IMPRESSION DE MATIN. The Thames nocturne of blue and gold, ' Changed to a harmony in gray; A barge with ocher colored hay Dropped from the wharf, and chill and cold . The yellow tog came creeping down The bridges, till the house's walls Were changed to shadows, and St. Paul's Loomed like a bubble o'er the town. Then suddenly across the clang Of waking life, the streets were stirred With country wagons, and a bird Flow to the glistening roofs and sang. Bnt one pale woman, all alone. The daylight kissing her wan hair. Loitered beneath the gaslamp's flare. With lips of flame and heart of Btone. Oscar Wilde In National Review. - Bow the Pyramids Were Built. A moneyed man, who was looking at the' process of laying an artificial stone pavement in front of one of his many properties, startled the friends who were standing about him by remarking, "I believe that the Egyptian pyramids were built in just that .way." Pressed for an explanation, he said that while he had never been in Egypt he had read the works of all ' Egyptologists, including Brugsch and Piazzi Smyth, and had never found in any of them a theory which would satisfactorily account for the manner in which the pyramids were constructed. , "Now," he said, "you must remember that the pyramids are built of stone which bears no resemblance to anything found within 500 miles of their location. It is incredible that the Egyptians of four or five thousand ' years ago should have possessed the mechanical ingenuity to move these enormous blocks of stone from the granite quarries of Abyssinia or Syria to the pyramids. Is it not m eh more natural to suppose that the anc ent Egyptians possessed the secret of mak ing artificial stone, and that the pyra mids were constructed by layer upon layer of Nile river mud, hardened by just such processes as we employ to make artificial stone? "It is a much more plausible explana tion of their construction than the la borious and unintelligent suppositions that the stones were carried across the desert to form the foundation and base ot the pyramids. I firmly believe that .the Egyptians of the ante-Christian era understood the manufacture of artificial stone, and that they built the pyramids out of it." Philadelphia Press. " Lake Winnipeg Wolves. In the winter of 1890 deer were unusu ally scarce in the forests east of Lake Winnipeg. A wet, cold summer had de stroyed an uncommonly large proportion of fawns. Consequently, wolves were without their accustomed food supply. Their distress made them forget their fear of humau beings. One morning in January news reached Winnipeg City that a band numbering 100 wolves had slain many Indian hunt ers along the east shore. This turned out to be true. Several of the men were caught on foot. One climbed a tree and shot twenty wolves. Another clubbed a dozen 'to death before they palled him down One hunter mounted a platform erected on noles for the-nnroose of keerrihff Rlrinn above the reach of wild beasts and ver min. He had hardly begun firing when the wolves pressed and leaped about the posts in such numbers that they threw Mown the platform and tore the man to pieces. ' The saine band had visited other camps. How many Indians in all were " devoured could not be exactly ascer tained, as more than one hunting party was said to have been completely wiped out. outh s Companion. Why Olrls Are Tall. Why are there so many tall girls now adays, and why is the tendency of the new generation toward unusual height and gracious slimness? Women are tall and becoming tall simply because it is 'the fashion, and that statement never needs nor is capable of any explanation. Awhile ago it was the fashion to be petite and arch; it is now the fashion to be tall and gracious, and nothing more can be said about it. Of course the reader, who is usually inclined to find the facetious side of any grave topic, has already thought of the application of the self denying hymn, that man wants little here below, and wants that little long; but this may , be only a passing sijjh of the period. Charles' Dudley Warner in Harper's Weekly. ' - . Oh, These Uonest Little Fellows. Eddie was very fond of raspberry jam. One evening when the parson dropped -into tea mamma opened her last jar, with emphatic instructions to Eddie not to ask for some more jam after getting his share. His papa, net knowing the circumstances,, offered to replenish his dish, when Eudie mortified his mother by saying, "'Mamma said I musn't-ask for any more, 'cause that is all there is." f A St. Louis physician recalls the case of a young man who had been dumb for five years, but who, while out hunting one day, began, in the excitement of the chase,, to yell at the top' of his lungs. Afterward he was able' to speak with perfect articulation.. When Julius Caesar fell, as he was landing on the African coast, he is re ported to have said, to banish the fears of his soldiers, who accepted the occur rence as one of ill omen, "Land of Africa, I take possession of thee!" That compositor was something of a . humorist in his way who set up the title of Maurice Thompson's pretty syl- . van. poem, "Pan in the Orchard, as "Pain in the Orchard;" "but the associa tion of ideas was serioos. " .- '- The ancient Greeks and Romans had their beds supported on frames, but not flat like ours. The Egyptians had a couch of a peculiar shape, more like an old fashioned easy chair, with hollow back and seat. ' ; - ' . - ' A farmer in Jefferson county, Wis., dislodged a huge rock at the bottom 'of bis well,' when it sank out of sight, re vealing a subterranean lake. A BLACKING MONOPOLY. THE PADRONE SYSTEM HAS IN VADED NEW YORK'S FERRIES. Blea Wlio Control the Bootblacking Privi lege on Board the Ferryboats and in Large Business Buildings A Business Tbat Has Grown. The unfailing law of business is that wherever there is an opportunity for the profitable investment of capital the money is forthcoming to keep that busi ness booming and to seize upon the most advantageous sites. And so it has come about that capitalists have not disdained to take hold of the bootblacking busi ness. While waiting for a boat outside of the Twenty-third street ferry to Jer sey City a Sun reporter got a shine from a remarkably bright and efficient Amer ican boy, whose mode of cleaning and shining indicated a good deal of experi ence. "Why don't you go inside and pick up business on the boats, where your cus tomers can get comfortable seats?" in quired the reporter. "I wish I could," said the boy, "but they won't let me do it." " - . "Why, I have seen boys on the boats blacking boots, and they seem to make lots of money. " "Yes. They don't see a day that they do not pick up at least a dollar, and from that all the way up to three or four, or sometimes five. But they can't keep the money themselves." "Why not?" . .- "They have to give it up to the Italian pad rones. There are three Italians who have bought the right from the railroad company, and they are the only ones who are permitted to black boots on the ferryboats. They have hired a lot of Italian boys, to whom they pay three dollars or four dollars a week, and the boys are compelled to give up all their earnings to the padrones who hire them. If the boys do not turn in an amount that is believed to be all their earnings the padrones put on spotters and watch them, and see that they do pay up. BOOTBLACK PRINCES. "Well, why don't you go in and buy the right to shine boots on the boats?" "Me? Why, do you know what those padrones pay for the right to black boots on all the boats? They pay over $2,000 a year, and keep the men's cabins clean. A poor boy hasn't much chance 'to get that job. I used to work for them, but- I find I can make more money by stand ing outside and catching some of the customers before they get on the boat. Then all I get is clean profit, and I don't have to pay over to any padrone.". On all the steamboats and steamships and railroads, at the hotels, in front of saloons in fact, everywhere where men go there are to be found capitalist boot blacks who hire the best places, or there is an arrangement by which the owner of the boat or hotel or barber shop hires some, one to do the bootblacking and takes the money himself. There have thus arisen several bootblack princes, such as the enterprising Italian who has the monopoly of the bootblacking at the Produce exchange, or the happy colored gentleman who does up the business in the Equitable building. Many of the bootblack princes have wives and families and nice homes, and they dress well and live well. At the big hotels the income from the privilege of blacking boots is a considerable part of the revenue of the house. It has long ceased to be a perquisite of the servant. A chair in a good place will yield five dollars a day. for bootblacking," and on extra occasions a good deal more. The bulk of the work is done by men. It really requires considerable bone and sinew to black a pair of boot3 well, and the man who has once noticed the differ ence between . the way an average boy does it and the way a man takes hold of the work will not care to risk the boy's work again. ART IN BLACKING BOOTS. . There are a "good many points about blacking boots . that give scope to the genius of the workman, as in all manual occupations. -The bootblack who once establishes a reputation for quick and good work has his fortune made. Men will go out of their way to' meet him, and will wait their turn as for a favor ate barber. -.' On hot days bootblacks' chairs are very tempting on the street corners in the shade, and many a man stops and takes a shine just f or a rst. The sum-J mer is the bootblacks harvest, because there is so much traveling and so much dust. Some saloon keepers exact rent from the Italians who have chairs for bootblacking in front of their saloons. Others are content to use the Italians' services in cleaning up the place or for running errands. Sometimes the pro prietors come out and occupy the chairs as lounging places, to the great chagrin of the Italian owners. - - Some time ago it was pointed out that a good many women would get tnejr shoes cleaned and ' shined as men do if they could have the. same facilities. Nobody seems to have acted on this sug gestion, yet. t But it seems likely that there would be money in it. When one man finds out that there is money in it others will follow. As it is, many women are ashamed of their shoes, and long to get up on the chairs and have a shine. Occasionally a venturesome girl does so, but she generally finds herself an object of considerable curiosity. . Improvements may be seen in the evo lution - of the bootblacking business. Fancy chairs, better blacking, a man at each foot, the use of chamois bands for finishing, little points of attention to dress, the varnishing of russet shoes, the oil shine all these show that the boot blacks are in harmony with the spirit of the age; that they have their eyes open to the necessity for keeping pace with the progress that is going on in other de partments of human activity. When the chorus of the nations calls upon each business to show what it has done of im portance in the evolution of society the modern bootblack will take no subor dinate place, but he will shine like one of -his own moat polished shoes.- New York Sun. imples. The old idea of 40 years ago was that facial eruptions were due to a "blood humor,"-for which they gave potash. Thus all the old Sassa parillas contain potash, a most objectionable and drastic mineral, that instead of decreasing, actually creates more eruptions. , You have no ticed this when taking other EarenpariUas than Joy's. It is however now known that the stom ach, the blood erecting power, is the seat of all vitiating or cleansing operations. A stomach clogged by indigestion or constipation, vitiates the blood, result pimples. . A clean stomach and healthful digestion purifies it and they disappear. Thus Joy's Vegetable Sarsaparilla is compounded after the modern idea to regulate tho bowels and stimulate tho digestion. ' The erect is immediate and most satisfactory. A short testimonial to contrast tho action of the potash Sarsaparillas and Joy's modern vegetable preparation. Mrs. C. D. Stuart, cf 400 Doves St, 8. P., writes: I hare for years I'.a'l iuui.-youtlnn, I tried a popular Sarsaparilla bet it actually aH-cil more pimples to break out ou my face. If earing that Joy's was a later preparation and acted difTcrcutly, I tried It and the pimples immediately disappeared." Vegetable Sarsaparilla iMreetf. bottle, most e tractive, same price, For Sale by SNIPES & KINERSLY. THE DALLES. OREGON. Health is Wealth ! ' WW TR E AT M C fcT Dr. E. C. West's Nerve ahb BbaiX Tkkai vent, a guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dizzi- 1 WUTUIBtUllD X'lkB, lu HUB .'CUJ I .ft a f Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by the use or aiconoi or ioducco, waneiumess, .Mental ue-. pression, Softening of the Brain, reuniting in in canity and leading to misery, decay and death. Premature Old Age, Barrenness, Loss of Powei in either sex. Involuntary Losses mid Spermat orrhoea caused by over exertion of the brain, self abuse or over Indulgence. Each box contains one month's treatment, f 1.00 a box, or six boxes fur fO.00, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price. WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES T cure any case. With eacb order received b us for six boxes, accompanied by $0.00, we will send the purchaser our written guarantee to re fund the money if the treatment does not effect a cure. Guarantees iBsued only by RLAKELET Jk lTOCGHTON, '' Prescription Druggists, ITS Second St. The ralles. Or. REAL MERIT . PEOPLE . Say the S. P.. Cough Care 19 the best thing they ever saw. We are not nattered for we known Real Merit will Win. All we ask is an honest tiial. For sale by all druggists. S. B. Medicine Mfg. Co., - Dafur, Oregon. A Revelation. Few people know that the bright bluish-green color of the ordinary teas exposed in the windows is not the nat ural color. Unpleasant as .the fact may be. it Is nevertheless artificial: mineral coloring matter leins used for this purro?e. The effect Is two fold. It not only makes the tea a bright, shiny greea, but also psrraits the use of " off-color " and vortl1le5s tess, whieh, once under the green cloak, are readily worked off a a good quality of tea. An eminent authority writes on this sub ject: "Tho manipulation cf poor tea-, to give them a finer appearance, is carried ou extou sivoly. Green teas, beir;g in this country especially popular, are produced to meet ti:a demand by coloring t hen- er b!n.-l Ui::dsl:y gl&zing or facing with Prussian l;i.t.;. tumeriv. gypsum, and indigo. This itifViod is so gen 'eral that very litil: Bin-Mat unrolordi jrccn tea j offered for sale." It was the knowledge cf this cen.lition cf affairs that prompted tbe p'acu-g f Beech's Tea before the public. It isabr.o!:i!ely pure and without color. Did you ever fee nny . genuine nncolored Jnvan tea? A:U yom grocero open a package of Eecch's. a:idj- -u will see It, and probably for tho vtry rat time. It will be found ia co'or to be 'just be tween the artificial green tea that yo; have been accustomed to and the black tas. It draws a delight! al caiiary color. t.ud Is so fragrant tbat It wiil ba a revelutiiin to tea drinkers. Its purity makes it '-: more economical than the artinciul tc&i, for lent of it is required per cup. -Sold only i-i pound packages bearing this trade-mark : 'Pure'As iidhoocu Jt mm ' If yoar grocer does not have it, he will get ft for you. Price tOo pec pound. For sals at Xieelio Butler's, THE DAILES, OK? i:"N. $500 Reward! We will pay tho above reward for any case of iiver ompmim, uyapepsra, sick lieanacne, in- oigeiaion, i; cure with W directions are strictly complied with. Tnev are rmrety vecewiDle. ana never fail to irtve satisfac tiou. .Sugar Coated. J-arge boxes containing 30 riiiK, i- cents; ijeware 01 eoumerieits ana 1ml- tnotiK ine g"nniTie manufactured only b' THIS JOHN Wl-'ST COMPANY. CHIGAG' Bf-.1f-tSST.KV it ilOUKHTOS, I 7 Swniiil St. The Dnlles. Or. Joys . It r v,. mm v.'v;' THE -V;- Dalles, Portland & Astoria - . , NAVIGATION COMPANY'S : '' ' Elegant Steamer : ' i ' Will leave the foot of Court Street ' '.. every morning at 7 A. M. :. ' Portland and Way Points . Connections Will be Made with the ' . , Fast Steamer .-. DJLItliES GITY At the Foot of the Cascade Locks. For Passenger or Freight Kates, Apply to Agent, or Purser on Board. Office northeast corner of Court and Main street R. B. HOOD, ivery, Feed and Sale JETorses Sought rin d Sold on Commission ana Money Advanced on-Horses Left for Sale. OFFICE OF- The Dalles and Goldendale Stage Line. Stage Leaves The Dalles Every Morning . at 7:30 and Goldendale at 7;30. All - freight must be left at R. B. - Hood's office the eve ning before. R. B. HOOD, Proprietor. The Dalles, Or! Opposite old Stand. VJt. &T.JVlGCoy , Hot-:-and-:- Cold-i-Baths. HO SECOND STREET, A NEW PRINZ & NITSCHKE. DEALERS IN - Furniture and Carpets. We have added to- our business a complete Undertaking Establishment, and as we are in no way connected with the Undertakers' Trust our prices will be low accordingly. r 1, 1 An dA ..- ivciuciiiucr U 111 ;ioi;t uu otwhu CLICCL, next to Moody's bank. Pipe Work, Tin Repair ing and Roofing. Leave orders at L. Butler's Grocery Store. JOHN PASHEK, liiGf - Tai i, Next door to Wasco San. Sys ad a garments, and a fit guaranteed each time. , tcpaifiiiQ anci Cleaning Neatly and Quickly Done. ' The Dalles -b'.J. K3T STREET.' FACTORY NO. 105. fTf A'T? G of 016 Best Brands VyXvXx.XVO manufactured, and orders from all parts of .the country filled on the shortest notice. - The reDutationof THE DALLES CI GAR has become firmly established, and the demand lor the home manufactured article is increasing every day. A. ULRICH & SON. Undertaking: Establishment ! GflOfl! 10 Gigar fmoN THE DALLES CHRONICLE is here and lias 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 course a generous support. Its will be to advertise Obi city,' and adj acent country, to assist in developing our industries, in extending and opening1 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 Daares of siv columns evening, except Sunday, ana will be delivered in the city, or sent toy mail for the moderate sum of fifty cents a month. JUST, FAIR AND IMPARTIAL. We -will endeavc r to cive all the local news, and we ask that yoxir criticism of out object and course, toe 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. CO. Office, N. W. Cor. Washington and Second. Sts : DEALERS IN Hay, Grain and Feed. Masonic Block, Corner Third and JNfeu Columbia THE DALLES, OREGON". Best Dollar a Day House on the Coast! First-Class Meals. 25 Cents: First Glass Hotel in Every Respect. . None but the Best of White Help Employed. T. T. Nicholas, Pvop. Washington 0tll DcIHBS, Washi"gton SITUATED AT THE . Destined to be the Best Manufacturing Center In the Inland Empire. For Further Information Call at the Office of . Interstate In vestment Go. , 0. D. TAYLOR, THE DALLES. eets the resources of the Eastern Oregon. each, -will "ha issnfirl fiverv Court Streets, The Balies.Oregon HEAD OF NAVIGATION. Best Selling Property of the Season In the North west.' - .72 WASHINGTON ST., PORTLAND.