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About The Albany register. (Albany, Or.) 1868-18?? | View Entire Issue (Jan. 23, 1869)
SATUHDAr, JANUARY 23, 1869. Latest Telegram. From t e Portland Oregonidn we get Eastern telegrams to the 19th : Geo. Carl Scharz has teen elected TJ. S. Senator from Missouri; Alexander Ramsey, from Minnesota; Chandler, r from Michigan ; Ilannible Ham lin, frolu Maine; Sumner, from Massachusetts Ilcuben E. Fenton, from New York. A Memphis, Tennessee, dispatch says c three Arkansas militiamen were convict ed by a court-martial for outraging a white woman, and shot, by order of the court, on the 19th. ; la the Senate, on the 19th, Corbett presented a memorbl from the citizens of Washington Territory against submit ting the question of the ownership of can uuan island to arbitration: also a bill to grant land iu aid of the construe tion oi a railroad through .Missouri and Arkansas to the Pacific. TLayer offered a constitutional amend ment to prevent the disfranchisement of l any citizen on account of color. Iteiola- tion laid on the table. In the House, a resolution to print ! -three hundred thousand copies of Com- ' raissioner Wells report, was passed. The bill to "preserve the purity of elections , in the Territories," was passed. The Atlantic cable brings dates to the 19th : The London Pall Mall Gazette hopes the English Parliament will not ratiify the Alabama treaty if the question of the recognition of the Southern Confederacy as a belligerent is to be opened. mo returns ot tne election in b-pain shows an overwhelming majority in fa vor of a monarchy. There will be about one hundred Republicans in the Cortez San Francisco dates are to the 20th : King, of the firm of J. King & Co., who have been heavily interested in the wheat trade, and who recently failed in consequence of bills of 20,000 being re turned from a Liverpool house protested, 'has got a considerable amount of money in his possession and fled to Paris. The unsecured liabilities of the firm amount to $30,000. 2 W.. C. Reed, eharged with forging and celling naturalization papers, has been acquitted. An unknown female 'child was found .floating in Mission creek. Capture of a Strang Beast In Illinois. How to Pay the National Debt. A correspondent of the Oregonian, signing himself D. J. Schnebly, proposes to pay the national debt in the following manner. . He says the idea was first sug gested by a writer in the Montana Post : " Let every man, woman and child in the nation, so disposed, contribute, ac cording to their means, a greenback, (from five cents up), form in procession on the 4th day of July, march to a bon fire and burn them up. The press could print numbers corresponding ' to the amount burned. They could be depos ited in a box and passed over to the Gov ernment. Ascertaining . the amount de stroyed, the government could then issue new notes in the place of those destroyed, and the new issue could go towards pay ing the old debt, thereby preventing any shock; in money circles. I think four years would wipe out the debt and place us in good circumstances as a nation. Mr. S. further says : "As to my earn estness in this regard I will pay $10 out of my slender means, and I have a wife and four children, for each of which I will pledge, in addition, one dollar, mak ing, in ail, $15. This would set at naught all the schemes of repudiation and dishonor, and would relieve the peo ple at once of the heavy burthen.!' 1 National Laughing Stock. East ern papers overflow with ridicule of the dirt-eating propensities of the American -Minister ir England. The New York Herald says : "John Bull continues his roast beef and plum pudding diplomacy with; : JKeterdy Johnson,and , with the greatest success. It is evident that the finale -of his mission in reference to the Alabama claims will be 'Failed from sur feit of English roast beef and plum pud ding An English Christmas will be apt to finish him." Thb "Poyeett Striken." A New York paper says that over forty thousand persons in . that city live by borrowing IBflMV. This cl.lRB tiaa it a rlnnsiint. i j - r avw i i ,au ia tires in all parts of the country. One of their, employments is to denounce the national debt, bewail the sad fate of the "poor man," curse Congress, and in de spairing tones assert that, "Oar taxes are greater than we can bear !" Green Peas in January. A few day since, stalks, on which there were blossoms sad also pods ' containing peas, were taken from the garden of Mr. John Farnham, of Port Madison, W. T. The Seattle Intelligencer asks : - "Can we offer a .better proof of the mildness of our win ters than the above - . ' ' . f - . i . - . . ...... ... ... In the latter part of November last a hideous monster was captured and killed by a party of hunters, iu the Illi nois bottom, fourteen miles west of Jer seyville. One of the parties engaged in the capture thus describes the "ane mile," in a correspondence to tho Mo. licjiublican : We do not know whether to class Liui with animal or reptile. To call him an animal would be degrading to a chicken stealing skunk. He had a body not un like that of a skunk if you look at his back. His belly is brown and rough, and looks like Illinois soil parched and cracked under the raj s of a summer sun. II is head is like that of a crocodile, ex cept broader. His mouth is large enough to take in a small boy whole. His jaws re decked with rows of yellow saw-like teeth, and his tongue is covered with a very rouirh coating, hard as steel. His ears, almost circular, have bristles inside and are as large as the head of a flour barrel. He measures eight feet four inches in circumference in the largest place, in height about four feet six in ches, and ia length eight feet one inch. Monster indeed ! Incredible but .never theless true. We brought his body to town for public exhibition and weighed him 1,G3S pounds avoirdupois. He is in the park west of the Court-house where he may be seen at any tim ureal crowds nave Decn around mui since his arrival this morning. Many persons avo cominz from a distanco to witness the uncomely .specimen. We are, of course, in the dark as to the orign or breeding place of such a nondescript. The most iuformati n we can get is from Captain W. II. ltceu, of Calhoun county, who' says he has heard sto:ie3 of some such thing having been seen some years ago in Cass county, up the river about sixty miles from a Mr. Keach, who says he saw hi3 track about two years ago near Columbiana Landing, in Green county, on the Illinois river, eleven miles above the place where he was killed. Mr. Gledhill will take his likeness to-morrow, and if we can obtain one of the photos will send it to Leslie for the gratifica tion of those who cannot come to see for The Examiner on Grant. Figaro gives the following as a sample of the ed itorials of the San Francisco Examiner since the election of Grant : There is no more a Republic in the United States. A military despot will rule the country with a rod of iron. Grant will scarcely dare to ignore the wishes and opinions of nearly half a million of white voters. The Radicals will find that they cannot control him as easily as they expect. Emperor Grant and his Court of Radical theives will re duce the Nation to bankruptcy. We hope and havo foundation for the hope that Gen. Grant will appreciate the re- sponsibilites of the office he is about to fill, and will cut loose from the influence of those who fondly imagine he will aid them in enslaving the people. Hiram Ulysses Grant, the ton arue tied blockhead, has been elected against the expressed wish of the white people, and they must submit to the negro rule. Gen. Grant will not forget his early Democratic training, and the Rump Oligarchy at Washington will find tbat they have made a mistake in their man. The Washington despot, the generous soldier, the tool of the infamous Radical party, the strong-minded, firm and well-meaning Grant, etc., etc. Income Tax. The National Labor Union, which assembled in New York in September, it is stated, proposes the fol lowing method for assessing an income tax : The class of people who have incomes averaging $75,000 annually, are to be taxed 25 per cent, of the amount ; the class having incomes averaging $35,000, to be taxed 20 per cent.; tho class hav ing $15,000, to be taxed 10 per cent.; and the class having $1,000, to be taxed 5 per cent. - In Shasty county, says the Marysville (Cal.) Appeal, beyond Suisun, where the Vallejo Railroad going west strikes the hills between that county and Napa, there is a Camel grazing as if it were a native of the soil and to the man or born. U. S. Mails. Among the advertised list of mail routes to be let to the lowest responsible bidder, we find the following? 15154 From Albany, by Boston Mills, (n. o.) to Brownsville, 23 miles and back, once a week. Leave Albany Monday at 8am; arrive at Brownsville by 6 p m ; leave Brownsville Tuesday at 8am; arrivo at Albany by 6 p m. Bids will be received for carrying the U. S. mails on the above route up to the 26th of February next. Kootenai Mines. The news from these mines is of the most encouraging character. ' It is thought that, the yield of gold and the general prosperity of that country daring the coming season, will be far greater than any previous season. , A water tumor, which weighed 120 pounds, has had a Mrs. Seely, of Troy, New York, removed from it. Wat-er tamor! - Depravity. A girl only nine years old, was found drank in Sacramento, (Cal.) on Christmas day - Hon. Wm. M- Stewart has been re elected U. S. Senator from Nevada. - .. ' ' : ' V tetter Prom Dimmycrat Aim Spooks. Canada, (which is in the Forks ) " - of tho Santiain), State ofOr- cgon, Jan. 20th, 1 860. J Mb. Editor : Arrangements wear maid for regular political meetin's- I certainly think the pressed -age of my distinguished presents had much two do with the same Lein' appointed at hour house ; for Jedodiah Spooks cares know more for partizan or public or National matters than he cares for payiug his whisky bill. "Somebody' 11 tend twj things," he alweighssays. Un like most of hour Dimmycratie replica tors who can't command credit, he "ac cepts the situation,' he says, and "don't care a copper whether the Dimmycratie war debt is paid or knot. The Abolition war debt; even, for which the "poor man of to day" is so unmercifully taxed, don't seem two bother him at awl. "Twon't come off us Dimniy Ann," says he, "fur we haven't as much property a the law allows U3." I acknowledge I al weighs feel a little down-cast over this last re mark, for it reminds' me of the pore w!:te trash from which Jedediah Spooks de scended. It's of know use trvin' two ml conceal family or, political pedigree. Such things icill out. The pore man is knot two blame for the failin"s of his ants-sisters ; and it's consolin' two think that most of hour neighbors sprung from just such aots-sisters : Another cosola tion i.3, they're awl Dimmycrats. Mr. Editor, forgive this digression. I could'nt help it. It was 6 weeks bce-4 election. At Iast 2 dozen Dimmycratie veterans wear assembled. I had abandoned the liberal idea of furnishin' awl the whisky and the nieetia' wer as dry as a salt mackerel. Two this day I am knot Abel two remember how things got start ed. 1 have a dim rccolection of seein' the Kernel rise two his feet, but of the length of time consumed in gcttin' mat ters under weigh I have no conception. Perhaps I was a little boozy. I had previously forty-fied myself with as much needful as I deemed necessary for my dignity. The Kernel was eloquent, and I gradually grew interested. As I list ened two his burnin' words concernin' the persecutions hour glorious Dimmycrafie party had endured from tho day inn which the tyrant Lincoln mounted the Abo lition thrown until the present period of time ; as he poor-Trayed inn glowing col ors the hew-main acts of Dimmycratie Generals inn there glorious struggle for independence ; as he feelingly pictured the inite-y sorrows of the pore freed-men who refused two bee comforted bee-caws they wear slaves know longer ; as he di lated upon the honors of the lata Abo lition crusade, which he stiled Aun un provoked as-salt upon the time honored institutions of hour aut3-sisters, and last ly, as he concluded with Ann honest fervent, pious, and truly Dimmycratie malediction against the Black-Republic-Anns who had burdened hour once hap py people with a debt whose mighty mag nitude know man could calculate . Mr. Editor, myhreath failetli. The mag nitude of that man's ideas is absolutely overwhelming. Let me cry ! There ; I feel better now. The speaker subsided amid a storm of applause. Elder Grey Back arose. Stepping up two the ex hausted Kernel, he caught him inn a long embrace. "God bless yew for a bed-rock Dimmycrat," he said fervently. We've had refreshin' times two-night. We'll Seemore inn November." "See more what ?" thundered the Squair. Everybody laughed at this, and there was Sow much confusion that I could distinguish nothing more. The as sembly dispersed and when I awoke two consciousness, I found that it were morn ing. My head ached, I was stiff with cold, I felt like Jedediah alweighs looks the next day after a spree. From him I learned that the Dimmycratio party of Can-ada had become thoroughly organ ized and was marchin' strait on two No vember and Victory. A-Iass! A-lass ! DIMMYCRAT ANN SPOOKS, - which is Ant to the illustrious Pastor Petroleum Verdigris Nasby. Petition lrom Vermont. Recently a petition was presented in the U. S. Senate from the citizens of Vermont, which asks eight things of Congress : First to pass J enckes civil service bill; second to complete and pass a new tax bill, with reduction where ever possible ; third to reduce the ex penses of all the departments ; Fourth to put the Indian affairs under the war department,, and 'stop frauds ; fifth , stop the sale of Indian lands to large speculators ; sixth grant no more bonds to railroads ; seventh stop useless appro priations for custom houses and hospitals; eighth legislate for the speedy resump tion of specie payments. It is believed that these eight points will be supported by General Grant. " ; ; . Stockton, California, has a Sunday School for Chinese. STATE ITEMS. From the Dallas Signal-of the 19th we glean tho following items: M. B. Hendricks is to commence the erection of a steam flouring mill the coming spring, at Wheatland, Yamhill county. Tho enterprising citizens of Independ ence are agitating the question of build ing a large steam flouring mill in that flourishing village. They have the money and the nerve to invest it. From the Jacksonville Reveille we learn that: But few men are seen upon the streets; no women; but 'now and then a boy, hastening upon some errand and never a dog or cat. Lonestuie timc3. A case of small pox ut the" Mountain House is reported. The person afflicted is a traveler from California. Miners are yet idle for want of water. Several heavy rains have fallen recently, but the dry earth seemed to swallow each at a single draught. The; small pox patients at the pest house on Kanacca Flat, under care'.Mr. Lang'ey, are sai.l to be doing well. None of the patients have died. It has been stated here, that resolu tions have been passed at Phoenix to prevent the appearance of small pox. A citizen of this place remarked that reso lutions would prevent it, provided they were made strong enough '. There have been no new cases reparted, for this week, to Friday night. There is hope that the epidemic is abating. But let no efforts bo relaxed, and no precautions abandoned. Caution and vigilance now may prevent further ravages. - We understand that Win. Turner, Esq. has been appointed agent at this place to sec after the Indians at this place feed and clothe them. Their proper place is on the 'reservation. Why are they not there? The patients at the pest house, who are all under treatment by Mrs. Round tree, are reported as convalescent, with the exception of Mr. Giluiore, the man who, in his delirium broke pest house, a. d wandered ivcr the , mountains, one cold morning, from 4 to 8 o'clock ; and it is said that he will probably recover. A difficulty occurred at Uniontown, last lucsday, between Jally bnnth and a 111 T- 1 1 " negro canea ien, in wmcu jscn was badly cut up by Smith. On Wednesday, Smith had an examination before Squire Mee and was discharged. Our informant Mr. Colwell stated that Ben's wounds were dangerous, and would likely prove fatal. I As near as we can learn, there have been reported up to the present time 44 cases of small pox; of this number 11 have died just one fourth of all. It seems that the disease is attended here .with greater fatality than any other locality on the coast. But it is proper to state, however, that all who died were persons unprotec ted by vaccination, if we are cor rectly informed. Fires sre constantly kept burning through all the streets and on the prem ises, of! nearly every citizen of town. Pitchwood is furnished by the authorities; while old leather, rubber, sulphur, &c, is added to the lire3 from which dense volumes of smoke ascend, aud hang like a dark pall over the afflicted town. The object is to disinfect the atmosphere; and it i3 the prevailing opiuion that good results will ensue. Then bring on the pitch! Keep up the fires, and make this a city of smoke, so loug as t,he contagion continues. The following is from tho Jacksonvilla Sentinel of tho 16th: . The severe cases of the confluent type that have resulted in death are, John Walker, Joseph Martin, John Martin, James Hubbard, Bertha Breitbarth, Mrs. Brewer, Sophia Love, Isaac Cowan (col ored), and three squaws. The cases that have recovered are six members of the Roundtree family, four of the Martin family, John Stowe, Chas. Harris, J. T. Hunt, Wm. Thompson, Geo. Hibbard, Smith. Mitchell, Stowe Senior, and one squaw. There are at present under treatment in the two hospitals and in various resi dences, Wm. Gilmour, Tarn More, Chris Wintjen Jesse Hugins, Thomas Brown, Lake, Ed. Pitts, Jno. Atkinson, Chas. Williams, T. Gaston, Chrs. Bryant (child) Nancy Dews, H. Hoover, Joe. Gray, Geo. P. Funck. This makes forty-five in all, eleven of which, or nearly one fourth have termin ated fatally. This is a terrible per cent of mortality, showing that the disease is of a very malignant type and admonishing the people of any community to use ex traordinary vigilance against it. In addition to the above, there have been a very few cases of very light var ioloid reported, which have been cured without other treatment than care and attention to diet. Just as we go to press Pitts and Atkinson have both died, and a new case, Henry Getchen, under treatment. The Eugene Journal of the 16th has the following: The Common Council had procured a house to be used as a small pox hospital, should any cases occur in Eugene City. The Odd Fellows and Masons had united in providing a place for the re ception and care of any of the members of either order who might be so unfortu nate as to be afflicted with small pox. It was reported that lambs were being killed by cayotes in the vicinity 'of Eugene City. - Henryi H. Gale, editor and proprietor of . the Roseburg Ensign has sold his in terest in the paper, and retired from the business. ; - We gather from the Ensign that in the Abraham's case a council of seven phys icians decided that re-amputation of the leg was not necessary ; the operation of the removal of a "portion of two nerves, and a sub-cautaneous division of a ten don" was perfumed, which relieved the patient immediately, and Mr. A. is re ported now to be doing well. S. Vanard, who left Douglas county and went to Lane, to be treated for a tumor, was reported dead. No small pox cases reported in or near Roseburg. The Salem Union Lt aires the particu lars of a revolting murder, committed on Monday last, in Yamhill county: The news reaches Salem thai Presley rr .it i i -ii i . . . . J unit nas Killed ins father, Mathew Hail. Mathew nail lived in Chehalem valley. i amain county. 'rcs ey. Hall, a man about i,o. years cf age, tells his story something after this stvle: Before day light, on Monday morning last he heard nis iattier and mother in an altercation. He went to their room -and stopped it, afterward, about breakfast time he heard another racket in the room of the old folks, he proceeded thither and found that the oIJ nmn was whirminir his wife. this so eniaged Press that he got a shot gun and fired both barrels at his father. fining him. .Press tnen ned and at tempted to swim the Willamette river, but changed his mind and wandered off to McMinnville, where he stated that he had committed a great crime and wished to give himself up to the authorities He would not state what he had done, and it was not known until Tuesday that he liaa killed his lather, i Mathew, the murdered man, was between seventy and eighty years of age; he removed from South Carolina to the nemhborhood of St. Louis, Mo., iu 1S27, and 1847 helim migrated to Oregon, and settled in Che halem V alley, where he has since resided. IIoruicle Murder at Carbon dale. From a dispatch dated Carbon- dale (HI-), Dec. 14th, we get the follow iug : Our community have been in a fer ment of exciteinentsinceyesterday, in con sequence of the commission of one of the foulest murders on record. John Irec- ly, who has been a resident of our com munity for a number of years, while in his own house, between the hours of midnight and daylight yesterday morn ing, was killed by some person or persons yet unknown. The weapon used was evidently some edged tool, supposed an ax. lhe back ot his head was laid open and the brains were exposed to view. His wife states that she was awakened in the night by a noise in the room, heard a blow, saw five negroes- or black men in the room, and heard one man propose to kill the whole family ; that the others refused ; that she screamed, the men fled, and that she alarmed the neighborhood. The County Clerk of Marion county issued eighty-five marriage licenses dur ing the year 1868. In the lower counties of Californlai the Indians are taking the small pox. The payments to the army during the present year were 8123,000,000. NEW TO-DAY. A correspondent asked if the brow of a hill ever becomes wrinkled I The editor replied : . "The only information we can give on that point is that we have often seen it furrowed-" A mountain of magnetic iron has been discovered in Lapland. It is sufficient to supply the world .with magnets. . Reportoriai. Enterprise. A young man about jumping from a train while in motion was deterrcdV by a reporter, who asked him for ' his naie, age, busi ness and residence, for an obituary item. Stockton has a dozen cases of small pox. A turkey weighing twenty pounds was decapitated in Marysville on the 28th. , - Small pox has appeared at Truckee, California. Pay up. MARRIED. At the residence of the bride's father, in Benton count", Oregon, January 17th, 1869, by Key. R. C. Hill, Mr. John F. Lee to Miss Francis U. Holman. At the residence of Deputy Sheriff, B. M. Da vis. Silver City, Idaho, f unday evening, January 10th, by James Lyman, Esq., Henry W. Millard, of the Tidal Wave office, to Miss Annie M. Sum DIED. . On the 17th instant, in Linn county, Oregon, Jcptha Markham, aged 87. Illinois papers please copy. Near Roberts' Bridge, January 16fh, 1869, Sanford W., son of J. B. and Martha E. Roberts, aged 2 years 4 months and 10 days. NEW TO-DAY. FIRST ANNIVEKSARY op - ALBANY FIRE COMPANY NO. 1, TO BS GIVEN AT PARRISH' HAXX, ALBANY, out -s WASHINGTON'S BIRTH DAY, '(February 2d, 1869.) COMMITTEE OF ARRANGEMENTS. D. M. Thompson, N. B. Humphrey, M. V. Brown, N. Baum, John Parker, A.H.Marshall, Chas. Mealey, Ira, A. Miller, ,.: 8. Kobn, A. R. Backus, J. W. Nixon, C. Van Cleve, Jas. L. Cowan. RECEPTION COHMITTEB. OFFICERS OF THE COMPANY. R. C. Clark, W. H. Wood, FLOOR MANAGERS. Leo. Fox, : : -P. C. Harper, A general invitation, is hereby extended. Tickets can be procured of any member of th Committees. Firemen are requested to appear in uniform. -Albany, Jan. 23d, 1869. AMtiKICAA EXCIIAlVCJi:, . . corses or , "'' . Frout and Washington Streets, PORTLAND, OREGON. X.. T. XT. Quimby, - - - - Proprietor. (Late of the Western Hotel. TfHIS HOUSE is the most commodious in tho JL State, newly furnished, and it will, be tba endeavor of the Proprietor to make bis gnes comfortable. Nearest Hotel to the steamboat landing. .255- The Concord Coach will always be fonn at the landing, on the arrival of steamships and river boats, carrying passengers and-tbeir bag gajre to and from the boats frt oft h arge. Jlouae ftipftlied Kith Patent Fire xtintuiker Dissolution of Co-Partnership NOTICE is hereby given that the co-partnership heretofore existing between J. E. Bent Icy A Co., is this day dissolved by mutual consent. J. E. Beiitley, Sr., will continue the business, assuming all debts outstanding against the lata firm, and collecting all accounts due the same. , J. E. BENTLEY, Sr. J. E. BENTLEY, Jr. Albany, January 9, 18C9-18ml WESTERN HOTEL, PORTLAND.' OREGON,' " DORCY & HOLMES, PROPRIETORS. THIS nOTEL IS LOCATED NEAR THE Steamship Landing. The Hotel Coach will be ia attendance at all tho Landings to -convey parsengers and baggage to and from the House FREE OF CHARGE. ja9-18 $50.00 I I . - - p Y NOT BUYING BOOTS AKt SHOES X HI. KAST & CAHALIN'S Philadelphia Soot Store, XO.-I12 Front Street, C Opposite McCormick's Book Store, Jan 9-G9-18 Portland, Oregon. TUCKER'S CELEBRATED SIPJEfcllVG BEOS I THE TUCKER SPRING BED IS SAID BY all who have used them to be the CHEAPEST and BEST now in 0SE. We refer with confidence to all who hare tried them. Read the following j i . i - - ; : EXTRACTS FROSI LETTERS: Eubitt House, Wahiiuftiin, Dec. 5, 1866. Tnos. J. Fisher, Esq., Pre. Tucker Manu facturing Co. Dear Sin : I have now in con stant use your "lucKer latent spring Bed in nearly all my moms, and Km gratified to write to you that nothing could be better. very truly your obedient servant, C. C. WILLaRD. " Metropolitan Hotel, Wathing-ton, Dee. 6, 1S66. Tnos. J. FlSiinn, Pres. Tucker Manufactur ing Co Dear Sir : Soma two years ago tba beds of this establishment were thoroughly refit ted with your superior "Tucker Patent Spring Bed," which, since then and now, have given the patrons of this Hotel nniversal satisfaction., Very truly, A. R. POTTS. These beds are now manufactured, by permif sion ol Patentee, at Albany, Oregon, and are for sale at all the principal furnituro stores in Port land, Salem, Albany, etc. . For particulars address, E. CARTER & SON., ALBANY, OREGON. Dec. 28, 1868-16. I BARROWS. L. E. BLAIX. S. B. TOUMO. J. BARROWS & CO., ARE CONSTANTLY' RECEIVING Fresh Supplies or NEW GOODS! DIRECT FROM' San Francisco, which they , will sell CHEAP FOR READY PAT ! TIIEY ALSO DO A General Commission Business! Zjesal BOUGHT AND ' SOLD Albany, Oct. 24, '68-7. and Manufacturer and Dealer in all kinds of FURNITURE & CABINET WARE, HATTItASSES, ETO, . . . . ... .. ., , Under the "States Rights Democrat" office, FIRST STREET, oet24'68-7 , ALBANY.