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About The state rights democrat. (Albany, Or.) 1865-1900 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 24, 1866)
ages te?!2Sijj.ijmv.&i&J2x&t-ute TATE RIGHTS DLMOCIiAT. JI. II. ABBOTT, EDITOR. ATURDAY NOVEMBER 24 i860. RAEEY DEMOCRATS ! There will be a meeting of the Democ- aey of Albany at the Court House, next hursday evening, at 7 o'clock, to nouii- .ate candidates for city offices. .VltO IS THE GOVERNMENT T A late St Louis Democrat, ly ing before is, contains the following i 'Is And v Jcbnscn the Oorernmcr t? ITe claims be, and Ids party claim it for hin. We think ley will tin i that the people govern in this coun- exemsr.13 their powvr thronsi ther repre- entatives in Congresit, and tiiit tho President is it the Executive, to execute the lairs cnctd by ie people s representatives." The St. Louis Democrat is now an in enseiy xtaaicai paper it is Dlacs as 1 T1T1 . 1 , Badical rebus, and has been for the last six or ght years. It scouts the theory now hat the President is the Government et, when Lincoln was President when ie was imprisoning Democrats bv the undredsfora mere difTeretce of cpm ;n as to the best policy to be pursued, us same immaculate sheet claimed that incoln was the Government ! All the epnblicans, of any note, throughout the ountry, took the same position. But now hese same men, hypocrites and knaves hat they are, turn round and, with an nconsistency eminently characteristic of hem, repudiate the doctrine they so re- ently and lustily advocated. If, when Lincoln was clothed with reater than imperial power, it was trea- on to deny that he was the Government is no les3 treason now to deny that lonor and power to his successor; and when hese liumps these Jacobins these dis- mionistB do so, they simply stultify them- eives in me estimation or all honorable uen. But it is not true that Lincoln was, or hat Johnson is the Government. The Government of this country, before the far, consisted of the Constitution and of he laws made in accordance with its revisions. These are the locomotive he President is simply the engineer to uide. These are the ship the Pres ent is the helmsman whose duty it is to ruide the ship, in accordance with the hart cf the fathers, over the storm- ossed ocean, into a secure haven. For suming and defending this position four ears ago we were denounced as a traitor, nd were threatened with imprisonment n one of Lincoln's numerous bastile3. The St. Loui3 Democrat says that ohnson claims to be the Government, nd that his friends back him up in this rrogant assumption. Tkis 13 simply a alsehood of the first water. No Demo- rat of any standing anywhere no Job n- on man oi any sense tafce3 any such rround. The Romp-Radical-Mongrel party-is' nost assuredly guilty of mere palpable nd glaring inconsistencies more mean-; ess and corruption more fiendishness nd hate more villainy and crime than ny party that has heretofore existed, not ven excepting that bloodthirsty party to vhich the French Revolution gave birth. hey advocate a doctrine to-day with errible vehemence, and to-morrow utter- y repudiate and discard it. They learn- d this base trick of Lincoln. lie said e had no right, nor no inclination, to in- erfere with slavery where it existed. iTet in a short time he interfered with it ret in the District of Columbia, and econdly in the States by issuing his Emancipation Proclamation. Ten days, icwever, before he issued it, he told a ot of preachers, who had callc 1 ca him, hat it would do no more gool than the ope's bull against the comet. He di- ected Mr. Seward to say to cur Minister t the Court of St. James, that whether he rebellion succeeded or failed, the re- ult, so far as the Confederate States were oncerned, would be the same their ights as to person and property would be he same in the one case as the other, ana rould be most rigidly observed and re- pected by the federal government. Yet, a a few months afterwards Lincoln sanc- ioned acts of confiscation, spoliation, dev astation, plunder, rapine and pillage of he most atrocious character. lie was ubbed by his party "honest old Abe," ut no more dishonest politician ever ap- earcd in the tide of time. lie was a ead and shoulders above Tallyrand in al he essential elements of deep duplicity nd profound villainy and dishonesty Senator Wilson, of Massachusetts, has I;ot religion, says the Union Democrat. Vt least the papers state that he has professed religion," and attached him- elf to some Puritanical Church of that date. All the churches of the land and 11 his professions of Christianity will not Iter our opinion of him in the least, or pake him a better man. His shielding l.imself within the portals cf a church .'ill not save him from the contempt and bhorrence in which he i3 hell by all who o not believe in Boston morality and lassachusetts politics. lie has been a jader among those who have' brought pon the county its present calamities, nd as long as the memory of the last six ears lives in the hearts of the people his ame will be detested and abhorred. rhaps he has found congenial company the institution to which he has attach- I himself, and may be considered a very roper man, bpth in politics and religion. f they are satisfied, we are. JEFFERSON DAVIS. "We clip the subjoined from the New York Tribune: I '' I; ' . !,We cherish no ill-feelini toward this prisoner ; while, on tho other hand, he is a stranger to Ais, whom we have never been tempted to love or bd- mire. .That he nas p ayed an impottom pari makes no difference in onr view. He is just man, after nil, and in pood part the creature of cir cumstances, as most men are. That some have wanted to hang him, "on a sour apple tree,' whdo others have done likehonor,'isqniteiromateml. But we do feel that the government of our country is disffrneinst itself bv its treatment of this prison er that it njrht to have bronjrht him to triallnng since, and let him know his fate that it is playing shabby, shnfflin part with regard to nim that it should either retract it charge of assassination or hare him indieied and tried thereon according to law that keeping him in prison untried, and not even attempting to hrint; his pas to issue, is diffusing an impression at the South that the gov ernment dare nnt try him for fear of damaging de velopments and a discomfiting verdiet, - The Tribune tries to throw all the blame arising from Jeff. Davis long imprison ment upon "the ffovernment " by which is meant President Johnson. Now, Mr Johnson is no especial favorite of ours, but tho Tribune must know that the President is not justly censurable in this matter. Mr. Davis is in the hands of the judiciary. He is to be tried before a civil tribunal, of which Chief Justice Chase" is the head, according to the laws and Constitution of his couutry. Presi dent Johnson has nothing to do with the retention of Davis. It is Chief Justice Chase that is responsible for the delay. The pardoning power is lodged in the hands of the Executive ; and he could therefore, pardon Davis and set him free ) but he has no more to do with determin ing when he shall be tried, and before whom, than a Sheriff has in determining these questions relative to a man, charged with murder, in his custody. The Tribune editor says he cherishes no ill-feeling towards Davis. If this be true Mr. Greeley is an exception among Rump j leaders. They have leen howling for thej blood of Davis for years past. This is one of the themes on which they have de lighted to dwell, and with which they have incited to deeds of lawlessness, ra pine and blood ; and a bastard muse has expressed the wish that Davis might be hanged on "a ''sour-apple tree." One hun dred thousand dollars were ofiered and paid for his capture, so that the popular clamor for his blood might be appeased. The Tribune says that Davis is oniy a man, "and in good part the creature of circumstances." This Js pre-eminently true. It is true that he was President of i the Confederacy ; but he was placed in that position by the people with far great er unanimity than was our dearly-beloved "martyred President" in his Presidential chair j and about the second year of the war he was supported by nearly every man, woman and child in the South. Davi3 was but the mouth-piece through which the Confederate States spoke the organ through whom they acted. No man in the tide cf time not even Napoleon Bonaparte excepted was ever more the 'creature of cicuat.nce3,' than Jeff. Davis. If he ought to be hunz on a sour-apple tree," so should Lee, Beaure gard, Johnson, the Generals Hill, and in deed all the men in the entire Southern Confederacy, If Davis is guilty of trea son, so are they, and if he should pay the penalty due the crime of treason, so should all those by whom he was upheld and sustained. It is a disgrace to the age and to our country that Mr. Davis long ere this, has not been tried. Mr. Chase is disgracing himself by his treatment of Davis. He should have brought him to trial long ago, and "let him know his fate." Chase is "playing a shabby, shufSing, cowardly part with regard to him." The charjre of assassination of "old Abe" should wither be retracted, or Chase should have him indicted and "tried thereon according to law." Either let him be set at liberty or hung on a "sour-apple tree," on the highest psak of Mount Gilboa. Impeachment. Mr. Bingham, one of the Ohio Congressmen, went so far in a recent speech as to say that if he was re elected : "So help me God, I will neither give sleep to my eyes, nor slumber to my eye lids, until I shall have drawn bills of im peachment against Andrew Johnson." "Wendell Phillips is also out on the same thing, says the New York Day Book, and he is usually only about six weeks ahead of hi3 party. A few weeks ago the impeachment of President John son was only hinted, now it is openly avowed. But the question will arise, can a Congress composed of only a portion of the States impeach a President? "Will Mr. Johnson consent to be set aside by a Northern Congress ? And if the Men grels try it, won't it make a muss amono: the five-twenties ? and the seven-thirties? and the eight-forties ? and the nine-fifties? etc., etc. The question will be, "How are you, bondholders ?" "How are you greenbaiks V Scandalous. The teachers of th negro schools in Richmond, says the Philadelphia Evening Herald, who are loyalists of the Radical stamp, are abus ing and maligning. the President in the most slanderous terms, and one of the copies which most frequently grace the slates and writing books of their ne"ro pupil is, "Andrew Johnson is a traitor.' Veteran Newspapee. The Newport Mercury is the oldest paper in America being now in its 108th volume. The first number was published by Jame3 Frank lyn, June 12, 1758. The Entc lion. Burr Morris. ' "We copy the following tribute to the ( memory of the late Judgo Morris, from the Bucyrus (Ohio) Forum. The article was written by the editor of that paper, on the reception of the news of h'i3 death : "Burr Morris was a native of this State, and for some years a citizen of Bu cvrus. He was admitted to the bar at F'mdley, and came to this place and opeu ed a law office a short time afterward. He continued in the practice of the law here until the summer of 1SG3, when he moved to Albany, Linn county, Oregon, where he resided until hi? death. During his residence in Bucyrus he was twice elected to the office of Prose cuting Attorney of Crawford county. '"He was also one of the County School Exam iners. In the spring of I860 he was elected County Judge of Linn county, Oregon, which office he held at the time of his death. He was a Democrat, member of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and & good Mason. "Burr Morris was not a brilliant man ; but he was a good man. He early learn ed that "there is no excellence without great labor," and hence he applied him self in the pursuit of his profession with untiring industry. "Whatever he did he did it well. His integrity was unnotted. Tn his manners he was affable, courteous and kind. In his morals he was as near faultless as the most perfect mortal. lu his party he was sincerely radical, draw ing his political pabalum from Jefferson, Madison, and Calhoun. His honesty made him fiiccessful as a lawyer, and pop ular as a politician. it h a pure heart with his feet planted on the rock of truth and hia glance continually onward, he merited and received the approbation o all who knew him ; and ho has left a light shining in the path his footsteps trod as a heritage to his friends, an J to young men who may find profit in his example. Hi: uoodness of heart manifested itself on al occasion? to the casual acquaintance by thewavside: m" the crowded walks o business ; at the bar even in the politi cal arena, when he appeared there as well as ln-the circle ot his most intimate acquaintances:- His unexpected death i sincerely lamented by this community and will be regretted by all who knew him. - "Friend, brother, thou art jrone to thy rest ! May the rose sweetly blossom ami the willow grow green over thy grave. "No friend's ermplaint, no kind d-imet ie tear. Pleased thy pale chost. rr rne'd ihy mournful bier. By foreign hands thy dym? eyes were closed. By foTvitrn hands thy decent Ihnhs eonipos'd. By foreirrn hands thy fcumMe sruve adorned. By strangers henor'd, and by strangers mourned.' The Mote and the Beam. Gov ernor Bullock, of Massachusetts, ays the New York Sunday Mercury, appointed a commissioner named J. B. Ham a very proper name for a man to receive dis tinction in Massachusetts, where such an affection is entertained for his ancien namesake and all the descendants of the family to examine into the subject of the employment of children in the factoric of that State ; and he reports that their condition-is infinitely worse than anythin reported of the condition of the darkies prior to the proclamation of Uncle Abe and the opening of the felicities of free dom and gratuitous rations to the darkey. Occasional glipises of this kind into the peculiar institutions of Massachusetts show that woman-whipping and the en slavement and drudgery of childhood? and other specimens of New England hu- manitarianism, are fair samples of the manner in which their philosophers illus trate their principles at home. They are so busy evangelizing the South and ele vating the darkey, that the elevation of the white trash who keep her mills in motion is of no possible censeqnence. a "Loyal." We like the great tory word loyal. It is peculiarly characteris tic of and appropriate to the party which claim3 and boasts of it. The tories of our Revolution were conspicously' loyal, and it is eminently just and proper and in accord ance with the "eternal fitness of things," that their children should be loyal and denounce, as their parents did, patriots as rebels and rebel sympathizers. Every signer of the Declaration of Independence was disloyal every tory who villiSed them was loyal. Every theif and traitor in the country, from Butler to Avery, is loyal. Have not the loyalists, with these facts before them, a right to glory in their loyalty ? "Best Government." During the progress of the late war it was impossible to approach a knot of loyal gentleman but our ears were saluted with a pancgyricism of the "best government the sun ever shone upon," accompanied with lifted hands und upturned eyes in holy horror at the wickedness, blindness and folly of the Southerners who didn't "see it in that light j" but now these same loyal gentle men are shocked at the very idea that any body should be so wicked as to desire to have that same "best government" re stored again. EUTLER AND GRANT. At the Pitts burgh Convention theiving Ben. Butler was lionized, and the name of Grant was not mentioned. It is intimated that But ler had threatened if Grant was made a hero on this occasion, he would instanly leave the Convention, as he did the Charleston Convention, after it refused to nominate Jeff. Davis, for whom he voted sixty times. Butler can never forgive Grant for saying that he (B. B.) had "bottled himself up where he was safe from the enemy and no service tos the Federal army !" The Snake has the Best of it. Butler says the rattlesnake is no brother of his. This announcement ia favorable to the finake. An Act. To aid in the construction of tho urecron Central Railroad lh it enacted by the Legislative A&mn- biu of the State of Oregon:' , Section 1. That whenever the Oregon Central Railroad Company shall have 11 H r. 1 , . 1 ... completed ine rust twenty nines ot their said road, and shall have received from Ihe President of Ihe United States a pat- eutfor tae land granted by Congress for such completed section, Uiy may exhibit the said patent to the Secretary and Troa- surer of this State. n J nresent tn thfm two hundred bonds of the said comnanv. of the denomination cf ntife thousand An. ars each, duly executed, payable iii twen ty years from the first day of January or July, the next ensuing,' with coupon at- taeucd tor thepatnient bv the State Treti- A , aS surer of half yearly interest on the said bonds at the rate ot seven per cent, per annum, and the Secretary and treasurer shall each make an entry in books to be kept in their respective offices, of the uuiuber and denomination of the said series of bonds, and their date and time of maturity, and of the number of coupons attached to each, and their 'denomination and amount, and the times when the firs! and last of such coupons will mature, and more than the entire expenses of the Gen thereupon, the Treasurer shall sign the eral GOv'eriunent for the first twelve year? nnn th I -iiirpr Rh:i I fci.m tin said coupons and deliver the bond to the company, and the company shall pay to the Treasurer one dallar for eaeh boud whose'' coupons are so signed bv him. And whenever another like see'tioii of tweuty miles of the road shall be com pie- ted. and the Patent lor its quota ofhuid shall be so exhibited, the Treasurer shall . - I sbni the cominua attached tn another so-1 ries of two hundred similar bonds, to 1c . sci presented and recorded, and so from time to time as tho road shall be com r. at. ed .bv like sections, and the land ratent for each sectiou exhibited, the .Treasurer . ...... ... i shall sign the coupons ofa like number oi similar bonds, until the whole uumber upou which the State has thus undertaken to pay interest, shall be one thousand bonds of the na-ireirate nominal value ot one million of dollars, aud the faith of the State is pledged to the payment of the said coupons as they mature, but the State will not pay any of the principal of the said bonds. Seetiou 2. Whenever the Treasurer shall have signed any such coupons he shall with the assistance of the Secretary, make an estimate on the rate ot tax, it any which it will be necessary to levy annual- ly on the assessed value ef the taxable nronertv ia the State, in additiou to oth- er available funds to redeem the coupons that will mature up to and including the half voar'a interest that will fall due next after the commencement of the uezt ses- iou of the Legislative Assembly. And the Seerelarv and Treasurer shall certifv to the Governor the rate of taxation so found to be uecc?sary. And the Gover- nor shall issue his praclimation directing the County Courts to levy the same iu addition to all other taxes. And the County Courts shall levy the same accor- dinslv. aud the money thence arising shall be applied to that obiect aud no i.ibpr er Inner a nnv of the said cmiiwm shall remain unpaid cec. . At the expiration one year from the maturity of the last of said cou pons the company shall refuud to the Mite h I thi immeva taid bv the Mafp for iuterest on all the said one thousand bonds, and the State shall have a lien for the same onthe said road with its depots and all other ot its appurtenances, with the right of way and the rolim? stock and all other property, real and personal of the said company from the passage of this act until such repayment shall be tul- lv made and completed, which lien shall i ...... i i, i.(.iM 1 c ' , , - , ot the comnanv. and iii.iv be rntorced sis 11.1 1 ,1 I'llUlllI U 1 t. I (lit V.1111 JUULUlCUULr? j mcirrrrToriJ nr n liprpiiiatfpr nrnviileil. t .F c .i ii i . t v t- 1 .11 1 - . . a . . ... . . i i . .... i . .it nil . i i . i . " . r i .1 .j . erty which otherwise would be conveyed at the expenses of the State; and all the articles on their way to the l airs of the State Agricultural Society for exhibition, and ou their return, and the company shall at all times transmit by their tele graph free of charge, all dispatches to aud trom the ofneers ot the State, whith oth- crwi.se would be transmitted at the ex pense of the State. And if the Compa ny shall procure any coupons to be siiju ed by the Treasurer, they shall bo deem ed to have accepted all the couditions and and provisions ot this act at the time ot its passage t. i ir ii.. . . l. . 1 1 l A.-. rtlnTA rii ftvnnf it Diilnu tartrinti rr flirt ri'iil l .i :r.t: i.to ueiurc uie cximauoii ui uio vcar icuo.ui snau noi couioicio two sucu scciious in , i . .i r. .;i cau jwr ui.u JW n uuw. li r-li,I.- tliill I in -.i?,,,,l..l,l tn lio S.f-ltol of California, or to a junction with tho California road, the State upon such fail . . I . ... ure, mav by act of the Legislative Asscm bly, transfer all the property, rights and franchise upon which the said line oper ates, to anv- other company, person or per .sons, in its discretion, and if the company aud the State shall not agree upon the valuation of the property aud rights so transfcrcd, the Circuit Court upon the pe tition of either party, and due notice to the other, shall appoint three impartial m .1 and competent arbitrators to assess t lie value thereof, and the coupons already signed shall be set oil against such valua tion, or the Slate on any such failure may take possession of such property or may foreclose such hen, or both at their dis cretion. And no coupons shall be signed by tho Treasurer for any section of the road which shall not be completed withiu the time limited by this act. An Act. To amend an act to provide a Codo of criminal procedure, and define crimes and their punishment, approved October 10, ISO-i Section 1. Be it enacted hy the Leg is lativc Assembly of the State of Oregon: Section of said act is hereby amend cd so as to read as follows : Section 532. If any person being arm ed with a dangerous weapon, shall assault another with such weapon, any person, upon eonqiction thereof, shall be punished uy imprisonment m uie peuueauary, uui 1 . . ii .1 ll A. less man six momn3, nor more inau icu years, or by impaisorimcnt in tho county jail not less than one . month, por more thau one year, or by fine not less than one hundred, nor more than one thousand dollars, Sec. 2. Inasmuch as there is no law prescribing a fine for the above named of- lense, this act shall be m-torce lrom and after its approval by the Governor Approved, Oct, 24, lbbb, Unnecessary Expenses. Among the appropriations of Congress t its last session is the following: ' " For salaries and expenses of collect tors, assessors, assistant assessors, revenue agents, inspectors and sapeti.ntendatits of ... 1 .1 i. .1 . III. (1. exports aim uruwuiun, lugeuicr huh i expenses of carrying into effect the forty- fourth section ot the internal revenue act uf June thritieth, eighteen hundred and sixty - four,' and all other expenses of car- rviu: into effect the various provisions of the several acts providing Internal revenue, except salaries of Coinmiion Ur. Deputy ConitiusVtoner and clerks of Internal revenue office, together with rent, dies, paper, etc., for stumps, and l eidental expenses, ten millions eight hu in- un- NreU tuousaml uoiiurs. An annual expenditure often millions eight hundred thousand dollars for only a portion of a single branch of the revenue service ! The other portions of the In ternal revenue service not included in this appropriation, together with commis sions, will not amonnt to less than ten millions more making in all twenty mil lions a year to be paid for the collection of the Internal revenue alone this is enu tjovemuieui lor wiv urscoiune eui of its existence It is more than the an uai expenses or me uovcrumenc uunng 'e last war with ureal juntatn ana equa ho the annual expenses of the Govern ment until the country had over twenty millions inhabitants two-thirds as many . t T-- il - I s at present, n is more ir.au me co of all the State Governments in the Uu ton. Divided between the Mates accor- .. , ... uins to their respective numoers. it mi poses a t:;x upon the people ot Oregon ot about fc ww a year lor simrny collect 2 the iulcrnul revenues due. to the Fed- i . , . i . i M uoverumeni. vuu any necessity ue imagined for the imposition of this im- mouse tax in amwuon to uie enormous taxatiou with which the people are borne down? The Constitution says, "Direct taxes shall be apportioned among the sev lral States which may be included withiu this I. nion, according to their respective numbers. It the 1 cdcral taxes were ap- portioned to the Male. and tolleeied with the Mate, and municipal taxes unuer State authority, three-fourths of the cost of collecting under the present system would be saved, which would be an amiu- p saving to use people oi urcgou oi not less than 'UJU'. Hat th: would not the policy of the KadicaU whose whole aim Is to centralize power iu the hands of the Federal Government at the expense oi the maepenttetice otttie Mates and the liberties cd the people. It would not provide tor an army oi office-holders, '"dependent ut State authority, to bar ras and subdue the people. It would equalize the taxes upon property flistead M" leveying the chiet burdeus upon indus- try, manufaetrucrs and commerce. 1 here are no people on the fiee of the earth so tax-ridden as are the people ot the L mted States, aud no system of taxation in any other country which so discriminates iu tavor oi accumulated weaun against the producing cLissee. 1 Oregon Herald CoutleuMcd History o I'M earn. About 2S0 years B. C. Hero, of Alex ander, formed a toy which exhibited some of the powers of stcam5 aud was moved by its power. . I). olO. Antheminns, an architect. arranged peveral cauldrons of water, each covered with a wide bottom of a leathern tube, which lose to a narrow top, with pipes extending to the rafters of the ad joining building. A fire was kindled be neath the cauhiron, and the house was shaken with the efforts of the steam do 1 scendms the tubes, . . This is the first of steam recor- I . . ded In loio. June 1. Hi Brasco de Garay tried a steamboat of i-'OO tons, with tol- crable success, at Barcelona, Spain. It consisted of a cauldron of boiling water, and a movable wheel on each side of the ship. It was laid aside as impracticable. .v present however was made to Garay. Iu 10-30 the first railroad was construc ted at Newcastle-ou-the Tyue. The first idea of a stem engine in En gland was iu the Manjuis Worcester.? His tory of invention, A. D. 10(3-5. In 1091 Acwerman made the first steam 1 1 engine in jnrtauu. In 1718 patents were granted to Savory for the first application for tho steam en- I irino I - feet steam r., iritrt T It,,!!, fif P.l, ., f . ..... the idea 1 1 steam navigation T .--y T, Thomaa first nronosed hn nnrliention in A infiriea. In 17S1 Marquis Jouffray constructed a steamboat on tho Saone. In 1785 two Americans published a work ou it. In 17S0 William Symington mado a voyage in one on tho Forth and Clyde Caual. Iu 1872 this experiment was repeated. In 17S2 llamscy propelled a boat by steam at New York. In 170 John Fitch of Connecticut navigated a boat oy a steam engine on the Dcleware. In 178 1 Robert Fulton first began to apply his. attention to steam. In lbo Oliver Evans, a native of Phil adelphia, constructed a steam engine to travel on a turnpike road. Ihe first steam engine thatcver crossed the Atlantic was the Savunnah, in the month of June, 1810, from Charleston to Liverpool. Hunt's Merchants' Mara- zinc. A Certain Cure. Tho habit of drink ing, says the La Crosse Democrat, can be cured by giving the drinkers all the liq uor they want all tho time. That this experiment will prove a success we kuow. It was tried on a whisky-ist in Milwaukee not long since, who after drinking all the liquor' he could hold for two weeks, im agined he saw snakes, devils, Ben. Butler and Thad. Stevens, and jumped out of a four-story window, running a curb stone into his hf:id. Hp. 1ms not. dr.ink a dron siuce nor he wni not the rest of the cen 1 tury t Strained Himself. Ilccently, says the Sacremento Uuion, on Humbug, Sis- kiyouo unty, a canary bird, wlule sinking, suddenly dropped dead. No causo is as- signed, except that the -'sinist" over- done the melodious enthusiasm and rup- turedhis whistle j Hlonueuce Brownlow oratory 1 The Oswego Furnace. -We reccnt- yf passed! down the river to ' Portland roui this! city, and observed that the 'stack" of the'first furnace bein built at Oswego, in this county, by the j Oregon Iron Company, waarapidly assuming large proportions, and gave evident signs of soon Becoming useiui. w .,.;,. .... ii. ., 4iii-nnftn wa iimlnr. I m"lus p ",0" '" . - Kbmd urn Stnrind. ' ' Tt W not be lon-T. . ... . . a- i. . 1 1 however after it "ets into operation, ue- fore this furnace will build others, us- wego is destined to become uie i uif-ourg - . k i i 1 I of this part of America. In rm&burg there are at this time forty-one foundries. e predict that a quarter oi inaiuumoor will be in operation at uswego nisiue oi foundries enmlov an averace of fifty handa each. Where there are such resources , -i - w - I there is something to support the popula- lion. in the tirst ClUSS esiaunuiucma u. - , . . n I 1 ! i .1. i a. a n fftr.nrn 1 tons of metal is used iu a einijle casting. The same can be done at Oswego. e !,,l- fnr l,I.uol.i;iifnPitt, of llollin"' Mills lnf..llA ....fWnr of iron at Os- W VAkVTI i ii v uju iv. ' I wego. The one now being thought of in talifornia must come to us tor iron. There has not been a time since the in- VAIihnn .iT t,.1i;nr Xtilla wliftn tllftir pro- duetionwas create'r needed than atthe present and this modern method of pro- curing the material in Oregon, when ouee fairly under way promises great re- suits. Enterprise. A Model Charue. A Justice of the peace the other day delircred the follow ing harangue to a jury sitting upon a ca.se being tried before him : "If, the jury believe, from the evidence that the plaintiff and defendant were partners in tho trrocery, and that plaintiff bought out tho defendant, and gave his note for the interest, and the ' defendant paid for th note by delivering iu i..v .nu.i,... - ......... tliA v.l.,i,ifitr ft Aritir rlkirii lif Wnrnn. tea not brcachy, and the warranty was broken by reason ofthebreachiness of the cow, and he drove the cow back and ten- dered her to the defendent who refused to receive her, and the plamtilt took her home again, and put a heavy yoke or poke upou her to prevent her from jump-j ing the fence, and by reason of the yolk or polk she broke her neck and died; and if the jury further believe that, the defen- daut's interest iu the grocery was worth auythiug, the plaintiffs note was worth- ess ana the cow good tor nothing, enner for beef or milk, then the jury must find I . r .1- . 1 . I out for themselves how they will decide siderable nonplus how such a case should be exactly decided. "Cowarplt aud contemptible copper iieau is iuc amiauiB iau-;u:i; aui.v i . i, r . .i . T.ii. i . i' . .i . loyal radical newspaper concern in A ton , with reierence to tae jranant coionei Morrison, Democratic candidate for Con- !T(5 on the 12th 1 Ihnois District. Colonel Morrison fbuyht at Fort Don- nelson and in several other engagements, under General Grant. Upon tendering his resignation. Gen. Grant declined to accept ii, ana lurwaruea u iu uie uepari- M. 1 I 1 - 1 T. A Al. - .1 L I- ntant urtfK inn f dlAirtntv Dnr(fri:ntiinnf il V ii V U XII lily IVU IU V. 1- .4 V.,' I ftU Ik U V l;narArttlitnc t.irw-i vilfiil la tha hn-ifl. quarters td the army, not deemms the 1 t aJ- ..... .i. partment commander in accepting a resig nation, except in the case of officers who are detrimental to the service, which can uotbe said of Col. Mernsou. He is one of our best "officers. U. S. Grant, Major General." There appears to be a slight difference trX to the merits of Democratic candidates to Congress. Chicago Times. Vrrmin on FoYfLS. Take a feather and dip it in kerosene, and touch it light ly under the wings, lt will soon spread over the body and destroy vermin. J his is often recommended as an effective remedy. We have not tried it, but should not hesitate to do so if we had oecariou. A better way, perhaps, would be to keep a box of dry ashes for them to dust them selves in. This of itself will enable them to keep ou uie nu.u. aui. ii juu mix into IIIC asncs a lew uunces oi powuereu ku nhnr. it will make a sure thins of it. This won't cost much anyhow and you and you can't do better than to fix up such a box under a shed or in the hen house where the fowls can have free access to it. You will whitewash the henery of course. That ought to be done often, and a lot ot ashes put in frequently.- Mass. Plough man. -r -,.. -r, ,1 "IT ii IF HE la.n t ins mi;. " vvannirron, a newsraner corresponacnt, says: ran- cy twenty-five lhaddeus btevencs in the .. ' House of Kcprcsentatives. It can t be did, says an exchange. The devil has not hell-fire enough in the la. bora tory of hell to manufacture twenty hve ot them, imagination lam to con- ceivc imps tho possibility of twenty-five Such n 3 . l of damnation existing at one and the same time. Ills duplicate has no ex istence neither has Butler the Brute, Moxa tho I often, or Brownlow the Loath- some Guilty Conscience. A Manchester paper tells a story of a gentleman of that city who had led a gay life during a somer What protracted absence Ot his spouse, The cveninjr of her return he requested to i iii i t t be awakened early next mornmg, which she complied with, when the hour arriy- ed, by shaking him soundly, exclaiming: 'John, get up! it is daylight." "Is it?" replied the husband, with a frightened air. 'Good irracious 1 People will see me going away from here,' The Most llEsrECTARLE. We will venture the assertion, without fear of con tradiction, says the Amandor Dispatch, that the two buck negroes recently elected tothe Massachusetts Legislature, were the two most rfisnpftsildfl r.mdidatfts plptrd on tho rump ticket, although they could not have had much seit-respect, or they never wouiu iiae conseuieu io Deeouie ... the representatives Ot SUCH a Corrupt theiy- ing -party. i THE vNLY ONE ALIVE. d hO Only v n? deseendent of Chr stonher Colum- u..-i? - ... rt : a. UU3 lll,'3 lil J.IU111C, U.UU 13 IU VlSlb niut r- ica next year. lip is described as a gen ial man of sixty, ' Hints tq IIousemaids, IJqw to de stroy flies-encourage spidevs. , n.0CKEp;,The Radical she is "seem about this time terribly shocl at the idea of Morrisscy bein-lecte toibn- gressi j They blurt oateir indignation jo no measured tcrmsT We are no great admirer of Morrissey or his kind, but for a r,nrtv vh uh W f.tt. oWa.! th ftrmnn- ui;: i i..-.'-..A t,i 1 1 ' "'8 culler, w w. cauio uvuj, ; a . . -i -t- w vi incize anyone on uie score vi cuarm,-- ter, seems, to say the least a little ab- Bttrj - f "Which ? Contrast the temperate and dignined language of Henry '' Ward , , violent and blasphemous fcarranguea ot lhaddeas Stevens, General LoKan J Governor Curtin, John, W. Forney and laran 11.1 A ioll i.:At. jmoti uiwii. uu iiivu vii n liitu "1 W'CUJ vufcut lu ue euuwwa VJ E0Ber and pure-minded men. NOTSOMCCHOFAN ErBOE. APenn- sylvania .paper recently, speaking of meet- jUg3 ieid by the massea throughout the inbehlU f . principles, was made r ' bJ' tjpograpUical error, to say : "The asses arc holding meetings in the northern part of the state, and arc being addressed bj Oovernor Hamilton and General Simon Cameron." Beginning to "Assail' General Grant. A correspondent of the Boston Commonwealth, Sumner's organ, speaks of General Grant as a "person of limited information and common-place ideas, with. t10Jsome obstinate prejudices, and not a su- perabundance of mtcll gent convictions." Radical Logic. The Radicals tell U3 ... . ... . that l ift .Southerners in thft iAt vr , . . fought to get out of the Union, and that we fought to keep them in the Union, that we whipped them, and therefore the southcrn States are out of the Union. fixe Writing. The New York Da, Xewg EaV3 of tU Y( J " ... .4 lliat lt bas J?one l'ack llke 1 ork Times, the canine J quadruped to the rejected contents of his stomach, or the porcine female to her uth ia fla-d ;m , r General Gleason, of New York, ii pre- paring a claita against the British Got- ernment, to De iorwaraea to asnmgton, for 600,000 for illegal imprisonment in Ireland. i . . . . . . HSPRIXT. A ItadlCal paper m Michl calj3 Doctor j. F. Butler :the . - I Hero of New Orleans." It must be a mi. ?print t for Nero. iIIE ll,(iUT side. the heart or a dissected negro convict at Albany was found on the ruiht side, savs a local nrint. y i;L-fv!v ! J I rr- , , , , . her sword, and she never lets it irrow rus- ty for want of use. WE NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. sons j aces on a hies, dckivvat. DEALERS IS FASHIONABLE MILLINERY GOODS, i;u..fcif, hats, umBoss, Lares, Cloaks, Gloves, Hose, if., It , if -ALTERIXG,- BLEACHING AND PRESSING Dena on short notice, and at The Most Reasonable Prices. jr?-STORE at the Corner of First and Broad Albin Streets. Albany, Orejron. uoT24ril56ni I. O. O. F. npiIERS will be regular meetings of tho Degre. j vl ltcbcera. on every Friday Tning at 7 t t- jin .r Albany Los-de :So. 4, I. O. O. F., over Noroross Store. Brothers and Sis ters ia good standing are invited to attend. E. S. MERRILL, X. G. M. L. JIaex, Secy. , . nlitf "W O 3XT 3D E 33,111 THE GREATEST WONDER DF THF WflRim DR, nillCCS' GREAT EXTRAORniNORY NFW mm 1 . . .. . ..... wwwi m 1 onnr a slow picte omae tor the I If . ir .- .1 r. j." i Greatest nnd Mot Magiml lirttpe o Nineteenth VcHtHry, tehich ay oftke can realize o tfeaay per aimiu.i. C3IPLOTMEXT FOR EVERY OXE. Or HOW TO MAKE MOXEYj Ehraf'J) lMe Iteeipe for 3anf,ctnrert f l-frl Arttele j General Demand, ' aid from the ,aie of - mente rirnjits may be de ritea. The Great Secrets revealed. 'I have collcetcd with great care, labor, asd with great expense. many valuable receipts, which ara in themselves sidendid fortune ta nnv ono with nfSiiont friMfT to push ahead. Most of them have been obuined "Tfu s .7 avC0 a"lJerKny. th eostof wllilo tL othcrs are Jcntirely nevr anJ a !L purchased at a large cost, ranging frora $5 to- 5l'00(l.cach;.,A rroa of ordinary tact caa maka I irom ?o 10 iiv pur dav. ia tuo mannfaeturo and , jalo oftbo hvl'J.nv JS' These aTticks are old at taormoua profit Why not make them yourself ? if not for sale, for your n in tvv; (uvtii ivi vur uwn iual-) vidua! usp would save vou niaiiT dollars a vear. and materially abd to yol-r beautt." nc urn ASD WEALTH. , -. ... .'i.; ;.::.:; i I will send this wonderful Book bv paid, to any post offioeof California aud U. S., for . $1. Address all orders to DR. C. BRIGGS, nol"nl41y P. O. Drawer 6308, Chicago, 111. $1,000 $1,000 Sl.OCQ HE W AUDI! lO'DOR O'DOR! O'DOR' . "r. u j.uk to lorce a wAitTtavT av finrmv . - -"- oeauuiui set or Whiskers or Moustaches to. i L' un tin rim Rmrmrnncr j . . . i. " rv 1 . B . . 1U iro,w aye to eignt , ,i.i. uam ueu.ua in Cism woeks. Proved bv tho tostimnnioi r 1 "co six lor and $9 per dojen. Seat to, r f 1 -s., scaled and post-. W reeeipt ot pnee. Address. . DR. C. BRIGGS, nol t nltly p. 0. Drawer, 6308, Chicago, 111. WAIVTJED.'.' EOGS, EGGS. ASH pnid oa delivery, for anv amount of ,V Eggs, by. R. CUEADLE. Jl lit IS ad I U a ill 3U3 ally' in il T "