V GONE UP IN SMOKE. The SnmmefiiiE Season Suddenly Ceases '. at RocKawayr - SEVERAL HOTELS CONSUMED. Winds Fan The Flames No Water I j Supph 'at Hand to Fight Firei SEVERAL LIVES KEFOISTED LOST. Cause of The Fire Unexplained Losses Foot uj Half a Million Dollars or More. .Rockaway BEAcn, L, I., Sept. 20. A conflagration started at noon, which threatens to wipe out a large section of this resort. The seaside museum, Foley's hotel, Messmers' hotel, William Burgess' hotel, Murray A Dalz hotel and the grand Ocean hotel are all ablaze, and undoubtedly will be destroyed. The whole population has turned out to fight the fire, but their efforts will be of little avail as there is a scarcity of water, and a strong breeze blowing which fans the flames. The fire departments of Rock away, Lawrence and Woodsburg have been summoned bv telephone. It is re ported 20 lives arc lost. The lire broke out in the museum on Seaside avenue, situated on the, most thickly populated part of the beach, where ail are frame buildings. The flames spread .with as tonishing rapidity and soon reached the opposite side of the street. All the buildings on both sides of the way on Seaside avenue from a point" near the site of the old Seaside house, which was destroyed by fire a few years ago seemed to be doomed. The Long Island railroad depot was destroyed. Mrs. Bertha Kingsland, wife of the proprietor of the Kingsland hotel, was badly burned while trying to save some effects. Two other ladies, guests, were also severely burned. The Long Island railroad is transferring fire companies as fst as possible on flat cars from Inwood, Ozone Park, Far Rockaway, Woodsburg and Lawrence. At 2 o'clock it looked as though all the buildings on Seaside avenue would be i destroyed. If this proves the case, the loss will be fully $400,000. The cause of the fire is not yet explained. A Nciv Hawaiian Cabinet. San- Francisco, Sept. 21. The steam er Australia arrived from Honolulu at noon t6day', with news that the queen has appointed the following new cabi net: Edward C. MacFarlane, premier and minister of finance; Samuel Parker, minister of foreign affairs; Charles T. Gulick, minister of Interior; Paul Neu .mann, attorney general. The appointments gave great dissatis faction, as they were the old ministry over again, witn two exceptions, iviac Farlane and Parker have changed places and the others retain their portfolios, Parker and Neumann were very obnox ious to the opposition, and it was against them that the want-of-confi-dence motion was particularly aimed. The day the Australia sailed a want-of- confidence motion in the ministry was tabled by a vote of 24 to 22. An ad journment wae then taken. The fight was to be resumed the next day, and the opinion seemed to be that the min istry would be forced to resign. The bill introduced in the legislature-) to grant the' Louisiana state lottery a twenty-five years' franchise to maintain a lottery in the Hawaiian islands is uni versally condemned, and the concensus of opinion is that it will not pass its first Jrfading. . Nashville, Tenn.; Sept. 21. Nash. ville is greatly exorcised over a scandal which developed today. The principals are John P. Williams, one of the wealth- iest men and vice president of the Fourth National bank, and Mrs. V. Booren, wife of a prominent citizen. Thiri morning Mr. Booren issued a cir cular . in which he says : "But for the pleading of the invalid mother of John P. Williams, I would have blown his brains out long ago. He has been very intimate with ray wife for the last six ntkis, and as the papers will not pnb- ish the facte, this is the only way I ave of putting them before the public. Williams is a heartless villain, and I am not afraid to say so." The affair has caused one of the biggest sensations ever known here, and it is rumored that Williams and Booren will fight a dnel. Mrs.-fboren, who is a beantiful woman, recently came from Dallas, Tex. The Ditch Delusion. West Coast Trade. The Seattle Press t-ontinnes to labor under the delusion that somebody or other -is opposing the instruction of the Lake Washington anal. "The Press is in, error. . No one bjects to the canal, provided always lat the expense of construction and laintenance is borne by those who are o be Denenteu. -. li Seattle wants the yEch let her get in and dig it. . , THE CLACKAMAS HATCHERY. A Scarcity of Salmon and Obstructions 1'nr'nt Good Operations. From the Oregon City Enterprise- Of late the work of the Clackamas hatchery has been considerably hamper ed by the inability to get salmon. Last season so little was done that the fish commissioners tuougni -jsenuuaiy abandonimr the concern. This year however, the state commissioners or dered a fishway put in at the dam of the Gladstone sawmill company, which has been the chief hindrance to fish ascend ing Ithe stream, and the fishway was built according to the directions of ;the commissioners. But it is a small and extremely "crooked passage into which it is impossible to coax the salmon. A salmon of any considerable Eize cannot turn the sharp angles in the narrow passage. A new fishway has been prom ised at that point, and it must be put in : at once or the necessity for it will have passed. ' '; Th r.Iar'knmas hatcherv has a eapa-r f city for handling 12,000,000 to lo,00U,UUU salmon eggs a season, uui. iwimj 1 V... cnnvnalir mnrO ' than 5,000,000 have been obtained any year, and for the last three years not so many. In 1S89 the first eggs were taken August 2S, and only about 4,000,000 were hatched.- The next year eggs were taken September 10 and last year Sep tember 8, and the hatch was scalier each year. This season nothing has yet hppn donn. nwim? to the absence of the salmon, and the prospect is not a bit en- couragingsfor a large product. W. F. Hubbard has been superinten dent of this hatchery from the beginning under the Oregon and Washington fish propagation company. He attributes the dwindling of the number-hatched to the inability of the salmon to ascend the Clackamas to the hatchery by reason of obstructions in the stream. --About i0, 000 salmon eggs from Maine were re ceived here last winter to be hatched and the young fish to be4iberated in Oregon waters, but the eggs were spoiled and not one would hatch. If 12,000,000 or l.),000,000 young Chinook salmon were liberated at this hatchery each year it is probable that the effect on the Columbia fishing interest would Boon be noticed. The business of hatching salmon roe artificially was begun on the Clackamas river, about seven miles above its con fluence with the Willamette, in 1S77, by the Oregon and Washington fish propa gation company, which was composed almost entirely of lower Columbia can nerymen. This company bought about fifteen acres of land, and erected the ne cessary buildings-, and prosecuted the work of propagating Chinook salmon for four year3. Then the plant remain ed idle until 18SS, when the state took the matter in charge, put the plant in repair, and ran the concern one year. The next season, the United States fish commissioner obtained possession of the hatchery, paying the state about $4.0M for the improvements it had made dur ing its year of work, and receiving the remainder of the property free from the Oregon and Washington fish propaga tion company, which owned it. It is now entirely i-. United tion." States institu- St. Lovis, Mo., Sept. 21. Chairman Taubeneck, of the populists national committee, received a summons by wire today to hasten to Indianapolis to at tend a meeting of the national executive committee tomorrow. When he was asked what-tbe object of the Indiana meeting was, he replied : "Now, iTiave an idea, as severat members of the national committee will be in attend ance, but I will give out nothing for publication as yet. I will say that there is a big deal on, and if I chose to make it public I could make a sensation in every close state in the union, and sev eral other states that are not considered doubtful. There is a gigantic deal going on in three states, but I will not give out the names of the states or the nature of the scheme being worked. It will come to light in two or three weeks, and then I will be prepared to give some startling information ; but I don't care for the sensation to originate in populist partv headquarters, and it won't, if I can help it. I will probably be able to taiK more ireeiy wnen l return. John's Fresh New Love. Klamath Star. England is becoming solicitous for our welfare. John Bull has always embraced the opportunity to slight our citizens and bully our govern ment, but now he wants us to adopt free trade, and prosper. Under protection we have beaten him in all his fields of industry, but his new love for us Eees greater glory in free trade. John's new love is always fresh. In The Haystack Region. ' . . Heppner Record. Chas. Austin, a far mer and stockraiser of the Haystack country, arrived in Heppner Saturday evening to meet his wife who has been visiting with relatives at Portland. Mr. Austin reports that the crops on bench lands in the Haystack section averaged about 35 bushels to the acre, while that along the river did not do so well.-j; -) Pap or Gore. Coos Bay Mail. The devil of this, office tried Ids hand on a political squib this week which is omitted for want of space and other considerations. '- He called ' the new party the p. o. g. in dis tinction from the g. o. p., and says it stands for the motto of the peoples wing of democracy, viz '. pap or gore. - VESSEL IN DISTRESS. The Belle of Oregon Barely. Escapes ,.' From Destniction. SPOKEN 6oo OFF SAX FRANCISCO. Considerably Damaged in a Severe Hurricane Early in September. CHASING -: COMMISSIONER PECK His Political Enemies After His Scalp on The Run Intending to Crush - Him Ont. Sax Fkanx-isco, Sept. 22. Captain Charleston, of the British bark Scottish Bard, from Chili, which arrived off the Heads late yesterday afternoon, states that September 12th he spoke the Ameri can bark Belle of Oregon in distress GOO miles fi-om port. The captain of the Oregon stated that he had been damaged in a Hurricane two weeks previous, while bound from Astoria to New York with a cargo of wheat. The damages sustained by the Oregon were almost identical with those on the "McCallum, only the rigging had suffered more. The main-mast was badly sprung, the main topmast had been carried away, the bul warks were damaged, the cargo had shifted slightly, and in the hold there were seven feet of water. The Oregon is making for this port, and will probably arrive in a few davs. j After Commissioner Peck. I New "York, Sept. 21. An Albany j special says : Commissioner I'eck's en I emies are after his scalp on the run. I Although he is now under bail to stand yeg-terdiy had hig cag3 prescntcd' to the grand jury. 'It is alleged the fail- nrc of the attempt to get the case rail roaded through the police court was the direct cause of the present movement before the grand jury. It is considered almost certain that indictments against both Commissioner Peck and Stenog rapher . Kogers will be handed down when court meets. In that case bench warrants will at once be issued against both the accused, who will undoubtedly furnish bail to await trial. The Drawing Card In Portland. Oregonian. The single track locomo tive, invented by Dr. J. B. Mahana, which is intended to work a revolution in railroad building, was hauled out to the exposition building last evening. It was set on a Eection of the peculiar saddle-shaped track, which was placed on a low truck" with block wheels. Six horses hauled it to the corner of Sixth and Washington streets, where they were stalled. A chain was run out ahead of the team and attached to a truck with four horses. The first at tempt to start was a lauure, but a sec--ond trial proved successful, and the ten horses and their unwieldy load moved off up the smooth pavement without any trouDie. - . - , Klamath County Workers. Express. Klamath .county workers rarely get off their feed. The wife of one of the leading ranchers south of town has been cooking for seventeen harvest hands during the past week and she in formed The Express editor that it did her soul good to see the boys eat. She baked fourteen loaves of bread every day and Tuesday morning she made 100 buscuits. After breakfast not a scrap of buscuit was to be seen. As the lady is one of the best cooks in the county the boys appetites are not to be wonder ed at. ' Committees on Entertainment. The committee on entertainment for the coming annual meeting of the Ore gon Press association in The Dalles Octo ber 4th, have designated the following sub-cotnniittees : On Music Mrs. Geo. P. Morgan, Mrs. C. J. Crandall, Mrs. J. M. Patterson and Mrs. John Michell. ' . . On Russian Tea Mrs. J. M. Patterson, Mrs. Geo. Blakeley, Mrs. Dr. Rinehart, Miss Lang. On Flowers Mrs. A. P. Brooks, Mrs. Hugh Gourlay, Misses Fraser. Brooks. Rose Michell, Kate Craig, Grace Michell. The Chronicle Enterprise. Klickitat Leader. The Dallee Chbox- icle issued a very interesting and in structive 8-page paper last Tuesday. It gives a very lengthy write up of The uaues ana county and makes a very creditable showing. The Chronicle is enterprising. ... Creditable all Around. Klamath Star. The Dalles Daily Cheoxicle: appeared September 13th with an extra, directing attention to the facilities afforded by The Dalles for the investment of capital. ' It is creditable to the head, the heart and the hand of the writer. This is the : Sentiment Chicago Nee. - A.a between the acti jn of the ghoul who robs graves for hire and . -the steamship company which makes money by spreading, choleraic infection, public, opinion would proba bly find It easier to pardon the former,-) BELOW THE SUHFACE LIFE THOUSANDS OF FEET IN BOWELS OF THE EARTH. THE la the Depths of the Conistoek I-ode. ' Doings In a. Great Subterranean Cliy with Hundreds of - Miles of Streets Where Work Never Ceases. Very different is the life led by the ininer of ' the Comstock lode when on duty from that- of the old California gold washer. The scene of his labors is hundreds of feet beneath the earth in subterranean regions to which no ray of suniigut ever penetrates. Dr. .Quille says or tne uomstock miner that when he descends the gTeat shaft, going down ana snil down from 1,000 to 3,000 feet, he leaves behind all the gTand tipper world, so Droaaly and beautifully lighted up by the sun. When landed at his sta1 tion from the car (cage) of bis vertical cable road he steps forth into quite a different world a world hewn out by tne nana or man in the realms of eternal darkness, which, jnst beneath the sur face crust, everywhere enwraps our planet. - - . All is not dark and dismal in this arti ficial world. On the contrary, the great stations, the main working drifts and crosscuts and the large chambers of all the principal levels are lighted np with lamps and candles. In one of our great mines there is neither day nor night; it is always candle light. Absolute pitch darkness prevails only in some far away and little frequented drifts in distant parts of a mine. When landed at the station of his level, dinner bucket in hand, the miner trudges away along a narrow subter rauean road to some drift or chamber in which lies his work. When on duty in the depths he knows not whether it is day or night in the world above; whether it is cold or warm there, calm or tem pestuous. - : , The miner of the Comstock lode may he said to live and labor, in a city be neath a city. There are streets and crosscuts through which he may travel miles and miles at points from 1,000 to 2.000 feet beneath the cities on the sur face Virginia and Gold Hill.. The great underground city in which is sui lieient lumber to build twenty towns, each of 0,000 people, has its busy places as well as, its lonely and silont- nooks and sections. At the stations of the great hoisting shafts, where many men are employed on the several levels, cars loaded with ore are seen arriving and departing. ' - IX THE 1JF.PTH8. Great lamps . with glaring reflectors (similar to the headlight of a locomotive) light np the station, which is an under ground hall large enough for a first class ball room; and the main drifts radiat ing from the station to different "parts of the level also have their lights, the line of which extends so far away' that the most distant seen seems a mere spark or point or light, like the most distant star visible in the heavens a mere pulsing twinkler. - - - . The station has much the appearance of the store or lumber room of some big factory of the surface world. Along the floor against the side walls are. seen coils of rope, boxes of candles, tools and many small lota of various other arti cles required on the level. Also in the station is seen a huge cask of ice water water in which several small icebergs are floating and against the side of the cask hangs a big tin dipper; that is, it bo hangs when it has a moment's rest, but it is almost constantly in" the hands of some thirsty soul. At each level (generally about 100 feet down the shaft from the point where ore is first encountered) there is snch a station as 1 have described. It is the centor of life on each level, though at several points on the lovel there may be at work in the ore breast considerable squads of men. From such sections of the mine at certain times come the booms of blasts, sounding like a distant cannonade. When one is in a drift in the vicinity of the spot where one of the big dynamite blasts is fired one feels more than heara it. - The concussion of the air in the narrow drift painfully strains'tue drum of the ear, and even at a distance the sensation is disagreeable. HIGH TEMPERATURE. The mines of the Comstock are now much better ventilated than before drifts connected the several main shafts and winzes of the many levels. Still the work of the miner is often in a hot and stifling atmosphere. Very frequently his work is at the face of a long pros specting drift, where the only air he has to breathe is the- scant supply pumped down to him through a pipe from the surface, as though he were a pearl diver fathoms beneath the sea. The place m which he works at times shows a tem perature of from 100 to 110 degs., or even as high as 120 degs. In such places he is stripped of' all clothing but a breech clout (heavy shoes protect his feet and he wears a cap to keep the sand from the slaking rock out of his hair), yet perspiration streams from every pore of his body.' But for the gallons on gallons of ice water he swallows he would be baked in his skin like a potato the very life blood would be dried in his veins. " Though sweltering and gasping the miner must still swing his pick or sledge, must still handle a shovel or crowbar for a certain length of time till the end of his "pass" (of fifteen to twenty minutes), when he can pass out of the drift to the cooling off station and send in his part ner to work his "pass." - For the dangers a miner must brave and all the suffering he must endure from heat and bad air (insufficient or vitiated) four dollars a day is by no means too large a sum to offer him foi eight, hours' work jn the sweltering low er levels. Simply to remain eight hours in the subterranean regions is worth something, not to speak of toiling that number of hours at the hardest of work. Visitors who enter the heated regions of the silver mines usually find that merely to walk through the various drifts, floors and chambers is about all they care to endure in the way of exercise. New : York Telegram. " I 'Jb'AKE PKOJlOTttliSr A CERTAIN CLASS: OF MEN" TO BE . FOUND ONLY IN NEW YORK. Occasionally They Manago to Get Acront the Water to London Tor a Few Weeks, but Loner Ttroadway Is Their Stamping - Ground How They "Operate." "When i was in London I stopped' at the Langham. I intended to combine business with pleasure. "I expected to sell a few thousand of our. Irrigation Canal bonds. The day 1 arrived I strolled down stairs and into the hotel office. - , " "I was staggered to recognize several faces from New York in the throng. "They were faces, too, of fellows whom I had seen hanging around the cafes and bare of lower Broadway. "They were generally seedy and seemed to be waiting for somebody to' 'blow them off. -"How they ever got to London or what they were doing I don't know. One thing I do know, they spoiled my game, for I never mentioned bonds to any one during my eight months' stay. "No wonder London is a suspicious market for American investments." Thus a. gentleman, just returned from the other side, held forth on some of the New York promoters he met in London. This class of "promoters" is a peculiar ly New York one. They make a pre carious living by bringing labor and capital together. - The capital they join to labor is not their own far from it. With the true spirit of the broker, they give the benefit of their experience and business ac quaintance to others and pocket only their commksions. ' That is about the only thing pocketed J m the whole transaction, except the bitter, bitter memory of tho laboi'er or produce;-. ' - - A short time kiucs Sir. Jason Idle- wild, a highly rospcted citizen of Paint ed Post, came to Mew. York. He brought with him his latest inven tion, a compound centrifu-'al churn, He had a feelin in bis simple, sub urban mind that each a:i-.l every resi dent of Fifth avenue was losing sleep because the hired girl could not get the slammed milk waic.i is sold to uuso pUinLicatcd city folks to produce the proper amount of butter. So he hied himself to this city with his churn model packed in a dry goods case. Visions of untold wealth xvere in his mind. . Now, if there i.-i any one in tins wide world who can put an inventor, on the right track it id thia class of ' -promoters. " One of these individuals scented the festive granger and his packing case full of churn. . So he took him gently hi tow and piloted him right up against capital. What Mr. Idlewild did not learn of "controlling interests, charters, treasury stock" and other mysteries of corporate companies wasn't worth knowing. After he had paid his "broker the com missions and expenses" he went home. Of course he was made vice president of the "Compound Centrifugal Churn company." . When he struck his native heath again the Painted Posters con gratulated him on his success. His old occupation of rising with the lark at dewy morn and gathering the early varieties of hen fruit seemed irk some. Hia dutie3 as vice president of the churn company did not interfere with his regular farm work not to any great extent. -He was only required to be vice president that was ail. But it all ended as it usually does and the suffering citizens of Fifth ave nue continue their struggle with an in ferior grade of butter. The poor,' hard worked trustee of somebody's estate may have tried to knock Jay Gould out of the street. But Jay has an "anchor tied cinch" on that particular portion of this somewhat wicked metropolis. . Now, the trustee would not for the world be dishonest or work any wrong to the fatherless or the widow. He therefore fills up his safe with stocks and bonds. These he buys from the "fake promoter" for about fifteen dollars per thousand. - - ;. - True, the value is hardly up to the amount of his trust, but that is the trus tee's business. So ho turns over to his wards us beau tiful a lot of bonds and stock certificates as ever escaped a junk shop. And then the titles "Alaska, x uca- .tan and Cape Horn Railroad First Mort gage Bonds" and the 'Bungtown Water Works Company's Bonds." and others. Who shall say it is not a goodly lot? In the matter of providing purple and fine linen wherewith they may be clothed and food whereby they are nourished these handlers of prodigious financial schemes these links between capital and labor are not in it to any great extent. They know that the" great financiers are not given to pointed toe shoes and strap seam covert coats. " Therefore, if their own- coats are a trifle shiny, if their trousers do have whiskers on the bottoms, if their shoes are rather gone at the heels and their derbys are of tha crop of three years ago they have their example in the mas ter minds of finance. - . Most .of these "promoters" are too strong to work. While their wives can keep their houses filled with boarders at six dollars a board, why should a "pro moter" bother his head about where the staff of life is to come from? It sounds well for any boarding house keeper to inform tho compiler of vital statistics for. the city directory that her husband is "a broker." ' ... Again, the table talk at dinner time is much enlivened by the fh-okor's descrip tion of "how Jay milked the market." The boarders fail to grumble and fall to wondering why he did no!- dine with his friend Jay. - ,. One peculiarity of this "promoter" is his watchword, "tomorrow." -v Alas I for frail humanity, who believe that "all things come to him who waits," the "promoter" fails to bring the day for "closing the deal" ninety-nine times ont of a hundred. New York Recorder. Hood River Conference. On Tuesday last Rev. W. C. Curtis and others of The Dalles were in attend ance upon a very -interesting church service at Hood River. In accordance with letters a council of Congregational ministers and delegates was convened to examine Rev, Mr. Gilt and set; him apart to the gospel ministry and install him as pastor over the two Congrega- -tional churches at Hood River, the valley and the village churches. Rev. Mr. Gilt is a graduate of Hamil ton college? N. . Y., and of Auburn Theological eerainary, and has -spent two years in post graduate, study at -Berlin, Germany. He sustained his examination as to his faith and the reasons of it, his per sonal religious experience and his call to the ministry in an eminently satis factory manner. The several parts in the service of ordination and installation were as fol- -lows: Reading of the "minutes of the council, Rev. Chas. H. Curtis", Portland. Reading of the Scriptures, Rev, Wells- . of the U. B. church, Hood River, Prayer by Rev. C. T- Whittlesey Pen dleton. Sermon by Rev.: T. C. Clapp, Portland. Ordaining and installing ; . prayer. Rev. Daniel Staver, assistant sUite missionary. Charge to the people -Rev. W. C. Curtis. Right hand of Fel lowship, Rev. C. H.vCtirthf. Charge to the people, Rev. C. H. Clapp, state missionary. Benediction by the pastor, Rev. Mr. Gilt. The entire service was a very inter esting and profitable one, and much enjoyed by all. Dissolution of Co-I'artnershliH Notice is hereby given . that tho firm of E. Jacobsen & Co. has been dis solved by mutual consent. O. S. Savage has this day sold his one-half interest in said firm" to E. Jacobsen and said E. Jacobsen i9 now sole owner of the busi ness and will continue the same- at the old stand. He will collect all accounts due the firm of E; Jocobsen & Co. and pay all demands against said firm. E. Jacoiisen, Ottis S. Savage. The Dalles Sept. 3d, 18H2. 0.3.1m' A Reliable Man. M. J. Griner, a Justice of the Peace at Print, Michigan, says one bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diar-rhu-a Remedy saved his life. He had been down with bloody flux for three weeks when he commenced using this, medicine. It soon cured him, and he believes saved his life. He also says it saved the lives of three railroad men in that vicinity. 'Sqnire GKner'is a re liable and conscientious man, and what ever he says can be depended . upon. For sale by Blakely & Houghton, drug gists. Stock Holders MestlHg. Notice is hereby given that the annual meeting of the' stockholders of the Wasco Warehouse company will be held at the office of French Co., The Dalles, Oregon, on Wednesday September 28th, 1892, at 3 :30 p. m., for the purpose of electing directors for the ensuing year and the transaction of such other busi ness as may come before it. The Dalles, Oregon, Aug. 12th, 1S92. . G. J. Farley, - Secretarv Wasco Warehouse Co. td8.12w NOTICE: SALE OP CITY LOTS. Notice" Is hereby Klvcn thut. bv Mithoritv ol Ordiunnce No. 257, which passed the common council of Dalles city, September 3d, 1H9-J, cnti- ' lieu "An ir.mnnco cniiuea an orumnuce 10 f rovide (or the tale of certain luls belonging to nlle eitv." I will, on Tuesday, tne 11th dny of October, lt2, nt public auction, to the high--, est bidder, all of the following lots and pnrts f " lots situated in mites. Addition to mil lea t tty. Wn co countv, Oregon, to-wit: ,P . -tti Lots 7. 8 sud 9, in block 27, lots 2, :i, 4, 5, u. 7. 8, 9 nnd 10 in block ;VI, and all of blocks 3T, 1ST, 37, :tN 40, 11, 4-.' and 4.t, and lots 1, 2, 8, 4, 5 and 6, in block Mi. Ihe reasonable ml lie of snid lots, for less than which thev will not be sold, hn been ilxed and determined bv the common council of Dulles city, as follows, to-wit: Lot 7 in block 27, 22.-i lot Lot Lot Lot lAtt S in block 27, 225 2 iu block SI, 250 Lot In block 27, 2i" Lot in block 31, 2-"0 Lot 6 iu block SI, 275 1M 7 in block SU, 2-'0' Ixt 9 in block 84, 3110 Lot 1 in block Si, 225 Lot 1 in block 3T, 200 I-ot 5 in block 200 Lot 7 in block 33, 17." Lot 9 illJlck a'), 1 Lot 11 iu block 8-i, 1V Lot 1 In block Sfi, 22S Lot S in block SO, 200 4 In block 6 in block 3t, 8 In block 34, 300 400 125 200 200 200 150 130 175 200 Lot 10 in block 34, Lot 2 in block So, Lot 4 in block 85, I ot ti in block 35, Lot 8 in block 85, I-ot 10 in block 3-3, Lot 12 in block 30, lxt 2 in block 36, Ixt 4 in block SO, 20U Lot 6 in block 80, 225 Lot 5 lu block 36, 200 Lot 7 in block .16, 17 Lot 9 in block 86, 150 Lot 11 in block 36, 150 Lot 1 in block 37, 150 Lot 8 in block 37, 100 Lot 5 in block 37 100 Lot 7 in block S7, 150 lt 0 in block S7, 100 Lot 11 in block 37, 1U0 Lot 1 In block as, 110 Lot 3 in block !S8, 100 Lot S iu block SX,. 100 Lot 7 iu blocks, 110 Lot 9 in block S8, 100 I-ot 11 in block 88, 100 I-ot 1 in block 40, 110 Lo! 3 in block , la) Lot S iu block 40, 1(0 Lot 7 iu block 40, 110 Lot 9 in block 40, 100 Lot 11 in b'ock 40, 100 Lot 1 in block 41, 150 Lot 3 in block -il, 100 ixt 5 iu block 41, 100 Lot 7 in block 41, 125 It 9 in block 41, 100 Lot 11 in block 41, 100 Lot 1 in block 42, 200 lx)t 8 la block 42, 150 Lot 5 in block 42, 150 Lot 7 in block 42, loo Lot 9 In block 42, 100 Lot U in block 42, 100 I-ot Unblock 43, 225 Lot 8 In block 43, 175 Lot 5 in block 43, 175 Lot 7 in block 43, 100 lxit 9 in block 43, 100 Lot 11 in block 43, 100 Lot 1 in block 46, 125 Lot i in block 46. 100 Lot in block .'Hi, Ixit 10 in block 36, Ixt 12 in block 36, Ixt 2 in block 37, Lot 4 in block 87, Lot 6 In block 87, Lot 8 in block 37, Lot 10 in block 37, Lot 12 in block 37, Lot 2 in block lis, it i In block S8, lot 6 in block 38, Lot 8 in block 88, Ixit 10 in block .'is. Lot 12 in bloci ."is, Lot 2 iu block 4(, lot i in block 40, Lot 6 in block 40, Ut 8 in block 40, Ixt 10 in block 40, I-ot 12 in block 40, Lot 2 in block 41, Lot 4 in block 41, Lot 6 in b'ock 41, Ixit 8 in block 41, 1iMO in block 41, Lot 12 in block 41, lot 2 in block 42, Lot 4 in blick 42, Lot 6 in block 42, Lot Sin block 42, Lot 10 in block 42, Lot 12 in bleck 42, I-ot 2 in block 43, Lot 4 in block 43, Lot 6 in block 43, I-ot 8 in block 43, Ixt 10 in block 43, Lot 12 In block 43, I-ot 2 in block 46, Lot 4 in block 46, 150 150 175 100 100 150 100 ICO 150 100 100 110 10O " 100 110 IPO 100 110 loo 100' 110 10O loo ISO 100 100 125 ISO 150 200 100 loo 100 175 175 225 100 100 100 100 K)0 125 Lot fi iu block 46, 100 Lot C in block 46, Each of said lots will be sold upon the lot respectively and none of thera shal t be sold for a less sum than tne value thereof us above stated. One fourth of the price bid on any of said lots shall bo fiuid In enth at the time of wile, and the remainder in two equal payments on or before one and two years from the date of such sale, respectirelv, with interest on such defericd pay ments at the ruts of ten per cent, per annum, parable annually. Provided that payment mny be'msde in full at the time of such sale at the option of the purchaser. rne snie win ocfriii on mo jiiu u in v,-,v-i, 1Fv. nt tho hour of ten o'clock a. m. of said day. and will be continued from time to time until all of said lots shull be sold. Dated this 8tb day of Bentemtier, iv.rj. FRANK MENKFKK, Recorder of Dollcs City. i