: . 13 . CEJJTS A WEEK. ALBANY. 0REGQM1: SUNDAY MORNING. JANUARY LSSS , ' -Y0I-iiCo9;:
Ti,, n,,m- i'.km- 'Ur ii Wmli'oxi- miJ m storm, i general news- jggi i
-Vuder the nox man?.geaient of-
-Y'HO WIL
A full sto..k of choice family groceries ami
.provisions.
WW BAKED BREAD
.fcCvery JDay.
Best Syrup, Pies
TEAS and COFFEES,
Candies Nuts, Raisins,
CANNED GOODS, ETC.
-The best Soap in the market-
Le Roi Savon.
A fine assortment of domestic
and Imported Cigars.
JT5TAt John Fox's old stand, below Flinn's
new brick.
AEricnltiiral Implemems.
FARM IMPLEMENTS,
OF EVERY DESCRIPTION
HARDWARE
Stoves and Tinware
AT
PORTLAND PRICES.
CALL AND SEE US.
E- 2TELS02T,
Shedd Oregon.
' PALACE 7
I MEA T MARKET
James V. Ripe, Prop.
First Street, AHmny
The best variety of choice becf.veal.mutton,
pork sausage, etcin the eity kept constantly
an haod.
4" Cash paid for all kinds
ock.J
MRS- EMMA O CONNER
Fine Jvlillinery-
I Opposite R""
far
Line o
Sipor
McFarland &
1 GO EAST VIA LlUlV 111 . illUllli.y The Eist;,Still Battlinx With ; tSS.SS'S'SSi Larceny in a Town. on the Or-:. '-Ss
A LIVE .. v i- " " c.rtT. ' nnil Inn Leap for chat ce to build the Bres, . . ' ;. .- ; 1 " $
11 to oOOmiles the shortest! v- V OllOw : auU XCB. Fair ones throughout the ImmI! ' gOIl PaeiUC. ' .. 1 . i
?armture Dealer
IN A
LIVE TOWN.
Th-s is whaiyba'iy ta at present, and in
order, to keep pace with the lively times in
this city, W. H. W'iiiaru has enlarged his
store ami s'nck so that he now has the most
complete ami desirable line of furniture iutlie
valley His double saicsnionis in Kroman's
block are fiiltd with an tU-'ant assortment of
'ievsr furniture, consisting: of -holiday special
ties, lounires m new patterns," find polU pic
ture i.anics, willow chairs, easy rockert. niar
lle tables, bi-ackets. etc., etc. An examina
tion of rhe stock will show this to be true in
every respect. '
&
"Si
-a
sisSJA WAITING CRY.!
J". JOITES.
GENERAL
bookseller, f
mkki
-AND DEALER IN-
Text Boots and all School Supplies.
Fine stationery, miscellaneous books, pbotograph and autotroph albums,
inkstands, ink, pens, pencils, etc., etc. iJiteet mu.-c, music books and all
kind j of musical merchandise. I
t
General News IDepot.
53FMa51 orders promptly attended
JULIUS
Grocer -
ILTO- 1 FIEST ST.
(Nest to Burkhart fc Keeney real estate office);
ALBANY, - OREGON.
Ttie Red Front.
TWEEDALE & HOPKINS,
Hardware, Stoves, Ranges, Tinware. Copperware
Pumps, iron pipe,, rubber hose and plumbing goods. Bo)", agents
celebrated "Early Breakfast" cook stoves andranges, and "Faultless
heating stoves. Albany, Oregon.
FOR A FULL
SEE
oves
11IIU 1 I.U Q HUUI3 1 -. J-' " ' 1 W
QUICKEST ROUTE TO THE EAST.
Thispopularlinc. on account of its southern
location, is especially preferable for travel du
ring the winter months. It a!so affords an op
portunity to visit, Salt Lake City and Denvei
withoutextra i-hargi: and gives achoice of routes
via Council LlnrYs, Omaha.St. Jese)h,I.eav-n-worth.
or KansasCity. Full particulars regard
ing rontusanii taro-. furnished on ainlicatiou.
CURSAN&'5IOXlSl'ra,lJociilPassengerArt8.
FOSHAY & MASON,
Wholesale and Ketail
i
g Is what j-ou will deserve ii jou
do not vail and sec our superb stock
of tine srlasswiiie and crockery am)
choice tcroeeries.
Will rise from
when they see
our competitors
Tie Delighted Buyers
Carrying away satisfectorj- bar
gains from our store.
Lowest Prices Best Goods
.CONN BEOS., Albany
Stationer
to.
JOSEPH,
for the
parlor
Stora
Tobacconis
ianges !
am
Irvin
Dr. Henry J. SiNUi, tli eminent
surireon ana speciHfsi, 3s &.earnev
St., San rrancisco, Lffltnor oi popular J
lectures on bcienefl -pi L,ife, Chronic
Nissiil Catarrh and llfe Cure, Cause and
Cure of Deafness, Df eases of the Male,
Diseases of the Fenisflei etc . who for
years past has mad j regular profess
ional vishs io roriKMv uuu iih pre
viously visited Alhiv as a represent
ative of the I'aei'V'ricivitl .Institute;
is now at 'the :'K;vere'li6iiWe' where'ire
may be consulted reiirdinsf all ehron
ic. speeialiiml suryfic al all'ections, in
eludinff deafness, cirome nasal ca
tarrh, affections and. Operations on the
eye, all throat and !ao;' diseases, nerv
ous, blood, kidney a.fld sexual distases
or weakness in either eex. M atlec
tions tf the hip, 1 nee and ankle joints,
arid all cases in any way crippled or
deformed. All eaes requiring braces
or other pnricil appliances will be
furnished Mitliout extra charjre from
our workshops. All'cases of rheuma
tim, chronic ulcers, eancers, skin dis
eases and all vases of broken down
constitution, are especially invited to
'all and investigate our method of
treatment. To all the afflicted lie
would say do not be influenced by
what others may say, but come and
ee us ar.d decide for yourselves. The
doctor has been connected for years
with institutions whose sole practice
was the treatment of chronic, special
and sursfical affections, and lias had
.m oj portunity unsurpassed for learn
ing: to cure that class of diseases which
has been friven up by the general
practitioner as incurable. The doctor
has been in practice over 30 years and
is a graduate of the best school in
America and the university of Berlin,
and may be consulted in Germnn or
English. The doctor would call at
tention to the wonderful
GALVANO - OXYGEN TREAT
MENT, Which was originated by him and has
been used successfully iu hundreds of
cases that had resisted all other treat
ment. He would call special atteution
, to his treatment of
FEMALE WEAKNESS
Symptoms of which are backache,
burning pain on top of the head, feel
ing cf debility, general weakness,
languor, and nervousness as the most
sr.cvesslul and pcrnancnt that has ever
been devised for the cure of lliis very
large class of smlereis.
TO THOSE OF THE MALE SEX
Who may be suffiying frorrf an dis
ciiso .ir wcukni-ss of the genito-urinarv
organs he would sayj . Do m-t waste
your time by&etvShsj.jntT jioine las.
adverti ed specifics or to sf-cHCd
"din-tors" who won d have you )p
l.eve th'it tlu-y can understand" al! the
bearii'g ::nd complications of your (lis
'ase without seeing you. By means
uf the micniseuue and chemica! anal
ysis we can find out all about your
case and will gnarat'tee success in
every case he undeilakes All weak
ness can he .-pcediiy cured by our gal
vano oxvgcn treatment. Piles radically
cured without pair, and without cutting
NASAL CATARRH.
Tins baneful disease, which is so
often negloetod and allowed to develop
consumption and many other serious
complications, has been cured by our
p. an of treatment m hundreds ot cases
m Oregon and throughout the North
wc"t (.'oust Those who are afllicled
should not despair, but come to us and
bj ciued.
TestiiiioiiialM.
Fo'lnwinu are a ftv of the hundreds of
testimonials we have received from Oregon
durimr the past twc-lv- years:
Milton, Oi., Ur.t. 9," Iss5. Editor Walla
Walla .Journal: A sense of duty to the pub
lie prompts me to sta'-e that my son Henry
lias been afflict ea with deaftif ss Miice a i hild.
and when Isaw from your paper that Dr
Smith of the I'acifie Surgical Institute was in
Walla Walla I determined to consult him
The doctor informed me that he was afflicted
with catarrhal deafness, and thoucht that he
could cure him. I accordingly put him
under the doctor's treatment, which soon re
sulted in a cure, and I could reesmmend the
doctor's treatment k all who may be suffer
ing from deafness or any of the effects of
naal catarrh. N. Pierce.
Miltos, Or, Oct. 3, 18S6. Editor Walla
Walla Journal: As the local doctors insisted
that the cure of my boy Henry was only
temporary 1 now take pleasure in statins
that after a lapse of one year his condition is
better than when I made'iny first statement
- X Pierce. -' ,
Editor Orpgonian Bear Sir: For twelve
years I have been Buffering from bronchitis
an asthma so that.I wag compelled to keep
my rocin during the entire winter season,
but under the new galvano-ox.vgen treatment
of Dr. Henry Smith, of San Francisco, I have
besn able to attend to my duties outdoors
during the entire wtnter "with perfect ease
and comfort, and would cheerfully recom
mend all who my be similarly afflicted to go
Ir. Smith and he cured Henry Barber,
East Portland Supt Hogue's mill, Nov. ,
1SS.
At ttORA Mills, Or., Dec. 12, 1SS7. J. W.
Ehien writes: Your treatment has nearly
cured me of my catarrh difficulty of hearina
and bronchitis. I would have been quite
well had I followed your directions and
taken treatment regularly.
Portland, Or., Nov. 13. 18S6- M. Slavich
(Proprietor Louisville restaurant) says: My
catarrh, asthma and bronchitis have been
cured bv Dr. Smith's treatment, and I can
attend to all my duties and enjoy good
health once more.
Siokase Falls, Au. 6, 1SS7. Mr. P. L.
LeBritcn says: Dr Smith has cured me of
my rheumatism, complicated with heart and
and kidney disease, which have made" niy
life miserable for the seven years past
Sr-RAGiTK, W. T., Aug. 4, 1387. To the
public: This ig to certify that I have for
over 19 years been troubled with a malignant
chronic sore or ulcer on my shin, which
more than a dozen doctors have tried to cure
and failed, and Ky friends told me if I healed
it up it would kit! we, ut Dr. H. J. Smith
told me he would cure me, and after three
month's treatment it was entitely healed and
I am still alive and the healthiest and hap
piest man in Eastern Washington territory.
J M. Laymance.
Kerereneea
L. E. Gray, Albany, Or., child hip diseases-
Ihos. Kirt, Centerville, Or., wife cured
of hip disease in both hips.
MUe Ryder Kirbyvule, Or., child cured
crooked bg.
-Mrs. L. A, Hogue, Chehalis, W. T., child
cured curvature of spine.
J. A. Holbrok. Union. Or., cancer of lin.
L. A. Alsop, Alkali, Or , eatarrh.bronchitis
ana consumption.
Dr. I). Siddfcl), The Dalles, Or., cured of
mil npm, aim removal oi tumor fram throat.
Othce in Kevere house. Consultation frea.
yau inoui utiay, as the doctors stav is
limited. Onice hours from 10 A. M. to i jP. M,
ad from o even
ABATING.
While Oregon Enjoys a .Copious Earn Onr
. ,. Ejsteiii.'Neigh'bor8 Dig Their Wuj ;
i- with' Snow Plow: - '
liie Ilirin'u'H "Special Dispat'chfs.l
-'-Acire-KS (Nj-Ja'i-S-The
sloiiD shows no stei of abaf'-ig ii
this section. Hotels here nu at
Canajohnres- aie crowded with
snow bor ul k-iests, and there is
hut little prospect of their being
started on the'V journey for several ,
days. Eleven passenger trans
stuck in a drift with'n r'fty miles of
th's city. A snow plow with five
eng:ies has been sent out by the
New York Cent'.?', but i enoi.Sj
labors are useless, as the wind
d fts the snow back into the track
as soon as it passes. The snow in
cuts near hre is over thiuy feet
deep. RepOi .3 from noi thei n New
England inc,;cat?s ur; iton apted
and continuous cold weather. The
snow is badly diifced and it will j
take some time to clear the tracks j
so that travel-'ng c?n be resumed.
WORSE 1HAS EVER. -
Oswego, Jan. 28. The stoi.n
raged woie than ever last night.
Ttie deep cuts of the railroads that
have just been cleared of the snow
are once more filled. The ther
mometer is 10 de.res below zero
and the wind blowing sixiy miles
tier hoi -. All tia" is on the Rome.
vVatei "wn r id Ogdensbv-g road
have ben abandoned. The Dela
ware, Lackawana and Western
road is also blockaded, and the
tra'"s that ?e i : f ig make very
poor time. A passenger train due
here last ever-ng from the. west
spent the right about thh cy miles
west of here. The blockade is the
worst in years, and every effort is
bp'ug made to raise it, but with
liifle effect, as the high wind
blocks ti e tracks as fast as they
are cleared,
IRA VtlC IWFAbYZF.n.
Sew Yoi:k. Jan. The
delav
;n arrival
and dena "tr-e of mails
:s owing to the snow
which still continues
blockade,
and was
worse last
night th?n during the
-wni v -r four ,;; hours.
preceding
Trains have not "been so iweg.ilar
for several years. The New York
Cenlal is mak'ng no attempt to
senl out freight trains. There are
l;f!0 east-bound loaded cao still
here.
IN THE NORTH.
Montreal, Jan. 2S. The snow
blockade lias left somewhat and
two trains arrived from New York
at midnight. One was due Thurs
day night and the other Friday
morning.
CI BE FOR SMALLPOX.
A Very
Inipoii'-iur irin ,Iy
Morlh I'.'escrvins.
WrM
Edwp'd Hire, a Taven ee
respondent of the Liverpool
cury, sends the follewiDg to
cor-Jler-that
paper. ''No disease is so repulsive
as smallpox, aud none so generally
dreaded. I am willing to lisk my
reputation as a public man if the
worst case of smallpox canuot be
effectively cured in three days
simply bv cream of tart:ir. This
is a sure arjd never failing remedy.
One ounce of creem of timar dis
solved in a pint of boiling water,
to be drunk when cold, at short
intervals. It can be taken at any
time,and is a preventative as weli ts
a cu-ntive. It is known to have
cured in a hundred thousand cases,
without a single failure. T have
myself restored hundreds by this
means. It never leaves a mark,
causes blindness, and prevents
tedious lingering.. It is so effect
ual that if properly used would
dispense with the upnatural law of
vaccinition and the costly staff of
vaccinators, for smallpox never ap
pears without a need, aud then
ought to be healthful and purify
ing to the system, and when capa
b!e of being so quickly removed
need nevei be fe.ired above a cold
or an overflow of bile.
. Buttons Made ot Blood.
Buttons made of dried fresh
beef blood are among the trim
mings used largely this season by
dressmakers. They are all made
in a factory neai Chicago, and
some 8000 or 10,000 gallons of the
utilized, daily. Many a woman
who buys cheap jewelry has ear
rings or broocher, belt clasps or
hair ornaments made out of this
dried blood. She may comb her
hair with the same material aud
she mav think she is using horn
or xylonite or celluloid when she
is using only the albumen left
after the bulk of the blood treated
has evaporated.
Startling A Terrible Fall !
A wonderful offer ! Cloaks, jack
ets and wraps, of every description,
at sweeping prices. Desiring to
greatly reduce our stock on these
lines before taking inventoiy, we wil
offer our entire line of Springer Bros,
tailor made garments at cose orle.-s.
This is a rare chance. Call eariy
while the assortment is large.
MoNTEim !c Seitenbach.
STOUM
A LEAP TEAR IDYL. . ' '
Leap till the last aimed male expires;
S Leap for your b 'bands and for sires;
Leap for a chai ce to build the fires, ...
Fair oneo throughout the land!
"What is the matter with the
fallen a lgels.niBmnv'," said the lit
tle "girl. ''Couldn't they make
their wings work?"'
Uncle Billibab(who has unwise
ly sampled the side-dish of Rocque
fort cutese) B gam! That butter
ain't in do trance! -. '
Which is preferable, fter all,tbe
polite,, accomplished, bogus Enst
lish lord, or tne g-enuine Engllshl
lord who acts like a bore?
A horrid jrind : The busint s the
dentist does, or that thing that o
es r r-r r-r r-r-r-r been there, eh?
Wall, wall, wall, wan, wall !
When you have to pay $5 an
hour for a sieieh, it's easy enough
to explain what is meant by a rev
enue cutter.
In Tu-key a man's allowed to have
four wives, but ODe of the conse
quences is t'iPt he bas to take his
shoes ff under the gas lamp away
down at the coiner of the strcei.
"O, papa exclrnrned a little girl
at the grand stall at the begging ol
a base-nal! game, ''see the ' two
men with bustles on their faces!"'
A young womaa in an Ohio
town married her brother s wile s
father, and, at last accounts, had
nearly gone crazy frying tod gure
out whether she was her brother's
brother-) n-law-, or her own mother-in-law,
or all four, aud if so, what
relation her ch ldren w.tuld be to
her husband.
SI
'VAN' ABUO".
He
which About Ireland and the
John L. SulHvan is becoming,
famous as a letter-writer He sends
the following to Boston: "Huil,
England, December 291 suppose
1 am due to vou now l am get
ting along iu this country, bo
far I h:ve been doing prettv well
out this country is not America
you kuow. Well, old boy, I made
a match with Mitchel1, and all I
Have to do now is to spoil his face,
and I as-ure you that I will en
deavor to make it as hansome as I
know how- I am after Smith.
He is the oplv one in tVis countrv
worth fighting, and there would be
a bane! of money in it, and he. is a
mark for me. You can imagine
what kind of a fight Riirain and
he fought two haurs and a half,
then kiss and make up, and say
"we will fight John L."
"Ktiiain will second Mitchell
against me, and after I am through
with Mitchell I will make him
right in the same ring or break
his nose.
"I hope it will not be long he
fore I arrive in Beantown. Yon
never saw so many i o r people in
all your life as in this country; all
on the begging order. I was over
to the dear old Emerald Isle. I j
tell you it is a pre ty country, and
well worth seeing. The places we
took :n were Dublin, Watesford, !
Crk, Limerick aud Belfast. Inj
Cork we went to see Blarney Cas
tle and Blarney Stone, and Baruett
and Phillips kissed it, but his
"nibs" only touched it. It was
quite a sight."
"Well, I have told you all but
one thing, nnd that is about bis
Royal Highness the Prince t
Wales. Well, we met, and his
'royal nibs.' John L., had quite a
chat with the coming King of Eng
land and smoked his best cigars,
and I tell you he is a jine fellow.
So you see I am in ths front rank,
but still I am the same old pla;o.
'chump.'
"Well, I will close by sending
regards, good luck and good-bye
as the best wish of your friend.
John L. Sullivan."
The Child of Mount Vernon.
George Washington Parke Custis
died at Arlington, near Washing
ton city, on the 10th of October,
1857. He left one child, the -wife
of Robert E. Lee, afterward the
Confederate general. Closely al
lied to the Washington family,
fond of calling himself the child cf
Mount Vernon, he was never so
much in his element as when he !
was talking or writing of the great
chief and the men and times of the
Revolution. As he said of himself
once, "his was the destiny tf no
common man," for he had been
fondled on the knee of the Father
of his Country, and received from
him the kindness of a parent. He
repaid that care and affection with
filial devotion, and to ths day of
bis death all the recollections of
life centered around or" radiated
from the time when he was one of
Washington's family . He lived to
a good old age, retaining his men
tal faculties to last. Though Mr.
Custis was never in public life, he
was in his younger days an elo
quent and effective speaker,and had
a fondness for oratory as long as he
was able to gratify those who con
stantly called on him to make pub
lie addresses. Ben Perley Poore's
Letter.
Ladies, misses and children's
wool knit hoods, scarfs and jackets
at cost at Samcel E. Young's..
A Ml'SDEKUL'S PA It EST ARRESTER
A Bisf Eail-osd Scheme in . Kansas A
Fierce Stoui at Sea Fears oi a
Eiot in London.- ' v
The "HkR im's Special DispaVfoeF.r S . '- . ' '
tvSALEjtfv.Ja-P,.' -2$. A young;; man
named w alteir ttiieye was brought
dow ii om Mill City on the San
tiam to-day by Deputy Potter, on
a charge of larceny from the store
of Hodson fc Co. at that place. He
was to be examined this evening.
W.'M'S TO KILL HIS FAMILY.
Stephen Smith, formerly a prom
inent citizen of Aurora, was ar
rested and placed in jail to-day, in
detault ot ?o00 to keep the peace,
he having threatened the lives of
his family. He will remain there
until the next term of circuit court.
THE BLOOD k. tSl BKIUSKEBS.
The Removal of Itri H Members of
Parliament Arons-s a Mob.
London, Jan. 28. Father Mc-
Fadden and Alexander Blaner,
members of parliament arrestedor
alleged violation of the ciimes act,
were removed ''om jail at London
this morning and taken to Dun
fonaghy, where they will be tried.
A crowd gathered outside of the
jail last eveu'ng and remained all
night, cheenog continually. A
few stones were thrown at the
police as the prisoners departed by
persons m the crowd, h ears are
entertained that the trouble "Will
increase.
A BIG RAM ROAD SCHEME.
ALonsSC ;fh of Road to he Bo'U la
the South.
Topeka (Kansas), Jan. 28. The
charter of the Kansas, Texas and
Mexican railroad was filed with the
secretary of state vesterday. A
company with a capital of $50,000,
000 propose to brild a b'ne from Kan
sas City through the state of Kan
sas to Clarke, county, thence sou'i
through No Man's Land, Mexico,
and the Panhandle to El Paso, a
distance of 1200 miles. Another
branch to run from Medicine Lodge
southwest into and through Colo
rado ind New Mexico, to Albu
qurque, 500 miles. In addition to
these there are numerous other
shorter branches in Kansas and
Nebraska. The directors are citi
zens of Kansas.
A t;j!c at Sea.
New York, Jan. 29. The wind
at Sandy Hook the past three days
has been blowing at from forty to
sixty miles an hour. The Pennsyl
vania and Wisconsin were the only
steamers that made port yesterday.
Their captains tell stories of waves
mountain high and howling gales.
A large number of sailing vessels
were bound in when t.ie storm oc
curred, but they were forced to
turn about and scud out to sea be
fore the gale. No serious accident
has been reported.
A SOTL'D STAGE ROBUEr.
Black Bart Says that He will Never
Take to the Road Agutn.
San I ancisco Post:
C iarles E. Bolton, alias C. E.
Boles, P. 0. 8, alias "Black Bart,"
the noted stage robber, who for
many yeprs proved himself to be
the prince-of road agents, was dis
charged from San Quentin Satur
day, after completing a six years'
sentence, for robbing the stage run
ning between Milton and Senora,
on November 8, 1883. Black
Bart as he was commonly known,
began operations. on July 2G, 1875,
when he held up the Milton and
Souora stage, and made off with the
treasure box. The county was
scoured for years by sheriffs and
constables, who were anxious to get
the robber in order to receive the
reward offered for his apprehen
sion. He suceeded in robbing
twenty-seven stages befo he was
caught ,aud then he w-. detected
through the laundry n. rks on a
cuff lost by him when h attempt
ed to escape after a r jbery. He
did not make 1 egal aght when
caught, and upon pleading guilty
was given a light sentence of six
years' imprisonment. Bolton was
received at San Quentin, Nov. 21,
1883, and was assigned for duty as
a trusty. While in jail he was
noted for his uniform good be
hayior, and his conduct entitled
him to credits under the law. As
Bolton is now 60 years of age it
is hardly probable that he will
again take to the read.
Polltene In the Rockies.
Easteru lady (traveling in Mon
tana) The idea of calling this the
"Wild West.'! Why, I never saw
such perfect politeness anywhere.
Native We're allers polite to
ladies, marm.
Eastern Lady Oh, as for that,
there is pienty of politeness every
where, but I am referring to the
men. Why, in New York the men
behave horridly to one another,
but here they all treat each other
as delicately as gentlemen in a
Native Yes, marm 5 it's safer.
t
0
!
I
if