A ROSE. "I fkcMmd a roe on the stones today This midwinter clay, with its lowering sky Asd miry streets: yet the white rose lay la its whiteness, starting to meet my eye. And wherefore, O Kosu. with your faint breath sweet. And your fairness, lyinn 'ncath careles feet' Dropped trom I be breast or a bride, my fair. As they brought her home from the hoi;, shrine: The bridal music haunting the air, Deep thrilling the soul with a rhythm divine. Till her full heart throbbed with a new joy. sweet. And you left its warmth for the wintry street? Dropped from the bier of the blessed dead. Do your folded leaves hold the dew of tears? Is your fragrance prayer, soft murmured By some pleading soul for the (iui.ihed years) Was the sullen chill of the crossing stone Uesscold than that pulseless heart, my own) Howe'er it be, U you white, white Rose, I will lay you down on a girlish breast "Tmmt has nevrr thrilled 'nenth bridal snows. Nor yearnc-d for the peace of unbroken rest. You shall linger there till your bright, briet day Of beauty and bloom breathes itself away. A. Ktgar Benet in Kate field's Washington. Wide Streets as Health Promoters. Dr. Anders has been investigating the influence of the width of streets in cities -on the mortality from phthisis, and as th results of examining into the locali sation of 1 ,500 deaths he hits arrived at tine conclusion that the number of deaths from phthisis is smaller in proportion to the population in the wide than in the narrow ones, and that in narrow streets the mortality is greatest where they are long or where they form a cul-de-ssu:. la other words, complete movement of air about dwellings is a point of prime importance in connection with the ques tion of pulmonary phthisis. It is on this principle that all modern bylaws as to open space about houses are based, aud it is as important to have "wide open spaces behind houses as in front, so as to secure a proper through current of air. The existing tendency to put up an undue limit on the needed area behind dwelling houses is Btrongly condemned, as constituting a distinct ' Tiolation of one of the most vital es sentials to the promotion of health and prevention of a certain class of diseases. Jfew York Telegram. Mew York Horses. "Do you know what I consider the most remarkable thing in New York?" asked a man frrn the west who had been spending a week in the city. His metropolitan friend suggested the Brooklyn bridge, the hurrying crowds on Broadway, the Stock exchange, the Oerman opera and other stock marvels, bat each time the countryman shook his head. "No," he said finally, "you haven't hit what I mean, though you see it or could see it if you looked a hundred times every day. To me, now, the most amazing thing in the whole' big town is the wonderful ' indifference the horses abow to the elevated trains. Why, if one of those things should go roaring ver the heads of my plow horses they'd imply have hysterics. As for my little mare Kitty, she wouldn't stop running till she got into the next state. Your horses, however, don't even 'look up when a train passes. I really can't un derstand it" New York Times. . Elopements In Luuuoa. A careful . newspaper reader, resident ia London, who has given' much atten tion to elopement statistics, states that n an average four elopements take place in London every week. This would give a total for the year in round num bers of 200 in a' population of 'something like 5,000.000. Presuming that the num ber of elopements all over the country is in the same proportion we have a total elopement list of about 1.500 per year. Now that a Gretna Green marriage is a thing of the past elopements seem to be on the wane. It is stated that at Gretna Green toll house alone 200 cou ples were sometimes united in a year. London Tit-Bits. A New Way to Shell Eggs. At a meeting of the Royal Meteorolog ical society Mr. R. H. Scott, F. R. S.. Srew attention to a curious case of light aing stroke which had occurred at Bally glass, County Mayo. The eggs were in a basket on the floor of a room when the house was struck by the discharge. It was found that their shells fell off when they were put into hot water, leaving the inner membrane unbroken. On be ing cooked they tasted quite 'welL CasseU's Magazine. The sun spot periodicity is a subject of universal interest, and little has been Bounded of its unfathomable depths. It is known that the cycle is completed in about eleven years, containing a max imum of activity and a minimum of qui escence; that the spots are cavities in the -j solar photosphere, filled with gases or vapors cooler than the surrounding por tions: that the spots move with a vary ing velocity, and that the - spot produc ing activity has a direct influence on the magnetism and electricity of the earth. Purse thefts seem "to be the common thieFs special weakness, more than 10 percent, of the larcenies, etc.. brought before the courts being ' for "thefts of parses. .Watches stand secend favor ites. Z, More ' than three-fourths 6f 'the 'purses" Stolen are the property of ladies, the thieves seeming to find ladies' pock ets more suitable for picking than men's. The army of the United States con aista of 2,167 commissioned officers and "a little "over 20,00ff "private "soldiers," ex clusive of those v performing civilian dufs; thus one-tenth of the force boa mata of its officers. A new method of preparing wood pulp wmpoeittonraf 'moldings'is described. i -which fhtf Vobd rpufp is mixed ! wrth l)Totiz'pwdeTA.iiaiiiimv,6r metallic cb) ore," Sp'as'W give'a! uniform color of any desired shade to the pulp. . .. The brownish discoloratiion of 'ceiling where gas is used is caused by dust car-, ried against them by the heated" air cur xentsplTfc by the gaiC EDWARD EVERETT HALE. A Boston Preacher Who Has Calned Wide Fame. Boston is particularly well provided with clergymen who are celebrated in their pro fession, or literature, or the cause of ed ucatiou. No one sect or denomination can claim them, for they vary in faith from Episcopal to Unitarian. Some of them have written books that have liecome fa mous, and have started more than cue train of thought toward the uplifting of the race. Rev. Edward Everett Hale is probably one of the most famous of Boston clergy men. His fame is by no means local, and his name is respected over a wide range of territory. He was born in Boston, April 8, 1822. He is sprung from an old New Eng land family that have figured largely in the history of the country. An ancestor of his was the martyred Captain Nathan Hale, whose last words were a wish that he had more lives to offer on his country's altar. The early education of Mr. Hale was under the most favorable circumstances. From the Boston Latin school he went to Harvard, and graduated from that cele brated university in 1839. H'e then became an usher in the Latin school. During this time he read theology aud church history, and in 1842 he was licensed to preach by the Boston Association of Congregational Ministers. His first regular charge whs the. Church of the Unity, in Worcester. He remained pastor of this church from 1846 to 1856, when be became pastor of the South Congregational (Unitarian) church. in Boston, where he still remains. EDWARD EVERETT HALE. Daring his pastoral work in Boston he has been identified with many charitable bodies and movements. A book published by him in 1870, "Ten Times One Is Ten,"' led to a movement which now exists ill a club or series of clubs with over 50,000 members. . Another society due to his ef forts, the Ixok Up Legion, numbers some 5,000 members. Several magazines are under his charge. He is a thorough news paper man, having served in every capac ity on the Boston Daily Advertiser from reporter to editor-in-chief. ALEXANDER E. SWEET'S HUMOR. A Man Who Began to Write Joke When a Child. Alexander E. Sweet, who edits Texas Sittings,-and who is prolific as a humorist, has been described as "a typical hayseed, with his loose, rough looking clothes, heavy movements, full uncultured beard and rich complexion. One would judge he knew more about crops than human nature. In conversation he says funny things that de serve places in print with a countenance marked by ineffable solemnity." Mr. Sweet is a modest gentleman of mild man ners, with a kindly face. He lives in New , York city with his : family. . He w a ti born in Canada in 1841, but when he was a mere child I jLrX parents moved tySV San Antonio, sasS'-. T ' Tex., and settled : there. At sixteen he went to school at Ponghkeepsie, after which he vis ited Germany and was a student at Carlsrube, Baden, ALEXANDER E. SWEET. for several years. He returned to Texas in 1863 and joined the Thirty-third Texas cavalry as a private, and served un til the war ended. "After the war," says Mr. Sweet, "1 practiced law, but not with any bewilder . ing degree of success. I drifted into jour nalism, and for several years furnished a column of San Antonio sif tings for the Galveston News. These items were much copied, and I started Texas Siftings in 1881 in Austin. My life has been comparatively blameless, except for a short time when I was learning to play on the flute." In re gard to his methods of work Mr. Sweet once remarked: "Unlike other alleged humorists, I can not recall my first downward step. I be gan going down from my cradle, I believe. The propensity to write funny things was contemporaneous with my first successful struggle with the alphabet, and has accom panied me through life, bringing with it all the' misfortunes which have blighted my career and made me the pensive creat ure yon behold. How do I build my jokes I think my jokes build themselves. They even get into my business correspondence. Of the different styles of humorous writing the brief paragraph is the most difficult. A column of such paragraphs daily would put any man under the sod in twelve months, whereas humorous sketches, es pecially if they are in a series, are the easi est work a professional humorist can do. I can write a couple of columns of sketches . without any great mental wear and tear. but a half column of paragraphs makes me long to be a popular preacher." - Floriculture rn the United States. A recent bulletin issued by the census bureau gives some timely statistics' regard ing, floriculture, which has been carried on as a business for upward of a century, and which in the last twenty-five years has as snmed large proportions. Out of a total of 4,65$ establishments, 2,795 ' were started between 1870 and 1890, and of these 1,797 be tween 1880 and- 1890 There . are - 312 com mercial floriculture establishments owned and managed by-; women. '- These 4,659 es tabUshmenta.bad huspiir' the census year 38,823.247 square feet of glass, covering a space of more than 891 acres of grounds. The establishments, including fixtures and (CbelnK apparatus, were "ralued ,c$38.855, J 72SJ.43; tool ami rmplemeptetl,5OT,S,ftt, and gave, employment to' 18,847 ?men ami 1.958 wom'en.fwho .'earned ,Hn ,tbt year $8, 483X57. Fueffbr'heating 'cost W,if0, 152. 6T.. The products for the year were 49,056,253 froaet pusnes, fo,opo,sce naruy plants ana rihrubshtieaH4taer plants amounted to to&Btars, 38,880,872 hardy plants and 163,835,283, reaching a total value of $12,036,-: 477.76 for plant. Cat . flowers brought an' addfttiBhal Income ot tl4,tis,m.9L ! IS LYING NECESSARY? An Experience In Truth Telling That Wasn't a Gaody Sueceas. A great many persons pretend to sadly deplore the fact that society is ever tell ing a great many little white lies. Frank ness is strongly recommended and people are praised for saying just what -they think. Frankness appears very admirable in theory, but it is quite another thing in practice. A certain amount of deception seems really necessary for the welfare of society, and the man or woman who tries to get on wholly without it is likely to have few friends and many enemies. It is said that the minister of a certain Chicago church became disgusted with the un truthfulness of mankind and prteacbed a vigorous sermon in denuncia tion of society falsehoods. He declared that lies told out of politeness were just as wicked as those told with deliberate intention of deceiving. In fact, these society lies get folks into the habit of lying, and they readily pick up the other kind. The sermon made a great impression upon the hearers. Many of the congre gation resolved to reform then and there. Coming out of church Deacon Jones said to Judge Badger, who sat in front of him, "Judge, 1 hope yon didn't mind my putting my feet tinder your pew?" The judge was about to reply, "Oh, cer tainly not:" but he thought of the ser mon and answered: "I did, though: your old boots took up j ail tne room and were a fearful nn sance." "Well." said the deacon, "the hair oil you use smells so it nearly forced us to leave the pew." They glared tt each other, and just then Mrs. Badger and Miss Jenkins came along. Miss Jenkins had asked: "How do yon like my new bonnet?" "Oh. I thought it just lov " began Mrs. B.. and then she thought of the sermon and continued: , "No. I didn't either. It is a horrid thing, and 1 wouldn't be seen with it on." While these honest conversations were going on Mrs. Smith had said to her next door neighbor, Mr. Murray: "1 hope the crying of onr baby last night didn't disturb you?. And Mr. Murray replied: ' "No that is yes. I wanted to brain the brat." , And then Mrs. Smith called him a wretch and wept Then the minister came ont and asked young Symonds how he liked the sermon. Symonds said: "It was a grand ef er . ' No, parson, it was blamed nonsense." "Sir!" said the parson, and he drew himself up very indignantly. Just theu Smith and Murray, after being real frank with each other and telling a few plain truths, clinched, and Deacon Jones was trying to hold Miss Jenkins from scratching Mrs. Badger. It took tremendous efforts to stop the rows and prevent a scandal, and as it was. every one went away mad with everybody else. The minister went home and meditated in a gloomy frame of mind for three hours, and finally concluded that society lying was wicked, but he would :not preach against it - again. It was alto gether too handy and necessary a sin to be given up. Chicago Herald. A Peculiar Fate. The 'supporters' of the much disputed theory of spontaneous combustion have received fresh grounds of belief from the case of Milton Hardcastle.; of Baltimore, whose remains were found nearly con sumed in his shanty on the outskirts ot that city. Hardcastle was an old . negro of un known age, enjoying a small monthly income left him some years ago by his former owner. Colonel Eustace Hard castle. Itris said that the negro consumed a gallon and a half of whisky a day, and would often buy and drink the pure alcohol in large quantities, often for days at a time partaking of no other nourishment. . He lived alone, being of a singular, taciturn disposition, so that it was some days before' he was missed, but his shanty was observed to remain closed, and search being instituted he was found in his bed burned nearly to a crisp, while the mattress and clothes were only slight- lv scorchml. The room was in perfect order, and no ' trace of fire was found on the hearth. ! which was swept clean, and as Hard castle was known to have been unique I among" negroes in never smoking the j whole affair seemed shrouded in mystery. I Dr. Everhardt was called uppn by the auLiiui iLitjo w luaKu an investigation, and gave as his opinion that it was a case of spontaneous combustion. ... (n this he has been supported by several other prominent physicians, who agree in de claring - the circumstances adinit of no other explanation. Exchange. v A Hint to Teachers. Don't give up the boy who sits in the back seat and wears his coat collarless, his hair non a la Pompadour, and his finger nails in mourning, who won't learn his lessons and who' will get into mischief. I knew a teacher who had a pupil just like. him. She showed inter est in him: she visited his parents, and didn't act as if their language and man ners made them -devoid of -all fine feel ing. She "asked him to' help' her about some work after" school' one night, and said: "By the way, John, we know each other pretty well now. I like you and 1 hope you like me. I want yon. to do something for me, will you?" : "If I can." wa the answer, v Come to school tomorrow with a col lar,' comb your hair nicely and pare your finger nails: " 'ton' see I like you aa you are now. but 1 want other people to like t yon too, and the; won't if yon are care- lees' about your appearance. . Da you think the boy hated her? No. He was, never seen untidy after 'that evening.; He 'graduated from the high a'reeporiBfbie" pbtfoh'in'"'sbciety. "iHe wears by that teacher. - She' made a man .of .him. Lucy : Agnee Hayes' in Journal of Education. Wholesale and Mall Dripts. -DEALERS IX- Fine Imported, Key West and Domestic CIG-ARS. PAINT Now is the time to paint your house and if you wish to get the bept quality and a fine xIor use the - Shenviii, Williams Co.'s Paint 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 others painted by Paul Kreft. Snipes & Kinersly are agents for the above paint for The Dalles, Or. Don't Forget the E0ST E)1D SJP, lacDonaM Bros., Props. THE BEST OF Wines, Liquors and Cigars ALWAYS ON HAND. Real Estate, Insuranee, and Loan AGENCY. Opera House Bloek,3d St. Chas. Stubling, PROPKIKTOR or THE New Yogt Block, Second St wholesale' and retail Liquor v Dealer, MILWAUKEE BEER ON DRAUGHT. Health is Wealth ! BRAIN Dk. E. 5. West" ' Kekve a'hd BraiK Tbeat ment, a iruaninteed specific for Hvsterla, Dizzi ness, Convulsions, Fits, Nervous Neuratyia, Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by the use of alcohol or tobacco, Wakefulness, Mental De pression, Softening of the Brain, resulting in in sanity and lending to misery, decay and death. Premature Old Age, Barrenness, Loss of' Power In either sex, Involuntary Losses and Spermat orrhoea caused Try over exertion of the brain, self abuse or over indulgence. Each box contains one month'B treatment. 1.00 a box, or six boxes for $5.00, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price. WE GUARANTEE BIX BOXES To cure any case. With each order received by us for six boxes, accompanied by $5:00, 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 , HLAKELEY & HOtJGHTOX, . Prescription Druggists, 175 Second St. . The' Dalles, Or. YOIT JfkED BlTt ASK ji.U "1 . ; ,v 'Midie;VallbY, Idaho, Maylir. lgSl. Dm Vandkrpool: Your S. B. Headache and Liver Cure sells well- here. : Everyone 'that tries it comes for the second bottle-, -.People are -coming ten to twelve" miles to get a bottle to try It and then they eotoe brick and take three or four bottles at s time. Thank you, tor sending dup-i ilontebillasmrnadU'plaeed. - c . :() D. E. BiYAI(P flO., 5 ! ' For eeiltf by aill DrttaTKlets. tne 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 if satisfied with its course a generous support. The Daily 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 Objeets 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. 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. m Office, N. W. Cor. Washington and Second Sts. THE DALLES. The Gate City of the Inland Empire is situated at the head of navigation on the Middle Colnmbia,.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 twe hundred miles. ' THE LARGEST WOOL MARKET. The rich grazing country along the eastern slope of the the Cascades furnishes pasture for thousands of sheepv the wool from which finds market here. , The lalles ' is the largest original -wool shipping point ! in America, about ' 5,000,000 pounds being shipped last, year. '.''"';,:'""'; : ? .'ITS PROI)TrCTS. l't ..The salmon fisheries are the finest onthe Columbia, yieldingvthis year' a revenue of $1,500,000 "whichcan and 'will 'be more' than doubled ' in the near future.- The products of the beautiful "Klickital valley find market here,, and r the,cpujitfy south: and this year filled the warehouses, and all available storage places to- overflowing? withitheiri products. Jt is the richest .6iiy of its'Mz6n the coast, ahd;its moiiey is: scattered over'and is being, ' usedtq develop, more farmingcpunttiy than is tributary-to any other eityinr.Easterji ;Qregonr Its situation's -unsurpassed! Its ' climate 'delight- l1! Tt.h TYftHsffiiliTiea infjTWldiVTo ' rJttsrvArHfieta 'tin- " 7 - - rwpfco iVT iis aBxw HaTdfcV , .sp. WW A VIKV fWSf limited! And on : these corner stones she stands. .