THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, SATURDAY. OCTOBER 23, 1897 The Weekly Ghroniele. THI DALLKS, OitEOON PERSONA 1 MENTION. Wednesday. J. B. Kerr, an Eastern sheep buyer is in the city today. Mr. Allawav, of the D. P. & A. N. Co. . is in Portland today. . -. George Young, a prominent sheep- raiser of Kidgeway, is in the city today, Mr. Chas. Stone of Waeco is in the city today, attending to business matters and . visiting trienas. Peter Rish. one of Nansene's enter- prising farmers, is in the city purchasing necessary implements tor ma tarm. Dr. Barrell of Hood River, who holds . the position in that community of doctor and trail-raiser, is in me city toaay Mrs. Charles Stabling went to Port land this morning; on the local, where . she will spend a snort time . visiting mends. .-. Thursday. E. A. Griffin, of Dafur, is at the Uma- niatilla. . J. G. Burns, of WaDinitia, was in the city last night. Miss Grace Brune, of Rockland, is in the city today, Frank Meddler and wife, of Waeco, are in tha city today. Mrs. D. W. Pierce, of Goldendale, is in the city today. John McAllister, of High Prairie, is in . on bnmess today. Chf -mid Andrew Douglass of Dnfut are in the city today. Mrs. G. D. Hayden, of Ilwaco, is a ; guest at the Umatilla. Mrs. Sheldon and Mrs Fairfowl, went to Portland yesterday. T. H. Johnston . of Dafur is in the city today on business. Joseph A. Graham is in from Sisters . today and gave as au. Henry Driver, .brother- of Sheriff Driver, was in this city yesterday. John Stephens, proprietor of the Fifteen-Mile House at Dafur, is in the city today. , Mrs. Ostrander and daughter, of Gol dendale, are visiting Mrs. strander's danghter, Mrs. Simeon Bolton, in this city. - Theo. J. Seufert left for Portland this morning to be present at the operation which is to be performed on his little boy this afternoon. Mr. D. M. Fareley of Moro, instructor of the Grass Valley band, is in the city today. His account as to the business which is being done in Sherman county at present does not vary from that of others from that part of the country. Friday. E. A. Medler, of Wasco, is in the city. James Baxter, of Antelope, was in the city yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. W. Lord went down on the local this morning. S. 6. Stearns, of Prineville, is among the guests at the Umatilla. C. J. Bright, one of Sherman county's attorneys, is in the city on business. Thomas Glavey, one of Kmgsley's nterprieing farmers was in on business yesterday. W. B. Presby, partner in the Golden .dale law firm" of Presby & Darcb, is in the city today. Mies Ethel Masters came over from Goldendale yesterday and went to Portland this morning. Mr. Ernest Drews left for Biggs yes terday, to assist in bnilding a telegraph line from Biggs to Wasco. The many friends of S. B. Adams are pleased to see that he is able to be on the streets again after his illnees. Sam E. Van Vactor returned last vening from Baker City and Prineville, where he has been attending court. Dr. J. Sutherland left on the morning train for Astoria, where he will spend a week or so visiting and attending to matters of business. . At Boyd, Or., Oct. 17th, 1897, little Vera Eldea Ward, infant twin daughter 'Of Mr. and Mrs. Fred H. Ward, 1 year old on the day of its funeral. Words of comfort were spoken by Rev. Conner of Dufur. If we knew the baby fingers Prissed against the window pane, Would be cold and stiff tomorrow, Never trouble us again. Would the bright eyes of our darling Catch the frown upon our brow? Would the prints ol rosy fir gers Vex us then as they do now. Ah! those little ice-cold fingers, How they point our memories back ; To the hasty words and actions Strewn along our backward track ! How those little hands remind us. As in snowy grace they He, - Not to scatter thorns, but roses, Foi our reaping by and by. W. F. Baker. Dr. KlDg's New Discovery for Cosump- .- tlon. This is the best medicine in the world for all forms of Coughs, Colds and Con earn ption. Every bottle is gaaranteed. It will cure and not disappoint. It has no equal for Whooping Cough, Asthma, Hay Fever, Pneumonia, Bronchitis, La Grippe, Cold in the Head and Consump ; tiou. It is safe for all ages, pleasant to take, and, above all, a sure cure. It is always well to take Dr. King's New Life Pills in connection with Dr. King's New - Discovery, -as they regulate and tone the stomach and bowels. We guarantee per fect satisfaction or return money. Free trial bottles at Blakeley & Houghton's Drug Store. Regular size 50 cents and ; 1.00. : ' . Notice. A second-hand Airmoterwind mill in good condition, with steel tower and iamp for 'sale by Maier & Benton. .!. Te Wheat Market. - The Portland wheat market is inclined to wobble slightly, and there is a more aotive selling movement than there has been at anytime this season, the offer ings - being simply enormous. The ruling figures for the past two days has been about 79c, bnt sales have been made at 80c for Walla Walla. The latter figure, though,- is the extreme, and some of the exporters refuse to pay it, Blue stem and Valley are 2 to 3c higher, re epectively. Receipts continue large, and the decks and warehouses are almost jammed. The exports , from ' Portland for the past six weeks total 2,087,079 bushels of wheat, valued at $1,820,461, and 93,293 barrels of floor, valued at $375,833; and even these figures would have been increased had It been possible to secure isbips for immediate loading. Never in the history of the port has such a large amount of grain been moved so early in the Beason, and never before have vessels 'received such quick die patch. : A steamer which arrived last Saturday, and lay idle all day Sunday, loaded a fall cargo Monday and Tues day, and cleared yesterdav, and nearly all of the sailing ships have received cor respondingly quick dispatch. While wheat is still hanging at a point that causes operators to do considerable thinking about what the future has in store for the price, just at present the matter of securing ships to handle the big crop is a serious one. Freights are high all over the world, and are still advancing. Wheat, in Chicago, was steady at about yesterday's closing price for a few minntes after the opening, and then was subjected to some bearish influences, that caused it to decline lc per bushel during the next hour. May was not as Lireak as December during the time re ferred to, owing to, it was supposed, the action of 'the bull clique, who, on the day before, sold December at or -above 91c and bought May when it was weak. The comparative firmness during the first few minutes was . because ' of a furthet reduction in Northwestern recripis and steadiness of the Liverpool and Paris markets, both of which quoted prices unchanged from the previous day's' cloee. The bearish news came partly from the Northwest and partly from abroad. Heavy rains were reported in Argentina. The' Liverpool - Corn Trade News revised its previous j estimates of European requirements, making the amount only 72,000,000 bushels, instead of 120,000,000, as previously calculated. Special cable and telegraphic dis patches to Bradstreet's, in New York, covering the principal points of accumu lation, indicate the following changes in the available supplies last Saturday, as compared with the preceding Saturday: Bushels. Wheat, I nited States and Canada, east of the Rockies, increase 2.274.000 Afloat for and in Europe, increase.' 2,000,000 Total increase 4.27-1,000 Wheat Receipts, 253,800 bushels; ex ports 22,353 bushels.' Spot market, firm ; No. 2 red, 99c. ' Options opened weak and declined under reported rains in Argentina, bearish Continental statistics on requirements and transfers at Duluth ; turned sharply and fully recovered on heayy covering by early shorts, closing strong at ?g to c net advance ; October closed at 94J8'e; December, 93 7-16 to 4c, closing at 94gC. Wheat is quiet in Liverpool. No. 1 standard California, 383 6d ; cargoes off coast, buyers and sellers apart ; cargoes on passage, nominal; English country markets, nominal; French country markets, quiet ; wheat and flour in Parie, quiet. Advertised Letters. Following is the list of letters remain ing in the postoffice at The Dalles an called for Oct. 21, 1S97. Persons call ing for the eame will give date on which they were advertised : Bootby, F W Brown F R Davidson, Albert Flanders, A P Halleck, Emma Krause, Henry C McDonald, Jonnie Nelson, P Brown, Mrs Mary Bently, C H Frizzell, Miss Grace Honsell, R A Kllpatrick, Frank Liveingston, Marie Moore, Bessie Osborn. Dan Orenheimer Mrs Pearcy, Howard Sperry, Sam Smith, Eza M Tellett, Wm Thurston, Wrn Westerman H H Yerex, Allan A Peterson. Miss Inez Stevenson, W T Smith, Wm H Smith, Moris J Thompson, Dan'l Weddell, Ed Wing, Perry . J. A. Crosses, P. M. TAKEN UP. ' Came to my place last spring, a roan pony, branded O on right hip. Owner can have the same by paying all charges. , S. A. Kin yon, oct20-lm Tygh Valley, Or. Guardianship Notice. In the County Court of the State Of Oregon for Wasco County. In the matter of the guardianship of Sayre Rinehart. Earl Rinehart, Carl Ri Debar t and Philip Rinehart, minors. The petition of Emily B. Rinehart, guardian of the minors above named, having been pre sented to this court, praying tor license to sell the interest of said minors in certain real estate situated In Benton county, Oregon, it is ordered that the hearing thereof be, and it is hereby set, for Saturday, the 20th day of November. 1897, at the hour of 10 o'clock a. m., at the county courtroom in the courthouse in Dalles City. Oregon ; and it is further ordered that the next of kin of said minors and all persons interested in the estate, appear before this Court at said time and place, to sbow cause why a license should not be granted for the sale of such estate, and that this order be' served by publication thereof for three weeks in The Dalles Chronicle. Dalles City, Or., Oct. 22, 1897. .ROBERT MAYS, .oct23-ii - - County Judge. Try Schilling's Best tea and baking powdor A GREAT FEAT. The Mesa Enoan tada Last. Explored at After Many Years of' Conjecture the Truth Concerning: the Famous Rock Is Now Positively Known. For the first time in the history of man the celebrated Mesa has been mounted! The honor belongs to Prof. William Libbey, of Princeton universi ty. New Jersey, and the fact has been scientifically established that the sum mit is uninhabited, and, as far as the party could discover, ias ever been. There were absolutely no traces of ani mal life. ' . 1 - ' ,It may be tha new specimens of flora have been . found that existed in the prehistoric world, but sufficient exam ination has not yet been made to de termine this fact. The Mesa Encan- tada is said ,to be the only spot on the face of the globe where the flowers of the period of long ago can exist without the contamination and war of plant life with the world of the present day. Prof. Libbey succeeded in making his much-talkcd-of ascent of the encantada a few days ago.- The trip to the summit was fraught with great perils, and the result is of little value from an arch aeological standpoint. The party consisted of Prof. Libbey, H. L. Bridgeman, of Brooklyn, and the correspondent of the Times-Herald. Every preparation had been made for the ascent, there were great kites and balloons ready for use, but it was decid ed to throw a line, across the top of the Mesa with a gun, borrowed for the pur pose from the United States life-saving service. ' The first shot was too low. The sec ond,- carrying a steel wire, went over the summit, but took two days to draw the cord which was attached to a long er rope over the rough, rocky surface of the spot described by Coronado in his report to the king of Spain nearly three centuries ago as being the strong est natural fortification in the known world. ' . ' When the ropes were made fast a block was arranged, and a great chain of boards, 20 feet across, was fastened to it. A huge rock was sent to the sum mit without tipping, and then Prof. Libbey made the ascent. It was dan gerous, exceedingly - so. As the pro fessor came close to the'summit he had to hang on by one hand,, while with the other, he disengaged the ropes of the chair, which had caught in the rough rocks. The remainder of the party then .made the ascent, and were assisted on the surface by the professor.. Aext a great difficulty presented it self in the form of a gaping chasm. This was crossed on the ropes, and the ten acres of the surface of the rock were ex plored by the daring scientists. They spent the entire day there, searching for the evidences of the vil lage, said to have existed 500 years ago, but there was nothing to indicate that it ever had existed in reality." There were, monuments of. rock, euch as the Indians built in the ages that have gone by, but that was all. There were some pools of water that had callected, but whether they were worn by the action of small particles of rock carried by the winds or whether they were in reality constructed Iby the Acoraa Indians in the centuries .that have gone down into the silence of the past is not known. Search was made for the bones of the human beings whom the legend of the haunted rock describes as having been starved to death .there, but they were not found. It is assumed by botanists that this great rock, which rises over 700 feet from the surface of a desert of sand, protruded out of the ancient sea that covered this section of the world in the distant pastK and that the flora is the same to-day as it was in those days, when the world was, young and of which history has no account.' Specimens, such as there w-ere, were collected, but whether they belong to this day and age or to the realms of the prehistoric; world is not known. This rock, enchanted or haunted, as it has been called by the Acoma Indians, has been the center of scientific inter est for years. Numerous attempts have been made to mount it, only to be doomed to failure. The legend of the Indians is that the summit of the rock was once reached by a natural ladder in a pillar. On this place the old and decrepit were kept to shield them from the attacks of hostile foes, while the men were in the valley at work. Once a great torrential rain came, like a cloudburst, and ate away the sandy foundations of the pillar, which fell, and the inhabitants on the rock, several hundred in number. starved to death. It has even been asserted that the place was inhabited, and the ascent by the Libbey party was niade to set at rest the rumors and determine once and for all whether or not the stories'as told were true. Chicago Times-Herald. Rich and Poor, in India. Our. standard of civilization is per sonal corofort-T-luxury, a thing abso lutely unknown in- native India. There is scarcely any difference in the mode of living between the rich and the poor. 11 you go into the house of a rajab, there is the same bare floor, and only a simple platter to eat from, such as is seen in the home of the poorest. To put it crudely, there will probably not be even the luxury of a wash basin and towel, for the rich man, like his poor brother, he washes in the open and dries himself in the snn. Such is the extreme sim plicity of life that wealth is still buried in India; a man mav spend it on iewels for his wife, but not on pleasure or per sonal comfort This simple life, which fostered no distinctions of class, has been preserved for 3,000 years by In dian civilization, but ours will destroy it in 50 years. Humanitarian. HINTS ON FRUIT CANNING. A Few Thing That the HouaewifO - Shoald Remember. - In canning fruit, remember that it is hard and disagreeable work at best, and unless you can come within-sight of its highest possibilities, "the game is not worth the candle." Whether it is good, bad or indifferent depends upon your own knowledge and skill. Exclud ing the air to prevent fermentation is only the A B C of success. Fruit must look as well as taste delicious, and, in order to do this it must retain its nat ural flavor and appearance, and be sweetened with granulated sugar. Fruit for canning must be- freshly picked, and a little- under rather than, over ripe. : . All berries except strawberries should be large and firm. With these the smaller the better. Blackberries, no matter how fine or of what kind, are never satisfactory ' and- palatable. Cherry pits add much to the flavor, and when, removed from the fruit a handful should be tied in a piece of net and nut in the renter of each jar. Pear seeds should be used in the some way if the core is removed. Cherries are richer and handsomer colored if the sir up is made of half currant juice. The skins of green gage plums should be left on and pierced with a fork be fore they are cooked. The skins of all other common varieties should be re moved. If plums and peaches are im mersed in boiling water to loosen the skins, only a few should be treated at once, and those should first be put in a .wire basket or sieve. After remain ing two minutes or so dip in cold wa ter and gently rub off the skins. A silver -knife should be used to shred pineapple and pare pears and quinces. Peaches should be put in sirup as soon as pared, and pears and quinces into cold water, to prevent discolora tion. Peaches are firmer and richer if allowed to remain over night in the sirup before they are cooked. Five or six pits should be distributed through each quart jar. The most delicate and natural fla vor is obtained by cooking the fruit in the jars. This method also does away with the breakage from handling, and adds greatly to its appearance. Pears and quinces are no exception to this rule.but, as both are more -quickly cooked tender in clear water, it is more convenient to do so before ihey are put in sirup. All old jars should be thoroughly cleansed with soda and boiling water, and the" air-tightness of every jar should be tested with water before they are filled with fruit, which should be placed in the jar as fast as it is prepared, and the jar filled to the neck with, girup. A flat-bottomed kettle or an ordi nary clothes boiler are convenient for cooking, and a board fitted to thebot torn loosely and closely filled with inch nuger holes obviates all danger of break age. Put the rubber and cover in po sition, leaving the latter loose; fill the boiler in warm water to the neck of the jars and boil gently until the fruit can be easily pierced with a fork. No definite rule for cooking can be given. Ten minutes is usually long enough for berries, while the time required for larger and more solid fruits depends upon their ripeness. "Experience soon makes one expert. Take each jar out onto a hot plate, fill to overflowing with boiling water, and eerew down the top. Tighten as it cooks, and in vert to be sure that it is air-tight. The jars should be wrapped in paper to exclude the light, which is more in jurious than one is apt to think, and kept in a cool, dry place. The flavor of fruit is more improved if the oxygen is restored by removing the cover an hour or two before it is needed. If rich fruit is desired, the following quantities of sugar for each pint jar will be satisfactory, but as sugar is not the "keeping power,"much less, or even none, may be used: Strawberries, seven ounces; raspberries, four ounces; whortleberries, four ounces; cherries, six ounces; peaches, five ounces; Bart lett pears, six ounces ;vSour pears, eight ounces; plums, eight ounces; quinces, eight ounces. N. Y. Times. GAY MUSIC AT A FUNERAL. Custom In Vincennes That Destroys Much That la Grcnorac at Grave. People in Vincennes have been wit nessing what is called "a Ray funeral," according to a paradoxical phrase, re ports the London Telegraph. Mr. Ferret, a resident in that sub urban borough for many long years, died recently at the age of 80. He left instructions in his will that the local brass band should be engaged for his funeral, and that lively music was to be played during the journey to the graveyard. The octogenarian's rela tives fulfilled his wishes to the letter. In the black-bordered invitations to the interment sent out by them they an nounced the names of the airs to be heard during .the funeral. As the cor tege started for the cemetery, the band struck up the appropriate "Chant du Depart," to the intense astonishment of the master of ceremonies sent by the Pompes Fnnebres; who knew nothing about the'last wishes of the deceased octogenarian in the matter of music. Then the bandsmen played a series of polkas and mazurkas, and wound up at the cemetery- with the "Marseillaise." After the funeral all adjourned to a tavern, wnere cirinit was ordered in abundance. The instrumentalists, hav ing been refreshed, played more lively music and then everybody returned home, apparently satisfied with the day's. outing. This is the third funeral of the kind which has been organized in France within the past 12 months. i'or People That Are nig I A Sick or "Just Don't J I 1 Feel "Well." itm SaJ ' ' ONLY ONK FOR A DOSE. Retnovts Pimple, euro Hdache, Dyspepsia anal Castinmsss. 26 eta. box at druggists or by mail Samples Free, address 0r Botanko Co, Foil. Fa, Regulator Line Tie Dalles. Portland anfl Astoria Navigation Co.' sirs. Regulator (6 Dalles City FREIGHT AND PASSENGER LINE .. -. ' BETWEEN The Dalles, Hood River, Cascade Locks and Port land aany, except Sunday. GOOD SERVICE. LOWEST RATES , ( DOWN THE VALLEY Are you going on to .; (-EASTERN OREGON If so, save money and enloy s beautiful trio on the Columbia. The west-bound train arrives at The Dalles in ample time for passengers to take me steamer, arriving in rortiana in time lor tnt outgoing Southern and Northern trains; East- bound passengers arriving in The Dalles in time bu utKe me hobi-doudu train. - For further Information apply to J. N. HARNEY, Agent, Oak Street Dock. Portland. Oregon, Or W. C. ALLAWAY. Gen. Agt.. The Dalles, Oregon EAST and SOUTH via The Shasta Route -OK THE Southern Pacific Comp'y. Trains leave and are due to arrive at Portland. LEAVE. OVERLAND EXO Sress, Salem, Rose- ' urg, Ashland, Sac-1 6:00 P.M. I ramento, Ogden.San i 9:30 A. M Los Angeles,El Paso, j New Orleans and I East I 8:30 A.M. Daily except , Sundays. 17:30 A. M. 14:50 P.M. Roseburg and way t-ta- tions , '4:30 P. M Dally except Sundays. ("Via Woodburn for I Mt.Angel, Silverton i West Scio, Browns ville.Sprlngfield and j (.Natron j (Corvallis an way! 't 5:30 P. M stations ( I jMcMinnville and; U 8:25 P. M )way stations ti Daily. tDany, except Sunday. DINING CARS ON OGDEN ROUTE. PULLMAN BUFFET SLEEPERS ' AND SECOND-CLASS SLEEPING CARS Attached to all Through Trains. Direct connection at Kan Francisco with Oeei. dental and Oriental and Pacific mail steamship iiucs iur jArA., uiu iauiA. caiuug uates UI1 aipitcanion. Rates and tickets to Eastern points and Eu rope. Also JAPAN, CHINA, HONOLULU and AUSTRALIA, can be obtained from J. B. KIRKLAND, Ticket Agent Through Ticket Office, 134 Third street, where tnrougn tickets to all points in the .Eastern States, Canada and Europe can be obtained at lowest rates irom J. B. KIRKLAND. Ticket Agent. ' All above trains arrive at and depart from urana uentrai station, f iitn ana Irving streets YAMHILL DIVISION. Passenger Depot, foot of Jederson street. Leave for OSWEGO, daily, except Sunday, at 7:20 a. m.; 12:15, 1:45, 5:25, 6:45, "8:05 p. m. (and 11:30 p. m. on Saturday only, and 8:40 a. m. and 3:30 p. m. on Sundays only). Arrive at Portland dailv at "7:10 and 8:80 a m.; and 1:30, 4:15, 6:85 and 7:55 p. n, (and 10 a. m , 315 and o:iu p. m. on eunaaya oniyj. Leave for Sheridan, week days, at 4:30 p. m Arrive at Portland, 9:30 a. m. Leave for AIRLIE on Monday, Wednesday and Friday at 9:40 a. m. Arrive at Portland, Tues day, Thursday and Saturday at 3:05 p. m. Except Sunday. Except Saturday. R. KOEHLER, Manager. G, H. MABKHAM, Asst. G. F. ii Pass. Agt THE FROM THE DALLES TO PORTLAND. PASSENGER RATES One way ........:......,...... ....$1.50 Round trip ............ 2.50 FREIGHT RATES ARE DOWN. The Steamer IONE leaves The Dalles on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sat- urdaya at 6:30 a. m. , - Office in the Baldwin Bnilding, foot of Union street. For freight rates, etc, call on or address ' , J. S. BOOTH, Gen. Agt., The Dalles, Oregon. AN 0RE50NKL0MKE. Do you want money? If so, catch on to this. A 7-year-old orchard, twenty acre tract, seventeen acres in choice fruits, bearing trees, new house of six rooms, barns, outbuildings, etc., all new ; two horses and harness, two wagons, one road cart and one cow. Will sell at a bargain and on ensy terms. Call on or Address E. Bayard or Chas. Frazer The Dalles, Oregon. STUB SUMMONS. TN THE CIRCUIT COURTof the State of Ore- The Oregon Railroad Navigation Company, a corporation organized under the laws ol the State o Oregon, Plaintiff, - V8 Thomas J. Bulger and Bulger, his wife, whose given name is unknown to plaintiff; P. L. Cates. George Gardiner and Fannie E. To Thomas J. Bulger, Bulger, whose given name is unknown to plaimlil, George Gardi ner and Fannie E. Gardiner, defendants. IN THE NAME OB THE STATE Off OttEGON you and each of yon are hereby required to ap pear a d una .i er the complaint Bled against you in the above entitled action on or before the Hrst day of the term of the above entitled court following the expiration of the time prescribed in the order f.ir the publication of this sum mons, to wit: on or before the 8th day of No vember, 197, that being the first day of the next regular term of suid court, and if von full tn an appearand unswer the complaint of the plain- the court for the judgment praved for in said complaint, towit: for the condemnation and appropriation for a rightf-way for a railroad of a strip of land one hundred feet wide over and across the following descrioed lauds: Commenc ing at a point 1190 feet north from the southeast corner of the southwest quarter of section six, township two north, range eight east, ia Wasco county, Oregon, thence north 10 feet to n point; thence north Stt degrees S4 minutes east, 'J80 feet to a point in the iiorth boundary of the right-of-way of the Oregon Railway and Navigation Com pany, now Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company's right-of-wav: thence southwesterly along said north boundary of said right-of-way to the place of beginning, con taining 22-K 0 acres. Also another tract of land situated in said sec tion six, described as follows, to-wit: Com mencing at a point in the south boundary of the right-of-way of the said Oregon Railroad and Jiavigation Company, which point is 1175 feet north and 290 feet east of the southeast corner of the southwest quarter of section six, township two north, range eight east; thence north 86 de grees and 34 minutes east, 815 feet to a point on the south boundary of the said right-of-way; thence on a curve to the left with and along the ' said boundary of said right-of-way in a westerly course to the place of beginning, containing 47-100 acres; said land to be used for the re-location of the railway of said plaintiff's across said premises as provided by section 8241, Hill's An- . notated Laws of the State of Oreron. And nlain- . tin will also take judgment for its costs and dis bursements fn this action. This summons is served npon the defendants above named by publication thereof in Tbb Dalles Chbonicls by order of Hon. W. L. Brad, sbaw, Judge of the Seventh Judicial District of the State of Oregon, made at chambers in Dalles City. Oregon, this 25th day of September, 1897. W. W. COTTON, .' J. M.. LONG and .' W. H. WILSON, sept35 - . Attorneys for Plaintiff. - . Executor's Notice Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been dulv appointed executor of the last will and testament of Mary Bill, deceased. All Sersons having claims sgsinst the estate of said eceased are hereby notihed to present the same, with the proper vouchers therefor, to me at my office in The Dalles, Oregon, within six months from the date of this notice. . Dated September 16, 1897. spl8-ii JOHN HARDEN, Executor. NOTICE. TJsiteo States Land Office, ( " The Dalles, Or., Sept. 20, 197. t Complaint bavlne been entered at this office by William Johnson against Oscar 8. Roffsen for abandoning hi homestead entry No. 5594, dated September 25, 1895, upon the S4 NE;4, ana !4 swjsi, section S3. Township 5. Soutn Range 15 E, in Wasco County, Oregon, with a view to the cancellation of said entry. . the said parties are hereby summoned to appear at this office on the 30th day of "October, 189", at 10 o'clock: a. m., to respond and furnish testi mony concerning said alleged abandonment. spzo-n jas. r. .MOOKE, Register Executor's Notice. Notice is' hereby given that the nndersicmed has been duly appointed and is now the quali fied and acting executor of the last will and tes tament of Elizabeth J. Bolton, deceased. All persons having claims against said estate are - nouneo. to present cnem to me, witn the proper roachers therefor, at the office of the county clerk of Wasco County, The Dalles, Oregon, within six months f rem the date hereof. Date! September 10, 1897. sp!5-I SIMEON BOLTON, Executor. Administrator's Sale. Notice is hereby given that nnder and by vir tue of an order of the County Court of the State of Oregon for Wasco County, the undersigned, -as administrator o. the estate of E. F. Coe, de ceased, will, on Saturday, the 4th day of Septem ber, 1897, at the hour of 1 o'clock p. m sell at public auction, to the highest bidder, the follow ing described personal property, Belonging te the estate of E. F. Coe. deceased, to-wit: Thirty shares of the capital stock of the Hood River Townsite Company, a corporation, said shares beinir of the par value of one hundred dollars each. . The sale will take place at the courthouse, The Dulles, and the terms of sale will be one- half cash, balance in one year at 8 per cent. uooa mver, ur., August iayt. H. C. COE, Administrator of the estate of E. F. Coe, de ceased. aug21-li Notice of Final Settlement. Notice is hereby eiven that the undersigned. executors of the last will and testament of H. Stalev. deceased, have filed their final account with the Clerk of the County Court for Wasco County, Oreiton, and that, by order of the said County Court, Monday, the 1st day of November, 1897, at the hour of 10 o'clock a.m., is fixed as the time and the County courtroom of suid Court, in Dalles City, as the place for the hear. ing of said final account. i. j. um vtn, W. M. McCORKLE, W. R. CANTRELL, B. SAVAGE, C. J. VAN DUYN, ep4-ii Executors. ' Assignee's Notice of Final Settlement. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned, ' assignee of the estate of the Eastern Oregon Co-operative Association of the Patrons of Una- . bandry, Limited, an insolvent debter, has duly filed his final report and account in the matter of said assignment with the County Clerk of -Wasco County, Oregon, and that said report will be called up for hearing and approval on Mon day, the 8th day of November, 1897, by the Hon orable Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Wasco, County, said day being the first day of the next regular term of said Circuit Court. All persons having objections to said report must file such objections with the clerk of said court on or before said day. Dated this 1st day of October, 1897. ' E. N. CHANDLER, Assignee of the Eastern Oregon Co-operative Association of the Patrons of Husbandry, Lim Ited, an insolvent debtor. . octl-5w-U Notice of Final- Settlement. Wotice is hereby given that the undersigned his filed, in the olUce of the Clerk of the County Court for Wasco County her final account as administratrix of the estate of Chas. Adams, de ceased, -and by order of the County Court of said County, Monday, the 1st day of November, 18S7, at 10 o'clock a. m., has been fixed as the time, and the county courtroom of ''said court, in The Dalles, Oregon, at the place for the hearing of said final account. MISS IRENE ADAMS. ' oct2ii Administratrix. Notice to Creditors. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been duly appointed by the County Court ot Wasco County, Oregon, executor of the last will and testament of Simon Mason, deceased. All Sersons having claims against the estate of said eceased are hereby notified to present them, with the proper vouchers, to the undersigned at his residence, Wamic, Oregon, or at-the office of Huntington & Wilson, The Dalles, Oregon, within six months from the date of this notice. Dated July 28, 1897. . i iyW-bt-U JOHN END, Executor.,