on THE SLEEPING SEA, Far Away ships are sailing- - ' Far and faint and dim Gleams of white, or glints of light. On the vague horizon' rim. And the ocean, only varied Whero the breakers cry ' From the straml f gleaming sand. Stretches level lo the sky . Cloudless azure heavens bending O'er I he sleeping sea Pulsing heat about her fcet- Whero call peril be? , Can it Ihi that tempests gather. ' Strong winds lash the deep? Tossed in pain this tall ships strain,' ' Maddened billows shoreward leap; Trust the lion, trust the serpent :. -When he sleeping lies; Trust thy hands to flaming brands Trust not fickle seas and skies. Overland Monthly . The I'ruper Way to Walk. As soon s a man comes into my shop and takes off his shoe I can tell whether or not he is a good walker, and it is as tonishing to find how few men know the proper way to step otit. If Che shoe is worn down at the heel not on the side, but straight back and the leather of the sole shows si qns of weakness -at the ball of the foot, a little greater on the inside just below the base of the great toe, I know - that the wearer is a good walker. If, however., the heel is turned on one side, or is worn . evenly through out, and the sole is worn most near the toe, I know that 1 have to deal with a poor pedestrian. i The reasou of the difference in posi tion of the woru spots lies in the' fact that the poor walker walks from his knee and the good one from his hip. Watch the passerby on the street, and you will at once see the difference. Nine men out of ten will bend the knee very considerably in ' walking, stepping straight out with both hips on the same line, and the toe will be the first to strike the ground. The te'nth man will bend his knee very little, just enough to clear the ground, and will swing the leg from the hip, very much as the arm is swung from the shoulder and not from the elbow. By so doing he calls -upon ' the muscles which are strongest to bear the strain, and increases the length of his stride four or six inches. The heel touches the ground first and not the toe. A slight spring is given from the ball of the foot on making another stride. Men who walk in this fashion cover the ground 30 per cent faster with the same exertion than those who walk from the knee. In pugilism the old rule is to strike from the shoul der and not from the elbow. In pedes- trianism it is to walk from the hip and not from the knee. Interview in St. Louis Globe-Democrat. How the Estate Was Divided. '- Once, while Mamonn was conversing with one of the most famous scholars in his realm, a' woman claimed an i inter view. ' "Justice, oh, prince! Justice. I implore t My brother left 600 pieces of gold, and his heirs have given me but a single one." "That was only proper," replied the caliph; "each of your broth er's two daughters is entitled to one third of his property, or 400 in all. The widow's share is one-sixth, or 100 pieces. Your brother's mother should .receive one-eighth, or 75 pieces. You and your twelve brothers are entitled to the re maining 25; but, as the law allows a double portion to the male, they had each 3 pieces of gold and you i. "-rSan Francisco Argonaut. H Understood. Anton Bubenstein, the Russian com- poser, in his autobiography tells of the confusion which overcame a certain architect of his acquaintance, who had a habit of interlarding all his remarks with the phrase, "Yon understand.' On one occasion he was explaining certain architectural matters to the em peror, and according to custom made free use of his favorite expression. "Good heavens! exclaimed Emperor 'Nicholas at last irritably, "of course 1 understand. My dear fellow, how could I help itr Megroea tm aoudon Fast life. In London a negro can go into the finest restaurants and be served just like a white man. He can sit at any public table if he is quiet and can pay the bilL White waiters serve him without a mur mur, and the American darky imagines ' he is sitting sideways on a cloud, picking a harp with one hand and eating honey with the other, when he is turned . loose in the English metropolis with fifty dol lars in his pockets. Richmond Dispatch. Poultry. Dr. Canning has a clay bank yellow hen which hatched -eighteen white chick ens from sixteen eggs. He also has a Texas rooster three feet high. Charles Graham says one woald think it waa a horse to hear it walk. Siloam Springs (Ark.) Locomotive. The farmers in the Palouse country, Washington, have straw roads, which are pronounced excellent. ' They take the straw after it is thrashed and scatter it over the roads, and, after awhile, when it is settled, it makes a road like papier mache. smooth and dnstless. . Hanifah, the founder of the Hanifites, the most ancient of the fonr sects of Orthodoh Mussulmans, did not accept the doctrine of absolute predestination. His commentary on the Koran was en titled "The Help." The most ' powerful telescopes now in nse magnify 2,000 diameters. As the moon is 240,000 miles from the earth, it is thus, to all intents and purpones brought to within 120 miles of the earth. In the ten years that elapsed between the'eensus of 1880 and that of 1S00, Seat tle increased in population by more than 1.000 per cent.. Tacoma by 3.000 nii.i Spokane. Falls by 5,592 per cent. . A compound composed of oxygen and hydrogen has been discovered which will dissolve metals, and when unittd with mercury and silver it forms a por rful explosive ' ! . Jocko's Sunday Recreation. A few pedestrians who were out for a I morning stroll witnessed a Drier dui bloody battls through the windows of , the Market street bird store Sunday morning. , -' Among the denizens of the placer is a monkey called Jocko,, whose proclivity for mischief has led him into disgrace before. On the morning in question Jocko determined to go on a lark. He succeeded in picking the lock of his cage, and once free turned his attention to his feathered companions. It took but. a few minutes to unlock a dozen of the various cages in the room, and soon a funny procession of monkeys and par rots were strutting about. In a few min utes trouble began to brew. One of the parrots, in a spirit of mischief, probably bit Jocko, and a 'lively battle, ensuea. Polly soon found that she was getting the worst ofit and made a rush for her cage, minus her tail feathers and part of a wing. , - Jocko, who was 'then thoroughly aroused, sailed in for a general massacre, ! and in a short time had the floor to him self, save for Minnie, a little nightin gale, who was too dazed to escape. With one blow the bird was stretched lifeless on the floor. The monkey then offered battle to a big stuffed owl which had been gazing solemnly upon the scene, and receiving no answer to his chal lenge, threw the bird off its pedestal. Jocko's Waterloo was awaiting him however. A huge vampire bat, which had been watching the battle, jumped down from his perch, and Jocko started for him. The contest was brief. The sharp beak and talons of the bird buried themslves like a flash in the monkey's flesh, and Jocko was glad to make his escape with the blood flowing from a dozen wounds. At this juncture the proprietor appeared and hostilities ceased. San Francisco Chronicle. A True Hat Story. ' ' Here is a new and absolutely true hat story. A New York gentleman, dining at a hotel in Boston, found on coming out that he was the last to leave the dining room, and his hat had been taken by somebody who had preceded him, leaving one very similar, but unmis-' takably not his, in its place. It was a sufficiently good substitute to allow of his wearing it for three weeks after his return home, when, after dinner one day, three weeks later, he said to a friend with whom he had just been din ing: . ' "I must replace this hat; its not mine, and it doesn't fit. Come with me and. I'll do it now." Together they sought a neighboring shop and began to examine" hats. One after another was tried on by the intend ing purchaser, none quite suiting him. "It's too bad," said his friend. "Like you, 'I am hard to fit. Now, this one is the most comfortable hat I ever had." "It looks so," remarked the hat seek-: er; "let me try that on." The hat was handed to him. It adjusted itself per fectly to his head. "Man alive!". he ejaculated, "this is my lost hat," and he took it off quickly,' turned back the in side band, and, sure enough, there was his name and residence in indisputable proof. ' It turned 6ut that the friend had been in Boston the same day, though j they had not met, had dined at the ho tel, but had not discovered that he had worn away another man's hat. And the shop lost a sale of a hat. New Yofk Times. Xot an Eleemosynary Institution. "It's' funny about some people one meets traveling," remarked a drummer at the Cadillac as he threw his feet upon the writing table. "How?" inquired the man next to him. "On' a dining car,- for instance, the other day," he went on jerkily. "What?" asked the other man en couragingly. "Coming over from New York. Odd sort of a genius across the car from me. .After he left the car the waiter who had served him brushed the crumbs off of my table. " 'See dat man, boss?" he asked. 'Reckon he nevah was on a dinin car tasfoV : " 'Why? I inquired.. " 'Caze, boss, he axed for a second helpin, Gemmen what eats on dese yer dinin cahs, .boss, knows dey ain't no char'tible institutions fer givin victuals .away in no sich inanuah as dat.' , "I had been thinking. I wanted a little -more than had been allowed me, but I 'didn't ask for it after that," and the drummer-sighed. Detroit Free Press. Kless Her! There is a family of little folk not far away who are delightful from their love for each other. Vin has the greatest ad miration for his sister Molly, and will .do anything for her "You's so pitty, Molly." He is five and she is three. One old morning Molly's mamma set her in her high chair, while baby had her neces sary care and papa ate his breakfast. It was rather chilly, and Molly was in her nightdress. Vin wanted to make her warm, so he wrapped up her feet in a newspaper, but poor Molly slipped and fell solidly on the floor from her high chair. "Oh, Molly," -said Vin, in tears, 'did yoa hurt yon?" "No," e&id Molly, winking back the tears which would come; "No, braver, t fell on 'e paper." Gardner (Mass.) Home Journal. .- Cousin Jennie Wholly cured of yonr love, did yoa eay? -'' Cousin Tom Wholly. Cousin Laura What killed it this time? .. ' Cousin Tom I asked her a simple question. And when her faultless lips formed the words "I disrememher," mj love became a corpse. Pittsburg Bul letin.' . . : ' -. . Handicapped. "Poor little soul!" said Uncle CJeorge gazing at the baby. . ' ''Why poor?" asked the proud father. "Nature has given him a black eye to start with." replied George. Harper's Bazar. THE OLD PRINTER-. He Was Short of Type and When v"Thll ty" Came, His Spirit Had Flown. ' And so, year after year, he wrought among the boys on a mftrning paper. He went to bed about the time the rest of the world got up, and he arose about the time the rest of the world sat down to dinner.- He worked by every kind of light except sunlight. . There were candles ' in the office when he came in; then they ' had lard oil lamps . that smoked and sputtered and smelled; then he saw two or three printers blinded by explosions of camphene and spirit gas; then kerosene came' in and heated up the newsrooms on summer nights . like a furnace; then the office put in gas, and now the electric light swung from the ceiling and .dazzled his old eyes and glared into them from his copy. If he sang on his way home a police man bade him ''cheese that." and re minded him that he was disturbing the peace and people wanted to sleep. But vftien he wanted to sleep, the rest of the world, for whom he has sat up all night to make a morning paper, roared and crashed by down the noisy streets unier his window, with cart and truck and omnibus; blared out with brass bands, howled with hand organs, talked and shouted, and even the shrieking news boys, with a ghastly sarcasm, murdered the sleep of the tired old printer by yell ins the name of his own paper. - - Year after year the foreman roared at i him to remember that this was not an ! afternoon pappr, editors shrieked down ! the tube to have a blind man put on that j dead man's case, smart young proof readers scribbled sarcastic commejits on his work on the margin of his proof slips that they didn't know how to read, long winded correspondents learning to write and long haired poets who could never learn to spell wrathfully cast all their imperfection upon - his head. But through it all he wrought patiently and found more sunshine than shadow in. the world: he had more friends than ene mies. . Printers and foremen and pressmen and reporters and editors came and went, but he staid, and he saw news papers and sanctum filled and emptied and filled and emptied again, and filled with new strange faces. He believed in his craft, and to the end he had a silent pity, that came as near being contempt as his good, forgiving old heart could feel, for an editor who had not worked his way from a regular devilship up past the cases and the imposing stone. He worked all that night, and when the hours that are so short in the ball room and so long in the composing room drew wearily on. he was tired. He hadn't thrown in a very full case, he said, and he had to climb clear into the boxes and chase a type tip into a corner before he could get hold of it. One of the "boys, tired as himself but a printer 'is never too tired to be good natured . offered to change places with him, but the old man said there was enongh in the case to last him through this take, and he wouldn't work any more tonight. The type clicked in the silent room, and by and by the old man said: Tm out of sorts." And sat down on the Jew window sill by his vase, with, his stick in his hand, his hands folded wearily in his lap. The types clicked on. A galley of telegraph waited. "What gentleman is lingering with 18 D?" called the foreman, who was danger ously xolished and polite when he was on the point of exploding with wrath and importance. .Slug nine, passing by the alley, stop ped to speak to the old man sitting there so quietly. The telegraph boy came running in with the last manifold sheet, shouting: "Thirty!" ' They carried the old inau to the fore man's long table and laid him down rev-. erently and covered his face." They took the stick ont of his nerveless hand and read his last take: "Bosto.w Nov.' 23. The American bark Pilgrim went to pieces off Marble head in a light gale about ' midnight. She was old and unseaworthy, and this was to have leen her last trip." Bob Burdette. "' Various Uses -of Oue Tree. One of the strangest of trees is the Ita palm, found abundantly on the banks of the Amazon and other South American rivers. In the swampy regions, which cover iinuieu.se areas, the Ita palm fur nishes food, drink, clothing and com fortable homes for the natives. The Indians that inhabit these swampy districts make a tolerable wine from the sap of the palm, and they distill a strong er stimulaut by crushing and ferment ing the young fruits. The food is de rived from the soft inner bark o the stems, and is a substance that in taste and iipiearance closely resembles sago. The soft and fibrous bark is used for garments and for making strings, ropes, hammocks and the like. ; ' In times of high water, often lasting two or three months, the natives make floorings in the trees with the bark ropes and live there in comfort and -eontent- , ment. Philadelphia Times. Hard Work Mudc Mackny Klch. -John W. Mackay was born in the humblest circumstances .in Dublin, Ire land, some fifty -five years ago. Coming to this country, very early, in life, he worked for a time on board ship. Dur ing the years that followed in whatever occupation he engaged he labored indus triously and faithfully. He saved his money and watched his opportunity, which so very few people do. . He is now twenty tiin.s a millionaire. Henry Cteivs in. Luiies" Home Journal. Tu Devil's Knell. - Among the famous bells of Dawsburg, Yorkshire, England, is one known as "Black Tom of Soothill." which was presented to tliechnrch in expiation of a murder." "felack Tom" is aljvaya rung on Christmas! eve. Its solemn tolling" as it strikes the first tap at exactly mid night is known all over Yorkshire as the "devil's knell," it being the notion that when Christ was born the devil died. Ht. Lonis Reirablic Tfce Inventor Dream of Fame. Every inventor has some idea of dis- -covering a great useful article, which will benefit the whole human race and carry his own name down to posterity as a great man of genius. Often these am bitious schemes are never realized, but the best . part of the inventor's lif o is spent in vain efforts to accomplish this great result. Such high aims ennoble and dignify his work, and, though they may never" be realized, he has the satis faction of knowing that others will come after him to take up the work which he has left unfinished. -' Many of the great inventions of today have not been the product of one man's genius, although he may enjoy all of the rcredit, but the result of generations of thought, experiment and suggestion of dozens of scientists and inventors. George E. Walsh in New York Epoch. ead Aches. .si.-k-hrmlaches are the outward indications ol iioniiimciits ol the stomach and bowels. As Joy's Voyctnblo Sorsaparilla Is the only bowel rerriilariiis preparation of Sarsaparilla, it is seen u-iiy il is the only appropriate Sarsaparilla in Nirkrfiemlnchcs. It is not only appropriate; it is n:i :'.!js!iito cure. After a course of it an occa sional tioMC at intervals will forever after prevent return. v . Jim. M. Cos, of T3o Turk Street, San Francisco, rki-s: "I have been troubled with attacks of nh'k-hvndaehc for the last three years from one to thivc times a week. Some time ago Iboughttwo hot tlirs of Joy's Vegetable Sarsaparilla and havo only lnul one attack since and that was on the se-o::!l day after I began using it." JniVQ Vegetable Uy w Sarsaparilla For Sale by SNIPESA. KINERSLY. THE DALLES. OREGON.. Health is Wealth ! Dr. E. C. West's Nerve and 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 iu sanity end leading to misery, decay and death. Premature Old Age, Barrenness, Loss of Fowei in either sex, Involuntary Losses and Spermat orrhoea caused by over exertion of the brain, self abuse or over indulgence. Each box contains one month's treatment, fl.OO a box, or six boxes for 5.00, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price. WK GUARANTEE SIX BOXES. To cure any case. With each order received by us for six boxes, accompanied by $5.00, we will send the purchaser our written guarantee to re fund the money if the treatment does not effec a cure. Guarantees issued only by ItLAKELEY HOCGHIOX, Prescription Druggists, 17B Second St. - The Dallos. Or. S.JE3. Cleveland, Wash., ) June 19th, 1891.) 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 yonr 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., . . i M. F. IICKXEY. A Revelation. rew people know . that tn ' bright bluish-green Color of the ordinary tea exposed.. In the windows is not the nat nrsl color. Unpleasant as the fact may be, it is nevertheless artificial; .mineral coloring ' matter Icing tined for this . purpoe. The effect i two- fold. It not' only makes the . tea a bright, shiny green, bat also permits the . ; ase of " off-color " and worthless teas, which, once wader the green cloak, are readily worked off as a good quality of tea. J1 An eminent authority writes on this sub ject: "The manipulation of poor teas, to give -them a'nmer appearance, is carried on exten sively. Green teas, being in this country especially popular, are produced to meet the demand by coloring cheaper black kinds by glazing or facing with Prussian blue, tumeric, gypsnm, and indigo. TM method it to gen eral that very little genuine uneolored green tea it offered for tale." ' " It waa the knowledge of this condition of affairs that prompted the placing of Beech's Tea before the public. It Is absolutely j-nre : and without color. Did yoa ever see any genuine nncolored Japan tea? Ask yonr grocer to open a package of Beech's, and yon will see it, and probably for the very first time. It will be found in color to be just be- ' tween the artificial green tea. that you hare been accustomed to and the black teas.' - It draws a delightful canary color, and is so fragrant that it will be a levelatlon to tea drinkers. Its purity makes it also more economical than the artificial teas, for le of It is required per cap. - Eoldonly in pound packages bearing this trade-mark: BEECHSTEA Pure As WdhoodT SICK If jroar grocer does not have It, he will gd it for you. FxiceGOo pet poand. For sale ml Leslie Bixtlere, ' THE DAI LES, OKFOOX. ..' THE Dfllik-ES is here and has come 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 course a generous support. Its Objects will be to advertise the resources of the city, and adjacent country, to assist in developing our industries, in extending and opening up new channels for our trade, in securing an open river, and in helping THE DALLES to take her prop er position as the Leading City of four pages of siy 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. JUST, FAIR AND IMPARTIAL We will endeavc r to give all the local news, and we ask that your criticism of out object and course, be ' formed from the contents of the paper, and not from rash assertions of outside parties. THE WEEKLY, sent to any address for $1.50 per year. It will contain from four to six eight column pages, and we shall endeavor to make it the equal of the best. Ask your Postmaster for a copy, or address. THE CHRONICLE PUB. GO. Office, N. W. Cor. Washington and Second. Sts RUCTION SHLE I Dry j Goods and Clothing at Your Own Price. The entire , stock of N. Harris consisting of General Dry Goods; Clothing, Boots and Shoes, Hats, Caps, and Gents' Furnishing Goods will be sold at Auction to the highest bidder for cash in hand. . Sales heldlevery night eommeneing at 7 o'eloek. J. B. CROSSEN, Auctioneer. Jevu Qolumbia j-lotel, THE D AliLES, OREGON. Best Dollar a Day House on the Coast! First-Class Meals, 25 Cents. f First Class Hotel in Every Respect. , . 1 . flortb Washington SITUATED AT THE Destined to be the Best Manufacturing Center In I the Inland Empire. v For Further Information Call at the Office" of . Interstate Investment Go., 0. D. TAYLOR, THE DALLES 72 WASHINGTON ST., PORTLAND. CHRONICLE to stay. It hopes Eastern Oregon. None but the Best of White Help Employed. T. T. Nicholas, Pvop. Dalles, Washington HEAD OF NAVIGATION. .Best Selling Property of the Season in the North west. .' i