THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE. SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 26, 1898 The Weekly Ghroniele. THE DALLES, OfEXGON PERSONAL MENTION Wednesday s Dally. Henry Hudson of Dafur is in the today. " city G. H. Southern is in from his farm near Boyd. Mies Bess Isenberz ia up from Hood Hirer today. Boy Butler, the Boyd merchant, ia in the city today. J. A. Fawcett of the Dafur neighbor hood is in the city. Mies Mav Enrieht was down from Wasco last night to attend the Old Folks concert. Mr. Leslie Bntler, accompanied by his daughter. Carrie, left lor .Portland to day. He will return to Skaguay Boon. Mr. Trnman Butler returned yeater -dav moraine from Kansas, whither be went with the remains of his grand mother. Charles Bovnton, an old resident of the Kingsley neighborhood, went to Woodburn this morning, where be will make his home in future. Owing to the illness of Dr. Siddall be has not been able to attend to hia duties for some time. He will go to Portland tomorrow and will return Monday. - George Johnston and wife of Dnfnr were in the city yesterday and went to Portland on the Kegulator tnis morn Ing. They are on their way to South ern California for a short trip. Mr. Harry Morse came, down from Baker City yesterday morning and spent the day meeting friends. He left ior Portland this morning, and ex pects to leave for Honolulu soon, in the hope of improving his health. Thursday's .Dally. J. A. Welch is in the city from Ante lope. J. J. Gibbons is in the city from Hood .River today. W. E. Woodcock of Wamic is a guest t tne Umatilla. Mr. W. Darch went to Portland on the morning train. Dr. D. Siddall went to Portland today to spend a tew days. W. H. McAtee is in the city from his home in Tygh Valley. Mr. W. Lord left on the Spokane train for Portland this morning. J. Nelson, of the Agriculturist, was over trom Goldendale yesterday. Thomas Farmer left for New York to day, where he will make bis future home. P. DeHuff was among the passengers who went to Portland on the Spaokane flyer today. Mrs. Pilkington of Antelope arrived in this city yesterday and went to Portland on the morning train today. ' James Kelly, one of the enterprising tillers of the soil from the Kingsley neighborhood, iB in the city today. . Judge J. J. Bailer ay, of Pendleton, who was recently stricken by paralysis, was able to leave his bed last Sunday, and to walk alone. Mrs. N. B. Speer of Warm Springs came in from her home yesterday, and went to Portland this morning to visit her son, who is seriously ill. R. R. Hinton and family came in from Bake Oven yesterday, and will re main in the city until after the meeting of the Wool-Growers' Association. Friday's Dally. J. H. Johnston is visiting in the city today. T. G. Condon- of Antelope is in the city today. Geo. N. Maddock of Goldendale is in this city on business. Frank Woodcock is in from his home at Wamic today. He reports that farm era are all bney in that vicinity. W. F. Week, formerly a resident of Bellevue, Iowa, who is an old school mate of Henry Maier and Dr. Hoi lister, is in the city today visiting these two gentlemen and recalling incidents of their boynood days. THE STORY OF MY LIFE. Mary A. LlTermore'i Latest Book Son shine and Shadows of Seventy Years. This new and superbly illustrated book is the crowning life work of the famous Mary A. Livermore, and, as she herself states, it is the last that will ever come from her pen. It is a thrilling narrative of her life from infancy to old age, por traying the sunshine and shadows of seventy years of a most marvelous ca reer, to!d in her own words. It eeems almost incredible that woman now so famous made "mad pies" in her childhood, was often sent supperless . to bed, and was often bounced. down into a kitchen chair with a force that caused her to "see stars." When a yonng girl, struggling to support herself, Bhe took in "slop work," made shirts and sub sequently learned the trade ot dress maker, at which she worked for twenty five cents a day. At eighteen she "ran away from home like a boy," and spent three eventful years on a Southern slave plantation years full of tragedy and comedy, and packed with thrilling ex periences. - She tells of the eventful Christmas night when she wandered into the church of a strange young preacher, who soon afterward became her husbf.nd. Their comical -experiences in their first at tempts at housekeeping; the ignomin ious fate that her husband condemned her first fish chowder he buried it in the garden after dark; and the many trials and tribulations that followed are mar- Telously entertaining.. They were poor.. She tried her band at tailoring, and with the money eaved by secretly mak- for . ber hueband subscription to a weekly newspaper. Mrs. Liyermore threw her whole heart and soul into measures for the relief of sick and wounded soldiers, and spent four years as a nurse in the Union army. Her intellectual greatnees and nobility of character led her to rise irom those thrilling experiences to become the best known woman of America, and opened the way to her phenomenal platform ca reer, that has continued for more than thirty years. At her fet Jmillions ot people have sat and listened in wonder and admiration. The rich and poor, the high and low, the learned and unlearned haye been alike thrilled and moved by her burning words. She has ewayed brilliant audiences ot fashion ; has spok en in state prisons, jails and peniten tiaries; to audienceB composed of out casts, and to audiences numbering thousands of children. In this autobi ography she gives many reminiscences of her platform experience, with anec dotes and incidents too. funny for any thing. Mauy distinguished men and women have long urged Mrs. Livermore to tell the marvelous story of her life. She has received letters from thousands of men and women, unknown to her, expressing the hope that such a volume would be written. This work is wholly and entirely new. It contains nothing that appears in her Story of the War, 1887, of which sixty thousand copies were sold. The book is splendidly illustrated with beautiful and costly full-page photo gravnre plates and portraits, and over one hundred fine text illustrations. Many of them are intensely humorous, while others depict thrilling scenes full of pathos and tragic interest. We do not know when-730 pages have given ub more genuine pleasure. If we speak warmly of the book it is because it richly deserves it. It is sold only by agents and is meeting with a large sale. Agents who introduce a first-class work like this ought to be cordially welcomed. We believe the way to keep out poor books is to introduce good ones, and a better one than this has never been brought to our notice. Put it in your homes. It will be read over and over again by old and young, with pleasure and lasting profit, and may well be handed down from father to eon and mother to daughter as a princely legacy. The book is sold only by agents and is published by the well-know firm of A. D. Worthington & Co., Hartford, Conn,, whose imprint is sufficient guarantee of the excellence of this first-class vol- xie. Mrs. C. M. Sisson Is agent for the val uable work in this county. Degree of Honor Washington Social. The public social given by the Degree of Honor last night was' well attended and the program was very interesting. The following numbers were rendered : Piano overture by Mrs. "Varney. Remarks on the life of Washington by Mr. Cradlebauch. Vocal trio by Messrs. Will Frank, Bert-Barrett and Fred Snipes. Solo, Mies Hattie Cram. Recitation by Master Neil McNamara. who. in response to an encore, delighted the audience with "One Little Hatchet." Vocal Solo, Prof. Lundell. Tableau "George and Martha Wash ington." Select reading by Mr. Donthit. Vocal Solo, Mrs. Varney. Especially fine waa the tableau in which Mr. Gifford made a good substi tute for George Washington supporting fie American flag, while Mrs. Varney did well as Martha; and with Hazel Waud hovering over them as guardian angel, the effect was very pretty. The program waa followed by danc ing, and altogether the affair was a de cided success. Warning : Persons who suffer from coughs and colds should heed the warn ings of danger and save themselves suf fering and fatal results by. using One Minute Cough Cure. It is an infallible remedy for coughs, colds, croup and all throat and lung troubles. Snipes-Kin- ersly Drug Co. The Wool-Uroweri Association. Preparations for the Wool Growers' Association to be held here on March 1, 2 and 3, are to a great extent completed, and from present indications it will be the Biggest kind of a success. Delegates have been appointed by the governors of Montana, Idaho, t Washington and Oregon to attend, and every wool grower that can possibly come- has signified their intention to do so. We need not trouble about the association not being well attended, but rather to find suitable accomodations for them when they are here. The Kinross Quartet club, of Portland, has been engaged to furnish entertain ment in conjunction with - Birgfeld's orchestra, and those two along with the numerous speakers of promin ence who will leclnre, will make the oc casion one of more than nsoal interest. You can't care consumption but yon can avoid it and cure any other form of throat or lung trouble by the use of One Minute Cough Cure. It cures quickly. That's what you want. Snipes-Kiners-ly Drng Co. . ' . . Cash In Xonr Checks. All countv warrants registered prior to Nov. 22, 1893, will be paid at my office. Interest ceases after Feb. 16th, 1898. - C. L. Phillips, County Treasurer. ing a pair of trousers she paid for a' years f BICYCLES OF GREAT COST. ; New York Firm to Meet si Demand for 1,000 Bicycles. . The most prominent New York jew elry firm has something new for wheel men in a silver bicycle, which was put on exhibition at their store a few' days ago. The wheel is the first of the kind ever made. In order to insure strength and durability it was necessary to have the supporting rods and spokes of steel. All the rest of the frame is of sterling silver. The handle bar is of plain sil ver, with burnished ivory handles. The other silver parts are finely engraved by band, with repousse etching of the Louis XVI. style. The sprocket wheel is of plain silver. The saddle itself is studded with silver nails. The cost of the machine, as it stands, is $500. A silver lantern to go with it will add from $100 to $200 to the price. The completed wheel weighs about 6 pounds. A member of the company said, in explaining the construction of the new bike: "This wheel was built to supply a demand which we know to exist among some of our patrons for a better and more expensive wheel than can be had on the market at present. Such a wheel we have tried to make, and I believe that another season will see many of them at the fashionable resorts." A woman's wheel is being finished in the firm's shops. This wheel will be much more richly ornamented, and its price will be $1,000. A lantern, which is being made to go with it, will be set with precious stones and will cost several hundred dollars. MATHEMATICS AND ASTRONOMY Two Sciences That Are Closely Related and Necessary to Each Other. Probably in none of the sciences, ap plied or pure, is a knowledge of higher mathematics so essential as astron omy. Certainly none involves so much mathematical labor. The method of the least squares is one in almost con stant use by "those engaged in astro nomical calculation, and the amount of labor often entailed by this process is enough to make the head of an ordi nary citizen swim even to think of. One of the most extensive least square solutions ever made, says the Pitts burgh Dispatch, has recently been pub lished by Prof. Schur, of Goettingen, The helionietric trinnsrulations of the stars in the cluster Praesepe (the Bee hive) gave rise to a series of 74 normal equations, involving 74 unknown quan tities. The solution of this set of quantities was effected by Prof. Schur in ten weeks by means of the usual Gaussian method of elimination. Prof. Schur comes to the conclusion that no other method by successive approxi mations is to be compared to the Gaussian method, even though it might seem to promise a saving of labor in advance. Prof. Schur mentions as the longest least square solution he has been able to find in astronomical liter ature a geodetic adjustment made by Baeyer, in which a set of normal equa tions with 68 unknowns was success fully solved by the famous computer, Dase, in three months. GAVE THE FISH A JAG. This Is One Way of Being- Entertaining In California. "Did you ever see drunken fish?" in quired a Sonoma county wine grower. No one would confess that he had Keen intoxicated fish, and the silence in dicated a predisposition to incredulity, says a writer in the San Francisco Po6t. ' "I suppose you are going to tell us about a drunken catfish staggering down through the orchard and catch ing a bird?" suggested one. "Do you think I am a liar?" demand ed the farmer, indignantly, but he was left in ignorance as to the belief of his hearers. "My winery is right on the bank of a little creek. This time of the year the water stands in pools and every pool is full of trout, suckers and pike. All of the waste from the winery is thrown into the creek, and that is enough to discolor the water, but the other day a big vat of sour claret burst and nearly all of it ran down into the hole of water just below the winery. In half an hour the pool was crowded with fish floating belly up. I thought they were dead, and pulled a big pike out, but he wiggled and flopped around just like an old drunk trying to get up without anything to hold on to. One by one they disappeared as they so bered up, and when the water cleared two days afterward there wasn't a dead fish in the pool. They had just been jagged." Thrifty Traditions of the British Govern ment Curiously Kevealed. A paragraph in the "Life of Gen. Sir Hope Grant," who did great service for England as a military commander in India . arid in China, throws a curious side-light upon some of the thrifty tra ditions of the liritish govcrcraent. After Gen. Grant's return from China to England, he received at the hand of the queen at Buckingham palace the Grand Cross of the Bath. He was proud of. -the decoration, "but his biographer addc that such, honors are not without expense to the receiver. He finds among Sir Hope's papers a bill vouched for by "Albert Woods, Lancaster Herald," to the amount of eighty four pounds, four shillings, for "fees, charges and disbursements for the matriculation of your arms, etc., as G. C. B." Odder still was a document iipm the same "Albert Woods, Lancaster Her ald," calling upon Sir Hope Gran t to send back the insignia of his former lower order, K. Cli. Knijbt Com mander of the Bath for the use of her majesty's government! It is a good old rule, for governments as for men: "Take care of the pennies, and the pound j will take care of them selves." You can't afford to risk your life by allowing a cold to develop into pneamo- nia or consumption. . Instant relief and a certain cure are afforded by One Min ute Cough Care. Snipes-Kinersly Drug Co. MADE OF GLASS. Many Odd Article s Now Fashlone d from This Material. Wearing; Apparel, Coffins, Fish Bait and House Vornlshlngs Among the Num berGlass Houses a Future Possibility. There is an inventor who is known at the patent office in Washington as the Glass Man. His name is C. W. McLean, of New Berne, N. C., and during the last few years he has obtained patents for a surprising number of devices in glass. Among these is a glass coffin, which is guaranteed proof against decay and rats. So long as no deliberate attempt is made to smash it, it ought to last for ever. Another contrivance is a stair case made wholly of glass steps, land ings and newel posts being all of that material. Yet another is a glass barrel. But perhaps the most remarkable in vention of the Glass Man is a billiard table of glass. The day may yet arrive when people will live in glass houses. A patent has been secured by other inventors for glass bricks of a peculiar pattern. The material of which they are composed being a first-rate non-conductor, these bricks will keep the cold out of a dwell ing built of them, while admitting the light. It is claimed that they will ex clude noise, being hollow. Further more, the inmates of a glass house need not be afraid of being under too close observation by neighbors, inasmuch as it is not requisite that the bricks shall be transparent. They may be opaque ground glass, or of any color that may be suitable for decorative effect. Thus before many years, have passed it will be considered the height of lux ury, perhaps, to occupy a dwelling of glass. Glass bricks, of course, are ex pensive. People who live in glass houses will be able to afford to wear clothes of glass. Nearly 20 years ago there was shown at the Centennial ex position in Philadelphia a bonnet com posed entirely of glass. It was a love of a bonnet. The flowers on it were glass, and so were the ribbons, which looked like the finest satin. The patentee of this process describes it as suitable for the manufacture of neck ties, shawls, table covers, etc. In fabrics of this kind a very fine qual ity of glass is used. It is spun in threads of exceeding delicacy, and of these several colors may be produced at the same time. They are woven in a loom of ordinary pattern. Anybody may observe that a thin sheet of glass is somewhat elastic. The threads em ployed in weaving are of such fineness as to be perfectly pliable and not at all brittle. With a gown of glass would naturally go a pair of glass slippers. Not like Cinderella's. Oh, no! Cinder ella did not wear glass, slippers. Her slippers in the original French story were of "vair," which means fur. Vair and "verre," meaning glass, are pro nounced exactly alike. - Hence the cor rupti6n. ' A Pittsburgh man named Smith has invented a process for making glass slippers in molds. They would not do very well for dancing. There is no reason why a glass gown should not be woven of iridescent" glass, and its wearer would look like an animated rainbow on a ballroom floor one daz zling shimmer of ever-changing hues. Until recently the manufacture of iridescent glass was set down in the list of the lost arts. But in 1878 it was rediscovered, and now it is a common 9ommercial article. It is made by ex posing the melted glass to the vapors of salts of sodium. At the Metropolitan museum of art are exhibited great num bers of bottles, plates and other articles of glass which were made and used long before Christ was bom. They were dug up in Cypress and elsewhere. Many of them have a beautiful iridescence, but it is the result of decay Glass will rot like anything else, and decay has split the structure of this ancicrH glass into laminae or flakes, which interrupt the light so as to produce brilliant red, green, purple and other rainbow colors. The window-blinds of the glass house of the future will be of glass, of course. That is another patent, and the in ventor suggests that such blinds may be made of whatever colors are desired. Baby in the nursery perhaps will play with glass building blocks, and at a suitable age he will receive a Christ mas gift of a pair of roller skates with glass rollers. Both of these ideas have been patented. A CURE FOR IDIOCY. It Itemalas to Be Been How Su ful it Will Be. A cure for idiocy ia one of the latest achievements of surgical science, which has taken so many giant strides of late years that it may be almost termed one of the wonders of the century. Experi ments were made on the skulls" of two children, who had been idiotic from birth, and the latest accounts are that they are not only surviving the shock of the operation, but are giving prom ise of a recovery of the mental facul ties. It would be more correct to say, says the Washington Star, that they are gaining those faculties, for the idiot from birth has no development until the obstruction on the brain is re moved. This is exactly the process in the present trials. Holes are drilled in the skull of the child, at tha top of the head where the "Fontanelle" or "soft spot" is usually located. In the case now under observation, these spots had become hardened at birth, and thus the expansion and development of the brain had been arrested. The opera- Oi oS var Peonle That . itArenil 1 Sick or "Just Don't! rlLL Peel "WelL" nvi v om rod A DOSE. Remotes Pimples, cures Headache, Dyspepsia ins? . CotuteiHSS. 2S cts. s box st druggixU or by mall Samples ire, aaaress ur. dosuko mi, raua. irm DeWitt's Little Early Risers, Tbe faeiuus Slitte plUs.V - tion was, therefore, to make a new or artificial fontanelle. Great care had to he exercised, of course, to avoid injur ing the brain, and there lay the main difficulty of the operation. .The scalp is drawn anew over the apertures in the skull thus made, and the little brain is left to cure itself. The chil dren thus operated on are two. years old. It is, of course, a question just when the patients should be subjected to the experiment, and the age of two years has been chosen as the starting point. It" has been considered prob able that at this age the child, if it should recover its health and gain in telligence, will be scarcely behind oth er children of its own age a dozen years later. By that time assisted na ture would have caught up with itself, as it were. There may be some ques tion in the minds of ultra-sensitive peo ple as to whether it is right for sur geons to experiment in this way upon helpless children by performing opera tions that may cause death. Yet there will probably be no general outcry against such an effort. In some sense death is preferable to life-long idiocy. Few parents would be likely to object to the experiment upon their own un fortunate offspring if conducted with the care which should attend all such dangerous proceedings. QUICKEST HANGINGON RECORD Legal Execution Performed Inside of Four Bllnutes.to Accommodate Reporters. r Capt. J. B- Patten, warden of the In diana state prison at Jeffersonville, has the record for superintending the quiekest legal hanging ever accom plished in this or any other country, says the St. Louis Republic. The laws of Indiana prescribe that the death sentence must be executed between midnight and the dawn of the day set by the court. A man named Stone had butchered a whole family in Davis county, of that state, and had been condemned to death. The case was a celebrated one, and newspaper men from Indianapolis and Louisville went down to Jeffersonville in a perfect phalanx to witness and report . the famous criminal's exit from this vale of tears. They arrived in the early evening, expecting to return to their homes on a train leaving Jeffersonville about one o'clock, by which time they expected the execution to be over. To their intense disappointment and chagrin they discovered that the last .train they could take departed from the prison town at twelve o'clock at night. Having determined this they set about arranging matters so they could see the hanging and yet catch the train. They telegraphed the circum stances ahead to the conductor, asking him to hold the train until after the execution. He consented to hold it five minutes only. They were filled with despair! Who ever heard of a hanging, including prayers, speech making, etc., in five brief minutes? But, nevertheless, they commenced to work on Warden Patten. The result was that everything was at once gotten ready for sending the murderer to eternity.. Promptly at the stroke of midnight the parson finished his prayer; in five more seconds the noose was around the condemned man's neck, the black cap drawn, the trap sprung and in two minutes and twenty-two seconds the attending physician pro nounced the murderer a corpse. Car riages waiting outside the incisure bore the reporters to the train in an other minute, and with nearly seventy seconds to spare the train pulled out. SOME THIMBLERIGGING How Small Shareholders Are Often - Swindled. .Six thimbles and two peas in the hands of a ring of skilled professionals do not leave much chance for outsiders, however smart and wideawake they may think themselves. Not only do the insiders have the concoction of the vari ous companies and the fixing of their original capitalization, which practical ly determines their future value, but, says the National Keview, they have the entire management of them. They can decide which of the half-dozen is to pay the big dividends and which are to draw blanks. They have all the initia tive, do all the manipulating, and can arrange every new scheme to suit them selves. They might even strip a com pany of its assets and reduce it to an empty husk before the shareholders could interfere to prevent them. The proprietary or parent company is in that respect most at their mercy. Say that it starts with so many claims to de velop a thousand it may be and that it divides them up among four or five working companies. The usual course is to receive in pay ment of the claims an agreed number of the sub-company's shares. These pass into the treasury of the parent com pany.but there is no obligation on the di rectors to keep them longer than they please, and no guarantee to the share holders that they will be kept. Thry may be sold,.pavned, exchanged, or put in trust at the pleasure of the directors, who have invariably proxies enough to give them complete control. r There was rejoicing in tbe village at the killing of a pig. Being dead, it was cut up; a neighbor's cat stole secretly into the larder, and annexed a piece of of pork, which she brought in triumph to her mistress. Next day the clergy man of the parish visited the old wom an, who recounted to him the remarka ble sagacity of the beast. "It was quite beautiful, sir," she said piously, "to see the way the sweet creature brought me the piece of pork, it brought to my. mind what we read in the Bible about Uijah and h" mrors." The Realm. BueJclen's Arinca salve. The best salve in the world for cute, braises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fevei sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains, corns, and all skin eruptions, and posi tively cuies piles, or no pay . required It ia guaranteed to give perfect satisfac tion . or money refunded. Price 26 cents per box. '. For sale ty Blakeley and Honghton, druggists. . i grow paying crops because they're fresh and always the best. For sale everywhere. Refuse substitutes. Stick tb Ferry's Seeds and prosper. 8 Beed Annual free. Write for It 0. H. FERRY & CO., Detroit, Mich. Administratrix, Sale of Real Estate. Notice Is hereby given that under and by vir tue of an order of the County Court of the Slate of Oregon for awo Comity, made on the 8th day of January, 1898, in the matter ot the estate of Dr. W. E. fiiuehart, deceased, 1 will sell at public auction, at the courth. 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 the real estate belonging to said estateand described as follows, to-wil: Lots A, B, C, D, E. F, (t, 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. The west half of the southeast quarter and the east half of tne southwest quarter of section 24 in township 2 north, range 14 east, in Wasco County, Oregon. Terms of sale One-half la cash at time of sain and one-half in six months, secured by mortgage on the premises. Dalles City, Oregon, Jan. 27, 1898. yililLY B. RINEHART. jan29-ii "" . Administratrix. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Land Office, Thr Dalles, Or., ) February, 9, 1898. ) Notice Is- hereby given that the following named settler has filed notice of his Intention to commute and make final proof in support of his claim, and that said proof will be made be fore Keeister and Receiver at The Dalles, Ore gon, on Tuesday, March 22, 1898, viz: Oliver Bowers, of The Dalles, H. E. No. 5807, for the 8EJ NEJi and NEJi 8EJ 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, Perrv VanCamp, Harry Learned, H H. Learned, all of The Dalles, Ore gon. JAS. F. MOORE, Register. NOTICE . FOR PUBLICATION. T.iNn Clvvim. Tm rT.r.a. Or .) February 15, 1898. ! Notice Is hereby given that tbe following named settlei has Hied notice of his intention t make final proof in support of his claim, and that said prttor will b-a made before Register and Reaiver at Tbe Dalles, Oregon, on Monday, April 11, 1898, viz: James Ball, of Tbe Dalles, H. E. No. 4747, for the N S NEJi and NEJ4 NEK Sec. 34, Tp 1 N., K. 12 E. W. M. He names the oflowing witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon and cultivation of said land, viz. : Alexander Vance, Albert Walters, William Wolf, Frank Obrlst, all of The Dalles, Oregon. 19-11 JAS. F. MOORE, Register. Administratrix Notice. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been regularly appointed by the county court of the btate of Oregon for Wasco County as administratrix of tbe estate of Charles W. John ston, decease-'. All persons having claims against said estate are hereby notified to pre sent them, with the proper vouchers, to me at the office of W.H.Wilson, In Dalles City, Ore gon, within six months from the dace of this notice. Dalles City, Oregon, Feb. 23, 1898. . CARRIE M, JOHNSTON, feb26-li Administratrix. Notice of Final Settlement Notice is hereby given that the undersigned, administritor of the estate of Frank Ireland, deceased. ha filed his final account as such ad mini trator 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 iu the courthouse In Dalles City, in said county and state, as the time and pl-ice for the hearing of objections to said final account ana tne settlement tnereot. ah neirs and creditor of the deceased, and all other per sons interested in said estate, are hereby notified to file their objections to said fiual account, If any they have, on or before the date fixed for the hearing and settlement thereof. Dalles City, Oregon, Feb. 8, 1898. GEORGE IRELAND, jebo-4w-fl Administrator. , I Alman Encydo Will Answer Any Question You may Ask It. Standard American Annual. PRIGE CENTS Ready Jan. 1,1393, On All News Stands. jt jt J JtJt J Larger, Better, More Complete . Than Ever. f'Tbt most widely told Annual Refer, tne Book and Political Manual published. THE WORLD, Pulitzer Building, New York. One Minute Cough Cure,' cures. That Is what It was made for. dia .fell sdllSfe Ebcyclopeaia