The Dalles weekly chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1947, October 14, 1892, Image 3

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THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1892.
The Weekly Gtoonicle.
THE DALLES, -
- . OREGON
LOCAL AND FKBSOXAL.
From the Dally Chronicle, Tuesday.
W. K. Corson is home from the expo
sition. The Dalles is a very poor place for
vagrants.. ,
Gity lots sell very well today at the
auction.
Attendance at the fair is not near eo
good as it should be.
Six lots were sold, this morning, at
the appraised value.
This way for the fair grounds, is the
tone of hackinen now. .
Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Macallieter re
turned from Portland last evening.
A. H. McDonougb, an old time resi
dent of The Dalles, is here attending the
fair.
Moses with his wagonette is on the
road to the fair grounds every moment
now.
A Jap who says he is a good cook, but
willing to make himself useful, wants a
place to work.
Entries for the half mile and repeat
free for all race tomorrow will close at 6
p. m. today.
The ladies of St. Paul's (Episcopal)
Church contemplate giving a chrisanthe
juam show soon.
People are busy about town setting up
stoves for warming offices and living
rooms these cool mornings.
The little one born to Mrs. Powell,
during her afflictions following the run
away accident, died yesterday.
President Harrison and Gov. Pennoyer
have proclaimed Columbus day, the
21st, a legal holiday.
Hon. Sol Hirsch has resigned as
United States minister to Turkey, and
will return to Portland.
Weather forecasts for twenty-four
hours after m. today are : Fair, cooler,
with light frost in exposed places, fol
lowed by warmer temperature.
The weather is perfect today, as if it
had been specially ordered for the oc
asion ; but it will begin to get colder,
and frosty nights may be expected.
H. C. Nielson has loaded up with a
big stock of fall and winter goods and
everything fashionable and choice in
gents furnishing lines. Give him a
call today or tomorrow.
The lady who said she could buy
everything cheaper in Chicago than she
could at The Dalles, should interview
Nasby. Postage stamps are sold just as
cheap here as any other place in the
United States.
Captain Bines says if he had that jar
of Salway peaches grown by Mr. Hough
tun, at his Buffalo home, it would open
the eyes of the people to a realizing
sense of things here in The Dalles as
nothing else could. "Seeing is be
lieving." One of the most pathetic things in all
the Bporting world is the manifestly un
successful attempt to bolster up the
waning popularity of baseball. It is
retrograding to its old time position as
the pastime of the intermediate grade of
school boys.
David Bell, of Buffalo, has friends in
The Dalles who extend to him congratu
lations on his success in the contest over
the construction of the new revenue cut
ter, Calumet, for use at Chicago, which
was finally decided by Secretary Foster
in favor of Mr. Bell at his bid of $38,500.
In the gentlemen's roadster race to
morrow at the fair grounds, six entries
have been made, to be driven by the
. owners. There are : E. C. Haight's bay
mare Topsy ; E. R. Hinton's bay gelding
Hero ; M. A. Moody's sorrel gelding Pet ;
E. Jacobson's sorrel mare Polly; J.
Schooling's sorrel mare Nellie; and Dan
Maloney's buckskin horse Joe.
A California botanist, who has been
making a prolonged visit to Mount Hood
and Hood Kiver valley in quest of speci
mens of fruit and foliage of cone-bearing
trees, succeeded in obtaining specimens
of sixteen different species of cone-bearers
out of a possible twenty-five, and is
very enthusiastic over the results of the
search.
It is whispered around that Jim Hill
is at the bottom of the Goldendale rail
way scheme, and intends to build from
Seattle to Prineville, connecting with
the Chicago and Northwestern's Oregon
Pacific division. In all his talk Mr.
H ill has not yet said a word about which
point is to be his real terminus. He
evidently has an eye on The Dalles, and
when the completion of the cascade
" locks is assured, this is a point for num
erous schemes as feasible as any at
present existing.
R. S. Perkins, of the Hotel Perkins,
Portland, is in attendance at the fair.
He was in attendance at the fair also at
La Grande, and speaks in terms of great
praise of the ladies' needle work, fancy
work, etc., on exhibition there. He says
it cannot be beaten in Portland. While
there he-had the pleasure of assisting
the judges and rendered a decision giv
ing the blue ribbon to a couple of little
girls for the best single buggy horse on
exhibition. Mr. Perkins is a good judge
of horses and human nature.
John Watermelon Alexander Hamil
ton Redbeadington, successor to J.
Watermelon Redington. author of
"Beautiful Snow ."himself and several
other campaign lies, passed through the
city today enroute to Heppner. He is
now wielding the pen of Commerce at
Puyallup. . ,
Pointing to the British ships in the
river which the Inland Empire is load
ing with wheat for famishing Europe, a
Portland writer says : "Our commerce
now commands a fleet of the best ships
that sail upon the high seas, and, as a
result, Portland is climbing the ladder
of financial importance several rounds
at a time." Several rounds at a time
you will soon be asking the legislature
for the privilege of borrowing money
with which to pay your taxes.
The sad news reached The Dalles last
evening that Bernard H. Vogt was dead.
He has been living in Sprague, where he
has been employed in the merchandise
establishment of Gehres & Hentrich as
bookkeeper for the past five years. He
was recently taken down with typhoid
fever and removed to the Sisters' hos
pital at Spokane. His brother, Max
Vogt, went to Spokane last week and
stayed with Bernard until night before
last, when he seemed to be so much
better and improving, that he came
home, arriving only a few short hours
before the news of his death reached the
family here. As soon as the news came
his brother Max prepared to go again to
Spokane, and, with Mr. Frank Gehres
will return here Thursday with the
remains for interment. It is a sad blow
to liis parents, Mr. and 'Mrs. F. V ogt,
and to other relatives and friends who
have always regarded him as one of the
most honorable and upright young men
in the country. He was 24 years of age
last March, and was a native of the city
ol Iserlohn, Prussia.
Mr. J. R. Love and party returned I
from the Mount Adams mining region
via steamer Regulator last evening.
He located three wonderfully rich lodes
of silver for the Silgol mining company,
and predicts that that region -will be
come as famous as V lrginia City within
the next year. His locations are both
above and below the locations of Mr.
Golden, assays of which are reported so
rich that it seems incredible. Mr. Love
was 55 miles in the wilderness beyond
Trout lake. There is not "a thing in
there for a horse to eat, and his animals
took French leave one night and were
never found again He says a road can
be put into, the mines from Trout lake
very readily.' The repoit that miners
were staffed into the camp from Grants
is an error. There has been nothing in
there yet except it was packed on horses
or carried in by , hand. There is no
hope of doing anything at the mines
this winter, a9 the weather is already
too cold and threatening. The rock will
be easily worked, and mines readily
opened next spring, when he predicts a
big rush of people, a permanent camp,
and a business tributary to The Dalles
which will cause such a boom as has
never before been witnessed in the
United States.
From the Daily Chronicle, Wednesday.
The steam shovel is O. K. again.
Old papers for sale at this office.
. Heppner got its first shower on Mon
day. ,
A quantity of clean rags wanted at
this office.
Printz & Nitschke will be represent
ed in the pavilion.
Farmers can see Chrisman's -paten,
dryer in the pavilion.
Hon. A. J. Dufur, one of Oregon's
honored pioneers, is in the city, on
business.
The funeral of Bernard H. Vogt will
take place at the Catholic church tomor
row at 10 a. m.
Hon. John H. Mitchell, United States
senator from Oregon, now at home in
Portland, will please accept thanks of
The Chronicle staff for valuable favors.
A runaway team attached to a buggy
this morning straddled a telephone pole
on Union street, corner of Fourth, and
prevented a first-class item of the sensa
tional character.
The Chronicle has more calls for its
report of the press convention last week
than can be filled. The editions are
wholly exhausted Bros. Tozier, Donan,
et. al. Sorry ; but no hab got how can
do?
Fine cattle, fine horses, fine wool, fine
sheep, finest of fruit, and all cereals,
beautiful trout, fat grouse, pure water
profitable gold and silver mines, a rich
soil are the most notable characterists of
the Inland Empire.
R. J. Gilmore, of Monument, one of
the solid stock men of Grant county, is
in the city. He says the regions about
Monument have been sufficiently blessed
this year with all the elements of pros
perity, and even the mines are doing
well. When the railroads get in there it
will be a productive grain country.
Tomorrow will be ladies day at the
fair, and all ladies attending will be ad
mitted free. The occasion will be en
livened by the presence of The Dalles
citizens band, and by common consent,
the leading business houses of the city
will close up for the afternoon, to give
everybody an opportunity. Following
is the agreement :
We, the undersigned, business houses
of The Dalles, agree to close from 1 to 6
o'clock p.m., Thursday, October 13th,
for the purpose of encouraging the
Wasco county fair and allow ourselves
and employes to attend on Ladies' Day :
Farley & Frank, W EGarretson,
J O Mack, . E Jacobson & Co,
Mays & Crowe, S Franck & Co,
E N Chandler, Pease fe Mays,
L Rorden & Co, First Nat. Bank,
French & Co, Blakeley&Houghton
AM Williams & Co, Cbrisman & Corson,
The Chronicle. Columbia Pkg Co,
HC Nielson, ' P Kreft&Co,
N Whealdon,- Maier A Benton,
A Keller, - Fisher & Montague,
PatFagan, Stoneman & Fiege,
Thos M Cav, T A Van Norden,
Campbell Bros, '.TP Mclnerny,
N Harris. John C Hertz,
Snipes & Kinersly, Pinz & Nitschke,
Jos Frieman, StublingA Williams
F Drews, Fleck & Co,
.TH Cross, Ad Keller,
C Wyes, JH Hermans,
Wood Bros, - W F Wiseman,
Joles Bros, Christman Bros,
W A Kirby, Sinnott & Fish
J J Nicholas, C Frank,
W H Jones, L C Sherwood -
A Bettengen, jr., Maetz & Pundt,
Ellis E Pierce, Trazer& Wyndham.
Wasco Sun, J F Haworth,
CF Stephens, . H Glenn,
A A Brown, Crandall & Burget,
Flovd & Shown, J, H. Herbring,
Jno'Michell, Leslie Butler, .
F. Lemke, I C Nickelsen,
SL Young, TcrHill, I
M T Nolan, C F Lauer,
P Willig, H S Cheesman,
H L Newman, . Floyd & Shown, D.
The first race tomorrow will be run
ning, H and repeat. Entries, Mac
Inerny's Rockland Boy; Wiley and
Wiseman's Frank Hastings ; John Hub
ner's Mamie S., and J. O. Macks' Sir
retta. A fine race may be expected.
Next: Three minute trotters. En
tries John L., Larsons Horse; Polly,
Jacobson's mare. Race worth seeing.
Special trot, mile heats, best 2 in 3,
between J. O.-Mack's Anitia, and F. H.
Button's Hany Young.
OUR COUNTY FAIR.
A Fair Commencement ana Promising
Outcome.
For the first day the attendance might
be said to be good Tuesday. In the pa
vilion the display was being added to so
extensively that our reporter deferred
making special mention until later on.
The ladiea have made a very creditable
display of fancy work, the floral corner
was well filled with beautiful plants, the
fruit tables loaded with choice speci
mens, and Mr. Curtis was out in full
with a display of Diamond mill products,
while Mr. Booth wa3 preparing to paint
another booth red.
In the stock pens and stables were to
be seen many fine animals, horses,
cattle, sheep, pigs, and on the side pouW
try, etc., which will be considerably in
creased today. s
-Of vegetables the list will be larger
than many supposed, but one pumpkin
weighing 117 pounds which was to have
been exhibited by Hon. Robert Mays,
will be Shown in fragments, as the Hon.
Mayor was informed that his twin
grand daughters had arrived at Mr.
Thompson's residence just at the critical
moment when he held the pumpkin on
a poise, unloading it, and he was so sur
prised and taken back that he for the
instant forgot what he was doing, and
the pumpkin took a start and fell with
a thud splitting it into fragments. It is
thought that there must have been some i
design on the part of the gentleman who j
ttt 1- - 4 1. ' 1 Yf,.i. fnva !
as it is said that C. W, Haight of Bake j
Oven had a pumpkin he wished to enter, j
and he was afraid Mays would walk the (
chalk for first prize. I
The first race yestefday was a quarter
dash, wori by Mamie S, 1 ; Rockland, 2;
and Frank Hastings, 3. Time, :25.
Next came a saddle hoi se race, half
mile dash. Six horses enteral; purses
were awarded the three fastest, in the
order In which they came in: John S-,
1st; Hartland Boy, 2nd; Dandy, 3rd.
Time, :2b.j.
Following this was one of Bill Nye's
Jockey Jokes. To carry it out the man
agement secured three two-year-old colts
to trot the race, mile heats, best two in
three. After persuasion, Mr. Snipes
allowed his Nancy Hanks to enter, then
Schooling put up Rooper's Bunch Grass,
and Walker put Dandy in.
It was a Dandy race.
But Dandy was sent to the stable, as
he didn't get in after the first heat had
been given to Nancy Hanks until the
clock run down. Time, 4:39 (standard.)
Pools kept on selling with Dandy in
the race, however, and until the horses
came on, at the expiration of the 10
minutes between acts, it wasn't known
outside just where Dandy had gone.
After the usual backing and filling one
of the men in the judges' stand got mad ;
that is according to Nye; and as the
horses were passing under the wire he
rapped the drivers up and notified
Schooling that he mast win that heat,
or he would be fined $10.
Schooling won the heat. Time 4 :52.
Four hours and fifty-two minutes?
It was now late, and as one of the gen
tlemen in the judges stand had to go to
Portland to see bow things were running
at the Hotel Perkins, the finish was
postponed until today. .
The race was intensly interesting to
half a dozen Indians who remained to
see it, but to almost every white man,
woman and child, who didn't under
stand that it was a burlesque, it was dis
gusting. About the only men left on the track
at the close of the second heat, were
those who had pool tickets. The grant!
stand was empty and the society was
cheerfully cussed for -letting such ani
mals enter for purses. But one man
was found in the whole crowd to speak
kindly of the contest, and that was Mr.
Linus Hubbard who said the horses de
served credit anyhow, for one thing
they had beaten Maj. Handbnry's time
at Cascade Locks 18 years.
.'J. 0. Mack, the secretary, has ordered'
an 8-Day clock to time the next race of
this class. Stop watches are no good
they run down before the horses get in.'
Races today were as reported in the
programme, gentlemens roadster, which
was a proud contest by six men owners
of good horses. '
Horses to saddle, mile and repeat :
Siretta, g. m. J. O. Mack; Frank Has
tings b. h. Wiseman ; Joe, b. h., Ben
ton; Pomery sec, b. g. H. J. Green.
But owing to the lateness of the hour we
are unable to furnish the summarv.
COLI'MBIS DAY
Reminiscence of tht Santa Maria, Pinta
and Nina.
The windows of Tun Chboxicxe office
today are decorated with engravings
illustrative of tho voyage of Columbus,
400 years ago. On October 1 1th there
was rather a heavy sea on. A green
branch floated past the Santa Maria, and
on board the Pinta the men picked up
a small carved stick, which seemed to
have been ornamented by means of some
metallic tool. Here were signs both of
land and of humanity, and the men grew
elated. The Pinta sailed the fastest, and
was ahead of the admiral, and presently
land was discrieu from her deck, where
upon, according to an understanding,
her flag was hoisted and she fired a gun.
At two in the morning of October 12th
land was plainly seen at about two
leagues distance. ,The ships shortened
sail and laid to, awaiting daylight, when
it was seen that they were abreast of a
small island and the marvelous under
taking of Columbus was happily con
cluded. It may well have been that, as has
been related, the crew of the admiral
flung themselves passionately at the feet
of Columbus and implored his pardon for
their doubts and repining. As for him
self, it is certain that he was as modest
in the moment of victory as he had been
dauntless and confident through the long
days when all about him despaired.
Then came the ceremony of landing
upon the new-found country. The
island, covered thick with trees and
tropical verdure, sloped down to the
coral reef and the beach along its edge,
where were gathered, quickly as day
light brightened the ecene, groups of
natives entirely naked,: who gazed in
wonder and half in fear at the strange
floating creatures with wings flapping
white in the breeze that lay just outside
the reef.
Columbus found that the island 'was
named, in the language of the natives,
Guanahani. He named it San Salvador.
His first impressions of the natives were
strongly in their favor, and he never
changed as to this. They were gentle,
generous, faithful and obliging. Had
succeeding adventurers treated them as
did Columbus, they would never have
lost these characteristics. The contrary
was the case, the Spaniards abusing
their confidence and maltreating them,
and they become suspicious, revengeful
and bloodthirsty. ' Their island and
those explored by Columbus at a later
period seemed to him and his followers
a veritable paradise.
Thus the most momentous occurrence
since the Crusade, unless it were the
discovery of printing, took place, after a
perfectly.safe and exceedingly monoton- j
ous voyage of six weeks, in the simplest
and most unconventional fashion im-
aginable. To Castile and Leon, Colum-1
bus had given a new world, and a hand
ful of wondering savages were the only
witnesses to the sublime act beside those
who participated in it. Looking back
upon this scene from perspective of four
centuries, it seems increditable in its
lack of ostentation and ceremonial. In
deed there is something almost sublime
in the tranquility which marked this
wonderful adventure, whose outcome
was to be the changing of the entire ex
istence of all humanity. Two months
spent amid favoring winds and sees, the
flight of birds, the passing by of ocean
weeds, and then America.
To no other such voyage was there
ever vouchsafed such a conclusion. Not
all of the world that has been discovered
and freshly people since Phoenicia first
began to colonize has ever shown such
magnificent results from such immaterial
causes. Rome and Greece and Carthage
pass away into obscurity, and, save
through their arts, are forgotten in the
vast propulsion given to Time itself by
the almost supernatural accomplishment
of the Genoese mariner. In all history
and all legends but two vessels the ark
of Noah and the Mayflower are held in
remembrance, besides the Santa Maria,
the Pinta and the Nina. And yet Amer
ica had been discovered five centuries
before Columbus made his initial voyage,
and he never discovered the continent.
His name has never been given to what
he found, or led up to it. After all, it
was only rediscovered and was, doubt
less, thickly populated tens of thousands
of years ago. Yet it remains that the
character and the acts of Christopher
Colnmbns are without parallel in the
history of the human race.
Bill Nye on Wag-on Roads.
Our wagon roads throughout the coun
try are generally a disgrace to civiliza
tion, and before we undertake to supply
I Jeager underware and sealskin-covered
Bibles with flexible backs to the African,
I it might be well to put a few dollars into
j the relief of galled and broken-down
horses that have lost their health on our
miserable highways.
J The country system as I recall it, was
in my ooynooa aoont as poor ana mem
cient as it could well be. Each towViship
was divided up into road districts, and
each road district was presided over by
an overseer of highways, whose duty it
is to collect so many day's work or so
many dollars from each taxpayer in the
district. Of course, no taxpayer would
pay a dollar when he could come and
make mud pies on their road all day,
and visit and gossip with the neighbors,
and save his dollar, too.
The' result seemed to be that the work
done was misdirected and generally an
injury to the road. With all due respect
to the farmer, I will state right here that
he does not know how to make roads..
An all-wise Providence never intended
that he should know. The professional
road-builder, with the money used by
the ignorant sapheads and eelf-inade
road architects, would in a few years
make roads in the United States over
which two or three times the present
sized load could be easily drawn, and the
dumb beasts of the republic, would rise
op and call ns blessed for doing it.
GOOD NEWS FOR GOLDENDALE.
Possible Prospect of Speedy Connection
With The Dalles by Railroad.
Last Friday night an enthusiastic
railroad meeting was held in Goldendale.
Mr. J. G. Maddock, who had just re
turned from The Dalles, had a proposi
tion from Denver, parties to build a
railroad from Goldendale to the Colum
bia river, giving connection with the
Union Pacific line, for a bonus of $50,000
and free right of way. -The meet
ing was addressed by Hon. Sol
Smith, I. , C. Darland, Joseph Nes
bitt, N. B. Brooks, A. Howard, W. R.
Laidler, Axel Anderson, J. G. Maddock
and William Van Vactor. The details
of procuring the subsidy were fully dis
cussed. It was decided it could be
raised. Six men offered to pledge $10,
000 to start the list. The meeting in
structed that an invitation be sent to
the Denver parties to send out a repre
sentative to confer with the people.
Many are of the opinion that Golden
dale has the first real chance since her
existence to get railway communication.
If Goldendale accept the proposition,
trains will be running to that point
without doubt within six months, pro
viding all reports are trne.
Patting this and that together, and
the recent inquiries for stock in other
enterprises about The Dalles, we feel
justified in saying that the prospect is
equally as hopeful for The Dalles as it is
for Goldenda'e, as the line will connect
here with the U. P. R., and as the Ore
gonian says today, this city will find the
greatest elements of future growth in
the development of the country rendered
tributary to it by nature, and local rail
way lines tapping fertile and productive
regions, now almost inaccessible, are the
best means of promoting such develop
ment. There are several productive sec
tions not now directly tributary that
could be rendered so by railway lines
reaching out direct from this city, or
built for feeders to an open Columbia
river and the lines which we now have.
Nobody Need Kick.
Not one dollar of the states $1,500 goes
to a horse show. Stop yer kickin' and
get in and make a fair. It is for farm
ers, not horsemen, and if you don't
know it, Mr. Kicker, read up and learn
something about it, besides hearsay.
At MoBier, Or., Oct. 8th, 1892, to the
wife of Mr. Amos Root, a son.
It was Mr. Emerson' who said "the
first wealth is health," and it was a
wiser than the modern philosopher who
said that "the blood is the life." The
system, like the clock, runs down. It
needs winding up. The blood gets poor
and scores of diseases result. It needs a
tonic to enrich it.
A certain wise doctor, after years of
study, discovered a medicine which
purified the blood, gave tone to the sys
tem, and made men tired, nervous,
brain-wasting men feel like new. ' He
called it his "Golden Medioal Discov
ery." It has been sold for years, sold
by the million of bottles, and people
found such satisfaction in it that Dr.
Pierce, who discovered it, now feels
warranted in selling it under a potilite
guarantee ol its doing good in all cases.
Perhaps it's the medicine for you.
Yonr's wouldn't be the first case of
scrofula or salt-rheum, skin-disease, or
lung disease, it has cured when nothing
else would. The trial's worth making,
and costs nothing. Money refunded if
it don't do you good.
The Tuna Hedge.
People wishing an ornamental fence
either for farms or city residence, will
find that the Tuna Cactus hedge sold by
U. R. Johnson is just the article-needed.
Every plant warranted, and now is just
the best time of the year to set it oat.
For farther information address me at
The Dalles, or see my agent Ed Pain, at
The Dalles. TJ. R. Johnson.
FOR SALE.
Sixty well bred rams, ong half of them
thorough-bred Spanish Merino. Will
sell Flieap as we are going out of busi
ness. Inquire or' Kerr & Buckley,
Grass: Valley, Sherman county, Oregon.
9-23-atw
Merino Raniii for Male.
For particulars address Tygh Valley
Land and Live Stock Co., The Dalles,
Oregon. d2tw4t
Bring your sisters and your cousins
and vour aunts to the county fair.
NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT
Xotioe Is hereby given thnt the undersigned,
as the administrator of the esuite of J. K. Hand
ler, deceased, has tilea his final account in the
office of the bounty Clerk of Wasco County.
Oregon, and that the County Judge of said
county has duly made an order thereon, direct
ing notice thereof to be given by publication for
four successive weeks in Tho Dalles Webkly
Chronic!. K, and fixing Tuesday, Nov. tith, IHH2,
at the hour of 2 o'clock p. in., (that being thc
second day of the next regular term of the
Countv Court for raid couutyl hh the time,
and the county court room of the county court
house of said county, in Dalles City, Oregon, as
the place, for the hearing of any objections there
mav be, to such final account and its settlement.
K. H. MAYS,
Administrator of (he estate of J. K. Hundley.
, 10.Ut."i
NOTICE.
To All Whom It May Cniwyra:
By order of the Common Council of Dalles
City, made ai.d entered on the :U1 day of Septcm-.
ber, W.ri, notice is hereby given that said City
Council is about to proceed to order and make
the improvements in streets in said city, as here
inafter stated, an I that the cost of such im
provements, aud each of them respectively, will
be levied upon the property adjacent thereto:
and said improvements, and each of them, will
be made, unless within fourteen days of the final
publication of this notice, the owners of two
tbirds of the property adjacent to some oral! of
the streets shout to be improved shall tile iheir
remonstrances against su h linprovcmcr.ts, as
bv charter provided.
'The improvements contemplated and about
to be mude are as follows, to-wit:
1. To improve Third street in said city, bv
building a sidewalk eight feet wide on the north
side thereof, I rum Washington street to Monroe
street. -
2. To Improve Fourth street in said city by
building a sidewalk six feet wide on the north
side thereof, from Court street to Jefferson
street.
' H. No Improve Fifth street In Bald city by
building a sidewalk six feet wide on the north
side thereof, from Union street to Washington
street.
4. To improve Fifth a'reet In said city by
bnilding a sidewalk six feet wide on the south
side thereof, from Union street to Washington
street.
5. To Improve Washington street in said city .
by building a sidewalk eight feet wide on the
west tide thereof, from Third street to Sixth
street.
6. To improve Federal street in said city by
building a sidewalk ten feet wide on the west
side there if, from the alley between Second and
Third streets to Third street.
7. To improve Federal street In said city by
building a sidewalk eight feet wide on the east
side thereof, from Third street to Fourth street.
a. To improve Laughlin street in said city by
building a sidewalk ten feet wide on the west
side thereof, from Second street to Third street, .
snd a sidewalk eight feet wide on the west side
thereof, from Third street lo Fourth street.
. i. To improve Laughlin street in said city by
building a sidewalk ten feet wide on the east
side thereof, from second street to Third street,
and a sidewalk eight feet wide on the cast side
thereof, from Third steet to Fourth street.
in. To improve Jefferson street in said city br
building u sidewalk ten feet wide on tho west
side thereof, from Second street to 1 hird street,
and a sidewalk eight feet wide nu the west side
thereof from Third street to Fourth street.
11. To improve Madison street in said city by
building a sidewalk ten feet wide on tho west
side thereof, from First street to Ti.ird street.
12. 'lo improve Madison street In said city by
building a sidewalk ten feet wide on tho east
side thereof, from Second street to Third street.
All of said sidewalks will be built, constructed
and erected In accordance Willi the provisions of
an ordinanae to define and establish the width
and manner of buildin f sidewalks in Dalles
C'itv, being Ordinance No. los, which passed the
Common Council of Dalles city March 7th, lK-,
except as otherwise hereinbefore sisxifled.
Dated this 10th day of September. lSiti
FRANK MKNEFEK,
9.14dl Recorder of Dalles City.
SUMMONS In the Circuit Court of the State
of Oregon, for the County of Wasco.
Clara E. Toland, 1
Plaintiff,
vs.
Isaac F. Toland, I
, DefetuiaiU. J '
To leaac F. Toland, tlie abort-xamril Defendant:
In the name of the state of Oregon, you are
hereby required to appear and answer the com
plaint tiled against you in the above-entitled
suit within tan davs from the date of- the ser
vice of this summons upon yon, if served with
in this county; or if served within any other
countv of this state, then within twenty days
from the date of the service of this summons
upon v. u; and i served iiism you by publica
tion, then bv the first day of the next regular
term of thf w.irt, to-wit: Monday, the llth
day of Nov-. 1 .r, 1: and If you fail to apja-ar
or answer i.oov required, tho plaintlll will
applv ti- tl'.i court fr tho relief prayed for in hr
complaint herein, to-wit: For a decree of di
vorce, snd for her costs and disbursements here- .
in. This summons is published by order of the
Hon. V. I,. Itradshaw, judge of the abovo-enti-,
tied court made at chambers in Dalles City,
Wusco County, Oregon, on the 2!lth day of Sep
tember. lW-'. J. L. SfOKY.
9-29-7t Attorney for Plaintiff.
ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE. '
Notice is hereby given that the undersigned,
the duly appointed, qualified and acting admin
istrator of the estate of John Mason, deceased, .
by order of tho countv court of Wssco count-,
Oregon, heretofore duly made and entered, will
on, Saturday, the 2th day of October, xvl, at
the hour of i o'clock, p. in., of said day, at the
front door of the county court house in Dalles
itv, Wasco countv, Oregon, sell at public auc
tion to the highest bidder for crash in hand, the
following-described real estate, belonging to the
estate of said deceased, to-wit: Tho northwest
quarter of Section Twelve (12) in township one
(lj south of range fourteen (11) east of the Will
amette meridian, in Wasco county, Oregon, con
taiuingone hundred and sixty acres of land,
more or less.
Dated at The Dalles, asco county, Oregon,
this day of September, 1. g y
Administrator of the estate of John Mason, de
ceased. DUFUR 4 MESEFEE,
Attorneys for said Estate. 9.29w t
NOTICE.
To All Whom It Hay Concern:
By order of the Common Council of Dalles
City, made and entered on the ad day of Septem
ber, 1892, notice is hereby given that said City
Council is about to proceed to order and make
the improvement of streets in said city
as hereinafter stated, and that tho cost
of such improvements, and each of them
respectively, will be levied upon the
property adjacent thereto: and said im
provements, and each of them, will be made,
unless within four:eeu days from the final pub
lication of this notice, the owners of two-thirds
of the property adjacent to some or all of the
street about to be improved shall iilo their re
monstrance against such improvements, as by
charter provided:
The improv ments contemplated end about to
be made are as follows, to wit:
1. To Improve Union street In said city, by
building a sidewalk ten feet wide on the east
side thereof, from First street to Second street.
2. To improve Second street in said city by
building a sidewalk ten feet wide on the north
side thereof, from Union street to Court street.
All of said sidewalks will be built, constructed
and erected in accordance with the provisions
of an ordinance to detine and establish the
width and manner of building sidewalk' in
Dalles City, being Ordinance No. ion, which
passed the Common Council of Dal es City,
March 7th, 1885, except as otherwise hereinbefore
specified. .
Dated this 12th day of September, 1WW.
FklKk' UEHKPEK.
9.HdU Recorder ol Dalles City.