-TOM RYDEirS CHILD Mr. Marsh, wiiua he was sitting iA the -village store with the heels of his well "tallowed boots carefully poised on the -4ge of the eorrasatw cylinder stove, Vrxs; far larger man than when he. was at home. Perhaps it was for that reason tbat he spent so much time in . the store A man likes to feel large and to hawk I expectorate in an independent man-' When under the protection of his own -goat this gentleman was very much in the shadow of his wife. He never hawked and he never expectorated there. He shrank np into the smallest possible compass and seemed to deprecate the fact that he was 'alive at all. If heconld have come in and gone ont at the key kale he would have felt an unutterable relief. - ' ; r As it was,- he was in constant fear lest kn should forget to wipe his feet, or lest ke should leave a door unlatched. He often told himself "he'd rother be .darned any day than to forgit'to wipe his feet twice." first on the husk mat in the sink toom and next on the braided mat at the kitchen door. When Mr. Marsh said ""he'd rather be darned," he meant that he preferred being consigned to hades. He often thought it wonld be a -kind of "relief to be in that place "and done with it," But he always was very meek in- j i i i i." .1 : ii i i. -hill I I l IK .1 J H .J IHM1 . . U l.-V. . OUVW thoughts. . ' Mrs. Marsh was a large, dark, mns tached woman,, who was believed by wme to be a good nurse. She certainly had the merit of subduing her charges into absolute quiescence. She boasted that folks that "she took care on knew their places mighty quick; n : their MaceB was w jest- uy ni in .u leb tuts uuru do as be pleased." She was fond of mentioning' the Lord at the most unexpected and irritating times. She had referred to him on so many occasions in regara to. ner nus- "Wnd's bringing in "medder mud" and ther kinds of soil on the soles of his "boots that Mr, Marsh was continually harassed by a fear lest he might become TWKindined and aramire a habit of think ing disrespectfully of the Lord. If he did acquire such a habit, he hoped fer-. vently and in plain terms that it might be laid to D'rindy's charge rather than to his. Dorinda was his wife's name; '.audit was the name given to each of five-consecutive daughters who had been horn to Mr. and Mrs. Marsh and who aad all died when children. There were residents in the village ( rho always took friends who came from a distance to the graveyard to . see the "row of D'rindies," as this series of mounds was usually termed. These continual bereavements- were very hard to ''bear -during . their occur rence, but after some years had passed and the wounds were scarred Mrs. Marsh was conscious of a certain dis tinction coming from the fact that she -was, in a certain sense, owner pf .that row in the cemetery. She had a pride in keeping the small graves and their aeatlstones in the very best condition; or rather she made Mr. Marsh keep them u. When I have seen that woman strid injr tawttrd the hill alone whpr fr.liA graveyard was, I have wondered if she did not feel a satisfaction that there were five mounds instead of four; live . made a much more impressive row. If one of those luibiea had grown it would doubtless have brought in a great deal of mud in the spring, snow in the win ter, and road dust in the summer. It would have "littered things up jest aw ful." to use a favorite expression of Mrs. Marsh. Was it possible that there were compensations? It is a distinction. too. to have had a "dretfnl sicrht tt atdcness' in your family;" to have "notes ' put up' for the sufferer and the suffer er's friends. Do you know what it means to have a note put up? It is to arrange that the minister shall find, apparently in the hymn book, a scrap of paper asking the prayers of the congregation for a family in affliction. The name of the person is often given, and then there is a rustling and a turning and a looking at the near ant relative who happens to be present. When things by land and by sea have been prayed for, when people "scattered tap and down this sinful earth" have been meutioned.thenjthe minister changes his tone to one of more feeling, and petitions that this dear xis r whose child is on a bed of sickness may be strengthened to endure, and that, if it be so decided that he be called upon to give up that be loved one, she may be enabled to bow her head to his great and glorious will. -and to bless him, even though he slay. There is a great sameness about the . words used in response to this asking for prayers, but who shall say that those phrases do not sometimes touch healing- ty a sore heart? Reuben Marsh never missed going to meeting a single Sunday during all the times when his children were pining and dying. Sometimes he would far rather have topped at home, being possessed by that piteous and natural feeling that he, with all his strength and -vigor, might in aome way give of that strength to the poor little thing moaning on the bed. But his wife had made him go. She had even found time as usual to fasten bis collar and button on the rusty black necktie. ' . . . And he had always heard those pray ers in answer to the note he had put up. He held himself rigidly upright. His heavy, bearded" face was impassive to look upon. People who looked at him curiously saw nothing but the calm, rough face. His hands were thrust into the big pockets of his loose sackcoat; the .great, knuckly . fingers writhed : and twisted as the prayer proceeded. Mr. Marsh heard the words going on and on over his bead. He felt as if he were groping in horrible darkness. All the time he was saying to himself: "O God, let her live! O God, let her live! I can't live if you take this one, toot" -' He -thought he could not live. But that one, too, was taken, and still the aun continued to rise and set on Reuben .Marsh,, and still Mrs. . Marsh hectored gionally reminded him of wliat a mother suffered in the loss of a child. She said she s'posetT afather had some feeling, but how corild a father know a mother's heart? " ' 1 Evidently there was no answer to this question." Certainly. Mr. .Marsh attempt ed to give none. . Mrs. Marsh talked a great deal to her husband and to the"ueighbors generally about the fact that all her children had been born without any constitutions. She didn't know why it was, for all her folks were made of iron. She often in quired how it was that a child with no constitution at all could be expected to live. She told Reuben it was too much I as if they were not straight. ,. -to ask. She gave every one to under- I Something that felteold and wet, like stand that' Reuben, seemed, to believe i their children ought to live; bnt she knew ! they couldn't. f As the years went-by she made Mr. j Marsh keep those little graves,-and their ' headstones, and their lettering of "Dor- inda, daughter of Reubeu and Doriuda j Marsh," more -and more "trigged up."! When Mr.' Marsh was hot at home nor V at the store it was well known tiiat he must be "to the cemetr'y triggin up them graves. ; It was one mild day in winter that j Mr. Marsh put On his overcoat apd his j rubber boots. He' said he was going j down to the store and guessed he should I just stop in at the graveyard before he ! came home. The hill sloped to the south there, and it was warm and sunny, almust like a snrimr dav. The man had. it in his mind that there i was just a chance that some snowdrops might be blossomed, or at least budded. But if lie should tma a bloom tie was not so crazy, he told himself , as to take it to his -wif e, who would only'consiiler it as some kind of "litter." He should stop at the . store, as he said, and he should probably see Tom Ryder's for lorn little girl shivering about, and he should give the flower to her. Then her small, ' pinched face would suddenly lighten, and she would smile in that ra diant way that always went like a knife to Reuben Marsh's heart. He wondered if" any of those Dorindies, if any had lived, would have had such a face and such a smile as that. If they "took after'' their mother they surely would not Once after Mr. Marsh had seen this transformation take place in the. face of Tour Ryder's daughter when she had re ceived a kindness he had ventured to speak about her to his wife, with a wild hope in the bottom of his heart that they might adopt Ryder's child, for Ryder was only a drunken ' wretch whose wife had long since died of a broken heart and too much work. 1 ' Mrs. Marsh made it very plain indeed to her husband that she had no opinion whatever of that nasty Belle Ryder. Mr. Marsh had fallen into his ordinary -home mood of dull, cowed silence. He sat with his slippered feet on their wood en cricket,: and hung his head, pulling bis beard slowly and wondering what he was living for. He supposed men never hated their wives. He supposed there was no man in the world whose wife was such a good cook, who kept her husband's clothes so well mended and so clean as D'rindy did, but be said plainly to himself that "he'd ruther be flogged than to be where she was." Often, as he " sat there pulling his beard and watching D'rindy as she made everything painfully clean, he told him self that he must have been even more of a fool than most young men to have fallen in love with a girl who could turn out to be such a woman as that. He also asked of his own soul how it would be with him if it were possible for a man to hate his wife. " - When he walked slowly through the mud of the main street he was conscious that there was more than the ordinary down his heavy feet with an air of bra--i vaao wuen ne reacnea tne store, tie i took in a lanre auantitv of mud. and he I talked so loud and spat so emphatically ! that the storekeeper winked at the mau next to him, and said in a whisper that D'rindy must have been carryin' an un common high band with Reuben that day. But for all this extra swagger Mr. Marsh was aware that he was greatly depressed. . It did not seem to exhilarate him to have his heels on the stove. He did not understand himself today, and he left the store much earlier than wus his custom. One of the men actually got up from his broken backed chair and went to the window to watch the re treating figure. "Something or other's the matter of Reub Marsh," he said pityingly. 'l never seen him miss his aim a-spittin' be fore, 'n he missed it every time today." The storekeeper was chopping off a piece of tobacco. ' He nodded his head. He said he was sorry for Reub. He s'posed he was goin' np to them graves now. He hoped it wa'n't wicked, buthe J did think 'twould be jest aa well if there was a sixth grave in that row and D'rindy was laying in it. , For his part he'd like to help trig up D'rindy Marsh's grave, whether 'twas wicked, or not. Then they tell to talking ahoutToui Ryder, and of the fact that he had been gone a week, nobody knew where, on a' worse spree than ever. "I guess they'll have to takn the little one to the poorhouse this timxj, and no mistake. Somebody ought to. speak to the Selectmen, V have her seen to. Mr. Marsh walked on mechanically up the road. He did not know why it was that he could not throw off his wife's in fluence when be had left" her, as he "was usually able to do. Some strangely desperate mood was upon him. He put his hand to his head, and said if ho didn't know better he should almost think he had been drink ing. Just before he reached the cemetery he passed by the house where the Ryders lived, an old place with low eaves that looked as if they Would always drip with unhealthy moisture. Some of the window panes were stuffed with rags,and a cat walked with ostentations misery among the puddles near the front door. . Mr. Marsh wished ' he had 'brought as he had nothing be went on atann vainly about in the hope of seeing Belle. In a few mihutetf'aibre he was stand big by the row .of graves and looking sharply down at the sodden ""turf for the snowdrops. There "were' the green leaves, lie knelt - and pushed - aside the brown, wet -grass. - His . heavy face took on . a pathetic look of eagerness.-. No, it was too early: the sun. had . not been warm enough. There were no . blossoms not even buds. '' '". "It's too bad too bad!" he' muttered. "How she would er liked 'emP ' ' '-'"'-. He stood np. "He" brushed a "mist from his eyes that made the headstones look ice, touched the hap d that hung down by his side. But he did not notice the j touch until it was repeated, this ttme'ac- j compamed by a wnine. '- Mr. - Marsh i: aroused himself and patted the lean, nn-1 - happy looking cur that stood beside, hin. j "Hullo, Jack," he said, "where'a your little mistress.-" . . ; ;i Jack wagged his tail and made' as if he would trot back home, but as Mr. Marsh did not follow him he returned -and licked his hand again. - He went through these movements so many times that the man at last walked after him, the dog continually looking behind, un til he had led his friend to the "back door of the Ryder Tiouse. This door stood open. . '' .. Mr. Marsh had not heard that Tom Ryder was "pa a spree," and he expected every moment ro ue greeted dv tne own f this place, whom he despised and j whom ' he "always wanted to kick every time he sa w him. - .. - j Instead of a masculine voice, however, j a piping, feeble treble sounded from one 1 of the front rooms. "Oh, J:ick, don't you leave me tool j Don't you go 'n' leave me tool"; - Reuben Marsh stood suddenly still from sheer weakness. His great, tender heart seemed to choke him. He heard the dog wining joyfully and .scuttling" about the room he, -bad entered. He breathed a long breath and pushed the door further open, apparently taking but one stride from the door to a "trundle bed" which was in a corner. On the bed was a child who stared wildly for an in stant at this intruder, then a flush of joy overspread her face. She put out two bony arms to the man bending over her.- She laughed.' "I've jest be'n praj in' for a friend," she crieJ feebly. "I kep a-prayin so hard that God had to hear finally." Mr. Marsh gathered the child to his breast. His heart glowed., His eyes sparkled as he felt the frail form leaning confidingly against him. He took a frayed blanket from the bed and wrapped her up until she was like a mummy. He was Bmiling all the while he was doing this. " Where's your father?" " " "I d' know. He's been gone ever so many days, I guess." .'. "Ain't you hungry?" "I was hungry after 1 et np all there was, some bread 'n' Bausage. Thou I got faint; theu I was so awful kind of sick." The child leaned her head on the man's shoulder and shut her eyes. He held her yet closer. j "I'll take ye right home," he said. ' v . ' He stepped out into the mild, damp air. He held his head very high,. and his eyes sparkled more than ever. - He walked down' and into the village street as if he had been a soldier coming from a victory." He nodded at the few ac quaintances be saw, and who looked , at him wonderingly, but he would not stop, to speak to any one. ' The storekeeper saw him, and said to a customer that there was Reub Marsh with Ryder's little girl, 'n' he guessed Reub 'd -ketch it when he got home. Mr. Marsh still held his head up when he entered his own kitchen, tracking in a good deal of mud as he did so, for he did not e a the huskmat. nor yet at the - . .,, . , "Brmg me a cup of milk with a drop ff ff .water m,U' he said, sitting down in the large rocker by the stove. Jack had entered also, and he also had brought in mud. He sat calmly on bis dirty haunches on the shiny oilcloth by. the chair which held Mr. Marsh and his mistress. Mrs. Marsh stood a moment in bewild erment) then fibs brought the miLki Her face softened somewhat as she looked at the pinched features on her husband's shoulder. "She is b tarring," said Mr. Marsh, shortly. 'We'll give her a good meal, 'n' then yon c'n take her right back," remarked Mrs. Marsh, with her usual decision. She added that Reuben . could go right. over to Mr. Wallis, who was one of the selectmen, and have the child taken to the poorhouse that very night. In ten minutes the girl ' was sound asleep. 'Mr. Marsh laid her on the lounge and covered her with a shawL He fed Jack, who ate very hastily and with tba utmost greediness and then curled up on the floor by the couch. Reuben Marsh rose from his bending position over the lounge.. He looked his wife squarely in the face, a thing he had not-done for years. - , - She gazed , back at him with some thing bike consternation slowly growing in her mind. . ' . . "I'm goin to do one of two things, D'rindy," he said very slowly, "and it's for you to say which itU be. Fm goiu' to keep Tom Ryder's child if he don't take her away from me, 'n' I guess he won't. I'm goin to keep her here if you're willin'; if you ain't willin' I shll go where I can keep her.- 'N' she's goin' to be Ideated well too. . Now which shall it be, D'rindy?" Mr.. Marsh, with that delicious love for the child in his heart, looked very big and manly. . - Mrs. Marsh 'mechanically brushed the the stove hearth with a turkey wing be fore she replied. "I ruther think, Reuben, she said, "yon might's well keept br here. " New York Tribune. . " Jiinmieboy has swallowed one of my poems," said Rondow, in despair, "That's all right,'' said the doctor. "Mush is good for childran." nck. iolesale ;aafe Retail . Draipts. t-KTEA1.ERS IN- Fine Imported Key; West and Domestic 'OIO-ARS. PAINT "Now Is the time to paint, your house and if yon ... wish to get. the bept quality and a fine color use the - Sherwiii, 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. Tj.' Brooks,. Judge Bennett, Smith French and others painted by Paul Kreft. . ....... Snipes A Kinersly are agents for- the above paint for The Dalles. Or. - Health is Wealth ! Dr. E. !. West's Nibve and . Bkain Tbbat mknt, 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 sanity and leading to misery, decay and death,' Premature Old Age, Barrenness, toss of Power in either sex, Involuntary Losses and Spermat orrhea caused by over exertion of the brain, self abuse or over indulgence. Each box contains one month's treatment. 41.00 a box, or six boxes for fo.00, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price. WE GUARANTEE SIX 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 KLAKELEVJl HOUGHTON, Prescription DruggistH, 17S Second St. . The Dalles, Or. Don't Forget the MacDonalfl Bros., Props. THE BEST OP Wines, Liquors and Cipts ALWAYS ON HAND. Real Estate, Insurance, and Loan AGENCY. Opera House Block, 3d St. HURRAH! FOR If you get Colic, Croup, Diarrhoea or the Cholera Morbus the 8. B. Pain Cure is a sure cure. ; ? 4th of July! - If you need the Blood and Liver cleaneed you will find the Headache and Liver Cure a perfect remedy. . For sale by all druggists.- Chas. Stubling, PBoPKirro ok thi New Vogt Block, Second St --' - - -; - -. . ' ; WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Liquor v Dealer, MILWAUKEE BEER ON. DRAUGHT. The 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 as& that you give it a fair trial, and if satisfied with its course a generous 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 Obi will be to advertise the resources of the city, and adjacent country, to assist iifc 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 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 fitem rash assertions of outside parties. THE WEEKLY, sent to any address for $1.50 . per year. It will contain fronr four to six eiglit 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 Gate 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 agriy 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 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 $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 overflowing 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. ' -w--' : Its situation is unsurpassed! ' Its climate deligh.tr ' : full - Its possibilities incalculable! . Its resources' un limited! , And on these corner stones she stands. i Daily eets