The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, May 02, 1892, Image 4

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The Dalles Daily Ctifoincie.
THE DALLES - - OREGON
MONDAY - - - - MAY 2, 1892
Produce and Merchandise Price.
Wheat We quote 55 to 60 cents
per bushel, Cora in gacfcs fl.40$1.50
per 100 lbs.
uatb tne oat uistkci. is in goou aup-
t:y with a limited demand.
.We quote
bef ceil
Barley The barlev supply is limited
good with a limited enquiry. Brewing
si .00 Der cental. Feed barley at 80
')LA
to QO netnia rtftr rental.
- FlVJ foca) brands wholesale, $4.1&"
"Ti'ii.fifi ner Vmrrei. - . '
MiLtsTuFo-r-We quote bran at $20.00 J
uer ton. Retail $1.00" per" 100 ns7
Shorts .! and ' middlings, $22.50$25.004
per ton. Chop corn at 28.00 to fao.oo
per ton Rolled barlay- at $28.00 Oo
$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 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.
Poultky 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. H cent per pound.
Hides Prime dry hides are quoted at
.00 per pound. tJuus .U4Uo. ureen.uzfc
.03. Salt ,03.04. Sheep "pelts
1.00 to $1.75 r butchered.' 75 to scents:
bear skins $6 to $8 ; coyote .60 ; mink 50
cents each ; martin $1.00 ; beaver, $1.75
($3.00 per lb. ; otter, ' $2.005.00 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, $-0;
Hedghog, $1.00 to $3.00.
Beef Beef on foot clean and prime
. 2Kc. for ordinary and 3c. for prime.
Mutton Choice weathers 44
cents, ana scarce per u in carcas.
Hogs 5c. Dressed, and quite scarce.
Veal 6 to 7 cents per ft. " "
Country bacon in round lots 10c.
Lard 5ft cans .12c; 10ft
40ft. 8Mc39Kc. ,. -,7C
Lnmber The buddiv la fairlv ttaaA
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 cedar shingles $2.50$2.60. Lath $2.85.
Lime, $1.65$1.75 per bbl; , Cement
$4.50 per bbl.
, ,,, staple osocebleb
Coffee Costa Rica is. quoted at 23
cents by the sack ; T .
Sugars Chinese in 100 ft mats. Dry
Granulated, $6.J ; Extra C, h cents
C, b cents.
American sugars Dry Granulated in
barrels or sacks, 6 cents ; Extra C, in
ao., o?4 cents ; .u, t2 cents.
Sugars in ; 30ft boxes are quoted
Golden J $1.80; . Extra C, $2.10; Dry
Granulated $2.25. '-, "
. Syecp $2.25 to $2.75 can, kegs 1.90
to $z.uo xeg. ,
Rice Japan rice, 66 cents ; Is
land rioe, 7 cents. .
Beans Small white, - 4 5 - cents ;
nni, cents Dy tne iuuss.- -
Stock Salt1 Is quoted at $17.50 per
ton. Liverpool, 50ft sack r . 70 -cents
100 ftaack, $1.25 j 200ft Back, $2.25.
,.A 1 Col That Cost l.BOO.
A trivial law suit with a remarkable
history has, been closed by. the payment
of $538.75 coat to th.aherift of St
Charles county. The case was that of
Black-well versus Ffeye, and was entered
ra the docket of the St. Charles circnit
court in 1867,: the suit being brought for
eighteen dollars, the value of a colt sold
by the plaintiff to the defendant. . With
v the attorneya' feev the expenses of the
suit will amount to $1,800.. The . colt in
the meantime died. St. Lous Letter.
The deepest depth of the sea is '
portea to be at a point twenty-three
miles north of New Guinea, where
soundings snowed a depth of 26,850 feet
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.
iavia ueorge. . : .-, . 2.ddtwlm
Iwm sad Iinbi for 8lt..
I have 1,400 ewes and lambs for sale
cbeap. Call npon or address B. S. Eel
say. Kent, Sherman-' countv. Orecon
4-23-1 md&w
A Word. to the Wise. - -v..
The best business openmg'and chance
to make money in the state, is tying idle
at uaiut, ur. -a. store i-dxSU. weu bur
nished in a growing, and prosperous
larming community. If or: sale or rent
-cheap. Let us hear from you. Address
- tne a. a. Med. Mfg. CoM jjt..'A.. JBrig-
nam, uniur, ur.
. . Dlssolatlon. Notice. .. ' .
Notice is hereby .Biven-. that the to
partnership heretofore' existing between
William Floyd, S. A. Byrne, and Stacy,
Shown, under the firm name of Byrne,'
Floyd & Co., in Dalles City, Or., has this
day been dissolved bv mutual consent.
The business will continued at the
old stand, by William Flpyd and Stacy
Shown, who will pay all bi&s and collect
' - i .i ' rr WitEifcSrFLovD,
Dated April 26, 1892.- Stact STiown.
. -"llslUo tItlck-.
ine copartnership betofore existing
between b. E. French and JTi .N. Lauer,
doing business ln.The;Dalles Sunder ; the
firm name of French & Laner, has been
aissoivea oy mutual consent. Tne busi
ness will be conducted at the old stand
First street, by J. .N. Laner who has
purchased the same,' and will collect and
pay all outstanding accounts.. ;
Signed : - French jSi Lackb. '
NOTICE.
All Dalles City- warrants registered
. prior to September 1 1890, will be paid if
. presented at my effioc .interest ceases
- from and alter this date.
Dated February 8th, 1892. .
. - - O. KlHBBBLV, '
tf. ' Treas. Dalles City.
HER FRIEND.
Twos In the Boston fast esamats a little rftaid
en sat;
She occupied the seat alone; tietslde her lay her
hat. - .
She clutched ber dolly to her breast In childish
mother play.
As if she feared some dreadful slant would
-snatch it rlabt away. v.
"Are you alone, my little girl?" 1 asked as 1
stooped down.
mamma told me Dod was lierel
she said
with half a frown.. . .
"She tissed me an my dolly, and I dess I don't
know you."
"Put, dear.V I answered, smiling, "tU me
: . where you're going to." T - ? - '
Sua iTf.ti ill her seaw-ahd then she tossed
her tangled hair, -
'iSbin on to Boston, an my pop'U meet me
there."- - -'-' -
But, dear," I questioned gently, "if the choo
i .. i i -i
"And you should walk, and walk, and walk
th en not D n d ;;,
Wfcat would yoa do?"' Th little r maiden
shook bet head &hd Crowned.
'LrMamma says when pop is gone, that Dod
Z?yd somewhere round." r '. ; i
The train-rolled info;: Boston! town. , I waited
there awhile .
And watched my little blue eyes, with her half
expectant smile.
"Dess waitin for my pop," she said, "with dollx
. fast asleep.".
And thea a man came rushing in. I knew him
'brhlsleap. " i"- ' .
He snatched his little daughter up with frantic,
feverish glee:
And then, with father's instinct, quick his eye
- was turned on me. t S ; f
"Well, Bess," he asked, "who is your ' friend?"
With quaint, expressive nod
The maid replied! "I deas I know. I fink-It
mturbe lod."-
, Tom Masson In Brooklyn I4fe,
America's JPaper SCaklnc, Capaelty.
The United States, has a capacity for
producing about 15,250,000 pounds of
paper annually, not counting the idle
mills, of which at present about seventy
are reported, out of a total of 1,180. Of
this, enormous', product: some . 3,735,000
pounds- are used in printing newspapers
and books, and 212,800 pounds more go
to help bind the-books printed.- It -is
estimated, that 498,000 pounds are con
sumed by the building trades; 3,176,000
pounds of wrapping paper are used and
590,000 pounds of writing papers. - An
toporta4t item.ia .the -production of
nearly 1,600,000 pounds of press, straw
and wood pulp "boards." The produc
tion -of "artificial, leather,"- fortunately
for the purchasers of shoes-, has been de
creasing since 1884, when 129,000 pounds
of this material were produced. The
most, rigid egonomyj is practiced in pa
per inakmg; hence the high degree of
mechanical-isMll ;and executive ability
connected - with this industry as com
pared with the cost of the product
New York Telegram. l&i ..", t
- Ghange of Fifty Tears.
The tardy" justice done ' to women in
the passing of the women's property act
in England and America was the -direct
outgrowth of the wages system. . The
fact that woman had no right in her
earnings, inherited property, or even in
her personal belongings, until recent
years, took away all stimulus, to active
money makingffort Driven to it by
the f auur&of jhuabaBd or father to tro-
'vide ror-tier-wants, she; could, not -hold
any possession from the grasp of the
selfish, crneL tyrannical or degraded
majerelative who possessed legal, power
over ner. The cha.nKe in these aerflike
conditaons haa all occurred within the
past fifty years, and it is marvelous.
Jenny June's "Thrown on Her Own Re
sources." ....
r- Catcher Flint's Wonderful Bandk .
Charles Seymour, the newspaper man.
used to tell a story About Catcher Flint.
-When the Chicago Ball, club called on
the .president in Washington each mem
ber of course snook hands with the ex
ecutive. .When the president's hand was
released by ""Old. Silver", the president
was seen to quickly thrust it into the
pocket of his coat. Then lie felt about
in his pocket a bit, took his hand out
and looked at it with some surprise, re
marking, "Oh, 1 beg pardon; 1 thought
yon. had given me a handful of - wal
nuts." Chicago Post- -: . . ' -!-
Three Small Trees.'
. . . . i
tt.eampier is quoted as describing a
trio of trees he saw in a box inches
oroaa, 4 mcnes long and 3 inches deep.
for which the owner asked the traveler
the modest sum of $500.' The three deni
zens of the bos were a bamboo, a monthly
blooming plumr tree and a blue leafed
pine, all- perfectly formed and seemingly
f - j T ' - 1 - . ' It . . ,
enjoying awarrea existence. at.
Lionis Republic. . - ... -
-' .- . . ." ' : 1-
Taking Her Down.
Little Dot Ma, may 1 take the baby
out in my aon s carnage? .
Mamma Why, what for?
Little Dot Susie Stuckup has'' a . new
doll 'at-ehuts v its- eyes -an criee ""Vahi
wahP r-I'm doin to betend the. babv-fe" a
doll And let her hear him yell. vTheff f
dess shell stop puttin. on airs. Good
News. -
Horse Sense.
As regards color, gf ay horses live long
est, roan horses nearly as loner. Cream
colored horses are- deficient of staying
pwwe,-especially in summer - weather,
Bavij on an averaare. are the beat HorsRn
wihJ)lackiioofs are stronger and tough
er roan outers. Kider and Driver. -
.-.7 V-Wt Needles. '.
A. . -nian customer in a Boston store
would not purchase an electrio belt be
cause it did not have all those needles
sticking out in every direction from it
such as pictured in the papers. Phar
maceutical .Era. -
JH..1.CaJ..B.liii.Tt,) Hill HI II l5SJi, (
: The earliest coinage that can be called
Amerjcan.was- orderecL- by the Virginia
company, and was minted in the Berr
mudas in 1612.- But 'then, and for long
afterward. the standard, currencv of
yirgima was tobacco. fciilHixi-':
- Conch shells, when ground, enter into
tne manufacture of porcelain. The rose
colored, :bearlrofi the; pink, eonch are
very vamaDie, ana nav-a Deautirui
wavy sheen like that of watered silk.
An English" clergyman whose ' adver
tisement has more than- once appeared
in a London paper nets a nice sum an
nually y the sale of a special breed of
puppies.
PE0FE8S1ONAL CARDS.
F.
M. 8ALYER, Civil Engineebimo, Survey
ing, and Architicture. The Dalles, Or.:
TB. E8HELMAN HOMOlorATMlci Phvsician
XJ and euBGEON.Calls answered promptlv,
day or night, city or country. Office No. 30 arid
37 Chapman block. . . wtf
DR. J. S0THERiAND Feixow or Trikity
Mertlcul College, and member of the Col
icge of Physicians and Burgeons, Ontario, Phy
lician and Surgeon. Office; rooms S and 4 Chap
man block. Residence; Judge Thornbury's Sec
Md street. Office hours; 10 to 12 a. m., 2 to i
ind 7 to 8 p. m. ,'
, TL. 6. D. DOAHH rBTgiciAn IT? etra-
YJ oeos. Office: .rooms 5 and- 6 Chapman
tlock south of Court House.
street, one
Office hours to 12
A. M., 2 to 5 and 7. to i P. M.
D6IDDALL DKMTIsr. Gas given for the
reinless extraction of teeth. Also teeth
et on fiowe aluminum plate. Rooms : Sign of
"bc Siiden Tooth, Second Street. ,
: C.B.OtFFCB. SBO. ATKJKB raAHK XKKEFKI.' .
DXJFTjR, WATKINS & MENEFEK Attor
: KBYS-AT-tAW Room No. 43, over Post
Office Building, Entrance on Washington Street
The Dalles, Oregon.. . . .
WH. WILSON Attorkiy-at-law Rooms
. 62 and 63, New Vogt Block, Second Street,
rhe Dalles, Oregon. . -
A.
S. BENNETT. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Of
fice In Schaano's buildine. no stairs.' The
Belles, Oregon. : h . - - - .
T.r. MATS. B. S. HCfTTIKOTON. H. i. WILSON.
ATS, ITUNTINGTON A WILSON ATTOB
' LAW. Offices. French's block over
First National Bank, The Dalles, Oregon.
SOCIETIES. '
AB8EMBLY SO: 2?, "K. OF L. Meets In K.
of P. hall the second and fourth Wednes
days of each month at 7:30 p. m.
WASCO LODGE, NO. 15, A. F. t A. M. Meets
- first and third Monday of each month at 7
DALLES ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER NO. 6.
Meets in Masonic Hall the third Wednesday
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 m
.Meets
K.
Sojourning brothers are welcome
H. Cloooh, Sec'y. s H. A. Bills, N, G.'
FRIENDSHIP LODGE, KO. 9., K. of P. Meets
everv MondaT evening nt 7-an nvirv-i- in
Schanno's building, corner of Court and Second
streets. Aojonrnrog memoers are cordially in
vited. W. S. Ckam.
D. W.Vaosb. K. of R. and 8, C, C.
WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN - TEMPERENCE
UNION will meet every Friday afternoon
at 8 o'clock at the reading room. All are invited.
TVEMFLK LODGE NO. S. A. O. IT. W Moot.
X - at K. ef P. Hall, Comer Second and Court
oiraui, x.aursoay evenings at 7 :au.
. ' ' UEOBGE UIBONS, '
W. 8 Mixes, Financier. : . . M. W,
TAB. MSMITH POST, No. 32, G. A. R. Meets
Hall.
( every esaiuraay at 7.:ao v. M., m the K. of P.
BOF L. E. Meets every Sunday afternoon In
theK.of P.Hall. : -
CXE8ANG. . VEREIN Meets every.
r! evenlngln the K. of P. Hall.
Sunday
B OF L. F. DIVI8ION, No. 167 Meets in-the
K. of P. Hall the first and thirrt W)r..
uuy ui. eacn mon tut St J mil r. JC. .
CT. PETER'S CHURCH Rev. Father Smm.
O . gkkht Pastor.. Low Mass every Sunday at
7 A. M
- High Mass at 10:30 jl, m. Vespers at
7
A DVENT CHRISTIAN CHURCH. Preaching
a. in. and 7 p. ra. Sunday school immediately
luuiuuig nnvii. . J . a, vrunaru, pastor,
ST. PAUL'S CHURCH Union Street,
-Fifth. Rev. EUD. Satellite Rector.:. I
pnosite
ervices
every Sunday at 11 a. m. and 7:80 p. M. Snndav
School 9:46 A. M. Evening Prayer on Friday at
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. O. D. Tat
lob. Pastor. Morning, services every Sab1
uaLu ine auaaemy Hb 11 a. M. . BaoDatn
cjcnooi immeaiately after morning services.
Prayer meeting Friday evening at Pastor's resi
dence. Union services in the court house at 7
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Rev. W. C.
V CCBTI8, Pastor. Services every Sunday at 11
A. x. and 7 p. k.
Sunday School after mornimr
service.
obrauigerB wraiauy invited. Beats xree.
M.
IS. Kev. A. C. 8PKNCEB, pastor.
Services everv Snndav mornin?. Snndav
ouuuui at iz.aj o cioca r. m. a. coroiai mvitauon
is extended by both pastor and people to alL
YOUR1
Is called to the. fact that.
Dealer in Glass, Lime, Plaster, Cement
and Building Material of all kinds.
-Carrl the Finest Ilne of-
To be foancj lo the City.
72 tZlashington
Sttreet.
W, H. BUTTS, Prop. "
Ho.
90 Second Sreet, The Dalles, Or.
This well knQWQ.etand, kept by the
well known W. H. Butts. Ions a resi
dent of Wasco county, has an extraordi-
nary fine stock of C - -- v ;
Sheen "Herder's' DeMt'sai Irish- Distarbaael
In fact, all the leading brands of fine
Wines, Liquors and Cigars. Give the
old man a call and you will come again,
Ha
Maeaulay's Power.
Impressions are conveyed in writing
by appeals , to the imagination of the
reader. - The successful writer- brings a
picture before the mind, and the related
knowledge may be like the frame to set
off the picture, or like new rays or ligut
thrown upon the canvas to give it vivid
ness.. The value of this related knowl
edge is well illustrated in Macaulayfc
description of the trial of Warren Hast
ings. He throws upon the description
the light of his vast erudition, . He stim
Slates t&e imaginatio! b?: all these side
lights, enchaining the attention, so that
we see as in a picture that brilliant as
semblage, and we are fined with admira
tion of the scene. " -.; - -'.i:-:
He conjures up the historian of Borne
and the eventful history-of the. eternal
city; he reveals his- acquaintance with
art in his -- happy - allusion to Reynolds,
and his acquaintance with - the recent
achievements of literature in his famil
iarity' with" the researches of Parr, at
that time '-' f amous::: he2 -: displays his
knowledge -"of the inner workings of
society and -i the ? intrigues' ; by which
thrones are shaken and dynasties are
overthrown in his reference to the salon
of Mrs. Montague, and the fair haired
daughters of the house of Brunswick;
and he shows his - appreciation of the
drama ' by recalling Siddons, who. 'in
the prime of her majestic beauty, looked
with emotion on a scene surpassing all
the : imitations of . the stage." Educa
tional Review. : ...
IjooIc for the Key.
Don't get angry at small things. Look
at vexations now as you will view them
thirty days from date. - The angry man,
who gets tne wrong key ana pushes and
rattles tne door till he breaks the lock,
loses more time' than if he had quietly
gone for the right key, and pays for a
new lock besides. New York Recorder.
STIPATION
Afflict half the American people yet there is
only one preparation of Sarsaparilla that acts on
the bowels and reaches this important trouble,
and that is Joy's Vegetable Sarsaparilla. It re
lieves It In 14 hours, and. an .occasional dose
prevents return. "Ve refer by permission to C. K.
ElKlngton, 125 Locust Avenue, Bau Francisco
J. U. Brown. Fetalnma: H. 8. Winn. Gearv Court
Ban Francisco, and hundreds of others who have
nsed it In constipation. . One letter is a sample of
hundreds. Elklngton. writes: 'T have been for
years subject to bilious headaches and const! na
tion. Hare been so bad for a year back have
had to take a physic every other night or else I
woald have's headache. ' After taking one bottle
r J. V.a-., I am in splendid shape. It has done
wonderfmi thlogs tor me. i- : People simHarly
Douniea snouia try n and be convinced." :
able
arsaparilla
"W3en-n Effective, largest bottle,
SBneprice, 1.00.sii tursiOO. v ,
For -Sale by . SNIPES at kiNERSLY
THE DALLES. OREGON. ,
The English -peo
ple look more elosely f
to the genuineness
ot these staples than -:
we doi '.la fact, -they
have. a . law; finder
which , they make
elzares ; and j destroy-!
: adulterated;
products that are
not what they are represented to be. Under
this statute thousands of pounds of tea have
. bceu horned because of their wholesale adul-
; tmtloa.': ' .'x-U-:'-T. :.. -..
: Tea, by the way, 4s one of the most, notori-.
..ooply adulterated-articles of commerce. Not
alone are the bright, shiny green teas artlfl- ,
dally colored, hut thousands of pounds of
substj.utet for tea leaves are used to swell "
: the hulk ot cheap tea;; ash, sloe, and willow"
h-ayes be;ng those most' commonly used.'
Agal.i, sweepings from tea warehouses -are'-colored
and sold as tea. . Xven exhausted tea:
leaves gathered from the tca-hooses are kept, .
dried, and madeover and find their way into
the cheap teas.- - . . .
The Euglish govrmraent atrempts to stamp
this out -by coiiCat-.i n; but no tea is too
poor Cur us and the result is, that probably
the poorest teas vsed by any nation are those
eons timed iu America. ; . . - V
- Beeeh'a Tea is presented with the guar-
. anty that it is aucolorcd and unadulterated;
in fact, the suu-euiea tea leaf pure and sim
yle. Its. purity -insnres superior strength,;
about one third less ef it being required for .
n infusion than of thearUfirial teas, and its
fragrance and cxqulsl-e payor. Is at once ap
parent. It will be a revelation to you.. In
. order that its purity and quality may be guar
anteed. It is sold only In pound packages
'besrlngthls'tradeiuia,,k:'-' , --
reAs-Cedhbbd:
' Prix sOq per pound Itoratla aa. v.b
Xjeslle-
StlltioIllJrielt
XL
M Ati'lii'-Vw
POBnixLifetClMt.Ai
JAIVIES WHITE
frha'EeBtaaraiiteuHa Opened the
. t'J - ' ' ' T( . v.. . .'J I1J. "
Where he will he dad to' see 'any and all
i - t histoid JiatronB.
Open day and Night. First class
twenty-five cents.
meals
OUtlOG
A Severe law
FI RST -
If
UJ'bii
J?, PD.;
u llll
0
UU
: n)
pit
CAN , BE HAD AT THE
CH
RON ICLE OFFICE
Reasonably Ruinous lates.
S
-: DEALERS IN:
Siapiunfl Fancy Gwics,
Hay, Grain
Masonic Block, Corner JhirdHand ;
Pipe
WfllK, TiD: BBlf W
MAINS TAPPED UNDER PRESSURE.
Shop on Third Street, next door west of Young & Kuss'
.. ' Blacksmith Shop.
Qolumbia .
o vuiaiDid o
THE DALLES, OREGON.
Best Dollar a Day House on the Coast!
First-Class Meals, 25 Cents.
First Class Hotel in Every Respect. -V :
-v' None but the Best of White Help Employed.
: "f u, T. ;..T. ; Nicholas, Pvop.
DEuIOGBDTIG
State, District, arid County
TICKET.
, For Supreme Judge.
Alfred S. Bennett..
" ' For Attorney General, :
George E. Cnamberlain.
-' For Member of 'Congress,' ' --
2d District,
James H. Slater.
'For Circuit Judge, -.-.
7th District,. - , - .
W. L. Bradsh'aw.
For Prosecuting Attorney,
v- Pistrict, .
J. F. Moore.
For Member Btate; Board ' Equalization,
- v ,. 7th District,.
William Hxighes.
For Joint Senator, 17th District, Sher
man and Wasco counties, .
J. A. Smith, -
" ; '-'of Sherman.
For Joint Senator, 18th District, Gilliam,
fcnerman ana vyasco counties,
, G. W. Rinehart, : .
- ; of Gilliam. :
For Joint Representatives, 18th Eepre-
sentative District, Sherman and
. 1 .Wasco counties, " '
; E..;JMoore;' ' fe . '
S. P.Blythe. ' -
- For Co'UBty, JrJjdgej'- -
GEOEGE C BLAKELEY. .
' For County Clerk; v -;
.; JAMES B. ceossen; , : .
For County Sheriff,-.- l
r r. raoS A.JrVARp. r
p ' - For Coanty Xreasurer,:-- -; -: c
V :-: WJLLIAM K. CGjESpN. .
i . For County Assessor; V - -.
-. For County Surveyor v'
,7 F. .8. GORDON- ' : , . -
.". For School -Superintendent,- , - '
- -. i F. P FITZGEEAIJtt,
r For County OommiBaioner, , , : . ?
JAMES DARNIELLE. .
For County Coroner.
JOHN W. MOORE.
4-21td
CLHSS
; n ' ' Of
i -mm
- .- r" I . . -. i
BROS
and Treed,
ourt ' Streets, The Dalles.Oregon.
State, Disirift and County
TICKET.
For Supreme Judge,
F. A. Moore.
For Attorney- General, -
Lionel R. Webster.
, For Member of Congress,
- 2d District,
W. R. Ellis.
- For Circuit Judge,
7th District, ;
Greorge Watkins.
For Prosecuting Attorney ,
7th District, .
W. H. Wilson.
For Member State- Board Equalization
, . 7th District,. r . . "
r Jbhn L. Ltickey.
For Joint Senator, 17th District, consist
ing ol snerman and Wasco Counties,
H-iS. McDaniels.
For Joint Senator, 18th District, consist
ing of Gilliam, Sherman and
Wasco Counties,
; ; W.- W; Sterwrer.
For Joint Representatives, 18th Repre
. sentative District, consisting of
- Sherman and Wasco .
' ,- Counties, .
E. N Chandler, - "
T. R. Coon: . ; "
-For County Judge,
C. N, THOR NBUR Y. V
J For County Clerk,"i :, ......
J..M. HUNTINGTON. ..
For County SherifiV "
C. P. BALCH.
" For County Commissioner, ' v
i Aiiti-A. XEAVENS.r. :; :
' For ''County Treasurer; ' .-.
' : - WM. MICHELL. - . i.
For County Assessor,
JOEL- -W.-' KOONTZ. .... -
1 For Countv" School. Superintendent.
, TROY SHELLEY. ; c,
- For Countv Surveyor,'
E. F. SHARP. .
For County Coroner,
N. M. EASTWOOD.
4-16tf
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