sam. ; ever had Was a payin' for a license to git married,' said my dad. "Atter that hit weren't so tryin'. for I'd call upon Elviry. When my calkilations stumbled, and the road of life eot miry: " So hit weren't so very long before we had Ave hundred dollar Lord, weren't I Brood! Says I to her. 'a thous and's sure to follor. "The thousand came. Says I. "By jing! for fear wo git in trouble. We'll rustle 'nd we'll tussle, tel our bank ac count i double.' And so we buckled to agin from airly morn tel night. Until we had it salted down where intruss wit all riRht. But then Elviry she got skeered. and kjw'd we hadn't onufl "To live and raise the children up.' said she, 'will still be tough.' "Down to it then we got oncet more, and slaved and pinched and saved. But seemed to me the more wemade, the more we alius craved. And when it come to spendln' here and there an extra dime, yje novcr could say yes. though wbrkin' harder all the time. Then Elviry, she grew feeble with the rheuma tic and ajrer. While I was laid up half the time with phthisic and lumbiiger. t "And so the children they took holt, and thing went wus and wus; They spent our money right and left, nor never cared a cuss: Our workin' aud our scrimpin' and our sarin ' hero und there All went for dressin'. fuss and fun, and no one seemed to care, "Cept Sam. uur youngest son. but he soon rarkutl ntr to the city. The rest Lave scattered here and yon, with no one h'fi i" pity. "And now wv'r- old and feeble, it seems right hard to m- That the pxrl:ouse only's left us: but Elviry says, wiys she: 'Ef we had thought of others more, and less of savin' gold. And l'arned our boys to love us, as we both on us got old. We would not be IcfT helpless here, with no one round to care;' And I guess. Elviry's hit it 'bout ez clout ez truth will bear. "What's uie aud her a goin' to do? P'raps you're the one can telL What you young bucks think you don't know these days hain't much. Oh, well! Hit ain't no reason you should laugh, kase two old folks is down Hey how you're Sam? Well, well: 1 swanl So you've got rich in town. Come to take keer of us? Lord, how Elviry'U cry for Joy! Wal, Sam, 'twixt us, 1 alius thought I'd raised up one good boy." Browne Perrhnan In Yankee Blade. A Simple Fire Extinguisher. It is the opinion of experts that much of the money which is spent by factories, mills and stores on the introduction of pipes and valves for fire extinction might be saved by the adoption of a much sim pler and more efficient method. Both sulphur and ammonia are well adapted for extinguishing fire. Sulphur absorbs oxygen and forms sulphuric acid, the fumes of which are much heavier than air. ' The quantity required would be small, since seventy grammes of sulphur can make one hundred cubic meters of air inimical to combustion. An effective sulphur extinguishing apparatus can be made of a large iron box of moderate depth and open at the top. It should be hinged at one end or side to a protected ceiling, and kept close thereto by a cord or wire connected with a wire or strap formed chiefly of cad mium fusible at 144 degs. Fahrenheit. Inside the box is placed a considerable quantity of cotton wadding, well satur ated with powdered sulphur. On the heat of an incipient fire melting the wire or strip, the box drops a short distance; by a simple device the cotton wadding is ignited at the same moment, and strong cloud of sulphurous acid gas is instantly evolved, which extinguishes the fire bv rendering the air unfit for combustion. New York Telegram. Cunning Siberian Natives. When compelled to travel all night. the Siberian natives always make a prac tice of stopping just before sunrise and allowing their dogs to go to sleep. They argue that if the dog goes to sleep while it is yet dark and wakes up in an hour and finds the sun shining, he will suppose that he has had a full night's rest, and will travel all day without thinking of being tired. One or even two hours' stop at any other time is perfectly useless, as the doas will be uncontrollable from that time forward until they are per mitted to take what they think a full al lowance of sleep. St. Lotus Republic. Strawberries. ' Why are they called "straw"berriesi Smart men differ on that. Some say it is on account of their hollow, strawlike stems. Others think it is because they have to be covered with straw or similar protecting material in winter. The most classical explanation that our Anglo Saxon forefathers used to raise them and they gave them this name because the berries are generally on the ground, that is, "strewed" or "strawed" around. Ex change. ' Acres of ground around Sandringham, the Prince of Wales' country seat, are devoted to the cultivation of lilies of the valley, the sweet scented and ever popular spring blossom. In the little Tillage near there is little else except a remarkably fine ruin of a little church, and hundreds of thousands of the pure bell shaped blossoms are sent v.p to Lon don every year. A man named Green, who, with others, was wrecked fifty-five years ago on a remnte island in the South Atlantic has resided there, living a Robinson Ornsnrt life, ever since. Green is the chief of a colony which eighty persons. now consists oi Although cookery is proverbially a French art, Paris had no school of cook ery worthy the name until very recent ly. .. Lectures, are now given in the Rue Bonaparte, -with practical demonstra tions by professors skilled in the noble art. - - J. W. Midgeley, the .Chicago railroad man, who is reported to receive a salary of $30,000 a year, was a newspaper desk editor not many years ago. Failing eye eight compelled him to abandon his profession. WHERE WOMAN RULES. SUMATRA ISLAND IS A PLACE WHERE WIVES RUN THINGS. Customs That Differ from Those of Any . Other Christian or Mohammedan Peo ple The Wife Is the Property Holder. She Never TLeHtVes Her Borne. A country where the women own the houses and lands, where gold and silver are common as flowers in the spring, where everybody is happy and nobody does wrong, is the burden of the story that W. J. Shaw brings from far off Su matra. W. J. Shaw is one of the men who modeled things in this country when it was young and pliable. He came from New York in 1849, and was about the first man to hang out a lawyer's sign in San Francisco. He won the cases that settled the validity of settlers' titles and resulted in the Van Ness ordinance, and he served as a state senator in 854, when it was more of an honor to be a legislator than it is now. "In all my years of travel," he said, "I never found a happier people than those who live in Sumatra, in the mid dle part of the island. The people all over Sumatra are believers in the Mo hammedan religion, but the peculiar customs which make this particular peo ple unique and different from all others are confined to one community. "It would not be correct to term this branch of the Sumatra people a tribe, for they do not live in tribal relations at all, although there is a chief and under chieftains. These rulers, however, are not despots, and if the people do not like the way in which they manage things they dispose of them very shortly and put other men in their places. "Although men .are the ostensible chieftains, the women are the real rulers. The customs of the country forbid the giving of a man's property to his chil dren after his death. If a man dies the property he owns is given to his father and mother. The woman's property, on the contrary, is given to the children. Probably that is the custom that is re sponsible for the turning over of all the wealth of the country to the women. " TREATMENT OP THE BOYS AND MEN. 'It is the constant aim of the men to enrich their wives. Each man has but one wife, and each wife one husband, and they live a perfectly moral life. The teachings of Mohammedanism are fol lowed upon the question of divorce. The husband has the right to divorce his wife whenever he chooses, but must al low her to retain the property in her pos session. Divorces are not frequent, though, and 1 believe that, in proportion to the population, divorces in this part of Sumatra are not one in sixteen com pared to the number in California. The people are happy there happy as they can oe. The children live at home with their mother the boys until they are thirteen or fourteen, and the girls until they marry. 'When the daughter gets married she does not leave her mother's house. An addition is built on a new roof, as they call it and the newly married girl makes her home there, and brings up her children. This custom, of course, results in forming quite large communi ties where there are many children. I knew one of these communities where there were a mother and several daughters living with their children. The original house had grown with each marriage until it spread over a large piece of ground. "When the boys get old enough to leave home they are taken to a compart ment house which is set aside as a home for them until they wish to marry. The girl has the right to choose whom she will wed, a privilege delegated to her in few Mohammedan countries. "Once married, the husband for the rest of his life is hiSwife's lover. He lives apart from her and visits his home only in the evening to chat with her and the children. All the money he gets and there is plenty of money of Dutch coinage there he turns over to bis sweet heart. She dresses herself and the chil dren and shoulders all the petty family cares. "He is bothered only to earn the money to pay for the things they eat and wear. "To get things for them to eat need not ,worry him much. The portion of Sumatra in which these strange people live is very fertile and productive. . It is a fine country, with beautiful mountains and streams and magnificent scenery. All sorts of fruits are grown, and in the higher altitudes many of the grains. DRESSES OF THE WOMEN. "To find dresses for the -family must oe a different matter, for J never saw such elegantly attired women as in these communities. They are very beautiful boasting the fairest and finest complex ions and the brightest eyes. "Never 'in Christian countries do wo men dress as extravagantly: ' "I remember that once the chief told me he would have two pretty maidens dress as they would on their marriage. The two bright eyed girls were gone some time, and came back wearing, one a dress of gold and the other One of sil ver. They had bracelets one above an other from the hands and acsve their elbows. At the elbows they wore pecu liar bracelets, jointed to permit easily moving the joint. In brief, their arms were armored with precious metal. They . bad necklaces of gems and other costly . Ornaments, and the ClOth-Of-gOld and cloth-of -silver .dresses were made loosely fitting above the waist, and the skirts in flounces. "They are not an ignorant people, for the children are taught in their homes, and many learn to read the Koran. They observe the proprieties too, as is appar ent from the rue as to widows. "When a woman's husband dies she plants a post in front of her particular !door in the family house and hangs flag upon it. While the flag waves she may not marry again. But when the winds, blowing softly off the sea, have torn it into shreds and scattered the bits on the ground her term of mourning is over, and she may accept a second lover's proffer. "&an Francisco Examiner. HITCHED TO A CABLE. The Unique and Startling Experience of a San Francisco Horse. A sad eyed horse hitched to a two wheeled butcher wagon blinked lazily and whisked flies from himself on Jones street, between O'Farrell and Geary streets. He was an ordinary quadruped with a large head, which he. wore in a dejected sort of way, as though he was indulging in melancholy thoughts. Dang ling from one of the bit rings was the long hitching rope, which the custodian of the wagon had neglected.to fasten to a post . Suddenly the horse cast his eyes to starboard and slowly wagged his right ear. An abandoned newspaper had drift ed down the street and became caught in the cable slot.- The horse was interested He lazily wandered over to the track and examined the paper. The free end of the hitching rope dropped through the cable slot. Suddenly the horse jumped clear off the ground, jerked his head up, plastered his ears close to his head, reared on his hind feet, pawed the air with his fore feet, gave vent to a loud snort and stampeded down Jones street. It was not his fault that he broke his 6peed record, liiis horse was a peace ful animal, with an inclination to the plodding career of a plow horse. 1 But he was compelled to assume a rapid gait because his rope was wound around the cable rope and he was propelled by steam, as it were. On he sped down Jones street, around the corner and into O'Farrell street at a gait he had never traveled before, while veal cutlets, cuts of beef, porterhouse stakes, kidneys, lamb chops and liver jogged out of the wagon and became top trail which the butcher boy followed frantically in his efforts to catch his beast. Nothing got in the way of the horse but dogs, and they added to his misery by leaping into the air and snapping at his nose. An enthusiastic procession of urchins raced madly in the wake of the wagon and cheered the animal on to greater efforts of speed. Down three blocks of O'Farrell street rampaged the equine, creating as large a sensation as, would a mouse in a semi nary. At Powell street his career ended. The hitching rope came in contact with the cross cable of the Powell Street rail road and was cut in twain. The horse was holding back so hard that the reac tion threw him on his haunches, and be fore he ' could recover his equilibrium half a hundred citizens were holding him down. The butcher boy gathered up as much of his scattered meat as the dogs had not devoured, and in a f ew minutes the yel low horse was plodding in the wake of a hay wagon, munching purloined hay. San Francisco Examiner. Chivalry in a ISootblack. On the corner of one of the business streets of the city the other morning a shoeblack had just finished polishing the shoes of a well dressed and gentle appear ing man. The latter was unfortunate in having a deformity which compelled him to wear a shoe on one of his feet with an exceedingly thick sole, thus endeavorin to make up mechanically for what na ture had denied him. 'How much shall 1 pay you?' he asked of the boy. . - y "Five cents, sir. "Oh, but you should have more than five cents for polishing my shoes," said the gentleman, tapping the thick sole significantly with his cane. "No, sir," said the boy; "five cents is enough. 1 don t want to mane no money out o' your hard luck. The customer handed out a com, laid his hand on the youngster's head for moment and passed on. Who says the days of chivalry are over. Detroit Free Press. A Coroner's Verdict. A coroner out west recently reasoned out a verdict more sensible than one-half the verdicts usually rendered. It ap pears that an Irishman, conceiving that a little pbwder thrown upon some green wood would facilitate its burning di rected a small stream trom a keg upon the burning piece; but not possessing hand sufficiently quick to cut this off was blown into a. million pieces. - The following was the verdict, delivered with great gravity by the official: "Can't be called suicide, bekase he didn't mean to kill himself; it wasn't "visitation of God" bekasehe wasn't struck by lightning; he didn't die for want of breath for he hadn't anything to breathe with: it's plain he didn't know what he was about, so I shall bring in Died for want of common sense." Green Bag. Patting It Delicately. He was a country parson and a good fellow at heart, and he liked to put it delieately; and so he finished upjhis ser mon Sunday: "And, in conclusion, my friends, we will now take up the collection, and 1 trust I shall offend none of the cheerful givers who so regularly contribute to,' alasl I am afraid, too frequent demands on their charity, if I suggest that X now possess a most ample and varied collec tion of buttons, and what we chiefly need now is some needles and thread and a little cloth." Exchange. - Lonjr Periods Miss Prime Philosophers disagree aa to which period of life seems the longest to mankind. What is your opinion, doctor? Doctor (meditatively) Well, it varies. In women, for instance, the longest gen erally is between twenty-nine and thirty. I know, in my wife's case, ten years elapsed between her twenty-ninth and thirtieth birthdays. Exchange, , -. . 1 The First Cloud. ' 'Boo-hoo-hoor cried the bride. "What is it. dear?" asked the groom from theDther end of the breakfast ta ble. " Y-y-yon have bub-broken your pup-pup-promise," sobbed the bride. , "You said nothing should ever come between, ns, and the bub-breakfast table is there now." Harper's Baear. The Mexican Swell on Horseback. The Mexican swell rides on a saddle worth a fortune. It is loaded with silver trimmings, and hanging over it is an ex pensive serape, or Spanish blanket, which adds to the magnificence of the whole. His queer shaped stirrnpa are redolent of the old minea. His bridle is in like manner adorned with metal in the shape of half a dozen big silver plates, and to his bit is at tached a pair of knotted red cord reins, which he holds high up and loose. lie is dressed in a black velvet jacket fringed and embroidered with silver, and a huge and expensive hat perched on his head is tilted over one ear. His legs are Incased in dark tight fitting breeches, with silver trimming down the side seams, but mit. SO an in RTimrmWT wpnhhAr s TiTiTiTii-.t-.rkn 1 from the knee down' and flap aside. His spurs are sUver, big and heavy and costly, OTlfl 1-itrl-Aa-l -- hnnb-la wn.H kin 1,t1. I heel. Under his left leg is fastened a broad uiauw auu ucauiiixuii v curveu swoia, wiLil a hilt worthy a prince of the blood. The seat of this exquisite is the perfect pattern ox a clothes pin. Leaning against the cantle, he stretches his legs forward and outward, with heels depressed in a fashion which reminds one of Sydney- Smith's saying that he did not object to a I clergyman riding, if only he rode very bad- ij anti turned out nis toes, it 13 tne very converse of riding close to your horse. In nrliaf.. if- ..-I'motra it- ta T,a4 ... . I t.uuw . " 'rt"""" . V .11.. V. w gUDOSj UU- leSS bravado. The &2EEZ short seat and long f SnS'niirKtr.- Colonel T. A. Dodge in Harper's. Victories of an Oarsman. My first great race was also my first ! great victory. When I arrived at Phila delphia in 1876, there were assembled all the great oarsmen in the world. I became j a laughing stock for them because of my style of rowing and my rigging. The pre vailing rigging for sculls then was the 8- lnch sliding seat; oars, 10 feet 3 inches long, with oiades o inches wide, and lootooard havmg an angle of so degs. i went there with 25-mch sliding- seat. 9l foot oars, with iHJ0 an w uw. uu&ic. vv ueu luo ram uuua uxx. Since then this rigging has advanced the speed of racing a minute a mile. I then went to England, and they laughed there; but I heat them out of sight. All England then used my rigging. I met Trickett in England and won $500,000 for my fjnends on this race. Then I defeated Laycock in the same way. I then went to Australia and was defeated by Beach through a col- lision with a steamer. The Australian climate undermined my constitution, and I was defeated several times there, but I could never get the Australians to meet me in neutral waters. Edward Hanlan in Ladies' Home Journal. For severe hemorrhage from the nose try holding the arms of the patient up over the head for five minutes at a time, A small piece of ice wrapped in muslin and laid directly over the top of the nose will usually give relief. New York, Paris and BerUn altogether have not so large an area as London. imples. The old idea of 40 years ago was that facial eruptions were due to a "Wood .humor,'? for which they gave potash. Thus all the old Sarsa parillaa contain potash, a most objectionable and drastic mineral, that instead of decreasing, actually creates more eruptions. You have no ticed this when taking other Sarsaparillas than Joy's.' It is however now known that the stom ach, the blood creating power, is the seat of all vitiating or cleansing operations. A stomach clogged by indigestion or constipation, vitiates tho blood, result pimples. A clean stomach and healthful digestion purifies it nml they disappear. Thus Joy's Vegetable Sarsaa;-iila is compounded after the modern idea to regulate the bowels and stimulate the digestion. . The effect is immediate aud most satisfactory. A short testimonial to contrast the action of the potash Sarsaparillas and Joy'K modern vegetable preparation. 21rs. C. D. Stuart, cf -SCO Haven St, S. F., writes: " I haro for veers hml iiiiij jci'I'ju, I tried a popular Sarsapariila but it ac'uu::. acil more pimples to break onfc on my face. lU-aria that Joy's was a later preparuri in and acted dierently, I tried it and the pimples immediately disappeared." 'stable apart. la Largest bottle, most etlW-rivc, same price. For Sale by SNIPES & KINERSL.Y. THE DALLES, OREGON. A Necessity. The consumption of tea largely In creases every year in England, Russia, and the principal Euro pean tea-drinking ! countries. But it ; does not grow in America. And not , alone that, bat thou sands of Europeans who - leave Europe ardent lovers of tea, upon arriving in the -United States gradu ally discontinue Its use, aad finally. cease it altogether. ' . . - - . This state of things is due to the fact that the Americans think so much of business and so little of their palates that they permit China and Japan to ship them their cheapest . and most worthless teas. Between the wealthy classes of China and Japan and the exacting and cultivated tea-drinkers of Europe, the finer teas find a ready market. The balance of the crop comes to America; Is there any wonder, then, that our taste for tea does not appreciate? In view of these facts, is there not an Im mediate demand for the importation of brand of tea that is guaranteed to be un- colored, unmanipBlated, and of absolute purity? , We think there is, and present Beech's Tea. Its parity is guaranteed in . every respect It has, therefore, more in- 4 herent strength than the cheap teas yon have been drinking, fully one third less being re- - quired for an infusion. This yon will dis cover the first time you make it Likewise, . the flavor Is delightful, being the natural fla vor of an unadulterated article. It is a revela tion to teardrinkers. Sold only in package bearing this mark: BEECHiii TEA 'PurAsOTdhood: j Price fOe per pouO. For sale at . Zieslle Sutler's, THE DALL,OR3GON. The Danes is here and has come to win its way to public iavor by ener gy, industry and merit; and to this end we ask that you if satisfied with its ttto qoTt Ve rrAn rMTro -i 4- o TQiti -r-wal ov3 vv- cxxcu J J IA. gJLVC XU a, XC4.XX ux XOLX, CLXXU II SatlSD-GO. WltJl ltS .& . -a . . support. . . . The In r 1U ILL UtlU tJS Ul UUlUIXlIliS GVLCI1. Will Ut3 M, K ' 7 issued every evening, except Sunday, and will be delivered by mail for the moderate sum of .fifty cents a month. Its Objects -n -i i , will be to advertise city, ana acnacent country, to assist m city, and adjacent country, developing" our industries, in extending 4 ana opening: up new cnanneis lor 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 m criticism of political rhaTll 1 Tie nflrfa.l affairs it Will Vi O JUST, FAIR AND IMPARTIAL We will endeavor cal news, and we ask that your criticism of our object and course, be formed from the contents of the rash assertions of THE WEEKLY, sent to any address It will contain from four to six eight column pages, and 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. I. d. tUtELEW, DEALER IN SCHOOL BOOKS, STATIONERY, ORGANS, PIANOS, ' 1 WATCHES, - JEWELRY. Cor. Third and. Washington Sts. , S ':''E3". Cleveland, Wash., ) June 19th, 1891.J S. B. Medicine Co., Gentlemen Your kind favor received, and in reply would say that I am more than pleased with the terms offered me on the last shipment of your medicines. There is nothing like them ever intro duced in this country, especially for La grippe and kindred complaints. I have had no complaints so far, and everyone is ready with a word of praise for their virtues. Yours, etc., -. M. F. Hackxey. Chronicle to stay. It hopes COUXSe Si geiierOUS , Daily 1 n l in the city, or sent , - jOjt the resources of the Eastern Oregon. politics, and m its matters, as in its J . to give all the lo paper, and not from outside parties, -v for $1,50 per year. we shall endeavor SJflPES &KLY, Wholesale and Mail Dmpts. -DEALERS IN- Fine Imported, Key West and Domestic ciC3--A.:KS. 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 Cos Paint. For those wishing to see the quality anfl color of the above paint we call their attention to the residence of S. L. Brooks r Judge Bennett, Smith French and others painted by Paul Kreft. ; Snipes & Kinersly are agents for the above paint for The Dalles. Or. . W. H. NEABEACK, PROPRIETOR OF THE 11 3 "VT 3 THIRD STREET. (At Grimes' old place of business.) Horses ted to Hay or Oats at the lowest possi ble prices. Good care given to animals left im my charge, as I have ample stable room. Give me a call, and I will guarantee satisfaction. . ' W. H. NEABKACE.