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About The daily morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1883-1899 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 25, 1896)
ASTORIA PUBLIC LIBRARY ASSOCIATION, Save time miawiirry l,0 An "Ad" - The Dally Astoria n Ht PlOULAR AND PUKMNSNT I IT J .1 I , ..Family Circulation... Much mom tm4 thru timm as lawis a that 0 any othm paps in Astoria. In Tim Automian'i 'Wm Colunti." ICXCLUSIVIC TKLRGRAPHIC PU1SS REPORT. VOL XLV. ASTORIA, ORKHOX. FRIDAY MORMNU, KKITEMKEIt 25, 18. NO. 229 jj ' l "t. IXJ V V Our Handy Wagon... Comhlnea ail the rsaturee of lha child's plain waain and a vnloelpt da, on. I, all tiling. onlil(, coals I ha nimum.r laaa than alUmr. Ho daalralila, vunvanlani ami aallafai-ory liaa II proven, thai, aa a raady "seller." II haa no aqual. We take a aiMM-lal prlda, loo, la delivering lha Bam promptly and In (aulllaaa cond llun la lha Irada. Paint? Paint?? Paint??? That U the question. Whether it it hotter in the eiul to utTcr the Kirruwi anil tlnupiiomt mcnU that poor paint will lnn(j, or at the tutt provide the beat that can be bought and end it there. There is but one beat, and that it The Sherwim-Wiluaks Paiht. With Paint you will need Urmhee and perhape Varniihe Thce and all Painters' Supplies ate to be found at HARDWARE, PLUMBING TIN WORK JOB WORK AT PRICES THAT DEFY COMPETITION Call and Be Convinced Oregon State Normal School MONMOUTH. OHKC.ON. A Training School tor Teachers. Senior Year Wholly Professional. Twenty weeks of Psychology and general and Special Methods; twenty weeks of Teaching and Training Department. Training school of nine grades with t-o hundred children. Regular Norma) Course of Three Yean-. The Normal Diploma Is recognised by law as a Btats Life Certificate to teach. Light Kxpensas; Hoard at Normal Dining Hall 1.M per week. Furnish ed rooms wltji light and Are, T(o tu 11.00 per week. Board and Lodging In private families ti.M to It 60 per week TUITION: Hub-Normal, WOO per term of ten weeks; Normal, 1(26 per term of ten weeks. Grades from reputable schools aocented. Catalogues choerfully furnished on application. Addre.i P. L. CAHPlinLL, Pres., or W. A. WANN, Sec. of faculty. MORTGAGE SALE i.uiiinsv f r r;,fcc uru UUUUb Fancy you hiivc ;m to' Ml per cent at the OREGON TRADING CO. TIME CARD OK TfiK Astoria & Columbia River RAILROAD. DcH-lnnlng on Monday, Sept. 14th, trains on the A. and C. R. R. R. will run aa follows: Leave Heaslda at 7:20 a m. dally. I,eave Hcaslde at 8 p. m. dally exoept Sunday. Leave Hcaalde at 4 p. m. Sunday. Leave Astoria at 9 a m. dally. Leave Astoria at 4:46 p. m. dolly except Sunday. Leave Astoria at 6:30 p. m. Sunday. C. F. LESTER, Supt. Oregon Industrial Exposition PORTLAND, OREGON SEPT. 19 TO OCT. 17 The urent rcHiuirccM of the Pacific Northwest, Agriculture, Horticul ture, Fisheries, Mines, Manufactures, Machinery, Transpor tation, Trade and Commerce will he represented more completely than ever before. Grand Band Concert Every Afternoon and Evening SI'CCIAL ATTKACT10XS EVERY NIGHT Lowest Rates Ever lade on All Transportation Lines ADMISSION, 25c: CHILDREN. 10c Tor Exhibit spice, apply to Ceo. L. Baker. Snperintcndcnt. at the building. E. C. MABTEN, Hecretnry. Children's Wagons, Baby Carriages, Base Ball Goods, -! Fishing Croquet Tackle, Sets Garden Tools GRIFFIN & REED CITY BOOK STOI'E Foard & Stokes Co. We Carry a Complete Stock of Groceries, Hardware, Glass ware, etc. i OHANITE WARE, ROPE, STOVES. IRON PIPE, TER RA COTTA PIPES, BAR IRON. STEEL, CANNERY 51 PPLIES, LOO0ER3' TOOLS SOL OPPENHEIMER Trustee for the late M. C. CROSBY 600 Commercial St. OF t Clothing Notions Shoes Mats, Etc. FOR M'KISLEY AND SOUND MONEY I'rmt Di inonst nil Inn timl Turnout liy the li'iulilUiins uf t'liitsiii Cniinty. t. t. ,i iirs uiN(ii.; .spi i:cii T..M of Ih- Fallacies uf Hi- Silver II in.) and I N-im.risl rated Them Uc yond the hhadow 'f I'Ul)l -Tun blight procession. -f m I He wan koIiik to he mirrlfl In two th M.lin.al dMiioimtiuona!"",,,,h"- M'"" y " n ' 0,')'" ' ' " h'"'"" ,.r l,u.K ,, in A. 1,1,. ihal h wan (t.-tl'lIK J p-r lllolHh-and hi- f all Which '. of the Mi K ml. i tub lnt night waa II si ili-nl Ull l most enttluWilxllr.. Hi i .Id" and (.'lutKop and other poima o;i tin- Astoria and Columhla lilver li.illrou'l were r-ren.'nti "I by dclega tlnr.: which IiojI come to the city on a apiilnl ttaln. Many M-o.le from the Xehalein wrre also In the city. AIhuiI 7 o'cliM-k the drmunatratlnn began by the firing of bombs and this waa kept up till 1. when the torchlight proccsnlon began to move. Altogether there were In line 410 persons, exclud ing boys. A drum corps preceded the proceesitin, and the Astoria Military Hand waa also In the line. The Voung Men's McKlnley Club and the McKln ley and llobart Clubs were the princi pal featuree of the proresalon. After limn hlng through the principal atreeta of the city the Itepubllrana repaired to the club room, fhlth was packed. It la estimated there were 10O0 peraona In (he hall, while the atreet In front of the building waa crowded. Many la dles were there and manlfeated quite aa much eiithUNliunn aa the voters. Chairman C. V. Fulton called the meeting to or r and atarted to make a siniiMii.nl. but waa Interrupted by loud calls for a seaker to addreaa the "overflow" . meeting. The McKlnley tilcc Club rvtideted a campaign iong and reapondeil to a voclferoui encore. Chairman Fulton made a few opening remarks. In the course of which b aald It waa the duty of all peraona, regardless of former party amilatlon, to vote fi.r Mr. Mi Klnley, aa he waa the;happen. When the country waa under champion of aound money and there-; fore the people's friend. Mr. Fulton scored the I'ohm rat candidate for en deavoring to array capital against la Ivor and Ills appeals to claaa preju dice. After n few minutes' talk, he lti(niliii'fl the speaker of the evening. Hon. T. T. Ueer. of Marlon county, who was given a hearty ovation. Mr. !eer snld that the demonstra tion was fur the greatest that he had seen in the state this campaign. He said he realised, of course, that It was not In his honor, but because the people relli. il that the time had come when they must put aside party for their country's good. He was not there was plentiful on the Pacific coast at to abuse anybody and aa evidence of ! that time, and the farmer had taken his good fnlth wns willing to put his gold money eaM with him. When arms around anyone any voter, he cor- the clerk handed the shoes to him he reeled himself In the house. Abuse 'gave In payment a J20 gold piece. The was not his argument. Hut when alclerk looked at it for some time and Populist called him a gold hug he felt ! finally managed to stammer an ex Justltled In retaliating by calling the planatlon. It apiwars he was charg Pop. a silver bug. which rather outdid 'lug IU-60 In silver for the shoes, but, him In culling bud nnmes, as It wasos the Oregon farmer had gold, the sixteen tln.es ns bad n name as gold price would be much less. So he hunt bug. He termed the sllverltee liryan-;ed "P a newspaper, got the latest quo Ite and not PoMcrata, as some speak-', tatLms, and, after fifteen minutes' tig ers did. hecnuM he was sure no honest urinit. gave the Oregonian the proper Democrat wanted to have his party Change. The ahoes didn't cost so much name coupled with the peculiar genus In R"ld. 'u " can see what con represented by Hrynn. After reviewing ;dltlons the free coinage of silver would the disastrous reign of the Democrat lc ' brlnir about." party, he told how a man named j Mr. Oeer closed hla address by ex Uorke. who, by the way. was In As-! phxllng a favorite popocrat argument, toria. had come to Marlon county In j The Pops, state, and truthfully, that 1SH2, and bred discontent amongst Its; the total debt of the world Is $32,000, prosperous people. He told them they -000.000, while the circulating medium were being Imposed upon and, Incredu-f the earth Is but $4,000,000,000. This lous aa It may seem, they bejleved It. bothers the life out of them. How will That waa before the presidential e!ec-!tlu debt ever be paid? There Is only Hon of 1SH2. The control the denia-' one way to do It Increase the per cap Kogues of that yenr exercised over the'tn: Imagination of the people reminded him The speaker's Illustration was as fol of the man who was bled to death, nl-j'ows: though he never lost a drop of blood. nce upon a time a score of men were Two physicians got hold of a man one!Kthered around In a circle, listening time who was condemned to death, and to a free silver orator. One of the men had to tile anyway, and, by wuy of experiment, pretended to treat him for a disease as they used to do In days gone by, by blending the patient. They blindfolded and laid him on a cot. Then they arranged a tub of water on the floor beside the bed and suspended a bucketful from the Celling. One of the pnyslcians made a Blight scratch on the patient's arm, causing a tinge of pain, but not drawing blood. The nth did the cutting for endangering the man's life by cutting too deep, and pro ceeded to let the water run from the bucket Into the tub. Of course the sick man heard It and thought he was bleeding to death. The doctors told him to He still and they would do what they could to save his life. TTTe patient's chances of recovery were free ly commented upon and finally one said that the other had murdered the man. Thla so frightened the subject of the experiment that he died "bled to death," said the speaker, "although he hadn't lost a drop of blood. And It was by that kind of play upon the power of human Imagination that the Demo crats were enabled to return to power In 1SH2." Mr. Geer demonstrated that the Dem ocratic administration was the sole mum' of Hid present depression ami nal'l In- couldn't see why It was at trll.utH in Hi "crime of '73." Fol'ow Iiik this iiMi-rtloti, he went after fn-it allvi-r anil rwl an rxlrai'l from tin Nw V'"k Trlhuna of Ik.'I. which i!i.ii'd ihut tile d'-iTi-Mlon at that time h Kn-ntiT than It la at piewnt, ami, mi tin? iiiuntry waa umlcr fioe rolniiKi- at 10 to 1. at that tlim-, thf prt-H.-m ili'jirmfclun could rml oc iMrfllnif to the arRinrn'nt of th I'iu llHta. tiiifiiNurlly ilui- t flnnti'Uil Ivxl" Intlmi, hut mlKht lc aumethliiic "Whi n my um ! waa a ymitiK nian." iii.tliiui"! Mr. (iyr. "like many other young rin-n, lie had a awet'theart. At llutt tlma the country u undi-r fre I'ltniiKi' lawa, niid my uni lc u n-i'K-l Ik tw ir.arrlnl In hla awrthi-art. -i-wiln-1 to huy hla dartlmra chIIco ilr.a! Well, calico wa a lllnu fur Zi ii-nta n yard, and. after aanrialnlnK from the olijM t of hla afTectlunn that It rHj-.ilri ' elKht yard for her drv, he went tn the atore- and actually expend ed 12 one-third of hla monthly wae.v fur the RiMida. He raya hla irlrl liMiked nnely, hut hla raah purchase gave him a nnanchtl a-t-lack which required three montha for him to overcome. Btlll. ws hail the free and unlimited coinage of allver then." Had It not been for the crime of 'K, the apeaknr aaaerted, all would be well "The Republican party la the only true friend of allver. The party haa always favored hlmetalllain aa It If In effect today the concurrent circulation of both tnetala a condition that doei not exlat In any free coinage country In the world today. We have both metali In circulation and we want to keep them there; but we cannot do thl hy paaMlng lawa giving to allver a flctl t Hia value." After demonatratlng 4alnly that the free coinage of allver would drive gold out of circulation, the speaker aaaerted ltnat he waa oppoaed to the free coinage of allver becauae he waa a friend of the while metal. Hut It la not worth one-alx.teenth aa much aa gold and therefore should not be coined at that ratio. "The popocrata aaaert that the free coinage of allver at the ratio of H to 1 would ralne prlcea. I cheerfully admit that thla would happen; In fact. It did frev coinage law a an Oregon farmer once made a visit to hla old home In St. Ioula. Like pretty nearly every' body else, he wore ahoes. While In St Louis he became In need of a pair of shoes and went to a store to buy them He asked the clerk the price of shoes and was thunderstruck to learn that they were selling for til. 50 a pair. The farmer swore strange oaths to himself, and told the clerk that shoes were only 16 a pair out In Oregon. "Well, he had to have the shoes. It would never do to go bare-footed In St. Louis. So he told the clerk to wrap them up. Now, It transpires that gold happened to think that he owed an other $2, and told him that he did not have the money Just then, but would pay him as soon as he got It. The creditor happened to think that he ow ed the man next to him the same amount and told him the same thing. Well, it happened that every man in the circle owed his neighbor $2. The laat man happened to think that he had a dollar and told the man to whom he half. Whereupon, he handed the dollar to his creditor. The latter passed It to the next man and It went around the circle, Anally getting back to Its original possessor. "Well, by Jove, I can pay you that other dollar," he said to his creditor, and proceeded to do so. Then the dol lar went the round again, thus paying a double debt for each of the twenty men. But the poor popocrat couldn't see that, and the speaker felt very sor ry for him. The Pop. argues that, when a man pays a debt with a dollar, he not only wipes out the debt, but the dollar. Consequently It will require $32,000,000,000 to wipe out the debt of the earth. Mr. Geip- Is unquestionably one of the bent campaign speakers who ever (Continued on Fourth Paga.) IN COLORADO Arrested for Telling the Truth and Locked I'u in the (iuard House. HAVE A I'ROVOST MARSHAL Capt. W. A. Hmlth. Formerly Warden of the Penitentiary. Now In Charge of Affalra Ibex Disturbance of Utile Conaequence. Leadvltle, Sept.. 24. No orflclat report has yet rearhid headquarters concern ing the firing upon the guards at the Ibex propi'htes last night, but the au thorities !o not attach much Import ance to t!p.r In-ldent. Captain W. A. Hmlth. formerly warden of the itate IH-nitentlary. waa tonight appointed provost martial of the Leadvllle dis trict. Correspondent Mitchell, of the Den ver Times, la In the guard-house where he haa been alnce laat night. Mitchell attended a meeting of citizens yester day at which Adjutant Oeneral Moaea waa present. When the meeting waa called to order all reporters and cor respondents were requested to with-dra-jr. Mitchell alone remained, and being a stranger was not Inspected. After the meeting the other corres pondents, scenting a scoop, visited the adjutant general's office, General Moses having announced in the citizen's meet ing that any one publishing the pro ceedings would be arrested. Mltchel was with them and In the talk hot words passed between Mitchell and Moses, the lie being given by Mitchell and a fight being prevented by others present. Mitchell was arrested and placed In the guardhouse, where be still remains. He had mailed the pro ceedings of the secret meeting to bis paper before he waa arrested. THE WHEAT MARKET. Cudahy Has a Corner on the Septem ber Delivery. Chicago. Sept 24 Five weeks aifo December wheat ruled steady at 53c per bushel. Today short Interests were clamoring for that option at 6Sv De cember wheat closed last evening at 65. The opening today marked a brisk demand and a quick Jump in price. The highest point reached today was S6, IS above yesterday's close. Later In the session the price declined to 64T and closed at 54. To a degree the market was Influenced by cabled quo tations from Liverpool, London, Paris and Berlin exchanges. All recorded higher prices and steadily Increasing demand. To cap the climax of the sit uation produced by the small crop abroad, this country's yield Indicated an unusually low aggregate, threshing returns coming In Indicating a large shortage In the crop. Today's vigorous demand revealed a big short Interest. Cudahy Is sold to hold nearly all the contract wheat for December delivery billed In visible supply, and that cred ited him with 25,000,000 bushels. There was talk today that Cudahy did not intend to unload until the staff of life has reached the dollar mark. POPS. IN TACOMA. Fusion County Ticket Nominated After Much Quarreling. Tacoma, Sept. 24. After three days of conference the fusion county ticket was completed this afternoon. The Populists secured fourteen out of the thirty-two places on the county, legis lative and municipal district tickets, the Democrats ten, and the sliver Re publicans eight. The agreement to give the national Prohibitionists the school superintend ent and one representative was rescind ed today on learning that the Prohi bitionists would not support Bryan but Intended putting an electoral, and pos sibly a state ticket in the field. The school superintendent was given to the Democrats and the representative to the silver Republicans. The entire tick et was then nominated by the Populist convention, as under the law It must be filed aa a straight party ticket. It will go before the people as the Peo ple's Party ticket. SHE BROUGHT GOLD. San Francisco, Sept. 24. The steamer Mariposa brought 450.000 English sov ereigns sent from Australia by bank ers to the United States mint to be exchanged at bullion value for gold certificates, which certificates will be used to pay for Imports at New Tork. Two men . guarded the treasure day and night on board the Mariposa, and seven guardians escorted the boxes, containing nearly two and one-half million dollars, to the branch United States mint In this city. STOCKS ADVANCING. New Tork, Sept. 24. The reviving confidence in the general business out look Is reflected tn the starting up of Industrial plants In various sections of the country and the growing easiness In the money market and In mercantile discounts continue to form the text of the advocates of higher prlcea In Wall street. There Is evidence of awakening interest by outsiders, aa la Indicated by the Increasing orders for stocks and bonds at advancing prlcea. SOLDI KKS' HOSPITAL. Completed and Dedicated Republicans Att-nil the MethodUt Meeting at Roseburg. Kosburg, Sept. 24. The Oregon Sol diers' Home hospital which haa been completed by the contra tor. was re ceived by the board and dedicated this afternoon. The usual routine of business occu pied the second day of the Methodist conference. The reports of preafhers and the benevolent societies were of a high order and generally encouraging. The Republican clubs attended the e.'enlng srvlce in a body as com pliment to Major McKlnley, who Is a Methodist. MURDERERS HANGED. Albuquerque. N. M., Sept. 24. Dloncio Sandoval, who shot and killed Victo ria no Tenorio, July 29. 1V.'5, was hanged here this forenoon before a crowd of several thousand. He was calm and composed to the last Perfecto Padela. who assassinated John Vlpond, miner, and Rosarlo Ring, who shot and killed Carlos Mlbarri, were executed at Tlerra Amarilla, while Antonio Gonial es paid the pen alty of death for the murder of Charles Vanoycle at Rosjwell. MURDER AND SUICIDE. Chicago, Sept. 24. Harry M. Conway, 21 years old, was shot and Instantly killed this evening by his wife. Grace Clark Conway, who was only IS yean old. The couple had frequent quar rels over the attentions paid by Con way to a young woman and It was dur ing one of these quarrels that the wom an killed her husband. She shot her self through the heart Immediately af terwards. TO TAKE PLACE OF STRIKERS. Kansas City, Mo., Sept. 24. A special to the Star from Fort Scott, Kan., says: About 100 miners from Southern Kan sas aod the Joplln districts left today In special cars for Leadvllle. Col., to take the places of the striking miners there. They go under contract MINTO RESIGNS. Portland, Or.. Sept. 24. Chief of Po lice John W. Mlnto has resigned and the police commission has selected L. W. Robertson, late of Independence, to fill the vacancy. The new chief will assume bis duties October 6. FASTEST BICYCLE TIME. Denver, Sept 24. Today with the help of a moderate wind on a straight away track. Stanley M. Barrow made a quarter mile in 15H seconds. It Is claimed to be the fastest quarter ridden on a bicycle. TODAY'S WEATHER. Portland. Sept. 24. For Oregon and Washington, fair weather. AM I WRONG? The Boston Herald publishes the fol lowing from a subscriber: If a dollar be a dollar honsst coin without deceit one may melt It, one may smelt It. but Its value won't re treat. Melt ten dollars silver dollars In unbiased melting pot and the silver "slug" resulting only sells for "five the lot." Melt gold dollars melt an eagle In aforesaid melting pot and the golden slug resulting quickly sells for "ten the lot." Will you tell me kindly tell me he v these dollars equal are If a little slowing furnace put on only one a scar? There was never yet equation that demanded legislation to establish right to be an equation Is equation else It is a fallacy. And I'm thinking quietly thinking that a poor man has poor sense If he vote to have a dollar that will melt to fifty cents. MR. CAMPBELL'S POLITICS. Astoria. Sept. 24, im. Editor Astorlan: Referring to the Budget of the 23rd inst, would like to state through your columns that the statment made there In regard to my supporting Mr. Bryan In the coming election, is misleading and untrue. On the contrary, on the 3rd day of November I will be one of a party of more than eighty young men of this city who will march to the polls and cast their first vote for president of these United States for Wm. McKln ley, the next prsident of this glorious Republic. D. CAMPBELL. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U.S. Gov't Report 'XZsitvl a Naa tMa ABSOLUTELY PURE FASTEST MILE INJIARNESS John R. Gentry, the Famous Stallion, Establishes a Xew World's I'aciog Record. OUTDISTA.NGED THE Kl'X.NER With the Wind in His Face. Made a Remarkable Quarter Mile John R. Gentry, Star Pointer, and Frank Agan to Race Today. Portland, Me., Sept. 24. John R. Gen try today at Rlgby Park paced the fastest mile ever made In harness and placed the world's record at l:tK4. The day was cold and a light northwesterly wind was blowing up the streteh when Gentry, with Andrews behind bun, came out to go against bis record of 2:01 "4. made September 1 this year, at inion'. r.tt. v v The famous pacer scored once or twice with the runner who was to pace him, and then went up the stretch cm what was to be the fastest mile ever done by a horse In harness. The run ner was at the pacer's throat latch aa they made the Brat turn on the stretch. Gentry went steadily and with appar ent ease, the runner bavins; hard work to keep his position. The Judges caog-ht the quarter mil at 21 seconds, and the second quarter waa made In J0"4, making the half mile In SSVt The runner, by the ase of the whip, was keeping up at Gentry's) wheel, but was making hard work of it The third quarter was made tn 30r seconds, making the three-quarters In l:20li. As they turned Into the home stretch and caught the wind la the teeth, the crowd began to yell wildly, and both drivers commenced to encourage their horses. With the shout ing of the crowd, which was now cheer ing like mad, the pacer spurted for the wire, and considering; that he had the wind in hla face made the most re markable quarter of the heat In JOH. the mile tn two minutes and one-half second. Just one second less than the record. Tomorrow Star Pointer, John R. Gen try and Frank Agan will all go against time. STILL GOING TO CANTON. ! Representatives of the Mining, Coal ) and Iron Interests Visit McKlnley. j Canton. Sept 24. Pennsylvania to jday sent two large delegations tn cx j tend greetings to McKlnley. One came ,as the Westmoreland delegation, util jlzlng four special trains of eleven I coaches each. This was distinctively representative of the mining Industry and included representatives of the cok3 making Interests. Addresses were made by W. S. Yaa Dyke and Congressman Geo. W. Hull. jThe Oil City delegation was a thor oughly representative body from all branches of the oil producing Industry. . lit Included refiners, dealers In sup . plies, tank manufacturers, merchants ; and workmen. It was claimed by those , tn charge of the delegation that It in cluded many who heretofore have vot ;ed the Democratic ticket, but who this year declared their intention to vote for ' McKlnley. THE OLD VETERANS. Given an Ovation at Eau Claire, Wis. Cleveland Indorsed. Eau Claire, Wis., Sept. 24. General Alger's party of old veterans were giv en a great Welcome here this morning. The party was met by a local commit tee of one hundred old soldiers In line, and several hundred citizens. Ex-Mayor J. U. Reniert. an old-time Democrat, presided at the meeting. General Sickles spoke first and was given a perfect ovation. His censure of Tillman was particularly applauded. General Howard followed and elicited much enthusiasm. His warm Indorse ment of President Cleveland's action regarding the Chicago strike stirred up the greatest applause. ASTORIA HONORED. St. Louis, Sept. 24. The American Bankers' Association today elected Robert H. Lowery. of Atlanta, presi dent. John A. Devlin, of Astoria, was chosen vice-president for Oregon. De troit was chosen as the next place of meeting. THE MARKETS. Liverpool, Sept. 24. Wheat, spot firm; No. 2 red winter, stocks exhausted; Noj 2 red spring, 5s lOd; No. 1 California, 6a. Portland. Sept. 24. Wheat Valley, 55 S56; Walla Walla, 5354. at Saa? V Was.",