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About Morning daily herald. (Albany, Or.) 1885-19?? | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1888)
15 CENTS A WEEK. ALBANY" OREGON WEDNESDAY J MORNTN 6 NOVEMBER 21 1888 VOL. 1II-NO. m ' r--;. CIM -HaTing decided to ire Our Ski i - Dry Goods, Fancy Goods, Clothing, if ! , Hats, Furnishing Goods, Carpets, A Cost FOE THE NEXT 40 DATS ONLY The Entire Stock The Knife WITHOUT This is a Genuine Closing Out Sale cf the well known fiim of lCONTEITE & SEXTE1T2ACE, and purchasers will receive a net s&virg i "bought- GS"I!arly callers stock to select from. "Monteith & Seitenbach, ALBANY 0 retire from business ia Albany, we of -CONSISTING OF- Genera i Must Be Closed Within Six Weeks -AND- fill Be Put REGARD TO COST will secure the advantage Sill! will offer our- Boots and Slices Cloaks, Etc. to Pros cf 25 per cent cn Goods of the large and unhrohen OZRCEDGrOZtsT Absolutely Pure. This powder never vanes. A marvel of purity .strength and wholesomeness. More economical than the ordinary kinds and cannot be 6old in competi tion with multitude of low te6t. short weight alum or phosphate powders Sola only in cms, Rotal Basis' Pow. der Co . 10G Wall st.. N. Y. D W Ckowley & Co., Agents, Portland, Oregon. ATTOR.VE1S.I DR. N. BLACKBUIiX. ATTORNEY AT . Law. Albany, Oregon. Office in Odd bellow's Temple. -Vill practice in all eou. of the state, and give special attention to all business. WOLVERTON CHARLES E. ATTORNEY at Law, Albany, Or. Office in roouip 13 and 14, Foster's Block, over L. E. Wain's stor . T K. WEATHOKFORfi, ATTORNEY AT J . law, Albany, Cregon. Office in Odd Fc low's Temple. Will practice in all the courts of thesuite, and give special attention ' - all business IMIYSK IAS. W. I1ASTON, PHYSICIAN AND SUK i geon, Albany, Oret'on.J M H. ELLIS, PHYSICIAN AND- SURr , geon, Albany, Oregon. CC. KELLY, PHYSICIAN AND el'R . (.'eon Albany, Oregon, office over Gral wohl's store Office hours, from 8 a. m. to 4 p. si. DR. R. KOLDEWAY, VETERINARY SLR. Keon, Albany, Oregon. - -Graduate of Ger,' man an.l American i-olleirea. ) EVERE HOUSE, ALHAN Y, OR. CHAS. X Pkiffer, Prop. Only first-eclass house in the city. Large sample rooms for com mercial men. No Chinamen employed in the kin-hen. General state ottke for Corvallis. H EWER!', PRACTICAL WATC'H.MAKE , and jeweler, Albu:iy, Oregon, Laud Surveying. TlARTIKS PESIRISO SIRVKYINQ BONK CAN OR L tain aec-uratt- and prompt work by calliiiL' upon ex-countv survtvoi f, T. T. Fisher. He hascomplete conies of field notes and town ship plats, and is prepared to do snrvehig in anv part ot l.mn cuintv. rosiomee aatirebs. Milltrs Station, Linn couuty, Oregon. Fruit lryr tor Sale. TiLUMMER FRUIT DRYER. FACTORY L size, complete, with additions and im provements, for tale eheap. Aiply to A. Blake.r, Shedd, Oregon, or te A. Wheeler, Springfield, Oregon. For Sale. CWF.R PRESS AND FIXTURES. CAPACITY 2(0 gallons per dav, will be sold cheap for cash, on the installment plan, traded, least or let out on shares. A number of vinegar barrels for sale cheap. Apply to F, H Pfeiffer, at Albany Soda works. T BCK1VKD TO-DAY AS INVOICE F KOVKLTIBH 1 1 in dress trimmiaes diiect from jcew York; the latest thifir ont ihey are sure to please. Call add see them. SAMUEL E. YOUNG Heat Market. FRESH MEAT AND SALMON day at Hide's meat market, specialty and a full market kept up. EVERY Fisn Rra for Ket. -niTRN'ISHED AND UNFURN1SHE C rooms to rent. Enquire of H. Barnes, corner of Seventh aud Baker streets. Iif T ASTtjeilONTH, A MIDDLE SIZE RKD I i ..xinrwi row. half cut ears and blunt horns Tne finder will be paid a good re ward. Address Depot Hotel, Albany. 500 Hons .Wauled, T niF.RINGER WILL PAY THE HIGH- J est market price for 500 head of hogs. Apply to him at the Albany Market, Albany. ltwolntiBXttee. TO WHOM IT MAY C6NCERN. NOTICE is herebv given that the firm known as Burkhart & Miller, wno navp neen engagea in the real estate business in Albany, Oregon, is this dav desolved by mutual consent, L. D Miller retiring and F. A. Burkhart retaining the business, and assume every control of the same hereafter. F A. Burkhart will assume the payment of all outstanding debts ,f the firm and will also collect all due said filTaUd this tns 24th day of October, l&SS: " F. A. BURKHART. L.D.MILLER. Portrait Photographe sittings appointment, tsecon:! and 1 eJ irvstreets Studio cor Pillow sham holders, cthe neatest thing out. at Brink's. j THOS. JOXES' TONSORIAbPARLOHS rF vOV REMOVED TO THE ST It An X A " .iH F:in fiuit v fni- i)..nt Ail.-, I i(V I 1 1 rooms a: -,-e neai " Give him a call. all hours. GENERAL NEWS. l"' Preparing) President Cleveland His Message to Congress. i l tssuvn I ! ftFFH'IAL vuii: OF frenchmen Fiht a. Dnel- Foreign DigDi- taries on their Way to the Pacific Coast Political Notes. The Herald Special L!spntchs Washington, Nov. 20. lhe president goes to Oak view to-day to begin preparations for his mes sage to congress, where he will re main until it is completed. IAA IV UK HOAOKEM. He islw Ke Made Judge Advocate In the I'. S. Ariiiv. Wash'Xgton, Noy. 20. The rumor is gaining currency that Cleveland contemplates appoint ing Private,, Secretary Lamont judge advocate general of the U. S. army, in the place of General owain, now under superintendent. Will Form a I'nlon. Pittsburg. Nov. 20. The con vention of boiler inspectors, for the purpoBe of forming a national or ganization, met here to-day. Del egates from nearly every state in tlie Union were present. The principal objects are to adopt a uniform system of boiler inspection and to prevent the employment of incompetent engineers. Duel Between Frenchmen. Paris, Nov. 20. A duel between Andreux and Guyst, resulting from a charge made by the latter that the Times trial was the outcome ot a collision between Uma-Gilly and Andreux, was fought this morning. Swords were used. Andreux re ceived a slight wound in the chest. Kase Ball League. New York, Nov. 20. The Na tional base ball league meets here to-dav in extra session. A joint committee of the league and the American Association on KuL-s are now in session. Rcely Released, Philadelphia, Nov. 20. KeeVy, of motor fame, was released to-day on bail, pending the hearing of his appeal from commitment for con tempt of court lor not producing a model of bis mnch:n. The Afav Bakery ! -Under the new manairtmcntof WH KEEP2 A fuil line ofchoice provision. family grocer es and Cannea rineapples, Choice Table Delicacies Ornamentedcakesfor Wedntnus andPartiea. Sr.lmonbellics, mackerel and 8altjfi8h0fall kinds. ;g . FRESH BAKED BREAD Cvcr v Dav. mi TEAS and COFFE CANNED WWODS, ETC.; -ine best Soap in the'market- Le Roi Savon. A fine assortment of domestic and Imported Cigars 3TAt JohnlFox s olcllptand. tow Fl nn s new brick. , tain's Restaurant Hermann Dierclis, Prop, THIS RESTAURANT IS NOW OPENED TO the public in the Saltmarsh' building be low the Kevere House, where good meals will be served at all hours. Mr liierck in vites nis old i-iiston.c-rs and the pub'ic (rener ally to call. The tables will be supplied with the best viands the n.arkt t affords. Satisfac tion jruaranteed. Mr. Diercks was formerly proprietor of the Revere Hojte restaurant, which he ran on the iiur-pean p'an.Ini: f unil tha? pian didn't succeed, so he opened hi-, present re.-taur.uit where he hasten general s iti.-faction. Persons w anting a lin-t-oiass meal should i'o to Hermann's, iter "No thintse viiipluvetl. Bros. bests Pies Cakes Candies Nuts, Raisins FAKSELL teMSIISSlON. & no Interesting Developments .UiUe in the Trial or the Case. toxpox, Nov. 20. The Parnell commission is , sitting. Attorney Gc-i.eral Webster, counsel for the Titr.es, complained of the difficulty rxpeiienced in bringing witnesses from count v Ken v. lie called the attention of the jude 10 an article in the Kerry Sentinel (Edward Harrington's paper) which stated: "The jndges.composing the Parne 1 commission, are showing signs if measles now, although at the open ing of the inquiry they appeared to be spotless. The judges were creatures of a conspiracy entered into by the government and the Times, and were manifestly united in their prejudices." The attorney general appealed to the court to take action in the matter, as such publication tended to defeat justice and amounted to grossest contempt. Keed, in behalf ot Har rington, complained that no notice of charge of this character having been given, it was absolutely im possible to make an answer at present. He asked that the mat ter be adjourned until to-morrow. Presiding Justice Hainmon and th e attorney general agreed to this and the matter stood over. The examination of witnesses was then resumed Farmer Culloty, of Castle Islan d, county of Kerry, testified that be cause he served notices on tenants in 1882 two men visited him. and one of them stiuck him with a spade, and the other shot him in the leg. The leg had to be ampu tated. He was afterwards boycot ted. . On cross-examination he said that the quarters of the near est branch of the league was six miles distant from his farm. He considered rents throughout Kerry too big. He denied that the two men who attacked him were rela tives of a servant girl w hom he had wronged. In the Xante of the Itrilfoh. London, Nov. 20. The British cruiser Hvacinth has taken posses- sijn of Cookes Island in the name the British government. 59,591 for Harrison in Pennsylvania Harrisbvrg (Pa.), Nov. 20. The official returns show that Har rison's plurality in the late election in this state was 79,5'jl. i. Senator i:i-t; d. An akta (G. A.), Nov. 20. A. II. Colquitt vviis to-day le-eiected United States Senator. Gradj-, of the Constitution, reiused to run.. BIG FA KM 1 DAKOTA. I hirteen 'thousand Aeres Fader mc ecg till Cultivation. The big Grandin wheal farm in Dakota contains about 40,000 acres, of which 1:3,000 are uuder cultiva tion, 11,000 acres being sown to wheat. There arc- used ou t.;o farm for-j five gang plows, two plows in gang, each cutting from fourteen to tJltt-eu inches. There are lorty-five 'i ii use arc six feet "ausr harrows. square, out are urrangt-u togetlur side tv side to wont twenty-four feet wide. One lon evener draws tbe tour with a span ot mules near erch end. One man drives botii teams. The advantage of this sys tem is worthy of notice bv other farmers. It reduces the number of men required by half. Tlieie are torty-iour broadcast sowers, each sowing eight feet, but two of these aae attached end to end with a sptu. ot mules to tach, and one man drives botli spau, in us saving an other half the inau lorce. There ar- sixty-five self binding harves is employed on the place. Modem improvements have so perfectei tcese tnat f'nly one expert is re quired for the whole, especially . . i- iuc mnouiuc ic npi iruui year ten year and they are able to attend to any little repairs. Tbe harvesters are drarn by three mules, and one and a half to two men are required to shock the bundles from each machine. The threshers, of which there are six, are quire ex tensive aflairs compared with thoce of former limes or with those ot former times or with thnse of the flails or aaimaln on the threshing lioer of our bo j hood. Each one of these machines, driven by steam power, threshes out from 1JJ00 to 2000 bushels a day. They are set down in the cmter of a hundred acres of shocks, and when those are threshed are moved to the cen ter of another hundred acres. The working force on a single thresher f rms quite a little array. Thus, there is, hrst, the general superin tendent, eight bundie teams to haul the shocks, with eight drivers and eight other men, part in the tieid and part at the machine as pitchers and un loaders. At tbe machine two men are required simply to cut the bands. 1 here are three teed- ers, two at work and an alternate ! Then there are the ecgiter. the : nreruan. the waterman, the ''straw bucicer, who with two mules and a pole removes the straw accumu lating before the machine, a barn man to care for the animals and the cock aud hts assis ant. The wheat is received into wooden tanks hold ing 100 bushels each, and four men witu tour wagons drawn by tour mules each, take the wheat to the elevators. This saves bajs aud bagging. If will thus be seen that a torce of thirty men is employed to run a single machine. LABOR QUESTION. Effect of the Scctt Exclusion Act cn the Labor Market. (.IIISI'iE LABOKIKS ARK SCIKCE. The Protpects for Whites Finding Employ ment in California Better Than Ever Beiore Some Figum. Alta California. 'lhe aciiui) of the recent measure in stopping the influx of Chinese lauortrs to this coast has already Oegun to bear fruit. The demand for labor has inci eased to such an extent that the wily managers ot" Chintse Uhorers in this btate are taking advantage of the fact to seek a higher rate of wages for itiose in ineir care. The reason given tor the action of the Chinese managers is that, owing to the ex clusion act, the source of supply has been cut off and that laborers are scarce. There is no scarcity of white laborers in this State, as the employment cities are crowded witn applicants, ready and willing to take the place cf the Chinese if they can command fair living wage9, Several hundred mep re cently lelt this city for the north west to perform railroad work. Manager Brown, of the State Board of Trade, says that if he were given two days' notice he could get 500 men aud boys to go to work any when in the country. Recently, when the board had or ucs lor hoys to go into the countiy to harvest the yintage, the heaa quarters were tilled daily with ap plicants ler work. Alter ail ordeis tiad been tilled, the applicants still continued to come to the board for employment. The names and ad" dresses of 500 applicants were ta Kin for future reterence, and still cuch large numbers applied that the registering had to be given up. Of all tne help sent out there have oeen no complaints to speak of, H of them giving entire satistactiou, aid perlorcuiug the work much more expeditiously and oetter than the Chinese wtiose places they had taken. There is a good demand for white nelp in Redding. Shasta county, nor- the people eonie time since discovered that ' they coulrT"get albug better without the Chinese than with them, and have since em ployed nothinjf but white labor. White help is also needed at Eu reaa. Formerly the reason given by farmers nd orchardists lor favor ing Chinese was on account of their cheapness. The present time is a good opportunity to show their sincerity and preference lor white labor, as the demands made by Chinese laborers have placed the matter of expense nearly on an even footing. No industry would sutler by a suddeu and general dis charge of Chinese help throughout the country, as then places could be immediately tilled by whites. A pecululr Snii-hies. Chicago, Nov. 20. Geo. Eoebel, a board of trade man, who lost $40,000 on fceptember wheat and corn, suicided by shooting this morning. omiuje ( tbe I'acific loat. Caicago, Nov. 20. The Corean minister and two other members of the iegation here, are on their way from Washington to the Pa cific coast. Wh; k WasIi?Kaenn r !hkesptar l u.uuiauii ui nn- uramatic productions contributed to the last of the above named is asritatingf literar-r-eireles to the very centre' but affects the practical masses far less than th momentous question, how to re.fain or preserve health, that essential of bodily and mental activity business success and the "pursuit of happiness" We can throw far moie light on this subject than the most profound ghakesperian can on the question propounded. If the system is de pleted, the nerves shaky; if indiges tion or constipation bothers one at times, or constantly ; if the skin ia yel low and tongue furred as in billious ness; if there are premonitory twinges of oncoming rheumatism or neural aria; if the kidneys ae inactive us Hobtetter's Stomach Bitters, the finest reeuprirant of an ase prolific ia oeueficial. anil successful remedies. Remember if malaria threatens r. afflc ts, that it neutralizes the poison and fortifies the system. rerftoaal. Mr. X. H. Frohlichstein, of Mobile Ala., says: I like great pleasure in recommending Dr, Kings Stw Dis eovery for consumption, bgvin- used it for a severe attack of Bronchifit aid emairu. ih gave me niutaur and entirely cured me and I have not een afflicted since. 1 also br to tate that I have tried or.hpr Jlttt n. r9od result. Have als as4 an4 Pf- Kind's New isni. Dr. King's New Discovery for o . sumction, Coughs and Colds, is sold no a positive jruarantae. Trial bottlss rej at Foshay & Mason, tiiven Away. W. F. Read proposes to give awav a fine gold watch with Ins gold and silver prize shirt, the very best littin ind best made white shirt in the diarket. The price is as low or lower than any equally as good shirt in the market. Dr'JM (;aff' Physician and Sur Ceou, fchedd Oregon, . i