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About The state rights democrat. (Albany, Or.) 1865-1900 | View Entire Issue (June 16, 1871)
'raooaf. ..JUNE 18, tSTl. ALIO AL PLANS. from the Hittertngs of 'gpapers that the chief ext National Radical be fcn the finances, as io mase; great capiuu ?iorta vbic atp being . a 'i m tnatfu irom tne xrensury If is highly "prekatle Jnciu carpenter Boutwell Eat' th, plank' 'of which. ft 1 J- repad for him. to stand force of ojrcumstance3 will from unclep his feet and place ft upon it. Not that the great if knows anrQiatig about national Any other finance, except the addi- f n of charitable; contributions to hia irate income, yet he will be made Je honorable example, just as Queen ictona is cauea uie x-eieuuer ui ujb Faith, as was the libertine and infidel King "George IV. and other monarchs -whose -Dietv was as auestSonabld .as i ' the financial acuteness tf the great Xlysse3. Let tis see if the claim of the Radicals to a wise man agement of the national finances is one worthy of the praise they ex pect and the reward they wish. . Of the two hundred millions and .more of the debraid. little more tb&a-the interest oa one hundred millions has ceased. About three-ninths of the should be credited to the sinking fund, where iher interest is from sim ple to compound and about one- ninth goes to pay premium on bonds purchased. Though the people here after will feel the benefit, we of the present day only get J the benefit of the liquidation t that portion of the debt on which the interest ceases, Then, where does this money come from to enable the Treasury Depart ment to pay a hundred millions jear of debt? Mr.. Boutwell is not a magician. He cannot call this- vast sum. from- the Jxwels of the earth. It comes from the pockets of an over-burdened pec pie It is wrung unnecessarily from the industry of the country. The pit-s ent generation . which has borne the affliction's weight, and an enormous expenditure in ' the most exhausting war of modern times, is called upon to bear continual and unnecessary hardens simply to enable the Secre tary of the Tteasury, the President and party in power to boast of pay ing a large amount of debt. To come down to the naked truth, that is why the people have been taxed about four hundred million dollars a year, when three hundred millions or less would haTe been sufficient to cover the current expenses of government, the interest on the debt and an ample surplus for the sinking fund or liqui dation of the debt. In fact, the rev enue of the government ought not to exceed a hundred and fifty or a hun dred and sixty millions. - , This enormous income is required, however, to be kept up in the interests of the Massachusetts Protective School. A plea of necessity is raised that foreign manufacturers may be taxed and, the price of home manu facturers raised. - Besides which a surplus revenue is a very useful thing to have in the house, and a great many neat little Radical jobs can be paid for with it. Offices can be kept' up as venal rewards to faithful syco phancy, and these considerations teach the Badical administration not to kill, if they can help it, the aurif erous public goose. Thet Should bs Consistent. Sen ator Morton and other Republican leaders, in their ideas of reconstruc tion, are loud in their clamors for a free ballot to the blacks, and. in or der to equalize this, they, at the same time, propose to disfranchise four million of whites. "We can account for such a course as this only upon the hypothesis that they regard them selves the intellectual equal of the Southern black man, but unable to cope with the superior intelligence of tli a 'whites. :; If these universal suf frage shriekers would be in favor of o . ... ...... the whie man as well as the black, withdraw their military , from the election polls of the Southern States, and run their chances in a free elec tion, a defeat upon this plan would not be unconstitutional, even were it attended with disgrace, while upon the plan proposed ; for ; conducting elections . down ' there, a " success ' would be both unconstitutional . and disgraceful. ; . '. a ; -i : , jHobace Gbesxt is now making a tour of the Southern States and is : being received and treated with great civility and even distinguished honors by the people of the South. iHe has accepted, an invitation to deliver an address before an Agricultural ' Soci- ty in Texas.- is not tne iact oi the bitterest assailant of the toutb going among that people and being hospitably received the strongest ref utation of those Ku-Klux lies that could be made? - - i - .; . The lawyers of Portland have about as hard a time to capture Holladay and get him to attend to the law suit now pending as BiU Watkins has in his pursuit of Shultz. Both Ben. and Shultz are said to be the cham pion bushrangers of the world. ... : - LY. A dispatch from Bosfchurg, Doug las cunty, dated last Sunday, gives the following account (of a terrible encounter between the! newspaper publishers of that place: There was a terrible affray this morn ing alKiut 10 o'clock between Thomas aiui Henry Oale of the Jliteiffn, and Win. mommon. editor or tile I'lam- deater. It occurred In fronts of the Pontortlce. It Is Impossible yt-Ktotell who shot first. The ouarrel nrosA out of a newspaper article. Thotnrwotivi shot in thrco places, through the facc una noes ana uirouU inc eiiouiuor ana his side grazed by a bullet. Thotnaa Gale U Hhot through Uie breast. The wound 1 dangerous If hot fatal. Hen ry uaie is beaten over tne Head wltn a revolver and badly hurt. The wounds of Thompson and Thomas Gale are dangerous, it Is sam by everybody that saw the aflYay that Thomas Gale shot lint. ;. . . .: . Subsequent advices inform us that all of the parties will probably recover, and that the Gale brothers have been arrested for being the assaulting party. ' : , This is a lamentable affair and one which should he deeply regretted by all good citizens. For some months past a bitter and acrimonious person al warfare has been persistently go ing on between the Ensign and Plain dealer, and this bloody conflict is the result. Would it , not be better for newspaper conductors to temper their discussions with moderation and to entirely discard this personal style of attack which has rnfortunate- ly become so common in our State as to entitle us to the unenviable criti cism ofalmost the entire journalistic world? Because an individual is ed iting a newspaper is no more reason why his private character Ehouhl be assailed than if he were pursuing r ny other legitimate occupation in life , and it is certainly in bad -taste as well as extremely reprehensible to prostitute the profession to such base uses. It is not the strongest sort of argument to call a "brother quill" a liar because you and he are antipodes in politics, neither does it conduce to that elevation which should be the exalted standard 'of every editor in the land to persistently attack the sacred citadel of private character for those political differences which rightfully belong to every ", citizen and to drag into the journalistic arena those acts and motives which belong alone to the individual and hot to the public. It is high time that the disreputable ' Oregon i Style" were a thing of the past and 11' I A fiat the profession would utterly ig nore and discountenance any attempt to revive so base and reprehensible a pratice. A PEACE PLESIDEST WA3T3 WAB. It has already been satisfactorily proven by the ablest jurists in the land that the Ku-Klux Force Bill is unconstitutional. There never was so glaring a departure from tho fun damental law of the land fas this measure presents, nor one which must receive such universal condem nation. When the President said Iet us have peace," every heart in the land echoed the sentiment and a majority of the people were weak enough to place confidence in this utterance and to believe that it was the true echo fronx the inmost heart of the new Presidtmt. Has be veri fied that opinion? No one dare honestly and intelligently assert that he has, but instead, we see him urg ing upon his party in Congress the passage of a bill whose only real pur pose is to secure his own renomina tion as a candidate for the- Presiden cy, and whose expected consequence is to promote hostile feelin g, aliena tion, antagonism, and conflict be tween citizens of the South a nd citi zens of the North. Instead of riming at peace, Gen. Grant, and the ma jority who have obeyed his dict ates in Congress, aim at war. Instead (of endeavoring to produce order, hrJ mony," friendly and patriotic senti ments between the geographical di visions of the Union, they endeavor to fan into the fire the dying remains of the old contest. It is impossible to exaggerate the wickedness of such conduct. What punishment could be too great for men who, merely to carry on an elec tion, : b'ght anw . the firebrands of civil discord, and who are ready to jeopard , the peace, the prosperity, and the happiness of the country as a means of controlling its voters? Asotheb Editoh Shot. Last Wed nesday W. H. Watkins, Superinten dent of the Penitentiary, cowbided and shot S. A. Clark, . editor of the Salem Statesman, for the publication of an offensive newspaper article. The shot was only a glancing one and did no material hurt. Mr. Watkins was arrested and held to ; bail in $1,000. This thing of shooting edi tors is becoming monotonous, and i e enter our protest against any shoot ists coming up this way. v .-V "Bbkk". Pomeeoy's very private. . The wedding was bride,' Mrs. Luisa M. Thomas, received a dowry of $75,000. Mrs. Pomeroy , has for some time contributed to Pomeroy' s Democrat, over the signature of "Elm Orlou.",, : The wedding trip will be overland to the Pacific. Charles E. Fritcher, Mr. Pomeroy's private Sec retary, , married a daughter of Judge Keeler, of Bloomington, New York, at the same time. . . ,- V At the . Lexington (Ky.) races on May 22d, a 3-year old colt made the best . time in : America by a horse of that age ne mile in 1 :43. , A BLOODY THE DOOM OF TEE MUBDI&ESS. It is interesting to' observe the capricious , flutterings of ' public opinion in the case of Mrs. Fair. While the murderess was on trial, and during the exciting and disgrace ful scenes of that memorable occa sion, the almost universal sentiment was that she ought to suffer the ex treme penalty of the law in expiation of her foul crime. Now, however, 11 M wnen tne stern nat nas been pro nounced and the appalling specter of the gibbet looms into view for the performance of its ghastly work, that publio opinion that was erstwhile clamorous for blood shrinks back with, horror and already protests against the inexorable mandate of retributive justice.' While we be lieve that it is always reprehensible to demand the punishment of the accused before a legal conviction is obtained by a fair and impartial trial, we also hold that it is fundamentally wrong to murmur at the course which events necessarily prusue in bringing the felon to her doom and vindicat ing the majesty of the law; and, therefore, however awful it may seem to us to contemplate the fast ap proaching and ignominious death of a woman upon the scaffold, yet where the ends of justice demand it, we deem it tho duty of all good citizens to.acquiesce. Because Mrs. Fair is a woman is no valid reason why she should go unwhipt of justice, and her crime is no less palliative for reason of her stricken mother or bereft or phan. While we pity them we must loyally bow to the majesty of tho law and let the demands of justice be sat isfied by that stern retribution which can be content with no less than the criminal's execution. D.lXCEUOtS lUtUCCDEXTS. "Carl Scfrurz uoJcrctaoJs batter than do svuie Auicricaos wo wot of aod the uore the abaute to them tho danger thero is in iuveatiag a military leader with unconstitutional powers uudcr the supposition that lie can bo trusted. No free people ohould allow such precedent to be ret. Says tho Iiouri Senator: Give him riches with a Iavih Jiand; cover hint all over with gold; sreep him with luxuries; but let not jour grati tudo to one make you unmindful of your duty at all. I beseech you, let not grat itude neduce you to thruw tho law of the republic at his iaco. No nation deserves to be free and great, no nation will remain free and great nay, mr that nation has already cca.cd to be free nod great, that will pay a debt of gratitudo nt the expense oi its cou.slitutiooal right and liberties. Let this fir?t precedent of acquies cence iu bo act of usurpation by a suc cessful ftoldser pas iuto our liUturj, aud you will have struck a blow &t the causa of free government that will resound throughout the earth. The nations of the world will a.-k: Have tho Aineri can people become to tired of their con xtitutional rights that the guardiaus of the Constitution can permit tbem to be invaded not only with impunity, Lot eveD without a remonstrance? The ques tion will be repa'aed. Is it true, then what ao frequently has been mid, that the United States issued from their Sot revolution as a Republic not only by accident, an accident depeuuin upon the sublimely unselfish spirit of Wash ington, who iiMtead of gra?piog the crown, modVstly retired to the plow of Cincinnatns? JSat, on the other hand, you vindicate tho constitution against the President, a President of your own choice aod the world will understand that in this Republic at least no man can grow so great as to overtop the majesty of the laws, that here at least Republican institutions are cafe, for they are in the keepiog of men who "know their rights, aud, knowing, daro main tain." , This country built about ten thou sand miles of railroad lost year. This required one million tons of iron. The duty on this iron amounted in round numbers to $15,680,000. In 1870 the revenue derived from for eign railroad iron was $4,630,507.24, gold. There remains therefore, over $11,000,000 to be accounted for. It unmistakably goes into the pockets of the iron ring and out of the pock ets principally of the people of the northwest. This is what , Horace Gjeley calls protecting American industry. What bald nonsense! : Ajiotheb Nepotic Cess. The Bose bury Ensign a Bepublican , paper is afUr one of Grant's office-holders and gL'fc enterprise men in the follow ing style: "' v There L complaint at Eugene of the new. Surveyor General, as he has made the lA.nd Office there a "family concern," running it in the interest of his own dear t nd needy relatives. The old lady is the only one in the family "out of office," and it is supposed the new Gen. will t oon give her a con tract. The citize ns there would like it well if a Surveyor General could be appointed who bad no needy relatives The State of Wisconsin has abol ished the grand jury sstem, the act to take effect on the 1 et of J uly.- The propriety of dispensing with this detective institution , htvs often been discussed ia various States, but this is the first instance in wl ich the op ponents of the grand jury system have ' succeeded in can ving out their views. The Wisconsin experi ment will be watched with A good dealof interest. George D. Prentice is . buried in Cave Hill Cemetery, near Louisville, a small Grecian canopy resting on four columns above his grave, with an urn in the center, and on the tap a lyre with a broken string. He lies; beside his son, Courtland Prentice, who was killed near - Augusta, Ky. during the war, while fighting pn the xebel side. . PACIFIC! COASTERS. Kalutna is nearly inondufod. ' Portland election next Monday. Yakima county filling up rapidly. Railroad grading south of Kugene. Peach crop in W'unco county is floe. Portland is to have that l'luza munio again. Strappod strangers sleep on Portland wharvort. Portland oitizens pay 850,080 a year for water. - Steunitntit fare from Portland to As toria, 50 cents, 1 The distinguished Irish exilos oro to visit Portland. ' Oregon loss ne Asylum has a crazy Chinese inmuto. Mrs. Ramsey, in Salcui, has 14 ehil dren, all living. State Temperance Convention meets at Salom to-day. A boy nearly bitten to daath by a dog in Portland. The deaf mute school iu Salem has bocooio a success. : ,; Enoch O. Adams has retired from the Vancouver lleyUter. Mrs. Fair's death warrant has been signed by the Governor, Jas. C. Perxoa, an influential citizen of the Dulles, died last week. Ochoeo will receive targe accessions to its population this season. Mrs. lielle W. Cook, of Salem, has published a book oi poems. Veterans of the Mexican War will celebrate the 4th in Portland. Mrs. Fair's trial cost her $20,000 and Sun Franoisco county $5. 000. Tho Grand Lodge of Good Templars is in session it Salcui this week. Some parties have been arrested for burning Wells' house in Yamhill. 'Lish Applegate is offered 80,000 to caovass California fur tho Radical. Ou last Thursday week a man killed his brother-in-law in San Fraucisco. A Caucasian slapped a colored dead issue's face in Portland on Monday. Sheriff Green, of Pacific county, W. T., is a defaulter and has skedaddled. A farmer's wife in Southern Oregon mews the hay and don't want to vote. Aokeny's new barn in Marion coun ty is to eontaio 105,000 feet of lumber. Democrats of Portland were to nom inate their city candidates last cveniag. Thtro were 6,000 acres of flax seed sown in the WilUmetto Valley Lut fall. Two vessels are on the wsy from Chios to Portland, filled with Chinamen. Another ship load of Yankee girls will soon be brought to the Pacific coast. Chat, Pope, an old and influential reMdont of Oregon City died last Sun day. There were 59 delegates to the Good Templar's Grand Lodge in Salem this week. The editor of the Baker City Demo crat has been shown a gold brick worth $4,000. Wednesday a ship sailed from Port land for England with 40,154 bushels of wheat. The railroad carries delegates to the Masonis Grand Lodge next week lor half fare. , The little daughter of Joseph Miller, of Jefferson, was badly burned last Wednesday. The aoonal session of the Central Baptist Association was held at Wacon ds last week. . . An soli-Mormon party has been formed in Utah to clean out Bn'gham and polygamy. James Ccssnlman, of Douglas county, was kicked to death by a horse, so uys the Plaindcalcr. There were 1,000 persons at the Southern Methodist campmeetins at Dixie last Sunday. Two human skeletons have been dis covered in a cave , in Douglas county. The Enrijn tells it. A young lady at Oroville, Cat., was last week murdered by her lover because she refused to marry him. The Democratic officers of Doughs county have paid off its debt and have $2,500 in the treasury. It is believed i hat the N. P. R. R. will be built from . Kaiama to Paget Sound the present year. The campineeting of the Christians began at Dixie,' Polk county, yesterday, and will last two weeks. Shultz, the great robber, has escaped from the Oregon Penitentiary. Anoth er prisoner skedaddled with him. They each had cn a 24-tb fhacklo. . Frank King, of Yamhill county, was charged of an attempt at rape and came near being mobbed, but got away. J. B. V. Butler, of Monmouth, has just completed the sale of 20,000 bushels of wheat to Allen & Lewis, of Portland. Two boys, aged respectively 14 and 12 years, sons of Lindon White, were drowned in tho Santiam last Thursday week. ': The Republican Clerk of Tillamook county says be never raids Democratic newspapers. : II o is certainly an intel ligent voter ! Thos, Crois, of Sulem, has received from the East 85 head of Cotswold and Leicester sheep, and 8 head of full blooded Berkshire hogs. . ' F. R. Hill offers a premium at the next State Fair to the boy who has got up before sun-rise every .morning for a year past. Wake up, boys I . Ben. Holladay talks about bnying a house in Corvallis, and the editor of tho Gazette already bloviates about that city being the great railroad center of the Pacific. , , . - Tho Salem 'Statesman says Judge Boise intends to withdraw hta demurrer to the contest made for the Judgeship jn this dUtrict, and permit Bonham to tike it by default, a; tho easiest way to wind up his official relations.. This in sures that Boohatn will bd Judge. , Hackney, who escaped from the Pen itentiary with Shultz, was reeapturcd on French Prairie and is now back in his old quarters. 1 Work on tho California and Oregon Railroad will bo resumed next woek, and it Is designed to complete the road to Cottonwood, Shasta county, Cat., .before winter.",:' .' , ' , In a war of races in Oregon City an Indiuo busted a Heathen Chinee with a whisky bottle. Tho , heathen is ndw a "dead issue," and tho "ab'rogwine" took a "new departure." Following are the Repuplican candi dates for Cuuucilmco ot Portland : First Ward,E. M. Burton ; Second Wurd, J. M. Caywoodt Third Ward, W. Lair Hill and R. G. Cmnls. Shultz, the escaped coovict, is at it again having stolen a bale of wool and the Salem ferry bontja'st Saturday. We expect to hear of hint stealing the editor of the Statesman next. Mrs. Dunniway's paper urges the "lady citizens of Portland to orgauizo a Water Company," as she believes they can furnish Letter water at lower rates than the present cum puny furnishos. Last Saturday a couple of men named Ames and Rustou met on the bridge in East Portland, a quarrel ensued, when Rustou shot Ames, and Ames threw Ruston over tho bridge into ten-feet water. Tho latter was fi -lied out by some bystanders, and lodged iu jail to await the conxequeuco of tho shot, which took effect in Ames' abdomen, aod may prove fatal. IIki'I'diatks Vali.isukjiiam. The Butler County I)rmtcrat. heretofore re garded as Yalaudigbotu'a special orwan, repudiates tho resolution offered by that gentleman at tho Montgomery county convention, and subsequently adopted by tho Democratic Stato Convention. Referring to these resolutions, tho Dem ocrut has tho following: "These new 'Departure Democrats' are sorely in need of straight jackets; they are surely demented gone crazy. Their ucw departure' has carried theui into auch deep water that they will all drowo, ami no one will caro much if the waves of oblivion will roll over them forever and forever. Why should these 'new departure men' now throw a bomb shell to distract the party. We have been steadily gaining in all tho States since 1805. We should have swept tho country at no distant period. This last piece of folly will loe us ten democrat where it will gain us one republican." Modestt ExEMPunEU. A dixpatch dated at New York latt Saturday, says: "General Sherman addressed a let ter to the editor of the Herald, stating that he bad a deep-seated antipathy to politics, and he never has been, a caudidateior the,l'rtaducyj that it nominated by either party he would peremptorily decline, aud even if unanimously elected he bhould de cline to serve." The gallant marcher to the .sea need scarcely lose any sleep or fret his gizzard about the Presidential nomination nobody wants him-1 ex cept the New York Herald, and it never succeeded in nominating even a drain age commissionex. No portion of citizen have a right to dictate ami force other citizen to vote ojt they do. or not vote ut all. To this pronohiUoii nil good, reasonable men will agree. torvauta uazette. Then our friend of the Gavile, in order to maintain a reputation for "goodness and reasonableness," must admit that the 14th and 15th amend ments are illegal and void because the people of the Southern States were forced to adopt them to gain admission to the Union. , The Late J. M. Masos. Henry A. Wise explains the death of J. M. Mason, of Virginia, thus: "The dis asters to the South, the wounds to his pride, the aching agony of seeing all Lis hopes of liberty, self-govern ment and State rights blasted, the desecration of sacred things and the devastation and demoralization he witnessed on coming home, were too much tenbion on the nerves of an aged man of delicate sensibilities and arroud sense of honor, and he collapsed. The telegraph' tells us that Grant will visit Oregon in August. He comes in company with Ex-Senator Williams. All presents designed for him may be addressed to Portland with express charges prepaid. "Boick" Pomebot was lately pre sented with a solitaire diamond ring worth $1,5G0 in gold by the employes of Pomeroy's Democrat. The presen tation was made by Mr. F. G. Tis dall, Masonic editor. , , The Ueatuen Chinee. A Califor nia paper thinks the Chinese settlements in tho coast towns ot that state are lay ing up for the Pacific elopo one of those pestilences which every now and then desolate the Orient. According to the account the health officers in utter des pair of forcing anything like oloanliness or decency upon the Chinese quarters, have given up those parts of the towns to an unrestrained nun, immorality and squalor, and while so far the healthful sea breezes nave averted any great dan ger, one warm season would send i scourge abroad to extend throughout the land, , laat such a season may be expected is argued from the fact that the climate on the coast of California is perceptibly changing to one ef calmness and greater neat, laking tais circum stance into account with the fact that the Chinese immigration was the third in extent last year, soniethiog over olev en thousand Celestials1 seeking ' Califor nia, it can be seen that the journal from which this hint of the eooiing pestilence iu the track of the coniing man uderiv ed has some reason fyr U fears, .' NEWS OF THE WEEK. Gleaned From the Telegraph. Friday, June 9. fORElON. ; Tho nlmwuie of the murdered Arch bixhtip iMrlxty took place at Paris tn Jay, with great pomp. There were other im posing funerals to day over the remains of priests. Thiers favors a Republic, The cause of the insurrection i charged to Napoleon's corruption of 300,000 work men in Paris. DOMESTIC, The National Printers Union, in nomion in IJrtltioii.rtv voted to hold tho next Con vention at Hichmond, Va. The colored strikers occaoioned a big row ia WaNhint4in, hut hare been quieted. They ought to ho Ku Kluxed. Ut!ti. Thos. J. ll.Jmiin, of the U. S. A., dii'J at Itouk Inland, Ills., yetenhiy. Yt;ntrilHy lSriloim Young drovo the Ana spike nt Stilt Luke City, in the Utah South H'eMcru JUilrond. Saturday, June 10. ' VOREION. In Paris Marquis Gitlliflat was asKassi tinted by the widow of one of the Com inuniMt shot by bin orders. 5 Oho hundred houses in flames in Con stantinople. r tun co elections to come ofT 2d July. iJOMKSriC. In tho New Hampshire Legislntnre t1i Democrats are jubilmit over securing the orniiixation of tho llnuae. A w lulling verl and 40 sailors were lost off lew ruuiulluinJ, May 21. Iupt. Hall Arctic esnloriition steamer "Polurw" will sail for the North Pole on 2Jih June. . F. M. Mi:Cnrtne. I)il,uriri'r Acentof the U. H. rl Office Department nt Wash ington, is a Uetuuller to tho amount of Twelve steam engines sre throwing out ino water irom new urieiin. Monday, June 12, t'oUMUN. Prince Napolenn is a candidate for. tho r rt-ncli AMt'iiiily from Cornea. Knglinli Parliament tin panned a Ku Klux bill to Im enforced in Ireland. The French capital to be moved from Versailles to Paris. DOMESTIC. Wenton, (Demoi-rut) was elected Cover nor of New iliunro-hire by the Leginlature yentcrday. The (leinocrnu are jutilftting. Ada graduated at nest Point Mili tary School to-day. J here was a turrilde tornado in Iowa City to-day ; houe were unroofed and partly deinolmlied ; crops of fruit tree were badly damaged, and man wa re ported killed. The extent of the damage cannot be ascertain! at preeent. A eteamer with a careo of 17.000 seal skin lia been crushed ia an iceberg off Kunian America. The niggers have let on on their strike at Washington. The monkeys i.i Iiarnum'a uiucutn will strike nest for more i.ennuu. Hear Admiral Golds'ioroueh and Our dun will retire from the L S. Navy. rruteor Agaxxis and Mill, of Cam bridge Univerniijf will shortly uil for the I '-ilio cast tu make scientific souiicir.gii. The statue erected to Morse, the invent or of telegraphing, m unveiled at New lork on baiurday, with appropriate cere monies, telegraph wira all ever tne United State wers at work at oi.ee to imv tribute to Mre. Tnosday Jana IX ro&Eioy. The B inepart'mU expect to carry the French election. . The Prince Imperial will be put forward as a candidate for the Assembly. - ftnrvlng Parisians have killed and eaten 50 children. Destroyed buildings in Paris are being rebuilt. Ilnrvet prospect in France and Prussia are div;ouraiiig. DOMESTIC. Foreign Governments won't invest in our new national loan. Yellow fever subsiding in Buenos Avres. South America. A woman who was handling a nistol in S.m Francisco, accidentally diwharged it, shooting one of her fingers wfl and killing her husband instantly. Five hundred Chinamen were burned nlive in a vecl which .was brinirin: them from China to San Francioco. A veel arrived at Son Francisco yes terday from China with 1,000 Chinamen; 500 mure are vn the way in another ship. Abolition op the HoNEraoox. The Princess Louise and the Mar quis Lome were married on a Tues day, and after luncheon the happy pair drove off to Claremont. the country-seat where they are to live bile residing in England. If this had been the marriage of a builder to a dressmaker the etiquette of so ciety in England (aud here) would have compelled the new raau and wife to co away, somewhere, for a mouth, and not presume to return home ono hour sooner. Not so ia the Lome affair. Married on Tues day, the happy, two-in-one were vis ited by Queen Victoria on Thursday, returnee, lue visit at Windsor on Saturday, and on the following Tues day appeared in public in London. 1 nis is a novelty nighty admired by John Bull. To say nothing of the increased expense of livining a whole month in hotels and so on and after marriage, to say nothing of any 'pos sible disarrangement of the husband's affairs by such a long absence, and the almost certainty of young people becoming tired to death of each oth er, by being too much together dur ing four weary weeks, this honey mooning will either go out of fashion or be limited to three days at most. Even in this short time of mutual "spooning" a good deal of ennui may be created. The honeymoon is -done with, for it bath become unfasliion- able. ' The Republicans ot Marshall ounty, Iowa, have uorainated Miss Ahbie Gil ford for School Superintendent, believ ing that she will nil the office better than any man. , Nearly 1,000,000 copies of the novels of Mary J. Holmes have ,been printed, and Charleston & Co., : her ; publisher, will issue in a lew days her new book, "Millbaok." : ' , ; : The strongest propensity io woman's nature, says a careful student of the sex, is to want to know, what is going on, and the next strongest is to boss the job. ! . .-., -'.-4.:, i-.V ;;:: ' The world or to-day laugh a at the therapeutivs of filty years ago. Blistering tbe bead, emptying tbe veins, and rasping the bowels with eatharticks a irritating si obeatnuU bnrra, will loun be consigned by univeraal con tent to tbe limbo of rejected fallaoie. In tbe meantime Da. Walskh's Vikrsab Birrsha, the true ally of Naturo, are efll-eting by a miid and painless proven, such cure of dyspepsia, liver eomp ftint and periodieal fever, as the world half a century ago would have deemed miraculous.-. .-,': : --J' (f CORVALLIS COLLEGE. fJMIE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE BOARD I of Tru.toua of Corvallia Culleee will oon- vene on TuesditY, June 27. 1S71. at. 10 a. . ' A full attendance of the Board is xarnenUy desired, SPECIAL NOTICES. A Clwptcr of Facts. 8pnre Is vnlnnMa In a tiewKpoj.cr, sod it Is therefor prnpoKcl in tVi adventeemcnt to con- dun I'd a variety f ttctt, Import mi l the yah lie, Into a smalt Cumpns. tbvtt fwU refer to Hottetter's Btutnach Dittcr tv'iat Ihut tclebrn tod nied'elne U, and what it wlil do. In the flrt plnee, then,' tbe article i ' ftimulnnt. tooiff and alterative, enirln ef a eomMimilun of an fibroin ti ly pare pirltau syent with the inont valuiiMe medicinal vego'alilo tibtnc ihnt !otnie reeunreh lis placed at the dUpnsal of the ebemlut and tbe phyaician. Tiienejiigrre dionU are eotnpoonded with great esro, and In meb proportion as to produce preparation which Invigorate" without exciting the general jritetn, and tone, regniotoa and e mrol the utomneb, the buwela, the liver, and tLe minor accretive organs. What this groat rcntoratire will do moat he gathered from what it hiia dune. The cane of dyp'pM, or any other form of Indigestion, in wbiah it bat been perainiit!y adinlnbitcred without efTuetlog a radical eare.is fvtlu be beard from, and the name may be !d of billoua ditor ders, Intermittent fever, nervous aCfittVinn, gen era) debility, eonsllpatlon, aiek headacbe- eien Ul il.hliitim to wbinb the feeble v,' flbjeet. It parifiel all tbe fluida of the b' jgHTbeteding tha blond, and the gentle atimntna, wMi:b 'te- Im pttrl to the nervnna ayrtpm i not anpeded ty the atigbtent reaction. Tbia I chapter of facia which readers, for their own aakra, ahoaid mark and remember. ' 1 WILLIAM DATIDSOX, REAL ESTATE DEALER Offico No. 64 rroat Street, POBTLASD, OBE'JOX. UEAL ESTATE io tbla CITY aed EAST PORTLA.N'U, in tbe tooat deairalde inealitiea. roi.aiatiog of LOTlJ, JJAT.F JiLOCK.-i and ULOCKtj, llOL'rttri end SlOR.hH; aUo, IMPJtOVED FAKMS, and ralaable tin cultlratwl ttASM, located in ALL psru of tbe STATK for SALE. REAL ESTATE and other Property por ehaaed fur Curreipondenu, io this CITY ad tbronghont tbe STATE.- and TEttJ'.ITOKIKS, with great eare aod oa the mutt AUVASTA OtOL'ii 1KH-M&. IIOCSEPI and STOKE LEASED. LOASS KKOOTIATEP, aod CLAIMS OF ALL UK.SCKIITIOXS PKOMKTLV COLLECTED. And a Ucncral FINANCIAL aud AGEXCV bVSlXZSS transactod. f . AGENTS of tbU OFFICE fa all tbe CIT IES and TOW.Vtf in th KTATK, wUI receive dcaeriptiooa of FARM PUOPEKTY and forward too aawe Ut tbe above addrea. . v6o26lf. The, Plf KiM-ra" may jnatly be atyled tbe great medicine f the world, for there to bo re giuo of tbe globe into wticb it baa tint found ne way, aud been largely awl and highly prized. Moreover, tbera ia no clime to which it ba- Dot proved to be well ad.ted f-r the eare of a eouidcrai!e variety of dUeaiefi it i a edy and afeeraedy for burn, aealda. eula, broic, woonda and variooa other iojuriea, a well aa for dyarntery. diarrhoea and bowel ccm pUinia generally, it ia admirably aaited for every race of meu oa tbe face of tbe cb'He, It ia a very aicniSrant fact-thai nutwitbatand ing the Ions periud of yeara that tbe "I'ain Kill er" baa brra befura thwwrM. it ta wrer loaf one wbit of ita popolsrity. but, on tba contrary, the call fr it baa ateadily increaaed from iu Or dlreovrrv, and at wv preriimf lime haa the drmand for it bsen so great, or tbe quantity madu bres a largr-, aa it ta to-day Another atguifieant fjrt i, that nowhere ha tbe Paia Killer ever been in biphtr repute, or twen mute seneraliy aaed by-familiea aud iiitli vidoala. than it baa been bore et home, where il waa fir.t di.eorrri.-d and intrHlued. That tbe ! rain Killer will continue tn be, what we tiave atyltd it. vna eaear MBOiriae or run vai.r. there cannot be tbe shadow of a doobt Provi 4ftn AHeerliaee. - - " Trie originator of Ibis wonderful medieine, claim to have discovered and c-mbintd im kar oy more of A'ature't momt aorerrfya medical properties than waa ever before combined in one medicine. Tbe evidence of tb is fact is found in tbe great : variety of mt obstinate disease which it has beea found to eonqaee. la Uieonre of llrauckili; Seem Coigkt, end tbe early sta ges of CoHtH-jitiun, it baa aatooiabed tbe medical laculty, ana hundred of the bed iihyieiaa pro- nouncod it ti yrcareW mejical tiacveery oIAa ag. Arhile it cares tbe severest Cough, it strengthen tbe system and purifies tho Mood. rjy lb grunt ana tAo-oMO blood purtfmima fro- ern'r it eare all Ummor from the Worst eroW tn to a common Mulch, I'impU or Eruption. aicrcurial il'Sease. Jleueral Fuisuna. tvibilite and veoerai diaeaaes, and their efiVete are eradi cated aud riguroam healid aud a aoead coif (loueataldished. Erynipeta; Sail Krtmm, Scald Head, Freer Sore; Sculy or llongk Ski, in suurt, ell the numerous diaeaaea caused by bad blood, are conquered by this powerful purifiiog and.invigoralion medicine For 'Liver Complaint," JJiliom I) i tor derm anh Habitual Coumtipation. it bas produced huodroda of perfect and permanent euret where other medicine bad failed. The proprietor oners I ,U00 leward for a medi eine that will equal it in tbe cum of all the dis eases lor which it is recommended. Beware of eomntereitt and tcorlhlett imiaalionf gee that my private Government Stamp, wbicb it a - re guarantee of 0'tnmiMeHett. is open tbeouuide wrapper, unit medicine is Sold 6 DrvnK'lt at tl. 00 per bottle. Prepared by R.V. PIERCK. Sole Proprietor, at his Chemical Labratory, 133 Seneca street, Buffalo, N. Y. -' NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. ICE!! ICE! ICE! IJ'oi- tlio Million! ICR SALE BT LEBANON ICE CO., AT ; Portland rates, delivered in Albany. Or- aers tolioited. . ; . n44w4 SIXTH ANKIVEKSAUY OF CORVALLIS COLLEGE FRIDAY, JUNE 23 Primary Examination 1 A. w. to 4 P. T, ' ' ' - '' SUM AY, JUNE 25 Annual Sermon bv Rev. A. B. Sears, of Dallas, 11 A. aT. MONDAY, JUNE 20 Preparatory Examio atii n, 8i a. m, to 4k r, v. Eahibition, 74 e. a. TUESDAY, JUNE 27 Examination of Col lege Clasnet, 81 a. m. to 41 liv a. , Exbibition, 71 h. - - ? " WEUNESDAT. JUNE 28 Examination of College Classes, 8 a.m. to 4 p. a. Society Ex hibition, 74 p. M, THURSDAY. JCNE 29Society Address bp Rev. B. R. Baxter, of Independence, 81 a.m. Commencement Exercises, 10 a. m.' 'Aaairerse. ry Addret by Rev. S. U. Irvine, of Albany. n44wi W. A. FIN LEY. Presided. THE JUSTLY CELEBRATED BAIN WAGON! JJECOGNIZED EVERYWHERE AS A FIRST CLASS FARM WAGON. , No other Wagon has a Home reputation nl to "Bain" make, aad it is tbe only - wagon that bat been tented end knowa to stand this climate. Io a word it is made of tbe bast materials and it tbe but finished wagon that somes to this mar ket., - .; . We have different style of Bounds and Reach, Patent da, (se called) included ELAIN, YOUNG A CO. ' vOn-13 Agents at Albany, NEW I ADVERTISEMENTS. FINE BLOOD SHEEP. COTSWOLD HAZ.P nstsens ' FOR 8ALK. Apply tn 8, Jj. EM- Vksj EK!03, Mono tnin Vb-ar.- " Clara Co. Cat., or JOTIS AXDZHSOS, 622 vioj oi., on Jfrancieeo, , . jnnl6ui D r. Julien Perrault, Sector of Medicine of the Facnlty ef Farls, Graduato ef the Oniveisitr "Qacen's College," la Canada, and rtysiclaa f the St. John Baptist Society, of San Fraaciaco. Ir. Parranlt ba the plemnre tn inform bis nnmeroua old patient, and others seeking Confidential Medical Advice, that be can be eoimultecl daily at bia olliee, iiofavi Mrnt goioery Street, nortb-eiiat corner f buc-ramento Ptrctt, ao Frano(oo, Booms V, IS aod II, first floor, up rtaira. , - Consultations and Correspondence ia. n"fcnglish, rrench and Cierman. JIat ioK uaie the varioaa forma of Sezaal Disease and Nerrons and Phy Ual fie- bllity the aubjeet of minute rciearcb and ape eial prctiee ror many yer, Dr. Perraalt too iinuca to treat these aCiittwna aaeecaalul y, by (be oeweitt scieutifie method, aod without rcaert to Obnoxiooat Kemediea. : Gonorrhea, Oleet, Strictures, Babe,, -Uleeva, Skin Erruptions, etc., io any, atage, apeedily eared, and all itypblHtie aad Alereeriai tainta. eradia4d fram tbe lyatetn. Kocta-nal Emiasiona. I.'igbt Sweats, DuW .cbarge from tbe I'retbra on going to stool or making water. Pain in tbs Hack aad Head, Khtumatie Pain, Dizzine, Sighing, Xervons PuJpitati.ar Fainting Cimgba, Sallow Cotoples ion, Urowing Weakaeaa of Higbt, .Memory aod ba Intellectual Faculties, Clouded idea, lifli deece, Arerion to fcoriety 3n4 Social pieae orea, etc., ere some of I be more rrominent Symptoms f Kervons and Physical . Prostration -the reault of beif Abuae sad fcxe4sreln4a!gm-e, which .if Dot timely ebeek ed, will never tail to induce premature decay, and terminate is total Loss of IanbovL Patient emplaining of one or more of the above eymplom. aliuuld apply immediately tn lit. Perraalt, as be bas diavovered Xtw n4 Bo liable Kemcdiea, which enable him to guarantee a speedy ami radical cure ef Seminal Weak ness and Impotence. f , r" We invito inveatigation-partienfarty fcy thoe offerer wbo have fried this boaated DocUn, aad that advertized Phyt'ician, nntd worn ent and diacooragel; we pretend not to know every thing, nr to cure everybody, but in all eaaee tak-m under treatment we folSll uor promiaca. Ladta auSering from any emplaiut incident al to their sex, can eonsolt tbe Doctor with aa eranee of rel.ef. ; Patient its the country ein be' Cnred at ZSom by etUrBjtng letter to Dr. Perraalt, a tbove, or Vox St:t, P. O., San Fraoeiaco, atating their cafe a minutely as poijible, hab ita of tiring, oeeupatiua, etc. Low cbargea, JDeat reference gives if ra qu rd. All eommuaicatiuna eoi fidestial. . . . Dr. Perrsult i aole ajrent in California, for Dr. Biott'i Celebrated Frinalc Monthly Pills wbicb sre anapproacbed, aod far in advaeee of every otber remedy for appreioa and itber rre-u'a, itU iu females. $3 00 per Bex; seat by mad or ezpreas eeearely packe4. v6uJyl. ........ AGENTS WANTED! CLERUYMEX. FCHOOL TEACH EES, fcMAKT VOUXii MfcS A LADIES WAXTK1 TO CANVASS FOB . THE SEW BOOK: , "OUR FATHER'S HOOSE," THE UNWRITTEN WORD. Ry Dasiai, M AKCH.aatbor of tbe popular -Xi;ht cene." Tbia nuatee to thought and language !o o nntold ricbe and bcautica in tbe Great Honae, with ha bloomln; flowera, ataj-ing bbrda. waving pxlma, rolling eluuda, beautiful brw,aw cred muuutain, delightful riven, mighty ocean, tbunderiog Voire, btuinx heavens aad vaat onirerae with eountle, beings in million of world, and read to it each Uie 1.0 written word. ltue tinted pnper, ornate engraving and uperb binding. Fend fur eirrular, in wbkb is a fall description and auiveral emmeodaton by tbe preaa, minuter and college prufeaaora, ia the auoageit poaaible language. Agents also Wanted for the "pacific law encyclopedia. THE BEST JVAW BOOS OUT! Written exprosiy fur nse opou tbe Pacific Coart. 800 PAK?! FULL LAW BIND INO! TREATS n ros saanLT 800 DIFFEREST SUBJECTS. To consult a lawyer njx.n any one of wbicb would eot mure than the price of tbe Book. By J. F. COWDERY, tit tbe San Francisco Bar. Tbe above are tbe awt rapM-aeilhig and pop ular bonk eeer upn tbia Coart. Agents are meeting with succer everywhere. -s Send immediately for Cirentlare and Trmt to A. L. BANCROFT & CO., ar.2m3 PAN FBANCI.'CO. CAL. EXECl'TOR'li AOT1CE. Ettate nf John P. Crabirce, deeeatd. "TJ-OTICE -IS HEREBY GIVEN TUAT BY order of tbe Coootj Court ef Liiw ewonty, Oregon, made en tbe Cth day of June, 1871, and ' at a ngalar terra thereof, toe aadcrKlgaed vnia ' duly appointExeeutor of eaid esute, ia aeeord anre with the will and teatament of tbe teatator. Therefore all person having elaira against aidT estate are notified . to pre-ent tbe tamo to ae, ' duly verified, at my residenee thirteen ailce Et of Albany, in Linn eouaiy, Oregon, wUbin tbe time aad in tbe manner preaeribed fee law. V-i" JAMES CRABTRUE. Executor, lftieo. R-- HauM, Aft'y for the Estate. $150,000! n Gold Coin Premiums w ILL BE AWARDED TO THE SEASON TICKET HOLDERS, oa the 4th Bay of Jul;-, 1871. Tbe Cosmopolitan Benevolent Society, of Cal ifornia, will hold their Second Grand Fair at the Bond Street Theater, Nevada City, Cai , La aid of the following charitable porposcsi . . , . 1st, Poblie School f Nevada County. 2d, Public Library of Nevada City. " ; ' 3d, Orphan Asylum, Nevada Connty. " 4tb, Fire Department, Nevada City. " 100,000 Season Tickets of Admission will be sold, at $2 50 each. All tbe Premiums wilt be deposited ia the BANK OF NEVADA COUNTY. PREMIUMS: h .Premium, gold eoin.. ..$25.00o .. 14.600 ' 1 Premium, gold coin 1 Premium, gold coinnwM 1 Premium, gold coin 1 Premium, gold ooin H ...w. 1 Premium, gold coin..- ........... 15 Premiums, gold coin, $1,0X0 each 5 Premiums, gold eoiu, eot0 each.; 8 Premiums, sold eoia, SSOO each. 25 Premiums, go'd coin, $250 each., 100 Premiums, gold coin, f 100 each... 100 Premiums, gold coin, tu each.. 200 Premiums, rold coin, $:I0 each 500 Premiums, gold eotn, $25 eaeh. 1,043 Premiums, gold eoin,$2t eaoh. 2,005 Geld Coin Premiums, am't'g te $liO,000 BUSINESS ; MANAGERS -A, ; W. Potter, A. H. Uagadorn, J, CorwcU I-oe. .- : By special permission we refer t the follow. -. Ing woll known eitixena : . . -' John H. Dickson, Sheriff Nevada Connty. T. W. Sigourney. . John A. Lancaster, National Exchange HoteL. ' Jd. S. Doal, Editor Kevada TransoTipU : G. V. Schmittbnrg. Postmaster..; Julius Greeawald, Cuunty Treasurer. f Geo. B. Nowell, ex-Conntjr Supervisor. Thos. J. Gardner, Editor Nevada Gatette, P. Banner, Merchant B. M. Gentry, late bherlff Nevada County " ' L. E. Boil, Deputy Postmaster. . '. -1 Ira A. Eaton, Union HoteL - s , : G. G. Allen, Nevada Foundry, ,.. , . Judge T. II. Rolfo. . , . Geo. K. Phillips, Merebant." ; ' t , ; A. Goldsmith, Merchant. - i l Wm. R. Coe, Chief Engineer, Fire Depart "nt : T. Canfield. -Chief Engineer - '. - -A. Sanf-ird, M-refcant. . i r .. . Bliven A Potter, Merchant. - - : ' Lester A Mulloy, Merehaolt. -,,- r s -L. Niheil, City Marshal. " ' Good rosponaible Agents wanted. Liberal eom-. missions allowed. Money should be sent by . press, or by draft upon any solvent Baak. Ad- drets all eonmituieationi to i , Vi - ' ' ; v C. B. SOCIETY, n39tl " NeTads City, Calfc ' J. C. JIEXDENHALL. Aea at Albany,. 10,009 5.000 4.S09 , 3.000 2,490 .... S.000 15.000 J.500 ..- J.400 8,250 . 10,000 a nnn ' 6,000 .. 12,500 ..- 50,880