C2J THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY. APRIL 10, 1895. The Weekly Ghf oniele. tHIt DALLKH OREGON Entered at the postoffice at The Dalles, Oregon, as second-class mail matter. STATE OFFICIALS. ajvernoi W. P. Lord Secretary of State HE Klncaid Treasurer Phillip Meteehan apt. of Public Instruction G. M. Irwin Aitorney-uenerai n. jaieman Benators. Congressmen. . State Printer. JG. W. McBrlde f J. H. Mitchell I B. Hermann W. R. Ellis ....W. H. Leeds COUNTY OFFICIALS. County Judge. Geo. C. Blakeley Sheriff. T. J. Driver Clerk A. M. Kelsay Treasurer win. Micnen .. (Frank Kineaid )A. S. Blowers Assessor F. H. Wakefield Surveyor E. F. Sharp Superintendent of Fublic Schools. . .Troy uneney Coroner W. H. Butts we needed. Those were our two indue tries.. We are shipping hogs and hog products, we are shipping eggs and but ter, we are shipping canned salmon, and carloads of the royal fish from The Dalles grace the tables of the money kings of New York-. We are shipping "sea bass." We are supplying Butte and Helena and Kansas, Denver, Lead vine, Salt Lake, the cattle men of Wy oming and the miners of Montana, with strawberries, $100,000 worth of crimson lusciousness every spring. We are ship ping peaches and grapes and carloads of mnskmelons and watermelons, that have filled their round bellies from the honey dews that fall on our hillsides. Be' aides this we ship more wool than any town in the United States. We have only begun. Wasco's future is in her orchards, and that future is in deed a bright one. OREGON AND WASCO. DEPTH OF THE OCEAN. The letters in the Oregonian on the subject of Oregon and its interests are" decidedly, interesting. They are full of hope for the state, and all indicate that the turning point in Oregon's history from the old days of spending to those of saving, has been passed. When the Willamette valley was first settled, nat urally from the remoteness from In view of the fact that the depth of the ocean has never been fathomed, it is impossible to tell if a piece of solid iron will go to the bottom. Close to the east coast of Japan the current flows through a marine valley, which, in 1875, was sounded from the United States steamer Tuscarora to a depth of 5J miles. The heavy sounding-weight took more than mark- an hour to sink to the bottom. A trial ets the chief industry was stock-raising, because the flocks could be driven to market. ' This era did not last long, and as the prolificness of the soil became known and markets available, the stock man gave place to the wheat-grower. The example set by Galifornians of growing nothing but wheat was followed just so long as prices were high. The soil responded so generously that even this farming was done in a slip-shod and slovenly manner. But steadily de- dining prices, heavy store bills, fol lowed by mortgages given to obtain temporary relief and lasting annoyance, caused tho more thrifty of the farmers to turn their attention to other crops. With thousands of acres of stubble, with abundant pastures, and no incon eiderably supply of mast, the farmers up to the time mentioned had not taken the trouble to raise hogs, because to keep them ont of the grain fields re quired good fences, and, though such material was certainly plentiful enough, good fences required considerable work, and work was not what the farmer of those days was looking for. There were too many deer in the woods, and the fishing was too fine to be neglected for the prosy employment of mauling rails and laying up worm fences. The wheat crop was raised, hauled to- the river bank, and turned over to the merchant to apply on the store account. It was a season of big prices, big crops, big store bills, big spendings, and big deficits at the end of the year. Those days are gone forever. Shift lessness has given place to thrift. In' stead of importing bacon and ham, shoulder and lard from the East, we are supplying ourselves and finding a small quantity for export. Instead of car loads of butter coming from Iowa, we are making butter to ship. Instead of eastern or California eggs, the Oregon hen is gladdening the farmer with her lay, a catchy song, with a jingle of coin in it, coin from the east, where the hen frnit of Oregon is finding market : coin from Manhattan, ttie home of the Stuy vesants and the Van Renselears, to pay for eggs laid within sound of the Pacific to feed the 400 in the metropolis on the Atlantic. Our cattle are going East by the train load, our sheep are sent by the thousands, and a constant stream of Oregon potatoes are following them to feed the spudless of the East. We have learned a thing or two by hard knocks, and the result is surprising us. There are some other places that are going to be surprised, too, in the near future. One of them is California, and the others are some of the eastern states that have been buying California's fruit, She is going to have a rival, and one that will make her hustle to hold her supremacy. Wasco county is going to assist largely in accomplishing this re sult. It is the best fruit county in the state, and therefore in the world. You just mark our words that inside of five years Wasco county apples will be known all over the United States. The winter apple is king. There is never too many of him. Side by side with the vaunted oranges of California and Florida he bids for popular favor, and brings the highest price, bushel for bushel. The apple is on top. He is going to stop there. was made of a chasm still deeper where the lead did not fetch up bottom, and this is said to be the only ocean depth tnat remains nnfathomed. As. to how far a solid piece of iron will sink depends upon the size of the piece and upon the density of the water. Scientists assert that at a depth of 6000 feet in the ocean the water is so dense that each square men will support a weight of 2,648 pounds.--ban f rancisco (Jail. It is astonishing that a paper of the standing of the Call would be guilty of such ignorance. Its writer fails to rec ognize the difference between hydro statics and solidity or density. ' Water is practically incompressible, hence even at the bottom of the ocean a cubic inch of water would weigh but little more than the cubic inch at the surlace, and hence would be displaced as easily by a ball of lead as if at the surface. The hydrostatic pressure is caused by the fact that the square inch at the bottom has the weight of all the cubic inches between it and the surface on top of it, and instead of being one cubic inch, as far as its pressure goes, has the weight of an Inch square as many inches high as the water is deep above it. If, as the Call asserts, one equare inch of water will support a weight of 2,648 pounds at the depth of 6,000 feet, on ac count of its density, then no object could possibly be found heavy enough to sink to that depth. The hydrostatic pressure is practically forty-two pounds to each 100 feet, the density of the water but little greater, even at the greatest depths. THE MORAL WAVE.' Patronize home industries if you want your town to prosper. No matter what they are, if you need their products buy from your own people. That will build up your town, will keep money at home, and will encourage others to put their money into business enterprises. Spo kane has adopted this system, and every citizen feels it a bounden duty to in quire, when he desires to buy anything, if that thing is made in Spokane. If it is, he buys it and will take no other. That is business sense, and Spokane is feeling the effects of it. There is not an article manufactured in Spokane, but that has run all competitors out of the market, and has reached out into the surrounding - territory for markets. Bear this in mind all the time and spend your money with your own peo ple. The trial of the Marquis of Queens- berry for Blander of the sunflower es thete, Oscar Wilde, came to a sudden termination yesterday. The marquis admitted using the language he was charged with, but asserted the state ments he bad made that Wilde was guilty of unnatural crimes was true. His counsel yesterday offered to put witnesses on the stand to prove that the assertions the marquis had made were nothing but the truth, when Oscar, fearing the result of their testimony, withdrew bis charges and virtually con fessed that the statements were true. And this is the came poetaster our American niceties went "Wilde" over a few years ago. There seems to be a fatality hanging over the editorial force of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Mr. Heilbron, the He was the king of editor, died of apoplexy yesterday. His fruits in Paradise before the fall, the predecessor, Mr. Grant, took passage choice of the first lady in the land, and a short time ago on the ill-fated the first gentleman. Wasco county is ship, Ivanhoe, which was never heard his home because it is the nearest Para- of after she left port. Col. Haines, an- diee of any spot he ever found. We are other editor, and a man of magnificent raising him numerously. Three years physique, was taken suddenly ill three from now we will ship 200,000 bushels years ago, and in a week was a corpse, of him. Ten years will see the figuers Three editors in three years, all strong tip to near the million bushel mark, and apparently healthy men, with the We know that outsiders will think we promise of long life, is literally crowding are trying our lungs through our Easter the mourners. Mr. Heilbron's life was bonnet, but we know what we are talk- insured for $147,000 ing about. The yo.ung trees are grow ing, beginning to bear. Hood River has An exchange in -its column devoted to thousands of them, Mill Creek has other ecret societies says: "A deaf-and- tbousands. Mosier and Dufur and 3- dumb fellow named F. J. Vaughn is a Mile are tip in the front ranks, and fraternal bilk. He is now in Missouri thousands of more trees are being set Bear nlm in mind." A fraternal bilk is every year. Six thousand trees are go- "something new under the sun. ing out in one orchard near The Dalles, That's what a fraternal bilk is, and every precinct and neighborhood in the frnit belt can tell a similar tale. J0B-, A- eters & Co. have cord wood, We nsed to be on the old lay out of which is desirable in all respects, and raising wheat and baying everything rcBlJCT;MU"y bqiici- youroruers, else; of selling cattle and buying all else all druggist sell Dr. Miles Pain Pin The moral nave that started in New York city from the organization of the Lexow committee has swept accross the continent, and broke upon the shores of the Pacific with a rush not equaled else where in its course. Portland has 1 bad. If it would lead to anything in the shape ot a better execution of the laws every good citizen would wish it more nower to its elbow. But it will not do this, History repeats itself and the his tory of reform waves, similar to this one do not indicate for it any great length of existence. Epidemics of morals run their course just as epidemics of measles or whooping cough, leaving the patient a memory only of what was. The trouble with the moral wave is that it is generaly started in good faith, but as it works alonsr it becomes befouled from contact with the debris which it meets and the great, broad American mind begins to use its power for its financial betterment. The history of great cities of all of them, shows that the laws are not enforced concerning gambling and some other offenses, simply because the officers appointed to execute the law find it more profitable to imitate the goddess of justice by being blind. There is more money for them in not arresting offenders than in performing their duty, since they draw pay from the city for doing what they are yet better paid to leave undone. The moral wave makes its influence felt first on these officers, because the fear of losing their jobs' compels tbem to become suddenly vir tuous enough to do their duty. They are moved the more easily to this course by the fact that the aforesaid wave sud denly throws all its profits on the side of morality. The hunted hare must hide from the hounds, and vice for the moment driven from cover, ceases its practices, and consequently shuts off the fees it has paid for protection. The police force of the large cities then find ing virtue profitable, first endure and then embrace. The jingling fee comes in a golden shower, until for yery lack of material to work upon the moral wave ebbs, vice that has been in hiding peeps timerously out, and seeks its old haunts. It finds the same old guardians of the peace on hand and ready for another dicker, which is soon made. By im perceptible degrees the dice and the poker-deck find their way to the tables ; the hand-painted dieciples of Baal re pair their erstwhile deserted temples and the devotees gather to their old high places. In the meanwhile virtue, satis fied, with her spasmodic sweep of the field, hunts her sleepy hollow, and takes a Rip-Van-Winkle nap. The moral wave having spent its force, recedes and is quiescent, until things have come to such a pass that the public is aroused in some city, virtue gets out her reform wave, and the farce is acted over again, The moral wave is simply the result of an acute attack of spasmodic virtue. It accomplishes good, temporarily, but not permanently because public ' virtue is always spasmodic. On the other hand vice is like interest on a morgage it never sleeps, never tires, never quits A gangrene or the body politic, it eats little by little into the healthy flesh and leaves putridity and death behind it, The preeent wave will be no exception, and pity 'tis 'tis true. The "Open Door will grow tiresome and the wherewithal of maintaining homes of refuge will be wanting. Besides those who have been or are sheltered in these places grow weary. They hunger for the excitement the abandon of the wild life they have led, as the morphine fiend for his dope, or the besotted unfortunate for his drink. There is no Keeley cure for vice, and sooner or later nine tenths, aye ninety- nine one hundreths of the brands plucked from the burning will find their way back to the tire. Focilit descensus Averno, is as true and trite a statement now as when Virgil penned it, and "to draw back the footsteps this is a work this is a labor" just as bard as it was 2,000 years ago. There is no grander work than the reformation of the fallen, and none requiring so much work for so meagre results. The woman of Babylon knows not the way out of her city. She is lost, swallowed up in its mazes. The bridges are burned behind her. The "Open Door" permits her to be an ob ject of pity, but it cannot open for her the way to respect. It is a wicked, a cruel and unjust law of civilization that the. woman is punished forever for what the man is forgiven. It is monstrous, but it is the eocirl fiat just the same. We may contemn it. but ' we cannot change it. 1 he ethiopian cannot change his skin or the leopard his spots and they who are accustomed to doing evil are like unto them. Between a democratic congress, an Ore- riyinc to Portland. gon legislature and the United States San Francisco, April 6. Tho pigeons supreme court, the seed of populism is belonging to H. Mills and F. Hoffman, being sowed broadcast. The harvest of Portland, Or., which are to participate will be more thistles than figs, and more in a 700-mile race for $500 a side, June trouble than prosperity. Recant Storms In Kansas and Colorado. Denver, April 8. Belated travelers from the East report the storm through Kansas the worst ever known in that section. Many passenger trains,' now more than forty-eight hours late, are Still battling with snow and sand on the prairie. Superintendent Bogard, of the Union Pacific, with headquarters at Cheyenne Wells, has a large force of men cleaning tracks. In places within sixty or seventy miles of Denver snow was found in cuts from thirty to forty feet deep, being over the tops of telegraph poles. Trains are getting through on -all roads today. lhe loss of range stock: in some por tions of eastern Colorado, it is said will amount to 20 per cent, of the cattle. Many cattle drifted into Hugo, Colo. and perished, which had been driven before tbe wind from the north over one hundred miles. 10, left this city on their second training trip this evening at 7 o'clock. There are fourteen of the birds, seven belong. ing to Mr. Mills and seven to Mr. Hoff man. They are being trained by B. Strouss. Two of them left on their first trial trip March 11, at 9 o'clock in the morning. Mr. Strouss received a letter from Portland Friday saying one of the pigeons had arrived, making the trip in nine hours, while the other pigeon ar rived three hous later. Tbe distance is supposed to be. 700 miles on tbe air line, Both birds arrived in good condition. They were all shipped back here Thurs day of this week, and will snake one more trial trip after the one started yes terday before the match in June. When tbe pigeons soared into the air this morning they circled about over the city for less than a minute, and then sat isfying themselves as to the proper direc tion, they took wing for the north and were soon lost to view amontt tbe clouds. It is expected some of them will make the trip in less than eight hours, or at the rate of nearly a hundred miles an hour. They will be sent back soon after The Farmer Was Badly Fnszled. A Household Treasure. D. W. Fuller, of Canajoharie, N. Y,, says that he always keeps Dr. King's New Discovery in the house and his arrival for the third trip, family has always found the very best results follow its use; that he would not be without it, if procurable. G. A. Farmer Oatcake, who, with his good Dykemnn Druggist, Catskill, N. Y., says wife, Mandy, is on a brief visit to a that Dr. Kings New Discovery is un- daughter-in-law in Buffalo, looked over doubtedly the best cough remedy ; that the newspapers to find a church service he has used it in his family for eight on the following day which he might t- One in Four. One nerson In four has a weak- m Hhmh heart that entirely unfits them for business is simply a little annovlnir. and social life, or Disease is never at a standstill. When the trouble first commenced, "Ohl well, it don t amount to much," and you let n go, let me disease insiuuousiy get the mas tery of you. You lose all courage; the slight est exertion tires you; your feet, ankles and legs swell; you cannot lie on your left aide. Finally, you become so bad that you cannot lie down without smothering, and are com pelled to get what sleep you can in a chair. You are urged to avoid this. You are invited to get well. Have you the least little ambition left? Mrs. Ellsia Casslday, a mill employee of Lowell, Mass., had slight heart troubles many years ago. She neglected it for years. Her son Cells the story best In his letters. Lowell, Mass., April 8th, 18M. I must tell of the wonderful things your Heart Cure has done for my mother. She is 68 years of age, and always had good health until a severe cold left her with a alight heart trouble, which kept Retting worse and worse. Physicians called It bronchitis of the heart seven .years ago, bnt they did not help her: we had the best physicians in Lowell. 6 ha would take weak, fainting and palpltat- nt ana Ing spells; several times we thou wouia not live to see morning, and every spell seemed to be worse than the last. On March 18th, she was prepared for death and we watched for her last breath, but reviv ing aomewhattl was prompted to try your Heart Cure. We fonnd it to relieve her al most immediately, and she is now using the third bottle, and thanks be to God and your medicine she has had no more spells and goes np stairs as well as ever and don't have to stand and wait for breath. Her cough has left her. I write to let you know, as there are others suffering same as she. Mother says May God bless jou every day of your life" . . Lowell, May 7, 11. "Mother tells everybody in nraisa of mnr medicine which saved her from the grave; she is gaining strength and flesh every day. No palpitation or trouble of the heart at all now, and is at work every day since I wrote you last. If any person wishes any informa tion, we will be only too glad to nave them write or come to see us and will give full par ticulars concerning tbe good your valuable Heart Cure has done her. We remain yours 23Tnorndlke6t. JOHN T. CASStDY, Dr. Miles' Heart Cure is sold by druggists tive guarantee, it toe In vou. vour monev la refunded. Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart. Ind srrwhere on a nositlve guarantee. nrst Dot tie does not hoi years, and it has never failed to do all that is claimed for it. Whv not trv a remedy so long tried and tested. Trial bottle at Snipes-Kinersivs Drug Co.' Drug Store. Regular size 50c. and $1.00. The President Pleased Chicago, April 8. A special to the Daily News from Washington says : I am deeply gratified by the stand Senator Palmer has taken against tbe proposed free silver convention in Illinois," said President Cleveland to one of his callers today. The president discussed the new silver movement at considerable length, and deprecated the action of the Illinois state committee. Politicians who are acquainted with Senator Palmer's pri vate views on the silver question read between the lines terview this morning his party that if the June convention de ciared for free silver he will leave the party and carry with him a large fol lowing of administration democrats. tend with hope of securing spiritual sat- r MllPS' HPA!"! flliFP flllRFX !:.. ir i a t-i .v aivuia wwiv wwiibw iaiabiuu, lio owu gicaucu bunk luu following scriptural subjects would be discussed from various city pulpits : "Is the 'Trilby Craze Dying Out?' Fitzsimmons vs. Corbett." Japan's Demands, London, April 5. A Shanghai dis patch has reported "that the principal "How the Pastor Spends His VacaA conditions of peace include the independ- tion." ence of Corea, the payment of an indem- "Should Our Daughters Marry Foreign nity of 400,000,000 yen and the cession Noblemen?" to Japan of Formosa and Liao, including High Sleeves and Theater Hats." Port Arthur. The cession of Liao Tung The Gold Brick Saloon." and Port Arthur, are objected to by tbe "Canal Street on Saturday Night." Chinese Wordsworth and the Lake School of Poetry." 'The Fifty-Third Congress. 'Bights of Motormen." Farmer Oatcake gaye it up after awhile i of bis published in- and laid down the PaDer "ay"1, with a store, opened the ing a plain warning to B!h: "Laws Bake Mandy' d be- and got away wi Specimen Cases. S. H. Clifford, New Cassel, Wis., was troubled with neuralgia and rheumatism, his stomach was disordered, his liver was affected to an alarming degree, ap petite fell away, and he was terribly re duced in flesh and strength. ThTee hot' ties of Electric Bitters cured him. Edward Shepherd, Harrisburg, 111., had a running sore on his leg of eight years' standing. Used three bottles of Electric Bitters and seven boxes of Bucklen's Arnica Salve, and his leg is sound and well. John Speaker, Cata- waba, O., had five large fever sores on his leg, doctors said be was incurable. one bottle Electric Bitters and one box Bucklen's Arnica Salve cured him tirely. Sold by Snipes & Kinersly. William Henderson Dead. Glasgow, Adril 8. William Hender son, the last survivor of the founders of the Anchor line of steamships and of the firm of Henderson Bros., the famous boatbuilders, is dead. Colombian Bxiles at Colon. Colon, April 8. The steamer De Les- seps has brought from Costa Rica to this port a number of Columbian exiles. The strike of laborers along the line of the Panama canal continues. THE BUSINESS MAN'S LUNCH. Hard Work and Indigestion go Hand in Hand. The supreme court of the United States has decided that the income tax law is unconstitutional, in so far as it taxes incomes from rents and municipal bonds. Tbe court holds that taxing such incomes is indirectly taxing the lands, and this the government is for bidden by the constitution to do. This may be good law, but it is certainly neither good sense nor good policy just now. The great mass of the people have about arrived at the conclusion that anything that taxes the very wealthy is unconstitutional. They do not under stand those nice distinctions of tbe law that permits the food and raiment of the poor man to be taxed, while the rich man's income and money is sacred from the polluting touch of the tax gatherer. Concentrated thought, continued in, robs the stomach of necessary blood, and this is also true of hard physical labor. When a five horse-power engine is made to do ten horse-power work something is going to break. Very often the hard- worked man coming from the field or the office will "bolt" his food in a few min utes which will take hours to ditrest. Then too, many foods are about as useful in the stomach as a keg of nails would be in a fire under a boiler. The ill-used stomach refuses to do its work without the proper stimulus which it gets from the blood ana nerves. The nerves are weak and "ready to break," because they do not get the nourishment tlfey require from the blood, finally the ill-used brain is morbidly wide awake when the overworked man at tempts to find rest in bed. The application of common sense in the treatment of the stomach and the whole Rvstem briners to the busy man the full en joyment of life and healthy digestion when he takes Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets to relieve a bilious stomach or after a too hearty meal, and Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery to purify, enrich and vitalize the blood. The " Pellets " are tiny sugar-coated pills made of highly concen trated vegetable ingredients which relieve the stomach of all offending matters easily and thoroughly. They need only be taken for a short time to cure the biliousness, constipation and slothfulness, or torpor, of the liver; then the "Medical Discovery" should be taken in teaspoon fur doses to in crease the blood and enrich it It has a peculiar effect upon the lining membranes of the stomach and bowels, toning up and strengthening them for all time. The whole syBtem feels the effect of ths pure blood coursing through the body ana the nerves are vitalized and strengthened, not deadened, or put to sleep, as the so-called celery compounds and nerve mixtures do but refreshed and fed on the food they need for health. If you suffer from indi gestion, dyspepsia, nervousness, and any of the ills which come from impure blood and disordered stomach, you can cure yourself with Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery which can be obtained at any drug store in the country. lieve that the gospel and the scheme of salvation have gone clear out of fashion. Buffalo Express. Relations With Spain Likely to Become More Complicated. Washington, April 5. The presence of United States officials at Jacksonville, Fla., last night at a meeting of Cuban sympathizers has attracted much atten tion in official circles here, and is likely to further complicate the already con fused relations between the United States and Spain. It is learned from the state department that the presence of federal officials at the meeting is re garded as a serious breach of official etiquette. ' A Murderer Killed. Winnipeg, Man., April 5. A Gleichen dispatch says : The Indian murderer of Government Officer Skyner, of tbe Blackfoot reservation, was finally cap tured and shot dead by a mounted posse of police last night. The murderer made a determined fight to the last. A Chicago Hewapaper Man. Cleveland, April 7. News was re ceived today of the death of Sidney Guy I Sea, formerly business manager of the Chicago Herald, at Santa Fe, N. M., of consumption. The remains will be I brought to Cleveland for burial. A Chicago Business Han. Chicago, April 7. Leopold Strauss, for 40 years a resident of Chicago and well known in business circles as a mem ber of the wholesale clothing firm of Strauss, Ullman and Gutman, died yes terday. General Farnsworth's Beanains. Washington, April 7. The remains of General G. D. Farnsworth, of New York, who died last night, will be taken to Albany tomorrow, where funeral services will be held Wednesday. For Bale.. Clydesdale seed oats at E. J. Collins & Co. 'a and W. H. Taylor's. Yield and weigh more than any other oat grown on hill land. m6-a6. NOTICE. Kobbed by Chinese. Dutch flat Station. April 5. Yee Sang dc Co's store was entered by seven Chinese last night at 11 o'clock who, after tying and gagging three men in the safe and money-drawer th $1700. One of the men in the store was badly cut about the head and arms. There is no clue to the robbers. mm For Infants and Children. Castoria promotes TMgeatiop, and overcomes Flatulency, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, and Feverishness. Thus the child is rendered healthy and its sleep natural. Caatoria contains no Morphine or other narcotic property. Castoria Is so veil adanted to children thai I recommend It as auDerior to anv nrescrintion known to me." H. A. Axons. M. D., in South Oxford St,, Brooklyn, 1. Y. ' For several Tears I have recommended tout ' Castoria,' and shall always continue to do so, as it has invariably produced beneficial roKulta.1 swm F. Fardbb.1L B., 125th Street and 7th At. New York City. "The use of ' Castor ia' is so universal and its merits so well known that it seems a work of supererogation to endorse It. Few are the in telligent families who do not keep Oastoria within easy reach." GaBLOS HABTTK, D. D., Hew York City. Tn Obbtaub Oohpaby, 77 Hurray Street, K. T. NOTICE. U. S. Land Orncs, The Dalles, Or., Feb. 25, 1895. ( Coraolalnt having been entered at this office by Charles Hook, against Albert N. Cooper for iMiure to comply witn law as to i lmDer-uuiture Entrv No. 2548. dated October 27tb. 1887. noon the NEK, Section 30, Townsbip 2 north. Range 15 easi, in Waaco County, Oregon, with a view to the cancellation of said entry; rem tea tan t alter ing that the -aid entryman never n I owed nor cultivated five acres the firs year after entry, and never pSTnted any trees thereon, and has wholly failed to comply with the Timber Culture laws, ana mat suen failure still exists and wholly abandoned the same, the saia turtles are he-eby summoned to appear at this office on the 10th day of April, 1895, at 10 o'clock a. m., to res pond and furnish testimonv concerning said alleged failure. J AS. F. MOORE, feb27-ap3. Register. Executor's Notice. V. 8. Land Omci, The Dalles, Or.,( March 27. 1895. 1 Complaint bavins- been entered at this office by William T. Meets against John finery for ibandoning his homestead entry No 8382. dated January 10, 1890, upon the E4 BWKi and WW Sec. 20, Tp. 2 N, R. 12 E.. in Wasco county, Oregon, with a view to tbe cancellation of said entry, the said prtle are hereby sum moned to appear at this office on tbe 25th day of may, wm, mi, w u ciuc a. in., to repona ana furnish testimony concerning said alleged aban r. muuki!, Register. donment. J AS. STRAYED. Came to my dace about Feb. 20. 1895. one black horse with white face, three white feet weight about 1,200 pounds; oranded 5 on left shoulder. Also one buckskin horse branded Z on left shoul der; weight about 850 pounds. Owner can have them by paying pasture bill and ad. F. S. Fleming, Bake Oven. Notice is hereby riven that the undcrsisned executors of the last lll and testament of John Baxter, deceased, have filed tbeir final renort ai'd account In said es ate and that Monday, the 6th day of May, 1895, at 10 o clock, a. m., of said da, has been affixed by the honorable county court ot ineotaieoi urcgon, tor waaco county, as tbe time and place for hearing objections to said accnunt and report, if any there be. Allperaons interested in said estate are noti fied to appear at said time and place and show cause, if any, why said report snd account should not be in all things approved and al lowed and an order enrsde discba-ttlng said ex ecutors from further liability by reason of their said trust. Sated this 30th day of March, 1895. JAMH.B itni ri r., JAM KS BAXTER. Executors of the estate of John Baxter, deceased. apr8-5t. Notice. To tbx General Public: The nndersigbed has thoroughly re modeled what is known as the Farmers' Feed Yard, corner of Third and Madi son, adjoining J. L. Thompson's black smith shop, and is now ready to accont- One Norman Stallion, weieht about modate all who wish thlr horses well 1,500 pounds; 4 head of work horses; 6 fed and Drorjerlv cared for. at Prices to Suit the Times. AGNEW & McCOLLEY, Props., The Dalles, Or. For Sale or Trade. young norses. will sell or trade for Dalles City property. CHARLES KOEHLEB, ml5-2m Boyd, Or.