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About Morning daily herald. (Albany, Or.) 1885-19?? | View Entire Issue (May 26, 1889)
, 7....,..f. ":5':tS'."'"''-'; . ... - "''"I"---- V .. . A - ... .Vr . 15 CENTS A WEEK. AliBAKY, OBEGOK, SUNDAY MAY 26 1889. j ii in i : .;:.-f;.i -vol. av. KO. 152- S I HV-f- ! ?4 i ' -A II II Hp V. ,. n O T 'Mil A fr !8r G. L. BLAC (Successor to E. W. Langdon; KHAN. mugs, Paints, Oils, Perfumery and toilet articles also a fall line of books and stationery, periodicals, etc. gay Prescriptions carefull j compounded IN ODD FELLOWS TEMPLE. Albany Oregon. Tie Mini Clothier Carries the Largest line of Men's and Boys' Clothing, Furnishing Ooods, Etc. in the Willam ette Valley, AIR PROPELLERS. A Danish Inventor's Method of Moving Vessels. Safety Valve. A Danish inventor has designed a method of moving vessels Lj air propellers. A steam launch whs fitted with a windmill with steel blades. It wia catro-d on a frame above the Week, and formed an aerial prope ier wbcei. ' .Steam machinery cs provide. I for rotat ing this. With this us a propeller it was proposed t drive the boat. Practically it was found, that a twenty-loot launch of five and one halt feet in diameter, could be drivt-n ut u cp'fd ol live knots per hour ia calm wea'her, and "gainst a lies.li breeze at four kuois. The engine producing this effect indi cated one and a half horse power. For a singk indicated horso power the thrust of the propeller was 35.7 pounds. i ' 3 : . . . --:;.- t. ing to a close, there would be a h flLUinn If 7IMirCI X I III1! Illll tlll'ili ; rllTI'i lwupea Kine.nme altar, were I rear cuard, not of infants, but OM ' ItIL I ..Is ill I V 11.11' .. I i . uiiiiuii. in nun ii. i' SUITS MADE TO ORDER Id Mersbaet Taitoring Departat HUMOROUS DRIFT. It is much easier to turu ver a new leaf in springtime than in mid winter. There are more new leaves to turn in the spring. "Home is the de&rest place on earth,' remaiked Nabbs to Dobbs "Yes." rep.ied Dnbbs. "That's wny we quit housekeeping and went to boarding." Husband -Dress, dress, always dress ! I doe't believe you have an idea abave a fifty-dollar dress Wife O, yes I have. I have ideas of tive-hundred-dollar dresses. Book agent 1 would like t show you the latest English cyclo peu.a. via finer iNo, sir; English or American. I could never learn to ride one at my time of life. Miss Gushington Ysu ought have been at the Dateriarch's ball last evening. I bad a lovely flirts tian with your brother. Miss Snap: hot O, he'd flirt w:th any thing, dear. Mr. Youngman (after long thought) "Is there any way to find out what a women thinks of you without proposing?" Mr. Benedict (absently) "Yes"; make her mad. stern latner wnat were you doing with your bead on old Smith's shoulder? Daughter You're not angry, I hope, father? .No; but I don t like to see young heads on old shoulders, that's all." "I ued to think," said Uacle Ezra, "ihet this thing cf gals kissin' pug dogs was purty rough, but sen:e l come to town an see some of the dudes well, mayb thegafs aiu't so much to biame arter all." Some Alleged ' Americanisms of the Present Day. " " . i ' ' '- THE 8TKVGI. FOR WEALTH. Fitting Tribute tt tiio Pioneers of Oregoa A Few Conaaenti ea the - . Needs of. Society.. FS1CX BLMK, ALBANY VhaMs 1 11 M ,l t MtTi r r 3 II II I I II ysaAu CMldrMjCsasphdbrfC gfl, Sett dedg stoeb. FINE LINE OF ART SUPPLIES I'KKBCH KBKVIl'RH. WlIEKB, WhS AND BT WHOM SBK- vjcks WIll as Held To-Dat. Catholic. Services every Sunday fct 10:30 a. m. Sunday school at 2 p. m. at the Academy. Rev. L. Metayer, rector. Christian Cnuacii Services every First Lord'B Iay at their church build ing by Elder W. D. Humphrey at 11 a. m. and usual hour in the evening. Sunday school at 10 a. m. Evangelical. Corner of Lyon and Fourth streets, services at 11 a.m. and 7 30 p.m. Pastor, Rev.I. B.Fisher. Sabbatn school 10 a. m. Prayer meet ing every Wednesday eveninj. Mkthodist. Corner Ellsworth and Third streets. Services at 11 a. m. and 'ISa u. m. Pastor, Rev. II. P. Webb. Sabbath school 2:30 p. m. Prayer meet ing every Thursday evenlnj:. ! Pkesbtteriaji. Cortier of Brnadal bin and Fifth streets. - Services at 11 a m. and 7:30 p. in. fastor Kev.JS. K. Prichard. Sabbath school at 12:15 p. m. Prayer meeting every Wednesdsy evening. United PBBSSTtaRiAK. Corner of Washington and Fifth streets.! Servi ces at II a. m.and 7 KM) p.m. Pastor Rev. S.G.Irvine. Sabbath school at 2:30 p. m Prayer meeting every Wednesdsy evening. St. Paul Methodist Corner Mont- f omery and Third streets. Services at l a. m. and 7:00 p. m. Pastor, Rev. D.H.Comann. Sabbath school at 10 a, m. Prayer naeeting on Thnrsday evenings. ,J- Baptist. Corner of Lyon and Fifth M tlra.tc flarainaa at 11 m ait1 T-Qlt p. m. Pastor Rev. L. J. TrnmbaH. Sabbath school immediately after the morning services.. Prayr meeting every Thursday evening." ntOTKSTANT KTISOOPAL' wICBCI Services will be held in St. Peters Epis copal church every alternate Sunday, morning and evening. . Sunday school at 9:30 a. la. Friday evening service on every Friday preceding the Sunday service. All ore invited to attend. Congregational Corner of Ferry and Fourth streets, Services at 11 a. bi. and 7:30 p. ra. Sabbath school at 1:15. Prayer meeting on Wednesday evenings. G. L. Roges, pastor. Cannst Aflorel. At this season of the year to be without a good reliable diarrhoea balsam in the house, as cramps, cohe, diarrhoea and all inflammation cf tho stomach and bowelj are exceedingly dangerous if not attended to at one. One bottle of B EGGS' DIARRHOEA BALSAM will do more good in cases of this kind than any other medicine on earth. We guarantee it. O. L. Black mau, druggist. TiLET AND FANCY ARTICLES. PRESCSIPTIONS CAREFULLY .COMPOUNDED. GUISS & SON, PROPRIETORS, ItSTHer wird Deutch qesorochen. Strawberry SariabU. Samaritan Lotie No. 316, I. O. G. T., of Ilarrisburg, will give a strawberry and ice cream sociable on Saturday evening, June 1, 18t9, at Smith's hall. The public are cordially invited. A short musical and literary programme will be rendered by some of the best local talent. Amittance, free. Written for the Hckals. By the Golden Age we mean not the tabled golden.age of which an cient poets have sunt,'' age in which man following the truo end and aim of his life lived' only to glorify the author of his being and thes secure perfect happiness, but we purpose speaking ot the present age the gresd for gold whioli seems to have usurped in the hearts and minds of men every higher and loftier feeling, and sits enthroned in the highest at tributes of man's nature. There was a time, in the history of .he world, when wealth was not the keystone for honors, nor the highest offices in tie gift of the people. In those days statesmanship, loyalty to country, scientific research, honesty of Lurpose, learning and aspiration after nobility of character were the the standards by which the citizens of a country were honored or elected to places of preferment. The Roman senators who have gladdened the heart! of future gener ations with their orations in the for um, Kepler and Gaulee, astrono mers of such splendtr that they rose to the highest pvrantids of fame, and even Voltaire, the jmn who by his mighty pen helped to civilize a na tion, Humboldt, who delivered those famous lecturts now known as "The Cosmos " Scott, who has thrilled every young heart with high laud songs. Barns, who so beauti fully portrayed th joys and swrrows of the cotte. s of bunnie Scotland, Shakespeare, "the greatest human beinar who ever touched the eaith the only mau whose intellectual wings have reached from sky to sky," were all men, innocent of wealth Tiieir lives, their labors and the accessions to literature ana science, maue uy their areat minds are the only key stones to their great fame. They knew not wealth uor its temptations, and lived not in a generationin which the attainment of riches was man hirhest ambition, i In all ages of fhe world learning has beea accorded to a greater or less decree, its measufe of respect. At times it filled with awe tho minds ot men; at times with fear; and perse eution was de vised to caeca ns on ward march. To-day, when the fetters of preju dice and fear haVe been removed, nrhn wa.ilth unbounded is at its r..mmnj.d. that verv element which should urove a fostering care, so oc the minds of men as to exclude ..... . 1 - A 1 L- . in manyall higner anu nooier muuguie, By this it is not meant ina learning ioen not command respeci to-aay, but that wealth commands more, it ia ni.t. meant tnat learning anu cul ture are not advancing, but tuat tne acquirement of weltb, particulaily ia tht American mind, predominates an a II nt.nar tninca. itivu wuw ia a struggle for existence; with them tu attain a ompeteiuy is praise worthy; with others it is but a greed for gain; nothing can saticiy tbcir sordid auuetites the increase et their store, but leads to further exertions in the same direction. It is the trnggle'for the deference and respejt whicu great weaitu commauu. iu those who worship' gbll more than true Worth and .manliness. One who in the nreaence of great wealth feels himaelt small, is in! reality very small. But one Who iu the presence of great worth feels himself small, is in reality large-minded. Money wields too great an inluence in all tho walks of lllO. AO POUIICS IS rmca ujpreHic. The ute of money in the campaign. the representations of wealth in our government, the innueuce wwmtu bV tho nroat monied ' corporations in I rnduldinir legislations as their- mter- i .. -i . ata dictate, all are evidences oi sno tact of tho power for evil of money in a field which should: be free from ev ery corrupting infleiee. - Remedies, eomv Utopian, outers practical, have be devised only to be sfioffed at. not duly by those whom wealth irives th - power to ' scoff at those whose Tjetter natures see the wrong and reveal the right, but by the great body 1 who lives en under the weight of oppression they bear in the hope that they themselves will reach as high a plane, and from the imaginary height to which they are raised by fortunes caprices or by their energy and application made selfish by their marrow aims, look down upon their struggling fellow men with arrogance increased by the knowledge thsj they hate risen from a similar status; that once they fought a similar fiUkf, but now have risen fair above thoMrugg!ing mass. But society," too,. has oen effected by this worship for nukmon. In the contradistinction between then aad now, we Ukdlw back to those days' long past, wsso pioaosrs of the Willamette VallaV 'had ' neiehbora from five to twehfy-fivo triiles away. It is true tnese joid pioneers God bless them rodo oa horseback as often as once a weak to all their neighbors, while pioneer mother en tertained strangers and neighbors alike, and none dreamed of drawing a 1 society line oases on tueir wortmy possessions. These oH-tnne yle. Christains, worlds-people ; ui all, practiced and preached thiivine principles whim iu youttty Lad been taught, and they lividtogether as one family, broke., bread together, worshiped at the . same alUr. were loyal and true to eaoh ether, and these precursors of civilization, those monarchs of the sublimeat nobility of charaoter that freedom's spirit Has ever breathed into, human souls, some of whom have grown gray Walk ing in these paths, and they.stHl cling to the early. lessons, while others well, we water their graves with our teara, and they believed when dying that they bequeathed a rich legacy of precepts and examples that those who followed them would love and copy. In those days men and women were taken into society because they , were honest, true and noble; because they . pbsseasd T eftI qumng minds for knowledge; because they studied character as they went along, the resul being a wide char ity and knowledge of their fellow men; because they were humble hearted and well-disposed towaid every person in whatever station of life, and had an intense interest in the joys and sorrows of others; be cause they loved home and country, twin sisters to loyalty and liberty, and admired truth, which when spoken, purifies the atmosphere of any society. But now how often is it that the ignorant, the yicious, the thief, the murderer, and that lowest and mean est of all human beings, the libertine, are too often admitted within the pale of society because of the coin in their coffers, yet this same society repels with a chilling frown the needy toiler in life's great workshop, though he possess the knowledge of a Webster or the graces of an Apollo. Whatever has been said about the tove for wealth, the wish is to be understood as speaking directly against the inordinate love for gold for its sake only. When we love wealth because it builds homes of happiness ad contentment, dots the hill-sides with school-houses, erects colleges the birth-place of scholarly attainments and statesmanship fos ters commerce and makes it possible for those with no other recommenda tion save their own worthiness to enter society, then, indeed, has the love for wealth beconK ennobling. In these few thoughts we have only at tempted to draw the outlines of a picture which the reader's imagina tion must fill, but as you journey thmtiL'ti life measure man not by what he has but by what he is. Clio. ins; to a close, there would be a rear guard, not of infants, but of romping (toys and girls. Thev would have passed, in fact, out the maternal arms into the bands of .the school teacher. Every moment of nearly seven years would be required to complete the parade of little ones that in the course of a twelvemonth begin to play their part in the first age of man. Leeds" Mercury. .HISTORIC FRENCH DUEL. TVHee-tinjr Between Caaalle and Mlii X780. -&W8 in'r-ITie -Frcncli . tftftrttbczJ. often leads to duels, but the Ferry BenlaDger meeting ef n short time baek was not a parliament ry duel, since it did not grow out of such a quarrel ; still its motive was so purely political that it has a right to be classed among those that originated in words exchanged during a heated debate. The first of this sort of eucouuters in the chronieies of French legislativt bodies had it origin in the meet- in? of the National Assess blv of August 11. 1700. The body was debating the responsibilities of the events ot October 5tb and 6th of the previous year, and Oudard A Model Wife. Mr. Jones came home at an un seemly hour the other uight and was surprised to see Mrs. Jones sitting up for him belww stairs with no other light than that of the electric toer on the corner to keep her company. "M m-maria," be said huskily, "y-you shouldn't sit up s'late when I'm out on business." "As Mrs. Jones did not answer him he continued ic an alarmed voice : "Shorry, m' dear, but it's lash time tell you I'm shorry won't speak to mei" At this inonm.-iit Mrs. Jones called from above : "Mr. Jones, who are yon talking to at this hour ot the night?" "Tbash'h what IM like to know m m-my scit," stammered Jones. Mrs. Jones hastened down-stairs lamp iu hand. When she saw the situation, she launheu in spits ot beiug verv angrv. "It s the mode', ' she said, "the model I bought to-dav to fit my dresses on." "Yes, thas'h so," said Jones. tipeily, "model women didn't talk back make some fellow good wite." KAltlKK OF THE WOULD. Nearly Thirty-seven Million ef Them Appear Every Year. .. It has been torn pu ted that be tween 36,000,000 and 37.000.000 babies are bora into the world each year. The rate ot production is tberetor abcut 70 a minute, or rather more than Ode for every beat of the clock: , With the o&c-a minute calculation every reader is laminar, out it ia not every one who steps to calculate what this means when it cornea to a years's sipply. it will probably, there fore, startle a good many to find out on the authority of a writer in The Hespital,tbat could the infants be ranged ia a line of cradle seven deep . they would go around the globe. We have the ingenius coa elusion also that supposing the little ones to grow up and the sexes to be equally divided, we should have an army a hundred times as arge as the forces ot the British empire, with a wife n addition to every soldier. The same writer ooks'st the matter ia a still more picturesque , light. He imagines the babies being carried pasta :te point in their ' mothers' charge one by one and the pro cession being kept up conunously night and day until the last comer in the twelve months has passed by. A sufficiently . liberal rate of peed is al'owed, but even with these babies in arms going past 29 minute, the -' reviewing omoer would onlv have Been a sixth part of tho infantile host file onward by the time he bad been a year at bis post. In other wards, the baby that had to be carried when the work began would be able to toddle onward itself when a mere fraction of its comrades had reach ed the saluting post; and when the year's supply of babies was taper- j made a speech repelling certain in sinuations indulged in by Cbate'.et, which raised a veritable storm of angry cries. The "blacks" (it was the name then given to the Royal ists, who art to-day called the "whites") behaved in such a man der that Camille Desmoulins was led to exclaim they "seemed like so many devils on wlies bare heads a bucket of holy water bad been suddenly dashed." Cazalis retorted that all the members of the Left were brigands, and he Inoked so fixtdlv at Barnave that the latter shouted : "Arcy(u speaking cf lltctively ? If you are you arc talking like a tool and I shall not notice it; but if you wUh to insult me personally I will not suffer it." -Vhat I have just said," answer ed Cazaiis, "was inteuded for you personally." Barnave implied- with an insult ing epithet, and t!w next morning they went to tnu Bois de Boulogne with the'.r seconds. Barnave shot first and missed, while Cazalis' pistol hung tire. "L'poa my word 1 owe you every sort ofaa apologv." said the iacter, a3 his secon-, tit. Simon, was re loading the weapon. "Say nothing about it. That's what I am here for," replied Bar nave, and they begau convening amicably. "I will he sorry if I kill you," said Cazalis, "but really you are very much in our way. What I would like to do would be to give you a wound which wonld keep you away from the Assembly for a few weeks."' ' "I am more generous," replied Barnave; "a!l I want is to graze you, for you are the only orator on your side, while my absence would hardly ue noticed." His bullet struck Cazalis on the forehead, bur, as it eacouotered the stiff brim of the hat he was wearing, it only produced a bruise, and ever alter they were good friends. OF SOUTHERN ORIGIN. Chauncey Depew's Eleqaent Sketch Decoration Day, 1879. When the war was over, in the south, where, under warmer skiea and with more poetic temperament, symbols and emblems are better understood than in the practical north, the widows, mo'heis and children of the Confederate dead went out tad strewed their graves with flowers, and at many places the women scattered them intpar tially slso ever the unknown and unmarked resting places of the Union soldiers. As tho news of this tjuchiag tribute flashed over the nprth it roused, as nothing elae could have done, national amity and love and allayed sectional animosity and passion. It thrilled every household where there was a vacant chair by the fireside and an aching void in the heart for a lost hero whose remains bad never been found.old wounds broke out afreab. and in a mingled 'tempest ol grief and joy the family cued. "May be was our darling." Thus out of sorrows common alike to the nertu and south came this beautiful costom. But Decorauoa day no longer belongs to those who mourn' it is me csmmon privilege ui ua all, and will be celebrated as long as eratitude exists and flowers bloom. s .. Nevtey Notes from the National Capital, A BOLD EXPRESS ROBBERY. Texas Bnadlu cter a Train and Secnrs ' ' $15,000 -r-Work cn toe Great later- Ooeapio Canal The HBBALlfS Special Diettch. Washington, May ml ';' X 25. The president has apiinted Tobin C. Spooner, or Wisconsin, consul at Prague. lie is a brother of lena tor Spooner. The president and party started down the Potomac this afternoon on Wannamaker'8 yacht. They will return Monday. " THE INTER-OCEANIC CANAL. V ATessel Leaves New York With Supplies for thisGreat Work. New YoRK.May25. The steamer Alvena sailed for Grey ton, Nicar agua, to-day, carrying the first batch of men and machinery for the construction of the inter oceanic canal. The first work to be done, and which will begin im mediately, is railroad construction, be building of a pier at Greytown, erecting permanent quarters, hos pitals, warehouses and shops, run ning telegraph wires along the line of the projected canal, dredging in -Grevton harbor, and r.arinc- And dredging the first two miles of the canal from Greytown to the "divide." Preparations will be made for heavy work rock cuts, embankments, etc. PRESBYTERIAN ASSEMBLY. at th Important Actiea Taken Meeting Yesterday. New York, May 23. At the morning session of the general assembly a telegram was received from the Southern assembly an nouncing their concurrence in the amendments made in the session of the committee in church work. After adopting the report of the committee on Sabbath observance and referring back the recommen dation that the president of the United States be inaugurated on the first Wednesday in March, the assembly adjourned for the day. "Is Love a Failure r.: How on earth any man who has ever strain ed the object of his affections to bis heart and printed a kiss on the end of her nose can ask that quet tion is a stunner. One might as well ask it eating was a failure. Economy shows itself variously. Some men who determine to practice it will reduce their church subscriptions and then give a theatre party when the next ballot comes along on the money they have saved. It requires but little faith lor man to oelieve he is made of dust after he has asked tor credit and found that his name ia mud. A Bold Express Robbery. Dallas, (Texas), May 25. As the east bound passenger train on the Texas & Pacific railroad reached the outskirts ot the city last night two masked men with. drawn revolvers entered the ex press car, beat the messenger and robbed the safe of $15,000. They escaped. . Lincoln Visits the Ourrn. London, May 25. Robert T. Lincoln, the American minister, went to Windsor this afternoon and presented his credentials to the queen. Will Con teg tithe Elections. Paris, May 25. At a meeting of ijouianger's tupporteia in this city, it was decided to contest all elec tions in France. German Fotentatec Berlin, May 25. King Humbert and Emperor William will goto Ktra6burg to-morrow. They will review the entire garrison on the esplanade. Humbert will proceed homeward from Strasburg. Deadly Dynamiters. ; LiSB0N,May25.-A dynamitebomh exploded at the door of the civil governor's house at Laport to-day, smashing the windows, but no one was killed. : Fair Weather. San Francisco, May 25. Fair weather is indicated lor ' Oregon and Washington territory. The rrtele or Wotaaa. A clear pearly and transparent Hum is always a sign of pure blood, and all -' persons - troubled with dark. greasy, yellow or blotched skin oaa rest assured that their blood is out of order. A few doses of BEGGS' BLOOD PURIFIOR and BLOOD MAKER will remove the cause and the skin will become clear and trans parent. ' Try it, and if satisfaction n not given it will cost you nothing. It is fully warranted, G. L. Black man, druggist. - The YereUet rnaalaeeo. W. D. Suit, Druggist, Bippus, Ind estifies: "I can recommend Electric Bitters as the very best remedy. Avery bottle sold has given relief in every case. Uno man took six bottles, and was cured of Rheumatism of 10 veara stanoing." Abraham Hare, druggist. Bellvlfle, Ohio, affirms: "The best selling medicine I have ever handled in my 20 years' experience, is Electric Bitters" Thousands of others have added their testimony, so that the ver dict is unanimous that Electric Bitters do cure all diseases of the Liver. Kidnevs or Blood. Only a half collar a bottle at Foshsy A Mason's ' Drugstore. A new line of solid silverware. gold-headed canes, beautiful dia mond ringg.gold and silver watches. tiaa lufct been opened bv Will dc Stark. The "Pacific Argand" ranges both four and six hole. An Eastern stove made especially for this roast's trade Sold only by Geo. W. Smith, Albaay 1 ;1 - i 1 M vr. v.. :y .. Ft v -r- sr. . . r. - - - . ' i . K.awwwnwre1.' .TjfL , :rr , -i i.mij'