The Dalles Daily Chronicle. THE DALLES OREGON WEDNESDAY APRIL 27, 1892 LOCAL BREVITIES. ' A quantity of nice, clean rags wanted at this office. ., Pure Yellow Dent Seed Corn, extra early, for sale at Joles Bros. 4-20dwl0t Old papers, nice and clean, for sale at this office. - They are useful for many things. - ' Arrangements have been completed for. holding another Demorest medal contest no Wednesday evening. 4-23td Pabst's Milwaukee beer at the-. Uma tilla house at a bit a bottle. Free lunch tonight at 8 o'clock. Miss Clara B. Story will instruct a limited number of pupils in oil paint ing, water colors, crayon,- charcoal' and pastelle work -and- - China painting. Studio, room 3, over Mclnerny's dry roods store. " - 2-3-tf .. MARKET REVIEW. - Wheat We quote 55 to 60 cents per bushel. Corn in sacks $1.40$1.50 per 100 lbs. . '. - Oats The oat market is in good eup- pry wiib a umuea aemana. we quote 1.20 .cents to $1.25 per cental. . Barley The barley supply is limited good with a limited inquiry. Brewing $1.00 per cental. Feed barley at 80 to 90 cents per cental. ... Flouk Local brands wholesale, $4.10 $4.25 per barrel at the mills, retail. Millstuffs We quote bran at $20.00 per ton. Retail $1.00 per lOOtfeg. Shorts and middlings, $22.50$2o.00 per ton. Chop corn at $28.00 to $30.00 per ton. Rolled barlay at- $28.00 to $30.00 per ton. . Hay Timothy hay is in good supply at quotations $14.00 to $15.00. Wheat hay is quoted at 12.50$13.00 per ton, and scarce, baled. Wild hav is Quo ted at $12.0013.00 per ton. Alfalfa $12.00 baled. Oat hay $13.00. Potatoes Abundant at 50 to 60 cents a sack and demand limited. ... Bdttkb We quote Al .40. 65 cents per roll, and more plentiful. "r- Eggs Are not coming in freely and the market strong, we quote 12 to 14 cents. Poultry Old fowls are in better sup ply at $4.00 to $4.50 per dozen. . Apples 1.75$2.00 box and scarce. Vegetables Cabbage, turnips, carrots and onions, i cent oer sound. Hides Prime dry hides are Quoted at .uo per pound, uuua .U4u&. (jreen.024 .03. Salt .03.04. Sheep pelts '1.00 to $1.75 ; butchered, , 75 to . cents ; bear skins $0 to $8; coyote .60 ;. mink 50 cents each ; martin $1.00 ; beaver, $1.75 (33.00 per lb.; otter, $2.005.U0 each for Al ; coon, .30 each ; badger. .25 each : fisher, $2.50 to $4.00 each; Red Fox, $10.00; vDilon gray, $25.00; Black Fox, $25.00; Polecat, $.25; Wildcat, $.50; Hedghog, $1.00 to $3.00. Bkkf Beef on foot - clean and prime 2c. for ordinary and 3c. for prime. Mutton Choice weathers 44 cents, and scarce per tt in carcas. Hogs 5c. Dressed, and quite scarce. Veal 6 to 7 cents per.lt. Countrv bacon in round lots 10c. Lard 5fi cans .12c:K)tt 40.. 8c9c. .Lumber The supply is fairly good. We QUOta No. 1 floorim nnrf motin $26.00. No. 2 do. $21.00. No. 3 do sio.ou. Kougn lumber $y. to $12. No, 1 cedar shingles 2.60as2.60.- Lath ?.. Lime $1.65$1.75 per bbl. . Cement .ou per DDI. - STAPLE GEOCEBIES. Coffee Costa Rica is quoted at 23 cents by the sack ; ' Sugars Chinese in 100& mats, Dry Granulated, $6.; Extra C, 5 cents C, oi cents. American sugars Dry Granulated in barrels or sackH, 6 cents ; Extra C, in do., 5Ji cents ; C, h cents. Sugars in 30 tb boxes are quoted: Golden C $1.80; Extra C, $2.10; Dry Granulated- $2.25: Syrup $2.25 to $2.75 f. can, kegs 1.90 w f aeg. jum diipui nee, o4o4 cents ; is land rice. 7 cents. Beans Small white, 45 cents; iuu,iiat cents Dy ine iuun8. Stock Salt Is Quoted at $17.50 nr ton. Liverpool, 50fi sack, 70 cents iB, ; iuum saCK, f.ZO. Wanted. A girl to do general house work, apply w miH. jaugu xraaer. ;. .. ..- Keen Oat tha VIla. - Wm. Butler & Co., have just received mock oi screen aoors -ana windows Call and get prices. 4-ll-d6t. ST. LAMBERT." - The thoroughbred Jersey bull St. Lam bert, will stand for the season at the Co lumbia Feed yard. For service annlv to David George. 2.25dtwlm Ewe and Lamb for Sale. I have 1,400 ewes and lambs for sale cueap. vu upon or address U. B. Kel say, Kent, Sherman count v. Oregon . . - ' 4-23-1 md&w A Word to tbe Wlae. The best business opening and chance to make money in the state, is lying idle - wuiur, vr. j. Hvore oixw well iur- niflliPtfa in a. 'cnviWiTicv an si nwonAiwii a farming community. For sale or rent cheap. Let ns hear from you. Address toe b. u. Med. Mfg. Co., or A. J Brig ham, Dufur, Or. ' 1 1 1 All Dalles City warrants registered pnor to oepcemoer i, low, will be paid it presented at my office. . Interest ceases lrom and after this date. j - . Dated February 8th, 1892. - O. KlNEBSLY, - tf. v- Treaa. DaH.es.City., XMssulntiom Notice. - The copartnership . hetofore existing whhwu o. jrrenco. una- leaner, doing business in The Dalles under the fitTO na.mn r TfiPAnoV Mr Tjitiav Visa lwin dissolved by mutual consent The bus!-' jicoa wlu -ue-conauctea atxae oia stand first street, bv J: I- Unnr vhn haa purchased the same,' and ,will collect and pay all outstanding accounts. . Signed: - French A Lacgr. aaron Burr Kye. The late Miss Theodofiia Bnrr Davis. of New York, was a dear friend of mine in the long, lone ago" days. The niece and ward of Matthew L. Davis, the in timate associate and biographer of Burr, she had a store of anecdotes of men who figured .prominently in national affairs seventy or eighty years since, but this one which I shall repeat as nearly as possible in her own words interested me most of all: v ' '1 was a schoolgirl of fourteen, spend ing a short vacatien at Uncle Matthew's house in the city, when one day I heard him calling to me from tbe hall below and went to the head of .the stairs. Come down." he said. 'There is a gen tleman here who wishes to see yon.' I hesitated, held pack by some undefinable fear. Again he said. 'Come down,' and in such tones that 1 dared not disobey. He led me into the parlor, and there on the sofa sat an old man whom I had never before seen. Very old fie looked. dressed in the costume of the last cen tury; with his snow white hair rawu back and bed in a cue behind.,. But his eyes they were not old." Large, dark and-, deep, they flashed with all the fire, of youth. 1 never saw such eyes in man or woman. A They fascinated while they mgntened me. eji .cr "My uncle led me forward and said.' -Colonel Burr, this is the child pf whom 1 spoked I. need not tell you whose name she bears. . The old man rose, took my hand m his and held me out-at arms length and looked at me looked at me with those eyes which seemed to see into my very soul : Only a moment," but the moment was an hour. . Then be dropped my hands and exclaimed , in a voice trembling with emotion: 'Take her away, Matthew, take her away! 1 cannot bear HIV 1 saw him nly once afterward; it was on Broadway, and I tried to slip by him unperceived. But when 1 turned to look back h was standing still, fol lowing me with those wonderful, won derful eyes. They haunt me still, and will, 1 know, while memory lasts." St. Louis Post-Dispatch. M acnu lay aa a Host. Macau lay was a pattern host. On his own . account, it is true, he was no epi cure, and his nephew tells us that at any time he would have been amply satis fied with a dinner such as is served at a decent seaside lodging house.' This was a sad moral defect, but happily his con scientious views of the obligations of hospitality prevented his guests from suffering by it. He generally selected by a half conscious preference dishes of established character .and traditional fame. His Dissenting frienda he treated to a fillet of veal, "which he maintained to be the recognized Sunday dinner ' in good old Nonconformist families." On Michaelmas day he would have been wretched - had no goose smoked on the board At Christmas - he never forgot the old historio turkey. " If he was entertaining a couple of schoolboys who could construe the fourth satire of Juvenal, he would re ward them for their proficiency with a dish of mullet that might have passed muster, on the. table . of an augur or an emperor's freedman.-" With regard to the contents of his cellar, Macaulay prided himself on being able to say with Mr. John Thorp, "Mine is- famous good stuff, to be sure," and if he were taken to task for his extravagance he would reply, in' the words used by another of his favorite characters in fiction, that there was a great deal of. good eating and drinking in 700 a year, if people knew how to manage it, All the Year Round. The Seniors In War. j . One marked difference divided the generals of Frederick William' in from those of Napoleon. . The Duke of Bruns wick was seventy-one years old. Prince Hobenlohe, sixty, and among subordi nate commanders were men of sixty eight, seventy and seventy-four. - Lefe bvre. . the oldest French . general, was barely ;fifty-one. Augereau, forty-eight; Bernadotte, forty-two; Napoleon, Ney, Soult and Lannea, thirty -seven: Murat only thirty-five. Excepting for tbe intervention in Hol land in 1787. and the Duke of Bruns wick's ill starred invasion of Champagne in 1792. the Prussian army like that of Great Britain in 1854 had suffered from a long peace, one of the results in each case being, a certain disbelief in yonng .commanders. Von der Decken, writing in . 1798 , under the title "Is it necessary that' we should only have young generals?" decided the question in the negative; and in the British army today an officer of the same age as that of Napoleon or -Murat at Jena may find his energies confined to the command of a Company, whatever his capacity. Edinburgh Review. . Claim Before Cong-re aa. " - Immediately after every change of ad ministration, claims which were 'disallowed- by the outgoing power pour in by thousands, to be considered and rejected AfRlh "''AnnlifA.nta j-macrina AvfilantW u tr L , .vuwj , that what ono party will not grant the otner may grant, meir persistence in manv cases is astoniahinip. --- Otia HHm who has not the shadow of a right to oacx mm up, . nas written more- than 1.000 letters to the treaanrr rnanApfiTKr his demand, and has expended more money in postage than the value of the claim... He has addressed bis communi cations on the subject to every public official in Washington, from the presi dent down, and even to the Chinese and other foreign ministers. Washington Letter, '--r----.-;..;- .... -i-"?ti v . . . ' . 11 I , r. -'--Went t Charch aee.-,--!; --. ' r - A Maine ' woman - who had an irrelu jfima husband kept driving at JLim until fcha- finally got him " to ! go-" t churchk Now mark how she was ' rewarded, fn stead of following the serTice he looked ' at the oongregafcion - and '- noticed how much more handsomely the other worn-' en were drooood than his wife. This fact! pricked him to the heart aa .no words of i the minister could, and the next day he : gave his wife $500 and told' her to go and : buy some Clothe. Need we enlarge on the moral of this story? '. We think not New York Tribune. T: PROFESSIONAL CARDS. M. SALYER. CrviL Engineering, Survev-1 DB. KSHELJIAN (Hoskeopathic; Phykician and Surgeon. Calls answered immntir day or night, city or country. Office No. 36 arid 37 Chapman block. .. wtl DK. J. SUTHERLAND Felixht of Trinity Medical College, and member of the Col lege o( Physicians and Surgeons, Ontario, Phy- uvioji biiu cuigcuu. vuhx, ivuiua a ana 4 unap--man block. Residence; Judge Thornbury's Bec- 'i,' Buccv, uiutc uvuib, 1U u a. m., SO 4 nd 7 to 8 p. m. - DR. O. 1. DOANE PHYSICIAM AND (DR. - gbon. Office; rooms & and S Chapman Block. Residence No. 23, Fourth street, one tlock south of Conrt House Office hours 9 to 12 A. M 2 to 5 and 7 to S P. JL . DSICDALL Dentist. Gas given for the painless extraction of teeth. Also teeth .fct on flowed aluminum plate. Rooms: Sign of -he Golden Tooth, Second Street. l.B.DUFUR. GEO. ATKINB. PRANK MENKFEK. rxtJFUR, W ATKINS 4 MENEFEB Attor- . a i ri-bA w nuum no. - over rosl Office Building, Entrance, on Washington Street WH. WILSON Attobnet-at-iaw Room . 52 and 53, New Vogt Block, Second Street, rhe Dalles, Oregon. ' V 8. BENNETT, ATTORNE Y-AT-LAW. Of Dee in Schanuo's building, up . stairs. The Oalles, Oregon. . , . V. HATS. - B. B. HUNTIWeTON H. S. WILSON. MAYS, HUNTINGTON" S WIL80N ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. Offices, French's block over First National Bank, The Dalles, Oregon. . SOCIKTIBS. ASSEMBLY NO. 4827, K. OF L. Meets" Jn K. days of each month at 7 :S0 p. nu - ., w A8CO LODGE, NO. 15, A. F. A. M. Meets nisi ana imra jnonaay oi each month at 7 r.ic, DALLES ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER NO. 6. of each month at 7 P. M. MODERN WOODMEN OF THE WORLD. Mt. Hood Camp No. 59, Meets Tuesday even ing of each week in the K. of P. Hall, at 7:30 r. x COLUMBIA LODGE, NO. 5, I. O. O. F. Meets .every Friday evening at 7:30 o'clock, in K. of P. hall, corner Second and Court streets. Sojourning brothers are welcome. H. Clodgh, Sec'y. H. A. Bills,N. G. FRIENDSHIP LODGE, NO. 9., K. of P. Meets every Monday evening at 7:30 o'clock, in Schanno's building, corner of Court and Second streets. Sojourning members are cordially in vited. W. 8. Ckam. . J. W.Vausb, K. of B. and 8. C. C. WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN TEMPERENCE . I'VTflV Trill moot XV4Hnn - - - . . . " w j rijwj WK1UUUU at 3 o clock at the reading room. . AUare invited. TEMPLE LODGE NO. 8, A. O. U. W. Meets at K. f P. Hall, Corner Second and Conrt Streets, Thursday evenings at 7:30. . - - " ' George Gibons, W. s Mtebs, Financier. : M. W. J AS- NESMITH POST, No. 32, G. A. R. Meets every Saturday at 7:30 r. m., In the K. of P. Hall. ; ... B- OF L. E. Meets every Sunday afternoon in the K. of P. Hall. ; . C2.ESANG VEREIN Meets every Sunday X evening in the K. of P. Hall. ., BOF L. F. DIVISION, No. 167 Meets in the K. of P.-Hall the first and third Wednes day of each month, 8t 7:30 P. u. . THK CHCBCHES. ST. PETER'S CHURCH Rev. Father Beonb gekbt Pastor. Low Mass every Sunday at 7 a.m. High Mass at 10:30 A. M. Vespers at 7m. ADVENT CHRISTIAN CHURCH. Preaching In the Y. M. C. A. rooms every Sunday at 11 H III STlff T V. TT. . Qnn,... uk I .- j , . . uu.tbj uwi iiuurauttuav after morning service. J. A. "Orchard, pastor. ST. PAUL'S CHURCH Union Street, opposite Fifth. Kev.EliD.Suteliffe Rector. Services every Snnday at 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. u. Sunday School 9 :4! A. m. . Evening Prayer on Friday at PR8T BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. O. D. Tat lob, Pastor. Morning services every Sab bath at the academy at 11 A. ir. Sabbath School immediately after morning services. Prayer meeting Friday evening at Pastor's resi de nee. Union services in the court house at 7 CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Rev. W. C. Curtis, Pastor. Services every Sunday at 11 A. K. and 7 r. u. Sunday School after morning service. Strangers cordially invited. Seat free. M- E. CHURCH Rev. A. C. 8pknceb, pastor. Services every Sunday morning. Sunday School at 12:20 o'clock P. X. A cordial invitation is extended by both pastor and people to aU YOUR flTTEllTIOJl Is called to tke fact that Glenn, Dealer in Glass, Lime, Plaster, Cement - and Building Material of all kinds. v. -Carrie tbe finest Line of- Pictures jnouining To be f oond in the City, 72 Washington Street. : y. H. BOTTS, Prop. -Ho. 90 Second Brest, Tie Dalles, Or. . This well -known stand, kept by the well , known W.' II. Butts, long a resi dent tf Wasco county, has an extraordi nary fine stock of " ' . Sheep'' Herder's MM tri. Irii Diirbme. ' - In fact, all the leading brands of line Wines, Liquors nd Cigars..' GiT the old man avail and you will come again. Hugh INDIA. Ganges swoon rlppleleas in the fleroe midday. Drenched in the white-hot sun's acnteat fire. Winding in calm its turcid. Indolent way Around Benares and its thousand spire. The monstrous crocodiles on either bank Loll in the sheen and watch the ichneumon creep, - . . And mid tbe rushes and the tail eras rank Of fecal pools tbe huice Ramingoea sleep. - No sound, no stir, no pleasant dip of oars. No sail to charm the scene, do cloud of white; . Kaught but the silence of the scorching shores. Naught but tbe wilderness of burning light. Master and stave hare Boutcbl tbe shadeleea . town. The iris fish hide in the alga dense. With deadly beat the hell sun poareth down. Blinding a continent in its insolence. While o'er the slumbering waste of heat and sand. Where nothing human moves, or sways or r speaks.- -. t . Far in the fertile distance, mute and grand. Rise the great Himalayas' icy peaks. - - ,.vi..j-;i.i t-rrancia&.Saltna. 'i. .-. . . Didn't Lose Much, ; One day a gentleman named Fleming called on Mr. C , and both being mem bers of the same society the conversation drifted in that direction. .y - ' You were-not' at the last meeting," said Mr. C to Fleming. ; k , "No,,,epUed the latter, "I was un avoidably absent. . 1 have lost my--wife." -Now, Mr. C- who was somewhat deaf, failed to hear the last remark, and saidT'emphatically, Wellf you didn't lose muchf referring, of course, to the meeting of the society. ':. i When Miss C , who was present, explained the situation, her father was overwhelmed with - shame, and - made most humble apologies. Fleming under stood at once, and had no thought of be ing offended, as Mr. C was known to be scrupulotlsly polite and tenderly considerate.-- Harper's. I'.-"..... Blood Impure or vitiated blood la nln times oat of ten caused by some form of constipation or indiges tion that, clogs up the system, when the blood naturally .be comes impregnated with the el- fete matter. The old Saraaparffl&s attempt to reach this condition by attacking the. blood with the drastio mineral " potash." The potash theory Is old and obsolete. Joy's Vegetable Sarsaparyia is modern. It goes to the seat of the trouble. It arouses the liver, kidneys and bowels to health ful action, and invigorates the circulation, and the Impurities are quickly carried off through the natural channels. Try It and note its delightful action. Chas. Lee, at Beamiah's Third and Market Streets, & F-, writes: " I took it for vitiated blood and while on the first bot tle became convinced of its mer its, for I could feel it -was work ing a change. H cleansed, purl-, -fled and braced me ooeenerallv. and everything is now working full and regal Sarsaparilla For Sale by SNIPES A KINERSLY THE DALLES, OREGON. - i ; . - A Revelation. Few people know Oat the Bright bluish-green oolor of the ordinary teas exposed in . the windows! is not the nat ural color. . Unpleasant as the fact may be, it is nevertheless artificial; mineral-' coloring matter being .. used for this purpose. The . effect . is two-: fold. It not only makes the : tea a bright, shiny green, bat also permits the us of " off-color " and worthless teas, which, onee under the green cloak, are readily worked off a a good quality of tea. -. . - An eminent authority write on this sub ject: "The manipulation of poor teas, to give them alflner appearance, is carried on exten sively. Green teas, being in this country especially popular, are produced to meet the demand by coloring cheaper black kiuds by . glazing- or facing with Prussian blue, tumeric, gypsum, and indigo. TMt method U so gen erol that eery tittle genuine uncolored green tea i offered Jar tale." J .- - .'.; ' It was the knowledge of-this condition of affairs that prompted the placing of Beech' Tea before the public It i absolutely pur and without color. ' Did you ever see afiy genuine - uncolored Japan tea? Aik: your - - grocer to open a package of Beech's, and you t . will see it, and probably for tbe very first time. , It will be found iu color to be just be- . tween the artificial green tea that you have, been accustomed to and the black teas. ' It drawse delightful canary color, and Is so fragrant'' that it will be a revelation to tea- - drinkers. Its parity makes it -also tnort -economical than the artificial teas, for lest of it Is required per cup. Sold only in pound packages bearing this trade-mark: 'Pure-As-fjBhdhbodr. It TonrgTooer does not have it, he will gel ' ttioryoo. PriosoDo pes poand. For sal si - THE DAXLE3, OBEGOS . - Still od Deck; - -.-,' ' '.'. Ph-OBui?:, I,ike - has " Aiigen Proitt ttib Aiiegtrv J AMES, WHITE, The Eeetanrantenr Has Opened the Baldioin Hestaaraiit OH MAIN STREET Where he will be glad to see any and aU - f hi ld Ptrons. ,- -; " . , -. :.': '. ' - yr' -.?r,.',vJ-Open day andlfight. .first class meals 1 ,wa.tyfl, cent. : r'"''--: Jdus F1RST - u M k f lit; S : k fo) 1 CAN BE HAD AT THE CH R ONI CLE OFFIC E etisonablv Ruinous Rates. ; DEALERS IN: Staple and ' ' ' Hay, Grain and Feed. Masonic Block, Corner Third and Court Streets, The Dalies.Oregon. D. BU N IN! WorK, Till Repairs Pipe MAINS TAPPED UNDER PRESSURE. Shop on Third Street, next door west of Young & Kuss' Blacksmith Shop. few .o. Qolumbia jotel, THE DAULES, OREGON. Best Dollar a Day House on the Coast! First-Class Meals, 25 Cents. First Class Hotel in Every Respect. fjr-nr 1 T i. i? TTT1 i j. TTLl . 15... 1 1 "ui" ix3 j - .1.1 te, District and County TICKET. For Supreme Judge. " Alfred S. Bennett. For Attorney General, Qeorge E. Chamberlain. For Member of Congress, 2d District, ' "" James H. Slater. i- For Circuit Judge, 7th District, '': ; W. Ij. Bradsha-w. For Prosecuting Attorney, 7th District, . J. - P. Moore. For Member State Board Equalization, -' - ' . J . 7th District, .William Hughes. . ' For Joint Senator," 17th District, Sher ' man and Wasco counties, 'i-f i; J. A. Smith . ; , '. - , .. o( Sherman.' . For Joint Senator, i8th District, Gilliam, ' Sherman and Wasco counties, . 3r. W. Rinehart, . -'- , of Gilliam. , For Joint Representatives, 18th Eepre - - - eentative District,-Sherman and. -- -Wasco counties, v v H. E. Moore, ' S. P. Bljrthe. . ' " For County Judge, ' ' : , v GEOKGE O. BEAKELEY. , f ' For County Clerk, l' JAMES CROSSEN. . For County Sheriff,' r " ' t i TH0MA8 A. WARD. - For County Treasurer? W1IJJLAM KCQRSON. "Tor County Assessor, GEORGE TrPRATHER. i '- For County Surveyor, F. 8. GORDON. ; " ' ; : .For School Superintendent, - F.' P. FITZGERALD. , V; -For County Commissioner, '-' ' . , , ; JAME8DARNJE1XE. For County Coroner. . -'' ' JOHN W. MOOBK. ' 4-21 td DEjuOGBflTIG CLHSS 0 cBi. ui yyuite xieip Jimpioyea. 4X1CJIOIEIS, tfpojp. State, District and County -rrvcc-r For Supreme Judgev P. A. Moore. For Attorney General, Lionel R. Webster. For Member of Congress, 2d District, W. R. Ellis. For Circuit Judge, 7th District, - ' , George Watkins. For Prosecuting Attorney, ;-: -7th District, W. H. Wilson. - i for AiemDer (State iioard Kqualization . ,7th District, "John Ij. "Ltickey, For Joint Senator, 17th District, consist - jng of Sherman and Wasco Counties, ' For Joint Senator, 18th District, consist ing of Gilliam, Sherman and .-. .wapco vxunues, - - - W. W. Steiwer. For Joint Representatives, 18th Repre sentative District, consisting of ' Sherman and Wasco . ..- Counties, , E. N Chandler X. XV. UUXl. - s For County Judge, ; C. N. TIIORNBURY. . - ; " For County Clerk, s J. M. HUNTINGTON. For County Sheriff, C. P. BALCH. . 'For County Commissioner, ': H. A. LEAVENS. For' County Treasurer, WM. MICHELL. . - For County Assessor, JOEL W. KOONTZ. . For Countv School Superintendent, . I - - TROY SHELLEY. - ELL, aijl Hoofing REPUDLICnil For County surveyor, -; E. F.SHARP. "., . .,. - - - - ' -. .-5 For County Coroner, ; - ' V : ' N. M. EASTWOOD. 4-ietf v: : : ..