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About Morning daily herald. (Albany, Or.) 1885-19?? | View Entire Issue (Feb. 16, 1890)
? THE MOUSING IlEliALD: SllDAY. FERRt'ARV Hi, 1SJ50. , 1 1- V A. X U W E IC KLY Kir,- v inn! ;) c..i. i::oti:in' ct:t;pt ; liy siTtivr, pit wc. I; ......... , I I'."l5 . j 00 VEKKLV. (I'libKi!'.!-'! every Friday M'-rning-.) e topy, kt .nnum, in advance, not nvil ifra-i.im-e , eral health was., previous to the taking up of the habit, and to have observations cover a Ions: enough time. The history of tobacco in the island of New Zealand furn ishes quitd a suggestive illustration for our purpose, and one on a large scale. When Europeans first visit e i New Zealand they found in th native Maoris the most lineiy developed and powerful men of an' ; of the trices inhabiting the island of the Pacific. Since the introduc- t a e . e i i ii .....ji.oo I 11011 UI looacco, lor wuicu ine ... z.iQ j Maoris developed a passionate lik rr ing, they have from this cause 1 K1TKLICANTSM The l.i ,if I. evolution CixitdciI Century OfKlVoi tt. It is sjereiahy miners' :;u )l;caa Mens 50 a. TJIKjU.tlLS. Mail t Hie Aliany postotticecion: For all oiHccs north 1 flic Kasteni tnU-s f 6; f he West (" r.J the Nairjw Oaiivto II. It. ) t-or Portland anil Salem 11a. SI iVirvallis and Yauina ,.....li:3) P. u oHice south :30 r. The postotlicti will 'bo closed caeh eveiiiii fini Nix to seven o'clock. Kesti.stereil mittcr for thn 'early niontin train should lc niailnd before b o clock the j ryious uvci.ini'. IX KliAZIL. ( i Os 1 Kv;' tod wiv 1 . Vv r . . .... .1. .. 1 . .1 in t.T . v. ' s t 1 1 .. 11 it. r. r a ssrllatlb's if Wasiihiii-iie suuilti.lv, us u'.silon, OREGON" I'ACIFIC TIMETABLE. K in lirazi! sprung out from Mi'-uivu's l;- ! The fuct is, 01: Hit.- coutrar for I liSl l'J'J f:i!.-, IrplliiiiCrtll reVO.'ts. have been irtijucn? in Hint lnuueiist; 1 country, when it wus under rule of Spanish viceroys, as veil u9 ' under the two Pedro. That the revolutionary movements uio not , better known i due to the distar.ee which separates North America ; from Brazil.-to the want of lie quent communications at the time j of the Spnuish domination, and 1 afterward to the nrtitige of Dom ; Pedio II, through whose person-1 amy alone the outer wonu per sisted iu looking at everything Brazilian. A.Ll-5AIi Y, OREGON. 188!) LiMiii'lV .890 Arrives Ueparts Vasdenirer. F rei;ht ItKMOVAI. Tlie olliee of ueeKiy herald lias ueen re moyed into the Foster block up stairs in the rooms formerly occu pied by the Masonic lodge, where ( larger and more commodious quart- j era have been fitted up. Patrons of the paper will please observe . the change. ! EDITORIAL NOTES alone, it is said, become decimated 1 in numbers, and at the same time ' reduced in stature and in physical ! well-being so as to be an altogether : inferior type of men." 1 A recent visitor to loronto, Can ada, beats this good testimony. "When one has spent a Sabbath in Toronto the wish is that the whole world were like it. The restfulness of the very atmosphere seems to say it is God's day, and calls one to worship Him. No sound oi street car or newsboy, no : ...1 t. f 41. . .1 . : JL. . : 11 loara'1.00 p 111 1 nu,,lls CAtryu iiiai ui iiht i iuiiiu ui 1 I t i Kul 1 u tVntvl fli. i.liiiri.lk btaonlitu Should man he so forgetful of hisi" ""'."' ! u. 1 Ktp "mpi, toou .nntu.-ar.-l miu.nran. fiimt. in. ,r :'ace 111 liOS, 10 the province of the Dailv and i hs accustomed share, he finds that j M ,nas i U r: t . W,H)SU principal has been re- n mst either do it himself or '""r, jrjum o.se u ouva wait until Monday morning. ! -wier, nicKiiameu i.sa uoutes, Should the busy housewif(5 neglect I whs the first man who shed his the buying of her fcunu..v dinner oiocu on Urazili: n soil :or the re on Saturday, she finds herself re duced to the necessity of using what was left over, as no business of any kind is carried on from mid night Saturday until six o'clock iuonuay morning. j-.ven me FMthcr Kouia wi re sl.o fitlAi. r I r . it utii 1 I i rii. InI ' ' JJ 1 ,J7 I Jl 1 una 0 "torJ::::;: -tli .1 j rin- tock I will "The fact b,' sajs Senior Teixti ra '-republican ideas predominated always in lirsxil. and had tbeir m-.i tyrs as euily as in th'; former century. The tirst revolutionary ilave you irt La (inijK'? It so.luy an Early Breakttist or .1 tl Stove or laiijrT anl on will ha-(! a trouLr n 1 1 m liaving tlie l?appi t tionu in thj Valley. Call and examine our Anti Kust Tinware 111 (ilUNI) CLEAKANCF The remark of an eminent jur ist, that "Law is simply public sentiment embodied in statutory torm and made binding on every individual within the radius of its iurisdiction," is in the main the truth of the case, the only excep tion, probably being those laws that are almost entirely obsolete and inoperative, from the fact of never having had a public senti ment to enforco their statutory pro visions. There is another fact in regard to laws and that is the in efficiency with which they are enforced, and the misconstruction that legal quibbles often puts upon them. There needs no showing that it is to the advantage of the species that individuals should die. Their immortality would be harmful all round; nay, impossible, unless rigor remain unimpaired ; and the multiplication of offspring does not overtake the means of subsistence, "for it is evident,' as Mr. Ruseel 4 Wallace remarks in a note which lie has contributed to Dr. Weis mann's essay, "that when one or more individuals have provided a sufficient number of successors, they themselves, as consumers of nourishment in a constantly in creasing degree, are an injury to those successors. Natural selec tion, therefore, weeds them out, and in many cases favors such races as die almost immediately after they have left successors, as, c. g., among the male bees, the drone perishing while pairing, death being due to sudden nervous ! shock." Of interest to those who bear the burden of taxation is the ques tion of how to equalize the burdens. That they are unequal is apparent, and that the unequality is being 5'ear bv.'year increased, laying the burden more and more heavily upon the shoulders of the produc ing classes and relieving other classes is claimed with undeniable evidence of truth. The Farmers Friend says that "it is hardly necessary to point out the fact that private capital does not care to enter into competition with corpor ate capital and the reason is so ob vious that he must indeed be blind who does not see it. Under the existing tax laws corporate capital pays a tax of near three mills while individual capital invested in the . same business is taxed over nine teen mills. Consequently, in order to save taxation, capitalists com bine and form corporate bodies. Bat the farmers and wage workers who own nothing; but their stock and homes are burdened and loaded down with oppressive taxes to make up for the favors bestowed by government on the corporations. Verily we have some wholesome laws." This of 'course refers to the state of Pennsylvania, where that paper is published ; but some thing of the same nature exists And prevails iu every section.of the country. . . TEMPER AflCE NOTES. C antributed tjr the W C T. V. "Wo cannot make men sober by law," says an objector, and to this the logical reply will be, "No, but -vou can stop making men drunk "by law." Two checks for $3,163,032 recent ly passed through tlie New York clearing-house for beer. Statistics tell us that during the last twenty-five years, the sale of beer in the United States has in creased from two million barrels to twenty-four million. A New York medical journal is responsible for the following m re rani to injury from the use of tobacco: "It is only necessary to have some record of what the gen- during those hours, as my host in formed me during my Sabbath in that city. Truely it is a veritable day of rest." Extract from a letter of r. teacher in New Mexico: "We have a W. C. T. V. here of fonrteen members, some of the Mexican women walk ing six mi.es to the meeting. No one realizes more than these women the terrors of intemperance and they seem so glad that some thing is being done to ameliorate their condition, although many of the women drink too. I have or ganized a Loyal Temperance Legion among my little folks, which thev eniov very much. I have been .rying to get the saloons to close, but cannot tell how it will turn out yet." Another hard cider caoe was settled before an Iowa court re cently, by which it was decided that a barrel of cider was lawfully seized as an intoxicating beverage. SOHK EXTRA B.iKCM la Keai Entate Offrrnl by Kurkbnrt A Malln. A good 2 story house aud 4 lots, situated in Ilackleinan's 4th addition for $2700. A good new cottage centrally lo. cated in the 2nd. addition and one good corner lot for $2100. 2 good vacant corner lota centrally located in 2nd. addition for $2500. A good new cottage and one good lot in the 2nd addition. A bargain for $1250. new house and 2 good lots in Elkine addition for $850. A good house and 1 good lot in 2nd addition, between Jefferson and Montgomery streets for $1950. A good small cottage on 5th street, iu 2nd additicn and one good lot for 1050. Half cash balance on time. A N. 1 i;ood 2 story house and good lot 95x110 feet, situated within 3 blocks of tlie central school, best location in the city. A No. 1 bargain for S3S0O. 22 feet front on First street, in one of the best business blocks now pay. ing good interest on pricj asked, on easy terms. Home and lot on 4th street, Hackle man's second addition at 1000 A good bargain. Lots and blocks in Goltra's I'utk addition for sale on the installment plan $30 cash balance $10 per month. Several lots in Pipes addition for sale at a small advance on original price, on easy terms. Lots id llacklemens -nd., drd and 4th additions. Call and look at our city list of property. 10 acres choice fruit land 'near the citv for sale at $25 per acre. Tracts of land within a few miles of the city in tracts of 5 to 20 acres, good for fruit or garden purposes for sale at $40 per acre. 160 acres of land 30 acres cleared, some improvements, snail house and within two miles of Lebanon for $1000, good terms. Good. farms, improved and unim- E roved, in all parts of Benton and inn counties for sale from $20 to $40 per acre on easy terras. We also have 160 acres of cool land, which lies within 3 miles of Yaquina City and within 6 miles of Mew port, which we oner tor a tew days only at the extremely low figure of $350 cash. This piece of land is deeded land and is well worth three or fonr times what is now asked for it, but it must be told immediately fcr cash. A good bargain for some one. We have a few good city lots to trade for farm property, if you wou d nice to make an exenanse oi mis mna. Call and see us. Bubkhart & Maun, Real Estate Agents. iiublifiii. cause. In 1817. in the province of LVroiunouca, the revo lution made more martyrs of the j dooio uica; ainoug oii.ers uoimngo Marin?, Miinici Cuidtis ud the Her 1 lint re- : voit was followed up in the pro viuce of Northern Parahyba, whtre the leaders were shotal.su, and with ; them another prias, Father Tenorio 31any victims cf the same rcpubli- can attempt succumbed in tne pro-1 vinces of llio Grande del Norte i and Alugoas. Later on, in 1824, another revo lution was. begun in the north, under the leadership of Manual de Carvalhe I'acs do Andrude. The insurgents proclaimed the Con feaeracy of the Ecuador, but were promptly subdued, and the ii!ood of numerous victims was shed by ! the hrst Lniperor of lirazil. But that movement was not barren of result?. It had amused the public spirit aod brought about the revolt ol April 7, 1831, which sen: to exile Pedro 1, but which failed, however, though it inspired the two brothers Andrade to proclaim the republic, which was the aim pursued by Brazilian?, as shown by their former revolts, Stiil. repub lican ideas were sedulously enter tained by Brazilian, whose num oer increased daily: :iudthe resul: has been seen in the last successful revolution of Novemoer M. STRANGERS AUK CORDIALLY INVITED TO CALL ON 0. E. BROWNELI . AND INSPECT HIS STOCK OF- Choice Family Groceries. Ul.snKHS XOTHF. A fine line of toilet soaps at Stan ard & Cusick's. Tinware warranted not to rust at Matthews & Washburn's. Go to Phelps for the latest styles in commercial work. Fine dressed chickens this morn ing at Geo. C. Henderson's. Tinware warranted not to rust at Matthews & Washburn's. Great clearance sale at W. F. Read's for the next 30 days. Fine dressed chickens to-day at Geo. C. Henderson'.-. Good morning ! Have you used Hubbard's Elegant Lotion. For school books and artist Mi -plies go to tanard & Cusick's. ! Cheap Astoria lota in tue f xten sion to tlw Railway addition. A full line of homeopathic reiue dies at Hubbard's new drug store Tinware warranted nob to rust at Matthews & Washburn's. If you want a choice cup of tea try my 40 cent tea in bulk. C. E. Brownell. Business men who want neat, tasty stationery get Phelps to do their printing. Buy lots in the extension to the Railway addition to Astoria. They are cheap. NEW TO-DAY. $5oo WORTH GOLD WATCHES KfinVinl'er this moaus everything in stock. mus have room, and we do not purpose to let Portland or any other city beat us in prices. We want to see you all and will save you money. IB SPECIAL BARGAIHS IN&CL0AKS. W GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS. GENTS' NECK WEAR, GENTS' HuM Kit Y, UMBRELLAS, HOSIERY, LA PIES' DRESS GOODS, LADIE.V FANCY GOODS, LADIES' UNDERWEAR, LADIES' HOSIERY, LADIES' NOTIONS, LACK Cl'ET-AINS, ETO..ETO. I take this method of informing the citizens of Albany and vicinity that I have just opened a first class clothing store in connection with my mcrchnntile business, and have added the most complete stock of gents Ms IlII Goods and C. OtlllDg ever brought to the city. In older to advertise my business I haTe de cided to yive away v, r $.U0 worth of Gold Watches. Every purchaser of ooe dollar's woi iii of goods, for cash, from the clothing department will receive a chance for one of thise gold watches. Stock is all new purchased in the cast for spot cash, and will be sold at LOWEST LIVING RATES. Call and examine my stocK nefore purchasing elsewhere. 2F"No troub!e tojshow goov.. Albany, Oregon. BAKROWS & SEAELS, Dry Goods, Notions. Gents Furn'gs Albany. Or. G. IV. SIMPSON. ITANTKH A0KXT3, OKNTLKMKN OR LA 1)1 US, TO I T nanuie a new invcnlian, that is imlc pcnsible anil sella at Goodrich, Albany, Or. bight. Address It. A NNCAL J hereby Prr. U. f. Pnlmera C'oaserraUrf of Music, Tweedale's block, First street, Albany, Oregon, opened Jan uary 20. 1890. The course of in struction will consist of classes for piano, organ, harmony and voice culture. There will be a normal class and diplomas furnished to teachers, specifying capacity and experience. Students partic ipate in monthly recitals, und are graded to insure equality in rendi tion. This conservatory will be conducted or the same basis as those in Bos tan. New York, etc. This is tlie on y recognized success ful system k aown for a thorough musical eduii tion. Send foi circu lars and reft rences. Office hours from 1 to 3. Tinware warranted not to rust at Matthews & Washburn's. SCHOOL m :ktixo -xoticb is Siren to th lezal voters of s -hol district No. 5. Linn cauntv. Ore? on. that the regular annual school meetintr of said pchool district mill be held on Monday, the 3d day of March, 1830, at the hour of 7 'clock p. m. of said day at the court house, in the city of Albany, Linn county, Oregon, for the purpose of hearing the reports of the dl.ectors and clerk af said school dis trict and to lery a tax for the support f the schools for the ensuing year. Also fot the purpose of levying a tax for the purpose of paying interest on the bom's of said school district, and for the transaction of any ether business that may legally come befere said meeting. By orJer of the board of directors. Dated February 14, 18!X. C. OI BlRKllART. John Fossat, District Clerk. Chairman Board Directors. ! t i '1 I frVMlNNVILLE QlLLEGE T McMINNVILLE, BOTH ACADEMIC AND COLLEGIATE Departments. 5lln the Academic Department there are four courses of study of three years each: Classical, icxntific, normal and business. In struction is thorough; location, heal .hy! expenses low; advantages, first class in every respect. Full informa tion in catalogue, for .which address G. BROWNSON,Pj8s. OREGON FB IL, D STORJE AND BOOT and SHOES P ARROWS HU M lllinc. BLOCK. AGENCT FOR - THE LUDLOW Ladies Fine Shoes. Also -,3ncy for M. D. WELLS & CO.'S Boots and Shoes. &SEARLS. Serfect Remedies 12 -AND- OCHOOL RLBCTION - NOTICB IS HIRRBT O given that the regular annual school election in school district No,5, Linn sounty. Oregon, will be held at the central school building in said school district, on Monday, the 10th day of March, 1890, for the purpose of electing one director to serve three yeais and one clerk to serve one year. Said elec tion to begin at 2 o'clock r. u. and continue unt ll 6 o'clock r m, of said day. By order of the board of directors. DaUd February 14, 1890. - C. G. BURKIUBT. Jons FcsnAT. District Clerk. Chairman Hoard Directors. FOR TP DAYS ONLY MONDAY AND TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17 & 18, Choice table claret will be Bold on tap at M. Baumgart's at 55 cents per gallon. This sale will ast only two days. GENERAL PRODUCE MARKET. WANTED SPECIALLY Hay, oats and potatoes, to supply customers on the Oregon Pacific Railroad extension and my increasing home trade, where I sell in quantities to suit the purchasers. Offic foot or Ferry street. R. WL. ROBERTSON. Will & Stark. SKffli nMStlMPTI ABirTINC MnMomiviur cal I " SOLD BY Foshay & Mm. The City Liquor Store, .!. UAVMflABT, Proprietor. V.Vhtloor I. the Oil Fell...' nplc, Albur.lSOnpM SPECIAL ATTErW PAID TO ORDERS FROM THE COUNTRY! t r idAUMkmm 2C tft' 1 111 I I II II II I vmolus tor" m a a . mm m ILVERWAREgc. T m 1PV We have n ;a; lit a to date (Not. . 188 . duced rates 7, e ah which duplie? cat of this ate, jj lo shall be plesud to Mseoi ic Tea,. , . Ttis Leading PHOTOGRAPHED; ALBANY. OSKGOS. he nwatwes made by L. W. Clark and Greaweod u : Duplicates ean be had from them onlv of nTTi IT lave about isoo nesatires tlade Dy ourL'fU-. e had at like rates. We esrry the onlr fulli ne of yiZ . .r-ed work at lowest rates for firsUclass work: W. : j 9i at rur studi in From.' Wck, ext dn U fke