The Dalles daily chronicle. (The Dalles, Or.) 1890-1948, February 01, 1894, Image 2

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    The Dalles Daily -Chronicle.
OFFICIAL. PAPER OF DALLES CITY.
AND WASCO COUNTY.
SUBSCRIPTION BATES.
BY KAIL, rOSTASB FBBFAID, IN ADVANCE.
Weekly, 1 year. 1
" 6 months. 0 75
' - 8 " 0 50
ally, 1 year. 6 00
- 6 months. , 8 00
per " 0 SO
Address ail communication to " THE CHRON
KILE." The Dalles, Oregon.
Post-Offlce.
omcE HOURS
General Delivery Window 8 a. m. to 7 p. m.
Money Order " 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Sunday ti D. " ,...9 a. m. to 10 a. in.
CLOSING OF MAILS
trains going East 9 p. m. and 11 :45 a. m.
" " West. 9 p.m. and 6:80 p.m.
Stage for Goldendale 7:S0 a. m,
" " Prinevlllo 6:30 a. m.
' "Dufuraud Warm Springs. .-.5:30 a.m.
" fLeaying for Lyle & Hartland.. 5:30 a.m.
" " " tAntelope 5:30 a.m.
Except Bnnday.
Trl-weekly. Tuesdav Thursday and Saturday.
. t " Monday Wednesday and Friday.
3-r
- JAN. Of. 1894
In Paraguay, a gentleman must kiss
every lady he is introduced to. If this
Tale was introduced into this country
introductions would be quite numerous.
The Pendleton Tribune announces five
eclip8es thia year three of the moon,
one of the sun, and one of the Wilson
bill. The latter will be total, and visi
ble in North America and England.
The McKinley . law may be open to
criticism in some respects, but the fact
remains, as Mr. Burrows says, that it
"never closed a mill in the United States,
shut op a mine, stopped a wheel, blew
out a furnace- fire, or drove a single
workman into the streets."
The Omaha Stockman is more hopeful
than any newspaper we have recently
seen. It says : The financial future is
clear. Prosperity is ahead, and all that
is necessary to one who desires to "real
ize" on the future is to "strike while the
iron is hot." Buy wheat; buy stocks;
buy wildcats or dogs no matter what
you buy, someone will want it at a
higher price during the coming year.
It eeems to be the opinion of Mr.
Wilson and bis associates that the sac
cess of their party was achieved upon a
promise of free wool, and they are con
sequently showing every indication of a
determination to sacrifice all other fea
tures of the present bill, if it becomes
necessary, to the single issue of free
wool. It has developed, moreover, that
the clause providing for 40 per cent, ad
valorem duty on goods is decidedly un
popular among many democratic con
gressmen, and that if the bill is defeated
in the 'senate they will seek to reduce
the duty still further.
Of the 11,272 immigrants who arrived
at the port of New York in December,
4,477 are put down as having "no occu
pation," and 2,455, or nearly 22 per
cent., could neither read nor write.
The average sum of money brought by
these was less than $15 per head. One
third of them are Italians, with an
average of $12. There were nearly
1,500 Russians, with an average capital
of $12. The average in the case of Bo
hemians was $7.35, and 112 Portuguese
had only $934 in all. These are very
small sums to stand between newly ar
rived immigrants and utter destitution
in a country where so many persons are
out of work and the resources of chari
table organizations are overtaxed.
A lectnrer at a meeting of an English
Agricultural Workers' Union gave the
figures in detail which shows how an
agricultural laborer supported his family
of self, wife and five children on his.
wages of 11 shillings ($2.75) per week.
The weekly purchases consisted of six
gallons of bread, half a gallon of fiour,
half a pound of tea, a pound and a balf
of bacon , one pound of butter and cheese,
three pounds of sugar, with oil. coal,
soda ' and six cents' worth of tobacco.
Nothing was allowed in the estimate for
shoes or clothing, and except at Whit
suntide they never had any fresh meat
The position of this family was that of
thousands of other workmen throughout
England. '
A hopeful editor advances the theory
that the hot winds which sometimes
prove so disastrous to the ripening
wheat crop in the Dakotas will, in a few
years, be a thing of the past. Not that
they are legislated out of existence by
some future Kansas legislature, but they
are expected to cease from natural
causes. " These hot air. currents - start
. from the arid regions of New Mexico
and Western Kansas and move north,
becoming cooler as they move along, but
still hot enough to do a great deal of
damage when they reach Dakota. As
. the intermediate area is converted from
prairie sod into cultivated fields, these
winds will cool more rapidly and be
: harmless by the time they have crossed
Nebraska. The cultivated soil and "the
growing green crops will give off more
moisture than the dry grass of the prai
. rie, and the cooling process will be
.rapid. Irrigation ot the arid plains and
the cultivation of even small areas will
have a favorable effect on the climate
and the next generation of Northwest
ern farmers will be able to live in peace
and comfort with wheat at $1 per bush
el and forty bushels to the acre. . The
theory is plausible and the experience
of the past . favors it ; but it will not
help mortgages now overdue. .
Warner's butter at Maier & Benton's
.grocery store. .
Slavery In Slam.
Slavery has been abolished in name
in Siam, bat it can never be abolished
in fact, for the slaves have no means
of supporting themselves outside their
masters' houses. Every member of the
Siamese upper classes can fetter his
servants or throw them into , prison
without any kind of trial or permis
sion beinff necessary. One morning 1
went to call upon one of the ablest and
most enlightened of the ministers, a
man who has been to Europe, and who
once actually got into serious, trouble
for trying to inaugurate a sort of
woman's rights movement in Siam,
says a writer in the Contemporary
Review. I made my way by mistake
into a part of his grounds where visit-;
ors were not expected, and I found a
slave fastened down to the ground in
an ingenions kind of .pillory, in which
he could not move hand or foot, while
another slave tortured him with severe
strokes of a bamboo, rod at the - word
of a member of the family in order to
force him to confess to-some micdeed.
- A Nevr Cereal.
A traveler in the Himalayan moun
tain region has discovered that the na
tives of that country cultivate a grain
hitherto unknown in civilized agricul
tural operations, which has something
the look of wheat but has very much
longer ears, and which has a peculiar
inward curve. The shiny, brown grain,
.unlike wheat, is, on the other, hand,
much smaller than wheat grains should
be for so larg-o an car. Hut the inter
est is that a cereal of this character
should yield such heavy crops in so
high an altitude, where the seasons are
necessarily short and the temperature
low. The natives call the grain kow-
nee. '
KrauMfc's Oeadaclse Capsules.
A remedy used with unvarying success as a
cure for Headaches oi ol' kinds. The results
have been so universale cood thnt it is no
longer an experiment. It has been used for
HcadHChe resulting from Dissipation, in Period
ical Sick Headnclie, in Headaches caused by
severe labor mental or physical, or by exposure
to the sun, and in all cases with the most ernti-
tying results. e nave, alter a Jiorough invest
tigalion, hnd no hesitancy in taking the npeucy
lor this etleetive remedy, and conscientiously
rixuiuiucuu lb hjuut pttiruus.
Respectfully,
Sold by Blokely & Houghton. '
An Rtrreeoble Laxative and NERVE TONIC.
Sold by Druggists or sent by mail. 25c.. 60c.,
and SI. 00 per package. Samples free.
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and ell the train of evils
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given to every organ and
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Xmmedlatelmprovement
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2,000 references. Book,
explanation and p roots
mailed (sealed) free.
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general ill health, etc. This electric Beit contains
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after all other remedies failed, and we Rive hundred
of testimonials in this and every other state. -
Oar Powerial Impnnd ELECTRIC 8T8FEN903T, the
greatest boon ever offered weak men, FREE with sit
Del.. Healtk ana Vigorous Strand GUARANTKEDia SO ta
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. SANDEN ELECTRIO CO.,'
Bo. ITS Kirmt Stt-eeS, JOKXrAJJ OJBLK.
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a WienAn
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PrdVeeflrYort
Are you willing to work for the cause
of Protection in placing reliable infor
mation in the hands of your acquain
tances? - -,
; If you are, you should be identified
with
the american
Protective tariff league.
. 133 W. 23d St.. New York.
Cut this nod cm out and send it to theXcaguo,
staling your position, and Rive a helping hand.
ALL TfiE NEWS TWICE A WEEK.......
YOTJ THINK, YOU
WILL CONCLUDE
THAT WE ARE AT
PRESENT OFFER
ING A RARE BAR
GAIN IN READING
MATTER. $1.50 A
YEAR FOR YOUR
HOME PAPER.
.ALL THE NEWS TWICE A WEEK.....
fCHE&S Jig
50. FO.-? ft CASE IT WILL NOT CURc. fc
D3. SA!.DHS ELECTRIC BELT
A FOOT-HOLD
for Consumption is
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ing, if your blood
Ois impure. Con
sumption is simply
scrofulous cond i
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But just as it
depends upon the
blood for its origin,
so it depends upon
the blood for its
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lyV remedy for Scrof-
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the most effective
blood-cleanser,
flesh-ouilder, and strength - restorer
that's known' to medical science, is
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Asthma, Severe - Coughs, and all
Bronchial, Throat and Lung affec
tions, that is the only remedy so
unfailing that it can be guaranteed.
If it doesn't benefit or cure, you
havo yaur money back."
For a perfect and permanent
cure of Catarrh, take Doctor
Sage's Catarrh ' Remedy. : Its
proprietors offer $500 reward
for an incurable case of Ca
tarrh in the Head.
Costs only 50 cents.
FOR 1894.
The Best Literature,
The Newest Knowledge,
and Fully Illustrated.
15 Cents a Copy. .
Only $1.50 a Veair.
'- Some of the features are:
The Edge of the Fature.
The Alarvels of Science and Achievement,
presented in a popular way.
Famous People.
Their life-stories told by word and pictures
the materials being; in all cases obtained
from sources intimately connected with
me suojecis.
Trme NarriratiVes
of Adventure,. Daring
ana naramooa.
Leopard bunting in Northern Africa, Lion
nun'me; in Algeria, Tiger hunting in In
dia, Elephant hunting in Africa, and ad
. ventures in the Upper Himalayas.
Gfeat Institutions:
The longest railroad in the -world. The
Hudson Bay Company. The Bank of Eng-
lanu. ine easiness 01 me greatest mer
chant ($100,000,000 a year).
Human Documents!
Portraits of famous people from childhood
to the present day.
Shoirt Stories.
. . And by the best writers obtainable.
Rotable Serials.
By
f?obeit Iiouis Stevenson
and
William Dean Hocuells.
Among the contributors for the year are:
Pvofessov Dramuond,
Elizabeth Staar-t Phelps,
Hvehdeaeon pavvsv,
Bret Hofte, -"
fiudyapd Kipling,
Oetave Thsntt,
' Andverxi bang,
W. D. fiocuells,
Gilbert Parker,
Jp. H. Stoekton,
tloel Chandler Harris,
" Conan Doyle,
f?. It. Stevenson.
Chavles R. Dana,
Archibald Forbes,
and many others.
IS CHJ4TS H COPY. - $1.50 A VEHP..
. Remit by draft, money order or
registered letter.
S. S. JVIeCIiUH, Liimited,
743 & 745 BroadWay, N. Y. City.
The Dalles Chroniele, Twak,
and
JlIeGlatre's JHagazine,
S whole year for 12.25. .
Adress. 1 -
CHRONICLE PUB. CO.,
; THE DALLES, OR.
Guardian's Notice.
Notice is herebv elven that the nudei-siem?
has been appointed by the County Court of
Wasco County, Oregon, guardian of the person
and estate of Lars Careen.
All persons having claims against said Lars
Larsen are notified to present the same with the
proper Touchers to the undersigned, at the office
of Hays, Huntington St Wilson, within six
months from the date hereof.
Dated at Dalles City, this 6th day of Jan., 1894.
J10w6ptl W.T.WISEMAN.
The Dalles My Chronicle.
HAS A FAMILY OP
2000 &EADEES.
They read The Chronicle to get the latest and
most reliable r.ews. And they read every line
that is in the paper That Is what makes the
Chronicle an Invaluable advertising medium.
The newspaper that - goes to the family
firesides is the one that the advertisers
of today patronize 1 when they desire to
reach the people. When they want your trade
their announcements will be found in the paper.
Look over our columns and observe the verifica
tion of the truth of this assertion. Remember,
a trade of a family of two thousand
Is worth asking for through these
- columns, espcially so at our very
-vxivx
: I
1
SUMMONS.
In the Circuit Court of the -State of Oregon for
- (4V vvuuhy ui nwco.
J.D. Parish.
:)
. . - . Plaintiff,
vs.
Matilda Parish,
... Defendant.
To Matilda Parish Defendant:
In the name of the State of Oregon, You ere
hereby required to appear and answer the Com
plaint filed again t you in the above entitled suit
within ten days from the date of the service of
this summons upon you, if served within this
county ; or if served within any other county of
this state, then within twenty days from the
date of the service of this summons upon you;
or if served upon you by publication, then yon
are required to appear and answer said Com
plaint on the first day of the next term of said
Court, after six weeks publication of this Sum
mons, to-wit: on Monday, the 12th day of Feb
ruary, 1894, and if you fail to appear and answer,
the plaintiff will apply, to the Court for the
lOllef prayed for in said complaint, to-wit: for
the dissolution of the marriage contract now
existing between plaintiff and defendant, and
lor nis costs ana aibDursemenvs herein.
You will further take notice that this Sum
mons Is served upon you by publication by order
oi uiv nuumaum t . xj. ciau&aaw, joage OI bm 1(1
court, sat a oraer Dcing aatea uecem bcr zi, m)3.
MAYS, HUNTINGTON & WILSON,
. d23wtd " Attorneys for Plaintiff.
jJYOO NEED ANY JOB
i-KlWTlNO, NO MAT
TER HOW MUCH OR
HOW LITTLE, GIVE
THE CHRONICLE JOB
DEPARTMENT YOUR
PATRONAGE AND BE
HAPPY. YOTJ WILL
GET THE BEST, AND
THE BEST 13 GOOD
enough for any
: body: use lots of
printer's ink and
BE PROSPEROUS, v
SHERIFF'S SALE.
By virtue of an execution and order of sale
issued out of the Circuit Court of the 8tate of
Oregon for Wasco County, upon a decree and
judgment made, rendered and entered bvsaid
Court on the 24th day of November. 1893, in
favor of plaintiff, in a suit wherein The Amer
ican Mortgage Company of Scotland, Limited,
a corporation, was plaintiff, and George F. Ar
nold, Kizzie A. Arnold and O. D. Taylor were
defendants, and to me directed wnd delivered,
commanding me to levy upon and sell all the
lands mentioned and described in said writ, and
hereinafter described, I did on the 8th day of
January, 1894, duly levy upon, and will sell at
Eublio auction to the highest bidder, for cash in
and, on Saturday,
the lOth day of February, 1894,
at 10 o'clock in the forenoon of said dsy, at the
front door of the County Court House in Dalles
City, in Wasco County, Oregon, all of the lands
and premises described in said wiit, and herein
utcriuu as iouows, to-wit:
The southeast quarter of the southwest quar
ter, and the southwest quarter of the southwest
quarter of Section one (1), and the southwest
quarter of the southeast quarter of Section two
(-) in Township one (1) South, of Range twelve
(12) East, of the Willamette Meridian, contain
in one hundred and twenty 120) acres of land,
all of said premises situated, lying ami being in
Wasco County, State of Oregon,
Or so much thereof is shall be sufficient to sat
isfy the sum of 1334.54, with interest thereon at
the rate of 10 per cent, per annum since Novem
ber 24th, 1S93, tSO.OO attorney's fees, and 21.65
costs in said suit, together with costs of said
writ and accruing costs of sale.
, . - T. A. Ward,
Sheriff of Wasco County, Oregon.
Dated at Dalles City, January 11th, 1891.
janl3w5t
SUMMONS.
In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon
for the county of Wasco.
Maximilian Vogt and Philipine Chapman,
Plaintiffs,
vs.
Augustus Bunnell and John R. Foster and
David Robertson, partners do ng busi
ness as Foster & Robertson, and Mrs. D.
E. Price, Defendants. J
To Augustus Bunnell and Mrs. D. E. Price, of
the above-named defendants:
In the name of the State of Oregon ; Yon and
each of you are hereby notified and required to
appear and answer the complaint of plaintiffs
filed herein against you in the above entitled
cause and Court on or before the fiist day of the
next regular term of the Circuit Court of the
State of Oregon for Wasco county, next follow
ing the final publication of this summons, to
wit: on or before Monday, the 12th day of Feb
ruary, 18U3, and if you fail so to answer, for want
thereof the plaintiff will apply to the Court for
the relief prayed for in their complaint, to-wit;
For a decree of foreclosure of that certain
mortgage deed marie and executed by the de
fendant, Augustus Bunnell, to the above named
plaintiffs on the 19th day of October, 1888, upon
the following descril ed real estate, situated in
Wasco county, Oregcn, to-wit: The south half
of those certain lots eouimonly known as the
Bickel lots in Trevitfs Addition to Dalles City
on the road from said city to the U. 8. Garrison
as formerly traveled, and being the same prop
erty conveyed by Griflith E. Williams and wife
to said Augustus Bunnell by deed duly recorded
at page 853 Book "E" of Deed Records for Wasco
countv. Oreeon. and particularly bounded and
described as follows, to-wit; Commencing on
tne east line oi urjerry street at a point on said
line 170 feet southerly from the touth jine of
Fourth street at a point on said south line where
the same is intersected by said east line of Lib
erty street ; thence southerly and along said east
line of Liberty street 60 feet: thence easterlv and
at right angles with said first line 104 feet;
thence northerly aud parallel with said east lino
of Liberty street 60 feet; thence westerly to the
place of beginning, said premises being in block
D" of Trevitfs Addition to Dalles City; and
that said premises be sold under such foreclos
ure decree in the manner provided by law and
according to the practice of this Court; that
from the proceeds of such sale the plaintiffs
have and receive the sum of 11,000.00 and inter
est thereon since October 19th. 1888. at the rate
of 8 per cent per annum, less payments made
upon saia notes as iouows: ssu.uu paid juarcn
10th,'-1890: f 120.00 paid February 2oth, 1891,
L0.00 paid December 21st, 1891; $83.86
paid - January 2d, 1892, and 1 16.64 paid October
7th, 1892; and the further sum of f 100.00 ass
reasonable su-ii for attorneys' lees in this suit to
foreclose said mortgaee and collect said note.
and the further sum ot 113.75 insurance prem
ium upon tne Dniiaings upon saia premises paid
bv these plaintiffs, and 4.0t) taxes uton said
premises whieh have been paid by plaintiffs, to
gether with all costs and disbursements made
and expended in this suit, and that if any de
ficiency shall remain after all of the proceeds
properly applicable thereto shall have been ap
plied in payments of plaintiffs' demands as
aforesaid, that plaintiffs have a judgment over
against the defendant, Augustus Bunnell, for
any such deficiency; and that upon such fore
closure sale all of the right, title, interest and
claim of said defendants and each and all of
them, and all other persons claiming or to claim
by, through or under them or either of them, in
and to said mortgaged premises and every part
thereof, be forever barred and foreclosed from
the equity of redemption ; that plaintiffs be al
lowed to bid at said foreclosure sale and become
the purchasers thereof at their option, and that
upon such sale the purchaser be let into the im
mediate possession thereof, "and for such other
and further relief as to the Court may seem eq
uitable ana just.
This summons is served upon you, the said
Augustus Bunnell and Mrs. D. E. Price, by pub
lication thereof, bv order of Honorable w. L.
Bradshaw, Judge of the Circuit Court of the
Btate of Oregon for Wasco County, which order
was duly made and entered et Chambers on the
27th day of December, 1893.
DUFUR & MENEFEE,
d30w7t Attorneys for plaintiffs.
lost.
1 Bay Horse, four white legs and white face,
branded on right shoulder - Weight, 850 lbs:
1 Bay Horse, small star in forehead, branded
on left Bhonlder with J C over T. Weight, 850 or
900 lbs. Finder'will be rewarded. .
j4d4w JOHN LOWE, Kingsley Or .
A Grand
Will be
East End Hose Co. No. 3,
: AT THE ARMORY, '
Toi7day Ixuijii?, pebruary 5, 1894.
Music by Birgfed's Orchestra.
' Committee of Arrangements.
H. L. KUCK (Chairman). W. H. LOCHHEAD (Sec'yV B. WILSON,
K. E. SALTMAESHE (Treaa), C.B.ADAMS.
Reception Committee.
M. SIIOREN,
' . F. KRAMER,
Floor Managers.
H. J. MAIER.
B. E. WILLIAMS,
A. C. WYNDHAM,
J. S. FISH..
A, V. FARGHEK,
JOS.
J. P. McINERNY,
IE. W. HELM & CO.,
DEALERS IN
Drugs, Medicines and Chemicals,
Fine Toilet Soaps, (Ms, Brushes, Perfumery, Etc., . -. : ;
Pure Wlnes-and Liquors for Medicinal Purposes.
. t Compounding Physicians' Prescriptions a Specialty.
- No. 105 Second Street, The Dalles, Oregon..
' -' ' -Opposite Columbia Candy Factory. '
. - - ' - . .
Mev7 York Weekly
-AND-
Da
nesweenii
41-
Wasco County,
ONLY
. The Gate City of the Inland Empire is situated at the head
of navigation on the Middle Columbia, and ia a thriving, pros
perous city.
ITS TERRITORY. .
It is the supply city for on extensive and rich agricultural
and grazing country, its trade reaching as far south as Summer
Lake, a distance of over two hundred miles. -
The Largest "Wool Market.
The rich grazing country along the eastern slope of the Cas
cades furnishes pasture for thousands of Bheep, the wool "from
which finds market here. .
The Dalles is the largest original wool shipping point in
America, about 5,000,000 pounds being shipped last year.
ITS PRODUCTS.
' The salmon fisheries are the finest on the Columbia, yielding
this year a revenue of thousands of dollars, which will be more
than doubled in the near future. '
The products of the beautiful Klickitat valley, find market
here, and the country south and east has this year filled the
warehouses, and all available storage places to overflowing with
their products. - ,
ITS WEALTH.
It is the richest city of its size on the' coast and its money is
scattered over and iS.beijig used to develop more farming country
than is tributary to-any- other city in Eastern Oregon. .
. Its situation is uxsurpisaed. Its climate delightful Its pos
sibilities incalculable -: - J ts resources unlimited. And on these -torner
stones she st-ttKbiJ
John Pashek,
The Merknt Tailor,
- 7S Couvt Stfeet,
Next door to Wasoo Sun. Offioe.
Has lust received the latest styles in
. Suitings for Gentlemen,
and has a large assortment of Foreign and Amer
ican Cloths, which he can finish To Order for
those that favor him. v
- Cleaning and Repairing a Specialty.
Times makes It all the more
necessarv to advertise. That is
what the most progressive of our
business men think, and these same bus
iness men are the most prosperous at all times.
If yon wish to reach all the reople in this neigh
borhood yon can't do better than talk to them
tnrougn tne columns oi tee iuilt i;hkosicls.,
It haa more than double the circulation of an v
other paper, and advertising in it pays big :
BaJ
given by the -
F. W. L. SKIBBE,
L. S. DAVIS.
A. BUCHLER,
J. HARPER,
WORSLEY,
F. EPP.
Oregon,
YOUR ATTEJiTIOfl
Is called to the faot that
Hugh Glenn,
Dealer in Glaaj, lime, Planar, Cement
and Building Material of all kinds.
-Carries the Finest X.tM mt
Picture indulfliiigs,
... To be found in the City.
72 CClashington Street
Tribune
itSiile
Sl.T5.tS-