Z3 Tub Dalles Daily Chronicle. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. ' BT MAIL, POSTAGE PREPAID, IK ADVANCE. Weekly, 1 year ... I 50 " 6 months. , 0 75 ' S " ; 0 60 Dally, 1 year.... '. 6 00 " 6 months. . S 00 1 per " J 0 50 ' Address all communication to THE CHRON K'l.E." The Dalles, Oregon. Post-Otilce. omci BOOKS - G moral Delivery Window 8 a. m. to 7 p. m. M .ney Order " 8 a. m. to 4 p. m. S-mday G r. , 9 a. m. to 10 a. m. C-OSING OF MAILS trains going East 9 p. m. and 11:45 a. m. " " West 9 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. Stage for Goldendale 7:30 a.m. . .. Prinevllle ....5:80a.m. "Dufuraud Warm8prlngs. ..5:30a. m. " t Leaving for Lyle & Hartland. .5:30 a. m. " " t Antelope 5:30a.m. Except Sunday. tTrl-weekly. Tuesday Thursday and Saturday. I " Monday Wednesday and Friday. THURSDAY, - - - APR 5, 1894 A PROPHECY FULFILLED. A good thine cannot be reiterated too often. The Oregonian of Nov. 9, 1892, contained the following prophecy, and ""since its absolute fulfillment the great Pacific coast daily has published it every few days. Mark its fulfillment : "The country has decreed a change of "fiscal and industrial policy in the most prosperous time it has ever known. This is largely the result of the immense foreign vote in the great cities. " Chicago carrie'l Illinois for Cleveland as the city of New York carries New York state for lifni. The labor vote, largely foreign, ignorant of the extent of its prosperity, lias ix-en misled by demagogues, and hs revolted against the best conditions it has ever known. The populist craze, Imped mi the same errors that has moved the. labor vote, has contributed not a little bit to this result. A majority of the voters have for the time put exper ience a$iile, rejected the policy under whii-h employment was abundant and vages better than ever before in our his tory., and have decided, though without knowing it, to put their labor on an equality with that of the cheap-labor of the Old World. "There will be arude awakening. We shall now have a free trade policy. We omrht to have it. The country has voted for it, and the present generation should - learn from experience what it means. Naturally and inevitably there will be timidity in making investments, par ticularly in industrial enterprises. JLabor generally will find the demand for 'it thecked, since new establishments -will not be founded, nor old ones en- ' Jarged, under existing " uncertainties. "The election of Cleveland will carry with it a democratic majority both in the -senate and the house, and there will be ino obstacle to legislation on the basis of the democratic platform. t It will be more than one year till the new policy cu.u he formulated into law and set in wjieration nevertheless it is sure that the . result of the election of yesterday will be the beginning of a period of industrial slaqnation, resulting from the timidity of capital and uncertainty of business, and that the consequences will recoil with ter rible furce upon the labor classes, through nr.huxe votes chiefly the result lias tieeii . brought about. They who kilo,- these things have but to wait jarrv tfnlly for events to come about which they eo plainly foresee." An Alpena democrat, while addressing au .audience this week, called attention oih ixct of the bounteous crops and Jep'oreil the fact that in spite ot peace ai l plenty hundreds of thousands of :ii'zi,H were actually starving. In con clu liiiir he said, "The Creator has pro vided liberally for the people but it looks am though Graver Cleveland and the present congress were too much for the Almighty. lr. I-enberg gave expression to a no ble xeiithnent yesterday in saving: "It it an honorable ambition to run for of fice, luii it is a still greater honor for the nan who is defeated to cast aside his 1 nVrei.rea and work for the ticket." No truer words were ever spoken. It is natural perhaps just after the battle to entei ih'ui a share of animosity and ill f-rlin. hut unnatural and dishonorable toch.-rih it, and warm it, and keep it alive, mut use the fangs of discontent, j-hIoupx .and hatred to defeat, the sue cestui nominee. There is also policy in thin proKsition. A shot into a flock of !u'kt will disclose the wounded ones by th"8 which flutter. Never exhibit your wounds. Other conventions are to follow aiil it may be your turn some ther ly. lie wise; be stoical; be Io'hI. No trait of human nature ap- leU more strongly for recognition than I hi. : He magnaminous to your op- Knent. - In Weakest Spot In vi'm i-whole system, perhaps is the liver. If that doesn't do its work of . ii rif vii the blood, more troubles come fn-m i- t han you can remember. I iv Iierce's Golden Medical Discovery "mi'H n...ii this weakpot as nothing else -hii. It rouses it up to healthy, natural Mellon. By thoroughly purifying the ti.Mii..ir reacnea, builds np, ana mvigor MiH. Hvi rv part ot the system. Koi itf-eases that depend on the liver r ihf uiooa dyspepsia, indigestion, .i'iou-n. a; every form of scrofula, -ven . oii-UDjption (or lung-scrofula) in iiri enrlier stages; and the inost stubborn ki'n mii) -calp diseases, the "Discovery" i- f'f only remedy eo unfailing and ef i. in i e t nut it can be guaranteed. it it l M-nn't benefit or cure, you bave inn in -ney back. A WONDERFUL STATE. Points About California and Her - Amiable .People. . Plenty of Rare Sights tor the Toorist Bat He Mast Pay Well to See Them Where the Zones Are Very Close Together. Take your average Calif ornian and you will find him to be an amiable creature. Distance lends no enchant ment in his case. You have got to meet the fellow on his own soil to get thoroughly acquainted with him and learn to admire all the good traits he has stored away in his well-nourished frame. There is nothing1 mean or small about the average Californian, says the Chicago Ilerald. He lives well, sleeps well and dresses in good taste. lie likes legitimate sport and is a keen critic at the theater. He doesn't nourish a throbbing Jove for China men, and he looks with suspicion on bank notes and gold apd silver certifi cates." He prefers to collect and pa;y his debts in coin, and considers a penny as a sort of tramp in our monetary sys tem. It rains in San Francisco during the winter months not every day, per haps, but possibly nine or ten times a week. But the average Californian doesn't appear to notice the precipita tion until he meets a friend from the east. Then he begins to apologize something after this fashion: "How jdo you like this country? Ever in California before? This rain is something unusual. Thursday was as clear as a bell. Sorry it is so disa greeable. Spring is quite as backward this year as some merchants I know are in their payments." Then you laugh and stoop to let the water run off your hat. "But," the average Californian will continue, "this fog in the morning means a clear afternoon. Never knew it to fail. Will you bury your beak in a glass of wine?" - ' . . There is the apologetic humanitarian for you. You can find him almost anywhere in San Francisco. He knows that fogs and rainstorms are as preva lent in his town during the months of November, December, January and February as they are in the web-footed state of Oregon. Yet when approached by the tourist he manifests the most acute astonishment at such climatic eccentricities. So thoroughly addicted is the average Californian to this harm less and amusing form of tergiversa tion that he at once impresses you with the belief that he actually thinks he is telling the truth, and that the doleful surprise he manifests is thor oughly conscientious. Things grow very large the moment you leave the Mojave desert, with its bristling, stunted palms and miles and miles of sage brush. Just' take a ride with a Los Angeles man through the San Gabriel valley, if you doubt this assertion. Let him . do the talking. He is sure to keep you thinking. This is about the way he rattles along: "Peach trees? No; that's a nrune orchard. Why, last year Sir. So-and- So gathered six thousand tons of prunes off these trees. Why, sir, the crop was so heavy that he had to hire men to saw off the branches to pre serve the trunks of the trees. Oh, but this country is a-coming. You can't stop her. Just look at these moun tains. They are fifteen miles from town and you cantt touch the land for less than five hundred dollars an acre. Look at that dirt. Raise anything here. This soil is blacker than Puget sound and richer than Baldwin. It's a great country. Why, it's different from anything on earth. Here the squirrels build their nests in the ground and rats live in trees that shed their bark instead of their leaves. See that orchard over there? Fifteen years ago it was covered with sage brush. Now there are eighteen thou sand orange trees in that tract of land. and the fruit the wind alone blows off would pave every road and path in Golden Gate park. What do you think of our women? Not so pretty as they are in 'Frisco, eh? I will tell you why. It's the climate. Up there they have more moisture in the air and that softens the complexion. Here it's dry the year round and that is why the faces of our women look harsher. But it's a good country, isn't it? What do you think of it anyhow?'' And so this man of Los Angeles will talk and talk until the sun goes down in the ocean with a sizzle. But Cali fornia has everything to brag about,' and the visitor can afford to stand this good-natured hyperbole. The state is Digger than the combined area of the commonwealths .of New York, Penn sylvania, Vermont, New Hampshire and Delaware. It is a thousand miles long. From the Mexican line to the boundary of Oregon the distance is as great as that- which separates New York city from Chicago. It is a state where the zones are so closely wedded that the visitor may pick straw berries one moment and half an hour later enjoy a sleigh ride on the flat top of a mountain. It is a land filled with flowers, fruits and birds, and just enough snow and ice to drape in glit tering passementerie the purple peaks and savage cataracts to the north. Queer Uses of Fans. There are many curious uses of fans in Japan. The umpire at wrestling and fencing matches uses a heavy one, shaped like a huge butterfly, the han dle being the body, and rendered im posing by heavy cods of silk. The various motions of the fan constitute a language wlych the wrestlers fully un derstand and appreciate. Formerly in the time 'of war the Japanese comman der used a large f an, . having a frame of iron covered with' thick, paper. '.In case of charge it could be shut, and a blow from its Iron bones was no light affair.. One notable variety -of fan is made of waterproof paper, which can bo dipped in water, and creates great coolness by evaporation, without wet ting the clothes. The flat fan, made of rough paper, is often used as a grain winnow, to blow the charcoal fires and as a dustpan. ... . , ' QUEBEC'S HUNTING GROUNDS. Plenty of Big Game to Be Had Close at Hand. Quebec is at the edge of a great wil derness of forests, rivers and lakes a wilderness reaching all the way to the north pole. ' Without doubt, says the New York Sun, it is the nearest to big game of any city east of the Mississip pi and north of Mexico. Moose and caribou are so close at hand that men are willing to try for them within a few hours of the city, and to guarantee the getting of them in a day's journey or less. The moose roam , all over the country south of the St. Lawrence, and are perhaps most plentiful east of the Maine border. The caribou field extends all the way into .and across Labrador, there being two varieties the wood caribou and the barren ground caribou, the latter being the larger beast. Visitors to the recent carnival at Quebec were surprised at the great number of freshly, slaugh tered moose and caribou then in the city. They not only figured on the floats in the grand procession but they were to be found in the dwellings and offices of the sportsmen and in the clubs. The trout that has been caught by fishing through the ice were positively enormous. Some were more than a foot in length, and more than an inch thick at the thick est part. They were not only speckled but their skins were suffused with a brilliant reddish tinge. These fish abound all around Quebec and arc as little trouble to .get as any game fish in the world. Two accompaniments of the ordinary wilderness country were very disappointing. They were the Indians and the Indian curiosities. The Indians were always in evidence, but they were more white than red, and more French than anything else. Ordinarily they looked and dressed like the rest of the habitants, but when they put on their aboriginal toggery for the great carnival parade part of it proved to be a most extraor dinary headdress of . short feathers. They were turkey feathers apparent ly, although most of the American In dians despise the turkey as a cowardly bird unfit to eat and unworthy to be dealt with at all. Whatever the feath ers were, they were arranged like a " mop, and on the heads of the Indians they looked like the new fangled paper lamp shades which the women are making. These headdresses were the only Indian curios worth having. The beadwork sold as Huron work is such as the Long Island farm ers' wives sell at Fulton and Washing ton markets. Flowers were the princi pal designs, and flowers ard things that the true Indian never works into a pattern in any tribe in any part of the country. y PRECIOUS BUGS. How They Saved the Orange Trees of . Southern California. Orange growers in the San Gabriel and San Bernardino valley tell an in teresting story of how they destroyed a pest which threatened the destruc tion of the industry in this countrv. A few years ago the trees were attacked by an insect known as scale. So rap idly did the pest propagate that within a few weeks the bark of the Jtrees was white with them. Drastic remedies were applied, but without avail. So serious was the outlook that many of the growers were on the point of cut ting down their immense groves. One day a young man suggested a novel plan for the speedy extermination of the pest. He said that there existed in Australia a species of lady bug which existed on insects that cling to trees. He received a consignment of thirty-: eight of these bugs by the next steam er. One grower who had ten thousand trees and probably one hundred thou sand million . scajo on all - of them bought eight of the precious bugs and placed them to the best advantage in his orchard. lie tells this story: ' " ."Three days after I made the experi ment I went into the grove. The trees were as white as ever with the pest. I told my friend that I thought his lady bugs a failure. He advised me to be patient, for, he said, it was likely that the bugs were breeding before making their onslaught on the scale. Three days later I again visited the orchard and found the trees as clean as a whistle. Not one of the insects was visible. Neither were the lady bugs. Having finished their work they flew away and I have ' not seen tbem since. More bugs were released in other orchards and in the course of a month there was not an orange tree in the valley-afflicted by the pest. . We now keep a stock of the bugs in hand so that in case the scale returns we'll be ready to fight it again. The bugs sell for twenty-five dollars apiece. . But they are worth that money and more, too, for they have saved every orange tree in the country." - Dancer In Pert umery. Women who are fond of indulging in strong perfumes should remember that they are decidedly injurious to the sense of smell. By their frequent use the. secretory glands of the nose and throat are overtaxed and weakened. One day a person notices that the hearing is less active than usual and the sense of smell seems defective. This is. of course, put down to a cold, and but little is thought of "it. After a time the entire head becomes affected and there are throat and lung Compli cations which are likely to end in chronic, if not 'fatal illness. . Smelling salts are a prolific cause of deafness All strong and pungent odors, particu larly those which act upon the secre tory processes, should be avoided as far as possible. ....... -. . ' When Bab; -was sick, we gave her Costoria. . When she wasa Child, she cried for Castorla. When she became Miss, she clung to Castorla, When she had Children, she gave them Castorla, Use Mexican Silver Stove Polish w York Weekly Tribune -AND- 41-ONLY J. b. acaascK, President. J. M. Patterson, . Cashier. First Rational Bank. VHE 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; D. P. Thompson. Jno. S. Schknck. Ed. M. Williams, Geo. A, Liebe. . H. Mall. FRENCH & CO., BANKERS. TRANSACT A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS Letters of Credit issued available in he Eastern States. Sight Exchange and Telegraphic Transfers sold on New York, Chicago, St. Lotus, San Francisco, Portland Oregon, Seattle Wash., and various points in Or egon and Washington. Collections made at all points on fav orable terms. Harry Liebe, PRACTICAL Watchmaker? Jeweler All work promptly attended to, and warranted. Can be found at Jacobsen's Music store, No. 162 Second Street. Wasco County, The Gate City of the Inland Empire is situated at the head of navigation on the Middle Columbia, and is a thriving, pros perous city. . ITS TERRITORY. It is the supply city for an extensive and rich agricultural and grazing country, its trade reaching as far south as Summer Lake, a distance of over two hundred miles. The Largest Wool Market. The rich grazing country along the eastern slope of the Cas cades furnishes pasture for thousands of sheep, the wool from which finds market here.- The .Dalles is the largest original wool shipping point in America, about 5,000,000- pounds being shipped last year. ITS PRODUCTS. The salmon fisheries are the finest on the Columbia, yielding this year a revenue of thousands of dollars, which will be more than doubled in the near future. ; - The products of the beautiful Klickitat, valley find market here, and the country south and east has this year, filled the warehouses, and all available storage places to overflowing with their products. . . . 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 delightful. . Its pos sibilities incalculable, i Its resources unlimited.. .., And on these -:oni;r s.tonfis.slie stands. . : ' P AU L K R E -DEALERS IN- PAINTS, OILS -;- And the Most Complete and the aC9Practical Painters and Paper Hangers. None but the beet brands of tha Sherwin-Williams and J. W. Masury's Paints used in all aut work, and none but the most skilled workmen employed. Agents for Mssury liquid Paints. ' Na chemical combination or soap mixture. A first class article in all colors. ' All orders promptly attended to. .... ; . -' - w Paint Sho5 corner Third ana Washington Bt8..The Dalles Qreroa SI. 75. CP. STEPHENS, DEALER IN DRY-GOODS CLOTHING . Boots, Shoes, Bats,' JKtc. . Fancfl oodg, llofciong, BtrOf Etc Etc Second St., The Dalles. John Pashek, The Merchant Tailor, 79 Coovt Street, Bert door to Wasco Sun Offioe. ' AW-Has Just received the latest styles in Suitings for Gentlemen, and has a large assortment of Foreign and Amer ican Cloth 8, which be can finish To Order for those that favor him. Cleaning and Repairing a Specialty. .ALL THE NEWS TWICE A WEEK....... 'YOU THINK, YOU WHjIi CONCLUDE THAT WE ARE AT PRESENT'. OFFER ING A RARE BAR GAIN IN READING MATTER. $1.50 A YEAR FOR YOUR HOME PAPER. ..ALL THE NEWS TWICE A WEEK.. ..... Oregon, FT & CO.; AND GLASS Latest Patterns and Designs in Tbs Dalles Dafly Chronicle . Published Dally, Sunday Excepted. sr. . THE CHRONICLE PUBLISHING CO. Corner' Second and Washington Streets, The , Dalles, Oregon. Terms of Subscription Per Year ; ... 6 00 Per month, by carrier .-. so Single copy 5 TIMB TABLES. . . a Itailroads. . In effect August 6, 1893. , BAST BOCKD. : No. 2, Arrives 10:55 r. u. Departs 11:00 r M. WKST BOUND. s 10. 1, Arrives 3:39 A. M. ' Departs 8:44 A. K. - LOCAL. Arrives from Portland at 1 r. Bf. Departs for Portland at 2 r. x. Two locai freights that carry passengers leave one for the west at 8:00 a. m., and one for the aat at 5;X)A. M. ' " STAGES .. For Prinerille, via. Bake Oven, leave daily t 6 a. M. , For Antelope, Mitchell, Canyon City, leave tally at 6 a. K. For Dnfur, Klneslev, Wamic, Wapinitla, Warm, springs and Tygh Valley, leave daily, except Sunday, at 6 A. M. For Goldendale, Wash., leave every day of the week, except Bunday at ? a. m. Offices for all lines at the JmaMlla House. ' 'KOFKS8IONAL. . H H. EIDDELL Attorn jey-at-Law Office Court Street, The Dalles, Oregon. B. B. DO FOB. ' rEANK. MKNKFKK. DUFUK, & MENEFEE ATTOBNEYS - AT LAW Rooms 42 and 43, over Post office Building, Entrauce on Washington Street The Dalles, oregou. 9. BENNETT, ATTORNEY-AT-LA W. Of . V fice in Scluuino's building, np stairs. The dalles, Oregon. f.r. MAYS. B.S.HUNTINGTON.- H. 8. WILSON. ' TAY8, HUNTINGTON fc WILSON ATTOB JX mbys-at-law Offices, French's block over first National Bank, rh Dalles. Oregon. vv. rr. Wilson attobnby-at-law Rooms French & Co.'s bank building, Second street. The Dalles, Oregon. . J SUTHERLAND, II. D C. M. ; F. T. M. C; M. C. P. and S. O., 1'hy slclan aad Sur geon. Rooms 3 and 4, Chapman block. Residence Mrs. Thornbury's, west end of Second street. . DR. E8HELMAN (HOMEOPATHIC; PHYSICIAN and bOBSBOM. Calls answered promptly lay or night, city or country. Office No. 86 and '.Chapman block. wtt DB. O. D. DOAME FHY8ICIAN AND SDB sbon. Office; rooms 6 and 6 Chapman block. Residence: 8. E. corner Court and Fourth streets, seoind door from the eorner. Office hoars 9 to 13 A. M., a to & and 7 to 8 P. M. DSIDDAIX Dbntist. Gas given for the painless extraction of teeth. Also teeta t on flowed aluminum plate. Rooms: Sign of -.he Golden Tooth, Second Street. . - societies; w A8CO LODGE, NO. 15, A. F. A. M. Meets nrat ana tmra wonaay oi eacn monin at y DALLES ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER NO. . Meets In Masonic Hall the third Wednesday f each month at 7 P. M. MODERN WOODMEN OF THE WORLD. . Mt. Hood Camp No. 59, Meets Tuesday even ing of each week In Fraternity Hall, at 7:80 p. m. COLUMBIA LODGE, NO. 6, I. O. O. F. Meets every Friday evening at 7:30 o'clock, in K. of P. hall, corner Second, and Court streets. Sojourning brothers are welcome. g. Clqbok. Sec'y. H. A. Bills JT. O. FRIENDSHIP LODGE, NO. 9., K. of P. Meets every Monday evening at 7:30 o'clock, in channo's building, corner of Court and Becond ftreets. Sojourning members are cordially in rited. E. Jacobsbk, D. W.Vausb, K. of R. and B. CO. a B8EMBLY NO. 4827, K. OF L. Meets in K. V of P. hall the second and fourth Wednes lavs of each month at 7:80 p.m. WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN TEMPERENCE UNION will meet every Friday afternoon , t 3 o'clock at the reading room. AU are invited. THE DALLES LODGE No. 2, I. O. G. T. Reg ular weekly meetings Friday at 8 r. m, a K. of P. Hall. J. 8. Winzlxb, C. T. DiMSMOBB Parish, Sec'y. . -pvKMPLE LODGE NO. 8, A. O. U. W. Meets L in Fraternity Hall, over Kellers, en Second i treat, Thursday evenings at 7 :80. J. H. BLAKENEY, W. B Mtbbb, Financier. M. W. J AS. NESMITH POST, No. 82, G. A. B Meets every Saturday at 7:80 r. M., in the K. of P. Hall. - . AMERICAN RAILWAY UNION, NO. 40. Meets second and fourth Thursdays each month in K. of P. hall. J. W. Ready, W. H. Jones, Sec'y. . Pres. B, OF L. E. Meets every Sunday afternoon in . the K. of P. HaU. . GE8ANG VEREIN Meets every Bundav evening in the K. of P. Hall. " BOF L, F. DIVISION, No. 167 Meets in K. of P. Hall the first and third Wednes lay of each month, at 7:80 P. M. . THIS CHTJKCUK8. rT. r'ETERS CHURCH Rev. Father Bbons O eissT Pastor. Low Mass every Bunday at J a. m. High Mass at 10:80 a.m. Vespers at 'F,. - : ST. PAULS CHURCH Union Street, opposite Fifth. Rev. EUD.Suteliffe Rector. Services every Sunday at 11 A. M . and 7 :80 r. u. Bunday 3chool3:45 A. at. Evening Prayer on Friday at 7:80 - - FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. O. D. TAT . lob, Pastor. Morning services every Sab bath at the academy at 11 A. M. Sabbath school immediately after morning services Prayer meeting Friday evening at Pastor's ret ieuce. Union services in the court house at -P.M. , -CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Rev. W. C : KJ Cuktib, Pastor. Services every Sunday at 11 i, and 7 r. m. Sunday School after morning tervlce. " Strangers cordially invited. Beats free. f E. CHURCH Rev, J. Whiblkb, pastor.' 31 Services every Sunday morning at 11 a. m. Sunday School at 12:20 o'clock r M. Epworth League at 6:80 P. M Prayer meeting every Thursday evening at 7:30 o'clock. A cordial in vitation is extended by both pastor and people to all. CHRISTIAN CHURCH RBV.P. H. McGUFPBT . Pastor. Preaching in the Christian church each Lord's Day at 11 a. m. and 7: SO p. m. AU are cordially invited - EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN Ninth street, Rev. A. Horn, pastor. Services at 11:80 a.m. Sunday-school at 2:80 p.m A cordial welcome o every one. - House Moving! Andrew Velarde '.IS prepared to do any and all ' . V kinds of work in his line at reasonable figures. Has the largest house moving outfit -. . ;. . V- in Eastern Oregon. Address P.O.Box 181 .The Dalles r