-1 TRUANT" MOLLY. Tlw winds nave lulled the shadows to sleep. The cow cum heme tang ago, Tbe thing! of day strange alienee keep , Why does that child linger aot MMllng hrr eyes from the setting son ' Tbe mother stands by the Kate, Watching long (or tbe truant one; . Oh 1 where does she stay so latet Has she wandered on where the swamp flow era blow, Down by the gliding stream? Hark I was that a faint "Hello T" ' ' No. naught but the loon's weird i Has she slipped on those dank, dark mosses On the cliffs where the tall pines grow. tod for the green, slimy waters Of those treacherous bogs below? May, hush ye, timorous mother; Thy maiden is safe and sound; ' Xo deep, dark waters smother. Or the lithe, willowy form surround. She is down at the foot of the meadow, There at tbe end of the lane, 4slring a daisy the question Whether her love lores back agata. , And Jack fs bending beside her. Down there amid the rye - Two curly heads near together To see that the daisy don't lie, -Beary W. Bail in New England Magazine. A LOVE STOBY. 1 cat spinning at my little wheel in "fibs ran, for the antumn day was cold, jrben I heard some one whistling, and. looking up, there was young Squire Turner, with his arms folded on the gate, looking over. When he canght my eye he laughed, 1 blushed, and 1 rase and made him a courtesy. He was a handsome gentleman, the quire, and the hand from which he polled the glove shimmered in the sun with pearls and diamonds, and he was bonny to loook at with his hair like spun (old in the October sunlight. -' When 1 conrtesied he bowed, making Ins cnrls dance over his shoulders, and aaad he: "Tve spoiled one pretty picture that I could have looked at all day, bat Tre made another as pretty, so TO not grieve. May I come in?" ' 1 ' "And welcome, sir,'' said 1, and I set m chair, for he was' grandfather land lord; bnt for all that 1 ' felt iincomfort--jtble, for 1 was not need to fine company. He talked away, paying tne more com pliments than 1 was used to, for grand nether, ' who brought me up, said, Handsome is as handsome does," and "Beauty is but skin deep.' Since Vm telling the story Fll tell the truth. 1 had done wrong about one thing. Neither of the old folks knew that I wore Evan Locke's ring in my bosom, or that we'd taken a vow to each wftlker beside the hawthorn that grew in the church lane. I never meant to de eeive, but grannie was old and a little 4iard. and that love of mine was such a weet secret. Besides, money seems to ntweigb all else when people have trnjggled all their lives through to torn a penny, and they knew - Evan was a fjoor, straggling young surgeon. 1 thought I'd wait a while until 1 could wee ten the news with the fact that he'd began to make his fortune. Grannie came in from the dairy five minutes after' the squire was gone and he had been there. I didn't tell f his fine speeches, but there was a keyhole to the door she came through mad I have a guess she heard them. That night we had something else to think of. Misfortunes had come upon grandfather; bat 1 didn't foresee that 'when the half year's rent should come 4ae not a penny to pay it with would be 4ocmd. All this time Evan Locke and 1 had Wen as fond as ever of each other, and be came as often as before to talk with grandpa on the winter nights; and still very little while pur young landlord. Squire Turner, would drop in and sit in fcia lazy way and watch me knit or spin." Once or twice he was flushed with wine and over bold, for he tried to kiss me. Sat squire or no, I boxed his ears for his jwuna, and no softer than I could help either. 1 could not help his coming, nor help eedng him when he came, and I did not deserve that Evan should be angry with ane. But he was. Eh. so" high and mighty, and spoke as though one like ' the squire could mean no good by com ing to so poor a place as the schoolmas ter's. He made me angry and 1 spoke up. ' "For that matter, the squire would be glad to have me promise to marry him," said L "Hethinksmore of me than" "May be you like him better!" said ..Evan. ' v I don't say that," ' replied L "But "bad temper and jealousy scarce ever' make me over fond of another. I pray J may never have a husband who will cold me." For he had "been scolding me. No other name for it ' Well, Evan was wroth with me and 1 "with him not ' heart deep, , though; 1 thought and I did not see brim for more than a- week. 1 was troubled much, though. I knew he would pome round again, and mayhap ask my pardon:' For before you are wed you can bring your lover to his senses. , So I did not fret after Evan's absence, nor quite snub Squire Turner, who liked me more than ever.- But" one "night grandfather came in, and shutting the oor. Blood between grandmamma and -ane, looking at me, and so strasgely that both grew frightened. . At last he te: - . . Tve been -to the squire's," said he. - "Tor the first time I had to tell him that 3 could not pay the rent when due." 1 opened my lips. Grandmaima's .-Stand covered them. ' Grandpa drew me to him. - "Thou'rt young,' lass,"' said he, "and they are right who call thee pretty. "Child could'st like the squire well - nough to wed him' "Eru" cned grandma. . "Sure, you're aot wandering . "Squire Turner asked me for this lass ot ours to-night. Of all women in the - - -world there is but one he loves as he hould his wife, and that is our Agatha. "I dreamt of golden rings and white -.noses on Christmas ere," cried grannie. I knew the lass would be lucky." But I put my head on grandfather! shoulder and hid my face. Th truth must out, I knew. A "Wilt have him and be a rich lady?" said grandpa. And when he had waited for ail an swer I burst out with "No" and a sob together. "she s frightened," said grand mam ma. "Nay, we must all wed once in our lives, my child," Then grandpa talked to me. He told me how poor they had grown, and how kind the squire .was, and I had but to marry him to make my grandparents free from debt and poverty their lives through. If 1 refused and vexed the squire heaven only knew what might happen. "She'll never ruin us," sobbed grand mamma. Ah! it was heard to bear bitter hard: but now there was no help for it. I took the ring from my bosom and laid it on my palm, and told them it was Evan Locke's and that I had plighted my troth to him. And grandmamma called me a deceitful wench, and grandfather looked as though his heart would break. Oh. I would have done anything for them anything but give up my true love. . That night I kissed his ring and prayed heaven that he might love me always. In the morning it was gone, ribbon and all, from my neck. I looked for it high and low, but found no sign of it. -And I be gan to fear the loss of that dear ring was a sign that I would never marry Evan Locke. ; ' ' The days passed on, and he never came near me. ' "Oh, it was cruel in him," I thought, "to hold such anger for a hasty word he had provoked, when 1 spoke it that he must know I loved him so." And grandma would scarcely look at me (I know why now), and grandpa sighed and moaned and talked of the work bouse. And I thought 1 should dio of grief among them. One day . grandma said to me, "It seems that your sweetheart is not over fond of you. nor over anxious to see you. "Why not?" said L "Where has he been this month back?" asked grandma. "Busy, doubtless," said L with a smile, though I thought my heart would burst. "You're going with him, maybe." "Where?" said L She went to the kitchen door and beckoned in a woman who sat .there Dame Coombs, who had come over with eggs. "I heard you rightly," she said. "You told me Evan Locke and his mother were making ready for a voyage." ' "They re going to Canada. . My son, a carpenter and a good one, though I say it made the doctor a box for his things. The old lady dreads the new country. but she goes for the doctor's sake. There's money to be made there." "I told you so," said grandmother. "I don't believe it," said L "They've sold the house and gone to Liverpool to take ship; and you may find the truth for yourself, if you choose to take the trouble," said Dame Coombs. "I'm no chatterbox, to tell falsehoods about my neighbors." '" And still I would not believe it' until I had walked across the moor and had seen the shutters fast closed and 'the door barred, and not a sign of life about the place. Then I gave up hope. 1 went home all pale and trembling, and sat down at grandmamma's knee. "It's true," said L "And for the sake of so false a lad you'll see your grandfather ruined and break bis heart, and leave me, that have nursed you from a babe, a widow." I looked at' her as she sobbed, and I found strength to say: "Give me to whom you will then, since my own love does not want me." And then I crept up stairs and sat down on my bedside, weak as though I had fainted. I would - have thanked heaven for forge tfulness just then, but it wouldn't come. The next day Squire Turner was in the parlor as my accepted lover. How pleased he was, and how the color came back into grandfather's old face! And grannie grew so proud and kind, and all the house- was aglow, and only I sad. But I couldn't forget Evan Evan whom I had loved so sailing away from me without a word. 1 suppose they all saw I looked sad. The ' squire talked of my health, and would make me ride with him over the moors for strength. - The old folks said nothing. They knew what ailed ' me; only our little Scotch maid seemed to think there was aught wrong. Once she said to me: "What ails ye, miss? Your eye'is dull and your cheek' is pale, and your braw grand lover canna make ye smile; ye are na that ill, either." ' -; . ..'No,.I am well enough," said I. She looked at me wistfully; ' ' '.-v. . "Gin ye'd tell me your all, I might tell ye a cure," she said. . : . .But there was no cure for, me in this world, and I couldn't- open my heart to simple Jennie. . So the - days- rolled by, and. I was close on my marriage eve, and grannie and Dorothy Plume - were busy with my -wedding robes. I wished it were my shroud they were .working at instead. And one night the pain ii my heart grew too great, and I went out among the purple heather on the moor, and there knelt down under the stars and prayed to be taken from the world, "for how can I live without Evan?" I said. - I spoke the words aloud, and then started up in affright, for there at my side was an elfish little figure, and 1 heard a cry that at first I scarce thought earthly. Yet it was but Scotch Jennie, who had followed me. "Why do ye call for your true love now?" she said; "ye sent him fra ye for sake o' the young squire." "How dare you follow and watch me?" But she caught my sleeve. "Dinna be vexed," she said. ' "Just bide a wee, and answer what I spoer. If s for love of you, for I've seen ye wfcste like the snaw wreath in the sun sin the squire woed ye. Was it your will the lad that loved the ground ye trod on nhould have his ring again?" : : "What do you mean?" said L "m speak gin I lose my place," said Jennie. "I rode with the mistress to young Dr. Locke's place 'past the moor, and there she lighted and gave him a ring, and what she said I know not, but it turned him the tint o' death, and said he, 'There's na a drop o' true bluid in a woman 'gin she is false.' And he turned to the wall and covered his eyes, an' your grannie rode home. There 'tis all I ken wullitdo?" "Ay, Jennie," said I, 'heaven bless your , And had 1 wings on my feet I could not have come to the cottage door sooner. I stood before my grandmother, trem bling and white, and I said: "Oh, don't tell me, grannie, you have cheated me and robbed me of my true love by a lie. Did you steal the troth ring from my neck and give it back to Evan, as if from me? You Tve loved and honored my life long" She turned scarlet. "True love!" said she, "you've but one true love new Squire Turner." "You have done itl" I cried. "It's written on your face." And she looked down at that and fell to weeping.. "My own true love was breaking his heart," she said. . "My husband and I had loved for forty years. I did it to save him. Could 1 let a girl's fancy, worth nothing, stand in my way, and see him a beggar in his old age? Oh, girl, girl!" . - And then I fell down at her feet like a stone. I knew nothing for an hour cr more; but then, when I was better, and fetch my hood and cloak and her own and come with me, and away I went across the moor in the starlight to where the hall windows were ablaze with light, and asked the housekeeper to let me see the 6quire. She stared at me for my boldness no wonder but called him. So in a moment he stood before me in his evening dress, with his cheeks flushed and his eyes bright, and led me into a little room and seated me. : "Agatha, my love, I hope no mis chance brings you here." But I stopped him. "Not your love. Squire Turner," I said. "I thank you for thinking so well of me. but after all that has passed I" I could say no more. He took my hand. "Have . I offended you, Agatha?" he said. -"Not you. The offense the guilt oh, I have been sorely cheated!" And all I could do was to sob.' At last strength came to me. I went back to the first and told him all how we had been plighted to each other, wait ing only for better prospects to be wed, and how, when he honored me by an offer of bis hand,-1 angered my grand mother by owning to the truth, and of the ring : grannie had stolen from my breast and the false message that had been sent my promised husband from me. : - - "And though I never see Evan Locke again," said I, "still I can never be an other man's true love, for I am his until I die." . ..... ..-,' - - . . Then as 1 looked all the rich color faded out of the squire's face, and I saw the sight we seldom see more than once in a lifetime a strong young man in tears. - At last he arose and came to me. "My little Agatha never loved me," he said. "Ah, me! the news is bad 1 thought she did. This comes of vanity." "Many a higher and fairer have hearts to give, l said. "Mine was. gone ere you saw me." And then, kind and gentle, as though I had not grieved him, he gave me his arm and saw me across the moor, and at the gate paused and whispered: "Be at rest, Agatha. The Golden George has not sailed yet."' I liked him better than I had ever done before that night when I -told grannie that I would never wed him. Eh! but he was. fit to be a king the grandest, kindest, best of living men, who rode away with the break of the morrow and never stopped till be reached Liverpool and found Evan Locke just ready to set foot upon the Golden George, and told him a tale that made his heart light and sent him back to me. Heaven bless him! And who was it that sent old grand father the deed of gift that made the cottage his own, and who spoke a kind word to the gentry for young Dr. Locke that helped him into practice? . Still no one but Squire Turner, whom we taught our children to pray for every night: For .we were married, and in a few years had boys, and girls at our knees; and when tbe eldest was nigh two, the thing I. needed to make me quite happy hap-pened- and from far over the sea; where he had been three twelvemonths, came our squire with the bonniest lady that ever - blushed beside him, and the hall had a mistress at last a mistress who loved the squire as I loved Evan,' Eh! but it's an old story. She that 1 remembered . a girl I saw in her coffin, withered and old.' And then they opened the vault where the squire had slept ten years - to put her. beside him; and Tve nothing left of Evan, my life and my love, but his memory, and it seems as if every hope and dream of joy I ever had was put away- under tombstones. - And even the Golden George, the great strong ship that would have borne my- dear from me, has moldered away at the bot tom of the sea. And I think my wed-' ding ring is like to outlast us all, for L have it yet, and I shall be 90 to-morrow. Ninety! It's a good old age, and it can't be long now before I meet Evan and the rest in heaven. -Gentleman's Magazine. Sagmr Cane Juice. A horse treadmill grinding sugar-cane and pressing out the juice for sale to passers by is an odd feature of the way side in Tampa, Fla., and one or two other southern cities. The liquid sells for a nickel a glass, and many people like it. It tastes insipid and sickish sweet to a northern palate. Exchange, j. J. M. HUNTINGTON fe CO. flbstraeters, Heal Estate and Insurance Agents. Abstracts of, and Information Concern--ingLand Titles on Short Notice. Land for Sale and Houses to Rent. Parties Looking for Homes in COUNTRY OR CITY, OB IN SEARCH OF . Bu0iiB0 Location, Should Call on or Write to us. ' : Agents for a Full Line of ' Leaiini Fire Insurance Companies, And Will. Write Insurance for on ail T--F!f!-r-i?. a -Fn-.-Ri daisies. Correspondence Solicited. All Letters Promptly Answered. Call on or Address, J. M. HUNTINGTON & CO. Opera House Block, The Dalles, Or. JAMES WHITE, Has Opened a Xj-vlxxoXi Ootixiter, In Connection With his Fruit Stand and Will Serve Hot Coffee, Ham Sandwich, Pigs' Feet, and Fresh Oysters. Convenient to the Passenger Depot. On Second St., near corner of Madison. Also a - Branch Bakery, California Orange Cider, and the Best Apple Cider. If you want a good lunch, give me a call, . ' Open all Night C. N. THORNBURY, T. A. HUDSON, Late Kec. U. 8. Land Office. Notary Public. THDRHBURY & HUDSOH. ROOMS 8 and 9 LAND OFFICE BUILDING, PoHtoffioe Box 325, THE DALLES, OR. Filings, Contests, And all other Business in the C. S. Land Office Promptly Attended to. We have ordered Blanks for Filings, Entries and the purchase of Railroad Lands under the recent Forfeiture Act, which we will have, and advise the pub lic at the earliest date when such entries can be made. Look for advertisement in this paper. Thornburv & Hudson. Health is Wealth ! DBj E. C. West's Nerve akb Brain Treat ment, 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 sanitv and leadine to miserv. riwiiv and Hnt-i, Premature Old Age; Barrenness, Loss of Poweifc in eairer sex, mvoiuniary Losses ana Spermat orrhoea caused by over exertion of the brain, self abuse or over indulgence. Each box contains one month's treatment. 11.00 a box, or six boxes for 15.00, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price. "VVK GUARANTEE SIX BOXES To cure any case. With each order received by us f or six boxes, accompanied by $o.00, we will send the purchaser our written guarantee to re fund the-money if the treatment does not effect a cure. Guarantees issued only by BtAKBLEY Sc HOUGHTON, Prescription Druggists, 175 Second St. Tbe Dalles, Or. $500 Reward! We will pay the above reward for anv case of Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, In digestion, Constipation or Costiveness we cannot cure with West's Vegetable Liver 1'fHs, 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, 25 cents. Beware of counterfeits and imi tations. The genuine manufactured only by THE JOHN C..WFST COMPANY, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, - i BLAKELIT HOUGHTON, . Prescription Druggists, 175 Second St. The Dalles, Or. 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 support. The four pages of six columns each, will be issued every evening, except Sunday, and will be delivered in the city, or sent by mail for the moderate sum of fifty cents a month. Its Objects will be to advertise the resources of the city, and adjacent country, to assist in developing our industries, in 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 Eastern Oregon. The paper, both daily and weekly, will be independent in politics, and in its criticism of political matters, as in its handling of local affairs, it will be JUST. FAIR AND IMPARTIAL We will endeavor to give all the lo cal news, and we ask that your criticism of our object and course, be formed from the contents of the paper, and not from rash assertions of outside parties. For the benefit of our advertisers we shall print the first issue about 2,000 copies for free distribution, and shall print from time to time extra editions, so that the paper will reach every citi zen of "Wasco and adjacent counties. THE WEEKLY, sent to any address for $1.50 per year. It will contain from four to six eig52 column pages, and 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. course a generous Daily