THK DALLI8, - OBEUON FEU) AY, - - - - OCTOBER l. 1891. I. OCA I. AND 1'EIISOXAL A. M. Branner of Nmisene was town Mondav. Messrs.-C. O. Roberts and George T. Hratlier, of Hood River, came up on tlie noon train Mor.day. ' Tb office of The Dalles, Portland and Astoria Navigation company in now on First street at the northeast corner of Court. j it came at last suddenly. Only a few Senator Fulton of Astoria is said to be i days ago a physician from this city was receiving strong indorsements from the j called in who found his system com Portland and Astoria bar for the vacant j pletely broked down and from the first circuit judgeship. ' ' the doctor had but faint hope of his re- Rr. Henry Brown accommmied bv I covery. Mr. Bolton was an honest his famiiv left last nleht for Snokane to assume the pastoral charge of a Method- 1st Episcopal church at that plnie. The amount of money received in tins city from insurance companies; on ac- - count of losses by the great lire, will not j " w County. vary a thousand : dollars, either way, f A telegram came to this office yerter from f275,(KK). - i day, too Into for pablication.'anii'drincing Tl whol amount of the contributions ! that Wasco county ha! , taken the first received for the sufferers by the late fire amonuted to something over foOOO, a considerable portion of which has been already distribnted. The Dalles, Portland & Astoria 'avi- gallon company are meeting with very 4 telegram arrived in the city Thurs flattering patronage.; .The people" are j announcing the death of f. T. Tur Unding solidly In with them and they " jate operator for the Western Un- - have all the freight and .passenger bnsi they cau conveniently handle. The Oregon experiment station at "y Corvallte, " through Prof. H. T. French, will send to any farmer in the state who applies for it, and agrees to give it care ful cultivation, two varieties of new wheat to test its qualities for cultiva tion in the state. - lenry Williams of Eight Mile has just been over the "free" bridge between this and Sherman county and he thinks ' very great credit is due Mr. Harris, the keeper, for" the excellent condition in which he found the grades on both sides of the Deschutes river. . .,' We regret very much to hear that Hon. E. X,. Smith is still under the physician's care. He was barely able to pay a short visit to bis home at Hood River, to attend his daughter's weddingrj when he returned to Portland where be is 'now under the care of one of Port land's mofct eminent physicians. The locomotive for the portage rail road was at Wallula yesterday, parts of H however had been shipped by another ' train and had not arrived. It is not ex pected that any unnecessary delay will occnr on the Northern and Mr. Farley . has a man at Wallula who will see that there is no delay after the engine has got on the track of the Union Pacific. Sergeant Gnrney of Troop C 4th cav alry U. S. A., while in the neighborhood of Baker City, en-route with his com pany from Fort Walla Walla to Fort Bidwell, Cat., died suddenly on the 28th ult., from the effects of an over dose of tnorpnine. . nis uuaui is ueneveuigjp jtto v nave resulted iroui ins own carelessness in not following the instructions of the company'sswfgebii. Wilev is putting up for Ward Kerns at the old stand, n stable 80x100 feet. It will be roofed with cor rugated iron, will contain 70,000 feet of - lumber and will accommodate, when finished thirty-three head of horses, The old barn used to accommodate, at times over 100 head, but the new one , will be enlarged in the spring sufficiently to accommodote the, trade. The bam and yard9 wilt occupy three lots. Eph Olinger, deputy sheriff at Hood River, brought up today a man named Thomas Ryan, who has been bound over bv the justice court of Hood River, to appear before the grand jury, charged with house-breaking. Ryan was de tected leaving the saloon of T. Deeke, which he bad broken into with the in tent, It is supposed, of procuring whiskey. He has been, for some time working as a section ' hand at Hood River. The town of Condon had a fire on the night of the 27th ult., that, starting in the livery stable of Ward & Glasco, burned the photograph gallery, W. Rhinehaft's dwelling, Dunlap's black smith shop, .Ward ,s hotel and C. C. . Shaw's barber shop: In a trunk in the photograph gallery was $1200 in coin and 41000 in currency. The gold was found . after the fire- The loss was about $7000. - Opinion is divided as to the origin of the fire and it is quite probable that it was merely accidental. . Yesterday Emile Schanno and M. T. Xoian made a trip on the Regulator to the Cascade Locks and return. In a conversation with Mr. Schanno this morning that gentleman expressed him self as most agreeably surprised at the amount of work that has been done for the amount of the appropriation made, the apparent substantial character and excellence of the work and the reason ably short time in which it was accom plished'. Mr. Shanno Las no hesitation in saying that Superintendent Farley deserves great credit for his excellent management. Mrv Schanno' baa been watching with interest the construction work at the locks, since the first pick was struck and he believes that more good work has been done there during the past six months than was done dur ing the six previous years. "Mr. Alexander MacEachernof Town rhip 48 was in town Friday. Although over 92 years of age he is still hale and hearty. In txmversation with Mr. Mac Eachern we could not observe that his mental power was the least abated. He was for many years an elder of the late Rev. Donald McDonald's church and by whom he was much valued, and that es teemed clerifvman said of him uianv years ago, that iie was an Israelite in deed in whom thrre is no guile. We are glad to see onr old friend looking so well." The above Is copied from the Prince Edward Island Patriot and refers to the father of our esteemed fellow townsman, Joe McEacliern, who has htt-ome a good .lealof an Israelite fwrnself, since S. P. Adin has taken htm In training. The BU., y poBsioiy; come when Jue is as old us bla father, I bot at yet the horoscope gives no iadlca-1 u tloq of it. yeSShvSrAYMixTUdit)t oj the thronicie: ' a dispatch a few days ago from Duluth, In an editorial in your issue of Sep Minn., informing him that he was one j tember 18th, in replying to the East Ore of seven heirs to property valued at j gonian, you assume that a single tax a6 $9,000,000 which was left by I'at'fi nude, j sessor must necessarily violate his oath. ; one Henry Fitzsiinuiona, a former rich " resident of Calcutta, India, and which , has been in the English court of chan- , eery for years. When Tat received the in , news of his good fortune he simply said, , 'noil, if it comes Oi 11 have a ood ! tune wnt it anyhow." . The Chronica regrets to hear of the death of John Bolton, of Kingslev, which took place at his residence at one viw.l- ,tn,r hoir.0t While his demise was not unexpected j ; '"". K01 neighbor. a Kina wtner, ! and an affectionate husband He leaves, a wife and three children to mourn ,li8 loss. The fnheriil took place Monday at ' jo o'clock. . j premium on fruits, at the Portland Ex- Dosition and that James A. Varney of The Dalles had taken the first premium on grapes. Death of T. T. Turner. ion Telegraph company at this place. Only a conple of days before a letter was received from his sister expressing the hope that he was improving. The hope was delusive and yesterday evening he passed over to the silent majority. Mr. Turner was a young man of excellent habits and most obliging manners. During his residence here he made many friends who will regret his departure. He leaves a mother and sister to mourn his loss. HU Pete Nodded. About midnight's holy hour last night St. Peter again nodded while " the celes tial gate, as is its wont, stood gently open for the weary pilgrim from the nether world. A little ten pound angel of the male persuasion, full of the cur iosity of its budding life, crept quietly through the portals and, seeing an au tumn zephyr pass, bestrode its crest and gently floated through the blue ex panse till it came in the neighborhood of the Galloway farm on Three Mile, when Dr. Hugh Logan, happening to be in that neighborhood visiting a sick patient, caught it and made a present of it to Ed Sharp. Ed and Mrs. Sharp are doing everything in the world to induce it to stav with them. Advertised Letter. The following is the list of letters re maining in The Dalles postoflice uncalled for Saturday, Oct. 3, 1891. Persons call ing for these letters will please give the date on which they were advertised : Adams Harry J Jack Joh: Armstrong F E wlTMiss Flora Monos Dick Murphy Jas Xight TJlvsus Nichols Mrs T Bowver K A Burlingamc Mary Ularkson U Shaw C E Clayton Miss Jessie Stevenson Bros Campbell J E Smith Mary Gumming G II 3 - Temple Henry Gordian Thos Wright George Haynes Emily Wright Mrs M E Howard Mrs H L 2 M. T. Nolan, P. M. At Their Old Trick. This morning H. C. Sielsen received a box of goods which was plainly ad dressed as follows: "H. C. Nielsen, The Dalles, Or. Care of D. P. & A. X. Co." The U. P. company at Portland had crossed out the shipping directions and simply left the name and thus shipped the lox by rail to The Dalles. Mr. Nielsen promptly returned it to the freight agent here, and told him to ship it back to Portland. Ad. Keller, the ba ker has a parcel plainly addressed to the navigation company's boat at Portland, which came up on the Bukcr. This is a very small business for a great, rich company to lie engaged in stealing small packages of freight. No particular complaint was made when the same company stole thirty-one curs of wool from J. H. Sherur, but we must draw a line somewhere. It is pofitively mean to steal anything less than a car load. - - A Qnlet Wedding. A delightful wedding party met on the evening of October 1st, at the residence of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Potter, of the Hood River valley, to celebrate the marriage of Homer Mc Farland of Heppner and Miss Happie Day Potter. There were present the celebrant, Rev. W. L. McEwau, and Mrs. McEwan, Mr. and Mrs. C. McFar land, Mr. and Mrs. F. McFarland, Mr. E. B. McFarland, Mr. and Mrs. Bishop, M.'Middletou, Mr. E. M. Williams, Mr.lndMrs. W. Potter and Mr. and Mrs. M. B.- Potter. The parlor of the handsome building was profusely deco rated with flowers and as the charming bride, resplendent in a rich dress of pale green silk, descended the stairway at the hour of 9 o'clock, her pathway was literally strewn with flowers. After the ceremony the party sat down to a mag nificent wedding supper and about the hour of midnight the company separated for their homes with many earnest good wishes for the bride and bridegroom, who at an early hour nex( morning started on their wedding trip to Portland. Among the numerous and valuable pres ents our correspondent noticed a silver water set and an eight piece-silver tea service, from Mr. and Mrs. F. McFar land, a gold breast pin, fromrMr. and Mrs. W. R. Abrams, a silver platter, j from Mr. and Mrs. Will Potter, a pair of J vases, from Mr. and Mrs. Mcbwan, a rose jar from Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Mc Farland, a set of fruit knives from Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Bone, a card receiver. from Mr. W. B. Lass well, a stand and cover, from Mr. W. C. Bishop, one set of j solid silver tea spoons, from Mr. and j Mrs. C. McFarland and inany other val 1 uable gifts the nnmcx of whoxe donors ; we did not learn. xbe railroads of the country employ 7QO.OOO men. Each year .titer lofi 2,000 Of their number in killed, and 20.000 of them are ininred annnallr. 1. M,5mB,,i c(i ZTrZ a' I pend on these employe, for a living. I ; Let mc say that all that single tax folks expect or claim at present is that the ' present laws shou'd Ik? strictly adhered to in order tnat people can see their in- justice. Single tax assessors, if thev do increase the nsscssmant on land, increase it onlv on unimprove . land which to it K- nnim,' i,..i ,. i,!oi. ' that extcnt Sieves personal property j i aml proved land. The impulse that; ! tl,e sin,c tax agitation has given in I i or v-HT ana iirooKiyn nas in- ! creased the assessment several million dollars and every dollar of it borne by the owners of improved or part.ally im- proved land, r.nd land owners who put their land to its best use, applaud the course. If the assessor of Wasco county would pursue the same course he would thousand dollars of the!IorGrenmann"ni!r- . p . , - . ; to that extent relieve personal property t ami improvements on lanu, wiucn, to and j that extent, ! farmers mid would relieve industrious require "the dogs in the manger'' to pay a part of their ill-gotten products of labor for public purposes. If the Chronicle, wishes to meet a foeman worthy of its blade, please turn your artillery upon the Oregonian, which, in an editorial of September 25th, advocates all that the most sanguine single tax man wishes or hopes for at present. Hoping that the Chronicle will yet see the truth and justice in the single tax, I remain, -Respectfully, F. MMakh is. M ajiagement of the Portage Itond. Two lettere recently appeared in the Oregonian on .the management'of the work on the portage railway at Cascade Locks. In these letters Superintendent Farley was sharply criticised. - It was a public matter, a matter relatingto pub lic business, and as a responsible nam that of Turner F. Leavens was given as the author, the letters were printed. But The Dalles Chronicle now says: When the letters appeared Mr. Leavens was at a distance in the state of Washington with a surveying party. Not till he returned last Thursday even ing did he have an opportunity of disa vowing all knowledge or connection with either of the letters. Mr. Leavens de nies having written the letters; denies all authorship, and denies having given anyone permission to use his name in writing them. The. Dalles paper makes this addi tional statement : The animus of the attacks is fully un derstood, and the time may come when their authorship will be fully exposed; meanwhile they have failed in their ob ject, and the solitary fact that there yet remains, after the road is open fcr traffic, fully fSOOO to furnish necessary conven iences, is itself a sufficient answer to a thousand such, made by a sneak who is cowardly enough to steal another man's name to fight under. . The Oregonian has not yet heard di rectly from Mr. Leavens, but it assumes that The Dalles Chronicle has received from him a denial of the authorship of the letters. If they are really forgeries, the 'Oregonian would gladly do all in its power to drag their author into the light and expose him to Lthe eerrtempt he deserves. It seems certain that the state board do not think Mr. Farley's management censur able, since they declined to receive his resignation. The letters bear evidence of inside knowledge on the part of their author, which may lead to discovery of him. The Oregonian has preserved the original of the second and longer letter. It would be easy for a malevolent per son to distort information that his op portunities had enabled him to obtain, and use it for unjust criticism upon a person in the public service. This seems to be a case of that kind, a case more over, which furnishes an illustration of that species of meanness which ' uses another's name to cover one's own cow ardice. A Kind Kdltor. Editor Bowmer of the Weston Leader has always been noted for his kindness and liberality, and the following touch ing incident is only a further proot of his humanity to mankind in general and to those whom he has long loved in par ticular. Recently a subscriber to the Leader died and left fonrteen years' subscription unpaid. Editor Bowmer appeared at the grave in solemn black attire with his stovepipe well over his eyes in a manner suggestive of tears, and, just before the undertaker screwed tne lid on for the last time the grief-stricken pencil-pusher gently placed in the coffin a linen duster, a thermometer, a palmleaf fan, a recipe for making ice and a copy of the Leader printed on asbestos. Go It. Hucd BiverCi lacier:" The Hood River Olar.ier bus the larg- j est circulation of auv paper in the county. It is more widely disseminated than all the others combined, being read from Celilo t Scappose, and from Cooper's Spur to Skookum Chuck. This makes it the best possible advertising medium. This is not literally true, but we intend to be in the swim if it ex hausts the material we wash our forms with. Dalles papers will please take notice that we intend to get there if .the concentrated lye will do it. The Red Men's lodge at Jacksonville gave up its charter last week, after an existence of twenty years. During stag ing times it was the strongest lodge in the county, and was in the habit of ex changing visits with Yreka lodge at an nual reunions, when hundreds of people would travel between those distances to see the festivities, and the day (May 12) would be important as the 4tfi of July. A little Detroit girl was bidding her boy playmate good-bye, and on this oc casion her mother told her to kiss him. She offered him a rognish cheek," and wnen tne salute was gravely eiven. be gan to rub it vigorously with her hand kerchief. - " hy, Ijiura," said her mother, "you're not rubbing it off?" "No, mamma," said the little maiden, "I'nimbbing it in." Detroit Free Preys. Condon, Gilliam county, has been visited by a fire that has done $10,000 damage. The losses are: Ward & Glassco, $1800; photograph gallery, $5000; G. W. Rhinahart,"$1200; Wil liam Dunlup, $000; Mont. Ward, $2000; C. C. ifhaw, $200. Mr. Ward was the onlv one who was insured. Sandy Olds, the Portland gambler who murdered, Em.il Weber and after being tried three" "times cot off with a vear in the neniPntiUrv cn M VmI !n the kitchen of that nstitution for the ! most part peeling potatoes. Andy's i time will bp up next March. I The kaiser has ordered a crown to ex- . . y . . " built tue 12 he hit ears. . I MAKE THE BEST FERTIL WHEN PLOWED UNDER, Itrxnlt of Experiment , Demonstrate the Value of Clover and Other le guminous Plants Southern Pea Tinea Good for Wheat Land. Green manuring consists of plowing ! naaer vegetation of any kind either dry i or green. Some plants are of much or green. Some plants greater value for this purpose than others. Yet it is probably true that every known plant that will make a good strong growth on dry, poor or worn ont soil will add more or less rich- vxoa l.n4- All 4-;j? I .1 A;l Av cept sticky ftre wilted by treatment. Brown adobes on . our lulls are greatly benefited by green manuring in coniunction with lime or I plaster and afhes. j leguminous plants are considered best or tnese tne corn- mon cjover jg the standard and lias lone been used for the nnrnose. The ; crimson clover has fa-4 last few vearg been highly valued in warm cli- mates like larce portions of this Const. ; These clovers are not adapted to locali ties with dry summer climates and are therefore only available in portions of Western Oregon and Washington. Many other plants are used for this purpose such as cow or field peas, buckweat, vetches, lupins, rye, etc. In most coun tries these are nearly all available but on this Coast we must depend on a few of them, such as will grow rankly during 1 winter and early spring, such as rye, al j filaria, and many of our beautiful, rank growing lupins. These lupins belong to the legnminosa?, same as the peas and clovers, and m their many different species have kinds adapted to every known variety or quality of soil, and in time some of these native lupins will be selected out and used with great profit as green manure crops. We have some seven to nine native species of wild clovers, some of which grow finely nearly everywhere. Some of these wonld un doubtedly be good for this purpose. Any or these plants that grow rankly m win ter, when trees and vines are dormant, are of the greatest value for keeping up tne fertility of orchards and vineyards. They should be plowed under rather late in the spring, and the soil at once har rowed down 'fine, the harrow following the plow within an hour or two. Bye is good if plowed under a few days after it flowers. But, unfortunately, we dare not leave it growing so late among the trees; yet, if sown early, a good weight per acre can be plowed under in early spring. It would not do to leave rye as late as some other manurial crops for it would rob the trees of moisture. Alfilaria would be one of the very best plants for plowing under if we could handle it in sowing. But, unfor tunately, its seed is of such a character that it cannot be well cultivated. In many localities it is self seeding and grows very rankly. In such places on poor, stiff and worn soils it should be encouraged and plowed under. This should be done as late in the spring as is 6afe on account of moisture. Then by plowing again late in autumn the seed for another crop will be brought to the surface. , A very heavy crop of such plants can be neatly plowed under by first running a light harrow in the same direction the plow is to run. Some plows will turn them under better if the ground is harrowed at right angles to the plowing. I took a patch thickly covered with blackberry bushes six to seven feet high and filled with . weeda and grass. All were harrowed down with a heavy harrow and plowed under; then harrowed out again and piled and burned. The next day the ground was planted to potatoes. This was done about the middle of May and not a sprout of the blackberries has appeared. Another way of plowing under such crops is to hang a heavy chain from the double-trees"so as to drag just before the plow. There are other crops for plowing under which only grow during the heat of summer. Buckwheat is an example. It is of great value East for this purpose. It might be sown on this Coast late in summer and then plowed under after the first rains. An experienced farmer in Illinois, when his land showed signs of weaken ing for com, plowed under the corn stalks and left the field to grow up in weeds and then plowed them under the following or second autumn. This was called "giving the land a rest. " The good of the "rest" came from the decay ing vegetation rlowed under. Plants that decay on the soil on which they grew return to the soil, all they take from it, with the addition of carbon, ox ygen and nitrogen that they gather from the air. When they decay these are given in a soluble and available form for other plants to feed. upon. The most valuable of these is nitrogen, the one necessary element of plant food in which our upland soils are deficient. Not only are these valuable elements taken from the air and given to the soil by the de cay of plants but each and every plant growing decomposes more or lees of the mineral elements of the soil and on de- cay returns them in a soluble form. The great value of red clover as a fer tilizing crop comes from its peculiar manner of growth. It sends its roots down into and through the sub-soil where they feed on mineral elements that few other plants can reach and could not utilize (decompose) them if they did. And it does not absorb the. available plant food near the surface it is left for the crop that follows. Its dense shades causes the formation of the nitrates in the soils, leaving nitrogen. A certain form of low microscopic ani mal life, called bacilli or bacteria, forms nests on clover roots, which at their death and decay give the soil -a still greater percentage of nitrogen. A poor soil may be sown with this plant and it may be cut for hay in June and Septem ber and then plowed under, leaving the ground greatly improved. But to get tne most benefit from clover it should be plowed under when it is fit to cat for nay. This method of fertilizing wonld not work well on rich soils. It would give too great a growth of wood and foliage at the expense of buds and fruit. On a thin, dry, gravelly clay such culture is most profitable. Unfortunately enough' narurai growth to plow under cannot be nau on this Coast. Therefore we should sow rye, lupins, vetches and some of the rank winter grasses. It is possible that some of the many different field or cow peas so largely grown in the South Atlantic states will'' prove the best material for green ma-? nuiing on this Coast. Professor Cham berlain of the North Carolina Agricul--, lurai college nas issued a bulletin de? tailing two seasons of green manuring ror wneat with Southern field peas. The; plats of soil selected were aa near alike. as was possible to select. Then several) different commercial fertilizers were "rei commercia HfJJ nPotl were treated alike., Ual' Plot had a crop of pea vines. Plowed under. From the results the-' piuiessor gives tne following: 1. Pea vine manuring for wheat is the, cheapest and most' effective of all fertilJ .a. The yiald due to th, wowth -f p. PLANTS I2ERS ""Tiiujc uoUucUuiis "are bated upon : 1. Average increased yield of wheat dne to pea vines in 1S89, 10 bnshels, 1 pound, or more than one-third. 2. Average increased yield of wheat due to pea vines in 1890, 16 bnshels, 11 pounds, or 50 per cent. Pea vines enrich the land even if the crop is all removed and thev make a vast j amount of good food for both man and beast. D. B. WlER. The Wood Pnlp Indntry. In the report of the chief of the divis ion of forestry for 1890, recently pub lished, Dr. Fernow savs of the wood pulp industry: uIt can lie said without fear of contradiction, that in no field of industrial activity has a more, rapid de velopment taken place within the last few years than in that of the use of wood for pulp manufacture. The im portance of this comparatively new in dustry for the present, and still more for the future, can hardly lie overesti mated. Its expansion during the next few decades may bring revolutionary changes in onr wood consumption, due to the new material, cellulose, fiber or wood pulp. " Though rupid in its growth the new industry has by no means reached its full development. Not only is there room for improvement in the processes em ployed but there are all the time new ap plications found for the material. While it was in the first place designed to be used in the manufacture of paper only, by various -methods of indurating it, its adaptation has become widespread; pails, water pipes, barrels, kitchen utensils, washtubs, bathtubs, washboards, doors, caskets, carriage bodies, floor coverings, furniture and bniiding ornaments, and various other materials are made of it, and while the use of timber has been suspended in shipbuilding the latest tor pedo rarn of the Austrian navy received a protective armor of cellulose, and our own new vesKeis are to be similarly pro vided. While this armor is to render the effects of the shots less disastrous by stopping up leaks. 011 the other hand bullets for rifle use are made from paper pulp. Of food products sugar, (glucose) and alcohol can be "derived from it, and materials resembling leather, cloth and silk have been successfully manufac tured from it. An entire hotel has been lately built in Hamburg, Germany, of material of which pulp forms the basis, and it also forms the basis of a superior lime mortar, fire and water proof, for covering and finishing walls. "The business in this country has in creased nearly 5C0 per cent, the last eight years, and nearly 200 per cent, in the last four years. "In 1888 the stunipage consumed for pulp was valued at $2,235,000. The pro duct, 225,000 tons ground and 112,500 tons of chemical pulp, was valued at $12,375,000, the capital employed being estimated at $20,000,000. The figures given below would indicate a present consumption in round numbers of 1,000, 000 cords of wood per annum. When it is considered that about 1,000,000,000 pounds of book and news paper are con sumed annually in this country, two thirds of which might be made of wood fiber, there is still a considerable mar gin for this use alone to be supplied by j wood pulp. . From figures given it is learned that there are in this country 237 wood pulp mills, New York having the grearest number 75 Wisconsin coming next with 2(1. Vermont and New Hampshire each has 18, Indiana 12, and Michigan 13. The 237 mills have a daily capacity The Choice of FruilH and Vegetables. It is hard to reform people in buying their daily food. They constantly cheat themselves. The market gardener and fruit grower are obliged to assist them in cheating themselves.. We will buy that which pleases the eye whether it be good or not. The big, red, thin juiced apple sells, wlule the dull yellow or rusfv coats of medium size, a far su perior apple, goes to waste or is sold for one-half or one-third what is readily paid for the red apple. . We choose the over bleached (white) celery, bleached until it is pithy, soft and with little flavor and its peculiar qualities that should give it value are extracted by the bleaching. The rich golden, somewhat green, crisp, firm, quickly bleached celery is left unsold or taken by the bnyer with the slender purse. In this case, as in many others the highest priced is the poorest quality. On the introduction of wax podded beans they were found to be good. The buyer takes the larger, thinner, whiter po'ds by far the poorest of all and the darkest when cooked and neglects the shorter, thicker, much more nutritious yellow podded varieties and much whiter when cooked. The a-Tparagus that sells for the best price is tne great overgrown, nearly tasteless, watery, insipid, often hollow shoots, but when they are just starting from the ground with nothing but the sharp point of any value as food at all. While the medium sized, solid, rich, high flavored shoots that were allowed to grow two to five inches above the ground are neglected by all except tba few who know the difference. It is the same through the whole category of foods and fruits. It does seem hard to see the finest of the world's plums the Green Gage go ing begging with no takers at two bits a box and the Ponds Seedling, about the poorest plum for any and all pnrposes. selling rapidly at Si a box. buch are the facta and the market gardener and fruit grower are obliged to n;eet them. They are obliged to ri-ow ?xrri as thev can sell. So long is bst :Tf!y and richness has no market varus, iia size and beauty combined with wtitl'ftss- ness bring the money, just so icbj Roll our markets be Durdened with tte poor est articles. . Disturbing Element. In the summer season East thev have their thunder storms, tornadoes, floods, threshing winds, hailstorms, cinchbuga, grasshoppers (locusts), and what not. On this Coast our summers are dry, and we escape all the above evils; yet we have one terror at this dry season which is as bad, at times, aa all the above com bined, namely, pasture, grainfteld, brush and forest fires. These are the rural dwellers' terror; especially on the ilia and mountains. Scores of fine, pleas ant, costly hoinea the result of years of toil together with their surround mgs and not rarely the lives of the dwellers, are being swept out of exist ence by merciless fires. The most strin gent laws snouid be passed, and exe cuted without mercy, against the care less or purposely firing anything ont of doors at this season. The man who carelessly starts a fire which burns out his neighbors should be held responsible. Whitewash the Frnit Tree. It is an excellent plan to whitewash the stems and larger branches of all fruit trees in early summer. It prevents sun killing on the southwest side and makes ' smooth, soft and elastic bark. The white reflects heat while dark col ored bark absorbs it. The salt, sulphur and lime mixture makes the best whitewash,- It will kill the foliage but lJ good for the stem. j . ,auu.i.uwu, Ui A-Uj,CiiC, Will LrXin j the publication "of the Weekly Times at 1 ; Junction next week. : I The Ashland Tidings says that the! ! peach crop in that vicinitv sold for $75, ; 000. One Portland firm paid out $20,000. j The twentieth Oregon .supreme court ! I a. e ii r ! 1 icjjuii la jubi uui irum me press 01 me j state printing office. It contains 045 pages. The new bridge which is to span the j Willamette at Albany is being built at I Cleveland, O., and work upon it is pro- gressing rapidly. The town of Susanville, Grant connty, was named after Susan Moffatt, daugh ter of the keeper fof the hotel at that place in early days. The heirs of Colonel I. R.JMoore, who left so much land near Eugene, are now quarreling in-thecourts"'over the divis ion of the property. John Gray, of Eugene, whose skull was fractured by the blow of a bar of iron in the hands of his brother-in-law, T. E. Russell, will probably recover. Joseph and Sarah Ann Hoskins, of Newberg, celebratedtheir, 'golden wed- ding SepteniberX27. Immediate reliT tives to the number Vjf twenty-five were present. The Catholics will erect a large brick schoolhouse for the education of the In dians on the Umatilla reservation. Work will le begun as soon'as possible. Andy Kavanaugh,livingnear.GervuiB, set"fire to a''strawstack lately, and it soon spread to his granary and burned the sacks off of a big quantity of grain. Two h"rses afflicted with the glanders havebeendiscoveredat'Salem, and the Domestic Animal commission of the state has ordered the county stock in spector to kill them. Henry Thompson a farm laborer for Mr. Davis, four miles from Newberg, Yamhill county, committed suicide Wednesday night with a shotgun. He had made an unsuccessful attempt a few days before with'poison. In Umatilla county :he experiment has been successfully made of raising fruit on the hills without irrigation. The orchards are flourishing and the. fruit producedjsofjexcellent quality. J. W. SiuipsonjofUmatilla county, Uiad a narrow escape at the railroad crossing at Barnhart'a station. One horse of his team",waskilled by the' en gine, the wagon overturned" and Mr. Simpson considerable bruised. It is aid the river bottom somo two or three miles below Pendreton is alive with rattlesnakes, of which there are more than have been seen for years, Mrs. Hill lost the best horse on her place recently from a rattlesnake bite. Silver salmon are verv plentiful at present in Yaquina bay. From morn ing till night her watevs'are dotted with boats trollingfor them, and it is but an ordinary two hours to catch six or seven weighing from ten to twenty-hve pounds, The men who made the arrest of Al- bertson, near Gardiner ,Jhave been quar reling over the $500 reward. Detective Ives has already announced that it be longs to W. W. (Jochran, of Eugene, as all the other officers were employed by the day. AUnited Presbyterian church was dedicated at Shedd last Sunday. The re d on that occasion by Rev. S. G. Irvine, D. D., of Albany, was his four thousandth discourse. Dr. Ir vine is an Oregon pioneer, and his strength is unabated. James Mackev, a'reaideut of Albany, aged 86, is entitled to the'distinct on of having assisted in building'thoTirst rail road in the United States, that between Germantown and Philadelphia, just about sixty years ago. . In fact he helped lay the first rail. A democrat!cJmass meeting will be held at the opera house in Albany to night. ChaunceyFBlack, president of the National Association of Democratic Clubs, and James M. Beck, attorney general of the statei'of Pennsylvania, are expected to address the meeting. ; John Blanchet, a rancher in the Nye neighborhood, Umatilla county, says that cropsof all kinds have been lietter than for six years in that section. Wheat is making twenty-five and barley thirty-five bushels to the acre, and hay about one and a half tons to the acre. The laige band of sheep brought up in Douglas county last spring by the Han ley Bros., of Jackson county, have been driven as far south as Marysville, Cal., where they are being disposed of at good prices. They started lo.ouo neaa, were four" months on the road, and reached! theirde8tination.with.0400 sheep. Athena .is somewhat excited over a j personal eucounterjbetween two women 1 of that place. One, Mrs. H. Mortimer, visited the house of the other, Mrs. ! Fisher, amfthe two engaged in a lively combat. Thev were separated by 1 fruit peddler .who passed r that way Mrs. Mortimer has been arrested 01 Mrs. Fisher's complaint. An occasional case of land-jumping is now heard of, incident to the forfeiture of railroad land. Mr. McCormick, i well-known farmer living"north of Pen dleton, woke up the other morning to find a jumper's cabin'on'one of his rail road quarters. It had evidently been all put together and- hauled ont there during me nigui. A new.variety br.wheat Jtnowu.as the new golden is attracting considerable at tention among wheat growers. It is a product coming originally from the de partmentjof agriculture,, andjproduced in Oregon for the first time in any quan tity the present season. The yield sur passes that of little club under like con ditions, while it is apparently less af fected bv dry weather than any other variety heretofore sown this season. Last week Howard & Baldwin, of Crook county, delivered a large band of beef cattle at Deschutes bridge, for ship ment to the PortlandfFmarket. The av erage weight of their three, four, and five-year-old steers was 1342 pounds, which is the best average any band of cattle from this part of the country has t At.:- . r a t fi a hiiuwu miH seasuu. udc oit-ei i tritneu 1870 pounds and another 1920 (pounds. When such cattle as these can be raised in Crook county, says the Ochoco Bcvieiv, it is folly to say the range is exhausted. The government locks at the Cascades are going up at the rate of a foot and a half per day. The lower gate will be completed by the middle of next month. Heretofore the work has been slow, as it was all under water, but now they can hurrv it. The south gate is completed ahd the north one is up probably a third of the way twenty feet; The building of these great locks is a magnificent piece of work, which, when completed, will stand as a monument to the engin eering skill of t his ago. The gates, when hung, will be the largest lock gates in the world, being 93x40 feet and weighing 130 tons. -i. They are oi steel ana are u swing upon giant hinges. iiiinnciuiui liiiiatiui h.ig. uu., Manufacturers and Dealers in- Minnesota Chief Separators, Giant k Stillwater Plain pd Traction Engines, "CHIEF" Farm Wagons, Stationary Engines and Boilers of all sizes. Saw Mills and Fixtures, Wood-Working Machinery, Wood Split Pulleys, Oils, Lace Belts and Belting. Minnesota Thresher Mfg. Co. CSGet our Prices before Purchasing. 267 Front Street, PORTLAND, OREGON. . Crandall & Burcfet, MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS IX FURNITURE pf CARPETS Undertakers and. Embalmers. NO. 1G6 SECOND STREET. WE ARE IN IT ! 75 pair of Misses Shoes worth $2.25 for $1.00 100 Corsets worth $1.25 for 50 cents'. OUR ENTIRE LINK OK DRESS GOODS AT ACTUAL COST. ' A. M. WILLIAMS & OO. New - Umatilla-- House, .. . THE DALLFS, OREGON. HANDLEY &. SIN NOTT, PROP'S. LARGEST : AND FINEST : HOTEL : IN : OREGON. Ticket nnl Baggage Oflice of the O. R. St N. Company, nd office of the Waster Union Telegraph Office are in th Hotel. Fire-Proof Safe for the Safety of all Valuables. JOLES : DEALERS IX: Staple n Fancy Hay, Grain Masonic Block, Corner Third and florth Washington SITUATED AT THE HEAD OF NAVIGATION. Destined to be the Best Manufacturing Center In the Inland Empire. For Further Information Interstate Investment Go., 0. D. TAYLOR, THE DALLES. EOBT. MATS. MAYS' & CROWE, (Sucoaoor. to ABKAUS STEWART.) Retailers and J" obtaer In Harffwaie. - Tinware, - firanitewaie, - CToeSepre,. SILVERWARE, ETC. AGENTS "Acorn," "Charter STOVES AND RANGES. Pumps, Pipe, Plumbers' and Steam Fitters' Supplies, Packing, Building Paper, SASH, DOORS, SHINGLES. Also a complete stock of Carpenters', Blacksmith's and Farmers Tools and Fine Shelf -AGENTS Tha Celebrated R. J.. ROBERTS "Warranted" Cutlery, .Herideu Cutlery , Tableware, the "Quick Meal" Gasoline Stovea, "Grand" Oil Stov and Anti-Rust Tinware. All Tinning, Plumbing, Pipe Work and Repairing -will oe done on SECOND STREET, L. RORDEN & CO. -ralth a Full Ctbekeiy and Glassuaarar Fop the present mill be foond at presman's Boot and Shoe Store.. BROS and Feed. Court Streets, The Dalies, Oregon. Dalles, Washington Best Selling Property of the Season in the North west. Call at th Offl f 72 WASHINTON ST., PORTLAND Xi. 32. OBOWM. FOR THE OakM "Argandi it Hardware. EOK- Bnort notice. THE DALLES, ORECOX. Line of- Gioceis,