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About Morning daily herald. (Albany, Or.) 1885-19?? | View Entire Issue (Jan. 17, 1890)
Poniing gattj fterad SI'KCIAI., 1-:.10 A. M. 2ujt t see our .-tovi-.s ;i:;i ranges before inyii: i :i n.it:ike. Mis takes are alway - otly. In heat ing stoves v.e Law tin.' largest as . well as the ;;;: carefully selected . stock in the city. The stoves we offer were not bought a.s an experi ment but a.s a certainty. We know what each stove will ilo, and they were bought for cash, so the price is right. We have special ties in heaters, beside our regular lines of Garland, Argand and Xu-. lerior stoves and ranges. Geo W. Smith. OS SALE. The Daily Hekald w ill be on sale each morning at the new stand of W. F. Kuiin's, where it can be procured at 5 cents per copy. WEATIIEi: INDICATIONS. For Albany and v.cinity Fol lowing is the forecast :or 24 hov.is, ending at 8 p. m. to-uay : liain ; warmer. JOTTIN41S ABOt f TOWN. Miss Couthoui to-night. Babies Chamois mocassins at Barrows & Searls. Do not mUs the Y. M. C. A. benefit this evening. Fresh fancy Sicily lemons just received at F. L. Kenton's. If you want something to read call at Kuhn's news store. W. F. Crosby left yesterday for a two weeks' trip to San Francisco. If you want a choice cup of tea try my 40 cent tea in bulk. C. E. Brownell. A fresh supply of seedless oranges just received at F. L. Kenton's. Look at my five-cent ccrner win dow, it is the wonder of the town. C. E. Brownell. A good second hand organ for sale cheap at the art studio over Linn County bank. Subscriptions for all the leading newspapers and magazines received by F. L. Kenton. A shipment of 10,000 bushels of wheat was sold by A Blevins at Tangent at So cents. Barrows & Searls have just re ceived an invoice of ladies fine shoes from George W. Ludlow. Smoke the celebrated Havana filled 5-cent cigars, manufactured at Julius Joseph "s cigar factory. G. M. Strong has at his produce stand a fine lot of dressed fowls, also some choice apples at $1 per bushel. Railroad men will find a good shoe branded Engineer, at Bar rows & Searls. Cheap, suitable and durable. For pure, fresh drugs and medi cines, the accurate compounding of the same II. C. Hubbard leads the procession. The Willamette river 5s steadily rising and i3 at a good boating stage and is free from ice. Boats are now running regulady, . Frank C. Baker, state printer, Clinton Monroe, proprietor of the Chemekate hotel, and F. M. Rine hart, of Salem, are in the city. Judge D. R. N. Blackburn and wife will go io Salem this morning, where Mrs. Blackburn will spend several days visiting relatives. Secure your seats early for the great Shakespearean play Othello at the opera house next Wednes day by Daniel E. Bandman and his company of 18 artists. The annual meeting of the San tiam Lumbering Company was held at Mill City on the 10th. The boaid of directors are Lee Brown, W. H. Hobson, Thomas Sims and John A. Shaw. Fresh cream cheese, choice comb honey, new crop walnuts,almonds, Brazil nuts and chestnuts, lemons, dates, figs and other ?ood things just received at F. L. Kenton's, near the postoflice. The Western Union Telegraph Company's wires have been pros trated in Southern Oregon by the storm, and through the courtesy of the Postal Telegraph Company the train orders have recently been sent over that line. Henry Freerksen, of this city, who is serving in the U. S. petit jury in Portland, returned yester day. On account of the absence of attorneys and witnesses from the snow blockade, the jurors were excused until Monday. Pant. E. J. Lanning, the wide awake manager of the Red Crown flouring mills, who had the misfor tune to fall upon a slippery pave ment during the recent freeze, in flicting severe injuries, is again able to be on the streets. Bv the request of Mr. David Froman, Mr. and Mrs. John Alt house have been appointed to sup. ply the p!ace of Mr. and Mrs. Froman on the reception commit tee appointed for the Masonic dedication ceremonies in this city on the 21si pros. To be conyinced that the railway addition to Astoria is the nearest, cheapest and best property now offered for sale by any agent. Call on E. G. Beardsley and see the maps showing the location of all the different additions to this boom ing fitv of Astoria. The Y. M. G.A. has arranged i mnsieal and liter, ry entertainment to be given at the opera house next iriaay uu -t urday evenings. Miss Jessu rvmthrit. the talented elocutionist will De present on this occasion. and an enjoyaDie enienuiumcui, promised. I i:iuyiwuiL a factor in School Statistics. State Superintendent McElrov is engaged just now making a report to the commissioner of education at Washington, giving full financial statistics of Oregon in support of the public schools, together with general information relating there to. This state is making rapid strides in the line of school work and in a few years will not be a whit behind her older neighbors in the number and value of her schools evervwhere. "Will Hav to ! Enlarged. It is probable, says the Salem Statesman, that the next legisla ture will again have to meet the necessity for more room at the 6tate asylum for the insane, if not also at the penitentiary. The new wing at the asylum will soon be filled up completely, at the present rate of increase. The rapi l in crease in the number of patients, the Statesman thinks, is rather the result of the growth of population than an epidemic of insanity. The Boats. The Oregon Pacific steamer Wm. M. Hoag has gone up the river to Ilarrisbunr and will bring down 200 tons "of wheat. The N. S. Bentley is at Corvallis and will come down this morning, and leave thi3 city at 9 o'clock tor Port land. The O. K. & N. boat Orient will come up the river this morn ing. Oregon's ibrentire (jennis. Oregon has some inventive talent among her citizens. Mr. Louis Bergendal, of Pendleton, the inventor of the famous rotary snow plow, has turned his ingenuity in another direction, and on Dec. 17, 1889, secured a patent for a com bined rotary land plow and har row. The Dreaded La Grippe In Here. Don't fool away money and val uable time in experimenting with newspaper prescriptions or patent medicines, but call your family physician at once. And as an im portant factor to aid him, have his prescription compounded at Hub bard's drug store, where only the purest and iresnest medicines' can De oDtaineu. rertect accuracy guaranteed, and prices most reasonable. LQWJEB 8IUSLAW XTKS. Walton, Lane Co. Jan. 11. Some of our neighbors are trying to build a shool house in place of the one that was burned down last tall. Mr. A. C. Barbour spent his holi days with his family and has returned to his school in California. Mr. W. F. Lycns sat down in chair -in which a pair of shears were carelessly left and run on blade in his thigh, making a very severe but not daugerous wound. Frank Whitaker spent the holidays with his parents en the Pa tab a and has returned to his work in a logging camp on bmith river, where he has been working since last May. Money to Loan. Money to loan at a low rate of interest, on improved farm and city property, in sums of $200 to $10,000. tor particulars call on Burkhart & Malin, Real Estate Agents. TUIfl MOliyiyu liEl?ALL: FKIDAY JANUAliY U7, 1800. v. ALBANY'S GROWTH. Co:resp!itdrnt Offers Seme Snggtsiiors Concsrai: the Promut.oa of Fac!oiies. j TVjiiji Editor nr t:ik Hkkali-: j With the beginning of t lie new year is a good time to formulate plans for the coming season and j prepare to put them into execution, j The year past has been one of more than usual prosperity for Al bany, jjul wlnle much has been done, it is but the index to the book, the neuclud of what might to be done this year of 18!)'). Very soon we shall heat- the complaint made against us that we do not provide tor the suliicient employment of labor, that there is not enough for men to do by which they can maintain their homes here. You have,, through the columns of the Hkhai.ii, pointed with per haps pardonable pride to the im provements of the past year and those that are to be made here .the coming summer, but thev are not calculated to furnish employment to the great throng of men in ditler ent portions of the country who are looking toward Albany as their future home. The fact that important public works are to be pushed this season will be likely to bring among us large numbers of laboring men of all grades many more than there is any adequate means to employ. Such is the usual experience of other places, and a few things should be planned and an earnest endeavor made to have them put into realty. We need all this in crease in population, but to have it to be of benefit it must be enabled to become permanent. To do this work must be furnished in abund ance and of a permanent character. Such work can only be furnished by manufactories. The building and running of factories demand large capital. We must point out the line of invest ment and induce the owners of the needed money to come here and put their capital to work. This is our part to do and it should be done at once. Delays in this, as in many other thing are dangerous, often disastrous. Much has been said about adver tising Albany, and a good deal has been done in that direction, but just now our best advertising should be done by our board of trade. They have been resting long enough to have got their breath and now is the best time for them to do effective work. It is their province to point out tliose kind of manufacturing interests that are most urgently needed, that will give permanent emplovment to the most labor, that will work up the raw materials most readily attainable and present them to the attention of investors. One factory that will employ a hundred or two hundred bands the year round is of more real worth to our cirv than the investment of twice the sum in dwelling houses or store buildings. Some one asks why? Because the factory makes work, puts money in circulation, keeps money at home that now goes away, makes a mar ket for home products, and, lastly, it forces the building of dwellings and insures their permanent use as homes for the artisans employed. Mr. Editor, some things can only be accomplished by continued and united effort, by persistent reitera tion, and the people of Albany have that duty plainly before them now. There never has been a time when constant agitation of a sub ject was likely to be fraught with more irood to the whole city than now. Gen. Grant accomplished his greatest work simply by his bull dog persistency in the line of action laid down in the start, and by a like persistency we can also win our point. Let the board of trade, backed by every business man, and by every private citizen, take hold of this "factory business with a fixed purpose and work lor that end, re gardless of all discouragement and adverse comment, and before another year we can have half a dozen additional factories at work in our beautiful city. Let us agi tate this subject in season and out, until it becomes an accomplished fact. Leon Knox. NOllTIIWEST NOTES. The Southern Pacific railroad ha3 lost half a million dollars by the late storms. The Union Pacific will soon issue 30,000 copies of a circular descriptive of the Nnrthwest, The Northern Pacific has bought the Puget Sound Shore road, the sum agreed upon being one million. Senator Mitchell has introduced a resolution calling upon the secretary of the interior to cause a re-examina-tion of the boundary of the Warm Spring Indian reservation, over which there is some dispute. A small boy at Pendleton, who licked a piece of railroad iron, a few days ago, lett enough of his tongue when be got loose to make a satisfac tory lunch for a iog which followed him. . The boy is now wrapped in anguisk and bitter regret. The Rooebsrg & Coos Bay railroad is exciting great interest. The general verdict is that Coos county will co operate heartily and that work will begin this season. Immediate efforts will be made to secure a proposition from railroad men to put the road through. A leading business man says a $100,000 subsidy can be secured on twenty-four hours' notice. At Oregon City Monday, a man made a filing ia the land office that is an extraordinary one, at least for him. His application was for forty acres near Milwaukee, in township 1 south, range 1 east. When he applied to the register that official supposed the piece of land applied for to be railroad land, and so stated, but the man said the railroad company knew nothing about it, and persisted in filing, so his application was taken, and upou look ing the matter up on the records it was found to be vacant. As land in that vicinity Js worth $200 or up. wards per acre, the applicant has se cured from Uncle Sam a very valuable homestead. A STATE DISPATCHES. Eastern Mails Four Days Overdue In Portland. AM. -uii: . TKaINS delayed. At Slisiaa tie Saow Eicckaue la r.a Bai as Ever. Eut Snow Plows Are at woik Uec .ri-rias tbe Tr.-.ck, S)nvi:il ta the I1i.kai.!i: I'okti.am), Jan. 1G. No Eastern mails have rx-en received in this city over the I'nion Pacific lines for four days. The Northern Pa cific continues to deliver through pouches on pretty good time, con sidering the general condition of the country through which it must pass. No O. R. & N. trains arrived to-day, although one mav set into the city to-night. The north-bound California train has not came in to-day. One will get in here to-night or to-morrow morning. At Sissons the blockade is as bad as ever, but snow plows are busily engaged io uncovering i ne track. Local trains are all run ning uninterrupted. Portland to-day is cut entirely off from telegraphic communica ti hi with the East. The wires of the Western Union Company are down easl of Spokane Falls and South of Roseburg. The offices here consequently failed to-day to receive the full Associated Press report. Property in I'ortland on the In stallment l'lan. Five dollars down and a dollar a week buys you a lot in the beauti ful addition of Wheatland. This property lies adjoining Mount Tabor, and is situated directly on the motor line running into Port land, and is beautifully located, being level land and in plain view of Portland, the metropolis of Ore gon. Any one that can pay $5 down can buy one of these excel lent lots. This property is for sale now Dy Burkhart x Maun, whoj will furnish you with maps and plats of this addition. Coltra's l'ark Addition. We are now offering for s:i!c lots and blocks in this fine addition, parties wishing to make invest ments with a view to building or where property will advance rapidly in value, will do well to look at this addition as it is the choicest residence property in the suburbs of lbar.y. This addition is laid out with parks and has ; broad avenue's running through the entire length of the property with trees planted at the corner of each lot on the avenue. Call on Burkhart & Malin, Real Estate Agents. Sure Care for La Grippe. There are a great manv cases of bad colds in our city, and not a few think it to be the liussian -ailment The best thing the people.of Al bany can do to prevent being taken down with this terrible la grippe is to use nothing but the best grocer ies, fine poultry and other delica cies, to be found at the Willamette Packing t'o.'s at the lowest possi ble figure. JU-itcr ... v W. Than Ever. -r t repared than I I am i liav- mers ii receive i r Leei. i suit my custo- he shoe line. 1 have just a large invoice of th3 cel ebrated Laird, St hoberA Mitchell tine shoes tor lames, lucre is no manufacturer who claims anything better than these shoes. 1 intend to keep a full assortment of them in all prices, widths from A EE, and can suit the most fastidious in fit and price. I also received another invoice of the popular ahoe, E. P. Keed's in waukenphast snd patent leather tip. These shoes are well known in Albany as a first-class nice style shoe. Or ders from the country filled with care and satisfaction guaranteed. Samuel E. Young. Dr. Patton now has his office fully arranged to suit every con venience and is prepared to treat all who may apply. Ladies suffer ing from those ills peculiar to their sex can be assured of speedy relief, as the doctor has made female diseases his special study. He holds two diplomas and is a mem ber of the Oregon State Medical Society. He prepares his own medicines and everything is confi dential. Consultation is free and a visit to bis office costs you noth ing. Office in Blumberg's block. Deserving poor treated free. . . ; i Hr ,,- t ;. . Scissors. Shears.' " ... Immense stock at Stewart. & Sox's. The best quality and any size or style. Call and examine our stock. Stewart & Sox. Cranberries, eocoanuts, oranges and ricd oeef at I.E. Brownell's. Paisley & Job Printers. Albanv Opera House, one night only WEDNESDAY, JAN. 22. THE GREAT TRAGIC ACTOR DANIEL E. BANDMAN, AND HIS New York Compaov OF IS WEIL KXOWX AKTIBT. IN Shakespeare's masterpiece, OTHELLO. THE MOOR OF VENICE. QPnta it. Admission fifl rents, teats now on sale at Blackman's Drug Store. KEEP YOUR EYE ON G. li EA KDSLE 1S Column. -ilGO.OOO To loan on real estate-? in sums to I suit at eight (S) per cent, per annum. ALBANY PROPERTY. A Good Bit--Business property on Sec.ond street in one of the very best blocks in town. Tins is the same block where the most extensive im provements are to be made in the spr ng. This is the only frontage in the entire block that can be bought at any price. The property will pay in terest on the price asked from the start. For sa'e cheap and on easy terms. Call tor particulars. One of the best 40 acre farms in this section of the country, not a foot of pocr land on the place. Is espe cially adapted for fruit, and is situ ated convenient to the city. Price low and terms easy. This is a spe cial bargain for a few days only. Cheap lots in llackleman's first, second, third and fourth additions, in Maston and Chamberlain's addition, in Fair Dale addition, in Bryant's ad dition and in the Goltra Park addi tion. Choice residence lots, both im proved and unimproved, and some bargains in business property. Farm property at all prices and on easy terms. Two cottages for rent, 8 eaoli. ASTORIA PROPERTY. Lots in the Railway Addition to Astoria. This property is situated just one mile and a quarter from the very center of Astoria and is practi cally inside property. This addi tion has been on the market but two weeks, and is already more thon half sold to parties in Portland, Astoria and other eitics. The prices are $70 for inside lots and $S5 for the eorners. The prices will be raised by Jan. 15 ts $85 aud $100. Now for sale on the installment plan, $20 down and the balance at $5 per month. Call quick and select tbe finest. This is by far the best and cheap est Astoria property that is offered for sale in Albany. Come and com pare locations, Am exclusive agent in Albany for this property, 13TN OFFICE EVENINGSTa E. G. BEARDSLEY, Real Estate and Insurance Broker AND NOTARY PUBLIC Broadalbin Street. Albany, Oregon. ASTORIA The most desirable addition yet placed on the market, is Powell's Addition to he City of Astoria. This addition is located just south of Tongue Point. The Columbia river adjoins this property on the east side. It is accessible either by motor line or river. Lots are for sale For a Few Davs Ooly Corner loti $85; inside lots $75. terms, $10 cash and $10 per month until paid for. or five per cent, dis count for all cash. Call and see plat at the office of (MM MONTETH K L. Kenton -DEALER IN- Staple and. Fancy ilso Choie Candies. Nuts, Cigars and Tobacco 8, Fru its, Vegetables, Etc. TERMS CASH Su bscrittion A gen t papers and Magazines. NER THE POSTOFFICE. We have bouarht all the nesatives made bv L. W. Clark and Greenwood un to date (Nov. 15, 1S89). Duplicates ean be had from them only of ue, at re duced rates We also have about 1300 negatives made by ourselves. fAat which duplicates can be had at like rates. We earry the onlr full fine of view of this 6tatc, and do enlarged work at lowest rates for first-class work. We shall be pleased to see you at rur studio in Fro man's block, next door to the Masotic Temple. Ttjlitjs Manufactauerof Choice Cip-ais AND DEALER IN Jff IMPflRTOn 1U1JU :ars,;piujr and Smoking Tobacc os, Meerschaum sr.d Erisr r:j.c. si full line of Smokers' Articles. Also dealer in CALIFORNIA AND TROPICAL FROIfr. Next aoor to Pffeiffer's candy store, Albany, Oregon, Ran m "Oh '. the cold and crujl winter. Ever thicker, thicker, thicker ; Froze the ice on lake and river, Ever deeper, deeper, deeper ; Fell the covering snow and drifted Through the forest round the village.' IT I COMING-. 'OM Prob. saS w inter is this year than -evere Take time by the topknot and eyamiue my elegant stock ot OVERCOATS, CAPE ULSTERS. DRESS OVERCOATS. KERSEYS, VALOURS, BEAVERS, MELTONS. CHEVIOTS, , WIBEAWAKE CHESCHILLAS, CASSIMERES, MONTAGNACS. L. K. B LAIN , 'XfcIE Leading Clottiier, it 19 -TA STt r- V'JiTO CO If T7V A1ND PRICES LOW. for all Leading Xetva- ALBANY, OREGON, Ttio Leading PHOTOGRAPHERS: ALBANY, 6BE40N. Tqseph A Mil WV Wl coming: earlier usual. aud more f , U CI Unifnnt rk n IIUJl Snow Remed FWny A Masea.