DO THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE SATURDAY. JULY 18. 1896. A QUESTION of COURAG A DIVERSITY OP OPINIONB. Kind-hearted Mrs. Ludlow, overflow' ins- with the sympathy which is the meed of troubled lovers at the hands of affectionate and disinterested woman kind the world over, waited impatiently for her guest to make, his appearance on the morning following his excursion with the colonel. Breakfast was ready and waiting, and the small hostess hov ered about the table, deftly arranging the china and adding a last touch of artistic negligence to the bowl of roses forming the center-piece, pausing now and then to glance out of the window at the figure of her husband poised con tentedly on two legs of his chair and reading the inevitable newspaper. Presently she went to the door. "Tom I wish you'd call Air. Kingbrand; Aunt . Mima's boon up twice, and the break lust's getting cold." Ludlow burst his way out of the laby rinth of news and tramped heavily up stairs to the door of the guest s room "Hugh!" he called. "Oh, Hugh! going to lie abed all day?" There was no answer, and he opened the door. The bed had not been occu pied, and it flashed upon him that-R'uig- brand had suddenly acted upon the hint that he might find it impossible to en dure the ordeal of a formal leave-tak ing. Ludlow went downstairs, trying to think of some way of telling his wife - without reflecting too severely upon hit friend's lack of courage. , "Yon said Kingbrand went up witr the colonel yesterday, didn't you?" ht asked, hoping to gain time. "Why, yes; they drove off togethe- about three o'clock." "Well, he didn't come back. Perhap' the Latimers kept him." Airs. Ludlow looked puzzled. "I hard ly thought he would stay. I rather ex pectcd him back to tea last evening It isn't like turn to stay away withon XAdlow looked puzzled. "I hardly thought- be would stay saying something or sending word : She seated herself behind the coffee nrn and touched the bell for Aunt Mima. . "Oh, I don't know about that." re plied her husband carelessly, taking his place opposite. "A man's liable to do anything when he's a badly hipped as Hugh is." "Please, Toin, tell me all about it, won't you ? I can't get a word out of Hester, and Hugh, goes about looking like a man who had losfall his friends in a single night." "I don't know anything to tell, except what is evident enough to a man up a moderately tall tree. Hugh has about as pronounced a ease as I ever saw develop in so short a time, and it'll go hard with him if he doesn't win. If Hester should refuse him, I shouldn't be surprised to have him leave us without a word; it would be very much like him." So much good-natured Tom Ludlow ventured on the chance that Hingbrand had carried out his fhreat "Whv should Hester refiiKH him?" J . ""Rless Trt v Rniil! hnw Khmilrl T lfnnw? rm not in the young woman's confidence;- and, besides, I don't know that she has.". . Ludlow hurried through his break fast, and breathed freely again when he was well out of ear-shot of his home. Tm a lucky man!" he chuckled;, "five minutes more, and she'd have had the whole story out of me, and 1 really mustn't tell her that not yet awhile; - it d be cruelty to animals. I'd like to know if that addle-pated rascal has actually taken French leave. I must 1 rv fVTirl finrl nut. -frTtm t li i"i unlnnpl If i o comes down to-day." the colonel did come down, but Lud low learned nothing more than that Kingbrand had left "The Laurels" quite t-arly in the evening, that he had in sisted upon walking, and that he had taken the north road instead of turning uiwaru lregurmen. juiuuow guarded his inquiries carefully, but the colonel's hospitality took the alarm at Once. "Do I understand that youh friend didn't come home las' night?" he asked. Ludlow admitted it, and hastened to add that Kingbrand was sometimes rather erratic in his movements. ' ' ""I reckon it would be something a little mo' than erratic if he camped out on the mountain all night; thah's no ' house this side of Squire Craven's, an' that's a good ten mile." '-'.. ' "Perhaps he went on down the road to Dunbar," suggested Ludlow; "he's good for a long tramp if he felt like it. He'll turn, up all right." . The colonel looked thoughtful. ."I hope so; indeed, I do. Hes a mighty fine young gentleman, and we-all think a heap of him up on the mountain. He told me yeste'day that he was going back to New York bef o' long." Ludlow took this as a confession of .lua suspicion, and. answered, accord ingly: "Yes; he's quite anxious to get back to his work." ' Here the matter rested, and the three people who knew of Ring-brand's dis appearance held widely different views as to its motive. Mrs. Ludlow, finding the. packed valises in the guest's room reluctantly gave place to the carefully insinuated suggestion of her husband that the young man had fled because Hester had refused him; Ludlow, some what better informed, was quite sure that the unceremonious departure was due to Bingbrand's failure to win in the battle with his weakness; while the. colonel went home with a slightly-con fused idea of the unaccountability of authors and story writers, whose vagaries led them to refuse the hospi talities of a comfortable mansion for the sake of spending the night in wan dering about on the mountain. Impart ing his convictions to Hester, together with the information that Hingbrand hud not returned to Tregarthen, he awakened an emotion in the heart of that ingenuous young woman which had slept quite peacefully through the unobtrusive wooing of her lover; and her -quick intuition, finding a better trajectory than the logic of the ethers. went nenre.r the mark, filling her with vague apprehensions for Itingbrand's safety. She immediately recalled the conversation of the previous evening. remembering his abstraction and the abrupt leave-taking. Then she recol lectcrt that Henry had been the last one who had seen him, and she quickly ob tained nil the information that could be gleaned from that source. It contained a grain of comfort in the assurance that he was not unarmed; but she could not help thinking that the mere possession of the revolver promised little for his safety. The following morning she mounted Pluto and rode straight to Mrs. Lud low's, in the hope of finding that her un defined premonition of trouble was groundless; but there had been no word from the missing guest, and the small matchmaker made an unsuccessful at- temt to conceal her resentment toward the girl who had, so ruthlessly demol ished her beautiful air castles of domes tic felicity. "Where do you suppose he can be?" asked Hester, when the conversation had been brought around by carefully guarded a pproaches to the object which had- prompted her early ride down the mountain. "I'm sure f don't know," replied Airs. Ludlow, trying to look properly severe. "Perhaps he's lost on the mountain; I'm sure I'm glad we didn't turn him out to to get lost. Hester looked mystified and hurt "Why, Helen, do you mean that we ought to have 'tried harder to keep him?" "I think you wouldn't have had to try very hard, if you'd cared anything at ail about him. Hester blushed painfully and hesi tated. "It would be foolish to seem not to understand you, Helen, but but it isu'tatall as you think; indeed, it isn't." And her voice quavered a little at the end. To be continued. ON THE ROAD JA y"nsr woman Tww'k''. who is takine Doctor Pierce's Favorite Pre scription. In maidenhood, wo manhood, wife hood and moth erhocd the " Pre scription " is a supporting- tonic and nervine that's peculiarly adapted to tier needs, regulating, strengthening and cur ing the derangements of the sex. Whv is it so many women owe their beauty to Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription? Because beauty of form and face radiate from the common center health. The best bodily condition results from (food food, fresh air and exercise coupled with the judicious use of the "Prescription." If there be headache, pain in the back. bearing-down sensations, or general de bility, or if there be nervous disturbance, nervous prostration, and sleeplessness, the Prescription " reaches the origin ot the trouble arid corrects it It dispels aches and pains, corrects displacements and enres catarrhal inflammation of the lining mem branes, falling of the womb, ulceration, ir regularities and kindred maladies. FALLING OF WOMB." Mrs. Frank Cam- field, of East Dickin son, Jprankltn Co., Jv. y., writes : " I deem it mv duty to express my deep, heart-felt grati tude to you tor having been the means, under Providence, of restor ing me to health, for I have been by spells un able to walk. My troubles were of the womb inflammatory and bearinz-down sen sations ana me doctors ; an saiu, tney couia not cure me. Twelve bottles of Dr. Mrs. Cam field. Pierce's wonderful Favorite Prescription has cared me.' Driving IiUM Horse. There is a state law prohibiting cru elty to animals, which is just as appli cable in The Dalles as anywhere else, and has iD times past been enforced in our city. A delivery horse was noticed this morning; with a lame foot, traveling along very painfully, and requiring to be urged with the laeh because of its lameness.. A nail was perhaps piercing the quick and each step cost the poor brute excruciating pain. Whenever.'one notices a lame horse being driven he may know that the driver is either ig norant regarding what is due to the rights of a life, or that, baring knowl edge of the pain endured by the animal, he is too case-hardened to care for its suffering. A selfish reason, if no other, should inspire a driver to stable a borse with a lame foot nntil it is well, for a horse may be rained forever by a nail or wound unattended to. . Baldness is either hereditary or caused by sickness, mental exhaustion, wear ing tight-fitting hats, and by over-work and trouble. Hall's Ren ewer will pre vent It. . : - 7 W- THAT IRISH ESTATE. "Ked Band"' O'Kalll'a Descendants Balra to ISO Mtliloaa. . The story in yesterday' Chronicle seems to bave had its foundation in an article that appeared in the Catholic Seatinel of July 9th. The Sentinel gives Mrs. Tbos. Woods and F. H. Van Nor- den as The Dalles claimants to the estate, and a very romantic story is told In connection therewith. -Below is the Sentinel article: A hundred and eighty million dollars seems a sum far beyond even the dreams of the very wealthy, to say nothing of the ordinary, every-day person. Yet in Victoria, B. C, living in a modest little house on Herald street, are a family that do not" dream, but look forward with quiet confidence to possessing not only this enormous sum, but a whole Irish county thrown in. Mr. A. P. Freimuth. who came here a short time ago and now plays the solo cornet in the Fifth Regiment oand and wields the baton as leader of the Vic toria theatre orchestra, is the husband of one of the claimants to the estate of the O'Neils of Antrim. Mrs. W. E. Ward, of Los Angeles, Mrs. Froimuth's mother, is at present visiting her daughter, and in the fail is going over to Ireland on behalf of the American heirs to claim the estate. From ' the two ladies the history of the quest was learned. 'The estate they say has been in chan cery for something like fifty years for want of an heir. Mrs. Ward's father, John Falls O'Neill, was a younger son of old Hugh O'Neill, the last to hold the estate. Being a younger eon John Falls O'Neill went to the United States to seek bis fortune, and after remaining for some time in St. Louie, got the gold fever in 1849, and joined the stream of those who came to the Pacific coast He was captain in the Black Hawk war. and now lies buried at Quincy, Plumas county. Now his descendants are look ing eastward to a store of gold that far exceeds the expectations that drew the old "Forty-niner" to the West. ' Cant. O'Neill leaves five children alive, Richard O'Neill, of Bakerafield California; Charles Terrence O'Neill, of Los Angeles; Mrs. Mary F. Bell, of Froville, Col. ; Mrs. Theresa C. Wheeler of Oakland, and Mrs. W. E. Ward, of Los Angeles. There are three grand children also Mrs. Freimutn, wno is Mrs. Ward's daughter: Mrs. Tom Woods, of The Dalles, Oregon, and F, H. VanNorden, of the same place children - of Mrs. Lizzie O'Neill Van Norden, now deceased. We are the only direct beire,"' said Mrs. Ward. "We can trace our ances try right back to the 'Red Hand' as the first of our line was called. We have bad lawyers working on the case for years in England, and now they tell ns that all we have to do is to come over and claim our own. I have the family seal and the old documents to prove we really are the heirs to the estate, and will take them over with me to England this fall with my brother, Charles Ter rence O'Neill, who is coming np here soon to go with me." There are other O'Neills who would like to have a share of the millions, but Mrs. Ward says they cannot prove their descent, and it in only ber brothers and sisters, her daughter, neice and nephew, who will come into the estate. There is a romantic story of how the first O'Neill came bv his property and .his name of the "Red Hand." In the good old-faehiuned way of sov ereigns Henry II conferred a great tract of land in County Antrim on the one of two suitors who would get there first. Of these the Red O'Neill was one. The time of the contest was fixed ; good King Henry acted as starter, the course being from Windsor Castle to the land in question, the condition being that the man who first laid hand on the land should take the prize. Away sped O'Neill and his rival for the Emerald Isle and crossed the Irish sea heedless of anything but of the land greed that even in the present day has actuated the wild rush of the "boomer." Arrived at Lough Neagh, O'Neill's rival secured the first boat, but' O'Neill was sood after him in a second. The rival was almost across to the strand, which marked the limit of the promised land and prepared to spring ashore. O'Neill, to prevent the fair demesne being ' snatched from him, drew his sword, sliced off his left hand deftly and with a mighty effort threw the bloody hand ashore just before his rival sprang trom his boat. The O'Neill's hand first touching land made him owner of the magnificent property for which the heirs araj now etriving. Last of Barth. The remains of Mrs. Irvine were brought to The Dalles on last night's passenger train and the funeral took place at 10 :30 this morning from the undertaking rooms of Wm. Michel!. A number of old citizens followed the re mains to tbeir last resting place in Odd Fellows cemetery. . Mrs. Catherine Irvine was born in In diana Oct. 28, 1838, and consequently was 58 years of age. She was married to John Irvine at The Dalles May 27, 1855, and has lived in this vicinity ever since. Eight children bave been born to them, four of whom passed-to the silent shore before her final summons came. Two sons and two daughters still remain. Mrs. Irvine died in Salem July 14, 1896. ' - PERSONAL HESTIOX. ' - . , - . Wednesday. ' Mr. M. Dichtenmuller of Mosier is in town today. - Mrs. John S. Brown of 18-Mile island is in the city today. .' Mr. B. F. Laughlin and family will leave for Glennwood, Wash., tomorrow morning. Judge and Mrs. Bradehaw i.ind Miss Clara Davis, left this afternoon for Sea side, Clatsop beach. Thursday. " Mr. Amos Root, of Mosier, was in town today. . Mrs. J. 8. Brown returned to 18-Mile island this morning. Miss Mabel Estes, of Baker City, is a guest of Miss Daisy Aliaway. - Mr. John Beadle and family, of Des chutes, are in the city today. Henry Schadwitz, one of Sherman county's successful sheepmen, is in town. ' - Mrs, H. Glenn and daughters left for II waco beach on the Regulator this morning. , ' - Mr. ' Buck, who has been suffering from necrosis, went to Hood River this morning. . James Covington went to his lower ranch on the Washington side this morning. Mr. C. C. Hobart, who has been in the city, returned to the Locks this morning. Mr. B. 8. Hnnticcton went to the Locks this morning and will return this evening. J. H. Sherar arrivpd in town yester day,' and will ship 2000 head of mutton sheep today. - Mrs. Hostetler, Miss Hostetler. Mrs. Sanson and Mrs. Funk went to the Cas tles for the day. Ed. Michell, of Trb Chronicle force, left for a three weeks absence in the Mt. Adams country. Mrs. Judge Liebe and two daughters left on the train this afternoon for Sea View, North Beach. Mr. and Mrs. John Michell went low this morning, Mr. Michell to he tbe Locks and Mrs. Michell to Portland. Ralph Prnitt, of Pendleton, who has been spending a few days in the city, was a passenger by the Regulator this morning for Portland. Misses Frankia and Mattie FitzGer ald, of San Francieco, who bave been absent from the city for eight years, are in the city visiting Mrs. D. Handley. Dr. Charlotte B. Brown, of San Fran cieco, is visiting her uncle and aunt, Mr. Daniel Farrlngton and Mrs. M. H. Rob erts. She will return to San Francisco the last of the week. Mrs. M. H. Roberts and Misses Char lotte and Anna returned from Gladstone Park yesterday. Miss Anna was one of the members of the graduating class of the Oregon State University at H.ugene. ' Friday. Mrs. J. H. Walters went to Portland this afternoon. Prof. Campbell of, Monmouth college returned nome today. Mr. H. Glenn will return from As toria tonight for a couple of days at home. Constable Dichtenmuller of Mosier was in town today, returning on the local train. Mis. Walter Moore, and Mrs. Henry Moore and son of Moro are registered at the Umatilla Hoube. Mr. J. E. Barnett has returned from a trip to the country. He reports con siderable hot weather and grasshoppers. Mr. Seufert has returned from Port land. He is much dissatisfied with the $25,000 verdict. A second trial will oc cur in October. Arthur Kennedy returned from a three weeks' absence down the river to day. He discoverd three copper ledges while absent, which he pronounces too thin to work. He will, therefore, not work them. Will R. Glendenning, conductor on the Oregon Railway & Navigation pas senger tram between tr endieton and Portland, has returned from a trip with his wife to Canada and several cities in the Eastern states in this country dur ing tbe past month. A Mathematical Problem. Editor Chronicle: If the people of the United States pro duce $100,000 worth of silver bullion, sell the same in foreign markets, and with (he proceeds buy $100,000 worth of the products of foreign labor, said people of tbe United States will have added to their wealth just $100,000. Should the peopls of the United States com said bullion into $200,UU0, they could only get $100,000 worth of the product of foreign labor for it;' but would be bound to take it back and pay therefor $200,000 worth of the products of their labor. How much would the people of the Unite4 States lose? An-weiv-$100,000. Suppose the $200,000 coinage is kept by tbe people ot the United States? How much as a nation have they gain ed? Answer Nothing. . - - F. 8. G. Mr. Geo. Reed was in town from his ranch .this morning, and confirms the reports of . a partial loss of the wheat crop by tbe hot winds. Beautiful fields of waving grain that would bave yielded more bountiful crops than for years, were breathed upon by the hot east wind and drooped and shriveled under its withering caress. There will be thousands of bushels of wheat hauled to The Dalles, bnt there might have been two bushels for every one that will be brought in, had it not been for the desert-born breezes of : the arid Cis Rockies. ': Anheuser beer on draught at the Mid way. . s A. Vole front Victor. Editor Chroniclb: ' - The question is frequently asked, "Why is silver bullion worth less uow than it was prior to the 'crime' of '73?" There are many and varied answers to that question, and from the scholarly mass of incongruities we turn away dis heartened, and look still farther for a solution compatible with our common sense. Our common sense teaches that tbe circulation of. money, and money only, cannot possibly add one iota to a people's prosperity. It is the exchange ot the products of human labor, which brings comfort, gladness, morality and civilization to the toiling millions of this old world of ours. The business and purpose of the money as nsed by civil ized man is to stand in lieu of the prod ucts of human- labor as they travel through the various arteries of trmle.and it is obvious that it must be a standard to which all commodities are referred for measurement as to value. Our com mon sense says that the money which will effect' the exchange of the various objects of commerce, certainly and eco nomically, is good. Silver when stamped by a sonnd gov ernment is certain, but very expensive, It costs about forty per cent of its stamped value, present standard, to pro duce it. Forty per cent ia a big bonus to pay for the scales to weigh with. The gains of ye man prior to and since '73 has devised means of circumventing this enormous production, and silver money, coined money of all kinds, ex cept in fractional parts of a dollar, is being relegated to the shades of com mercial oblivion, there to rest in com pany with those life-seeking, liberty crushing abominations of antiquity the thumb screw and the rack. There is reared instead of this gloomy, fore boding monster, the grandest financial system the world has ever known. refer to that noblest monument to man's mighty genius, tbe 'bank credit system through which about 95 per cent of the -business of the world is done today The basis of this mighty commercial structure rests on the broad foundation of nature. Through this system -the product of one section is exchanged for tbe product of another with certainty and economy. To illustrate: An east ern manufacturer sells the merchants of The Dalles $100,000 worth of goods. His agent buys from the customers of the merchants $100,000 worth of wool fruit, wheat, etc. Through the banks the exchanges are made with very little expense to any of the thousands of the parties interested. The bank money checks are perfectly . sound, and so long . as tbe dealings throughout are sound, are equal to gold in any part of the country. Thus we see the wool, the wheat, the fruit and the manufactured articles, exchanging with perfect free dom and safety. This condition of things - is not I dream of the Utopiast ; but a reality. That such a condition ia possible; that we, the people of the world, and especi ally we, the people of this grand repub lic, have reached that high standard of commercial honor which makes this system of freedom possible, should cause each heart to look in admiration for the possibilities of the human race. This grand innovation which has torn from our hands tbe shackles of an un natural money, is so completely in line with the material law of commerce that it is bound to endure and grow in favor as man's morality grows. The system is vigorously attacked by demagogues, who' know only such wea pons as prejudice, malice and jealousy Tbey tell the people that bankers are a bard lot; that they receive 8 and 10 per cent interest, open their banks at 9 and close at 4, and have a good time generally at other people's expense. Still our common sense continues to whisper in a "still small voice" that there is no justice In coining 100-cent dollars from 50-cent bullion, and have our dear old Uncle Sam guarantee' they are just as good as gold, when tbe buyers and sellers of the world have declared by tbeir acts that they don't want them, and don't use the dollars that are now coined. To force Uncle Sam to sign such guarantee would almost break his heart, and entirely break his credit. But let's go back to the question. Silver bullion is not worth as much as it was prior to '73, because the people won't use it as money as they did then. The bullion owner would like to have bis 50 cents worth of bullion made worth 100 cents; so would the owner of 50 cents worth of wheat, 25 cents worth of potatoes, etc., like a scheme of this kind applied to his possessions. We have simply outgrown silver as a money. The general enlightenment ot the matter which our public school sys tem baa made possible, haa swept from the earth nearly every vestige of that horrible idea, "vicarious' atonement." The world has grown strong in individn ali8m. Now we have, standing at tbe head of every successful cominercia' concern, men and women whose moral stamina lifta them out, far out, beyond the reach of all temptation to do a wrong commercial act. This condition of things is realized by the masses to a great extent. -The com mercial men and bankers of today are gods when compared to the Shy locks of ye olden times, or ye political tricksters of ye modern times. F. S. G. - Victor, July 13, 1896. ; ;.- UNTOLD f.'ISERY FKOK RHEuriATisn ' C. E. King, Water VtUey, Hiss, cursd by Ayer's Sarsaparilfa 'For five yuur. I si.I'itmI itntniil mlwry from muRiilxr rl 'iiiu.iiWui. I irleil every known romeily, oiisulle:l Ilia l.cst liys. clans, visited Hot Springs. Arfc..tlirec tiuwui, spending finoo Umre. 1 ch!I iloctrs' Mils; hut could obtain only loi. Kr.-u y relief. My flesh was wasted away so th.it I weighed only nlm-ty-tlirec piun!; tny left ?rm and leg were drawn out ot shaye, the musolcs 1 bnlng twisted m in knots. I was unable to dress my8ff. ox.-tft wtih assistHm-e, and eonld only hobble about by uslnir a ennc. I had no appetite, and was assured, by the doctors, that I tw:ild not live. Tlio pains, at times, went so a v. fui. lhat I could procure reli-.-t only by ni'-uns of hypodermic Injec tiuns of moiilii:i?. f liud niy limbs bandaged in clay, In sulpi-.nr, in poullkvs; but these gave only temporary relief. After trying cverythinr:, ami suffering, the most awful tortures. I bci?"! to lake Ayer's Sarsaparilla. inside of two mouths, I was able to walk without a cine. In three months, my limbs began to strengthen, and In the course of a year, I was cured. 5! y weight has increased to ltT pounds, and I am now able to do my full day's wovK as a railroad blacksmith." s The Only World's Fair Sarsaparilla. AVER'S nirS ewra Headmch, Hay and Grain for Sale Ward. Kerns & Robertson's Stable Corner Fourth and Federal Sts. dec4-lm TTie coiumBla Packing Co., PACKERS OF Pofk and Beef " MANUFACTTJIUCKS OF Fine Lard and Sausages. Curers of BRAND Dried Beef, Etc. Bake Oven and Mitchel STAGE LINE, THOMAS HAEPEE, Proprietor Stages leave Bake Oven for Antelope every day, and from Antelope to Mit chell three times a week. GOOD HORSES AND WAGONS. Notice of Sheriff's Sale. Notice Is herebv riven that bv virtue of an ex ecution and ordar of sale issued out of the Cir cuit Court of the State of Oregon for Wasco county, upon a judgment and decree made and rendered therein, in an action men ana mereio- fore pending wherein the American Mortgage Company of Scotland. Limited, a corno ration. was Dlnintiff. and Francis M. Thompson. Mis souri) A. Thompson, his wife, and R. F. Gibons, A. S. MacAllister and John M. Maiden, partners and members of the firm of Gibons, MacAllister & Co., were defendants, I did duly levy upon -and will sell at the front door of the County Court House In Dulles City, Wasco county, Ore- . gon, on Saturday, tlia 25th day of July, 1896, at 2 o'clock In tbe afternoon of said day, at pub lic auction to the highest bidder for cash in hand, the real estate described In said execution and order of sale, and described as follows, to- - wit: The east half PAI of tbe southwest quarter (W) and tbe south half () of the northwest quai ter (!) of section eight (8) in township (2) south of range thirteen (13) east of the Willamette merid ian. In Wasco eountr, Oregon, containing 160 acres, together with all and singular the tene ments, hereditaments and atpu;tenances there unto belonging or in anywise appertaining, or so much thereof as shall be necessary to satisfy -the sums due upon said writ, towlt: 11064, to gether with interest at tbe rate of eight per cent, per annum from June 9th, 18; 1100 attorney's ees. and IIS costs and Disbursements due and owing to the plaintiff in said writ, together with accruing costs and Interest and expenses of said sale, and also the further sum of 11391.20, due defendants, R. F. Gibons and John M. Marden, with interest thereon from me tn anj oi June. 1896. at 10 tier cent per annum, and the further turn of 100 attorney s feea. Dated at The Dalles, or., wis aia urt ni June, .- 1896, 1. 4. UtUVfiK, je27 ti Sheriff of Wasco County, Oregon. Notice of Final Account. To all Whom rr Mat Concern: Notice Is hereby given lhat G. J. Farley baa filed his final account as administrator of 'be estate of Joshua W. Reedy, deceased, and that said nnai aeeounc win eome on for bearing on Monday, July 13th, 1896, at which time a hearing will be had aa to any and all objections to snob, final account, and the settlement thereof. Blakeley, county judge. Dated this lltb day Ot June, 1899. O. J. FARLEY, Aaurr ot (a estate oi josnua n. moii.uw Ceajeil, His awl Ei ;ni, Jeli