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About Morning daily herald. (Albany, Or.) 1885-19?? | View Entire Issue (Feb. 1, 1890)
15 CENTS A WEEK. ALBANY, OREGON, SATURDAY FEBRUARY 1, 1890. VO.. V. NO. 55 t ft'. fa?. s FOR PURE DRUGS, TOILET AXD GO -HE ALSO a nan rfSffiai Tle Finest Line of Pianos and Organs in tie Willamette Vallev. CALL A.ND EXAMINE HIS STOCK C A TTrP I O IV T;ake n" tixoe uuIts J rt. J X. X'yJLl the bottom. If the W. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE GENTLEMEN. Soul I V" WhaH ptitonRMT. Banil Pitcher old, tonuow and quick cura ?-totairU- amd . Children's Complaint. Superior to C tor Oil gtwtwto or ITarootioiSyrnp. C3dMiw pr for Ctoria. Mii tttmn t Hothgra Mow Cartoria. " I PoTlA Consffratfon r flioiHrli ninrWwTpit VnW.tim. . Tea'haUthy sleep ; also aids dJgcsUoa S. The bet French hanu hewed corset in the market. Try them once. You never will wear any other. Money refunded if oof found entirely satisfactory $. E). Solo A - l H. PFEI Proprietor of Albany Soda Works Aid nmnr.faciurcr i Choice Confectionery. We arc now pttrred to furnish choice, f rth Cinuies of te-rt irrade, consistin; of nnre tick, as)rtrd flavors, mixtd candies, Ttra French and chn,nlate creams, fancv mixed, candy to arid a .;ncrl assortment of fine cariiUts AT IV II O LEGALE U KETAII. itS'OrdcM from count'v dealers promptly at tended to. Factory o:i Kirt s-trtct. ALBANY - OREGON G n. WINN, AGKNT FUR THE LEA1 in fire, life and.ani(!ci:t insurance com panies YM) CORDS XISX in quantitio ta suit th. ;-isr. U::. r. Ii'-iiiiro at tne othtc ' i m FANOY GOODS TO -ssAijn ur- Lirngs, Paints, Oils, Permmerv aad toilet article. o,MlJUa-t-booki and I bUlloorry. periodicals, etc. Proscriptions careful J compounded IN ODD FELLOWS TEMPLE. Albany Oregon CAKRIES- W. L. Douglas' name and price arcstamped 01. dealer cannot supply you, Bend direct to factory factory Fine Calf, neavy Hand Craln ana treedmoor Waterproof. Be In the World. Examine hlw SrS.i.OO Genuine Hand Sewed 4.00 Hand-Sewed Welt Mioe. 9:1.50 Poller and Farmer.' Shoe, $3.50 Extra Value alf Shoe. 'i.-io A .. Worklngmm' nnr. $3.00 and Boy' .School Mines All Made in C'onsrc. Itullon and Lace S3 SHOES I.AIMKS !.:.- .SHOE IOU MIM BEST MATERIAL, ' BEST STYLE i BEST Ki n INC. W. L. UOM.LtS. ICrorktoii. 31av. L E. BLAIN. S "X recumnimd CacZoria, toe child. . ronip!ainU,aa luperior toanypreftcriptic i Vjowu to ma. H. A. Abcbeb, M. D.. Ill So. Oxford St., Brooklyn. X. 1". JThx CnrADB OoxPAinr, 77 Slurray 2ew Tori-. a: I. .""Perfection of Fit COMFORT 4 STRENGTH young; gent fo -Albn y Suburban Property ! LOIS IX BURKIIART'S PARK ADDITION This Addition offers superior ad vantages for residence property, commanding a view of the whole city and bui a short walk from the business portion of town, For sale by WRIT8MAK A I-'l I.RTBT BBO'S. iv. ih Mcpherson, FIRST STREET. REAL ESTATE BROKER. Insurance busincestraneacled and money caned? I have a larpe list of improved and uniniproved cijy proreity and fruit, irarden and far rr bnd in lare and ranll tracts, .s I sell 0"t liniiistinn only, if you w is-li to l uy i r sell it will p-y you to cme and tee uic II EWERT. PRACTICAL WATCH.MAKK , aim jeweler, Albany, Oregon, Absolutely Pure. This powder never vanes. A niarvu ol purity,strenirtli and wliolesomencss- More economical thaii" the ordinarj kinds ami cannot be 6oli in competi tion with multitude or low test, short weight uluin ? phosphate powdert Sold only in cms, Kotal BakiN' ow- deb Co.. W VuV t.. N. Y. - Lbwis M. JtnxoN iV Co., Atrents, rortiand, Oregon, rilYiilCIAK WH. DAVIS, M. . PHYSICIAN AND sut'eon. Can he found at hisfoflice room in btrahan block, I irst street. Albany vrejron- G W. 1IASTON. PHYSICIAN I:Ml . gcon, Albany, Oregon. M. H. ELMS, PHYSICIAN geoa, Albar.y Oregon. AND SUKr ri C. KELLY". PHYSICIAN AND 3UR J. ffcon Albany, Oregon, office in .Puree's new Diock. othce houre, from Ha. m. to 4 r. a. AJ. UOSSITER, VETERINARY SUR . gcon, praduate of Ontario veterinary college andmember of the Ontario veterin ary medical society, is prepared to treat the ureases ot all domesticated animals on scientific principles. Oftiee at Ans Marshall's livery stable. Residence 4th and Calapooia nireeis, iuuany, Oregon. TAn, E. A. McALihTEK iioMKorATinc rnv U sician and snrircoii Has removed his omce into Crawford s block. All calls promj I" attended to. TV'iC.A. WHITNEY. PHYSICIAN AND J 8iirg.:on. Cradnatc of liellcvue Ilorpi tal Medical College. New York City. Diseases of women a specialty. Office in at residence on th street between Caapooiu uml Vine V.. I. W. STARK. PilYRKIAN AN U Surgeon, latc f I:rwnsi ilie. Or, Ollire in the Strahan-l'tarcc, block upstairs in the rear rooms on the main hall. Calls promptly aucnucu 10 in city or counuy. lVII.M. J. PA'TOV. PHYSICIAN AND J hurgeon, Iiluiiiber'.s liloek, Alhanv. Or. Ftiiiale diseases A specialty. C.vi be fotmd ti the omce day or night. vr roiti:i. T N. DUNCAN t) . and notary public. ATTORNEY-AT LAW Olice in the Straban !.., rooms o. 4 um i). It. s. ISi.acki:ii:n. o. w . wrioi l)LACKlll KN, & WKIUHT ATTORNEY AT J Law, Alliany, nregon. t.nice in Odd fellow's Temple. A'ill practice in all courts of the state, and give special attention to all business WOLVERTON CHARLES E. APTORNEY at Iaw, Albany, Or. litliim in rooms 13 and 14, Foster's Dock, over L. E. Wain's store. TK. WEATHF KFORD, AITORNEY AT .law, Albany, Oregon. Office in the rutin lilcck. lll practice in all the courts of thestatc, and gi especial attention to an raininess V JIEAD, All 1UNEY-AT-LA W and title examiner, Alliany, Or. Will practice in all the courts of the state. Ab stracts of title furnished on short notice. Ten years experience. Land Knrveylng. PARTI KM DMIRI.NG HI RVKYtNO DOS CAN OB tain accurate and prompt work by callimr upon ex-county surveyor r', T. T. Fisher. He has complete copies of field notes and town ship plats, and is prepare I to do surveying in any part of Linn county. Postoffice address, Millers station. Linn cou it v. Oregon. OR HOOH FLKCTRIU RELIKF 18 TIIK MOST EI.B gant medicine in the world for interna and external use. and f. r pain oi any nature. Yoti will never find its equal. Ask your druggist for it. loatraclor aid Ballder. riVHE UNDERSIGN ED HAVING LOCATED X in Albany solicits patronage from city and country. Will contract to build bridges, bams, and all manner of dwelling houses, including Queen Anne, Eastlake and Elica bethian stylet of buildingj. Will furnish plans and sptciflcations free of charges. Satis faction guarantee. -W. C. CASSEL. Plana Tnalng. PARTIES DESIRING PIANOS TUNED should call upon Prof. D, Van Horn of this city, the well knowa and reliable piano tuner He is we'l known to the people if Albany and the entire State, having had yean of experience in this business, also in a pianoforte manufactory, and has no equal in that line of business, It always pays to patronize home enterprise and the pnblic should remember that they can now get pianos tuned in a more skillful manner in Albany than elsewhere in the State, Leave orders at Will & Link's WANTED MAN OF GOOD SELLING ability to represent us as sales agent in this town, (8200 to $2000 per year can be made) Address, Wanamaker & Brown, Philadelphia, Pa The largest clothing and merchant tiilor ing house in America. IjMNE CIGARS IMPORTED, KEY WEST ! and Domestic, embracing the celebrated Flor de Madrid. Estrellas, Conquerors and other choice brands in the Wells, Fargo and Western Union Telegraph office building EaThemcniber the place. Jest of i Instead of offerinc a prize thai only benefits the lucky one, or sending out confidential slips an baits, wt propose to openly offer the citizens of Albany and vie.ir.ity choice goods at bedrock prices and give 5 Per Cent Discount For cash on each dollar's worth at rcoular retail prici until .lan.l, is;) Highest prices paid f jrt liii kcns,V.'s and otitter. Tliaiik;i::r ymi far mmii lat patronase owl soliciting Vnur trade lor Uiy fi;t urc. I l.r i. rVn Via at yo.ir service. J. M. UAKDIT OVER THE ; WIRES. A Daughter of Secretary Blaine tangerously III. NEW 1 OKL BANK MIAKTEKS. Ibe Cbiojgo Iotei-Ooean Enjoys the Lmary ',1 a Libel 8nit Hews Ean of the ' r " Eotkiec, The Heraus Speciat Dispaichc. Wakhixcton.v jAn.i 31. Airs. Coppinger, "theeldest daughter o! Secretary Blaine is;lyi)g critically ill with lam-trOticfc and the gravest nppreheWfjf 'areilelt in reuaid ier.-ssfe 7ias'wot-lee well for some time, but was not regarded as seriouslv ill until this morning, when the maladv took a dangerous turn, and it was deemed advisable to telegraph for her hus band, who is now in the est on an inspection tour, ana lor ner biolher Emmons, the only mem bers of the family out of the city. The president learned of the case this morning and wept over to tne secretary's oflice, offering sympa thy and assistance. A consultation of physicians was held this morn ing. They offered no verdict giving hojies for the patient's re covery NEW YOKK 1J.VNK KAILVKES. They Will Amount to S75O.O00 Officials Under Arrest. New York, Jail, SI. (ieo. 11. Fell, a broker, was arrested last night for the part he took in the disposition of the securities of the Sixth National Bank, was to-day held in $250,000 bail for examina tion Ihursday next. Cleason, president of the bank, for whose arrest a warrant was issued at the same time as was that for Fell, is still at large. The Sixth National Bank and Jnoi Hill Bank arc closed, and at 10 o'clock a notice was jiosted on the door of the Equitable which stated that the bank was closed temporiarly. An official statement of the condition of the three banks is expected this evening. ANOTHER AKKEST EXPECTED. New iork, Jan. I. it is rumored that cashier Vansendt, of .the Lennox Hill Bank, is being watched by tho piice, and it was thought he would oo arrested as soon as tno statement now bein prepared was ready. Examiner Hepburn, when peen at the Sixth National Bank at noon, f-aid that the bank would not lose more than $750,000. Of thi amount $400,000 was represented wv bonds and securities, which ha been already sold, and the other $350,000 is represented by checks which are held against the Equita ble and Lennox 11 ill bank. Torpedo Boat Test. Fkovisence, Jan. .11. The new torpedo boat Bushing was given a trial in Bristal harbor yesterday. The party on board comprised HerrcshoffBros., her builders, the commander of the vessel, Lieuten ant Winslow, of the U. S. navy. Also an inspector and the com mander of the Converse. Tne con tract speed was twenty miles an hour, and it was readily made under half steam, the vessel, of course, being light. Libel Against tbe later-Ocean. Toronto, Jan. 31. Pat Grant, special correspondent of the Chi cago Inter-Ocean, was arrested this noon, at the instance of Dr. O'Reil ly, treasurer of the Land League, for alleged libel, for recent publica tions in the Inter-Ocean over Mr. Grant's signature. He was held in $2000 bail. POULTRY RAISING. To xnn Eorroa or nnrHuiLn: I wish to answer through your paper the many inquiries in regard to my success in raiting poultry last ysar. I purchased an Excelaor Incu bator and think I did quite well owing to the leason not being a good one for raining chickens, and I hatched more chickens than I could attend to well. My turkeys did quite well, IKau utara 1,a wiljt anil KmHfi. the first tray of turkey eggt hatched, mere were only two nnieruie eggo 30 tho ntko K1ta vera full but wa vi'V V1IV4 bmvw " four failed to get out from some un- 1 V 1 . ftU1 0 riakIIi Known cause, i nave of noultrv and eecs, and have yet on hand 52 turkeya and about 150 chickens and some ducks. 1 nave lome four or five different varieties of of chickens the Lighorn are the best layers for all seasons the Wyandotts are good, the Light Brahms re the kind to eat if you want a pot full, and they are a good layer n summer, mine are not hard to break from Bet ting, their eggs are large and a dark color yet the chickens are almost white. The White Holland turkeys are very tender and hard to raise, centle a pure white with red head and black beard. The wild turkey and bronze does much better in this climate. If I had waited two months longer to make this report T AAlllrl'mVli ! rem fiirures. I think I have $150 worth on hand yet. ' . 1 A Yours witu respti. L. JHoitck. A K 1 1 LA DS KECL A M ATI ON. The Committee l'nvor Siirvi'js, But Not Irrifcal io H oi ks. Washington, -ft-"- :H. The , Scai'.e lrrmtrc (A iiiuiitt'jf, ofi which Mi. Steward, of Nevada, is chairman, is devoting much time to the consideration of the several pioposilions looking to the reclam ation of the arid laod9 of the West. A vast amount of testimony was was taken in ail parts of the West during the recess, and it h expected that the Government Printing Office will sdon have the volumes con taining it printed. Hearings will be given to one or twe more persons, and the committee's report will then be completed. The testimony taken has shown that the storage system of damming up the mountain streams and natural basiDS is the best method of re claiming the Western arid lands. The committee will recommend that Congress appropriate sufficunt moncy.lo,malte.a complete survey o determine where these basins should be located, the probable cost, the appoxiuiate amount of land that can be reclaimed in the nei h boriiocd of each basin, and the Sines along which the irrigation caoals or ditches should run. There is an indisposition to commit Con gress to the policy ei constructing these irrigation works. It is be- leived that all the money necessary can be procured by private enter prise, and that, as soon as Congress, by means of surveys, establishes definite and trustworty data upoD which private parties can urocced, individuals and corporations will carry on the work. SMALLEST DRAFT ON RECORD For One Centand Has an Interst- ing Origin. Lowell (Ma48.) Corr. Chicago Herald. The smallest draft ever issued by the Treasury Department will be drawn in the course ol a tew days. It is for the msgnificent sum ot lcent and is to pay lor prop erty worth, at the lowest estimate 40,000. At the last session of Congress the representative from Lowell succeeded in having a bill passed appropriating $200,000 for the erection oi a nubile building here and the purchase of the site Half a dozen different property, owners were anxious to have the Goverumt n: buv their property as thev thought it would be a goou thin" lor them. The famous bunting mill, in which Geoer:1.! IJ F. Butler is such a large stoi:t; holder, owns'a large p'utot gionii'. near the mill, and offered it to tin Government fcr a vcrv low mice thinking that if the Fostollic! were built there the company s other property wouIJ enhance iu value. Considerable property was owned by an estate at the other an: ol the town, and lor the sums reason they offered land equally as desirab.e. The contest between the two waged warm for a time until at last the Butler people executed a master move aul offeredjthe property to the Govern ment lor $1. But the other sy:uli cate heard what bad been done UDi offered ibeir ground for lcent, and this oiler tho Government uu- ally accepted, end the draft for 1 cent will soon be sent to the airent of the owners. The same routine will have to be followed in regard to this draft as if it wore for a $1,000,000. All the papers wil have to be carefully examined by the accounting officers in the Brat instance, and flicre will be about fourteen signatures on the warrant before the draft is finally signed by the Secretary of ths Treasury. OlNasanlns an I'nsecn Foe. "This was sometime a paradox," as Zlainlct says. Since, however, the people of America and other ,'ands have been enabled to pit Ilostetter's Stomaih Bitters against that unseen foe, malaria, it id no longer a paradox, but ' an easy possibility. Whatever malaria evolves its misty venom to joison the air, and decaying unwhole. some vegetation imprcgnater the water, there, in the very 6tronghold of miasma, is the auxiliary otent to disarm the foe and assure cfScient protection, Feycr and ague, bilious remittent, dumb ague and ague cake, no matter how tenaciously they have fastener their clutch on the system, are first forced to relax their grasp and eventually to abandon it alto gether. But it b" preventive force that should chiefly recommend the Bitters to persons dwelling in malaria cursed localities, for it is a certain buckler of defence against which the enemy ,s pow crless. Cures, likewise, dyspepsia, rheumatism, kidney and billions ailments. Files! Pile! rile! Dr William's Indian Pile Ointment is the only sure cure for blind, bleed ing or itching piles ever discovered. It never fails to cure old cases of long standing, Judge Cons, Maysville, Ky, says: "Dr William's Indian Pile Ointment cured me after years of suffering." Judge Cofllnbury, Cleveland. 0,6aya' "I nave ound.by experience that Dr. William's Indian Pile Ointment gives immediate and permanent relief." We hayc hundreds of such tc6ti menials. Do not suffer an instant longer. Sold by druggists at 50c and $1 per box. Sold by Foshay & Mas on Albany, Oregon. Scissors. Shears. ImmpriKft stock at Stewart & Sox's. The best quality and any size or style. Call and examine our stock. Stewart & Sox. For your fine imported and Ke i West cigars, co to M. Baunigart : cigar store, one door :ast of lilaefc ; man's drui; sto'j For the finest silver polit-h ir. the market go to II. '.-vert's. IS HE SILC0TT. An Interview With Him By a Newspaper Reporter. DISCO VEKEIJ IN QUEBEC. Tbe Exile Living With His Mistrets in a Quebec Village-He Declares That He Ha; Been Slandered- ' New Your. Jan. 31. The Herald claims tj have discovered Silcott, th? defaulting cashier of the house of rep resentatives in the village of Terre bonne, Quebec, and this morning trintaalong interview had with him yeeruavy. ... oifwm wb iuuuu m u h6nse of Louiae-Thiebadlt; the woman with whom it is said Siicott.ned from Washington. He consented to talk to the reporter. "The time will come, saul Silcott, "when those now the hardest against me will say I was not so much to blame. As to the charges of forgeries that is all bosh. There is hardly a member of the house to whom I did not advance his pay every month and receive not as receipts As to tne nionev I am accused of decamping with, I assure you I had very little when I left New York. Ihere is one thins else I wish to contradict, and that is the stories that I was a big winner at the races. This is not true, for mv lossess far exceeded my win nings. It was to keep up and be hale fellow-wcll-met with these same mem bers of congress who are now running me down that 1 hrst went to tne races. Mv curse on the races. wish to God I had never been near them. Miss Thiebault, of whom such hideous falsehoods are told, had noth ing to do with my downfall. Had I always taken her advice I would be in a different position to-day. Silcott told the reporter he was go ing away to-morrow, but wculd not say where to. He said he was not afraid of arrest in Canada. He had legal advice that he could not be ex tradited. THE NORTHERN BLOCKADE. Outlook Very Discouraging-Provisions Scarce in Some Towns. S.w Francisco, Jan, 31. A special to the Chronicle from Red-diuzsav-i: J he mountain roads and pilches are blocked with drifta from lifted! feet to unknown depths, and tiiere are sme points t which no relief ca:i be sent for months to come The Upper Sacramento river is very lii"h. but no tears ol danger are enter tained here. Caiicly reports that it is getting out of provisions, and a supulv tram has been sent up. JSearly ill the mines in this section have clitsed down. At the Iron Mountain and Old Confidence mines severai slides have occurred and buildings have been broken down. The cause of trouble above Sims has been a combination of snow and L'ravei, ivcvnting the snow plow from doiiii effective work. Four snow plows are now operating in the mountains, where drifts and slides have made the snow 100 feet lccpin places. The snow on Hatchet Creek moun tain has totally interrupted communi cation between Redding and Lake view, Or. Mails are occasionally re ceived, butlio express or other mat ter. The snow at French gulch is teu feet deep, and certain lines of provisions there are getting law. Tbe general appearance of the country towns around Redding is somewhat depressing. The Chronicle says editorially: Tbe Oregoniao, who relieves his feelings with profanity, will probably find his vocabulary too small when he reads that the revenue cutter Rash is car rying the delayed mail to Portland. The tlush, in spite of its name, is a mighty slow vessel, and through Sec retary Wannamaker's parsimony the mails will reach Portland about three days later than they would have done if taken by the steamer Santa Rosa. i;ebuildingthenavy. Irving M. Scott Before a Committee of the House. Washington, Jan. 31. Irving M. Scott of the Union Iron Works of San Francisco gave some interesting facts to-dav before the House Com mittee on Naval Affairs concerning in creased faculties for building war ves sels at that city. The largest battle ships, he said, those of 10,000 or 12, 000 tons, could be built there. For the protection (of inland porta Scott recommended that the Government sinele turreted monitors be remodeled. If the turrets were removed and the vessels armed with disappearing guns of heavy caliber they would, he thought,give veryjefficient protection. Slaughtering Diseased Cattle. It was discovered some time since that a number of W. S. Ladd's herd of Jersey cattle, kept on his farm back of EaBt Portland, were affected with tuberculosis, a disease similar to con sumption. The attention of Dr. James Withycombe, state veterinary surgeon, being called to this, he ex amined the cattle and found that several of them were diseased and the remainder had of coarse been exposed to the disease. He reported the mat to the domestic animal commission, and at a meeting of the commission held at Salem, Monday, Jan. 20, it it was ordered thai all the cattle be longing to W. S. Ladd that were found to be affected with tuberculosis, be killed and their bodies buried or barned. In accordance with these in structions. D". Withycombe lias visited Mr.. Ladd's farm aud inspected I the killing of thirty-four h?ad of cat i tie. But IfW of tin m sl.nweiay ;signcs of the. du vj.se. Six c!ve killed showed no trace of the disease, and one bull killci' was free from it, whi e another had one small tubercle on his lungs. As the disease is liable to devolop in any of the herd, the killing oi the whole herd as ordered by the commission, is the only safe course to )e followed to eradicate the disease. This herd is believed to be the only one in the state so affected, and prompt action may prevent any spread of the disease. Mr. Ladd'a loss will be considerable, as he has 158 head of Jerseys in his herd, old and yauii, which, if free from disease, would be worth $33,000. The first lot he imported came from Pennsyl vania. They wcte twenty-seven head and cost $12,C00. Mr. Ladd aays the disease was introduced to his .herd by two cows which he bought from a man in California. CRiatKB AOAIN8T CRIMINALS' Colons iBgersolI'a'AMreM Bfii The State Bar Association. At the ninth annual meeting of . the New York State Bar Associa tion Hamsun's Hall, which seats over 3,600 persons, was crowded with noted lawyers lrom all over the State when President 'Amour welcomed the members in a long address. He was followed by Colonel Robert G. Iogersoll, who delivered the annual address, bis subject being "Crimes Against Criminals." In tbe course of bis address, Colonel Ingersoll said: . Crimes were committed to pun ish crimes, and crimes were com mitted to prevent crimes. The world has been filled with prisons and dungeons,' with chains and whips, with crosses and gibbets, with thumbscrews and racks, with hangmen and beadsmen and yet these frightful means and instru mentalities and crimes bave accom plished little for the preservation of proptrty or life. It is safe to say that governments have com mitted far more crimes than they have prevented. The world has thoroughly tried cenSscation, and degradation, imprisonment, torture and death, and tbu3 far the world has failed. There is no reformation in degradation. To mutilate a criminal is to ay to all the world that he is a criminal and to lendor his reformation substantially im possible. Is there any remedy? Can anything be tlone i;'r toe re formation of the criminal? He should be treated with kindness. Every right should be given him consistent with the safety of so ciety. He should neither be degraded nor robbed. The State should set the highest and noblest example. The powerful should never be cruel, and in the breast of the supreme there should be no desire for revenge. A man in a ' moment of want steals the property of another, and he is sent to the penitentiary. Why should the State take without compensation the labor of these men; and why should they, after having been imprisoned for years, be turned out without means f suppoi t ? Wculd it not be far better, far more economical, to pay these men for their labor, to lay aside their earn ings from day to day, from month to month, and from year to year to pnt this money at interest, bo that when the convict is released after five years of imprisonment he will have several hundred dollars of bisown net merely money enough to pay his way back to tiro place from which he was sent, but enough to make it possible for him to begin business on bis account, enough to keep the wolf of crime from the door of his heart? There are, however, men who pursue crime as a vocation as a profession men who have been convicted again and again, and who Ptill persist in using the liberty of interyals to prey upon the rights of others. What shall be done with these men and women? Pat one thousand hardened t breves on an island compel them to produce what they eat and use and I am almost certain that a large majority . would be opposed to theft. 8uch a community would be self-sup porting. .Let women of tbe same class be put by themselves. Keep tbe sexes absolutely apart. Those who are beyond the power of reformation shonld not have the liberty to je produce themselves. They should dwell apart and, dying, should leave no heirs. Woman's Discovery : "Another wonderful discovery has been made and that too by a lady in this county. Disease fastened its clutches upon her and for seven yean she withstood its severest tests, but her vital organs were undermined and death seemed imminent. For three months she coughed incessantly and could not sleep, 8he bought of us a bottle of Dr. King's New Dicovery for Consumption and was so much re. lieved en taking first dose that she 6lept all night and with one bottle has been miraculously cured. Her name la Mrs. Luther Luts." Thus write W. C. Hamiick & Co.- of Shelby, N. C Get a free trial bottle at Foshay & Mason's Drug Store. Bncklen's Arnica Salve. The Pest Salve In the world for Cute, Bruises, gcree, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is Guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded, Price 25 cents per box, For sale by Foshay & Masos. ! Paisley & Job PrinteiC 4