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About The Albany register. (Albany, Or.) 1868-18?? | View Entire Issue (Nov. 3, 1876)
1 It VT n Y f rtfliii rtV ALIIANY, FUJI) AY, NOV. 3, 187G. v iv ton ri;iuKT of the united states, it . 1$. 1 i v'iss. t roi: H E ri:K.-uKST, j III I'I 1ILK A NTA1T TM MFT. HOfJ. f?. WILLIAMS, of Multnomah county. Foil t'REIDKTtAt. KI.EfTOKS. W. II. ODELL, of Lane county. J. W. WATTS, f Tuinhill couuty. J. f. C'ART KltillT, of Wasio county. II'JW to do it. The way to ro'l up large majorities is, for every Republican to Wu?k from now until the close of the ballot on November 7th. a if one vote nwre was needed to win. Let every lover of his country resolve himself into a committee ot one and go to work in earnest. Our future existence as aXation is the stake p'ayed for. Il'iL THE TOUT. Call on your luke-wann neighbor. Tell him of the importance of a sing'e vote; stir him to activity by showing him the danger that must follow a Icrnocrr.tic victory. We are stiil on joying peace, but the defeat of the Re publican parly may reojen the gate ot war. Hold the fort tor future genera tions. ' i.VO D1F FE II EX i: IIOWYOC .SFL'LL IT. The Ilmliiigton (Iowa) IZutrfccye has this : Mr. Tilden said that "the! wolf is at the door of every home in the land." l"ut when he looked out of his window to see if it was the wolf at his floor, it was thu hounds of the law, that had beer, running upon the hot trail of that income affidavit, and track ed the reformer to his lair. Note to the compositor It doesn't make any difference which vowel comes first in that word.J QUESTIOXS TO AXSWER. Everv citizen should ask himself the ! j question: Why should there be a change -j tA policy on fche part of the Govern- j ment? Is there auything in the past or (present record of the Democratic painty to assure the country that a bet ter jstate of affairs will exist nnder it management than at present ? Does any sane man believe that our credit will be improved, our currency increas ed in value, and our prosperity as a )ecjple assured by a Democratic victory ? On the contrary, are there not good reasons to believe that a Democratic victory would lead to a national calamity ? COVER XMEXT CREDIT. James Buchanan was the last of the long scries of Democratic Presidents. During his administration a loan of .twenty millions was eflected, on a con siderable portion of which twelve per cenL interest per annum was paid. Ge)eral Grant is the second Republican President, and, iu the last few months, during the very time the Democrats wele bowling about the danger of bank ruptcy to the Government, of the ter riblo depression in business owing to Republican rule or misrule, a loan has been eflected by the Administration of a- large sum, on which only four and a halt per cent, interest is paid. So much lor a Democratic financial administra tion and a Republican one. TILDEX WORSE THAN DURE. AAROX Some weeks since Demas Barnes, editor ot the Brooklyn Argus, a Demo oratic paper, wroto a letter to the Ohio State Journal denouncing Tilden as a Democratic candidate. Democrats pro nounced the letter a fraud, and Lewis C. Mead, of Ovid, Michigan, wrote Mr, Barnes asking him it he wrote the letter in question, and if he knew posi- lively- thi the charge against Tilden were true. Mr." Barnes replies that he wrote the letter, and that the charges arc true. lie regards Mr. Tilden's antecedents as worse than those of Aaron Burr, or those of any man who ever befbru sought such high office in this country. lie pronounces Governor Tilden corrupt, ambitious, unscrupulous, I lt"-p lie. THEY .STICK AT XOTIIIXGTHE OUTLOOK. All through the present campaign Tilden joun.als have attempted in a greater or lesser degree, to imitate the tactics adopted by their leader, and have stuck at nothing that they thonght would have the leant influence in ad- vancing the interests of their candidate.; Such unblushing cheek an.l overwlielm- j i-ig mendacity was never before equalled, ! as disp'ayeJ by Tildeii j-.tirnals and speakers in the campaign of 187G. In j their red hot zeal they seem to ha ve lost : all sense of decency and propriety, as j sonic of their assertions are ositively , idiotic in their utter unreasonableness Of these latter may be mentioned the statement that Colorado had jrone De.n- ocratic, and that Senator Conk'ing had thrown Iipilio-MWH"?, dccl'irui" that i - .i ... i :..;... k r..... ' . . sand majority for Tilden ! And yet p)ols sold iii New York at Morrissey's, i ever sii.ee Tilden's nomination, have j been in favor of Hayes ; hiuI it. has been i staled, and never contradicted, that 1 1 j Morrissey, Wood, and other prominent ; Mights f the Democracy, have wagced j large sums that Tilden could not carry i Nw York ! And we vent tire the as- j sertion that there isn't a man of average ' intelect in Oregon, who is at all posted iu the current news of the day, who be- ; storm of shot aud shell for the honor of ; etiUUsly and plainly set forth in the lieves that Tilden will carry New York, i America, was a Democrat. ! columns of every Republican paper in or that has the least hope that he will j Every man who believed that any j the Xation, so that all have had an be elected President In the face of all j State could go out ot the Union at its ; opportunity of reading and judging, the vastjrauds tlat have been attempt- j pleasure, was a Democrat. .each for himself. 1 lie Republican press ed by Democrats in New York, Phila- j Every man who tried to spread small- J ias appealed to the judgment and rea delphia, and other places, during the pox and yellow fever in the North, as on of the people, and not to their pas past few days, unearthed by Republican j instrumentalities ot civil war, was a jsfonsiind prejudices and we believe officials, and the parlies anested for j Democrat. : that the appeal has not been in vain, their crimes we say, in the face ofj Soldiers, every scar you have got on j We believe that the masses, not only of these attempted vi'laiuies, will honest ! your heioic bodies, was given yon by a i Oregon bnt ot the whole LTnion, are in men still support Tilden, who is the ; Democrat. j favr of lionesty and right; and that a tivc originator of the entire scheme1 Every man who was the enemy ot j as the Republican party his jiroven ly for cheating the people of New York j ai.d Pennsylvania out of their choice of i President ? Never ! A party claiming to be in favor of "reform," and vet one week before the election is proven to ( have organized a gigantic system ot re- , jx-ating, ballot-box stuffing and even i furriery, to carry an election, cannot; hope to receive the suffrages of honest! men? The Democrats have no hope ot the j election ot Tilden save through fraud ; aiid villainy." If Tilden believed he ' would carrv the electoral' vole of his! , , , j own State, he never would have con- , coctea tne gigantic irauas uncarmea the city of New York a dav or two : since. And mark the prediction: These ! , ,.,, . uauas win Le traced to liiuen, ana ins . bane's of money will not prevent his ! paving the penalty to the State for out- 1 i i i : . . The truth is Tammany is divided, i Republicans are harmonious and are I working as thev never did before tor , "... . ! succes. unu every iiiuicauoii uaus 10 mu belief that even the Gibraltar of De- but yesterday, united iu publishing a , " . , , . , lener to tne worm, oceiaiing flection of Tilden would be ruinous to the city and to tho whole country. Tl.cy recite that the "Democratic party is identified with th:i rebellion and the principles which gave it li, and its ad- . lv. uum w ,-.u.w. ... i.i i- i . . . . i Ul '-"UHiern Ciuuns .oi whinihi.. to aa extent that would jeopaidize the sol vency of the national treasury, and cur tail ujk)U taxpaysrs burdens that could not be borne; that the credit of the gov ernment, at home and abroad, would be impaired; the resumption of specie payment indefinitely postponed, and endanger in future our peace and pros perity And this letter is signed by well kuewn merchants and capitalists, including- Democrats and Republicans, beaded by John Jacob Astor. It is probab'y true that, through in timidation an 1 actual murder, the greater portion of the- Southern States may be carried for Tilden, but beyond this Tildeii now has little hope ot car rying a single State. South Carolina, North Caroliua, Florida and Louisiana are counted npon as surely tor Hayes i and Wheeler. Republicans feel rea sonably assured of Connecticut, and New Jersey ; there is scarcely a donbt of Indiana, while the ba'ance ot the Union, including Oregon, are just as sure to cast their electoral vote for Hayes, and Wheeler, as that election day.da.vns. Here iu Oregon, Republi cans have only to do their duty from now until the eve of election, to insure a splendid triumph tor Republican in stitutions in the'election of Hayes and Wbeeler, and Richard Williams to Congress. Amen. It is evident that at least one traveler on his way homo from s foreign shore takes no interest in the melody ot "Home, Sweet Home." His name is Tweed; . : . . . -v- I itself, will be redeemed from Demo- i ble to telegraph you my greeting. J e action gives the Reptibhc-ans all the cratic misrule, and that General Dix ! home i.. November to my elective ofllcers for the ne-, State Gov- ! muiienc wun tne mmiiiern jx?opie lor ! ernment, a member ot the present and will bo the next Mayor. The principal j olir 110miw, whose triumph wou'd be Uie Kt,rly.flftU Congress, and a majority business men of that gteit metropolis, , hailed here in Eng'and with almost as ; branches 'of the Eemslature. IXGERSOLL'S IXDITEMEXT. Why Col. I56"b. Ingersoll is opposed to the Democratic parly : Every State that seceded from the Uniied Stales was a Democratic State. livery ordinance ot secession that was drawn was drawn by a Deiriocrat. Kvery man who endeavored to tear t)e yij rtag frnm tjie i,eaveu tj,at en. r;c.ie)J ;t wa3 R Democrat. Kvery man who tried to destroy this Xation was a Democrat. Every man who shot loion soldiers was a Democrat. , , , , , Kvery man who loved slavery better than liberty was a Democrat. j The man who assassinated Abraham 1 Lincoln was a Democrat Kvery man who sympathized with the assasMn was a Democrat. Everv man who raised blood hounds t-i.m. TW crat. Every man who impaired the credit 1 of the U iutel Slates was a Democrat, Everyman who resisted the dial was a Democrat. ; Kvery man win) hid in the bushes i I j a,1,l sl't Lrni-n soldiers, simply iKtcans-e : . lliey were endeavoring to enforce the ; j l lws of" their country, was a Democrat. I j Every man who denounced the sol-J I'l'ers ttiat bared their bosoms to the j human liberty in this country was a Democrat. JEFF DAVIS RATIFIES. The Grand Rapids (Mich.) Jintrnal j ias this stand-ofl" to the Kilpatrick let- tc.r to Haves : Lan,.;hai; IIuisk, London, Eng. ) July 23, 1876. To the Hon John Kelly, Tammany to m an invitation to attend vour Til-! den and Hendricks ratification meeting fl Tammanv Hall this evening. I am heart and soul, with yiu m the good causc o, j)emet.ralic TWioratiii ai d re- form. J he M. J.euis nominees can count on an almost unbroken Sonth in J lJ'ir l'1- Jf.l"' "" I drvks well. Y hue the Southern peo- f)Je were i,mvelv conieding in the field for four long years of cruel war, your .nominees, both in the forum and as pri- aiu e.ii.eiis, were giving invii mjiiiiuui j ll)ilk t!l.lt we win gail;- alj lliat we lost by the war lietwren the States in Uie elon of those glorious champions t State sovereignty and the Co::stitu- i tion as it was. Distance, however, will ; put it out ot my power to be present at ; i nic joy as it ouia be in tne nans or i Tammany. I'erhaiw I i i lammany. leinaiwl may favor mv Democratic friends in New York with ! a speech on completing my European j and reform. JEITERSON DAVIS, .-t X OTHER LIE X AILED. , Tilden journals keep reiteratii g the e,ia t,at Goy j, Js mcmber of the American Alliance, notwithstanding the charge was proved false a few hours after it was made on the Atlantic shije. George A. Steel, of Portland, Chairnr of the Republican State Central Committee, has received a telegram in response to one sent by him making in quiries regarding tho truth of the charge, from headquarters, that leaves the reiterators of the lie without a leg to stand upon. - Here it is r - v . Com mbus, Ohio, Oct. 14, 187G.' To G. A. Steel, Chairman Repub lican Slate Central Committee Gover nor Ilaj-cs was never a member iof American Alliance, never affiliated with Know Nolhingism, and never accepted membership in any society hostile to the rights ot naturalized citizens. A.T. WICKOFF, Chairman Rep. State Exec. Com. But as these irresponsible inkslingers who have been reiterating the lie, have no sense of shame or decency, we sup pose they will continue publishing it as long as there's hope of making capital out of it. "I Think what , Democratic victory means ! It means the surrender of the Government into the hands ot the ; very men who were beaten back at Gettys burg and on a hundred other battle fields ot the Republic. Is there a sol dier mean enough to be a party to this surrender? It there is, he should turn his back on his country and seek a home where ingratitude is a virtue and gra'i tude a crime. Ho would be unworthy to enjoy the blessings ot freedom, j It TildcnV figures on New York ma jorities arc no more reliable than his in come returns he had better 6top giving Ihciu. HE CAREFUL HOW YOU VOTE. Information ot an apparently reliable character reaches us, says the Oregon t w, that the Democratic managers haVe determined to get np a laage number ot tickets similar in general appearance to the Republican tickets, but having the name of one of the Democratic candi dates fur elector substituted for one ot the Republicans on some of the tickets, and that of Mr. Lane Kiibstituttd for that of Mr. Williams on others. These tickets are to be varied, so as to take away a few votes from each of the Re publican electors, and a few from Wil liams, giving them to Democratic candi .lntim rt uiifla tltn snl7 vntpfi ihfV V Will- T ' . - -" - j wM lhm & from t,,e 1epnb. licans wuld be such as might be se cured through the carelessness ot the voters in examining their tickets. The tttirv.! ,..,.. t.l 1 w (.tmiiawtttuiilv email bnt j , gufficieilt to affect the ! result. Kvery Republican voter should j be on his guard on election day, and j sec .to it that his ticket contains the .names of J. . Watts. J. C. Cart- wright, and W. II. Odell ,tor electors, and Richard Williams tor Congress- man. OUIiS THE WLXXIXG TICKET. ; Next Tuesday at the ballot-box, the American people will decide who shall ' exercise the functions devolving upon ij,e cj,ief Executive of this great Nation for t,0 ncxt foljr years. Tlie issues of lll0 jmr j,ave been faithfullv. consci- its entire past history that it is in favor of honesty and reform, therefore its candidates, Rutherford 1. Ilnyes and ! William A. Wheeler, will be the choice f lhc people fbr the otUeesot President and Vice President of this Nation for , the next tour years. Let every Repub- j ! : i z- i. . . I iican, eery inver oi nis country, put, his shoulder to the wheel, working from now until the pol!s are closed tnat "la Linn, heretofore the banner Democratic county, will be reclaimed, and once more be enrolled among the Republican counties- of the State. Every man to his post, then, that our victory may be certain and overwhelm- in3- WHAT HO X EST DEMOCRATIC JOURXALS THIXK. The Albany Times, Democratic, in speaking of the Colorado e'ection says : "According to our latest advices, it seems that the-first State election held in Colorado takes her out of the donbt- tul column and places her squarely on tliG ipp,,bliCai, side. The result of this which elects two foiled States Sen- ators and also appoints the Presidential electors The present delegate iu Con- gress from the Territory ot Colorado, is a Democrat, and in 1874 the Demo cratic uiajot ity there was 2,163. Evi dently there has been "change" in Col orado, bnt it is not sucfi "change" as will promote the election of Mr. Tilden. Everywhere in the Northern States his nomination seems to have had a depress ing etleet." A MAG XIFICEX T RECORD. The Republican party has a magnifi cent record. Its wisdom, loyalty, cour age, fidelity to public trusts and noble devotion to the rights ot man challenge the world's admiration. The JDemocratie party has a record over which every American citizen should blush. Its treachery, dishonesty, disloyalty ; its base use of. power ; its devotion to sla very when that institution controlled the nation, and its slavish submission to those leaders who have outlived the wrong they could not save, stamp it as a party unworthy of confidence, entitled only to infamy and scoin. To exchange the party of freed on for this sin-begotten shadow of slavery would be a crime against humanity and a disgrace to civilization. VOTE JX THE INTEREST YOUR COUNTRY. OF Before a vote is cast for the Demo cratic ticket we hope the citizen will satisfy himself that such a vote will be for Uk5 interest of the country. In our opinion it will not be. A vote for De mocracy will be a vote for the introduc tion of disturbing elements into the body politic. It will be a vote iu favor of reversing the verdict of the war, a votn , in favor of throwing aside the fruits of a costly and bloody strugg'e. The ascendency of Republicanism means the continuance ot peace, and to main tain this ascendency is the d utv of a'! who love their country.. a - - DEMOCRATS OF TEXAS SICK OF THE KUKLUX MU21DEMS. The Mississippi plan of electioneering with the shot ghn, Colt, and Derringer may hate qualities of temporary effect iveness which commend it to the South Carolina ehivalry, but it has disadvan tages which weigh against it 'n the long run. It was tried in Texas, and proved very effective there so far as the election was concerned, but its after con sequences have not been agreeable, as witness these remarks of the Dallas Jftrad, a Democratic paper of that State: "The people are heart-sick and weary of murder. They hang their heads in very shame at the character Tesas is obtaining abroad. They know and teel that it does her every interest infinite Imrt, retards immigration, drives back capital, arrests internal improvements, bankrupts and beggars our citizens.' To be sure, Texas is a vast State, to which a tide of immigration has set in, and which has the finest prospects of future development and prosperity, if law and order prevail. These disagree able at'er consequences of the Mississippi plan reveal themselres more promptly and in a more practical and realizable way to its citizens tran they may to States like South Carolina and Missis sippi, which do not seem to desire im migration, but they will make them selves equally as plain some day, and that not far in the future, to any State whose people resort to murder as an electioneering device. THE RESULT OF DEMOCRATIC VICTORY. The Albany JCrpress thinks a nulled South tor Tildeii and Hei.drick should give us, as we believe it will.-a united North tor Hayes and Wheeler. If we are to have the old sectional fight over again and that is what the Democrats are now practicaly claiming, let us of the North be once more united as we were when these same Southern Democrats were endeavoring to force their peculiar ideas npon us vt et armut. Keep it before the eopIc that Democratic tuc-ec-ss depends ux..n securing for their candidates the united Confederate vote in a'l Southern Stales; that the victory for the Democratic party thus obtained means a turning oref of the Govern ment to the ex-rebels; that the results of such a victory would be either repu diation of the present national debt or an agreement to pav the rebel war debt - , and compensate the owners ot emanci pated slaves. VO'IE DEI- ORE DUSIXESS. Vote first, transact your business at terwards. It is all important that every Republican vote should be polled. The citizen ought not to consult personal convenience when such great issues are at stake. Lay business aside; put tiff pressing ergagements until your vote is cast. Many business men will 'say, "Oh, I will vote when I return in the evening." It may be too late, the one vote needed may remain nncast, and the cause of freedom may suffer a great injury. Others may say, "One vote will not be missed; I will enjy pleas ure and let the polls go." This is dan gerous in the' extreme: a hundred or a thousand may be thinking the s.imc, and the aggregate ot votes lost over whelms the tteket. Vote first. Let nothing interfere with this sacred right. . . . - -DIG TIIIXG FOR GRAXT. Jo Lane sa'nl in his harrangue last Saturday, that he was 'offered a Major General's commission in the Union'army and that it ho had accepted it, Grant never wonld have been President of these United States ! The quandary here still is a to whether the old gent meant that, as a Major General he would have played into the handa of the Confederates so that they might have destroyed the Union ; or whether he simply meant that he wm s mnch the superior of Grant, as a military roan, that he would . have fi led Grant's place, and lie himself been President of this great Nation ! ! ! When Grant finds out how near he came to missing the Presidency, all through Jo Lane's accession proclivities, ot course, won't he bo astonished ! . And uov the very men who tooght and voted to break up this union, under the same name and organization still call ing itself Democratic, appeal to your generosity to surrender to them all the great powers ot the government. They ask to administer its laws, control its revenues, and " to mould its policy at home and abroad. Both of their can did ales', though living in the north, op posed every measure ot the war, all the movements to organize the army that beat dowu the rebellion, and all tho safeguards adopted to secure the results ot our victory. The men they would bring into the chief places of the Gov ernment are those : who led the rebel armies or who frowned and complained in tho north. The same States that passed and maintained ordinances of seces!on are the maiu ttienirth of this i coalition. DEXIES HIS RECORD. Gen. Jo Lane made a harrangue at the Court House in this city on Satur day last. In that harrangue he denied that, he was ever a secessionist or a sympathiser- with secession. In his place on the floor" of the U. S. Senate on the 2d day of Mareh, 1861, Jo. Lane, Senator from Oregou, said : ' The doctrines asserted In the series of rt-solutions ottered by Mr. Davis bare not been iniiliitaKied, and as a conseqnVncc events hove since transpired detrimental to the public peace and the welfare of the cmiiitry nd dertrh'etfve ot its unity. The Uniou'has been in fact broken np. t srareu on a inriin-r unnsiuii dim me ias- j ms.tlitf tt nlll (!llllltftii'!lf'. Ifiilllil lurup i join the Kepumieau party in any attempt to coerce the Southern States. I know lonz, well mid intimately, the gallant men of Ureffon-s-tiiai mey win not lie i found ready of inelinexl- at the Senator's! and his master's beck, to imbrue their hands for a godless cause, in fraternal gore. : Mr. President, in my remarks which i I made on the 19t.li' of December last, in! Mnlv to rlif Seiintor from TennessM" I bmli ' the ground that a State might rightfully J seeede from tlw ITnion. Coercion is nsnrp.it Ion snd tyranny. As a Dem- oemt I an. bound to reflect the declared ! will of the sovereign me.s. They ( would at least refrain-Irom ungenerous in- i sinuatioiiB Hgaiusr, the patriotism of those j Northern Demociats who, like myself repiobate the iKilicy of i-oeixion. i And vet. upon this floor there re men base ! enough l. nllude to him h a traitor. Mr. ; Pivsitlent. I have not words to express my ! conteuipt for any man that can apply sutii ! a term to uch a man as Jefferson Davis. S Jeflersoii 1ivU a traitor ! Treason applied j to him ! He, tie purest awl bravest vf txi- triots. The Pittsburg Gazette says that a j rebel flag was carried in a Democratic procession iu that eity Saturday even ing, but the Democratic managers assert that they thought it was an old Ger man battle-flag. Poor innocent souls. If they had been to the front during the rebellion they would have knowe a Confederate" flag. The Tilden organs continue to have some strictly private news from Colo rado, but tliey don't warble over it ! much. Rnn(C of n Nle Rotfer. In the summer of 1 808 a stage coach rmuiing from I5oise City, Idaho, to Cor- rii.ne, Utah, was stopped by five stage robbers, and the treasure entrusted to Wells, Fargc & Co., to the amount of S64.000, taken. The footpads divided the gold dust and coin, and buried the bullion, amounting to alxnit C50.000 near the scene of the robbery and then fled iu different- directions. One of the robbers, with the design of cheating his leriows, returned to "the place, un earthed it and lmi i?d it about four miles distant and proceded about his busi ness. A tew days after he was captured by the authorities and, with two others of the gan who were subsequent!' ar rested, was sent to the Nevada JStale Prison at Carson City lor eight years, He who transplanted the treasure died iu prison, nrst telling a comrade and one ot the guards who had befriended him, the location ot the treasure. The guard tried to find it, but failed, and tina-Iy turned the case over to Wells, Fargo & Co. They employed S Hob ertson, of Oakla.id, to work up the case. Itotierlsoii fb-nud where the treas ure had been coucealed, but it bad leen removed probably by some of the other robbers, who had in the meantime leen released from the eniteiitiary. In vestigation convinced the detective that ft portion of tin bullion, amounting to alK.nt $13,000 or $15,000, had been disposed of iu various places around V lrginta lty, and it was finally traced to Carson's mint, where it was run into coin The robbers alarmed at the close watch kept iijion their movements, separated and disappeared. In May last thtee of the ro!bers met at Pana miut. One of the party said it he were in San Francisco he could easily obtain means to take him to i he sjiot where the plant was si id raise it, suggesting at the same time that they had been away so long from that section of the country that the authorities had given up all hope of either finding the bullion or obtaining evideiiee upon which to re arrest them. They came here and after some little difficulty managed to arouse the cupidity of tieorge U. Baily, young man doing business iu Oakland1, "who furnished them with money, and in June last they tracked across the mountains and to their amazement dis covered that the bullion had been car ried away. They spent a week or o iu. diligent search for the treasure, and returned to this city. On their way down they concluded to swindle their outside partner, which they did by passing- off on him a bar ot bogus bull ion. Subsequently they began to fear the discovery of the character of the bar would get them into trouble, and while all were crossing the bay together snatched it from him and threw it over board, Ilaily procured a warrant for the parties, charging them with grand larceny in stealing a bar of bullion val ued at $6,500. - They were arrested last idjrht at Oakland, and gave their a- vv imam r . u iisou, Carey I liomp son, and Jos. Langley. Thompson is saiu to nave respect ai to connections. In the police court to-day the accused moved a preliminary examination tor no other purpose than to shut out the facts ot tne cave. Cross-examination of one of the witnesses dwveoped tho fact that the bar was bogss, which a-pjeared greatly to tho astonishment of the pros renting witness. However, counsel for the defense said he wished to make no defense before tliev police court, and would go before the grand jury. The court held the parties in $8,000 bail each. The case fe one of the most re raarkablo whieli ever came up in this city. What has become ot the $35,000 is a mystery, bo i is presumed tbat iu some way the location of the bullion was discovered by Borne one connected with tho Slate prison at Carson, and removed. HAYES, WHEELER, WILLIAMS, 1 tL?&&SF&&i GRAND REPUBLICAN BALLY Ds gifts AT TIIK Opera House ox MONDAY"--EVENING, NOV. C, 1876 ... - - .v- tr,tt Turc ani1! IerS Cf th VnlWj, XCOXSr ISA 'Wcmon, ars lHVitSl to Attend. ; . THE JLAST SfEETIXO UKFOKE THE DA V - r KLKtTIOSI , - , - , - V . lh IIyes and heeler Club of tin C"T ,l"y extensive arrmigements fVir fl""' rally, of tlie Kepnhlieans ot OUI I;,n; ' Monday evenh.g next, at the Ta-' i)era Ilortse In thN city, when nd "we nddi-esses will be delivered by souio of thV ab!,;st a,,d uuxt el'Miieut fM?akew in the Stitte. Let Evcry Lover of the Old Flag;' be In Attendance ! Iet every patriot who loves his country, and desires to see our free Institutions per-' pet dated, iittcnil the meeting. - TIi Wny the Ucmoeratle Btfariom Ex' p.-t to wri t Votes. PinnnKLi'iiiA, Oct. 28. The pliee, tast night, captured paper for the issue ot 5O.O0f lxpfus tat receipts in this city, in ihe hands of two irominent members of the Democratic party. It seems that a few days ao lion. . Christian Kneass, chairman ot the Republican City Coin nnllee, to whom credit fhr unearthing this great fraud is due, was informed lluit the Democracy intended flooding- j the city with bonus tax receipts-, but j that the great trouble was to procure? paer with water marks "personal tax, 1870," on if. At last pajer W3R ob taiued. Tonight whi e the rank and filer ft the party were giving Gen. Mc Clellan a reception, a waguu came oufc t (iiiswold alley near Si.vih 4nJ llro ker streets, in the fourth ward. This? wa followed hy detective Harry Weyle. The carriage was driven to the head quarters of the Democratic State t en iral Committee, No. -fOOt Walnut street. Here Henry Marcus,' ex-mem Ix-r of the eity coin cil from the 40'tk ward, alighted, troon J-'ainiiel Jot'phs a leader of the Democracy and a candi date tor the legisature for the llilM dis- i trict. apporcd. . In a short time Mar ! eus and Josj-t-i s st pcared. comn sr from' headquarters, each carrying a larger bundle. The ?mnd!es were placed iu the carriage and Marcus jj..t in and Jo sephs went np Walnut Mu.et. Weylo and two oflm-rs followed' in another car risge, and on Locust slieet, In-low Nineteenth, overhauled the carriage' containing the bogus, receipts. The' party were driven to popee headqnar ters, where it was found that it was si great capture, receipts having the re quired water mark, and could not ber lcteeted from genuine. Marcus waw given a hearing and held in $5,000 baif tor violating the election laws. A war rant was issued fi.r Josephs, and he will' be arrested before month g. The driver' of the carriage aid the receipts weter to be taken to the printing house of (lillcn & Nagle, Fifth street, below Walnut. TX'fs capture prevents the consummation ot the greatest fraud which ha ever been attempted here and shows where the arty of reform intend cd to get voters. Xcw To-Dur ALBANY ALDAN Y, : OREGON. THK FA T.I. TKRM of till" InMilnlion wl bcaln on MO PA V, SETTEMBEK 4. 1S76 I iMfulty of Ium'rnMlon : Rov. H. W. STBATTOX. A. M.. IfvAKlvnl - ud PVofeMHorof Msntal tnl Moral Science Kev. L. J ruwELUA. M-. I'rolcssor ol Matli ejnM ics an it Nat nrul Sciences. - M. 11. hbw ri r. A. M.r l'rotvsaor or Ancient Lansuge. Mi MARIA IRYrSfi, Tenchcr of Trimary' Perwrttnent. " Mi BI.VA BKKYMAX, TcucHcr of Instra menial MiikU-. I. B. KICE, M. V., Lecturer ou Pliysloiosy iinil llygitsue. Culouhri First Term boKino Svntenilior i. igfif. ;'. Sevond Term lesin No-vemlH-r 13. 1!7S--Third Term bniin) Jnnnnry 2. l(57i. Fourth Term iHiRins April 9, 1S77. Vacation of oup wek during ll:e holirtnys. v Closing cNcivises of tho school jtur, June 1; 18i7. Ita(9 of Tnltion t ' I'niMAY Pepahtxent, pt'rtcrm 5 K Common Ksni.ttu Ukanchicm, tr tt-mi.. 00 Uioiier Iikax hem, including I're)wmlo- r iJtiin mi'l Uraek 11 00 Col.llwlATK, inciuUuift Ilijtlier Ijnin antl Gr-ek, Advanc.-id MatlH-niaiic, nl Mental and Moral Sciences, h.t term.-.- 13 00 French and German, each, extra..-.. ...... 8 00 instrumental MuMc 11.00 I'aeof Pinno.. 3 00 Incidentals M Tuition In all caes reinired In advance. Pum.-inul attendance, twaineits. prouptneM nd Kent leuwnlr and ladylike deport ment will Im exiwted from all who may lieconte nwmlwn of tlieMrbool. J.. J. POWELL.. ,ATIO.AL KuMineHH Collegre,- BT SINVKSS EPVCATrOX IS THE SCEEPT' (Erimmntv of uuceefw lor pftraotis iu all purv Bi o, lir roVKSA wnt 10 any aASix wire 4trr8mS Lock bos 10i'. THE IVIETZLER CHAIR rr-H IS TO INFORM THE PUBI.TC TfTA'T Jl do eliair sow from my factory withont my name 0n it. All others are false imitation, and should bo so regarded. Alt -person are heronv arne! fiiralnst attempting any suct imposition upon my customers. Jcffcrsoir. !., -tnh, SI. lS'tt -