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About The Albany register. (Albany, Or.) 1868-18?? | View Entire Issue (June 20, 1874)
JOT Election returns come in slowlv. a,.)d. ffe W.Rqt let ble to mve tfw 'official vote ot the State. There 'seems to be no doubt, however, 1 about the election of the entire 1 Democratic State tioket, with the single exception of the candidate ... . ror superintendent oT Public In- A rebellion h broken out it, rtruotioil Dr. ffho j$ Kliokan, Central Asia, and already 0ki t,to i. tttteen officnls of high rank have by a Wr majurity iear M Den oeneaueu. care business. r. ft. 0tal Paar for Orffon. 8ATCfbi)AY, JtJNE 2ft, W74. ft--' '- TTTTT 1018 WOUill Wdl- K 4S,J ... .1 ' next Legislature can be classified as Dispatches to the 16th from Ha vana, W. L, report that Marqais Santa Luck has been deposed from the Presidency, and General Gomez appointed his successor. follows: Democrats Senate. 10 : , 9 7 House, 20. Republicans Senate, 11; House, 16. Independents Senate, 9; House, 24 a total of ninety members, thirty in the Senate and sixty in the House. These Upon the arrival of the great 'figures are not official, and when Communist, Rochefort, at Queens- the official count is had, may show town on the 16th, a grat mob sur- a considerable alteration. The In rounded, hooted and hissed, and dependents hold the balance of would have lynched him, had the power, and can prevent any wrong police not have protected him. ' legislation. He was to proceed at once to Lon-! jon J In the French Assembly on the ' " 1 15th, La Rochefoucauld, of the The jury in the case of Thomas ertreme Right iDtro(Jaoed the foL Geand, indicted at the present . lowing resolution, which was read terir of m Marion County Circuit amid the most profound silence: Court for killing Thomas J. Hub-: The Assembly declare that the bard, on the 17th brought in a ver- j Government of France is a mon. diet of murder in the first degree, arohy; that .be throne belongs to with a recommendation to the the head of the bouse of France; mercy, of the Court. George D. ; that Marshal McMahon may assume Coffin, indited for rape upon the ( the title of Lieutenant of the King. person ot his stepdaughter, wasidom; that the national institutions acquitted. be determined by agreement between . fj irM I ,k ir: .1 i nil , , I " iviiiK auu tire uauuum rcurcwn- 1 he hanknint. fwt. a nmriw. tot.ve(( 'Pi . . : . . , , .. , i uo uieawt-oi, excitement tedly passed by the House, provides e . , j. ... , it . , J. k : , , followed the reading ot the reaolu- that voluntary bankrupts, if other-1 . , . ,, wise entitled by honest and fair ' - ... , ,. v. . ... ' reference to a committee of thirty, dealing, may obtain a discharge ... . f , , v Z j?H which motion was rejected by a upon paying thirty per cent., or . . , 3 i l v majority of one hundred. All the upon the assent ot one-fourth in'.,. ... number and m-uhM ia r!MuMgtoIB' mth the eX0et)t,On of W. A tk.-c Il ;i ! Tailbaud, voted against it stantial change from the Senate bill. Providence, Rhode Island, is The Centennial Commission have been at work about one year and the treasurer reports the amount re- having a sensation, which is roth- oeive, UP to APril lsti 1874, as ing less than .balloting for IT. S379!167 ? wni'e expendit Senator. Dixon and Chieffield are ure8 premiflms ptfd architects for ..... . ' i . a .ti.Aj;A. . . the candidates, the first named ap- t" m WT .vywtfBh pnnwng, ana parentMSfeirtff the strongest. How w'anesfllCOTmissiou, foot up long the balloting will continue be-; H5,273 .ljjaving a balance un fore a choice is made, remains to be i expended of 8263,793 58. We are Been. 1 glal, for propriety's sake, that a balance can be shown, although but In San Francisco on die 16th, B. F. Kapthaly, of the Sun, and Charles piX)ung,of the Chnmkle, met on Washington street opposite the Postofiice, in that city, when both drew pistols and commenced pegging away at each other. Seven or eight shots were fired, neither of tbo principals jeceiving a scratch, oui. one oi tne bullets hit a little boy named Henry Mitchell, in the leg, making a flesh wound. Both parties were.rrested and javiled, but both were released during the day, on $15,000 bail each. De Young sent $100 to the mother of young Mitchell. During the melee a ball passed so close to the bead ot a lady coming out ot the Postoffioe that it knocked her down and she fainted away. It is posi tively asserted that N'apthaly fired the first shot We wish to say a word right here. This is a most disgraceful transaction, and we are ashamed of it it is a disgrace to the editorial fraternity that may take oceans ot blood and years of patient industry to wipe out. Fight shots and nobody hit ! Either stop this business entirely, or go out where there's uo danger of scaring women to death and maiming little boys, take a car load of loaded re volvers, and shoot until one or both it's really immaterial is fit only for a funeral. This would look Murder in Portland. The Portland dalies contail full areouhts of the murder of police officer 0. F. Sehoppe, while in the ili-.rltflrge.of MN duty in ttint city last Saturday, from which we con The San Francisco Post suggests that the following additional sec tions be added to the ordinance re cently passed by the Hoard of Su pervisors of that city " prohibiting cheating, or fraudulent or dishonest dense as follows : A man named j practices at card-playing :" u Sec RttjhMt Gibbons W(iit i,if, th Cozy j tion 8. In playing a game of draw- siilnoi. on Onk ravel, a'-id ;if'ier our- chasing cigars for himself and friend, went into the kick yard. The woman keepiug the house going to see what had became of him, the man ! RiVms fired at her. She ran out of the saloou crying murder. Officer Sohoppe being near by went into the saloon, and as he entered Giblens fired and shut him through the heart, killing him instantly. Schoppe was formerly a guard at the Penitentiary in Salem, and those who knew him siieak of him as a faithful officer and a good man. Two Urnulnv Pluun-rN. The jury in the case ot the People i Z VTET va P. P. Wintermute, for the ! f ? I8 D murder of Gen. McCook. at Yank- v 1 ton, Dacotah, last September, on the 3d returned a verdict of man slaughter in the first degree, after The President has Dominated John E.' Cadwalhroder. ot New York,- for Assistant Secretary of being out twenty-one Joww, State; Major Absalom Bird, As- nanalt.v fir mi ncla unrlitnv ? f liA I I i 1 . J j discretion of the Court, but cannot be less thau four years imprisonment. The verdict is generally considered a just one by 4l people of Yank ton. H. 'JDffl.tsq.'has withdrawn from the editoral control of the JackaonviJrAMl4:; During the temporary absence of Mr. Kelly, the paper had been conducted cob. w inn cAprenwu wiRiies, ana against the interests of a large ma jority of the patrons of the paper, which was the cause ot Mr. Kelly's retiring. Mr. Kelly is ftltrong, forcible writer, and he made an ex oellenipgr ,o jtbe Sentinel, On tlesfay ie Ploneere of Ore gon had a grand reunion at Aurora (Dutchtown),on eoorrty which called together more than thous and people. Hon. S. F. Cbad wiok delivered the oration. Consuls General Thomas B. Van Buren, of New Jersey, at Kana gawa; George Pdrnutz, ot Iowa, at St. Petersburg; p. Bydney Post, of Illinois, at Vienna ; Her. man Kreissmah, of Illinois, at Ber lin Paul Jones, of Ohio, at San Domingo; W. A. Young, of Ohio, at Manneheim ; Daniel J, Malar- key. for United States Marshal of ASM i " .1 -i ,V .. Oregon Thomas Adamson, Jr., of Pennsylvania, Consul General at ( iXlW.'.-..-....- I The Illiikn&iibhMl Steal H ! the 1 0 b 14th, in Des Moines, Ilwa, a toy lor named John John son was feund dead in tfie street with his skull eruthed, and lying near a paper on which was in scribed: "This is the twenty-seventh mail we have killed. We will never bo taken alive." f The black stallion, Strideaway, lied on the 15h, t PWfideoce,R. ? iHfeW'vaWfttfeoOO. ike business, and no one would he worried oVpu'todt about it. Sabef It is curious to observe how modes of discipline vary iu different parts of the country among wise, in structors of youth. A Virginia teacher fiiidiiig.that two of his pu pails, ibont the same age, had sot into a diffiortlty, attentively heard the story ot each boy declaring him self to be in the right He took them into a room, bv themselves. f and recommended a square fight upon the spot. "Permanent peace was speedily restored,'' says the record, " and tlicv will nmHahls Drht Masonin kdimn rannrtod -r wvnwnenvJLWOWfl 1 to4&fafatem?wi" wym, In 1830 the population ot Illinois was one and a quarter per cent, of the whole population of the United States; in 1840 it was two and three anarterepef eut.; in 1860 it was five and a half per cent.; and in 1870 it was nearly seven per cent, of the whole. In 1860 it con tained ene-eigtieti of Our popula- tion, in 1870, one-fifteenth. In 1850 Illinois was valued at $156,000,000; in 1860, $871)00,00 and in 1870 her valuation had increased to the benormoSe sum"of2,I21,Q00,000. Ibe marvelouftgrowth ot thjs State ,may we excite thepride of its ofti. reus ai9 causa them to ohallerfce the worW for t parallel;, mm About a thousand years aaro a colony of Icelanders was planted on the westera nos?ofxGaeenland. Thev Went hflMv nnnnfo itinnv) tn fA'ttfttWutii itA there seemed to be to ifttion why thev should not take; reef in the rresfen soil of their new. homes. They built a stone church there and stone bouses to liv are came of the buildere vt''g question that has nevap' Mm solved, and never will be.Tfcw vanished from the face of the earth, and that is all that is known. WbMher bold, oV Mt'WaV irjaHlWrtiu took them TiNf,or whether wandering savages killed thern MBBiMMiell' i Xbetr settlement kknfflni in hiatoiy as Among the ''ioiioers who lath. ered at Aurora on Tuemiay, says the Statesman, the " oldest inhabi- taut " was but a freshlv arrived im. migrant compared with two old veterans of the Colony, named Ileinrich Iveil and Adam Steinbach. Not that these two men were such remarkably early settlers iu Oregon Keil came out with the origiual colony and Steinbach about nine years ago but on account of their transatlantic history, they were the real central figures of the entire pat riarchal gathering. Both Keil and Steinbach are the survivors of. AFOLJ;0-N''s KXPEMTIOX TO MOSCOW, and probably the only repreeenta- itves of that fated army iu the United States. Tiey both wit- nessed the burning of the Russian capital and each has many a thrill ing tale to relate of that most dis astrous campaign. Keil was a member of a company of one bun dred and fifty of whom only three returned to France, all the others having perished either m battle or in the snow banks ot Russia that were the frozen tomb ot so many of the very flower of the beet army of Europe. Steinbach is one of the fifty survivors of a company of two hundred men. Afterward, they were both IN THE BATTLR OF WATERLOO. But in this, instead of being to gether, they fought on opposite sides, Keil with Blucher and Stein back with Napoleon. One ot them is 81 and the other $5 years old. Both possess their faculties well, and. are as fall of soldier pride as in the days when they marched and fought under the most daring if not the best general of history. Tues day was a sort of gals parade day for them. They were out in regi. mentals, and warlike accoutrements, the observed of all observers, and the gayest among the gay, though so infirm aud shaky with age as to Ike unable to sheath their own sa bres. Mr. Jiosco, ot Portland, se cured excellent photographs of them, whioh, with history attached, wil poker a flush sequence shall be deemed to be a better hand than tour cards of a kind ; and the party holding the ' age ' may pass aud come in again ; and every player when raised beyond bis means to respond, shall be entitled to a sight for his money. Section 4. In the game ot euchre, jacR shall be con sidered the highest card in cutting for deal, and in case the dealer is ordered up by his partner, said dealer shall have the privilege of playing alone and scoring four points if he can. Section 5. In the game of pedro, the game shall be counted high, low, jack, game, and pedro. Section 6. Any person de claring that he holds nineteen at cribbage shall be deemed guilty of a violation of this ordinance." In New York on the 15th, Dr. 1'hling, charged with attempting to defraud the Merchant's Life In surance Company by interring a coffin filled witB bricks instead of a dead body, was found guilty and sentenced to the State prison for eighteen months. A Porter county, Indiana, young lady has the ambition to raise two thousand chickens this season. How much nobler it would be, says an exchange, were she to devote her heaven-born energies to poetry, pi. anoe aud croquet. The phicago Times, lately De motratic, refers to "Dick Richard sou" aud "Jim Robinson," citizens ot Illinois, as "the senile remains of the ancient and bad-smelling politi cal prejudice known as the Demo cratic party." . m The telegraphed reconciliation beteween the Pesident at Carl Schurtz is a canard. How to Plant a Tree. possess uncommon interest. 'S&&S' At tbe'riection for Couneilmeti last Monday m Portland, the People's ticket was elected bv an aggregate majority of 549. Messrs. R. R. Thompson, John Catlin and 'Blijah Corbet were the successful candMateB. As soon as tho hi it waa known there was great rejoic- "Bt " aiscoursea music skv wokete and borate were fired off. gweral WJarity prevailed, ljbt When planting don't dig a bole like a bowl cistern, bat dig it just aS deen AS thp Rnil IB tiut lir Aoanar make the bottom of it one-third larger round than the top, aud loosen up the very bottom. Then f! as the tree is planted, throw in first an inch ot real, good, fresh, rich soil ; set the tree, holding it with one hand while on your knees you spread its roots carefully with the other; let the assistant drop the dirt in upon the roots as he would if he had a seiye, and, as it i dropped in, do yon who hold the tree upon your bended knees, work every root carefully oat straight on a level line with the point or junc tion of it with tho main stems, use the 'fingers out-spread in mineiimr the fine dirt with the 'roots, and b careful that not an air space is reft ' at the bottoms, and also that the' earth upon the kwer roots u packed. the hardest or tightest of any. . As yon reach the upper route only see t)ia,t each root is surely sun rounded with earth, and then let the last four inches of earth1 'be-' sprinkled m with spade or abovel, wltliout pressure of foot or any thing else, don't even flat it witkW the shovel, mid be Mire to keeper your own, and Paddy's feet off; for PVfrv nratsnn will ln..t.M !,.,. Jt imp M mm I ha ,m