MOONLIGHT. mutation of ths moonlit air. Meat dwy breath, the fragrance c Om brine, 91m waste of moving waters everywhere. Tba whispering ol wares a hnah divine 1 gnesof soft murmorinn dunk, to the tea's rim. The infinite, illimitable sky,. Wherein the great orb of the mucin on high 3 atUlnet dowu the quint deeps doth swim: SehoM the awful beauty of the night. The solemn tenderness, the peace profound. Tke mystery -Uod's glory in the light JkaA darkness both his voice in every sound! Be silent and behold where hand in hand Great Nature and great Art together standi ; Celia Thaxter in Century. DORA. Tfce night after his stepfather, Squire -Habited, whipped Harold Burr for a -thing he had not done. Harold ran away. JJo one knew it bat 1, and 1 was nobody. Sat I thonght as much of Harold as ever a human being could think of another. JLnu I knew that he was wronged, and 1 felt that Mrs. Robling had done a dread ful thing when she took Squire Halsted for her second husband, and let him rule aver, take possesion of her money, and ill use her handsome boy, 1 had had my share of it too, for while Mr. Bobling lived, and while she was a "widow 1 was like a daughter of the botute. But no sooner had she come back lrom her honeymoon trip than all that ms altered. The squire looked at me oldly, and I heard him ask Mrs. Hal sted who I was. Her mother died when she was born," Mrs. Halsted said, "and 1 took the baby . to my own nursery, where Harold lay in the cradle." ''More fool yon. my dear." said the quire 'The father went away," said Mrs. "Halsted. "and was lost ' at sea so they amid and 1 kept the little girl.'' 'Ton must remember that she will . seed to earn her own ' bread," said the quire. - "She is not a lady. Let the - servants keep her in their part of the house and teach her her duties as wait- Oh. Mr. Halsted r cried the bride. 1 cannot do that." "My dear," said Mr. Halsted. "I am master here.' The poor lady was helpless. She had so longer any control of her own money. , X was six years old, Harold the same age. and a terrible life we had had of it. ', 1 was very well used in the kitchen, but 1 felt cast down and degraded. I wore Ag crash aprons that covered me from head to foot, instead of my pretty mus lin and silk dresses. 1 was delicate, and waiting i hard work when your wrists are slender. Mrs. Halsted did all she could for me. used to hear her pleading with the sjuire to 4let her send me to a boarding . school to learn to be a teacher, but he called her a "little goose." and she fan cied him very wise. But for Harold 1 should never have . known anything, as after school he used V come to me and teach me what he hmd learned himself. - Cook would whisper: "That's right. Master Harold. It's a food deed you are doing. God spare ' ytra. 1 was never taught to rade me- aelf. on account of an evil minded step . father iv me own that pnt me to sarvice "before I could get schoolin. an' I know " toe loss." ouu not a HHrvimi im r wnnin navA 'waited in my place, for they said I was too small to carry dishes: but the cruel sjuire would have me come, in to make ore that he was obeyed. Mrs. Halstead really felt ' badly about it, 1 know) But two little girls came oon, and then a little boy. and soon she cared nothing for her own splendid boy. and why should she care for me? ' But 1 am wandering away from the 'aaorning when Harold Robling, just eighteen that day, walked down the gar den path in the gray morning light, and J with him. choking down my sobs. For mw the one being 1 loved was going away from me, perhaps forever. It was only 6 o'clock, and no one was up The grass was wet with dew. aad there were only a few pink streaks in the sky to tell that day was coming. We did not dare to speak until we got , -out of hearing of the house, but then I maid: "Oh, Harold, what will you do vith so money and no friends alone in the world?" many a young fellow has done the amine sort of thing." Harold said. "No nan with his limbs and senses need to starve, and 1 mean to make my fortune. 1 But I'd rather work in the trenches for lay daily bread than to live in Squire . Halstead's house, and with a mother he bas bewitched into doing what he wishes, whatever it may be. It was a crime to stake a servant of you, little sister. But remember, the moment I have power in my hands all that shall be altered. 1 will write to you, and you shall know just how I get on." But now . we had got to the wharf "where he was to take a little market boat to New- York, and 1 was obliged to leave him, for he did not want the quire to find out what he had done un til he was fairly out of reach, and then be put his arm about my waist . and .kissed me. 'Ooodby, little sister," he said, "good toy. Dora, my pet. Keep np a good heart and never forget to answer my letters." "JLnd he was off, and 1 went home weep ing as though my heart would break. There was a terrible time at the house when they found he was gone, and the quire swore he should never enter his doors, again. Bat the squire's daughters, who hated Harold as their father did. thouerh he was their own mother's child. aaid they were glad he was gone. And nly I remembered him, 1 think, very long. A weak woman was Mrs. Halsted. . and her husband had got her under hia hmtat The wnv Ka mnnftiml hpr h lis always made me think that there must be something in magnetism or hypno tism. She seemed to have lost her senses or to have grown mentally blind, and he Jtl her where he would. Just about this time I fell very ill. nd when I grew better the squire. 'knowing I was good at my needle, matU a Btfamstrese of me. I wu asluuned to say why, but it is because Hooked rather stylish and was called pretty, and so-4. many questions were asked me. by guests. As a seamstress I could stay in my npper room and work. I was so thankful for the change. Now I could read a little and be more to myself. I made the finery for the young ladies of the family, and no one troubled me. ' Once, indeed, a rich old gentlemau, having somehow got my story from good old cook, sought me out and made me a proposition of marriage, saying it was a shame that such an elegant woman should live as I did. But I thanked him and declined his offer. 1 was not un happy now, except that I pined for news of Harold, for in all these years no word had come from him none of those let ters he had promised. I felt sure he was not dead, and it was very natural that he should forget to write: but my heart had no rest. , He was twenty-six years old by this time, and in all that time much might have happened. My pillow was often wet with tears from thoughts of him fancies of what he had suffered, and longing to meet him, or only see him from afar but once again. At last news came. Mrs. . Halstead came running into my room wild with joy. "News of my boy!" she said, holding a letter toward me. "I thonght you had forgotten all about him. madam," I said. I was sorry the next moment, for she burst into tears and faltered through her sobs: "You don't know what it is to be the wife of a man who dominates your will! I never have forgotten or ceased to re gret other things." .Then she wiped her yea and said: "But, as far as Harold goes, it is all over. He has written to me, He is rich really rich. He has made a fortune' in California, and he is coming home to see me. He is in New York and will be here tomorrow. The squire is pleased; the girls are wild to 6ee him; his little brother is delighted." ' She ran out of the room again, look ing young and happy, and I sat down to my machine, swallowing a great lump that had risen in my throat. He had not written to me. Well, 1 was only a servant, and he was a rich man now. They were rejoicing in his coming for that reason the squire and his children. He was a very different person from the poor Harold Robling who went away. . "1 expect he will give us lots of pres ents." I heard one of the girls say. "An older brother who is rich is a great thing to have. We must pet him and make him good natured." "Oh, yes." said the other. "When girls have as stingy a father as we have a generous elder brother is a godsend." And I oh! if he returned in rags, begging his bread, I should have wel comed him. " I cared for him, not for his money. And if he had returned poor it was I to whom he would have written, I knew welL But 1 tried to put the self ish thoughts away and rejoice for hit, sake that he had . prospered, even if he had forgotten his little sister Dora. The morrow came. As 1 sat at my machine I heard the sounds .below that told he had arrived. I heard -bis mother cry out and the squire say heartily. "Welcome home, my . boyP and his sisters squeal and giggle after a way they had. Then the great drawing room doors were closed, 'shutting me out. I, who loved him so. dearly, went back to my room alone, uncared for, wretched! I felt as thongh my heart would break. I could no longer ' keep back my tears. Half an hour passed; then some one came to the door a servant who told me briefly that I was wanted in the par lor. Trembling, quivering, feeling as I had never" felt before, I obeyed the summons I opened the drawing room door. The squire stood before the fire, im portant as usual, one hand in the breast of his coat, the other waving toward me as he uttered these words: "Dora, I have sent for you because Master Harold has returned, and wishes to meet a faithful servant of the family." But before the words were out of his mouth, Harold, handsomer and larger, but the same for all that the very Har old that 1 knew1 rushed forward and took both my hands and bent down and kissed me. ' "1 told you. sir," he said, "that I wanted to see Dora the dearest being alive to me! Such words as you utter J cannot permit you to speak as though they were mine. You have never re ceived any of my letters, Dora, bnt I have guessed why." "I never have received a letter. Har old," I answered. '..- "So 1 thought," said he. . "We will not ask who kept them from you. 1 have no wish to quarrel with any one: but you were my only friend years when 1 went out into the world home less and penniless, and I have come now to ask you to share with me the,, heme that I can now offer to you." "Share your home, Harold?" cried the squire. "The girl is not your sister. It can't be done. It would .be improper!" "I am glad, sir, that the girl is not my sister," replied Harold, "for she is the girl I want for ' my wife; and here, before you all, I ask her for her heart and hand, and proud shall 1 be if she will give them to me." . ' . I could not answer, but he saw all I felt in my face, and led me away with him. There was no quarreling. People like the squire and his family never offend rich people, and I am the happiest wo man living. Mary Kyle Dallas in Fire aide Companion. Capture of s Whale oa the Essex Coast. A whale nearly fifty feet in length was captured in the River Crouch, near Burnham, Essex. The river is a mile wide, and the whale had become strand ed on the bank. ' Special trains conveyed thousands of people" to inspect the mon ster. It was seized by the customs offi cer and sold for seventeen pounds ster ling for exhibition purposes, r It is in tended to preserve the skeleton intact. HELPING A LITTLE. MOTHER. Hew York Sfutp Girls Interpret m Pi of Scripture Literally. It was on a cross street near Sixth ave nue that one of the human race was strag gling with bottomless courage against an overwhelmingly adverse Fate with a big F. This member of the human race was about three feet high and of the feminine gender, and the fate took the form of a great, fat two-year-old child dead asleep. . Where she had come from or how she had ever gotten away from there is more than I can guess, but when I first saw her she was staggering across the street under her impossible load, only to sink, help lessly overcome, on the curbstone. It was dark, a little after six in the evening, but the young ones had chanced to tumble un der a gas lamp. Jast then two young women came along; they had come out of the back entrance of one of the great shops on the avenue. Evidently, they were shop girls. - "Do Bee that poor young one with the baby!" cried one, as her eyes fell on the hapless pair. Just then the unconquera ble "young one" struggled to her feet and loaded up again. . "I say," . said the same speaker, "she can't carry that child. Wait a minute, sissy," and the two harried across the street. It was .easy in the gloom to keep in ear shot, and if ever eavesdropping is justifia ble is it not when it seems to promise a chance to see a better side of human nat ure than this sordid old world usually brings to the surface? "Where are you trying to gof" "You can't carry that child to save your life." The two spoke together. "I've carried him lots and lots of times," declared the mite in a voice divided be twee: defiance and misery. "Well, I guess he's gained five pounds since last week by the look of him, and a baby asleep like 'that always weighs a ton. Where do you liver" The mite murmured something about Second avenue. One of the girls whistled. It was very unladylike, bat I for one am willing that she should whistle whenever she pleases. She and the other one looked at each other a minute. - It'll be nine before we get home," said she, adding, "unless we take the Twenty-third street car one way." "We can't afford it; you know we can't. It won't hurt us to lose our dinner. They'll save us something to eat." The mite began trying to gather the young Jumbo off the pavement again. "Hullo wait we'll carry him for you." Both were speaking, and both leaned over to pick him up. "Let me take him first," said the girl that whistled and that had. first spied the pair. ' "Whew, what a loadl You've no idea," aid she, and the queer quartet started off, the mite trotting along with a watchful eye cocked on the baby, but entering now into friendly explanations. "He just would go to sleep all at once," I heard her say. I had not heard the Scripture about bearing one another's burdens quoted dar ing the whole episode, but some way I felt as if I had been listening to a large and elo quent sermon thereon. New York Herald. Got Even with Hint. "Kin I have this seat, misterf" said a grizzly bearded, frowsy haired, long limbed man as he wandered up the rear car look ing for a place to alight. The sour faced individual in the Beat looked at him a moment and snapped: "No, you can't have it; it belongs to the railroad company; you may occupy it." The frowsy headed man looked dam founded, but slid into the seat. - "D'you objeck to my smokin'f" inquired the lean man. "Wouldn't make a continental differ ence if I did: this is the smoker." aaid the crank. The frowsy haired man did not reply to this, but fired up his favorite brand of the weed. "Party brisk "nd stormy day, ain't itr" put in the lean man. The crank peered at him a moment, "Hah! that's nothing new." he replied. "Every idiot knows that." This seemed to nonplus the lean man, and he gave up bis attempt to be social. It was easily seen that this lean man was con siderably flustered at the rebuff be had re ceived. He seemed to be willing to be eliminated from the earth. Several passengers bad heard the' conversation and watched de velopments eagerly. They came. , After the thin, lanky man and the crank had ridden several miles in silence the former revived and began a search in his vest pocket. He pulled out a cigar and said: ' "Hev' a seegarf".. The crank put forth his hand to take it, and the thin man immediately replaced it in his pocket with a grin. "No ye don 'tl" he exclaimed. . The passengers grinned, and some even smote their knees with their nalms and laughed heartily. The Jean man then gave it to the crank '"in the neck" as follows: ' "You are too confounded cranky to ex ist. Ef you was out in oar section they'd White Cap you and learn you manners. You can't smoke on met Ta, ta." - -' With a wave of his hand, betokening both triumph and scorn, the lean man made his escape from the seat and his exit from the car. Albany Argus. - Freight Elevator Accident. Few people are aware how many persons are yearly injured on freight and passen ger elevators. During the past year in Boston thirty-eight individuals were hurt or killed in elevator accidents, and other parte of the state swelled this number suf ficiently to make it average nearly one each week. The largest number of these acci dents have occurred on freight elevators, and mainly through the carelessness of the persons injured. Captain Damrell, in hia report imputes the cause of so many acci dents to the indiscriminate use of the freight elevator. Both he and Chief Wade, of the state district police, favor legislation by which freight elevators should be put in charge of competent persons, who alone shdll be authorized to run them. In the city of Boston there are 1,700 freight ele vators, and the number is constantly In creasing. Boston Transcript. Tne Unit ef the ink. By the Arabs this speech is put into the locust's mouth-. "We are the army of the great God, and we lay ninety-nine eggs; were the hundredth pat forth the worlH would be oars." According to the state ment of these people, the locust has the head of the horse, the horns of the stag, the eyes of the elephant, the neck of the ox, the breast of the lion, the body of the scorpion, the hip of the camel, the legs of the stork, the wings of the eagle and the tail of the dragon. A common belief in this country is that the wing of the insect Is always marked with a letter W, portend ing war, or the letter P, promising pram Interview in Washtogten Star. & KII1ERSLT, WMesale and Retail Drafts. -DEALERS IN- Fine Imported,1 Key West and Domestic CIGAES. PAINT Now is the time to paint your house and if you wish to get the best quality and a fine color use the ' v Sherwin, Williams Cos Paint. V For those wiwhing to see the quality and color of the above paint we call their attention to the residence of S. L.. Brooks, Judge Bennett, Smith Frencli and others painted by Paul Kreft. Snipes & Kinersly are agents for the above paint for The Dalles, Or. Don't Forget the E0SI EI1D SJLOOJl, MacDonali Bros., Props. THE BEST OF Wines, Liquors and Cigars ALWAYS ON HAND. C. E. BiAFD (JO., Real Estate, Insaranee, and Loan AGENCY. Opera House Bloek,3d St. Chas. Stubling, rBOFKIETOB OF THE .. New Vogt Block, Second St , . - ' WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Liquor v Dealer, MILWAUKEE BEER ON DRAUGHT. Health is Wealth ! " Dr.' e: C. West's Nerve akb Bbain Treat ment, a guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dizzi- Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by the use wi wwuyior uiducco, . wuiceiuiness, Mental de pression, Softening of the Brain, resulting in in sanity and lentil In? to tnlserv. derav ni1 ilmth. Premature Old Age, Barrenness, Loss of Power iu eiiuer sex, involuntary Losses and Spermat orrhoea caused bv over exertion nf th brain. lf- abuse or over indulgence. Each box contains one montn-s treatment. f 1.00 a box, or six boxes for $5.00, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price. WE Gl'AKANTK K SIX BOXES i u cure any case. v ltn eacn order received by us for six boxes, accompanied by 6.00, 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 BLAKELEV t HOUGHTON, Prescription Druggists, 175 Second St. ' The Dalles, Or. YOU" NJflED BUT ASK - - Trb 8. B. EiiDicEl AMD Livkb. Curb taken according to directions will keep your Blood, Liver and Kidneys in good order. Tai B. B. Cough Cork for Colds, Coughs aad Croup, in connection with the Headache Cure, is as near perfect as anything known. Tbb 6. B. Alpha Pain Cork for internal and external use, in Neuralgia, Toothache, Cramp Colio and Cholera Morbus, is unsurpassed. They are well liked wherever known. Manufactured t Dufnr, Oregon. . .Vat sale by all druggists H w tub Dalles 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 it 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 1 by mail for the moderate sum of fiftj 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 hew channels for our trade, in securing an open river, and in, helping THE DALLES to take her prop er Tosition as the '. . I Rarlin? fiitv nf VMM...q WIS. J wi esUWlwl II WIUjUlll 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. THE WEEKLY, sent to any address for $1.50 per year. It will contain from four to six eight 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. THE DALLES. The Grate City of the Inland Empire is situated at the head of navigation on the Middle Columbia, and is a thriving, prosperous city. ITS TERRITORY. It is the supply city for an extensive and rich agri cultural an grazing country, its trade reaching as. far south as Summer Lake, a distance of over frwc hundred miles. THE LARGEST WOOL MARKET. The rich grazing country along the eastern slqpe of the the Cascades furnishes 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. v ITS PRODUCTS. The salmon fisheries are the finest on the Columbia, yielding this year a revenue of $1,500,000 -which can and -will be more than doubled in the near future. ? The products of the beautiful Tfiickital valley find market here, and the country south and east has this year filled the -warehouses, and all available storage places to overflowing -with their products. 1 . ITS WEALTH - . It is the richest city of its size on the coast, aifjd its money is scattered over and is being used to develop, more farming country than is tributary to any other city in Eastern Oregon. Its situation is unsurpassed! Its climate delight ful! Its possibilities incalculable! Its resources un limited! And on these corner stones she stands. GfironiciB course a generous Fastprn Drpomn Daily