OUTWITTING- THE SMUGGLERS. low Uncle Sam 'a Customs Officers Cap tare Contraband Cigars. "The ways of smugglers axe peculiar, but the ways of custom house men can more than outdo them," remarked the purser of a Havana li:ie steamship. 'You know," he added reflectively, "a man who visits the West Indies and ap preciates a fine cigar seldom comes back to this couutry without making an at tempt to do some quiet 'smuggling. Of course the contraband articles are cigars. It may not be because he is mean, but the duty is stiff, and I can easily imagine with what pleasure a box of cigars can r be passed around among a few friends with the recommendation, -'Boys, Uncle Sam never received any duty on these and I can vouch for them." I have been there myself. "The shrewd deputy of Uncle Sam Understands all this, and in addition, . the chances are he appreciates a good cigar as much as we do. Of course he makes a thorough search for dutiable, goods on the arrival of all our Bhips, but there are, he tliinks, many little ways by which he can be avoided, and travelers are not long in finding them out. "This does not worry our friend, the customs man, for his arrangements, al though most simple, do not fall far short of perfection. He knows of the where abouts of every large lot of cigars which leave Havana, and when we arrive here has, in all probability, a complete list of the number we have on board and the names of their owners. 'Yon don't believe it. Well, never theless it is a fact. When smuggling was more of a business some ears "ago veloped a scheme by which the quantity of cigars smuggled in this port was re duced to a minimum. "An agent of the department was placed at Havana. He straightway made friends with tht cigar dealers and man ufacturers. This cost money, but the game was worth the candle. . Whenever cigars were sold to an American or an Englishman, in nine cases out of ten the dealer delivered them, and politely in sisted on doing so. "At the request of the buyer they ' would invariably be sent on board bis steamship or to the hotel at which he was boarding. In this way the buyer's name and address were ascertained. "The crafty Cuban would then make a memorandum of this seemingly worth less information and send it to Uncle Sam's agent. Once in his possession, that man kept well posted in regard to the buyer's movements, and on the day he sailed for New York the amateur smug gler's name, description and the number of cigars which he bad were cabled, to the authorities here. "No fear of detection bothered the would be smuggler, and on arrival he would give the customs man the coldest kind of a" bluff until a few facts and figures were presented to him. "Do they give up the cigars? Oh, yes, but with mighty bad grace, and if all the customs men could be paralyzed for the wishing, I assure you .Uncle Sam would not have an ablebodied man in the business. It is hard luck to have some other man smoke the weed which your money has paid for, but it happens more often than you imagine. The . goods are always confiscated, and the amateur smugglers are lucky in getting out of a bad hole, for smuggling is an offense not to be trifled with. "Oh,' yes, there are dozens of ways by which cigars could be smuggled in this port without detection; but the practice could not be carried on long, so the business has not grown. - Sorry I can't give you some inside information, but it would be bad policy." Then the smart looking purser reflect ively puffed a cigar which had never paid duty, New York Sun. Synods and Sinners. -';' There's a Presbyterian minister in De troit whose wife is very fond of this city as a place or residence, some tame ago the synod to which he belongs" was dis cussing the advisability of sending ' him away on feome important business occu pying a year or so. It was suggested to him, and he went to his wife as all good husbands do. , "My dear," he said to her cautiously, "what do you think of going away from. .Detroit?" "I don't think of it at .all," she an swered promptly. ". "Why did you ask?" "Well, the synod has asked me to go ana She went over to him' softly, and, put ting both hands on his head in a moth erly way, she said solemnly: "My son, if synods entice thee, con sent thou not." And he didn't. -Detroit Free Press. T iie Original Eleven Ostriches. ' ' The longevity of the ostaich is a qual- ' ity that commends it to capitalists. Arthur Douglass, a poor sheep farmer near Graham's Town, South Africa, was ' the pioneer ostrich'' farmer. He started ink1865 'with' eleven -wild bird ; chicks and finding that they could be raised in captivity, he started in to supply the market with domestic feathers. " He has raised and sold thousands of chicks and stocked, many of V the1"- surrounding ranches, has. marketed thousands of dol lars' worth of feathers, and still has the eleven original wild birds . breeding and yielding good marketable' ' feathers. In terview in StTXiOuis Globe-Democrat: The Happiest and Healthiest. ' After all, those are the happiest and healthiest persons who can labor moder ately and sensibly at their duties day by day through the ' year, and who take with keen zest the pleasures of each sea son as they come to them in their own locality. Those who frantically chase happiness and pleasure from seashore to mountain and from continent to conti uent not infrequently brfng back very little from the pursuit. Providence Journal. . - . , Give a boy a fundamental knowledge of the principles 'of chemistry, and the processes and operations of the farm be come at once wonderfully interesting to him. BRAUN'S STONE FENCE A Scowling; vllxzard Attempted to Raise I It, but Abandoned the Uoo. I A few years ago an old Dutchman I named Braun bought a quarter section just below mine. He came from Penn sylvania, and was a hard worker and a thrifty chap, as most all ' Pennsylvania Dutchmen are. "My farm is fenced with barbed wire. t The Dutchman didn't like wire fences, so in the spring he planted a willow hedge around his quarter sec tion. Summer passed, and the hedge was growing like a jimsen weed, when early in -the fall a little black cloud which had been hangin around over in the northwest all the afternoon suddenly swooped down our way and went rippin and tearin across Braun's place. It didn't leave a dozen hedge plants standin. Then the old man concluded that a fence which would stand agin a hard wind would be eheapestr in the long run, and by the middle of October he ' had built a stout rail fence to replace the hedge. It was a beauty seven rails high, with locked corners .and a- heavy rider" on every length. But we had hardly time to look over the old man's handiwork and pronounce it good before a blizzard struck it and. scattered the rails over several neighboring townships. Rather reluctantly Braun then decided to follow my example and fence his place with barb wire. He put in jlace of the rail fence that was a wire fence which could scarcely be beaten. It had large, sawed posts and five heavy wires, and should have lasted a lifetime. It might have done so, perhaps, but for an unfortunate occurrence. One afternoon early in November another blizzard came sauntering along, pulled up every blamed fence post,' carefully wrapped a few miles of wire around them and sailed off toward Chicago with the whole outfit. When the hedge was destroyed the old Dutchman merely sighed; when the rail fence went he said something half under his breath; when the wire fence followed it he swore. Then he sat dpwn, lighted his pipe and fell into a brown study. Bright and early the next spring he began another fence. It was somethin entirely new for our country, but it was a dandy and no mistake. The old man set his hired hands to work pickin up stones and haulin bowlders together, and in a few weeks he had collected enough of 'em to build a stone wall. It was as strong as stone and cement could make it,' and was four feet wide and three feet high. One afternoon, just after it was completed, Braun was pdintin out to me the fine points of his new wall, when we noticed a black cloud over agin the western horizon.' There s trouble over thar, old man. said I. ' "That blamed' thing is je,st rolliii up its sleeves and spittin on its hands and gettin ready for business. It'll be along here, too, in about two minutes." "Veil, let it coom." ' Then, as there wasn't anythin else to do, we sat down to watch it. It' came rippin along, twistin Off trees close to the ground or pnllin em by the roots, cuttin . the prairie grass as clean as a mower could have done it and sweepin a clean path. " 'When it reached that wall it just stopped a moment as if to look it over, and I could swear I heard a chuckle. Then it stopped- and caught hold of the edge of the. masonry. " It held together well, but up it came, slowly and steadily. Jest when the wall had been turned half over the blizzard suddenly gave a groan, lost its grip and loosened its hold. The wall settled down upon its side and the blizzard jumped over it and went howl in out of sight. . "Vellr said Braun jubilantly. . "Vot I told yon. Dot fence, is a dandy, don't it? It is von feet higher now as pefore dot vind coom along." And he winked the other eye. South Dakota Cor. Chi cago News. The Woman with the Van. 'The woman who uses a fan in a public assembly must see, if she has any ade quate perception of what she is doing, that five-sixths of the'air carried by this implement of torture is thrown" into the neck of "the gentleman' or lady who sits in front of her. ' She may have1 read m works of physiology, and she must have seen very often' in tbe newspapers, that pneumonia i and kindred 'diseases- are often the result of such careless - use of the fan; but she would not abandon the habit or forego the slight relief that lit tle waft "of air 'brings to her cheek to save the life of the whole assembly. - We have have had a stiff neck (not the moral,' but th physical kind) for several days following the gratification of one who sat behind us in a church or lecture room, and we regard the woman with a fan as the ideal picture of supreme sel fishness.: Men are bad enough,' but a selfish' woman with a fan can take the prize. New York Journal of Commerce. - Mirrors of the Greeks and Romans. , . - The mirrors of the ancient Greeks and Romans were thin disks of bronze, high ly fpolished and usually fashioned with handles, though sometimes they ; were "set upright on stands. Later on silver was used, and . the first mirror of solid silver - is said to have been made by Praxiteles in the- time of Jnlina Caesar. Sunseqnehtly : silver ' ndrrors took" ' the place of brass or bronze ones almost-altogether, though steel, copper and even gold' were ajso employed. "Looking glasses". xf metal, were employed every where np to the Fifteenth century. Washington Star. ' ' His Fred lea: - Lady (to deaf butcher) Well, Mr. Smallbones, how- do yon find yourself today? Smallbones WelL I'm pretty well deed np, mum. Every rib's gone, they've J almost torn me to pieces for my shoul ders, and I never bad such a run on my legs. London Tit-Bits. An English writer asserts that no mat ter what species of oysters are placed in the English beds, where the natives are in excess, they very soon, "by inter breeding, become of a uniform character, the descendants being all practically native oysters." i-'... . Chemistry on the Farm. : .f Many farmers, laugh at the notion of applying the principles of chemistry on the farm, calling such an application of science "fooling" and . humbug. ' - Yet farmers see their sons grow up and drift away because, having" been educated in the public schools, the spirit of a scien tific and progressive age has possessed them, and they seek elsewhere than upon an old fashioned.! arm scope for the edu cation which they have already gained and for the wider education which they crave. -' . . . Now there is no field which offers more ample scope tog oaveducated ahd scien tific mind thanfi good farm. The old fashioned ftirmer says. "What do I want to .know about chemistry? It's enough if I manure the ground and plant my seed; nature will take care of the rest." But the application of manure is "chemistry," and if the farmer or his boy nnderstands the groundwork of that science he knows what kind of manure is good for a certain field and what kind is good for another field, and his knowl edge may make for him or save for him many dollars in a single year. A knowledge of chemistry will enable him to save the valuable properties of his manures for the soil, instead of let ting precisely those properties be evapo rated and wasted r as they are in the case of most natural manures as now treated on the farms of this country. But the most important function of science on the farm, after all, .at the pres ent time, is not the immediate material advantage whiolv it may bring to thp farmer, but the means which it will sup ply of interesting the young, of engaging their active and 'eager intelligence, and keeping them from places where they will be very much worse off. Youth's Companion. . Good Fishing. The most unique locality to be found by the sportsman is probably that sur rounding the town of Linkville, in Kla math county, Ore. The'town nestles at the foot of a large mountain, and lies right on the, bank of what is locally known as Link river. - This stream which is quite large' and connects the up per and lower Klamath lakes is. alive with thousands and probably millions of large, fish, which are constantly passing to and fro between the two lakes, and are as constantly jumping out of water in sight of the town. .They are of all sorts and sizes. . " Some of them appear to be cutting up those antics for Ae fun of the thing, and! some to shake some kind of an eellike looking creaturetwhich attacks them in the water and becomes attached to their sides, causing the fish apparently much suffering. It is no uncommon thing for large fish to be taken there whose sides are all scarred up in consequence of these attacks. "" """ - ' ' " It would not be surprising if many fish were :. thus destroyed. Probably there are" not in-the world two lakes more numerously stocked with trout .than the upper and'tower Klamath lakes. judging by map -measurement,"' they earfi average thirty miles in length by ten miles in- width; Many large 'streams empty into them, ' affording splendid fishing and spawning . grounds. Lying east of the Cascade range of mountains, where genuine winter prevails in the season for it, the water is better and the fish healthy and solid features which do not prevail on - the western' side of the mountains, where an almanac has to be consulted to ascertain, accurately the season or the year. Forest and stream. ; . ' l . ; .' 'A. Conventional Castom.-: ; i-y.-'r One of the simplest instincts of good manners would - seem to be that a man should uncover his head while eating his dinner with his family; yet it is pretty- certain that the first gentlemen of Eng land two centauries ago habitually wore their hats during that ceremony, nor is it known just when or why the practice was changed. In Pepys' famous Diary, L which is tbe best manual of manners for ita period, we read, under date of Sept. 22, 1664, "Home to bed, having' got a strange cold m my head by flinging off my hat at dinner and sitting With the wind in myneck." " ' In Lord Clarendon's essay on the decay of respect paid to age he says that in his younger days he never kept his hat on before those older than himself ' except at dinner. Lord Clarendon died in 1674. That the English members of "parlia ment sit with their hats on during the sessions is well known, and the same practice prevailed at the early town meetings in New England. The presence or absence of the hat is therefore simply a conventionality, and so it is with a thousand practices which are held, so long as they exist, to be the most un changeable and matter of course affairs. Harper's Bazar. When a Man' Is Thirty Tears of- Age. . All men who employ animals in work know how their speed falls off with increasing age.- 'Race horses are. with drawn from the track shortly after they have Arrived at the full possession of their force; they are still good for com petitions in bottom, and are capable for many years yet of doing excellent trot ting service; but'. they cannot run in trials of speed:" i -; ;': -" ' Man's' 1 capacity to run likewise . de creases after he has ' passed thirty years; and ; "the professional' couriers who are Btiu seen m Tunis, running over - large distances-in an. incredibly short -time, are obbged -' to retire while sfeill "young. Those who. continue to run after they are forty years old all finally succumb with : grave heart affections. Popular Science Monthly. . ;.l - ' : ; . Pawned at Five Dollar Bill. ; A man who possessed a five dollar bill, and wanted to blow it in badly, hit upon a novel plan the other day by .which to save and spend it both. The bill was given to him by a friend, and he was de termined - not to part with it. After a lengthy debate with himself he evolved the brilliant scheme of pawning the note. He paid a visit to his uncle, raised $4.62 on the bill, and spent it according to his tastes. When further funds came in he redeemed the original note. Phila delphia Record. x Bad Bld6d: Impure or vitiated blood Is ninft times out of ten caused by some form of constipation -or indiges tion that clogs up tbe system, when ttao blood naturally be comes impregnated with the el fetcmatter. TheoldSarsaparQlas attempt to reach this condition by attacking the blood with the drastic mineral " potash." The potash theory Is old and obsolete. Joy 's Vegetable Sarsoparilla is modcru. It goes to tUe scat of the trouble. It- arouses the liver, kidneys and bowels to health ful action, and invigorates the circulation, and the impurities uro quickly carried off through tho natural channels. Try it and noto its' delightful action. Chas. Lee, at Bcamish's Third and Market Streets, S. F., writes: . I took it for vitiated blood and- while on tho first not-" tie became convinced of its mer its for 1 "could feel it wns work- f lied and braced mc up generally. and everything is now working full and regular,' Joy's Vegetable SarsapariSla For Sale by SNIPES & INERSLV r i -THE DALLES. OREGON. " ; Health is Wealth ! Dr. E. C. West's Nkrvk anb Brain Trkat mekt, a guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dizzi ness. Convulsions. Fits. Nervous Neurateia. Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by the use oi aiconoi or iodocco, w aiceiuiness, mental im pression, eoitening ot tne urain, resulting in in sanity and leading to misery, decay and death. Premature Old Age, Barrenness, Loss of Power In either sex, Involuntary Losses and Bpennat orrhcea caused by over exertion of the brain, self- abuse or over indulgence. Each box contains one month's treatment. - $ 1.00 a box, or six boxes tor xo.uo, sent Dy mail prepaid on receipt of nnce. VI GUARANTEE SIX BOXES To cure any case. With each order received by ns for stx boxes, accompanied by $S.00, we will send the purchaser our written' guarantee to re fund the money if the treatment- does not effect a cure, uuorantees issuea omy oy -t . BIAKILBT St HOUGHTON, Prescription Druggists, 175 Second St. 'J'. ' VJ The Dalles. Or. h-jsl ; KBAIi MEKWr.v tt t.M. Say thefS. B. Cnrfi'.Care is the best thing they ever "bSw.1" We are not flattered for we. known Rkal Merit will W in. All we ask is an bonest tual. For sale by all druggists. .' 8. B. 'Medicine Mfg. Co., . .I .T.j" TyDnlnr Oregon. A Revelation. Few peopla know that tfa bright bluish-green color of the ordinary teas exposed in the windows is not the nat ural colon- Unpleasant as the fact may be, it is nevertheless 'artificial mtnerat 'coloring matter being nsed for this -purpose.- Tae eflbe - Is two fold. It not only makes the tea bright, shiny greenbat also permits the MS tt " off-color " and worthless teas, which. once . mnder the green cloak, , are readily r worked off as a good quality of tea. An eminent authority writes' on this sub ject: "The manipulation of poor teas, to give them a'flner appearance, is carried oa exten sively. Green teas, being in this country especially popalar, are produced to meet the ' demand by coloring cheaper black kinds by ' glazing or facing with Prussian bine, tumeric, gypsum, and Indigo. Tbi method U so gen eral Utat wry UUle ffinutne uncolorat green tea it offered Jot tale." . : ; ' - c -. It was the knowledge' of this condition of affairs that prompted the placing of Beech's Tea before the public.. It is absolutely para and without color. Did yon ever see any genuine nneolored Japan teat ' Ask your grocer to open a package of Beech's, and yon will see it. and -DrobablT for the very first time. It will be found In color to be Just be- " ; tween the artificial green tea that yon hare been accustomed to and the black teas. ' It.draws a delightful canary color, and is so fragrant that it will be a revelation to tea drinkers, 1 Its. Vnrity makes it also in ore economical than the artificial teas, for less ' of it is required per ctrp. ' Sold only in pound packages bearing thls trade-mart: ' BEEC :- .: ' " ' " '" m TorerAs ildHood" If yovr grocer does not have it, he will ge ftfer-yon -MMotaaecpwand, For sals al lie 3EJ.-tl.ox'js, $500 Keward! We-will mv the above reward for any case of Liver Comvlaint. Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, In digestion, Constipation or Costiveness we cannot cure with West's Vegetable Liver Pills, when the directions are strictly complied with. They are purely vegetable, and never fail to give satisfac tion. Sugar Coated. Large boxes containing 30 Pills, 26 cents. Beware of counterfeits and imi tations. The genuine manufactured only by i tit. juhim (J. yiax (juiWAiiu, ILLINOIS. BLAEELEY HOUGHTON, Prescription Irnggists, VflH I7S Second St. The Dalles, Or. THE DAliliES GHRONIGIiE is here and has come to stay It hopes " to win its way to public favor by ener gy,, industry and merit; and to this end we ask that you give it a fair trial, and if satisfied with its course a generous , support. Its Obi will be to advertise the resources of tlie city, and adjacent country, to assist in developing1 our industries, m 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 colximns evening, except atinaay, ana will oe delivered in the city, or sent by mail for the moderate sum of fifty cents a month. JUST, FAIR AND IMPARTIAL We will endeavcr 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. iTHE WEEKLY, i sent to any addreste for contain irom. tour to six eignt column pages, and we shall endeavors ta ; make , it the equal of the best. Ask your Postmaster for r; - . J .tt f!4 V- f.'i-K (7. QUI It v!---,::(ij THE CHRONICLE PUB CO. Office, .W CiVWash Sts iff hJOeES BROS,; Siapie and Fancy Groceries. Hay, Grain Masonic Block, Corner Third 'and ' J : - ' THE DAIjIjES, OREGON. ! Best Dollar a Day House on the Coast! First-Class Meals, 25 Cents. First Class Hotel in Every EespecL ' None-but the Best of White Help Employed. r ; T. T. Nicholas, Prop. Washington ' SITUATED AT THE i ii.-.'-.ftt.I t;. v-if -i rj. ii '.'I 'it:- if i ' Destined to be the Best Manufacturing Center In the Inland Empire. ., . For Further Information Call at tti Office of -'. ! .4 Mefstate to 0. D. TAYLOR, THE DALLES. eets Eastern Oregon. ... -' - '':. each, -will "be issued every $1:50' per ; year. It will a copy,1 or address. S '.fji' s y, ! TV l; STI and Feed; Court Streets, The Dalles.Oregon Washington HEAD OF NAVIGATION. . Best Selling Property of the Season In the North west.:..... . . ' ' Dalles, 72 WASHINGTON ST., PORTLAND.