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About Morning daily herald. (Albany, Or.) 1885-19?? | View Entire Issue (Jan. 28, 1890)
i THE aiUKlsiyu U3il?ALl:: TTJESJJAl' JAKUAKY 28, 1690. jKlimung gaily Brawl SPECIAL, 13:30 A. M. Not to sie our tov'es and ranges before buying i u ndstakc. Mis takes are always costly. In heat ing stoves we have the largest as well as the most carefully selected stock in the city. The stoves we offer were not bought as an experi ment but as a certainty. We know what each stove will do, 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 Su perior stoves and ranges. Gko.W. Smith. The Daily Herald will be on sale each morning at the new stand of W. F. Kuhn's, where it can be procured at 5 cents per copy. WKATHEK INDICATIONS. For Albany and v.cinity Fol lowing is the forecast tor 24 hours, ending at 8 r. m. to-ua v : Rain; stationary temperature. JOTTINGS A BOD T TOWN. Bandmann in Othello Thursday evening. Regular meeting of the ciiy council will be held this evening. J. N. Duncan and Geo. II. Keeney leave this morning for Portland to look after 6ome real estate investments there. The wires of the Postal Telegraph Co. are now in working order through to San Francisco, the first through connection for several days. A district teachers' institute for the counties of Linn, Marion, Polk, Yamhill and Tillamook will be held in this city on March, 13, 14 and 15th. Two prisoners, Frank Byron and Samuel Newton, escaped from the jail at Salem Sunday night. A re ward of $50 each is offered for their capture. The steamers Willamette Valley and the Farallon are lying at their docks at Yaquina, unable to put to sea on account of a severe gale prevailing. Next Monday a meeting of citi zens will be held at Halsey to con sider a plan of tapping the McKen zie river with a canal, to be run - down the valley to that place. Jim Murray has returned from Palouse, Idaho, and will make his horn's in Albany. He has sold his ranchXup there, and will take chargeot the Exchange hotel on Feb. 1st. E. C. Phelps lias his new job printing office now in operation. His adv. will be found in this issue. He has a new and complete stock of type presses and material and guarantees satisfaction. The proved ings of the Eighth annual session of the Northwest ern Firemen's Association and tournament held at Tacoma last September, are just out, having been printed by C. W. Watts of this city, who is secretary of the association. Mr. Lee Brown, manager of ' the Albany lumber yard of the Santiam Lumber Company, states that the recent articles of incorporation filed in Salem were for a logging company connected with the mill. The capital stock of the company itself is fiO.OOO, and the capacity of the mills is 50,000 feet per day. Dr. W. II. Rowland has bought out the Pacific Medical Co. of this citv, and has formed a co-partnership with L. C. Stratton, who will continue the business under the same name. They have rented rooms in Foshay & Mason's build ing over Matthews &. Washburne's hardware store, which will be used as their office. C. W. Ayers, a prominent archi tect of Ashland, who has decided to locate in Albany left last night for that place. He will return in a few days. He has completed plan" of a fine front for the new Bank of Oregon building. Mr. Avers will fit up an office in the Flinn block in the rooms with the Albany & Astoria Railway Co. PERSONAL MENTION. 11. F. Ashby is down at Astoria. D. B. Monteith has returned from a trip to Astoria. Miss Nellie Kizer.of Harrisburg, is visiting in this city. Geo. Hsh and Lake and Frank Dorrie, of Corvallis, spent Sunday in this city. Bert Van Cleve has returned from Portland to the home of his parents in Scio. William Green, of Jackson, Michigan, is spending a few days with his brother-in-law, Fred Blumberg, in this city. Linn Comnty Council. The regular monthly meeting of the Linn County Business Council, P. of H., will be held at Knox Butte next Saturday at 10 a. m. Arrangements have been made to have the Oregon Pacific train stop ped at the hall both going and coming, ihe train will leave Al bany at 8 :30 a. m. and return about 4 o'clock. Those desiring to go on the train should notify Hon. R. A. Irvine. The Census. The census takers will begin work June 1st. There will be re quired five or six men in Linn county, and there will no doubt be plenty of candidates for the places. Hon. John H. Shupe, of Oakland, Douglas county, chief clerk of the last senate, is the superyisor of the census of the western district of Oregon, and he will no doubt visit this part of his field soon. AN TJNBLUSHIIG BIGAMIST. Kill :a $20C Bauds fir Possessing Too Many Wives. F. J. Be!:, who was arrested at! Oakland and brought to this city by Chief of Police Hoffman on a charge of polygamy, was arraigned injustice Humphrey's court yes terday morning. His wife, who resides at Rose-j burg, also Ellen Beard, of Tangent, j a grass-widow, whom he married i about four weeks ago, appeared in court. Bell did not. attempt to deny his crime and waived exam ination. He was held to await the action of the grand jury, his bonds being placed at $2000." In default of this amount he was lodged in jail. Bell said in court that his name was Frank John Bell, although his name in tt-e marriage license was given as Irancis P. Bell, lie seems to have made a profession of marrying one woman after another, and had letters in his possession from women in various portions of the country in answer to advertise ments of his' inserted for wives. He is one of the most unblushing scoundrels ever brought into court, and ought to have hied himself to I'tah lonw ago. He is now well on his way to the penitentiary. At the Opera House. 'Lynwood'' was the play pre sented at the opera house last evening by the Russell-Jewell Dramatic Company. It i a thrill ing military drama, the scene be ing Kentucky during the war of the rebellion. The plot is well laid and the leading part, that oi Lucille Carlyle, is taken by Miss Lizzie Langham, who is a charming actress. Sam Morris, the war correspondent, kept the audience in a good humor, while Frank Cleares, the villain, was all thr t could be asked. Mr. W. M. Russell took a double part and ex hibited some clever acting. Miss Jennie Dorragh and Miss Fannie Yantes sustained their parts well. The company is deserving a good patronage wherever they go. Bandmann Will Return. Daniel E. Bandmann and his talented company who so pleased the people of this city last week with their Shakesperean plays,will return Thursday and play Othello. The return is made at the request of some of the prominent citizens of this city, and in their presenta tion of this masterpiece of Shakes pearean plays there will no doubt be a crowded house. The Boats. The I'nion Pacific steamboat, Modoc, passed down the river yes terday. She was loaded with 200 tons of grain from Harrisburg. The Oregon Pacific boat, the Bentley, took on ."0 tons ot hay at this city for Salem. The river is slowly faUing. During the recent rise it reached G feet and it inches above low water. InHtallatlou. The installation of officers of McPherson Relief Corps, No. 13, W. K. C.,will occur this (Tuesday) evening. The members of Mc Person Post, No. 5, G. A. R., and of the Relief Corps and their fam ilies are invited to be present, as an enjoyable social is expected at the close of the installation. Snow in the Logging Camp. The Brownsville Times says : "Nelson Cochran returned Wednes day from tt.e 'ogging camp above Crawfonlsville. lie report:- snow plentiful, there being from four to five feet. It seems rather singular to see snow on the hills around us, while here in the valley green grass can nearly everywhere be seen. Still in .lail. The Chiuese cook Moy Yap, who made a savage attack with a butchers' cleaver upon Mrs. Mur ray, proprietor of the Exchange hotel, Saturday, is still lying in jail. On being arraigned yesterday morning in Justice Humphrey's court, the time for examination was continued until 2 o'clock .Ved nesdav. Pioneer Woman Dead. Mrs. S. A. Clark, of Salem, one of the pioneer women of the state, died at her home in Salem Sunday nk'hfc- Her husband was formerly editor of the Willamette Farmer, and nas recently been engaged on the agricultural department of the Oregonian. Paid for Their Folly. J. II. Mattoon, father of the two girls who were engaged in whole sale stealing in this city, has re turned to his home at Drain, hav ing settled up as far as possible for the articles taken by the girls. He regrets their actions very much, and wants the young men who were with them brought to justice. Almost a Fire. A lamp which was left burning in the tailor shop of W. R. Gra ham last evening caught fire when no one was in the buildin?, and the burning oil made a blaze that caused some excitement. The flames soon consumed the oil and went out without doing any dam age. Only the Jim Jama. A rannrt. vpsrerdav. that W. H. Greenwood had committed suicide proved to be no more than an ex aggeration of the fact that he was indiilwincr in the iim iams in get- ling over one of his customary big drunks. Important Announcement. We are now prepared to do what we have advertised. Sell cloaks, both ladies' misses' and children's, for 0 cents on the dollar. All we ask is to call and see us at Sample Room, opposite the Revere house, as we aie here for onlv a lew days A good cloak man wanted. Great clearance sale at W. F Read's for the next 30 days. STA3S DISPATCHES. The Soaih?rj Paciaj Opss to fish!aad Portl.isd News. S;cii.il t j the IIkral!'. PoitTi.AX i, Jan. 27. The .South ern Pacific railroad is clear as far south as Ashland. The train which left there Wednesday night arrived isere at 10:0 this morning with all the passengers who went down on it. All of them who de sired were given tickets to go to San Francisco by the steamship Columbia, which si i led hem e to night. The situation on the road smith of Af-hUrul it-mains much the same. The snow is melting some what, and tin-re is nowmore danger from washouts than any other causes. The convicted Indian murderer Peliio, of Pendleton, will be sen tenced to death bv Jiuke Sabin some day this week. A reporter had a chat with him through an interpreter in the county j.iil this morning. Pellio said that the first two days lifter his conviction he could not sleep or eat, but now he was feeling quite well. He re marked that if he must suffer the death penalty for his crime he wants to make his exit from earth where he can see all his people once more. Burglars seem to be active in tli is city. Four cases occurred Sat urday night. There is great interest in the sale of seats for the opening night of the Marquain grand theatre. In Judge Shattuck's court this morning the case of E. K. Jones against the Portland & Willamette Valley Railway Company, involv ing $:;0.45"J, went to trial. On the 20th of last July the plaintiff's sawmill was burned, together with a house and a large quantity of lumber, located on the White house road, and being destioyed by lire from sparks from the en gine, the plaintiff sues for that amount as damages. NEWS FROM SALEM- Oar Uaaal Interesting Budget t.om State Capital. the Spi-cial to the IIkbald. Salem, Jan. 27. In the supreme court to-day in the case of the state of Oregon, respondent, vs. Elzear Dupuis, appellant, as j teal from Ma rion county, the judgment of the lower court was affirmed ; opinion by Strahan, J. Edgar Poppleton, appellant, vs. Yamhill county, appeal from Yam hill ; judgment reversed and the cause remanded to the court below, with directions to entertain a writ of review; opinion, Thayer, C. J. Samuel Kiel, respondent, vs. F. Levy, appellant, appeal from Ma rion ; cause on trial. Lewis C. Garrigus and Leonard Buell, of Roseburg, A. F. Wheeler, E. S. Miller and II. (J. Sibray, of Portland, and Win. P. Wright, of Roseburg, were to-day appointed notaries public by the governor. P. L. Hanson, from Baker City, and John Lake, from Clatsop county, were brought to Salem to day ami left at the insane asylum for treatment. Hanson is suicidal and often violent. Lake is a "tranger in Oregon, lately having arrived from California. Coroner D. C. Byland died this morning at his home in Woodburn of typhoid pneumonia. Governor Pennoyer is in receipt of letters from quite a number of county assessors in the different counties of the s.ate relating to the assessors' convention. All signify their intention of being in attend ance upon the session at Portland. Hosea Pratt, a pronation t man of Marion county, died at Mehama Sunday, aged 77 years. He will be buried here to-morrow. Mrs. S. A. Clarke died suddenly last night of a congestive dull. She came to Oregon in 18311, and was a member of the E. N. Cooke paity in crossing the plains. Ttie funeral will be Wednesday. rrank Bvron and Samuel New ton, by using an iron hook and a spike that had by some means been obtained by them, dug through five courses of brick in the jail and made their escape at dusk yesterday evening. Both were pending the action ot the grand jury, liyron tor the rouoery ot Minto fc Low s 6a:e, and Newton for jietty larceny at Jefferson. They made good their escape. A reward of $100 is offered for them. lietter Than Kver. I am now better prepared than I have ever been to suit my custo mers m the 6hoe line. I have lust received a large invoice of th3 cel ebrated Laird, Schober & Mitchell fine shoes for ladies. There is no manufacturer who claims anything better than these shoes. I 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 aboe, E. P. Reed's in waukenphast snd patent leather tip. These shoes are well known in Albany as a hrst-clasa nice style shoe. Or ders from the country filled with care and satisfaction guaranteed. Samuel E. Young. Prof. II, C. Palmer's 'malory of MoHlr, Tweedale's block, First street, Albany, Oregon, opened Jan uary 20. 1800. The course of in struction will consist ot classes lor piano, organ, harmony and voice culture. There will be a normal class and diplomas furnished to teachers, specifying capacity and experience. Students panic ipate in monthly recitals, and are graded to insure equality in rendi tion. This conservatory will be conducted on the same basis as those in Boston, New York, etc, This is the onlv recognized saccess ful system known for a thorough musical education, bend ioi circu lars and references. Office hours from 1 to 3. Paisley & Job Printers. i COAST BOTES. Notes as Eiported by !xcba:ges Tbincght'ut the northwest. Pendleton has got two can's of smallpox. Seattle complains of a very poor quality of gas. The total clearing house receipts uf Ticoma for 1SS1 were $20,0S0, 077. Pendleton expects lively real estate times in the spring. At . pre.-ent dirt is very cheap. The Port Townsend Argus, a weekly since 1870, daily since 18S2, has suspended oblication. i A man representing $230,000,000 ; of English capital is trying to buy j the large lumber plants of Puget ! Sound. ! The Marquain grand opera house j will be opened at Portland Feb- ! - o I - t - . t i iuaiy ou, masiug a new era oi dra matic progress m Oregon. According to the Post Intelli gencer, says the Ledger, 1 ,8o2 new buildings were erected in Seattle during the last night of the year. The salary of the governor of Montana is to be $3,0j0 a year. This is a contrast to the paltry amount Oregon pays her chief exe cutive. The Mechanic's Mill coupany, ' oi fteattie are boring tor artesian water in the mud flats. They ex pect to strike fresh water at a depth of 150 feet, The Northern Pacific is about to build a railroad from Seattle to the international boundary line and Bellingham bay and ship's harbor, a distance of one hundred miles. The Union Pacific is experienc ing gt eat trouble in getting engin eers to do the work on the road. There have been upwards ot a dozen killed on the Portland-Hunt-ington division. A correspondent of the Baker City Democrat says. "The immi gration committee has been disor ganized and the board of trade has not life enough to get out on a cold night and pay their honest deots." Charles C. Trescott of Portland. the largest exporter of sturgeon on 1 the coast, is preparing a bill to be . presented to the legislatures of i Oregon and Washington, fo the' protection of ami propagation oi sturgeon. An Ellensburg paper says snow on the mountain ranges and in the valley of the Columbia is reported deeper than for many years past, and cattle are dying by the hun dreds. The snow in the Big Bend is two feet deep, and on the moun tains from three to six feet. About :;,C00 head of (cattle are still on the range ; the streams are frozen over ; there is nothing for them to eat, and unless they are rounded up and driven out every one of them will die. SelNKors. Shears. Immense stock at Stewart A Sox's. The best quality ami any size or style. Call and examine our stock. Stewart & Sox. lulMoriini 4'iil-U-Curr. . The only guaranteed cure for catarrh cold in the head, liaj fevor, ros-e cold, catarrhal deafness mid orc eyes. He store the M-nse of taste and unpleasant breath. rt-Miltiiig from catarrh. Kay and : nit tn i..-". Follow uirections uin! i 1 1- i i ....u-l, by all drug-iri.-i. .-! iid foi t i t-ul.ir to Auictine .Medi--i 1 Company. Orot illc, Cil. Six moitli..-' treatment iur $1 ; sent by mail. I 1(1, For sale by Foehay iV Mason. IH'SIKSS 01MTi. Cloaks away down at Reads. Good morning! Have you used Hubbard's Elegant Lotion. A full line of homeopathic reme dies at Hubbard's new drug store. If you want a choice cup of tea try my 40 cent tea in bulk. C. E. Brownell. When vou want any printing done call on Phelps for the best work in that line. A good second hand ort;an lor sale cheap at the art studio over Linn Countv bank. Try Hubbard's headache cap sules. They are a sure cure, and only cost 25c. per box. Smoke the celebrated Havana filled 5-cent cigirs, manufactured i at Julius Joseph's cigar factory. Why suffer with the headache, when Hubbard's headache cap-1 sules will positively cure it. i To the ladies of Albany. W. F. Read will sell you a cloak 10 per cent cheaper than any Portland house. We are not here for only 10 days but to stay and help build up Al bany, and we will guarantee at all times to cell you the best goods at the lowo-t possible price. W. F. Read. Get an a'-cident policy in the Travelers of C. B. Winn. Don't delay. Work on the Albany & Astoria railroad will probably begin in the spring, Dut Phelps will do your printing for yon now and do it right. S. J. Brown, who recently nur- chased the cigar store of II. S. Ellis s Co., opposite the Revere House, keeps a fine assortment of the best brands of domestic and imported cigars. Smokers are in vited to try his goods. Woman's Dl scoTcry "Another wonderful discovery has been made and that too by a lady in this county. Disease fastened its clutches upon her and for seven years she withstood its severest tests, but her vital organs were undermined and death seemed imminent. For three months she coughed incessantly and could rot sleep. She bought of us a bottle of Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption and was so much re lieved on taking first dose that she slept all night and with one bottle has been miraculously cured. Her name is Mrs. Luther Luts." Thus write W. C. Hami ick fc Co.. of Shelby, N. C Get a free trial bottle at Foshay & Mason s urug store. KEEP YOUR EYE ON E. G. BKAHDSLEY'S Column. j Agent fur NEW ZEALAND INS. i CO. CAiTTAL 5,000.000. Fire and ' Marine Insurance written. ALPANY PROPERTY. A (loon Brv--Business property ou Second street in one of the very best blocks in town. This is the same block where the most extensive im provement are to be made in the spring. This is the only frontage iu ths entire block that ui be bought at aoy price. This is the best offer in business property ir the city, and will oou go at the price I am asking. Call at the office for particulars. Farm property at all prices and in different localities. Improved lands, can sell on easy terms. 100 acres for $1100. 104 acres for $S0O, 1C0 acres in the coal belt, 7 per acre. 55 acres on Coos Bay, $5 per acre. Cheap lots in Albany. Residence lots both improved and unimproved. Lot 50x100 in Pipe's addition; this lot faces town and is a bargain at $1S0. Lots iu Burkhart's and Goltra Park additions, If you arc looking for in vestment in Albiny property come and see me. Two cottages for rent, $8 each. ASTORIA PROPERTY. Lots iu the Railway Addition to Astoria. This property is situated. just one mile and a quarter from the. very center of Astoria and is practi cally inside property. This addi tion has been on the market but a few weeks, and is now nearly all sold, parties in Astoria invtsting to a large amount. Prices forthese fine lots are$S5 for inside lots and$100 for the corners. The prices will be raised on Feb. 1 to $100 and Si 15. Now for 85 on the installment plan, $20 down and the balance at $5 per month. Call quick and select the finest. Call and compare locations. Acre property in Astoria for sle. Am agent for the ASTORIA REAL ESTATE & TRUST CO., OF PORT LAND. This company makes a spe cialty of Astoria property, and it you desire to invest in the city by the sea, it will pay you to call and exam ne my list. rlN OFFICE EVENINGS" Tiro, beardbley: " Real Estate and Insurance Agent AND NOTARY I'I KI.K Broadalbiu Street. Albany, OregoD. WHERE WILL YOU FIND A GOOD Set MEAL? At tlie Delmonlco. TPllV HRKAKKAPT, HIT I1IK DISNKR, TUT Ills X MiiH.-r. (ioctz Bros. !( all their own tiiokim:. Tit hid-hot coffee ami tea with cakes lor 10 cts. Katurn oysters are a spe cialty, ami xrt-at care will be taken to put thciii up after KaMcrn r-tylc. Yaipiina and I Say Viiwojsters t-otiHtantly on hand. Read his i liill of fare ana tee if vou don't find what I you want. Hid yu ever try one of our Sun day dinners'.- All kinds of iraiuc. Fanners will find a t;ood table set at the Iclimnnico. Waiting will he prompt Come anil pee us. Krchh I'isli. Fresh llame. Fresh Meats .:TZ KBOS.. lrop. Morklio!!rr' Merlins. NCTICS IS UKKKI1Y GIVEN THAT the annual nu etin of the stockholders of the Alhany liuililiii and Loan Association will be held on Friday, February 21. IS'), at the hour of 7:20 r. M of said day in the W. V. T. U. hall in Albany, Linn county. Ore Kon, for the purpose of electing nine direc tors and three auditors, .o srve for the term of one year next ensuing from said meetini;, and until their succcstwrs arc elected and qualified, and to transact such o'her business as may then cjmo before the association. Done bv order of said association this 17th day of January, 1&00. W. C. C'ASSELL. Jay W. Blais, l'resitlent Secretary NEW ARRIVAL! A genuine surprise it will pay you to call. There is now at the Revere House sample Rooms im mediately east of the hotel a select line of pattern cloaks, wraps and jackets, from the following well known manufacturers : Messrs. Judd&Co.,of St. Louis, Bohen Brothers, of New York.and Spring er Brothers, of Boston, which will be sold at retail for an average of GOcen's on the dollar. Nothing like them has ever been shown here. Mr. Geo. Caldwell, a young man well known, will be pleased to show the goods for a few days. Do not miss this 6ale. Please tell your neighbors about it. Will be open for business at 2 :03 on Saturday. The City Restaurant, Under the new management of H. Lampman will be conducted on a first-class plan. Meals will be served at all hours. Consult the BILL OF FARE And order whatever you want, pay ing for what you order and nothing more. Straight meals served as usual for 25 cents, and meals to order from a 5 cent roll and cup of ooffee to a first-class ?1.00 meal. Furnished rooms to let in connec tion with the restaurant. C. PHELPS, II COMMERCIAL, BOOK AND JOB PRINTERS, OVER WELLS, ARGO A CO's OFFICE, ALBANY, OREGON. A share ot the trade In this line solicited. Call and see samples. ALBANY. j The tine niauufactciii; city and j railroad center of Orc;."..n. Albany, I t-day has the briyhtm future be j fore it of any town in On.-.oinnd .-.he ' will certainly by the end of Ls'JOhave i a population of from 10,000 ti 15,000 i souls. Sli-.- i maintaining a steady J ami heaiihy growth, and is destined j to be the grc.t lailroad center and j manufacturini; city of Oregon. Real estate to-day in Albany i- cheap com pared with other towns in Oregon and Washington that have not one half the future before them that Al bany has. It will only be a short time until the speculator will prefir Albany to any other town in Oregon or Washington to invest his money iu and those now who arc smart enough to embrace the present opportunity to buy real estate iu Albany while it is cheap will be the ones that make the money. The real estate firm of Burk hart Sl Malin have some excellent barcains in inside property, as well as fome good bargains in some of the closest additions. They have lots for from $50 to $1000 and on the install ment plan. Parties who wish vo get in on the ground floor should call at their office and be shown their large li?t of city property, which cinbracos residence property in all portions of the city. A few special bargains we note below, to which we respectfnlly invite the attention of the ptitilii: A gcod 2 story house and 00 front by 110 feet deep, corner of 4th and Montgomery streets, for $SS00; part cash, balance on time. Two good vacant lots corner of tith and Montgomery streets for $'2500; a bargain. A good new house and one lot with in two blocks of the court house for $2500. A No. 1 bargain. 1 good lot and small old house near the corner of 4th and Railroad St?, for $750. 2 good vacant lots on 4 th street within 3 blooks of the court house for $1300, half cash and balance on time. A good new house and 1 good cor ner lot within 4 blocks of the central school huse for $1100. j We are now oU'erin;;: Lots on th installment plan in Goltra's Park ad dition for $:0 down and $10 monthly This is the choicest and most sightly addition to Albany, and is situated directly on the j roposed street rail way line Lots in this addition will double in value in the next six months BURKIIAKTit MALIN Ileal Estate Agents, ALBANY, - - OREGON. A FRESH SEEDLESS -JUST RECEIVED BY K L. Kenton -DEALER IN Groceries k NER THE POSTOFFICE. Si lain ! "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 IS COIVLTNGK "OJdProb.'' says winter is coming earlier and more severe this year than usual. Take time by the topknot and examine my elegant stock ot OVERCOATS, CAPE ULSTERS. DRESS OVERCOATS."! KERSEYS, VALOURS, BEAVERS, MELTONS, CHEVIOTS, WIDEAWAKE, CHINCHILLAS, CASSIMERKS. MONTAGNAeS. L. ED. BLAIN, Leading 1 iif Miseries We are permanently located on the M Cline homestead milt from i Alhiiry on Corvallis read. We have on baud a larje stock of Choice Emit. Trees of cur own jn'owinj;, w hich we wil sell at lowest living rates. l'artit-s contemplating planting trees will consult, their interests bv j examiuiug our block and prices btfore purchasing. IIyman & Brow null, Albany, Oregon. Cranberries, cocoanut, oranges and ried beef at C E. Brownell's. COWAN r.VSTON AND CHAMBERLAIN Albany, ; - Oregon Transacts a general banking business. lraw si'!it drafts on New Ycrk. San Fran f isco and Portland, Or. Loan money on approved security. Receive deposits subject to check. Collections entrusted to us will rccehr jiromot attention ni CJTJMAKKET-JI ST OPENED IX J; lOll the Sultmarsh bloclt below the Kevore House. Fresh Fish of all kinds kef constantly on hand. WILSQX A BOtQl ET, Prop JB PATENTS Caveats and Frade marks obtained, and all patent business conducted for moderate fees. Our office is opposite L . S. Patent Office and we can cccure (intent in less time ajd at less cost than those remote from Washington. cnd model, drawing, or photo.with kefcription. We advise, if patentable or not, free of charge. Onr fee not due till patent is secured, A little book, "How to Obtain Pat ents," with names of actual clients, in your state, county or town sent free. Addres . A. SOW CO., Opposite U.S. Tatent Otllce Washington D.C. :pi:tsros- 'PHOSE WISHING A FIRST-CLASs' 1N 1 8r Jirent, the best made to stand the c'imate of this coast, can be suited by calling at Mis: It. E. II) man's, opposite the Masonic Temple, First street. The latest vocal and :nstrumental music kept for sale. Alse the largest assortment of stamping patterns t select irom this side of 'Frisco. - Lessons Riven in painting and embroidery at her studio over Linn County Bank. Give her your order and you will be pleased. RED CROWN MILLS ikon, lakxixc; a- o., rrps, NEW PROCESS FLOUR. (Superior for Family and Baker's use) Best Siora&e Facilities. 43THighcst cash price paid for wheats A.LBANY OREGON SUPPLY OF OEANGES Confectionery ALBANY, OREGON. T Clotriier, Lmn County Bank Snow.