EXPERIMENTS. REASONS WHY THE GOVERHMENT SHOULD HELP FARMERS By Assisting Scientist to Observe tne Life and Causes of lath of Noxious Kufrn and Insects Prevention Ketter Thin Cure in This Direction. Man is inclined to travel in beaten paths, looking little to the right or left for short cnts iind easier Trades. He is prone to select at the start the most expensive and most intricate way of ac mplisliing his.ohject. The study of mechanisms gives plain proof of this. Watts original steam engine was a most complicated affair. It took two or three generations to simplify and perfect it. The same was true of . the sewing ma chine and all other complicated inven tions). The wagon in use in central Eu rope to-day is made with as much work on one as on six American farm wagons and it is a mast awkward affair. A set of English plow harness is equal in weight to the combined weight of our plow and plowman. A regular one-horse English farm cart is much heavier than our two horse wagon. And so the world plods along. America should aud does lead the world but she must be constantly on the alert or she will drop behind. The re- juvenated giants of Europe will some of them handicap us. They are far ahead of us in that form of politics so dread- fnl to some ages paternalism. For years practical scientific research was fostered by Europearn governments and great results had been obtained, espe cially in France and Prussia, before we an a government dreamed of such a thing. Slowly we have fallen into line but we are far behind. The United States should have leen leaders from the start in all scientific and inventive lines, and especially in practical applied science. There are great openings yet to be filled. Our forests are not conserved. Our rivers are drying up, our lakes and harbors are filling up with detritus, once navigable rivers are now a delusion and .snare, our swamps are unreclaimed and remain a menace to life and health. More paternalism in certain directions might do us good though it is better to let the people do for themselves what they can do best. There are many things, however, they cannot do. Much ia yet hidden that would be of great ben efit if it were brought to light that pri vate agencies cannot devote the time and means to properly elucidate.' Here paternalism in the government steps in and is useful. The inventor and scientist is not a business man as we now use the word. Not a man who can amass wealth. They are poor, with rare exceptions. Our lawyers, statesmen and scientists do not as a rule get rich. They will not grovel ia the dirt for gold. Yet they give great wealth to the world. Contagious and infectious diseases have -constantly decimated mankind and ani mals since the beginning. One would think that this fact would have led man up to the use of proper weapons of de fense. Yet it is only within the past few years that experiments have been made as to the causes of diseases. It is now accepted that animal life is the cause of nearly all of man's ills. Pro fessor Forbes of Illinois was the first in this country to give the matter scientific attention. Naturalists had long known that ferol life, insect as well as larger animal, had- myriads of "infectious dis eases. About 1863 chinch bugs were enor mously plenty throughout the prairie states. The last week in July they were attacked in Illinois ,by a deadly disease and at theimd of two weeks not a living bug could be found in the neighborhood. And the uext season scarcely one .could be found for a cabinet specimen. This occurred throughout the prairie state at different dates that season. Of course, isolated individuals escaped and gradu ally re-seeded the country. Professor Forbes made a careful study of this. He learned its character and how to pre serve it through the winter so the bugs might be- infected the following year. If I remember rightly, however, he failed in this by reason of there being no chinch bugs the following year to infect.' From want of means and time Professor Forbes was forced to discontinue his study and this valuable weapon of defense against the prairaie farmer's great enemy was forced to rest until three or four years ago when it was taken up by a professor ofa Kansas experiment station. The latter has demonstrated that there were two distinct diseases deadly to the chinch hug: One was a fungus, the other bac- -terial. Bugs could lie- easily infected with either and they would be extermi nated before tftjy could do any harm. He met with the same results that Pro fessor Forbes did. He killed every chinch bug in his region and his experi ments seemed fated to come to an end for want of material. But he advertised for healthy chinch bugs. It was neces . sary to have, chinch bugs to keep the in fection. , t Another case is tlu importation of the Australian ladybird'(bedalia cardinalis). jft ate up all the cottony cushion scale Imgs its only food where introduced and then starved to death. This diffi culty had to be bridged over by inclos ing the bedalia- on protected orange trees infested with scale. .Otherwise the bug wonld : have to be ; imported again if the scale made a fresh start as ijt surely would do. , .-. The -department of agriculture : has now taken hold of thissvork as it should, have done yearsgo.' The' experiments the present season have been very satis ' factory both on the-'Chinch bug and -cabbage caterpillars. The boll and leaf worms of the cotton plant are now the most destructive insects in this conotry. A means of destroying them would .be" worth millions to the industry. It is undoubtedly true that all noxious in- ' sects can be obliterated by disease. Here tofore parasites have lieen credited with the extermination or -sts. Preventive measures may also . .- discovered, by ex periment und study. There are many vegetables which are bug repellents anij tliese should be experimented with. ... P. B. "Wua. '" Ti iiiiisoN.wiiY. WIER SEEKS TO SOLVE THE CAUSES OF DEGRESSION. Farming Has Been Affected Deleter lously by Changes in Commercial Uses of Farm Products Coal Oil Against Corn A Better Era Promised. Many writers and political economists have attempted to give the reasons why the farm has not paid during the last twenty years. .Before 1861, we-will say for about fifteen years, farming and its commerce had been going along smooth ly. There were no violent irruptions, changes or fluctuation of prices. The farmer knew from the' past what the future would be, provided always that there were no radical changes. Farming was then a conserv ative business. .There was no specula tion in it but rather a certain steady in come. Land was free by homes teading. It was for the most part ready for the plow and though millions of acres of rich prairie land were brought under cultivation '' yearly the growth of the country and commerce absorbed the product and the farmer was prosperous. Railroads, canals and cities were being built and the farmer was feeding the builders. We supplied the world with cheap cotton and many other things. Taking things all in all it was a very comfortable time for the farmer. Yet he worked hard, was prudent and gen erally out of debt. The prairie farmer then got into that peculiar habit of buy ing up all the land that joined him and the neighbors he bought out came west to grow up with the country and in that way the great trans-Mississipi ' was quickly settled by men who understood farming in all its details. Now we come to review the causes which brought about radical changes in farming. We will begin with alcohoL Indian corn made the cheapest alcohol. It was generally used for light in the shape of camphine and burning fluid. It was used largely in cooking, in the arts, and shipped in large quantities to Europe to be converted into so-called brandies and other liquors. All of this alcohol or nearly all was made from corn. In 1862-3 coal oil came into gen eral use, entirely displacing the burning fluid. This would have been a serious blow to the corn grower if . the war had not intervened. The war, with its great wastes of provisions, labor and lives, really saved the farmer from bankrupt cy. It brought about high prices un dreamed of before. Money was plenty, especially in the great producing centres. Corn continued to be king. It was the foundation of pork, beef and alcohol the sinews of war." The cutting off of alcohol and the internal revenue ' tax placed upon it had no appreciable effect on the farmer. The result has been that war prices and plenty of money begot extravagance. The old prudent ways were dropped and forgotten. Was the old better than the new? Perhaps it was safer and carried with it a more com fortable and restful life. The farmer of the last twenty years wears more frills, rides where he used to walk, and has much more style than he had in the fifties. But is he happier and having an easier time of it? Those who have en joyed the privileges of both periods can see but little difference in the pleasures and comforts. , We now come to the causes of the present general depression. With the late deplorable situation among the far mers of the prairie states and their con dition reflects on all other states, for prairie state prices rule the prices of provisions throughout this country and to a limited extent the commercial world alcohol still has much to do. It is to-day carrying the full war taxes first placed upon it. This tax the corn grower has to pay. The excise tax of 90 cents a gallon largely prevents the use of alcohol. If the removal of this tax would cause the use of one third or one half more spirits by cheapening its price that would measure the portion that the farmer pays. And if it caused the use of one-third or one-half more it would enhance the price of corn justhat much, with the usual reflex influence on the prices of all other foods.. . , - Corn was not only knocked out in price by the tax on spirits but ' also by doubling the corn producing area and the extension of railroads. . - Pork made from corn was refused admission into some of our foreign markets. Another thing to be considered is that one man and a horse could only cultntate twenty five to thirty acres of corn in 1855, while in 1875 and since, one man with two horses . and improved implements can cultivate twice as much with greater ease. . - - - The whole farming method of the South was changed by the war. Before, the cotton grower, his negro and mule were fed by the corn grower. After the war he' was not able . to buy corn and was forced to feed himself. Such are about one-half the causes that have led up to the great Oepression in agriculture. -The wonderful recuper ative powers of the nation, the great im migration with the money brought with it and the millions set free by the nation in paying its debts are the forces that have sustained the farmer in so far as he has been sustained. If it were not for the fear of being construed as a po litical or partisan-' writer, which I am npt,': I would " add .'In"': conclusion, that what the farmer most needs to relieve the general depression' in his business is the removal of the excise tax oh spirits. . Cheapen alcohol ' and .therebv increasa its consumption. Not necessarily as a tipple but in the arts and domestic .uses. Use it for fuel, for lighting purposes where gas or kerosene is too expensive. Create through its use an enlarged mar ket for corn and thus will the great corn Crrowinor RfcitftS rn"dftT-lTIO' An fio "Miaaiaa- ippi and Missouri rivers again ' blossom as no rose. Ana tneir prosperity will reflect upon every line of industry, es pecially agriculture in all its branches. , . " D. B. Wier. t How to Oil a Harness. Take a harness ti a. i'COtu where you can unbuckle it and separate the parts completely. Wash each part well in lukewarm water to which has been added a little potash. Scrub well with brush until all grease and dust have been re moved. Wash the pieces well under the hand until they become supple. It won't do to oil until the harness becomes so. Let the parts dry in a place where they will do so slowly. When jnst moist, oil. For this purpose use codliver oil, as it 'is the best for the purpose. Besides, if you use neatsfoot, the rats and mice are your enemies at once, while they will not touch a harness oiled with codliver oil. Give a good dose of oil to all parts, then hang up to dry. When dry rub well with a soft rag. How to Slake a Dainty Letter Opener. Cut two pieces of- sheet celluloid in dagger shape with curved blades. The whole should not be more than three or four inches long. The two may be glued together and some tiny design of flower or leaf sketched in sepia on the polished surface of the celluloid. ' How to Keep Fish Fresh. , i A . 1- .1 il -i - - i xx. iii;i.uuu piituuceu in jurope is to clean the fish and sprinkle the interior with sugar, keeping the fish in a hori zontal position so that the sugar may penetrate as much as possible. A table spoonful of sugar is sufficient for a three pound fish. : The flavor is thus preserved a long time and fish treated in this way before salting and smoking have a fine flavor. - ' How to Clean Jewelry Kaslly. Every piece of plain jewelry, except a watch, can be cleaned by a simple wash ing with soap and warm water. They can be dried and brightened on a piece of chamois skin, or by being laid in a box of jeweler's sawdust. Pearls and turquoises cannot, of course," be treated in this way. " How to Clean Vessels Used to . Hold Kerosene. Wash the vessel with thin milk of lime, which forms a new compound with the kerosene and removes every trace of it. By a second application, adding a little chloride of lime and allowing the mixture to stand in the vessel an hour, every trace of the kerosene odor will be removed. How to Bleach Wax. Slice r ordinary . '.. beeswax into - thin flakes, lay them on sacking of coarse cloth and in sunshine, turn occasionally and sprinkle with i.of t water unless there is dew enough. In four weeks it will be pure white. .', .. . How to Polish Shells. When shells become dry they often lose their luster. To restore it wash them in water in which a little gum arabic has been -dissolved, or with, the white of an egg. ? If the shells have a dull, thick skin, it can be removed by soaking in warm -water and rubbing with a brush, or, if very adhesive, by the use of a little nitric acid in the water. Use the latter with care, as it may de stroy the luster of the shell under the skin. - . How to Arrange Peacock Feathers. Peacock feathers in a vase are the de spair of the uninitiated, for they will fall over or slide into any position but where you placed them. Try partially filling your vase or jar with sand or saw dust, and see if the peacock feather stems will not "stay put." Easy enough, isn't it'- when you know how? How to Test Houey. If adulterated with molasses, the dark color will indicate it, and many can de tect it by the taste. If with potato sugar sirup, that will be shown by boil ing a sample for a short time in water containing 2 or 3 per cent, of caustic potassa. If the liquid remains color less the honey is pure, but if it turns brown it contains the potato sugar sirup. If there is wheat flour in the honey (and it is sometimes used to increase the amount), it. will become very liquid when heated and solid and tough on cooling. . How to Cure Chapped Hands. Mix one ounce of glycerin, one ounce of rosewater and ten drops of carbolic acid. Bathe the chapped parts occa sionally, especially, at night. - It will cure and prevent chapping and whiten the skin. , How to Bamon Old Wall Paper. , Fasten the doors. and windows closely and set a large vessel of hot water in the room for a few minutes. In a large room it is well to add boiling water two or j three times. The T paper will be mois tened and come off much easier and more evenly. The woodwork- can also be cleaned much more easily while damp. How to Make Chewing; Gum. Take of prepared balsam of tola two ounces, white sugar one. ounce, and oat-! meal three ounces. Soften the gum in a ! water bath till it is workable, then work in the other ingredients and roll in finely i powdered sugar in sticks to suit j, How to MakejCheap andulek Klndllag. Dip corncobs for about one minute in mixture of tsixty parts resin and forty 1 parts tar. melted . together. , Dry in hot j sunshine or fcven. . . - . ' ' How to Tell Fresh Eggs. To ascertain whether an egg is good. or bad hold it, up to the light, i If it is good it is transparent; if bad, opaque. .- How to Pickle -Bleat Bed. Mix brown sugar, bay salt and com mon salt each two pounds',, saltpeter, eight ounces, and water, two gallons. This pjckle gives meat a fine red color, while the. sugar improves the flavw -. , How to'Clear Sugar. Take a little gum arabio and a little isinglass dissolved in hot water and pour it in the sugar while the latter is boiling. It will cause all the sediment to boil to the top of the pan, where it must be skimmed off. Loaf sugar may be cleared with the white of an egg, isiDglass. or gum arabic. . How to Make a Cheap Paint for Outside ' Use. . Farmers will find the following a good receipt for making an excellent and cheap paint for outdoor buildings, fences and poultry houses: Take one-half bushel o good unslacked lime; slack it with. 'boil ing water, keeping it covered fairing the process, so that as little of the steam as possible may escape. Strain the liquid through a sieve and add to it a peck of salt dissolved in warm water and three pounds of ground rice boiled to a thin paste. Stir in boiling hot one-half pound of Spanish whiting, one pound of white glue and five gallons of hot water. Let the mixture stand a few days, covered from dust, and apply hot with a white wash brush. If another color than white be desired, Spanish brown, yellow ocher or other colors may be added with the exception of green. This is a good paint tor ail outdoor woodwork, brick or stone. Health is Wealth ! "4 mm imm Db. E. C. West's Nervb and Brain Treai' ment, a guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dizzi ness, Convulsions, Fits, Nervous Neuralgia, Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by the use o alcohol or tobacco, Wakefulness, Mental De pression, Softening; of the Brain, resulting in in sanity aud leading to misery, decay and death Premature Old Age, Barrenness, Loss of Powei in either sex, Involuntary Losses aud Spermat orrhoea caused by over exertion of the brain, self abuse or over indulgence. Each box contain one month's treatment. 1 1.00 a box, or six boxet for $5.00, Bent by mail prepaid on receipt of price. : WIS GUARANTEE SIX BOXES To cure any case. With each order received bv for six boxes, accompanied by fo.00, we will send the purchaser our written guarantee to re fund the money if the treatment does not effec' a cure. Guarantees issued only by - BLAKELEI HOUGHTON, Prescription Druggists, 175 Second St. - The Dalles. Or. gPimples. The old idea of 40 years ago was that facial eruptions were due to a "blood .hulno,, for which they gave potash. Thus all the old 8 ansa pariUas contain potash, a most objectionable and drastic mineral, that instead of decreasing, actually creates mora eruptions. You have no ticed this when taking other Sareaparlllas than Joy's. - It is however now known that the stom ach, the blood creating power, is the seat of all Titrating or eleansing operations.- A stomach clogged by indigestion or constipation, vitiates the blood, result pimples: ; A clean stomach and healthful digestion purifies It and they disappear.' Thus Joy's Vegetable Barsapariiln is compounded after the modern idea to regulate tho bowels and stimulate tho digestion.;: The effect is immediate and most satisfactory. A short testimonial to contrast tho action of tho potash Sarsnparlllas and Joy's, modern vegetable preparation. Mrs. C. D. Stuart, of 400 llujvs St., 8. F., writes: "I have for years had iudittestion, I tried a popular Barsapacllla but it aciiia!;..-1 oncil more pimples to break out on my face., UcuriiiK that Joy's was a later preparation and acted 'JirTcreuHy, I tried Hand the pimples immediately disappeared." .- 'v .Vegetable;' y Sarsapaeilla Largest buttle, most efSW-iivc. same price. For Sale by SNIPES & KINERSLY. THE DALLES. OKEGOV. . A Revelation.' Pew people know that th bright bluish-green color of. the ordinary teas exposed in the windows, is not the nat ural color. Unpleasant as the fact may be. it is nevertheless artificial r mineral coloring matter being used for 'this purpose.- The effect is' two-" fold. It not. only makes the - . tea a bright, shiny green, bat also permits the ase of " off-color " and worthless teas, which, ' once under the green cloak, are readily worked off as a good quality of tea. . An eminent authority writes jn this sub Ject: "The manipulation 6f poor teas, to give : them a'JIner appearance, is carried on exten- siTOly. Green teas, being in this country ' especially popular, are produced to meet the -demand by coloring cheaper black "kinds by glazing or facing with Prussian blue, tumeric, -gypsum, and indigo. : ThU method it to gen-: raXthat very liilU genuine wieoiared preen tea ' it offered for tale." ' - . It was the knowledge of ttis condition of affairs that prompted the placing of Beech's': Tea before tha public. , It is absolutely pare. ' and without eelor. Did you ever see any ' genuine un colored Japan tea 7 Ask your grocer to open s package of Beech's, and yuu -' will see i and probably f or : the very first -; time. It will be found in color to be Just be tween the artificial green tea that you have-.' been accustomed to and the black -teas. ' It draws a delightful canary color, and Is so - ; fragrant that It will be a revelation to tea- V - drinkers.- It purity makes : it also - mors -economical than the artificial teas, for less' of it is required per cup. Sold only In possnd packages bearing this trade-markr Purees WdhoodT If row grocer does not have it, he will gel tt lot-yon. Price 630 per pound. For sals at Leslie Bixtler's,' : THE DAlLES, ORFGOX. sun tr The Danes is here and has come to stay. , It hopes to win its way to public favor by qner gy, industry and merit; and to this end we ask that you give it a fair trial, and if satisfied with its course a generous support. The Daily four pages of six columns each, will be issued every evening, except Sunday, and will be delivered, in the city, or sent by mail for the moderate sum of fifty cents a monfh. Its Obi will be to advertise the resources of the city, and adjacent country, to assist in developing our industries, in extending and opening up new channels for our trade, in securing an open river, and in helping THE DALLES to take her prop er position as the Leading City of Eastern Oregon. The paper, both daily and weekly, will be independent in politics, and in its criticism of political matters, as in its handling of local affairs, it will be JUST, FAIR AND IMPARTIAL We will enedavor to give all the lo cal news, and we ask that your criticism of our object and course, be formed from the contents of the paper, and hot' from rash assertions of outside parties. THE WEEKLY, sent to any; address for $1.50 per year. It will contain from four to six eight column pages; and we shall endeavor to make it the equal of the best. Ask your Postmaster for a copy, or address. THE CHRONICLE PUB; CO.- : Office, N. W. Cor. Washington and Second. Sts Gnronicic eets