rvjv VWHCHQ ffimimKimw yppfft" - T " r & tt pmmyaKarwa"-- r wx4 rawimftvyyj ftfty.''y.'.,tarYgag3ia OVER THE CAPITAL OUT. Complete Ilecilal of Hie Day's Deeds and Doina Knocked On" a r.ridse'fjA Mow Clmrcli City Khiction Smallpox. , .Smallpox Abating. Judgo Shuw to-day Is Iii receipt of a letter from the quarantine ofllcer at Cliumpoeg who states, that, there is but one cuhV of bninTfiifuf ' there, that of Dr. 'Jf. c'jldlim'.' He is improving nicely ami will soon ue well again. The,' junior of a l!oy.' having broken o.iit(vii ItMii hcIioo), is flllBO. Squire Poujadc, quarantine olllcer at OervalH, writes that there are no new cases thereand tlurt Amuli La Chappelle has' tiii't !i h iii; hi' iil'taek it i ?i " ' ' ' ' and is convalescing, . In North Salein there are no new', . . . . i A 1IRAKEMA.YS TKHIIIDLE PALL. cases to report, and the B is improving. are no seliwab girl C 1 1 . I K I Articles or Incorporation. The Klamath Canal and Ditch Co., with principal otlleo nt Link- vlile. The Capital stock, is flOO.OpoJ in slinres of SlfiO e.ich, Jesse p. Carr, G. W. Bin'ltli "And Cfiiis.' (if Moore are tlio Incorporators and the business of tho company will be that of building and maintaining an irrigating ditch from Big Klamath lake to it point on iho Ore gon and California boundary line. The Pendleton Coal company of 1'ondle'ton, with" a capital stock of $2000, and C. J. Cnrlston, Q. W. King and J. H. McCoy, tho fcicor-porntont. Knuckcil From lie Train by a "ridge, lie Fulls Many Feet.. . .. ! ' b "u ;.- . ' As this, morjnlng's freight was coming down from Albany,and was lieu rili g Jeilfcrson, an accident oc curred wjilgh may result In the duii'tii'of lirakenian VanRankin. The train wis in full motion and VanKankiu was between two cars examining the bulk-heads,,. He swung out and started .to mount the , i . i. J' ' i, ,' ' t t" traii was passing over the bridge, aul as lie started up the ladder he was struck by tho timbers of the bridge and kiiijcked to lie solid rock twenty-live teet ueiow. He was picked up an almost lifeless form. One leg was broken by the fall and he is otherwise badly bruised. Aside from being cut yp about the face and head bv comiut? in Hiiuuuii contact(wtii the bridge, he is terribly bruised 'by Ills awful mil. , ills mother, who llvesat Junction, was, At onre, informal of the accident a li A arrived on the n6ii passenger train and removed him home on the rijiufirtrilj n., 'Although fie fior-, rimy uruiseu, almost ueyonu recog nition, It Js thought.hc may recover. Ah yet there are no evidences of in ternal injuries, but it is reared, as lie was precipitated from such an elevation to tho solid rocks below, that he may be seriously injured. THE SALEM STUEET KAiLWAY. ' UNIVERSITY NOTES. Points of Personal 'Mention and Notes of News. Several male students have enter ed school during the week. I'rof. Whlteaddressed the studeuts Tuesday, on the study of short hand writing. Levi Magco read a good oration in chapel Wednesday j subject, "The Two Roads of Life." The jocifttes wlU install their new officers at ,tieir respective meetings this afternoon, and evening. Miss Lottie Beunett has been en gaged . to teach. Kthe school in tho Johnson district, near Mehama. Miss Sliuart. with the assistance of her pupils,' will give an elocution" ary eiterlaliyacnt in the near future. The . museum' recently received from' Idaho n fossil of a species of extinct rtjifrnaisupposed to have Mr.- -Sharp, of the young men's boarding hall, informed tho boys that Vie would try to make them feel at homo on Thanksgiving day by treating trjcin w a genuine ruaiiKS glvlngjjfim'cr. i,', Rev. Kllpatrick of Lebanon while visiting Ills daughter, who is a stu dent of the conservatory, took the op portunity of visiting tho school and expressed his delight In finding the school so prosperous. THE-CHURCH OP OUR PAT1IEK. OCCIDENTAL JOTTINGS. News And Notes of a General tcrcst toltlio Westerner. In- Astoria Illumes I'd. lteplylng to an nrtielo in" tho Jour nal concerning the new railroad the Pioneer says: "Well, why don't you dig up some coin and start out as though you meant busi ness? This end of tho line is going ahead all riirht. but Astoria is not ilnanclally able, nor disposed to build a road right toyour doors with out some assistance, especially when tho aforesaid road will be of as much bcncllt to Salem and the Willamette Valley as It Is to Astoria.'' The facts in the case aro that Balem is waiting for ii reply from tho Astoria people. Woaro"ottly waiting." Cars Purchased und Work iof Con struction Ready to Commence. Tlif I'll)- or SrbuuNnnd I'hui t-tics. Salem, tho capital city ami as Is oft times called, the city schools and churches, Is about receive farther accessions as churches. With the revival of the Cumberland Presbyterian congre gation and tho organization of the Church of Our Father which latter is more Uko tho creed of tho Unitar ians than any other two will be added to the number of our churches. All Trui't'il to 1'urllniid. All of tho eases of smallpox throughout the valley with per haps one exception aro directly traceable to Portland. Kor awhile poor MoMinnvllle was maligned, but sho soon recovered and the blame fell where It belonged. A New Drug Slvrr. Yesterday wo mentioned the fact that Oeorgo flood would occupy the room in which Bridges and lU.zorth are now located. He will open up u new drug Hon theie as soon as ho mn secure the stock and have tho room refitted. The directors of the Salem street railway, after considering the dlU'erent styles of cars, have pur chased three of the Wright & Brownell company of St. Louts. These celebrated cars are built on the sumo plan as those in use on the As toria street railway and which give such universal satisfaction. The cars will bo lettered and shipped at once and 'he three delivered here will cost not less than $L',r00. The contract for construction was signed this morning and bonds entered into. Messrs. O'Connor & Barr have shipped their tools from Mehama to this city, and will arrive here to-morrow noon with a force of men and begin the work of grading at once. Aside from the men they have employed on the O. P.. they will need the ser vices of quite a number of Salem laborers and teams, as they aro un der contract to have the line com pleted by January 1st. Tho rails will bo shipped from San Francisco, and all Is in readiness for a speedy completion of this much needed enterprise. -- THIS IS THE NKillT.- Tlmt Either Makes tis or Undoes Unite Says The Poet. us Will llr Ulna to Sro You. A Thanksgiving excursion from Albany to Salem Is being talked of, and now depends on whether a boat can bo secured or not. Democrat. Ai AbMlita care. The ORIGINAL ABIETINK OINTMENT Is only put up In large two-ouneo tin boxes, anil is an absolute euro for old boivs, burns, wounds, chapped hands, and all skin eruptions. Will positively euro all kinds of piles. Ask for tho ORIGINAL ABIIITINE OINT. MKNT. Bold byD.W. Matthews & Co., 100 State- strvot, Salem, ht '25 euuu jer box by "bH 80 oenta. This evening tho city republican primaries will bo conducted at the four wanls In this city. These primal les aro for tho pur pose of nominating two aldermen in the llrst ward, one in the second, one in tho third, ami one In the fourth, and for selecting delegates to the city convention, which will be held at the opera house on Monday evening next. Tho apportionment Is ono delegate tor every ten votes or traction over half polled for Uecorder Strlckler at the last city eWctlon. This gives tl delegates to tho first ward, 10 to tho second, 11 to tho third, and 8 to the fourth. As yet candidates aro few and far between, but It is thought the bco will bo dlseo'verud In tho, bonnets, ot several more before tho convention on Monday evening next. A New Denomination to lie Established in Our City. It has been determined to organize a new church in this city, which will be known, for tjio present at least, as The Church of our Father. Recognizing the fierceness of the struggle of life, tho importance of the here as well as of tho hereafter, it will hope to bo helpful in all tho religious und civil interests of the great Pacific slope. Its creed will be shert: believing love to be the mainspring of all rational conduct, it will welcome all who profess au earnest ettort to love Gud with all the heart and their neighbor as themselves. Believing that doubt of any sort cannot be removed except by actioji, It will seek all help, human or Divine to the end that the will may bo done on earth as It is in heaven. It will allirni that perfect character is salvation and that salva tion is perfect character, that nothing but a perfect life will insure a perfect reward, for whatsoever i man sows, that will he also reap. It will not, therefore, affirm that repentenco and forgiveness however necessary, ure a substitute for a right life or a release from the con sequences of a bad one, nor will it affirm that time and death nre a limit to human hope. In tho ever lasting Kingdom of our Father, con duct mono, is tuo limit ot man whose better nature Inclines to the good. To help bring In right conditions of good, the church will enter the field in humble trust, lulling for u kindly welcome and praying that It may be largely Ufoful in tills day of conflict. It is tho further Inten tion of this congivgation at a future time to erect a church edifice in our city. Salem has a new physician in tho person of Dr. Mary McCoy. Benton county manages to get along with only six newspapers. Astoria by tho sea has no flour mill and Is a bustling city of 8,000. At Alblna the First Norwegian and Danish Methodist Episcopal church was yesterday incorporated. A cattle firm in Eastern Oregon will feed 15,000 head of cattle for the fall and winter markets. They have 4.000 tons of hay. Petaluma, Cal., has passed ordinances forbidding the Salvation Army from making street parades and obstructing the streets and side walks. Roseburg recently voted Mrs. Cleveland a handsome gold mounted and engraved riding whip. In an autograph letter sho thanked them heartily for tho token. The fund of $16,000 appropriated by tho last legislature for conveying insane and idiotic persons to the asylum has been expended, with the exception of a few dollars. Defici ency certificates will bo issued by the secretary of state for claims on this fund after it is gone, until a new appropriation is made. Junction City will give tho Cum berland PresbyteWan Synod $5000 to locate their college at that place. , 'A, friend of tho church has donated $10,000 for its locatian in tho Wil lamette valley, and at the recent session at Eugene the Synod ap pointed a commission to hear propositions for the location of the college. In some parts of Los Angeles town-lot stakes that wore driven in tlie days ot the boom aro compara tively as thick us trees on the Ore- goniun mountains. Tho Star says, editerally: "Something less than 10,000,000 town-lot stakes between San Bernardino and tho sea should be pulled up, tho ground plowed und sowed to barley and wheat, or planted with fruit trees and vines." Saturday last there was published a pathetic letter from Annio John son, a 13-year-old Kentucky girl, to tho mayor of San Francisco, asking for information regarding her two uncles, who, she believed, were on the coast. She stated that her mother was ill, and she desired to be a school teacher, but had not the means. It seem that one of the uucles, Richard Beswlck, lives in Ashland, Oregon. Jacob "Wenger, recently from the east, and his cousin Miss Emma Kundret of Salem, left the city yes terday for Yaqujna bay where they will remain a Bhort tlmo visiting friends andrelatlves. The church of Our Father will hold service next Sabbath in the hall in front of tho opera house, at 7.30 p.m. "Rejoice, O young man in thy youth." All aro invited, es pecially tho young. The street railway contractors, O'Connor, Barr & Horrigan, having completed their contract on the ,0. P., wiil put the large force of men they had employed there at work h,ere the first of the week. The Albany folks are trying to charter a boat and have an excur sion to this city on Thanksgiving day. We.hopo they may be able to complete all arrangements, for Salem will take pleasure in opening the city to them. Supplementary articles of the Astoria Building and Loan associa tion have been filed, .increasing the capital stock from $400,000 to $800, 000. This ossoiclatian has been or ganized but a year and a half and is meeting with great success. Chilblains, unpleasant odors from tho feet and other narU of the bodv. nosnl catarrh, ringworm, poison oak, stye on tho eye lid; eruptive diseases oi the skin, nil disappear after using Dutards Specific. Warranted to effect a radical euro In every Instance. Sold by D. W. Mathews & Co. ESTABLISHED' BT NATIONAL APT TkCapitallfajillji OK- SALEM, - - - OREGON, fl !i-l II.! J .... iipuuramup, - - . . oiirpias, -. iom R. S. WALLACE, . . Pre-M ' J. li. ALBEKl, .... rn,. . uintuiUKSl Onuhler. w. t. uray, w W. Mn. J.M.Martin. ilr.wh ' Dr. W. A.CusIck. J. h. Albert ' T. McP. Patton. LOANS MADE MISCKLLANJJOUS. To farmers on wheat and other mrv.l able produce, constem-d nV u.r.S?tkl ,r ,5,Prlv"te eranarlesor ipubllc warehouses. Stale and County Warrants Bought at Pel uuMmtKUAL PAPER Discounted a, reasopnblc rates lw... drawn direct on Now York. Cnlca1oIJ'!, H6nVinBandCaTcut.U",larl,,lBa First National Ban 8ALEM, OREGON. C. H. Monhoe, J. n. N. Belt, Lute of tho Monroe House. Monroe & Bell, WM. N. LADUK. -Dlt. .1. REYNOLDS, JOHN MOIU, - - President,!! Mce President I - - uiswer, -Proprietors Cliejiie m Ho e FREE BUS. GENERAL BANKING, Exchange on Portland, San Franelsca New York, London und irons KonS uougni anil sola, stale, County and Cltf warrants bought. Farmers aro cordlalli Invited to deposit und transact buslnea with us. Liberal qdynnces made on wheat, wool, 'hop and 6ther propertyat reasonabio rates. Insurance on such se. curlty can be obtained at tho bank In must lunuuiu companies.; Sample Rooms for Commercial Travelers. From $1 to S3 per day. SALEM - - OREGON. 10-l-tf LOCAL SUMMARY. pHE QUESTION OF THE DAY. EXPItESSAV-AOON, QUICK AND SAFE delivery. Wm. ltennle havlnjj bought prepared to deliver trunks, valises, pack ages, arid any thing else that ho can get In his wnifon to any part of tho city, quicker, safer, better, and neater, than it can be iiuiiu uy any uoay cjse. .L.eavo orders At .muiu ssuiuio. NEW BOOK. DEEDS OF DARING BY BLUE & GRAY. PROTECTION OR FREE TRADE? ll.UttUN 11AKKS, Tlio Oregon hnntl Oonimny's ton ttcrolotflnro wiling m)l(Uv,-l01mvlii Kmii miUInIiico thoStliof Kent. Thoro in no nmbulilllty thut 10 ru'ius of Koil liuul within four milwofVuloiu will over aulii ho ullcrvd for f0 w Ruru mi winy tonus. 1 ire tuv now flvo Iioumoh lu prtHiwofoonstriU'tlort on 1o(h nlrwily sold und roods nro Mug opouwl und hrldLi hullt m tlutt tho vhIuo of nil or tho loin is tmiiiK mnldly oiilmnood. Any ono wkhiiiK to ituv ton neros of' good huid for much 1mm than the rloo of h city lot will do wull to look ut this jirojwrty Ht oiuv tw tlioiv Is uodouht tmt thut It will all ho mid iusldo of thirty days. fU nt tho otll f tho Granm Ijvnd cnmimny on Com HMrfliul strvot Mudytm will lwhowu tho proiwrty irv orolmrwo. lO-lKHHltf. nufkun'i Arilr SiIt.. Tho best unlvo In tho world ( cuts, bruises, sores, ulcere, salt rhoii; fever sores, totter, chapped imn. ciillblalus. corns, and ull skin urui .tlons, and positively cures plh. ... ho pay required. It Is gunmutti . to Klvo perfect satisfaction, or mom refunded, l'rico 25 cents per Ik... lr sale v" Dr. H. W. Cox. ' llraewt llrr Ysatk. Mrs. lMuvlto Cluwlov. Peterson. Clay County, Iowa, tolls tho follow ing remarkable itory, tho tntth of whlwi is vouohod for by the real dents of the tewn: ' I am 73 veare old, have boon troubled with kidney complaint and lameness for many yrs; could not dress mvsolf with out help. Now 1 am frw from all pniu and soreuot. ami am able to do all of ill V own lioiisou-nrk. T nu-n all of my tfmuks to Klootrio Dlttore lor imving ruuuwed my youth, and rvmovod oomidutoly all dkmao and mm." Try h bottle, KOo ami fl. at Tho road work Is about all dono at t!iU place. Tho musical sound of the anvil is heard in our village ouco more; Chas. Seentz presides. Two new houses aro under con structlon in Marion. Win. Little's house is about enelo.-ed. Tho law suit between It. II. lUith- orford and W. I'. Young resulteU l;i favor of W.'l. Young. Thomas Heed has, returned from Idaho, where ho has been on a land hunt. He repprts riulto favorably of thut country. J.. (J. Sutton of Urowersvlllc, Minnesota Is hero negotiating for tho store, here. Ho. thinks ho will put in a stock here. Mrs. Win. P. George is improving uulto, rapidly in tho last few davs. but Is still unable to walk without the support of crutches. Marloii Is surely going to mako n olty for Mr. Little Is building a bow window on his new house and there nre an styles on our streets. KtatMlo khnw that nevcnty per cent of heixplao(th L'iUtiLsjati uro sutrw luir froui.tU disoam at the ktdnay and iirlitHnr htjii. a simple rln la tU tNuOc. uuiwiwini.onen runs Into tlwt twriinel "uv """ v"" "v -""" "i "" "' orl!r tS?.!'Tch mTT n'ho were thought to havo bean ox Republican primaries this even ing. Polls open In all tho wards from 7 to 0 this evening. F. E. Vaughn came up from Port laud yesterday evening. John McNnry was to-day sworn in as deputy recorder of Marlon county. The popular fad Just now is vac cination. It is worn on tho left arm as usual. There Is no caso of smallpox nt Marion as Is generally reported on tho streets. The testlietlc city editor of tho Telegram, Otto Greenwood, was in Salem to-day. ' At Dallas on Wednesday occurred theniarrlago of Eugene Hayter and Miss Eva Slnitlz. Henry Ackennan of Portland was granted a notary's commission by tho governor to-day. Chas. Bonier, an Insano patient from The Dalles, was brought to the asylum to-day. Ho is ayoung man. Thoro is an increased interest in religious debato at Sllverton. Last night tho house was crowded to its utmost enpuuity. Tlio investigation of Col. Leo's administration oftho aft'alrs at tho Indian school at Chemawa pro gresses slowly but steadily. Tho O. It. f- X. lias Its river steamer Alice completed mid ready for sorvIc As soon as sho inspect ed and granted a license, sho will be put on the upper Wilhuuotto river. Those who descend Into tho valley from Eastern Oregon go from tho midst of winter lntp the close of summer. From sleigh ridlug thoy I go to whoro tlowors aro yet in bloom in tho gardens. Smallpox does not seem to spread with very great rapidity. There Is but ono caso at Canemah, and thoso An Examination of the Tariff Question with Es pecial Regard to the Interests of Labor. BY HENRY GEORGE. CLOrH, S1.50. PAPER, 35 CENTS. This Is the clearest, fairest, most Interest ing and most complete examination oftho tarill' question yet made, and will prove Invaluable to all who wish to understand tho subject. The most thorough Investigation of tho subject that has yet been put In typo Now Tho npnearanco of this book mnrlts n new epoch In the world-wide struggle for The irreat collection oftho most thrilllnr personal ndventures on both sides during the great civil war. Intensely interesting accounts of exploits of scouts and spies, iunuru Hupi's, jieruic oravory, imprison ments ami tm!r.hrnnrlth r.nnnMi rnmnntfo incidents, hand-to-hand struggles, humor pus nnd tragic events, perilous Journeyi, bold dashes, brilliant suc-esses and mag nanimous actions on each pldo the line. BO chapters. Profusely illustrated to the file. No other book at all like it. Agents wanted. Outsells everything. Tlmoforpaymcnts allowed agents short of funds and freight prepaid. PLANET BOOK CO., Itox 6318, 1 1-0 1 y w. ST, LO U13, Mo. free trade. Henry George has a power of fmiiuiK i-uuuuiuiuiruiugiuHuri) a cienrana Impid language that any child can under stand him. while tho most learned mnn can enjoy the accuracy of his statements and tho suggestiveness of his thoughts, Thomas G. Shearman In New York Ktn Whoever wants to seo tho strongest ar gument not only against protection, but against all tariffs will find it here. Christian Union. ThO SlnirtllarsllPPPSS OfMr nnnnrntc thnt he has madepolltlcal economy Interesting. Unitarian Ileview. A book which every workingman In tho land can read with lntnrost nmi mr.iit t, read. Now ork Herald. Henry George's Other Works. Progress and Poverty, cloth, St; paper, Sjconw, r ' Social Problems, eloth, Sl;'paper, S3 cents. ii.u ijium itursuou, paper, iu cents, iiuiwriy in ianu, paper, l FOR BARGAINS IN FURNITURE GO TO ROTAN & WHITNEY, 1 02 Court Street, Salem, Oregon Ilavine bouirht nut the remainder ot tne chair factory's stock, wo aro prepared to sell chairs lower than any house in Oregon Ad re-1s it nnna 1Cnn THE HTANT)Ann 12 Union Square, New York. BLACKSMITIIING and HORSESHOEING. SCRIBER & POHLE 28Si, 312 and 3U Commercial BU, Balem. 10-l-tf Take Note or This. TTlOn 82,000 AVE WILL BELL GO acre J well Improved garden land, within 8 miles of Balem. Good road to town tho ELI!.n!?mn(1- Building good. FINE YOUNG pRCHARD and excellent grass land. This la a barvalu.and will be held only a short time nt theiut rintmL Pull nmf ua .iii , ii... V -, nv T. ... auun juu luuiircjj L.I WIl .LIS A CHAMIlEItLTV. Oporu House, Balem, Or. 8dw-tf l). V. Cox's drtigstoro. .m ttluaA .-4il ...... ...i : 1 .r ! ? J!E?$h l."i".w.Uu? h?w . 1 not putTt oil until ,o httbut nroctirva wokH of dlKAlktlM. It wlM Hlr mn I S4d by JJ. V. Mitttww a'co. yotjod havo not takou it, and the tini is iseotl. At Salorn nono of tho oxnoecd ohm havo contracted It. jVaoolnatlon Is tho true quarantine. NKWM.AN iNsurtAxnH ICompan y. Klre and Mm. ' rlne. JOS. AUlBItT, Agent, - Balom, Oregon. A rPBAL,SILVBRTON,M'BBKLY.ILS0 rt per.ywr. Indepenilonu TheAfFKAi, b olroulated In Marlon, Linn and Claok amas counties; baa been established eight years and to an excellent advertising me dium. For terms addrewa the publisher II. G. Guild, Sllverton, Or, 1831 THE CULTIVATOR 18S9 AND Country Gentleman THE BEST OF THE AGRICULTURAL WEEKLIES DEVOTED TO Farm Crops and Processes, Horticulture and Fruit-Growing Live-Stock and Dairying. While it also Includes aU minor deport ments of rural Interest, suth as tho roultry Yard, Entomology, Ileo-Keeplng, Green house and Grapery, Veterinary Replies, Form Questions nnd Answers, Fireside Heading, Domestic Economy, and a sam mnry of tho Rows of the Week. Its Mar ket Reports nre unusually complete, ana much attention Is paid to the Prospects of tho Crops, an throwing- light upononeol the most lmportnntof nllauobtlons- hen to buy and when to sell. It Is liberally Il lustrated, and by RECENT ENLARGE ment. contains mora rcadlnz matter than ever before, Tho Bubscrlntlon IMce Ua) peryenr.butweofleraSMMJIAL REDUC TION In our CLUB RATES FOR 1889! 2 SllbSCriptiOnS tnono remittance i 6 Subscriptions,- . . 10 12 Sujficriptions, &- - 18 WfTo nil New Subscribers for 18p. paying In advance now, we will kenduje paper weekly, from our receipt of lite re mittance, to January 1st, 1S8B, without charge. 3- Bl'BCtHHX Coi'isa KB8K. Addres LUTHER TUCKER & SON, Publisher, ALBANY, N.Y.