CM PRAISE OF DEATH. Thanatoa, thy praise I sini;. Thon immortal, youthful kingl Glorious offerings I will bring; For, men say, thou hast no shrine. And I find thou art divine As no other god; thy rage Doth preserve the Golden Ago. What we blame is thy delay; Cut the flowers ere they decay! Come, 'we would not derogate. Age and nipping pains we hate: Take us at our best estate; While the head burns with the crown. In the battle, strike us down! At the bride feast do not think From thy summons wo would shrink; We would give our latest kiss To a life still warm with bliss. Come, and take us to the train . Of dead maidens on the plain Where white lilies have no stain: Take us to the youths that thou Lov'st to choose, of fervid brow. Unto whom thy dreaded name Hath been simply known as Fame: . With these unpolluted things Be our endless revelings! Michael Field in Academy. The Misuse of the Fail. "Talk about the early martyrs,' said a lady, aa she came out of a crowded con cert room the other evening. "They are absolutely nothing to me. Here I am just rip from an attack of influenza, and ril warrant myself to have another at tack, and all for the selfish stupidity of one old woman with a fan. I wish peo ple had more consideration or sense or something," and the speaker stopped to sneeze and pall her wraps closer about her throat. "And she sat there by your side and waved one of those great, strong, gusty fans, creating a breeze like a young whirlwind, until you are. all of a chill, 1 suppose," said her friend. 4 'Indeed, yes, and the more I pulled up my scarf the harder she fanned. There wasn't a vacant seat in the house or 1 -would have taken it. I didn't like to ask her to stop, tor she hadn't a specially inviting countenance. And I have taken a severe cold, for every bone in my body aches. I think there should be a rule 'against fans in crowds, just as there is against canes and umbrellas in art gal leries. You can mend statues or build more, but there isn't any remedy that 1 know of, when once we. are dead from somebody's carelessness or indifference.' "But it is easy enough to use a fan so as to disturb no one; wave it gently forward and back, never from side to side. . I see no reason why people should make their neighbors uncomfortable by such acts when a little sense and con sideration would make every one com' fortable. ' I think there are very few delicate persons who ' have not at some time in their lives suffered from the too vigorous waving of a fan in the vicinity. Indeed any one, however well, is serious ly exposed to colds if on coming into an assembly often -quite heated from hur ried walking, a current of air from a fan is directed across the neck and 'shoul tiers. 1 have made up my mind that one who is careless or - inconsiderate enough to use a fan to my discomfort is a suitable subjeq for a reprimand, and that, then and there, she will get it." New York Ledger.- Religion Depends on Physiology. Before and since my fasts of forty days, in Minneapolis in 1877 and New York in 1880, 1 have given much time to the investigation of the physiological and psychological effects of food, and as a result of my study and experiments 1 unqualifiedly assert that the prevailing skepticism as to the superior claims of a vegetarian diet for. the best development of man in his entirety is only compatible with the most incorrigible indifference and mournful destitution of knowledge. scriptural and otherwise, on a subject of vital importance. It is not often that the claim is set up that the question of food just as properly belongs to the domain of theology as to physiology, yet 1 champion the claim and considering how much the happi ness and welfare of humanity depends upon the soundness and precision of its moral and religious views, and not for getting the ever increasing control which scientific proof exerts over the masses of men, I will endeavor to prove, to the philosophic mind at least, that the ad vancement of the absolute or perfect re ligion as taught and lived by the Man of .Nazareth which was a religion of prac tice ana not or theory depends-upon proper understanding of physiology, especially the physiology of the digestive apparatus. Dr. Tanner in Kansas City rimes. 'Reprimanding His Own Son. 'A story is told of Dr. Clark Kendrick. On one occasion, in a high pew in the .gallery . of one -of the old fashioned churches, some boys, during the time of worship, got to cracking and eating nuts. His keen eye perceived it,' and that one of his own ons was with them. He stopped, and with a countenance both grieved and rexed said, "D , come and sit on the pulpit stairs and eat your nuts." St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Mr. Preston, in a letter to Dr. Hertz, the famous discoverer of electrical 'waves, points out that if the lines of force remain stationary while the mag net rotates, the magnet,-' being a con ductor rotating in 'the field of its own lines, will become electrified and : show positive electricity at one end and nega tive at the other. If, on the other hand, the lines move with the magnet, no such effect will take place. Dr. Hertz admit the force of this reasoning. " , France is probably pbe only European country enlightened enough to allow the poet of stenographers to the - chamber of deputies to be open to women. For their services in the chamber they are paid 8,500. to; 6,000 francs a. year. Stenog raphers who i report i lectures, congresses or. conferences: are paid sixty francs an hour, each hour implying1- eight 'bourn of; transcribing. ',''' The tomato is u Dative of South Amer ica. It was known fV England as early asl590, but its introduction into North America is credited to the French . fami lies who were exiled j. by the: revolutiou of San. Domingo and settletl.in the ,ra -era part of the United States. ' " ' A HAUNTED CONSCIENCE. The Terrible Sensation That Follows the Taking of Human Life. It is a dreadful thing that human life must be sacrificed," said Major C. O. Bates in the rotunda of the Lincoln hotel the other evening. There was an omi nous look between him and Colonel Bob McBeynolds as the latter spoke. Some how it just- leaked ont that there was some unwritten history as to the Nebraska militia upon the frontier. A word or two of kindly condolence elicited the following from Colonel McBeynolds. who has kept very silent heretofore. It was very nearly S o clock when Major Bates and myself left Pine Ridge agency. All day Indians had been swarming about the agency like so many bees around a . hive. Each one was armed with a Winchester, and had on his person no less than 100 pounds of ammunition. The wildest excitement had prevailed all day, so that when we left the agency at that late hour en route to Rushville you can believe we were on the alert. From Pine Ridge the road led over a plain for nearly five miles. Then began the range of mountains known as Pine Ridge. The manor and I had spurred our horses for a couple of miles out of the agency, then drew up into a walk. We were following a circuitous road that led over these Pine Ridge mountains, when suddenly from behind the rocks ahead there confronted us two Brule Sioux, with Winchesters ready for ac tion. Major Bates instantly uttered an alarm. This caused one of the enemy to skulk behind the other, both with Winchesters leveled upon us. "I was fairly panicstricken myself, and scarcely knew what I was doing, but Major Bates, with his cool headedness, drew his Winchester to his shoulder and fired. The report echoed up and down the valley, and when the smoke cleared away, there were two forms motionless upon the brow of the little hill ahead. My horse, frightened at the report of the gun, was struggling in a frightful man ner, and it was all I could do to restrain him. Finally, when I got him quieted, I rode to Major Bates' side. He was pale as a sheet of paper, yet firm and composed as a soldier should be. His first remark was. 'Oh. God. this is aw ful!1 . . 'The single shot from bis Winchester had killed them both. They fell upon their faces, their hands tightly clenched about the weapons they bore. We looked for others, but none were in sight. Then I rode within jt few feet of the bodies and picked up a war club. - Their blan kets and ghost shirts were swarming with vermin or I would have taken them along. The major divested one of the dead 'Indians of his 'war bonnet, placed his scalping knife in his belt and re mounted. - "As if by some strange fascination 1 lingered on the spot for a few moments. Those bronze forms, motionless, lay with face to the earth. Human life had per ished there. The cold, snow covered hills, resplendent with their wintry beauty, brought naught but chill to the bouL Two forms, clad" in their red blankets, lay. silent in death. They meant harm to us who would not have harmed them. The winter's sun was fading beyond the chill blue hills. "I rode from the spot and joined the major on the crest of a hill. His voice was husky in tone when lie said, 'Let us get away from here.' The road led over a mountainous country for the next seven miles, then we came to the out posts of the Nebraska militia at Jar chow's ranch, where, .after admission within the picket lines, we met General I. W. Colby, Colonel J. P. Bratt, of the First regiment, and Colonel J. C. Bills, of the Second. Major Bates here, true to his soldierly qualities, told of the fate of the two Brules. General Colby's face wore a vexed look when the affair was recounted. He seemed to think we should have waited until we were fired upon. Observing this, the "major an swered, I have done so. and this is my explanation. ' "I wish the affair was effaced from memory," continued Colonel McBey nolds. "The picture of those Indians lying there so still, the snow covered hills and silence of the hour, will long dwell in my memory, and I know that with all justifiable action of Major Bates, it must forever remain to him a nightmare which can never be forgot ten." Chicago News. The Parrot's Laucli- Some years ago I possessed a parrot which, among its other accomplishments, could mimic perfectly the cook's call for Kitty, the household cat. Polly's cage hung usually in the kit chen, and Kitty's favorite mode of -exit in the summer was through the . adjoin ing window and along the wooden parti tion fence which rah up to it. No sooner would Polly observe Kitty sunning herself at the end of the fence or in the yard than up would go the cry: "Here, Kitty, Kitty! Here, Kitty, Kitty r and the deluded quadruped hardly ever failed to respond by dashing rapidly to ward the window. - Then that - mischievous parrot would chuckle and flap 'its wings and yell, "Ho, ho, hoi" thereby clearly demonstrating its intense enjoyment of the practical joke played upon the credulous cat. . ' Do yon think that Polly did not laugh? If so, I don t know what a laugh is. New York Telegram. - A Heap of Money. - - If a billion dollars "were1 placed on the groan d ege to edge they-would extend to a distance of 23,674 miles, nearly all the way around the equator. Broken into three parts the line would form both a solar and an equatorial axis for the globe, with a spare one left over in case of accident, Divided into. "seven parts the line would stretch from Wash ington to - Algiers, Berlin,, fcxlinburgh, Lima, .Venice. Paris and Liverpool. Exchange, s ' f - j- - i, n i i r. . Among French dairymen the use of hot water for milch cows is growing in .'favor.' - It is alleged that one-third more milk is yielded than When jc'old water is given. ' THE CONVERSION OF LONDON. Effect on England's History of the Teach ing of the Early Cburch. " London was converted in A. D. 604. The citizens relapsed, it is true, but they ! were again converted, and then, in sober : earnest, put away their old gods, keep ing only a few of the more favorite su perstitions. Some of these remain still with us. They were so thoroughlcon Terted that the city of London became a veritable mother of saints. There was the venerable Erkenwald saint and bishop he who built Bishops gate on the site of the old Roman gate; there was St. Ethelburga, the wife of Sebert, the first Christian king her church still stands, close beside the site of the old gate; there was St. Osyth queen and martyr -the mother of King Offa her name also survives in Size, or St. Osyth's ' lane, but the church of St. Osyth was rededicated to St. Ben'et Sherehog Benedict Skin-the-Pig you may see the 'little old churchyard still, black and grimy, surrounded . on three sides by tall houses. English piety loved to. dedicate churches to English saints more likely these than Italian or French to look after the national interests. Thus there were in London churches dedicated to St. Dunstan, St. Swithin, St. Botolph (whose affection for the citizens was so well known that it was recognized by four churches), St. Edmund the Martyr, and later on, when the Danes got their turn, churches to St. Olaf and St. Mag nus. ' The Englishman, thus converted, was received into the company of civilized nations. Scholars came across the Chan nel to teach him Latin, monks came to teach him the rife of self sacrifice, obedi ence, submission and abstinence. The monastery reared its humble walls every where the first foundation of the first Bishop of London was a monastery. In time of war the monasteries were spared; Therefore the people settled around them and enjoyed their protection. -The mon astery towns grew rapidly and prospered. New arts were introduced and taught by the monks; new ideas sprang up among the people; new wants were created. Moreover, intercourse began with other nations; the ecclesiastic who journeyed to Rome took with him a goodly troop of priests, monks and laymen; they saw strange lands and observed strange cus toms. Walter Besant in Harper s. The Orange Industry in Faragsay. The orange tree is generally under stood te have been introduced into Para guay by the Jesuits and the seeds . dis tributed by the birds. - However, this may be, the orange has spread all over the country, from the river banks to the tops of tho hills, and from the cottages even to the deepest solitudes of the vir gin forest. Paraguay is the land of orange trees more truly than the coun try of Mignon. ' And : what oranges! Juicy; perfumed and of a delicacy that Spam and Italy have never : attained. The chief industry consists -in the ex portation of the fruit. The great orange season is from May to August, when the ports of the Para guay river, from Humaita to Asuncion, dispatch enormous quantities by steam ers and schooners. Villeta, San Lorenzo and San' Antonio are the principal ports, and there best may be seen the pictur esque processions of ' laughing and screaming girls and women, who carry basket after basket of fruit on their heads from the shore to the ship, like swarm of busy ants. Up to the present no industrial use has been made of the orange. - some sixty millions are ex ported annually, the same quantity is consumed by the natives, and perhaps treble that quantity is devoured ' by monkeys and birds, or left to rot on the yronnd. Theodore Child in Harper's. Where Horse Meat Soup la Popular, Every day, at early morning, noon and evening, in Paris, you will see poor people gathering at certain shabby cook shops in the quarters of Belleville, Mont- martre, the Batignolles and others of the sections outside the boulevards, where poverty houses are thickest, each armed with a tin pail, a pitcher or something else calculated to carry liquid. - These receptacles are duly filled with thin but savory broth, ladeled from huge, steaming caldrons, and which costs only a cent or two a quart. I have drunk this -bouillon and found it nourishing and good, tt is made of the bones and scraps of horse meat after the choicer pieces are sold to the cheap restaurants, and the very essence and marrow of the meat are in it, for the boiling is kept up until the bones are fairly honeycombed and the meat reduced to shreds like bits of twine. This broth provides the principal ani mal nourishment for the average laborer in the gay citv. He adds to it a few vegetables, thickens it with bread, and it having, as the cook book might say, been "seasoned to taste," makes a palat able and hearty meal. Alfred Trumble in New York Epoch. Manuscripts Ahead. Some of the . larger magazines keep MSS. for years unpublished, their stock on hand is so great. This is not so hard upon the young author , when they pay upon acceptance, but sometimes it in flicts great hardship upon the struggling author when he has to wait for his pay until his story is published. - One - of the editorial staff of The Youth's Com panion told me not long since that they had over $100,000 worth of MSS. in their safe, all accepted and - paid for, and it was a question if - some of it could ever be published. Emily 1 A. Thackray New York Epoch. " .:. While the Jury Was Out. Prisoner thinking of . the date) This is the 13th. That means bad lack for me.- ' .'; -,- -.- .-. .. - . - His Attorney (thinking of the jury)-T-My friend, the unlucky number for yon, I am afraid, is twelve:1 Chicago Tribune. . -'Her Appearance,' . Bingo-'-Thirjes'-'have gone so with me lately that I have bad to compel my wife to make her own ftresRes.. .-. Kjngley, Too -br.d. How 'does ' she Bingo Daggers. Cloak Review. ' ODDS AND ENDS. - The United States has 1,000,009 miles of telegraph wires. , . .. . , , It has been discovered that almanacs date back to the year 100 A. D. Unbound palm leaf fans are effectively used in decoration of summer houses. Woman's love of admiration is ' apt to vary inversely with her power of exciting it. The caterpillar is making fearful ; havoc with the fruit trees in southern New Eng land. The hardest thing to do la to set people to think of the things that concern them most. Take iron stains from marble with lem on juice or a mixture of spirits of wine and oxalic acid. In Great Britain there is one elector to about six of the population; in Belgium only one to about forty-six. On Irish railways women are much em ployed as booking clerks, and in Dublin tickets are given almost entirely by women. A Sonoma county, CaL, vineyardist has purchased 10,000 paper bags to cover the young vines and protect them from grass hoppers. All that can be said of very slow people is that it is their duty to avoid conversa tion and get through life as inoffensively as possible. It has been found after elaborate experi ments that sewage can be more efficiently filtered through open sand than through sand covered with spiL - - The first dress of embroidered bobbinet ever woven in France was presented to the Duchess d'Anguleme, who, it was thought. would be one day queen of France. The cheval glass is becoming more and more a necessary piece or bedroom furni ture to the modern woman, and with it come into use the dressing table and high chest of drawers. ' Good Plot for a Farce. . The following singular will case cornea from Hamburg. Some years ago there t died in Schleswig, G-ermany. a govern ment official named Nielsen. Some lit tle time before he died Nielsen be queathed to his man servant 20,000 crowns and to his cook a like sum, on the condition that if either of them mar ried the 20,000 crowns should revert to the other. As soon as the old gentle man died, however, the happy possessors of this fortune went to the altar and were married. The couple then took up their residence in Hamburg, where they have resided for the last six years. Recently there arrived from Copenha gen a relative of Herr Nielsen, who by their marriage considered the spirit of his relative's last will and testament had been departed from, and demanded the restitution of the 40,000 crowns. The matter is now before a court of law. London News. There is no fun in doing nothing when you have nothing to do. - - Never a made up tie under any consider ation with the neeutre shirt. Bad Blood. Impure or vitiated blood Is nine times ont of ten caused by. some form of constipation or indiges tion that clogs up the system, when the ' blood naturally be comes impregnated with the ef fete matter. . TheoldSarsaparillas attempt to reach this condition by attacking the blood with the drastic mineral " potash." Tho potash theory is old and obsolete. Joy 's Vegetable Sarsaparilla Is modern. It goes to the seat of. the trouble. It arouses tho liver, kidneys and bowels to health ful action, and invigorates tho circulation-, and the impurities are quickly carried off through the natural channels. Try it and note its delightfnl action. Chas. Lee, at Beamish's Third and Market Streets, S. F., . -V V. "1 writes: " I took it for vitiated blood and whilo on the first bot tle bettainc convinced ot its iaer WZLZ TZ- Sm tied and braced xnc up generally. and cverythinsf is now working full nuiI rsular. vegeia! &a?sapani.a For Sale by SNIPES & KINERSLY. ' THE DALLES, OREGON. A fiecessity. 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 1 America. " And not .alone that, but thou sands of Europeans who leave Europe ardent lovers of tea, Upon arriving in the ' United States gradu- - ally discontinue its use, and finally, cease it altogether. This state of things is dne 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 facta, is there not'an im- , mediate demand for the . importation of ft. brand of tea that is guaranteed to be nn colored, nnmsnipulated, and . of absolute purity? We think there'. is, and' present Beech's Tea.. " Its purity Is 'guaranteed la every respect. '. It has," therefore, mdreJ In lierent strength than the cheap teas you have been drinking, fuHy'one third less being re. quired for an' Infusion. " This yon" will dis- i cover" the first time" yon make it. Likewise, the flavor Is delightful, being the natural fla- Tor of an unadulterated article. It Iiarevela-' tion to tea-drinkers. Sold only ' ia packages bearing this inarkij .. ... ', .' " TEA 'Pure As ndhobcJT OUS Price 60c per pound. For sale at . Leslie Butler's, THE DALLES, OREGON. Te Dalies is here and has come to win its wav to tmblic favor bv ener gy, industry and merit: and to this end we asK tnat you give it a fair trial, and it satisfied with its support. The four pages of six columns each, will be issued every evening, except Sunday, and will be delivered by mail for the moderate sum of fifty cents a month. will be to advertise Obi 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 The paper, both daily and weekly, will be independent in politics, and in its criticism of political handling of local affairs, it will be JUST FAIR AND IMPARTIAL We will endeavor cal news, and we ask 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 tor a copy, or aaaress. THE CHRONICLE PUB. CO. Office, N. W. Cor. Washington and Second Sts. I 13. prEW, DEALER IN- SCHOOL BOOKS, STA TIOWERY, ORGANS, PIANOS, WATCHES, ; ; ' JEWELRY. Cor. Third and Washington Sts.. ' : Cleveland, Wash.,' ' ' ) , - - ;v -, v June 19tb, 1891.) Medicine . Co., Z ', i . Gbntlkkks -Your kind favor received, and in reply would, say that I am more than pleased with ' the terms offered me on the 3ast shipment, of your medicines. There is nothing like:; them, ever intro duced in this country; especially, for La crirme and kindred complaints. I, have had no complaints- so far, andfl everyone is ready with a word ot praise; forf their ' . -; , M. F, Hackle. GfiioniciG . to stay. It hopes course a generous m the city, or sent eets thq resources of the Eastern Oregon. matters, as in its to give all the lo that your criticism SjllPES & K1W, WlolEsale aid Mail Dnupts.' -DEALER8 IN- Fine Imported, Key West and Domestic PAINT Now is the time to paint your houefe and if you wish to get the best quality and a fine color use the -. - .': -.. "--V .-' '( ''. . Sherwin, Williams Go.'s Pamt 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. W, fi. NEABEACK, ' . , . PROPRIETOR OF THE V Granger Feed Yar d; THIRD STREET. V' - '(At Grimes' old place of business.) , ; Horses fed to Hoy or Onts at the lowest post ble prices. Good care given to animals left in my charge, as I have ample stable room. 4-itw me a call, and I will guarantee satisfaction. ; W. H. N EABKACK , Daily