WOMAN'S EDITION THE DALLES TIMES-MOUNTAINEER. 11 -after more afraid of cows than before. There I I hear the dinner bell." "Oh, Auntie, won't you tell us more about Joe and Sue after dinner," clam ored the children, all three. t "The very next rainy Saturday," said Auntie Maude, "I'll tell you about the shearing and the 'River Ranch," and the little, motherless calf that Sue found on the prairie ;" said Auntie Maude. Do you suppose it ever rained again on Saturday afternoon? C. W. K AN OPEN SECRET. Good Biddy Top Knot made a nest. And hid it very nicely ; ' But cackling when she laid the egg, Revealed the place precisely. Sel. A Story About a Parrot. doors all night he will be chilled and catch his death of cold." It was getting most night, and Mr. Q. was down at the barn milking the cow. Pretty soon he started toward the house and called out to Miss Q., "Mar tha, I heard the parrot call out, 'grand ma !' while I was milking, but I eouj not tell where he was." Miss Q. was so d.3Ugfcte4 clapped her UaiifPlQy, an4 ran aut psst the barn to the hack street, and there was Perequito sitting in a great LITTLE THINGS. A little burn will hurt ; A little sting will smart ; And little unkind words FRED FISHER DEALER IN- jftf argie. fHrst Burro Ride. Johnny '"''Armstrong- had a borroj a little, shaggy, long-eared creature that looked as droll and jolly as a burro can. One clay little Maggie Lane came with "(if SECOND STREET, EAST END, The Dalles - - Oregon tall gum tree and calling out everything her mamma to spenu tlie clay. Maggie Live and let live is our motto. Mrs. Q. had a parrot of which she ""and her family were very fond. It was ? given to her by a friend who brought it from the country where parrots grow 'wild. When Mrs. Q. first got her parrot it 'was very wild and did not want any one to touch it. It conld not say a word and could only squawk J but the parrot he had learned to say. Pretty soon Mr. and Mrs. Q. were there, and ever so many strangers stopping to hear "Polly" talk. He called ' Do you want to go to breakfast?. Come along, go to break fast?" and then he would laugh and say, "call the dog," "do you want to go to bed;" and I do not know what all. But Perequito Was 40 of 00 feet up In the tall'tree and he did not know how to come 'down:" and we did not know how to catch him. Miss Q. borrowed a great long bamboo hadn't been lonr in Kansas, and had lived away back eaet, where they don't have well, a great many thingH that Kansas girls and boys know all about. Johnny felt very shy and hardly knew just how tu entertain the little girl, but pretty soon he said in such a teasing way, "guess you're so little you can't filfl much;" which challenge Mas of course the signal for a race ; and as they "bptlijheaty" his respect for the little city girl increased and he told her all about his greatest treasure, Jacko, the, Telephone 270. THE DALLES LUMBERING COMPANY Office Corner Second and Jefferson Streets, pole from a neighbor and Mrs. Q. car-' burrow ried out the step-ladder. They thought if one stood on the step-ladder and reached up the . long pole Perequito would get on and let them take him down. But oh, my! They could not got tame and learned to say some words, reach him by a long distance. The first thing he learned to say was "How-do-you-do," and the next was 4,Peek-a-boo." Mrs. Q. named her bird Perequito, (Per-i-key-toe) and he soon learned to say his name. Once Mrs. Q. went on a visit to her "-relatives and stayed three months. "While sh was gone Perequito forgot all One kind man said he would go home and get his long ladder and bring it. He did so, and he tried so hard to put it up in the crotch of the tree so that he could reach the pole up to the bird, but it got-dark and he could not see the bird. Poor Perequito was frightened to see ;about her and chose Miss Q. for his best s' many people and quit 'talking, so friend. He learned to like her after she they could not tell where he was. And Margie thought It must be the most wonderful little ixmy she had ever heard about and begged for a ride. When she saw Jacko, she didn't think him the least bit ugly, with his great long ears, shaggy coat and solemn eyes ; and he was such a tiny little creature, too, and when Johnnie fetched out his cute little saddle and bridle, she danced and clapped her hands for pure joy and could do nothing but laugh, it seemed so verv like a fairv storv. mm But Jacko didn't prove a fairy-like steed. He positively refused to budge onejneh.- The children, coaxed, pulled and begged ; but Jacko stood stock still Building: Material, Paints and Oils, House Finishings," Windows, Doors, Blinds, Cedar Shingles and Posts, Fruit and Fish Boxes. . . ,; lrxFJr, Pine, Oak and Slab Wood Prompt delivery to any part of the city. J2 enry Vfanfr. of and dealer in jfcarness A GENERAL LINE OF Jfrorse JimsAny Soods, Saddles, Whips, Robes, Tents and Wagon Covers. dies and Cowboy Outfits a Specialty. RepairingPromptlyv and Neatly Done. Stock Sad came home, bnt never liked her again orry as they were, Mrs. Q. and Miss Q. in tne hot sun calmly blinking his great as well as he did MissA Mr. Q. and Uncle John Q. tried to be good friends with Perequito; but he never cared for the gentlemen and would bite them pretty hard if he got a chance. But the little fellow was so jolly and merry that all thought a great deal of him in spite of his bad faults. . One afternoon after Perequito had been in the Q. family about two years had to go and leave Perequito up in the tree all night. They did not know what might hap pen to him . in the night. He might catch his death of cold, or some night bird might kill him ; or something might frighten him so that he would fly away off. ... -.. I do not know how it was with Mrs. y., but Miss Q. spent several wakeful and a half, he was sitting on his perch hours thinking? of the toor little naiW. in the kitchen and Miss Q. was washing shivering out in the tree. the dishes. He was sinzing a loud soncr ww o that Miss Q. did not care to hear, so she took Perequito on her finger and .-. put -him out on -a pear- tree near the Tcitchen door. Perequito was often put out in a tree and generally stayed right .-w.here. he was s: placed,., unless some strange man came into the yard and -then he would sometimes fly into an other tree. Miss Q. forgot all about the parrot for quite a few minutes and then she thought she would look out and see what he was doing. And what do you think ! Little Perequito was nowhere to be seen ; no pretty green bird cling ing to the twigs of the pear tree. Oh, where was Perequito? Miss O. Bright and early next morning in the cold and fog, Mrs. Q. and Miss Q. were up and out to see if Perequito was still up there in-the-saine' free: --Yes; there he was, as lively as. ever and did not seem to have been hurt by his night in the tree. But the question ? was still how to get him down. There was a great long heavy ladder in Mr. Q.'s yard that had been left there by the man who painted Mr. Q.'s house in the summer ; so Mrs. Q. and Miss Q. tugged and pulled and got the great ladder out into the street, and were trying to lift it up against the tree, so as to reach Pere quito with the long pole. But a kind neighbor man came out of looked from one tree to another hoping his house justthen-and saw . what -the to see him, and went up and down the yard calling "Perequito!" But she could not see him and he did not ans wer to any of her calling. Mr. , Q. and Uncle John Q. came out of the house and theyy"too, went rouncT an'd Tound the yard hunting . the lost one but could not find him. Miss Q. quito with the tip end of was pretty nearly sad enough to sit down and weep to think that perhaps he would never see Perequito' again. And then she would have to tell Mrs. Q., who was out. in the buggy doing some errands, that the little bird was gone. While Miss Q. was going about search ing and calling, little Lucy Lantz came into the yard with Miss Chapman, her cousin. Little Lucy is just four years old, and she said to Miss Q. in ber slow little way, "I came up to see your parrot." Miss Q. had to say the parrot was gone and she did not know whether she would ever see it again. Kind little Lucy with the pretty brown eyes said, "I am very sorry you "lost your parrot." Miss Q. said, "Well, Lucy, come back -some other day and if we have found the parrot you shall see him." A little later Mrs. Q. came driving in, and she had already heard that Pere quito was lost. She got out of her bug gy and went all around where Miss Q. had been twenty times before, ealling -"Perequito, where are you?" TSnallv hf Rftirl. 'wpll T miaou Vr 7rd is gone for good. If he stays out Q.s were trying to do. He knew how to lift up a great ladder, and he came and set it up against one tree and climbed to the top of the ladder, then took the long pole and reached over to the tree where Perequito was: He could just barely reach to Pere- the pole, but Perequito had good sense that time, and he jumped right on to the end of the stick and clung there until the man reached him down to the Q. ladies. And weren't they glad to get hold of. their pretty bird again ! But what do you think that foolish bird did. .He got frightened at the strange man carrying the big ladder into the yard and Miss Q., and circled around and flew so high that they tho't he was going back to the very same spot in the tall tree. But he did not. He came down and lighted on the ground and then his friends held him tight un til they got him in the kitchen. And I tell you, they are very careful of him now ; and he takes the air mostly inside of the screen porch. ' . A hen with a brood of young chickens was heard making a great fuss in the front yard, and Ruby's mother, looking out, saw her near the little family, and said, "Ruby, are you chasing that hen?" "No," answered the three-year-old, "I'm only going a piece wif her." A certain Chinese flower is red in the sunlight and white in the moonlight. sleepy .eves Johnny had never known him to be so stubborn before; but the day was such a drowsy hot one, and perhaps Jacko felt cross that his little master should be so thoughtful of hi& comfort ; for I don't believe ponies like to go about in the rhot . sun any better than grown-up people do. Any way,- he was stubborn, and re fused sugar, green grass and everything nice they offered him most all afternoon, and they were pretty tired and a wee bit cross themselves. They were talk ing about getting off and putting him back .in the, stable, when up jjent Jocko's head and tail and away he ran. A while ago J hey had taken off Jacko's saddle, and now it was difficult to stay. , on his back ; and pretty soon when he jumped over a little ditch, off they both tumbled and fell in. And oh, such for lorn looking children you never saw ! All drabbled with black mad and just bristling with sand-burrs ! How Johnnie laughed at Margie, and Margie laughed at him. Margie had a great many rides on finer ponies afterwards,' 1)ut ;never such a gay one as that. Johnnie declared ride Jacko" had ever I believe. Jacko .rather enjoyed it himself ; don't you? C. W. K. New ARRIVAL OF THE DALLES, OREGON. Spring Goods... .Dress Goods in Plain, Plaid, Striped and Brocade "effects: . . ; . . . ... The Very Latest in Lace and Button Shoes Agent for Thompson's justly celebrated Corsets; also Butterick Patterns. . . . Cor. 2d and Court J. P. JT1NERNY & Diifur " " ;'.. : ..writers of : Fire and Accident Insurance Oufur Property of Non-Residents Carefully Attended Best of References. Satisfaction Guaranteed. to. 'twas the jolliest given him, and One day Jessie was sitting in her grandpa's lap, and while sitting there noticed that his head was bald on top. She said, t'Ph,.- 'ranpa, your head's peaking froo." Houses for rent, Real Estate for sale, Abstracts gf Title, Loans and Collections, Referee V ork, Conveyancing and Legal Matters, Shorthand and Typewriting. Rooms 23 and 24, Vogrt Block, The Dalles. Phone 01 CLOSING OUT SALE " OF ' . ' . Furniture and Carpets Our entire stock will be SOLD AT COST. Sale to continue until all is sold. PRINZ & NITSCHKE COOPER MANUFACTURER AND DEALER IS "NAME ON EVERY PIECE." LOWNEY'S Chocolate Bonbons. FOR SALE BY jfcarness, Saddles, Zftridles, Collars, Hants, PACK OUTFITS, WAGON COVERS, And all articles usually kept in a First-Class Harness Shop. Custom work and repairing done in a workmanlike manner. ' 1 " Opposite Moody's Warehouse, The Dalles, G A. CLARKE) . . PRACTICAL . ... Watchmaker and Jeweler. BLAKELEV & HOUGHTON, THE DALLES, OREGON. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Cast Second Street, The Dalles, Oregtm