V WON BY A SIREN. The Romantic Tale of an Amer - ican Professor" Downfall. IB . H H it J rm e d 1 . 11 u HOW BO YOJJ DO when you buy 6hoes or clothing ? Don't you go to the place (if you an find it) where they tefll you that you may wear the articles out, and then, if you're not satisfied, they'll refund the money? Why not do the same when you buy medicine? Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis covery is sold on that plan. It's the only blood - purifier so certain and effective that it can be guar anteed to benefit or cure, in every case, or you have your money back. It's not like the ordinary spring medicines or sarsaparillas. All the year round, it cleanses, builds up, and invigorates the system. If you're bilious, run-down, or dys peptic, or have any blood -taint, nothing can equal it as a remedy. The worst cases of Chronic Catarrh in the Head, yield to Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. So certain is it that its mak ers offer $500 reward for an incurable case. WORK WITH FOOT AND HAND. XSMt Indian Artisans tJenerally Able to Make Use of the lreliensilo Toe. The traveler who walks in the native quarters of the cities of India can easily study there all industries in their be Xinnings, as they were probably prac tised in Europe in the middle afjes. The shops arc usually open and the workmen can be seen inside; textile in dustries, pottery, shoe mailing1, joiner-ang-, armoring-, jewelry, confectioners all can be observed ia a sirp-io street, like Chitpore street, Calcutta. If we take pains to examine attentively the methods of working1, v.-e shall be struck Try the enormous function p'ayed by the lower limb. Whutjvci il; indus try, the Indian, squatting or sitting on the ground, works with iiis feet :io well as with his hands, and it might be said, adds a writer in the HevuciMeientiflque, that all four of his limbs are in con stant exercise. The joiner, for ex ample, has no assistant to hold his plank, but v.-uikou his i'-ci:t t.vj serve that purpose. Ti.e : ".-Jrialri'r rices not employ a fixed clami S .. iho shoe on which he is sewing1. ii.A. liutd.s it in his feet, which change pi llion t-. i-uit his convenience, while hit: -limbic hand:; do the sewirigA The metal worker holds the joint of his shears on his feet in cutting copper. In the makinjx of wooden combs I have seen the comb held straight up by the feet, while- the workman marked the teeth with one hand and with the other diroeteil the .instrument to -it them. The wood trrner cUreots the hand-res.t with his j.ri!. toes: so, gen erally. 1o Egyptian and Arabian turn ers. In t.nv.xtihin;; twine or sowiivr a bridle thv Indians hold the artkdo be tween the first and second toes. When the butcher cuts his meat into r.iun.ll pieces he hold:; the knife l)'tv.-.-.-n the first and second toes, tairs the meat in both hands and ptilis it cltoks the knife. I have seen a ehtid climb a '. roe and hold a branch between his toes. The great t.nx is cu-vtabV f con; Id -Table lateral movements ln-in t!:u s;v--nil toe, ao that the Indian can ,e;isily pick up articles from the ground with his loot and even exert s..mc force sidewise. THE TEMPf. Or CAAL. ' Description t.;.- Oisre : :.:::r; :: There rises a !:.. high, inclosing- a s.j; the side is seven i (.f V, Itut Was :.i y:-. -vi-:;;;' feet :"urt which .Ircd and forty feet long1, says a wrlu-r in Blackwood's Magazine. . I 'art of the wall, having fallen into ruins, has been rebuilt from the ancient materia'::;. b::t the whole of the north side, v.-il': i; i berrjtiful pilas ters, remains p-Tf. t, .Is the' visitors enter the court they Vta::d sliil iii as tonishment at the extraordinary siylit which.mects their yos, for ijere. crowd ed within those four hir-Ji walls, is the native village of Tadtnor. It was nat ural enough for the Arabs to build their mud huts within these ready-made for tifications, but the imprassii n pivdaeed by such a village in such a'pia-.'e is in- describably strange. The temple, so to speak, is eaten out at the core, and lit tle but the shell remains. IJut here and there a fluted Corinthian column or group of columns, with entablature still perfect, rises in stately grace far over the wretched huts, the rich, creamy color of the limestone and the beauti ful moldings of the capitals contrasting with the clear blue of tho cloudless sky. The best view of the whole is to ba ob tained from the roof of the naos, which, once beautiful and adorned with sculpture, is now all battered and de faced, and has been metamorphosed into a squalid little mosque. To describe the view, from that roof were indeed a hopeless task. High into the clear blue air and the golden sunshine rise the stately columns; crowded, and jumbled, and heaped together -below, untouched by the gladdening sunbeams, unfresh- . ened by the pv;re, free air, lies all the squalor and wretchedness of an Arab nad-hut village. -. For Colic and Grabs In my mules and horses, I give Simmons Xiiver Regulator. I have not lost one I pave it to. -K. T. Tayloe, Agt. for Grangers of Ga. Led by tlie Wiles of an Aleutian Island Maiden to Forsake His Wife and Conn try A Touching Story of L.ife . in the North. Maj'. S. E. 2?ettleto"n, who was two years United States special treasury agent at the Pribjdov islands, or Seal islands as they are sometimes called, was a close observer of the customs of the Aleutians, and relates many inter esting anecdotes of his sojourn there, says the St. Louis Republic. - ' , "In the far away Pribylov islands there is a little convent devoted to a nameless religion,"' said Maj. Nettle ton. "It has only one occupant, whom the natives call Kchatka, the Aleutian nun. She worships no invisible divin ity and has no theoretical doctrines, but she teaches her people that if they livsjionestly and relieve the sick and unfortunate they will be rewarded. "Years ago, when the islands were the property of Kussia, a Russian trader came to the islands to exchange his merchandise for sealskins and the fur of .the s ilver gray fox. He fell in love with an A.leutian maiden, the. belle of the island, and in the due course of time they were'- married. The trader and his dusky wife made many voyages between the island and Russian- ports, but one day they were brought from their ship to one of the Alaska Commercial company's huts, both very ill with a terrible fever. With them were two little twin girls, whose exuberant health and- spirits were a sad contrast to the condition of their parents. The next day their mother died. Her husband was at the point of death, but when his dying wife was brought to his bedside and asked him to give their children to her parents he feebly assented. When the funeral of his wife was taking place he too died, and the two little orphans were removed to the home of their grandmother. "Their lives were uneventful until they reached the age of sixteen. Neither had been to school, and they knew nothing of the outside world, ex cept what they remembered of the fairy tales told to amuse their child hood fancies. About this time the 1 ."111 ted States purchased Alaska and sent a young professor from one of the leading eastern universities to the island on a scientilic expedition. The trip was an arduous one, and he left his j'oung wife at home with her rela tives. Securing the data and statistics for which he was sent in a few days, time hung heavihy on his hands, and the young savant undertook the task of instructing the beautiful but illiter ate sisters. Kchatka was an apt pupil, quailing eagerly . from the Pierian spring, out her sister, although quite as bright, seemed to be much more in terested in her tutor than she was in her grammar or arithmetic. The at traction was mutual, and when- a ship came on whicli the young professor might have returned home he wrote to ,his wife that he was unexpectedly de tained and could not come home for another three months. The arrivals of ships at the islands were few and far between, and the next mail brought a letter imploring him to return home, as his wife was at the point of death. It so happened that one of the Alaska Commercial company's schooners was to sail for San Francisco the following day. The young professor resolutely went 01 board, bribing the boatmen to refuse to bring his Aleutian sweetheart to the schooner should she a,sk them to do so. "The schooner lay fully a mile from the shore, and the sailors were already in the tall masts spreading the canvas preparatory to departure, when one of them caught sight of a woman swim ming in the water. She came on board and implored the young man to aban don his idea of returning home, or to stay at least until the next ship. Her knowledge of English was limited-, but as she kuelt before him on the deck of the ship, her dark eyes pleading more eloquently than words, he decided to forsake his invalid wife and spend his days with his Aleutian love. "He returned to the island and en deavored to forget the woman whom he had promised to love and cherish, who, lying at the dark portals of death, was longing for a parting kiss or a last embrace before she died. The mail which next reached the islands in formed him that his wife wns dead; that she died" with his name on her lips, and that her last intelligible utter ance was a hope that he would meet her in the better land. "He read the letter apd fell to the floor unconscious. Fully two months of faithful nursing saved him from dying of brain fever. Wjjen he was well enough to return home he mar ried his Aleutian sweetheart. Kchatka, her sister, refused to leave the islands. During the epidemic of smallpox, which nearly depopulated . the islands a few years ago. she was. one of the very few who did not take the disease, although she was constantly at the bedside of the sufferers. The simple natives say that the Great Spirit re fused to spoil her beauty, that she might shine as an angel of light among them and teach the road to the Aleu tian heaven, where seals are plenty and it is never cold." The total number of new enterprises organized in the south during the last quarter of 1893 was 436, while for the first three months of this year the total was 602, an increase of 226. This num ber is larger than during any quarter of 1893 except the first, which showed considerable activity prior to the gen eral depression that came on last spring. Manufacturers' Record. . . Is this world truth can wait. She is used to it. Douglas Jerrold. Address makes opportunities;, the want of it gives them. Bovee. " The Chronicle is prepared to do all kinds of job printing. Kew York Weekly Tribune One ONLY X heDhlles Wasco County, The Gate City of the Inland Empire is situated at the head cf navigation on the Middle Columbia, and is a thriving, pros perous city. - ITS TERRITORY. It is the supply city for an extensive and rich agricultural and grazing country, its trade reaching as far south as Summer Lake, a distance of over two hundred miles. . The Largest Wool Market. The rich grazing country along the eastern slope of the Cas cades famishes pasture- for thousands of sheep, the wool from which finds market here. - The Dalles is the" largest original wool shipping point in America, about 5,000,000 pounds being shipped last year. ITS PRODUCTS. The salmon fisheries are the finest on the Columbia, yielding this year a revenue of thousands of dollars, which will be more than doubled in the near future. The products of the beautiful Klickitat valley find market hen-, nnd the country south and east hns this year filled the warehouses, and till available storage places t-o. overflowing witlr" their products. . . -ITS WEALTH. It is the richest city of its size on the coast and its money is scattered over and is lxjing used to develop more farming country -than is tributary to any other city in "Eastern Oregon. Its situation if 'i!:s irv-'s-icfi. Its climate delightful. Its pos il!iitios tii i ::!-. :r. rpsu'irccs unlimited. And on these " .!1IT vfitf - ..I,.- -t ,1. : , J. F. FORD, Evangelist, Of Des. Moines, Iowa, writes under date 01 March 23, 1893: S. B. Mid. Mfg. Co., Dufur, Oregon. Gentlemen : - On arriving home last week, I found all well and anxiously awaiting. Our little girl, eight and one-half years old, who had wasted away to 38 pounds, is now well, strong and vigorous, and well fleshed up. S. B. Cough Cure has done its work well. Both of the children like it. Your S. B. Cough Cure has cured and kept away all hoarseness from me. So give it to every one, with greetings for all. Wishing you prosperity, we are . Yours, Mb. & Man. J. F. Ford. If you wish to feel fresh and cheerful, and ready for the Spring"g wort, cleanse your system with the Headache and Liver Cure, by taking two o? three doses each week. Bold under a positive guarantee. SO centB per bottle by ail druggists. COPYRIGHTS. CAN I OBTAIN A PATENT ? For a prompt answer and an honest opinion, write to WUNN &: CO., who have had nearly fifty years' experience in the patent business. Communica tions strictly confidential. A Handbook of In formation concerning Patents' and bow to ob tain them sent free. Also a catalogue of mwimn. leal and scientific books sent free. Patents taken through Hunn ft Co. receive special notice in the Scientific American, and thus are brought widely before the public wttb- out cost to the inventor. This splendid paper, issued weekly, elegantly illustrated, has by far tbe largest circulation of any scientific work in too world. S3 a year. Sample copies sent free. Building Edition, monthly, Si.50 a year. Single copies. "Zri cents. Kverr number contains beau tiful plates, in colors, and photographs of new bouses, with plans, enabling builders to show the latestdeslgns and secure contracts. Address MOBS & CO. Nsw YOUK. 361 Bboaswat. House Moving! Andrew Velarde IS prepared to do any and all kinds of work in his line at - reasonable figures. . Has the , largest honse moving outfit in Eastern Oregon. e Address P.O.Box 181.The Dalles " : .''!.- 3? "2Te?a,:Ey - $1.75. Oregon, "The Regulator Line" Tie Dalles, Portland and Astoria Navigation Co. THROUGH rreioni anti Fassenrjer Line Through - Daily Trips (Sundays "ex cepted) between The Dalles and Port land. Steamer Regulator leaves The Dalles at 7 a.m., connecting at the Cas cade Locks with Steamer Dalles City. Steamer Dalles City leaves Portland (Yamhill St. dock) at 6 a. m., connect ing with Steamer Regulator for The Dalles. (- ' PASSENGER KATES. One way $2 .00 Round trip 3.00 Freight Rates Greatly Reduced. All freight, except car lots, will be brought through, with out delay at Cascades. Shipments for Portland received at any time day or night. Shipments for way landings mnst be delivered before 5 p. m. Live stock shipments solicted. Call on or address, W. C. ALLAWAY, . - Ganenl Aftnb B. F. LAUGH LIN, General Manager. THE-DALLES. OREGON PHOTOGRAPHER. Chapman Block, The Dalles, Oregon. I have taken 11 first prizes. THE CHRONICLE was established for the ex press purpose of faithfully representing The Dalles 7 and the surrounding country, and the satisfying ' effect of its mission is everywhere apparent. It now leads all other publications in Wasco, Sher- , man, Gilliam,'a large part of Qrook, Morrow and Grant counties, as well as Klickitat and other re- gions north of The Dalles, hence it is the best medium for advertisers in the Inland Empire. The Daily Chronicle is published every eve ning in the week Sundays excepted at .$6.00 per annum. The. Weekly Chronicle on Fridays of : each week at $1.50 per annum'. For advertising rates, subscriptions, etc., address TtHE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO., Tlxe Dalles, Oreson. FIRST CAN BE 0 i CHR ONI CLE OFFICE treasonably I'Tiere is a tide in the affairs leads on to fortune" The poet unquestionably had reference to the Ctti-Oi Sal .at.CRANDALL Who are selling those goods MIOWEUiACH BRICK. THOSE WHO WISH Glass, Lime, Cement, PLASTER, LATH. Pietcife : Ffarjies, -8CCH AS- Shafting, Pulleys, Belting, Engine and Boiler, CALL. AND SEE ZEE. G-iLiEiLsrnsr. Caveats, mad Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat ent Dusiness conducted lor Moderate fees. and we can secure patent in less tune than those remote from Washington. - Send model, drawing or photo., -with descrip tion. We advise, if oaten table or not. free of cnargc uur ice not aue tin patent is secured. A Piannrr. "How to Obtain Patents." with cost of same in tbe U. S. and foreign countries sent tree. Address, ' C.A.SRIOW&CO. Opr. Patent-Office. Washington, d. C.y MEM1IS CLKSS k m iff HAD AT THE ' Ruinous Rates. of men which, taken at its Jtooa & BUR GET'S, out. at ureatly-reduced - TTNTOX ST. rates. John Pashek, Tie Merchant Tailor, 78 Court Stfcat, . Next door to Wasco San Office. ITSHasi Just received the latest styles in Suitings for Gentlemen, and hs a large assortment of Foreign and Amer ican Cloths, which- he eau finish To Order tor .. those that favor him. Cleaning and Repairing a Specialty. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION; . 1 Cork ' Land Offick, The Dalles, Or., May 11, 1894. j Complaint having been entered at this office by Johann G. Fischer against the heirs at law of t William M. Murphy, deceased, for abandoning -his Homestead Entry, No. 4371. dated October 12, 1892, upon the tiU BEJ4, and NH 8W, 8ae i 31, Tp 1 N, R 10 , In Wasco county, Oregon, wKh "-3 a view to the cancellation of said entry: the said .parties are hereby summoned to appear at The Dalles, Oregon, on the 14th day of July. . 1894, at 9 o'clock A. M., to respond and furnish, testimony concerning said alleged abandon ment. - JOHN W. LEWIS, . June 9 Register. FOR SAIiE OR TRADE -. A FINE IMPORTED - French Perclieroii Stallion, Weight in good flesh 1,506 pounds, and Sure Foal - Getter. Wili sell for cash or notes with -approved security, or will trade . for horses or catte. . Address: Kerr & Buckley, Grass Valley, Or.