THE ' SONG"" OF THE"'FARM." The popples that peep from the wheat at morn, '- With pearls of the night dew glittering still. The shadows that race o'er the waving corn And the shy little runnel down under the hill. The hoary old orchard whose trees are bent; And the clover fields where the honeybees swarm, - -Cry, "Come to the cradle of calm content! Come see Mother Nature at home on a farml Here are billows of meadow whoso waves are so sweet They perfume the air; here are mountains of hay; Here are little winds lost upon oceans of wheat. And butterflies shipwrecked In hollyhock spray; Here is peace in the air and a smile in the sky. And never a fear of deception or harm. From the cares and the woes of a city JVe fly . To old Mother Nature, who lives on a farml" . And so the old song from the cherry tree tops And arbors where Bacchus might gather a treat, From old fashioned sparrows that live in a copse ' And not in the dirt of an ill smelling street, From the bees and the klne and the sentinel cry - Of the cock, whose shrill clarion bodes no alarm, , Rings out to the city folk ever and aye: "Come back to Dame Nature; she lives On a farm!" . -New York World. ' Truth au1 Fiction. Touchstone says that "the truest poet ry ia the most feigning." Without go ing that length, we may affirm that the construction of correct .versification gives a man so much to think of that he cannot attend very strictly to the trntb of what he suys. Blank verse of .the or dinary sort does not come under this rule; it leaves the mind very free. .And hymns-Dr. Watts ruthlessly sacrifices the sound to the sense; some lesser lights sacrifice the sound without benefiting the sense. But no one can read some parts of Pope carefully those lines in which, in a word or two, he sums up the character or achievements of the nota bilities of his day without suspecting that uu apt rhyme occasionally beguiles the poet into a more forcible expression of admiration or contempt than he would have given in prose. The teller or writer of .the story has the impul.se njion him .so strongly to make it a good Rtory that it is next to impossible for him to avoid modifying its more counuouplace features. And he adds a little here and h'o prunes a little there. Point before precision is, it may be feared, soiuetimes even the historian's motto. 'There are veracious narratives we feel bound to accept on the word of onr friends. We should not have be lieved the stories had any one else told them; as it is, we store them in our memories as splendid illustrations of the often quoted saying of the poet that truth is stranger than fiction. All the Year Round. " liass Eats Bass. Colonel Richard Bright had a remark- able experience at Woodmont, on the Potomac, while fishing for black bass. He was casting with minnows of mod crate size and was slowly reeling in a small bass, when a hungry three pounder bhot out from his concealment and bolted the booked fish bodily. The colonel be came aware of the augmented strain on the reel and, by careful management, landed his double prize. The small bass went into the maw of his big cannibal brother smoothly enough, but his sharp spines stuck in the throat of his captor and made escape impossible. The two bass were presented to the National mu- enm, where they are preserved just as tney came from tbe .Potomac, the tail of the small one projecting from the mouth of the larger. The weight of the two is 34 pounds. "Necessity knows no law," and hunger recognizes no relationship. Forest and Stream. Charm to Ward On Disease. For what will charms not be worn? I know American mothers who buy seeds -"Job's tears" at drug stores to string them into a necklace to hang about the baby's neck to ward off eye troubles. The Bechuana mother strings beetles of a certain species and hangs them about the neck of her baby to help it in teeth ing. Professor Putnam found metacarpal bones of birds buried with babies in the little graves which he discovered under the hard clay floor of old house circles in Arkansas and Missouri. From anal , ogy with modern Indian "customs, he believes these were charms to help the child in cutting its teetlu Professor Frederick Starr in Popular Science Monthly. Stopped to Get the Rod. Joe Jefferson is a devoted disciple of Isaak Walton. He always has an eye open for fishing tackle and wants to buy every new variety of pole he sees. A few weeks ago he was. on his way to a funeral with lr..j sons, when he happened to spy a particularly attractive fishing rod in a store window. "Boys," said he, in his best funeral voice, "I think I'll have time to buy that rod let's go in. It may not be there when we come back." San Francisco Argonaut. A Man Who Eats Glass. According to the Charleston World, .the driver of a car on one of the street railways of that city is a confirmed glass eater. The driver, although a small, pare man, appears to enjoy perfect , health, and his glass diet, while it may ' sot be very nourishing, does not appear to have been very hurtful up to the . resent. ' ' , Fasting Fish. . It is said that a number of the larger fish never eat anything when traveling p rivers to deposit spawn, at least noth ing is found in them when caught. As the period of the year is about the time yot Lent, they probably have respect for the occasion. Meehan's Monthly. - "One hundred people per day are maimed in the United States," is the 'astonishing statement from the lips of A. . A. Harks, one of New York's largest and most successful artificial limb dealers. At a hotel, where the bed coverings are insufficient, or when camping, news papers spread between the blankets will nearly atone for the lack of an extra isoinforter. ADVICE TO YOUNG MEN; f 3 i T r fi ?. ." ' "BUSINESS" IS NOT BY ANY". MEANS Z THE. CHIEF -AIM IN LIFE.: - The Voutli Is" Carter Tie Obligation to Imitate Others or to Do as Others Do. Kespect the Sanctity of the Soul and Reware of SuperAuous Friends. ' ""; Here are" Some Extracts of. William Winter's address before the Staten Island academy : :"- What will you do with your lives? We, who are older, who have lived longer-and traveled further, are usually ready enough with our counsel; but it ia yonr ideal that must lead you now, and not the ndvice of others. Honor and truth we take for granted. "I would be virtuous," said an old philosopher, "'though no one were to know it, just as 1 would be clean, though no one were to see me." . : . . . '; The book of commonplace precept need not be opened here. Yet there is one word of counsel which now more than ever -in this Pagan age of denial and democracy ought to be spoken to the -youth of America. Be yourselves, and never abandon your noble aspira tions! .. You cannot live in absolute independ ence of the" world. You must have affiliations with other persons. Bntit is not imperative that those affiliations should be numerous, and you have it ! within yonr power to make them select 'You are under no obligation to imitate; others or to do as others do. j You ought never to. permit your minds to be inundated with the ignorance,- the crudity and the vapid chatter of commonplace persons. Do not too much reverence th6 past. Old burdens that have rolled from the shoulders of weary and dying men and women should not be taken up again by yon. It is your life that yon must live; it is not theirs; and now that they rest from their labors, let their works follow them. Neither must you suppose yourselves en joined to assume the burdens that other persons have created in the present day. AVOID TOO MANY FRIENDS. Let those attend to grievances who have them, and do not allow yonr spirits to be dejected, your hopes darkened and your live3 encumbered with the vices, the errors, the follies 'and the weakness of failnres and of fools. It is, no doubt, pitiable and deplorable that failures and fools should exist and suffer; but they must not be permitted," merely because' they exist and suffer, to drag you also into failure and folly. Respect the sanc tity of your souls, and beware of super fluous contact wun other lives. . - For it is only the temporary and the expedient that is gregarious. In every great moment of life in every time of insight or inspiration or crisis the hu man being is alone. The object of edu cation, therefore, should be the develop ment and building of an original, noble, adequate character not simply a prep aration for industrial pursuits, but an armament for everlasting life. The occupations of this world, how ever important, are transitory. The soul of man is immortal. Other views, I am aware, are commonly entertained. Peo-' pie who claim to be practical but are only narrow are never weary of declar ing that education must be sensible and not visionary. An effort to worry the public mind on this subject is a part of the errant activity of the complacent man of business, all the world over, and has been so, at periodic intervals, for many years. I remember its pernicious existence long ago the jealous sneer at what was called "book learning," a3 opposed lo what was called practical knowledge of affairs; meaning thereby cotton, iron, coal, the Stock exchange and the Re vised Statutes. - SOME SNEER AT EDUCATION. Not long since in 1S90, in the news papers of New York thai epidemic of mean commonplace burst forth with un common virulence, and various individ uals, in every case possessed of more wealth than sense, apprised us 'that scholastic training is superfluous, be cause it aims to furnish an equipment wholly in excess of what is requisite for business. My dear old friend, William Warren, the comedian, used to tell, in his inimit able way, a story about a pompous tradesman of the conventi6nal - kind, who once was addressing the pupils at a Sunday school. "I knew a little boy, he said, "who always obeyed bis mother, always washed his face in the morning, always came early to Sunday school, never stole an apple. And where do you think that good boy is now?" To this inquiry a small voice piped out an answer, "In heaven, sir." "No, sir," cried the disgusted orator, "not in heaven! He's in a store!" That is the mental drift of those ene mies of the higher education. To their minds the chief end of man is to get him self employed in a stoe. They are what Joseph Jefferson calls "the selfish made men of our time." Certainly the fact is significant that the sensitive feeling is all on one side. Educated men are . not worried. - If education has not. always given them wealth; it has given them blessings that no prodigality of wealth can buy, and by this token they know that the prov ince of education is not to train young people for business, but to embark tham upon life of which business is only an incident. . The best wisdom of the wis est of mankind has always taught that lesson... Make your business tributary to your mind, and not your mind subservient to your business. New York Tribune. Plurals or Several Words." Knight errant is uot written as one word, and need uot be even connected with a hyphen indeed, is not. so gener ally. Therefore the plural, of conrse, is knights errant. Lookers on is not one word. Once that usage has soldered two words, the resultant word will form its plural with a final s. The plural of bootjack ia not bootsjack.--Note and Queries. ONE . OP -A'aVANlSHtNa RACE.?"' He Hants Over Wide Areas and Is at Home Wherever There Xs Wilderness, ' The professional hunters and trappers who at one time comprised the whole of the white inhabitant class in. this sec tion are becoming so few that a real old time solitary woodsman who plunges into the forest and divests himself of human companionship is becoming a rare sight. Joe Thomas is one of the best examples that remain of these men, and a study of his characteristics is in teresting. ' .- Thomas is a man of about forty. . He is slightly below medium height and is not heavily built. He appears like a fall blooded negro, although he says that his mother was a half breed Indian.- He has sparse, tightly curled whiskers and does not look like a Nimrod and a mighty man among coons and deer. - Thomas follows as near the life of the red man as any ono can in these days, and has an antipathy to human society, though he is nothing of a misanthrope, and talks well to any one who questions him. . In the summer time Thomas works at whatever he can get to do about the cities in this vicinity and through to Ohio. When the squirrel season opens he is in Ohio, and puts in the first few weeks of the autumn shooting squirrel. As the deer season opens, he emigrates northward, and for the rest of the win ter lives the life of the solitary banter, shunning human habitations and Bleep ing in the woods in the most inclement weather. His domestic outfit consists of a tent, blankets and a small stove, and he declares that he is more contented in the woods than he would be in town. When the night is cold he lights his fire, chains his dog up in the tent and sleeps. While the deer run,. Hopkins follows them tirelessly, and when night over takes him on the trail he lies down in the woods to sleep; confident that the deer is as tired as he and will not move during the night" nnless disturbed, and in the morning will be so stiff that the second day's chase will be tively easy matter. . a compara- After the deer season is over Thomas starts for the open, and traps skunks and otter and all other fur bearing animals for the rest of the winter. ' At all times he is ready in case old Zip Coon comes racking around, and his dog he alleges to be one of the best coon dogs in the country. The animal is a liver and white hound, slightly larger than a fox hound, and with no more fat on him than is required to grease his joints. Thomas said that the dog got him more than fifty dollars' worth of coonskins in one season, and he would, not part with liim for three times that amount. 'Joe tells a story to illustrate, the sagacity of the dog. He says that one winter the dog treed a coon in a big tree; Joe always carries climbing irons, and he skinned np the tree.- He followed the coon oat on a branch and shook him off, and he heard him squeal as - the dog nabbed him. When Joe got to the bottom of the tree there was no coon in sight and no dog. He beard the dog running and called to him; the dog came out of the bushes a moment and then- ran back.: Joe fol lowed and found that the dog was run ning around a skunk) keeping it from going into its hole. Mr. Dog did not want to interview the skunk closely, bat the skunk was not sure of that, and he kept his eye on the dog, circling around, and the dog was gradually getting him away from his hole. Joe killed the skunk, but he could find no trace of tbe coon, and concluded that the dog had lost it. :-"'.' The next morning he reproved the dog, sayingj "You didn't do right about that coon last night; you lost him. Now you go get him." The dog looked kind of ashamed and moved off. Joe followed him, and they went back to the place where the trouble occurred on the pre vious night. After nosing around a while the dog unburied the coon from where he bad buried' it,' having been afraid to leave it while he went after the skunk, so he buried it, leaving the tail sticking out of the snow so he conld find it again. Some one asked Thomas if ho was not afraid that the bears would eat him some night. He said that the only thing that made him mad -was that the bears kept away from him and didn't give him a chance. Joe says that the houses are getting altogether too thick, and when he meets up with a house he wants to get as far away from it as he can and as quick as he can. Oil City Derrick. Cheaper in the End. . Boutton So yoa are not going to housekeeping when you get married? De Boarder No. . We shall take board for a year. y "Isn't that rather an extravagant way to begin?" . "Not at all. I desire my wife to study economy of my landlady. Then we will start housekeeping, and I will make her an allowance of as much a week as we paid for board." "What , do you think will be the re sult?" - . "Well, by the time we are old she onght to have about a million." New York Weekly. Tree Toads In Demand. - Tree toads are in big demand by young doctors and chemists,-who are anxious to learn something of the circulation of the blood. The tree- toad has legs that are almost transparent. The young doc tor takes the leg, spreads it out-under a microscope and can see the blood cor puscles, chasing each other here, and there in the veins of the leg of the toad. We sell hundreds of tree toads .for this purpose every month. Interview in New York. World. Not to Be Taken laterally.. "Ia it your opinion," said the theolog ical professor, "that the portion of the parable which represents the prodigal son as feeding among swine is to be taken literally?" "Perhaps not," the thoughtful young man replied; "maybe it is a reference to the meals he ate at a railway lunch counter." W;iehington Star. - In the case of the trial forwnrder which is going on at Naples the deceased some time before his death fought a duel with a man who is now one of the pris oners, t At the hearing the other day one of the witnesses, a government official, said that on the day of the duel he went with others to meet ' the carriages com ing . back, ' for "at Palermo every one knows everything, and the carriages re turned as if from a festival, and the peo ple waited to see them." " ; -. The public minister asked the witness how the news of the dnel being about to take - place was known to the public. Witness: "First by the Mafia in fixing on the place and hoar... I have never- seen such a duel; people went as if to a feast,and every one knew of it. " Per haps the circumstance that an officer was fighting bad some influence, and that therefore the authorities did not prevent it." London News. He Couldn't Be Frightened. A small boy on Sixth street hates the washing process worse than snakes. His mother was scrubbing him and he was kicking. . .. ;-'. "Why don't you be a good boy," she begged. "Don't you know that youll go to the bad place if you are not?" "There ain't any water there, is there?" he asked. .... "Not a drop," she answered solemnly. "Then I guess I'll keep on being bad.", And he kept on. Detroit Free Press. Fully 85 per cent, of artificial limbs made are' legs, 15 per cent. arms. Of legs, 49 per cent, are right, 46 per cent, left, 5 per cent, both right and left. Seventy-eight per cent, of legs amputat ed are of males, 23 per cent, are females.- pimples. The old Idea of 40 years ago was that facial eruptions were due to a "Wood humor," for which they gave potash. Thus aU the old Sarsa parilias contain potash, a most objectionable and drastic mineral, that instead of decreasing, actually creates more eruptions. You have no ticed this when taking other SarsapariUas than Joy's. It is however now known that the stom ach, the blood creating 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 heaUhlul digestion purifies it ana they disappear. Thus Joy's Vegetable Sarsapari'.la is compounded after Iho modern idea to regulate the bowels and stimulate tho digestion. The cHcct is immediate and most satisfactory. A short testimonial to contrast the action of tho potash Parsajiarillas and Joy's moslcrn vegetable preparation. Mrs. C. I). 6tnart, cf 400 lluvcs St., S. K., writes: "I have for years l:a;l i;nJ;:;c-t':on, 1 tried a popular Sareapariila but it actually res -eJ more pimples to break out on my face. I!cu: i:i3 that Joy's was a later preparation asttl acted 'liiTvrcntly, I tried tt and the pimples immediately disappeared." J SarsapaHlla Largest bottle, most cflucHvc. same price. For Sale by SNIPES KINERSLY THE DALLES. OREGON.. By nsinjt S. B. Headache and Liver Cure', and S. B. Cough Cure us directed for colds.- They were SXTOCSSSFTJIjXjV : used two years ago during the La Grippe epi demic, and very nattering testimonials of their power over that disease are at hand. Manufact ured by the 8. B. Medicine Mfg. Co., at Dufur, vrcguji. r or sale oy au aruggists. A Severe Law. . The English peo ple look more closely 'to the genuineness of these staples than we do. In fact, they have a law under 'which -. they . make - ' seizures ' and . de stroy : adulterated - "- . . products that are not what they are represented to be. Under '. this statute thousands of pounds of tea have . been burned because of their wholesale adulteration.- . - ,- - Tea, by the way, is one of the most notori- -ously adulterated articles of commerce, Not alone are the bright, shiny green teas artifi cialljt colored but thousands of pounds of substitute for tea leaves are used to swell the bulk of cheap teas; ash, sloe, and willow leaves being those most .commonly used. Again, sweepings from tea warehouses are colored and sold as tea.. Even exhausted tea leaves gathered from the tea-houses are kept, dried, and made over and find their way into the cheap teas, . . . The English government attempts to stamp this out by confiscation; -but no tea Is too ' poor for u, and the result is, that probably' -the poorest teas used by any nation are those Consumed in America. - x Beech's Tea Is presented with the guar anty that It is uncolored and unadulterated; -In fact, the sun-cureu tea leaf pare and sim ple. Its purity insures superior strength, bout one third less of It being required for an infusion than of tbe a-Uncial teas, and Its fragrance and exqtiinire flavor is at once ap parent. It will be a revelation to you. In order that Its purity and quality may be guar anteed, it Is sold only in pound packages bearing this trade-mark: '. j LH GRIPPE t:K sum 'PureAsWdhoodr. Price 60o per pound. For sale at Xjesllo Sutler's, THB DALLES, ORE0OK. Dalles IS Of the Leading City During the little over The has earnestly tried to fullfil the objects for which it was founded, namely, to assist in developing our industries, to advertise the resources of the city and adjacent country and to work for an open river to the sea. . Its record is phenomenal support it has expression of their approval. Independent in every thing, neutral in nothing, for what it believes to be Commencing with the vclume the weekly has been enlarged to eight pages while the price' ($1.50 a year) remains the same. Thus both the weekly and daily editions contain moie reading matter for less money than any paper published in the county. GET YOUH DONE AT THE CIWICLE JOB (100(11. BooK ai?d job pripti Done on LIGHT BINDING Address all Mailorders to Chronicle THE DALLES, cnronicie n II of Eastern Oregon. a year of its existence it before the people and the received is accepted as the it will live only to fight just and ri ht. first number of the second WriflG Short Notice. NEATLY DONE, Pub. Co., aDaTrIVI