The Albany register. (Albany, Or.) 1868-18??, August 29, 1873, Page 3, Image 3

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    ALBANY REGISTER.
8
BUSINESS CARDS.
JOHN CONNER,
BANKING
AND
Exchange Office,
ALBANY, OREUON.
IvEPOSITS RECEIVED SUBJECT TO
cheek at sttfht. , , ,
Interest atlowuil ontiinedenositsin coin.
Kxclmiwu Port Hind, Sim Franeisco,
and New York, for sale at lowest rates.
Collections ma It and nroiimtly remitted.
Refers 10 II W. CoriHitt, Henry Falling,
Ranklim hours from S A. M. to 4 P. M.
Albany, fob. i, is7i-v3
Komethlng New in Dentistry-
Ult. B. O. NJII'I'H, DU3TIIST,
H VSI.IK'ATKIHN ALBA
ny.anil luwtne new In
vuiitUiu in puiu; work.wliuli
VOIISIIS 111 uiaw H . ,,, hnln
in the moti, u wi noui ;
roof as luireiofore. it gives the woarei the
wSrerrto ftwS-ose of thy tongue W the
rMfoftue mou h in talking ana tasting.
It is the Smlih Purytne patent.
Teeih exiractel without pa". tw
mended, wlusi hot' broken or divided.
Gfri ik net: Kirs, si reel . OMt of Conner's
Bank (iiii stalrsi, Albany, Oregon. 7v4
CITY MARKET,
MUST NTIIKKT, AI.BAXY, OREUOX,
J, L. HARRIS,
PROPRIETOR,
YY
nix EN PEA VOlt TO KEEP-COM
siantly on lianuannisi'i".
A I.I. KISU OF
Which will Be f the very heat quality
Tli, hi h" si market price paid fr beeves
ttfwestofFerry.onuthridt
of First street. hawuo.
Alismv, Dec. i'- M7l-l."v
JOHN SCHMEER,
DKALK.lt IN -
Groceries & Provisions,
ALBANY, OUKGON.
HAS .1CST OPEN KD HIS NEW WOOER
establishment on corner of Ellsworth
and First streets, with a fresh slock of
Groceries, Provisions, Candies, Cigars, To
bacco, Ac., to which he invites the atten
tion of our citizens.
In connection with the store he will keep
a Bakery, an 1 will always have on hand a
lull supply of fah bread, crackers, Ac.
' Call and see me.
JOHN SCHMEER.
February lt(-'Mv4
TIKMVG - - TURNING.
i
5
I AM PREPARED TO DO ALL KINDS
of turning! keep on hand and make to
rder rawhido-lwttoinod chairs, Ac. Shop
near the Mills an 1 Hosiery, Jeirerson, Ore
gon Branch shon near "Manolia Mills,"
Albanv. where orders for chairs, turning,
Ac, can lie left. JOHN M. MKTZLEB.
Jefferson, Aug. 4, 1872
PETERS &SPEIDEL,
XANUFA(Tl'RKB8 OP
Carriages
6c Wagons,
Of Every Description,
ALB AX Y, OREGON.
MANUFACTURE TO ORDER ANY
and all styles of
Wagon. Carriages, Hack,
Ac at as reasonable rates as tho use of
cowl material and first-class work will jus
tify Rennlrlnu neatly and expeditiously done
t low rates.
Shon on Ferry between First and Second
"reetfi. PETKBS A SPEIDEL.
Albany, March 7, 1873-27
Notloe.
OREOON A CALTFOBNIA RAILROAD
Comiwiv, Land liennrtment, Portland
Oregon, April , 1H72. Notice Is hereby
given, that a vigorous prosecution will lie
Fnstltutod against any and every person
who trespasses upon any Railroad Ijind,
hycnttin''andivmovini,'tm'ierthercfrom
before the same is BOUGHT of the Compa
ny AND PAID FOR.
AH vacant Uml li odd numbered sec
tions, whether surveyed or unsurveyed,
within a distance of thirty miles from the
Hue of tho road, belongs to tho Company.
I. R. MOORES,
Bvttt Land Agent.
i TMHf V.'m
K
FOKKIMlf MEWS.
Intelligenoe was received in Mad
rid on tlie 16th inst., of an unsuc
cessful attempt being made upon
the li?e ot Don Alphonso, brother
of Don Carlos. Tlie would-be as
sassin was taken and executed.
Prii.ce Napoleon has been elected
President of tlie 1 'unnofl General ..t'
Corsica by a majority of 30. The
Prince on accepting recommended
that its proceedings be confined to
matters of deiartmeutal interest.
The Turkish troops have at last
captured anl killed the Carayanyo
brigands, who were implicated in
the brutal massacre at Marathon.
A liattle lias transpired at Berga.
Spain, l)etween Republican and
Carlists, which resulted in a bril
liant victory for the former after a
f)eserate conflict. The ar'ists lo.t
90 killeil atil 300 wounderl, among
the latter ut 'whom were Generals
Sahalls and Trestany.
The Ualian Government has re
ceived intelligence ot the dispersion
of a noted band of robbers who
for a long time operated in the
vicinity of Salerno. Six brigands
were killed and the rest captured.
i'A-IFM' MUST NEWS.
Prom Salt Lake, August 22d,
comes the following: Judge Emer
son sustained defendant's demurrer
in the case of "Ann Eliza Young"
vs. Brigham Young tor divorce.
The decision is against the jurisdic
tion of the District Court. The
Judge held that the Probate, not
the District Court, had jurisdiction
in divorce cases. This is in direct
opposition to the opinion of Judges
McKean and Ilawley, virtual y of
the Supreme Court of the Territory
The case again comes up before
Judge McKean in October in the
District Court. Rev. C. C. Strat
ton, Methodist Minister, has oft'erd
to vindicate himself in a long card
in a newspaper from the charge
of influencing Ann Eliza Young to
enter a divorce suit and join the
Method Church. He makes grave
charges against her lawyers and
asserts that' they attempted to fleece
their client, lie admits acting as
confidential adviser but vindicates
himself from the old charges of
scandal in the ministry in Oregon.
He gives tlie history of his connec
tion with the effort to compromise,
which was somewhat important,
but as he holds, not controlling.
He defies the world to prove that
his ministerial character was im
paired. He is not ashamed of his
crime and will not be badgered out
of a correct nor into a false position.
It is understood that the legal ad
vi ers of Mrs. Young will give
their statement to-morrow. Great
interest is displayed by the commu
nity. The discussion promises to
be warm.
Laura De Force Gordon has pur
chased the Narrow Gauge, a week
ly newspaper published in Stockton,
Cal.
The wheat crop of Clackamas is
better than good.
From Eugone depot 70,000
pou i. ds of wool have been shipped
this seasoii.
At Lafayette wheat fluctuated
from 75 cents to 83 cents during
last week.
On Friday of last week, a sjn of
Ro'uert Ford, Esq., dropjied insen
sible while at work in the harvest
field on the Luckamute, in Polk
county, from sunstroke.
Columbia Conference of the M.
E. fJluirch South, will meet at
Brownsville on the 3d of Septem
ber next. Bishop Doggett will
preside.
The Ilmrk Eye says: "A fellow
not a thousand miles from here,
stole a widow's calf. She sued
him and recovered the calf and 30
So much tor trifling with a woman's
calves."
Wheat was selling at Oregon City
from 90 to 86 cents per bushel last
week.
About 80 wooden tenements were
destroyed by tire in China-town of
Virginia, Na., on the evening of the
23d.
Flood at Pioche, Nevada, lately
have done considerable damage.
Judge Tillford and Smith, coun -
sel for Mrs. Ann Eliza Young, in
tlie divorce case, have published a
long and pungent card in reply to
Kev. C. C. Stratton, charging him
with interfering in the case and at-
tempting a compromise with Brig -
ham without their knowledge, and
intimating that he received pay
therefor. He is charged with lying
ill asserting that they had defamed
her character. The card is spicy
and strong, and closes by staling
that Mrs. Young's case is not lost.
1 hey believe that she will ultimate
ly triumph. They will appeal to
the Territorial Supreme Court, and
will not trust longer to Mr. Strat
ton. The case is to be pushed
ahead. It causes a good deal of
tak.
John Bingham, Minister to Ja
pan, was in Salt Lake on the 23d.
'I wo San Francisco young bloods
fought a duel with pistols, at Lone
Mountain, on the 22d, 'bout a
woman of ill-repute. Their names
were not given.
On the afternoon of the 24th,
Sunday, Buislay made a balloon
ascension from Woodward's, San
Francisco. A strong west wind
carried him rtjpidly over the Po
trero and when a considerable dis
tance outside Long Bridge the bal
poti rapidly descended, and when
about 20 feet from the water Buislay
jumped out and was soon rescued.
The balloon was also fished out.
Hundreds of people hastened to the
city front supposing the :eronaut
would certainly U drowned.
Empire City titles to real estate
are to be contested in the courts.
On the farm of Mrs. Mcllree, in
Benton county, figs have ripened.
Prof . E. Williams, qt Wes
tern College, Iowa, is to take charge
of Philomath College.
Corvallis last week had about
20,000 bushels of wheat in store.
The chronological chart by Hon.
S. C. Adams, ot Salem, is being
lithographed in Cincinnati. It will
be ready for delivery to subscribers
in about four montns.
Mrs Wilson, wife of the late Hon.
Joseph Wilson, has accepted the
position of teacher in one of the
Dalles public schools.
Mr H. W. (Vandall's sawmill,
situated up in the mountains fifteen
miles southwest of the Dalles, was
entirely consumed by tire on 1 hurs
dv morning of last week. Loss,
fc6000.
Abetter from the Superintendent
of the Oregon and California Kail
road to the 1 'resident of the State
Agricultural Society states: All
stock and articles intended for ex
hibition at the State Fair will lie
forwarded to Salem at tariff rates,
but will be returned free upon pre
sentation of certificate to the Ag nt
at Salem, signet! by the Secretary
of the Association, that such stock
or articles have been upon exhibi
tion, and have not changed hands.
All regular trains will stop at the
Fair grounds during the Fair.
From the Oregon tan we learn
that a party assended Mount I Itxxi
on the Kith and that a Mr. Perry
Vickers, of Multnomah county, re
mained on the summit all night
alone, lie icports that the ther
mometer stood on an average of 4
degrees lielow the freezing jsiint
during the night. Miss Libbie
Vaughn, of Portland, was one of
the party who ascended the moun
tain, the first lady who has done so
this year.
K. Jacobs, J. Jacobs and W. S.
Ladd, have lieen elected Directors
of the Oregon C ty Manufacturing
Company Kr the ensuing year.
There are live districts in Benton
county that have no schools.
I he new light at tape foul
weather was ojicned for the first
time on Wednesday night of last
week.
Portland received her first water
jnclons last Monday evening on the
Dalles boat.
The Bulletin of last Tuesday
says tho sma1l-Hx has died out
entirely in that city at present.
The tew troub'ed with it are recov
ering rapidly and no new cases.
Olympia is to have a shooting
gallery.
The citizens of St Look have
contributed and sent $1,100 to tb
' sufferers at Portland, Or.
J We hear of a stock of wheat
grown on the Nootsack, Whatcom
comity, bearing 125 heads, having
an average of 80 grains to each
head.
1 Preparations are being made to
build a Catholic cathedral at
! Helena, Montana. It will cost
' $75,000.
"Is there any one here who take
exceptions to the rulings ot this
court?" said an Idaho Justice of
I the Peace as he placed a revolver
and Bible on his desk. There was
nary objection.
A iermaueut organization of the
Episcopal Society in Tacoma wa
effected on Wednesday of Inst week.
They have a butcher at Helena,
Montana, who sends his bills with
spelling like this: "Sop bohn,"
''bit' schteck,"etc. Customers find
it as difficult to read the bills as to
j pay them.
j Grasshoppers have made their
j reappearance in Prickly Pear val-
ley, Montana, and farmers are
alarmed lest they take the balance
of the grain left by the first lot
Gen. Kosscr, charged with the
railroad survey of the Stanley
Yellowstone expedition, has submit
ted to the authorities of the North
ern Pacific Railnad Company iu
New York his official report ot re
sults accomplished by the expedi
tion. He finds a new and final
route across western Dakota, from
Missouri to the Yellowstone river,
entirely practicable and satisfactory,
it being snierior to those of former
days. The distance is 205 miles,
21 miles shorter than the survey of
1871. The expedition is now pros
ecuting the survey westward, up
the left bank of the Yellowstone to
Pompey's Pillar, where it ill join
the survey made last year from the
West, and complete a surveyed line
across the continent.
The Oregonian has this: Mr.
N. W. Smith, who owns a farm
several miles southwest of the city,
cut the present season a small
patch of oats of the "Enterprise''
species. Tho oats attained an un
usual height, and were very prolific
as to yield. Subsequently Mr.
Smith has had the oats threshed.
On an average the entire yield will
weigh forty-seven pounds clear of
the sack, which may be regarded as
rather extraordinary. Usually oats
will range from forty to forty-three
pounus to the bushel.
Boise City is $1,200 in debt to
teachers and old debts on the school
house. No fcIiooI will be had
until these aie paid, it is conject
ured. Kev. C. C. Stratton has replied
to the card of Tilford JL Smith, Mr.
Young's counsel iu the divorce
case. He reiterates his former state
ment that he has had nothing to do
with advising Mrs. Young to com
promise, lie accuses counsel of
defaming their client and himself.
He quotes General Maxwell, who
has also a card somewhat hearing
his statement out 'i he ba ance of
the statement is a general denial
lie says that he is opposed to ras
cality iu general, and hopes the
aw will take its course. Finally,
he will have his say. The suit will
go on, it is said, More Judge Mc
Kean, although Mrs. Young is
again reported to be attempting to
settle.
Wheat 00 cents per bushel at
Walla Walla
The new church at Pendleton is
to be built immediately.
Jerry Stanley, of Hilton county,
lost three fingers by a circular saw
last week.
The potato Tot is not so general
in Clatsop county this year as it
was lhst.
Charles Williams, a printer by
trade, of Portland, has taken the
small pox says Ortgonvin,
La Grande is troubled with flies.
Editors can't sleep alter two in the
morning tor them.
The company of troos stationed
at Fort Colvil e has been reduced
by desertions until but 37 men an
swer at roll call.
Thirty feet front nt tho corner of
Fourth street, Walla Walla, could
not l bought tor $2,500