jf .k 1 v vvxyvy a ouri; PECIHL S SHLE. Dry Goods, Shoes, Mens Furnishings,! Hats, Take advantage of this Liberal ALL GOC5DS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. The Dalles Daily Chroniele. Sneered a the Postofflee at The Dalles, Oregon, as Becond-class matter. Clubbing List. . Regular Our price price Clroiiele nd If . I. Tribme $2.50 $1.75 " id Weekly Orcgoiiau ....... 3.00 2.00 ' ui Coimopolitai Ia?aiiE 3.00 2.25 .ocal Advertising;. 10 Ccuui pcr line for first Insertion, and 5 Cents per line for each subsequent insertion. Special rates for long time notices. All local notices received later than 3 o'clock will appear the following day. Tlie Daily and Weekly Chronicle may be found on gale at I. C. Nickelsen'a store. Telephone No. 1. SATURDAY, - JUNE 30, 1894 JUNE JUNGLINGS. Leaves From the Notebook of Chronicle Reporters. Don't forget the Novelty Tea tonight, K. of P. hall. Sixty passengers came down on the Spokane from Umatilla to Celilo today and on to this place this afternoon. The trial of the case of the etate against McReynolds was completed yes terday, and the jury brought in a verdict of acquittal. . By substituting the word areas for acres where the latter word first occurs in an editorial entitled "Malthus Cor rect" in yesterday's issue, a very sense less paragraph becomes plain. Through the kindness of Messrs. Sin notti Fish the Smith Bros, have se cured the dining room of the Umatilla house, for the night of July 4th and will give one of their old time parties. All claims against the city should be filed by 7 :30 th:s evening as the present city government desires to act upon all bills and claims, so that the incoming officers may start with a clean slate. The case against Maloney and Snell ing ia on trial today. Court was Hot called at the usual hour, on account of the venire not being returned, the work requiring considerable traveling to serve the summons. . Mr. Theodore Prinz fell from an ex press wagon this morning and dislocated his shoulder, and Mrs. Kent fell on the sidewalk breaking her left leg below the knee. Dr. Hollister was called in both- ' cases to repair the damages. - The average temperature for June at this point for the past nineteen years is 67.3. That for this month . is 63.2. Only three years in that time has it been so low. " In 1890 and 1891 it was between 61 and 62, and in 1888 the same as this year. '. ... In going to Hood River yesterday we had an opportunity, to examine a por tion of the railroad, and are convinced that the damage is not nearly so great aa supposed. When once the break be- . tween Bonneville and the Locks is pass able, the balance of the road will soon ' be i placed in condition. '. .'. Deputy Sheriff Phirman got home at noon having summoned a special panel of jurors to serve in the case of the state, against Maloney and Snelling. . 1 The attorneys will commence on them this SflTUHMY, Jl)p 30. To reduce our stock as much as .'' ' "before vre move back, WE OFFERS Per ThLis PEASE afternoon, but owing to the manner in which the case has been brought and kepi before the public, it is going to re quire considerable time to select a jury. Mr. W. H. Jones, secretary of the American Railway Union here, received a dispatch from President Debs this morning calling ou the entire brother hood on the Union Pacific. Tomorrow there will not be a wheel turning on the entire system. ' The matter has nof be come national in extent, and will prob ably settle the question of railway strikes, for if the Union cannot win now. it never can. . . ' Some fault is found by our merchants on account of the time required to get freight here from Portland, and also that the company discriminates. In order to understand the first cause of complaint a visit to the Cascades is necessary. This demonstrates the im possibility of moving freight faster. On the other" charge, the comrjanv has adopted a rnle, which it has never vio lated, of bringing all freight through in the order in which it is received : first. offered, first brought. The Steamer Inns. The steamer Irma, due here last nieht. aid not arrive until noon today. She left the locks at 3 o'clock vesterdav afternoon and would have been here by 9 :30, but when at Moeier broke a nnmn. Captain Coe came up on the Regulator last night to get an injector in place of the pump, one he had ordered bv ex press, but found it had been put off at Mood Kiver. He went down this morn ing, took the pump to pieces, and made the run as stated. The little boat left on the down trip shortly after 3 o'clock and will get back to Hood River tonight, and here about 7 o'clock tomorrow. After that the mail will get in earlier on account of the time being changed for its arrival up at the locks. This, provid ing the strike is not on. Advertised Letters. Following is the fist of letters remain ing in the postoffice at The Dalles un called for, Friday, June 29th, 1894. Persons calling for same will trive date on which they were advertised : Mrs NelheMartinf4) Miss Jorgine Jensen, Sara Hava. Vn PoiKinn. I u VUVUUWMO VJl ThoB Howl ton, don. Mr Juan Agiribas, MrsClaraWoodratb, Mrs Ann M Brutt. John R "Walker, Mr Germain Segar, Hank Bryant, Mr John W Gcilin- A J Cobel, , ger, TP Conn, WmF Dermis, Mr Will E Freeman, Mrs Jugrid Lyons, Mr Dudy Depee. -Mr Ben McDowell. . M. T. Nolan, P.'m. Perspicacity. Bless God for victory ! I want to tell everyone that , God, for. the sake of Christ Jesus, His eon, has given me good eyesight. The devil and all his angels cannot change this victory into defeat. Praise the Lordl He has won the victory for His own glory. . Blanche Rothkock. Many a poor sufferer who submits tA the surgeon's knife, in consequence of malignant sores and scrofulous swell ings, might be cured without an opera tion, by taking Ayer's Sarsaparilla. This remedy expels from the blood all the impurities by. which disease is gen erated. ... : .. . .. ,.; -. .-... Hall's .Vegetable Sicilian Hair Re- newer has restored eray hair to ita ori ginal color and prevented baldness in thousands of cases. It wilj do so to yon. possible Cent. Disciooi. Day Only. Offer. & MAYS. $ The Green Bug on the Wheat. Little green bugs have appeared in myriad numbers in the wheat fields of the Willamette valley and are to be found thickly ensconsed in the open space between the layers of wheat berries along the heads. Thev have caused great alarm for the safety of the present crop and for the future of wheat growing in this regian : but scientific investfoa tion proves that the danger is not so alarming as might be supposed. It is true, this year's croD mav be ininred some ty their depredations before they are destroyed by their inevitable accom paniment, the parasite, but the chances are happily against such a result Some beads of wheat plucked from a field across the river in Polk county and also from one in the Waldo hills were shown to a Statesman representative last evening, and while the green aphis. for such it is, was very numerous, vet the berries seemed to be sound and healthy. But the reader will be more interested in something authoritative on this subject, so the Statesman is pleased to present from the Corvallis Times the following account of the little "varmint" and the" manner of circumventing his nefarious schemes against the prosper ity of Oregon, as given bv Prof. F. L. Washburn, of the Oregon Agricultural college: "It is a small green insect that attacks the stalks and later the heads of wheat, rye and oats. It has a long beak with which it extracts the sap. It is not des tructive to the berry except that its ab sorption of the sap robs it of nourish ment and causes it to shrivel. "As wheat ripens the aphis migrates to the more succulent oats and 'when these in turn ripen it goes to the various grasses. It spreads over a wide extent of territory quicker than any in Beet known. Although its existence was observed seventeen years before, the grain aphis first appeared in great num bers in 1861, spreading over New Eng land, all of New York except the western portion, northeastern Pennsylvania and portions of Canada. Every grain field was invaded and many of them thronged. In many cases the wheat crop was re duced one-half, and the oat crop hardly paid for harvesting. The following year it spread, over the remaining portion of Canada and into Michigan, and then disappeared. In 1883 it appeared in ten counties in California doing considerable damage to wheat, one man reporting that the yield of his spring wheat was diminished one-half by the ravages of the pest. It was prevented from multi plying by late rains to the extent that damage was scarcely perceptible in other counties. April 27th and 30th and May 2d and 3d large flights of the winged variety were noticed in Sacra mento, but disappeared after the raina of May 4th. In nearly every instance where the pest has appeared it has been met by a host of parasites, flies and ladv beetles, and if it has not been at once checked, -have prevented its reappear ance the second year. In many cases these natural enemies have prevented it entirely from damaging grain. - from specimens sent me I observe that parasites are working on the aphis. If these parasites are numerous enough, no very serious damage may result. If not numerous enough, manv . wheat growers may lose a large portion of their crop. There is no practicable remedy that can be applied at present. Th pnly thing that the farmer can do ia to burn the stubble immediately after har i i : . - . MAUI BENTON Have moved back to their old stands, at 133 Second St., and Corner Union and Third Streets! vest, together with all straw, weeds, littel or waste of any kind, on or about the field. This will destroy places favorable for the insect's hibernation. The experience in the East has shown that this aphis may ruin a wheat crop one season, and not be seen again in that locality for many years. Whenever the aphis turns a dark color either brown or black it means that it is doomed. This is caused by the work of the parasite, which deposits the egg in side the aphis the egg hatches and the larvae feed on the tissues of the body of the aphia producing the death of the latter. The parasite finally emerges as a wasp-like insect to repeat its good work." f The following from the Albany Demo crat bears out the cheerful view taken in the beginning of this article : "The wheat aphis that is causing con siderable talk is not a new thing in Ore gon ; in fact it has been here for years. A man tells a Democrat man that he saw the aphis as early as 1878. It ap pears this year in larger numbers than usual, but it is probable will cause little damage to the wheat, particularly to the fall wheat." Salem Statesman. Drowned at Turn water. Mr. J. A. Splawn, who is engaged in cutting hay on the other side of the river, informs us of an accident that oc curred at Tumwater about a week ago, his informant being 'an Indian named Jake Andrews. The latter says that about a week ago a white man came down in a small boat and landed at the head of the rapids. Andrews talked with him, and offered to haul his boat around the rapids if he would ' wait un- till morning. The man, however, seemed to be an independent sort of a fellow, and saying he had to get to The Dalles that night, produced a long rope, which he tied to the boat and under took to lower it over the falls. After going about a hundred yards the boat took a sudden, plunge and pulled him into the water. The Indians saw that he kept afloat for a hundred yards or so, and then went down, being seen no more. Andrews describes the man as being about six feet tall, dark com plexion. PERSONAL MENTION. Mr. Gage of Mitchell is in the city. Mr. John Buick of Silver Lake is in the city. Mr. Alexander Kirchheimer of Antel ope ia in the city. Mr. A. A. Javne came down from Arlington yesterday. " " Mr. Geo. P. Morgan returned to Cas cade Locks this morning. Mrs. Clark of Oysterville is expected up tonight on the Regulator, coming to visit her sister, Mrs. Julius Wiley. ' - - - ' - Pallor, languidnees, and the appear ance of ill-health being no longer fash ionable among ladies, Ayer's Sarsapa rilla is most largely resorted to as a tonic-alterative, nervine, stomachic, and bnilder-up of the system generally. This is as it should be. Ayer's is the best, ' , - : . . Cord Wood. We again have an abundant supply of dry fir and hard wood for immediate delivery at the lowest rates, and hope to ba fayored with a liberal share of! the trade. Jos. T. Peters St Co. . : Thk Chronicxk is prepared to do all kinds of job printing. - . . t . I JOLES, COLLINS & CO. Back at Their Old Stand, 390-394 SECOND STREET, . Where they will be pleased to see all their old The Rose Hill Greenhouse la still adding to ita large stock ' ' of all kiuda of Greenhouse Plants, And can furnish a choice selec- tion. Also CUT FLOWERS and FOHJUi DESIGNS MRS. C. L. PHJLLIPS. !The Only Thing Ever high in our store was the Columbia, -and that is marked down; but it is not yet as -t " Low as Our Prices. We can give you bargains in everything in Ladies', Gentlemen's and Children's Clothing from Hat to Dress. Call and see us at the old .corner. . N. Just leeeiued. MRS. M. LeBALLISTEK, The Dalles. THE EUROPEAN HOUSE: Complete and clean in all its furnishings, and The Culinary Department is under the immediate super vision of Mrs. Frazier, and the table is better supplied than any other in the State for the money. Union Street, What? Where? ITEWBST BOOKS. BARRABAS ..." THE KING'S STOCK BROKER MARCELLA' ", ; : . TOM SAWPER ABROAD MARION DARSHE . ; MONTEZUMA'S DAUGHTER SHIPS THAT PASS IN THE NIGHT I. C. NICKEI,SEN,V The Dalles. patrons. Harry Liebe, PRACTICAL Watchmaker! Jeweler All work promptly attended to, . and warranted. Can now be found at 162 Second street. HARRIS. A FRESH LOT OF NEW STYLES SUMMER MILLINERY GOODS. -. STILL LATER STYLES OF Summer Hats and Bonnets. ; Something New in Flowers. THE DflliHES, OREGON. Hand-Corded Corsets, Health Reform Waists, Nursing Corsets, Misses' Waists, Children's-Waists, Shoulder Braces and Hose Supporters made to order. At the Pacific Corset Company's Factory, north east of the Fair Grounds. It desired each garment' will be fitted before being finished. Call at the fac tory and examine our goods, or drop a card in the office, and our agent will call. and Becure your order. ............ By Marie Corelli ...... By- Archibald Gunther . . .By Mrs.' Humphrey Ward ............ .By Mark Twain 4 ..... . .By Marion Crawford By Rider Haggard . . . . . . .By Beatrice Herraden