The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, April 30, 1892, Image 4

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    The Dalles Daily, Chronicle.
TDE DALLES
OREGON
SATURDAY ' - - - APRIL 30, 1892
Produce and Merchandise Prices.
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 sup
ply with a limited demand. We quote
1.20 cents to $1.25 per cental.
Barley The barley supply is limited
good with a limited inquiry. Brewing
fl.00 per cental. Feed barley at 80
to 90 cents per cental.
Floue Local brands wholesale, $4.15
$4.50 per barrel.
Millstuffs We quote bran at $20.00
per ton. Retail $1.00 per lOOtbs.
Shorts and middlings, $22.50$25.00
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
't quotations $14.00 to $15.00. Wheat
hay is quoted at 12.50$13.00 per ton,
and scarce, baled.- Wild hay 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.
Butter We quote Al .40. 65 cents
per roll, and very plentiful.
Eggs Are not coming in freely and the
"market strong, we quote 13 to 15 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, 1 cent per pound.
Hides Prime dry hides are quoted at
.06 per pound. Culls .0405. Green .02)4
.03. Salt .032.04. Sheep pelts
1.00 to $1.75; butchered,. 75 to cents;
bear skins $6 to $8 ; coyote .60 ;. mink 50
cents each ; martin $1.00 ; beaver, $1.75
($3.00 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; Dilon gray, $25.00; Black Fox,
$25.00; Pole cat, $.25 ; Wildcat, $.50;
Hedghog, $1.00 to $3.00.
Beef Beef on foot clean and prime
2Xc. 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 ft.
Countrv bacon in round lots 10c.
Lard 5ft , cans .12jC; 10tt
40ft. 8Xc9Mc -
Lumber The supply is fairly good.
We quote No. 1 flooring and rustic
$26.00. No. 2 do. $21.00. No. 3 do
$16.50. Rough lumber $9. to $12. No.1
1 cedar shingles $2.50$2.60. Lath $2.85.
Lime $1.65$1,75 per bbl. Cement
$4.50 per bbl.
STAPLE GROCERIES.
Coffee Costa Rica is quoted at 23
cents by the sack ;
Sugars Chinese in ' 100ft mats, Dry
Granulated, $6. ; Extra C, 5 cents
C, 5J cents. '
American sugars Dry Granulated in
barrels or sacks, 6 cents ; Extra C, in
do., 5 cents; C, 6 cents.
Sugars in 30ft boxes are quoted:
Golden C $1.80; Extra C, $2.10; Dry
Granulated $2.25.
Syrup $2.25 to $2.75 & can, kegs 1.90
to $2.00 f keg.
Rice Japan rice, 6.J6 cents ; Is
land rice, 7 cents.
Beans Small white, 45 cents;
Pink, 44) cents by the lOOfts.
Stock Salt Is quoted at $17.50 per
ton. Liverpool, 50ft sack, 70 cents
100 ftsack. $1.25; 200ft sack, $2.25.
Experts axe predicting that the books.
of today will fall to pieces before the
middle of the next century. The paper
in the books that have survived two o:
three centuries was made by hand o:
honest rags and. without the aid of
strong chemicals, while the ink was
made of nutgalls. Today much of the
paper for books is made, at least in part.
of wood pulp treated with powerful
acids, while the ink is a compound of
'-'various substances naturally at war
with the flimsy paper upon which it is
laid. The printing of two centuries ago
has improved with age; that of today, it
is feared, will within fifty years have
eaten its way through the pages upon
which it is impressed. Paper World.
JERSEY BULL "St Lambert
The thoroughbred Jersey bull St. Lam
bert, will stand for the season at the Co
lumbia Feed yard. For service apply to
vavia iieorge. z.zadwlm
Ewes and Limlil for Sale. .
I have 1,400 ewes and lambs for sale
cheap. Call upon or address B. S. Kel
' say, Kent, Sherman county, Oregon.
4-23-lmd&w
A Word to the Wise.
The best business opening and chance
to make money in the state, is lying idle
at Dufur, Or. A store 32x60 well fur
nished in a growing, and mosoerous.
farming community. For sale - or rent
cheap. Let us hear from you. Address
tne b. is. Mea. Mtg. uo., or A. J Brig
ham, Dufur, Or.
Dissolution Notice.
Notice is hereby given, that the co
partnership heretofore existing between
William Floyd, S. A. Byrne and Stacy
Shown, under the firm name of Bvrne.
Floyd & Co., in Dalles City, Or., has this
day been dissolved by mutual consent.
The business will be continued at the
old stand, by William Floyd and Stacy
Shown, who will pay all bills and collect
ui aeots. is. A. Byrne,
William Floyd,
Dated April 26, 1892. Stacy Shown.
Dlssolntlom Notice.
The copartnership hetofore existing
t.wppn h. V. FrnnnH iiul T XT T
doing business in The Dalles under the
firm name of French & Lauer, has been
dissolved by mutual consent. The busi
ness will be conducted at the old stand
r irst street, Dy .. n. jLAuer wno has
purchased (he same, and will collect and
tJ MsV VUMWUVIlUg OtWUUiBt
Signed; French & Ladkr
4-14-dlm
All Dalles -City warrants ' registered
prior to September 1, 1890, will be paid if
presented at my office. Interest cease
irom ana alter this date. .--?-
Dated February 8th, 1882."". . ' s
- '. tf- - - i . Treat laUea-CSiyi
Woman's Dainty Underwear.
Just what sort of underwear to assume
is one question that troubles the average
woman very much. She doesn't want
to wear so much that it will be bulky,
and she doesn't want to wear too little
for fear she will catch cold. She tries
first one and then another shaped gar-,
ment, and the wise woman is she who,
having at last hit upon that which is
most comfortable, makes it most dainty
and assumes it for good. - Very little
linen is used nowadays for one's lingerie,
the preference being given to cambric,
Victoria lawn, nainsook or percale. The
last is noted with tiny dots or wee flow
ers in pink, bine or lavender upon - the
white ground. Then when the garment
is finished the edges have a triple scal
lop or a sharp point embroidered in cot
ton of the same color as the figure. This
material, with its simple finish, is liked
for sack shaped chemises, for 'night
dresses and for drawers. It is seldom,
if ever, used for skirts. -
The fancy for silk nightdresses still
exists, but as there always have been
women who would wear nothing but the
clear white lawn or nainsook, "and as
these women are many, the makers of
underwear ' are specially catering to
them. Very much more fine work, that
is, handwork, can be put upon a nain
sook gown than upon a silk one, and the
needlewoman can make more fine tucks,
fancy stitches, gatherings, hemstitch
ing and drawing of threads than ever
would seem possible. Mrs. Mallon in
Ladies Home Journal.
' The Bayeux Tapestry. :
Tapestry was brought into general use
in western Europe, with many other
elegancies of life, by the Moors of Spain.
The oldest known specimen is the Bayeux
tapestry, an epic in embroidery, careful
ly treasured for centuries in the cathe
dral of . Bayeux, and now preserved in
the hotel de ville of that place. Miss
Strickland says of this piece of work:
"It 13 beyond all competrticri the
most wonderful achievement in the gen
tle craft of needlework that ever was
executed by fair and royal hands."
It was done by Matilda of. Flanders
wife of William the Conqueror, and the
ladies of her court. It is a coarse linen
cloth, 214 feet long and 20 inches wide,
on which is worked in woolen thread of
various colors a representation of the
invasion and conquest of England by the
Normans. i
It contains the figures of about 625
men, 200 horses, fifty-five dogs, forty
ships and boats, besides a quantity of
quadrupeds, birds, trees, houses, castles
and churches, all executed in the proper
colors, with names and inscriptions over
them to elucidate the story. - It is a
valuable historic document, as it gives a
correct and minute portraiture of the
Norman costumes and their' manners
and customs. Woman's Work.
Aliments of the Eyes.
No organ of the body is liable to a
greater variety of ailments than the eye.
More than forty such diseases are enu
merated in medical works.
Some of these tend toward blindness,
partial or complete. Some are highly
contagious. Some are-peculiar. to the
earliest stages of infancy; Borne to old
age. Soma are due to other diseases;
some originate with the eye itself; some
are the result of external wounds. Some
are brought on by the improper use of
the eye; some by the abuse of other or
gans. Some are partially or wholly
curable; otners are not.
As we. have two eyes, the loss of one
oes not materially affect . the other.
The double provision is a wise and be
nevolent one in the case of an organ ex
posed to so many accidents from with
out and so many diseases from within.
Youth s Companion.
A Professional Honseeleaner.
A woman in this Htv hna n f &vt.nin
number of customers, all of . whom are
persons of wealth and willing to pay her
well. She eoes to the house nf Anrh
customer at stated periods and removes
all the furniture, curtains and pictures
from the drawing rooms. She then di
rects the cleaninsr of tha rnona uiit t.Via
furniture, taking care that the latter is
not scratched or injured in the handling,
and that all blemiflhAa sra mnnviul Rv
careful oiling. All the furnishings are
wen repiacea according to her ideas. As
she has excellent taste, she numama tn
create a good impression each time, but
never duplicates a settiflg. She suggests
the removal of unnecessary pieces or the
addition of odd bits that will fill nn Vioi.
I plan, and keeps the customer informed
ui regaru io tne cnanges oi styles. JNew
xorKsun.
Blmlnl and the Fountain or Tnulh
Bimini was a fabulous island firmly
oeuevea in Dy tne Indians or the An
tilles, though they could give no further
clew to its location than that it lay some
hundreds of leagues north of Hispaniola.
On this island was the famous, foun
tain of youth which had the power of
restoring youth and giving perpetual
health and vigor. . It was the Bearch for
this fountain that led Ponce de Leon
and Hernando de Soto to FJorida, on the
outskirts of which the island was gener
ally supposea to be situated. St. Louis
T -I T -
IMipUDllC . .
The Heart Bests Elrht Honrs Enr. r..
That wonderful nitvA nf miwiianiam
the heart, appears to work continually
dav and nisrht. from Mr h
in realitv there axe short nanaM Lfn
between each beat, which, though mi-
i . j . . .
uuw in wemseives, mount up in the ag
gregate to eigne noun out or every twen
ty-f our. These short pauses enable the
heart to repair the waste which constant
work entails and without which rests it
would break down. Brooklyn. Eagle.
Why the Wren Is King;.
The WTen is chased every St. Stephen's
way on account of it betravmst tha Sav
iour by chattering in a clump of furze
where he was hiding. It is called the
"king of all birds," because it concealed
isseK beneath the wins of the eatde when
that lordly bird, claimed . supremacy by
soaring highest. "Here 1 am," Eaid the
wren, mounting above - the .-eagle's bead
wnen tae totter could .go .so higher.
iron Tonea,
-1
PROFESSIONAL cards.
F
M. 8ALYER. Civil Engineering. Snrvnv-
Ing, and Architicture. The Dalles, Or.
DB. ESHELMAN (Homoeopathic; Physician
and Surgeox.-C&11s answered tiromntlv
day or night, city or country. Office So. 38 and
37 Chapman block. wtf
DR. J. SUTHERLAND Fellow of Trinity
llcdieal Allege, and member of the Col-
(weof Phvuiciana Rnn finrppmm. nnturln Phv.
-.ician and Burgeon. Office; rooms 3 and 4 Chap
aiKii block. Residence; Judge Thornbury's fc'cc
)nd street. Office hours: 10 to 12 a. m.. 2 to
-lud 7 to 8 p. m. -
DR. O. V. DOAKS PHYSICIAN AND 8CB
oiox. Office: rooms 6 and 6 Chanman
Block. Residence No. 23. Fourth street. on
tloek south ef Court House. Office hours 9 to 12
V. M., 2 to 5 and 7 to 3 P.M. :
DSIDDALX Dentist. Gas given for the
m rtaliiless extraction of teeth. Alan tAth
et on flowed aluminum plate. Rooms: Sign of
UV UU1UCU -1 win, owuuu OUWb
B.B.DUFUB. OXO. ATKINS. FRANK M KNIFES.
DUFUR, W ATKINS fe MENEFEE Attor-NKY8-AT-LAW
Room No. 43. over Prat
Office Bulldins;, Entrance on Washington Street
1 ue itum, urcgon.
WH. WILSON ATTORNET-AT-LAW Rooms
52 and S8. New Voet Block. Second Street.
rhe Dalies, Oregon.
i 8. BENNETT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Of-
.1 . H(A in Rihilnnn'R hnilillnff. nn atain Tt..
DsJles, Oregon.
V. r. MAYS. B. B. HUNTINGTON. H. 8. WILSON.
VfAYS, HUNTINGTON & WILSON Attor-
.V I KEYS-AT-LAW. Offices. French' hlnob mar
First National Bank, The Dalles, Oregon.
SOCIETIES.
ASSEMBLY NO. 4827, K. OP L. Meets In K.
of P. hall the second and fourth WninM.
days of each month at 7:30 p. m.
w
ASCO LODGE, NO. 15, A.F.iA. M. Meets
uibi mju uiuu jauuunf ui eacn znontn at 7
p. If
DALLES ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER KO. 6.
Mratj in Afflam4tf Hall ti a .hit 1
of each month at 7 P. M.
MODERN WOODMEN OF THE WORLD.
ML Hood CamnNo. .V). Mmi Titnuliivomin.
Ing Of each week in the K. of P. Hall, at 7:80 r. m.
COLUMBIA LODGE, NO. 5, I. O. O. F. Meets
every Fridav eveninsr at 7:30 n'clncb. in v
of P. hall, corner Second and Court streets.
Sojourning brothers are welcome.
H. Clough, Sec'y. H. A. Bills,N. G.
FRIENDSHIP LODGE, NO. 9., K. of P. Meets
Bcnanno's building, corner of Court and Second
streets. Sojourning members are cordially in-
D. W.Vause, K. of R. and S. . C. C.
YW H. 1, Rill.
WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN TEMPERENCE
UNION will meet evenr ItSHrinv nfton.nnr.
at 8 o'clock at the reading room. A 11 are Invited.
TEMPgDS?,,K9-8.A.O.U.W.-Meet8
- .i - . "Qii) iauuue oeuuuu ana uourt
streets, Thursday evenings at 7 :80.
. USOJtGE (jrXBONS,
W. 8 Myers, Financier. 11. W.
J AS. NESMITH P08T, No. 82, G. A. R. Meets
- every Saturday at 7:30 P. M.. in the K. of p.
Hall.
B
OF L. E. MeetsevervSnndavaftffiTKvm in
the K. of P. Hall.
'ESANG VEREIN Meets every Sunday
JT evening in the K. of P. Hall.
"R - OF L. F. DIVISION, No. 167 Meets In the
. j. 'i mt. nnu me nrss ana tnira Wednes
day of each month, st 7:3il p. x. - -
TBS CHURCHES.
ST. PETER'S CHURCH Rev. Father Beons
GEE8T Pastor. Low Mass every Sunday at
7 A. If. Hich Mass at 10:80 A. h. Vesnera at
In the Y. M. C. A. rooms everv Sundavst 11
a., in. nun p. in. sunaay scnooi immeaiateiy
u luuiiiiug Dcivitx. . a. vrviiuru, pastor.
ST. PAUL'S CHURCH Union Street, opposite
Fifth. Rev. Eli D. Butcliffe Rector. Services
every Sunday at 11 A. sc. and 7:30 p. ic. Sunday
wiuwtBiw a. m. evening rrayer on naay at
T7MRST BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. O. D. Tat-
7 LOR. Pastor. Mornins- services everv Ran.
oaxn at tne acaaemy at 11 A. M. baDOatn
scnooi immediately after morning services,
Prayer meeting Fridav evenina- at Pastor's resi
dence. Union services in the court bouse at 7
r. M.
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Rev. W. C.
Curtis. Pastor. Services everv Sundav at 11
a. M. and 7 P. X. Sunday School after morning
service, strangers corawny invitea. beats tree.
1 T X. CHURCH Rev. A. C. Spencer, castor.
j. Services every Sunday morning. Sunday
ecnooi at rz.M o ciock P. M. a cordial invitation
is extended by both pastor and people to all.
YOUH UTTEpTIOp
Is called to the fact that
Dealer in Glass, Lime,' Plaster, Cement
- and Building Material of all kinds. -
-Carrie tne Finest Line of
To be found In tne City.
72 LUashington Street.
1 he Snug,
W. H. BUTTS, Prop.
Ho, 90 Second Sreet, Tne . Dalles, Or.
This well known stand, kept by the
well known Wj H. Butte, long a resi
dent of Wasco county, has an extraorcu
nary nne stock ol
Sheep
Herder's Delist and Irish Cinrbanee.
In fact, all the leading brands of fine
Wines. Liquors and Cigars. Give the
Hugh
Glenn
PlGtllTuS
Plowing
old man a call and yon will come again
" Taeatlon Expeditions.
It is not a new thing for students in
vacation to make scientific expeditions
on their oWn account, combining camp
ing and "roughing it" .with congenial
study, but an expedition , of the kind
which was successfully carried out dur
ing the vacation season of the present
year deserves to be noted as of especial
importance and significance. .
A party consisting of a professor and
several students of Bowdoin college, in
Maine, organized an expedition to Lab
rador to study the vegetable,and animal
growtns, and otherwise to gain a scien
tific knowledge of the country.
it was also planned, incidentally, to
ascend the Grand river to the great cata
ract. The Grand river flows from the
high plateau of northern Labrador, and
the falls by which it reaches the lower
level to flow into the Atlantic ocean are
among the grandest on the continent.
The Bowdoin college expedition was
fitted out at the expense of alumni and
friends of the college.
The Grand river was ascended, the
great cataract viewed and photographed
and its height ascertained. The students
who succeeded in pushing as- far nn as
the falls suffered many privations, but
won deserved honor in the successful
prosecution of their enterprise. -
Their achievement is a good example
for other American colleges and students.
Much important information remains to
be gathered about the less knoan por
tions oi our continent, ana geological,
botanical and zoological researches, faith
fully carried on, may always be made
scientifically profitable and valuable,
even upon ground which has been cov
ered before. Youth's Companion.
The owl is unable to move the eyeball,"
which is immovably fixed in the socket
by a strong, elastic, cartilaginous case.
N
fSTIPATION,
Afflicts half the American Twnrkln vat th. f.
only one preparation of 8arsaparilla that acta on
the bowel and reaches this Important trouble,
and that is Joy's Vegetable Earsap&rilla. It re
lieves It In 31 hours, and an occasional dose
prevents return. "Vereferby permission toO.E.
Elxington, 126 Locost Avenue, Eaa Francisco;
4. n. jimwD. reuinnu: ii w inn chat nnm
Ban Francisco, and hnndreds of oth.nslinh.iia
used it in constipation. One letter is a sample of
nunareos. iungton, writes: "I have been for
yean subject to bilious headaches and mtutliu.
tlon. Have been so bad for a rear back hava
had to take a physio every other night or else I
would have a headache. After taking one bottle
ef J. V. 8. , I am In splendid shape. It has done
wonderful things tor me. People similarly
irouDiea mould try it ana be convinced."
Joy1
q Vegetable
w Garsaparilla
Host modern, mutt effective, largest bottlst
sme price, 11.00. si t for SS.00.
For Sale by SNIPES & K1NEHSLY
THE DALLES. OREGON.
A Severe Law.
The English peo
ple look more closely -
to the genuineness
of these staples than
we da Is tact, they .
have a law under'
''Which ' they" max
seirnrei and de
stroy ' adulterated
products that are
not what they are represented to be. Under
this statute thousands of pounds of tea have
been burned because of their wholesale adul
teration. Tea, by the way, is one of the most notori
ously adulterated articles of commerce. Not
alone are the bright, shiny green teas arti fa
cially colored, but thousands of pounds of
sub-.it'.'r.tei for tea leaves are used to swell
the bulk of cheap tea ; ash, sloe, and willow
csves being those most commonly used.
Again, sweepings from tea warehouses are
colored and sold as tea. Even exhausted tea
leaves gathered from the tea-honses are kept,
dried, and mode over nd find their way into
the cheap teas.
The English government attempts to stamp
(hi oat Ijr cor.Cfict'.I n; but no tea is too
poor for u.-, and the eult 1?, that probably
the pofcret teas used by any. nation are those
coummed In America. ,
Beech's Tea is presented with the guar
. amy that it is nucolored and nnadnlterated;
in fact, the sun-curea tea leaf pore and sim
ple. Its purity insures superior strength,'
about one third less of it being required for
an infusion than of the a- Uncial teas, and its
fragrance and cxquisiie flavor is at once ap
parent. It will be a ic-relation to you. In
order that its purity and quality may be guar
anteed, it is sold only in pound packages
bearing this trade-ma-k:
BEEC&m TEA
-PureAsWdhood:
' Mm Mo par pound. For sals al
Bile 33-va.tlor'jBi
THE DALLES, OREGOH.
Still on Deek.
Phoenix Like has Arisen
. Prom the Ashes!
JAMES WHITE,
The Beetauranteur Has Opened .the
Baldioin hm Hestewafit
ON MAIN STREET -
Where he willoe glad to see any and all
of his old patrons. -
Open day and Night. First class meals
- :'. twenty-five cents. -..
GO
Sf SUN
-o
Health
and Comfort
are
Octroyed
bvthe use of Door smokino- tnharrn
I DURHAM 1
The one . tobacco that has held its
own through all the changes of
time and against all competitors is
Blackwell's Bull Durham Smoking
Tobacco.
WHY?
Because it's always pure,, always
the same, always the best. Such a
record tells more than pages of
"talk." it's just as good to-day
as ever and it is the tobacco foryoa.
If you smoke, you should smoke
Bull Durham
A trial is all we ask. ' I
A Question
A Great Record
For You
Good Advice
BLACKWELL'S DURHAM
TOBACCO CO.,
DURHAM,
JOLES BROS.,
: DEALERS IN: -
le and Fancy Gioceiies,
Hay, Grain and Feed.
Slap
Masonic Block, Corner Third and
D. BUNN
Pipe Woru. Tin nepairs ana Hoofing
MAINS TAPPED UNDER PRESSURE.
Shop on Third Street, next
V THE DALLES, OREGON.
Best Dollar a Day
First-Class Meals, 25 Cents.
First Class Hotel in Every Respect.
JNone but the
T. T.
DEITlOGRflTIC
State, District and County
TICKET.
For Supreme Judge.
Alfred S. Bennett.
For Attorney General, '
George E. Chamberlain.
For Member of Congress, "
2d District,
James H. Slater.
For Circuit Judge,
7th District,
W. Li. Bradshaw.
. For Prosecuting Attorney; "
7th District,
J. F. Moore.
For Member State ' Board- Equalization,
- 7th .District,
William Hughes.
For Joint Senator, 17th District, Sher
man and Wasco counties, ,
J. A. Smith,"
- ... of Sherman. . ;
For Joint Senator, 18th District, Gilliam,
Sherman and. Wasco counties,
G-. W. Rinehart,
: " of Gilliam.
For Joint Representatives, 18th Repre
sentative District, Sherman and
- - - Wasco counties,
. H. E. Moore,
S. P.Blythe. -
For County Judge,
GEORGE C. BLAKELEY.
For County Clerk,
JAMES B. CROSSEN.
For County Sheriff,
THOMAS A. WARD.
For County Treasurer, .
v WILLIAM K. CORSON.. .
For County Assessor, -i
GEORGE T. PRATHEE.
For County Surveyor,
... F. S. GORDON. ,
For School Superintendent,
F. P. FITZGERALD.
. . For County Commissioner,
County (Jommissioner,
JAMES DARNIELLE.
For County Coroner.
. JOHN W. MOORE.
4-21 td
A Fac3
Against Time
Fears Nothing
Unchanging
Talk's Cheap
N. C.
ourt Streets. The Daiies.Qregon.
0
door west of. Young & Kuss'
1 1 DURHAM j
Blacksmith Shop. .
House on the Coast!
iiest ot White Help Employed.
Nicholas, Pvop.
HEPUBLICQ)!
State, District and County
TICKET.
For Supreme Judge,
P. A. Moore.
For Attorney General,
- Lionel R. Wehster.
For Member of Congress,
2d District,
W. R. Ellis.
- For Circuit Judge,
7th District,
George Watkins.
For Prosecuting Attorney,
7th District,
W. H. Wilson.
For Member State Board Equalization
7th District,
John L. Lackey.
For Joint Senator, 17th District, consist
ing of Sherman and Wasco Counties,
H. S. McDaniels.
For Joint Senator, 18th District, consist
ing of Gilliam, Sherman and
. Wasco Counties,
W, W. Sterwer.
For Joint Representatives, 18th Repre
sentative District, consisting of .
Sherman and Wasco
Counties,.
E. N Chandler,
T. R. Coon.
For Countv Judge,
C. N. THORNBURY.
s
For County Clerk,
J. M. HUNTINGTON.
. ' For County Sheriff,
CP. BALCH.
For County' Commissioner,
. H. A. LEAVENS.
;
For County Treasurer, -
WM. MICH ELL. ,
; For County Assessor,.
JOEL W. KOONTZ. . .
For County School Superintendent,
TROY SHELLEY. .. .
For County Surveyor, '
. E. F. SHARP.
For County Coroner,
N. M. EASTWOOD.
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