The Dalles Daily Chronicle. THE DALl.KS OREGON. Entered at the INmtofltae nt The Dalles Oregon, us second-class matter. STATE OFFICIALS. Governor S. Peimoyer Secretary of State O. V. Mcllilde Treasurer PhilUji Metsehan bupt. of 1'ublir Instruction E. B. McElroy (J. K. Dolph etorK J J. H. Mitchell Congressman M. Hermann Stute Printer Frank Baker COUNTY OFFICIALS. Countv Judge C. f. Thornbnry Sheilrf 1. I Cites Clerk J. J, t'nwsen Treasurer ueu. Ruch ,, . . t IT' A. leavens Commissioners jl-Tnk Kincuid Assessor John E. Burnett Surveyor t K. V. sharp Hupenntendent ot 1'UDIte wnoois. .. rroy hiieiiey Coroner , . . . William iiiehell THE MAYOR'S MESSAGE. It is well known to the people of thin city and county that the common' court' cil of The Dulles and the mavor have been having a "monkey and parrot' time, for lo these many month?. That the gentlemen who compose the council were always wrong and his honor always right we cannot believe. Prima facie, the united wisdom of five honored and honorable men, some of them old enough to be his father, is as likely to be as sound and right as that of one, albeit a mayor. That the council may have made mistakes, we may frankly admit.. That the mayor may have done the came is just as likely . Nothing is gained by unfairness, and it is not journalism but todyisin that insists on perpetual fault-finding with the one and constant laudation of the other. The mayor de livered a message to the council last Saturday evening. It was an able and valuable document, fnll of figures and wise suggestions. But it was promptly tabled by the council and they did right. When an official, holding a high and honored position, ui-es an official mes sage, as the vehicle of petty spite or bit ter hate; when the mayor of a city allows his rancor to supplant his man ners; when he prostitutes his dignity to place on the records of a municipality an . evidence of his own partisan hatred or affection, the council has a right to snub him, and they did so. The council had no right to endorse a laudation of Messrs. Hilton, McCoy and Johnston and -a condemnation of Senator Watkins, and they didn't. If the mayor Wanted to thank Senator Hilton and Iiepresenta tives McCoy and Johnston for obsequi ous iersonal servitude, and condemn Kenator 'Watkins because he faithfully supported the wishes of his constituents, he might have . done so in some other way. His thanks and blame had no place in an official message. We have only one other fault to find (with this, otherwise excellent document. We have already said it was n cunningly devised instrument. It was all that. It may not have been intended, but it reads as if every good feature in the amended -w ater bill was placed there by the mayor's suggestion. We cannot allow him so much glory. He must share some of it with others. The coun cil needs a little as well as the mayor. We have not seen the water bill, as it finally passed the senate, but His Honor tells us that the amended bill contains a provision whereby the surplus revenue from water rents can lie loaned out, when not needed to pay interest on the bonded debt. But this was in the bill that the council favored. They thought it one of the best features of the bill, -and reckoned it would save to the city, 'before its debt was finally paid, as much as $20,000. We are pleased to know this provision remains, but the council must get the glory of it ; not the mayor. His is a lessor glory. He didn't amend it out. For that we move him a vote of thanks. NO PLACE LIKE OREGON. EASTERN The Oregonian says the Willamette' valley seems to be the favored spot of all the earth, this season. We doD't agree with the great daily. We have lived for a-tiine, this winter, in both places, and we unhesitatingly avow our preference for Eastern Oregon. If, in that splendid valley there is an absence of cyclones and hurricanes, if high winds and ex cessive i-old do not hold bitter carnival there, if floods have not run riot and heavy snow drifts stopped traffic and en dangered human life, the same is true of Eastern Oregon, while there is an utter absence of that cold, raw, chilling moisture-laden . atmosphere peculiar to a Willamette valley winter. An Eastern Oregonian doesn't know what a cyclone is, except by its definition in Webster or newspaper reports. If the nights are colder here than they are west of the mountains the days make up the com pensation by salubrity and sunshine. A typical winter day in this climate is a poem. It's a tiling of gladness and pleasure and beauty and health and brightness. Life is worth living when it is lived here and no healthier spot exists on God's green earth. Take it for all in all, we think Eastern Oregon is the favored spot this season ; and bo say, we all of us. AN IMPORTANT SUGGESTION. I be message ol Major juoorty very prosperly suggests the necessity .of im mediate action by tne city officials, in all matters that relate to the completion of the city water works. A certified copy of the water bill ought to be pro- cured as soon as possible, and an ordi nance passed providing for the submis sion to the property taxpayers, the question of a further bonded indebted ness. The council, last Saturday even ing passed a motion for the appointment of a committee to ascertain the -condition of the water fund and act upon the new law. The mayor, however failed to appoint the committee although the mo tion was made at his suggestion. We presume this was an oversight on the part of the mayor, but it is a cause of delay all the same, and the people are jealous of any further delay, more than is absolutely nesessary. Hitherto, one eye of our esteemed evening contempor ary has been critically fixed upon the council, while the one that ought to have seen the mayor has been closed. The optics of the Chronicle will be fixed upon both and apportion praise or blame as progress or retardment may demand : but the people want water, thev want it badly and they want it I'ERSONAL AND EXP A NA TOR Y. The first issue of the Chronicle was dated December lo. 1890. Nearly three months have passed since then, and, till this present issue, the Times-Moun taineer and its editor can scarcely be said to have been noticed in its. columns. If the Chbonicle was started to "starve out" the Mountaineer, it was singularly tardy, in commencing the process. Our predecessor, Mr. Cradlebaugh, never once referred to that paper, and the present writer, on taking charge, received positive instruction to "leave Mr. Michell alone." He would have been glad to have done so, but he cannot. He must rise to explain-;' and must do it now. The editor of the Times-Moun taineer has been whining for the past six months, because, as he alleges, the Chronicle was started to starve him out. The pocket of the Times-Mountaineer is the tenderest part of his anat omy. That explains the intensity of the wail. If the Chronicle has any mission, it is to tell the truth. If the Times Mountaineer had done this, there had been no need for the Chbonicle. The Chronicle was started then, because, in the words of a learned senator, uttered on the floor of the senate, during the meeting of the legislature, "the editor of the Times-Mountaineer is the most ac complished disciple of Annias in Eastern Oregon." The Chroniclb was started to treat people fairly. Had the Moun laineer always done this the Chronicle, then, had had no special mission. In the Mountaineer of yesterday, there is a notice, in the second local column, of a circular, issued by the State Horticul tural society. We publish it, today in full. Mr. Michell yesterday published all but the author and subscriber. This was the honored name of our fellow townsman James A. Varney. The Times- Mountaineer doesn't like Mr. Varney Mr. Varney doesn't get all his printing done there, and his name must not ap pear in the colunfns of that journal, in any connection that would do him honor. At the last local agricultural fair General Varney made an exhibit of grapes. The Times-Mountaineer, give an accurate ac count of all exhibits, but Mr. Varney's. Mr. Varney took the same exhibit to Portland and carried the sweep-stake prize in competition with the whole state. This is not journalism. No journal, worthy of the name would stoop so low. The Times-Mountaineer falsely insinuates that the Chbonicle is a "North Dalles boomer." There has never been a line in this journal adver tising North Dalles, that was not paid for at advertising rates. But enough. The Times-Mountaineer must not trust any longer, in the credulity of the public and the silence of the Chronicle. It won't be safe. "A ehiel among us takin' notes. An' faith he'll prent it." DEATH OF A. W. FERGUSON. Peaceful Passing Away of a Prominent Pioneer of This State. A. W. Ferguson is dead. That was the announcement vesterdav afternoon. He passed away at 2 :30 p. m. His end was painless. "They thought him dving when he slept and sleeping when he died." He had been bed ridden for man v years and death came to him as a welcome re lease from long continued suffering. . He was an invalid since 1883, and since '85 had not left his bed. He leaves a wife and five children, E. Z., H. B., J. E., and F. W., and Mrs. J. N. Griffin. The funeral will be under the auspices of Temple Lodge No. 7. A. F. and A. M., from the Episcopal church tomorrow morning.: The interment will be at Young's River cemetery. A. W. Ferguson was born in Virginia, Aug. 29, 1821. He came to the Pacific coast, across the plains in 1850. . He was married in Louisburg, Va., in 1844. . His wife accompanied him in his trip and survives her venerable husband. - He was city councilman, justice of the peace and sheriff of Wasco county for two terms of two years each. He was a prominent Mascn of high degree, and in '82 was elected an honor ary member of the Masonic Veteran association. The above is clipped from the Astorian of the 20th ult. . Mr. Ferguson will be remembered favorably by the older settlers. He was a good man and was held in the highest estimation. As one said to the writer, "all the old settlers quote Ferguson." He was a former master of Wasco Lodge A. F. and A. M We extend our sympathy to the bereaved wife and family. Peace to his ashes. An exenange expresses tlie opinion that a gas trust can be disposed of in short metre. WHAT BREEDING MEANS. rblnEX WlilcH Et7 Stock Bailer Oag-ht to Understand Thoroughly. What is breeding based on? It ia based on heredity. We use another word, po tency or prepotency!. Mr. "Wylie spoke of inbreeding as establishing potency. The Jew ia the most wonderfully inbred man of all men on earth. He has been inbred from the very day he left the Egyptians. You may breed him with aay race on earth, and the child will be a Jew more than anything elBe. Now those are principles that apply right here, jnst the same with animals as with men. What is the reason for that? Be cause the Jew has established a type so potently and powerfully that the mo ment the current of his blood strikes the f current of other blood the Jew current i takes possession of the other, and the re sult is a Jew. Now that is a valuable thing to study on; that is the meaning of pedigree. Some men sneer at . pedigree and say that it is worth nothing. Pedigree has a long number of agreeing bloods behind it in line. Men need not only a good specimen of the individual animal, but they need a long line of fathers and mothers of the same line characteristics, so that there is a constant agreement and augmentation and enlargement of the functions for which the breeding is done. It is a well known fact today that if a Texas steer is given a quarter of a bushel of corn meal as his ration, and yon take a Shorthorn steer and feed him the same quantity, you will get very different results. Why? Because the power to assimilate food and pro duce meat has been bred into the Short horn and by a constant, slow process built np. The Texas steer has not been bred for anything except to get over the ground, and I know by experience that he can do that. I once had 800 of them chase me two miles across a prairie, and if a man is to be judged by the enthusiasm of his following, I was the most popular man ever seen in Texas. Now, there are cer tain principles that I want to bring out in order to show that a farmer needs to study them. Why? Because his money and his living and his profits are in these animals, and yet he seems- to think that nobody but the breeder ought to study breeding. Why, the farmer is the man that is to make the money- out of the farm. - It is the average farmer that has to produce .the animals of the country, not the breeder. Therefore the average farmer should be just as wise in produc ing a good animal as the breeder. He should be a breeder. " Now, take dogs, for instance. They are a favorite illustration of mine be cause it is so clear on the question of heredity. Take a setter and a foxhound; both have noses equally sharp. And yet hundred of years back wise men began to breed one dog to smell birds alone, and the other to smell four footed ani mals alone, and so well have they suc ceeded that the setter dog is almost ob livious to any other scent than the scent of the bird. You do not find dog men acting as foolishly as farmers. No boy 15 years old would ever undertake to go hunting foxes with a bird dog or birds with a foxhound or either with a bulldog. And yet we have thousands and thou sands of farmers who are trying to make butter with beef animals and trying to make beef with butter animals. The average production of our cows is a dis grace. I tell you, my friends, it is not feeding so much today as it is intelligent shaping of these animals for a purpose. An old man jumped up in an institute and said, "You may talk as much as you have a mind to about it, I say the breed is in the corncrib," one of those truths that are partly true; and yet not true. I said, "If your words mean anything at all, they mean that you don't pay any attention to breed, but everything to feed." "Yes," he said, "that's right" "Very well," said I, "you are the man 1 have been hunting for for years. You have got a short cut to success, and I want to get it. It doesn't make any dif ference what the breed is, it is all in the feed?" "That's it," he said. "Very well," said I, "do you remember that razor back hog we had here thirty or forty years ago?" "Oh, yes," he said. "Now," I asked, "how would you feed that bog so as to make a Poland China of him?" He looked a little staggered. I added, "How would you feed a race horse to make a draft horse oat of it? How would you feed a Jersey cow to make a Hereford out of it?" "Well," he replied, "you may talk as much as you are a mind to, but I believe just what I said." ' Now don't you see that too many of us are not teachable? Here is a bale' of hay. On one. side comes a running horse, on the other a draft horse, on this Bide a dairy cow, and on that side, a beef animal. Now there is just , exactly . one kind of feed, yet in one case it produces speed, quick, fast action; in another slow, strong ac tion, in another it produces batter, and in another beef. At another bale are fine wool sheep and mutton sheep. Yon see the difference in the result. What is it that turns the' result off like a switch down these different tracks? What is it that takes the same car and shoots it upon one track or another? It Is breed. Now one of these disadvantages that we labor under- as farmers is that we are not sufficiently educated up to the idea of a thoroughbred sire. - The thor oughbred, sire is the sire that has re ceived, like the river, a lot of streams from the mountains on either side run ning into Trim to swell the potency of his blood, and that all in one line. A thoroughbred sire is so full of prepo tency that he impresses himself upon his. progeny. For instance, breed a native cow with a thoroughbred. Holstein bull; he has had so many years of breeding in a distinct line that he invariably marks his calves black and white, and will continue to do so to the end of time. Governor W. D. Hoard. In Holland there are goose farms on which may be found as many as 6,000 geese. They are near Amsterdam, and are as important and profitable as a theep ranch in America. SNIPES & KINERSLEY, Wholesale ad Retail Dnpts. Fine Imported, Key West and Domestic CIGARS. VI (AGENTS FOR) 1 CST 1863. 0. e. mfssp Co., Heal Estate, Insurance, and Loan AGENCY. Opeta House Bloek,3d St. Don't Forsret the W 9 W MacDonali Bros., Props. THE BEST OF Wines, Liprs aod Ciprs ALWAYS ON HAND. Chas. Stubling-, PROPRIETOR OF THE (iEiyipfi, New Vogt Block, Second St. - WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Liquor v Dealer, MILWAUKEE BEER OX DRAUGHT. From millions of customers, daring thepast years. comes ine vcmici cnat yiUK SS OXJtiJJS disappoint. Why waste time, money and patience on others, when you can buy the BEST same price? Make no mistake this year; sendio cents for Vlcb'S Floral Guide, deduct the so cents from first order, and it costs nothing. It is better than ever: zoo laree pages, colored plates, grand novelties worthy of cultivation. iasn prizes ziooo ana ktoo. JAMES VICK. 8m", Rochester. H. Y. FOR FINE Commercial Job Printing COME TO THE CHRONICLE OFFICE. W. E. GARRETSON, Leatfi(g Jeweler. . SOLE AGENT FOIl THE All Watch Work Warranted. Jewelry Made to Order. 138 Second St., The Dalles, Or.. THE DALLES. The Grate City of the Inland Empire is situated ,at the head of navigation on is a thriving, prosperous ITS TERRITORY. It is the supply city for an extensive and rich agri cultural and grazing country, its trade reaching as far south as Summer Lake, a distance of over fwc 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 point in America, about shipped this year. THE VINEYARD OF OREGON. The country near The Dalles produces splendid crops of cereals,, and its fruits cannot be excelled. It is the vineyard of Oregon, its grapes equalling Cali fornia's best, and its other fruits, apples, pears, prunes, cherries etc., are unsurpassed. 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, places to overflowing with 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. Its situation is unsurpassed! Its climate delight ful! Its possibilities incalculable! Its resources un limited! And on these corner stones she stands. -FOR- Carpets ana Furniture, CO TO PRINZ & NITSCIIKE, And be Satisfied as to QUALITY AND PRICES. S. L. YOUNG, (SucceHKor to K. BECK.) Jewelry, Diamonds, SILVERWARE, :-: ETC Watches, Clocks and Jewelry Repaired and Warranted. 165 Second St.. The Dalles. Orr. REMOVAL. H. Glenn has removed his office and the office of the Electric Light Co. to .72 Washington St. DEALER IX WATCHES. CLOCKS the Middle Columbia, and city. original wool shipping 4 5,000,000 pounds being and all available storage their products. The successful merchant is the one who watches the mar kets and buystothe best advan tage. The most prosperous family is the one that takes advantage of low prices. The Dalles MERCANTILE CO. Successor to BROOKS & BEERS. will sell you choice Groceries and Provisions OF ALL KINDS, AND AT STORE KEASONABLES RATES THAN ANY OTHER PLACE IN THE CITT. REMEMBER we deliver all pur chases without charge. 390 AND 394 SECOND STREET. John Pas nek, IHeicW Tailor. Third Street, Opera Block. Madison's Latest System, Used in cutting garments, and a fit guaranteed each time. ,lA Repairing and Cleaning Neatly and Quickly Done. FINE FARM TO RENT. THE FARM KNOWN AS THE "MOORE Farm" situated on Three- Mile creek about two and one-half miles from The Dulles, will be leased for one or more years at a low rent to any responsible tenunt. This farm hae upon it a f;ood dwelling house rud necessary out build ups, about two acres of orchard, about three hundred acres under cu ltivation, a large portion of the lu8nd will raise a good volunteer wheat crop in 1 91 with ordinarilv favorable weather. The farm is well watered. For terms and particu lars enqu ire of Mrs. Sarah A. Moore or at theomce of Mays, Huntington & Wilson, The Dalles, Or. SARAH A. MOORE, Executrix.