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About Morning daily herald. (Albany, Or.) 1885-19?? | View Entire Issue (July 16, 1891)
THE MORNING HERALD: THURSDAY. JULY 10, 1891 ON SALK. The Daily Hkbald will be on ale each morning at H. J. Jones' book store, where it t an be procured at 5 cents per copy. MONEY TO LOAN. In suras to suit, from six months to live years, on good Albany and Linn county real estite. W. K. McPhersox, Opp. Russ House, Albany, Or. JOTTINGS ABOUT TOWN. Held by the Enemy to-night. Fresh bread every day at Parker Bros. Harry F. Keene Co., Thursday evening. New jewelry of latest patterns at Will 4 Stark's. Are you going to see Hairy F. Keene to-night. L. W. Deyoe and family left yes terday for Alaea. Pay your school tax and save costs of collection. Sells Bros., circus will exhibit in this city Aug. If. Have you seen that elegant piano at Klein Bros. W. R. Uarrett and family went to Newport yesterday. Klein Bros, are giving a fine piano to their customers. J. H. Howard and family are visiting at Oakland, Oregon. The thermometer registered !K) in the sun yesterday afternoon. A fine line of ladies' lawnNorfolk waists just received at the Ladies' Bazaar. If you are hungry go to Parker Bros, and get a loaf of the best bread in the city. ! County Superintendent Russell will take a vacation at Fish lake for a week or two. Try Conn A Hendricson's ovrup, the finest in the market. Retail in quantities to suit. You will miss a treat if yo 1 do not see Held by the F.nemy at the opera house to-night. Calumet baking powder is abso lutely pure and wholesome. Try a oan. C. . Brownell. Regular meeting of the Albany Building and Loan Association will be held Friday evening. Your school tax will be delin quent if not paid at once. Look after it and save costs of collection. C. W. Cobb who has purchased the Job printing ollice of Paisley and Smiley in this city, assumed control yesterday. Mine host J. A. Gross, of the Depot hotel, has returned from the hot springs, where he has re ceived much benefit. Mrs. Royal, sister of Mrs. A. McAlister, came up from Salem last evening and will go with the McAlister family for an outing up on the North Santiam. Mr. E. E. Hammack, one of the proprietors of the warehouse at fallman, has sold out his interest to Mr. David Smith, his partner in the business, who will carry it on. The sale of reserved seats for the Keene company in "Held ' by the Enemy" opens this morning at Will A Link's music stote. We would advise all desiring to he present to assist in welcoming this splendid company to secure their seats early, as our patriotic citi zens will doubtless crowd the house to witness the great. play to be given that night. Paris is laughing over a joke about an American inventor who - is said to have patented a.i electiic corset that is to bring about the reign of morality at once. If one of these articles is pressed by a lover's arm it at once emits a shriek like the whistle of a rail way engine; and the inventor claims that he has already married three of nis daughters, owing to the publicity thus t hi list upon hack w ar d lover. To Clear a Mystery. At last there possibly has been discovered a clue which the Stay ton Times says may lead to the solution of the mysterious disap pearence of the young man, Tncker in the mountains last winter. From an interview with a gentle man from neargatesville the Times learns that grave suspicious as to fool play are now entertained. It is claimed that two men reluctantly consented to assist in hunting fur Tcmmie Tucker, and that they have avoided directing anyone to a certain swamp in the mountains where shots from a rifle were heard on the day of the young man's uieappearence. A company of men will be organized in a few days to thoroughtly search that part of ttie swamp where it is supposed tne Doay 19 niuuea. Well Done, The appoiutment of ieo. W Davis, of this county, to the oflice of clerk of the board of school land commissioners, is a good one and will meet with the highest com n.endation from all parts of ti e state where he is known. He is well fitted for the position by his former business experience and hia work will keep the office in perfect condition and efficiency. ralnrul Accident. Yesterday the little son of James Cherry met with a painful, but not serious accident. While swinging in a hammock the rope attached to it gave away, and the boy fell to the ground, striking his head on the edge of tbe sidewalk, inflicting a painful scalp wound. Dr. Davis was called and dressed the wound. Little Ulrl Vied. Geo. w. Hughes' little girl ten months and six days old, died last evening at nine o clock, of 1 scarlet fever. The funeral will le By order of S". V. C. acting com atteoded this afternoon. mander. Napoleon davis soocessob. The State Land B ard Appoints Geo- W. DayifpOfLlQD County. The board of state land commis sioners, consisting of the governor, secretary, and state treasurer, field a busy session Tuesday listening to the arguments in cases of land contest and it was not until late at night that the matter of accept ing the lesignatnn of the old clerk was reached says the Salem Statesman. Hut at 1U o clock a vote was taken accepting the resignation of Napoleon Davis as clerk and electing lieorge W. Davic, of Linn county, to succeed him. The resignation of Napoleon Davis as clerk was filed on Febru ary 7th, last and when the board came to vote upon accepting or re jecting it there were two votes for and one against, the governor having voted nay. Then a ballot was taken for a new clerk. In this George W. Davis received two votes and Napoleon Davis one. It was, then, a strict party vote, for the governor voted for the democrat and the two republican members of the board for one of their own political faith. The newly elected clerk is a gentleman highly spoken of as well qualified in every way to perform the duties of the office. He was formerly engaged in business at Shedds. Mr. Dvisis expected to qualify in a few days and take charge of the affairs of the office. The retiring clerk, Napoleon Davis, steps down and out after a faithful service of four years, dur ing which time there passed through bis hands over a million dollars of trust funds. He has made an efficient and accomoda ting clerk and turns the office over to his successor ith everything connected with it in perfect order. Wheat and Flour Prospect. The Oregonian makes the follow ing comments upon the wheat frospects: "Harvest in the Wil amette valley and throughout the state will be later than usual, and wheat will not be delivered before the middle of August. There is no market for new wheat, and no price has been fixed. The farmers talk of 75 cents a bushel for valley wheat and tio net at Walla Walla. It is thought that freights are about as high as they can go. A large wheat grower said yesterdav : "I do not expect to see wheat start at more than $1 40 or $ I 42'., per cental. If it starts any higher sales will be very slow, and I want to sell early and pay my debts. A wheat shipper says there is but little prospect for any amount of wheat being shipped Last by rail from this region this season. They have plenty of wheet t lit re, and don't want it. Yesterday wheat at tbe rates farmers talk of was worth as much here as at Chicago, and the freight to that city is i!0 cents a bushels. The prospects are favorable for large flour ship ments to China and Japan this season. The tiade is increasing, and the amount shipped last sea son would have been double what it was if transportation could have I been procured. Now that we have s regular line of steamers, there is every prospect for them having full cargoes of Hour on their return trip, as their is no trouble in selling the flour there if it can be got there." A Silver Trowel. The Salem Statesman savs that an interesting relic of some pro minent events in Oregon a history was exhibited bv T. Mcr'. Patton yesterday. It is a small silver trowel on which is inscribed: "Presented to T. McF. Patton, M. W., A. F. A A. M., of Oregon, at the laving of the cornerstone of the states Capitol, Oct., 8 1873, by John F. Miller, Henry Klip pel, nnd Samuel Allen, commis sioners " It wa presented to Mr. Patton just before the laying of the coraerstone of the capitol and was used by linu in the cermonies 01 that occasion. Later it was used by R. P. Karhart, S. M.. in laying the cornerstone ol tlie agricultural college at Corvallis. More Opal. The Mul Ian, Tribune states that a rich strike of opals was made by Joseph Davis near the head of Mill creek on Monday afternoon last while chasing his buckskin mare over the hills. He brought several of them into Mullan and a jeweler at once purchased them, paying $80 for them in the rough. Davis says they are gunny sacks full of the gems where he got his samples. A spokane jeweler pronounces them euperior to the Moscow items. They must be particularly clear and tiery if this is the case. It only remains sow to find emeralds and dimonds in this great Northwest ern country. Baseball New. The request of an H. & L. man t the Evening Democrat the fire men did not win the baseball game and that No. l's won it brings the question, where do you get your firemen if you don't go to No. l'? It has been a noticeable fact for last eight or ten years that when No. l's take hold of a thing it was always a snre case of win. We never challenge anyone for any thing and if the o her companies do not think No. l's superior why do they send those challenges? I think that the H. A L.'s had better wait till next summer and then we will beat them again if they will practice enough between now and then so they can play a friendly game without kicking. i Mascot. Special Meeting. The members of -McPherson I post No. 5. G. A. R are requested to meet at the (i. A. R. hall on Friday at 7 :'.i0 v. m. Business of importance that must be trans- acted. Full attendance expected. SW3 OF THE C0A8T. Interesting Items from Exchanges Tbronghont the Northwest. Cor vail is has a case of diph theria. Oliver Witham, of Corvallis, is the owner of a hen that has laid an egg measuring U.'sx3 inches in circumference. V hen the lightning struck the Polk county approach to the big steel bridge across the Willamette at Salem last weer it d'd but little damage. One post was shattered and sp'it. and this will be repaired at once at a co?t of but a few dollars. Considerable wool is now chang ing hands at The Dalles, hut it is haul, in most cases, to find the exact price, owing, as we presume, to tbe fact that concesin has been made ' on both sides. It is rumored that 1500 bales were sold at 17 cents a pound. The number of sheep in Eastern Oregon is estimated at 1,500,000 and the wool clip for the season of 181)0 is estimated at 8,078,123 pounds. The general average price obtained was 14 cents, which amounts to $1,214,937.21'. The sheep themselves represent an es timated value of $3,750,000. With the majority of the fish wheels the fishing season is prac tically ended. A few w heels ir. favored localities will continue to catch more or less until the close of the season. Fishermen at The Dalles say that during the season hereto not more than a quarter catch has been taken. Mr. H. R. Hapnah killed Satur day morning 011 Chenoweth creek, one of the largest rattlesnakes that he ever saw in his life. The snake) measured 44 inches in length and was fully as thick as Mr. Hannah's arm, which is by no means a small one. It had htteen rattles and a button. The other day at Naylox another barbed-wire fence did damage. It stretched across a thick clump of chapparal in a pasture through which a fine blooded colt, proba bly f lightened by a panther, went racing at night. Ihe splendid vnuni? Animal was so badlv lacer- j n ated that its owner was obliged to have it shot. Mr. A. Loosely, of Boise Citv, the other day received a letter froji his brother at Fort Klamath, Oregon, stated that it was believed thee that the old original Lost Cabin mine bad been discovered at a point called Diamond Peak, 30 or 40 miles distant. Three hundred men had rushed in, and more going, including nearly all the people ot Klamath and Lank ville. Rich gold quartz had been found and several claims taken up. It was supposed that tbe Lost Cabin had at last been discovered. Tbe remains of two men who had beer burned had been found. Also pieces of pack saddles, sluice boxes, and a quarter of a mile of mining ditch. It having been demonstrated that the sugar beet can be success fully cultivated in Eastern Oregon, papers in that section are urging the farmer to give some attention to the industry, and thus add another element to the state's in dustrial prosperity. They believe that the two-cent bounty should stimulate the industry until it be comes one of the leading ones of tbe state. A Big Tree In Thurston County. J. W, Hints in O'ynii ia Tribune, As it appears to be a fashion to tell what one knows about big trees and other wonders of our state on account of tl.enear ap proach of the Chicago big fair, I beg leave to intrude on your time a short while. There is a lir tree standing aoout fourteen miles southeast from Olympia, two miles from the Collins ranch, that I in company with others measured over twenty years atro, that was forty-gve feet in circumference four feet from the ground. It is a round, smooth-bodied tree, fn e from knots or blemishes for 100 feet or more. There is a lir tree down here, about ten miles from Ehna, that is cohsiderably larger, longer and finer in every respect than the one near Olympia. 1 did not measure it at the time I was to it, but my judgment is that it is close to sixteen feel in diameter. As to the lasting qualities of our cedar, my experience is that it is prai tically indestructible. I have seen tir, spruce and hemlock trees three, tour and five feet in diameter growing on top of old down cedars that were yet sound, and the trees glow ing on them must have been 2(H) or :i00 vears old. Mot Insane. Salem Journal : John Hoefer and about a cozen others, neigh bora ol tJarl Uruenwald, who was on Monday committed to the asy lum, at once started for Salem when they heard what had been done. They went to the asvlum this afternoon, demanding an inter view and will try to secure his release. They will declare that he is not an insane man, and not proven to be unsafe to be at large, iiiey propose to test the matter whether a man who is merely lovesick and excited over being arrested can be legally committed for insanity. - Quite a Slide, Astorian: An extensive land slide on the Skeena river at the North Pacific cannery last Tuesday destroyed hugli mountains, an nihilated nine houses, killed the wife of the foreman and forty Indians, missing the cannery bv about two feet. Had the tremen idous mass struck the canneiy sixty more Indians would have been killed, as they were just get ting ready to take in salmon from the boats. BOKN I)ICK-In Albany on July 15, to the wile of J0I111 Dick, a 12 pound daughter, uiotber aud child doing well. KEAL ESTATE 8&LE3. J. L Cowan to W. E. Ayers, 2 lots, O's A. ; consideration, $000. E. E. Hammack to David Smith, Jo of 3.51) acres. 11 w 2: considera tion, $2500. L. E. Hanon to Pell Rimison and otiiers to R. C. Redman, 55.0'.) acres, 10 w 2; consideration, $1200. Thos.Clemens and Spencer Web ster to Fred Holzappel, 110 acres, iz w 4; consideration, $z. Wm. Clemens admr. to Fred Holzappel. HQ acres 12 w 4: con sideration, $2700. R. E. Curt an to Isaac Louden, several lots, Amelia ; consideration, $4UU. C. G. Burkhart to I. N. Van Winkle, b'.k 41. Gollra's Park A. : consideration, $2500. b. J. Houston to A. II. Frum, l it interest 320 acres, 12 w 3 and 29 08 acres, 13 w 2; consideration, $200. G. P. Stires to J. R. Powell, lot 3, blk 4, Sodaille; consideration, $50. J. II. Loveall to I. J. Kirkpat rick, 20 acres, I. bai,on ; considera tion, $1000. J. K. Kirkpatrickto II. Y. Kirk patiick. i interest in blk 2, Sweet Home; consideration, $200. J. L. Cowan to lt-ahelle Kirk patrick, 2 lots, blk 4, Park A., Lebanon; consideration, $2iK). Mrs. L. W. Clark to Catherine Clark, lot 2, blk !0, M's S. A., Al bany ; consideration, $10. Jas. Morgan to N. C Myers, 120 acres, 10 w 1 ; consideration, $1200. J. H. Frum to A. r-rum, 1-D in terest 32J acres, 12 w 3, and 79.08 acres 13 w 2; consideration, $300. Examination of Teachers. Notice is hereby given that the regular examination of applicants for certificates to teach iu the pub lic schools of Linn county, Oregon, will be held at the superintend ents oflice in Albany, on August 12, 1801. G. F. Rlsski.1,, County superintendent. State Horticultural Society. The regular quarterly meeting of the Oregon State Horticultural Society will be held at Newherg, Tuesday and Wednesday, July 14 and 15. A full programme for thiee sessions has beeu prepared, but as all the titles to papers are not iu. the announcement of the programme has been omitted. Newberc promises to entertain royally, and there should bi a full attendance, showing our appre ciation of her interest in horticul ture. Novelties In Ladies Footwear. I hve just received for the sum mer trade the latest novelties in ladies fine shoes. Cloth top, fancy tips ; lace shoes with fancy tips, besides all the staple styles in band and machine turns. These goods were made expressly for me and will be found nice enough for the most fastidious and cheap enough for any one wanting a tine dress shoe. I also carry late novelties in Oxford ties ranging in price from $1.25 to $4.00. S. E. Young. Mothers? Castoria is recommended by fhysicians for children teething, t is a purely vegetable preparation its ingredients are published around each bottle. It is pleasant to the taste and absolutely harm less. It relieves constipation, regulates the bowels, quites pain, cures diarrhu'i and wind colic, allays feverishness, destroys worms, and prevents convulsions, soothes the child and gives it re freshing and natural sleep. Cas soria is the children's panacea the mothers' friend. 35 doses, 35 cents. Through Train. Notice has been given that com mencing on Saturday, July 18, the the train to the front, on the Ore iron Pacific, will run clear through to Coe, and on every Saturday thereafter. Croup, whooping cough and bronchitis immediately relived by Shiloh'sCure. For sale by Fob hay A Mason. Silk mitts at the Ladies Bazaar. For lame back, side or chest, use Shiloh's porous plaster. Price 25 cents at Foshav & Mason. University of Oregon at Eugene. Next session begins on Monday, the 21st, day of September, l.S'.ll : tuition, free. Four Courses: Classical, Scientific, Literary, and a short hnglish course, .in which there is no Latin, Greek, I rench or Cierman. The English is pre eminently a business course. For catalogues or other information, Address J. W. Johnson, President. BtCKLCJi 8 AKMCA The best salve In the world for Cuti. Bruises, Soes, Ulcers, Salt Kheuni, Fever sores. Tetter, Chapped Hani, Chilblains. Corns, aud skin Eruptions, and pos tively cures Piles, or 1.0 pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money re funded, Price 25 cents per box. Fcr gale by Foslmy & Mason Baby cried, Mother sighed, Doctor prescribed : Castoria 1 Highest of all in Leavening Power. Absolutely pure SHREWD MONKEY'. Strategic Tactics That Look as Though Iteason Inspired Them. In real military organization and strategy monkeys are far ahead of all other animals, and notably the different kinds of baboon. Manstield Parkins gives an excellent account in the London Spectator, of the dog-faced Hama dryads that lived in largo colonies in the cracks in dills of the Ahys B nian mountains. These creatures ined occasionally to plan a forag ing expedition into the plain below and the order of attack was most carefully organized, the old males marching iu front and 011 the flanks, with a few to bring up the rear and keep the rest in order. They had a code of signals, hal ting or advancing according to the barks of the scouts. When they reached the corn fields the main bodv plundered while the old males watched on both sides, but tck nothing for themselves. The others stored the corn in their cheek doiicIipr mnl under their armpits. They are also aaid to dg wells with their hands and work iu relays. The Geldaba boons sometimes have buttles with the Hamadryads, especially when the two species have a mind to rob the same field, aud if light ing in the hills, w ill roll stones 011 their enemies, Not long ago a colony of Gelada baboons, which had been lired at by some black soldiers attending a Duke of Co-burg-Golha on a hunting expedi tion on the boarders of Abyssinia, blocked a pass for some days by rolling rocks on all coiner.-'. A Great I'lay. 'Held by the Enemy," an Americau play, by an American of Americans and for Americans, is the piece in which the I eene com pany will open its return engage ment here on Thursday of thin week. The play was written by Win. Grillett, one of our most celebrated Ameiican authors, and is founded on the scenes of carnage enacted during the civil Mar. It appeals to the heart of every patri otic American whose natural love of country and liberty teaches him to appreciate the beautiful senti ment of a play, the object of which is to strengthen the lxnd of union between two formerly rival coun tries, both of which, after having struggled for supremacy, bow down and worship together, the stars and stripes. Through the entire play runs a humorous vein of de lightful comedy, which, together with the startling situations and the wonderful horse scene, an 1111 itation of a horse coming from a distance, gradually getting nearer until it seems that the horse itself must actually burst upon theet;;ge at full gallop, rentiers the piece t lie most intensely interesting and effective of all the drama- which owe their origin to incidents con nected with the war. The company C resenting the play are known to e thoroughly first class ami a per formance such as we are seldom treated to in Albany may be con fidently expected. Excursion to the C'oaxt. Here is your opportunity t-j take a cheap trip to Newport. Special train leaves Albany, Sunday, ,lu!y lOlh at 7 a. m. arriving at Ne oortatll a. m. Returning ar rives in Albany at !:3) that evening, giving an excellent op portunity to have a pleasant day at the seaside. The tides are just right for surf bathing, weather very pleasant, and wiln the fare at $2 for the round trip, those whoi care for the pleasures of a days ! outing can t allonl to stav at home. Free Lecture. Mrs. Chela F. Lutz, slate organ izer of the Minnesota Woman Suffrage Association, is making a unci visit in Oregon, ami will lecture in this city on Thursday evening next, Julv filth, at the V. C. T. U. hall. M rs. Lutz is highly endorsed by both the Minnesota and Dakota press. The Clear Lake Advocate says: "Even those who are not in sympathy with her cause cannot fail to ad mire her eloquence and ladylike manner." Frequently accidents, occur in the house-hold which cause burns, sprains and bruises ; for nee in such cases Dr. J. H. McLean's Volcanic Oil Liniment has for many years been the constant favorite family remedy. Try Coronado mineral water, the purest on earth, for sale by all druggists. John Isom Jr., pole agent. ' AiIinlliKtrnt rlx'H Notice. NOTICE IS 1IEFEBY GIVEN THAT the undcrsinctl lias been duly ap pointed Administratrix of tliu estate of W, II. Churchill, deceased, by tlie Honorable tli County Court of Linn courly, Oregon. All persons liaving claims aeainst the estate of g'lid V. H. Churchill, deceased, are lierchy notified to present the eame in writ, iusi. nuly verilicd, to me in person, or to my attorney (1. W. Wright esc., at his law ollice, over the Hank of Oregon, in Albany. J.imi county, Oregon, witliin six months from the date hereof. M. J. Cm m 1111.1., Administratrix-. (5. W. WaifiilT, Attorney foi Admin istratrix'. Dated June 27. ls'.tl. GIKL WANTED To lo eneial liouw ' work. None but lint clasn ln.li need apply, tall at Mr. W. It. IMreu . Latest U. S. Gov't Food Report THE WORLD ENRICHED. The facilities of the present day for the production of everything that w ill conduce to the material welfare and comfort of mankind are almost unlimited and when Syrup of Figs was first produced the world was enriched with the on ly perfect laxative known, as it is the only remedy' which is truly pleasing and refreshing to the taste and prompt and effectual tocleanse the system gently in the Spriu- tune or, in tact, at any time any the better it is known the more popular it becomes. NEW TO-DAY. Opera House, Warner & Orator, Lessees & Managers, THREE NIGHTS Comment-in Thursday, July l(!th Triumphant return of the Unriv aled Favorites, HARRY F. KEENE'S WEI L KNOWN STOCK COMPANY, In an elaborate production of Wm. Gillett's great Amer ican military drama, With all Ihe original effects used during its first pro duction 111 New York. "An American play, by an Amer ican, of Ame-icans. ami which all Americans should see." N. V. Herald. CHANGE OF PL.VY NIGHTLY. Admission, fi c and 75c. Seats 011 sale at Will A Link's. -GENERAL- :::::::: Stubi; Agency. THROUGH TICKETS Ti unci frum Kiir.iiM; !y b'.I Arnt-clau linea Tinkers from any place in Europe to any point in Hi' L'ntteil Status, cr fiom this i-ountrv to Kurcpnn points Mil over tlie following fuit -clans lint.-: Xrtli iJcrinan Lloyil. via New York, Norlli German Lloyil, via llaltimore, Allan Linu, Anchor Line. American Line, Stae Line, Kcavcr Line, C'liniird Line, kcl Star Line, Wtrte Star Line, tfuion Line. DK UTS AND MONEY ORDERS Hold on alt Kuropein citicsat current ra'ea. Intimation collections. Kor information rcvjrtiire; price of paHsae, date of sailing, etc., call 0:1 or address, '. It. WINN, Albany, Ok. THE Mi Agricultural Urn Opens September IStli, 1S.I1. Cot'liSE Of STl-DY arranged expresnlv to m (.ft the 1 teed u the farming and median. -cal ititert'ttta of the atato. Lange. comooioiis ami wrtl-veiitilmtod tiuitriinp. The 'llev in lotuW'l hi Acukiiated and Christian cow iiHiii.tv, ut.il one of the healthiest in the Slate," Military TrtiiHtnff. K(.iisis N e.l Nut Kvcerd $V0 for Ihe fcj.tire Season. Two rnioii.' tree mlmlirnhi9 frum every coiinv. Write fr ritalne t It. L. AKNOl,.', 1'red., Corvallis. Or. FOR SALE OR RENT. JE1TKSOX FLOURING MILLS -Also .SAW AMil'LANING MILLS, Jefferson, Marion Co., Or. For particulars apply to CORIiETT it MACLEAY, 04 and 0G Front St., Portland, Or. Aftiguee's Notice. NOTICE IS HEKEBf oIVEX tliut :.(, VVa, Jim, Gw, and Nancy Wfstfull partuers doing; business imilcr tli! lii 111 name of Kwonir, Woo, Kcc. Company iniolven. debtors in Alli.my 011 tlie 1-ilU day of June 18.)1, made a trencral apsinment 10 me umli'rsii'ucd for the lieneflt of all tbe r crrditiirs. All persons liainr claims i 1 present the sain 1 duly vemtea w the undersiirticd at the hank of Ore- K', Al.-ai,y. Oregon, within three months from the date hereof June 15 1.S1I1. Jat W. Bi.m, L. II. Montatnb, Assignee. Attorney for Assignee. IHxHulutluu of Drug Firm. NOTI'-K IS II KKKBV UIVEN THAT BY niutii:il consent, S. A. Uiilin and Fred liauaon hare thif day diawilved partnership in the drusf husinem, S. A Ilulin hayiiiK IiirttiHel the interest hitherto owned bv Fred Dauaon All outstanding indebttd-iim-s will lie settled by, and all accounts are piyahlr to S. A. Ilulin, who will, aa hither to, lie found ready to accnmmodale hit patrons at his store on French's coroer. S. A. HI.' LIN, FKEl) DAWSON". Alb:iny, July 1, 18!U. Notice. To all whom it roar concern, notice is here by ifiven that my wife. Angle Tritcs, has left my lied and Uiard without any just causa or pr i n'ion, and I w ill not be responsible for an) ilehu of hr i-ontrai tin. V. D. TBlTES, Albany July 1 1MI1, GRAND: T. L WALLACE k CO. -WILL Summer Clothing Light UM Underwear, Shirts and all Seasonable Goods at Actual COST FOR Remember, tliis trives you new and richly tailored clothing at is large, and you can select just as Hell now as you c mid earlier in the season. T. L WALLACE & CO., THE BIRTHPLACE OF GREAT AND HONEST BARGAIN'S. CALL SIEIE THE VERNON HAY PRESS Unequaled for fast work and light draft. Manufactured at the foot of Baker Street, Albany, by PRICE & VERNON. HAVE YOU SEEN THE GOODS Grand : Clearance OF SUM -NOW IX L. ED. The Leading Cloth ier E :. SALE! SELL- an opportunity to buy any of our the same pi ice we paid. Our stock TO BE SOLD IN THE IMT5T: MER STOCK. Blain, :-i IT. Safe MVS & MercW Tailor. .