THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE, SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 12. 1898 The Weekly Ghf oniele. TBI DALLIES. (ISEOON Advertising Kate. Per inch. One Inch or lees In Dally SO Over two Inches and under four Inches 1 00 Orer four Inches and under twelve Inches . . 75 Over twelve Inches , 50 DAILY kSD WEEKLY. One Inch or less, per inch 12 50 Over one Inch and under fonr Inches i uo ' Over fonr inches and under twelve Inches.. 1 60 Over welve inches 1 00 PERSONAL MENTION- Wednesday. Mies Bess Isenberg, the Victor Echool mistress, is in the city today. J. T. Neff, a member of the connty echool board, is up from Hood River. Mr. Sam Herren of Portland was in the city yesterday visiting old friends. D. S. Van Hoy and son, merchants of Goldendal'e, are in The Dalles on busi ness today. - Fred H. Shoemaker, an enterprising young business man of Pendleton, is in the city today. Bacbe Fargher, the enterprising sheep and grain raiser of Nansene neighbor hood, is in the city. C. G. Hickok and wife, formerly of Cascade Locks, who at present live in Portland, are In the city today meeting old friends. Robert Mays, jr., and wife left this morning for their home at Antelope, after a ten-days visit with relatives here and in Portland. . Attorney Chester V. Dolph of Port land, son of the late Senator Dolph, was in the city yesterday, returning home on the morning train today. Thursday's Daily. Clyde T. Bonney came up from Hood River last evening. A. W. Cooper came in from hia home at Goldendale yesterday. Jos. T. Peters returned from a busi ness trip to Portland last night. Pauline Drews left for Portland this morning, to visit friends in that city. Attorney N. B. Brooks of Goldendale 18 in the city today on matters of busi ness. Miss Besse Lang returned last night, after a week's viBlt with friends in Port land. Miss Temple of Dufnr is in the city attending the teachers' quarterly exam ination. Mr. Allaway, of the D. P. & A. N. Co., who has been in Portland on business, returned home last night. Mr. and Mrs. I. H. Plummer of Mis Boula are in the city visiting Mrs. Plum mer's parents, Mr., and Mrs. Rowland, of this city. Mrs. Win. Mansfield returned last night from Eugene, where she has been visiting relatives and friends for about three weeks. William Floyd of 5-Mile and his i daughter, Mrs. Stacy Shown, of Seattle arrived from Seattle last night. Mrs. Shown will visit her parents here for a short time. J. P. O'Brien, Messrs. Campbell, Watt and Rowland, officials of the O. R. & H. Co., are in the city today transact ing business for that company and look ing over the road. TjknliA TCntlnr wan nmnnfr thA nu)Mn gers going to Portland on the morning train. He will return to this place about Tuesday and remain here a short time oeiore returning to DKaguay. . Friday. E. S. Hintnan of Duiar is in the city today. J. P. Carroll of Mosier is a visitor in this city today. ' Harrison Dnfar is registered at the Umatilla House. William Ellison of Hood River is in the city on business. F. H. Davidson is up from his home at Hood River today. Fred W. Wilson went to Hood River on legal business'yesterday morning, re turning last mgbt. Attorney E. E. Coovert, of the Port' land firm of Coovert & Stapleton, is in tne city on court business. F. S. Campbell and wife of Albany. who have been visiting Mrs. Campbell's father, Mr. James Vox, of Kingsley, lett inr t nrr.mnrt trwiftv. Born. In this city, on Tuesday, Feb. 8th, to the wile of J . Jc or tin, a son. Advertised Letter. Following is the list of letters remain ing in the posloffice at The Dalles un called for February 11, 1898. Persons calling for the same will give date on which they were advertised : Andrews, Mrs M Andrews, Mrs J Ballard, Carey Barto, Horace ' Belate, Mrs Lizzie Biggs, AS . Bins. J C BainB, C F Christner, Joe Davie, Miss Jesse Franks, Hattie Falton, Miss Ada Fisher, Mrs D E Fox, A O Ford, Mrs Amos . Forrest, Mrs M A Foord, JE Hays, J L , Hibney.MissJennie Hyre, G D Johnson, Herman Kan ton & Gundover Kelly, F C Koebler, Joe Morris, Mrs J McWhorten, H W McConn, Johnnie Newton, Mrs R J Nonviden, Mrs Ida Peterson, Miss Anna Pea re y, Mrs Jennie Rice, Walter Rinar, Mr Rodman, Henry . Roberts, Lafe Ruark, Mrs J P Sanford.MissLutie Stewart, P Shepperd, Owen Shearer, J E Smith, Miss Anigie Thomas, Mrs Delia Thompson, C W Thorney, Alix Terry, J B Todd, John Wellington, Miss D Wick, G H Whitney, FW Williams, Mrs E F J. A. Ceosben. Caali in Xoar Cheeks. . All county ' warrants registered prior to Nov. 13, 1893, will be paid at my office. Interest ceases after Jan. 15th, 1888. ... C. L. Phillips, County Treasurer. W9999Q 9 onnnrin n ounuruLH.i 8 ft ffi ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft w One of America's most fa- mous physicians says: "Scrof- s ula is external consumption.' $ Scrofulous children are often $ beautiful children, but they w lack nerve force, strong bones, stout muscles and power to jtj resist disease. For delicate children there is no remedy w equal to m Scott's Emulsion 1 of Cod-liver Oil with Hypo- ft phosphites of Lime and Soda. ft It fills out the skin by putting: g good flesh beneath it. It makes $ the cheeks red by making rich $ blood. It creates an appetite & $ for food and gives the body o power enough to digest it. Be 8 sure you get SCX)TTSEmul ft sion. 50c and i.oo ; all druggists. SCOTT 4 BOWNE, Chemists, New York. . NO USE FOR A WATCH. David Ward Concluded That He Didn't Need Any Jewelry. David Ward used to be fond of drop ping into a certain bank after bank hours and gassing' with the cashier. The latter had a handsome gold watch and a habit of holding: it in his hand and twisting- the stem when he was thinking- of something' else.- Mr. Ward noticed this one day and said : "What are you doing?" "Oh, just winding my watch," said the cashier. "It's a habit I have. "How can you wind it without a key?" inquired Mr. Ward. "Because this is a stem winder," Baid the bank man. Then he showed the watch to Mr. Ward. "Well, that's curious," said the old man. "No danger of losing the key or getting the keyhole clogged up with dirt! Sometimes I think 1 11 get a watch, but I never had one in my life; never wore any jewelry, not even a linger ring. How much would a silver watch cost with that kind of winding apparatus?' "Oh, about $30," said the cashier. "Well, suppose you get me one," said Mr. Ward, "and I'll pay you the next time I come in. A few days afterward the old man had some business at the bank. "By the way," said the cashier, "here's your watch," and he took it out of a pigeon hole of his desk. Mr. Ward looked a trifle embarrassed. " Un, just so!" he ejaculated. "Well, between you and me, I don't think I need a watch after all. In the first place I have never worn any jewelry, and it's a trifle late in the day for me to commence. I don't need it to tell the time, for I can do that by the sun, or if the sun is obscured, I can always ask somebody that has a watch. But the main reason is jthat I don't think it's safe. If I wore a watch somebody might be tempted to knock mc down and steal it. I'll be a good deal safer if 1 don't wear any jewelry, so you'd bet ter take the watch back." And the cashier did so. Detroit News. SLAUGHTER OF FELINES. Bledlcal Students Are on a Still Kant for Cats to Be Dissected. At this period of the year each of the medical students in Chicago is re quired to dissect an animal and mount its skeleton. The animal preferred is a cat. There are some 200 medical stu dents inChicago in their first year, and each of them is instructed to keep hi eye open for a cat, and they have been prowling down alleys in search of fe lines, and rhaps half of them have been lucky enough to be successful in their search. It is not aft. easy thing' to find a cat when you want one. Ordinary mortals see plenty ot .them as they squall through the night outside of their win dows But it is different with the med ical student. When he wants a cat he finds" it very difficult to get one, and therefore he is forced to make a very thorough hunt before begging' hi game. On this account the medical student finds it better to make the resi dence districts his hunting' grounds, where he may be able to catch some very tame feline who has wandered from its house and home to sun itself on the steps. " The stray cat are much harder to capture, because they are not as tame and have been -taught by sad experience to regard all men as their enemies. The pet tabby is less suspicious! and falls an easy prey to the medical student when she wanders from her own fireside. Hence it is that most of the cats which are being made martyrs to science arc well groomed and high, bred, Fully a score of beautiful Angoras and nearlf as many Persian oats have been captured alive and chloroformed by the students during a'recent week. There is a student atone of the med ical colleges who has been so success ful in capturing cats that he has been making- e business of it and is laying by a store of money to help pay his ex penses through the college. He has a winsome" way of saying "Pussy, pussy." which few cats seem able to resist, and as a result -has caught 18. thinner a week, which he las had very little dif ficulty in selling to less- fortunate hunt ers of the feline pets. Chicago Times-Herald-: .. - r -. -'f. v FIRESIDE FRAGMENTS. ; Cocoa Balls. Before the fondant ia Verv" stiff, take out about a cupful, Knead into it as much grated cocoanut aa possible, form into balls, brush with white of egg ana. roil in ary cowuiui Prairie Farmer.. Polish for Floors. Boil together one cup of strong beer, a piece of bees wax about the size of a nut, and a spoon ful of sugar. First clean the floor by wiping it over with warm beer, and then apply the polish with a brush. Leave until dry, and then polish with a soft duster. Beef and Carrote. Chop one pound of beef (not too fine). Cook slowly with three sliced carrots in water, enough to cover until well done. Season wth salt, pepper, tablespoonful of butter, one-half teaspoonlul ol onion juice Cream one tcaspoonful of flour in one- half cup of milk, and- add just before serving. Chicago Iiecord. Plain Custard. The beaten yolks of five eggs and five teaspoonfuls of sugar. Pour over this one quart of hot milk, add flavoring and the whites of two eggs:' Bake in cups set in a pan of boiling water. Cover with mer ingue and eat old. Do not leave too long in the oven. Boil instead, if pre ferred. Farm, Field and Fireside. Cocoanut Creams. These are made by dropping some grated cocoanut and a few drops of vanilla in some of the fondant; work like dough, roll out, cut in cubes and allow to harden. Melt a piece of fondant without choc olate, and dip t he cubes in this. The dip ping must be done expeditiously, as the creams will melt if left too long in the hot mixture. Keep the mixture for dipping: warm over hot water. Orange Judd Farmer. Apple Butter. Boil three gallons of cider down to one-fourth of the quantity. Pare and core as many ap ples as the cider will cover. Dmde the cider and put equal parts in two ket tles on the fire. Place the apples in one kettle, and as they boil down pour over them the cider from the other ket tle, boil 12 hours until smooth, add ground cloves, allspice, cinnamon, brown sugar. Then boil again, stir ring constantly. When sufficiently done it will stick to the spoon when held up. Boston -Budget." SNAG FOR HIGH BUILDINGS, The Elevator Become Troublesome with the Increase of Height. Pending the result of, a movement to restrict the height of our tall buildings, there is one feature of the problem that has recently been called forcibly to t attention of the. public by the accident to the elevators in the American Tract society building-, the details of which were described in the Engineering Rec ord of November 21, and that is the peril attending the occupancy of such structures where high-speed elevators and high-pressure plants are intro duced. It is quite practicable to regu late this matter in anticipation of action cn the larger question of the restriction of the height of buildings. The risks attending the operation of elevators designed to run at speeds of from 500 to 700 feet per minute are much grreater than is generally sup posed, yet they are fully appreciated by experts. The demand for excessive speeds like that required of the builders of the elevators of the Tract society building was assumed to be necessary in order to make available for rentinsr the ten upper stories of this 23-story building-. To reach quicklv these high er stories an excessive speed is called for, and with a view to economize .the cost of operation and minimize space in the basement, high-pressure plants are designed, with the result that the record for safety of elevator travel so creditable to our elevator builders in the past is likely to be impaired. To onviate. this it should be made illegal w wjjci-Bic passenger elevators at a speed greater than 400 feet a minute. This will permit the safety device to operate when the speed reached 500 to 600 feet per minute. Engineering Bec- jru. METAL OF THE STANDARDS. Nature Furnishes Mo Mineral Suitable for the Purpose. There are no products of human skill on which a greater degree of care is ex pended than the standards of weight and measure in use among thtf civilized nations of the globe. Two things In particular have to be considered accu racy and durability. Nature does not furnish any single metal, or mineral, which exactly answers the require ments for a standard of measure or weight that shall be, as nearly as possi ble, unalterable. ' The best substance yet produced for this purpose is an alloy of ninety per cent, of platinum with' ten per cent, of iridium. I his is called lndio-platinum, and it is the substance of which the new metric standards prepared by the international committee of weights and measures are composed. It is hard, it is less affected by heat than any pure metal, it is practically non-oxidizable, or not subject to rust, and it can be finely engraved. In fact tbe lines on the standard meters are hardly visible to the naked eye, yet they are smooth, even, sharp and accu rate. If our civilization should ever be lost, and relics of it should be discovered in some brighter age in the remote future, there is nothing which would bear higher testimony to its character than these standard measures of iridio-plat-inum for the production and preserva tion, of which the science of our day has done its very best. . You can't cure consumption but you can avoid it and cure any other form of throat or lung trouble by the use of One Minute Cough Care. . It cures quickly. That's what you want. Snipes-Kiners-ly Drug Co. - Smoke the popular brands, Prizs Med al, Hose Queen and Guarantee,. For sale by all first-class dealers. THE ARMt EATI0N. Experiments to Produce a Oon ; , centra ted Food. Nothing Found to Take the Place of the Old-Fashioned Batlon of Bacon and Hardtack in Sulta able Bulk.- The recent experiments of the United States government to tent the value of a concentrated army ration have quite naturally proved a. failure- They were instituted by the secretary of war with a view to reducing the bulk and weight of food without impairing its nutritive functions. This appeared to be necessi tated by the fact that the American army is more in need of possible im provements in this line, in view of the heavy, tedious and long transportation of supplies across the plains and through districts that are incapable of affording the proper amount and qual ity of food in times of emergencies. The German army, for example, when moving' in small bodies always pur chases supplies on the march as want ed. The same is true of the French, Bussian, Austrian and other European armies, but at the same time the sol diers usually have in their knapsacks what ia called an "emergency" ration, generally sausage or preserved meat of some kind. The soldiers of. the Jap anese army in the late war with China carried an emergency ration of rice in a little tin case strapped to the top of their knapsacks.' . The reports made by the different military departments to which the questions were referred are interesting as bearing upon the value of f obd prod ucts generally and on the physiologi cal questions involved in the digestive and nntritive processes more particu larly. Theoretically speaking, it would appear that the problem had been solved regarding the amount of food necessary to sustain life and the varieties of sustenance that gave in minimum compass the greatest amount of nourishment. All the observers agree, however, that the old-fashioned ration of bacon . and hard-tack in suitable bulk is the most practical that has ever been ugr gested. The quantity of food neces sary to keep a soldier in good condi tion is fixed at 22 ounces. The latter amount is increased for obvious rea sons to 26 ounces. When the theories were put to a prac tical test the result was as might have been anticipated. Various concen trated food tablets were employed in Colorado, but more than half the men who were victims to the experiment became candidates for hospital treat ment. The f ollowiug xtract from the report speaks very significantly on some very essential and striking facts: "A company of the Seventh infantry, at Fort .Logan, near Denver, was de tailed and furnished with condensed rations, consisting of coffee, soup, bread and bacon. The coffee and soup were in small tablet, which, when placed in boiling water, were ready for consumption in two minutes. The bread was in small, flat cakes, the weight and hardness of a brick, but when moistened swelled out like a sponge. The bacon was compressed and only needed to be warmed in a frying-pan. The soldiers started out with ten days' rations, but the campaign was brought to an abrupt end after four days of 15-mile marches. The food nos only did notsatisfy the hunger or give strength, but seemed to irritate the stomach. After the first meal, two of the enlisted men had to be placed under the surgeon's care. At the end of the second day 30 of the 70 men in the company were ill, and on the fourth day the whole command went into camp, and couriers were sent to town for hard-tack and ordinary coffee and bacon. Some of the soldiers were seii ously ill with a stomach complaint, and were confined the hospital for sev eral days." All this goes to show that not only very much is to be learned regarding laboratory feeding, but that we are also far from the proper appreciation of nature's complex requirements in food taking. Thus far the human labora tory, with its multiple, interdependent, and complementary methods,' has a monopoly of its own in fixing the proper standards for digestion, assim ilation and subsequent growth. There is a natural law pervading the whole that must not be violated by too radical attempts at modification or improve ment. - The stomach must earn its living in its own way, as by such purely physio logical effort in bringing each and all of its mechanical, vital and chemical functions into play, it can best main tain its health, activity and usefulness. No prepared' or concentrated food can relieve it of any or all of its activities in that gradual conversion of a legiti mate quantity and quality of food thfct constitutes a natural and perfect di gestion. In such an aspect a moderately full stomach is something more than a feel ing. Its work must be distributive rather than restrictive. It must be healthfully distended with food bulky enough to occupy spare places; other wise, its most important function is hampered, while for lack of mechani cal stimulus the intestines become stagnated into almost helpless inactiv ity. Hence it is easy to see bow the ex periments failed and the victims paid the penalty of outraged physiological laws. So far, at least, there is not sufll cient reason, because a man becomes a soldier that his stomach should be puckered around a desiccated soup tab let or that it should wrestle alone in some dark cornerof an accommodat ing fold with some soggy and glazed albuminoid. Medical Kecord. . DeWitfs Witch Hazel Salves. ; Cures Plies, Scalds. Burns. - On: Minute Cough Cure, cures. ' That Is what It was made for. FUEL FREE. G) (9: We Will Give TO All and Persons subscribing and paying up in ad vance for the Weekly Ghfofliele , . A Copy of fte .World-. ; mn Answer Any Question You may Ask It. Standard & American 3f Annual. PRIGE GENTS Pes.dv Jan. U' On All News Stands. Larger, Better," More Complete Than Ever. , fTb most widely sold Annual Reftf tne Book and Political Manual published. THE WORLD, Pulitzer Building, New York. THE NEW YORK WORLD . THSICE-fl-WEEK EDITION. 18 Pages a Week. 156 Papers a Tear. It stands first among ''weekly" papere in size, frequency of publication treennefis, variety and reliability of. con tents. It is practically a daily at tbe low price o a weekly : and its vast list of subscribers, extending to every state and territory of tbe Union and foreign coun tries, will vouch for tbe accuracy and fairness of its news columns. It is splendidly ilrastrated, and among Its special features are a fine humor page, exhaustive market reports, ail the latest, fashions for women and a Ion series of stories by the greatest living American and English authors, Conan Doyle, Jerome K. Jerome, . Stanley Weyman , Mary B. Wilkin s Anthony Hope, Bret Barte, Brander Matthews, tc. ' ' We offer this unequaled newspaper and The Dalles Twice-a-Week Chronicle to gether one year for $2.00. The regular price of the two papers is fi.uu. NOTICE FOB PUBLICATION. Lard Office, Tax Dalles, Ob., ( February, 9, 1898. J Notice fa herebv given that the following named settler has hied notice of his intention to commute and make final proof in support of his claim, and that said proof will be made be fore Register and Receiver at The Dalles, Ore gon, on Tuesday. March 22, 1898, viz: Oliver Bowers, of The Dalles, H. E. No. 5807, for the SEU NEW and NEW SEW. Sec 24, Tp 2 N. R 12 E, W M. He names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon and cultivation of said land, viz:. William Ruffner, Perry VanCamp, Harry Learned, H ' H. Learned, all of The Dalles, Ore gon. J AS. F. MOORE, Register. JBS- 6KISBNDOSFFER A KUEDI, Physicians and Surgeons, Special attention given to surgery. . Rooms 21 and 22, Tel. 328. Vogt Block B 8 HUNTINGTON H 8 WILSOJI UNT1NGTON 4 WILSON, . AilUAA 19 AT LAW, THE DALLU, OKHUOH Office ovn First Nat Bank. - T7IRED. W. WILSON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, J . THE iJAJ-LiCSjURfcUUS Office ovei First Nat Bank. - : Try Schilling's Best tea and baking powder- Notice of Sheriff's Sale. Notice ts hereby riven that under and bv vir tue of an execution and order ol sale Issued out of the Circuit Court of the State ot Oregon for Douglas County, on the 17th day of January, 1898, and to me directed upon a judgment ren dered therein on the 4th day of January, 1898, which Judgment was duly enrolled and docket ed in the Clerk's office of said Com t on the Sth day of January, 1898, in an action theretofore pendinr. wherein Bartholomeo Parodi was plaintiff', and Joseph Kolco was defendant, I did on the 19th day of Januarv, 1898, dulv levy upon and will on Monday the 21st day o"i February, 1898, sell at the hour of two o'olock in the after noon of Kaid day at the premises hereinafter de scribed In Dalles City, Wasco Couty, Oregon, to tbe highest bidder for cash iu hand, all of the following described property, to-wit: That cer tain one and a hlf story frame building situated on the east IimU of Lot three (3) in block fourteen (14) in Laughlin's Addition to Dalles City, Oregon, being the same building owned by theeaid Joteph Folco, and hy him and his les sees heretofore and now occupied and used as a soda and carbonaiing manufactory and confec tionery store, together with the "followina ap- JiaratUF, fixtures, machinery and utensils there n, to-wit: Oue B. and G. generator and oneB. and G. fountain; oue B. and G. bottling table; 1 Hutchinson attachment; 1 Tuft's syrup pump; 1 force pump; five cor-per fountains; one marble soda fountain "pfunder" : one syphon filler; one combination Iron safe; three stencels; two ex tract jars; two glass pitchers; one porcelain; one graduate; 105 syphons: 100 doz. 8 oz. soda bottles with Hutchison stoppers; 74 soda boxes; 202 soda boxes-; 14 'odoz) boxes; four pair nipples; four tables; one bed lounge; three lamps ;one side board; seven chairs; one candv thermometer; one set knives and forks (Rogers; seven ice cream spoons; one candy book; l'A dozen ice cream dishes; oue set diKhes(24 pieced) ; one cas tor; other dishes; about 150 boxes for quart bot tles; distilling apparatus; bottle wash.ng ap paratus; four show cases; one lemon squeezer, ("Rapid"); 30 candy jars; one glass washer; one "Bartholemew" peanut roaster; three pair stain; three stoves; one truck; two marble slabs; ice water tank; one copper extract filler stand; one tank for steaming syrup; 4 syrup jura with fau cets: ice crushers; S stone jars; 2 stone jars; 2 hydrometers tools; two phones; one ax and one hatchet; one hand saw; one brace and bit; fau cets, hose, etc. ; one steam engine and boiler, 1 horse power; one ice cream freezer; one jacket kettle; three one gallon demijobus; four glass holders; two tobacco knives; seven whiskey barrels; one 10 gallon keg; six fountain clamps; 23 dozen soda bottles; or so much of said above described property as shall be necessary to sat isfy and pay the said several sums due to plain tiff and mentioned in said execution, writ and order of sale, to-wit: Four hundred twenty seven dollars and thirteen cents, and interest thereon at the rate o f ten, per cent per annum, since January 4th, 1898, and the further sum of one hundred and twenty-ihreedotlars, costs and disbursements of action, 'ogether with accruing costs and expenses of sale. Said sale will be made subject to any interest in said property which Wallace Weaver and Henry Nagel may have as lessees thereof. Dated at Dalles City, Wasco County, Oregon, January 9, 4t98. ' T. J. DRIVER, jan22ii Shet iff of Wasco County, Oregon. Citation. In the Connty Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Wasco: In the matter of the estate of W. J. Meins, de ceased, citation: To James Meins, Carrie McDonald, Ida Hubert and to all unknown heirs of w. .. Meins, de ceased, greeting : In the name of the State of Oregon, vou are hereby cited and required to appear in the County Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of Wasco at the courtroom thereof, at Dalles City, in the County of Wasco, on Monday, tbe 7th day of March, 1898, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon of that dav. theu and there to show cause, if any exist, why an order should not be made authorizing ana directing j. v.-Meins, as administrator of said estate, to sell thereat property belonging to the estate of W. J. Meins, deceased, for the purpose of navinsr the charsres. expenses and claims asainst the estate, which said property is described as follows, to-wit, The north half of the northwest quarter, the southwest quarter of tbe northwest quarter, the northwest Quarter of the southwest Quarter, the south half of the southeast quarter, and the south half of the southwest quarter, all in sec tion 12, tp 1 south, range 12 east, W. M. Witness the Hon. Robert Mavs, judge of the County Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of Wasco, with the seal of said court affixed, this 14th day of January, A. D., 1898. Attest: A. M. KtLSAl, SKALl Clerk. janl5-4t SUMMONS. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT of the State of Ore gon for Wasco County. Emma Golden, plaintiff. vs Dewitt Golden, defendant. To Dewitt Goideh, tbe above named defendant: in the name ot tne bcate ot Oregon, you are hereby required to appear and answer the com plaint filed against you in the above entitled court and cause on or before the first day ot the next term of said court following the expiration of tbe time prescribed in the order for the pub lication of this summons, to-wit: on or before the 14th day of February, 1898; and if you fall to so appear and answer, or otherwise plead, in said cause, the plaintiff for want thereof will apply to the Court for the relief prayed for in the com plaint filed herein, to-wit: that the bonds of matrimony existing between plaintiff and de fendant be dissolved; that tbe plaintiff be awarded the custody of the minor child men tioned in said complaint, Zola Maud Golden; that the plaintiff have and recover her costs and disbursements made and expended In this suit, and for such other and further relief as to the Court may seem equitable. This summons is served upon you by publica tion thereof by order of Hon. w. L. Bradshaw, judge of said court, which order bears date of September 28th, 1897, and was made and dated at chambers in Lalles City, Wasco County, Oregon, on the 28th day of Septcmbei , 1897. . FRED W. WILSON, il Attorney for Plaintiff. Adininistratrix' Sale of Real Estate. " Notice is hereby given that under and by vir tue of an order of the County Court of the State of Oregon for Wasco. County, made on the Sth day of January, 1898, in the matter ot the estate of Dr. W. E. Rinehart, deceased, I will sell at public auction, at tbe conrtlk use door in Dalles City, in said county and state, on the 28th day of February, 1898, at 1 o'clock p. m., to the high est bidder, all tbe real estate belonging to said estate and described as follows, to-wit: Lots A, B, C. D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K and L In Block 65, in the Fort Dalles Military Reserva tion Addition to Dalles City, in said county and state. -i ' 1 The west half of the southeast quarter and the east half of the southwest quarter of section 24 in township 2 north, range 14 east, in Wasco County, Oregon. Terms of sale One-halt in cash at time of sale and one-half in six moaths, securedjby mortgage on the premises. Dalles City, Oregon, Jan. 27, 1898. - EMILY B. RINEHART, Jan29-ii - . Administratrix. Administrator's Notice. Notice is hereby given that by an order of the Connty Court of the State of Oregon, for Wasco county, made January 19, 1898, the undersigned has been duly appointed administrator of the estate of Thos. J. Sullivan, jr., deceased. All Sersons having claims against the estate of said eceased. are hereby notified to present them to me with the proper vouchers at the office of Huntington & Wilson, within six months from date hereof. - Dated January 19, 1898. HORATIO FARGHER, Administrator. Notice of Final Settlement Notice Is hereby given that the undersigned, administrator of the estate of Frank Ireland, deceased, ha filed his final account as such ad ministrator in the county court of the State of Oregon for Wasco County, and the Judge there of has appointed Monday, the 7th day of March, 1898, at the hour of 10 o'clock a. m., at the county courtroom in the courthouse in Dalles City, in said county and state, as the time and place for tbe hearing of objections to said final account and tbe settlement thereof. All heirs and creditors of the deceased, and all other per sons interested in said estate, are hereby notified to file their objections to said final account, if any they have, on or before the date fixed for the hearing and settlement thereof. Dalies City, Oregon, 8, 18. Jeb5-4w-il ' ' Administrator.