THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY, JULY 18. 1894. The Weekly Chronicle. fc'nurvd t Uie tXT)iv at The lallf. onuuu. a IM'OMul f IkM wall UlAtttT. KTATK OKKICIALS. jvarnor tiMrlary of suite Y wurvr upl. f lublic I uatnu'ttnu Attorney i.em'i- HDtom.. Jonaresnu'ii. 4tate rrlr.tcr . . . . fc. Pennoyer II K kincai.l ..Fhilllp Metis-han I.. M (rw in I'. M I.llrmall (J. N. lMvh " J. II. MlU'Uell t H. Hermann jV K. Kill . . V H Iwla riii'XTV ornriALH. t'ountv Judge.... SherltJ. Clem Yreaaurer Commisaioner . T. J. Prlvar . M. kelta? Wm. Micheil Krank KincaUl (A. 8. Blower;. Auroor V. II. WakeneU armor E. '. ttharp Bneerinmi.tont of Public tic hool . .Troy Shelley Coroner W. II. Butt MISTAKES MASAUKRs. A special to this paper vesterdav j li' to control a disease which may Mated that Hebs had otlered to call off; be sail1 tu have become epidemic. As the strike if the railroads would permit j i"1 with tn ,x,l,v- fou,e brainless in the strikers to go back to their old places dividual offers a hill that is calculated nd that this proposition was refused bv , tm e're, t9. but not he C8l,M8 the I5oar.l of railwav Managers. If this I Borl!i ' arbitration and congres91onal is the case, Mr. febs has played a trump card and has the railroads on the hip, I'uhlic sympathy is evanescent, and fades a quickly as a rainbow, when there is reason why it should. That J sympathy which tirst went with the strikers was immediately transferred to the railroad companies a" soon as acts of violence were committed. Jf the rail road managers now lefiue the peaceful solution of the difficulty not only will public sympathy agai.i go to the strikers tint a feeling of indignation will be aroused against the companies that it will take years for them to remove. The railway manager want to remem ber that this is no longer their light. They are a small factor in it. The real sull'erers. the parties in interest are the people whose business is paralyzed and who in net eventually liear all the ex pense. The railroad companies are taking an untenable position, in asking the great mass of people not only to protect their proierty. and to open their roads for them, but are also demanding that these same people shall stand in I with them to put the thumb screws on j all engaged in the strike. This the ! people will not do. The companies have won the fight, or rather the people have -won it for them, and now that those opposed to them have offered to sur render, it is not fitting that they should demand as a condition of that sur render that they be allowed to first handcuff and afterwards maltreat those who were opposed to them. There is no excuse for this, and now if the com ipanies refuse to carry the mails for one moment, they should be arrested and .prosecuted with ten times the vigor that has been shown towards Debs. The board of railway managers have allowed Iheir individual heads to swell and they are oue and all making the mistake of Ueir lives. The people have protected them mid their property, but they have jiot elected them as dictators. If the mails are not now carried, we shall see whether this administration and the! i courts of justice are entirely for the vlaea as against the masses. We shall see if grand juries are venal and courts corrupt. The public is tired, the people whose patience has been severely taxed are weary. Let the railroad managers j beware how they further tempt them. lt them recollect that 40 per cent, of the entire population, the farmers, who eventually have all the costs to pay, are not in love with boards of railway mana gers, watered stocks and unholy charges. Thev have been patient under all diffi cul ties.and forbearing towards the corpor ations that have grown rich levying toll upon them. Let the managers look to it that this element does not go on a strike, for when it does, there will be no board of railway managers. Let the courts take a hand to prevents this, and if the companies w i 1 1 not accept Debs' offer, let every delayed mail be followed by the arrest of the president and board of directors of that road delaying it. Demonstrate to the laborers that there is but one law which rich and poor, high and low alike must obey. I)o this, or prepare for the time when there will be no law. THAT WU.H0S HILL. We asserted soon after the senate be gan monkeying with the Wilson bill that it would never pas. That the senate would insist upon its amend ment", and that the house would de mand the Wilson bill or nothing. That assertion w ill be verified or disproved in a very short time, since the whole mat ter is now before the conference com mittee, r rom the dispatche in yester day's Oregonian we clip the following ss showing the present condition of the Vi!: : "A house member of the confen nee, after toJay's session, made tiie state ment that the conferees were as far apart now as at the first moment when they had sat down together; and he also asserted that the report to be agreed npc-n must be practically the liouee bill, either that or nothing. On the other hand, one of the senate con ferees stated there could be no good ac complished in denying the existing sit uation, that the senate bill must be the basis for the report, or the bill could never pass the senate. Until oue side or other is willing to give way, there ' . ... : ... ... 1 .U- .1.. i. can lie no coiiciusiun, nuu HHTucininMi tion of both aides U hold out lends poW to the statement made bv inem- ; hers of both houses that nothing ha reHlly Ix-en accomplished. It is said j that the aeimte conferees will go into 'the resaion tomorrow with another wanting from the "conservatives" that, , under uo circumstances, uiuat the ten ate amendment be killed, and they will aiain endeavor to impress upon their associates the folly of the course they are pursuing. The numerous con , forences held during the day indicate j that the senators who framed the hill and fon-ed the amendments upon the eomiuittee are on the watch, and in tend to keep intact the victory they gained in the senate." HOC TO HI SO EFFFC TS . Congress is monkeying with the strike proposition and trying to devise tome, medicine in the shape of bills are not needed. What the country needs is a medicine that will reach the cause, and so cure, instead of relieving the disease, l et some congressman who wants fame introduce a bill prohibiting absolutely all immigration for ten years for a 8t;,r,er- Thi9 ou1,1 ive tlu labor in this country a chance. As it is, foreign labor comes here faster than work can lie found for it, and hence all labor be comes a drag in the market and is forced down. Then, too, put the tariff laws on an honest basis, pass a bill providing for removing the protection from American manufactures or products as soon as the wastes paid are less than a stated per cent higher than are paid in Kurope for similar work. The O. R. oi N. company will lie run on business principles by busi ness men, who are looking out for its individual interests, instead of the gen eral interest of the Union Pacific. Al ready arrangements have been com pleted witli the tireat Northern by which that road will reach Portland over the O. K. . X and others are pending with the Northern Pacific, while the Union Pacific and Short Line must still use it to reach the coast. This would give the road an abundance of business and at the same time would direct the wheat shipments of the Pa louse and Eastern Washington to Port land. I One of the most disagreeable duties a country editor has to perform is to re- I fuse to print obituary notices done up in rhyme, yet if he does not refuse ninety nine times oat of a hundred he neglects his duty. It looks like a small request to refuse, but once the thing gets started there is no end to it. Beside a brief prose notice is far preferable, for not all of us are poets, and if we were, obituary poesy is the most difficult to handle. We want to say now, once for all, that under no circumstance w ill we print that kind of matter. Japan and China are having trouble ry i , i . i . i o.errea.eacn no uouot ue.ng ... uie , wrong, yer. ooin Having troops lanueu in Corean territory. F.nitland comes grace fully forward and offers to act the part of arbitrator between them. An old fable about the manner in which the monkey divided the cheese between the cats aptly illustrates the position Corea, Japan and China would be in when the final judgment would be rendered. Japan would have nothing, China would have nothing and Corea would be out of tight, inside the British lion. The Hood P.iver Giacier has changed hands Mr. Samuel F. Blythe being the new owner and editor, tie has had the community gives liirn the patronage it ehouKI, make them a paFr of which they will be proud, ami which will at the eauie time do good work in brinKinK ! the right kind of citizens to Hood Kiver j vaIleV j Prendergast is at last judicially and i iiidiciotislv disposed of. Friday morn-1 ning at II :4S he took a fiual tumble to himself through the platform, bis head twisted to one side, his neck was broken i and his crime expiated as fully as it I could be on earth. It was almost nine months from the lime he unprovoked j shot down Carter Harrison, until he : paid the penalty of his crime; just eight i months too long. i . ! Kveryone rjuile naturally complains of I the heat, seemingly forgetful of the fact that this is the time of the year for it to le bot, and that if it wasn't so, it would be contrary to nature. The old negro was right when be remarked that "white folks, when they wasn't prayin' for' rain, was within' it would cl'ar up.'' j If Prineville and Antelope don't quit quarreling about baseball there is liable! to be a perpetual coolness between the J two places. We tugitest that they both I strike if the argument doesn't thow up Wanted. to hay one good 3'4 second-hand j is almos. white. His borne is in Call wagon. Inquire at this oOice. I fornia. He came with horses belonging AS IS FAMOUS STATKMKST. The Astoria Herald says: The soldiers sent to various places to preserve order ate simply doing their dutv and tli" striker should not kill tlirin. They are ji. Hilled in killinir rail road director and presidents and will receive the atilandit of the people. Onlv a coward w ill rire from auilmsh and . I. -..II ..I Kill innocent, eoiie. i in? eirtaria ui i California are cowards. I And so our esteemed otetnp.irary thinks the plaudits of the people would lie given to anyone w ho would assassinate a railroad president. If there is any reason why men should be murdered be cause they were engaged iu some par ticular business, whv tingle nut the rail road presidents? Why not let the selec tion fall on editors of country news papers? They would perhaps be missed less than any other class, and in most caes it would be a relief both to the party assassinated and the public. Kail roads are necessary, even Astoria with inordinate desire, praying, hoping, in fact, doing everything but working to there must be railroad presidents and directors. In our experience we have, found railroad men the peers of any; nrnres.ive. energetic, full of hIlal,ieM r ' ' and good citizens. The Herald's remark niixlit lie expected from llerr Johaun Most, but from a man with intelligence enough to run a newspaper, it comes as willful, malicious and doubly damned anarchv. The freedom of the press, one of our boasted privileges, should not lie fTtfnili tit iinv publication that will i advocate murder. There is not another ; i, , ,i,, ,,,..r i,. the Northwest that would indorse the Herald's as-ertion. mm TO ADMIT rTAH. A bill providing for the admission of Utah as a state has passed both houses i of congress, anil was in all probability signed bv the president yesterday. The bill provides for holding a constitutional convention to meet next March. A peculiar requirement in the bill is that the constitution shall provide by ordi nance, irrevocable without the consent of the United States and the people of the etate, that perfect toleration of re ligious sentiment shall be secured, and that no inhabitant of the state shall ever be molested on account of his mode of religious worship, provided that po lygamous or plural marriages shall be forever prohibited The government provides liberally for colleges, etc., do nating about one million acres of land for the purposes. The population of Utah is about 22',000, and she will be the forty-fifth state. The boycott in (ieroiany is liable to have wme queer complications. Re- cently the socialists boycotted certain breweries; and one after another the breweries began standing in with the boycotted cotemporaries and became in torn nnder the ban of the boyeotters. The peculiarity of the situation is, that if the boycott is kept up all the brewer ies will be banded together and the socialists will have to let go, or go with out beer. Thus the socialists will boy cott themselves, and become perforce, prohibitionists. It is safe to say that this is one case where the strike or boy cott will make its effects felt where they do Uie m(Jt Ooldendale is makingan effort t have the distillery destroyed at Grant, rebnilt at Goldendile. Without desiring to in terfere with the desires of our sister town, we cannot help but think that The lhilles is neglecting an opportunity that should be taken advantage of. There are many arguments in favor of locating the distillery here, wood is cheap, and there is the river for trans portation. Wheat can be had for about the same price as at Grant, and it has the advantage over Goldendale of being , haodv to market. Thn T)n)lfa atmuM h,D(,v t(J rUet(! . ... 1U. , una are The t.onferent-e committee are not Illtkinf rtny headway and the prospect tor anv agreerm.nt between the senate Bntl tho honfM5 are decidedly slim. Con. gresn tand pat on the Wilson bill, and thc ?iate have douhle-ehotted their S,,I1S rtll1 refuse to budge an inch. The enatonaI baby is a little off roior for democratic measure, ' to te "liuh in but its parents love with it a if u Pure white. (;,,olera 8K;lin raging in Ruinia, as Uih " 270 ca" b,in" Prtetl in St. i''-'"' in one day. The balance of Kf"fe i1 quarantining ttrictly against it, and it is expected it can lje kont within bound-.. Conditions are much better than a year ago, for then famine had left the people in such a shape that disease fattened upon them easily. Iw vitality, filth and despair made the field ripe for the ravages of the demic. Mitchell Nowa. "pi Weather extremely, warm, with a cloudless sky, a slight breeze and very dry. Mrs. I)r. Harick returned after an ab sence of more than two month. I. N. Clark returned to his old haunts for few davs last week. The ravairea i of time are very noticaMe. His hair : to Lou Klton, which Kiton purchased, in lower California. I Hard times have put thu people daft. I Hardly day passes without someone passing east or west. Some of them j have small bands of stock. tiolng, i going, and seeking what? At such times as this the old adage "the ruli ng j ' , i "l one" should be well weighed, for nrely now there is but little nim to ; j g't',,,r and that i better csthered where vou know its haunts. July 4th, IS'M, is a thing of the past, ' and dwells in our memory a- a vivid ! .Iream. with many pleasantries aim ; eyorv m. of Ulm .1,.,-iares privatelv to few unpleasantries to tlx It linn iu our', , . m.rfclUv ,m,utisfctory. I minds. It was hailed very quietly. Not with the boom of the cannon s hoarse ,Hal. nor from the loyal throats of a thousand stalwarts. Only the clarion notes of a barnyard solo lever lierating from cliff to cliff uwoke the July morn. At 10:o0 the declaration of Independence was read by W. II. Sas ser; also an oration by II. I.uny, which was patriotic to the core, in fact excel lent. In the afternoon we were further enieruiineu ny mo .nucneu iuerr ; society. A solo, "You Know, by Max Pii 17 and Miss Ctella lloadman was ox- ii. t -..:...:. lit. ' ceueiu in execuuon. a recuauon, i.i- I I 1 I I t III., - I uepenoeu,-e imv, oy aiii rv,-.. was very nicely done. Uecitation, "Curfew Shall Not King Tonight," by Kita Cham berlain. Little Kita deserves extra praise. There seemed to lie nothing wanting to make her Bpeaking erfect tor one to young. One's heart could stand still when licssiu had mounted to j wpinosi rounu on u.e la.uier n. in I "'ii lower ami looneu oyer uie street ue- ! ,ow and when she dauntlessly clung to j Ml as il "wunK ,i,r out i,,(o l,1,,', we could almost cry aloud for sympathy, ' and when she had received the assur- ance that her lover should live there j were tears in our hearts, if not in our! eyes. A cornet and organ duct by Miss Sella Board tn a n and Frank Chamber- lain and instrumental music, songs and recitations tilled up the time for two! hours. At night a ball was given, which was the nicest that lias been here. I believe I can safely say, iu years. The hall was crowded to discomfort, but j with all there was oue round of mirth and good will the entire night. These are the pleasant things we will like to remember on this Ith of July, lSy-t The unpleasant thing I will tell you. The bitter must be mixed with the sweet to make the sweet the sweeter. But does it? During the day, as is usual, someone must try tn put to shams this our inde pendence day. This time one man hit another a solid lick over the head that stunned bini a few minutes, but noth ing serions but arrests, if that is serious, came of it. At night about 2 o'clock Jim Holman stabbed an old erav-head- ed man, by the name of Scott. In this case only a little bad blood was drawn. Good came of that. There is one thing I would be glad for the readers of this paper to know that not in many cases is it citixens of this little town that carry on this warfare. In one case this time it was, but generally they are blood thirsty men outside some distance who come here to show ns the brave side of a cowardly life. In most case our men are quiet and law-abiding. Mitchell has the name of lieing one of the most vicious towns in the state. It i not an Eden, neither suburb; but does it is it belong to the J not so bad a the uame it carries. Once more must I chronicle the going out of a noble life. July 3d at hi home in Bear valley E. B. Allen passed on to a higher sphere. Since he was hurt two years ago he ha been partially par alyzed, and for the past few months has been gradually growing worse, until all Is over and he is at rest. He had passed the alloted time of three tcore and ten, and until he met with an accident by falling from a load of hay, he was very strong for one of his age. Do we grieve .l ... ... t i .t :i..... mat lie liaa jmeeeu over me arent river an(i mg ect now stanu on ttie mystic I grieve that thoee chilled numbed hands are cold and numb no more? IX we, . , , , ink r. M'.al. l.im t.a.r wlian. Hiirmiv 1 ....... .' I toil ana care uem ma snoiiuiers and were silvering his hair? Oh, happy rest to you who have gone before into the beyond faith made so inexpressi bly splendid I A noble, loving, true husband is irone : a dear, kind futlioria oul o( our .;Bht blt not dea(, waits for us with outstretched arms and loving smile beckoning us on to a higher, a truer life. Khed not a tear in torrow for his going. Let your tears fall for those that are left behind alone. K. V. K. Mitchell, July , 18!U. Now Try Thla. It will cost you nothing and will snro ly do you good, if you have a cough, colli, or any trouble with throat, chest or lung. I)r. King's Xew discovery for consumption, coughs and cohbi is guar- j anteed to give relief, or money will be i paid back. tMMlerers from la grippe : found it just the thing ami under its i use had a speedy and thorough recov eay. Iry n sample bottle at our ex- pense, and learn for voursolf just bow I good a thing it Is. Trial bottle free at j hnipe A Kinersly's drug store, targe tize 50r and $1. (let Vaur Maaay. All county warrants registered prior tn Anirttat 1 If. 00 will t.aM nn tentatlon at mv office. Interest ceases after July 12th. Wm. Mi;iiti.i., County Treaturer. WASHINGTON LETTER. Knit. i our n-irnlur i-orf --ittli-nl V .iiis.ion, July li, lrt'.U ' '"" ut '"' r:l.,i:: TVT reallv believe with M-nator Hill Ihiit Uie I tarill bill they lielja-d to puss and which he voted ag.tinst i a "rag-bag produc tion.B crazy iiiilt patchaork, a splendid nothing" may never lie known, but the more one talks with democratic senators on the subject the greater become the surprise that thirty-sevencd them should have voted for u hill which each and .,.ii i l -vi their I s ai.nir(!illl. , l,llrM,.t, olthough ( xWu nine y ri.,ll,illtic bargain when part of it was upset by the shrewdness of Senator Palmer, w ho secured protection for the barbed wire manufacturer of his st.ite. I'efl'er and Stewart voted with the republican against the bill. What the tariff bill is now cut a vury small figuro iu the discussion at present. It is w hat it will be when the conference committee gels through with it that everylnMly i interested in. The free i trailers of the house have received a I fresh infusion of murage lately and it is believed that most of it bears the Cleve land brand. If they can act up to their talk the (iorman-llriee trust conbinat ion, which made the radical changes in the bill iu the senate, will have their choice between surrendering or defeating the bill . but dumiiL'.tttic talk is .il.a..,u l.iL-... ..illi it liiir i.l lou-unt... ill i . i i. . 1 . prised to discover in the end that the free, trade members of the conference committee on the part of the house are just as susceptible to the power of the ! before, mentioned combination a the democratic senators were. There is some talk aliout the conference com mittee completing its work in a week, hut it doesn't come from those whose opinions are entitled to weight. If the committee can get through inside of four weeks it will bo surprising to the old stagers. Any attempt to predict the outcome at thin time would be only gues work, a there is alisolutely nothing in sight li xin which to base a prediction, the democratic senators claiming that i they intend to insist Uoii the senate amendments and the democratic mem ber of the house that nothing short of tiie Wilson bill will satisfy them. The probabilities are, uf course, that coniza tions will lie made on both side and that the bill as finally agreed upon will lie a compromise lietwe'ii the house and senate bills. Representative Babcot-k of Wisconsin, chairman of the republican congres sional campaign committee, in man who never allow hi wishes to rnn away with his judgment. He recog- I nizes the fact that so loi;g a the demo crats have the solid south to start with, and no federal election law to hamper them, the republican have no walk over in electing a majority of the house, but he calculates that by hard work the republican majority in the next house will be at least twenty. He think that few democrat will lie elected outside of the solid south, although they may hold their own on the Pacific coast and ia the liocky mountain country. He take no stook in the idea that the pop ulist will increase. On the contrary, he calculate that the two Mipulists from Colorado will ! succeeded by re publicans and that Kansas will have a solid republican delegation in the next house. Chairman hayers, of the Ikhiko coni rnittf on aipMiriutitiiH, says the joint rt-Milulion rxlfiidinn the appropriations of the last fital year until the first uf August, was pn-. ured at the treasury tlepartment, Ix-can-o it was inlenile.l that it should cover etery kind of ex peoilitiire nnder tiie government and keep everything KOiiig just as it was until the new appropriation hills could i Ittu-Aniu !. V . . Il i in n n . r v . I I. I tit r V lttTIH"ri J loruereil the suspension of hundreds of ordered navy yard employes, alli-ging that the joint resolution would not furnish the money to pay them. If there was a political reason for getting rid of some of the navy yard empjoyes to make va cancies to be utilized in the congres sional campaign tho end might have been accomplishi-d in a more manly way. What makes the thing look all llie worse lor het-retiiry Herbert is that the joint resolution is identical in word ing with the one that waa pitwtfd two years ngu, under which work whs con tinued iu the navy yard. Congress may or may not take action in connection with the railway strikes, but it is certain that it will not pas either the anarchist resolution intro duced by Senator Kyle at. the dictation of the strike lenders, or the crazy bill introduced in the house by Kepresettta tive Ilt-en of Minnesota, providing that mail trains slml', on interstate roads where a strike is in progress, consist solely of a locomotive and not more than two mail t ars. Can. Trnnhla ltplirttl In North Ilaknla. Fariio, N. D., July 15. The Northern Paeific strike situation is more compli cated tonight than lor the past week. The members of tho Switchmen's Mutual Aid Society, who had returned to work, all struck at 7 o'clock. The report of the shooting of Knglneer Mar I tin, a nonunion man, and Id HrmiiaQ j out In the Had Lauds, Montana, I confirmed by a private telegram tonlgtit. , 1 In,, .'i.t&'liov null Illl In tlta ..!.. . ; .bot both. lM.il. .re lackin,,. u both ate said to have died. Martin brought the first train cm the Nnrl. Pacific to this point, and coiikj,!,, a leader for the company against tht union. A Htrlkxr Khut y Hallway Clark la Ml, I'HIll- St. I'aVi., July M. Chris E. I-eonun a clerk of Ihu Oiiiuha road, shot and n. Mtautly killed Cha. J. I.utli, a trikiug switchman, in the laborer' home to night. Tiie shooting was the outcome of the strike. Leonard was arranging forth board of ten non-union employe uf th road when Luth Interfered. After strlk. ing a coniMnion of Leonard's, !.(, raised hi hand to strike Leonard anil wa shot four times, ih-ath resulting iu mediately. I-eonard at once gave him. self up to the police. Ilnrs ul Mu a Halllvninul. London, July 1". A dispatch to the Standard stale that the North Gernirj Gazette, commenting upon British iii. diation in theChincse.Japaiieaedisputr, says such a dictation doe not mean a settlement .as it is perfectly clear that Japan wants to profit by the tumble Ui push the Chine out of the peninsula. t'liiilr at Ml. retrraliurg. M. IVminiin:!., July LY There were reporteil iu this city yesterday "IS new cases of choiera ami lit' deaths. The physicians mid authorities are seriously alarmed bv the spread uf the cholera. Lhiliointi' Minitiiry precaution have In-en taken. The numan Electrical Forces! How They Control the Organs of the Body. The itrirli-al fnrf of the humin budy, as tin nvrw flu ul may Im v roiPii, 1 . an etp euilly atlRutivfciepurtniiii if 'lmice, ult M,rt-t n riiiirk tl nn lnHutncu on tlif healu. of Hm or at .hi "f IhIv iStirvH fin: to privliiri hy hrutu uml iHivyi by in .int nf nTW. in 1 hi- v .iriftj nriinnt of tin- !.-. ihiiiiitiflvi.ix tin Inl U-r wilii lt vlMlirv nvf"miry hi siirt f lifir iH-itilii. I It ' fmriiTNiriMftirir li rv v, :i . Nlitmn hin. uuiv I- .iil tit hi tin mm: nun f-'i in . of till' I'Mlltf h'TNf , .- Iimii. a- II Ukt I ' ill' h:irl I in iv. iiiu'li. Umv I t 111.1 ihtw fr ih-. ii v In IttM'.i litem H-ti un 1 (if i!hv. . w In it m ! I v Uii' ' in i in !' ; ;iti' fit'w'l'M'llM., f 'Oil I II ' h;. oi I lr I 'ft! 1 tiTinlu.it rt : In t -iN 1-ttn jincirnn;:!' r-. Willi'- III" IMUMViivil , n I it lir.lti '?!' iti;,j' tit In I ri . Im:.' it'l l .nut tt'-li witii n 'i ir vi twiiJty Jit'u in t nun Ih 'o:u in m . n iv ii nlrv.t liv Ir-rii.itiiilt? nr t xh.m ( 'uii I f.ivi' vvni'-h r 1 . I"4'Im. Hit 1 p ill- n fivtii: :::: bi UlllliMi- il -'n ii v .ipTu i' n I . i i U- ; I I'm tit riti if fnT;il v tilt' i II li n't III ' III IliU OtV-ltl ll-afif ,'! l if III' f'lll t H.HIU. 1 III lull It. 'II I I III fit. I. nf I Iti' lr.Mll. Itl Titr hoi.mI 1.1. II II I. i. .1. t r.i:,kll:i Mil. .. M. II . i. 1 1n- i .t ir.ri itt I.U llfrt i in. iih,.-.'i. uml titr tirin'-lrt-il 'i-pniit': it jr iltn. tiiltl-. I'lturt.. It III.' tllilv til. 'UVIT'I . In- Mi..'. I!. ...ill.. .N.'rtii.... tin. tiitri- tnU il hr.iii. 4t ti. I II..-I-..' f.ital. l-'iireii.irfilintli.i .niii iil.' i n:a nil n. r..u. ami ninny ttih.'r ll.tli-lliU.'s .irl-;iiiitt.' frtttn tllM.ruur t.f lint vrv huts li-. non ictful am cm... Ino i'ln ln-t' iliMinl.TM li tf, i n,tl in by tuuuauuii. Iu tv.rv i in uf I In' I. in, I. lli'.liir.ii'vi. .Sitvii... ftir. alaoplfaiinex, nr..i.t'. t.r.Mtr;tiii.it. tlimi.'t, livHi..rla. m.x ii. 1 1 il.-Dlliiv. M. ViliiHilitii.t.. fullt'iny, ftu. It b tn-.. fr.nn upliit. t tir tl.iiiir.'roiit tlrui(. It Isxil.l on h lafltlvi. auuniiii.tt hy all ilrnil" fMt. or x'nt ilir.'.-i l.y dm ir Mll.ii Jl.'ill. l o . I.lkl.arl. (nil , on ri-.-!t of prlt-a, fl VT Uiill. , six lailll.w forj, cxprt-M pn'puiil. A SHERIFF'S SALE. lly vlrlilt of an i'trruth.11 am! or...r of nl- 1 ii.il out ..( tliri in nil t onrt ol Uie him,. ,,l tlw Kuli lor Wane., ciiilitv, iimi a ilrrrw ami Jtatlar -mi-lit tna.l.., remlertil anil mla-ml l.y aniil rourt on IhH d.i ,v f May, l-t, In lv.,r ,.f llif l.lnlnlirt, In a ault wlirr.'ln K. '. i.mat.a'k nai plalnllir anil l.r..rif.' W Hal an.l Ktilllv Hall rr ili'l.-iiilnnlii, anil to me ln.'OU-.l ami tie liver. i, rtiiiinianiliMir tntt In Ihvv iiim.m an.l avll nil til" lainla menu. in.il anil 'liwrllaal III aal.l writ, ami li.-i.'liiill. r ile-etllml, I ilul on Hie IVIh ila of June I vii, .inly lew ti mm. ami will aelt at l.iililK' aii. lloii lo the hlKhv.l IhiMt for ciu.Ii In lianil on i hi' 1 iln il,iy i.l AiiKHit. I i'M, al 2 o clork In the alleinmli ol Mini tl,iv at the li.mt il.a.r of III ( onntv I null House In Imllrait lv, III aw ' v. OreKon. all ol the Uml ami r-m Im-h l.-aerlli it lii hiiI writ ami liaieiii .leM-rllail aa f.ilhma lowlt: lAilt 11. 4, ft, ami aontlieait iiiarter I1.) ot llorlhweat illarter f i) ol aeellon .1, (). iowII lil.on,. lisoiilh,taii(e llll.- n rnt, WIIUlll rile Merl.llall iuilliii.( I 11.77 a"e ol Intel, (II naletl, lyliiraml Is-iiik In V mmii roiiniv. treoii. los.'lher llll Urn tent HiPiita, hertilnnmelitj. an.l ni'imrti iinnr.i ilierennlo ! otiuniK or III anv wl e., rialnlnir.or an miieh th..re..f ahall 1st nlllleiit Ui aa'l.ly the mnof tl.ln wiili nW-r t therwiti at the rale of ,...i,t line the.ilil of Mv, lw.il, ami t-oim nli.irneva In; anil li.'.i. .! in aal.l aint lintellier will. Ihec.wU.nl aairt writ ami a.-eriilnn emi of wile. Ual.il at Iwllest lly, tirixoii, I line "i, A.D ls'Jl. T. A tt'AKII. MherlfTof Wiimt comity, tireHon. Jun.V) 1ST E3W ...vrraiiv -la -M ', I "1-1 PJHNZ & NIT8CIIKK DKAI.KKH IN Furniture and Carpets. We have added to our business a complete Undertaking establishment, and as we are in no way connected with the Undertakers' Trust, our prices wil be low accordingly. J ,tl TV Luderlakine Establishment