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About The state rights democrat. (Albany, Or.) 1865-1900 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 7, 1879)
Wu1' """""C HA I A V APIW1UWV. lw W I li I ft I n I 4TS i Inch 12 In. 8Iu. 4 III. Col Col lA Col I Col r 2 3 uo 6 "off Trirf 00 A Ml I 7 Mi 14 (It i go ISS'JKl) EVERY Flit DAY a oo 4 00 6 00 7 HO 10 00 15 00 W, 10 00 m 00 1. IV 0i 00 7 00 12 fM (' 16 t 12 00 18 0 lft 00 2ft 00 an oi 40 io "ft oo 11 4t Wi t ( 0 (M 00 ot i 1,. In ' niornflliill. HnB.(l.p.ilr Cururr Kruutlultilii inl ix'toml T!tinoa notices In the lPosi Geftacana 20 cents per line. For legal and trsmatettt adeitliwnaiiti t'i 00 per square, for the first inaertian, and 50 cents per square for each subaequeut in sertion. TEilMS OF SCBSCKIiTloX: ALBANY, OREGON, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1879. NO. 14. S Crt S 00 ..... 1 0-1 10 VOL. Hinyrle rMy, thrt m.ma(H. ... Single number.. STATE EIGHTS DEMOCRAT ritOFESSIOXAL. CUIUS. C, K vV01.VKTv?E. JS. R. HVMI'liaSY. Ill MrilUKV S WOLVEIITOX, ATTOIINETS AT LAW, AHiar.y, Oregon, i 1VU1 .rti'licv it nil 11 e iVuri tu llw s;.ilt. I'rvHate ii-tt?r ami t'tkv a'tt'inliU Ui fi'ini..t. l.-ii..l Ai'toKNKY AT LAW. .iiunv. ouevov r-CVi'iiiv iipsMTrs in the Odd IVHotv's Tempu.v f7Ta. "'MI LLCS? , rroiiNMiY AT I,Av r tin m tMi( CtiiUls, O I J. A. VAATIS ATTORNEY AK3 CCUNSELG3 AT LAW C0KVALLI3. OUSSofi. n'ill prnrtlo. In all the Con' of th vti. ayoctiee m i n 'mn li.ni.- "Va vlOn-vl. D. M. SAVAGE, Physician and Surgeon. Alban, Orrjen. HAVING On.VPUAT J'hysiit-Medical Just tu KD IX THE to of t'mcni- tMli. his located m A'.fc.; piTOitW ia KromsinV Jjrick, (up vll:!;ti t.iiri ) D. B. Rice, M. D., Ofkicf. r p ta i ::s in m i i.waivs brick, ibwitlomti on tim street had im;r il, :rptt, st I'ifl ci.ro.hij oi" the ii.i!. t D. M. Conic j, AITvM.N'HY AT LAW. iii-iw. oum.ov. Ofkik, 57 wixr h:ot ntkkkt. Njeci.i attention triYMii lo -i;!i.-tei!. . j. .JSJ.V VrroiJXHV AT I, ALUtXV. f'HKM'Oi. ;!!.? In th- ;.vn H,uf 3. W. il." ATTOHNTV AT 3 -"'wile ot..- i.Hr : ! of I i.ii,. r Lr.rk.ix D. r. i-ar. BLACICBUR??, Albany, Orcsjou. J. S. "V7E iT HElirORD, (N'T.RV ITi'.I.H',) attounj:v AT LAW, AlK tM', I .'. "ilrn.L I';!.: t: k iv am.thk ' ht:!;tkkt!ie VbsU milter. isarvtRa in O.U re;inr' T.mi U-. (11:2 j. c. rowEi.i, R. IlILVKt'. POWELL & IJILYEU, ATTOIiXEYS AT LAW, And Solicitors ia rhaawry. AI.fl.4XY. - OKKUO.V. Colktions .rnnipily nia.Ic onall Kuitt. I-oans negotiate"! on ruasoDithie t;niiM. pJ3t1Vice in Folt-r'K Ilrick.'t?" l: k. montaijye. ATTORNEY AT LAW ANI 2Totary Public. Alban-, Oregon. I'riL'trs tore, vlln2.!lf over Jcli n 1st etre.'t. 1. W. BAI.LARII, M.r. J. M. POWKI.f., Jt.f). DALLARD & POV.'KLL, riiysicians anl Surgeons, .?lanoH, Oregon. gJFQtll-te in llnon Iriii 8lor.-TSS vtrmlOtf H. S. BREWED, F;l. 0. Homecepathic Physicia,n and Surgeon. o FFTCK and rcf)ilene on Second street, opphi(e tim Opora IIoum?. 47 II- J. EOUeZTQN,M. DM A tMXS V, - - - - - o k; G V. fniTE IXMTOIt IS A GRADUATE OF THE UXI X VElirilTV M'lifU Ci!t(e of New V'ork, anil U a la.Ce lucmber o Beiievue llosjiital iiediuai Cuilce of r"ni" in City Im St-jr. Iissidence on Sonth id of BeMI .St.. thrift tkxjrs eat uf the main foreet feodhi to ilcjtt'. r. T. fj. CSOLDlSiV, OCCULLST AND AUPJST if treating the various diiti.sjs to which thft eye arid ear are Bu-t, and fei ls conlidntof giving entfr' salistactiori to Miose who may pUttv theinMPlvf.'S under his taro. lurfW - 0. C. Kelly, H. D. E'ssysicia-ii sssssl K is recoil, rOITiia in M'llwainV Block. Reni- danc, one Ixr mirth of U. V. C'aurehr Vl4n8tf . 0. 0. .GLARE, (Successor to J. B. V.'yatt.) Dealer in Usavy arid Shelf Hardware, Iron, Hteel asid jlec-Siaiise'.s Tool. On First street, ono ottr C3t of S. K. Young any, Oregon. '9, AY IBek iSil ' n r vigvil by water les of -tiii: srut !; roxsisrs is rAin'or- l.sulics :jiv.. "Waterproofs, Casshneres, " and Jeans, 15 dos. Bed-Spreads, Ladies' Misses' and Children's Wool and Felt Skirts. ?.nIio Mrrino I ii!rpnr. tets lt-l FlHuurl l utlfrnrar, .Hrrlna anlvn IInnnI SO piper ( anion I- Ihiiii-I. li, Uruy ami lVlilte all wool riunnet. iUO ItrtMm null I2nrhpl 'ollon, Rlitrk, .vy Itluc and Iloltle The Biggest Stock of Hamburg Edging in Oregon I The Finos! Assortment of and Drawers Fall Si.rfc r LAlIi:, CI! I Rij.l !!:oii:ti!s of citltcr arti IT I-! IMIMSMItl.KFOU Mi;TOil.uTK I'KIflX. is your clxancc to lay in your supply, aHd save from 50 to 75 per cent- Hcmexaber the -whole Damaged Stock must be sold, no matter what they bring1. kkmkmi:i;k THE EASTERN-STORE. 112 'nOMA'S Ixx)k fr ttitt aiiViiM fis;ri marked Sheriff's Sale. 1Y VII JJ lion isuwl out of th t'irciiil Court of tb; SutU of Urifon for thet'tmity of l.irm, to mo lirectcil aixl '!ivcr;(J, on tliel.it i:;y of Ortolx'r, 1-S7U. iu favor of I.-a:ic U"th, J. .Sternberg ami A. Viu;heiihiuiKr, partuerM an fStwrr.oerR, Kfiulont A Co., jilainuir-i. and aninvt K. J. Miclmi-l, ilo K n.lant. for tin xtitn of four liurxlrcd an-l 'if,hty-five and 2j lw dollars in U. (S.pild coin, Willi imert iu like -oinattli rsit. of twf Hcpei ccTit. p-raiiiiiirn from tfie 271 h day of September, H7!, ami tho further huiii ol thirty-eight and WI-HHJ ilollarHcohtH I have applk-d Urwm tlis following real property Imrolofoio all-a'-liod at tiio prop, erty of said defendant at tho Ktiilof Haid piaiirtilT, to-wit: IJiniiiiif' at a point wven fliains and thirty-jiino IiiiKM (7 S'J-HXi ciiains) and North iiintieii deffief-M and thirty iiiiniiicH Jlast from the fSouthi-ast cornel of James Miehal'n donation land claim in 'irmn Kliip fourteen (14) ISctith Kange thiee (3) West in IJnn Counly, Oregon, and rnn u'm thence WeHtliveYhainu, thenee North nineteen degrees and thirty ininuteN, JCast thirty-l'jur eliairm and twenty-four links, theneo J-lai't live chains, thenee Noith n nteen degrees and thiity minutes Kant fiva ehainn to tho North lin of Section 13, Tp. U.S. H.3 W.,tiienee l-iutt twenty-four chains and fifty links tolCt irillith'H Nortii wet comer, thenee Mouth nine def?rpe' and thirty miuutex, I-jwst thirl vnine chain and ten link, thenee West, forty ehainn and fifty links U the Kant line of JamcH Michael's donation land claim, the place of bc?mnin;r, and containing one hundred and twenty-eight and 3a-)0J acres, inoro or less; aio iieiniiing at the Kouthwet-t corner or haimiol JohnsoirH claim, Notifi cation No. 2021 , and running in a North. easterly direction on the Western bound ary of naid claim twenty-nix rods, thence in a Southeasterly direction to the oith wewt corner of tlishaOrifiith's land claim, thence West eight rods to the place of be- iinnnif, containing i cres, more or less ; also commencing at the tsouiheast corner of Jared Michael's donation land claim. thence North magnetic 100 rods, thence Wai-t magnetic '2(H) rods, thence .South magnetic KW rods, thenee Ijist magnetic 20U rods to the place of beginning, contain ing zl0 acies, m J p. n H. K. 3 W., princi- paliy in see'-ion 1 1, containing in all 334 70-1U0 acres in Linn County, OreKoii, to gether with the tenements, hereditaments and appurtenances thereunto belonging or in anywihe appei laming, auu on iSulnrday, the :20th day of Kovimher, 1870, at the Court House door in the city el Al bany, ljinn County, Oregon, at the hour of 1 o'eloek I. VI., I wilt sell the taid real property af public auction for cash in hand to the highest bidder, to satisfy said writ, with accruing cents. Dated this 23d day of October, 1R79. I. O. DICKEY, 12w5 Sheriff of Dinu Co., Oregon. ,'. established ihti. SEA SOU OF '. 1879- 18S0. rprns w'arf.iiousb wir.r. eeinthk best JL i urder througlient at tM jjinniiisf ot tlie waxun, iti.ii will tjWre grain mi tlie most f:tvomble ttruiu cim KiiJieMl willi a wiire t):n. 1 projiusii Uxiovnhi my atLclitiii iiMilulvcly Ut tliis liiAihcsn. Partit-ii intcr eU'li are in iLed u cull and sets mn. A. WllGBLEJl, Lpnaeo. Shedil, July 11, 1879. 60tf - k Block, Iain- and must he cost ! tSllIlVl!"!- Ladies Cloth, Tweeds 'nrptM mid Inllluir. ISIark tautl Colored Mlk, Itlnrk l.urfs, Wliiic I.arrM. I.atlli' and Cttllrrpit'M Wool Hoar -!. 9-1 and lo-t KhrrllnK, ."( ir-fM liloKham, (riit'H and lloyw t hllr and C'ol ureil Mlrt. TnwfU. aiiklii. I r loll I.lnrti. liildrm'M I Hood and Jack Ladies Gowns, Chemises in the Vallev ! LDKEN'S & JIISSMS SIIOMS, - :cH tx iiuiiimu to iiirntion. fin: i-i.ack. FIRST STKKKT. TillICK 1II.OCK, Vllxitiv Yil I'. S'.ASJ IlItX KTOUIV am. ! igia mm 'iifc, wm ECS Summons. Cfit'iittj Court of thr Ciiinf; of . Sttifr tit ilri'Hiu: J. D. Cowan, I'laintilf, vs. William .-t- lie, Ix rciidaut. To William Kettle, he above named D fendant. In the name of (he Slate of Oregon, von are hereby ipiired to appear and answer the complaint of the above i'laintilf in the above entitled Court, now on file with I he Clerk of haid Court, by the tirsi day of the next regular term of Vaid Court after tho publication of this summons for ix weeks, to be begun and held on the lirst Monday ol DeeemlKir, 1H79, and answer the com- pia.nt of the plaintili' herein ; and you ar" hereby not i tied that if you fait to apfiea' and answer said complaint, as hereby re quired, the piiiinlilt' Mill take judgmenl against you for want of such answer lor the sum of ?1 13 14, and for interest on $70.14 theieof from Aug. 1st. 1H7K, at the rate of JO iter cent, per annum, and for In terest on 7. 00 from Oct. 187K, at the mteof ten per cent, per annum, and for the costs and disburseuieniH of this action, PubiiHhed by order of H. A. Jhns,Judgo oi court, wini (i order liears date Hept, atlb, 187U. Jj. H.1S.V, 0w7 Att'y for l'laintin. MUSIC ltOOI18: WIGS NETTIE PIPER wiwhes to Inform the puMie that she will i-ommence givin' inti ui tion in inusio at her looms over ii.trhll's llrllg store, on the I'.ih if SdiiU iiil.er. The terms will bo an follow: Piano, Organ, and Cultivation. of Voice $15 per quarter. liudiments of Vocal Musk", 3 per quar ter. fsHTK quarter will be three months, and two lessons will be given each week. Vlin3tf ST CllAKLES HOTEL, AI.CAKT, OREGON. 31 US. C. IIOL'K, --- - Proprietor. Thi Xdiime haa bocn thoroujjlily renovattHl from top Up bottom, ami in now in tlendii condition for tilt; entertiiiniiietit of travc-leni. The Hfitlts in hiiiplH-(i with everv lliinif the iiiur kt't afTordt. Hantplft rooms tor eornmarcittl men. irvnllf, IrliARon and liallan KfaseOfHre. Vlillftf DITCHING. O. tl. TATI.OU has commenced bimi and vicinity with his neirs m this city ditching machines, and is prepared to do all work in his lire on short notice and at lower rates than the same work can be done for by any one elwe. The machine cuts a diteh 2 feet deep, 5 feet wide at tlie top and 18 inches at tho bottom. I'ay ment may be made bv note, payable Jan uary Mt, IfiSl, without intercut. lerniM, 3H cents per rod. Address O. C. TAYLOR, 13m3 unction City, Oregon. HOW WE PARTED. am aii ol.lerly, grave man now.i.iuit tlio foverisl not turn Ol wnen sum holdrt itway in men a littarta, uui the lime was with inn aa wilh all oth erswhen all tho world teooiPd iiaucns ucking tho Might of one woman's wuile, ami the Round of one woman' voics She loved me, too, anil nothing hcciii I ahle to deatroy our proapeot of inu- 1 tual lutppineRi., mnco none ooiii.i mt ua niiv And vet. I ait alone, a Hud. broken-1 .J- : '. . heai teil miui, wlulu aha 1 love aleea in n" S". wy ''" " jici mn nx-iiii tne pant once morpiiiu i ell how it came alsiut that I am alone il the world. I had iimt retunied from my round of irofcHaional viaita, and was aitting in my study one bright June morning, when a messenger nought mo in great haste to nay that 1 had been aent for by a lady who thought her child waa Iy- 112. 1 lost no tune in hurrying to the ad ckh given me a amall bonne in one of the unii'tcat of our Ixmdon suburb, the door of which waa opened by a voting and very beautiful woman. on uie the Doctor I alio aatu, iu a vi.u u of woitdeiTul aweetneaa. I bowed aaiu-nt. 'Then vou will nave my darling 1' he wont on. "You must you must!" 1 aiisweml nothing, but uwew liear- r and looked down upon the uncon acioiiM form of tho little aulTerer. He waa a beautiful boy, aciiroe thre yeara of age,wilh the dec at blueeyea, wide on and brilliant with fever, which had also left it crimson stain upon each cheek, in startling contrast to the marble whiteness of the brow, A few momenta' profeaaiona examin ation convinced me that the child waa beyond the reach of profeaaional nk ill, and, except to alleviate hi suffering", my avi viM-a could avail nothing; but how to tell the mother! "You can save him, DocUm!"' The quint ion waa an appeal. I would have given ail 1 iKMaeiuiea in that mo ment to have taken her hand in mine and anawercd "Yea;" but I dared not paltei with the truth. "l will do all that I can," I 1. "It ia but little." "He will die, you meanl she gaajied out. He fihall at least die iu is ace," I re plied. lie him! I not, muitt not die, she wittlwl- '! Heaven. Hrm rft liim in nir ' : . ' Siiiiro me my boy" he prayed again. sinking on her kneea and clasping her arms about the little form. .v Hour inter we uniooaenea the Hnging touch from the then south mould of clav, and bore her acnHchwa to lu-r Im. She knew nothing fur day a, not even when we laid the baby in his Kpoiieaa coiti n ana uore mm to tbe graveyard. W hen mi lirst recovered! conscioun lits J wa laiiln her. Mio Imjltea low ii nt her nrms; they wem empty. She glanced alsiut ihe room: it waa sl ight. "Why did you wv nie," she cried, When you could not save for me all ll.at made life swiH't?" Hut when she grew stronger and ilmer she i hanked mo for my care li.uikcl ntx ho humbly that I felt I won!- fur rather bear her reproaches. Her child hud been dead six month when I began to understand my heart's secret, and to learn why 1 still con tin tied my visits, no longer professionally pared. Una evening aa 1 enlcrea iier rooms 1 noticed a alight shade of " embarrass ment in her manner. Uoctor, she said, "you have never sent me your bill." It is very large, I answered, grave- ly, "That does not matter, she replied. 'I may not have tho entire sum neces sary at my command I am net a rich woman but in time I promise to pay it all." "I must have immediate payment, answered. "I cannot be satisfied but with the whole." Her face paled. "The amounll" llut I could no longer wear my mask "Yourself my darling! With this, and this only, will I be content. You told me the life 1 helped to restore was val uelcss to you. I jet mo gladden it with a little sweetness. 1 his ia the on ly payment I will have. Tell me.dear- eat, will you give it to me "Y on have asked me nothing ot my life, she said "I wish to know nothing, ' I replied, "I love you; I need no more except your love. "How good, how generous you are 1" she whispered And softly her little hand stole into mine, and I knew that 1 had gained my treasure. Her mother-heart was empty, robbed and despoiled. Perbai it was for this reason it turned to me for the comfort which I gladly gave, At last our wedding day was fixed, when one evening, as I was preparing to go to her, I heard a hurried knock " I 1 at my door, and, ere I could reach it, it was thrown open, and Eleanor, white and breathless, entered my room. rr riai-linai" T Buiil Imnt.nninff to J " m- 1,0. i.u "What, hua l.roiurht vou t...v ' ' "-- ' a J "To tell you," she replied, in a calm, cold voice, "that I mav never be your wife." And whvt" "Because he has come back! lie is herel He claims me!" And with a low cry she fell fainting to the floor. I lifted her in my arms and laid her upon a couch, and at last succeeded in restoring her to consciousness, only to hear tlie whole miserable story. She had married, when she was but eighteen, a man who was utterly un worthy of her, and by whom, shortly afterward, she was deserted at a time when she most needed histenderest care snd devotion; though in justice to the man, it must be said that he was in ig norance ot this fact. Six month after her child wan born, and they wore supported by her own t . . . , , r,,uin(M, j ow, IKaiuiion. When tl.n Wt.v wan thriM montlia old. the rumor, aoemincly mib- atantiated, cached Iter of her liuslmnd'a death. This afternoon. Hitting in her room thinking of me ami the new life mooii to begin for tin both, a knock had come to 114, j,. Hhe aprang eagerly to open u thil)ki u WM m whn iml;ml i i . . . ner ni her huabatid stood un the lliresli- l0ti i He hail returned, renentant and auc :.. .i. " i...i. ,.e i. happy futuro which might yet be in store for him. At her feet he prayed for forgiveneas, until, fearful I would come, she roused from the stony apathy into which abe had fallen, and, making some pretext, had thus nought me. I was mad; I forgot reason and hon or. I aiked her what were thi man claim upon Ler eomiatred to mine. 1 entreated her by all aha held sacred in the sight of heaven to ! mine mine a ahe already was in the eye of heav en! Hut, thank God ah, even i can aay it now my darling was true to herself, true to me, true to her little dead child, true to the reiientint man who had returned to her. It waa a whirlwind which shook to the center both our souls, but she wss tbe stronger of the two stronger in her own pure womanhood and so ahe conquered. When we parted that night, we knew it waa to be forever, and no it proved for five year she lived a true wife to the man who now vainly sought to atone, and then her heart broke. Just before her death ahe aent me, on a slip of aper, these words: "Ood oill m ert ua in lloataur No more no word of love. But that one sentence brought Dill comfort U me. I look at it every night before I go to rest, each morning before I seek my daily toil, and know that some day I shall be rewarded, that some day J shall meet my love above. tKMIU aua HABIT. Bad habit are mainly the reiult of want of care or mismanagement on tbe part ef those having aharga of the ani mal. They have no knowledge of when they do wrong or when they do right. They are ignorant uf all before them ; the paat and present alone are theirs. It ia an old and true adage that loranee is a blank sheet on which we may write, while error ia a aenb bled one, from which we must first erase." Kraaing bad habits in animals, aa in ourselves, ia one of the most un pleasant labor known to dim who baa charge of animal natures. I'levention ia much the easier and safer method. When a habit baa become confirmed, a self inflicted punishment should be sought for. When such means cannot lie (uloptexl iiecuro cnforctMl olioiliencp, not by whipping, and if possible de prive the animal of the power to return to a practice of the habit. Many jier iitcious habit are tbe result ot over tasking, and cornea aa an endeavor of the animal to obtain rest, shift the bur den of the harness, Ac. Let it be borne in mind that training or instruction must precede knowledge, and that the brute haa neither knowledge of cause, effect, nor our hope and reason to stim ulate to labor. The labor of tho ani mal k obtained by man's power over him : it is not a voluntaiy offering. Let not, then, that power bo abused. Teach! instruct, well and carefully, and prove yourself worthy the service of a well- trained, noble animal. WAS IT A MAMArait Within five miles of Lovelocks sta - tion on tbe Central Pacific are three old forts which were doubtless thrown up as a protection against Indians by the pioneers of California in the early days of the cold excitement. One of them is a good five miles south of the road and the others about four. Tbe The smallest and apparently the oldest bears evidence of very severe usage. The whole space inside the walls ia covered with waaron irons of everv kind. Hub r intra, thimbles, tonnie straps, etc.. and bushels of small scraps could be gather- ed up. Old settlers say that they car- rind off tires, axles, etc.. enouch for twenty wagons large and small, Many emn barrels have also been nicked nn in the neighborhood. P. A.fMoses has used a dozen truoto hancr harness on in his stable. Who can solve the mys- tery of this silent old fortt But for the nresence ef tbe old irons, one wonld sav that a fire had got the start of some corralled train and burned their wag ona,.but in that case their guns at least would have been saved. In a hostile country every man would save his chil dren and weapons together. -A'eno Ga zette. WANTED BAIN. mi 1 I 1- r l xue coioreu people oi suiih-j vvuumj, Ark., nra ved verv earnestly lor rain, rl ' . ' . ... . The leading church engaged in this la- oor organized asort oi -prayer-oee auu sent over into an adjoining county and oorrowea a iew memuers, agreeing to borrowed a few I nav a beavv interest in nvm '.. .. .. .. .. - I lven this failed : but tbe cow ot emer I ' .. . trencv was taken bv the horns when the preacher issued the following proclama tion : " We's bound for to hab enough members in dis church to meet ao occa sion, and I hereby sets my hand and I seal to de artikel what says, "all col- lured persons, respectable o otherwise, in dis county and all de counties jinm. I is declared members of dis church till aftor de nex' rain." tivn . ..;! ,miu, vutiK ") .". """"1 :r i . :.i f.,.,, pugmwin uiiito,;u. wife is now living : therefore pray for her." And while you are about it, don't forget to pray for ber future bus- band ; he needs praying for as much as she does Btonbwall Jackson's only daughter is attending school at Baltimore. MOBBf. TUB IftlKYTttR. Ill rlbf la hi PrJeets-Vrbal II '! I Wrfrnil Mil Faleaf. It is wotth while to pick up now, while it ia atill lioasible. soma few anec dotes of Samuel Fin ley Breese Morse, the inventor of the telegraph, and to record them. Such incidents, trifling though they may be, allow us to form some alight estimate of this remarkable man. J'erhiii the most salient ixunt that Morse hail was the ftositive belief in the necessity of his invention. There was no half hearted cess about him. Such men as Bernard do Fatissy are few in thi world. The French potter was willing to burn his baby'e cradle, providing it would furnish fuel for heat ing his kiln. Putting aside as much as we may the difference of age aud time, I'alissy seeking to Mrfoct hi dish, or Morse to develop his telegraph, the divergence between tbe two ia wide. The former was groping for perfection in a physical thine. Men had eaten from earthenware, had slaked their thirst from jHiUrrtr, ever since tbe world waa known. It behooved I'alissy, per haps, to invent new glazes, new forma, new ornaments. But with Morse it was to convince the world of a new method of imparting information, to project something which was in a cer tain measure ahead of them. It waa a novel mental process, which was to be driven through mople's heads. If tak ing 10 as the auni total of the difficul ties in tbe way of the introduction of the telegraph, the Morse instrument, the system of wires, these can hardly be said to have represented more than a quarter of the trouble. Of course all this has been written and rewritten, but this element of farsightedness must place Morsean a higher plane than that accorded to mere inventor. It waa some time in 1843, while the first work was being prosecuted, that some labor er near ISaltimore were digging a trench, in which tho lead pij was to be placed. hich incased the wires. A heavy thunderstorm came up. Pro fessor Morse was watching tbe men. It rained so bard that Morse and a son of his sought refuge in a neighboring shed. The time will come, said Morse, 'when we will have to bang these wires on poles." Nowadays ire in the sir have accumulated so fast that we are devising methods of burying them again. It has been declared that Morse felt elated when Congress had granted him tbe desired ecuniary aid, some $30,- 000. As far ss can lie learned for Professor Morse waa a God fearing man the sentiment of gratitude only was prominent, but as to that wild exulta tion, winch would cairy away weaker men, the great electrician felt none ef it. At that very time be was so poor ibst on his return from Washington, where be had gone so as to understand more inorougnij Mow oi iug governing wte money appropriation, i I T a S. 1 I 4 I wing -i n m. uj a young ., one bia lamuy, the boy aaid jocosely to bis f.ther,"iiow, luttier, yon ought to treat Ontbat" "SOI would," WM the reply. -but this is dl the money I have in the world," and a ailver quarter of a dollar was produced. It was much earlier than this that Morse, when with a fn.l in Wall .tri .o..,.. 1.. 1840, when in addition to the news , --- - utougbt by steamers, bulletin-boards ... ..... had posted on them the prices of stocks, that tb nmfHssor said to an .sbonishn.! friend, You see those prices of stocks auotod I Well, before many years you will Lava the price of telegraph stock put on that board." Of course, aa was perfectly natural, the I rofesxor a friend looked at him with amazement. The devising of bis telegraphic machinery so fully absorbed bis mind that tbe neighborhood in which he lived, good, 1 straightforward eople, could hardly understand him. A son mentions the fact that, as ho waa playing as a child in a public square, some compassionate fiiend of the family, looking at him, aaid : "Poor child, it would be a bun- dred times better if your father would - 7 . - , pay more attention to you, insieaa oi working over his old wires, which never can come to anything." When Morse was taking daguerrotypes on top of the building at the corner of Nassau and Beekman streets, Samuel Colt, the in ventor oi tne revolver, waa a inena oi the electrician. Uolt baa bis mind lull oi a torpouo lor tne aeiense oi tne coast, which was to be exploded by an electric I circuit. As Morse had the wires and found battery, the dabbler in torpedoes rh neeesRRrv machinery readv at hand. J . .1 On one occasion, when Morse was sent, an experiment waa to be tried on tne rooi oi tne nouse, wuu a aiiguh charge of powder, which was to be con- nnea unuer a urum oi ngs. ine gen tleman who tells this story was then a mere lad, light of weight and was ex- which Colt wanted. It was agreed that the boy should stand on the 1 ie box while the powder was nred. J uat aa all preparations were completed, and the lad stood on the box, rroiessor I t , I ,1. fl.o ai'lna. Morse appeared, who took in the situa iu.i .1t., -u -- i turn at a giance. -otop, ne cueu, tion at a glance. "Stop," he cried, "Colt, bid that noy get aown. ii you 1.... ...... a .a wans to iry p jf in his piaoe. xuere is nottne eignin oi a iuu o. p 1. , , t r j - . - 1 dov s place, jrroiessor, ao you touch I . v . .. iv. ... r i-i the key." ioucn tne aey juorse aia - An explosion loiiowea, ana it was an Uolt could do,.wno was a man oi largo build, to prevent himself being hurled over into the street below. If the boy had stood there he would have been certainly lifted into the air. It was evident that then .Professor Morse knew j that explosions were intensified in so .i iv ... .n.nU.oJ t coruanuo wituwio u,o fire peculiar substances, and must have had an inkling of tbe effects of what 'I - - - i hod n inklincr of the eltecta ot what I . .iii ih vihratnrv influence I j - detonating substances, -wnce, nuya an informant, "in Professor Morses laterlife.be wanted a package of pa- pers, which, be told me, were on his table I secured a voluminous bundle . , n ..!..i -v ! OI uocumeiiba, nnu iihik down, presented them to the Jrroiessor. "Yon have made a mistake ; these are not the iajer I wanted. Still, though they are of no moment now, at one time they caused me a certain amount of disturbance. They represent the vouchers iiaid by me for lawyers, costs, and expense in defending my tele graph. I once took the trouble to add up the iigures. I can t give it exactly now, but the aggregate ought to foot up something very close on to $500, 000. Pi of. Morse' charities were end leas. All the impecunious of the Uni ted Slate made him their milch cow. He gave, if not wisely, at least well, and must have, during the last twenty years of his life, disiiensed a fortune in amall sums. N. Y. Tiiw.$. MOTEI, BtlLKM. At the risk of pulling a hotel we can hardly refrain from reproducing the following sensible rcmirks found on the back of the card of the Twogood house, at Conastoga, conducted on entirely new and , approved principles. , These are the advantage enumerated : This hotel ha been built and ar ranged for especial comfort and con venience of the traveling public. On arrival, eacu guest will be asked how be likes the situation, and if he says the house ought to have been placed nearer the railroad depot, the location of tbe house will le imuiedi- .tely changed. Corner front rooms, up only one flight, for each guest. Batb, gas, water closet, laundry, tele graph, tire-alarm, hot and cold water, restaurant, bar-room, billiard tables, daily papers, coupe, sewing machine, a grand piano, and all other conveniences in every room. Meals every minute, if desired, and consequently no second table. ijkch guest will have tbe best seat in the dining hall and the waiter. Any guet not getting his breakfast red-hot, or exM;riencing a delay of six teen seconds after giving his older for dinner, will please mention the fact at the office, and the cooks and waiters will be blown from the mouth of a can non in front of tbe hotel at once. In short, there is nothing Two-rood for our house. Tbe landlord will le always glad to hear that some other hotel ia " tl e best house in the country." large and convenient sample rooms. PsggaK carried to and from detot without extra charge. n. b. mi K u i ran It may be that some of our readers do not know of the work that is being accomplished by this influential body of Christiana. They have the finest uni versity in Nahhville, Tenn., that is to Iss found in our Union. Commodore Vanderbilt, while living, gave 1,000, 000 towards its erection. W. II. Van lllil" V. . derbilt, a son of tbe Commodore, has, 7, V " ' within the last three months, given ; - W1LUII1 LIlB UUtb Lit I tTIT IDUI1L11B. !1 KI1 I . $100,000 to tbe same institution to en large its capacity in the civil engineer- . T ..IT I LTi " " i "-i y . . I '"K 8J".r.m uU " ool. Ihn. university is ,usc the electioll of Mr. R;. !"j!nUw ibis year will probably s care the ,u" T """J " j gii.u.iu.jr I upon recommendation of their various churches. This church is tbe second i . ... I Iamuu. hA.1. n H.I Bl I . nj1 1 1,. a , n . n n-n . J- V -ZZ. T J -; "r"1 more tnan o.uuu.vuv. me communi "uu"' "" "V" '. 7 T: .T.. " i "T. ! i r,- !.,.. i l. i wiueiuaioca. ucwucii mis, tun luuiui south baa six foreign missions under her control. They are building more than two church-bouses every day in the year. Per. Mr. Mays has lately built a very nice church in this city on tbe N. K. corner of 4th and Sumac streets. Mr. Mays has done his work J " 1 . . ensuing year to Dayton, thirty miles above here. This church has thirteen appointments and ministers east of tbe Cascades, whereas, four years ago, they j nnl. bad three men in all this oanntrr. y 7 J IiT"rr'' This is an encouraging enlargement. llotta II alia btatettman. TBI SMALLEST OF BABIES. Mrs. George Fromtn, of No. 43S West Twenty-fourth street, New York, is the happy mother of a fully develop ed boy baby weighing eleven ounces and tbiee quarters. Ihe bead of tbe I ch'' aJthough smaller than a small I r ' . . . " . . . . ' orrnwth rvF licyhc hmwn liflir. I h lea. r - . , .i- turesare regular, the eyes bright and clear, and the skin is fine and delicate. The arms are the thickness of ordinary little fingers,and the fingeis are the size outburst of epithets, and closely ques ef extra large pencil leads. The nails, tioned M tft the qualities of the although not much bigger than a good- man he was abusing, all ef w hich he sized pinbead, are perfectly formed. An ordna,7 luncheon buket is npe . """""' birth was five inches, and breadth across the shoulders 21. Mrs. Fromrn is a pleasant-faced German woman fivrA faaf. D&van InnliaD in Itnlfrhf. Wfdttll- I 'vu f5"- l M mnnJa nmrn Fromm. the i -. . -J w. . I lKliUDI'. WDIUUB Ala IWJUHUO. AAU s driver on the Third Avenue d a out of work. They have been mATried eieven years and" have had fiye other ydren, all of ordinary heicrht and weight. Physicians and others who have examined the tiny ba by, already named Georcie, say that he ia considerably smaller than either the midgets at the time of birth, and that if he lives he will take the palm the smallest man in the world. IMMEDIATELY. "Come, old lady, hurry up, said Tn)inir u tiia nntW. "T'n i nst made v--j j T , A t'jZ "tZ " a mile and three laps, and Jim Jones, is I mv trainer, says neeu ruoomg uoa , , . . -. . oi I and putting to oeu ior twenty minutes; i . - , -i, ii,' j is. u go ou mo i. . duce Cross-eyed 1Mb. lead and - He . was immediately rubbed down with a slipper, energetically applied to the I base ot his muscular uevetopment, ana ii ... tk. 1t.wla.l-. 1.n ha l.ud ,.,! . .. ---v. r . all his record. Cross-eyed Bob main tained the lead. is 1 my trainer, says 1 need rubbing do a-n 1 Fiowkr has never, to onr kne . I 1 ... . 1 r . a t...lftiilQ1lA.ni. "I ),Umimiu ill I HOW OHIO WAS CAEEicD. r.lMiV.K AT TUB Of IT. te;. Tho, Ijiii$r, ii hi speech at Warren, Ohio, a few days before the election, told something of tbe "true in wardness' of the manner in which the Itadicals carried Ohio. Ifoe is an ex tract from his jech: I he said, my fellow t-iiizetis, that the contest (his year in Obi' is a hand to ham I h'nbt for the rule of ihe .lallot against the rule of the dollar and the bayonet. J ii no alrtiggle in one Slate heretofore has the influence and power of money lecn w openly and audacious ly asserted. Heretofore the money lower ban fought under cover; now it comes ojtculy into the field. - 1 hold in my hand ilie proceedings of llm "Amer ican INnkeis' Association," held at Hsratogn, i the Oih, 7th and 8th of last month, bcfiiro which assocMi ton the couij t roller ff eiiriency made an -addrefc f voting all of lis objects, and before which Mr. .Sherman says be was only prevented from j-earii!g by the pressure cf official engagement. The leading purjows of the association, as declared in ill's rejsjit, are to "abolish Out short tceijld dollar," which means the ancient doiir of ail our contracts, public or private, and to "sr.pmtie the iasu of jtjr money from frartison pol itics" which mean In destroy nil tbe greenbacks ai.d eouimit the ho!- con trol of the jmix-r cuiitii.y to the Na tional bankx; and :i'.iy to prevent the re-enact men t f what the association calls the "old and odiou.-i income tax." On tbs day after the adjournment of the annual convention referred to a cir cular w as booied to I ! '-batiks and bankers of Ohio." a duplicate of which was handed me bv an i.tlioer of a Na tional bank, who is a sound Democrat, aim is not m lavor oi osoks tlirmain themselves into the arena of jM,lities. I read the original circular, which is as follows : "The American Bankers A'u, "No. 217, Broadway, ltom 4, New Pork, August 9, 1879. j "To the banks and bankers of Ohio: As members of the executive council of the American B-uikera' Association, we desire to state that K-cial measure will be taken to fuorward our interests in Ohio. It is desirable that all banks and bankers become nietn!sra of tbe as sociation fur thi ymr nl le'ii. lours truly, Wm. .1. Desk ler. "President Nattou! Exchange Bank, Columbus, Ohio. A. H. Mols, National Batik, "President Pi rut Sandusky, Ohio." A 204. Here we have a Uil attempt at a combined movement of il.w jw-ttul lnbUtuUonHf crt.at4;d by ,lU,,!u. ,aw an,j subsidized by tbe National T.easurv, to elect the Rem.blican and defeat the. ,Wwrti .StieVetin fl.U. Whv! election of a Xatwiml Banl k candidate for the presidency in 1SS0, and fasten on tbe country the declan d jiie of i Lne associate! i ian &s iu uesirov nit? .i i t. ... .i. .i I . --- creenbacks and the silver dollar and bank Uxation. Let the National banks If thev m.sh on this eombinatiou for the corrupt r.se of their tower iu bribi.u; or I pursuadiog or menacing voters thev . . . , ' . , i will find that their own roof-tree will not stand tbe firmer for that. Thev will find that there is enough f cour- I age and public virtue in the masses to execute the Seitz law against eveu the most wealthy and powerful of its vio lators; and they will find, too, that this combination to bring their power open- 1 I xt til r mmn I Mi ii. I wt 1 1 will J - .1 v 1 .,, masses tuat win oemoiisuaie 10 mem that they would have stood a better auwwa. u M.ey.iau rhimi .1 r : c .1 i . : 1 concealed under cover ef the Republi can party, instead of thus openly ap pearing as the instigators of corruption, the violators of law and the puree-holders and pronounced allies of the Ee- I publican party. rtlSLl VWBXCKbD. Down in Gloucester, niatty years ago, a certain well-known character about town became, for some trivial reason, incensed against a verv estimable and harmless citizen, who had the nii.vfor- tun0 to an invalid, and vented his wrath in no measured tel uls, He waa reasoned with for such an uncalled-for waa compelled reluctantly to admit. At last, fairly cornered, and out of all patience, be wound up with, ",V , ell, it don't make any difference ; he's a. - consumptive cuss, anyhow ! HE LEFT. wu m. t.u il.. U I " wa J "i . ' a m v v lecture platform 1" inquired an ambi tious youth of Jim Kedpatb, of tbe Redpath Bureau, after Idling bim half an hour with his plan cf a comic lec- ture. "I would, said Kedimth, "I - would advise you to take the platform away out into the depths ot the forest, of far removed from the habitation of man, and there, amid those dim, nn- as peopled solitudes, speak your ; little piece. lie lett at once. False Impression. ' I It is generally supposed bv physicians and the people cenerallv tht Dyspepsia cannot invariably be cured, but we are le-seii to that Gbkkn's August i flowkr has never, to onr Knowieaee, , I ,!,j i,.,.;.. ...,,l l v,.- i l"y'" v i',r"i"3p" plaint in all its lorms,sucn as sonrfttom- lT. aeh, Costiveness, Sick iieadache, paipita- tion ot the Heart, Indigestion, i bad-taste m wa9 reported, but thousands of compli- i mentary letteis reeeivea irom aj-usrsrisis ox in wonderful cures. J hree doses v, in. relieve any ease. Try ic. ssampie oomes lueeius. Regular size J5 cents, lor si le by all druggists. ' ,