THE MOUNTAINS. .AH thronuh the frozen land we sped, ' Through cuttings white and marshes drear; Tbrongh black plantations, grim and dead, ' And forest giants darkly sere. i - He landscape fled and passed below, . And tracing still, we aavr no more -Tbu one sreat cheerless waste of snow, - ju ocean wan no tanner shore: Until the mountains rose around, , 80 sternly from the Icy earth, And beauty, though rejected, found A home in her own very dearth. -. 5old they were, 'pride intensified In every line so gannt and grim A mantle and a pall of pride. That lingered when all else grew dim. Tbe rocky heads all powdered o'er. And in the valley far below A forest tangle, and once more A long and stainless slope of snow. They seemed as mourning for the past. In hopeless mourning for an age Ua distant now, its records cast But mystery on earth's dim page. They seemed as frowning on the eye That arrogantly dared -to read The secret thoughts they laid so by. And to such silence had decreed. Tuy seemed as wrapped In voiceless scorn Too passionless to stop to hate. That anything of mortal born - ' Should dare one thought to penetrate. 1 net them, and I left them so. ' Still watching from their fortress white. aaelr cold, vast citadel of snow. To see the first approach of night longing to feel its shadows glide. And veil their grief and hide their pain. "With eager longing, even pride. Though measureless, could not restrain. TJiisn Wlnstanley in Chambers' Journal. Wants to Be Saved from His Friends. ""Why do I keep my proposed trip to Europe so secret?" repeated a man whose circle of friends is larger than common to person who had asked him the ques tion. Wellk to tell the truth, because I want to escape being made a purchas ing agent for a dozen or two of people whom I know. Whenever they learn xhat I am about to go abroad they over whelm me with commissions of . all kinds. One man wants a photograph of certain tower of the castle at Heidel berg: another wants a peculiar kind of a "match-safe, which may be bought at a "certain shop in Pans; still a third is anx ious to have a few London neckties, and others want umbrellas, sticks, opera glasses, cigar holders, jewels or some thing else. "It's a nuisance in the first place to Voy these things, especially as yon are Likely to be in a hurry at times. Then when yon arrive back in New York yon are likely to have trouble with the cus toms officials, because your friends al ways expect you to get their articles in lnty free. Besides, no one ever pays you in advance, and you have to go around dunning the people. To cap the rJimax, yon often buy things that do not nxt the persons who have asked the fa tot of you, and their disappointed looks r words make you feel unpleasant, to aay the least. Consequently, having , been through these experiences several 'times, I now keep my intended depart ure as secret as possible." New York Tribune. Preference of Cannibals for Chinamen. The black cannibals of northern Queensland are exceedingly partial to Chinamen. The reason is said to be that the flesh of the Chinese is peculiarly tender and palatable, owing to rice being their staple article of diet. ' There is now a numerous Chinese population in the north of Australia, and scores of them who have ventured beyond the confines of civilization have been captured and devoured by the natives. This explains the nonchalance with which the northern Queensland surveyor recently reported 4a these terms to the government: "The Macks have stolen all my provisions and "sampled" two of my Chinamen." Lon don Tit-Bits. Fate of the Turkeys. A certain parish not a thousand miles from Portland devotes one Sunday even ing each month to what they term a "missionary concert," it being the duty of some of the church to keep posted on the progress of mission work in the dif ferent countries and report the same at these meetings. A certain active worker whose study was the land of the sultan electrified the audience by announcing one evening that "his was a sorrowful eport," adding, in all seriousness, "that the Turkeys had all bad their crops cut off." Lewiston Journal. ' Catarrh of the ears and catarrh of the .Eustachian tubes often cause deafness. Catarrh of the stomach loads the stomach with tough phlegm and interferes with digestion. Catarrh of the gallbladder obstructs the outflow of the bile, which ' is absorbed into the circulation, and thus gives rise to jaundice. Catarrh of the bladder is a dangerous disease, from the -difficulty of getting rid of the mucus. Weldless steel chains are being experi mented with in England. The chains are cut from a blank after the same gen eral methods employed in cutting out & chain from a single piece of wood. As steel is used, it is asserted that the weight can be reduced one-third from what was necessary in old chains of imiiftr strength. The largest yawl on the Atlantic coast is said to be the Whitecap, eighty-three feet over all, owned by Dr. J. T. Both-" rock, of Philadelphia. The Whitecap is well known in Massachusetts bay, hav ing been formerly owned by D. H. Bice, of the Hull Yacht club. She was built in Essex, and rigged first as a schooner. . Of the 1 1,000,000 square miles of Africa, cnly about 4,500,000 remain which have not been claimed by some European power,. and more than half of this area lies within the desert of Sahara. The word muslin comes from Mosul, in Asiatic Turkey, where it was at one time largely manufactured, just as at a later date cambric received its name from Cambray. in France. The following states have no state motto: Indiana, Mississippi, New Hamp shire, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio and Texas. I OLD LONDON PICTURED. COMPARED WITH THE CITY OF ' TODAY. TWAS A SORRY SIGHT Its Houses Were Dwarfy. Squalid Struct area and Kiwily Pulled Dawn The Cli mate Then Was Colder and More Un bearableFamine and Pestilence. Who can rebuild before the eye of the mind a single ordinary dwelling of the vanished London of the middle of the Thirteenth century? It was a dwarfitih. squalid strnctnre of such crazy unsub stantiality that, with a stout -iron crook and two strong cords, provided by the ward, it tnigh be pulled down and dragged off speedily in case of fire: a structure of one story jutting over a low ground floor, with another jut of eaves above, its roof perchance engrailed with gables, its front bearing an odd re semblance to the back of jl- couple of huge stairs, and the. whole a most rick ety, tumbledown, top heavy, fantastical thing Chimneys were fairly in vogue then, so it had them squat, square, wide mouthed, faced with white plaster red tiles or gray pebble work. . Red tiles covered , its roof. Its walls were rough planed planks or a wooden framework filled with a composite of straw and clay, buttressed with ports and crossed this way and that with sup porting beams, the whole daubed over with whitewash, of which the weather Boon made graywash. , In front was a Ktairway sometimes covered, sometimes not or a stepladder set slantwise against the "wall for an entrance to the npper story. The doorways were narrow and low. the windows also, and the latter, dark ened with overbrows of wooden shut ters, propped up from beneath and sticking out like long.- slender .awnings, were further darkened by. sashes of parchment, linen or' thin, shaved horn, for glass came from Flanders, and was costly and rare. BOMAXTIO BUILDING. Snch. joint and seam and tile being loosened into crack and cranny and crev ice everywhere, was the dwelling of the London citizen as the eye might see it in the middle of the Thirteenth century. Multiply that dwelling into a tortuous and broken perspective of like buildings, some joined by party walls, some with spaces between, all pent roofed or gable peaked, heavy eaved. stub chimneyed, narrow latticed, awning shuttered, stair cased, post buttressed, beam crossed, dusky red roofed, dingy white walled, and lo.w under the overhanging vastness of the sky. and you have an ancient Lon don street, which shall be foul, and nar row, with open drains, footways roughly flagged and horseway deep with slushy mire, overstrewn with ashes, shards and offal, and smelling abominably. There were indeed at that period, thinly interspersed here and there, houses of somewhat better description, solidly built of stone and timber, though at best strangely deficient in comfort and convenience, according to the fash ion of that most inconvenient and un comfortable age. Here and there, too, for those were the times of the feudal soldier and priest, 'rose in dreadful beau teous contrast with the squalid city the architectural' grandeur of church and cathedral, or the stately house or palace of bishop or earL But all around stretched dwellings .which our poorest modern bouse excels, and on those dwellings all evils and discomforts that can befall had' their quarry. Light came dim and sunshine dimly glimmering into their darkened rooms. Summer heats made ovens of them. The old gray family of London fogs rose from the marshes north of the city walls, from the city's intersecting rivulets, from the Thames below, and crept in at every opening to make all dark 'and chill within. Down their squat chimneys swept the smoke. Choking and blinding. Rams BUch as even rainy England knows not now soaked them through for weeks together. A TERRIBLE PICTURE. Cold such as English winters have for gotten now pierced with griping blast and silent . sifting snow to their shiver ing inmates. Foul exhalations from the filthy streets ; hung around them an air of poison, or rising from the cesspools, of which every house had one within, discharged themselves in deadly mala dies. Lightnings stabbed their roofs or rent their walls, bunting for those they sheltered. Conflagration, lurking in a spark, upspread in dragoonish flame and roared 'through them devouring. Whirlwind swept through them howl ing, and tossed them down by fifties.. Pestilence breathed through them in re curring seasons, and left their rooms aghast with corpses. Civic right or in testine war stormed often near them and brought them death and sorrow. Fam ine arose eyery few years and walked through them on his way to England, leaving their tenants lean and pale, or lifeless. Often into them broke the midnight robber. singly or in gangs; often to them dune the gatherer- of taxes or of tithes; upon them hung per petually all the bloodsuckers, every vampire which an age of ignorance and tyranny could . spawn, and in them herded fiendish bigotries, crazy super stitions, brutish illiteracy, and all that darkens and depraves the soul For that was the mournful midnight of our mortal life, centuries ago. The old, sad stars that governed our con ditions still kept their forceful station above the brawl of brutal and internal dreams: and one alone, now risen from Geber's east, hung dewy bright with the world's hope and promise, while science, builder of life that is holy, beautiful and gay. was but a wondrous new born child in Roger Bacon's cell, dreaming of things to come. Atlantic Monthly. lira wins the Line. ; A native New Zealander was induced to wear a shirt, a paper collar, shoes and a hat. and he almost concluded to eat with a knife and embrace Christianity Then they asked turn to wear suspenders. and he went ont and banged himself. It was pushing civilization too fast. De troit Free Press. Bow to Drive Flies from a Stable. Chloride of lime scattered on a board in the stable will clear it of all kinds of flies. - How the Point of Break in an Oeean Cable Is Discovered. , If the metallic conductor is broken, the surrounding insulation remaining perfect, the electrostatic charge of the cable, or the amount of electricity which it absorbs in becoming charged, is elec trically weighed by building up an arti ficial line until the current flows equally into the cable and such artificial line, if the insulating covering of the wire is broken the current will flow freely from the conductor to the surrounding water, and its strength, if the power of the bat tery be known, definitely measures the electrical resistance, and consequently the length, of the conductor. In other words, the battery power, divided by the indicated current strength, gives the line's resistance, and therefore its length.' Bow to Dye Dress Goods Bed. Boil the goods ten minutes in one ounce of cochineal, one ounce of muriate of tin and a little cream of tartar for each pound of goods, dissolved in enough water to cover them Hang up to dry. How to Clean Balr. Wash well with a mixture of soft water, one pint, sal soda, one ounce, and cream of tartar, one-quarter ounce. How Ships "Speak" Each Other at Sea. -Communications are made from ship to ship by means of an international code of signal flags. A number of flags of various designs and colors are hoisted one under another, each symbol or com bination having an arbitrary conven tional meaning attached to it. Owing to the difficulty of distinguishing blue, red and black, or telling yellow from white, the tendency is to reduce ' all signs to black and white, singly or in combination, trusting to shape for dif ferent signals. , ."v ' How to Hake Sandpaper. Powder common window glass that having a green tint is best and sift through sieves of varying fineness, for coarse ana fine sandpaper. Cover any coarse paper with thin glue and sift the powdered glass upon it. Let it stand a day or two. when the refuse - sand is shaken off and the paper is ready for use Bow to Make Family Wines from Frnits. Take ripe fruit, crushed, twenty-four pounds, soft water, one gallon; loaf sugar, four pounds; cream of tartar, 1 ounces, brandy, one .quart Dissolve the cream of tartar in water, mix all the ingredients, and let them stand one week before drawing off. ' Bow to Destroy Acid on Clothes. ' As soon as possible after exposure to the acid dampen with spirits of ammo nia, which will destroy the effect of the add immediately " Bow to Test Steel. Good tool steel will fall to pieces with a white heat: with bright red beat it crumbles under the hammer; with mid dling heat it may be drawn to a needle point. To test hardening qualities, draw under a low heat to a gradually tapered square point and plunge into cold water. If broken point will scratch glass the quality is good. To test tenacity, a hardened piece will be driven into cast iron by a hardened hammer; if poor it will be crumbled. Soft steel of good quality gives a curved line fracture and uniform gray texture. Bow to Engrave on Eggs. . Write upon the egg shell with wax or varnish, or with tallow, and then im merse the egg in some weak acid, snch as vinegar or etching liquor Wherever the varnish or wax has not protected the shell the lime of the latter is decomposed and dissolved in the'acid, and the writ ing or drawing remains in relief. ' . How to Make Liquid Glue. Take soft water, one quart; best pale glue, two pounds; dissolve in a covered vessel over a water bath or in a vessel immersed in boiling water; cooL and and add gradually of nitric acid (specific gravity) 1.835 ounces, when cold put it into bottles. It is very strong and does not gelatinize. Bow to Enter and Leave i Never open the door of a private room without knocking no matter upon what terms of intimacy yon are with the oc cupant. Always remove your hat be fore entering it is an insult to your host to remain covered, even for an in stant, in bis or ber apartment. This is especially the case when ladies are pres ent. When leaving do not replace your hat until you nave crossed the thresh old. ' How to Preserve Insects. Persons who wish to make a collection of insects, butterflies, etc., can do so easily, and preserve their colors by im mersing them in a weak solution of cor rosive sublimate. As a matter of fact, stuffed birds and other products of the taxidermist can be insured from de cay by soaking the animals in this solu tion. Bow to Eat Grapes. . Grapes have a dual medicinal quality which ' is almost unknown in this conn try As a matter of fact, nature has pro vided in the grape a sovereign remedy for all minor disarrangements of the stomach. In northern 'and central It aly, when the bowels become lax, the natives eat quantities of grapes, includ ing the skin. When they need a slight purgative they eat a number of grapes, discarding the skins and only using the flesh. The tannic acid contained in the skins is sufficiently astringent to arrest incipient dysentery SJIIPES & KIJIERSLY, i Wlolesale and Retail Broiists. -DEALERS IN- Fine Imported, Key West and Domestic PAINT Now is the time to paint your house and if you wish to get the bejt 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 Dalles. Or. Don't Forget the EflST EP S0LOOJI, MacBonalJ Bros., Props. THE BEST OF Wines, Lipors and Cigars ALWAYS ON HAND. C. E. BtflKgp (JO., Real Estate, .'. ; Insaranee, and Loan AGENCY. Opera House Bloek,3d St. Chas. Stubling, PBOPBIITOB OF THE iEwi(ip; New Vogt Block, Second St. . WHOLESALE AND RETAIL- Liquor v Dealer, MILWAUKEE BEER ON DRAUGHT. Health is Wealth ! ... I BRAIN I ?.4. .-a A Dr. E. C. West's Nerve anb Brain Treat ment, 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 miserv, 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, Belf abuse or over Indulgence. Each box contains one month's treatment. 11.00 a box, or six boxes for 15.00, sent by mall prepaid ou receipt of price. "WE GCARAKTEE SIX BOXES To cure any case. With each order received by us for six boxes, accompanied by 15.00, 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 A HOUGHTON, Prescription Druggists, 178 Second St. The Dalles, Or. YOU NiSED BUT ASK . Middle Vaixev, Idaho, May 15, 1891. DR. VaNDERPOOT.: Ynnr H R HpuHacha mil Liver Cure sells well here. Everyone that tries it comes for the second bottle. People are com ing ten to twelve miles tn n.t a Witt I., t.. trv it. and then they come back and take three or four bottles at a time. Thank you, or Bending dup licate bill as mine as displaced. Respectfully, M. A. FLETCHER. For sale by all Druggists. Dales 36 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 cqurse 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 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 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 obiect and coursfi. h formed Wi the contents of the rash assertions of THE WEEKLY, sent to any address t will contain trom 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 CitV Of the Inland "Rmnirfl is sitnn eH a the head Of navigation On is a thriving, prosperous ITS TERRITORY. It is the SUPtJlv CitV for an ex-tensive nr1 -rinTrt norri- cultural an grazing country, its trade reaching as far south as Summer Lake: a distance of hundred miles. THE LARGEST WOOL MARKET. The rich grazing conntrv alone the easte-m si one of the -'the Cascades furnishes nastnre fo-p t.h on sarin's 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 snipped lasx year., ITS PRODUCTS. . The salmon fisheries are the finest, on tnerWInmTvio 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 countrv south and east. ha thie year filled the warehouses, places to overflowing' with ITS WEALTH It is the richest citv of its size on the ooast and it money Is scattered over and is beinr nsed to develon more farming country than in .eastern vregon. . ItS Situation is Unsumassed! Its nlimate delio'Vn-. ful! Its possibilities incalculable! Its. resources un limited! And on these corner stones she stands. Daily naner. and not fro outside parties. for $1.50 per year. the MirldlA nnlnmln's anrl city. and all available st.OTn ta their products. is tributary to any other