The Dalles weekly chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1947, December 02, 1896, PART 1, Image 1

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THE DALLES, WASCO COUNTY, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 2?1896.
VOL. VII.
NUMBER 1.
r II e II .- 1 1
HIS FINAL MESSAGE
Resident Cleveland Getting
Ready for Congress.
AWAITING CUBAN DEVELOPMENT
Among ruber Thing, He Will Reeeom
mend the Retirement of theCreen----.'
t backs and the Sherman
-'' ' Note.
Washington, Nov. 27. President
Cleveland has been devoting a great
of time to his annual mescage during the
last week, and now haa It well in hand
sd that it can be finished In a couple of
days. ...
The message is expected to be one of
the ablest documents Mr. Cleveland hap
written daring his tw94terms.---.rlt will
be in a sense hia ' farewell to the Aoieri
can people as their chief executive, and
there la little doubt that he will embrace
- the opportunity to mark oat the coarse
he believes ought to be followed by the
national government for the maintenance
and development of the honor and proa
----- parity of .the country. - : -
.Foreign affairs will naturally claim
considerable attention, and the presi
dent will have an opportunity to con
gress and the country upon the solution
of the eneznelan-boundary controversy
in 'America in an honorable and satisfac
tory manner, alike to the United State
, . and to 'Great Britain and . Venezuela,
Tbe condition of affairs in Turkey will
be discussed in detail, and the president
--willbe a We- io show that the ordinary
r diplomatic ageuciea have sufficed for the
i protection -of American life and jrpp
erty in the Turkish empire.
The ia6t paragrapba of the message to
be written will be those dealing with the
situation in Cuba. , He will avail bim
eelf of the latest possible information as
to the military situation in the island,
and the prospect for -early settlement or
failure of the insurgents may have much
to do with shaping hia policy. . The
present indications are that he will
make no radical recommendations on
this ieubject. - Other -foreign complica
tions in which tho , United States ia in
terested will be touched upon briefly. v
Secretary Carlisle ia preparing data
looking tojthe increase of revenue by
imposing revenue duties on tea and
J coffee,, and by increasing the internal
revenue tax on -beer, and the president
'wiTtdoubtlees express hia approval of
these recommendations.
The financial reform recommendations
of the message will be along the line of
Mr. Cleveland's former recommenda-
tion?," and will have as- their basis the-
' advocacy of the single gold standard as
the foundation of the monetary system
-." of the 'conhtrf.. '-. ; :
i . The retirement of the greenbacks and
' the Sherman notes will be recommend
ed so as to take the government entire
' ly ooi ol the business of "issuing promis
sory .notes. :- Banking reform will be rec
ommended at. the same time, to enable
the banks of the' country to issue circa-
latlog notes which can be expanded or
'' , ; contracted in volume to meet the needs
of the. businera of the country:
Mr. Cleveland ia alive to the necessity
Ti of continuing the expansion of the navy,
. h and of constructing coast defenses to put
the country in a condition to resist for-
eign aggressions, and the recommenda
.tianxalheseJlnes made by. Secretaries
Latnontand Herbert in their annual re-
r g porta- will be seconded in the message.:
J i AJUDITIQN pr TIH PHlLADLfllA
The Culer- Waate. to-Own a
Speed
" Ileoord. ? - '
- -. ... .- -f
San Fbascisc", Nov. 27. the United
I mj Stateajcrulser, Philadelphia wants, to
own a record, so navy gossip has it, and
she fondly hopes to "tecuVe If "on E'er
"coining tiip to Callao.; It iaiaid thai
her officers have firmly determined that
the vessel shall break all existing ree-
.Ord8..for armored cruisers. Notwith
standing that the officers refuse to cor
roborate the , report, it comes from a
good source and; would seem to be borne
out by the nature- of ' the- preparations
made for this voyage. No stop will be
- X Fmade. "on-tbe Jway down, thought it Js
nsual for warships bound' to Sooth
America to recoal at Panama.
In anticipation of the long voyage,
1500 tons of coal has been P?1 aboard
the crniser, and evei y inch of Available
space is being economized, encroach
ments being made on the officers' qnar-
- ters. The polished floor in i be ward
v room has' been taken up and a coal
chute , passes Jlhrough . Jhe, apartment.
The Philadelphia haa all the coal she
f. : can carry; "'Tomorrow ,bns been set as
' the sciling date. . - v
fflltlR WAS DEFEATED.
Nawi of Jttaceo's Knbl Mountain Victory
Confirmed.
New Yokk, Nov. 27. The Cuban
junta in this city claims to have re
ceived confirmation via Key West of the
report that Maeeo had defeated Cap
.tain-General Weyler in the Rubi mount
ains of Pinar del Rio. The following
account of the battle ' was furnished. by
the secretary of the junta last night:
General Weyler'a forces, while march
ing through the Rubi mopntaine, a boat
thirty mils from Havana, were attacked
by Maceo's army.- The charge was so
sudden and played such havoc with the
troops that the insurgents were able to
pour several volleys into the Spamsb
ranks before the latter could rally and
return the fire.- The battle was short
and desperate, arfd General ' Weyler,
Feeing that Hia men were fighting at
disadvantage and -were being elaugh
tered, ordered a retreat, leaving over
1000 dead and taking his wounded with
him.'
'After leaving the mountains General
Weyler proceeded to Artmiiea, where
he stopped to allow his armv to rest.
A-1RSAKDKIK KUBBZD.
Dallas Offlelal'e Toogh Eznerlence With
Dalles, Tex Nov. 29. At midnight
Ave pistol shots in rapid succession - in
the vicinltv of the courthouse attracted
the police to that building. - W. E.-Coe,
county .treasurer, was found in bis office
with blood oozing from a wound in the
back of the bead. : He Was in a dazed
condition and in a very excited frame of
mind. He said iie had been working
very late in order to get the affairs of the
office in shape to retire in favor - of his
successor. At ruidnigbt,- two men ap
peared, and one placed a gun to his tem
pie and ordered bim to open the vault
He did so, and all - the valuable papers
and contents of the inner vault were ex
amined by one 'of the robbers. After
placing a considerable sum of money in
a canvass sack," the -robbers withdrew
from the vault. Coe seized his pistol
and shot at the robbers. The latter re
turned the fire, hitting the' treasurer in
the back of the head, ' inflicting b bad
scalp wonnA -The--treasurer- says the
robbers secured $6000, and he is confi
dent that he shot and. badly wounded
one of his assailants. -The police force
and a large number -of deputies with
bloodhounds are on the trail of the rob
bers. . i-
' Policy br'TChltejMetal Senators.
Salt Lalu, Nov. 27. The Tribune
publishes :an interview with Senator
Dubois, of daho. The senator says that
he has no idea that there will be any at
tern pf to pass the" .Dmgley bill at this
session of congreie, it Ts a piece of legjsla
tion that failed at the last session 'and
ought . to fail, at any session. When
asked about the policy of the silver sen
ators fn the next congress, he said : : .
They wfll hold'the balance Of power
in the senate and will, no doubt, con
tinue their aggressive fight for silver,
making all other issues subordinate to
.that. - There can-be no- prosperity under
the McKInley administration, 'any- more
than there was nnder Cleveland. Mc
Kinley wants a, high- tariff, and a gold
standard. No matter' what kind of
: r .. 4 . -
tars we nave, ttiere can be no pros
perity except for a few, nnder the gold
Standard. One more trial of the Re-
publican party will convince, the people
of this, in my judgment, and the silver
advocates will win ttia congress in '98
and the presidency in l'JOO."
Senator Cannon, of Utah, leaves for
Washington this morning.
Due ti UuiMtati Iufluenee.
I-ONDOK. ' Nov! "SOT. Th " Hnnotanti.
J nople correspondent of 'the Standard
discusses the refusal of admission to the
Dardanelles of Greek, Dutch and Amer
ican stationarles, which is attributed to
Russian influence.- The American and
Greek eubj ctp, ad la the correspondent.
are annoyed at their governments for
not showing jnore"energy with a view to
obtaining the privileges granted to the
great powers.
"" " One-Dollar Wheat.
: Toledo, O., Nov. 28. Large-sales of
No. 2 red wheat for May delivery were
made at the produce exchange here this
morning, at $1 per bushel, amid load
cheering. At the same lime "the New
York pricwas 9 sente Chicago 85J
cents. The demand here is for export
i1nK- - , ;
Havana- le-Vhreatened.
r JACKSOKvrLLEi ;f la.r;Nov 27. News
comes from Havana tonight that orders
have been issued doubling the guards
at the fortiflcatieM aronnd the'eity, and
the news has reached tbS captain-gen
eral ot the- presence of laree guerilla
orces near the city if? i'xf
: For Hale. ';
One span draft horses, one set of har
ness and a wagon, for sale at a bargain.
Address box 429, The Dalles, On' ;.-
- y- ,j i-' a. ' ''XV : Qi;t2S-dwlni '
THE BLIZZARD REIGNS
Fearful Suffering in the
. Northwestern States. ;
M-ANY LIVES REPORTED LOST
Cattle Bnrted In Snow Drift. Trains
Delayed. and Wires Prostrated
on the Prairies.
St. Paul, Nov. 28. Human- beings
have been frozen to . death, cattle have
been stampeded, braised and smothered
in snow drifts; trains are delayed,, wires
are down and the November storm rec
ord is broken by the blizzard tbat holds
the Northwest locked in its chilly grasp.
' How majy lives have -been sacrificed
cannot be told until the enow drifts clear
away, months hence. Men -are. missing
everywhere in the heart of the storm.
Some are known to be dead,: and many
are missing, with the chances very much
against them being alive. ' Those derfd
and missing are: " '
Thomas Anderson, 18 years old, lost in
the snow near Moorbead, Minn.
F. M. Burrows, mail agent, lost in the
storm at Devil's Lake, N. D.
Frank Stack, of Chicago, frozen to
death near Fargo, N. D. '
Two unindent'fled men, found frozen
to death near Fargo, N. D.
Three missing men, lost in the snow,
hear Fargo. '
From the cattle country in the west
ern part of North' Dakota come reports
Of intense 'suffering of the livestock on
the ranges, but no definite information
can be had. as the wires are down.
Watson Ball, a cattleman, says the losses
will be extremely heavy.
South Dakota is suffering, too. At
Pierre over eight inches of snow fell
during Thursday and Friday, and the
wind maintained an average velocity of
28 miles an hour. ' Wires were down
most of the time, and trains and street- !
cars were tied up. The first train to
move west went out about noon today
with a snowplow.
Snow on the prairie drifted badly, and
cattle losses are being reported. ' It was
the worst storm tor vears. ' ' :
Some ot the transcontinental railroads
centering at St. Paul resumed thebr
through' service today. The w'nd hav
ing abated. .they.. were able to send out
rotaries and Bnowplows; and expected
that within six - hours they would be
able to send their, traffic" through in
good shape, provided no serious damage
has been sustained by their tracks.
: Wires are still in bad shape, and it is
mpoesible to get definite reports regard-"
ng conditions in . certain sections, but
the railway set large bodies of. compe
tent men to work and made rapid pro
gress., iroraall reports received there
seems to be nothing to contend with ex
cept immense snow banks, which, how
ever, the rotaries can easily remove. :.
From latest reports it is safe to pre
dict that tomorrow, everything will bi
moving . pretty well, though cot o
schedule time. , : '
' Stock Suffering- In Nebraska.
Omaha, Nov.' 28. Severe weather
continues to prevail throughout Nebras
ka. 'The thermometer has been close to
zero for thirtv-slx honra. "In thn w V.:
Awn na, il lh at.t. a V. I ..U 1 1
vails. In some sections stock is report
ed as suffering for want" of food and
water. The immense supply of grain
and bay io Nebraska, where it is availa
ble, enables feeders to carry cattle with
out trouble. Rarhflkd trains are being
operated on many roads without wires.
Other reports from some bf the northern
counties in . this state say the storms bf
late were . the most severe in years, and
that range cattle would surely perish
unless furnished food and shelter. '
Worst Mtorm in Sight Tears. ;
Aberdeen, S. D.;Nov. 28. The pres
ent storm has not,been paralleled since
the ereat blizzard of January 12, 1888.
Drifts on the streets and on the railroad
tracks are six feet deep.. Railroading
has been, entirely abandoned until the
storm breaks.. The. Eureka accommo
dation is fast at Hillsview. , The loss to
stock, it is feared, will be great.' A dis-t
patch from Mellen .says the worst snow-.
storm and blizzard through this section
for years commenced on Wednesday
ight. Trains are blocked.' Snow drifts
on Main street are fifteen feet deep.
Stock will suffer greatly. ' . i
: T radio Blockaded.. .
Washington, Nov; 28. A - traffic
blockade by stormsJn the Northwest is
reported at the postoffice department in
the following dispatch from the super
intendent of the railway service at St
Paul : "On account of heavy blockad-
ing s,torme, trains of the Wort hero Pa
cific and Great Northern lines in South
Dakota and Montana are at a standstill,
telegraph wires are down, and it will be
forty-eight . hoars before the regnlar
train service is resumed. ''
Lout in a Dakota Town.
Devils Lake, N. D., Nov. 28. The
blizzard was very eevere here. The pas-
Kenger train from the Coast has remained
on the siding since Thanksgiving.' About
j 4 :30 p. m. on Thursday, F. M. Burrows,
mail agent, left his car to go to the de
pot for orders. He. has not been seep
since, and there U not one chance in
thousand of his having escaped death in
the storm.' It is supposed that in re
taming to the car he lost his way in the
blinding storm. .
' ' Snow Blockade Raised.
cubon, a. v., jnov. z. the snow
blockade was raised and traffic . on this
division of the Chicago & Northwestern
road resumed tonight. The Great
Northern will begin business Monday.
Telegraph lines are badlv demoralized.
Stock losses on the northern and west
ern ranges are very heavy, but no suf
ferlng among the settlers is reported
.The storm lasted 43 hours, and was one
of the most severe experienced since the
settlement of this country. '
- 1 4 '" r "--. '
In Colorado.
Denvkb.NoV. 28. The minimum tem
perature recorded at the Denver station
weather bureau today was 8 deg. belo
zero, at 6 a. m. : at 11 it was 84 below
zero. . At Leadyille it is 17 below zero
at Pueblo, 12 below ; at Cripple Creek,
14 below.' 'The cold Bnap has been more
severe in Wyoming and Colorado. ; At
Lander, Wyo., the thermometer record
ed 28 below, zero last night, v
j. .Minnesota and Manitoba- ...
St. Padl, Nov.: 28. A light , snowfall
only was reported today, but it seems to
be the closing fury of the. present big
blizzard. Th'S temperature dropped to
a low point. In this city it was 7 below
zero early this morning. Moorhead re
ported 24 below,; Huron, 8 below ; , Wil-
liston, 22 below l. Winnipeg, 24 below.
Trains are badly delayed, and telegraph
communication greatly crippled. :
Salt Lake's Coldest Day. : -:'
Salt Lake, Nov. 28. Today was the
coldest November- day in Salt-Lake' in
the: 20 years existence of- the : Utah
weather bureau. , At 5 o'clock this morn
ing the therruoter registered five-tenths
of a degree below zero, . ' ' . ', ' ' '
SITUATION JST THE TBANSYAAliJ''
Krna)err Say the Rumors ot .Inpendlns;
Troqble Are Untrue- . 1 1 '
' j I i , . : 7 ' , .
Pbetobia, South Africa, Nov. 28, At
a banajiet here yesterday evening, Presi
dent Kruger declared that the rumors of
impending trouble were untrue, and that
they had been, spread by f peculators.
All was clear, he added. The London
convention assured the independence of
the Transvaal, and if a change was de
sirable, he would see that it was ar
ranged constitutionally. Referring to
e delay of the Transvaal government
.ii claiming maemnuy jrom tne critisn
South Africa Company id consequence
of the Jameson raid, President Kroger
i said the delay arose from the desire not
to make, an excessive demand, and that
the exact expense was not computed.
He ridiculed the idea that an invasion
of Rhodesia was proposed, and assured
bis hearers that the mining interests of
the country would be fostered. :
The Prlnoe Leaves Blenheim.
Woodstock, England,' Nov. 28. The
Prince and Princess of "Wales left Blen
heim this morning and were escorted to
Oxford by a detachment of the local yeo
manry corps, the Oxfordshire hussars,'
headed by the Duke of Marlborough,
who 1s a lientenant of that branch bf the
cavalry.- t " :- " ( , . ,
t Satolll Mad No Beport.-
Rome; Nov. 28. Cardinal Satolli de
nounces as absolutely false and repre
hensible all rumors published in Amer
ica alleging that he made a report to the
pope touching upon the university of
Washington, Archbishop Ireland, Car
dinal Gibbons or other Catholic digni
taries. , . " , .- .
, Jameson In a Critical Condition.
London, Nov. 28. Dr. Jameson, leader
of the Transvaal raid, who is undergoing
a sentence of 151' months' imprisonment
-in Holloway jail, and whose sickness has
jrevious!y been .noted, is; announced; to
be ln a critical conditiQa., t, ( . (
i The'JfUer KxpefllMon. , ".
) Pabis, Nov.. 28. The,- French govern
ment has received assurance from, tbe
government of Great Britain that the
sphere of the river Niger company's
proposed ' expedition : will ' not affect
French interests. i : . - - ',
All- old club - members, and : their
lady friends are especially invited to the
skating rink on Tuesday evening. . Skat
ing from 8 till 11. .
ALL RECORDS BROKEN
Paget
Sound Joins in the
Freeze. Up.
GROUND, FROZEN EIGHTEEN INCHES
-; ' T. - I
la
Minnesota . and Dakota the Cold
Weather Continues, With Loss
of Lire and Stock.'
, Tacoma, Nor. 29. The present cold
snap holds the record for November. It
also holds the record for the longeEtcon
tinned cold spell, and the snow in West
er Washington is deeper and dryer than
ever known before. Another new told
weather record has been established for
Comqien cement bay, as, for , several
miles from shore it is covered with i
thick coating of ice. Just how thick
may be understood when the ' steamer
Aberdeen was prevented from making
her regular landing at the wharf on ao
count of her inability to break a chan
nel through the ice. The steamer Flyer,
the fastest boat on the Pacific coast, had
to back nearly a mile to clear the ice
floe, before taking her course.
. Captain Clayton and hia wife started
oat for their ship in , one of the ship
boats, pulled by four strong sailors, and,
after battling with the ice for, over an
hour, had to abandon the attempt. '
Captain Bailey, of the ' Drumrock,
started a boat away from bis shipiohelp
break a passage through the ice, so that
Captain . Clayton; and bis wife could
bring their boat alongside the Drumrock
This im certainly something new, for
there is no record that can be found to
show that the salt water bays . of ; the
Sound haye ever frozen over before.
Reports are coming in from all sec
tions of the Sound of great damage done
by frost to the root and fruit crops, by
reason of their being no way to stow it
away: Many of the farmers living in the
valleys had taken op only .as , much of
their crop as they had .immediate sale
for, and for -convenience bad left the
rest of the crop in the ground. In all
such cases,' the farmer will lose every
thing, fof the frost has gone in the
ground in .many cases .18 to 20 inches.
. Considering the amount of snow , that
has fallen, and the great number of peo
ple who have taken advantage of it to
go coasting in Tacoma and Seattle, in
ma by i liases, downs dangerously steep
hills, there have been bat few accidents
during the past week, and tbe sum total
of accidents for the ' week does not
amount to more than four or five cases
of broken arms and legs, which, consid
ering the large number out, and the dan
gerous proximity of the coasting grounds
to street and railroad traffic, is remark
able. -
STILL
INTENSELY
COLD.
I V j -
"- l
Movsj la
Train) Are
IlesTlnnlns; to
' Northwest.
the
St. Paul, Nov. 29. The weather in
St. "Paul 'continues cold.- The lowest
point-reached last night) 7 degrees be
low. The Northern Pacific's West Da
kota division was open last night and
trains running as usual.
Bismarck reports the. Northern Pa
cific still blockaded in that state, and no
prospectsthat trains will move before.
tomorrow. Tbe coast train,, which
should have' reached St. Paul Thursday
ia stuck in a snowdrift at New Salem',
40 miles west of Bismarck, and cannot
move. until enowplows clear the tracks.
In spme , deep cuts, snow is drifted on
the track to a depth of JK) feet. A coal
famine prevails at Bismarck, and there
will be much' suffering unless relief Is
afforded at once. ' No services were held
in the churches today and tbe fuel on
hand was distributed among the poor.
Mandan, N.. D. Nov. ,29. The first
passenger train from the West since
Thursday arrived tonight. ' Railroad
officials expect to start trains east Mon
day. : At present, no casulties have been
reported,; but stockmen expect to hear
of, great losses of cattle, as tbe storm
must have caught many ranchers un
prepared'. 3 ' V -' : " ''- " "'
Devil's ;LAkE? N. D. Nov. 29 The
weather., continues extremely cold, tbe
thermometer -indicating .frprn 10 to 20
degrees below zero. . Thefirsf train from
I tbe East since Wednesday arrived this
evening. ' A trainload of 'sheep; 13 cars,
was caught n tbe blizzard I at - Grand
Harbor, six miles west ef here, and the
animals gsnf11- th:, irack , in, open
donblq-drikaTs during the entire
blizzard.' Oat of 2300 sheep, about 600
perished.
Wn-LiSTON, N. D., Nov. 29. East
bound passenger trains were snowbound
here two days. The road was opened
to Minot last night. Tbe west-bound
pram.
, Absolutely Pure. .
A rresm of tartar baking; powder. Highest of
11 In leavening strengtli. Latat PnOtd (Uata
Government Food Report.
Rotal Bakimo PowDia Co.. New York
passenger train, due here Thai sday, 'will
not arrive until tomorrow.
Dfloth, Minn., Nov. 29. The coldest
weather of the season was experienced
this morning, when 15 , degrees below
zero was reported by tbe weather
bureau. ' ' " "
1 Snow at New York.
New Yobk, Nov. 29. A slight snow
fall occurred in . this vicinity tonight.
The. temperature is rising, however,
and there are no indications of a se
vere storm. ' ' " "' '
CYCLON
IN
(1KLAHOMA.
The
Towa
of BalstoaT Wiped
Off
'Map. "'
Pebbt, O. T., Nov., 29. Information
reaches here, that a very destructive cy
clone struck the town of Ralston, on the
Arkansas river, 60 miles northeast of
here, on Thursday night, at ' 12 o'clock
and nearly wiped out the town of about
200 houses. Nearly every house in
town was blown down , and several
people were Injured, bat no .names can
be obtained. Ralston ia in the Osage
Indian nation, and 55 mites : fnpm a
telegraph office. : ' ' ''
TBI FLORIDA COAST.
Concentrating- ' Artillery
Troops at
-. Peasaeole..'
Pensacola, Fla., : Nov. 29. It is ru
mored in military circles that the troops
of the First artillery, ndw stationed at
various posts on ine uuu ana Auaniip
coast, are 1 to be concentrated here for
practice with the modern heavy guns,
whkb will soon be in position on Kanta
Rosa island. . -.
The selection of a site for another bat
tery leaves no doubt in the , minds of
military men that' Pensacola is to be
heavily fortified as rapidly as possible,
and as, the troops need .'practice, in the
handling of the modern guns, -the- har
bor ia deemed by military men. to be
the beet that could be selected for tbe
purpose. They would ' nave the to pen .
gulf for target practice, and at least
1000 men can be comfortably quartered
at Fort Barrancas and the navy yard.
. ., , , Crops lu Aau(r. , t
Salem, Or., Nov. 29.-rTbe , cold .spell .
ih not yet over in Salem. The thermo
meter was within 14 degrees below' zero ,
this morning. The'conntinuanoeof cold -weather
aroUie fears for the potato' crop
and fall-sown grain, The upland potato
crop that has not been dug la , probably
safe.' In'the overflowed' lands along the
river and creek bottoms,-it la feared the
crop will be damaged by the freeze. The
sarface of the ground is frozen: dry and
if a snow shoald fall or the, cold snap
break up at once, wheat would not be
injured; . But if .' thaws and freezes
shoald alternate, the tender roots would
be frozen out of tbe ground. '
It has been several years since skating
was good in Salem, and. everybody who
delights in the sport availed himself ot
the excellent oppportunity yestetday and
today. There is abundance of ice cover
ing the still waters and the sloughs and
lakes have been liberally patronized
State or Ohio, Citt o Toledo)
. , . , Lucas County. f ,"
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he
is the senior partner of tbe firm of F. J.
Cheney & Co., doing business in the
City of Toledo, County and - state afore
said, and that said Arm will pay the
sum of One Hundred Dollars .for , each
and every case of .Catarrh that cannot be
cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Care.
' ' ' Fbank J. Cheney.
Sworn to before mejind subscribed in
my presence, this 6th day of December,
A. D. 1896. ,. ;. ., 7 ... I .
. , , . , A. Wf Gleason,
seal ;. " ' ' Notary Public.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internal
ly and acts directly on the blood and
mocuos surfaces of the system. ; Send -
for testimonials, free.; " T
F. J. Cheney Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 75c. No. 3-11
;For rent. Five-room , cottage nicely
furnished, below the bluff. Enquire ot
W. A. Johnson, grocer. ' nSO-SC