- S0MG.'4F POLLY. PvUj. fully, the kettle sings. .' TTaere's a pair of steam like fairy winga. A fragrance of Oolong stealing: Dainty china coallr art. -, ;'-' Vraile as rraileat of ugKabell, yet ' StrooB ia my bouKeuife's dealing. ' It's bey far Ichuit. and ho for teal "' Old reminiscences brought to ma Over lur lea with Poll v. Tnere's the fragment of noun when hearts were young. A trembling minor never sans. - Hashed In lar from Polly. War Poll) and I. ay. hey for toast, ' Ho for tha tea, too. who ran boast. , Of youth and love forever! ? Let broken heart and hint of wrong find cbenrier note in the kettle's sons. Btrivns with brave endeavor. Bo, over the crisp brown toaat for two, . And tea in the old cape quaint and blue, Heigbo for bygone Pollyl Though yellowest hair has turned to white. Old songs to minor, yet tonight We love on. 1 and Polly! Kate Luolnm in Travelers Record. A PRESSED ROSE Grace Hetherton was happy: that is. young; Grace was. - There was an old Unoe Hetherton too. Annt and niece they were, one nearly sixty, the other just turned twenty. And the young unuse was happy that summer evening tor the same reason that Annt Grace had been happy forty years before. ' She was going to marry Archie Armitaxe. i'tt Por years before Archie Armitage and urace Uetuerton bad been betrothed. He was a young Englishman, and a short time before the day fixed for the wed ttng he had been called home by the sudden death of his father, leaving Grace to wait on this side the water for hla speedy, safe return. But that never came. The ship on. which he to-fpas-age for England never axrivedSi port. Grace waited and hoped on. "He said -ho would come: he will come." she said. v . -Sttlatber- arid mother and her brother i i i. i i . j i . . wua uuwu auu waiieu wi lii uer, out.no tidings came. Until all chance for his xeturn was past, they did not tell ber that he was dead; that he had been drowned at sea. Then, at last, they put away the bridal finery. But still Grace hoped and waited. Her clouded brain held fixedly to the one idea; her lover would return. The Months grew into years, bnt still every night she looked long and anxiously oown the drive, and said. "If not to night, he will come tomorrow." The father died: John brought a wife -into the big, ram bung house. Grace's Hair turned ft-otn brown to gray, from gray to snowy white: wrinkles came into her sweet, wistful face: nephews ana nieces grew up about her: but stall she looked out from her rooms at the end of the wing and said, "He may come tomorrow." About the country she oame to be spoken of as "'poor old Miss Hetherton." Visitors to the house saw her sometimes, and she explained to them that she was merely "staying with John till Archie came back.' Now, after forty years, another Grace Hetherton was to marry another Archie Armitage. John's daughter, Gracie, had suet the second Archie while traveling -abroad. He was the son of the drowned man's brother, and in face and figure, in voice and bearing, was remarkably like - his ancle. Gracie walked up and down in the sweet smelling J une twilight, from the ifV piazza to the gate and back again. She was waiting for Archie. He bad but re cently come from England, and was soon ts take her back with him. his bride. As she paced to and fro. she caught the gleam uf light from her aunt's win dows in the old wing. It occurred to c ber to go and sit there with the old lady -anti Archie came. She had told Aunt Grace some time before of her engage ment, but when she gave her lover's -name, the gentle voice had checked her. "Do not talk nonsense, child, dear! Archie A mintage is coming over sea, true enough. 1 have been waiting for him. Yon must not claim him for your sweetheart, uiy dear Gracie." That had ended the matter. Aunt Grace dismiss ed the subjevt as nonsense, and was not to be reasoned out of it. So when the young Archi had come for his first visit to the little town he had not been pre sented to the mistress of the pretty frround floor rooms in the old wing of the Hetherton mansion. Gracie crossed the lawn and mounted the short flight . of steps to her aunt's door, almost bidden by climbing roses full of bloom. She paused there and looked in. sil-ntly In the center of the cozy room her aunt sat reading by a shaded lamp, her lavender silk dress fall ing about her in full folds. All her sur roundings tcld of a love for the beauti ful Choice ehgravings and etchings hung on the walls. A great jar of old -fashioi.ed single white roses stood upon the otn piano. The shaded lamp cast a meliow, softened light over every thing. The corners were but half de fined. Gracie was about to go in when she heard the click of the gate and quick footsteps coming up the path. Then ."he aaw Archie walking toward her. He -had seen her white dress crossing-the lawn and had followed. "I'll hide from him behind the roses -and let him hunt, she thought, and -quickly drew back at the side of the -tepa The young man came up the steps. -Grace!" he called; "Gracer" The figure in the room reading by the haded lamp turned at the voice. She rose, and for one trembling, uncertain ' moment stood still. Then, with , the . iovelight in ber eyes, with arms out--tretched. with the smile of her happy sjirlbood upon her face, she moved eagerly toward the door. . There stood the young man, pausing on the thres-' -hold, looking in. "Archie!" the gentle voice faltered. "Archie Yon have come yon have - comer The young man understood. To the old lady before him he was the absent lover returned. He came into the room, put his arm about her and kissed her. The young girl understood. She re tmained silent behind the roses, and "Watohed the pair sit down together on the prim, old fashioned sofa, the face of ine woman mummed with joy. her eyi looking tenderly into those of the nuu. her hands placed caressingly on his shoul ders, hi her mind the passing years bad brought no thought of change in him she loved: she had watched for the same stalwart young figure, the saqie snnny face she had parted from. - . Archia quickly took jn the situatk-i. and felt the cruelty of undeceiving ber. Better to Ie;tve her shattered mind test firm in the belief that her own Archie had returned as he had promised than to attempt explanations, even if she would have understood them. He determined to act the part as well as he was able. . She plied him with questions as to his health, the voyage, etc., and he answered with whatever apt fiction came to him. taking her hands in his and smiling back into her dimmed eyes. "You seem to have been gone a long time, Archie. How long?" She paused and put her hand to her head. "A year was it a whole year? Yes, perhaps as much as a year. It confuses me to try to remember but there! no matter, you are here. How long it seems since you gave me the rose that night and said goodbyl" She arose and took down from a shelf behind her an old volume in red and gold, opened it carefully and held it out to him. . "You ' remember how you broke it from the bush at the gate and fastened it in my hair?" Her voice trembled with excitement. "There it is, pressed in tny annual, the one you gave me. f have kept it to show you." .-- Archie took the book and bent over it. On the open, yellow page lay a long stemmed rose, withered and brown with age, the last gift of the Archie of long ago. "It has turned brown while you hare been across the sea and back again." ' The young girl listening outside caught the quivering strain in the voice, and fearing the effect of the unusual excite ment upon her aunt now appeared at the door. ' "Come in, Gracie. come in I 1 have a visitor to introduce to you." She took the girl by the hand and led her into the room. "This is brother John's daugh ter, Mr. Armitage. Gracie, this is my old friend. Archie Armitage, who has just come from England. We have been talking over old times." . In her ex cited joy all sense of incongruity seemed lost to her. The young people exchanged a swift glance of intelligence as they bowed to each other, and Grace said to her aunt: 'Don't you think you are a trifle tired now, auntie? Perhaps you and Mr. Ar mitage had better wait until tomorrow to continue your talk? You know you have not been very well." The white haired woman looked thoughtfully from one to -the other. "Yes." she said slowly, "it is probably somewhat late. I will send him away shortly. Will you tell your father he has arrived, dear? "Papa knows Mr. Armitage is here, auntie." replied Grace, "and I will go Dack with him across the lawn. To morrow youll have a long day together.' "Y-e-s, perhaps that is best. I seem somewhat dizzy. It has been so excit ing to see you, Archie. She stroked her brow slowly with her hand and sat down in her easy chair. "Youll come in the morning?" "Yes, auntie. 111 come in early and help you dress: but you must get quiet now. auntie, dear. Good night" "And. Gracie, Fll put on my blue fig ured gown be used to like to see me in, and the broad garden hat. and well have the morning on the lawn. I shall have to show him all the old nooks and cor ners, and we'll have so much to say. so much to tell each other." She looked up at Archie' with a look of exquisite tenderness, and he bent and kissed her reverently. "Do not rise." he said: "you are overtired and we will have so much to talk of tomorrow. Good night." He followed Grace to the door. and as he closed behind him on the picture of the w' liead bent over the withered rose, hi- ..uought how much they were alike, the woman and - the flower. When Grace opened the door of the old wing the next morning she stopped aDrupuy. Tne lamp still burned on the table, and beside it in the easy chair sat her aunt as they had left her, but with closed eyes, and an odd, happy look of youth upon her face, still holding in her lifeless hand the stem of the rose, its fragile petals lying scattered among the soft folds of her dress and on the floor about her. Charles Edwin Kinkead in Pittsburg Bulletin. Seemed Monotonous. , The other evening's little girl, a mite of five years, lay on her mother's lap during the children's hour. Play was over ' and the white robed little figure was ready to be tucked into bed.- But she clamored for a story, and tne moth er, told her of heaven; of the golden pavements.' the great white" throne, the snowy garments of the angels and -the perpetual praise from the harps of the great orchestra "of' the blessed. After the story was finished the. child was' si lent for a minute. ' Then she asked, "Mamma, have we got to do just that for ever and ever, amen?"' It will be difficult to insure the orthodoxy of this precocious young person. Detroit Free Press. - Extravagant. , Some Japanese real estate boomers went out and founded a town and adver tised as a leading feature "a great avenue, fifteen feet wide, running the length of the town. This extravagant waste of land ' was reported 'to the gov ernment, and the boomers were ordered to simmer down or go to prison. Cin cinnati Times-Star. Let Him Try It. A Philadelphia stirs-eon nn rim l three strokes of his lancet ha cmli lyze the nerves acted on to make a man get. mau, ana uierearcer anyone could null his nose, cuff his earn anrt Hrvir n his boots and he .would simply smile a oft, bland smile. Detroit Free Press. SPANISH DISHES. nV U Cm Oil In CooklDg Wttnmt its' Disagreeable Effects. Though, as a rule, Spaniards of the better class are not early risers, they be gin the .day with the desayuno, as they call the meal. This usually consists of a large cup of milk and coffee, or a small cup of thick chocolate, with a kind of cake called ensaimada. The chocolate is made with milk, never with water, ex cept in the poorest families. . Between 1 and 2 p. m. old fashioned Spanish folks have their dinner. The table is very simply laid with a clean cloth and sev eral plates of sweets and - fruits; ' flowers seldom appear; saltcellar, pepperbox and mustardpot never. A spoon, fork and knife lumped together, a tumbler for water and a small wineglass are set at each place. A Spaniard never commits the heresy of mixing wine and water; he Bays it is spoiling two good things.' A goodly sized loaf of bread flanks each plate. The soup tureen is first handed round, and, although its contents are a ' trifle greasy, nothing can be more nourishing. It is compounded of all the good things that go to make up the classical cocido or puchero. The substantial portion with which the soup is made is placed in three' separate dishes and served np immediately afterward. On one dish figure large, thick slices of boiled beef and pieces of fowl with slices of bacon: on another appear the garbanzos, or chick peas, and on the third are the veg etables with slices of chorizo, or sausage. The cocido is usually eaten as it is, though in some houses tomato sauce is added. The puchero, or cocido, takes its name from the pewter pot in which it is slowly boiled. In every well regu lated home throughout Spain the cocido is made once a day, and a right good thing it is, as at any hour you may chance to need a cup of broth you can be supplied with it. The next dish is the frito. Frito means a fry, and the dish usually consists of fried brains, fried sweetbread, croquettes of fowl, etc In no country are things fried better than in Spain, because good olive oil is used to fry them in, and oil makes those delicacies more crispy. That Spanish oil may be turned to good account for anything in cooking will no doubt cause unbounded surprise. There is no deny ing the fact, however. Food ill prepared with oil is no doubt a trying case in so far as the palate and nostrils are con cerned, but a good Spanish cook knows well how to disguise the taste of the oil in many ways. The simplest and perhaps the best ad vice is to let the oil ' come to a boiling point and to throw in a piece of bread, which is taken out as soon as it becomes brown and thrown away. This takes off any bad taste the oil may have. The 'pan is -then carried to an open window and the steam blown away, a process which as effectually clears it of any un savory smell. Boston Transcript. . Nearly Everybody Is Superstitions. "The amount of mental suffering igno rant people undergo from the fear of ill omens being fulfilled is inconceivable to persons of well balanced minds," said a well known physician. This doctor spent two years at one of the charity hospitals on Ward's Island, and while there had an excellent oppor tunity for observing many peculiarities and various phases of humanity among the outcasts of a great city. Continu ing after a short reverie the doctor said: "Of course superstitions have existed and will exist as long as there remains a belief in the mysteries of future life. It is seldom admitted by persons of intelli gence that they are, to a greater or less degree, at all subject to the uneasy feel ing an-uncanny event will produce. But it is really an exceptional thing to find a person who has no superstitions what ever. Generally the presentiments are so unimportant that they are but sel dom alluded to by the one experiencing them, and are soon forgotten. But that they do exist in nearly every mind is undoubtedly true." Chicago, News. Correcting- the Teacher. In one of the Springfield grammar schools the teacher was explaining an example in arithmetic on the blackboard, and had finished it with the exception of the last two figures of the answer, which was in dollars and cents, when she was called out of the room. On returning one of the pupils raised her- hand and said, "There are some cents to the an swer in the book, but there isn't any on the board." "Whyi Nellie, what do you mean by speaking to me like that? the teacher exclaimed in anger. After the school had been in a roar of laughter for fully a minute it dawned on the teach er's mind that it was "cents" instead of "sense that the girl was talking about. Springfield Homestead. Wanted It to Float. - Timothy Sheeler had become very rich. but he remained very ignorant. Hav ing traveled about the country by land he began to i think he ought to visit the coast states and have a yacht. He consulted his friends on the subject of the kind of boat he should buy. "WhisV? you are about it." said one of them, "you'd better get an iron boat." The old man saw - in the suggestion only an attempt to play a joke upon him. "What, d'ye mean? he roared. "An iron boat! ' Have me go sailin' 'round the world in a cook stove, would ye?" Youth's Companion. . Superstition About Spiders. 1 Even school boys are led to forego their usual destructiveness when spiders are in question. I remember that when I was a lad at Winchester it was consid ered a most unlucky thing to do any in jury to a particularly large kind of spider which is sometimes found in the college buildings, and which went among us boys (or men, as we called ourselves) by the name of a Wykehamist Corn hill Magazine. Strained Relatioas. Archibald You are related to her by marriage, are yon not? . Frigiday No; JTm her brother oy re fusal. Puck. SJHPE5& iQEilf Wlolesale and RetaflIftTis A -3- y -DEALERS 1N- Fine Imported, Key West .andOoinestie OIGAlis,V: a ' w . -av w '-..':' .J Now is the time to paint -"your house and if you wish to get the best quality and a fine color use the Sherwin, Williams Co.'s Paint, - - - , r For those wishing to see the quality and color of the above paint we call their attention to the residence of S. L,. Brooks. Judge Bennett, Smith French and othere painteu iy raul ii-rett. Snipes & Kinersly are agents for the above paint for The Dalles. Or. Don't Forget the EflST END SJLOO)!, MacDonaltl Bros., Props. THE BEST OF Wines, Liquors and Cigars ALWAYS ON HAND. . (J. E. BD JO., Heal Estate, . Insurance, and Loan AGENCY. Opera House Bloekt3d St. Chas. Stubling, PROPKIKTOB OP THE New Vogt Block, Second St. . WHOLESALE AND RETAIL - Liquor v Dealer, MILWAUKEE BEER ON DRAUGHT. Health is Wealth ! Db. E. C. Weht"b Nervs anb Brain Tkkat ment, a guaranteed gpeciac for Hysteria, Dizzi ness, Convulsions, "Fits, Nervous Neuralgia, Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by the use of alcohol or tobacco, Wakefulness, Mental De pression, BoftenltiK of the Brain, resulting in in sanity and leading to misery, decay and death, Premature Old Age, Barrenness, Loss of Power in eiiner sex, involuntary ixmuscs and Spermat orrhoea caused bv over exertion of th hr-Mln rclf. abuse or over indulgence. Each box contains one month's treatment $1.00 a box, or six boxes fw, sent uy mail prcpaia on receipt oi price. W K ei!ARATER STY nn-CTcA To cure any case. With each order received by us for six boxes, accompanied by $5.00, we wiU send the purchaser our written guarantee to re fund the money If the treatment does not effect a cure, uuaraniees Issued only by BLAKELKT HOUGHTON, Prescription Druggists, 175 Second St. The Dalles, Or, YOU NiflED EUT ASK Thi 8. B. Headache and Lives Cobb taken according to directions will keep your Blood, Liver and Kidneys in good order. The 8. B. Cough Cube for Colds, Coughs and Croup, in connection with the Headache Cure, is as near perfect as anything known. The 8. B. Alpha Pain Cure for internal and external use, in Neuralgia, Toothache, Cramp Colic and Cholera Morbus, isunsurpassed. They are well liked wherever known. Manufactured tit Dufur, Oregon. For sale by all druggists t me ..- . it-""1 - - 1 ' - -1. i i .. i v v"- is here. and has .come to stay. It hopes towin its way tb public favor by ener gy, industry and merit; and to this end Ttfe ask that you give it a fair trial, and if satisfied with its course a generous oUfcport. The four pageserf six columns each, will be issued everyWening, except Sunday, ana wm De aenvbred Dy man ior tne mdrate sum of fiftj cents a montn. 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 cai 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 eierht 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. GO. 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 tnriving, 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 tvrc hundred miles. . THE LARGEST WOOL MARKET. The rich grazing country along the eastern , slope 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 beirig shipped last year. - . 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 Klickital valley find market here, and the country south and east has this year filled the "warehouses, and all available storage places to overflo"wing -with their products. , .ITS WEALTH It is the richest city of its size on the coast, and 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 unsurDassed! Its climate delight- limited! And on these corner stones she stands. . cX Daily m the city, or sent . N