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About The Dalles weekly chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1947 | View Entire Issue (May 26, 1900)
THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE. SATURDAY. MAY 26, 1000. The Weekly Chronicle. fM, U.ILLKS - OKtLl.w.N "oyticiAL Taper ok wasco cuv.ntv. "iHi,Uhtd in two partt, on Ved. l iy$ 4.J situriiav. MT Mill.. TOTkG FUSfilD, IN ADVANCI. uB.y' 11 41Z m'iit' !? ..-. mimthS OU Advertising rate reasonable, and made known '"JaT-n-'tii clirnmunloatlous to"THF fHROS- LOCAL BHET1T1E9. Wednesday a Dallv. C. T. Siioggin, of Fossil, Arrived in town today with 28 head of very fine drait horses which he la taxing to Portland. The Shaniko Leader of May 17'h and the Antelope Herald of Mar 13th arrived here this afternoon after being about a week on the road. Shaniko had a wedding on the 15th. The high contracting parties were Claude K. Andrewi and Nan Thompson, and the knot was tied by Rev. Chas. Elery. Twelve hundred bead of ebeep, bought of K. Hinton, of Bake Oven, by the Union Meet Company, arrived at the Saltraarsh stockyards today for ship ment to their destination tonight. The first shipment of sheep from Shaniko was made on the 16th and con sisted of 2000 head. The Leader under stands 1 00 carloads will leave Shaniko before June 1st, all for the Chicngo market. The Leader understands that Shaniko will he made a distributing point for Bake Oven and all points south. This will take a burden off Mr. Kiddell's shoulders at The Dallee, which is the distributing point at present, aud make an office of the third class almost from the start at Shaniko. C. McPherson, of Hay Creek, arrived In town yesterday with a small clip of wool which he sold at a price that realized hitn a fraction over $1 99 a head. He says he passed, between the hill on the other side of Sherar'e Bridge and The Dalles, twenty-six wagons loaded with Crook county wool, all bound fur The Dalles. F. Kugy, an old-time resident of The Dalles, is in town in the interest of the Oregon Native Son magazine. Mr. Kagy says the July number of his magazine will contain a write-up of the early history of The Dalles, with ap propriate pictures of scenes that are, many of them, only a memory. A. M. Kelsay Is here from Siianiko spending a feiV days with his family. He says Shaniko is growing rapidly in business and population. A large quan tity of wool js stored at the warehouse ami considerable has been shipped through to The Dalles. The Columbia Southern is preparing to build a two story brick hotel that will face one hun dred feet on each of two streets nnd have fifty rooms. The center of gravity nowadays is the Shaniko warehouse, says the Leader. All day long freight is unloaded and carried away. Wool has come in until the building is filled with it, and the workmen are planing, sawing and ham mering from morning till night building the south end. Already Shaniko is show commercial activity that no one would have believed possible to have come about in six months. Neighbor W. D. Harper, of the local lodge of Woodmen of the World, having bought himself a strawberry ranch down tt Hood River, brought up a crate of the first-fruits last night and treated his "Neighbor Woodmen" to a royal straw berry feast. The Chronicle is author ized to inform Neighbor Harper that he can repeat the dose just as often as he wan'sto. There will be no kick com ing from any of the neighbors op this way. Fletch Faulkner shipped the other day a carload of 29,000 pounds of bones to Portland, where they will be manu factured into fertilizing material, bone dust, glue, and other things too numer ous to mention. He shipped alio an other car of 11,000 pounds of iron doors and other old junk that had been used in t'le old Fita Gerald warehouse, now Part of the scouring mill. There is many a pound of old iron around the form hoiisei of Wasco county that would Ty to haul to town for forty to fifty tc"l hundred, the price paid by Mr. Fii kner for this class of old junk. George W. Fender, of the 45th U. 8. infantry, writes to his father in this ity from southeastern Luzon that sol dering i, no May day picnic in the Philippine. His company has been "'1't on the jump all the time since hey landed on the Island, and since new year'! fighting their way through r""ith mountain! and rice swamp!, (eiirne I,-, a very poor opinion of the average Filipino. He say! they are '""or in intelligence than the American Negro ami more treacherous than the American Indian. A loldier who ven bireg t (, , njDa (r0n cair,p may con nlently make np hi! mind that he will "ever come back alive. Coiiimniiicatlon are being received by l Portland chamber of commerce from commercial bodies and citizms through out the Columbia river basin, commend '"It (he start that nas been made by the handier toward securing an open river "'Jin Lewiiton to the sea by the remov al of the obstruction! at the dalles of the river and at Celilo. At a meeting of the trustee! of that body, held yester day, coxuionication ere read from j the Wall Wall and Astoria chambers , of commerce intimating their hearty ac I cord with the movement. Letters from i Senators McBride and Simon and Rep resentatives Tongue and Moody were also read, outlining what they had al ready tried to accomplish and promis ing renewed efforts for an open river from Lewiston to the sea. Tburijaj's Pail?. Todav is the 81st birthdv of the queen of Eugland. A special to the Reuo Gazette says the greater portion cf the town of Lskeview has been destroyed by fire. The Methodist general conference yes terday, after considerable discussion. voted to abolish the time limit on pas toratee. i he result ot the vote wag re ceived with great applause. A denizen of Tho Dalles tenderloin district was found wallowing on the street this afternoon in a beastly state of intoxication. The marshal put ber in the cooler till she would sober np. Last night'! Telegram says 600 tickets have been sold in Albany for the excur sion to The Dalles next Sunday, aud that a few hundred more will be sold if the company can furnish the cars. Half of the tickets have been Bold to out-of-town people. Word came today from Bakeoven that R. Hinton was quite ill at his home near that place with what teemed to be pleurisy, and asking that a physician go out to see hiui. Dr. 0"isendorffer answered the (all and left on the mid day train to go by way of Shaniko. J. R. Harvey, of Centerville, today purchased the imported English shire horse, King of the West, of Mr. Robert son, a horseman from Cowlitz county, Washington. King of the West is a magnificent animal and will be a valu able acquisition to the horse breeders of Klickitat county. The public lands committee yesterday authorized a favorable report on the bill which prescribes that when lieu selec tions are made for lands relinquished in forest reserves, the lieu selections shall be on surveyed lands, thus cutting off the wholesale selection of unsuiveyed lands which has grown so objectionable. A Washington dieputcb says the changing of the star routes from The Dalles to Prineville, on account of the inauguration of railway mail service over the Columbia Southern, will make necessary the advertising for a new service from The Dalles to Sherar's Bridge, and also from Shaniko to Prine ville, via Antelope. In the estimates called for by these proposals, Represent ative Moody has had the new star route box delivery system incorporated. This insures a daily rural free delivery along the line of these routes for all who de sire to avail themselves of such service. Secretary Dunbar, of the Astoria Fourth of July committee, received a telegram from Congressman Moody yes terday stating that the navy department had ordered the cruiser Philadelphia to Aetoria to participate in the Fourth of July celebration at that place. The bar pilots will bring the veesc-l in and take tier out free ol' charge. The Columbia river is still falling, but very slowly. This morning it stood at thirty feet, having fallen ttfo-tentha of a foot in the proceeding twenty-four hours. The daily river bulletin says: "The Columbia river is falling through its length and the Snake is about on a stand." It is predicted that both rivers will continue to fall for several days. Dr. Ray Logan, who has been bouse surgeon at St. Vincent's hospital for the past year has concluded to locate at Shaniko and grow up with the country. The doctor, who is here on a visit to bis father, will go back to Portland in two or three days, and after settling his affairs there expects to be located in Shaniko before the end of next week. General Passenger Agent Hurlhurt, of the O. R. & N., bas authorized the state ment that his company will, beginning July 1st, scale its passenger tariffs down to a uniform first-class rate ol three cent! per mile. This will apply on all the company's lines in Oregon and Washington. A circular officially an nouncing the chanije will appear early in June. Miss Morrow, a representative of the National Suffrage Association, will speak at the middle-of-the-road pouulist meet ing at the Baldwin opera house tonight. Miss Morrow ii addressing the various political rallies on the suffrage amend ment and presenting tha question from a strictly non-partisan standpoint. The ladies of The Dalles are especially in vited to be present. Married, yesterday at the residence of the bride's parents near Mosier, Rev. U. F. Hawk officiating, Mr. W. II. Jones ami Miss Rosella Root. Mr. Jones is an employe of the Southern Pacific rail road, and hi! bride is tha daughter of Mr. Amos Root, one of Mosier'a best known fruit giowers. Ahont forty In vited gnesti attended the ceremony and partook of a aumptuotii wedding dinner after. The artesian well is now down to a depth of 220 feet and boring has been suspended pending the arrival of ad ditional casing, which has been or.lered from below. The additional racing has been nialo necessary because of the constant falling In of clay from a thirty foot stratum struck at a depth of 110 fett from the surface. The last boring is in a stratum of sandstone. The best curfew bell is a good stiff bed slat, with suitable hand "holt" on one end, says the Myrtle Point Enterprise. Grasp the invalid afflicted with the per uicious habit gently but firmly by the back of the neck with the left hand; wave the bed slat several timts In the air to get up a head of steam and lelVr flicker, aiming the instrument so as to strike where it will do the most good. Repeat th3 dose vigorously and in a short time yon will have no need of a curfew. James Duncan, cf Garfield, Clackamas connty, has b night out the etock in trade of W. A. Kirby and will continue the business at the old stand. Mr Kirby Is not going to leave The Dalles and has no definite plans for the future. He think! that after a close application to business for eleven long years be has earned rest. He asks Tub Chronicle to thank his many friends for their liberal patronage and bespeaks a gener ous abate of it for bia successor. J. P. Bolton, of Fifteen Milo creek, while on bis way home from The Dalles yesterday, and after he had got as far as Five Mile, discovered that a parcel, con taining a suit of clothes, a pair of pants. a shirt, necktie, collar and a pair of sus penders, all new from the store, had been stolen out of his wagon in an EaBt End feed yard a short time before he started for home. Before settling his bill at the yard office Mr. Bolton had talked of a horse trade to two gypsies, who belong to a party camped on the old fair grounds. Mr. Bolton at once suspected the gypsies of the theft and returning back to town had a search warrant issued from Justice BrownhiU's office and placed in the hands of Deputy Sheriff Sexton, who, assisted by Marshal Hughes, made a thorough search of the gypsy camp, but without discovering the stolen goods. Mr. Bolton is confi dent the gppsies were the thieves, as they were the only persons in the yard during the short time that intervened between his talk with the gypsies and bis return from the office after settling his bill, when the goods must have been stolen. Friday's Dally. Cut flowers for commencement will be on sale at Mrs. Morgan's art rooms to morrow. Furnished rooms for rent on Fourth street, in the DeWolf house. Apply to Mrs. J. O. Pose. m25-lw The remains of the infant child of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Oliphant, of Port land, who died at that place yesterday, is expected to airive here on tonight's train for interment in the Beezley lot in the Masonic cemetery. Mrs. Oliphant is the granddaughter of the lute Joseph Beezley. The funeral will take place from Crnndall & Burget's tomorrow at 10 a. in. Roger Sinnott Is able to appear in public today for the first time in ten days, wherein he has been confined to his room suffering from a very severe dose of poison oak. He came In contact with it like many others, through not knowing it, and baying admired its beauty to the extent that he plucked a bunch cf it for a nosegay, What Rug. does not now know about poison oak is not worth knowing. A special grape-vine telegram to Thb Chronicle informs us of a hold up that occurred a short time ago in the other wise respectable precinct of Columbia. A. E. Lake, the republican candidate for county clerk, was the victim, but the amount extracted from him is only known to himself. While a picnic was in progress at that place a few days ago thirty women surrounded him and pre sented bim with a written demand that he furnish ice cream and peanuts for the whole outfit. He is the pink of gal lantry, and it is needless to say those women had ice cream and peanuts till they cried quits. Wool-Grnwara' Meeting. FUSIONISM RIPPED UP THE BACK Wool-erowers of Oregon will convene at The Dalles Saturday, in answer to a call fioin President George A. Young and Secretary F. W. Wilson. The pur pose of the meeting will be to discuss the disposal of this year's clip and allot ment on the reserve for the coming summer. In the respects named, tho meeting will be an important one. Superintend ent Ormsby, of the Cascade reserve, will he present, and make the allotments. The question of price for the wool clip will not be serioosiy considered, except to have a general understanding that growers will not consign their goof's. Thi! would be the means of avoiding nseless competition and make the buy ers pav CAf.h on delivery. The understanding is not for the pur pose Jof forming any pool or combina tion, as each grower remains free to sell hi! clip for any of the rnling market prices, so long as he gets the cash on delivery and does not make consign ment!. Mala. Trimmed bats and pattern at cost fur the next thirty days at the Campbell A Wilson millinwrv parlors. 23-tf Lewis Ackerman. Goshen, Ind., says, "D-Witt'a Little Early Risers always bring certain relief, cure my headache and never griie." They gently cleanse and invigorate the bowels and liver. Ki-Coiirfumii M. W. Howard of 4la I bunt and Hon. J. II. ttloro of ! nrl Tvll rllonl What Thry THtuk ,.f Tho in. I I r":i Jay's Pally, j Tiie tpei-cht-a of the middle ofthe- j I road populist at the Baldwin last night ! were the severest arraignment of Bry- j ampin and Ivmibon democracy .e ; Dalles t.hs ever listened to. The fores of the arraignment consisted in it-i ab solute conformity to the truih of his tory. The men spke not id the bastard derooeracy of tho north and west, but cf genuine Bourhonisui as they knew it on its native heath. The courtesy of the -t.eeting was ex tended to Miss Morrow, a representative) oi the ?ittoiial buOYage Association, who made an earnest plea fur the suf frage amendment to the Oregou consti tution. Mr. Osborne followed. He arraigned the Bourbons of the south for disfran chising the Negro, and pointed out that in his own state of Georgia 140,000 of them bad been deprived of the ballot through a law that demanded as a qual ification for voting that the voter must swear that he bad paid all back taxes since 1873. . He held that Bryanite free silver was twice as bad as the gold Standard, and that the Bryanite system of a national currency was twice as bad as the republican national bank cur rency. In spite of all the Bryanite zeal for an Increased per capita, there was uot a dollar of any kind f money in circulation in the United States that the democratic party had authorized. Dem ocrats and populists were as wide nBtiu der as the pole'. They were going different ways. One was going east, the other west ; one north, the other south j one to heaven, the other to hell. The populists of the south had made it pos sible for a man south cf Mason and Dixon's to vote an independent ticket and live. The democratic party was always for . reform when it was in the minority, and always against reform when in the majority. Here it was iu favor of direct legislation ; in the south it was bitterly opposed to it. He and Congressman Howard were acenssed of working in the pay of the republicans. There were two of them against four southerners in the pay of the fusionists. If Bryanism could support four, Mark Hanua could surely afford to support two. General Weaver and Cyclone Davis don't live on wind. He had left the democratic party forever. He felt toward that party as an emigrant from Kansas did, who, after living two years in that state, printed on the prairie schooner that was bearing hiui out of it : Fare thee well oM Kansas, 1 bill you a (mid adieu. I May rro In hell or Texas But 1 11 mvur come back to you. He would not vote the fusion ticket if they had Christ for a candidate and the ten commandments for a platform for the democrats would afterwards crucify the candidate and repudiate the platform. He predicted that Netiraska would go re publican and bury Bryan and fusioniam forever. Fusion had been the curse of populism. It alone had made republi can ascendancy possible, as long ns populism stood apart from Bourboniam it prospered as no political party ever did. In Oregon and California ftiMon had killed populism till you could hard ly smell the remains. Ex-Congressman Howard followed. He held that fusion was illogical and hixhoneet. It was simply an organized appetite lor pelf. The democrats and populists were only agreed on one prop osition,- 10 to 1, and they were not agreed on that. In 169ti twenty-three democratic states had passed resolutions indorsing th wise administration of Grover Cleveland, and if there was any thing that distinguished the Cleveland administration it was its intense opposi tion to free coinage of silver. Mr. Howard wbs in favor of government ow nership id public ntilities but he con tended that the trusts had come to stay. Bryan would license them. The popu lists would put them under government control the moment they become a monopoly. That was the true remedy for the trusts. The populists were in lavor of direct legislation. The d -mo cials favored it only in state! where they were in the minoritv. In a num ber of eastern states the democrats were bitterly opposed to free silver. There are no democrats in the wet-t. The genuine old Bonrlmn, who never learns and never forgets, is only to he found in the South. Democratic rant about lin iwrialism was a itcluiion and a sham. They were lighting windmills and thev knew it. We had expanded and it was now a queetlon of policy what we should do with our new possession. When William Jennings Bryan deserted his regiment and rushed to Washington and persuaded a necessary number of democrats to vote for the ratification of the treaty that put us in possession of the Philippines, at that moment the question of expansion was settled for all time. There were enough of senators opposed to the treaty to have defeated it if Bryan bad kept his fingers out of the pie. Mr. Howard spoke flatteringly of Charley Towne, but predicted that the Kansas City convention would turn him down and nominate an eastern man who would he known to be Secretly opposed to fiee silver. He predicted that the democrats would nominate a cold bug for president in 1904 on practically a gold standard platform. The great trouble with the democratic party was, you never know w hero to find it. Bad as republicanism was, yon could tell whit it Hauls for. The democratic party was simply nn auti part anti gold standard, atiti-pioteclion, nnt'-cx-paiisiun, anti pro.-peiiiy, anti-everything. It lives in the past. You people out west talk of your great country, good times, eic. ; down south the Bour bon "talks only of thing, that are dead and gone forever. THE TROUT LAKE TRAGEDY. Furlhrr I'artlcular Furolhil lijr Ilia C'uruuvr ii f Hlu-kltat Count;. A UNIQUE TABLET. roiitalulnit Abrnhuii Llnooln'a rao Aitilrr at Colt jiburf, I88:t. From an advauce copy of ihe Agricul turist, kindly mailed us by the editor we learn the following additional par ticulars of the death of Ida Foes at the hand of Ben Wagniti at Trout Like last Sunday. The Agriculturist had them from the coroner, Win. Hart, who had just returned from the scene of the tragedy. Mr. Hart says that on Sunday even ing about 7:15, Mr. Wagnitz and Miss Foss, who was teaching school at Trout Lake ami boarded with the Wagnlls family, were out walking and were met by County Supt. C. L. Colburn and wife near the bridge crossing the Trout Lake outlet. Wagnitz and the young lady' seemed to be quite happy. Mr. Colburn and wife shook hands with them and then drove on to Mr. Pear son's, ueur by, for the night. Mr. Wagnitz anil the young lady then returned home. The (ainilyconsisted of Mrs. Wagnitz and two runs, Benja min and August, the husband of Mrs. Wagnitz residing in Portland. The mother and son, August, were at the time out a short distance from the house attending to the milking of the cows. She and her son,shoitly after tho ar rival home of Mr. Wagnitz and Miss Foss, heard a loud tcrenm, followed im mediately by the report of a rifle. The mother and con rushed to where they could see the house and saw Wagnitz, with gun in hand, leaning over the body of Mies Fuss, who was Iving on the ground, apparently dead. Wagnitz then stood up and waved the gun in the air and called to his mother to come, saying that Miss Foss wished some water. The mother, however, and son, August, would not approach, being afraid of Wagnitz, but went to the home of Mr. Pierson close bv. The reason of this, Coroner Hart learned, was that Wai'nitz had on several occasions threatened to shout hh mother and brother, and they dared uot go near him. She did, before going to Piersons, so it was learn-'d, say to Wagnits that If he wool 1 throw awav the rifle she would come, which he declined to do. As she left she heard him sav, "Oh, what have I done! What have I done!" In a few minutes a Becond shot was heard and Wagnitz fell dead by his own hand. Miss Foss was shot in the back, the bullet going entirely through the body and through the right lung. Wagnitz had placed the butt of the rifle on the ground, with tho muzzle pressed against his heart, and then touched the trigger with a small foot rule. Thus ended the life of these young people, Mr. Wagnitz being 27 years of ne and Miss Foss 2"). PLEASURES OF THE METROPOLIS Old llurea Got on a Jaiuhurca at Port land YeHlerriay, Thursday's Daily It blows Bouie in Portland too. We had a stiff little gale here yesterday, but we're used to that kind of thing nnd thought nothing of it. Portland, how ever, seems to have had an experience such as wo never have here at all. De scribing it today's Oregonian says in part : "A little after noon the cyclone got eav. and broke boughs and twigs off shade trees, tried to tear awnings down, and made things lively all over town. It had a fair sweep on the river, and jollied np all who crossed the bridges. "Traffic on the Portland Railway Com pany and the Portland Tiaction Com pany was interrupted for nearly three hours. Both lines receive their power from the plant of the Portland General Electric Company at Oregon City, which failed to keep np the supply of electricity on account of the extremely hih winds. The Vansouver cars were delayed only a short time, receiving power from the plant at Sellwood. "A street-car loaded with passengers was delayed ly an open draw on the Morrison street bridge, and a wagon load of sawdust drew up alongside of it. The wind blew the sawdust out of the wagon and into the car, through the ventilators, completely covering the passengers, who, after all their brush ing and dusting, looked as if they bad been out in a wooden snow storm. "As an expressman was crossing the steel bridge, tho wind blew hi! horse blanket and other things out of his w agon. A passer caught them as they were going over the railing, and as the expressman rose to receive them the wind picked hla overcoat and cushion out of his seat and carried them aw ay over toward the terminal grounds. The expressman was afraid to leave his horse and wagon on the bridge to go after them, and they are probably in Klon dike or Mexico by this time, for the wind diil not know which way U was blowing. If the rain and wind will take a rest, the city will, take care of the streets." ! The society for ethical rultu-e hit In j iis h.,itse in New York a tablet in broca I contain:'! tne famous addles of Abra ham Lincoln. In tv.'ry paiticular the work is thoroughly American. Tha tablet Is cf bmnz, neirly three feet square, ni;pcrted by seven consule, en riched with blue eyed grass decoration!. The address is iu Doric characters, and the signature is a fine re ro luction of that of the martyred president. Modeled up the frim are the corps badges of those who tuok part la tha battle. The first U reprereu'id by a disk; the second by a shamrock ; tho third by a diamond ; the fifth by mal tese cross; the eleventh by a crescent, and the twelfth by a star. Intertwined with these are American wild flowers, blue-eyed grass, Oswego mint, prim rose and arrow head, also a dainty wreath of laurel. The tablet rest! upon a slab of highly polished Pennsylva nia serpentine, most appropriate aa the battle was fought iu that state. Altogether the scheme Is unique, and will be an attractive spot, terving to keep before the icembers a speech that, for inspired patriotism, choice composi tion and Hinptii'itr of expression bas never been surpassed. rilK AD1IHK9S. Four score and seven years go out fathers brought forth upon this conti nent a new nation, conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created free and .equal. Now, we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or any nation so conceived an I dedicated, can long endure. We aro met on a great battlefield of thai war. We have come to dedicate a portion of that field as a final resting place for those who here gave their lives that that nation might live. It Is altogether tilting and proper that we should do this. But, in a linger sense, we cannot dedicate, we cannot c macerate, we cannot hallow this ground. Too brave men, living and dead, w ho struggled bote have con secrated it, far abovo our power to add or detract. The world will little note, nor long re member what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us, the living, rather to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which tbey who fought here have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us here to be dedicated to the 'great task remaining before us, that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion ; that we here high ly resolve that these dead shall not have died In vain; that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom, nnd that the government of the people, by the people, ami for the people, Bhall not perish from the earth. Advertued Letters. Following is the list of letters remain ing in the posloflice nt The Dalles un called for May 2d, 1900. Persons calling for tho same w ill give date on which they were advertised: GEN ri.EMEN. Ayers, Chirk Anson, B Brown, C A Bach man, A Brnmer, D Bath, R C itritteu, T Cooper, C J Cooper, J T Daggett, C L Fleam, L Ellsworth, Fred Garner, S D Garland, F T Hereaux, J E Jahnson, Hyram Kelly, Thou Kayser, J F (2) Mnir, James McCuIlongh, W F Oestriecher, Julian Pat ton, E Sherrill, Geo Scholty, II Stearns, Bud Stephenson, C F Smith. C H Thompson, Win Tenton, T Williams,Jeronie(3) Wagner, II Wherrv, Jno Wright, A S Avola, A R Ailen, S V Brown, W M Bridges, H Buttiker, B Bluvy, John Carlson, W A Chastain, W A Dell, Chas Ellsworth, E Emery, J Freeman, A C Hastings, Fred Gray, L Holm. N P Johnson, E R Kymiston, Tom Munynn John Pearl. II Mack, W Pearson, A Pasemnre, Geo Sheriff. Max Scott, W Slater, DC Stangle, J Sloan, Will B Trigg, E C Vaubaugh, Terry Wright, A S Walsh. Pat Wilson, James L Zimmerman, J Basn, Mrs Dailey, Mrs Alice Gray, Jessie Richards, Mrs J I. Wright, Mrs A S I.AniEH. Blake. Miss Mabel Davis, Miss Hattie Lucas, Miss Viola Rhneds. L N Watson, Mattie H. H. Rii.dkll, P. M. Kotlcv. Owing to the retirement of Frank Chrisman from the firm of Chrisman Bros., and hij intention! to leave the state as soon as possible, all debt! due the firm must be paid immediately. All having claim! against the firm will please present them at the market for payment. Illl-tf ClIKISMAM BrOTHKRH. DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve Is nn. equalled for piles, Injuries and skin diseases. It is the original Witch Hazel Salve. Beware of all counterfeits. Cash In ton Chack. All cotintv warrants registered prior to June 3, 189tt, will be paid at my office. Interest ceases after February. 3, l(;00. C. L. Phillipb, Oonntv Treasurer. Clarke A Falk bare received a carload of the celebrated Jauie' E. Patton strictly pure liquid paints