The Dalles Daily Chronicle. Published Inily, Sunday Excepted,' BY THE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO. Comer Second and Vashinffte' Streets, The Dalles, Oregon. Terms of Subscription. Per Year 6 00 Per month, by currier w single copy 5 STATE OFFICIALS. Governor S. I'ennoyer Secretary of State : G. W. McBridc Treasurer Phillip Metchaii Sunt, of Public Instruction E. B. McElroy ' N. Dolph enutom jj H MiWu 'Jonjrrcnnmnn li. Hermann Stute Printer Frank Baker COUNTY OFFICIALS. County Judge C. K. Thornbnry Sberitr U. L Cates Clerk J. M. Crossen Treusurer Geo. Kuch Commissioners j iSm Assessor . . ... .John E. Bamett Hurvevor E. F. Sharp Superintendent of Public Schools . .Troy Shelley Coroner: William Michell The .Chronicle is the Only Paper in The Dalles that Receives the Associated Press Dispatches. A N EX PL A NA TWN. A short time after the tire a promi nent insurance agent of this city placed a risk in a San Francisco company for which he is agent and was surprised shortly after to receive notice that the policy must be cancelled. Writing to headquarters for information as to the cause of this action, he received the fol lowing reply : "For several days after the big fire there were telegraphic re ports in the San Francisco papers, sent from The Dalles, asserting that there was an evident concerted plan on the part of unknown incendiaries to burn the balance of the city. Coining as thec-edid right from your towV, you can easily understand what led to the can cellation of the policy. Thus we have another illustration of the truth that a newspaer or correspondent who never ln'iHses an opportunity of giving his own city a black eye can do more to pull a town down than ten good papers can ef fect in an effort to build it up. The committee selected by the mayor to in vestigate the origin of the var.ious' fires have, as our readers may remember, given in an elaborate report, the fruit of much patient labor, and they were not able to trace any one of the four fires to incendiarism. And this opinion the whole city, with few exceptions, fully endorses. . A THOUGHTFUL SUGGESTION. Now that Mr. Farley hift signified his intention of resigning the superintend ency of the portage road, on or before Nov. 1st. it is in order for Mr. T-fnrh Oourlay to present his name for the va cant position. He should Dresent a petition for signatures ; for petitions are wonderful things both as regards unan imous expression, and the manner of manipulating the names on them bv ex perts. Times-Mountaineer. Good ! Xow will Mr. Michell, please draw up that petition and sign his name to it. It will be as certain of success as was Iiis request of the Oregon delegation to get a job in the land office or his elec tion contest for water commissioner for Dalles city, or his petition to the Oregon legislature to be appointed railroad com missioner. But no. Come to think of it, Farley won't resign. The board -would not accept his resignation, bo -we'll continue in the business of making the best paper in Eastern Oregon till a better job turns up. The farmer is the most important man on the American continent today. If 'one is to believe the platforms of either of the two great parties all legislation is aimed for his benefit. Democrats . are 'screeching themselves hoarse in the en deavor to prove that a protective tariff Ss the farmers curse while republicans tare scarcely less zealous in the effort to "convince him that protection is the pan acea for all his ills. All the arts of demagogy are resorted to catch the farmer's vote, for after all, that is the most important thing that all parties are looking after. Meanwhile the farmer is doing a heap of solid thinking on his own account and the old parties would give barrels of money to know just what he is going to do. The stories of the great distress and suffering in Russia, for lack of bread, may be all very true, and it is quite likely that they are, but the Press dis patches grow so pathetic while relating them and they come eo frequently" and with such affecting detail that one can scarcely avoid the suspicion that some gigantic scheme is being hatched for the purpose of "bulling" the grain market. , Whether this suspicion should be well founded or not it remains true, and past experience proves it, that the grain gam blers are, up to anytning so they may skin one another. N The world's fair will have to manage to get along without the official patron age of the Italian government. The an nouncement is made that "In pursuance of a principle long adopted the Italian government declines to officially partic ipate in any international exhibition." - A private'letter receiued this morning from Major G. W. Ingalls commences thus: "Hurrah!" Wasco county gels ' first 'firpuiinnoV 'fruits over all others , 9 yaVtfto.iWh.west.'-,;i..The major had entered all the fruits he had re ceived from this county as a "County Ex hibit Th inrWs rhosn were "three of the oldest and most experienced k j ,, ; wholesale fru't dealers in Portland," and the result was as stated above. This is no surprise to any old eettler here. We knew we could lick creation on fruits. Now other folks are beginning to see it too. BRIEF STATE NEWS. Mr. Moorehead, of Eugene, will begin the publication of the Weekly Time at Junction next week. The town of Susanville, Grant connty, was named after Susan Moffatt, daugh ter of the keeper of the hotel at that place in early days. Two horses afflicted with the glanders have been discovered at Salem, and the Domestic Animal commission of the state has ordered the county stock in spector to kill them. It is said the river bottom some two or three miles below Pendleton 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. John Blanche!, a rancher in the Nye neighborhood, Umatilla county, savs that crops of all kinds have been better 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 10,500 head, were four. months" on the road, and reached their destination with 9400 sheep. Athena is somewhat excited over a personal encounter between two women of that place. One, Mrs. H. Mortimer, visited the house of the other, Mrs. Fisher, and the two engaged in a lively combat. They were separated by a fruit peddler who passed that way. Mrs. Mortimer has been arrested on Mrs. Fisher's complaint. An occasional case of land-jumping is now heard of, incident to the forfeiture of railroad land. Mr. McCormick, a 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 the night. A new variety or wheat known as the new golden is attracting considerable at tention among wheat growers. It is a product coming originally from the' de partment of agriculture, and produced 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 by 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, f or ship ment to the Portland market. The av erage weight of their three, four, and five-year-old steers was 1342 pounds, i which is the test average any band of cattle from this part of the country has shown this season. One steer -weighed 1870 pounds and another 1920 Bounds. When such cattle as these can be raised in Crook county, says the Ochoco Review, 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 thev can hurry it. The south gate is completed and the north one ia 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 this age. The gates, when hung, will be the largest lock gates in the world, being 93x40 feet and weighing 130 tons. They are of steel and are to swing upon giant hinges. GENERAL PERSONAL, MENTION. ' Fred May, who once enjoyed an unen viable and unsavory notoriety in New York, was a prominet figure in the in surgent army in Chilu The suicide of Balmaceda took place on the very morning after the expiration of his term of office, which legally ended last Friday, although he was practically deposed by his defeat at Placilla. Budyard Kipling's works have been translated into Swedish, and the young author is rapidly translating Swedish money into hia banking account, a sure sign that the Swedes appreciate his works. - George Francis Train's new series of lectures are a triumphant failure. No one can listen to the eloquent tramp without coming away wonderfully im pressed with the elegenceof thelectnrer's clothing. W. D. Wyncoop, a mining expert of Denver, is about to proceed to Africa to look for the famous King Solomon's mines for an English syndicate. Per haps the best part of them exists in a book that Rider IJuggard wrote. Judge Pruden of Ohio, who has been making n extended ; tour of Alaska, says he thinks the natives of that land are of Chinese or Japanese rather than of Indian descent. They have many of the pronounced mental characteristics of the Mongolian race, while they bear absolutely no resemblance to the typical western Indian. i : ' Mrs. Brown Potter seems to, have had some pleasant expediences in trie course of her professional travels. "The Nizatn. of Hydrabad.'she says, gave a fete in her honor, and she a so stated: to hifve re ceived as presents from the Mikado the real one not Gilbert and Sullivan's) four dwarf trees-two oaks and two pines "S" """" "re ur ! centuries apiece. The Princess Bismarck is a hvpochon dnac, though not of the first water, be cause she never drinks any, preferring champagne, which she telieves is the one medicine that keeps her alive. She is tall, angular and parsimonious, and is always nervous about her failing health. Though tile late General Pickens of South Carolina was the youngest Con federate colonel, the youngest Union soldier to attain that rank, it is stated, was Colonel "Billy" Hobson of the 13th Kentucky infantry, who was promoted from major to colonel immediately after the battle of Sbiloh. He was then under 22, and at the close of the war he was a full brigadier, though then only 26. General Pickens was. 25 when he was made colonel of an Alabama regiment. s The Queer End of a Snake Fight. One of the most exciting contests ever witnessed occurred at the depot of the Georgia Midland railroad. The contest was between Ernest Low er's pet king snake and a little green snake known as a "garter." The snakes were about of equal size and length, and it was hard to tell for half an hour who would prove the victor in the contest. After racing around the cage for some time the king snake caught the green one about six inches from the head, slip ping himself around his adversary and getting hia. mouth closer and closer to its head. The green snake the while kept its mouth wide open as if in an ef fort to get its head too large to go into the king snake's mouth and thereby euort proveu lutue, ror soon the head and about six inches of the green snake were in the stomach of the king. At this point of the game another and more stubborn contest took place. In the cage are two wires one run ning perpendicular and the other hori zontal. Twisting itself around the per pendicular wire, the green snake tied itself into various hard knots. Mounting . the horizontal bar, or wire, the king be- j gan the work of unfastening the coils of ; the other by continued pulling and swal- j lowing. When the feat was accomplished, with the exception of about a half foot of the tail, it looked like the king snake would be defeated, but with some maneuvering the tail was untied, and the job of swal lowing was completed. After finishing the task the king snake looked wonderfully pleased, and raced around eying the spectators for some minutes. Cor. Atlanta Constitution. ' ' - A Queer Hallucination. There is a very good story, which has the somewhat unusual merit of truth, which has been told again and again in the dispensary, as illustrating the power of imagination. A lady, who was other wise quite rational, was troubled with a horrible feeling that a snake was gnaw ing away her vitals, as she explained it. Efforts were made to convince her of her error, but without avail, and. it. was". rfinally decided to humor her out. . ,of "he trouble. A small snake was secured, and one day she was. told the necessary oper ation would be gone through to relieve her of her trouble. Chloroform was ad ministered and . when she revived a scratch made while she was asleep was carefully bandaged up, and the- snake was exhibited as evidence of 'the-superiority of ' her diagnosis over that of the physicians. Her joy was painful to wit ness, and she w.ent away thoroughly cured. Interview in St. Loins Globe Democrat. Murder In the Air. t As a Sixth avenue elevated train ap proached the Eighteenth street up station the other afternoon a series of feminine yells broke upon the ears of the passen gers. With others 1 rushed to . the windows overlooking the east side of the street: A crowd was fast gathering on the side walk. When tbe train stopped at the station a number of passengers got out to learn who "was being murt'-ered." As I reached the spot the crowd was gazing intently at a dentist's sign.- Just then the yells ceased, and a man came out of the doorway with this announce ment, "She's only having her tooth pulled." New York Herald. How to Clean a Plaster Cast. A correspondent of a leading scientific journal says that a bust or statue can be most thoroughly cleaned, provided it has not been painted, oiled or waxed, by in verting it and filling it with water free from iron. The water is then allowed to filter through the plaster. After the filtering has been kept up for a sufficient time and the outside surface occasion ally washed with water and a soft brush, the plaster is allowed to dry. It is then found that all the dust has been -wiped out of the pores of the cast, which, is thus restored to its original whiteness. . California's Lack of Bong Birds. In the autumn the society organized for colonizing foreign song birds in this state will commission a practical dealer to select and purchase as many song birds in Europe as the money at his com mand will permit. The money is being secured by contributions, and is being paid in gradually. The absence of song birds lb California is a misfortune. The presence ' of song birds in California would be an everlasting enjoyment. Golden Gate park should be alive and merry with them. They would be an attraction there as beautiful as the many hued flowers, the graceful trees and tbe smiling landscape. San Francisco Poet. . An Old Venetian Ship Launching. Admiral Canevaro, commander of the Venice arsenal, has arranged that in stead of the Sicilia being baptized in the usual way, by having a bottle of cham pagne broken on its bows, the ancient custom of the Venetian republic shall be revived. That is, that a gilt ring shall be attached to the vessel's prow in such a way by the godmother that when the ship is .launched the ring shall be the tirst thing to touch the" water, this fnl iuling the 'wedding of the sea." Lon- d.JNeWB-j;- A NEW tUndertakinff Establishment! PRINZ & NITSCHKE. DEALERS IN Furniture and Carpets. We have added to our business a complete Undertaking Establishment, and as we are in no way, connected with the Undertakers' Trust our prices will be low accordingly. Remember our place on Second street: next to Moody's bank. Building Jilaterials ! Having made arrangements with a number of Factories, I am pre pared to furnish Doors, Windows, STORE FRONTS And all kinds of Special work. Ship ments made daily from factory and can fill orders in the shortest possible time. Prices satisfactory. It will be to your interest to see me before purchasing elsewhere. Wm. Saundeps, Office over French's Bank. W. E. GARRETSON. Mm Jeweler Xssv SOIE AGENT FOlt THE All Watch Work Warranted. Jewelry Made to Order. 138 Second St., The Dalles. Or. FLOURING MILL TO LEASE. rpHE OLD DALLES MILL AND WATER X Company's Hour Mill will be leased to re sponsible parties. For information apply to the WATER COMMISSIONERS, The Dalles, Oregon. D.' P. Thompson' President. . S. Schenck, H. M. Beam., Vice-President. Cashiei First national Bant THE DALLES, - - OREGON A General Banking Business transacted Deposits received, subject to Sight . Draft or Check. Collections made and proceeds promptly remitted on day of collection. Sight and Telegraphic Exchange sold on New York, San Francisco and Port land. DIRECTORS. P. Thompson. W. Spabks. H. M JNO. S. SCHBXCK. Geo. A. Ljerk. Bkall. TO RENT. A Union Street Lodging House. For terms apply to ' Geo. Williams, Administrator - of the estate of John Michelbaugb. dtf-9-2 " Still on Deek. Phoenix Like has Arien From the Ashes! JAMES WHITE, The Reptauranteur Has Opened the Baldwin'.!' - Restaurant . , ON MAIN STREET Where he will be glad to see any and all " ' "f . of bis old patrons. Ojen'd&v and Night.' First class meals : twentv-five cents. iiouldirigs. SUMMER GOODS Of Every Description will "be Sold at FOR THE NEXT THIRTY DAYS. Call Early and Get Some of Our Gen uine Bargains. J. H. CROSS -DEALER IN- Hay, Grain, Fcei al Flour. HEADQUARTERS FOR POTATOES. Cash Paid fop Eggs and Chickens. All Goods Delivered Free and Promptly STRICTLY CHSH. Cor. Second & Union Sts., THE DALLES, The Dalles Mercantile Co., Successors to BROOKS & BEERS, Dealers in General Merchandise, Staple and Fancy Dry Goods, Gents' Furnishing Goods, Boots, Shoes, Hats, Caps, etc. Groceries, Hardware, Provisions, . Flour, Bacon, HAY, GRAIN AND PRODUCE Of all Kinds at Lowest Market Rates. Free Delivery to Boat and 390 and 394 E. Jacobsen & Co., WHOLESALE AND RETAJL R00KSELLERS AND STATIONERS. Pianos and Organs Sold on EASY INSTALLMENTS. Notions, Toys, Fancy Goods and Musical Instru ments of all Kinds. Mail Order OEMXXexi Promptly. 162 SECOND STREET, Great Bargains ! Removal ! Removal I On account of Removal I will sell my entire stock of Boots and. Shoes, Hats and Caps, Trunks and Valises, Shelv ings, Counters, DeskSafe, Fixtures, at a Great Bargain. Come and see my offer. GREAT REDUCTION IN RETAIL. 125 Second Street, HUGU CHRISMAN. CHRISMAN & CORSON "Successora to GEO. RUCH, Keep on Hand a Complete Stock of Groceries, Horn, Grain, Fruit anil mill Fell - Highest Cash Trice Paid for Produce. Corner of Washington and Second-St. - The Dalles, 0r. c5 Successors to A. BETTINGER, Jobbers mid Retailers in Hariiare, Tinware, Wooflenware Heating and Cookstoves, Pumps, Pipes, Plumhers and Steam .Fitters Supplies. Carpenters', and Blacksmiths' awl ;v' Farmers Tools, ; and ' Shelf Hardware. .All Tinning, Plumbing and Pipe Work will be done on 'Short Jfotic. " .: '.' ' 84-nt HtThe l)nrt, r. H. Herbring. Curs and all parts of the City. Second Street THE DALLES, OREGON. The Dalles. W. K. CORHW. BEN-TON, anJ Graniteware, Ilnve Compute Stock of -v.