OPTICS. , Bachelor at forty Ave, Tree am 1 the world to roam. Ask mo why I do "not wive." Why I have no borne? Has my heart no tenderness, -Have I sworn to hate the fair? Tia not that I love them lees. Love not one. but more. . Once, there Was a pat? of eyes. Eyes of soft and beaming gray. In whose depths 1 loved to gaze. , xred their Kent je ray Bat between me and the gray. Passed two orbs of blackest night. Turned me from the first away. With their witching light. . Here 1 would have bowed the knee. Sworn allegiance true. Bat there chanced to beam on me - Eyes of deepest bine. They were brighter than the gray. Softer than the black, I ween. Black the starlight: blue the day: Gray the twilight seem. Black and blue and tender gray. Ye are all divine to me; 1 woold wed yoo ail today Coulit I marry three. But 1 cbukt not chouse at all. Which should grace my bridal himu This Is why at forty-five. -Bachelor I roam. ward H. Rice In Springfield HomesieHU THE ANGEL OF SHILOIi. "You found the tavern full?' 'The speaker was a handsome, Intel ! gent looking gentleman of perhaps fori v evidently a citizen of the village .-m l resident of the handsome but nnpreie.: tioos dwelling house in front of vrli.i .: be was standing. "Yes." I replied: "1 was too lat- i half an hour, so the landlord inform .i me." "You shall be welcome here if you wil ; accept -of modest quarters and - plant fare.- - t The tone of voice, no less than the words uttered, assured me that the offfi of hospitality was sincere, and with a grateful heart and a simple expression of thanks 1 passed through the gate bikI clasped the extended hand of the inaii who, although 1 had never known of his existence till that minute, and who 1 had every reason to suppose a foe to the - ras i represented, a rebel to the gov ernment whose uniform 1 wore, yet in whom J recognized a friend and brother. "You are very kind," 1 said; "more kind than you know, for 1 am not only weary, but ill, or 1 should not have sought lodgings indoors while my com rades were exposed to the privations of camp life." ...... "I'm glad of the opportunity to offer hospitality to a professional brother," he responded, "for 1 know from your letter on your hatband that you are a surgeon, and 1 am a physician. This would have been sufficient to have prompted me to invite you in, but something else, a sud den but unexplainable impulse, which 1 could not resist, impelled me to do if By this time 1 had been led into the family room. A beech wood fire blazed and glowed upon the hearth, a bright carpet with warm polora covered the floor, an old. fashioned mahogany side board stood to the left and a bureau of the same rich wood faced it on the other side of the room, and in one corner a clock of "ye olden time," and known by the title of wall sweeper, counted off the seconds with steady precision and sounded the knell of dying hours in a solemn monotone. " Easy chairs stood back against the farther wall like sen tries on an inner picket line, while others were grouped about the cheerful fire, and these, as we entered, were occupied by persons whose faces I could have never forgotten, had I seen them but a moment, and which are now photo graphed upon my heart forever and aya , There were three persons in the group a venerable old gentleman, a . white haired matronly and kindly faced old laxly, and a golden haired, blue eyed young lady father, mother and daugh ter of my friendly host, Dr: Jewell. . There is something in a name, else how should these people be so appropri ately named? 1 wondered and pondered the more when 1 learned that the richest and rarest gem in the group had the beautiful name of Lillian. - - --. 1 beg the reader's pardon, 1 - have not told him or her, as the case may be, who am, or wuen, now or wnere ail tins happened." -.y.-.----.-. '.v . My name is Alden. a lineal descendant 1 am from John and Priscilla Alden, whose romantic history - you ' doubtless have read in poetry, if not in prose. My ancestors had gone west almost a century ago, hence those provincial prejudices, so characteristic of those descendants of the Mayflower party who still cling to the crags of Plymouth Bock, had been lost in the broad and fertile valleys of the Ohio, or they had wandered off and found a flower bespangled . grave on the boundless-prairies of Illinois. At any rate they found no place in my heart. The time ofc which I write was Janu ary, 1862. Place, southwestern Ken tucky. Grant's army .: was making a grand reconuoissance in force, with a view to feeling the strength of the enemy before making an attack npon Fort Donelson. ; " ': ' '. 'f A Cold, pitiless rain had pelted us all day, and was still pouring down upon soldiers and officers alike. : When the village of B.- came in view, at 4 o'clock the mud and waded . through swollen streams from early morn having- sur rendered my horse to a sick soldier, of the brigade to which I was attached, and was, therefore, worn and weary and almost ill. . Immediately after the order .had been passed along the line to halt -and to pitch tents for the night, a large number of the officers galloped on to the village an drought -shelter beneath' the rot vof. the hotel it contained. It haS been my purpose to get a hot supper and dry bed also, but my professional duties detained me for some time; and when 1 reached the door of "the inn -i ; was in formed that not only all the beds, but every square toot of the parlor - and sit ting roam -floor had been pre-empted. 'It was waU0-wendingvmyway back to -camp that I had the rare good fortune, or fate, to attract the attention of Dr. Jewell. My boots were covered with mud," my clothes dripping with water, and I felt as if chilled to the marrow of my bones and the center of ray heart It took but ; a brief time to warm me, however, for the elements of warmth were abundant. At his request I fol lowed the doctor into his chamber and donned a suit of his clothes, while he sent my own by a colored- boy to the kitchen to be dried. Returning to the parlor, I observed a large bowl of steam ing punch, flanked by goblets, upon a table which had been drawn up near the fire and by which an easy chair had been placed. The family arose as the doctor and I advanced, and the old gen tleman delivered a very brief but very eloquent temperance speech. He said: "You northerners have peculiar no tions about the use of liquor, at least some of you have. I have been told that in some places it is an insult to a guest to' offer him - a glass of hot punch. We southerners think differently. With us it is an act of hospitality to invite our friends, and even strangers, to join us in a social glass.- 1 do not know what your views are, but believing that punch is a good medicine for a man who has been drenched by a cold rain, 1 ordered some prepared, and hope you will join us in a glass before -supper.- ' But if you' have any conscientious scruples we shall re spect them and at once send the bowl from the room." - "I have no such scruples," I respond ed. "It is the abuse and not the proper use of stimulants that forms the basis of my temperance creed, and there are times when brandy is a blessing, and this is one of the times. --1 shall join you most heartily." At the close of my speech the old gen tleman gave place to his wife, who ad vanced and filled - the goblets to the brim, while Lillian handed them around. When each of the men had been supplied with full and foaming beakers and the ladies with smaller glasses only part full, the father said to the son, "Give us a toast. Walter one suited to the occa sion." The doctor complied by saying: "May the acquaintance begun tonight ripen - into a friendship before which all sectional and political prejudices shall dissolve and disappear,, and may that friendship live and flourish in the hearts of all present when this cruel war shall exist only as a sad and sorrowful re miniscence. . i ' . "I most heartily Indorse the senti ment you have so beautifully expressed," 1 responded, "and beg leave to quote from a Northland poet in reply: " May the song birds of peace soon revisit oar glades, . And oar children clasp hands where their fathers crossed blades. A reverent and fervent "Amen" burst from the lips of the old gentleman as he touched my glass with his and raised it to his lips; tears rolled down the fur rowed features of his good wife, and tears stood in the blue eyes of the beau tiful Lillian, and the long silken lashes that curtained those-' heavenly orbs drooped and quivered like the dew laden willow fringe that hides from sight the crystal waters of a spring in the valley of Eden the Eden of my childhood. Supper being announced at this mo ment, the old folks led the way, and the doctor, taking my arm. followed them into a large old fashioned room, which served as both kitchen and dining room. It was a most cheerful and homelike place; the table which stood in the cen ter of the uncarpeted floor presented a neat, inviting appearance to a soldier who had been on short rations for some days, and who had eaten nothing for twelve hours. Ham and eggs and de licious corn cakes, done to a turn, with sweet country butter and coffee with real cream constituted the bill of fare. It was ample and I did full justice to it. The evening hours fle w rapidly past on downy wings of friendly converse, till the old clock in the corner announced the hour of 11, when the thoughtful mother mildly suggested that the major was doubtless tired, and would like to retire. I disclaimed ; any thought of weariness, and, indeed, 1 uttered but the simple truth in saying that 1 had not been so entirely refreshed for weeks. It is passing strange what power there is in good fellowship to restore the wasted energies of the body as well as spirit. So we sat another brief, delicious hour, , and then the goodnights were said, and 1 retired to' sleep and dream. The blue eyed Lillian formed .the web and horrible battle scenes the woof , of my visions. ; The beautiful girl had scarcely uttered a dozen words during the evening, but she had a most eloquent auditor. She had sat almost directly opposite me, and my eyes rested upon her face as I ad dressed other members of the group, and they did not fail at any time to meet a sympathetic response from her heaven tinted orbs: nor was there the least em barrassment in this, for her countenance bore such a perfect expression of inno cent interest as to reveal a spirit at once modest and pure as an angeL ' In my dreams a bloody battle was rag ing. - My ears were filled with. t ha boom of cannon, the crash of small arms, the scream of shell and the shrieks-and groans " of .". dying '. men." ' The scene changed. I wandered over the fields of carnage. The dead were thick about me. . A groan reached my ear, and I bent my steps" in the direction whence the sound came. A soldier in a lieutenant's gray uniform lay upon the ground with his bead resting upon the lap of a wom an. - I ald;"'lf can be of any service, please command." - A pair of blue eyes were lifted toward my face, and a voice, sad but musical, said: "Oh, 1 am so glad it is you! you are a surgeon as well as a friend, and my brother is dangeronsly wounded." " ' . Those eyes, that voice; could I be mis taken? No, it was Lillian," and 1 the wounded young officer her brother. What joy, what happiness to be able to serve-, "aye, perhaps - save the life of her brother the son of my friend. --'-A rap1 on my chamber door dispelled the vision, and the pleasant greeting of Dr. Jewell restored me to my normal etate. But my dream remained as a vivid memory of a startling reality. I could not believe but that it was a presentiment, and although I kept it locked in my heart as a sad, though cher ished secret, 1 resolved to ask Lillian for a picture of her brother which she had shown me the evening before. So just as I was on the point of leaving I said: "Miss Lillian, I wish you would give me a photograph of your brother.' It is possible I way meet him, and if I should it would prove my passport to his friend ship." i - . : ; - "I will," she replied, "for you may be of service to him, and I know you would do him a kindness if you could." ' ! " "Most gladly would L both for his own sake and as a reward in part for the great kindness 1 have experienced at the hands of his family." . . The young lieutenant's handsome face bore a striking resemblance to that of his sister, and for that I prized it and cherished it. ' I wore it constantly in an inner pocket of my vest . - The stirring - scenes intervening dimmed somewhat the memories of my vision as time passed, but could not blot it from my mind. The battle of Shiloh had been fought, and during the whole of it my mind re verted to the dream.' It seemed" but a repetition of a tragedy of which I had witnessed the rehearsal. .Impelled by some strangtt impulse I could not resist, 1 wandered out upon the battlefield at midnight Every spot seemed familiar. The dead faces were those I had seen in my dreams. A groan, aye, the same groan that 1 had heard on that ever memorable night of January. 1862. - I hurried to the side of the poor fellow from whose agonized lips it came He was prone upon the cold earth, with his head resting upon, bis left, arm, while with his right hand he was striving to check the flow of blood from a gunshot wound in his left breast. A glance told me 1 had found the son of my friend the brother of Lillian. Fortunately I had with me the means of stopping the flow of blood; also a can teen of water and a .flask of brandy.-'- No" word was' spoken until : I had -done all that could be done at once, when with a faint voice and difficult articulation he said: - "You have saved my life and 1 thank you." -' -- ' ; " You owe me no thanks, lieutenant. 1 should be an ingrate did I not serve to the utmost of my ability the son of my friend, Dr. Jewell, the brother of bis precious daughter Lillian." . "Is this is a dream? How? Where did you know my father and sister?" 1 - .-- "Be calm, my dear friend; I will glad ly tell you all, but not now. Enough that 1 have found you, and serve you.n.- In my arms I bore the wounded officer to my tent, and vigilantly did I watch by his side until morning came. - r-- He had lost much blood, and the wound was painful, but not especially dangerous, hence he recovered' rapidly and within a month he was well again. In the meantime I had told the story of my impromptu visit to his old Kentucky home and the generous hospitality I had met with there. 1 showed him the photo of himself given me by his sister, and the marvelous dream which had prompt ed me to ask for the picture was; re hearsed. '-'..':"' " "Doctor," he said as I closed my story, "1 don't think 1 am superstitious, but I believe your (eam was a presentiment given you by my angel mother. It was she and not my sister you saw holding my head in her lap. Lillian is marvel ously like her mother, and could readily have been mistaken for her.". , ' "'At least in a dream." I added pleas antly, i -. . "Yes, or by moonlight in waking hours. But please don't try to break my faith in the reality of that vision of yours. It has come true almost to the last particular." . - It has," I replied, "and 1 believe in its reality as firmly-as you can." I told the story to General M , and it softened his heart bo greatly that when I asked permission to take my tnend to liis borne it was readily granted. The reader may be safely left to pic ture to himself the joyful meeting of the long absent son with bis loving grand parents, father and sister, and the ex pressions of ' jjratitude and friendship showered npon my humble self. ' iir My leave of absence was for thirty. aays. i spent a fortnight of it with my Kentucky friends, and when I departed 1 carried with me two miniature 'por traits. - One of them had : golden hair and eyes of heaven's own blue, and lips tnat rivaled the ripening pomegranate. and cheeks like the sunny side of a lus cious peach. Nor was this all I had to gladden my bachelor heart. . - ' The original of the picture had said that "when this cruel war should be over I might come again, and then she would gladly go with me to my northern as my wife.' - - ; - -'' , I have only to add that she is looking over my shoulder as 1 write, and trying to convince me that the public (meaning you, dear reader) will laugh at ' me for being so silly as to tell how I was cap tured by a rebel girl , and at her being so easily converted from her "secesh" senti ments to unwavering loyalty to the Union. True Flag. - W - . Perfume In Plants.." A German botanist, Mr. Hegel, has made public the result of his researches as to the causes of the perfumes of plants, and the factors which diminish or increase them. "Light and heat nat urally play a very important role. Dark ness prevented the development of per fume in flowers -of which the buds were only slightly advanced when submitted to ' its influence; and even the plants j whose flowers exhaled perfume only at nighfc lost their 'ouor if compelled to live in continued darkness." Boston Tran script. ; - : ' - . .. - -t Elevation or the Hind. ' Lofty elevation of min i does not make one indifferent-t the" wants and suffer ings of thrwewher are below him;: 4" On the enntntrj', 'as the rarefied air of moan t; -.s makes distant objects seem nearer, ko are all his fellow beings brought near erto the-J heart of him who looks "-upon them from the height of his wisdom. New York Ledger. ' i A Victim of the Common House ly. '- -It is said that the late Father Damien attributed the'- leprosy - which brought about his death to inoculation by flies which flew from leprous patients to a wound on his head. It must be remem bered that though cases doubtless occur in which infectious diseases are con veyed by flies,' these insects do an im mense amount of useful service by the scavengering which they so assiduously perform. Brooklyn Eagle. ' v" - A Remarkable Egyptian Custom. The Egyptians had a very remarkable ordinance to prevent persons -from bor rowing imprudently; An Egyptian was not permitted to borrow without giving to his creditors in pledge the body of his father. It was deemed both an impiety and an infamy not to redeem so sacred a pledge. A person who died without dis charging that duty was deprived of the customary honors paid to the dead. Yankee Blade. .W-omeni The -emmou afflictions of women are sick-headaches, iiid.'jjsstioa o::il nervous troubles. They arise largely from stomach ilisorOc-re. As Joy's VcgefubJa Earsaparilla is the only bowel regu lating preparation, yon can see why It Is more effective than any other SarsapariUa in those troubles. It is daily relieving hnndreds. Tbo action u mild, direct and effective. We have scores of letters from grateful women. ' Vfc relet to a few: Nervoas debility, Mrs. J. Barron, 142 Vth St., 8.F. Nervous debility, Mrs. Fred. Loy, 837 ElllsSt., S.F. General debility, Mrs. Belden, 610 JIason St, 8.F, Nervous debility, Mrs. J. Lamphere. 735 Tark 8L, S. 1. Nervous debility. Miss R. Rosenblum. 282 17th St., 6. F. Stomach troubles, Mrs. R. L. Wheaton. 701 Post St., 8. F. . - Sick headaches, Mrs. M. B. Price, 16 Prospect Place, S. F. Sick headaches, Mrs. M. Fowler,S27 Ellis 6t,S.F. Indigestion, Mrs. a D. Stuart, 1221 Mission St, 8. F. . Constipation, Mr. C. Kelvin, 126 Kearny 8t,8.F. etable arilla Most modern, most effective, largest bottle. Same price, 11.00 or 6 for $5.00. For Sale by SNIPES & KINERSLY. THE DALLES. OREGON. Cleveland, "Wash.', ) June 19th, 1891. f S. B. Medicine Co., Gentlemen Your kind favor received, and in reply would say that I am more than pleased with the terms offered me on the last shipment of your medicines. There" is nothing like them ever intro duced in this country, especially for La grippe and kindred complaints. I have had no complaints so . far, and everyone is ready with a word of- praise for their virtues. Yours, etc., . , - M. F. Hackley. Dit. E. C. West's Nekvb akb Bbjiih Triai Kent, 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, Loss of Power in either sex, Involuntary Losses and Spermat orrhoea caused by over exertion of the brain, self abuse or over indulgence. Each hox contains one month's treatment 1 1.00 a box, or six boxes for $5.00, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of prioe. WK GUARANTEE SIX BOXES To cure any case. With each order, received b us for six boxes, accompanied by to.00, we will send the purchaser our written guarantee to re fund the money if the treatment does not effieC a cure. Guarantees issued only by - BLAKBtET A HOUGHTON, ,- Prescription Druggists, ITS Second St. . -To Dalles. Or. A Revelation. Tew people know that the bright bluish-green olor of the ordinary teas "exposed in the windows' Is not the nat ural color. ' Unpleasant as the fact may be, it is nevertheless artificial:' mineral' coloring matter- being used for this fold It not onlr makes' the ' tea a bright, shiny green, hat also permits the ase of " off-color " and worthless teas, which; once under the '.green cloak, are readily worked off as a good qualify of teat . -. An eminent authority writes on this sub- . JeeU "The manipulation of poor teas, to give them a'flner appearance, is carried on exten sively. Green teas,' being in this country especially popalar, are produced to meet the demand by coloring cheaper black kinds by glaring or facing with Prussian blue, tumeric, gypsnm, and indigo. ' TMm method it mo gen eral that very little genuine nneolored green tea it offered for tale.". '' it was the knowledge of this condition of affairs that prompted the placing of Beech's Tea before the public. - It is absolutely pare and without oolor. Did yoa ever see any genuine nncolored Japan tea? Ask your grocer to open a package of Beech's, and yon : will see it, and probably for the very first : time. It will be found in color to be just be tween the artificial green tea that you have been accustomed to and the black teas. It draws a delightful canary color, and is so fragrant that It will be a revelation to tea - drinkers. -Its purity makes it also more . economical than. the' artificial teas, for leaf of it la required percup. SoHonly in pound packages bearing -this trade-mark;:. i, ... : ' ' ..'i. u ';--- ' PtlnrJ4Si.ndhood: Ifill'6 Ve yyysarsap S. B Health is Wealth ! "VIrl - .1.. .... SiuiN I (Mx v -:.rj k i .-.4: D5liEJEA If your grocer does not have it, he will gel Mforyom, raoatte per pound.. Por saleal XjobIIo Sutler's, THE DAILE8, OtFCrON.. THE DflliliES is here and has come to stay. It hopes tu wm ixs way to public favor by ener gy, industry and merit; and to this end we ask that you stive it a fair trial nrirt ' if satisfied with its support. .. will "be to advertise the adjacent country,, to The industries, in extending and n-npmi-ncr-i-i-r, -r, m v, for our trade, m securing an open river, and in -e, 'Bf wAUJUio tS XXX6 Its will be to advertise Obi city, and adjacent country, to assist in developing- pur industries, in extending and opening up new cnannelslfor our trade, in securing and jjenrrivrr and in neiping xjtLiu ij a LIjES to take her prop er position as the Leading City of Eastern Oregon. four pages of siy 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. JUST. FAIR AND IMPARTIAL. Wei will endeavcr to eriva all trWl WO ask that VOUr Criticism be formed from the contents of the paper, and, not u uiu l asxi asserxions 01 puxsiae parties. THE WEEKLY, sent to any address forj$1.50 per year. It will contain. from four to six eight column pages, and we snail enaeavor i to mafee it the equal of the best. A sk your Postmaster for a copy, or address. THE CH RON I CLE PU B. Office, N.' W- CdrJ Washington and Second. Sts Dry Goods and Clothing at Your Own Price. The entire stock of N. HarrisJ consisting of General Dry Goods, Clothing, Boots and Shoes, Hats, Caps, and Gents' "Furnishing Goods will be sold at , Auction to the highest bidder for : : : cash in hand. Sales held every night eommeneing at 7 o'eloek. : . J: B. CROSiSEN, Auctioneer. Jfe otel, THE DALLES, OREGON. . Best Dollar a Day House on the Coast! ' First-Class Meals, 25 Cents. A First Class Hotel in Every Respect. - ' 'None but the Best of White Help Employed. T. T. JSLicholas, Pfop. (Washington ynTzrn jrt KS SITUATED AT THE Destined to be the Best Manufacturing Center in the Inland Empire. - For Further Information Call at the Office of InteFstate Investment Go., C. I, II! US. 12 VASHINTON ST., P0RTUE3 CHRONICLE- course a generous assist in develorrirur nm- xo iaje ner proper position eets the resources of the Of OTlt ohient n.rtr nrm-rac i Washington) . HEAD OF NAVIGATION. Best Selling Property of the Season, in the North west. - - Daily