4- THE - D A Y- -FORT -M E.- -A. brilliant ky, a fine b trea. Some Boft Bnow bto. down the slope: The cedr green aa tliey can be, - The sunshine fall of lifeund hope v These flU one's heart with glee. ThU is the day for me! ,..JL warm, sweot noon, with flowers round, ' And Insects happy in the son; With green things rising from the ground,. Their big-Hef life not long began Hail! blossom, bird and bee. Tliis is the day for me -....- . A. richer sky, a deeper green; A happy sense of well-earned rest; A Hammer landscape fall of sheen. The world at its brightest, sweetest, beet: A swaying seat In a tree .-- This is the day for met ' 1 ' ) glowing woods In splendor stand (Their wealth is hid from careless eighth TVe eye may feast on erery hand; To be alive is pore delight. -- -Oh, autumn wind so free. This is the day for met l not so fasti joy pulsing heart; ' -: These ideal days make not the yean They only form its perfect part. Some most be rainy, cold and drear. Canst then say earnestly ('" 14 This is the-layJor mei' ? f. J Annie Isabel Willis In Boston Pilot. Best ts A man who has so much to do that he "yriii work nights and Sundays aa well aa "Week dava; is hot likelv to do as mnch ii. -abb long 'rriri asthe man who rests' at Ctoda appointed times in order to fit bimaelf for. effective work, between , thoee times. c Many a bnsy man breaks own a great deal earlier than he needs 'in, becanse he insists on working when met is his first dnty.f fAndi many ja mad "wbo observes God's law "of the 'night and the Sabbath, written' in man's Very .Mtare, accomplishes far more in a series - years than he could have wrought "With any violation of that law.s - Jlr. Gladstone, speaking ' not' long ago f his own experiences in busy life, said cf the high privilege of "Sunday , rest," "Personally, I have always endeavored, 'is far as. circumstances have allowed to yail myself -of this privilege, and: now; "that 1 have arrived near the goal of a' laborious public career of 'dose on fifty seven years, 1 attribute in great, part to this practice the prolonging of my life and the preservation of my faculties. " A. true man can do more in six days than fee can uu-seven,-week by: week; as he can do more in- sixteen -hoarthaai in twenty-four, day Hy day. for a' lifetime. Sunday School Times. -.- (;r--' 'n .--. r ' Mall In Early California Days. A Calif ornian tells this story of boom times in San "Diego. The general deliv mcy window of the postofflce was always II ! jl! I i n' - 1 . J3 - Jayed for several days, a,nd . when ;they -were at last distributed the line of ' in ' quire rs at the general delivery .window of (be poBtoffice extended, for- six blocks. A man who ; fell' 1 in: line - in ; th early morning got to the window and received' iua mail about 8 o'clock in the eVenlng." ' n: One old lady) who had. plenty of (tame tmher hands, took, with her a camp stool and her lunch basket, and. camped right ' .1 HI 1 . . u u uno..-; ano -leceivea no iei- and turned away apparently happy, although she waited ' in line for seven' Jwura.-, When this mai accumulated the postmaster made no attempt to 'distribute the aewspapers.. They were simply piled P in one- cpmejs.i and i nnAUy a t wagon lead of newspaper mail was carted away Cram the posibomce.r To be distributed?. Oh, no; to ..be . dumped, into San Diego bay. Exchange, r h Q J. 2 ft C Vl :.: The "rail. - - - 1 " I have seen it stated over and over again that "fall" autumn is an.Amer qcanismuu i am not sure that I have ever seen it contradicted; 1 myself learned long ago that to a Dorset rustic "fall"-wao-the word of native speech; ba'tumn." 1 mere high polite exotic (Is it gout ill, I ! -wonder,! in -this r day -at board , schools?) However, here is a passage from a book of the Seventeenth century, in which "spring and fall", are spoken of as a Dor et man might speak n,t KJ ., "And this 1 doe. not so verie expreslie, by occasion 'of my contingent health, though still, if I secure not from some kw ud cpriijy, i may cnauce ao 11 lesBO happilie in the fall." Motes and Series. ; ; -r He Gently bar Firmly Berasect. - ' ' "Reginald." exclaimed an up town bride of two months, as she returned from a. shopnins ,tour. I saw the- lovn. 'day; and so cheap, too; it can be bought for a mere song." Then she paused to bear what remark Reginald would make. "My darling," quoth he, "you know how gladly I would grant you every wish; but I grieve to say that in this case lam unable to do so. Nature has not en dowed me with the' power of producing -vocal melody. 1 could not sing though I should be promised a solitaire for every note." Lockport Journal.. . 1 ' - r .-.. ' . - In case of a person choking from some thing sticking in the throat or windpipe, try and dislodge it with the fingers, or a blunt pointed- scissors may be used.-- A bairpin with a loop on its end is also useful Holding the - person with the -beels in the air and vigorous thumping oo the back is .also' of - frequent: service. TCTl -L:i J t. , , . uuumn swauow maroies or coins it is a mistake to give a purgative. The strange matter, will find an escapement without effort."- " 1 - - The newspaper requires the very best ' of .the brains and brawn of its followers. "The newspaper man. js a' soldier in a great army. Always ready must be his motto. It is not for. him to reason .why. It is for him to obey to do or die. And who ever knew him to hesitate? "'ijiJ .' . i i ' i i i - ',7;.-.: Lord Aberdeen is one of the most pop-alar- noblemen in Great Britain. He is a democrat by sympathy as well a principle, and' has tben -known to ride down to his club in a milk wagon when a cab was not handy. He is much sought after in Edinburgh society. ' Id Corea 'tii eryi unmarried man is con- be 100. No matter what his - age, he fol lows in position the youngest of the married men, despite the fact perhaps of having lived years enough. to; be their lather. THE OlAfATURSE-CRAB. D Climbs Cocoan at Trees and Cracks the -Nuts Against Stenesv-.' In the mining bureau jnay beseen a very -rme specimen ot Tiie "remarkable large land crab known as the purse crab, pr.Birgus latrp,. which -is well preserved in a glass jar. This t -i one of the largest species of . land crab Kuown. It is some times ' found from 18 to 24 inches in length when fully stretched out. and is capable of erecting itself to the height of nearly a foot from the ground, which it'readily does if irritated, retreating and exhibiting to the utmost its powers o'f -offense and -defense. It is somewhat allied to the hermit crab, but t having, the abdomen or tail shorter,; yet very large: on thd under side of which it carries its eggs in immense quantities, its under side is soft and membranous, it, upper surface covered with i strong 'plates, which j overlap; One an6ther as in:lobsteref The first pair of legs have large and powerful pincers; the second; and third .pairs of lees are terminated by a single nail; the pair next to them are a little smaller, with small pincersr"theparrtof legs' nearest to the abdomen are very small, but terminated by rudimentary pincers. c .' ?. Wben teased-this crab is so powerful in,'its mclawl andJegs as to be able to cling to a stick, and can hold its own weight to be carried for over a half hour before letting go,-1- It cantraver about as fast backward- as forward if pursued. It is generally of a yellowish brown color,, its Jimbavbeingrbowever, covered with. -little blackish pro ections. V- It is nvver-found far from the sea, to which it is said to pay visits in. order to moisten its gills', but it always resides on land, and is. generally found in holes un der the roots of trees, especially of cocoa- nut trees, which it prefers, and where it accumulates great quantities of the fibers of the coooanut husks, as if to keep itself warm, or for a -soft bed, , As a general -thing the purse crab stays in. these! holes during the daytime and -comes but at jught.-. ' Its food generally consists of cocoa nuts, also the nuts of a species of palm known'- as- Pandanus odorotismns, and other nuts,, which it climbs the trees to. procure, cutting the cocoanut Sxova the tree with its heavy "claws," and after it has cat downtwo; dr three it descends and commences to pull the husk from them.,. -,-f.f . : rr r I In its maimer of dealing with cocoa nuts it exhibits a remarkable instinct, as it always begins to -tear off the husk at the end '-where the eyee-are. It then makes, a jbole .through the eye from, which the nut would germinate.1 This is done by trikin the fruit -witli its heavy claw and breaking it sufficiently 1 to aomit one.of the small legs, by which it scoops out; the nut with its small,,' pin cers. ; Sometimes it seizes the nut by eneofnits great ' pincers and breaks it against a -stoned 'i:-n S-t -rK;' j I p I : XTbe purse crab is found in the mounts ains and in the more eastern islands of the Indian ocean as well as on . some of the islands of the South Pacific, more es pecially in - the -Caroline- islands, which Are -a low coral group. San, Francisco Chronicle: K' ' 5 'il. v v -i-: '. . .Hats and Beads.. : f It 'has fceen noticed' by :Mr;.' Henry Heath, who sends hats all over4he world, from Culcutta to Perti, that different na tionalities, possess heads of -distinctive sizes and shapes. For- instance; Germans U.1 nave I very, round, i heads, a peculiarity shared by our own royal family. The average English head is what hatters call a. good , ahape-that jay rather. Ipng, . e Scotch, one is riot surprised to learn, are very' long headed.' Canadians are dis-': tinguishsd by exceptionally large heads." South Americans : by" very small ones. Australians, again, have rather small heads. "The subject is an iriterestdnar one. and worth, pursuing further if, space al lowed, ine beads of individuals also vary a good deal from time to time. shrinking during illness or mental worry. ana generally Decerning smaller with ad vancing years. As to shape, there is such a thing as fashion, but it only affects mashers; men stick to ' much the same shape year after year. Pall Mall Ga zette, - . .-. -'' , ? r: ' ' ' - - Detecting a Thief: "John Napier," Miss Warrender tells us, "pursued his studies and researches in' Merchiston, ; He was suppose ly the vulgar to be deeply, versed in magic, and to possess a familiar in the shape of a jet black cock. , The story goes that once when some petty thefts had been com mitted in the castle, of which one of the servants was suspected, Napier brought them all np the winding stairs into a darkened . room, where the cock was placed. ' ' He commanded them to stroke its back, declaring that it would crow at the touch of the .guilty person. During the whole "ceremony the cock remained silent, but. afterward . the .hand.. of. the culprit was found to be free from the soot with whicb. the bird's feathers had been liberally sprinkled. j Bow the People of Sangir Keep Time. . The people pf Sangir, an island of the Malay Archipelago, keep time by theaid of an hour-glass formed by arranging two bottles neck to neck. The sand runs put in., half an- hour, when the bottles are reversed.' i dose .by them a line is stretched, on which hang twelve sticks marked with notches from one to twelve, with a hooked 3ti,ck which is placed, be-' tween the hour last struck and- the , next one.1 One of these classes keeps the time' for each village, for which purpose the hours are -sounded on a gong by a keeper. London Tit-Bits. 'if A tacky Boy. A lad at - Annapolis was lying on a lounge -reading a novel, when a bullet. ilred'-a smarter J of a mile away, came llirough'a'dodr, fell" upon his chest and slipped down into his vest pocket, where he. found it half an . hour later. He thought hie brother had. hit him with a spooL-r-Detroit Free PressL , t- ': ! ,. - - - " " . ' : 5' ? fThe -PreTalllng Enaul. " "You look tired." " "" ' ' "lam."1 : ?Tod many social dissipations?" 1N6. Not enough." Puck. GOLUDUGOUrBYTlll DISCOVERY BY OF BREYFOGLE'8 MINE A PROSPECTOR. Many Lives Bin Been Ixst In the Search for the Historic Treasure Oold IiFoniid '- There on the Surface In Umpi Uke - Plnmi In a Padding. There is not a miner or old settler in the southern part of California who is not familiar with the story of the famous Breyfogle mine. It ranks with the Gun sight, the Pegleg and the Lost Cabin legends. , Like them; it has cost dozens of lives, and bo unsuccessful and fatal have, been the many expeditions made m search of the mine that it has come . to be regarded by many as a myth. '. - Briefly, for the information of those who have never heard the tale, the story goes that away back in the early fifties a party in which, was a man named 1 Breyfogle, set out for .California by way of the southern Utah road, a route which , lay through .the . southern portions of Utah and -Nevada, skirted Death valley, traversed the. Mojave. desert and, finally terminated. in either the San Bernardino or Los Angeles valley,.,' . , '(, Breyfogle; was .something of a miner m his. .way, and whil . .prospecting in a wild and forbidding region. he found a place where. heconld literally dig. great nuggets -of gold out of the decomposed iquartz or cement,- as he . called it, with his - knife. As . he .described - the place. k there 'was a large deposit of ).an exceed ingly ncb-character enough to-' make the .whole . party wealthy; ;.. He returned to camp, but the travelers were short of provisions .and water,-the Indians:: were troublesome : and 'there was no time to Waste in mining.'-.- - ' - -; - ' i ; ; v They pushed on toward their destina tion, but between the Indians and thirst only a few of them ever reached civiliza tion. ' Brtyf ogle told his story, exhibted the nuggets he had dug out and careful ly jjreservedi and then spent the rest of his life in a fruitless search for the de posits . Others, who heard the story fol lowed his example, and; for upward, of forty years the Breyfogle mine has been a veritable will-o'-the-wisp, luring men to -destruction -in the terrible .: deserts of southeastern California and southwest ern Nevada. - ' - - y: -. - - -"'-V A' LOCKT 8TBIEE. : -George Montgomery, an experienced miner well known in the Wood river re gion of Idaho, was on a prospecting trip -in the . region : to , the southeastward of . Death valley. It should . be premised that the old Utah road after leaving San Bernardino city turns through theCajon pass-'and then strikes off in a northeast erly direction, across the Mojave desert, passing Besting Springs,' the' Kingston mountains and then traversing the Pahr twip valley.'.'; .This' valley lies just on the boundary line .let?ween --.Calif ornia and Nevada - and ; has , a general. northwest erly and southeasterly course the Kings ton mountains lying to the west and the Pah ramp range to the east. "While prospectiiig""iir the' mountains last named, and at the upper end.ofthe valley'-'Monrtgomery-made a-' discovery jyhichbearseyery bcatii)iv.jof.Jk!eing the long sought Breyfogle mine, or at least one exactly nnilar..-- Bat Ittwr loca- iioa answers: to; that ;giy em byi-Brevfogle. UMe t;he4basn f ound jnst as he .,8amsopientuu thatu; rCroldug uut ui uufjeus wiui a aniie. One ledge located , by, Montgomery is eight feet wide. has been traced by its ontaroppings,,fpra distance of fl.000 feet.-. In. the decomposed, surface: rock .the gold is found almost' like plums in a pudding J Pieces of quartz picked out I are from a quarter to half bright yellow gold, while- with," a hand mortar the lucky discoverer pounded but in a short Jame a yeast powder can full of nuggets or various sizes. , All j along the ledge free gold is found in quantities that as tonish, the oldest prospectors and which seem scarcely credible, . , . - :- i ; ' -After making, several locations 'Mont gomery spead the news of his discovery, the' result being that some thirty or forty miners are at work in the valley. Mont gomery himself packed up as large a quantity of the richest specimens, as. he conld carry and. made bis way. across the desert to Daggett, the. nearest railroad point, 160 miles away. , From there he came to Sah Francisco. : " ' : ',' .'. ' . V EOETUNES. "FOB MANY. " ' . To the qne8tioa whether he was look ing for capital or a purchaser, Mr. Mont gomery returns .an. emphatic negative The mines, he. ways, are- the. richest he ever saw, .and . he is satisfied that he can realize a fortune :iby ..working t them. There ought to be plenty of placer gold in the gulches leading from the ledges that have been discovered, but no effort has been made to find any. All the miners yet in the camp are busy on the quartz chums they have located. On one claim taken .' np by Montgomery a cross cut. has been pushed-'. for twenty .feet across 'the vein without striking.; the hanging wall, and it is free milling ore all the way. - '- -- - ' ' ; ' - Besides the deposits of gold, some rich silver veins have been found, assays from which run over a hundred ounces to the ton. Lead and copper also abound, but at ; present,. gold, js the sole object of .r There is plenty of mesquite wood- for fuel in, the valley within, three "or four i miles : of :the-newly . discovered jcamp, - while in the-. mountains, fifteen .-miles away,' are forests -which afford, abun dance of timbering material. -Water can be had at a moderate depth -in ' Pahrump valley, while at Ash Meadows, fifteen miles away, are streams which conld be' utilized for power.' ;. yr '; r:"':1.'- " In, any event, the Breyfogle mystery seems to have .been solved, and , perhaps this. .fact:.. will give .another., stimulus to the search for the Gunsigbtand the Peg leg mines. San Francisco Letter. .: i ; -1 v.;,!-' .-: Doesn't Peselmlsna Pay? She-rlt's disgusting to : see people so demonstrative in ipubhc places. 4 Who's that man across the street who 'kisses his wife and baby on the doorstep when be leaves every morning? ,;;:'!1';u ' . He--Thaf s Dodson, who writes ' cyn ic?.! paragraphs on matrimony. Epoch. Wiiolesaie and Retail ' Lnmrists. -DEALER8 IN- Fine Imported, Key West and Domestic PAINT .' '. -' ' r- -' Now is the ti me to : paint vour house and if you wish to get the best quality and a fine color use the - ' ShenviD, 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 r, if 8! -s-ft.-n - i.t.-t fur; i. THE BEST OF Wines, Lipors and Cigars - ALWAYS ON HAND. d. E. bMrd & no., ,;V- vl.-u V. Real-Estate, Insaranee, and Loan AGENCY. Opera House Bloek,3d St; Chas. Stubling, PKOPHISTOR OF THI : New Vogt Block, Second St. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL l Liquor v Dealer, MILWAUKEE BEER ON DRAUGHT. Health isWealth ! Shi t ...Da. E.jC., West's. STkrvic amb Brain, TBKiT mxnt, a guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dizzi ness: Convulsions', Fits,' Nervous- Neuralgia, Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by 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,1 Barrenness, Loss of Power in either sex, Involuntary Losses and Spermat orrhoea caused by over exertion of the bracta,' self abuse, or over-Indulgence. . Each box contains one month's treatment. - Si .00 a box, or six boxes foro.00yent by mail prepaid on receipt of price. 1 -,-WB GUARANTEE SIX' BOXES To cure any case. With each order received by us for six boxes, accompanied by 45.00, we yriu send the purchaser, our written- guarantee to re fund the money if the treatment does not effect a cure. Guarantees issued only by" ' " BIAKKLKY HOUOHTOS, ''! -!: i ; Preacrlptiom Draegists, 175 Second St.-,; u;t r.,.l The.DaJlea, Or. YOU SUED -BUT ASK EHST EHD tOII. Hi' iXjna-u esL & , ' Middle Valley, Idaho, May 15, 1891. Dr. Vandbkpool: -Your 8. B. Headache and Liver Cure sella 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 w as displaced. : . Respectfully, 1 , -' ; ! --M. A. FLETCHER. ; For sale by ail Drug-grists. . SS ;i9-UiA ff tt-ii'J,.r h U:,i. 1 ,S-W.W . ': l--;-" ';.. "I .)!! . ,,. ........... 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 yre a$k that you give it; a fair trialLnd if satisfied with its course a generous support. . i The Daily four pages of six columns each, will be issued every , evening, except Sunday, and will be delivered in the city, or sont 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 deyelpping our Industries, in extendihg ..nd ;9P-raingup;;;new channels for our trade, in securing an open river, and in helping THE DALLES to take her prop er position as; the Leading ity of The paper; tibth daily; and weekly, will be ; indfepetidht in politics, and"-in its critic of ; po handling of local afikiim-be" JUST, FAIR AND IMPARTIAL. We will endeavor to give all ihe lo cal; news: and we ask that vour crxticistn of pur phi ect arid course: be fbrmedArbm the contents ot theVpaper,', and riot '.'from TiQOh rincinnrmvin J UilU.il .Ml' J. ; ' J ..-. -1.1 . . THE WEEKLY, sent to any'address ;wm cnjam;:ip column pages, arid to make it the eciualof the best; !sl your Postmaster for Ill) U.i-b,, IC HE CHRONICLE Office, N: Cor: WasB i ngton an d Secon d' Sts. m mm The Grate City of the Inland Empir;e is situated at the head of navigation on the Middle . holTnn'hin nri is a thriving, prosperous ,; ITS TERRITORY. It is the supplv. citv. for 'anvetensivA 'and 'rifth n trri- cxdfaral an c grazing country; its trade reaching as far south as Summer Lake, a distance of over . twe nunarea miles. . THE LARGEST WOOL. MARKET. The rich fiwazinsr-coxintrv alon the , eastern f?lore of , the the; Cascades; furnishes pasture for thousands Of sheeP. rthe !"WOOl from -which' finds maT-Tret. here,., The :iDalles .is -the, largest orierinal wool shinnincr point -. in America, about shipped last year; - - : - iThe salmon fisheries are Vieldinar this vear a revenne'nf'fftf finanOO xsrhinh 'fian land ;lbe mpr.e th market Hereand.the country-south and east has this year-filled the. -warehouses, and all available storage places to overflo-wing -with their products. : - - -v rrrs; wealth, ; . It' is the richest citv of its size on the coast, and its money is scattered o ver and is being used to develop, uiurtj larming country tnan ,Its situatibn is .unsurnassed! . .its,, climate ' delifirht- fulti:. .Its possibilities incalculable! - Its resources -unlimited! And on these corner stones she stands:1 Eastern Oregon. '.-.'j 'til: .op;,J$l,pp..;peplyesar. six .eight ! wel' shall endeavbr a copy, or address. ! : J .! . " alles. city i ;;r . r. ;. . u , ; i - 5 5,000,000-pounds being ' :. " "' - the finest on the Columbia. is triputary. to any. other 1 V SlI' T Ft 1-1 -iJ.Sii . lli.il