The Dalles weekly chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1947, April 24, 1895, PART 1, Image 2

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    THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 24, 1895.
The Weekly Gtoniele.
IH h DALLK8
Entered at the poetoffice at The Dalit s, Oregon,
as second-class mall matter.
STATS OFFICIALS
ajvernoi.. . W. P. Lord
Secretary of State H K Kincaid
Treasurer Phillip Metocban
Bupt. of Public Instruction U. M. Irwin
Attornev-General C. M. Idleman
I Li. v . aicunae
" ) J. H. Mitchell
Senators.
Congressmen.
State Printer
I B. Hermann
" JW. R. Ellis
....W. H. Leeds
COUNTY OFFICIALS.
(Jountv Judee. .Geo. C. Blakeley
Sheriff. T. J. Driver
Clerk A. M. Kelsay
Treasurer Wm. Micbell
(Frank Kincaid
Commissioner A 8- Blowers
Assessor F. If. Wakefield
Surveyor E. F. Sharp
Superintendent of Public scnooia. . .Troy oneiiey
Coroner : W. H. Butts
WHO 18 THE MURDERER!
The murder of Marian Williams and
Blanche Lamont in San Francisco as
one of the most cold-blooded and brutal
crimes ever committed on the coast.
The medical , student, Durrant, was
picked upon by the detectives as the
man who committed the murders, and
all the machinery of the detective and
police departments has been brought
into play to prove the correctness of the
theory. It may be possible that Dnr
rant is the man, but it must be remem
bered that all the testimony is not in
' yet. It must farther be remembered
that the police up to yesterday had not
disclosed the fact that one of the par
sou's shoes had been found in the church
and that the sole thereof was covered
with blood. Of course this does not
' necessarily implicate the preacher as
someone else might have worn the shoe
or even put it intentionally in the blood
for the purpose of throwing suspicion on
him. He had two pairs of shoes and
pair of slippers in his library in the
church. g
The circumstances, taken altogether,
point strongly to Durrant as the mur
derer, and yet an analysis of the circum
etantial evidence, even as presented by
the police, who are making as strong a
case against him as possible, shows some
breaks that cannot be easily explained
Both the murdered girls were modest,
quiet, good girls. Yet the testimony
shows that Marian Williams told Mr.
''Morgan, with whom she lived, that Dur
rant bad made improper proposals to
ber, and that she was afraid of him
The testimony of Maud Lamont, sister
of the murdered girl, shows that about
the same condition existed between
Blanche Lamont and Durrant. Ibis
3eing the case, is it probable that Min-
nie Williams, who professed fear of him
-on account of .bis actions at Fruitvale,
' would have trusted herself alone at
night in the church with him? Despite
the fact that he' was the assistant super
intendent of the Sunday school, she
knew his real character, and if she was,
as she told Mr. Morgan, afraid of him,
she wonld not have entered the church.
Miss Lamont was also informed as to
his true character, and being rather
strong-minded; we take it. as the testi
mony shows, she would have refused to
go into the church with him at night,
even though permitting him to accom
pany her on the street car. Again,
when Blanche Lamont's body was found
in the belfry the tracks found in the
dust by it were measured, arid the police
say these tracks were made either by a
number 8 or a number 9 shoe. Durrant
wore a number 6; but up to date we
have not seen the statement as to the
size of Rev. Gibson's shoes. If the
girls would have hesitated about going
into the church with Durrant, whom
would they have entered with? Un
doubtedly more freely with the pastor
of the church than any one else. Then
when Rev. Gibson, the pastor, is told of
the breaking of the door, he requests
the janitor's son to say nothing about it,
that he would attend to it.
warrant ween arrested, and ever
since, is said to have wonderful nerve,
but it is neyer suggested that that nerve
might be, after all, tbo consciousness
of, innocence. Gibson, on the other
nand, refuses to see ' Durrant, refused
to speak to him. Why? If Durrant
was guilty, his duty as a minister
would compel him to offer such spiritual
consolation as lay in his 'power. He
does not do this, but shuns bim. If
Gibson himself was the criminal, that is
- probably the exact course he would
pursue. '
The police in perfecting their case say
that the night Minnie Williams was
killed, Durrant went home, changed bis
clothing, burying the bloody garments
that he wore at the time and then went
to Dr. Vogel's to an entertainment; that
when he arrived there his hair was dis
beveled and he asked Dr. Vogel to allow
bim to wash bis hands and comb bis
hair. Yet, according to their story,
Durrant entered the church, at 8:30,
killed his victim, went borne changed
bis clothing and destroyed that he bad
worn, and arrived at Vogel's at 9 :30, or
in one hour. If Durrant went home and
changed bis clothing, why did he want
to wash at Vogel's? '
Then there is another and widely dif
ferent aspect of the case. When the
police showed that Durant was leading a
dual life and that his visits were not
always to the church, they did bim a
favor. If Durrant was something of a
rone, be would not be likely to commit
the crimes imputed to him.' To that
I I 1 nn nit n ttn.D a ra eth aA
i; urn at: Ltri ui men, duuj mvi.oi u
upon in a business way and the doctrine
of as "eood fish in the sea as ever were
caught out of it" governs them. Such
men act bv Dersuasion. not by force. . If
is your recluse, your morbid, retiring,
unsocial fellows, who says nothing, who
avoid such places as the Durrant kind
seek, that finally give way to unreason
ing passion and commit the most borri
ble crimes. Durrant may be the mur
derer and Preacher Gibson may be en
tirely innocent, yet we believe the cir
cumstantial evidence, if given a chance
by the police and detectives, would point
just as strongly towards the latter as the
former. -
IS IT A MIRACLE?
Mrs. Eima Wylie, who resides on east
Thirteenth street, near the universiiy in
this city, says the Eugene Guard, has
a strange story to tell. For eleven
vears she has been paralyzed in her
lower limbs so that she was not able to
walk or even stand alone upon her feet.
Last Tuesday at 1 o'clock she suddenly
regained the use of ber paralyzed limbs
and arose from ber -seat and walked
about the house a well woman.
She had a strange story to tell and
bearing of this a Guard reporter called
at her home' today for an interview.
Entering the room he was greeted by
the ladv herself, who got up from a sola
and came forward with the usual activ
ity of any person who is sound in mind
and body. In auswer to a question she
said : "I feel that it is all for the glory
of my Lord and Savior that I am
healed."
It seems that eleven years ago she was
stricken with a disease which affected
tae lower portion of ber body, and
finally caused her to lose the use of
those limbs to such an extent that she
could not walk. It was so complicated
that the physicians did not sufficiently
understand it to give her relief, al
though all has been done that could be
to afford ber such relief. Any attempt
on ber part to rise her feet would cause
her great pain. She is a fine Christian
ladv and has srreat faith in prayer. She
has been praying for relief. Last Sun
day morning shortly after midnight she
awoke. A strange feeling seemed to
have taken possession of ber and con
tinned thus all dav Sunday. She felt
that she must nerve herself for a stronger
faith. She had an ordinary chair set on
small wheels with which she wheeled
herself about the room. On Tuesday
afternoon about 1 o'clock she was sitting
fn this chair cleaning a lamp, when she
was suddenly seized with this strange
feeling, and as she worked the thought
entered her mind, why not make an
effort to rise and walk and have faith
that it would be so. It forced itself
upon ner mind so strongly mat sne
vielded and reaching out. rose to her
feet and walked across the room, the
effort being accompanied by no pain as
had previously been the case when she
tried to rise. A short time afterwards
she walked up stairs without assistance
and has since been able to go about the
house performing duties as well as any
one. She attiibutes her cure to faith
and prayer, saving, "Christ alone is my
heIer."
Her case is indeed a peculiar one, and
there is no cause for doubting her story.
Medicine could have had nothing to do
with it as she has not been treating the
case, having long since given up an
hope of relie from that source. She is
a bright, intelligent lady of about forty,
and came from Missouri with her hus
band and family four years ago. They
have a very pleasant home on East
Thirteenth street.
Miss Linnie Wylie, who has been
teaching school west of this city, was
sent for and came borne as soon as she
beard the news of her mother's recovery,
Another peculiar feature of the case is
that Mrs. Wylie could not sing before
her recovery but can now Bing as well as
anyone. .
HAD NOT ALL THE EVIDENCE.
A LYING PAPER.
The Brooklyn Eagle, a leading demo
cratic newspaper, whirls the bloody
shirt thusly:
"The concerted effort of the South to
fasten an income tax on the government
bad its motive in Southern resentment
aeainst national pensions for Northern
soldiers who put down Southern rebels.
The South is where those soldiers won
their pensions. The North is where the
property is which an income tax would
reach. The scheme to tax the section
which furnished the beneficiaries of pa
triotism was agreeable to the section
against which those benehciaries con
tended. The North took it out in pen
sions. The South would retaliate on
property. The South bad few or no fed
eral pensioners. The North bad nearly
all ; but the South had little or no prop
erty subject to income tax, while the
North had much. ' The chance to get
even, or more than even, was attractive,
It was improved by making the exemp
tion rate just high enough to let the
South effectually out." The editorial is
headed, "Appomattox Revenged and
Reversed." ' .
The Brooklyn Eagle makes an asser
tion that it knows to be false, and one
that it has manufactured maliciously for
the purpose of bolstering up a cause that
it cannot defend with argument. The
income tax is demanded by the people of
the North as well as those of the South
and it is demanded by that class . of
whom soldiers art- made. It is demanded
by the great mass of common people,
who pay enormously more than their
proportion of the taxes in order that the
class who do not bear arms in time of
mav be exempted from their fair
"A New York man took a funny
course to prove to bis wife that he was
not a coward, after he had been called
one by ber. He took twenty-five grains
ot morphine in her presence and re
marked : 'You called me a coward, and
I will let you know that I am not. , I
will be a dead man before 12 o'clock.'
He only lived a short time. Was he a
coward?"
The above is taken from the Albany
Democrat. Our answer is yes. A man
that will suicide to escape the possibili
ties of life is the greatest coward on
earth. Wasco News.
There is one element that Brother
Armsworthy did not take into consider
ation. He does not know the woman.
It is time this country either abandon
the Monroe doctrine or put it in force;
As it is this government is a laughing
stock for the world. If the United
States does her duty, England will
never own a foot of Nicaragua soil with
out a fight tor it. Now is the time for
this government to stand up for its
boasted Munroe doctrine, or else forever
hold its peace.
It seems now that Paul Seoul ze suicid
ed because he was short with the North
ern Pacific Railroad Co., in the sum of
from $100,000 to $250,000. He should
have remembered that the Northern
Pacific is no slouch of a thief itself, and
went on living on his plunder just as it
does. Paul was not a logician. '
proportion of the tax. It is demanded
that this tax be imposed in order that
the burthen may be equalized, and that
persons instead of paying a per capita
tax will pay according to their ability to
pay, and will put up the sinews of war
necessary to carry on the government in
proportion to the benefits derived from
the government.
Rockefeller has $100,000,000 and be is
protected in its possession and enjoy
ment. By whom? By the common
people of the United States, by the
middle classes who pay as much for hay.
ing $5000 worth of property protected as
Mr. Rockefeller does for having $100,'
000,000 protected. And. again during
the war an income tax was imposed and
submitted to by the rich. Wby?jBecause
they preferred giving up two per cent, of
their incomes to giving the whole
amount up to pay the debt the nation
would have if the South won. Then it
was a war measure. As soon as the war
was over and the danger was passed,
these same tax dodgers set up the cry
that now the war was over there was no
necessity to suffer this inquisitorial tax
longer, and the congress of the United
States, false to its trust, relieved wealth
of its share of taxation and turned a war
debt of $2,500,000,000 over to the common
people to pay. The war was over, but
the debt was left and the necessity for
the tax was not over. Incomes that
were piled up from the speculation of
sharpers, on the necessities of the soldier
at the front, were exempted and the
soldier who was paid in money worth
fifty cents on 'the dollar, and made so
worthless by the speculators, were asked
to stretch their patriotism still further
and stand in to pay not only their por
tion of the debt, but also that of those
who bad grown rich by plundering
them. It was a venal congress that fell
down at the demand of the plutocrats
and betrayed the people.
John Sherman was reasonably honest
then. He defended the income tax, and
answering a taunt of Casserly, Cali
fornia's senator, be said. "The income
tax is a just tax ; it is the most just and
equitable tax ever placed upon the
statutes of this or any other country."
John's income was not so large then and
his conscience was more tender. He is
not talking that way now.
The income tax has come to say, and,
to grow, and those whose vast wealth is
used to corrupt legislation and purchase
courts, may yet find that it bad been
better to bave paid the taxes on their
incomes, than to have found, that an in
dignant people bad left them no incomes
to be taxed. The degenerate Romans
burned Rienzi for trying to tax them
and the republic fell, France had her
privileged classes in '92, hut not in '94
and the tax dodgers of New York may
profit by contemplating these examples.
It is not the North, neither is it the
South that demands an income tax, it is
the demand of the great common people
of this' great common wealth, and a de
mand that it will be well for those who
bave incomes to beed. .
. The San Francisco Rural Press says
"The English and French bave become
very fond of American apples, and since
last fall the New York fruit men have
shipped 1,443,592 barrels o apples to
Europe, as against 168,706 barrels in the
winter cf 1893-94. This export trade
will encourage American fruit-growers
to take Detter care of their apple orch
ards and give more attention to fruit
growing and less attention to corn and
wheat. Tbe new discoveries in cold
storage and improved methods of pack
ing have done a great deal to stimulate
tbe export trade, and now that the trade
has begun we may expect it to increase
until it furnishes one of the large items
in our national income. This is good
news for horticulturists and small farm
era everywhere, and , will encourage
them to further efforts for improved
varieties and more intelligent culture,
Rev. Dwight Moody must be powerful
in petition. Yesterday at Fort Wor,tn,
Texas, be delivered a sermon to an au
dience of 8,000. As rain was needed
badly, he asked the entire congregation
to join in a prayer for rain. This was
at 3:30 p. m. At the evening services
Mr. Moody announced that telegrams
stated that rain had begun to fall at
several points in the state, and even as
be spoke the storm burst on Fort Worth
and the rain fell in torrents. . In a tew
moments there Vas a crackling sonnd
and a portion of the roof fell in. J: V.
Ingram was hurt so be will die, several
others were seriously injured, and some
forty slightly. ' '
JSndersby Items.
The weather for tbe past week has
been perfect, tbe hills have taken on a
lovely green, while the orchards are in
full bloom, farmers are about through
seeding and planting is tbe order of the
day.
The committees in charge of tbe May
day picnic are doing everything possible
for a big time. They have concluded to
use the Campbell grove for . tbe picnic
grounds, as it is more convenient as to
the location, being; close to the new hall
where the grand concert of the' season
will be given tbe same evening. We
bave learned from the committee in
charge of tbe picnic, that the grounds
will be cleared off and reseated with
every convenience for speaking, singing
and games, too numerous to mentiou.
Mr. J. C. Burkes of 'Moro, will be tbe
speaker of the day. The singing will be
conducted by Prof. McGregor with his
harmony group, assisted by a quartet
from Moro, under tbe leadership of Mr.
E. Brown, president of the Musical
Association of Sherman county. Miss
Conard, of Walla Walla, will be
organist for the occasion. - The com
mittee in charge of the evening enter
tainment are doing all they can to make
tbe concert a success and no doubt they
will . be rewarded with a full house.
Come one, come all, sing, laugh and
grow fat. . W. J. D.
The Moro Club.
Antelope Notes.
From the Herald.
. we learn tnat a man was held up in
The Dalles last Friday in broad day-light
while he was on his way home. It was
done by two of his friends, who could
barely walk straight themselves.
An industrious man spends the firet 40
years of his lite at hard labor, and the
next twenty running around trying to
find a climate in which he can live. A
lazy man has good health anywhere.
This is the finest lambing weather ex
perienced in many years. The nights
are a trifle cool, but there is no rain nor
snow to. make them disagreeable. A
large percentage of lambs will be saved.
Mr. Fred Walker, a mutton buyer
from Portland, accompanied by Mr.
Charley ikers, one of the solid citizens
of Northern Sherman county, were up
in this section tbe first of the week con
tracting for tbe purchase of a large band
of 3 year old wethers from the P, L. & L.
Co. The price paid was a little over
$3. They are both old friends of tbe
Shutt family, whose guests they were
over Wednesday niglit.
Symptoms of kidney troubles should
be promptly attended to; they are
nature's warnings that something is
wrong. Many ' persons die victims of
kidney diseases who could have been
saved had they taken proper precautions.
The prompt use of Dr. J. H. McLean's
Liver & Eidnev Balm
ands of valuable lives,
derangement of the
Price $1 00 per bottle.
& Kinersly, druggists.
has saved thouB-
If you have any
kidneys try it.
Sold by Snipes
KNIGHTS OF THE MACCABEES
OF THE WORLDI
The Deputy Supreme Comman-I
der Expresses His Gratitude.
AmannsU Cured by Dr. Miles' NenrUsej
Deputy Supreme Commanders Office, I
Knights ot the M accabees of tbe WorldJ
Emporium. Pa,, Dec 15, 1883.
Dr. Miles Medical Co- Elkhart, Ind.:
Gentlemen; I feel very grateful toyonf
and your valuable medicine Dr. Miles'. Ke-1
torative nervine. My lime aaugnter, Helen!
was almost blind from loss of power In the
optic nerve. Her eyes looked perfectly nat-1
ural. but there was a gradual failure of sight
until on some days she could hardly tell day-t
ugnt i rum aaraness. n nau several pre-f
Bcnptions irora oculists ana irtea several
remedies, but without success. We happened
to see In a paper accounts of what Dr. Miles'
Nervine had done for others, and I purchased
a Dottle one day of Dr. Lamb. To onr great
Joy it restored her eyesight. I bought two
bottles mora and they made a final cure.
Thanking yon for what It has done for us, I
ww auu wui recommend is to oiaers.
Yours with gratitude,
Geo. Dicxnrsosr.
THREE MONTHS LATER.
BauanBa th curb puutaincsrr bb waits
BVCBTBOPT TO BHOW IT. .
Emporium, March 20, lBSi.
Dr. Miles Medical Co.:
Gentlemen : What we mta von lut Tm-
cemuBr kwukuur usugnier seyes, still noias
good, and we believe the cure permanent.
f lease puDiisn mis tor the benefit of others.
I hone vonr valuable medlrlnA will i.uh
the afflicted In every home and hamlet and
nation on eartn. xnanaiuuy yours.
Geo. Dickihsob.
Dr. Miles' Nervine is sold on a positive
guarantee that the first bottle will benefit.
All druggists sell It at 11,6 bottles forts, or
It will be sent, prepaid, on receipt of price
by the Dr. Miles Medical CkX, Elkhart, Ind.
Tbe Moro Dramatic club will play here
. the opera. bouse, Friday, April 26th.
The club is composed of some of Moro's
most prominent people and their acting
highly Bpoken of by all who bave
heard them. The play is "A Social
Glass" and is said to be full of dramatic
Ecenes. The proceeds of the play will be
given to tbe bherman county public
schools. Admission, 75 and 50 cents,
children under 10 years, 25 cents. Re
served seats at Blakeley & Houghton's.
I want tbe music of Prince Ananias."
said a small boy entering a Broadway
music store. "For singing or for tbe
piano?" "I don't want it for either,
want it for a young lady friend of
mine." Tammany rimes.
The wedding of Hon. George Nathan
iel Gnrzon, M. P. and Miss Mary Leiter,
was celebrated at Washington City,
Monday. Mr. Corzon is a titled Eng
lishman and said to be a clever gentle
man. Judged by other marriages of the
kind, however, it is fair to presume that
before five years have passed Mrs. Cur
zon will regret ber wedding and heartily
wished that she bad remained at home,
and married instead a plain American
gentleman named Cur-Smith.
The railroading record was broken
Sunday, by a special newspaper train on
the Pennsylvania road. It ran from
Camden to Atlantic City, 58 miles, in 45
minutes, or at the rate of 76 miles an
hour. A part of tbe run was made at
the rate of a mile in 41 seconds. ,
"J'JB.AsW
Hypochondrical,
despondent, nerv
ous, 'tired
out" men
-those who
suffer from
backache ,
weariness,
loss of en
ergy, im
paired mem
ory, dizzi
ness, melan
choly and
the re
sult of ex
hausting dis
eases, or drains upon the system,
excesses, or abuses, bad habits, or
early vices, are treated through cor
respondence at their homes, with
uniform, success, by the Specialists
of the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical !
Institute, of Buffalo, N. Y. A book
of 136 large pages, devoted to the
consideration of the maladies above
hinted at, may be had, mailed se
curely sealed from observation, in a
plain envelope, by sending 10 cents
in one-cent stamps (for postage on
Book), to the World's Dispensary
Medical Association, at the above
mentioned Hofel. For more than
a quarter of a century, physicians
connected with this widely cele
brated Institution, have made the
treatment of the delicate diseases
above referred to, their sole study
and practice. Thousands, have con
sulted them. This vast experience
has naturally resulted in improved
methods and means of cure.
General Stevenson of Colorado.
Chicago, April 20. General R. M
Stevenson, editor of the Chieftain, of Pu
eblo, Colo., died at the Victoria hotel to
day. General Stevenson was taken ill
here Punday en route to New Tor.
The remains will be sent west tonight.
His death resulted from nervous pros
A severe rheumatic pain' in the left
shoulder had trourded Mr. J. H. Leper,
a well known druggist ot Pes Moines,
Iowa, fo? six months. At times the
pain was so severe that he could not lift
anything. With all be could do he
could not set rid of it until h appMed
Chamberlain, s Pain Balm. "I only
made three applications of it," he says.
and have since been free from all pain."
He now reccoraends it to persons, simi
larlv afflicted. It is for sale by Blakely
& Houghton Drngeists.
A Pioneer ftdaeator of the coast.
San Josk, Cal., April 20. Professor
Thomas C. George, one of the pioneer
educators of the Pacific coast, died at his
home at .Colletre Park, this morning.
From 1873 till 1891 he held the chair of
natnral sciences at the University of the
Pacific. "
(Jhamheriain's Congh K9medy gives
the bent satisfaction of any coueh medi
cinp I handle, and as a seller leads all
other preparations in this market. I
reccomend it becanse it is the best medi
cine I ever handlwl for rnnshp, and
ornnp, A. W. Bnldridge, "Millersville,
111. For sale by Blakely & Houghton
Drurcists.
: 1 .
A Promising- Portrait Painter
New York, April 20. Joseph ' F.
Mathews, the young portrait painter,
died todav. Mr.-Mathews was a son of
Colonel Felix Mathews, late United
States consul at Tangir. He was born
in San Francisco in 1863. . '
Dr. Miles' Nervine
Cures.
Harry Don't you know, Carrie, it al
ways seeuis to me that it must be an
awfully awkward thing for a lady to
carry a muff. Carrie Ob, it is not such
a difficult thing when you get your hand
in. Boston transcript.
Manchester folks are not yet posted in
seafearing lingo. Thus, a Manchester
ship canal band was overheard shouting
at the top of his voice to a captain :
"Are you bringing in the hlunt end or
the sharp end of that ship?"
All Pres. .. 1 .
Those who have used Dr. King's New
Discovery know its value, and those who
bave not, have now the opportunity to
try it free. Call on the advertised drug
gist and get a trial bottle, free. ' Send
your name and address to H. E. Bucklen
& Co., Chicago, and get a sample box of
Dr. King's New Life Pills free, as well
as a copy of Guide to Health and House
hold Instructor, free. All of which is
guaranteed to do you good and cost you
nothing. Sold bv Snipes & Kinersly.
Well Known Pittsburg Physician.
Pittsburg, April 20. Dr. Dickinson,
an eminent surgeon, died of paralysis
this morning. . ,
Miss Delia Stevens, of Boston, Mass.,
writes: I hare always sudered from
hereditary Scrofula, for which I tried
various remedies, and many reliable
physicians, but none relieved me. After
taxing o ooiues 01
I am now well. I
am very grateful
to you, as I feel
tnat it savea me
BCsfgya:
from a life ot untold agony, and shall
take pleasure In speaking only words
01 praise ror me wonueriui meaicine,
ana in recommending it to all.
Treatise
and n
. mailed
SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY,
ATLANTA. OA.
Tor Infants and Children.
Caatorist promotes Digestion, and
overcomes Flatulency, Constipation, Sour
Stomach, Diarrhoea, and Feverishneaa.
Thus the child la rendered healthy and its -
sleep asvtoraX C&storia contains no
MorpLine or other narcotlo property.
"Caotoria is to well adapted to children that
I reeommrad it as superior to any prescription
koowa to mo." - H. A. Acchik. M. I).,
in South Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. T.
For warm ml rears I hare rftoonmaafled root
Ostoria,'and shall always continue to do so.
as it liaa invariably produced beneficial remits.
Emm F. Pardbb. H. D.,
J2SU1 Street and 7th Ave Mew Xorfc City.
"The nss of 'Castor!' is so universal and
its merits ro well known that It reems a work of
supererogation to endorse it. Few are tbe In
telligent families who do not keep Oastoria
within easy reach."
Cuuvos KiBTTir, D. D.,
. Mew York City.
Tbs CxjrrAUB Compact, T7 Hurray Street, N.T.
Sheriffs Sale.
By virtue of an execution and order of sale
Issued out of tbe Circuit Court of tbe S ate of
Oregon for Wasco eouutr. noon a decree and
judgment, made, reudered and entered by said
Court on the 16th da of rebrusry, 1895, In favor
of the plaintiff in a suit wherein Laura xandos
as trustee was piainutr ana tmmi k. urowu,
Daisy E. Brown, a minor by O. D. Taylor, ber
SuardlHn ad litem, Nellie L. Reed and Msnrlce
.eed were defendants, and to me lieeted and
delivered, commanding me to let y upon and sell
he lands mentioned and described In said writ
and hereinafter described. I did day levy upon
a' d will sell at publio auction to the highest
bidder for cash In hand, on Thursday, the 16th
dny of Hay, 1895, at i o'clock In the afternoon of
said day at tbe front dor of the County Court
House In Imlles City. Wasoo county, oregnn. all
of the lands and Dreml. described In said writ
and hereinafter described aa follows to-wit
All of tbe Southwest Quarter f tbe orthwest
ouarter, the Weft half of tbe 8onthwest Quarter
and tbe Southeast quarter of 8uuthwet quarter,
of be- tion twenty-ttve in Township two nortn, of
Rmge twelve east of the Willamette Meridian,
in Wasoo county, Oieg.in, together with sli and
singular the tenements, hereditaments and ap
purt nances tbtreunto belonging or In any wise
appertaining, or so 'i nch thereof as shall be
sutticieuv to satltj the sum of fMO with interest
thereon at tbe rate of ten percent per annum.
since Februnry 16th, 1895: $d0 attorne 'a lees and
the further sum of 170.05 rusts n aid ult, to
gether with cost on said wri and aoo ulng costs
of sale.
Dated at Tbt Dalies, Oregon, this I6tn day
Of April, 1895. T. J. DRIVER,
DiieilU VI vr UW WUiny.
By R. KELLEY, Deputy. - e!7-5t
NOTICE.
U. 8. Land Omct. The Dalles, Or.,
March 27, 1895.
Complaint having been entered at this office
un T. Meets
ng his h
10, 1890,
abai
indoning
January 1C
against John Bpeiry for
no atsu, oaiea
his homestead en
0. upon the BWii andWK
BE4, Sec 20, Tp. 2 N, R. 12 .. in Wasco
county, Oregon, with a view to the cancellation
of said entry, the said portle- are hereby sum
moned to appear at this office on the 25th day of
May, 1895, at 10 o'clock a. m., to respond and
furnish testimony concerning said alleged aban
donment. JAS. F, MOORE. Register.
Executor's Notice.
Nntlca is herebv riven that the nudcrslimed
executors of the Inst - 111 and testHOient of Jnhu
Baxter, deceased, have tiled their Anal report
a. d account lu said es ate and that Moi day, the
6th day of May, lKStft, at 10 o clock, a. m., of said
day, has been athxed bv the honorable 'ounty
court of the titiitp of Orwon. for WarCo countv.
a tbe time and place for bearing bj ctlom to
said aoc- unt and report, if any there be.
All persona in teres ted lu said etate are noti
fied to appear at said Urns and place and show
cause, if any, why said report and ocount
should not be in all things npproved and al
lowed and au order e made discharging said ex
ecutors from further liability by reason of their
said trust.
Dated this 30th day of March, 1895.
- James whitten,
- JAM r 8 BAXTER,
Executors of the estate of John Baxter, deceased.
apre-ou
NOTICE.
7
V. 8. Land Orncx, The Dalles, Or.,fS
Mar. 30, 1895. I 1
PfiTnTilHlnt navlnir hMn Milmvd -t thl onice
by Sylvester Babcock against E. Clarence Meek
W fiwilrin ft.Townshlnl South,
RjtnvA 12 EliL in Wum rmintv. Oreffon. with a
view to the cancellation of said e try, tbe said
parties are hereby summoned to appear at this
office on the 25th day of May, 1895, at 10 . 'clock,
a. m. to respond and furnish testimony concern
ing said alleged abandonment.
J. F. MOOBE, Register.