a stone for Bill's grave." There were tears in the eyes of the old sheep herder when he finished, and we arose and went over to the grave. The wind was sighing a requiem through the tall pine tree, and the little stream was murmuring the sweetest music as it ran along over the rocks. . In the moonlight I read on the plain marble slab the sim ple inscription: . : ' big Bnx. ' j : OirC or TBS NOBLEST OF HER. R. A. Eaton in Omaha Herald. . The Danger of a Doctor's Ufa. Eighteen thousand doctors are now re quired to guard the health of the British islands. Few of them spend the evening of their days in competence and retire ment. The doctor's life is the most dan gerous of all, and, on the average, the shortest of alL It is even more danger ous than the soldier's. Exposed to the contagion of fatal diseases, to cold, to night air, to accident, it is not to be wondered that he falls early in the bat tle of life In every little town may be found clergymen, officers, brewers, gro cers, tailors, schoolmasters, . jewelers, shoemakers and even peddlers,, who end the evening of life in affluence and ease. But how seldom the doctor. He gener ally dies In harness. Liondon Tit-Bits. ; When Km all bodies get in the eye, like cinders, dust or chips of stone, a horse hair loop will frequently do what poll ing one eyelid over the other fails to ac complish. Pore gam arabic, ia weak solution, may be poured into the eye, which requires a cold bandage after ward. In case of lime, use lemon juice and water at once. . " . SUMS & KQIEHSLY, Wholesale : and -Retail Dnnists. -DEALERS IN- Fine Imported, Key West and Domestic CIG-ARS. PAINT Now is the time to paint your house and if you wish to get the West quality and si fine color use tlie Sherwin, Williams Co.s Paint. . For those wishing to see the quality and color of thetUwe paint we call their attention to the residence of 8. IJ. 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 E0ST EjlD SPOJl MacDonalfl Bros., Props. THE BEST OF Wines, Liquors and Cigars ALWAYS ON HAND. (J. e. bYar;d f!0., i Real Estate, iDsaranee, and Iioan AGENCY. Opera House Bloek,3d St. Chas. Stubling, PROPRIETOR OF TRI New Vogt Block, Second St WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Liquor v Dealer, MILWAUKEE BEER ON DRAUGHT. Health is Wealth ! Dr. E. C. West's Neeve akb Brain Treat MENT. a guaranteed SDecific for Hvsteria. Dizzi ness, Convulsion), Fits, Nervous Neuralgia, Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by the use of alcohol or tobacco, Wakefulness, Mental De pression, Hoftening 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 Bpermat 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 ior a.uu, sent Dy mall prepaid on receipt of price. W K GUARANTEE SIX ROTEs To cure any case. With each order received by us for six boxes, accompanied by to.OO, we will send the purchaser onr written roaranteft to re. fund the money if the treatment does -not effect a cure, uuaraniees issuea only Dy VLAKEIET Sc HOUGHTON, Prescription Druggists, 175 Second St. The Dalle, Or. YOU NJJED BUT ASK The s. B. Headache and Liver Cube taken according to directions will keep your Blood, Liver and Kidneys in good order. The 8.. B. Codgh Core for Colds, Coughs and Croup, in connection with the Headache Cure, ia as near perfect as anything known. The S. B. Alpha Pain Cuke for Internal and external use, in Neuralgia, Toothache Cramp Colic and Cholera Morbus, is unsurpassed. They re well liked wherever known. Manufactured U Duiur, Oregon. For sale by all dxuggisU H 2 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 Daily four pages of six columns each, will be issued every evening", except Sunday, and will be delivered in the city, or sent ,A by mail for the moderate sum of fiftj 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 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 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. CO. Office, N. W. Cor. Washington and Second Sts. THE DALLES. The Grate City of the 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 i grazing country, its trade reaching as far south as Summer Xiake, 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 overilo-wing -with their products. v 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. , the resources of the country, to assist in Eastern Oregon.