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f -in 3k t 1 'if I? VOL. 1. ALBANY, OREGON, SATURDAY, MARCH ,20, 1869. " '5 SATURDAY, MARCH 20, 109. no. sa AO OI'.JCIX At,. Affecting. tr who T Down at .cij, near the "Forks" Of OM Linn's nuMot rivtr; Where Kemocraoy "uncorka" III aim st auy Hud f weather Lived the slickest gal you ever Saw in your life: v Ankle tike a. blue LoacU lever, As'T jT'Ber a'coilrtinY Calm ana serene .-"With her aprun sho was sportin". Checkered and clean. Mingled was onr fcasU toother : All d.iy we sat, A ehatrin' gam iu winter weather, llapj.y as fat. Lons I tuek to her like teaslcs. Summer an;i fall, '. But site w-nt off with tae mcaslcp Auklc a:; J all. Signed With my Own lilood. BY CAPTAIN nOWAKD. In the ; Spring of 185) I en tore J the detectivc-foree. I will not here give the whys and "leave the is wherefores Jor so doing, bu re.iuer to conjecture. It said that wh-Mi a man becomes it detect ive a man hunter he i.s desperate r I ' I . ..- . . J.110 saying was applicable to my step "" "".t jra uj ir, capiaiu : asks an inquisitive roaier. Perhaps, my dear iriend, I had been jilted: perhaps . . A l , .. j;.c.ii uun.nierciui.era.-n leit me penniless ; or, uouotiess, l tjusid the ye ars of bach eloihaod gathering arouud iuo. and support. The probable. leaf I Don't piucl I with with no visible means of Just conjecture is most you tlii itk so ? But to - the story th from detective life. I was seated one morning on the steps of W house,, waiting fr breakfast, when little Dick, the errand boy of head quarters, ran tip ana wnispered : 'Captain, 4he chief wants you." "Is his business urgent, Dick ? asked,-tor 1 did uot relish a walk empty stomach. j"No; you can cat your breakfast," ana inc boy bounded away. J , After partaking of my morning's meal consisting of coffee, ham and e-"s i dish I relish I sauntered towards head quarters. As I entered Eighth street, I saw several groups of men talkiiv excit euijr, x Knew mat something important nau lately1 taken place with which my summons to headquarters was connected. I quickened my step, and not long after ward stepped into the office. "Take a chair, Howard," said Mat sell. I seated myself, and he continued : "A murder was committed last night. Some person or persons assassinated Mr. Royston, the banker, in his chamber." "They did I" I exclaimed. "Yes; you wi 1 have to work oat the case, as the rest of the force are engntd. A reward of five thousand dollars ls of fered for the arrest of his murderer." "I will do what I cau to bring him to justice," I answered, "and will proeeel at once to the scene of the midni-'ht work." I went directly to the banker's man sion, and was shown to .the room where the body still lay as it had been found. An examination of it and the chamber gave me a clue by which I hoped to se cure the villians, for I knew now that two persons were concerned in the trag edy. I went to work with success in the distance, and in a month felt the rogues within my grasp. But on the threshold of accomplishment I was thwarted engaged two years. Without answering the woman's ques tion. I asked one. 'Where is your friend ?" "I will not teli you, sir. If you will go, say fcs much, cr he will die with the secret uutoid." "What is his name, then ?" "Ah ! yiju doubt my sincerity. I will go." And she stepped away. I reflected a moment, and resolved to accompany her, lot good or evil be the result. I sprang forward, and touched her arm. "I will accompany you." " "ThaijksY'hc -eaid, turning.," Al low mc tt) "bandage-your eyes." And she-produced her 'kerchief. I protested against such a proceeding, but finding her inexorable, I suffered myself to be blindfolded and led away. On, on we went. I tried to enter in to conversation with inv mysterious guide, but was unsuccessful. 1 gained no information save that the man to ... 1 T I - I i i n iiuiu j. was uemg eouuuctea lay in a basement. Alter waiting sonic distance, a mile or two, I should judge, we stop ped. My guide knocked at a door, winch was opened. Down a flight of steps I was led till another door was reached, which opened. I was pushed forward, the woman saving : "He is here." I heard the door shut, the lock turn, and steps ascend the stairs. I tore the bandage faom my eyes, and looked around. I was in a small room, evi dently a celler, in a poor portion of the city, for the apartment was very small. A lamp burned upon a lude table, up on which lay writing materials. But what attracted my atteniion most was two masked men, a few feet from me, di recting two pistols at my breast. I had been deceived, and drawn iuto the tuur dures net ! Quick as thought my hand went to my revolver ; but the ominous click, click, checked me. 'Two can play at that game, Tom Howard." said one cf the masks. "You know me, then 'Of course we do, and take pleasure in informing you that your life is in our hands." ' "And yon intend to deprive me of it ?" I ventured to remark. "Well do yes. If you sign a cer tain instrument of writing, you Jive if not, you die." -a wouia iikc to Know in whose pres ence I stand," said I, stepping forward ihe murderers of John Rovston. the banker, replied the tallest mask. I recognized the voice instantly as be longing to a tall dark-faced fellow who for some months.. I had followed like i sleuth-hound. Ha !" I cried, ;it is you, my covey Two da-s more, and your career of crime would have been ended. iou must eaten a man betore vou hang htm, my dear Howard," was the taunting rejoin er. "W e'll see, sir." "A truce to this badinage, said one of the n;en, stepping up to the table, while I lemoved the 'kerchief, went to head quarters, and announced my intention of sticking to my oath. The lloyston case was put in the hands of Dick Clay, while I w:s detailed to work up the burglary. Time passed, when," one morning, I was summoned tactile city prison to hear the confession ot a woman who had at tempted suicide. She was dying, but a faint smile appeared on her hectic cheeks as I entered the cells The Masonic Brotherhood BO The following incident, illustrating "the Masonic brotherhood, we extract from an oration delivered by Brother T. E. Garrett at the rcceut opening of the new hall at St. Louis : Much is said and surmised about the peculiar nature of our ties of brotherhood, which to the world, appear so invsterious, so euduring and so srron.r. t ' mnV "Mr. Howard," she said, "I have laid ?be'r universality and binding force dy- this violent hands upon' my life ing; I sent for you. Let is the-, 't "Eleventh of July," I answered, see and am iuq see, are ing her hesitate come to-morrow night. "Une -ear ago, you signed a bond to desist trom pursu ing the murderers of .John lloyston." "I did." "The bond is null and void to-morrow night, and then you are at liberty to pur sue them. "Which I intend doing." "Listen, then, to my confession : Last January two men entered John Royston's house and murdered him. I assisted them. We escaped detection uutil you got on our tracks. We intended to leave the city, but you re member how you foiled us. You were weaving your web around us, and there was one course left, by which we might escape. I decoyed you into that cellar, where you gave bond not to follow us. "The men left the city ; but I re mained, as I did not fear Dick Clay. It was I who sent him to New Orleans on a false trail, from whence he returned dis comfited, and I was arrested, but suc ceeded in clearing myself. The real murderers are in Paris." "How will I find them in that city ! Can you give me a clue ?" great .inconceivable. They cannot hn f.illv i plained except within the secret recesses of the lodge; but I may be permitted, .to. Siye a simple illustration pt he true spirit of Masonic brotherhood which came unaer my personal notice not louga-o. 1 wo men had been fast fnendi Tn an evil hour they quarreled, and from vi olent words they came to daggers point, but used no daggers. They did not speak, and had not spoken together for years. Mutual friends had tried the arts of reconciliation in vain. They were n n I ' f. , - - uuiTi;u vucuiies ior nie. itc miuid umicuity was purely per- uuu nie nonor oi either was not impeached either by the origin of the quarrel or subsequent c-ircuinst.inci Probably they were equally to blame; pos sibly uot. No matter; one of them, be came a xuason alter the estrangement anu u Happened the other remained ignorant ot the fact, j One eveniri" he. too, was admitted into the lod"e. Al most the first voice he heard and cer tainly the first he saw, was that of his enemy, who presided over the ceremonies oi initiation, and was obliged rccordiu" I to usage to address him as "brother" This was a most peculiar situation, and a 1 1 ' I . , ' scrciu urueai jor DOlIl. A Ft aw iL. I...J i iwuge was ciosea, the ap prentice sought the master, and without money takeu from Royston's safe. There is a letter under my pillow. I received it from them a month ago. ; Its contents may throw some light upon their exact wnereabouts. i heir names are bend nearer are w hat ?" I cried. "Ran Ran. I'm gone !" and she fell back on the pillow dead ! I got the letter she had spoken of, but it helped me not at all. It was dated at Pans, and contained two Y's in lieu of a his companion kept a pistol at my breast. jLvru luuai aiirii lais nancr " " if you value read the fol- an uneven, but night as I was standing by a you at last, have do One ...uppusi, uiy neaa oowed upon my breast meditating!?-, a hand touched mv arm, and looking up I confronted a rather mevu.j ciau lemaic. iier face was cov ered by a vail, through which I caught a gleam of eyes fiery eyes liie the flash- ca ut ngnining on an inky sky. "Ila ! 1 have found vou at h I r she exclaimed "It seems so." I replied, "What you wani wun me I "Do you ever listen to death-bed con fesMons ?" "Not often." f "I have a friend who is nearing the portals of that undiscovered country. He has a 'secret one which he has car ried in his heart these many years which he wishes to confido to you." "Why to me V I asked. "There are : ministers who will hear it, and soothe his dying momenta -with. comforting thought?' ; "He will confess to you alone, as his confession is about a caifr you. worked on once. . , Will you go ?"., - ,,.- -J I hesitated. The woman might be ' sincere, or. she might be a decoy to lead me into a net set by thieves and mur derers, who wished to rid the world of me- J3ul that ease I bad worked on J I started Perhaps he knew about the great Martin mystery, upon-which I was my own your lite. I went to the table and " .i . . owing oatn, written in legible chirography : "I, lhouias Howard, a detective, do . - -1 - solemnly swear that I will desist from the pursuit of the murderers of John Royston, banker, for the period of one year, so help me Uod I "bigned with my own blood, this the 12th of July, 185-." i turned to the men after reading, and asked : "What does 'signed with blood mean ?" "Exactly what it says," was the unelu cidating answer. "Then I refuse to sign." "You are rash, Tom Howard. The bond is good for one year only. Sign it and live." There was something so significant in in his last sentence, that I changed my resolution. "I will sign," I said ; "but at the end of the year mentioned in my bond, I will hunt you down and bring you before outraged justice." i - "No boasting, sir ; make ready to have some blood spilled ;" and one ot the as sassins laid aside bis pistol bod produced a lancet. I bared my arm to the elbow j but ho laughed, saying ; "Not yourarm, Howard ; the blood must come nearest the heart. Bare your bosom.'' "Is this another Shylock affair? "No, sir ; wo want no flesh merely blood." v I bared my breast ; he made an incis ion directly over my heart, caught the blood in a spoon, dipped a iaen intn it and pkced it in my hand, f bent for ward and signed the bond. The hanrl. age was then replaced over my eyes, the woman who had brought me thera an. peared, and conducted me through mtk. eral streets, when she suddenly left m. "They purchased a flower store with any preliminaries the following colloquy .1 i- . I J i . ensueu. commenced by the newly-made "Are you a member of this lodge ?" The reply was "I am." w . . tcic you present wnen x was elected T" "I was." "May I ask if you voted?" "I did." iXf :?i it ' uw will you ieii me now manv votes it requires to reject, in a ballot for admission r The Master answered "One." ihere was nothing more to sar. The inmate exieoucu 1113 nand, w.iich was warmly grasped by the other, and uttered with thrilling accents, deep emotion thrilling his voice : "Friend! Brother! You have taucrht me a lesson I shall never forget.',' This is a little ray of Masonic liht No language is so eloquent as the silent throbbing of a heart full of iovful tears. While this kind of cement is used in our moral edifice, should it not be enduring? ho can wonder that it is so stron- ? I went to Paris in the next vessel, and. arriving there, searched two weeks, but in vain. I was on the point of giving up wnen i encountered an American a jeweler who had resided in Paris some years. 1 inquired of him if he knew of any flower stores kept by Americans. Yeslie knew of but one, in the Rue Ueppo.- He believed it was owned by - xxaunr. , rro. inat was the place 1 was hunting for ; the names that the dy ing woman iriea to rronounce be thu3 : "Ran" , the remainder was "lin." But the Rue Beppo was the last place on earth that 1 would have looked for a flower store. nen a reacned my hotel I set to work and removed the heavy beard and moustache which adorned my face, and , . . n - ' repaired to tne itue Beppo. I entered the flower store, and a clerk awaited my l T J r j . ... . ' pieu&ure. a uesireu 10 see tne proprie tors. Ancy appeared, and 1 introduced myself as George Hall, of Galveston. Ihey did not recognize me, 1 could hardly restrain myself when in the persons of the firm I recognized the murderers of the banker. "Uentlemen, said I, after talking awhile with them, "were vou ever Ncw.York?" 'O, yes,' said one, "we lived several years. "Did you know one Annie Graham r. siding there r Their lips grew ashvr and thev to their feet. "WThat of her ?" "She is dead." "Well." "And before she died she confessed." They stepped forward, shouting : "Who are jou ?" "Tom Howard, at yous service I" And at the same time I drew a braea rf revolvers and leveled them at thF W hite Pine. The Stockton ImU- pendent publishes following extract f.om a letter written by Gen. George S- Evans, to his partucr, dated Treasure City, Jan uary 18th : Everything selis at an. exhorbitant price. Wood is worth from thirty to fifty dollar n cord: lumber, thrcer nun dred end fifty dollars a thousand; water, tan cents a gallon or twenty-five cijts a Ducket, aud everything else in proportion. Nevertheless, this, in my opinion, is bound to be the town. The mines are i ii i . . . iocuicu au arc una it and they are un questionably the richest ia.thc.-world. All that has been said .docs not, come up io me irum as to tne richness and ex- .cut, ui me iiuues itere. in tnis ore mountain, known as Treasure Mountain, I have visited the Hidden Treasure, Eb- crnardt, and other mines, and seen for mj-self and know of what I write. This is the richest country, and a large town will be built here ; but the capitalists have got in and gobbled up everything that is good, and thre is attle show for men of" limited means, except by staving here and making a scratch. Lots are held at ban Francmco prices, and are valued at from one to five thousand dollars, accord ing to location. Ihe snow covers the whole country and it is d.ffi ;u!t to pros pect at present. There is no chance to get any goods here, without costing a lunune ior transportation, it is very -I coia nere now, the wind blowing furiously and the snow falling. Thermometer ranges at night from 10 to 15 desrrees below zero; but, as a general thing, this country is not as cold and disagreeable as represented. - But this has been an open 1 1 r . . , ... v inter, me snow not being at any time more man six or eight inche deep. This town is 9,000 feet above the level C A I J 1 . . oi me sea, ana me air being light one can scarcely breathe at times when walk ing. Hamilton is at the base of Treas ure Mountain, and on the north side, where the stages stop. Treasure City is on tne south side, and still lower than II Mi TV 1 1 !! m iiaiuuiou. a ue inaaen .treasure JYlme is on the north side of the hill, nearly at ine top. Chloride rlat is on the south and west sides of Treasure City, and Eberhardt is south of the city and about half way down the hill. The Mazcppa is stui tower aown, a newly discovered mine, which ranks among the richest From White Pins. We are placed in possession of a letter from H. C. Morse, written to a gentleman well known in Portland, in which ia an extract from a letter wtitten from White Pioe by A. A. Wightmau, and dated Feb. 10th. It says: Everything is lively and all locks en couraging; prospects are good for lircljr times commencing in 'April.' . We have very rough weather here it present. Property is very high also rents. Yott : cannot procure a rOTin of any size on thn princ'rpal streets of tbe'town, under f 100 . to -200; aud store rooms from f 200 tfr S3Q0 per month. Lota ait 'eliing at from $2,000 to $4,500 This ia a oe country; any poor. man. if Tindustri0Uiir . can make a stake nere. " "I have a pfcee of the White Pine ore. that is not half as big as your fist and. I was offered $5 for it. You can cut tba silver in it with vour knife but that is- nothiog to the Eberhaidt ore." fTba former is rich enough. Commercial- Extraordinary Feccnditt.- A cowbclonging to C. M. Blair. Co. Clerk of" this county, has produced five calves ia a little less than twenty-two months The date of the births are as followss April, 1867, one calf; February, 1868 twins heifers; February 3. 1869. twin bulls. The owner has named the lat ter "Nip" and "Tuck," tbe latter the- senior of "Nip" by about fifteen minutes. The cow, with the four , calves under one year of age, can be seen at Mr. Blair's stables, all ali.ve and doing well. Can any "cow county" beat this 7 Merced Herald. Washing Mixtubf. The washer women of Berlin, Prussia, uso a mixture of two ounces turpentine and one-fourth ounce spirits of sal amoniac, well mixed together, a his mixture is put into a bucket of warm water, in which half a pound of soap has been dissolved. Tha clothes are immersed over night in this, mixture, and the next day washed. The; most dirty cloth is said to be cleansed and free from tbe smell of turpentine. The cloth does not require so much rub bing, and. linen fabrics are thus not so. soon destroyed. Toothache, according to the- London There are plenty more good claims that Lancett can be cured by the following will be prospected in the Spring, when preparation of carbolic acid : To one the snow goes off and prospecting can be drachm of collodium add two draahm vf prosecuted advantageously. Parties who Calvert's carbolic acid. A gelatiaeaa located claims before the fall are now at mass is precipitated, small portion at Claims here differ from quartz I which inserted in the cavity of an. aching .1. 4 .1 1 . I A U ?.11 - . ... work. claims, in that they have no croppinors. The whole mountain is composed of lime stone. Jt looks as though tbe lime and spar had been melted and poured over tooth, inv.riably gives immediate relief. The. old system of. "shinning?, far money seems to have been aboliohAd !. the surface that covers the basin of silver New York, and the novel method of buy ttuu selling n in tne opoor market, has S j that lies underneath. in there A New Hotel Experiment. A citizen of Boston recently bought a house in one of the aristocratic streets of the city, and transformed it into a hotel. The proprietor designed making J.he building ten or fifteen stories high, but yielding to the advice of friends, con tented himself with eight stories. The building has a steam elevator and two dumb waiters, the advantages of which are described by the proprietor : "My own bedroom is in the eighth story, 150 feet from the office. On going home to-day from diuncr, I at once rode in the elevator to my own floor, and suggested to my wife that we should dine in, our own parlor. Turning to the mouth of the speaking trumpet, I blew ringing the bell in the office, which threw down a silver ball which indicated the number of my room. The clerk at once asked, 'what is wanted ?' I replied that I would have such and such articles for my wife and sclt in fifteen minutes The articles were put in a little portable cupboard with non-conducting sides, placed in one of the dumb waiters at the right time, and sent up to the eighth floor, giving notice to the waiter on that floor that my dinner was coming up. Ihe waiter spread the table and left us in peace and Quietness to dine at our servant had ascended a sin Geography. "Class in geography . i r . . - . u siana up. now many divisions ot the earth are there ?" "Seven." "What are they ?" "Europe, Asia, Africa, Australia. America, jong Division, and the Divis ion of the Democratic party." "Kight. How many races are there ? "Eleventeen hundred." "Nonsense. Let's hear them." ."White race, black race, Indian race. ... - . noss race, wheelbarrow race, human race race after a debt, foot race, mill race-' you name "Hold on ! Guess you are right; but itVndJSSn . cant stop al day. Now then, what never cease to L thankful fnat s the principal elements?" wnu j. a. v:.? 1 heads. "Gentlemen, the bond hnvln I leisure. No expired, I have done what I said T wonlli 1 "'c flight of stairs. If I had rang the do that night. I have tracked you, and now you are my prisoners. Come with bell on the eighth story of an ordinary hotel, I should have to wait fifteen min- me. I utes tor the waiter to come, then l should Weak as lambs they followed speak- nare t0 Wai naif an nour fr tne fd to ing not a word. At the door thev were I com5 with tho waiter putting as it he met by a squad of French police, whom I a been running a race. This would had stationed near as reinforcement in I ve been unsatistactory to us an, and p ; mi . . , a case ui uecessiiy. ado villains were locked np till a vessel sailed for thp United States, and I had the pleasure of being their compagnonau voyage. When the ship reached this city, I delivered my prisoners over to the au thorities, who -, tried them, found them guilty, and they expiated their crimes on the scaffold. 4 The people were surprised when they learned of tbe detection of Royston's murderers after such a lapse of time. They did not know that I was under a bond tor one year. Tbe j think of reducing the salaries of Baltimore' sohooJ teachers.. an additional expense as well. Every tenant furnishes his own rooms ; and the hotel is so arranged that the most absolute privacy is secured. The prices of suites of rooms range from $300 to $2,000 ; but the situation is in Bea con street, and although high for moder ate incomes, these rooms are cheap for that aristocrat io location. - . ' A man stopping his paper, wrote fo the editor, "I think folks ottent to spend their munny for papurs; my dad didn't, and evwry buddy says he was the intel lyginte&t man. ia the bull country, and had the smartest family of boys that ever dugged taters." we are the princip "Land, water, and the national debt." "Is the national debt one of the ele ments?" . "Yes; one of the elements of disoord." "What is your globe divided into? "Land, water, and benzine. "How much is dry land ?" . "Saloon keepers can teli better than I can. "What is a mountain ?" "You ain't." . "Ain't what ?' -" "A mountain too mush.", - , "You rascal, you will catch it for this." . . "I caught it last term of Bill Jenks, and ain't got over it yet." Boys get an intermission to go out and scratch - J L 1 Z . J -r ween auuuiu insieaa. Ajorrowem nn simply resort to the Stock Exchange and Aaong avooio, ana mere purchase what money they need. I am a believer." savs Dr. r!nvi "in tbe moral and spiritual influence of an open fire. To make home attractive there roust be some where in the house a common family rendezvous; and that ought to present a more radiant than a black hole in tbe floor, through whiehi the hot air pours forth from a subterra nean furnace Men will fisrht for altars and their firesides, but what ora-" tor ever invoked, a burst ot patriotism in I Wataa brought up beside the hickorv Of 9. MINI farm house. . Another Cross. The wife of Thorn as Cross gave birth to a daughter, being the seventeenth time that Mrs Cross has made her husband a happy father. Mrs. Cross s christened name is Amelia Jana "this is not to be borne !" "But it is born, my dear," said the wife, meekly; "don't get angry, my love we all have our little crosses to bear." Mr. Thomas Cross groaned in bitterness of spirit. "Amelia Jane, this thing has been penn on long enough; if yotr have any more little crosses to bear. I shan't heln support them!'' ' The Chinese in San Francisco rn great admirers of the Alia. Tha almon eyed celestials clamor for it; they say it is "welly good lap, np cloahaj, heap big." r New York lawyers' eomidain' Hat1. of dull business, - V -i"- -va iJT! Dunne the attack on Fort DonT.Ai. a Southern hardshell exhorter was hold ing forth in exalted strains. do1.r.'n repeatedly that the Lord 1 fought rtn til. side of the South, and Jehovah was en oamped round about the Confederate army say iqg that , it was'' impossible for tho invading Yankees to eohhner ifw.m Just at the close of one of these sen ten ce, a man dashed up to the door of tha church on horseback, and yelled out. "The Yankees have captured Fort Donelson, and are coming up tha river ? "Then, my brethren. for the Lord has got licked I" . .. In Sterling. III., is a. temperance so ciety to which none are admitted except those who have been inveterate-tipplers. The rank of the members is ; determined by the depth to which each, haa ; fallen. The President who has .been chosea, has been the most abandoned drunkard of the society. The penalty for breakin3 the pledge is as many dips in the river aa there are members in the club. . "I shan't be with yon a great white Jane," said Mr, Maker. "I shan't stay a great while." . "Oh, Mr. Melter, how can yo talk so ?" said Mrs. Melter, with a lngubriona expression of faoe. , - "Because,- continued he "I fed aa if I was meet gone.' and that I was passing away like a elond before, the rising sen." tr. J alter vt-riflod hi .prophecy the next day br ranting away, with sjniHa- thhing alster.' :" ' " .l . ' 1 Al i .. .jii.in' llif ii i -! ' Si. -r . ,