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About Morning daily herald. (Albany, Or.) 1885-19?? | View Entire Issue (Jan. 19, 1888)
"I - ' O- A, , " O . I CKNTS A WEEK. i ALBANY. OREGON!: THUB8DAM0RNiING. JANUARYlVlis8 WJ tl uivnniT d ,1 fttr iiF u "wiin! "1- 1v ill TJSrsi SSSi. ! . ATto RKP iTf tfife, ' E Sit. HUM t llinri V U II- Itll.liHIIII ....,- nr u.nnio 1 tllll III 'I III'J ll li Lti, in F.o-W.,nil trdU oiiiLinixJWi inwi n x v " HtlKTi(aJ?afteirini pais i a f w m v iijii iiiiii t ni iiui i u l v ii i k wu i ik n l v , i in ul livo u --''"- -- -. i i m w -fuller the now management of- afker Bros -WifO WILL KEEP- A full s!o;fc odhi provisions. ice family jriwics and FRESH BAKED BREAD very Day. Be Syrup, Pies, Cakes. TEAS and CCJSSrF EES, CANNED GODS, ETC. The best Soap is the market Lc Roi Savon. A jfine assortment of domestic and Imported Cigars. CEAt John Fox's old stand, below Flinns new brick. Agricultural Implemenis, FARM IMPlf MENTS, OF EVERY DESCRIPTION HARDWARE Stores and Tinware AT PORTLAND JPBICES. CALL AND SEE US. E. NELSON, -fl'nedd, Oregon. PALACE MEAT MARKET James V. Ilrtt MMX. - PlPBlProp. - iAIiiaty The best vatiet$- of choice bee(,veal,mutton. . jork -lausage, tcin the city kept, constantly &n hand. ClT Cash paid'for il kinds ock.S MRS EMMA O CONNER. Fine Milliraery- Opposite r" Candies, Nuts, fans, McFarland & - j 1 "nLt miu giu 111 11' III fl 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I ,. : arm. which -she -?rnac3or wfl Fiirmtore Boa e? .IN" A LIVE TOWN. Th s is what Albaov is at present, ami in order to keep pace with the !iveiy t'lws in this city, W. H. Willanl has enlarged his store and st'-. k so that he now bus ta-e must complete ami desirable line of ftimitrr-e in the valiey. His double salesrooms in Kroinan's block are filled with an tlejrant assortment of new furniture, consistim; of holiday special ties, louni'cs in new patterns, find jrold pic ture f.amt-s, willow chairs, easy rockert. mar hie tahlcs, brackets, etc., etc. An examina- tsou of the stock will show this to he true in everv resne-1. - Ul - mm rr -i ' r I L EC T. TCOSriBS, GENERA C - ookseller, -AND DEALER IN- Text Boots an J if School Siigpfel Fine stationery, miesellaneons books, photograph and aatourafh albums, inkstands, ink, pe"n8,'peicils, etc., "ttc. Sheet music, iiiuoio book-e and all fcindj of musical merchandise. Grerieral News Depot. ( JgjMail orders promptly attended JULIUS Grocer 2.TO- 61 FIBST ST. (Next to Bttiibiutrt it Keeney's ie-l estate olliee j ALBANY, - OHKQON. Ttie Red Front TWElCJDJl.i & HOPKINS, lartlwt e, Stoves, Ranges, tare, Coppeiwarellgl Pumps, iron gupe. rubber hose and .ftfumbini: sroofs. Sol ajrenl for the celebrated "Earfy Breakfast" couk stavt and.rango, and "Faultless" parlor heating stove. "Albany, Ore-sron. FOR A FULL SEE oves The undersigned proprietors of the Pacific Coast Marble and Stone Works are yrepared i to do all kinds of marble and stone work on i short notice. All work p.iarautee.l to give satisfaction. We wili furnish to oidernmnu ; ments, headstones and an other work in the ! marble business, in any -shape or eolor that I can be found in the market. We will furnish ! Kastein made work as -low as any house in ! the slate. We eali trie-attention of thepub 1 lie to Eastern finished erk now in our shop. : We will not use the Jtentiam sandstone as we I cai.not recommend it for durability, but will endeavor t" use tnc lies'; material 1.1 ine market for B ise. Stone Walls, Curbing, etc. We will sell as low v lower than any house on the coast. We can always lit- "mil at our place of business on ferry st re mo door south of postoltiw Albany, i c :on All communications will he promptly i.nswered. Repairing, cleaninsr and resetting old Sloties a seoialti. Addr-s IIAP.UIS &(J1LLETT, Mar 1:1c I 'ealer .Albany, Orejr.i VUl'UFlNE WINES AND LMH OKS r l'o t.i m Kan'O'-'nrt's. A Stern Reproof ! Is -w. li:ci. jou will ilcsiTvo if you do not ;t!ll anil sec our suju? V tock of tiive rliis.swjtrc mid i-ruoki-jy and choios snrneurios. A W5T.1 rise from .wlicaiHIicy see our I'oirjTietitors Tie Delighted Carrying away satisfactory bar irams from our store. Lowest Prices Best Goods CONBROS., Albany to. JOSEPH. f AILING CRY Myers er, wiier, ianp! Irving. T)i. Henry J. Smitli. tlm eminent surireon and specialist, 4:5 Kearney St., san Francisco, author of popular leetures on Science of Life, Chronic Nasal (-atanli and tts Cure, Cause and (..'m e of Deatness, Disoases of the. Male, Diseases of the Female, etc. , who for vears past lms made; resrulat profess- - . - i 1 : ....,1 i lonal visits to roi ujiih;, anu nns pre- i viouslv visited Albany as a represent ative of the PaeiSe Sul iiieal Institute,': is now at the K ivere house, when; lie ; may he consulted rejfirilinjf all ehron ic speeial and pnrgif4i -alleetions, iti eliidinsr deafness, el j,onie nasal ea tarrb. jfl'eetinns. a.'nK perations on the eve, all throat ar.d lung diseases, nerv ous, hlootl, ki&ncv and sexual diseases or weakness m either sex. .11 anee tions of the hip, 1 nee and ankle joints. and al". cases in any way crippled or deformed. All caies requiring braces or other snrgicil appliances will be furnished without exVa charge from our workshops. All cases of rheuma tism, chronic ulcers, cancers, skin dis eases and ail cases of broken -down j eonstiiutioi:, are especially invited t' i all and iirvestii'ate our method of treatment. To al! the afflicted lie would say do not be influenced by w.bat others may say, but come and see us ar.diSeclde for yourselves. The doctor has been connected for jears with institutions -whose sole pr.eetice was the treatment of ciironie. sjieeial and surgical alfections, and liss had an or portunity unsurpassed for learn ing to eurtthatclassof diseases which have been given up; by the .general practitioner as ineurahle. Thedoctor lias been in practice over "20 years and is a graduate of the best soLool in America, and the university of Berlin, and may te consulted in Gemini! or English. The doctor would tall at tention to the wonderful GALVAKO - OXYGEN TREAT MENT, Which was originated by him and has been used'successfully in liuiwucils of eases tlnd. bad resisted nil otkr treat inent. He would eal' special attention to ins treatment of FEMALE WEAKNESS Symptom of which are backache burning ifain on top of the lre;id, feel wi'j: f debility, reliernl weakness, ianiruii",.ji.n(l nervousness as &e most silceess.tu! iiud pernianenttlial ha fer heen devised for 'he cure of this Tery lai'Ke c&as of suflereis. TOTIMJM5KOFTHE MA I IE !EX Who may be suft'enntr fror. any dis ease or weakness of the tfenil-urinarv firtran be would say: Do not waste y u-time by sending fri m ;k:)ine for i.dverticd specifies or to o-calle(l "iloetr"" who won d liav '.yon lie l.eve thit they caiiiiiU-rstMod all the bearii.i, jjnd eoVnrn.i,ivus f vour di. jase. without seeiiij you. Ky means of the ia'eroscoie r.nd i-liemical anal ysis we -can tind out all aont jour case and will iruara? tee success in every cjrfie he undoitakes All weak ness can 'be speedily cured liy our ral vano oxygen trcatuient. Hik-s radicallv cured without pais; and witiiosit cutting; NASAL CATARRH. This biiiiefu! disease, which so often neglected and allowed tidevehu consunttSiou and many oil ei -serious complications, has hi-n cun-d by our ji.an of ti'eitincnt in hnndnsls of "eases in Orern.and 'throughout tbe North-wc-t V:t Those who are iiittlic'ed should notiiiespair, but come 4o us and be euied. iVsliiuouinls. Fo'lo!ii are a friv of the h'vmlrmls of tetinioma"tr t haie rcceivnl frw; 'tttezon diirinir the i-:t ;elv- years: Milton. Mi.. Ort. 9, 186. Editor Walla ! Walla Journal: A sense of duty lo fihe pub lic proniutKaae-to state that my Nm Henry has been aiSieUu with deafiuss Miice a i-hilci, and when saw from your pajier tt:at Ir Smith of the Pacific Suruioal Institute vs in Walla Walla i deterniiniil to consslt -fci,n The dovtor initmncd me that he uu rr!icted with catarrhal -deafness, and thought that he could enn boo. J a;-cordin!v put ' him under the doctor's treatment, which union re sulted in a cure, and I could recsuimend the doctor's treatment to all who mav 1 uffer iiiK from deafie-, or anj of the effoats of nasal cttxrrh. X.ll'ierce. Miltos. Or. Bct. 3, ISisfl. Eilitor Walla Ac the local doctors iiisted f my boy Henry was only. now :take pleasure in stating ser oiie vcar his condition is1 ..letter tnan when It suade my hrst statement. - X. Pierce. Koitor Orroniaai .Dear Sir: Kor twfn-e rft-ars I have been suffering from bronchitis aji asthma so that I was compelleil to icue my rocm during titt .entire winter "season, hut under the newga&vano-oxyfrtn treatment of r. Henry Smith, of San Francisco, 1 hare len able to attcud to iiuy duties outdoors ducingrthe entire ;iAer 'with perfe:t ease and comfort, aud would cheerfully recoai mead all who my be similarly afflicted to go Ir. mith and be eurd Henry Barber, East (Portland Supt Hague's mill, Nov. 2, 1886. Ai-MRA Mills, Or., Dee. .12, 1S87. J. W. Ehlen writes: Your treatment has nearly cured we of my catarrh dilfieulty of hearvng and brcachitis. I would liave been quite well had I followed your -directions and tauen treatment regularly. Portland, Or., Nov. 13. ISSff- M. Slavich (Proprietor Jjouisville restaurant) says: My catarrh, asthma and bronchitis have been cured bv Dr. Smith's treatment, and- I can a: tend to a8! my duties and enjoy good health once more. Swkaxe Falls' Aug. S, 18S7- Mr' P. ' L. LeBriton says: Ir Smith -has cured me of jny rheumatism, complicated with heart and and kidney disease, which have mane my Jite miserable for the sev en years. Spbaoce, W. T., Aug. 4, 1887. To the public: This is to crtify that I have for over 19 years been troubled with a malignant chronie, gore or uluer on my shin, which wore tlian a dozen doctors have tried to cure and failed, and my friends told me if I healed it up i.t would kill me, ut Dr. H. J. Smith told e he woufd cure jic,' and after three month's treatment it wasentitejy healed and I am still alive and the liealthies and hap piest mail hi Eastern Washington territory. J M. Laymauee. " "' 1 Bercrenrfs, L. E. Gray, Albany, Or., child hip diseases' Thos. Kir, Oenterville, Or., wife cured of hip disease in both hips. MUe Kyder, Kirbyville, Or., child cured crooked lg. Mrs. L. A, Hogne, Chehalis, W. T., child cured enrbuture of spine. J. A. Holhrok, l-mon. Or., cancer of lip. L. A. Alsop, Alkali, )r , catarrh, bronchitis and consunipticn. Ir. D. Siddell, The Dalles, Or., cured cf larynsriti, and removal of tumor fivm throat. Utrici- in Kevere house. Consnluuion frea. Call without d-lav, as the doctors stay is limited. Office hours from 10 A. H. to 4 r. .. iind trom 7 to S evenings. Way to Me ml Broken Kilts. A vouno; woman physician who practices in Englewooil tells of ueer case in surgery wmcu -fcue heard ol a lew weeks ago. or fa1 her a case of mott unusual snr gical treatment for a common in-, jury. A, young r man had sulrer etexl a fall from the cars, and od examination it was foand that two of his ribs had been broken. The doctor who was to the case a man doctor, by the way told j the patient's mother to moke a i hio- bowl of mush and milk, and to ciwv the. wo tin dad inau to eat :is much of it as he 'could possibly hold. This was done, atd then the dofter told the wondering mother to bring him'ene of her old cur sets, the 'argest one she had. The good woman blusliingly obeyed, aud stood by wirh bulging eyes and watched the docter put on the corset on his patient aud draw the . . ,.if strings comlortaoly tiirnt. "iveep the boy filled with mush ana milk u!l night, it possible, was the doctors injunction, as he packed up his trap? to go away; and be sure that the corset-strings don't gft any looser than they are now. I'll come again in the mornirisr. Tue h-xt day the ingenius medi cal man declared the uroKon ribs would soon be kn tttnJ well to "ether again, and they were grow ing nice and straight as you i;easo. "The mush sad uulk on the inside and the' corset on the outside is 'vhut did the business," he said. KuniclliinK PIvwmuiI. "Cant you say something plea: ant to me?" said a husband to his wife as he was about to start for his office. Thev had had a little quarrel and h was willing to naku up.' "Ah, .John," responded the peni tent lady, throwing her arms around his neck, "forgive my fool ishness. And don't 'forget the baby'a shoes, dear, and the ton of coal, and we are out rf potatoes. ami Joun, love, you wust leave me some money for the g;is man. Smart If. Not 4;rautMUit ical. The teacher - Corn-ct the sen tence. The niU'r which the man bought was drank1 Smart boy "l'b bought the lip:or w;.s man which drunk."-. THE MARKETS. .U.15AXV ljlXTATlSv6. Wheat -tH!-i'(n.ic. Oats :K' .4("lc. Flour $5 pe. Md. Potatoes 7.rc. - Etftrs "25c. Mutter otic, bard .hi lc AVool iid'iV-. Hams llfrtl-23ac. Shoulders -tUff 7c. Bacon 11 (.:). Hay i'iinotliv, 2'., oa's and cheat. $14. ' Apples -tureen. ?oc.(7t1 per bu. fluins UrieCI, UH jx.- Tf. Apples dried nleached Wc sund 7 ( X c. ied Hides Bef hides, reer. 5 c, dried 111 c : deer skin, 2c4 flreep melts, Wj :i() , accorrtini; U wool - Beef 'ik'c jrross. Mutton per head. Hos 5c. dre.-sed. 1("!TI.AXII markets.. J:i". 17. Th Miply of w.Uaat in sin'lit in the United jstate.s nd (.'itnada asl of tin. Kockies, is -riven by tele gram January o as 44. 421,(HHI buI:els mid increase for a week of 174,0(10 bu shels. Wheat (Juiet. Markets al:oad lend a rather easy tne to those on this side, and both Chicasro atd !scw York fell oil'. . London aw-d Li-v-erpraol stocks are iartrcr than accounted by most of tiie trade. Our market is, tpiiet and without cluuijre." Walla Walla is quoted about $1 1 73 -j and Val ley about $1 'M;. Barley Fair brewing sold at 1 05 per cental but the market '6 not a quick one, brewers buying largely in the interior a short time airo. Oats The bulk of receipts noted is for shipment account and offerings on this tnarket are not large. Feed qual ities quoted 4ti04.Sc. Ejrscs Local rather weak at 27?c Some Eas'ern just in reported to be alferinr at 24c. sax fkaxcisto markets. Jan. 17 Wheat Spot inarKet very dull; buyers and sellers apart No'l shipping $1 37V.'. In option only a small business doinf. Sales: morning- session. 200 tons buyer season at 1 4$. 500 tons do atl 4SJ4 . 100 tons doat.;Sl 4S3t ; durinif the afternoon sesskm 100 tons do tons do at 1 48.;. at $1 48 ."8i 200 Oativ Receipts liberal lijjht; prices unr-han;cd 1 87ki(fl:l 50. and demand Oregon at THE PHU 06RAPHER. ' Pajrtoa'ii old ateod Albany UNION PACfFJC it. Jt om SHORT LINE & GO EAST VIA 11 to SOOmiles the shortest" and 12 to 48 hours QUICKEST ROUTE TO THE EAST. Thisponularline, on account of its southern location, is especially preferable for travel du ring the winter months. It also affords an op portunity to visit Salt Lake City and Denver withoutextra charge and gives achoice of routes via Council Bluffs, Oniaha.St. Joseph, Leaven worth.or KansasCity. Full particulars rejfard ini; routes and fares furnished on application. CI KUAN" & MONTElTH.LocalPawengcrAgts. VREsn OYSTKKS F.VERV DA V AT DOFF X mail i; Pfcitfer s. Round House and Machine Shops Burned. KILLED BY A FALLIXCi TIMBER. The Number of Fatalities in the Blizzard- Stricken Scti"ii Increases-Collision at Sea- Hkrai d's Special Dispatches. 1 Portland, .Ian. IS. Early this morning tne ). H. i. o. 8 -oiu round house and machine shop at Albina caught lire and was totaliv destroved. The buildings burned were the old shops of the North ern Pacific Terminal Company, and cost originally, buildings, machin ery . and all, about $200,000, total loss, the machinery being worth nothing now except as old iron, mere was an insurance oi onlv about $'25,000, placed in the New York. The O. R. & N. Co. had in the round house seven loco motives and one passenger coach, which was elegant. The coach is a wreck, the only-salvage being the wheels and iron work. The trucks of. the engines are not so badly injured, and. it is thought only the woodwork of these will have to be replaced. The total loss of the O. R. & N. Co. will reach about $40,000. There was no in surance on the rolling stock. The fire is supposed to have caught from the heater, which had been placed in the coach to thaw it out. A 14-year-old son of Edward Whitney, of Albina, while playing about the scene was killed by a neavy piece oi titnDer,wnicn sh uck him on the head, crushing the skull. The lad lingered several hours. THE STOUM'S BE 'I'H-KOLL. TEACHER AND I'LPII.R PERISH. St. Pai l, Jan. IS. From Abr enleen, Dakota, the Pioneer-Press has a report of two more victims of the storm. The report of the death of a hchool teacher and six teen children at Clear Lake town ship, in the eastern part of Ed moud county, at lirst discredited, is probably true, parties who came from Warner, Dakota, to-night, stating that. the' teacher and six children have been found. From Wolsley comes the report that two more bodies have been found. OVER ONE HUNDRED DEATHS. Yankton, Jan. IS. A Dakota correspondent says that only two eaths are reported in that sec tion. From South Dakota 104 deaths are reported. - From Yank ton to Springfield the snow drifts are said to be thirty feet deep. FIFTEEN PERISH. Lincoln, Neb., Jan. 18. A dis patch from Oneill, Neb., says that 15 persons perished on last Thurs day in Custer county. The loss of stock is said to.be'tiormous. IN-rtl or I In- lep. Liverpool, Jan 18. The British steamer Toronto, trom Portland, Me., Jan. 4, for Liverpool, arrived in .Mersey to- lay. She reports dur iiiL' the fog, off Skenen, Ireland, she collided with and sunk the Norwegian" bark Freidis, from Liverpool for. Savannah, and that rnirieen oi tne oarK s crew drowned. Only one man saved. were was SK.VT TO THE HOl.SK A.M Sst.VATK The Report Accompanied by a Lang Jlcswisr from Cleveland. Warhixgton, Jan. 17. The President sent in the report of the Pacific Railroad Commission to the House and Senate at 1 o'clock this afternoon. He accom pained it with a long message, saying tnat it is clear that the railroad companies can not pay their indebtedness, and that an attempt to foreclose and take possession of the roads would be of doubtful policy. He therefore advises that the re commendations of the majority ot the Commission for f unding of the debt be followed by Congress, pro vided the roads themselves willac cept such plan. SEYStTIO.YAL (UKMATIOX. A Father's Eulogy Over th Vend Body of HIm Son. ; Cincinnati, 0., Jan 17. A most sensational cremation occurred yesterday at the Crematory. The body of Benno C. Rothe, the eldest son of the Hn. Emil Rothe, a very prominent German, and an attor ney at-law was incinerated. . At 2 o'clock this afternoon the fuDeral cortege, consisting of a hearse bearing the coffin, followed by several hacks, drew up the high hill to the Crematory. The corpse was removed from the coffin in the private room and wheeled out, cov ered with a sheet and saturated in alum water. The head of the body was a few feet from the furnace door. Mr. Henry Doeuier, an ex principal of one of the public schools, and the father of," Prof. Doemer. of tiie College of Music, delivered an address upon the noble ronr or . the od over the ' bich was cov ered aCTweamvj'as anu smiiax. He callefiSJtJJntiiy, several grown young ladiesTroTbni their biother good-by. There were about thirty friends present. Then tl'e father burst forth in a sermon, bevvai.ing the ioss of his sou, whom he said had always b:eii so dutiful, so honorable, s ifoo-J. He was more of a compan ion ami triead t him . than a son. His eloquence and feelings moved all present to tears, while the sobs of the tamily were heart. rending. The doors ol the furnace wero opened and the body reduced to ashes in one hour and a quarter. The young man was of gooo pr-onise. a partner of fathy, and one spoken of as an exemplary son. He whs o2 years of age. The cre mation was the thirteenth in this city, and the affecting eloquence of, the father over the corpse ol the beloved child formed a scene never to be forgotten. Al I OH till' LABOU. How the Cvudiliunx ol Labor Have C'li.'iugeI From I he Old Time. Boston Transcript. In the innuite subdivision ot mc- cl.anica'. effort there is a continual eduction of the legititimate pride that a workman tnav take in Ins product. One cannot vaunt him self much upon the quality of his buckle holes in a strap when the machine that he operates is mak ing them all exactly like. "It is a poor accouut to give of one's life," says Proudhon, "to have made but the eighteenth part of a pin." So long as men and wwncn are human this consideration must weigh with their., even if it weighs insensiblj . The old shoemaker at his beach bud an object in life. It was no small achievement to have . made a good shoe a sturdy" or a handsome article that somebody wore with satisfaction . He had an opportun ity to distinguish himself in his way . There was a proud pre-emin ence in his trade that he reach. might His mind w is developed along with the shoes he made; his energy auk into jio weary iteration of au tomatic pncesses carried on at high pressure. He became a phil osopher in his way, and even if ' hs did not choose to become a philos opher at all, the chances are that he was when he finished his ap prenticeship, and give his children a chance to do better than he did. His work, even with its longer hours and incessant pegging and shaving, was more favorable to mental growth than that of the ten hour operative whs runs a machine which punches a hole or makes a part or a p?g. But the division and subdivision of labor is the foundation, the life, of the modern industrial system. It is impossible to g baek to the old system as it would be to restore us all to the Garden of Eden. Civ ilization has pat its hand to the plow and by no means can turn back. But wht sort of a race will our mechanical automatism de velop The iiuetrn is respectfully referred to the historian of the future. Common Kxporirnce. I honestly and sincerely believe1 that if our politicians aoamembeis of Congress were lor one single year subject to the vexations,bother loss and inconvenience of the pre sent, dirty, sticky smeary and costly postage-stamp-exchange system, to which the rural popu lation of the country is condemed, we should get the " much needed nd universally demanded fraction dl currency immediately. In cities and large villages fractional parts of a dollar can be sent, but only by paying tribute to the bank, express company or post master, but to the country there is noMiing left but the stick-to-every-thing postage stamp. And I pre sume that people doing business in cities when they receive lumns of stickey stamps, instead of crisp convenient paper money, are about as much annoyed as their country customers are nrst the counting aud recounting, and illAII 4-Wa out ting them exchanged into some- thing that will not cling to you like the "Old Man of the Sea' If bankers' and brokers' influence can prevent us getting fractional cur rency, then we shall not get it, no mattei how useful and convenient it may be. In a certain large family- a tax has been established en bad words, aDd, not unnecessarily, as this re cent conversation therein demon -strates: Tommy (aged 5, exclaiming, while trying to tie his woolly dog's head on)- O Lordy? Jimmy (aged 10 N ow, why do you do that, Twmmy f Don't you know it costs you money ? You'll have to pay for it. Tommy (with a complacent sense ofmauly honor) Well, d-n it, don't I always pay? They think they will have to try another plan for the purification of the faiuiiv vocubnlarv. 1 4 "r; '-