THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, FRIDAY," SEPTEMBER 23, 1892. The Weekly Gtooniek THE DALLES, OEEOOS LOCAL AND PEBSOSAL. The Young Americas returned to pa pa's this afternoon. " ' -. Messrs: Wm. Copeland and J. B. Yeag ley of Checto are in the city. Mr. C. P. Heald, of Hood Kiver was in the city yesterday on officia) business. - Mr. Lem Burgess left the city yester day for his sheep ranch with his winter supplies. Mr. Orin Kinersly returned at noon yesterday from a jaunt over in Klickitat county. - . Messrs. A. R. and Wm. Lyle,' and C. McPherson, of Cross Keys, are in the city today, The weather forecasts today indicate light rains with nearly ptionary tem , peratore. " Steward J. J. "Wiley, who has been on the sick list for nearly a month, is again able to take his position. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Crossen and ; daughter Emily, returned yesterday from San Francisco. The chilly atmosphere of the last three days is particularly severe on the familiar housefly. Miss Gertrude Meyer returned to her i school duties in Portland, after a vaca tion spent with friends in this city. Dufur is represented in the .city by Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Frazer, Miss Ingra ham, and Messrs. Wm. and N. Kelsay. Mr. Josh French believes in lots of manual exercise, and is today assisting the workmen at pipe laying on Wash ington street. . Mayor Harrington of Pillar Rock, is -up for an inspection of his cannery in terests at Seufert's today, and will be at the Umatilla tonight." The republican county central com mittee will hold a meeting at The Dalles on Saturday next in McKinley hall, the Chronicle building. Hon. F. I Mays spent a few days in The Dalles. His family is still at Cloud Cap Inn, but expect to return to Port land this week. Mr. F. T. Sargent of Wapinitia, has - changed his residence to The Dalles, chiefly on account of the superior edu cational facilities attainable here. F. Johnson, of Mountain Home, IdaflOj the desert region which has been made to blossom as the rose by irrigation on a large scale, is iu The Dalles today. Mr. Jas. Benson, of 5-Mile, has con tributed to the Wasco collection of fruit for the Portland exposition and worlds fair, peaches which measure 11 inches in circumference. Mr. Manley, who came in yesterday with another load of wheat, says the shower was quite a brisk one on the road, completely saturating an ordinary coat. There are no rrr in Campbell's name, but the oysters served at the Columbia Can:ly Factory prove that the words Brothers and September supply all de ficiencies lacking" to the delicate bivalve. Mr. AV. H. Smith, formerly of The Dalles, but now a resident of Portland, in the city on a visit among old friends this week, has returned to the consoli dated city. Mr. Kelley has returned from Port land, but he left the pacer there. He was only passed once on the road, and then by a two-minute horse, driven to a pneumatic sulky. A party of young ladies were out on Ninth street, also one on Fourth street last night, hammering the nails down in the sidewalks, using rocks for hammers. This ought to move property holders to a sense of duty. Mr. J. O. Mack has returned from the Salem fair. He says it was the best ex hibition ever given by the state, and if the articles could be taken to Chicago next' year, would of themselves make a creditable display for Oregon. Mr. H. Corson, an old-time and highly-respected citizen of The Dalles, is re ported seriously ill. About two years ago Mr. Corson -was practically paral yzed, and has never since fully recov ered from that affliction. The potato crop has been reported 6hort in spots; but the prospects are that the reports will prove to be too pre vious, according to the work of the clouds yesterday and today, as was the case with grain last June. Mr. and Mrs. A. A Brenner returned Horn Portland today. AA'hile away Mr. Brenner was under treatment of an aurist and returns much improved, but Mrs. B. is now ill, and their stay in the city will depend upon her condition. Mr. Frank Roach returned from Port land this morning. He says the rain yesterday did not in the least interfere vith the Sovereign Grand Lodge proces sion, and the consolidated city showed off in its gayest attire, the admiration of all guests and residents. Another important industry is "to . be added to the list of manufactories in CnAtfinn .,.1.,.,. 111 1 yjwwtm:, nuxbll will UC a JttlgC pttyvr mill, to beoperated by a St. Paul com pany, of which Mr. J. B. Streeter, of that city, is at the head. , j Mr. Loyejoy left by the steamer Reg ulator -today with the fruit samples pre pared by Mrs. Dr. Ingalls for the Port land exposition and worlds fair. Prof. Lorant also left this morning, but his collection will not be forwarded to Port- land until further advices from Mr. I imported sheep reached their destina Sargent. - . .' t tion in fine condition. . - . Mr. McNeil, foreman of Mr. Hugh j J. W. Gilman of Fossil", is in tl city. Glenn's work in The Dalles, has con - tribuuted some superb samples of apples for the Portland exposition and worlds fair. If Wasco does not again take the sweepstakes purse for elegance in the display of fruit this year, we shall nuss our guess muchly. Judge Bennett's office during his ab sence, is presided over by Mr. X. J. Sinnottin a very urbane manner. From the salutation, the reception and recog nition Nick gives one on entering the office, it is nlain to be seen that he be- - j.jong8 Q the courteous class from which comes the polite host, A Mr. Geo. B,erry was taken oft' the train here this morning, on a dispatch from Pendleton, and detained for a war rant from the sheriff of Umatilla county. He was accompanied lay a wife and child, and was identified by a couple of bull dogs in his possession. No partic ulars up to the hour of going to press. Mr. Charles N. AVait, secretary of the democratic state central and campaign 0f matrimony, license to that effect hav committees, 125 First St. Portland, wish- jng oeen issued by the county clerS. " esusto say that all democrats visiting Another offender was locked up' by Portland are invited to call and confer j Deputy v g. Marshal JameBon last with members of the committee in re-.... f i- t T j- Tr gard to matters in their respective lo calities ; and, it is presumed, receive an antidote for The Chronicle doctrines of national preservation. In 'calling attention to the elaborate display of Dress Goods and Cloaks, in the handsome show windows at Pease & Mays today, Mr. Pease desires us to say that the credit of the nice arrangement is due to Mr. Briggs' taste. One window isdevoted whollv to Dress Goods and one to Cloaks, which the ladies cannot help but admire, and which seems to say : For further inspection "Please step in side." Frank G. Lent., a Pittsburg wheel man who is making a tour of the world, will pass The Dalles some day this week. He left Spokane at 8:30 Satur day morning, via Texas ferry, AValla AA'alla and Pendleton. At Hood River an effort should be made to get him to make a detour and take in Cloud Cap Inn, over twenty-seven miles of the best road in the United States. An insane man, name unknown, but who claims to hail from Ca-ur d'Aleue, gave Marshal Maloney a troublesome chase to capture him yesterday. He took refuge on the trestle below Union street, and fired railway spikes at one of his pursuers until he escaped below the shops, where he was captured. He will have an examination to decide upon the cause of his strange actions in The Dalles. The Columbia didn't have a ripple on the surface Sunday, from the Cascades to The Dalles, and the fast steamer Regulator was given a chance to test her steaming qualities. One sail, the Julia going down with a picnic party after cord wood at Chenoweth, and half a dozen smaller 'crafts were all that were met by the way to divert the attention of tourists and excursionists on board. The marriage ceremony of Miss Al mira Calef and Mr. Isaac Pitblado will be solemnized at the First Melhodist church in Portland this evening. Miss Calef was formerly a student in the academy in this city, and has many friends among the young people here, who will extend to her their best wishes. Among the bridesmaids will be Miss Maie AA'illiams, of this city, and Miss Ethel AV. Grubbs, of Portland. A letter from Harry Liebe, dated at Aix-la-Chapella, Sept. 4th, states that since the cholera epidemic broke out in Europe every means of precaution is taken by the board of health officers to keep the disease from spreading, and to prevent the advance of this dread dis ease to the yet uninfected districts. It is reported that up to this time 150,000 of the inhabitants have died from the cholera -in Russia. ''The people here," he adds, "have lost the nervous appre hension which prevailed at the outset of the cholera news." ' From the Daily Chronicle, Wednesday. AArm. B. Thune, of Mitchell, is in the city today.- Mr. Tracy, representing the A'ancou ver nurseries, is in the city. Hon. F. A. McDonald and wife, of. Seattle, are visiting'in The Dalles. . ' S. P. Haines of Buffalo, and Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Stoekwell, of New York, are at the Umatilla. Mr. AV. E. Garreston is visiting with the family of Hon. Peter Pacquet, at Oregon City. ' - j-c is in again toaay. -i-age i, col., o, Oregonian. Keep your eye on Hand bury, until Nov. 15, 1892. J. G. Julien, and Mrs. W. P. Morris, of Hay creek, and Mr. N. Froeber, of Wasco, are in the city. Scandinavian Lutheran services will be held by Rev. A. Dolven tomorrow at 3 p. nr. at the Lutheran chapel on Ninth street. - The amount of moisture in The Dalles the past few days was not sufficient to check the rounds of - the sprinkling wagon. Judge Blakeley and wife are still in Portland, also Justice Schutz, taking in the Sovereign Grand lodge of Odd Fellows. '-'- Hon. C. W. Cartwrigiit arrived in the citv last evening from Hav Creek. His : jt r. Gilman is a member of the famous j Gilman & French Stock company, known all over the Inland Empire. ' Rev.A. -C. Spencer writes to Leslie ! Butler that he is nicely located as pastor j of the M. E. church at Salamanca, N. Y., and is well pleased. . Wheat is king at the East End this week. A long string of teams at the, warehouses, awaiting their . turn to un load, is a fine subject for a picture. Mr. Malcolm Maclnnes, assistant sec retary of the agricultural society, may be found at the office of AA'in. Butler & Co., corner of Second and Jefferson streets, The Dalles. - " Au advertisement for proposals for disinterring the reinainsof'twenty-six soldiers at Fort Colville, filled the space of the ad. for bids on the Cascade canal in the Oregonian yesterday. . . Francis Conlin and Elizabeth Agnes Lyman, have permission of the state authority to" become linked in the bans gave his name as Henrv ' Meir, late of Utah, a member of the Juvenile Tem ple. Collector Taylor of Astoria has filed a libel against the steamer AA'ilmington on accountof the 400 cans of opium captured on board. The "stuff" was found among the cargo, and was without stamps or marks, and was not manifested. Frost was so distinctly traceable in the East End this morning that cats' tracks were noticed. There must have been frost all about us. The mercury stood at 41 minimum. But we had a royal sunrise and a delightful daj . Col. J. B. Yeagley, of Coos county, now in the city, is a gentleman well posted on the political issues of the day, and he will be -heard from, prob ably, in AArasco county, before he- .re turns to Coos. It has been found that the town of Spokane is built on gold. Perhaps this is why the citizens have been getting in and digging. Can't some benefactor get in and discover a gold mine under The Dalles. AVho says Astoria has . not reached a high state of civilization? Her trage dies are the most startling and original on record. She blew up a sawmill on the departure of the Sovereign Grand Lodge for Flavel last Saturday. Mr. E. C. Pentland takes charge of the editorial columns of the AVest Side, at Independence this week. AVe are glad to hear this, as Mr. Pentland is a thorough newspaper man all round, and will bring the AVest Side up to its former standard, of -excellence. ". '. - The cannery at Seufert's is again run ning to its lull capacity putting up salmon. The ' crew which operated Pillar Rock during the.summer are em ployed. Mr. Haveley, and his crew which operated the Seufert' cannery during the summer, have been trans ferred to Seattle, for the cannery of Hon. Geo. T. Myers. - The controversy which Cass, our faith' ful Cascade Locks correspondent has stirred up about the- block house, and the Indian massacre of March 26th, 1856 (not February as given in the Ore gonian,) will receive due attention, and the history of that stirring scene will be straight, for the first time, perhaps, since the fight; through an article in the columns of The Chronicle. Mr. R. A ' Baxter, general superin tendent of the Union Pacific, has: just returned from a trip over all the. lines of this division. He says the outlook generally throughout the country he visited is very good, and he thinks there is more wheat this year than ever be fore. In some places where it was thought the crop would be a total loss it yielded 20 bushels per acre, and a great deal of wheat which it was Supposed would be shriveled is turning out very good. Newspapers are sometimes employed in fiction as the medium of some start ling bit of intelligence to one of the personages of the story, but truth is sometimes stranger. The father of Johnny King, while in ' A. M. AVilliaras & Co.'s store last night, received through j a newspaper the first intelligence of his i boy for five years, whom he has mourn ed as dead. The boy, who is now living j near Kansas City, Mo., did not write j home during his long absence, and the sad news awaits him of the death of his -mother and a sister. In speaking'of oysters, and where the finest aregrown, Sam Campbell says that at Lynn Haven bay, A'irginia," there grows an oyster that is supposed to be the finest in the world, but that the bed is owned by four families who hold the entire product for their own use," except that every Thanksgiving day, a bushel .of the luscious bivalves are sent to .the president of the United States. So if any oyster Jovers in The Dalles desires to feast on these famous oysters it will become necessary to either "marry into one of those four F. F. V or else be come president. ' - -The bureau weather report from Port land yesterday admits a proposition In words like - this concerning Eastern Oregon crops?. "It seems that grain generally is turning out a little better than expected." , "In-portions of Marion land Malheur counties," continues the i report for Eastern Oregon, "the first j and second crops of hay have been very bountiful, better thanor five.year past." Thanks, awfully. . From the Daily Chronicle, Thursday. Mr. Lucky of Hood River is in the cityj - ' .'" '- - -. .Call upon Maclnnes and make ar rangements for exhibiting something at the coining fair. . ' . - Congregational church prayer meet ing at the residence of G. M. Patterson, on Fourth street" this evening at 7:30 o'clock. , - -'"..." ' Mr. S. I.. Youngs advertisement notes the fact that he may be found ready - for work at the store of I. C. Nickelsen on Second street. If you have ldst your teeth, perhaps you can find them at The Chronicle office. An upper set has been left here by the finder. The first day's proceedings of the Ore gon Press association will "be held on board the steamer Regulator, coming np from the Cascades. A gang of horse thieves are operating in the vicinity of Des Chutes. They have stolen and run off quite a number of good horses cently. Up iu the AA'illamette valley people are arrested for stealing sheep. In Portland a whole carload of freight can be stolen with perfect impunity, arid the thief is not molested,. . . New York may as well stand up and confess that Corbett can attract a larger crowd to Madison Square garden than young Mr. Damrosch and his AATagnerian fiddlers. . ' " City Marshal Maloney informs us that vesterday he had nine cows in the pound awaiting owners, and the num ber is increasing. People must pay at tention to the ordinances, as the officers are in duty bound to enforce them. The photos of the members of the Sovereign Grand lodge, as published in the Oregonian suggest that possibly the climate of Oregon, or the fruit, or some thing, doesn't agree with them. Steb bins appears to be fierce about it today. Mrs. AVilson and her son Fred left on today's east-bound train for Baltimore, where Fred has entered this year's grad uating class at Johns Hopkins Univer sity. Mrs. Wilson will spend the year visiting friends inAA'ashington and other points. The popular restauranter C.'E.Haight nearly had his" phist knocked off him a few days ago, by its coming into friendly contact with the toe of a boot worn by a high stepper from AVamic. Dr. Hollis ter will today attempt to save the index finger by placing the hand in a paris caste. . ' - - A great many business men are com plaining about hard times in Astoria, and yet Clinton & Sons wanted ninety men to work on the streets last week for $2.50 per day, and couldn't get but two or three extra men. That don't look very much like hard times. Bright and newsy, neat, and spotless as a mirror, comes to our table The Daily Tribune from Pendleton. Be sides being a thoroughbred Republican, the Tribune evidences the fact by its appearance, that it reflects the intelli gent sentiment of the representative citizens of grand old Umatilla county. Long life and prosperity attend it. Collector Taylor, in getting after ves sels at the mouth -of the Columbia for violations of marine laws, has included the Truckee, on complaint of the board of local inspectors, who charge that she went to sea without a licensed pilot on board. AA'e are somewhat curious to learn whether the 8-hour law of con gress has anything to do with this seiz ure. - x - Mr. Frank H. Lamb, Supt. of the AV. U. Tel. Co., paid The Dalles a hasty visit at noon today. He told us that there hadn't been a kick coming from The Dalles for so long that at head quarters they had begun to believe that the office here had been abandoned. He was greatly surprised to find an operator here, Balfe Johnson, who understands his business and knows how to keep his mouth shut. It is astonishing, is'nt.it? AVhen O. N. Denny was taking a stroll through a Marion county orchard the other day ho started up a Mongolian pheasant. The bird probably knew the close season was past, so it flew away in a hurry. The judge should have pre sented his card and introduced himself, for if the bird had "known that Denny was the friend who sent his great-grandparents over from China years ago.it would undoubtedly have been proud to make his acquaintance, especially as no dog or gun was in sight. A gentleman who is a constant reader of the current political literature of the day, having closely observed the situa tion of business under the McKinley act, gives it as his opinion that McKin ley is responsible for the exodus to the New AArorld from the Old World. The prosperity of ' American . industries is directly traceable to protection, and the operatives in Europe are consequently thrown out of work, as we buy at home, and they are hastening to America to prevent starvation at homei "Enjoys a 'joke. Nobody enjoys a joke any better than W. S. Ladd of Portland. He is down at North Beach now havinz a eood time. as may be inferred by the following from the Oregonian yesterday : - v Snipe are coming in down at the beach, and Mr. AV. S. Ladd, who is still rusticating at his cottage, is enjoying very fine sport. His method is to take ont two or three men in his buckboard, and let them shoot, the snipe, while he drives around the'swamp and scares the birds up. A day or two since, while thus amusing himself on the shore of AVillapa harbor, he saw several men digging claims near the water mark and started to drive down where they were. He is 60 used to being driven in all sorts of places around his farms whenever he wants to flee anything, that he thinks his horses 'and backboard can go any where; but before he reached the clam- diggers he got into a soft spot or pit hole, and his horses went down to their bellies and the buckboard eank till its bottom rested on the mud, and there he was, with the tide coming in. It took twelve men all the time they had to extricate Mr. Ladd and his outfit, and when he started for home it looked as if he had been ..driving about Portland through a long winter's day. He will not bother himself to cultivate the- ac quaintance of any more clam-diggers, but intends taking out the juveniles of Ilwacp for a daily drive. Birthday Party. A very pleasant party was given at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. A. Liebe to their daughter Lena on Satur day, the 17th of Sept., it being her 13th birthday. The afternoon was delight fully passed in playing and social inter course. Many beautiful presents were received. Those present were: Edna Glenn, Pearl AA'illiams, .Gussie Meins, Hattie Cram, LeiTa Thompson, Grace Glenn, Clara and Julia Nickelsen, Nettie Fred den, Ida Burchstorf, Emma Ostlund, Lizzie Bonn,. Peart Joles, Bessie and Lena Arogt, Rosemary Baldwin, Mary Mclnerny, Dora Nielsen, Emma Ulrfch, Annie Stnbling, A'alesca Liebe. Mrs. Hess and daughter Minnie, and Bertha and Daisy Botefuhr. - - How to Change an Address. Many people do not seem to under stand the inconvience they put publish' ers to when a change of address is desir ed, by not giving full particulars. The name of the individual addressed and the present post office is' as'necessary for a correct change"' as that the post office to wtich the change that is desired should be given. For instance: Mr. G; B. Simpson, until lately Supt. of AVells, Fargo & Co., Omaha, having changed his residence to St. Louis', writes a mod el letter, as follows : The Chronicle. Dalles Citv; Or.l - St. Louis Mo., Sept. 15. Please have The Chronicle that .is now addressed to me at Omaha. Neb., addressed to me as Sunt. Wells, Fargo & Co., St. Louis, Mo. and oblige, yours truly, G. B. Simpson, Supt. Carved Tree rtecorrts. Twenty-eight years ago the past sum mer Dr. Hugh Logan, of this cityi then a boy living with his "father at AVarm Springs agency, accompanied his lather, Lieut. James Halloran, and Dr. AV. C. McKay, on a vtour into the Cascade mountains, in search of "a mountain of salt,'.' reported to exist, by the Indians. This season evidences of their visit were discovered by Mr. AV. E. Campbell, who returned yesterday from a surveying ex pedition in the same locality. In the vicinity of some hot springs, in town ship 9 S., 7 E., Mr. Campbell came to a tree, which has engraved upon it five names and dates, as follows : - : Hroii Logan, July 31, 1S64. AA'm.: : Logan, Lieut. Halloran, AA C. : : McKay Aug. 11, 18C4. R. AV.: : Crandali.. a The date opposite the name of Mr. Crandall Mr.- Campbell was unable to decipher, on the scrap of paper upon which he had copied it, when he got back to campi The feeling is described as somewhat peculiar to find familiar names away out in the wilderness like this. Speaking to Dr. Logan" about the register, today, he distinctly remem bered the cirenmsta nccs. His father was lost by the sinking of the steam ship Brother Jonathan the next years Dr. McKay is still living in Umatilla county. Lieut. Halloran disappeared from the active stage ot life many year ago and his f-ite is unknown that is time. . From Lack of Attentlnu. A correspondent of the Union-Journal says the lekoa tire was renuerca co- structivo because of. a lack of power to pump water for fire purposes. Mr Sutherland advised the city council a few days beior-c to secure some kind of power temporarily, -until the machinery of the electric light company, which had been organized recently, and which was to furnish the pumping power, arrived from the east. Acting under the .advice of Mr. Sutherland, a traction engine had been secured, but had not been at tached to the pump yet. Had the en gine been attached to the pump the city would have had an ample supply of water for protection against fire. The city was also without any fire hose, with the "exception of 200 feet which had been borrowed from Spokane to test the works. Charming people, these exceptional people! Here's a medicine Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, for instance, and it's cured . hundred,, thousands that'ro known, thousands . that're un- I known, and yet your's is an exceptional icase! Do you think that that bit of i hunuin nature which you call "I" is different from the other parcels of hu5 man nature? "But you don't know my . vwvv ...lav, ... 1U1IL1.I II I IIV. VUi- of a hundred oases, the causes are the same tinpnre blood and that's why "Golden Medical Discovery" cures ninety-nine out oj every hundred. You may be the exception. And you may not. But would you rather be the ex ception or woald you rather be well? If you're the exception it costs you nothing, you get your money back but suppose it cures you?. Let the "Golden Medical Discovery" take the risk. Some Pnuipkln." Klamath Express. John Sjiallock takes a natural pride in exhibiting a photograph of his little son astride a big pumpkin that is growing in his yard that borders ou Main street. The pump kin weighs ninety-six pounds now and will weigh much more when thoroughly ripe. - OREGON'S SHOWING AT CHICAGO , NEXT YEAR Remains in doubt, but there is no question about the Portland Industrial Ex position -which - opens Sep- ffin-lvr 91 ct nnrl r'lnara Ort,olr 22d, being the best Exposition eATer held on the Pacific Coast. So far as Oregon is concerned it Avillbe the.forerunner of the Exposition at Chicago in 1893. The principal attrac tions,", are the magnificent American Band of Providence, R. I. An art " collection valued at $350,000, and em bracing some of the greatest pictures owned in the United States. Immense ' Horticult ural and Agricultural exhibits, the result of the combined efforts of almost every county in the state. A mineral ex hibit exceeding all former years. A- Stock Department shoAving tremendous progress. To these are added a larger number of exhibits than ever before; including a magnifi cent electrical display under ' the combined lhomson-iious- irji aim jjvu,ivii vviuuiiiuui All manufactures in full oper ation. Government models of Battle Ships. The Avonder-ful- Hall of Mystery.. The marvelous "Little World," the product of a mechanical genius; all inteispersed by noA'elties incident to the pti nlar snecial daAs. ErerAr- -. , thins? new and nothincr dead. o - " Greatly reduced rates on all transportation lines. DlHSolullon of Co-nartnernhip. Notice is hereby given that, the firm of Abrams & Stewart has been dissolved by mutual consent. "W. R. Abrams is authorized to collect all amounts duo the firm of Abrams & Stewart, and will pay all demands against said firm. V . it. ADRA.MS. - AVm. Stewart. The Dalles, Or., Aug. loth, 1892. .2-"xlA:wv Notice is hereby given to all persons indebted to the late firm of Abrams & Stewart, of The Dalles, or AV. R. Abrams, either by note or account, to make pay ment of the same immediately at tne bank of French & Co. All notes and nc- loth. 1S92. will be lilaced in attornevs' hands with instructions to collect. , Any -claims against the late -firm must Ikj presented at the : same place, with proper vouchers, on or before above date. The business of the firm must be closed up without further delay. - Res pectfully, - AV. R. Adrams. H.25div3m DUHoIntlon Notice. Notice is hreby given that the firm of Yee Hop & Co. is dissolved by mutual consent. Lee I'oong man having this day purchased the entire interest of Lee Soong. The business will be continued by Lee Gooug and Lee Foong man under the linn name of Yee Hop & Co. All notes and accounts must be paid to the new firm of Yee Hop & Co. who will settle all debts against said firm. Lee Goong, , . Lek Soong, . Lee Rond. Those desiring Chinese laborers fir any kind of work can secure them by calling on this firm. 9.10d6t