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About Weekly Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1900-1924 | View Entire Issue (May 22, 1903)
.;:. weekly onccorr ctatxsiian, Friday, may: 22. t tt- e t If E. E. D'lLEY, D. r,l. D. " 1 Graduate A'orlU 'Pacific Dental lnl silent Ui to Trow it and BrnUre woik.. 'I'lic la t ot n4 tnoet scieulirle iullioU in every t.aiich of dentistry at iowt-bt prUa-a... fioeas 1-2 McCirsack t!? ' Over Meveri 4, Sons Star a. 7 ' ,- -'. - ' ores 3Xtm AGREES OTTH " THE CITIZEN u. M I. DOCS KOt FailCy the Tariff .Taken. Off - Manila Products . ABUSE MISREPRESENTATION AND OLITTEmNO GENERALITIES ARE TO BE EXPECTED FROM A DEM4 OCRAT1C CAMPAIGN ORATOR, BUT THEY ARE EMPTY. I U , (From Thursdays Dally). Editor Statesman: . ; . I was one of the many Republicans Who was - present snd heard j M?. Jleamea at the Armory Hall, on Mon day night last, and 1 can say that I fully agree with your friends concern ing the - statesmanship, politics; and demagogy of his address. Of course, abuse and misrepresentation, sand wiched between glittering generalities, were to be expected from s Democratic campaign qrator, but such, barefaced assertions, as the removal of the tariff between Portland and Manila would give cigars at one-fourth the present cost, and- that the American clothing manufacturer sold clothing in foreign markets from 50 to 75 per cent cheaper than they sell it In this country; In oth er words, a. suit of clothes costing ah American citizen $10 is made by an American firm, exported across the ocean and sold to foreigners for 12.50 to $5, and yet there were people in the audience that swallowed the statement whole. Applying the old motto: "Fals us In una fulsus In omnibus,", how much confidence can any thinking man plate in aiy of bis assertions? I have heary great many Democratic campaign' speakers:' have heard them In the South denounce the Republican party for giving the negro the rignt of suffrage and declare they' : were not competent to, and ought not to be al lowed to vote, and then, close by ap pealing to the negroes for ""their sup port on the grounds that they, the speakrrs, were their besrjend!, hay ing been nursed by a "nigger toatnmy but 1 never before heard a man profess ing to bvlong to thq party whose only prUulpte is negation, whose one aim Is office, whose only view Is to 'view with . alarm" every principle enunciated by ten Repahlican party.- and whose posi tion In the band wagon of progress Is back to the front, who was nominated to-office In a regular Democratic con vention by Democrats, and for whom .the-most prominent Democrats In the state. Including the Democratic Gov ernor, are sponsors, assert before an intelligent audience, and devote a large part of his time to proving that he was not only better Republican, but was more In harmony with, the principles and views of the Republican National Administration than is the man who has been an outspoken Republican for years and wtuTwas nominated by Re publicans In n regular Republican con vention, and who accepts and endorses the platform of principles of his party. It Js not th.? first time, however, that a man has disguised his hands, for the purpose of securing the blessings of another; for which see the story of Ja cob and Emu. There Is a familiar fable which " re lates the exterlen e and exposure of an ass who was masquerading In a lion's skin, but Mr. Reames has Improved upon that ancient custom, by wrapping himself In an elephant's skin, labeling It O. O. P., and passing as the "hot stun.' while hU voice. ltk the voice of Jacob, and the bray of the a.i5, gives him dead away. ' . : :- v ' .r w. Salem, Or., May 20, 103. Wakeful Children. For a long time t- two year old child of Mr. P. I MeFher.n. S N. Tenth street. Ilsrrisburg. P, wawld leep init two or three hours in the nrly part of the night, which in-Je it very hard for hep parents. '"Ier n-oth-er concluded that th child had stom ach trouble, and- gave her half of one of Chamberlain's Stomach snd fiver Tablets, which quieted her stomach and she slept the whole night thmegh. Two boxes of these Tablets Imvs ff fected a permanent euro jnd she Is now well nnd strong. Fot sale by Dan J. Fry. Salem. Ore. HE DIDW'T FILE 'El - ; , ' .- W. C. COWGILL WILL NOT FILE . REFERENDUM PETITIONS , . . UNTIL TOD AT. : ; (From Thursday's Daily.) ' "No,. I did not file my referendum pe titions today on. the Eddy bill., portage railroad bill and exemption tax , bill." said W. C- Cowgill -.wben Interviewed by the Statesman last nlrjht. , "Much-to my ".disappointment, .some of the sheets h-ve been slow In .xuiirig' in and some of the district- have f ill-n behind their estimates of name. 3 Bi ker county, my home county.- ies j them all Wth almost 2000 signers, snd ' Multnomah Is next with- about IVfQ. The most courteous treatment was ut ) irorded, me here by County Clerk Row- land and his entire force. bn dropped Oirard. Ka.. April Tf. This is to cer 0 1. business "for two or three days to tlfy that I an using the Texas Wondr, certify to the let legal voters Salem Hall's 5 rest Discovery, for kidney and and Marloa county rolled up on their bladder troubles snd I am satisfied that petitions. ... , : . " I have been very grrstly benefitted by "If tomorrow's mall brings the sddl-lit. I can fully recommend It to others Clonal signers " to make the petitions ! similarly afflicted. " ' . Jsrge enough,' I will file them." . .. j ' MRS. LOUELLA WARD. CRITICiSIJ IS I i ITHTT ATT A MTCn 41 I-lrs. Tannan Writes, of Her Impressions of the Cap- j i- italUty . SATS TEACHERS I J? TUB PUBLIC SCHOOLS ARE LAZT AND NON PROGRESSIVE, BUT IN THIS riE IS ! MISTAKEN OTHERWISE ARTICLE IS POOD. -(.-': ...-. ! . - . M.-. 1 , ! (From Thursday's Daily.) Many Salem people will remember Pro J. and Mr. Warman, who were here Ian winter. Prof! Warman lecturing at Mil V' 1LM C A s- .1H ton tit physical culture there. Mi si Warman, over the. signature f Flora Ma rtlnstein Warman. is writing a i-e-rles of articles deerfhtriB her tmvoU ..j M .k-k,. ..... Saturday Globe, of Oskaloosa, Iow.u Writing; from Chlco. CaL. under date I of April. 1$ tb. Mrs. Warman among many , other things, says; ' ; ; , Salsm, Oregon. "Beautifully situated on the shores of tiio Willamette Is this little town cf li.Oftft inhabitanU. It must, indeed, be a pretty place later In the season when the foliage is in evidence. , We were n this capital city during the Legislative seseion '.when the little place was na"r politically and socially. The regnlir state Institutions, as usual, seemed to each have its share of patronage the Penitentiary, Insane Asylum and Re form School. ' To effset .thee were t'.e Willamette University, Woman's, Coi lece. Sisters School, Orphans' Ho-ne, Dvif-Mute Institute, many -churches. a. excellent Y. M. C. A.' with a most senta.1 secretary, and the public schools wita the most self-satisfied and non progressive corps of teachers we have ever ; met. True there were a few, a very j few, progressive ones, but not em ugh to redeem the others. This is no secret, as we soon discovered "hat it was universally known.; Having ni er lost my Interest In teaching and teachers, it pains me very much to see a class of teachers that are simply con tent with the drawing of their saLi.-y. and, although with some effort, tne drawing of their breath. "Salem, In size, is the second city In Oregon. One of the finest woo'en mills on the coast is situated here, Sa lem Is, by no means, lacking In wealth, culture, brains and ambition. Although about 60 years of age. She? seems; guilts young and modern! zed.. and has many social advantages.. ;Her resources are almost . unlimited, being situated- In -; a prtniuctive valley ; that yields j abund antly of pretty nearly all the heeds of mankind; Our; two weeks wre f vefy busy and very pleasant ones, and j'ke Portland and many other places durl.ur tblsj jextended trip, iss added to , Mir list hew. and pleasant acquaintances. ; t Mrs. Warman's criticism ' of ; the teachers of Salem's public schools Is certainly very unjust and uncalled for. There Is not a more energetic body cf wc.rktrs , anywhere. : and as for their taking; no interest In their work te Vud the drawing of their salaries, this s tlso the next thing to slander, it not tli real article. Mrs. Warman could not cite a single teacher in all of the schools who does pot work unceasingly and earnestly for the greatest good an J the most correct training of the pupils. The writer has : very good reason to know-j whereof he speaks, havin mn borS of his household in several of th rooms Salem's public schools are a I right, and so are the teachers. They are worthy of the pride of our pepli. whojiave reason to feel resentment on account of such unsolicited and gratuit ous criticism as this of ?ur casual vle-ito-of last winter. Mrs. Warman !s no doubt an intelligent and educated Jady. nut; she needs yet some lessons n the tu ad school of fair dealing. Justice. equity, charity and truthfulness Of fat ment.X LET THE LAMP FALLL THE CAPITAL OF NEBRASKA SUF- ! FERS FIRE LOSS OF $125,000. 1 4NCOLK. Neb, May 20. Fire that started shortly before, noon in the Brewneli block, a four story office building on Eleventh street, between O and N streets, gutted the structure and caused a loss estimated at $123,000. For a time the fire threatened the surround ing property. The heaviest individual loser is Carl Funke. $25,000. The Are started in the cellar of Funk's crockery store by a clerk dropping a lighted lamp which caught a large pile of straw used for packing. The smoke became so. dense and the heat so Intense that the firemen for a time were unable to get within a block of the fire. Two clerk of the Funk store reported miss ing wei-e found unhufjt. Fifteen firemen were- overcome temporarily by'': smoka and the intense heat and taken to ll e hospital. but'lt-Is not believed that the condition of any of them Is serloo. - 1 A TEXAS WONDER I II A LLS GREAT - DISCOVERY. : One smalt bottle of the Texas Won der. 11a U s Great Discovery, cures all kidney and bladder troubles, removes gravel, cures tJIsbeles, seminal emis sions, weak and lam backs, rheuma tism snd all Irregularities of tire kid neys and bladder In both men and. wo men, regulates bladder, trouble In chil dren". If not sold by your druggist. w la be sent .by wail n receipt of $L ei'wll b.tl Is two mo rni-i.t t'r. ?:i-nrl ; , HI. two months treat- iite loanu- fajctuicr. P.' O. Vox &3, .. LouiJ. Mo. Send for' testimonials. -Sold by all druggists and Dr. S. C. Stone's drug stores. READ THIS. THE PERPETUAL WAR There is always a fight going on in : every human Body between health and dis ease. ; On one side are poor food, bad : air, ; over-work, worry, colds, accidents. On the other, are sunshine, rest, cheerfulness i and nourish ment :r ;;i "gf:?,;; The reason Scptfs; Emul sion ; fights' so powerfully for health ' is. because it gives so much more nourisnment tHan you can get in any other way. Get in the sunlight? and try ScottV Emulsion. ,t- WH sead yum suapla ire apea rtqoaat. SCOTT A BOWNE. o Prt Sma, New York. CARRIED OUT HER THREAT Mrs.taxfleld Fires Si Bullets at Uer Daughter's Husband DRAMATIC OUTCOME OF ROMAN j.. TIC LOVE AFFAIR IN WHIClt 1 THE DAUGHTER ELOPED WITH ! AND MARRIED HER MOTHER'S I M-YEAR-OLD SPOUSE. . , .' .i ALBANY.; Or. : May 21. Mrs. Max field attempted to kill Otho Hall, who recently eloped wlth-her 17-year-old daughter, Charlotte Max Held, in this city yesterday evening. She met Hall, who had Just returned with her daugh ter, now his wife and after a brief con vernation, pointed a pistol at him and fired .-;. - . . j ; , .. . The bullet was partially Intercepted by two buttons. After the first shot had been fired. Hall started to run. and Mrs. Makfield emptied her revotv. er at him, firing five more shots. Shs , was immediately disarmed and was soon arrested and placed tn the county Jail. , . i, .' .J' . .1... . .. ' ' The shooting occurred at the cornet of Hecond and Baker streets, about 7:30 o'clock. , Mr. and Mrs Half had just arrived on the Albany local, and were on their way to the home of some friends. They J were met a t the depot by several friends. Mrs. Maxfield met jthe party and requested her daughter ittf'leikVe' nail and come with her, The airt reiusea, uyiag sne naa . married Hall and intended to, remain with. bjl George Hall,5 a resident of South AH ;bany, who wasHalking with h's. broth fer, attempted to dlsaude .Mrs, Max- field from -causing! any ..trouble, and said the matter was settled by the marriage, and she shoul look at It philosophically. Mrs. Maxfield gave him peremptory orders to , "keep his mouth shut, and then asked her son- in-law if ne remembered that she had told him he must leave the girt alon Or she would kill him. rt 3, ' Hall said he remembered what she had said,. and she then drew a revolver and fired. She was directly In front of .the object of her attack, and the pistol was only a few Inches from his body. The bullet struck two buttons- and glanced, but still inflicted a painful. but not serious, wound on the abdo men. . .... Hall Immediately started to' run. Five more shots were fired at him, Th .shots went wild, one of them going througn a wlndosr.of m. residence near by. - ; i ' . . . - .r Charles and Guj Benight, who were wltn HalL seized the frensted Mrs. Maxfield, and held her until a pollcs man arrived and placed her under ar rest. - ; vp -i--yy - Hall, who Is a widower, about fifty five years old, and Charlotte Maxfletd, a 17-year-old girl, eloped from Albany on the night of Tuesday, May 5, and went to Aumsvllle., ' From there they went directly ta Vancouver. Wash., near which city some of Hairs relatives reside. The couple were married at Ilrush Prairie, Clark county, Washing ton, Saturday, May 5. They remained there - until last ! Monday, when they came to Miller's station, four miles north of Albany. Hall sent word .to severs! friends that he would arrive home yesterday evening on the Albany local, and he was met at the depot by his friends. Since the elopement Mrs. Maxfield has been meeting the evening southbound trains almost constantly. As the fates would have It. last even ing was the first time she was not a.t! the depot at the arrival of the Albany local since Hail and her daughter left tne city. She was, however, on Lyon street, which leads to the depot, and was on the lookout. Mr. and Mrs. Hall and their friends left Lyon street and started east on Third street, but Mr. Maxfield Jsd seen them and hurried ts Intercept, them when they left Third street and were .walking along Baker stfrrt on their way to. First street- '"The circumstances leading up to .h elopement and tbe rpnsenuent shooting affair were of a sensational and ro mantic nature. Hall sod another ware desirous of winning the affwtions of Charlotte Maxfle'd. and Hall was sue. ceseUeld. But Mrs, Maxfield also had matrimonial designs on Hall, and since 8h couldn't make him "her husband he wouldn't allow ner daughter to ut her out." Mrs. Maifleld told Hall hot to marry her daughter, and threat ened to kill him If he did. Hall claim that oiw Curtis, who pa!d attention t MIps Maxfield, ba nMuragei Mrs ltxfi-ll from the .beginning; and has aHed her In attempting to carry oull ber threat Mrs. Hall says thr revolv er her 'mother usl was the property cf Curlls. snd be will itrobabty be ar rested totsy as in acompIIr. TJ5 girl rriwalns true to Hall and says she w-lli sy with him. : What has become of the old fashlon- i ed man who celled-a boil a"gatber- ' ingr . - fciFIY THOUSAND i ;i . VOICES ItAlSED (Continued from nags LV pleasant, and that upon yqur return to Washington you may cherish none but pleasant memories of our people and our state." ",:,'.'-..";,',' s- Then Senator Brownell. President of the Senate, was Introduced, and he ex tended a hearty welcome, as follows: . Hen. Go. G. ' BrownsU's Address. "Mr. President: In behalf of the j Legislative Assembly of the State of Oregon, we welcome you to this state. I know that I express the welcome of . each- member of both houses of our Legislative , Assembly irrespective of political "creed. We Welcome you as President and Chief Executive of the greatest people and greatest . country in the civilised world. We welcome you ilso because we believe you stand for, the highest ideals of American citizen-' ship. ; "We welcome you because we believe ! that In your personality you represent more strongly than any other public character in America the energy, the. pushing and progressive spirit of all Americans. r v. "We welcome you because we believe that you represent and stand for the high and legitimate claim of labor and capitalto unite without repression from either in the upbuilding and de velopment of the material resources of this Republic "We welcome you because we feel, Mr. President, that we can see in you that same spirit that has been illus trated so many times by our fathers In this, that wherever we go as a people, wherever -We stand w-e? stand for the right : and a. higher civilisation . and 'wherever our flag Is put there it shall stay' put ' '..:' .. We welcome you because we believe that you stand for the idea that a Na tion or a. people can jiever stand still, that they must go forward and upward or else the race will retrograde. . "We wplcome you because we believe that whatever problems we as a people have to meet, whether they be In the coal fields of Pennsylvania or on the Pacific sea or in tb- Orient, that you will meet them as the Chief Magis trate of this country In a spirit of high liberal statesmanship, all the time governed with the. that what Is right for us to have that we shall have. "And aerain I assume the responsibil ity bete of welcoming you in behalf of the Second f)rion Regiment of Volun teers who served F000 ml low across the sea in the Philippine Islonds to uphold the same flag that was ho upheld by you and those under you on that Juiy day on San Juan HHL" 4 Judga Burnett then Introduced Pres ident Roosevelt, who arose amid a tu mult of applause and responded to the welcomes. He said: . v "Mr. Mayor, Governor, Mr. President of the Senatee and you my Fellow Amerclcans. Men and Women of Ore gonI thank you forthe greeting you have extended to me. You. Mr. Mayor an behalf of the city yo&, ''Governor, for having introduced jiai . in words i more than kind and which I appreciate especially, for I hold that if one Is a good Westerner he .As necessarily a good American. Apd.: wikether a man lives at the mouth of the Hudson or in your beautiful valley here, If he does not believe In the destiny of its people in its unity and its greatness he Is but a poor citizen Of the United States. (Applause) And Mr. Brownell, natural, ly I feel pleased at the language In which you spoke of me, and I shall certainly strive by my actions not' to forfeit the right to respect of those Whom you represent. ' A Good Oregonian "It has never been my fortune before to be In the state of Oregon, and yet I wes a good Oregonian all along! f knew you and believed in you. I had seen and knew tne type and worked with It; I have been In kinship with It And now my fellow citizen I have rpine from the Atlantic across this great continent to the Pacific. I have seen many people of many of the different states, and different sections, and. In finitely' more, than any diversity, what strikes me Is our essential unity, as I beKeve in fact that a good Aemrican is a good American and nothing else; and In thanking all of you for your greet ing let me say a word In spec ial recog nition of the greetings, of the A wo bo dies of your citizens. -.""!-"- "In the first place, you, the uien.of the Grand Army, you the men to whom we awe it that there Is now a country stretching as ours does from one ocean to the other, that this Is now a coun try In the lead among the nations -of mankind and bound-to make a great future, even greater than its mighty past. . . " i - - ' "To the men who left us not only a reunited land but the lessons which we must nevei forget. In the first place the lesson of , brotherhood the lesson of brotherhood in .many ways, the les son of brotherhood w ilh those gallant Americans who. wore the gray no lers than with those who wore th blue. For one of the fortunate features of the outcome of our great Civil War was that It left Americans the tight to feel pround of the gallant deeds done by any American, whichever .'banner he followed in the great days of 1 to '65. and where has it been in history where Pddisliub tew Wales Mass IToo-IIagnetic . SlcksJ 13m Cass ' Pally Guaranteed , - j FsrssJefry .,- ALL JEWELERS Tasstnrtsa Booklet a leases t. saswlag COLORED FAKCY DIALS 1 f v . I " rVsnrtsr.Crs. fe yV TvTr,Ckfs, A. issPreselKs. Df'G inni mm -4". ... fcV it r .fill W m 1 M M KM? 269 LIBERTY &T; STORES H-has been given to the victim to leave to the whole country the memory of his deeds and also the memory of the gallant deeds of the victors? You left us memorials of brotherhood in that way, and you left them in other ways, too. '- ": . ". ' ' "In the Civil War you who wore the uniforms cared nothing from wht sec tion a man came, you cared nothing as to what his social standing or wealth had been, yuu cared nothing as to the creed in which he worshipped his Mak er, .so long as he was a man and able to do a man's work, and that lesson we must now apply in our citlxenyhtp. "In greeting you. let e add a word of greeting to the men of the National Gtiard, Including w man) mit of the Second Oregon v,ho fought la ills' war in which t was my privilege abo to take a part. A war not only important In giant results, in which you played your part, but a war mighty lu its run. sequence to the world, and one which I trust :t hat aw' 'oi- the younger genera tion, at least, showed our desire to prove ourselves nt wholly unworthy of the men of the great days from "61 to ':. . It La not only -the lesson of these men" In their career-thai We need to learn, in v' fellow citizens, but It is tho applied lesson of citizenship that they teach. .We need to apply the les son of brotherhood as they taught It, just as much m the affairs 'of civil life aa in military life. We need to apply the principle of treating" each man at his worth as a man, Without regard to aught else. The men who sprung to as sist the mighty Abraharrr L'ncOlq left us more than a united realm, for they left us the. memory of how it was re united. We can fehow ourselves fit heirs of them only-by acting jon their prlncl pler, only by resolutely declining to ac knowledge 'any distinction in citizen ship in this country, save, the dlsUnc tion drawn between those who did their duty and' those who fall to do their duty. ' Tho man who strives to excite BettlJn against section, class against class, or creed against creed. Is an en emy tu the. entire country. The man who fails to realise that Our salvatUm lies In remembering that lesson of the war fought successfully td establish liberty under and through the law, liberty based tUon the recognition of ail men's equality before the law, that man Is either a fool or a traitor to our institutions and national lite. ' 'In the Civil War, as esdi of you marched' to battle, what was It that concerned you with the man on your right hand or your left? Not what his occupation whs. ' Tf ou cared nothing whether he was a banker, a bricklayer, lawyer or mechanic, merchant or farm er, whether he was a Catholic or a Pro tcstant, a Jew or a Gentile, or whether! he came from Tennessee, Maine, Ore- j them. . ; gun or California. What you cured for Unlike other physicians who have was whether when the time of cris's become eminent In their profession, came he would stay put. Now, gentle-, t"e doctor's charges are extremely mo. men. we want to apply the same test derate and reasonable, according to clr exactly in civic life. Most fortun itMv 1 cumstahces and ability to bar. and he in mis country we are fre !rtrn thi him. mnntrir nv nm f s terrible curse of religious torture and' persecution which has worked so much harm . in times .past in the world at large. We. realize that the corner stone- In the building of tins Government must not Iks merely a re ligious toleration before the law. but a genuine religious toleration among our selves. Junt as it was In the Civil War a man's creed matters nothing to us if he does his dutj, to the state; and we in America are. contrary to the rule in the' old world, blessed that the chance for animosity between Jew and Gen tile, or between' Christian sects, his become infinitesimal to the vanishing point, ' and we can continue . to work out our salvation as it shouVl be con tinued, and we should continue' only by proceeding to Set on those principles In public and in" private life alike, to pay no heed as to what the man's creed Is, if he is a square man and does his duty by bis neighbors and by his state. A man should be neither advanced nor held back because of the form of his religious belief; but if he extends to wards others justice and right dealing It should be extended to him in return. 2 J No Class ..Unction. r. 'i "Once more: Not. only must there be no line of deinarkatlon drawn among our, people on grounds of creed, or on grounds of section, but there must be no line of demarkatlon drawn among then on grounds of class or occupation. In the past there have been many re publics which have sprung lntor being, have flourished and then have gone down, to wreck: and ruin, and too many of them have failed" on the very "point of abandoning the true principles of a republic oi democracy, and becoming a government of -a class In the interests of that class. Instead of irt .the Inter est of the people as a whole; instead of teaching the advancement of each man on his merits, pure and simple, and scorning : to discriminate 'for or against him because of hla position, the republic of antiquity of the. middle asres went dowft.' chiefly because there sprung upsavage and bitter fights, in whirh either one set .of the people got costrbl of the government and oppress ed the poor, or another set got control of the government and, plundered tbe rich.: c"''- Ti :"' 5 : I; :urr. government la equally - avers to government by plufocrary, and gov rnnentv mob. and the man is a oor , American who fails' to see that there mi But Ave can not help it. It's our nature to do more for our customers anil otiiers lt. : .We do urge, you -to l;uy but sire to show.' wLat have. not de- we- ALBANY NEWS. FOR THE AFFLICTED An Announcement That Will Interest Hany . DR. DARRIN, THE EMINENT SPE . CIAL1ST. - WILL VISIT ALBANY FROM MAY 15 TO AUGUST 1 MANY KNOW HIS MODE OF TREATMENT. Albany llerald: ' ' While advcrite to drawing the atten tion of our .readers to -any advertise-, ment which partakes of- a ' medical character; ' we feel more than Justified In overriding this .-objection wit n' re spect to the announcement of the vlrit of Dr. Darrin. :. ' .-' This far-famed phlyaiilan. lately from Portia tut, who has achieved such a . great' reputation, throughout the coast and the Northwest the past six teen years, has. been prevailed uiion, by, urgent request of many , in this vi cinity, to visit Albany, as they could not afford by their time and buniness to consult him at his ofTUes at Port land. Tbe doctor has at last consent ed to visit this city to accommodate tha sick and afflicted, and .his office Is at the Revere Hotel. Those wishing to ree the doctor wit Iflnd it to their advantage-: to ; consult him while here and during the first part of his stay, as many require more than one treatment by electricity.; - , '. '- He comes laden with te3llnibnials from the whole Northwest, and the au thentic reports of some of his cures seem nothing, short of miracles? So many thousands are already acquaint ed with his mode of treatment it seems unnecessary to state that he uses little, medicine In the tvajority of cases and perfects his cures by ' the wonderful powers of elctrlclty. There are few Ills to which the hu man flesh U heir, which cannot be re lieved and generally permanently cur ed by Dr. Darrtn's electro-ptagnetlc treatment, and cases that have resisted the efforts of ordinary physicians hava yielded to his power. Thee cases em brace almost every form of disease, and as said before, no man. woman or child need despair of relief, or cure while Dr. parr In offers his invaluable services. The doctor Is prepared to and fit eye glasses to any desiring will not lindwtak. snv .. . a r . IC cannot cure or benefit. Consultation la free to alL ' Should there be cases that are incurable, he will Immediately dis cover them oft consultation, thus sav ing his patients ahy farther expendi ture of time and money, which they might otherwise squander. - .- Dr. Darrin make a specialty , of all diseases of the "eye, ear, nose and throat, catarrh and deafness, and all nervous, chronic andf private diseases, such as loss of manhood, blood taints, syphlllls, gleet, gonorrhoea, stricture, spermatorrhoea, seminal weakness, and loss of desire or sexual power Jn either men or women. AH peculiar female ! troubles are confidentially and success- fully treated. ' Most cases can be treat, ed at home after one visit to the doc tor's office.; ' - ..-. v. Office hours from 10 . in. to 5 p. m. Evening. 7 to g. Sundays. 10 to 1. The worthy poor will be treated free, ex cept medicine, according, to his time honored custom from 10 to ll a. m. dally.. Circulars and question blanks sent free, , Inquiri?s answered. All business relations with Dr. Darrin ara strictly confidential. Among the many sucessfully treated may be mentioned ex-Senator George Chandler's son, of Baker City, who had trouble and general debility; cured and gained 30 pounds. :''. F. HL Hohn. 2i1 . Commercial street, SHlem, catarrh- cured. J..' W. Pate; JeffersosT Or., rheuma tism and diabetes. - ' . .. Reuben Lee .and wife. Turner, Ore gon, aciatie rheumatism and cough, re stored, tl : ''"', Mrs. C. Pfennig. Salem, varicose ul cers on both limbs. . " :" . Baxter. Ferry street. Salem, tumor cured.,., -," , . -. .;...-,, Miss Irene , Ashford. : Woodburn, oirl discharging ear, cured. B. F. Klngo, Gervals, Or., discharg ing ear, cured. , S , J. 8. 'Ilesten. Salem,' liver complaint: And dyspepsia, cured. '" ;.; "','. . MU Yng Again. One of Dr. King's New Ufe Fills each night for two weeks has put me In my 'teens' again," writes D. 1L Tur ner, of Uempseytown. pa. They're tha best in th world for liver, stomach end -bowels. Purely vegetable. Never gripe.' Only 25c at EL C Stone's Drug Store. X No man can cure" consumption. You can prevent It. though. Dr. Wood's . Norway Pine Syrup cures coughs, colds, I bronchitis, asthmas. Never falls.