THE MERRY BRITISH BEGGAR. I brave the day, I brave the night. I throw my Borrows to the wind. And try to keep a cheerful mind. Although my coat if thin and light. Although my hat . Is wondered at. Because I shaved the outer rim . To try and keep it smooth and trim. I laugh and sing and whistle, too. When 1 have wind enough to spare. But in the sharp and frosty air My breath comes short, my nose turns blue. My lingers freeze, . And my pgor knees Would knock together did they dare; But still I keep a jaunty air. - . When bread is scarce and shelter poor I watch the sparrows, and I say . . "I only want a meal a day." . . ' And if they turn me from the door I tramp for weeks, , And dodge the beaks, . And with no money for a bed I try an archway or 4 shed. .'I brave the day, I brave the night, I throw, my sorrows to the wind, . Tis wise to keep a cheerful mind ' And screw your courage for the fight. And so, kind sir, ' . In case you err, With over pity worse than none. Just hand a copper and have done. -Nina F. Layard in Longman's Magazine. Chinese Points for Hosts. Don't eat with your ears," says Yuan Mel, a Chinese writer, "by which I mean do not aim at, having extraordinary ont of the way foods, just to astonish yonr guests. For that is to eat with your ears, not with your mouth. Bean curd, if good, is actually nicer than bird's nest. And better than sea slugs, which are not first rate, is a dish of bamboo shoots. ;The chicken, the pig, the fish and the duck, these are the four heroes-of the table. Sea slugs and bird's nest have no characteristic flavors of their own. They are but usurpers in the house. I once dined with a friend who gave us birds' nests in bowls like vats, holding each about four ounces of the plain boiled article. The other Tjuests ap plauded vigorously, but I smiled and said, I came here to eat bird's nest, not to take delivery tf it wholesale." Temple Bar. How to Acquire a Foreign Vocabulary Perhaps one of the best ways of fixing the words :-nd idioms of a language in one's mind is to teach them to somebody else. The learner should try to impart to some member of his family what he" has already mastered. He should, above all, seek command first of words in fa- miliar use, leaving to a later stage of .bis progress the forms of literary expres sions; bis first business is with the com mon objects of daily life, his last busi ness is with general terms. As he sits at his dusk he ought to be able to name every article about him, just as when he is riding in the street car or on the rail way he should be able to mentally recall the equivalent for every detail in the moving panorama of objects. Boston tteraiu. . - Frosted Glass. The frosty appearance of glass which we often use when it is desirable to keep out the sun or for a protection against inquisitive eyes, is brought about by using a paint composed as follows: Sugar of lead, well ground in oil, ap plied as outer paint, tnen pounded while fresh with a wad of batting, held? be tween the thumb and finger, after which it is allowed to. partially dry. Then with a straight edge laid upon the sash you run along by the side of it with a stick sharpened to the width of the line yon wish to appear between the diamonds, figures or squares into which you choose to lay it off. Detroit Free Press. A Little Brute. Xiear8igntea. Lauiy The-. boy who is trying to tie that tin can to that poor dosr'a tail onc-ht to ha r.hrnjiliArl within an inch of his life the horrid little brute. Maid It's your boy, mum. "My boy?" "Yes, mum." "Tell him if he'll stop I'll give him some cake. Good News. ; - A Tribute to the Frog. ;-' The bullfrog is a combination of pis catorial, venatorial and aquatic delights. r From his cradle to " his grave he is an ornament and an honor to the land. There is fine sport in the hunting of him and . the eating of him, and -it is both policy and justice to protect him from the onslaughts of rival and foreign bull frogs'. Louisville Courier-JournaL A Poetic Child. My oldest boy, who has not yet reached the mature age of three, has, I think, a poetic way of expressing himself. Thus the other day, on noticing ttr ripples on the lake in Central park, caused by the wind, he exclaimed, "Mamma, lookj Bee how the water is laughing." New York Cor. Babyhood. Cloth and Paper Made from One T. The paper tree of the South seas is species of the mulberry. Its inner bark is so delicate that a Boft and . pleasant feeling cloth is made from it, which the -natives use in making their "best suits.'" It is also used in the manufacture of a very fine grade of paper. Philadelphia Times. : . In the abysses of the oceans, below 500 fathoms, many animals have either im perfect eyes or none. Their condition in this regard affords a suggestive par- allel to that of cave life, and the causes are probably the same. . Science is of the opinion that all deep sea life originally emigrated from the shallows. ... . ....... . A writer on social affairs in Iceland says there is not a single prison on the island; that such things as locks, bolts and bars are unknown, and that there are neither watchmen nor policemen. In the 'line of eating the Manchus, who have ruled in China since its con quest by them some 250 years ago, are . strongest in baked meats. The Chinese excel in soups. . Old French fSrii ' are being sold very cheap. A French artist has bought the Fort du Gnesclin for about $1,100. They .go from a few hundred to $1,000, 1 , Beckoning by Her Tl'uie. "Hold the baby, please; Til be back in just a minute," said 6he. Ten, twenty, thirty minutes passed. . Baby awoke and yelled as if seven ghosts were after it. Takin'g the child, he went to find his wife. "She isn't here," said the neighbor. "She has'eone to the dressmaker's. But she left her parasol here and said she'd call for it in just a minute. Have,-a chair." "Thanks." Baby screaming, head thrown back, face red, eyes shut, back stiff, kicked off one little red shoe and made its mouth and hands go. Half an hour, no wife. He carried the baby to the dressmaker's, where he was'told: "Your wife isn t here. She has gone to the milliner's. But sne left a dress' pattern here and said she'd call for it in just a minute. Be seated." "Thanks." ' He trotted the screaming child on .his knee, laid it on its back, rolled it over on its stomach, tossed it in the air, stuffed a handkerchief in its mouth and hummed" "We Won't Go Home Till Morning." He asked for a rattle box, bat the dressmaker got mad and said she wasn't married.- Half hour, no wife. He took the child to the milliner, who said: "Your wife isn't here.- She has just left for home. Oh, what a cute little mouth; that child has been crying!" "Hain't it!" He started for home and met his wife on the street. Tossing the child into her arms he strutted away, muttering: . "Til be back in just a minute." "Chicago or New York time, dear?" "Your time!" ho thundered. That was two years ago and she hasn't eeen him since. Chicago Herald. Lord Castlereagh's Ghost. . In one of the standard British bio graphical works may be found the story of Lord Castlereagh' and the ghost. It seems that when quite a young man Castlereagh commanded a militia regi ment in Ireland. One night he was sta tioned in a large, desolate country house. The bed upon which my lord reposed was at the end of a long, dilapidated room, while at the other extremity a great fire "of wood and turf had been prepared within a huge, gaping, old fashioned fireplace. Waking in the mid dle of the night, Castlereagh lay watch inglroin his pillow the gradual darkening of the embers on the hearth, when sud denly they blazed up and a naked child stepped from among them upon, the floor. The figure advanced slowly toward the drowsy but thoroughly puzzled gen eral, seeming to grow with surprising rapidity at every step, until, coming within two or three paces of his bed, it had assumed the proportions and ap pearance of a ghastly giant, pale as death, with " bleeding wounds across the brow, eyes seeming to glow with rage and de spair. Lord Castlereagh said that he leaped from, the bed and confronted the figure in an attitude of defiance, where upon it retreated before him, diminish ing in size as it withdrew, in the same manner that it had previously shot np and expanded. He followed it, pace by pace, until the original childlike form disappeared among the embers. This story Lord Castlereagh told and declared to be true in every particular at a party in Paris in 1815 when Scott was among the hearers. St. Louis Republic. ; , The Sweetest Visits. There is a pleasure in little, "scrappy," unexpected visi tings with friends, which is often wanting from the planned and rounded comings when the "fire is bright and the cake basket ready in the closet. V We are never conscious of a warmer, more living nearness to a friend than after we have unexpectedly chanced upon him in the street and had a few minutes of that flavorsome chat which glances at so much and grasps so little, or after he has dropped in, for an unanticipated half hour, .at a time when we had no reason to look for him. Why is it that the longer, more ordered hours of meeting leave, on the the whole, an impression less vivid and less warm?. Perhaps because we have lived he visit once, in anticipation, and the reality has some faint fatal suspicion of stateness? Certain it is, the scrappy hours are sweetest. Boston Common wealth. ' . -. Did Not Know What Was Going On. There is a fact about the French revo lution more wonderful in. its way than any which can be discovered in old news papers. ' It is .the fact, gathered from private letters of the period, that in those stirring times, when all the world was ringing with the events in Paris, there were actually people in' that city living 'in absolute ignorance of the hor rors around them. There was no Reign of Terror for them. They lived veritable - recluses in their quiet suburban houses, hearing nothing, reading nothing of the turmoil which startled and terrified , the nations. One wonders much what man ner of people these oysterlike' folks might be. Nothing sounds more incred ible today. Yet there are many things in history not half so well authenticated, though history is curiously silent on so strange a circumstance. London News. ' What the Present Was) Used For. There was once a school teacher who received from her pupils a most elaborate jewel casket of, glass and silver. Not long afterward she announced in family conclave, "That thing is horrid, but we really must nse it" "We? queried her mother. "Why, how many of us are ex ' pec ted to make nse of it?" ,- "As many as possible, I should say," was the inno cent reply. "Isn't it a pickle jar?" Youth's Companion. . .. - Knew How to Wait. Van Jorkins (to applicant for position of butler) Yon are familiar with wait ing? : . John Thomas--'Oh, yes, sir. .Van, Jorkins Where did you get your experience?; " ' , , ; - John Thomas I " was a fashionable tailor, sir; and I gave long credits, New York Epoch. , Birds iyiU the Statue of Liberty Light. ; A fewvenings ago I took the steamer, with a party' of naturalists, to Bedloe's island, as the electric, lighfs'at the top of the statue are known to attract multi tudes of birds every spring and f alL There had been cold weather for a few days before, and millions of birds were hurrying 6onth. We obtained a permit, and want up to the topmost gallery of the statue and waited. The night had not far advanced when all' the heavens seemed to become full of .wings, which produced a tempest of whirring sound. Then came the calls of. the leaders, and they rang out so clearly that they could be heard for half a mile through the storm. The responses were fainter than the signaling' cries, but they were quite definite. The object of the calls, of course, was to -keep the flocks together, for, as could be seen through strong glasses, birds of a hundred species were driving along on the breast of the storm. All that came near the statue hovered around the light in large circles, but some of them struck against the bronze or stone. ..There .were, sandpipers .of every kind, "peeting, peeting" as they went; golden wings and other wood peckers, with their loud and.: rather hoarse cries; warblers of every kind and their signaling"ran through wide gamut of sounds thrushes, robins, meadow larks, nuthatchers and congre gations of bobolinks that filled the air with hurricanes of lovely music as they swept by. Sometimes a huge black cloud passed along, and the glasses showed that they were blackbirds, but they did not chatter as- they do on the edge of the forest. -...' The leaders made all the noise and preserved order. I know not how many flocks went by of teal, wood duck, black. duck, mergansers, curlew, snipe, plover, pewees, phcebe birds and what not, but none could mistake the kingfishers as they went, with their scolding laughter, through the dark. We caught a score or so of the, birds in nets and in our hats, and kept them till the morning, after which we re leased them. And all through the night bats chased and feasted upon the silly moths that gathered around, the spikes of electric flame.- . A large number of birds lay ' dead upon the. grass inrthe morning, having struck the statue. Harper's Weekly. A Stamp Fad. "It makes us swear." ."It's the most senseles fad in the world." The postoffice clerk went on, "Some fool has discovered that the most un gainly place in the world for a postage stamp is in the" middle of the back . of the envelope, where the flap is glued down." "I see." "It's a fad npw. ' Yon must, stick your stamp in the middle of the back of the envelope." . ): i "Like a porous plaster?" .y a "Exactly. . Oh, don't the stamp clerks rage! - They lose hours of time turning over letters . and hunting ; for stamps. Ill resign if the fool killer doesn't get to work." i "Must be very annoying?" -i ."Well, I should say it is. For heav en's sake don't spread this awful fever. I suppose next the idiots 11 hide the post age stamps, under a pile of bricks, and expect the clerks to go out and dig 'em np!" New York World. A Club of Ocean Travelers. - A number of gentlemen in India, whose business or pleasure calls them- fre quently to England, have formed them selves into what may be termed a trav elers' co-operative association, with the object of lessening the expense of. their voyages to and from the east. The sub scription to this ocean club is to be 850 rupees, payable in monthly installments of ten rupees, there. being no annual payment, and members will have the privilege of a free return passage once in three years, paving simply for the bare cost of their food on board. Should a member not be able to take his turn when it comes round, he can sell his passage ticket for anything he can get for it, not exceeding the total cost of raenibership. A steamer replete vith all the latest improvements ia to be built specially for the association, and it is proposed that the first journey to this country shall be made in January, 1893. The vessel is to accommodate 1,000 saloon passengers. London Cor. Manchester Courier. Lake Erie Drying; Up. . Mr. J. T. Wamelink had occasion to visit the building inspector's office in the city hall, and as one or two of the officials are, like him, fond of hunting, the conversation naturally turned to that subject. ; . In speaking of the state of the water in the marshes, 'Mr. Wamelink said that within a few years the level of Lake Erie had been reduced two feet. Mr. Wamelink expressed the opinion that the permanent lowering of the water level was due to the constant increase in the channel at Niagara falls, which per mitted a greater volume of water to roll over the falls. He was - of the opinion that, in order to preserve the proper stage of water in the harbors of the lake, it would yet become necessary for en gineers to raise the level of the Niagara 'river. Inspector Morse stated that it would be necessary to drop huge bowl ders into the stream in order to accom plish that result. Cleveland Leader and Herald. Seventh Pis; Bad Seven Legs. " '". Friday night last a bow belonging to C W. P. Howell gave birth to a litter of seven pigs. In this there is nothing very remarkable, but . that the seventh one should have seven well formed legs is somewhat strange, to say the least. The pig is still alive and doing well. Live Oak (Fla.) Banner. - - " . - A Knowins Cabbage. A cabbage with fourteen heads can be seen in . our counting room window. It was raised by Charles F. Mendall on the James Sherman place on t the King Philip road.' this, city. New Bedford" (Mass.) Mercury. ' Bad Blood. Impure or vitiated blood Is nin6 times out of ten caused by some form of constipation or indiges tion that clogs up the system, when the blood naturally be comes impregnated with theef fe to matter. TbeoldSarsaparillas attempt to reach this condition by attacking Uic blood with the drastic mineral " potash." The potash theory is old and obsolete. Joy's Vegetable Sarsaparilla is moden.. . It goes to the seat of the trouble. It arouses the liver, kidneys and bowels to health ful action, and invigorates the circulation, and tho impurities are quickly carried off through the natural channels. Try.it and uoto its delightful action. Cbas. Lee, at Bcamish's Third and Market Streets, P. F., writes: " I took it for vitiated blood .and while on the first bot tle becatno coavinced of its mer its, for J. could leel it was work ing a change. 1 1 cleanscii, puri fied and braced mc up generally. and everything is uow working full anil regular." n8,Q Vegetable ilUy w Sarsaparilla For Sale by SNIPES & 'NERSLY THE DALLES. OREGON. . Health is Wealth ! Dr. E. C. West's Kxxte and Braik Tbiii kemt, 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 in sanity aud leading to misery, decay and death Premature Old Age, Barrenness, Loss of Powei in either sex, Involuntary Losses and Spermat orrhoea caused by over exertion of the brain, sell abuse or over Indulgence.' Each box con taint one month's treatment. $1.00 a box, or six boxet for $5.00, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price. WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES To cure any case. With each order received b ub for six boxes, accompanied by $5.00, we wil send the purchaser our written guarantee to re fund the money if the treatment does not effec a cure. Guarantees issued only by BLAKELEI 4 HOUGHTON, Prescription Druggists, 176 Second St. . . The Dalles. Or. REAL MERIT PEOPLE Say the S. B. Cough Cure is the best thing they ever saw: . We are not flattered for we known Real Merit will Win. All we ask is an honest tiial. ..; For sale by all druggists. S. B. Medicine Mfg. Co., t Dufur, Oregon. A Revelation. Few people know that the bright bluish-green color of the ordinary teas exposed in the windows la not the nat ural color. Unpleasant as the ' fact may be, it is nevertheless artificial; mineral . coloring matter being used for this purpose. The effect la two fold. It not only makes the tea a bright, shiny green; but also permits the vise of off-color " and worthless teas, which, once under the green cloak, are readily worked off as a good quality of tea. An eminent authority writes on this sub ject; H The manipulation of poor teas, to give them a'flner 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 - glaring or facing with Prussian blue, tumeric, gypsum, and indigo. Thit method ia so gen eral that very Utile genuine uncolored green tea it offered for tale." It was the knowledge of this condition of affairs that prompted the placing of Beech's Tea before the public. It is absolutely pure and without color. Did you ever see any genuine un colored Japan tea? Ask your 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 have . been accustomed to and the black teas. , It draws a delightful canary color, and Is so : fragrant that it Will be s revelation to tea drinkers. Its purity makes it also more economical than the artificial teas, for lesi of it is required per cup Sold only in pound packages bearing this trade-mark: " BEEC TureAsWdhood: II jemr grocer does not hare It, he wm gei ft tot 7xl grlf Wn pet pond. For sals al XjojsXIg Bvitler's, THE DAI LE8, OREGON. $500 Reward! We will pay the above reward for any case of Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia,Sick Headache, In digestion, Constipaaon 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 Rive satisfac tion. Sugar Coated. Large boxes containing 30 Pills, 25 cents. Beware of counterfeits and imi tations. The genuine manufactured only by THE JOHN C. WF6T COMPANY, CHIGAGO, ILLINOIS. - ., . ; BIAKEIET HOOGHTOS, Prescription Druggists, M ill 1 79 Second St. The Dalles, Or. THE DAIihES 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 t)ie city, and adjacent country, to assist in developing our industries, m extending and opening up new channels for our trade, in securing helping THE DALLES to take her prop er position as the City of four pages of siy columns Leading evening except Sunday, ana will ce 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. THE WEEKLY, sent to any, address for . . s3 . . uoniaiu irom iour to six eignt column pages, ana 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: Staple and Faqcy Groceries. Hay, Grain and Feed Masonic Block, Corner Third and THE DALLES, OREGON. Best Dollar a Day House on the Coast! First-Class Meals, 25 Cents. First Class Hotel in Every Respect. None but the Best of White Help Employed. T. T. Tliehofas, Pfop. "fl;.' Washington tjortl) t)t9 1 1 (5S Washington SITUATED AT THE Destined to be the Best Manufacturing Center In the Inland Empire. For Further Information Call at the Office of Interstate investment Go., 0. D. TAYLOR, THE DALLES. CHRONICA eets an open river, and in Eastern Oregon. each, will be issued every $1.50 per year. It will n . . n . t Court Streets, The Dalles.Oregon; HEAD OF NAVIGATION. . ' Best Selling Property of the Season in the North west. : . . . - 72 WASHINGTON ST., PORTLAND.