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About Morning daily herald. (Albany, Or.) 1885-19?? | View Entire Issue (Oct. 8, 1890)
r I , , , I II I in - .. - ' Oil flWa.Tmr'. . ' ,. .... ..,!., , .U- . A vyjfljflx. ALBANY, OREGON, WJSDwjSDAY, OCTOBEK 8, 1890. VOL. V. NO. 2 14 i 1 r r IF TRIKE L E. BLAINE'S! AND LOOK AT 969 PAIR OF" PANTS! "NOW Our oil) er 1 us in a a in a lid have cios tt get cm gut to make jti n-es (Ml stoves, loo i ostock and we injmnd to un'oad )dricewill do it. Oxrland , 1 onitor, A igcnd aad Superi or langcs. Ccoks tzi Heaters, Hard ward ill Cutlery: SMITH ALBANY, jjoons and asuo as our 1 ! ftteJT-fifrdtl t? Tira CelebnitBil French CURE w.tea to ApjjRODIIiNE" or money refunded fF0RE AFTER the generative organs of either sex whether arising from the excessive use of stimulants, tobacco or opium, or through j outhful inilis cretion, over indulgence, etc., such as loes of Brain Power, Wakefu'nesa, Bearing Down Pains in the Back, Seminal Weakness, Hys teria, Ner ous Pros' ration. Nocturnal Omig s;oiis, Leucorrhoe, Dizziiiess, Weak Memory, Loss of Power and Impotenuy, which if neg lected often lead to premature old age and insanity. Price $1 a box; 6 boxes fcr $5,00. Sent by mail on receipt of price. 4 WIIII1KV tl lKIVTEE is given with every $b order received, to refund tne money if a Prrnmnrnl cure is noteffetted, VV have thousands of testimonials from old and young, of both sexes, who have been permanently cured by the use "f Aphroditine Circular free. Address rUK APIIKO Mi !H'IE CO. Western Branch, Box, 27. Portland, Oregon, For sale by Foshay & Mason, who esale and ctail druggists, Albanv, Orek -t: FEMALE Fills For Female Ir regularities; noth ing like them on the market. Never fail. Successfully 'used by prominent ladies monthly. Guaranteed to re lieve fcuppressed menstruation. SuftSafs, Ceriain Don't be humbug ged. Save time, Health and money. Take no other. Sent to any ad dress by maii on receipt of pricr, $2.00. Ad i!ms tpjiro :Mt-lirlu Company West Branch Box 27, Portland, Or. Sold by Foshay & Mason, Albany. Oregen WANXKI A girl to do general house work. Apply immediately at this office. THAT HACKING COI GH can Iw 80 quick ly curvd by Shiluh'-tOure. Wcguarantee it. Scld by Fns' y & Mason. mm FISH,; Printers FLINN BL8CK ALBANY OR. For all kinds of green or dry fruit boxes call at the Sugar Pine Door & Luuibei Company's ware house, Albany, Or. Matthews & Washburn, the en trprising hardware and pove eiders, received their thir car doail of stove? vesterdav. Bi'i!i8 celebratrd family remedies are for sale b; all leading: druggists every where. Quench your thirst whIm fountain. at the new Ask to see our $2.50 ladies atE. C. Searls. shoes for Fresh cranberries and picketed cod huh at Mueller & Garrett's. & OR KG - to sell their share of N prices made. Our A a i J Fabsrs Golden SENDERS customers are invited to comr set their own price,time and A an! of good Aanted as long s'ock lasts. HIS NATIVE STATb. President Harrison Visits Scenes of His Early Childhood A VERY WARM WELCOME. Hli Bfseeh to to Pajplt of Lawrsacs- banr, Ohio- As Old Frlond Oatli Hlo "Bu." Nokth Vkbnon. Ind.. Oct. 7. To day has been one of ovations tor tne chief magistrate ot tne na tion. Kentucky, Ohio aud Indi ana hav; joined in doing him homap", t:i:l in the land of Dixie ihe tjn.'';-' was no less warm than in : native state of Presi dent Harrison. It was hardly more than daybreak when the presidential train passed through Newport ana uovington, uui me president was up and bowed ac knowledgement to the bustling, enthusiastic Kentuckians that c.o.:. ed the depo's as the train p2-s:.i through. Cincinnati as readied at :ou -r. . a. m. .uesr ite tne eariy nour sev eral thousand people gathered 'at the Central depot to gieet the president. At 8 the train pulled out. The principal event of the day was to come. .Near ftortii bemt, umo. tne oia Harrison homestead was reached. andthetiain came to a stop just at the house in which Benjamin Harrison first saw the light, and but a few yards from the white shaft that marks the tomb of his illustrious ancestor, ex-President William Henry Harrison. The occasion was not one for words, and as the president passed to the rear platform he was unaccom panied. The rest of the party delicately left h;m to the solemn memories that the scenes ot ma childhood and youth called forth. After a brief stop the train passed on, but the president vtB visiDiy affected by the sights that brought so many tender memories to his mind, and when the little town ol Lawrenceburg was reached his voice was heavy with emotion as he addressed the crowd of neigh bors and friends that thronged to greet him. 'My friends," said tne pres- dent, "I want to thank, yoa . very cordially for this greeting. All scenes about nere are very laminar to me. This town of Lawrence burg was the first village of my childish recollections, and as I ap proach it this morning, oast the earliest home of my recollections: the home in which my childhood and early manhood was spent, memories crowd in upon me that are very full of interest, very full of pleasure and very full of sad ness. They bring DacK to my mind those who once made the old home very dear the most precious spot on earth. I have passed with bowed head the place where they rest. We are here in our generation with the work of those who are gone upon us. Let us see, each of us, that in the family, in the neighborhood anu in the state we do at least with equal courage, grace and kindness, the worK so Draveiy, Kinaiy bhi gem-rously done by those who fill ed our places fifty years ago. Now, fir I must hurry on, to those old friends and those new friends who have come in since Lawrenceburg was familiar to me, I extend again my hearty thanks for this wel come, and ni parting, win intro duce one of the members 01 my cabinet, who accompanies me, General Tracy, secretary of the navv. Secretary I racy contented himself by merely bowing to the enthusiastic crowd, and he and the Dresident had time to shake a few eager hands extended as the tram Dulled out. At Milan and vsgooa targe . .... . j crowds also assembled, but the president merely appeared on the rear platform and introduced Sec retary Tracy, bowed to tne cneer ini Jndianians. and the train nassed through. vVhen the villaae of Washington was reached many old friends of thfl nresident ureeted him. An r.ld urav-haired man elbowed his way sturdily through the crowd to the nresideni. ana erasping urn hand, said, "How are ye, Ben; am fflad to see ve : I voted for your grandfather and then voted for vou. and 1 hope. Ben, I'll have a chance to vote for you again. You don't mind if I call you Ben?' Great lauzhter from the crowds The president assured his visitor that to his old friends he hoped to alwavs remain the "Bin" of yore, and the crowd loudly applauded ihe sentiment. This encouraged an old ladv to exclaim a she m-asoed the president's hand, "I feel as though 1 am related to Mr. Harrison ; your grandfat! i and mine ate roast turkey at d p together, and that makes us rc lated, dot i n't it?" Great lat gl ter.l lh president bowed an affirmativu to this loiric. Danville, Ills.. Oct. 7. Th president is certainly making bib Western trip a period of unalloyed pleasure. The generous welcome which the citizens ot his native slate tendered him at every stop in Indiana was p irticularlv pleas ing to the president. The" princi- r. c.cin oi me day was the re ception at Terre Haute. A stand ""Veen ected and fully 10,000 People Moeuiuiea to greet the lariy. The arrival of the train 1 - . tne echoes and everv factory in the citrnd tne noise was deafen tog'jyQpP the speaker's stand was fnohr reached it was fully 10 minrne Detore the thousands of cheencs people could be quieted, Mayor -HJaniels welcomed the Sreewtji to the city. The preei eat resDbnded in m. short SecretirkTracy and Congressman GroavwtJJy of Ohio, also puke TK AIBLE EXPLOSION. Tfe WjJUI and a WhoU Village , ; Wipd Out. eral startling explosions in quick succession at 3:30 this afternoon announced to Wilmi igton a disas ter to the Dupont Powdei Works on the Brandywine. An Associa te, rress reporter hastened to th scene and has wired that the whole section of the works known as the "Upper Yard" is a complete wreck, and that at least six live coost. One of the magazines8 went off first and the rolling and drying mills were set off by the concussion which followed in rapid succession. There were at least seven distinct successive explo sions. Every dwelling in the neighborhood is reported a wreck or unroofed. LATKB.--A messenger has just brought in the following dispatch : Ten kiljed and twenty wounded. Rockland is a complete wreck; none of its houses were left stand ing. Rockland is a village on the Brandywine, fully a mile above the scene of the explosion and it com prises a large paper mill, owned bytheJessupA Moore company, and about fifty dwellings, in which chiefly resided the mill employee. Its population is about 200. Evi dence of destruction a that dis tance leads to the belief here that the number of killed and wounded are not fully ascertained. LUCKY ESCAPE. Workman Narrowly Kocapas Being Barnad All. From Seattle comes the report of serious accident. A laborer named George Henry, employed in digging a trench on the corner of Jackson and Eighth streets, was completely buried by the side of trenin ivit2 in upon him. No one saw it happen, and attention was hrst called to his disappear ance by a small boy, who asked his mother where that ' other man" was. It must have been discovered immediately after it happened, for it took the rescuers only twenty minutes to dig him out. He owes bis lucky escape to his arms being above his head, s as to allow him to breathe when the dirt struck him, He was very much bruised, especially about the knees. No one knew him, as he had just started in work, having recently come from the East. lie was taken to the hospital and in a few days will be well enough tore turn to work. Terrible Storm. Quebec, Oct. 7. Dispatches from points along the Gulf of St. Lawrence say terrific snow storms and gales have prevailed from Cape Despair up the ulf on both shores to Lislo, since last night. A dispatch from Rivere Du Loupe, says a schooner, name unknown. was seen to go ashore last night on the west end of Green island reef, but the weather w as so thick that nothing has been seen or heard ot her since. It is feared many vessels will come to grief. A Popular Appointment. Berlin, Oct. 7. The appoint ment of General Von Kaltenborn Strachen as minister of war. sue ceeding General Nerdy du Vemois is officially announced. General Von Kaltenborn Strachen served on the general staff in the Aus trian and trench war and has lately commanded at Stettin the appointment is particularly popular witn tte general stan. A Knock Oat for Depew. Nbw York, Oct. 7. The repub lican county convention last night by a vote of 14b to 48 refused to nominate Chauncey M. Depew for mayor. . Depew was not present though he had been elected a dele gate and did not know that his name was to do used. Had he known it, he doubtless would have forbidden its use. An ArtUt Commits Suicide. Seattle, Oct. 7. Wm. 8pragu Jr., a photo engraver on the Morn ing Journal in this cty, com mitted suicide yesterday by tak ing chloroform. Sprague has been in the citv but two weeks. He came to Seattle from St. Paul. They Appraise the Estate. San Francisco, Oct. 7. The ap praisers of the estate of William P. Fuller, of the firm of Whittier Fuller h Co., who died on the 17th of May, have submitted their re port. The total estate is valued at $1,771,282. Sanderson for Mayor. San Francisco, Oct. 7. The re publican municipal convention this evening nominated Geo. H. Sanderson for mayor. Hew goods at Read's. Just received a new stock of I. F. hosiery at W. F. Bead's. wa;BCaided by the whistles of A WIFE'S SUICIDE. o a Fit of Remorse She Takes Strychnine. WCOUIKS NIGHT SUIOIDB. BurliagtoB EaflDsori-A Uft BtntoMe A Terrible Powder Bxplotioa WinmiDYi' Wedd.mg. San Francisco. Oct. 7. Mrs. Lulu Raisers. 19 years old. a wife. a&fL th. mo&er ol.wO children, committed surcldeW-dariy uose oi Birycunme. ; xier uuu- t i . n . band, William J. Rogers, is a car conductor, and on returning from ftork yesterday morning at one 'clock, found his wife out. The quarrel which ensued and the re- uorse for her conduct is believed to have led to the dose. She left an affectionate note, begging her husband's forgiveness. SHE WAS CRAZY. A California Girl Who Co':iitted Suicide on Her Wedding- May. Redwood, Cal., Oct. 7. Mrs. George Wehrlin (nee Miss Louise b-sliHKer), who coramitteed sui cide on her wedding night, was buried yesterday. The husband as overcome. A letter arrived (or the dead girl at the same time from Kansas City, from her brother. The letter was written on Oct. 1, in Geiman. An extract was worded as follows: Louise, you know you are a very strange girl, but you know there is something wrong with you; that you Jell twenty-hve leet on your head, and you had better think well before you marry. A niece of Groner's, who was quite intimate with deceased, said : Louise was a strange girl and from what we saw of her we have come to the conclusion that she as not right in her head. From the first uay she was engaged to ieorice she treated him harshly ami did not appear to like him. I don't think she was ever engaged to anyone else, for she told me he had several chances to get married in Portland but had re fused them all. She was appar ently oppose I to marriage toward the last, and told my uncle she would take poison some day. Wehrlin s ud to a friend that if he could get his money back he would tell something about the marriage. The stomach of the leceased was removed by order of the coroner and will he sent to San rancisco to have the contents analyzed. Wehrlin, who is a coachman for a prominent family of this city, put all his money, it if stated, into a cottage he bought for his bride and gave a inortHt"- on the place for a few hnn tred dollars he could nor pay. Hie cottage was sold to him by Mrs. Groner, aunt of the deceased girl. IMPORTANT MOVE. The Proposition to Ketabllab a Popedom in England Revlred. Paris, Oct. 7. Le Matin, of Paris, publishes an article assert ing that a movement is brooding n Eng and among the leaders of the Roman Catholic and Angelical parties to appoint a special pope for England. As an evidence of the truth of this statement Le Matin calls attention to the recent old Catholic congress held at Cologne, where the establishe! church of England was repre sented by the bishop of Salisbury and the archbishop of Canterbury, merica by Janner, the formei bishop, now bishop of New Zealand. There were also present Jannicheff, representing the Or thodox Lrreek church of Huesia, Pere Hyacinthe and several Jan sen ists from Holland. The con ference led to no definite result, though there was a vague scheme to establish a popedom in England. THE BURLINGTON ROAD. It Seeks a Pacific Terminal- Arnold's Sentence. Union, Or., Oct. 7. A corps of engineers are in the Blue moun tains thirty miles west of Union, making a preliminary survey across the mountains in the inter est of the Burlington & Mirsouri river railway company. It is stated that it is the intention of the Burlington & Missouri to ex- i end its road to the Pacific coast and that the terminus will prob ably be somewhere on the Puget. Sound. C. E. Arnold was to-day senten ced by Judige Clifford to life im prisonment in the state peniten tiary, for killing E. A. Shafer at Hilgard in March last. Politics Caused It. Livingston, Tex., Oct. 7. To night Demit Jones, of Legicett. was ailed out of a saloon by Jim Par ker and Alex Lowe. As be stepped out of the door he was fatally shot by the men. Uriah reeman then came and began shooting at Parker and Lowe, who returned the fire. Lowe was killed outright. Parker is shot in the stomach and cannot live and Freeman is shot in the left arm and breast. The doctors say he will die. The tragedy had its origin in politics. Y. When you want a nice hat call on G. W. Simpson. WINNIE DAVIS' WEDDING. Gossips and Ramon A heat the Postponement of Her Marriage. Syracuse, N. Y., Oct. 7. Report came from New Orleans that Miss Winnie .Davis, daughter of Jeff Davis, will not marry Alfred Wilk enson, because of his poor financial condition. Wilkcnson is out of town and his sister will neither coiiiirin nor d-.'ny the r p t". Dr. Thomas Emery, at whoue house Miss Winnie Davis was a guest when Bhe first met Mr. Wilkenson, says in regard to the report from New Orleans that their engagement has been broken off, that ne had no definite . lniorma- luort. and did not .believe it wa tfua r vx-jg is tar as the reported postpone ment was concerned, he knew no lime had ever been fixed for the wedding. "There has been a re port," he aid, "that the wedding has been postponed from Septem ber to next June. I don't believe .Hiss Davis ever intended to marry earlier than that, anyway, out of respect to her father' memory. As a matter of fact, Mr. Wilken n did not suffer any considerable loss in the burning of the family home." PRISONERS TO BE RELEASED. England to Extend Clemency to DTnamiters Now In Prison. New York, Oct. 7. A London correspondent cables an follows this morning: I have good rea son to believe that the government has decided to release nnder cer tain conditions, a number of un fortunate men who are now serv ing life sentences in British pris ons for complicity in the earlier dynamite outrages or attempted outrages. Recent investigations have proved practically beyond doubt that many of the men, prob ably the majority, were victims of "agents." fnis discovery, cou pled with the fact that no blood was shed by the prisoners, and that they have already endured neavy penalty of years in prison, has induced the government to recommend the crown to give a merciful consideration to their case. A MURDERER ESCAPES. Assumes HI Wife's Clothes and Deceives the Jailer. Greenville, S. C, Oct. 7 Bill Howard, who is under sentence for the murder of a confederate in the Moonshine whisky business over a year ago, escaped from prisun here this morning. Howard's wife was allowed to spend the night in the cell with her husband. This morn ing Howard, dressed in his wife's clothing, came down the stairs oi the jail with an infant in his arms and, leaving the baby at a rela tive's house, fle i before the ja:ler had discovered the trick that had been played tn him. The Markets. San Francisco, Oct. 7. Wheat, buyer '90, $1 37H ; season $1 45. Barley, buyer U0, $1 42 ; sea son, $1 49. Chicago, Oct. 7. 1 :15 p. m. Close Wheat Higher, cash, $1 00 ; December, 1 d4 ; May, 1 082. Corn Steady; cash, 60; No vember, 50a ; May, 53. Oats Firm ; cash, 39 ; Decem ber, 39; May, 42. Mess Pork Steady ; cash, $9 75 (ffi9 77)2; January, $1185; May, $12 522. Lird Steady; cash, $625; Jan uary, $6 55 ; May, $6 95. A Monster Ferryboat. San Francisco, Oct. 7. The monster ferryboat. Ukiah, is rapid ly neanng completion and in a week will be ready for her much- talked-ot trial trip. The UkiaU is rated as first-class in her line of vessel and it is thought her en- gines will develop a high rate of speed on her trial trip. She has been supplied with a vertical beam engine, having a sixty-five inch cylinder and twelve-inch stroke. The boilers, two in number, are each twenty-hve feet long and eleven feet in diameter. - The to tal cost if the Ukiah will be not less than $175,000. A Defaulting Secretary. San Francisco, Oct. 7. Daniel 7.imAB r4 110. Aitir Vtaa Vwmn uuja 1 va viiiD tj 1 uaa uwu missing since Wednesday, Septem ber 17th. He was secretary of American Council, No. 7, Order Chosen Friends, and when not en gated in that business solicited orders for several wholesale liouor houses. It is stated that he is in debted ta the amount of $6000. A Whitecap Outrage. New York, Oct. 7. Whitecaps are at work at Abseco n, JS. J John Newman wu taken from his bed by a party of four men, who stripped him and rode him about on a rail trimmed with barbed wire. It appears that he had been drinking freely of late and has abused his wife and family. Forged a Check. London, Oct. 7. Mrs. Maud Yates, wife of Frederick Yates, son of Edmund Yates, editor of the London World, who is separated from her husband, was to-day com mitted for trial on a charge of ut tering a check with the object of defrauding her fatber-in-law. ASSAULTER I'SLAIEfi, 4 Lady Who Could Defend Her Hoaor to the Death, ENGINEERS IN BLUB BIT. UUmaaoy to DyBsBltorr-Dwaiit la Us Wife's Apaaral Hirdtm Es- i 8torm Drain, Or., Oct. 7. F. F. Tem pleton was shot and instantly killed about 10 o'clock Sunday night by ltxa.Uainey, living five ilei JfjOflou- tewa-o to -"Utb t . river roa&f itxiptXaA'le&mtt 55 years old, a married nun am v v sawyer by trade, ne ana, ear. tiainey had taken up uomeeveaoa on Smith river. Sunday evening iainev left for the river to finish a house for Templeton, who was to ollnw with Hainey s family yet. terday. Templeton was a large. stout man. Mrs. Hainey is quite mall and delicate. She told her husband that she was arraid of fempleton, as he had insulted her seveial times. About 10 o'clock rempleton made an assault upon Mrs. Hainey with his person inde cently exposed. SI e told him to stand back. He attempted to lay hold of her, when she fired, miss ing him. He then rushed at her, and she fired a second shot, the ball striking him in the nec, :oming out at the base of the irain. He fell on the floor, where he lay until the coroner was sum moned yesterday. There being no near neighbors, and the night very lark, Mrs. Hainey was compelled to remain all night in the house with the dead man. ine coro ner's jury rendered a verdict of justifiable killing. WOMAN FOROER ON TRIAL. How She Secured SaS.OOO From a Rhode Island Bank. Providence, R. I., Oct. 7. The trial of Nettie L. Clarke, a young music teacher, who was arrested in New York July 3d for a $45,000 forgery, committed on the Me- - chanics' Savings Bank of this city, was begun in the court ot common pleas to-day. There was a perfect mob of women, not half of the pplicants being able to get into the court room. The procreation proved the forgery Bud the method whereby Miss Clarke worked this iron clad bank. The connection of Rowland Hazard, the millionaire manufac turer, with the case proved to be one of a friendly aid to a woman, who pleaded ignorance of banking affairs. One new disclosure was the use to which she put the $43,300 pai i to Allen B. Ralph. It vas for the purpose of taking up a 145,000 note purporting to have been made to her by Ed. 8. Pierce, of orceeter. This note has been destroyed and its genuineness can not be tested by cross-examination. .The defense will probably be undue influence and that Miss Clarke merely passed a note forged by another. WHAT NOTED PEOPLE DO. Henry Watterson was originally intended for a pianist by hie father. Madame Modiebka owns one of the largest farms in Los Angeles county, California. Mr. Buckle, the editor of th London Times, is reputed to re ceive a salary of $25,000 a year. Wilkie Collins' grave in the northern part of Kensal Green cemetery is marked by a neat, un adorned marble cross. Mr. George Meredith has become a convert to vegetarianism and in tends, it is said, to write a novel in support of this theory of living. Father P. L. Chapelle. a Catho lic priest, of Washington, D. C, who is about to oe elevated to a bishopric, is s Frenchman by birth, and has a missionary ancle in Hayti. Colonel John Benton and N. M. Johnson, respectively democratic . . .? jfj.i.. ano repuDiican canaiaaies tor con gress in North Dakota, will jointly discuss the tariff throughout the campaign. George Washington,of Newport, Ky., the temporary chairman of the Blue Grass state constitution convention, is a direct descendant of Samuel, a brother ot the immor tal George. Marshall Field Jr.. a Harvard sophomore and a son of a wealthy merchant in Chicago, has become a Roman Catholic in order that he can marry Miss Houck, the daugh ter of a rich brewer. Mr. Albert Bruce Joy, the well- known sculptor, arrived in New York from England, on th Majes tic, a week ago, and with occasion al absences in other parte el tne country, will be here for a month to come. One oi Mr. joy's most recent works, a statue of Bishop Berkeley, for Cloyne cathedral, in Ireland, has a peculiar interest for Amencanp. Steamer on Fir. New York, Oct,7. The steamer Alamo from Galveston arrived this morning with her cargo of cotton on fire. She was towed to Red Hook flats and will open her holds so the firemen can get to the flames. : . -a a V Ji -