c z y 'The Dalles Daily Chronicle. THE DALLES OREGON. ntered at the PostofBce at The Dalles, Oregon, as seoond-clam matter. i'1 STATE OFFICIALS. Govemoi Secretary of State Treasurer Supt. of Public Instruction . enatora...., 8. Pennoyer G. W. McBride ..Phillip Metschan E. B. McElroy (J. N. Doluh )J- H. Mitchell Congressman H. Hermann Bute Printer Frank Baker ... COUNTY OFFICIALS County Judge. C. N. Thornbnrv Sheriff : D. L. Cates Clerk J. B. Croasen Treasurer '. .Geo. Ruch vommismoner. iFrank Kincaid Assessor John . Barnett Surveyor. ........... E.F.Sharp IH A. Lesupnn Bupennienaeoi 01 niDiic ocnooia , . .lToy neuey Coroner ....... William Michell -" The Chronicle is the Only Paper in The Dalles that Receives the Associated Press Dispatches. FRUIT VULTURE. The time is past when farmers can raise good fruit without taking some measures to meet the insect depredations and fungus diseases that are now so prevalent. The advantages gained by the use of insecticides and fungicides have been so long and thoroughly tested - with the codlin moth, aphides and other insects, the black spot (Fusiclartinm dentriticum) which is quite prevalent in some portions of the state grape rot, mildew, etc., that they are no longer an experiment and the can be recommend ed and relied upon without reserve. The apparatus for spraying is simple and can be operated by any' one, and the cost of the pump and material is nom inal. .. v. A few boxes of apples or pears saved by its use in a single garden or orchard will. meet the expenses. . If a large ma chine is needed for large trees a number of neighbors may operate the same. Pumps are made especially adapted to this work and may be obtained at our hard-ware stores. ..The most important part of the whole apparatus is the noz zle, for upon this depends the efficiency of the work. It is absolutely necessary to have a very fine spray to do good work, as all the foliage and fruit must be thoroughly wet but not drenched. It is a lamentable fact that many of our gardners and orchardists, will still aver that their trees and fruits are free from pests of various kinds year by year, and at the same time they are unable to bring to our markets a single box of ripened fruit, which is free from worms. The truth is, every orchard about us is in fected more or less, and only those who' will fight our insect enemies may expect their orchards to be munerative. - Our orchardists ahould wake up to the fact thatv it will soon be too late to save their trees if. they continue to cryk as they . did last year, , that orcharding, in Oregon, is a failure, notwithstanding the fact that sound apples were sold in this marKet me past winter at a box. The future outlook in prices for all kinds of fruits is encouraging, and the few progressive men will fignt against the fruit pests, and find it a profitable business. We have a good and wholesome state law which requires every law-abiding citizen to cleause his trees, fruit, fruit boxes,, etc., and imposing certain penal ties for the failure to comply with its re quirements. If you are too lazy to. do any or all these things, cut down your trees and leave them at once and do not allow them it to infest your neighbor's trees by spreading millions of their fun gus spores in the air, and millions more of insect pests, as they is sure to do in a few weeks. COMPLIMENTS TO THE "SUN." The Chronicle sincerely . thanks the Wasco Sun tor the hearty , joyous ring of its article- headed "The Dalles Our City," in this week's issue. Brother Morgan does not write of the place where he makes his bread and butter as if he had a constant cargo of undigested sour grapes in his stomach, like some people we wot of. His article is the very opposite of those who, having made everything they own in the world here. never write of the city or its inhabitants except witn a pen dipped m worm-wood and gall, and who are constantly pro claiming to the outside world that we are nothing but a community of 'snarl ing luossbacks. ""The Chronicle, on the other hand believes that The- Dalles ia one of the very best, towns in Eastern Oregon and it is not afraid to proclaim to the world that there ia more business done here than there is in any own of its size in the state.,' Keep up. your lick Brother Morgan and if the Chboniclb can do nothing- more it will gladly stand by and pat you on the back. HE MUST SPEAK. Y THE CAR&. Senator.Pugh of Alabama is real mad at ex-President Cleveland. He charges him with having gone out of his way to use offensive epithets towards the South. In an address delivered at. Buffalo the other day, Mr. Cleveland, alluding .to the late war, used these words : "When the government was assailed by rebellious hands." Senator Pugh says this is an insult to the south. He is somewhat sensative, this senator is.: Mr. Cleve land should have said : When the gov ernment got mad at the south or, when the government was caressed by friendly hands, or something like that. Senator Pugh swears that these "rebellious hands" are going to fix Mr. Cleveland at the next democratic national conven tion or if nominated the "rebellious hiinds.'.are. going to fix bub at the ballot bQX, but the senator Js 'oyer sensative and hypercritical and will find few sym pathisers among-bis sensible congeners of the democratic party. The Goldendale Sentinei informs us that the people of Klickitat county are tired of paying tribute to Portland in the matter of shipping , all their . produce there while . Portland takes it all as a matter of course and does not put forth the least effort to retain a trade naturally hers. The Sentinel does not exactly use these words' but that seems to be its meaning. The people of Klickitat county are making arrangements to have .their coming crop shipped up the river to Pasco and thence to the Sound by rail. The Chronicle heartily sympa thises with this effort but sees no reason in the " world . why the producers of Klickitat county could not make better terms with the company owning the boat now being built at The Dalles. This company could certainly carry the products of Klickitat county to ocean steamers, whether - at Portland or Astoria, cheaper than the Northern Pacific could afford to carry them. The matter of ferriage' across the Columbia could be easily arranged and the opposi tion line will, we believe, be in readiness to carry this year's crop. There need be no apprehension that the new boat will fail to run in the interests of the people. The men who put their money in this enterprise never made the investment for their own direct benefit and there are too many stock-holders to ever al low her to be sold out to the railroad company. We commend this suggestion to the farmers of Klickitat county who live within a distance of The Dalles near enough to haul their grain here. Facta About Beet Sugar. The average yield of sugar from a ton of beets is ten per cent., or 200 lbs of re fined sugar. The average crop of beets per - acre is twelve tons. Average yield of refined sugar per acre. 2,400 lbs. ... - Value of sugar produced from one acre of beets at 6 cents per lb. is $144 plus $72 bounty, is $216. . Cost of manufacturing twelve tons of beet from one acre is $9 per ton, or $108 per acre. Net value of one acre of average beets. r Cost of raising beet sugar per acre, $30 ; cost of raising 3,000 acres, $90,000. Three thousand acres of average beets will yield a net return to the county of which they are grown, of $324,000. . The Missouri professor who wrote an essay on how to manage a wife has ap- If fiileuce be golden dumb people o ight to grow rich. The-:-Vogt -:-Grand. 7 ONE NIGHT ONLY ! . i; Hobday Jui)e rne : inaicners MINSTRELS. Under the Management of Rich & Harris.- lU TRIUMPHANT : JJD U TROUBADOURS TU The World's Greatest Minstrel Organization. A PEW OF THE MANY. COMEDIANS. George Thatcher, Lew Dockstadter, Burt Shepard, John A. Goleman, Jay Quigley, George W. Lewis. The Singing Wonders of the World. R. J . Jose, Ravmon Moore, H. W. Frillman, Thos. Lewis, W. A. Patterson, Rush Elliott. SPECIALISTS. Crain & Lorenzo, Comic Trapeze Artists, wooa oc enepara, Musical Comedians, Frank LaMondne ' Wira Woltcr John G. Coleman, Eccentric Dancer. tieorge Jwis and Mis Corps of Dancers, And the One and Ohlv Geo... Thatcher. Watch for Grand Street Parade. Admission 75c and $1. Seats on Sale at Snipes fe Kinersly's. - --DEALER IN school books; ..." : ; V STATIONERY, ORGANS, V . ' . pianos; : . y ; WATCHES, T. ' ; ; .- JEWELRY: ... ' . .. '. .. .. V Cor. Third and Washington Sts. Ralph Gibons , announces himself as a can . 't didate for' -'r-'i'.- GIT Y MARSHAL tMtl Surprise $ ' The man eating tairer.iir 4 eeaWra both cunning ao-i anaacropsr One de4 scribed by &r Samuel Jkrrf, wfeictr-b-eaine the victim of a pwcJCipaljftSseaB not the typical ,oltana rniw.aromJ, but a powerful bs iJStvinBm pled ferocity, liiyr 'x jiaertleisti wayman, which .infested .rrtrtoa of the road, and frequently carried 'off the driv ers of bullock carts ; to. feast upon them in the jungle. ... The natives feared to travel with a sin gly cart,, and - it became - the custom to pass the dreaded spot with several teams together.". "This; however; proved a Tain precantionfor the tiger seised the driver of ttxi hindmost - cart and made away with' him ,in Lspite :of thd cries of those left behind. . At length Mr. Duff, the superintend ent of police, provided two covered carts, each drawn ' as usual by two bullocks. The leading .one was fitted, with strong bars of bamboo, which formed an im penetrable cage. In this the driver was seated, and Mr. Duff himself sat with his face, toward the rear, prepared to fire through the bars at the moment of attack.:-. - X ., -r - This would have been an exciting time for the driver, but that ' individual was personated by " a dummy stuffed with straw, " which might prove tempting to the tiger's eye bnt would hardly satisfy his palate. Slowly the carts moved along the dreaded path. Suddenly there was a roar and crash in the jungle. A large tiger bounded forth', seized the dummy driver and dragged him away. Nothing could have been better planned, but one chance, necessary to . success, had been forgotten. No . sooner . bad the tiger roared and bounded npon the cart than the bullocks, terrified beyond control, went full gallop across the country, fol lowed by the other team, all in the wild est panic. ' - It was impossible to fire, and after a few seconds of desperate chariot racing both carts capsized, and lay, with the animals, in a heap on the ground. The victorious man eater, victim of what he must have considered a practical joke, was left to a dry meal of a straw stuffed carter, instead of the juicy native he had expected to get. . Expensive Portraits. " The ladies of Gotham are very good to the gentlemen of this place. They are presenting them' with miniatures ' of themselves exquisitely painted on ivory. Time was when a simple photo, card size, was good enough for anybody's best fel low. Then a cabinet must be bought for him, or a panel nearly as large as life and as natural as the camera could make it. ,- Now it costs twenty-five dollars to give one's likeness to one's divinity, for it must be upon the finest of polished ivory and so beautifully tinted that none but a real artist can do the work. ' '" ' The most approved ivory likenesses' are h6 larger ' than the pictures of George Washington upon our postage stamps. And they are designed to be fitted within a locket which is to be worn upon the watch chain.-' Twenty-five dollars is the very cheapest sum for which the ivory likeness can be obtained. They used to cost , fifty . dollars, but an artist who makes a specialty of them says, "They cost no more than twenty-five in Lun non.'" And so one must pay no more than that in this country.'' 1 ' Another dainty personal gift is a like ness of one's self painted upon a coffee cup which ' is to adorn the bachelor quarters of one's best love; If painted by an artist who understands china painting, the colors do not change in the firing, and the effect ia as lovely as could be desired. ,.'... Still another way of giving one's like ness to one's best boy is by having' it painted upon the inside of the case of his watch. This method possesses one ad vantage over those previously mentioned, namely, that of endurance. Seasons may wax and wane. Time, may come and time may go, but as long as the ticking of that particular watch goes on, just so long will the . dainty, smiling features look out from the inside of . the golden cover. Nothing can erase it and nothing can cover it up save another picture painted over it. And shame be npon the artist who could be prevailed npon to do so ruthless a deed. New York World. i Sympathy' with Suffering. ' . .Unless there be some -sympathy. with suffering there will be nothing done for its relief, and the ties of human brother hood will" be quickly sundered. If it is a blessing that we are unable to feel the full, force of. another's sorrow, it is no less a blessing that we have the capacity of feeling a part of. it. And this capacity usually needs development rather than restraint. ' Por a few who-may grieve unwarrantably for their fancied insensi bility there are multitudes who are sadly deficient in sympathy and never grieve at all about it. - It should never be for gotten that all social happiness, all mu tual benefactions and all. true, benevo lence, are .founded on the presence of sympathy. .Were it . not for this we should be miserable and misery giving egoists. New York Ledger. f ' Pesvrl In OjrsMra. ' ' ' 1 The-pear 1 oyster is a valued member of 'the family. , . Some produce pearl for but tons ' and -1orqamentatapu, and .some the em- T The latter , is simply a . result of the oyster's attempt to protect itself from soma . foreign., substance. Thus, if a minute grain, of sand finds its way into the shell,, the animal will immediately envelope it with a. nacreous of pearly coating,, which if continued resu A in a perfect 'gem.1 ' The pearls attached to the shells are layers of nacre heaped up to prevent the 'onward march of a boring parasite, seeking entrance from without. In Ceylon 17,000,000 pearl oysters were destroyed lately to produce $80,000 ia pearls. San Francisco Chronicle. Bad to B a Suomm. ' v "Charley 6awyer play is bound to be success." i-p ... "Why are yon to sanguine about it?" I "Well, you see, Charley has just de cided not to play the leading role." Judge. S. L. YOUNG, fSacceMor to E. BECtC.i DEALER IN WATCHES. CLOCKS. Jewelry, Diamonds, SmyEHWflflE,:ETG. Watches, Clocks and . Jewelry Repaired and Warranted. 165 Second St.. The Dalles, Or. The Dalies' Gigar : faetory, PIEST STEEET. FACTORY? NO. 105. fTf. A T Q of the Best Brands JXvJ2Lllkj manufactured, and orders from all parts of the country filled on the shortest notice. The reDUtation of THF. DAT.T.F.S f!T. GAR has become firmly established, and the demand for the homo mannfantnrod article is increasing every day. , .. A. ULRICH & SON. -FOR- Carpets a Sitfi, . CO TO - ' PRINZ & NITSCHKE, And be Satisfied as to QUALITY AND PRICES. R. B. Hobp, Livecy, : Feed aiid Saie Horses Bought and Sold on commission ' and Money Advanced on Horses left For Sale. : OFFICE OF- The Dalles and Goldendale Stage ' Line. Dinge uava 1 ne uaites every mornlnar at 7:30 and Goldendale at 7,:30. All freight mut be left at R. B. Hood's office the evening before. R. BT HOOD, Proprietor. . : COLUMBIA ;;, QQdy x,rFaetory, W. S. CRAM, Proprietor. (Successor to Cram Corson.) . Manufacturer of the finest French and .-' Home Made - ' ' O J lt ID I B S , '; East of Portland. . Tropical Fruits, Nuts, Cigars and Tpbacw. 42an furnish inv of them owvia t wniv..K In Every Style. 104 Second Street, The Dalles, Or. -t' - I'l'i ii : '' : Wood Dealers Attention ! ;: - SEALED PROPOSALS WILL BE;RECEIVED . . at my office In -Tbe Dalles, until Monday, July 6th. at 7:30 n. m.. for fa nrrin of vnnd. rirv oak wood, and 15 oords of good, dry, fir wood to u ueuverea uurm me montn or juiv at I tie several school houses In School District No. 12, Wasco county, Oregon. By order of the directors. - J. M. HUNTINGTON,' n5-12 -m - , School Clerk. $20 EEWARD. WILL BE PAlU FOR ANY INFORMATION leading to the con viction of parties cutting he ropes or in any war interfering -with the wires, poles ac lamps of Thb Electric Lisht C. H. GLENN. Manager Removal 4fH. HerBrinf's DRY GOODS STORE Hasremoved to 177 .Second street (French's Block) nearly opposite his former stand, where he will be pleased to see his former customers and friends. . He carries now a much larger stock than before and every Department is filled with the Latest Novelties of the Season. The Dalles Mercantile Co., ... , x ... Successors to BROOKS & BEERS, Dealers in ' General Merchandise, Staple bents Furnishing Goods, Boots, Shoes, Hats, Cans, etc. Groceries. j Provisions, HAY, GRAIN AND PRODUCfe Of all Kinds at Lowest Market Rates. Free Delivery to Boat and Curs and all parts of tlie City. ' ' " . 390 and 394-Second Street JAMES WHITE, Has Opened a Iiuxicli Counter, In Connection With his Fruit Stand t -', " and WUl Serve Hot Coffee,-Ham Mwich, Pigs' Feet, 'and Fresh Oysters... y Convenient to the. Passenger Depot. On Second St., near corner of Madison. Also a Branch Bakery, , California , Orange, - Cider, and the Best Apple Cider. If you want a good lunch, give me a call. Open all Night The Iiadies' Tailor of Dress Cutting .- , . ... at . r : Mrs. BroWs D ressmatinn: Parlors, 0or. Fourth and Union Sts., . . The Dalles, Or. ' i : ' t i ' i I ' : . Each scholar can bring' in her own dress and is taught to cut, baste and fin ish complete. . --y-. They are also taught to cut the seam less waist, dartless basque, French bias darts and most every form of sleeve. mm In the dressmaking department I keep only competent help. . . Dress Cutting a Specialty. C. N..THOKXBUEY, , T. A. HUDSON, Late Bee. U. 8. Land Office. ' "Notary Public lOPIY'ODlJI, ROOMS 8 and 9 LAND OFFICE BUILDING, Pogtoffice Box 885, THE DALLES, OR. , 1 vj-U ij,- Pilinas, Contests, And all other Business in the D. S. Land Offiea Promptly Attended to. 'I We tiave' 'ordered Blanks for -Filings, Entries and the ' purchase ' of ftailroad Lands , under the recent Forfeiture. Act,, which we will have and advise thepnb-. lie at the earliest date when such' entries can be made. Look for advertisement in this paper.. , ' . - thor(iburv & Hudson. John Pashek, Third Street, Opera Block. Madison's Latest System, Used in cutting garments, and a fit guaranteed each time. ; ' i . . T J . . J., .... t 4. ' t . , ( I , . : Repairing and Cleaning Neatly and Quickly Done. merGFiani Tai idt: Notice I and Fancy Dry Goods, Hardware. , : Flour, Bacon, J. M. HUNTINGTON & CO. fljistraeteps, Real : Estate and IiisuFanee Agents, Abstracts of. and Information Concern ing Land Titles on Short Notice It Land for Sale and Houses to Rent Parties Looking for Homes in COUNTRY OR CITY, OR IN SEARCH OF Should Call on or Write to us. Agents for a Full Line of . Leaiini Fire Insnrance Companies, . And Will Write Insurance for on all Correspondence Solicited. All Lettepj Promptly Answered. Call on or . Address, J. M. HUNTINGTON & CO. Opera House Block, The Dalles, Or. Phil Wiilig, 124 UNION ST., THE DALLES, OR. Keeps on hand a full line of MEN'S AND YOUTH'S Ready - Made Clothing. Pants and Suits . MADE TO ORDER 1 r .' Call and see my. Goods before .:t nurchasing elsewhere. REMOVAL. H. Glenn has lemoved his office andthe office of the Electric Light Co. . to 72 Washihgtbn"St. -$600 ile-ward x .-We will pay- the above .reward lor any case of liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Sick "Headache, In digestion, Constipation or Costlveness we cannot cure with West's Vegetable Live Pills, when the directions are strictly complied with. They are purely vegetable, and never fall to give satisfac tion. Sugar Coated. Large boxes containing W Pills, '25 cents. . Beware of counterfeits and imi tations. The genuine manufactured only ,by THE JOHN C. WFST COMPANY, CHIGAGQ, ILLINOIS. ' ' "I- ' ' ' BLAKILKIT HOTJiHON, Prescription Drnggists, 175 Second St. The Dalles, Or. M H-J f rTm( is now running a steam CMHTiO Ferry, between Hood!, River and White Salmon. Charges - easonable. R. O. Evans, Prop.