The Dalles weekly chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1947, September 01, 1894, PART 2, Image 2

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    THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1. 1894.
The Weekly Chronicle.
Bkml at the pitfttre at Tlw Pallia, Onitou.
aa accoml tiaaa bait matter.
HTATK orriCIAL.
Ajrarnor
Baerautry of Atatv
Tmuunr -
nut of Public Inairucuoa.
Attorney tiout?ral
salon
Conjrreeamtn.
tale WnlCT
H. PwnflTtr
II K km. aid
..Phillip MeU-cnau
U. M. lrm
.'. M Idlcmali
IJ. N. lMph
jj. II. Mitchell
(H. Herniauu
W K. Kill"
W. II. lMt
COUNTY OFFICIALS.
oanlT .
Uev Blaketey
T. J. Prlver
hertff.
C.kara
Treaaunar
Cemmiaaioucra .
V. M. kCUMT
Vim. Michel I
tKrauk Kinraid
j A. K Rlnwere
V. M. Waketield
anreror K- .shn
Bapenuwndent of Public BchooU . Troy Kneiiey
coroner . U.
FOR .1 SEW COSSTITCTIOS.
It is high time that the conetitution
of the itate be changed. It n all
rich, when il i? made, but it u
made (or fity thousand people, and it is
not a fit one (or live hundred thousand.
We have outgrown it, worn it out. I'n
der preeeut conditions it simply oper
ates to prevent the people doing any
thing that will be for tho interest of the
whole state. Indeed the affairs of the
state cannot be managed without vio
lating the provisions of the constitution.
The supreme court is compelled to wink
wisely at some things that are done be
cause the things are necessary in spite
of the inhibitions of the obsolete docu
ment we call the constitution.
The capital of the state ought to be at
Portland, where it is convenient to all
parts of the state; the state buildings,
while most of them are properly located
at the capital, should not be forced
there when the iutereeta of the state de
mand some other arrangement. This
is particularly true of the insane asy
lum and of the penitentiary. The one
should be located, or its branches should
be located, where the climate is best for
the i patients, regardless of where that
may be. The penitentiary should be
located convenient to tome atone quarry ,
or some place where work could be pro
vided for the prisoners.
The salaries of the governor, the su
preme judges, and other state officers
should be fixed in such sums as would
amply reward them, without piecing
them out by commissions, or some other
shift made necessary by the restrictions
of the constitution. Our elections
should be changed from June to Novem
ber, so that business is not interfered
with all summer every four years. The
expense of a constitutional convention
would be saved in a little while bv the
saving on extra elections alone.
We reed new constitution, and we
need it badly, and the coming session of
the legislature will be derelict in its
duty if it does not take the steps neces
sary to submit the question to the
voters.
SESSE VS. SOPIIOitOliE.
We feel that Bishop Joyce did not
mean to say what lie is reported as say
ing in his sermon last Sunday, to the
effect that newspaper men, most of
whom bad not attained the standing of
sophomore, were in the habit of criticis
ing religion. We do not believe be in
tended to convey the meaning that his
language indicated. There are several
reasons why we do not believe it. In
the first place, the bishop being an edu
cated, intelligent man, would hardly tie
guilty of throwing stones, because the
Methodist mansion is, in respect to
sophomores, composed laagcly of crys
tal. We noticed in the report of last
year's conference, held, we believe, at
Sookane. the requirements held to be
necessary to admit applicants to the
ministry, were rather brief, the last one
mentioned being that they "must have
common sense." There is nothing said
about collegiate education. In fact the
college graduates among the ranks of
the ministry are in a very large minor
ity, and this is especially true of the
Methodist church, which of all denom
ination is msst liberal in permitting its
members to fill its pulpits. Besides,
when Christ selected his twelve disci
ples be sought them not from among
the wealthy, not from among those who
had been given the opportunities for
higher education. There was not one
of tbem who had arrived at the dignity
of a sophomore's station.
In this connection we might add that
a college education does not necessarily
makean intelligent man or a successful
one. A calf may suck two cows and
only succeed in being a bigger calf; and
the saoie is true of humanity in regard
to absorbing the mental pabulum fur
nished by our colleges. Four-filths of
the college graduates are practically
failures in life. The "common sense"
required by the rules of the church to
permit members becoming ministers is
a much more important requirement
than the sophomore's education, and if
the good bishop meant what he said, he
himself is a fair demonstration of it.
TUE HARPIES GOSE.
Congress has adjourned and the coun
try can now apply arnica and stick
ing plaster to its wounds, knowing it
will receive no more for torn months at
least, and recover as best it may. The
president thanked both the house and
senate, and expressed the with that
jthey might have a rdeaaant vacation
The dispatches do not say whether or
not he Included Gorman, though, It
Is probable that he did, with the men
tal addition to his good wishes that in
that gentleman's case the said vacation
might extend over a period of time equal
to that mentioned in the marriage ser
vice.
We congratulate the president in that
he no longer has a congress on bis
hands ; the country on the fact that it
can take a rest, and congress for its op
portnnitr to take a much-needed and
long-continued rest. The president has
been so aiiuoved and harassed by the
congressional crows that for a while, at
least, he will be lonesome. Hut then,
when he feels that he can no longer ex
ist without the companionship of the
old congressional flock, he ran go to
Ituzzards bay.
President Cleveland has written I
letter to Congressman Catchings of Mis
sissippi giving his reasons for not veto
ins the Wilson bill., with Gorman's
brands and ear-marks on it. The presi
dent savs he is not bigger than his
partv, but that he is in accord with it.
Gorman has done at least one good
thing in convincing the president of
what common people knew before.
When be took Gresham for a bedfellow
he was not of his present opinion. lie
thought he was a great deal larger than
his party. As a result his administra
tion finds itself covered with mugwump
vermin, which serves only to make it
scratch.
The Tacoma affair was opened yester
day. United States Senator Watson C.
Squire was selected to press the button,
which from much practice in the polit
ical arena, he did with a delicacy and
precision of touch that prevented his
tine Italian hand being seen in the oper
ation. The crowd is estimated to num
ber 50,000, which would indicate that,
by the census, nearly two-thirds of the
citizens of the charming village were at
home. This proves conclusively that
Tacomaites are patriottc and that most
of them came home from the mountains,
in spite of the disugreeablenem of the
fair in time to swell the crowd.
Politics are getting warm in most of
the states, but Oregon has had her little
fever and recovered, and so can look on
calmly while her sister states wrestle
with the disease. The elections are
of more than usual interest, as they are
the first held since the tariff agitation
began, and as the successors of those
who passed the hill will be chosen, the
judgment of the people on the measure
will be learned from the ballot boxes in
November. Local matters will have
tome effect on the results, but taken as
a whole, the result of the November
election will be a fair expression of pub
lic opinion on the Gorman bill.
We acknowledge the receipt this
morning of the fifty-eighth monthly re
port of the Oregon State Weather Ser
vice, giving a detailed description of
weather conditions last January. It is
intensely interesting reading while the
thermometer is up near the hundred
mark, and shows the wisdom of Messrs.
Hayes and Blandford. Some persons, if
they had charge of the weather, would
get out the monthly report at the end of
the month, but Hayes and Blandford
ith a wisdom that compels admiration,
turn on their January weather report in
August, and the August varietv in Janu
ary. Great heads.
The last river and harbor bill pasted
by the recent congress provides, amongst
other things, $100,000 for The Dalles
boat railway. Some folks think this
ill cause considerable work here, but
they are badly mistaken. It will take
all of the amount to put the engineers
in a good humor, and make a prelimin
ary survey. It is largely a political
move, but still something may come of
it in the next twenty or thirty years.
With the experience we have had with
the canal and locks at the cascades,
Dalles people are not liable to grow en
thusiastic over the matter.
The Salem Independent reiterates the
charge the Lower Soda Springs were
poisoned. Amongst other things in
proof of its charge it adds that "not
long since a rank taste was noticed in
the Sodaville water, and upon opening
the reservoir where the water ia caught,
a litter of pups in an advanced state of
decomposition was ditcovered." This
indicates that the old Latin poet, Hor
ace, we believe, must have visited that
locality before he wrote those charming
lines beginning "0 Yer punr-ura"
'Violet-colored Spring."
August 30th has come and and is gone,
the earth has not quaked and the tidal
wave has not waved. The conjunctive
ness of Saturn, Jupiter and the other in
habitants of spare did not affect the
crust of the earth to make it heave,
f alb is no good ; he is a gay, giddy de
ceiver, who didn't have money enough
to visit the seashore, and maliciously
tried to drive everybody else home.
Falb coufdn't predict rain in Oregon in
March.
The name Gorman ia probably de
rived from gourmand and to in plain
English it a synonym for glutton, twine,
etc. This it according to the eternal
fitness of things, Gorman being the
great American hog.
SOME SALEM MISTERS.
The Salem Statesman couuiientiug on
what we said the other day, concerning
the stale fair, "that Eastern Oregou
would cheerfully assist in making some
other place the capital of the state," j
says :
"This unkindeat cut of all is from Tim
C11110Nu1.it, a paper published at 1 he
Dalles, which city reaps the benefit of !
the portage railway, which was built by
state appropriation. But Salem never j
objected to the appropriation. She 1-1
lioved it was for the best interest of the
state."
The Statesman dodges the question
that has stirred Kastern and Southern
Oregon up against her. It points to the
portage road at the Cascades, which cost
160,000, an amount about equal to that
expended on the dome of the capltol at
Salem the tame year. Of courte Salem
did not object to the building of the
portage at the Cascades. It would have
done so, however, if it had been possible
to move the Cascade to Salem. It
aomes with 111 grace from that paper to I
twit Eastern Oregon about the Cascade
portage, for years before Eastern Oregon
stood manfully by the Willamette valley
in constructing the locks at Oregon City.
Salem did not object to that either,
what the does object to is the building
of anv state buildings outside of the
reach of Salem. That the constitution
of the state gives her ground for this
contention we freely admit, but the
agricultural college, the soldiers' home
and other stale institutions have lieen
located elsewhere in violation of it. The
state constitution was made for a com
monwealth of thirty or forty thousand
people, and Oregon has outgrown it
We need a new one, or else such an in
terpretation of the present one as will
allow the state to do business. The
locating of a branch insane asylum in
Eastern Oregon is an absolute necessity.
It is needed to provide a place for the
treatment of the insane from the valley
and coast counties, because it gives a
change of climate and plenty of sun
shine, but the welfare of the insane
must stand to one side to satisfy the
grasping disposition of Salem. We are
not finding fault with the board locating
the asvlum elsewhere than at The
Dalles. We wanted it, it is true, but
when the board in its wisdom selected
another site, we acquiesced cheerfully in
its decision. It matters not to us a cent
whether the branch asylum is built or
not, but we reiterate the statement that
Salem's action has aroused the indigna
tion of the entire state, and that most of
the people feel as we do, that tne capitol
should be removed to Portland, which is
the traffic center of the state, and the
proper place for it. To get from one
sec tion of the state to any other the
traveler is compelled to para through
Portland. It is the natural and most
convenient place for the state capital,
and us fellows up in Eastern Oregon
stand ready to help remove it to that
point. If Portland will get a move on,
she can have the capital just as soon as
the constitution and laws caa bechanged
to permit it.
HEATS THE RECORD.
Ii Edward FoUom, aged 27, under ar
rest at Harnmond'port, X. V., is as
black a villian as be is painted, he is
easily the worst outlaw that ever lived.
It is charged that Fuleom, within the
past two weeks, planned three murders.
tried to rob a bank three times, passed
half a dozen lorged notes, attempted to
wreck a train, fired eleven buildings,
eloped with the prettiest girl in the
village and after the arrest twice at
tempted suicide. A companion obtained
money for him on .forged notes. One
was refused payment, and he plotted to
kill the cashier. The scheme fell through,
as the "pal" engaged for the deed lost
his nerve. On Friday last be placed an
iron rail on the Bath and Hammonds
port track, but the obstruction was seen
in time.
Over thirty fires have occurred in
Hanimondsport within the laftt two
months. On Monday last five houses,
four barns and a gristmill were destroyed.
When the officers appeared at Folsom'a
house last night the young man grabbed
a butcherknife and tried to cut his own
throat. He then dashed to the street
and threw himself in a near-by-pond.
He was nearly drowned. Folsoin's wife
is the seventeen-year-old daughter of the
wealthiest man in the village. The
ceremony was performed by a minister
who had previously been adjudged in
sane. .1 WRATUY AST.
An article in this family journal a few
days ago concerning Salem and the state
fair, aroused the wrath of the Statesman,
which makes a personal attack on the
writer hereof. We presume the article
was penned by C. 15. Irvine, as hia name
appears as manager of that paper. Here
is the way the gentlemanly editor rants
our horoscope :
"We are happily aware of the fact
that when the newspaper shyster
Cradlebatigh presumes to speak at
"Eastern Oregon," he doe to in an
equally representative capacity with the
three London tailors who spoke for "we,
the people of England," and it is not
particularly to reply to him that this
article is intended. He deserves neither
attention nor argument. He has never
been other in the newspaper business
than the hired tool of jealons opponents
of existing powers. A cheap ageucv
always sufficiently diaengaged to be
made use of in an endeavor to tear down
what honest worth and indtixlry and
I perseverance had built up to eneak in
and by tubtcrfuge, demagogy, pandering
t the lower prejudices of men and such
meant aa are known only to crlttert of
his ilk, divide public sentiment, create
I fictions and destroy the harmony of
I social and hi! itu-ul communit'iea. In
j this instance, he would feign muke him
self the chainpioti of one section of thej
slate against another, when in fact there
is neither quarrel nor ill will between
them except in so far as such a he can
creste it. Such ia the author of the fore
going, an irresponsible, tiuisution-loving
penny-a-liner, who is not happy unless
he it slinging mud at hit betters."
A careful perusal of the Statesman's
statement concerning our personal and
political proclivities will convince any
fair-minded man that Salem is not
swinioh, and that there is no ill-feeling
between Eastern Oregon and Salem.
The Statesman's argument is convinc-
inc. At to ita attack on the writer
hereof, we simply desire to lift our hat
to the gentleman who does the writing
for that journal, and to acknowledge his
unchallenged right to pose as a leader
iu Oregon journalism. His high sense
of honor, chaste language and nobleness
of character, should entitle him to the
respect and reverence of the fraternity.
S EVA DA UAS THE STRISCS
Mrs. W. K. Vandcrhilt, it is said, is
about to begin an action to separate her
self from her husband. It seems they
do not get along nicely together, it be
ing stated that she exacts too much and
her husband concedes too little. At any
rate there is a pretty mess of scandal
stirred up in Paris over Mr. Vander
bilt' openly expressed admiration for,
and association with an American grass
widow of the oligotokons variety, a Mrs.
Neustratter, formerly the wife of a cigar
drummer in San Francisco. The lady
was born in Eureka, Nevada, thirty
years ago, her father being a prominent
merchant of that sage brush city in It
palmiest dayt. She is said to lie the
handsomest woman in Paris, and when
Mr. Vanderbilt first met her the tun
light of a love as warm as high noon in
Yuma in August poured into the deep
est recesses of his aorta. He would
have surrendered to her charms, but he
did not have time, to he just succumbed.
He presented her 40,000 francs, taught
ber a palace, and dressed her servants
up in the tume gaudy livery that was
worn by those of his wife. In short, he
seemed troubled with a desire to tee
how many kinds of a burro he could
make of himself at once, aud succeeded
in breaking the record in that line with
out a akip.
Mrs. Vanderbilt, having to draw the
lino somewhere, naturally objected to
Mrs. Neustatter't servants wearing the
Vanderbilt livery. She very properly
desired the public to know the Vander
bilt uniform only accompanied the Van
derbilt family, and objected to that uni
farm being to used as to place her in a
false position. The result of it alt is
that the Vanderbilt friends are crossing
the wide ocean numerously to get tome
kind of a pea-e patched up between
them. The chief peace-maker is a Mr.
Jay, who is all that his name suggests
for having anything to do with the
social decoction. In the meanwhile the
pretty little Jewess is assisting William
in sowing a goodly portion of the old
commodore's wealth, and it not bother
ing herself about what either the world,
Mrs. V. or the d 1 think of her.
Just for a little comparison to show
that our worthy friend of' the Salem
Statesman ia a consistent gentleman, we
quote two sentences from the article in
which be makes a personal attack on the
editor of Ins Cukonicle. He says:
"It it not our purpose now to discuss
the legal aspect of the branch asylum
question, aa there ia doubtful merit in
the position of man who ttandt forth
and openly advocates a disregard of
fundamental law which happens to
stand in the way of local ambition."
And then speaking of Salem'e legitla
tors, he taya: "They voted for the lo
cation of the branch asylum in Eastern
Oregon despite their knowledge of its
unconstitutionality, simply from pure
seneroauy to those people." It will be
teen from thia that it ia high treason fur
an Eastern Oregon citizen to tuggest a
change in the constitution ; but a com
mendable act for a Salem legislator to
violate it.
It is a pity that the ataiving stock of
Kansaa and Nebraska cannot be shipped
to Oregon to fatten on the ten cent
wheat that ia piled np through thia
country. If our wheat growers bad the
capital to purchase hogs feeders and
put their wheat into them, we feel cer
tain that instead of ten cents bnshel it
would net from fifty to seventy cents.
We are told by the newspapers of the
East that stock hogs can be purchased
for a trifle, that horses are being killed
to prevent their starving. It teems aa
though tome arrangement could be made
with the railroadtto transport thia stock
cheaply to that profitless grain and
starving animala could be brought to
gether. There would be big profit in
the transaction and ties ides it would
demonstrate the feasibility of raising
hoga en wheat, and so put life into a
new industry.
Jew York Weekly Tribune
AND
Danes inf eeniu earamcie
ONLY
THE CALIFORNIA WINEHOUSE.
-Al l
California Wines
FREE DELIVERY TO
Call on or address C8AS.
SHERIFF'S SALE.
By virttH' ol an execuUnn burned nut of the
Circuit uurt ( the htntu ol Onipin Im Ituni
County, In a ult therm pendlne: wherein K. I..
Htnttli platiilitl ami M V. Ilarriann. Hophla M.
llarrteon, iamca W. Hmlth, John khmtertnali.
K. H. lameii, lining btialueea under the name ni
K. H. Laiaen A Co.. Jnbn (r. Miller, Kmantiol
MlUcrand Jamea It. Watt, partner doing buai
nvaa nuuVr the firm name of Jonn (. Miller A
Co., John Murphy, Adam (irant. J. 1). Oram and
J. T. Ford, partner dntiiff buaiuemi titular the
lino name ol Murphy, 4, rani At Co.. I.arrvlaon,
Womlrurt, I'ratt ComiMny. a corporation; t- M.
Ilctiflcraon A; Co., a corporation : A. h. IMnntt
ami K. A. liartmi-if an. ilt-ft-mlantw. on !Ji 'Ailh
lay of July, ltl. I will aell at Public Alirtion to
inr tiiuhc.t otiiiicr lorra.h In hatiil.al the Court
tlouat- door in iMillrx Cttv. (irvaon. on tin- tint
(lay of i-itcmxT, IKM. at tin- hour of J o rba-k
In thr afu-riioti of aanl uny.all of Ihw riKhl,
title anil liilrri-t of ra-h arid all of lliralnnrr
naiunt l (-nil.int in ami to tin- followltiK '!'
rnwii tvai property lyinif ami iliial- In ttaf i
County, orivnn. to lt:
All of lota one, two. thrpc, four, Iwentv nvr I
twenty. lx, tx-ntv-.ivm and tuentv-riKht In !
block four of ttauroma A'tillllon M tile li.wn nf I
l!il lllcr: bIpmi loin om-and two of Muck lour
In VVhiHlm Addition to the town ol lloal Itlver .
alo blia-k two ami lot our In block four In the
town of I'arklilliM. T. J. IMtlVKK,
J M HhcTtlTof Wwni county, or
SHERIFF'S SALE.
l'uriuant to the command nf a writ of execu
tion itaiicd out of the circuit Court of the Miale
of Ort-Kim for W aeo Countv In a nit therein
penduiK wherein I.. I.. Mr( artney i. plaintm
and John Adama and C. K. Ilalsiit arc defend
anta, itatcil Ai;inl .11. wi, rmnnmndinr me to
ell all the rlitht, title aud Interest of aald do
lenuanta and cai-h ol llieui In aud to tlinaouth
eaat (tiarterof aectlnn nine, lowfithlp two aouth,
ol range ln.irle.-n eaat, W. H., to mU.fv the an in
of I'Jl.Tn and inti-reat tliercnn Irom June j.tli ,
lf. at the rule of leu per cent per annum and
the further aum of -.J on attorney a In-aatid the
nm of .,i' tint and dlabunu-nicuta, due to
aald uialn'lfl Iron, aald defendant John Adam.,
and to apply the aurplua It any In payment ol
the anni of .i;i..Vi and lnten-at thereon at the
rataul ten percent per annum lnn anld June
2ith, WM, and ttt.tM atbirner a lee, due Irom the
defendant John Adama In tha defendant C. K.
Ilaurht, I will, on hatunlay Ibanthdayof hept
embvr, 1M, at the konr of 2 o'clock tu Ihe aller-
iiimmi. at the CtfirtluiiiMA l,wt !. 1,11.. .-i...
Orctron, ael all Mid alaiva deM-rllx-d real
prmwrty at public aalo In the hiKht bidder lor
caan in nauu.
T. J. IlKIV KK.
aug-l M.
HiierlrTof Waaco County, Or
Notice of Adminislrafor's Final Account
Notice la bere-hy f Wen that J. W . Condon, ad
mlntatrator of the ealale of liarriaon Cornm.de.
caaaedbaa filed hla llual account of Ihe admlnla
tralionnf aald eatatc with tbeclerk of theCnunty
Court of the mate of Orcitno. for Waaco County,
and that said Court haaappolnhil in o clock a in
of Monday, HeDtember ill. ImM. heine th., iirat .i.J
of the rettu.ar tx-ptcmber term of aald Court lor
the year .l, at the County Court llotiae In
iMllee City. Ilmnn, aa the time and place for
tba bearing of objrrtiima to ueh mini account
and IhcMtllemeiit Ihrreof.
Tbla notice a puhliahed bv order of aald
County Court made aud enteicd Jul v V7th. Ii
J. W. ciiNliuN,
Administrator.
NOTICE FOU rUKLICATIOX.
I'. B. l.Aiin DrncK, The Iialle. Or.,
... , , . An 2i. .n. j
Notice la hereby Riven that the InllowiiiK
named eettler baa lllcd notice of hia intention to
make final proof In aupH,rt nf hla claim, and
that aald prtad will be made before the kulier
and Keceiver at The liallea, Oregon, on ta-to.
ber loth, liH, vlr:
Homer White,
"i N",J; ''"the n'.ae',-, nr'4 nwj w' :
ee'i.ece2, Ins, arl2c, win.
lie name Ihe lolkrwinir wllne-a to prove hia
COIHlr"i"" r,',1'',,',"'c "l"n '! cultivation ol
A. Cilery, N. O. Weber. W.
McClure, all of Waplnilia, or.
V. McClure, A.
NOTICE FOU FUULICATION.
C. K. l..;n Orni'K. The Dnllea, Or,,)
. -,," '" i
Urniplfilnt huTinjr been enter.il at thia office
by frank Malnue analnat John Vrvdt for ahan.
dnnln hla homeau-ad entry, No. 4:ui, dated
March . W!, up,,,, the K'X HWU, NWU HWV.
and Mwlj NW' hcc. lO. Tp. H V. R lif K, in
Waaco County, Oreton, with a view to thncau
ceiiatinn of aald entry. Ihe aald partlee are In-re.
by aummnned to ap-r at thia ottlce on the mill
day nf rteptember, ln, at In o cluck a. m., to
reapond and limilah teatlmony coticernlnc aald
alleiced ahandonmet t. K. M. hhutt. II. 8. Com
mlaaioner, la authorized to take tiwtlmonv at
Antelope, Oregon, on Heptainber Mil, Iau4,at
10 o clock a. di. '
JAU. r MOORC. Rcfrl.u.
- $1.75.
KISIW OK
at Low Prices.
ANY PART OF THE CITY.
BEC8T" The Dalles, Or.
PIONEER HERD
POLAND CHINA UOGS
ron sAXaiis.
Thirtv-five head fur 1SW, aired by
( euter rrew Trade, sou of the lireat
Free Trade hog of Ohio, told fur S0O,
the highest priced hog ever anld in the
1'nited Mutes, aaaited bv son Tecuinsah
Chip Jr LMKhil, sold for $aKJ.
Owing to the hard times, I will sell
for the next three months, mv liigs for
(20 each, or Ktt per pair. Will bo and
deliver at nearest station free.
Come and iw them or write.
No Iiiim m ens done on Sundays.
KHWAKD JCPY,
t'enterville, Wash.
A. A. Brown,
Kecpa a lull aaaorUMiit ol
Staple and Fancy Groceries,
and Provisions.
which be often at Low Ftguraa.
SPECIAL :-: PRIGES
to Cash Buyers.
Hintest Casl Prices for 1m aflJ
otter Proince.
I 170 SECOND STREET.
Wasco ivarenouse Co.,
Receives Goods on Stor
age, and Forwards same to
their destination.
Receives Consignments
For Sale on Commission.
Rotes RcoBonble.
j y
sw -4EL
MARK (l(K)l)tl
W. W. OOe
THI DALIKD, OK