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About Morning daily herald. (Albany, Or.) 1885-19?? | View Entire Issue (Feb. 6, 1890)
. -, I x?- . '. . ' . .,f3';?i-:". - - . y 15 CENTS A WEEK. ALBANY, OREGON, THURSDAY FEBRUARY (5, 1890. VOL. V. NO. 58 i i FOR PURE DRUGS. TOILET AND (JO -HE ALSO The Finest Line of Pianos and Organs in the Willamette Vallev. CALL KD EXAMINE- HIS STOCK PA TTTlPlIV Take no Bhocs unless W. L. Douglas' name and price arc stamped or. J rV J X J Hie bottom If the dealer cannot supply you. send direct to factory enclosing am eitisea price W. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE GENTLEMEN. Sold by wwwwwwmmmmmmwmaasj. Pftrta'srPg.'8sanT aHfaflawfr S5S3HB"aBHBlBMHnBBJK Z2XpSBAVSKI9a gafaato.- mod . CHldrcnV Complaint- -- Sotoi W CaatoT" Oil. Ti" siT" r js ' " 1 " u 'i ;mm jweooo PTWrpi. .... - . . I Consfimtibii r fitomarhi Plarriioea. Eructation- tore baaltfar sleep; alo aids dfanstion : EillMiiii.Mlli. ...n..F-.. . ... ( The best French harfil' sewed corset in the market. Try them once. You never will wear any other. Money refundecf'if not fonnd entirely satisfactory - ' ' 5. E). YOUNG, Sole jLgent for -A-lbany 1 1 m .Proprietor of. Albany Soda Works And manufacturer of Choice We are now prepared to furnish choice, fresh -eanotcsof bc grade, consisting ol pure stick," assorted flavors,- niKted ' candies, extra French snd chocolate creams, fancv mired, candy 4ys sad a $enepd .assortment of One candies' - at nnoiEiu; qk betaii. Orders itnih ewinitH' dealers promptly at tended to. Factory on Kirst street. ALBANY OREGON CB. WINN. AGFJST FOR THE LEAD iD( fire, life and.acuidcnt imurancc cmn anies. " VM) CORDS nVL in uantitiet to suit the pur. hr-s-r. Inquire at the Jttice of Curno & Mci.tuith. i Confectione FANCY GOODS TO G. L BLACfflAN. sum ur- urngs, Paints, Oils. . Perfumery and toilet article, also a full line of books and stationery, periodicals, etc. Prescriptions carefully compounded . iH ODD FELLOWS TEMPLE, Albany Orgoc CARRIES- Fine Calf, Heavy Dana Grain and Creedinoor Waterproof. Best in the World. Examine his r.00 Pennine Hand Sewed Shoe. .S4.0O Unnd-Sewcd Welt Shoe. .'.. "0 Poller and larmm' Mioe. 8S.50 Extra Value fair Shoe. ?.' A vTorklngnicn's Shoe. .S'i.O and BojV School Shoes. .ill Made in Congress, Itnllon and I.nce. S3 & $2 SHOES l; OR AU1ES shoe fob .tiissr.s. BEST MATERIAL, BEST STYLE. BEST FITTING, w. i. no i ; las. Brockton. Mass. L- E. BLAIN. cM, torau sal mfok JaM4tsavenr Urn Cmm t to. KH- .. mi i. " i . i . . ' i T recommend Cbrtorfa. for chiMr.."? roniplatnia,SB aoperiortomny pmaeTiftu -kjowncotne. H. A. Ascbor, II. D., Ill So. Oxford St, Brooklyn. K.V. Ens Ccktack CcjtPXXT, 77 Murray Si, Sew Tor!-. XXV mm "Perfection of Fit COMFORT k STRENGTH Sokkn Property! LOTS IX BUKKHART'S TARK ADDITION This Addition offers superior ad vantages for residence property, commanding a view of the whole city and but a short walk from the business portion of town, For Bale by WBIT3MAX A I!l LBFBT BBO. W. 1 MePjimtSON, Kl RST STREET. REAL ESTATE BROKER. Insurance busincsstransactcd' and monev oaned I have a large list of improved and unimproved cijy property and fruit, garden and farm land in lare and small tracts. As I sell o; .ommifsiuiiciily, if you wih touv or sell it ill pay you to come and sec me. - TJ EWERT. PRACTICAL WATCHMAKE 1.1, ana je'eler, Albany, Oregon, Absolutely Pure. This rjowaer nswr en of purity trenjrth and wholesomeness. f . . more economical inaa me orainarj kinds, and cannot be sold in competi tion witb multitude of low test, short weight alum or phosphate powders Sold only in e-ms. Kotal Bakin' ow. der Co., IOC Wall st.. N. Y. Lewis M. Johnson' Co., Atrents, Portland, Oregon. I'UVSICIAN WH- DAVIS, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND BOieon. Can he found at hisTo'lBce room in Strahan's block, First street. Albany Oregon- W. MASTON. PHYSICIAN AM)KIH , geon, Albany, Oregon. M, II. ELLIS. PHYSICIAN AND SURr . geon, Albany Oregon. CC. KELLY, PHYSICIAN AND 5UR . Keon Albany, Orceon, office in j Pierce's new block. Office hours, from 8 a. m. to 4 P.M. A J- KOSSITER, VETERINARY SUR . geon, graduate of Ontario veterinary college andtnember of the Ontario veterin ary medical society, is prepared to treat the diseases of all domesticated animals on scientific principles. Office at Ans Marshall's livery stable. Residence 4th and Calapooia streets, Albany, Oregon. DR. E. A. McAlistkk iioMsorATiiic put sician and sureon Hag removed his office into Crawford's block. All calls Prompt ly attended to. DRJO. A. WHITNEY, PHYSICIAN AM) surg.;oi! . Gnolunte of Uclh ue Hospi tal Medical College. New York Citv. Uiteafes of women a specialty. Office in n"t residence on 7th street between Calapookt and Vine, Albany Oreeon. D. I- W. STARR, PHYSICIAN AND Surgeon, late of lirownsvilie, Or. OMirc in the Strnhan-I'tanc bloek iip.stan in tl.e rear rooms on the main hail. Cal's proniptly attemled to in city or countJy. DR. M.J. PA 'TO PHYSIf'IAN AND Surgeon, liliiuilier's lilock, Albany, Or. Female disc.ises a so ialry. C.vi be found n the nfiice day or tii'ht. ATTOIC.VEYS. JN. DI NC.AN ATTORNEY- T LAW . and notiry public, u ik-t in theSlrahau bloeL, rooms No. 1 ami 'J. I. k. S. IlLAl KIH UN. li. w KRKillT. BLACKRl RN, WhKillTATTORNKYAT Law, Albany, ni n. !(, in Odd rs llow's Temple. Vill practice in all courts of the state, andgi-e special attention to all business. lyOLVERTON CHARLES E. ATTORNEY It at law, Albany, I'r. ti!ic; in roomi 13 and 11, Foster's lilock, over L. E. Wain's 3tore. J K'. WE ATI If KFOKD, ATTORNEY AT t) , law, Albany, Oregon . Oiliue in the Fliim lilick. Will practice in all the courts of the-statc, ni c special attention to all business TAMES P. MEAD, AITORNEY-AT LAW J and title examiner, Alhsny, Or. Will practice in all the courts cf the fctate. Ab stracts of title furimhcd on short notice. Ten years experience. Land Surveying. 1)ARTIF.S PRSIRINa SfRVKVIXO Wi.XR CAS OF tain accurate and prompt w ork bv calling' ujon ex-county nirveyoi r. T. T. Fisher. He hascompletc copies of licld notes and town ship plats, and is prepare 1 to do surveying in any part of Linn county. PostoHiue address, Millers station. Linn cou lty, Oregon. ORKOO.V KIFCTR1C REI.IKP.IS T1IR MOST EI.R gant medicine in thc.world for interna and exteinal use. and f..r pain oi any nature. You will never find its equal. Ask vour druggist for it. Contractor and Itnllilrr. rpHE UNDERSIGN EDjHA VINO LOCATED I 1.. 111... 1 : . . . . .. a- ,u Aiuaujr .-iiviia p&irunaire rrom city and country.; tym contract to build bridges, barns, and all manner of dwelling houses, including Oucen Anne, Eastlake and Eliza bethan stvles of buildingg. Will furnish plans and specifications free of charges. Satis faction guarantee, W. ('.. CASSEL. riano Toning. PARTIES DES1R1NO PIANOS TUNED should call upon Prof. D, Van Horn of this city, the well known and reliable piano tuner. He is we'l known to the people jf Albany and the entire State, having had years 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 lit the State, Leave orders at Will; Link s WANTErjMANOF GOOD SELLING ability to represent us as sales agent in this town, (200to $-2000 per year can be E"8?, 1A.dll,C8,,. Wanamaker & Brown, Philadelphia, Pa The largest clothing and merchant tiilor mg house in America. . . : IjnN e cigakimportkhT keYVest ... "d Domestic, embracing the celebrated I-lor de Madrid. Estrellas, Conquerors ard other choice brands in the Wells, Fargo and Western Union Telegraph office bSiMine XSTItenieraber the place. K' ill Instead of nflV-rtnir a benefits the lucky one, or sending out confidential slips as baits, we propose to openly oner the citizens of Alhxnv and vlcttlty choice -joods at bedrock priTieeand ghx: d h Cent Discount Fur cnh on each dollar's worth at 1 re-nliir retail prices, until .l:,n.l lvi,, ! HiL'h'.-st prices paid lorchiikcns V-.'r, ' and butter. 'i'hat.ki:i- y f,,,.' v7 . past iat:-i!ia:;i; uv, Sl. rv i : uiiuu mi in'.- i!;;i;rc, 1 !(- ,, at your nn ii '. m. i:.m:il i:. I i'llt:! ilk THE LUMBER TRADE. A Review of the Nations Lumber Industry for '89. THE PACIFIC COAST BUSINESS. The Cutting of Forrsta i&to Lumber Is a Steadily Iucreaeistr Bajineis ;n the Webt-Soine Tirant- . Bradstreet's review of the uatiou's Jamber trade for the past year con tains the following: Taking the lumber trade as a whole, the record of 1889 was not so- good as the pre vious year. Business was rather un erbnThe Sotfth Wakes compara tively ti-i; best showing, while at Chicago, December ended with un usual uncertainties. Local trade in that city, both with manufacturers and dealers, was disappointing. Profits were small and failures in certain branches cf the factory business created uneasiness. The receipts of lumber at Chicago during the year wero approximately 1,940,000,000 feet against 2,220,000,000 feet the year be fore, and 1,880,000,000 in 1SS7. Throughout the Northwest rather large stocks of lumber are in store. The Southern lumber industry in all depattments made rapid progress dur ing the year, while great sums of money were invested in timber lands and enterprises connected therewith. Southern ' yellow "pine it attracting mare ' and -' more attention.' '. la the upper Mississippi' valley an average year was met with. Th trade has little to grow enthusiastic over and, on the other hand, nothingto occasion great despondency, ' Pricei have ruled low. On the Pacific Coast the pine men have done well, but the manu facturers of redwood report poor re turns ou account of overproduction. Building iu the Eastern cities has been active as usual, and the distribu tion of lumber is satisfactory. ' Lumber has not sold as freely in the Saginaw valley as the mill-owners wished, but they have done fairly well. The year's cut is estimated at a little less than 800,000,000 feet against SSO.000,000 feet in 1SS8. home other Michigan points report a larger cat than ever before. Preparations arc being made foi the mual winter operations on the Missis sippi and its tributaries, but the sea son as yet is too open for the best re sults. Throughout the country the general outlook is considered favor able. This is particularly true at the Southern centers, and also in the dis tant West, where the abundant crops promise to be followed by liberal pur chases of lumber for repairs nd new buildings. A NEW 111 KIAb SCIIKMK. Our Itixlies to be Iried and 1'ut Away in Vaults. The New York Sun says that s new disposition of tue dead as pro posed may be caU the "latest thing in hlc. uround lor a "new niau soleum" is to be b:oken near that city in thcsprlaf. The idea un- dcrlymg the new mausoleum is based ou the fact that a current of dry air will preserve a body from iliscompobitiou, nod change it into a ccnditicn resembling life, in which it will remain for an iodefi- Dit:; time. This process is applied by nature to the unfortunate trav eller and bid beast who succumb upou the great deserts. In the Sniithsomau institution are many bodies thus desiccated by nature which have been brought from the battlefields of Mexico and Peru, irom southern plains, and Indian districts of the far west. The ancient Co'.chiaos and Tartars sus pended their dead from branches of trees to be dried by the air and sun. The Peruvians first dried their deceased friendi and ''then buried them in sitting DftSture Savages f South Australia place the dead body on the top of the hut till perfectly dried, when it is nana aired and hidden amons the branches of the trees. The body retains its form in the process, and the skin, though it becomes bard and dry like leather, remains white, while the face though more or less emaciated, remains lite-liae ana and recognizable: ' ' ' ' Modern science and skill are tc be applied to the original preserve ative power of the atmosphere. Experiments have recently been made by sp6cialists,firston animals and later on human oouies. in the course of an recent experiment conducted by a sanitary "engineer tn aWsbingten, in nine P'g was reduced in weight from 22 to 1 pounds, and remained just as dIuuid and round as in life. ' In a laboratory in this city the body of a man weighing pounas was subjected to the process in 1888 and the effect was marvelous. The arrangement for the inter mcnt of deesiccated bodies in the new mausoleum will be similar to that of the drawers in safety deposit vaults, while tb interior plan of the building will resemble that of a weir appointed public library, with main corridor and diverging halls leading to different sections. These drawers or sepulchres will be of solid concrete four inches thick, without ioint or seam, of certain sizes, all nrracfred In tiers of six on either side ol the hallway. Ttie owning into och sepulchre wii! be provided with tw doors,: Hit: iuiici' ..: .d'i-.-tsr. hermetically ic.l.cd a :- :! '.t'U pi'-'O, through i which the body may be Viewed by those holding the keys: the outside of iron, wroagb: gold, silver or bronze, decorated and adorned according to the ability and taste of relatives. For family use there will be separate and distinct compartments of various sizes, with setscr suites, of sepulchres adorned as desired, and having but a single entrance. The space that holds the casket will be acell of concrete, permit ting neither the escape nor admis siou ol moisture. In the erection of the walls hollow pipes or con duits will be formed over moulds, so that no destructible materia!, as iron or metal, will be needed. Through these conduits wi.'l be made to pour into the hermetically Sealed sepulchres cu'renU . of dry. air, which, passing rapidly' and repeatedly around the body, will extract therefrom every trce of moisture, vapor, or fluid, and cou yey it to a huge furnace, where without possibility of escape, all noxious matter will be destroyed. Gradually the body becomes bard, smooth and drv. with little or no change of appearance, and once uuuc, picscivauou ja secured ier ever. ... Provision is to be made against premature interment by the adjust ment of electrical appliance to the body, so that the faintest motion will be instantaneously conveyed to the guard by means of alarm signals. The mausoleum will occupy comparatively little space. A building covering 100 feet square could inclose 10,000 sepulchres, and one that occupied an acre would provide as many resting places as 35 acres. It is intended that ample and suitable grounds shall surround the building, and that adornment inside and out will be made s perfect as taste and wealth can dictate. The sepulchres will be numbered and registered as lots in a cemetery and a fund will be provided for the perpetual care of all treasures of art or nature that may be provided. All records of interment will be kept in the mausoleum. A chapsl will bo provided for the discharge of the last rite. The cost of single sepulchres will probably range from "$10 to $200, while lat.iily compartments will vary from $000 lo $40,000. Durial lots in cities raDge from $400 to $5000 for space to allow six "raves, to which must be added the cost of headstone, monument, statuary, enclosure and care. Concrete is the material ct which it is proposed to build the mau soleum. Research, ancient and modern, establish the quality of this material for impenetrability, insolubility and consequent per mauencc, even an earthquake being powerless to destroy buildings made of it. This substance will no doubt be faced by ornamental materials. Croup Can be Prevented. We want every mother to know that croup con be prevented. ' There is no question about this; as it has been done in thousands of cases, and you may acpena upon it mat when a cmid takes the crouo it is wholly owing to the negligence oiliU parents. Irue croup never appears without due and timely warning; a Tew hours or a day or two before the attack, the child be comes hoarse. This hoarseness is the first indication of croup, and is a sure sign that croup is to follow, unless promptly and propcily treated. The free use of Chamberlain's though Keincdy as directed with-each bottle, under the heading To prevent croup," will dispel all symptoms of the dis ease. This first sign of coup, hoarse ness, may be overlooked by young mothers or those not familiar with the disease. Under such circum stances, or when not properly treated, the hoarseness becomes more marked, and the child shows shows symptoms of having taken cold, then a peculiar, rr ugh cough is developed. Even at this stage Chamberlain's Cough Rem edy will prevent the - croup, but after the cough has developed the croup is liable to appear at any moment. The proper way la to keep a bottle of this remedy at hand, it costs but 50 cents, and only a few doses, or at most nsj over a third of a bottle, is required to dispel all symptoms of the disease. Chn yon afford to risk so much for 6 little? There is not the least danger in giving this remedy in large and frequent doses, which are always re quired, as it contains no injurious substance. As proof of this fact we refer to John L. Olson, of Des Moines, whose 18 months-old boy drank the entie contents of a 50 cent bottle of Chamberlain's cough remedy without the least Injury. Certainly it made the baby vomit very freely; but after taking a nap he would have been glad to have d. an k another bottle of the remcdv. as he liked it A similar In stance occurred near Valley "SpringB, Dakot . Mrs, Mattie J ohnson's two-year-old daughter, Annie, drank a full bottle of the remedy without Injury. This remedy has been the sola re liance of thousands of mothers for crcup, and especially as a preventive lor uianr ycarss, and has never beer, known to fail. It is also invaluable for colds and whooping-cough. For saie oy r osnay s Mason. Baeblen's Arnica Palve. The Post Salve In the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles, or no oav roouircd. It is Guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded, Price 25 cents per box, For sale by Foshay & Mason, lii.-;!ev & Job Printers. AGKI CULTURAL STATISTICS. Are the Farmers of Tills Conntry Bankrupt? American Economist. If that question should be decided by the utterances of our briliant but misguided contemporary, the Louis ville Courier-Journal, it would be in the affirmative, as never since the time of the prophet Jeremiah have more continuous and agonizing howls of distress arisen in one series than proceed from its columns in this mat ter. In a recent issue it says as follows: "About the only Protection the far mers of America are familiar with is the Protection of a mortgage. It keeps it going, going iu the payment of interest and finally 'gone' under the Sheriffs hammer to the mortgagee." No longer ago than in 1SSS the Sec retary of the Illinois Bureau of Labor statistics doubtless stimulated in toe matter by such howls of distress as the foregoing made a most careful ex amination of the existing mortgage conditions in every county in the state, excepting La Salle County and Cook County, which latter contain3 Chicago, both of which are omitted as as the records of both had been des troy ed by fire. Had the student of social conditions selected one State in the Union as an average representative of ails in farm ing matters he could have selected none better abpted for that purpose. For Illinois is neither one of our oldest nor newest states, has a fair ehare of diversified interest, and has perhaps as near the average natural productiveness of lands as an other. The report of her Bureau of Labor above referred to is of the most en couraging kind as to the status of agriculture in regard to mortgage in debtedness when contrasted with resources, which is the only measure by which the pressure of such indebt edness can be properly gauged. For the man who owes a million of dol lars and has two million of cash re sources to pay it with is practically not so hopelessly involved as another man who owes only a thousand dol lars and not one hundred dollars to pay it with. Exactly analogous to the former in stance is the condition of the average Illinois farmer as to assets and liabilities the total farm mortgages in that State amounting to not over one hal' a year's product of the farm lands of that State when computed at the home valuation of the same as stated iu the latest national census report. The report before us does not state the aggregate of the yearly revenue, which may be termed the current cash receipts of the farmer, in the entire State iu tho aggrtgate and their mortgage indebtedness, but it does give those items, in detail, for the two hundred and odd counties thereof, to reproduce which iu these columns would not only too much room but weary our readers. Vt e give the first and last counties as they are alpha betically rrranged, thus: ADAMS t'OrXTY. Value of Farms, Tools and Stock $19,SI4,12( Mortgageson 1,001,770 Value of croj8 at homo prices (187'J) 3,294,250 WOODFORD COUNTY. Value of farms, tools and stock $i:i,7S4,'J3f Mortgages on 1,458,534 Value of crop at home priceR(lS79) 2.3S4,C08 It is fair to assume that half of the average crop of an average year would pay on the eutire farmers mortgage indebtedness ot the state, which is, we submit a remarkably solvent and healthy showing, and not tho least provocative of the groans of despair that our brilliant contemporary in dulges in. Such exceptional thrift and solvency must be productive of increased credit and lower rates of interest which rates the State statistician assures his con stituents have largely declined and tend still further downward. The percentage of deferred payments is re ported as but halt in 18S7 what it was in 18 j 0. In fact, so excellent did these con ditions become that the older States authorized their savings banks to in vest in Western farm mortgages Which they have done with the most satis factory results, . Tho savings bank Commissioner for the State of New Hampshire 'in his -report, 'for" 1889 tabes officially that xne foreclosures on 'Western mortgacev, (mostly on farms) Were bat one-fifth as large in proportion as they are "in 'the East.' His figures are as foUowsi v -Percentage 'of foreclosure to ' amount loaned ori East ern mortgages......... Percentage of foreclosure to ' amount loaned on West ern mortgages......... 4-5 of In summarizing he says: "West ern farm loans have been for a num ber of years profitable investments for enr Savings Banks and private in vestors. They furnish a safe field for our surplus capital." Such conditions, offered the strong est possible arguments in farorcf that protection to home labtnV'which, , , , . , . . r Wnlte ll provides mc American war mer with the best market 'in the word in his own country fhi prod ucts, carefully secures to hhtfand bis prosperity that home market, by a large and effective Protection to his farm products against the devastating raids which otherwise would be made of products growfl at ' a' tenth or a twentieth of the wages which self respecting American fanners will work lor. . To pass from State to national evidence on this point. We will avail ourselves of Mr. Blaine's concise sum mary of the testimony of the United States census in this matter as pre sented iu his reply to Mr. Gladstone's Free-Trade eulogy (See North Ameri can Review, Jan. 1S90., pp. 52 and 53 thus: "By the census of .'SCO eight agri cultural States of the west (Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas. Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska and Wisconsin) returned an aggregate wealth of ?2, 27 1,000, 000. Twenty years after ward by the census of 1SS0 (Protec tion all the while in full force) these same States returned an aggregate wealth of $11,268,000,000. The rate of increase for the twenty years was 396 per cent, or ISO per cent, greater than the increase in the eight manu facturing States of the East. "The case will be equally striking if we take the fifteen Southern States that were slave-holding in I860. By the ceusus of that year the aggregate return of that property was $6,792, 000.0C0, but $2,000,000 was slave property. Deducting that, the total property amounted to $4,792,000,000. Their aggregate return of wealth by the census of 18 SO was $8,633,000, 000. The rate of increase for twenty years was 80 per cent, NOTABLE PEOPLE. John D. Rockefeller, president of the Standard Oil Company, said to be worth $129,000,000; is very greedy and exceedingly pious. - George W." Cable, the novelist, is being spoken of as successor to Fred erick Douglass, should the latter re tire as minister te Hayti. Bishop Potter, who preached the dynamite sermon on the occasion of the Washington presidential anniver sary in New York,' does not believe in compulsory use ' of the Bible in the pubhc schools. Mrs. Levi P. Morton teaches her daughters letter Writing' by giving them her own notes "to answer. If the effort pleases her it is stamped and posted. If not, corrections are made and the "copy" returned. It is an interesting fact that Henry Watterson was born in Washington when his father was a member of Con gress, and that his own son, Henry, was born at the capital when he was a representative. Ilerr Siemens, himself ouc of the princes of electricity, owns the corn. He tells his fellow-countrymen chat Germany cannot compete with Ameri ca in the number and usefulness of new electrical contrivances. Knri?I in the Avalanche. Lomlon Star. A sad accident lias happened cot far from Marvia iu tne Tyrol. A young doctor, who had j;it married, and was on way home ii m his wed ding tour, took a sledge, two servants, and two horses to crc.ts the Prcdil. The travellers saw that an avalanche had begun to move ou the mountain side, but the coachman hoped by whipping his horses to i.ars before it fell. The avalanche, however, was upon them in a moment, precipitating sledge, horses, and occupants into the valley. $ouie men working ou tho road succeeded in extricating the doc tor and Lis wife from the snow with broken limbs and Urni-ly bruised, but alive. The coachman was scarce ly hurt, but the other m:wi and the horses could uot be fm::d, a:;d niUbt have beeu suffocated. Disarming an 1 iisvmi Joe. "This wa? sometime a j madox," as Hamlet says. Since, however, the people cf America iii.d oilier .'ards have been enabled to pit HostetUr's Stcma:h Bitters againsi that unseen foe, malaria, it is no longer a paradox, but an easv possibility. Whatever malaria evolves its iuily venom to joison the air, and dtf:-.y:iii: unwhole some vegetation iun:iv;.'iiater the water, there, in the tery stronghold of miasma, is the auxiliary otenl to disarm the foe and aMire ciiici-'iit protection. Fcyer ai:d agur, bilious remittent, dumb sguc &nd'a:ue cake, no matter how tenaciously they hve fastener their clutcf- on'thi sysU-in. are first forceuto rewj. their gmsp and eventually to coaiirtuii it alto gether. But it ic preventive force that should chiefly ro onimcnd ti,e Bitters to persons dwcKir.gin malarm r.ursed localities, fo' it. is a certain buckler of defence 'j'giV.st' which t'.e enemy .a poweilessv- Cures, likewise, dyspepsia, rheumatism, kidney m.d billions ailments. "' PUest Pile! riles: Dr William's Indian FUe Ointment is the only sure cure Jcr blind, blt d. ing or itching piles t'ver discover d It never fails to cure o'A c.tscs of lo g -standing, '-Judge Coons, Maysvillc, Ky, sa-. "Dr William's Indian Pile Ointm. nl cured me after years of ew fie ring." ; Jtadge CffiAMiry, Cleveland, 0, 6a- -"I nave ound by experience that i . Willian's Indian Pile Ointment gr immediate and permanent relief." We have' hundreds of such te- menials. Do not suffer an ineti longer. Sold by'druggl6ts at 50c n 1 fl per box. 8oW by oshayJc Mas. Albany, Oregon. Calif onla C'ae-RH'nrc, The only gur.:antcel cure for catar cold in the hea L hav fevor. rose co catarrhal deafr iss and sore eyes. 1 store the sense ;f taste and uor.Ie.is:. breath, rcsultin J from eatarrh. E:. and pleaBant tc ase. Follow directio and a care is w vranted. by all dn gists. Send fe circular to Abicti Medical Compf if,' Oroyillc, CL J: months' trcaU i-at for $1; sent mail. SI 10, F -.saie by Foshay Mason. . . ' ' Scissors. Sfcrars. Immense stock &t Stewart Sox's. The best quality and ai size or style. - Call 'ajid cxami oar stock. Stewart & Sox. Bnrno'D Catarrh Snnff. Sure cure for sore ycs, deafne headache, and the worst forms eatarrhin the head and throat. Pr 25 cents. Sold by Fotrhay & Mas. Albany, Oregon. S. J. Brown, who recently pi chased the cigar store of II. Ellis & Co., opposite the Rev House, keeps a fine assortment the best brands cf domestic c imported cigars. Snol.rrs are i vi'cd to trv bis goode-. A