: VOL. U NO. 12. n U P(JIJLISIIEI) fiVERY SATURDAY MORNING BY s. Editor and Publisher. SUBSCRIPTION: Per Year, : : : $3 00 Six Mouths, : : : $1 75 INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. RATES OF 'ADVERTISING. Notices in local Column, 20 cents per line, each insertion. Transient advertisements, per square of 12 line?, 2 00 for fh-t, and SI for each subsequent inseri"ii in advance Legal advertisements charge 1 as transient, and must ho paid lor upon expiration. No certificate of publica tion given un'il the fee is paid. Yearly advertisements on very liber term;?. Professional Cards, ( one inch or less,) $15 per annum. Personal and Political Communication chart? d as adverMsemcits. The above rates wid be strictly adhered to. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. C. W. Parrisii. ATTORNEY AT LAW. Canyon City, Oregon. M. L. OLMSTEAD, ; ATTORNEY AT LAW, Canyon City, Oregon, Geo. B. Currey, Canyon City, Oregon. M. Dust in, Attorney at Law, Canyon City, Oregon. F. C. HORSLEY, M D. Graduate of the university of penn Bylvania, April 8, 1878. Canyon Ci-'y, Oiviron. Office in his Drug Store, M.i'n Street Orders for Dru:s promtly filled. No professional patronage solicited unless directions aie s'rictly followed- J. W. HOWARD, M. D, Canyon City, Grant Co., Oregon. 0. M. BOBSOtf, M. D., 3T. K. BOLEY, DENTIST, EfifDontal Rooms, Opposite the Methodist Charoh. Canyon City, Oregon. G. I. IIAZELTINE, Fliotograplior, CANYON CITY, OREGON. iiiil t, O -A. TXT "5T O TXT CITY MILK-MAK The best of Milk furnished to the citizens of Canyon City ev 3ry moiling, by tiie gallon or quart; at reasonable rates. JOHN SCHMIDT, Carpenter and Wagon Makkk. Canyon City, Oregon. Dealer in Hardwood, Spokes and Felloks, Furniture, Chairs, Faints, Glass, and Window-sash. GEO MflilD itrm CANYON Pliil. Metschan. F. C. Sols. John McCullou'd). Denis .McAuliif. Eitiiriiw lutein OFFERED BY Phil. Metschan & Co. KUOCJiSSOKS TO M. S. HELLMAN. IIaving purchased the entire and -well assorted Stock of Gen eral Merchandise of M. S. Hel man, in September Just, and we beinir, then desirous to wind upHhe business as speedily as posssible, we have been selling Git ; u 1 We are now determined more than ever to settle up our bus iness at once, and hereby offer Superior Inducements To our Pa' reus and the Public Gener ally, which be greatly to their Interest, to Come, Exaiiiice and Price our Goods j before purchasing el-ewhere. PHIL. METSCHAN & CO. Canyon City, Ogu., April 10, 1870. j n?t woo iskv. GEO. nOU SHAN. WOOLSEY & EOUSMAN, CAITYON CITY, OREGH". rri'lE RAK U doppHed with pnre Wines and -- Liquors, Beer. Aio, Bitten and Cigar?. FINE MILLIARD TABLES 1 tho Snloon. jSSfQ'no uaSi call. 1. n. woon. j w. ohurch. WOOD & CHURCH, LIVERY STABLE AND CORRAL, and FEED STABLE. v o Good buggy teams and nice Saddle horses furnished at all hours of the day or night, at! reasonable prices. Particular attention paid to boarding and oroomino; transient stock. entrance On Main und Washington St8., Canyon Citv, Oregon. BAKER CITY ADVERTISEMENTS. A.B. ELMER Watchmaker and Jeweler, BAKER CITY, OREGON- 0 All work done promptly, and warranted to give sntiefiiotiuD. Has cnnHtantly on hand a full and noiopleto atck f Wntohe.-', Clocks and Jowolry, for Bale Chonp for Oash. All good. wsrreniod as rtprt 'tod. Watches and all other artiotas sont for topiir may be left vich S. JI. Shepherd, who will attend to forwnrding tho same. A. U. ELMER. WM. GOOS, BAKER CITY, OREGON, CIGr All MAN UF ACTO RY, ALSO Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Tobacco and Smoking Articles. T. C HYDE, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW, Baker City, Oregon. Office enrney of Court Avenue and Liberty Street. Haines & Lawrence, A.ttoi3aoys zx Xjjx7-? DAKER CITY, OREGON. Will practice ut law in &l courts in Oaegon uzd Idaho. MM V CITY, OREGON, S IT CRD AY, JUNE 28, 1879. Coast Xews. From the Daily Bee- Considerable emigration is pouring into the Klaniaih Basin this season. The school clerk in Jackson county has collected .nil but $2 of this 3ear's taxes. A radish 80 inches long is exhibited in Jacksonville. It grew on Apple gate creek. The Democratic Times?savs Joaquin Miller used to drive an ox team for the Phomix s.i winiil. Haying has commenced. A large amount will be cut this season in Jack. son couutv. An oxcellent bridge has been built across Griffin creek, near tiie Dollar hide, place, Jackson county. The Stale Line Herald says crops are looking well in Langell valley, and there is an increase of acreage. The hills of Curry county are almost covered with fine sheep, and the past ures, on account, of the abundaut rah. a, are excellent. If the roads improve, the stage com pany will run on the summer 'schedule soon. It is later already than ever before in that respect. The Salem Town Talk says F. J. Bubeook, who was taken severely ill while attending the ilasonie Grand ! Lodge in Portland, is rapidly recover ing. A Jackson comfy farmer, who has been experimenting with Angora goats, says that their hair brings a good price when sacked, but adds that the shearing process results in a great cry and little wool. The Plaindealer says that W. F. Briggs, of the Telurium mine, was in Ho'cburg this week on business con nected therewith. He reports work progressing on the tunnel, which is uow in 440 feet, cutting through a ledge of ore bearing quartz thirty feet in thick ness that assays $60 to the ton. The Town Talk says: While all the machinery in tho Swartz mill was in a buzz of business, the main saw, a sixty inch circular, broke into two equal pieces, bending some shafting, but otherwise doing little damage. The sawcisi S-OU, but in the pross of trade the d.unagti to Mr. Swartz is great on account of delay. Immigrants should remember to look into the Nehalem valley before settling. There are homes there fur a thousand families free for the takinr Alany .str.tugers 'nave lately appeared in the Boise country. Great bands of cattle are being driv en from Boise valley to Ch yenne. Many lots in Tho Dalles are v.-nrth more than they were with the buildings that encumbered them before the fire. Cramlal, Honrici it Co. have had a force of 41 Chinamen at work on their mining claim on John Bay river since the 1st of April, and will increase the force to .MOO or 400 before the close of the se ison. The claim was first opened in 1867, bur was abandoned untill the ; present season. A We-t'n m.m exultantly exclaims: 'Three months hence the scream of j the locomotive will rescind in our j streets anu the goloeu gram ironi a thousand hills will here wait the steeds of steam to speed it around the world." All of which means that railroad com munication for Weston has been decid ed in the affirmative. Eattlesnake Jack. Ratthmake Jack, alias Rattletrap Jack; Lone Jack, Charley Carson, etc., arrived in town last night under escort of Deputy Sheriff Berry, of Grant county. The Goddess of Justice pre siding over Grant county, although bb-ul, says she saw Jack run off some horses bearing another man,s brand lat fall, and i'o accomn Ocs to Salem for one i,miB jtgKgg'-'A some scouting last summer, and shot holes through some of 'he entrail-eaters near the Long Creek Rpuhlie, in the Blue mouKtaius. At the close of the campaign he struck out for Nevada, and some Stein mountain ho'ses were just mean enough to keep traveling ahead of hini on the range. The Grant county people were just h6iisitive enough to send a sheriff after him, and it cost the State about 31000 to get him back to Canyon City, where he has been jugged all winter. The In dians ran off Iocs of hoists from the same vicinity, and were simply taken over to the Yakima country. and turned loose again. But Jack, being a white man has to be cooped up. As Nez Perce Joe says, there muso bo some thing wrong about this Indian bu.ine$. Some of the Indians ought to have been hunt; and the b ilai.ee sent to the penitentiary. There is old Otis, the worst murderer and poorest fighter in the whole outfit, living in a nice, airy tent at Vancouver, while ,Jack, who is a nephew of Kit Carson, is cooped up in a little iron cage at Salem. Bee. Mure truth than noe.tr v. The Prisoner of Scchelle. Here is a scene from the vaudeville of the "Prisoner of Ivoohelle:" Corpo ral Cartouch amuses himself by going through the manual, while Leza, sea tad at her work table is abstractedly ques- tionint: him concerning matrimonv. Leza If a girl were to fall m love with you, Corporal, what, would you do? Cartouch Present arms. L. She would doubtless look to you for C Support! L Audthen what a heavy burden you would have to C. Carry! L. Your butcher and baker -would have to C Charge! L. Your prospecta of course would nos C. Advance! L. And you would have to G. 'Boat face! L. And never have any C Best! L. Now, Corporal, pray give me your C. Attention! L. A man of your age isn't able to bear such a C Load! L. Hut you are not in your C Prime! L Your wife may C Bout! L. Leave yon, but fihe will soon C. Return! L And then vou'l have .to bear all on your C Shoulder! L. Would you C U.'ady! ' L I think you have some other C Aim! L. And you will throw all your epistles into the C Fire! Fires the mu4:et. The Grime of Poverty. Mr. Wells Wetherell, of North Manchester, appears to be a person of rnther decided COnvictions, and has fresh and original modes of expression, llaviiur been recently appoint ed special constable under the j "tramp" act, he do-lines the f appointment with thanks, and , appointment the Manchester selectmen, who tendered him the office, are "let down easy" with a few reasons for refusing to serve ; they can una lying arouna them. Mr. Wetherell frankly I loose. 'I here would be howev admits that "he has no heartier, quite as much justice and for the work" of hunting up ! Christian charity in so doing, va "rants. "Alter trumpeting ! as there was in the legislature tothe world," he says, 4 'that j that passed the present ty ran ic this country is the asvlum of! al, odious, unchristian, indis- lodute her, Jack the poor, the oppressed, the j criminate, barbarious and un venr. Jack did J down-trodden of all ii.itiuns, I ' feeling law against Cod's poor. TERMS: 3. PER YEAR. m ' n . ' mil" i 1 I don't think it right to arrest- them as tramps, as soon as they put loot in this state. I don't think there is much consisten cy in a legislature ct'iistrrin; Congress for passing th' Chi nese bill, for the relief of Cali fornia, and then pass a law that would send the Chinese, as tramps, to Wethersfield if they came to this state. I think there are criminals enough in this state without maki .ir a large batch by legislative en actment. I believe there are criminals enough, undev the commou law. without manu facturing for the trade: and I doubt the constitutionality of it." Mr. Wetherell concludes his remarks to the astonished selectmen by saving: "I had rather hunt for slaves, untlor the Fugitive iSlave law, tor there was at least a property right. If the blind Bartimeus was m Manchester to-day, or the ble?sed Lord whom he fol lowed, I should have to arrest them as tramps: for, 'inasmuch as you have done it to the least 01 these my little ones, you have done it unto me I never yet refused a tramp I Something to eat, and don't in- tend to; for, naked tramps we come into this world, and na ked tramps we go into the next, and we don't know who will be in the legislature there. May I be put in the lockup, and fed on the provisions of this act, if I do become a hound to hunt a man down because he is poor, and lias nowhere to lay his head, and asks in chari iy for something to eat.,; There are a good many who are of Mr. Wetherell's way of think ing on the subject of "tramp hunting." The Lord Himself in a moment of pathos said of himself that while the fowls of the air and the dumb brutes had homes, the Son of Man had not where to lay His head, thus placing himself clearly within the provisions of Connecticut's 'tramp" act. The giving of alms was specially and continu ously enjoined by the blessed Lord and His apostles. To one Jesus said, ,Sell all that thou hast and give to the poor." The young man thus advised went away sorrowful, nut en joying the prospect of becom ing a tramp in order to gam the kingdom of Heaven. It is of course true, that some of our modern tramps are crimin inxls in disguise' having assum ed the garb of poverty in or der to conceal their nefarious purposes. It is also true that some of our rich men are crim inals, in spite of their high station. It does not lollow, however, that because some rich me.i rob banks, wreck insurance com panic! and filch frow the public treasury, that the legislature should en act a law making it a crime to be a rich man, sending him to state prison on suspicion mux he is about t steal the trut funds of orphans and widows, and ottering a reward of $5 to constables for every rich man