MIMNERMU3 IN CHURCH. Ton promise heavens free from strife. Pure truth ud perfoct chaugo of will; Bt sweet, sweet is this human life, 80 sweet I fain would breathe it still. Tour chilly stars I can forego. This warm kind world ia ail I know.' Tou say there ia no substance here, One great reality above Back from that void 1 shrink in fear. And childlike hide myself in love. Show me what angels feeL Till then I cling, a mere weak man, to men. Ton bid me lift my mean desires From faltering lips and fitful veins To sexless souls, ideal quires. Unwearied voices, wordless strains. -My mind with fonder welcome owns One dear dead friend's remembered tones. Forsooth the present we must give To that which cannot pass away. All beauteous things for which we live By laws of time and space decay: Bat oh, the very reason why 1 clasp them Is because they die. William Cory. Effects of African Arrow Poison. It has been conjectured that the fatal Sects of African arrow poison are not always due entirely to the- poison itself, and with a view of determining how far fear and other influences enter into the results of its exhibition a series of ex periments in inoculating the ; lower ani mals has been proposed. One of the poisons with which the arrows of the Africans are smeared is a dark substance lite pitch. It is strong enough to kill elephants, and is considered so danger ous that its preparation is not allowed in the villages, but is carried on in the buah, where also the arrows are smeared. The virulence of the poison is remark Able; faintness, palpitation of the heart, atausea, pallor and the breaking out of beads of perspiration all over the body follow with extraordinary promptness, sad death ensues. . One of Stanley's men is said to have died within one minute from a mere pin hole puncture in the right arm and right breast; another man died within an hour and a quarter after being shot; and a woman died during the time she was The activity of the poison seems to de pend on its freshness. The treatment adopted was to administer an emetic, to suck the wound, syringe it, artt inject a strong solution of carbonate rf ammonia. roe carbonate of amtucll injection seems to have been a wonderful antidote if it could be administered promptly enough. New York Commercial Adver tiser. Anxious to Nurse. Dr. Scott Todd had been called in to attend Mrs. Keely, who was ill with pneumonia. One morning while he was attending ler an Irish woman came to the door. "Ez this where Missus Kaaly lives?" she inquired. The servant told her it was. "I hear she ez sick." "Yes," said the servant. "Well, me ;;obd girrul, share d' ye go an tell Missus Kaaly Oi kem to get a job T narsint her." xne servant torn ner tnnz tuey naa a nurse already and didn't need another. "En' what's it that's th' matter wid Missus Kaaly, did ye say?" "Pneumonia." "Ye don't toil me now!" An' who ez the docktor, to be shore!" "Dr. Todd." "Ez that so now? Oi'm jest the woman ye want thin. Goo oop en tell Missus Kaaly Oi've joost after narsin one av Dool;tber Todd's pashuntz ez died av that saiue dissaze." Atlanta Constitution. OuugerouH r.mliu. An American who is in London for several months every year returned from one trip with a - handsome umbrella, on the silver knob of which was engraved a complicated monogram the gentle man's initials were H. A. B. One day a friend took up the umbrella, and after squinting at the knob for several min utes said: "This is rather a queer mono gram on your umbrella, Mr. . ' I can see the A and B all ntrht, bnt for the life of mo I can't find the El." "Why," responded the owner quickly. "I lent the umbrella to an Englishman jnst before I left London, and I presnme he dropped the H!" San Francisco Ar gonaut. K;tcl Form. This Oxford university expression is by many considered slang which it is "bad form" to use. But is it not really an old and somewhat classical phrase? Thus Archbishox Laud wrote to the vice chancellor ut Oxford under date Feb. 20, 1838-0: "Sir I am informed that the masters, many of them, sit bare at St. Marie's, having their hats thera and not their caps, rather choosing to sit bare thau to keep form, and then so soon as they come out of the church they are quite out of form all along the streets," etc. Notes and Queries. Neariy all the government bonds floated during the war were 'at a 'dis count part of the time during that strug gle. From 1835 onward, however, all of them have been np to or above par, ex cept the 5s of 1864, which dropped un der the 100 mark for a time in the fluct uations in 1866 and 1867. - The 6s ma turing in 1881 were, for a time in 18G2. as low as 83. The almost universal prevalence of corns, bunions and other afflictions of the feet, and the race of eccentric shoe makers who have arisen as a legitimate outgrowth of these afflictions, all go to show that there is something radically wrong in the care of the feeL The gamboling of whales is often wit nessed by sailors, and Paley says that any observer;, of fish must acknowledge that "they are so happy they know, not what to do with themselves. Their atti tades and. frolics are simply the effect of an excess of spirits." - -' It does not take a woman many years to find out that men are a mighty oncer tain set. But a man never entirely loses the delusion that somewhere -. in , the world is to be found a worn 40 about 10 per cent, nearer perfection than the "an els. AND FLOWERS. One Girl : Wlio Sells TUrpx Shrewdly, and One Whet UsesTUem, Cartoasly. A genial old gentleman was buying violets from the flower girl on Broadway. "Well, I'm." getting to be -a-pretty old customer, eh, Katie," he observed, as he arranged the flowers in the lapel of his overcoat. "You've been buy-in flowers a good many years, sir, but you're not old yet.V replied Katie, with the shrewd flattery of her sex. "I like to see a gentleman wear flowers, especially a middle aged gentleman. That shows his heart ain't growin' old, an' it shows he likes what's Bweet an' clean. . I . notice . a lot ot the gentlemen lose their grip in, that way when they get along." "How do yon mean they lose their grip, Katie?" asked the gentleman. "Oh, they get . over ;carin' for .vileta when they' get married and has fam ilies,' replied the flower girL "I see a lot of young fellers dressed np fine goin" along here for a few years, an' they all wear , flowers., in. their coats. They tire all bright, just like the flower, and you can't help likin' 'em for it. That's when they're mashers an' when the girls care for 'em. 1 ; "Then they get married.'an' the' first thing they drop is the flowers from their coats. That takes away all their bright ness, an then it does seem as if they go sort of dusty, an' as if their hats were old or not brushed. Once in a while, though, a gentleman gets married an' grows a little old an' still he buys vilets. like you do, sir. Then I think he must be a nicer sort of man than the rest, an' probably is very happy at home with a good wife an' children." The old gentleman blushed, " and hemmed and hawed. "Humph! Haw what's the price of those roses, Katie? They look verv fresh." "Two dollars a dozen sir, and they're fresh cut this morning." "Humph! Haw well, pick out two dozen nice ones and send them to my wife. Here! This is my card. . Good morning, Katie." "That's a nice gentleman," said Katie to herself , as the customer walked away. "I guess I reminded him of hi3 wife, though.- That's the way with the best of 'em. They never forget their own buttonholes, but they think a woman don't need any more roses after her hair begins to get gray." A girl who i3 such an extreme belle and favorite that the men she knows burden her with floral mementoes of their regard has many strange and po etic ways of disposing of her superfluous bouquets. In the first place she never gives any preference to one over another, bnt selects the one she is to carry by ad vancing with her eyes closed to a large table', upon which they have been indis criminately scattered by a servant, and selects one at random. This, she de clares, saves the trouble of thinking the question over, and gives an equal chance to all her admirers. She then has her maid pluck all the petals from the roses that are left, and these are saved until the next morning, when, afti-f coming ont of her bath, t'iey are poured in a shower over her. and she stands among them while her toilet, is completed. All the violets are collected together osveh night, and after they are thoroughly mixed the dainty maiden makes up a small bunch, which she fast ens at the neck of her nightgown. Those that are left i:rs tossed over her bed after she lir.s retired. The orchids are m:ide into as huge a bunch as possible and suspended from the chandelier of her bedroom. New York Sun. Belief In Sicknens. It is a very old observation that a domi nant ideii is valuable in controlling the human being, and whether it be in the bearing of pain or in the devotion which leads the Turk to die contentedly, before the Russian bullets, belief is a factor that may be turned to great advantage. In directly, Christian science may prove an aid to medical science. The intelligent physician of today could receive a greater aid in the scientific practice of his profession thau to be emancipated by his patients from the obligation invari ably to prescribe a drug. , When people are willing to employ physicians to order their lives so that they may live iii hqjilth, the custom which binds the phy sician to prescribe something for his pa tient will be unnecessary. As we have become more civilized this state of affairs is gradually coming into place, but there still lingers the expecta tion that the doctor's visit means drugs. Christian science and faith cure, more refined than the' spiritualistic beliefs which have preceded them, form an in teresting study in mental pathology, and mark an advance from fhe grosser stage of table tipping and magnetic doctors to a recognition of the fact that among the weapons employed by the scientific phy sician of today an appeal to a determined purpose to overcome pain is worthy of a place beside antiseptics and anodynes and tonics. Century. ' A Power In the Land. , Lift your hat reverently when yon meet the teacher of the primary school. She is the good angel of the republic. She takes the little bantling, fresh from the home nest and full of his pouts and his passions, an ungovernable little wretch, whose own mother honestly ad mits she sends him to school to get rid of him. . This young lady, who knows her business,' takes a whole carload of these anarchists, half of whom, single handed - and . alone, ' are more than a match, for., both their, parents, . and .. at once puts them in the way of being use ful and upright citiz?ns. At what ex pense of , toil andwearinessl s Here is th most responsible position in the whole school, and if her salary were doubled she would receive less than -.she earns, r--Shelbyville (Conn.) Democrat.; . ; U- - . . . . ' ' ' Too .Plain, "j, '. .: ; Jaysmith (gloomily) Larkin called me a liar today. Mrs,. Jaysmith (indignantly) Did you tell him to prove it? Jaysmith It wasn't necessary. West Shore. ' . " ' " GIRLS THROUGH THE FLUME KNOWLEDGE OF ANCIENT HISTORY HELPED OUT MINERS. f They Followed the Example 8et by Cyrus the Great When He Captured Babylon. A Few Tons of Silver Ore Instead of a City Was at Stake, However. There were gathered in the lobby of the Windsor hotel a number of engi neers and mining superintendents. As is frequently the case, there was a good deal of talk of shop. Among the num ber present were men who had - been working, at one time or another, in near ly every prominent silver camp in the United States. . The climax, however, was reached when one of the mining men showed how a knowledge of an cient history once came into play and paid a man exceedingly welL 'Of course," he said, "you have all heard of the Pelican and the Dives mines at ' Georgetown, and know . that there has been very rich ore taken from these claims. There was a dispute between the owners of the claims. The Dives used to keep its ore and have it all sampled Sunday. ' The idea was that, no civil pro cess could be served Sunday, and by get ting the ore down and sampled that day there was no chance for their opponents to do anything. Of course, after the ore was sampled, no one could swear to its identity when removed from the sam pler, and so it was safe the. rest of the week. "The Dives people aimed to ship down about 100 tons each Sunday, this amount of ore being valued at about $50,000. Mr. Schneider, the banker, who was afterward shot, was the owner of the Pelican and was anxious to get -even with -the Dives people in any way possi ble. "One day he told one of the miners around Georgetown that he could have all. the ore that he could get from the Dives people, and that he would pur chase the same at full value at the Peli can mill. . . 'The bargain certainly gave no one a legal title to the ore thus to be obtained, and as to the moral aspects of the ques tion 1 suppose that didn't bother any one of them. The law certainly would have looked upon ore taken from, the Dives people under this arrangement as stolen ore. OBTAINED THE KEGS. 'The miner with whom the arrange ment had been made had for some time had some low grade ore in sacks in one of the bins of the Foster sampler, a mill about half a mile above the sampler where the ore of the. Dives people was sampled. One evening, after he had made arrangements with a couple of friends, he went to Mr.. Foster, after the latter had locked up his sampler, and asked him for the key of the mill, as he wanted to get the sacks holding the low grade ore stacked in the mill. Mr. Fos ter, of course, had no objection and handed over the key. "During the night there came along a wagon loaded with ore picked out at the Dives mine by one who knew the grade of the ore. It was dropped on the hill and the two men packed the ore in the Foster sampler.- Thore was put in the sacks which formerly held the low grade galena ore. It was impossible to take away the ore that night, so it was left, with the hope that Mr. Foster would not notice anything out of the way. But when the next night it was noticed by the two conspirators that a brand new lock was placed on the door of the mill, and that all the windows had been firm ly fastened down, they needed no one to tell them that Mr. Foster wanted an ex planation of how worthless galena ore had sudor- y become ore running 500 ounces in stiver. "The two conspirators sneaked around the mill, hunting for an unguarded place, but every point was locked, no door opened, no window was unshut. To break in meant burglary, and bur glary means Canyon City for a term, if discovered So what to do became the question. KNOWLEDGE OF HISTORY. 'Here came in the advantage of read ing. Says the one to the other. "Have you ever read any ancient history'! "No,' was the reply, 'and what good would it be here?' 'Well, if you hadv you would know bow to solve the problem of enter ing this mill without breaking it. Cyrus entered Babylon by turning the river that flowed beneath the walls of the city and eutered by the way thus opened. We must do the same with the water running through the flume entering the mill, and thus enter without breaking through tho wall or through the roof.' "It wasn't mach of a job to turn the water of the flume at the headgate, and in a few minutes the flume was dry. Here was a good ' pathway leading into the mill, and nothing needed to be broken or in any way injured. "It wasn't very long before our two conspirators were in the mill and were moving the sacks with the rich ore, about which Mr. Foster was so particular and anxious to learn something. . . "The time at command did not allow of carrying the ore entirely away. Not only that, but it was not safe to handle just that class of ore immediately,. for, at the least, it meant a cutting- of a good deal of the profit of the job." Here again the flume ' and its supply of water came in handy.,:, The sacks with the ore -were dropped over the tail flume, and as soon as the water was turned on there was a veil of water hiding all that wealth hid den behind it. "When the conspirators had moved all the ore they returned by the way they had come, again turned on the water, and then nothing on the outside showed that the mill no longer held the ore it once did. When the doors were opened in the morning everything was found as usual, except that the ore, to ard which all the -paddocks and nails ' and screws had been 1 brought into requisi tion, was gone. - j "Ln -due time. -the ore .was removed from beneath its ; : curtain : of water, brought to the Pelican sampler and sold.: It ran 476 ounces in silver to every .ton, and as there was a little more than five tonS) ;it can be readily calculated that good pay was received for the sleep, lost at night," Denver News,-.. - ,- SlB-lIlilT,: wholesale ; an! Retail Dnsiists. -DEALERS IN- Fine Imported, Key West and Domestic OIC3-A.:R,S. PAINT Now is the time to paint your house and if you wish to get the best quality and a fine color use the Sherwin, 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 Dalies, Or. Don't Forget the M 58L00 MacMali Bros., Props. THE BEST OF Wines, Liquors and Cigars ALWAYS OX HAND. J. E. BiYAiD ISO., Real Estate, Insurance, and Loan AGENCY. Opepa House Bloek,3d St. Chas. Stubling, PROPRIETOR OF THE New Yogi Block, Second St. -WHOLESAI.K AND RETAIL. Liquor v Dealer, MILWAUKEE BEER ON DRAUGHT. Health is Wealth ! Dr. E. C. West's Xerve akii Brain Treat ment, a Kuni-Hntee.1 specific fur Hvsteria, Dizzi ness, Convulsions, Fits, Nervous Xeuruljriu, Heudache, Nervous Prostration caused bv the use of alcohol or tobacco, Wakefulness, Meiitul De pression, Softening of the Brain, resulting in in sanity and le!diner to miserv. tiecnv and dpth. Premature Old Ase, Barrenness, IJbss of Power 111 viLiier sex, involuntary Losses ana fcjterniat orrhcea caused bv over eitrtinn of the hntin. Hflf- abuse or over indulgence. Each box contains one month's treatment. 1.00 a box, or six boxes for t5.00, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price. WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES To cure any case. With each order received bv us for six boxes, accouipKnied by $o.OU, we will send the purchaser our written 'guarantee to re fund the money if the treatment does not eflect a cure. Guarantees issued only'by BLAKELEY & HOUGHTOX, Prescription Druggists, 175 Second St.. The Dalles, Or. YOU NJKED BUT ASK EBST PS- TR EAT M E 2 fsninSfjfej K- Middle Vaiaey, Idaho, May 15, 1891. Dr. Vanderpool: Your 8. B. Headache and liver Cure sells well here.- - Everyone that tries It comes for the second bottle. People are com ing ten to twelve miles to get a bottle to try it and then they come back and take three or four bottles at a time. Thank you, (or sending dup licate bill as mine as displaeed. 1 Respectfully, . I. A. FLETCHEE. For sale by all Drug-grists. Tiie oaiies Giucitt is here and has come to stav. It hones : i 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 11 satisnea 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 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 km IMPARTIAL. . We will endeavor to give all the lo cal news, and wTe 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. TH CHRONICLE PUB. CO.. Office, N. W. Cor. Washington and Second Sts. TIT To rv The Gate 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 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 m arket 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 Eastern1 Oregon. Its situation is . unsurpassed! Its climate delight full 1 Its possibilities incalculable! Its resources un limited! ' And on these corner stones she stands. course, a generous Daily A