isW4rsv r iK.di.iuimr.i-itiiiin WHAT-'OREGON" MEANS Something of Her Resources and Sublime Scenery. THE WOOL AND WHEAT CROPS. This Season Will be the Busiest and Brighter the Farmers Have Ever Kuowu. Special correspondence of the Astorlan. Astoria, July 10, 1894. A standing re buke against the vast majority of that portion of the American public whose privilege it la to occasionally go pleas ure seeking, Is that they are apt to turn ihelr steps to foreign countries when at their own doors are sights and wonders far eclipsing In size, beauty, and Inter est, anything they can gaze on abroad. That this rebuke Is In a great measure merited there can be no doubt whatever. Out of the ten thousand people In this city I do not believe that fifty have ever seen The Dulles, or the Cascade locks, or the great Multnomah falls. I do not believe that ten have stood at the foothills of Mount Hood or gazed cn the beautiful little river that carries Its melted snows down Into the mighty Columbia. And yet how many of us were crazy to go to the Midwinter Fair, height. The force of the wind was so at San Francisco, and to revel in a ser- great at times that heavy men were IfS of artistic looking hothouses, car- blown off their feet, and several people peted with peanuts and enlivened by got badly shaken up by being suddenly the cry of Cheap John fakirs, ("conces- brought in contact with the side of a Fionaires," I believe Mr. De Young calls bouse or thrown down onto the side- them) yelling the superior attributes of walks. t.he bearded woman or the Hon with Professor Smith, of the United States Eeven legs. On the one hand a dreary fisheries commission, who has lately ccean trip, a week of revelling (among Deel ln Astoria, has been winning gold the peanuts) and you return home with cn opinions from all the cannery men on a nasty taste in the mouth. On the' tne "PPer rvier. His unassuming be other, a voyage along a river, whose Savior and his evident knowledge of the shores, crowded with waterfalls, ran- yons, and fertile valleys, speak peace' and delight at every mile; after that a trip to some of nature's grandesf snec- tacles Jefferson, Hood, and thundering cataracts, and your holiday closes with a remembrance that will stay by you cs long as memory lasts. How many of locality. Mr. Smith has inquired clon us really know what that word "Ore-;lv lnto the dam nuisance, and has been gon" stands for? To most It signifies' ,crv greatly impressed with the neces Portland, Astoria, and the stretch of sitv of keeping the upper streams and river that Joins the two cities. Its hun-j spawning grounds absolutely free from dreds of miles of smiling farms, its cat- molestation. lie ranches, its beauties, and Its won- Proprietors and foremen of fish wheels dors, ppread over a vista whose bound- have nad great difficulty this year hi arles cover an area larger and more' baullng their catch to the various can beautlful than tha whole of France, are' neries. Several of the tracks through nil unthought of. Look at the map,! which they usually transport their loads study out her size; gaze round you and navo been converted into huge mud see her fertility, her millions of acres of lloles through the flood, and now they virgin soil, her giant trees whose tops have to make from four to five portages throw shadows at your very doors, her cn every trip. waterways and her cloud-piercing peaks! When the flood was at its height the this and much more is Oregon. I once Columbia Just abreast of The Dalles was heard of an old settler away out near! very greatly disturbed, and in the center Huntington, In Baker county, I think,!0' the river was a solid wall of water who was asked by two tourists whether. they had crossed the line into the next i tate yet. The old man in a very melo- dramatic manner stood In front of thenv and throwing up his arms, replied: "No, ln memory a great many people of Sher yer alnt. An' when you younir cents' man Wasco counties were-able to gets back home to yer mammies In New I Yark, or Phllydelphy, or Row-chester, on' they asks yer to tell 'em all about that ere little web-footed hole In the People ail over the eastern part of the ground called Oregon, you Jest ups an'istale tnat there ls as mucn snw 'n the says, 'mam, that hole In the ground ls mountains every year as there was this a mighty big hole.' Don't either of 8eason. that under weather condi jer ever forget that you oncet got to a tlon9 the 8ame 03 thla year8'' or an' placo where an old feller told yer youj tnlng aPProoehlng this years', other dls was four hundred miles east of the! a8;,rous nod8 would be bound t0 make E.eU Pacific ocean-and still In Oregon." i tnelr aPPearance. These people would That old man mightn't have had a col- not be prised if within the next few lege education, but he knew better than most of us of the Immensity and splen dour covered by the name of our state. But this Is moralizing. I want to tell your readers something about Oregon's fertility as evidenced In the vicinity of The Dalles and the whole of Northeast ern Oregon. The disastrous Columbia river flood has wrought great destruc tion in mrviriai mirtiiiiica wii'iuil uurj boundaries, but nature has recompensed us in many other ways and her bounty in fish, wheat and woql has been un stinted. Never before In the history of the state has our wool crop been so lnrf?f fla It In thin vonr Our whMt nprtn' will Da several hundred thousands or bushels bigger than ever before, and salmon are swarming all the upper riv ers -In countless millions, defying the cannerymen to handle half of what they can catch. The excellent weather con ditions, principally brought about by an exceptionally cool month of June, will be the means of a splendid wheat aver age throughout the farming dlatricto, and the acreage planted this year ls larger than It ever has been. The crop everywhere is makln? the most favor able progress, and by October thousands of fields of rustling- gold will be spread over the whole wheat-growing portion of the state. The only trouble will be in obtaining transportation for the srain after it is gathered, and this difficulty, will in all probability be a serious one. I expect to- see the farmers begging the railroad companies for cars inside of three months, and It seems to be very doubtful whether they will get all they want The Dalles is Just now one vast store house for wool, and in every available space Is packed pile upon pile of this material awaiting shipment. The Wasco. Warehouse Company's warehouse is stacked to the roof, and Moody & Co.'s lsrge building is loaded. In fact, the wool came In from the surrounding country so rapidly that it was found necessary to open up the big pavilion of the exhibition building, which was also quickly filled to its utmost capacity. And the woo has still kept coming In steadily for the past three weeks, se verely taxing the ingenuity of the resi dents of The Dalles to find storage for it It Is of course absolutely impossible trj sillS any" d? it III thi prVijk'Ilt (i.iiitlitloii of the Union Pacific at that .point, and nobody knows yet when the blockade will be broken. The wool is of fine quality, in fact superior to any that has ever yet been baled in the state, and the amount of it that has been clipped this year Is a surprise to the oldest hands lnihe business. I talkea to several farmers while in Wasco county and they all had the same thing to say of Astoria and her prospects. One of them is very em phatlc. He is James Seufert, a relative of the canneryman whose name ap peared in one of my former letters. He said: "Astoria must have a railroad in the very near future, and neither Port land's Jealousy nor the greed of Portland merchants can keep, her out of it. This grain of ours that will be ready fur shipment In a few months, should never leave its cars until It reaches your city where iti ought to be taken aboard the ships. The moment the first sack of wheat Is hauled overland from here to Astoria the question of prosperity will be settled among you for all time. You will find yourselves a thriving metropo lis before you are aware of it." It is safe to say that the Union Pacific will not be able to resume Its traffic east of Bonneville to The Dalles for another 50 days. The "oldest inhabitant" at The Dalles does not remember to have ever en countered such fearful windstorms as blew over the little city down through the canyons when the flood was at its business that has brought him to the coast. ha-ve been the means of his being received pleasantly everywhere, and It 19 the opinion of many of the canners ll,at ne takes awav wlth lllm mre val unWe information than any other gov- ernment agent who hag ever visited the ieei nign, aDsoiuieiy precluding a view of the opposite shore. The waves were smashing over one another with a continuous roar, and for the first time !lsten to a verv Sood Imitation of ocean breakers. It Is the general Impression among uays tne Willamette at .Portland were to experience a rise of three feet. On some future occasion I may turn my attention to the remarks of Dr. Wheelar, the heolth officer of Portland, tnougn ror a common man to take a tilt et such a medical windmill as he is, might be considered (by him) the most arrant presumption. To give him his due, I believe he knows as much about sanitation a she does about Bmall-pox. THE WEAKEST SIOT - in your whole system, perhaps, is the liver. If that doesn't do its work of puri fying the blood, more troubles come from it than you can re- 1 member. I)r. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery acts upon this weak spot as nothing else can. It rouses it up to huaitby, natural action. By thoroughly purifying tho blood, it ruacbui, builds up, and invigorates every port of the system. For all diseases that depend on the liver or the blood Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Bilious ness ; every form of tJcrof uln, even Con sumption (or Lung-scrofula) in its earlier starts ; and tha most stubborn Skin and Scalp PiK-ases, the "Discovery" is the only remedy no unfailing and clfoctivo tbat it can be riniirnnteed. It it dotvint benefit or euro, you bavo your money back. On those term3, It's an insult to your intelligence- to havo something eh offered a " just as good." TUB music of the trees and wild river waves and all the summer time singers comes sweetest to the housewife when she knows the 6 o'clock meal can be got ready on her double burner oil stove Instead of the red-hot ccoktng range. There'll not be an even ing from this on till October 1st but she ll be glad she bought one. Have you noen those in our window? H50. That Ola genuemwi w nu win mcy " haa r-hanced his mind and has purchased his wife ani married daughters each one. NOE & SCULLY. FREEMAN & BREMNER, Blacksmiths. Special ritention paid to staamboat re pairing, first-class horseshoeing, etc. LOGGING CRSP IDORK H SPECIALTY. 137 Olney street between Third and and Fourth. Astoria, Or. . m M1LV AHTOillANi 'ii'faYBViViBti Blue Devils The business man who says that ad vertising does not pay does nof adver tise. He ls the one that always doubts the prosperous trade reportB he hears of his competitor, who does advertise. He sits in the back of his store, smokes his pipe and wonders why he isn't making any money. He has the blues when ne Bhould have trade. He not only lets his neighbor get that neighbor's share of the business, but a good part of his also. He sees people whom he thought old friends of his go into his competitor's store and come out with bundles of goods, when he has the, same articles on his shelves, and perhaps at lower prices t than they paid his competitor for them. Why ls this so? It is because his com petitor lets the public know In an ln telllgent way through the local papers what he has to sell and when he has it The successful advertiser looks after his advertising space as he does his clerks. He changes his ads. in such a way the people are attracted by them. He feels that to make money he must be willing to spend some; that there Is strong competition in all lines of busi ness, and to get his share of the trade he must advertise, and to do it in the most skillful and intelligent way. If he cannot write advertising matter himself, he seeks the aid of some one who has made the writing of advertisements a study some specialist, who will see that it is properly written in a catchy and displayed way some one whose duty it ls to take off the shoulders of a busy man all the worry of making up on ad. No business man attempts to cure his own sickness, pull his own teeth, make his own clothes or attend to his own law cases. He employs specialists for each of these various services, and saves money by doing it. It is through its language and arrangement that an advertisement gets its business-bringing qualities. There must be something to attract public attention and hold it; something of interest, something out of the ordinary, something that is different from others of the same line of- busi ness. To give it these peculiar features requires experience, and the owner of The Astorlan has engaged the services of such a specialist for the benefit of its advertising customers who may wish to take advantage of his services. The Evening Star, of Washington, D. C, has an adertUement writer con nected with Its business department, and its terms to advertisers are, "So much blank space, so much money. The same amount of spaca, with the assist ance of the advertisement writer in get ting up ad. attractively, so much addi tional." . The Astorlan charges nothing extra, the services of the expert being thrown in.' " ' WMMAV MOlhNi&U; JULV II, 1894 b "lpaknotoutofweakurmlsos, N ; but from proor IT. tl EV3UGT GO. since COTTOLENE has come to ' take its place. The satisfaction with which the people have hailed the advent of the New Shortening oftolene evidenced by the rapidly Increas ing enormous sales Is PROOF KOiil 11 Vb not only of Its great value as a new article of diet but is also sufficient proof of the general desire to be rid of indi gestible, unwholesome, unappe tizing lard, and of all the Ills that lard promotes. 1 ry at once and waste no time In A discovering like thousands oJ VI others that you have now No use FOR LARD. & V DEFUSE ALL SUBSTITUTES. I oenaln nude only by jm N. K. FAIRBANK & CO.. 4 sr. louis and 4 BOSTON, fi n i wnui v rzl Tliese tiny Capsules are superior to Uulwim of Copaiba, Cubcba n-id. Injections. ljjJDY They euro iu 43 hours tho same diseases without anylncon- venlcnca SOLD CY ALL DRUGGISTS THE ORIGINAL AND GENUINE (WORCESTERSHIRE) mum Imparts the most delicious taste and feat to EXTRACT of a LETTER from a MKDICAL GENTLEMAN at Madras, to Ms brother at WORCESTER, Moy, 1851. "Tell LEA ft PERRINS' that their sauce ls hlirhly esteem ed In India, and is in my opinion the most pal atable, as well a the most wholesome sauce that is made." BewaTO of Imitations: immim imiirntii ."bthh. see that you get Lea & Perms' Signature en every bottle 0! the original and genulnn. John Duncan's sons, new York. Is something you want, if not today, you will want Is sometime. We keep carpen ter's tools too, and If this weather will only pull itself together you will want plenty 00 of Hardware of which we have a plenty only waiting your call. J. U. WYATTi HARDWARE DEALER Uo You Wish 1. ITo enrich vour table economically ?r: lliere's a chance, at A. V. Allen'a. lli-mrlluh nin ami lnta llf It! Itlclll'l Flower decorations of various sorU,ii i and at quickstep prices. Moaestr-prlceu glassware, 100, orr course. Tha Bhelvea are crowded;! with them. Corner of Cass andi" I'jSnuemogue Street Ti QUICK TIME -TO- SRH FRANCISCO AND ALL POINTS 1H CALIFORNIA Via the ML SImsU Rout of Hit The Only Route Through Califor nia to Points East and South. THE SCENIC ROUTE OP THE PACIFIC COAST. PULLMN BUFFET SLEEPERS AND SEOND-CLASS SLEEPRE5 Attached to express trains, affording uperior accommodations lor sewind cluss passengers. For rates, tickets, sleeping car reser vations, etc., call on or addrens E. P. ROOKRS. Assistant General Passen ger and Freight Agent, I'ortland, Or. loifolene SAUCE J SOUPS, GRAVIES, FISH, . HOT & COLD MEATS. IVl CAME, L&jsi-j RAREBITS, (OO) EVERY REQUISITE FOR ' : first Class Funerals : AT POtfJj'S Undertaking Parlora, THIRD STREET. Rates Reasonable. Embalming a Specialty. Dalgity's Iron Works, General Machinist and Boiler Works. All t'lnftc nf r"'',ner'. SMr 9-mlrtit and Engine Work of any Description, Castings of all kinds made to order. Foot of Lafayette St, Astoria, Or. Kopp'a Beer Hall Choice Wines, Liquors ana Cigars. KENTUCKY WHISKEY Only handed over the car, The largest glass ol N. P. Brer. Half-and-half, jc. Free Lunch. Erickson &YVirkkaIa, Proprietors, Cor. Concomly and Lafayette Sts, FISHER BROS., SHIP - CHANDLERS, HEAVY AND SHELF HARDWARE. Wagons & Vehlches in Stoclc Farm Machinery, Paints, Oils, Varnishes, Loggers' Supplies, Falrbank's Scales, Doors and Windows. Provision, Flour, and Mill Feed Astoria, Oregon. florth Paeifie Brewy JOHN KOPP.Prop.' Bohemian- Lager Beer And XX PORTER. All orders promptly attended to FRED SAIZ, Manufacturer and Importer of Saddles, Harness, Collars, Whips, Blankets, Robes, Leather, Etc, GOODS SOLD AT PORTLAND PRICES. P. O. Box a7Q. Olney St., Astoria, Or. Mow Are You Fixed for Insurance? Fire and Marine. Wo are agents for the largest and best companies represented in Astoria. Royal Insurance Co., assets, London. Assurance Corp'n iEtna Insurance Co. Western U. S. Branch, New Zealand Insurance Co., Combined Assets, On Top, MARSHALL'S TWINE Is conceded by all to bo the best. It fishes better and wears better than any other twine used on ' the Columbia river. TRY IT AND DE CONVINCE!") THEflSTOrmSflVliGSBlifliv Acts as trustee for corporations and individuals. Deposits solicited. Interest will be allowed on savings deposits us follows: On ordinary savings books, 4 per cent ptr annum. Ou term savings books, 8 pr cont per nnnuni. jn certificates of deposit: For three months, 4 per cent per sn l.um. For six months, 6 per cent per annum For twelve months, 6 per cent per annum. J. Q. A. BOWLBT President BBNJ. YOUNG Vice President FRANK PATTON Cashier W. K. DEMENT Secretary DIRECTORS. J. Q. A. Bowlby, C. H. Page. O. A. Nelson, BenJ. Young, A. S. Reed, D. P. Thompson, W. E. Dement. ROSS HIGGINS & Ca Grocers, : and : Butchers Astoria si d Upper Astoria. Fine Teas and Coffees, Ttble Delicacies, Domestic and Tropical Fn Its, Vegetables, Sugar Cured Html, Bacon, Etc. " Choice Fresh and Salt Meats. HUNTER & MERGENS, Proprietors of ttia Portland Butchering Co.'s Markets Corner Second and Benton streets. Corner Third and West Eighth street J. A. FASTABEND, GENERAL CONTRACTOR, pile' driver, house, BRIDGE AJiD WHARf DUILDUH. Address, box 180, Postofflce. ASTORIA, OR Portland and Astoria. 8TEAMEK TELEPHONE Leaves Astoria every evening except Sunday at 7 p. m. Arrives at Astoria every day except Sunday at 4 p. m. Leaves Portland every day except Sunday at 7 a. m. C. W. STONE, Agt,Astor1a. E. A. Seeley, general agent, Portland. ASTORIA IRON WORK9 Concomly St., loot of Jackson, Astoria. General Machinists and Boiler Makers Land and Marine Engines, Holler work, Steam boat and Cannery Work a Specialty, Castings of All Descriptions Made to Order on Short Notice. John Fox. President and Superintendent A. U Fox Vice Prenldent O. U. Prael ' Secretary 21,562,370,00 8,030,425.00 10,915,829.00 1,017,195.00 2,677,219.00 $45,403,044.00 ELMORE, SANBORN & CO.