; REACH THE j VAN. Beach the van! let nut tlie rrar Ever be your uiarehinti plare. Poster courage, banish fear. . Wear a brave, determined f; lieat ri Hit van! Only tliey, the brave and true ' Nature's noblemen--tun hope ' ' By the klorious work I hey do To reach fulfillment widest scope Keacli t he vau! ... lJUtgards, druiiua ami slaves of ease, Binggard's long beyond the dawn. Ne'er the golden moment seize Which to grand suceesit lenda on- ,. --. ; Reach the ran! . ' ' - ' - " " ' 'i Man was uiude to show his might. Not to grovel iu the dust; Sfan was made to work for Right, Not in sin and sloth to rust ' Iteach I he Vanl 111 may come, lint ne'er so dark tVaa a cloud that did not hold t 'Nealb its kIooiw hope's thecrliiK.siars, - Soon to low tike beaming gold ' . - ' ,,' . liuai'h the van! : i . Do your best, I hen. use your power, ' Be content uot in the reart 4' Full improve each golden hour Be the first in all your sphere licach the vanl . . - ' , -i New York tedirer. History of Worcestershire Mauce. - Many years ago Mrs, Grey, .author of The Gamblers Wife." ami other novels well known in tueir day, van on a visit atOuiberbley Court when Lady.Sdnds chanced to remark that she wished she ooald get some very1 good curry ' powder r which elicited from Mrs. CJrey that she had in her desk an excellent recipe which her uncle. Sir Charles,' chief justice "of India, had brought thence and given her. Lady Sands said that ,' there .were' boiue clever chemists in Worcester- who. per haps, might be able to make np the pow der; at all events, when they drove in after luncheon they would see. One fem looked at the recipe, doubted if they could procure all the ingredients., but said they would do their best, and in due time forwarded a packet of the powder. Subsequently the happy thought struck some one in the business that the powder might, in solution, make a good sauce. - The experiment was made, aud by degrees the thing took amazingly. All the world to its remotest" endtr-niVir Vnows of Worcestershire sauce 'as an article of coiujinerce, and, notwithstand ing that, in common with most good things, it is terribly pirated, an enor mous trade is done in it. The profits amount to thousands of pounds a year. London World. . How to Roll an Uiubrella. "Certainly, but yon don't need any." said a salesman in a Chapel street nt"ire recently to a customer who had just bought aii umbrella, and who had asked for a rubber ring. - - "But 1 want to keep the ends of the ribs from spreading when the umbrella is rolled up," and the customer held up for inspection the umbrella he" had just rolled. . '. "Let ine show you," said tlitr sales man, as he unfastened the band and hook out the folds. Grasping the stick o that his right hand . held the ends of the ribs close to the wood, he began roll "ing the silk in the curve of his left haiid. "Whenever he gave the umbrella a turn he kept the ribs in their original posi tion, and when the rolling was complete he lield up the umbrella and showed that the metal tips pressed as closely to the stick as if riveted in place. New Haven Palladium. , What a Fried Pie Is. ' Fried pie is a Philadelphia dish "that cannot be found here. The dish is pre pared with dried peaches inserted be tween haf moons of pastry turnovers, they are called with a particular sort of crumple at the edges, seemingly iden tified with their tiiste. . They are f ried in hot lard, and afterward sprinkled over with sugar and cinnamon or nutmeg. They are served hot, "and to make them richer butter is inserted between the smoking ends. They are very good and desirable if you are armored to resist their ravages. New York Evening Snn. A Natural Church Steeple. A remarkable pinnacle of rock, some thirty miles from Grant s Station, in the San Mateo region, is the "Cero de las - Alesena," Or- Shoemaker's Awl moun tain. It rises 4,000 feet above the vallev. and the upper 2,r00 feet is of hexago nal prisms of columnar basalt, standing up like a church steeple. Its summit is totally inaccessible, and like the deserted heights of the Mesa Escautada of the Acomas, a host of traditions have gath ered about it. Goldthwaite's Geograph ical Magazine. liaised the itoof. - r A delicate youth iu Walling, a Colo rado settlement, where he had gone to recuperate his health, succeeded in lift , ing the roof of a friend's house without much effort. He was smoking a ciga rette near a keg of gunpowder. A spark lighted On some Iivika o-rin- art it in u instant the cigarette, the young uian juiu vue root were nymg skyward. Yankee Blade. : ; Walk Straight. " My dear sir or madam, if you cannot walk briskly along the pave, 1 don't see that you are to be blamed for it But there is one thing you can- do, namely, walk in a straight line. .'. Give others a chance: .toypass youi-- Don't wdrry the life out of .them byvibrating like a pen dulum, from side to C side. Keep in a straight Ijne. Don't wabble. Exchange. in Berlin, XJermany, not long ago, the pupils in one of the public schools saw a ghost" Soon others began to see:sim ilar apparitions, and 'ghost -seeing"-extended from school to school as a regular ,: epidemic, '- : - 1 1 . ; , ,; When a gun is fired absolutely in the vertical the ball will fall a few inches south and west from ' the gnu in the northern latitude, due west at the equa tor and northwest in the southern lati- tudes. In the island of Madagascar the dis satisfied husband has . only to give his wife a piece of money and to say. "Madame. 1 thank yon." in or.ler to lie XONIMXN ZOO, HOW THE CHILDREN ENJOY THEM ; SELVES ON A SATURDAY. Seeing the Animals in -London's Great Csrdes Take Their Daily Meal la a '. Weekly' Attraction In the Big City. Watching th e Create res Eat. No day is more animated at the Lon don Zoological gardens than Saturday, when tne children appear in full force, marshaled by papas and mammas, who are doubtless glad enough to visit the scene of their own early "larks," but who try to look. as if they came only as guides and guardians. The little peo ple begin to appear early in the forenoon, some or them, brinemg a lunch basket. wherein .may' be found not only their rown bread and; butter ..but biscuit, and I buns for feeding' the animals. k- - ' '; Those who are to take their noonday meal in the refreshment room; .- how ever, need not be destitute of provender for -their four footed acquaintances; a bun may always be bought for a penny. and -biscuit are , abundant on many a convenient counter. First comes the preliminary ramble, ana then a skurry back to the fish house. where at 12 o'clock the divine birds are , fed.' A large glass tank of clear water occupies one end of .the. room', and into this precisely at ' noon an ' attendant throws a handful of tiny .fish, a few of them still "living. Then the side of .an adjoining cage is removed, and down plunge the penguins to seize their nrev. It piust be confessed that their table manners are not fine. They literally gobble ban after fish, and then hurl themselves about in the water, evidently aeugntea with their bath. Another bird a slender, graceful creature, familiarly called a "darter" is admitted alone to the tank, and his motions in eating , his fish dinner are wonderful to see. He sweeps through t . i 1 - T ' ' . . . me water iikc an arrow, ana impaling eacn nsn upon his bill lifts his head, ana tn some mysterious and litrhtnine- like manner' catches the victim and swallows it. . THE RIDR OV THR riUPHlVTV: Later in the afternoon the pelicans are fed in the little vard whr tVmv soiemniv an nav inne a umiii mn.) occupies its center, and into this bits of t? i , , , ... usu are mrown, m search or which the birds rush pell mell, covering the water wim a oonrusion or gigantic wavina wings. As the attendant approaches to carry out . this ' pleasing ceremony, the birds awaken from" their ilmvcr !-. and it is a sight not soon to be forgotten li one can watch a stately old pelican lift his winers and bearin ' curveting in token of his joy. - in tne bear pit, a deep and well lighted inclosure. dwell two hM.rs Wli wield V with the farnma nnuln.ul many ouns. iney have-i)een so per sistently fed by visitors that when one looks Over the railinrr hl Vir!r:hir ilm. ly rises, holds out two entreating fore paws anu sits in pleased anticipation of a feast.'. - : - ' He catches liitn nf linn In liw mnntl. with, the unerring skill given by long Dractice. and Will PVPn flim'h fha nnlain the center of the pit, If one will but hold a nun over it snsneiKiivi fwim a chvt - how will Ha 1rntw I want l,i,n . climb?" said a little girl, who had just been provided with this plummy bribe. : "Just hold it near the pole where" he can get it, said ah attendant, "and hell do tlie rest. Ho knows as much as we do." . , . So, heavily and with much panting, the awkward creature mounts his pole, seizes the bun. and descends to munch it iu" content. '' The crowuiny joy of all perhaps for mue visitors is that or riding the ele phants, which, provided with great sad dles, large enough for a dozen people, take their load of shrieking, laughing children and go lumbering oif down the walks, waving their trunks this side and that in the hope of receiving a stray tit bit from the neighboring crowd. - - FEEDING TOE LIONS. ' Later in the ' day - comes one great event, to which, even the -most serious grown person: must-be interested. At half past 4 the lions are fed! Long before the time visitors begin to pour into the building where, in large cages against the wall, lions, tigers and leop ards are pacing restlessly up and down. The creatures themselyes need no watches t j tell them dinner time is near. At the appointed moment a man en ters, pushing a barrow of bleeding meat, and wheels it past the cages to the very end of the room.- At the -smelL-'and sight pandemonium, breaks .loose. One awful concord, fills the place. -At the- last cage the barrow stops, a bar is thrown back, and two large pieces ef meat aae thrown in- The lion seizes them in his paws and lies contentedly down, to "gnaw andi heir them with the delib eration of a well fed animal.7 i : .. , - So the programme "goes on," until one voice after another is silenced' and the barrow is empty. " One very interesting fact is always to be observed. The animals do not, on receiving their first piece of meat retire to devour it; they wait f or;the second and' then turn away with both held securely in their paws. They have evidently learned how much to expect and can count up to that number..'? ?'.?. f:,-;; ,t 'Indeed the delights of the Zoo are almost inexaustible to animal loving children. There is the monkey house, where those grave,,: wrihkl-half , hu man creatures sit. picking fleas "from each other with an air of funny absorp tion. There is the chimpanzee "Sally," who will count five for her keeper by passing hiinthe requisite number of straws, and who, at request, will eat with her fingers, as she "used to do," and then with a fork, as she does now that she is civilized. ' "Queer old Sally,", as one little boy said, and happy children who can see her! Youth's Companion. Fish swallow their food whole because they are obliged to keep continually opening and closing the mouth for the Walt: Whltmaa in New York. - Notwithstanding : .-. his . residence . in Washington; his tay in New Orleans, where- he ' did ' some good newspaper work, and not counting his long" vegeta tion' in: Camden, N."J.,' Walt' Whitman is in every fiber' a thorough .New Yorker. ' Why not?' He was born, 'seventy-two years ago,' in. a .little village:, over ' on Long Island, and, like lhost Long Island ers, naturally drifted to this town. My old journalistic friend remembers, him here' thirty-five years ago,wheu! he first put out his "Leaves of Grass." This city was comparatively small then, and JWalt Whitman ' was as conspicuous a citizen as any knew everybody and everybody knew him. He was a marked figure on Broadway a most manly man, as vigorous and virile as his own poetry. His very personality impressed itself upon all passers by, and men, and even women, turned around to look at him. He was almost the first to make the now fashionable fad of the flannel shirt in summer his all the year round - conveni ence and comfort, and .the broad collar was turned- over a silk " American flag. His ordinary wear was a neat suit of workingman's clothes. Whatever he might be called, a Democrat or a Repub lican, he prided himself upon being "one of the people." Brady, then fa mous as a photographer, was the first to capture Whitman, and thereafter every photographer in. town displayed- colored pictures of Walt, especially to show his American flag scarf. . There were omnibuses in those days "stages," theycalled them and every driver knew Walt - W.hitman; and up and down Broadway the poet was promi nent; often for hours, beside a driver on the box. The lively street was his studio in which he made his pictures of the people and his studies of humanity. New York Cor. Brooklyn Times. Tlie Development of &iaro.' - The Siamese sovereigns have usually been men of considerable ability and in energy and enlightenment are superior to most Asiatic potentates. The late king of Siaui and his successor have done what, they could to introduce the forms of westerh civilization." Bangkok, the capital, has the electrie light, tram cars and government offices of European architecture, and the present king has also shown himself a reformer of abuses, especially of the worst of Siamese social evils, the universality of serfdom and the prevalence of slavery. Further and much needed reforms are expected from him, but even were the political and fiscal administration nf t.h kingdom very much better than it is the oiaruese, a iignineartea nation of .Bud dhists, fond of amusement and accus tomed to frequent holidays, are little fitted to develop the great resources of their country. -'. ' 7 ' The internal trade is chiefly in the hands of Chinamen, who.- with the Malays, add some millions more to the estimated bbnulation of fi.nnn:nnn " Rail. ways'are, being constructed, and' Euro peans; nave oeen encouraged by the policy of Siamese royalty; to settle at Banzkok and to dtrrnlrm the, ' trade of Siam. St." Louis Post-Dispatch. . Explosives in Mines. It has been claimed that " the use of modern explosives in mines leads to the production of such poisonous fumes that a grave danger to the workmen isJhus incurred. A short time ago a commit tee was appointed by the . Durham Coal Owners' association., consisting of repre sentatives of both masters aud men, to consider this important question. Care ful experiments having been ' made, the committee came to the conclusion that the fumes produced are not more dan gerous than : those from gunpowder; that carbon monoxide the irrespirabla gas which is produced by the combus tion of charcoal, and which has led to so many deaths is present only in traces; that an interval of fave minutes should be allowed to" elapse before the men re-enter the gallery' in which the charge has been fired; and that as they find a portion of the deleterious " gases are due to the fuse employed, the charges should be invariably fired by electricity." New York Telegram. A Uuiiue Social Organization. - The latest departure in clubdom is tne formation - of the Annie Lynch Botta Conversation club, a purely social or ganization of literary and artistic men and women, founded in memory of Mrs. ootta 8 famous Sunday evenings. . The topic of the evening's conversation is known only to one person, who selects it but does not-announce it until after the company has assembled, -which pre cludes all possibility of preparation and secures the charm of spontaneity to the talk. - '.:The person who selects- the torric is called the 'director," and leads the con versation,. ilThis office is not held by the same person on consecutive evenings. .Membership to the club is obtained only -through: the medium of friendship with those Already .admitted to its privileges. aew xoric sun. "... - - . A Successfal 1 rummer. A. B. Cnmmings, who was famous in ; the gentlemen's furnishing - trade throughout the country and . was re gard ed as - in some: respects - the . most brilliant: salesman in New-:York, is dead quite suddenly from an attack of the grip. "He was able to command "a salary of fl0,000, Abesides handsoTne'commis-siens'-on his 'Bales, and- he earned more money sellipg, neckties than a majority of the bank presidents receive in salary, or nine-tenths Of the lawyers here coin in practice at .'the bar. New York Let- - , One Year's Patents. Some months ago the American patent office had' its 1 00th' birthday and the last half of the century has witnessed wonderful strides in that direction.. In the first fifty years only 12,413 patents were issued, but last year there were 22.- 080. ' The - variety of patented ' articles is really -wonderful, and American inge nuity seems to be in no danger of ex hausting itself. " Every year shows a larger number of inventions than the ' . Bard for" .Foreigner to ftnderataad The constrnttion wf the EngHsb lan guage must appear niost formidable to a foreigner. One of them, looking "at a picture of a-nnmber-of-vessels, said, -"See what a Hock of ships!'' ' He was told that a flock of ships was called a fleet, and that a fleet of. sheep was -called a flock, ... ;. J. ; And it was added for his guidance in mastering the intricat ies of ' our lan guage that "a flock of girls is called a bevy, that a bevy of wolves is called a pack, and a pack of thieves is called a gang, and a gang of angels "is called a host, anda boHt of . porpoises is called a shoal, and a shoal of buffaloes is called a herd; and a her'd' of children is called a troop, and a troop of partridges is called a covey, and a covey ofi beauties is- called a. galaxy ; . and ; a galaxy-of ruffians is calletl a . horde, and a' horde of rubbish is called , a heap, and a neap of oxen is cailetl a ' drove, and a drove ..of llackgnards is called 'a mob, and a mob of , whales is called a school, and a school of .worshipers is called a ' congregation!, and ' a ' con gregation' of ' engineers ' is called : a corps, and a corps-of robbers is called a band, and a band of locusts is called a swarm, and a swarm of people is called a crowd. Boston Commercial. . Diogenes' Tart IronjC Diogenes" indulged in a "tart irony" when, observing1 over" the' door of a schoolroom this inscription", "Let no de ceiver enter here," he quietly asked, "How does the teacher go -in?" New York Home Journal. "- ' The whitebait, the sprat, the sardine and the anchovy are the smallest of the finny tribe, and yet the collection and sale of these' form important arid very profitable industries, - . - 1 ; , : - . Afflicts half the Amerloau people yet there la only one preparation of Sarsaparilla that acts on the bowels and reaches this important trouble, and that Is Joy's Vegetable Sarsaparilla. It re lieves it In 24 hours, and an occasional dose prevents return. "Vc refer by permission to C. E. Eltlngton, 125 lxrnst Avenue, Bau Francisco; J. H. Brown, Petaluma; H. S. Winn, Geary Court, San Francisco, and Jmudreds of others who have used it in constipation. One letter is a sample of UUUUicu.. X.1K1UKWU, writes: x nave been tot years subject to bilious headaches and constipa tion. Have been to bad for a year back have had to take a physio every other night or else I would have a headache. After toting one bottle f J. V. 8.. I am In snlendiH t vn. a M . w UIM UUMO wonderful things tor . mo. People similarly if " eusnouia try nana De convinced." VegetaWe Sarsaparilla Uost modern, mxt crTcrtir". largest bottle. Bne price, Jl.O-i. ! , r..i " . - - For Sal by SNIPES & K1NERSLY .. .. U,1B DAIXES..ORESOX.- i ' r By using S. B. Headache arid Liver Cure, and S. B. Cough Cure as directed for colds. They were nsed i two years- ago during the La Grippe epi demic, and verv flattering tRKtimnniln nt ihfir power over that disease are" at band. Mannf act- j Meaicine Mig. CO., at Du fur. - - JJ OUWUUIh , . . 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. J Under 1 this statute thousands of pounds of tea have -been burned because of tlielr wholesale adul- - teralion. . . - .- " . : Tea, by the way, is one of the most noto'ri- ." ously adulterated articles of commerce, - Not " alone are the brfght, shiny green teas artlfl- - ' clally' Colored, but thnnands of pounds of. substfetitet for tea leaves tire used to swell . the bulk of cheap tea ash, sloe, aud willow 'leaves 'being -ahose most '.commonly used. ' -.Again, sweepings from tea . warehouses are -colored and sold as tea. ' Even exhausted tes, leaves gathered from the tea-houses are kcpC dried, and madeoveraud And their way into ' the cheap teas. . " ; ; . The Eiiflish governmea't at'empts to stamp . this out' by cooficatf.jn;birt nb'tea ls too poor Jfor'uV and tbe; rclulE i,'that probably" l' fhe poorest teas ned' fcy any nation are rhosa ; Consumed In America. ?'V r"rH "Beeeh'r Tea' is presented "with the gaar- auty that It is uncolored and .unadulterated; '. in fact, the sun-eurea tea leaf pare ;aiid,slm- '" r pie. Us purity insures saperior- strength, . .about one third less of it 'bejng" required for ., a 'Infusion than of the aiflcial teas, 'ahcflU '" fragrance anil exquisite flavor Is at bnceap-' :parenti It Tvill be a revelaUoii roybui Hn -order that lb purity aud quality may be gaar- ' anfeed, it:'lm sold only In 'pound -pafcttages. earinK'this trade-mark :M ' cHi -txs ' 'PureAs-Ghifdhoodr Price 60a per poind. For sale at " STIPATION. Jou's AVA OURHD 1 "-T"o(f ina(irt f lis GfielB IS n tso?;;,:-' Of the Leading City of Eastern Oregon. - Paring the little over a year of its existence it has earnestly tried to ftdlfll the objects for which it was founded, namely, to assist in developing our ftdes, to advertise the resources of the city and adjacent country and to work for an open river to the sea. . . Its . record is before the people an 1 the phenomenal support it has received is accepted as the expression of their approval. Independent in every thing, neutral in nothing, it will live only to fight for what it believes to be just and riht. Commencing with the first number of the second 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 YOUR DONE AT THE CIII1WLE JO Boot ai)6 Job pripti9 Done on Short Notice. LIGHT BINDING r-: ' f-r: -j ; Address all. Hail Orders to . ; Chtfonicle THE DALLES, PKlflTIflG NEATLY DONE. Pub, Co., - OREGON. b Room.