si r VOL. III. Bombardment of mo Firiiiz ContiunGs Day anil Nl;MER OP TROOi'S KILLED. lB Cjprivi and Emperor William Re ceive Infernal Machine Minor New Notes. London, Noy. 28. The Times )a this ipatrli. tinted lant Tliureiluy, from Rio Loeri'i: "Tlie desultory tiring ron ,:iiiffl day and nltrht. A small party of atom landed at Anuiicao on Monduy ,d were attacked by I'ulxoto'a nion. ie luttor loHt two oillcors and thirty tn, killed. Five Bailors were wounded. :ring the aHt week more than 1!00 oops have Iwn killed by the artillery on the Nietlieroy fide of the liurlwr i majority of the insurgnnts favor the Iritoration of the monarchy with the ake of Grandpara as emperor. The in rgenta have resolved not to bombard .10 1111 less me governmuni uaiterius id . , i i lie city fire upon the ships from the ore. The lSritish senior oflieer reports jit a government battery yesterday .dlt'il a launch flying a white flag and lrrying a urlllsn oineer ana crew. :i liritish luiniHter today protested. A Msjffsjaluo Blown l'. X Yokk, Nov. '.'8. The teamor aiulyn, from UIo Junerio November .ijorts a strong tide of public senti- tnt bat set in against President Peix- o, who if daily becoming more dicta- rial and Mullo is gaining sympathy cadily. November 3 a powder maga- bo belonging to Mello was struck by a hot from one of the forts, causing a ter ilic explosion. Lieutenant Mohray and ioutenant Tupper, of liritish warships, ud 10 others of their party, w ho were ut bunting and passing the magazine t the time, were killed. The los of lie powder is laid not to have crippled lullo, who claims to have ammunitiou nough to lust two yearn. Boy n ton, lie American who attempted to sink one i Mello's vessels, was arrested and iiken on hoard the cruiser Charleston, there ho is held a prisoner. TKY1NO TO KILL CAl'KIVI. iHhmrully Arranged Infernal Machine Hniit to the Chaucellor. Bkiu.ix, Nov. A box containing n infernal machine was received by 'hancellor von Caprivl, accompanied by letter dated Orleans, November Slid, he letter stated that the box contained sample of wonderful radish seed. In ttempting to 0)en the box Major Ed tayer noticed grains of gunpowder full ig out of It. This made him suspicious tat the box contained a bomb, and he idled a police expert. They found in lie interior of the box a hammer which ras kept down by bands of India rubber. !he hammer was so arranged that if the ux were otum;d in the ordinary way it tould strike a cap of nitro-glycerine artridge. The cartridge was the length :! a finger. The whole thing was skill '.lly made. I THK LKTTKU SENT WITH IT. ISkklin, Nov. 28. The letter which iccompanied the infernal machine sent to Caprivl read: "I have the honor to forward you samples of an astonishing kind of radish seed, usually sown In Dec ember and gathered In February. This tk'M is not affected by frost. Receive, f'fUie assurance of my perfoct consid eration." It was stoned "11. Pepohantau, Hn Boulogne, Orleans. Internal Machine for the Emperor. Ukrum, Nov. 28. It now appears Em lror William Sunday received an in- rruil machine from Orleans similar to he one sent Caprivl, accompanied by a ettor. It was delivered at the emperor's ivil cabinot, where it was discovered "id rendered harmless. The emperor not yet Informed of the receipt of ithcr of the Infernal machines. The mncli government has promised the linost assistance in tracing the author f the attempted outrage, who Is as yet Uerly unknown. Olympia, I. Oneen. Na.i Fhancinco, Nov. 25. The per nnance of the Olympia is truly re larkable, much more so than that of tie Columbia, which recently smashed U records on the Eastern course The oluinbia was constructed especially for led, everything being sacrificed to it, hlln the Olympia is only a cruiser, d room had to be made on her for y guns. In spite of these facts, the itter ship, steaming over half the nuse yesterday, nearly equalled the "eed of the former. The Columbia ie week ago today averaged 22.81 knots THE pur hour for the diHtiinee of 88 knots, and according to the dispatches her fast est time, that which kept the average up, was made on the first half of the cmiree. The dispatches state that the Olympia averaged 22.02 knots, going over 42 knots yesterday, and that was steaming at increased speed after round ing the stakebout for the run in. Had she completed the run she might have made an average equal to the average of the Columbia. As it is, the speed of the Olympia surprises even ber builders. They would have been satisfied bad she developed a speed of 21 knots. A half a knot more and they would have been delighted. A speed of 22 knots, and perhaps a little more, they have talked of to lie sure, but they never expected it to happen. NEWSNOTES. The proposed plan of Union Pacific re organization includes the whole system. Hussian sugar manufacturers havede clditd to export 4,000,001) pounds between now and March. With Saturday night's performance at Ifoolev's theater, Chicago, Kosina Vokes, of Die once famous Yokes family, retired from the stage. The silver men have discovered a new vantage ground in the new tariff bill. They propose to ask for a duty on silver ore, which will bring up the silver fight in a new form. A deal has practically been closed whereby the Rockefellers and the Stand ard Oil company will get control of the $3,000,000 steel works which were built near West Superior, Wis., by Francis II. Weeks. Four men appeared simultaneously, two in front and two in the rear of a saloon on State street, Chicago, with re volvers. They held up 20 inmates, re lieved them of all their valuables and es caped. The Olympia was prevented by the fog from finishing her trial trip at San Francisco, but the patent log ebows that the Olympia made for a distance of 13 miles a rate of 25.59 knots per hour, and for a shorter distance 26 knots. A railroad, with a terminal at the Gulf of Mexico, another on Lake Michigan, and a third at the Pacific ocean, would make a more extensive system than the world has yet seen aud it is possible that the Illinois Central will )e the company to owu such a line. Captuin L. Zalinski. of the Fifth ar tillery, stationed at the 1'renido, Cal., the expert on the pneumatic gun, was recently offered $15,000 to assift the Brazilian government for three months in the uiie of the pneumatic gun, nud of course accepted the oiler. Fire yesterday morning destroyed an entire block in Oil City, Pa., consisting of 12 or 15 buildings. The loss is es timated at $100,000. It Is believed three or four persons perished in the flames. The missing persons are Mrs. Shields and three of her children. The Kansas City Times prints a state ment by P. I). Keader, a well-known Iowa republican, on Hawaiian affairs. Keedor was in Hawaii four aionths last winter. His statement corroborates Blount's report. He upholds Cleveland and Greshaiu. The first election in New Zealand under the woman suffrage law Iresulted favorably to the government. Women voted in large numbers, supporting mainly the candidates who professed Christianity and favored temperance. Princess Colonna, the daughter of Mrs. John W. Mackey, has applied for a legal separation from Prince Ferdinand Galiatro Colonna, and for the custody of her three children. The marriage took place in Faris in 1883. Six months after the marriage the prince began demand ing money of bis wife. She then dis covered that he had a taste for gambling, horseracing and a fast life. She bore his abuse, taunts and vulgarity until October last, when she left him at Paris. The oddest damage suit on record was brought In Philadelphia by Joseph Wood. The night of October 1st, last, ho was struck and badly Injured by a lrtiman head severed from a woman's body by a railroad train at Holmesburg junction. Wood was standing on a plat form when the train struck the woman. He has sued the Philadelphia Railway company for damages, holding that it was negligence in having no safety gates at the crossing. others. Wives, Iau(thtert Have Yo Heard the New.T A wonderful medicine has beeu placed on the market, called Dr. Grant's Native Discovery, for the cure of diseases and complaints peculiar to the fenmle sex. Ask for our medical adviser treei ana nnr tmntise on woman and her dis eases, and if you Bre atilicted try a bottle an d see whether we speak the truth or not It is for sale at Blukeley Houghton's. DALLES, OREGON, MR. STEVENS' REPLY He Answers at Lenntli Commissioner BlMt's Report, HIS VERSION OF HAWAIIAN AFFAIRS His Obligation of His Country and His Duty as an Ex-Minister Dc- -mand be Should Reply. ArccKTA, Me., Nov. 29. Ex-Minister Stevens' answer to Commissioner Blount, regarding the Hawaiian affair, was given out tonight. Mr. Stevens says: "A deep sense of obligation to my country and a minister's duty to defend an insult threatening against a struggl ing American colony, planted as right eously and firmly on the North Pacific isles as our pilgrim fathers established themselves on Plymouth Rock, demand that I sballmake answer to the astound ing misrepresentations aud untruths of Commissioner Blount's report on Ha waiian affairs. Not wishing to lie severe on a neophyte in diplomacy, with no knowledge of the world's affairs, outside of his own country, sent on a very peculiar errand amid currents and quick sands entirely unknown to bim, I say he has been In part the victim of circum stances, having been caught in meshes and snares adroitly prepared for him by the cnuning advisers of the fallen Lil iuokalaniand by the shrewd, sharp and long experienced British diplomatic agent, whose aims and hopes Blount has served so well, and without the least suspicion that lie was aiding the ultra British interests even more than he was helping the Hawaiian monarchists. III8 PLAN I'HE-ARUANGED. "It was clear enough from Blount's manner from the day of his arrival at Honolulu, as well as by his letter to the department of state, written soon after, that he had designed, at whatever cost, to repudiute the views and actions of the recently terminated administration, and that in order to do so he must im pugn the action of the American minis ter and the commander of the United States eteauier Boston. A total stran ger, it was impossible for Mr. Blount to know how unfitting It was for him to take up his quarters where he was cer tain to be surrounded by royalists, and where the supporters of the provisional government would be reluctant to go. As a precautionary safeguard against shutting out Americans from ready ac cess to Commissioner Blount, a wealthy and highly respectable widow of the American colony was ready to grant the use of her house "to Mr. and Mrs. Blount, the commissioner to pay the same amount it would cost him to live at the royalist hotel. This polite offer of an American resident to an American com missioner did not originate with the provisional government, nor did the provisional government have anything whatever to do with the proposed ar rangement. A committee of three American citizens, born and educated in the United States, men who had not taken any part in the revolu tionary proceedings the previous weeks went on board the Rush, when that vessel came into the harbor. At the re quest of the three, an American gentle man introduced them to Mr. Blount. His manner of receiving their visit re pelled them, and they asked me to state the reasons why It could not be pleasant to bim and better for all concerned for him not to go to a royalist hotel, but to take a residence on neutral ground, where be would be master of his own surroundings. As delicately as I could, I stated the offer of the committee of his countrymen, pointing out to bim that by accepting their proposal he would be near the archives of the legation, which he could conveniently use and which the owner would be pleased to place at his disposal. Brusquely he refused the courteous and honestly intended offer of his countrymen, and at once placed him self among royalist and ultra-British surroundings. ACCESS TO THE LEGATION RECORDS. "The iusinuations and implications in Mr. Blount's report that I was averse to his access to the legation records is a shameless perversion of facts. I took to him the printed dispatches of Minister Merrill to Secretary Bayard; the printed records of the recently adjourned legislature, containing the recorded votes for and against the lottery gang, the recorded votes as to the recent changes of ministers, and the official copy of the lottery charter. This was evidence of decisive value, if he had really come to Honolulu for any other purpose than to convict Harrison's ad ministration and the senate foreign affairs committee of hasty and ill-advised action In January and February last. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1803. Hi manner while allowing me to lenve these iniiortant document in !.. room I showed he cared not to receive them, and the general drift of his reply indi cates he did not even read them." Admiral Htsntou la New York. New York, Nov. 30. Admiral Stan ton, who was relieved of the command of the South American squadron for saluting the flag of the rebel, Admiral Mello, arrived hereon the steamer Spree late last night. He declined to speak of the incident which led to his recall. Concerning the bombardment of Rio Janeiro, he said that he bad been through the city several times, and be yond a piece of cornice chipped off here and there very little damage was done to the city. NEWS NOTES. A dispatch from Rio Janeiro says: "Admiral Mello has sailed with several warships In an unknown direction. It is tielieved the fleet went south." The Perry Athletic Club has tele graphed Richard K. Fox, of New York, that a purse of $30,000 will be given Cor bett and Mitchell by Perry (Oklahama) bankers and merchants if the fight is brought there. Thanksgiving day was celebrated in Detroit by the distribution of food to the poor, 10,000 of whom were provided with a good dinner and enough food to last several days. This was the work of the Pastors' Union, which gathered over $25,000 worth of food and clothing. A Cedar Rapids dispatch of yesterday says : A know storm began this morn ing. It is now five inches deep with no indications of a let-up. Street car ser vice is almost paralyzed. A blizzard is approaching. There are indications of a railroad blockade. MITCHELL NEWS. The Field Amply Covered by Our Regu lar Correspondent, Born, to the wife of Lafe Frazelle, on the 18th, a daughter. E. B. Allen returned from a visit to his old home in Bear Valley. He is much improved in health. George Seigfort, the mail carrier from this place to Canyon City, reports plenty of snow, the 20th, about the latter place. Mrs. W. W. Stone is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Allen. She is visiting her brother at Mitchell for the last few days. On the Kith snow fell to the depth of a quarter of an inch in and about Mitch ell, reminding us very forcibly that the year is fast fad'ugaway, and the gleam ing snow, and priehintr biting cold will be here only too soon. Frank Chamberlain, after an absence of more than three years, returned to his childhood's home at Mitchell, very much improved physically if not finan cially. He reports very hard times where he came from, Rosalia, Washing on, with no prospects for a betterment this year. Many crops were standing in the fields rncut, since the cost of cut ting and caring for it would be more than the profits. There were no sales of grain at cash. Mitchell's Dramatic and Literary society did well in the way of entertain ment on the eve of the 10th. The doors were open at 7 o'clock and to a well filled house they gave amusement until a late hour with dialogues, rehearsing charades, tableau and music, instrumen tal and vocal. The opening song by a chorus of voices was very nicely done. Asa Lunz in the role of Bill Nye deserves a great deal of credit for his apt imi tation of that personage. Bro. Watkins' farewell to his congregation was- ludi crous in the extreme, exciting applause at every pause. Music and song by M iss Stella Boardman and Fred Hoyt was ex cellent. The Sleeping Beauty (tableau) might have been worse represented in a more modern city than that of Mitchell. A Spanish fandango, on banjos, was exceptionally well done by Frank Chamberlain and Bud Boardman. But seven littie children put to shame the older members in their perfect acting of their parts. The burlesque band with their rat-a-tat-tat and rub-a-dub-dub was almost perfect in its execution. E. V. E. Mitchell. Or. Nov. 22d, lS'JS. A Word to Larlie. Ladies who desire a beautiful elear skin, free from pimples, boils, blotches and other eruptions, should commence at once to use Dr. Gunn's Improved Pills. They will also remove that heavy look about your eyes and make them bright, and will cure headache from whatever cause it arises. Rememlier you are only required to take vnr nnall pill at bed time, which is coated w ith pure sugar and will not gripe or produce any unpleasant sensation. Sale at '2b cents by Blakeley & Houghton. 3m IM)UM OF THE HOUSE. Electricity the Coming Motive Power for Vehicles. Not Only Ktreet Care, lint Wheeled Con. veyencre of All Kinds W ill lie Pro pelled by thH I'oeeen Foree That la Kevolutlontslng the World. From present indications it will not be surprising if within a few short years tho electric motor will have super seded the horse generally, if not uni versally, as a motive power, saya the Pittsburgh Commercial Gazette. With in three years it has taken its place on all the street railways in the city, with a single exception, that were not using the cable. The same is true of every other city in the country. Even coun try towns and thickly populated coun try districts have electric roads. In this way hundreds of thousands of horses have been displaced within the last five years. The cable came first, but it is being superseded by the electric motor, as it is less expensive and more easily handled. Many of our readers will be able to recall the cry against steam railways tbat they would do away vph stage coaches and horses, thereby throwing thousands of drivers, hostlers, horse buyers and tavern keepers out of em ployment. It is said that this cry was so loud as to keep the Baltimore & Ohio railroad out of this state. Had it not been for the turnpike influence the first line would have come to this city, and thence to Wheeling, instead of going over the mountains from Cumberland to Wheeling. The stage horse was doomed, however, and had to go. Is it not possible, or even quite probable, that the carriage horse and the draft horse are likewise doomed? Within two years from the present time car riages, buggies and light wagons will be scudding along our streets propelled by electricity, and it is not improbable that the same power may be applied to heavier-wheeled vehicles. S In a recent letter Thomas Shields Clarke, the artist, who has been in Paris for some time, says: "Do you realize that the days of our equine friend are numbered? Carriages propelled by electric or naphtha motors are already a common sight on the streets of Paris and becoming more nu merous every day. Not being a great lover of horseflesh I shall be glad when it is gone. What nice, clean streets we will have when it ceases to hammer them to pieces with its iron shoes. More capacious carriages can be used and many men can own their own con veyances when propelled by a motor that only uses a few cents' worth of electricity, in naphtha, per day, and costs nothing at all for feed or atten tion when not in actual use. Every man may then be his own driver. It looks very much as if this new order of things will be established before the close of the present century." There are none, or at least only a few, who will take issue with Mr. Clarks on the subject. The electric motor and storage battery have been brought to such perfection that it is quite safe to predict a general if not universal decline in horse power. Dur ing the coming harvest a number of agricultural machines, such as reapers, mowers, thrashers, plows, harrows and rakes will be operated by storage bat teries instead of horses. This is ren dered possible by late improvements in the storage battery. A five-horse-power battery, good for ten hours' steady work, occupies a box no larger than an egg case, and weighs no more than one hundred and fifty pounds. These can be transported any distance, and may be returned and recharged at small cost. A battery of this size and power will propel a farming carriage continu ously for fifty hours, or at least for ten days if only used five hours each day. So it will not cost nearly so much as a carriage horse, nor require either feed or attention when not in use. There is no reason why it should not become very popular ' A boat constructed of aluminum and intended for the forthcoming expedition of Commander Monteil into Central Africa, has just been launched from the Quay d'Orsay, in Paris. It is a flat bottomed ferry boat, capable of carrying a load of 15 tons, is 33 feet long and 8'j feet wide, and the total weight of the boat is 20 cwt.,of which 18 cwt. is of metal and the remainder of wood. This lightness of construction has only been obtained by tlie use of aluminum, and the difficulty had to be overcome of roll ing sheets of this metal 4 feet long, 2 feet 4 inches in width and 0.12 inch thick. The boat is made in 24 parts, each of which can be carried by one man, and which are adjusted by means of bolts, India rubber being provided at the joints of the sections so as to render tlie boat water tight. With two exceptions, all the parts are interchangeable, and the loat, which is fitted with the necessary tools for assembling it, can be put to gether in a very short time. For Male or Krul. I w ill Bull or rent my furut on 8-Mile on rejnable terms. Anyone wishing for nui'h n opportunity will please ap ply at once at Tun C'ukosici.k ottioe. Mrs. Matilda Habt. Friday, Nov. 17th, 18!;J. 3tw. Use Mexican Silver !tove Polish. NUMBER 4X Jd. H the mind that makes the man," said Watts, but modern ethics deny this, and give the credit to the tailor. It is question able, however, if cither are right. Food has some claims 0 1 li li 4ii mthisrespect.therefore those Oj, parents who would build up tiie physique of their children !! il !l ,H l 1! it !l 1 pay strict attention to their wawve wa,vu.u utb nil ivuu pastry; for this to be health- pastry; fully prepared, flOTTOLEfiE must be used 03 a shortening. It is Recommended by the best Cooks. Consult your physician up on its healthfulness. fiend three eenta In stamps to N. K. Fuirbank d; Co.. CblcaKO, for baud some Cottolene Cook Book, contain liiK six hundred recipes, prepared iiy nine emluentauUioritiee on cocking. Cottolene la sold by ail grocers. Beam ail substitutes. 1 1 n :ii 3 IB ;ii ! !l Had only by N.K. FAIRBANK A. CO., I "II IIC I lcm .'CHICAGO, NEW VOBK. BOSTON.'J5 V V t V ?? GENTS mnke -".00 a day. Greatest kitchen utensil ever invented. Retails 3.j eta. 2tot 8ld in every house, Ham pie, wwtage puid, five cents. McMttkin and Co.. Cincinnati. Onto. AVE WANT YOU TO WORK FOR US, thns 1 makin I12.C0 TO ffci.00 PER WEEK. Parties preferred who can furnish a horse and travel through the country; a team, though, ia not necessary. A few vacancies in towns and citie. 8 pare hours may be used to good ad vantage, r. f. Johnson & Co., llth and Main M., Richmond, Va. SHERIFF'S SALE. Hy virtue of on execution iirr! order of sale, intmed out of the Circuit nrtof vc State of OrcKon, for the County .-f w, in, to p-eiiirected coiniiiaiidiiiK me to in k.iIl- nl tins nud in the said writ, described t"-uU: Those ) i en and. parcels of land in Wfi- .t itnity, Stnt of Ore gon, Known una deer,ije: u- tt.e :utn half of ectioii eight (h , and the mu h ha.i of section nine cm and the enst half m.il thecouthweat (juurter and theeaftt half of tlie noi Lh ett quar ter and the anuthwest quarter of the northwest quartet of section ten (10) nml the north half of the northwest quarter ana the tsnuthent quarter of the northwest quarter of section fifteen i !."), nil in Townchip one i, north of Range fourteen (14 euhtof the WllUmette meridian, to imika and pay the Mini of money, in naid court adjudg ed to be paid to the plaintiff in said action, lit wmcn action ine houciiora ioan ana jruM Company were plamtili and James Booth, Mar tha M. Booth. Everett E. Hall. J. F. McClure. Sarah H. m( lure, D. G. Alter, Ralph Rogent, Jo- lla . KogerN, i ri hmoouy, J. m. layior ana J. K. KdwardM were defenoantn. to-wit: the sum of $'Jni0.ut with interest thereon, from July 1. In1-', at the rate of six per cent per annum and Ki(UM) attorneys fees in said action and costs and dis- utirhe en w tnerein wxea, i navemiK uuy lev ion upon the laud aforesaid and on Saturday the 23rd day of December 1803. at the hour of 10 o'clock a. m.. in front of the court bonne door. In the City of The Dalles, in said County aud Htate, I will sell said land at puoiic auction, 10 me nignesi oiouer mere, or. T. A. Wabii, Sheriff' of Wasco County, State of Oregon, noviita SHERIFF'S SALE. By virtue of an execution and order of tale. luMieil on: of the Circuit Court of tne Htate of oreimn, for the Omuty of Wauro, to ine directed commandtnfr me to make .ale of the land in the itaiil writ dtM;rited to-wit: those pieoea and par cels ol land in Waxco County. Htnte of Oregon, known and deM'.riled a the Houttiweui quarter of section four 41, and the north half of section nine I'J, and the northweat quarter of section H-veuteen 17, in Township one li north of Kanice fourteeu II, eaat of the Willamette Meri dian, to make and pay tlie ruin of money, iu iaid Court adjudged to be paid to the plaintiff in said action, in which action The Hnliciturii Loan and Trust Company were platntilf, and James Hisith, Marlha M. Hnoth, Everett E. Hall, . I. F. McClure. i-nrah H. McCiure, 1. G. Alter. Hal ph. Kiers, Julia N. Hewers, I'M Kmlmly, J. M. Tay lor and J. r'. Edwards were defendants, to-wit; the sum of f .MUMm w ith interest thereon, from July I, INri, at the rate of six per centper annum and tjoo.un attorney's fees iu said action and posts and disbursements therein taxed, 1 have this day levied upon the laud aforesaid, and on Saturday, 83rd day of December, 11103, at the hour of ill o'clock a. in. In front of tho court house door, in the City of The Italics, In said County and State, I will sell Midland at public auction to the uiKhest bidder therefor. T. A. Wako, Bherilt'of Wasco County, State of Oregon. nov-r-'td SHERIFF'S SALE. By virtue of an execution and order of sale issued out of the Circuit Court of the state of Oregon for the county of Wasco, to me directed, commandms; me U make sale of the land in said writ, describ ed to-wit; those pieces and parcels of land in W asco County, -tate of Oregon, known anil de scrllied asall of section three ill, and the south half of the southeast quarter of section four I, and the south half of section Ave (o) ami the north half of section eight (), all In Township one (11, north of Kanife fourteen (14 east of the Willamette meridian, tn make and pay the sum of moncv. In said Court adjuduiii. to be paid to the plaintiff in said action, la which action The OUCllOrS I.OSI1 Sill! 1 I . "in I'nnj "tit 1'iniii- tirt' and James B.th, Martha Nl. Bisdh, Everett E. Hall, J. K. McClure, r-arah H. Met lure, I. i. Alter, Ralph Rogers, Julia X. Rofrcrs, I'rl F.in Oody, J. M. Tavlor and J. . Edwards were de fciKliints, to wit, the sum of fjilrai il with inter- . est thereon from July 1, IvrJ. at the rate of six.' per cent per annum aud IJoO iaj attorney fivs in said action and costs and disbursements therein taxed, I have this day levied upon the land above descrilMf ami on Saturday the 93d day of December, IM93-, at the hour of 10 a. m., in front of the court house door, iu the city of The Dalies, in said count- and state, I will sell said laud at public, auction, to the highest bidder thereior. T. A. Ward. hcrifTof Wnsco county, State of Ormolu nov'lJtd