i-jMH ! ny . mmmmmmm i wmmsami BATES OFADTESTISIXO. ' " 1W ?k8M:X ' "elf "lTB 1 Inch 1 00 8 00 6 00 8 Ot 1 & 00 2 In. 2 00 6 001 7 00 12 00 13 00 Sin. SM 6 00 10 00 15 0V 22 00 4 In. 4 00 7 00 12 60 JSC 27 0 M Col 6 00 00 16 00 26 0t' Z 00 01 7 60 12 00 18 00 88 00 48 00 H Col 10 OT IS 00 'iX, 00 40 Ofc 600 I Col 15 00 2000 40 00 )60 00 100 00 StATfl RIGHTS DEMOCRAT ISSUED K VERY t HID AY : by 1 orrE.lN"!li-ai,.rrBl"Kl!illim,(i(p-lalr C.rarr Krealaisin anil Ms. BaInosi notices in the Local Column i 20 canta per line. For legal and transient advertisements f 1 00 per aqnare, for the first Insertion, and 60 cents per square for each subseq uent in -sertion. TKUMS OF StttSCKLPTtON: Simile copy, ht ear ,t $S 00 Suufi city, w iihHtUiK,, ,, ...... Sot Sitnrio dMV, fchtw mouths . 1 00 ALBANY, OREGON, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1879. VOL. XV. NO. 8 mni:le number,... t jo ' Hl!) Jv fCv flfv IV 'yffi?! A N?v . S if irtir H i jr 1' I fill I I I l 11 I IwH I i i i 1 i J -.. f J PROFESSIONAL CARDS. C. K. .V)lliTX. K. B. HlXrilKKT. HOPllUEY & WOLVEliTOX, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Albany, Oregon. III pnrtire in all tho Courts In th. Stnto. lYolioto l.ujf T. i IiACKlAiMAIV, ATTOIINEY AT LAW. A Lit AM". KKiON- .ederoiIW up stairs iu the Odd Fellow's i empie.-u F. IY1. FILLER, ATTOItNKY AT LAW Will practltn all the nim of tUo Slt. rroiui Ktu-mton Blvn to c-l.:vlio!i, cn-t)-iins auj tuuuoll of 1 iUin. ITT bate oumucvi a speci.uity. vtluu. J. A. VA.T1S, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW co&val&is, cnssoN. "Ill practice In all the t'onf of lh State ruutce in the tvurt tioi.of 4 vionsjvl. y D. H. Conloy, ATTORNEY AT LAW ALCtT, OCLCOV. O FFICE, 57 WFST FRONT PTKEET. fcpecnu attention piveu to collet-liana, vlonlntf S. A. J OKAS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, ALBANY, 0KEG0JC. fcromce In the Court H.iuw.Aa J. XV. KAY83Ml.. ATTORNEY AT LAW. a' aTtrttirtn to eolU-dlc.n rf r-onntK, l"'i dtnr utti of Ki-htrx I;ri-ic.CS vliD.yl. D. n. 17. EIjACKCURI:, ATT0aKY USD C0USSEL03 AT U.1V Albany, Orejrn. SCk ay Lair In the Odd FrllivwV Trra- ' Collect loa a upecla'ty. J. XL "WEATHERFOUD, P.OTAKT PrBUC,) ATTORNEY AT LAW, ALBiXT, OCttOX. "ITHLL PRACTICE TN" ALL TTTE COt'KTS OF THE f V Spoii aiieuutm riven u o 'iic. i:. !; ajiti prolKU matter. 0"0oe in Old Fd' Tciu-lv 1S.S j. c. rowEix, iv. ii. 1111.YKC. POWELL & 15ILYEU, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, And Solicitors in t'Iiancerr ALCAXY. ... OBEGOX. Collections promptly made on all points. Loans neotuttcd on reasonable terms. iTOffieo in Foster's Erick.-S. vl-Jiil!ii. L. H. M0NTA1TYE. ATTORNEY AT LAW. AXT ITotary Public. Albany, Oregon. Office cpstairs. over John Erijrjr store, 1st street. ' vl4u23:f C. 0. Kelly, H. Physician and Surgeon, AtnASY, OHEGOX. fa-Office in 5I'IIwain' Block. Resi dence, one door north of U. P. Choreh. vUnStf DR. AFIGIE L. FORD. ".FFICE AXD RESIDENCE, SECOND door west of the Court House, Al bany, Oregon. Special attention given to tho diseases o women and children. 15:1 I!. S. BREWER, m. 0. Homeoepatnic Physician and Surgeon. o FFICE at residence on corner of Ferry and 1 bird bts. 4u. H. J. E0UGHT0IJ, M. D., Al-ci.w, ..... oui;co. mHE DOCTOR IS A GRADUATE OP TIIE V A VEHSITV MwliKil College ol New York, and IM s l&tc member ol ifellevue Hutfpilal ieiicsl College of lieir 1 UK. fcSotfiee in City Dm? Store. Kwidanoe rei South ide of Second bt.. three doon) taat of the main trfreet leading to depot. Ir. T. Id. GOLDO, OCCULIST AND AURIST SALE"!, OREC1U.V. IAR.JOLDE?f HAS HAD EXPERIKXCE IS I tntinir the various dim?nHe U wliicll the eye and ear are Buljeetf and teels confident of giving entire satisfaction to those who may place themselves under Hit care. nosii, B. M. SAVAGE, Physician and Surgeon. Albany, Oregon. YJAVINO GRADUATED IN TIIE jri Physio-Medical Institute of Cincin iiaii, has located in Albany. SJ0!H.ee in Froman'r brick, (ap-8tairs ) D. B. Rice, IX D., Pliysiciau and Surgcoa V FFICE UP STAIR IX M'lLWAIN'S brick. Kesiuence on the street lead ingto the depot, at the crossing of the t-anai. laaytf ST CHARLES HOTEL, iISS. C. KOUH. - - - . froprictoi T'ais House hag been thoroughly renovated from t to totuin, and is now in spletuUd condition -jr the enttirUiiumeiit H travelers. The tiibie is supplied with uveryihina: the mar ked atiuriis. fcaiiipie rras for c:.'iii:ii;trcUJ men. Summons. U the Circuit Com-t of the- St.u'e o Orryon for the County of Linn : Johu A. Crawford, rUinUff, vs. S It. Roberts, ltefotulaut. To S. II. KolHrU, tho rIhvo nmuetl fendunt : In tho name ol tho P(te of Orppon you are liproby KtuiiitiontHl and roquirud to ap IH'itr Hint answer the tilaiuUtrn eompUint in tho alovo ontiUM t-auso, now on tUo with tho Clerk oft ho above entitled Court, on tho lirst day of tho next term of mvld Coun, to be hoiden at the Court Houso In Albany, Linn eounty, Oregon, on tho 4th Monday, tho 27th day of October, A. J). And you are hVroby noUtied that the relief demanded ujiiUiist you io, that tho plaintiff John A. Crawford have and recover juij;nifiit agatimt wild defend ant for tho sum of Stitie (K) in United States void coin, with ititero-st t hereon at the rate of ton por cent, tier annum from tho dalo of tho alius of Mtid complaint, and that the plaiutilt' have Judgment anlnt you for the sale of the following doMcribod real proiH-rty, to-wli: lxts Noh. 6 und tf, in iihx'k No. loft, in ll:U'kleman' Addition to tiie city of Aibsinv.IJnueounty.Orcgon.bt'saidtm comu and liisburoinf nlsof thia acuou.aiul u you liiil to apjioar and answer oaul com plaint a herein miuired the plalntitf will apply to said Court lor the relief herein demacded. This summons is tmbl islied In theSrATK KusiiTs J-'kmochat newiicr for ttlx weeks constscnlively, by order of Hon. It. K. llardmir. Judo of ntdl Court, which ordir is tuuwl July i, ISTit. Ii. S. STllAHAN A h. llir.YKr, i2vl0 Att'ys for maim.;!". Executor's Sale. -VJ-OTICi: IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT 1 in pursuance of an order of tho Coun ty Court of Linn County, Oregon, tnado and entered on tho loth day of July, l!Tt, 1. C. Harper. Exoetttor of the last will and testament of Marv S. Smith, deceased, will on Suturday, tho ISth tiar of Octoler, l.ST!, at tho hour of one o'clock I. M. of naij day, at the Court House door in Albany, mn County. Oretron. sell at public auc tion to Uio highest bidder the following de scribed real property belonging to said ca use, to-w it : The Southwest onsirter of Section thirty-three i&t) in t'ownahiu eleven (II) South, lUnt-o three (3) West. Also, forty (40) acres ott the North side of the North west quarter of section four (4) in Township twelve ltanse three (:!) West, in the County of Linn and State of Oregon. Terms of sale : U. S. cold coin, one- third cash in hand on day of sale, one third in one year from t he day of sale, and he remaining one-third In two years from tie dav of sale, and with interest thereon from the day of sale at the rate of one per cent, per month, secured by notes and mortgage on the premises aforesaid for the a yiufiil ot the same. I'. C. HA KI C.I., Cwi Executor. ALBANY COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE. ALU A NY, OR. The Tall Terra will open on Septem ber 2, IS79. So far it leirau tlirre rurv t4 limtrtictifo Ihj (untie? in tHt IwVaitii, vjx: I'laMtcstl, A fall rorp f l4trvrtar Um Urrm trraml. For partieuUn ctmcemin tlw cuum-v of tudf aiul 1 KET. 1 LKEUT . O0IT, irr'U MUSIC KOQ3IS! filSS NZTTIE PIPER wishes to inform thepnbJic that she will commence giving instruction in mnsic at her rooms over Saltmarsh's drug store, on the 15th of September. Tho terms will be aa follows: Piano. Orsran. and Cultivation of Voice. $15 per, quarter. Kudjment of ocal Musie, ei per qnar- ter. ffi6TA ouarter will le three months, and two lessons will be piven eah week. vljiiatf Assignee's Notice. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT James W. Hector has mado an assign ment of his property to the undersigned for the benefit of all his creditors. All persons having claims against tho said James W. Kector are hereby reouired to present the same nndcr oath, within three mourns irom the uate nereoi, to tne at my oilice in Harrisburg, Oregon. imted August lilst, lisTU. E. N. TANDY, 5w3 Assignee. Assignee's Notice. VrOTICE 13 HEREBY GIVEN THAT r the firm of Jackson fc Kalisky, of Albany, Oregon, have made an assign ment or all their property (except that which is exempt by law) for the benefit of their creditors. All trie creditors or the aid firm are hereby required and notified to present their respective claims, under eatii, to the undersigned, at Portland, within three months from the date hereof. DaUid August 15, 187'J. Wil. GALXICKy 2lf Assignee Come Up and Settle. "VJ'OTICE is hereby given that Kiefer A si Natter have dissolved partnership. and all those indebted to the firm are here by notified to come up and settle by the 20th of this month, as at that time ait ac counts that are not paid will be put in the hands of an attorney for collection. tiw:j KIUFElt & HATTER. D..G. CLAP.cV (Successor to J. B. W'yatt.) Dealer in Ilcavy and Shelf Hardware, Iron, Steel and ITieclianic's Tools. On First stract, one oor ewt of S. E. Young, Al Ctf baiiy, Oregon. mam; factureb OolieeH aim cipiees. So. 21 First St. Albany. Routed or jrronnd coffeeti and ppiees of all kind, whuleibile or reUiiL hatiafactioti guaranteed. WILLEBT & BUSCII. MAJJUFACTCitErtS OF Carriages and -Wagons. ( or. Second and Ferry t. Tne uesi carrraes ana wiT'tes m tne Ktato are mad ut their 6hom. Kepsuriuv and job work done oo short notice, aua cverv tmng waranttsa. VASH1N3TGN,0.C. HAS A FIRST-CLASS HOTEL AT ?2 50 per day. T IiEMONT HOUSE THE YAXOO TRAGEDY. The OiUrr Hide of fbe Mary. Permnnlllies, Xot Politic, th Cam of the Killing Turning the Ymom of Jlin Tomjm Ajnint Pnrltl,f vutle lUlutiona. SctUI to the Courier Jisioml.l Jackson, 5Iis., Antr. 27. I have rend your articles on tho " Yazoo Affair,1 which appeared on the -2d inst. Tho fiiends of James A. llarktuklo, one of the principals in that unfortunate affair, liavo not expected the Radical journals of the North, who naturally seize jKrt this affair to mnko jiolitical capital, to do him justice in commenting ujon it And in candor, thry are entirely in ilifierent to what they may say about it; but aa your jmjier is n reireacntativo Southern journal, circulating largely in this aud other Southern State, they would bo cnitified to have his sido of tho question apjicar before your read ers. I judge that you will Io willing to accord thin, as you admitted in the article referred to that "there are al ways two sides to every question." THE TWO M EX. Henry M. Dixon, the wait who was killed, hits resided in Yazoo county since tho war. During that time lie has been a professional gambler. He has killed, in jrivato dilliculties, a ne gro and a white man .Mr. bajiiuel Harrison; in political ailravs, a white man Dick Mitchell, a Kojuiblican; and lie wai tho leatlt-r ot a squad called Dixon s Scouts, who are said to have hung four or live negroes during the riots of 18".". From one of these, Pat tison, who had been a member of the Legislature, he took SI, 500, with the promise to send it to Patttsoti's sisters, who reside in Ohio, but tho money was never Kent. In l$iG the county treas ury of Yazoo county was robbed of $u0,000. This money Dixon and Lis gang were believed by nearly every cit izen of i azoo county to have taken. No great efforts were ever mado to re cover this money, or to discover who the robbers were. Samuel Harrison, a Democrat, undertook it, and charged Dixon with being the robber; for doing so Dixon killed him, without giving him a chance for hU life. A picked jury acquitted Dixon, and no other jier- sou was willing to take the task ion himself, as it was well understood that to make the attempt was but to invite assassination. It is not my purpose to say more of the dead than necessary for the defense of ll e living. The follow ing extract from the proceedings of a meeting of the citizens of Yazoo county will show in what estimation Dixon was held by Lis neighbors: 'To Bum up in brief onr estimate and opinion of tho character of the man Dixon, wo declare as our deliber ate opinion that be is a murderer, a gambler, a bully, a thief, a man of vio lence, of blood, and of lie; a man who ill pack juries; a low, unprincipled demagogue iu politics and an infidel in religion. He unites in himself every juality required to make ban the un tested monster that he is, and lie wants every qualification that is necessary to make him the gentleman which he is not." Jas. A. Barksdule, who you a is the "bearer of a representative South ern name,'' was born in Yazoo county, and is about twenty-seven years of age. He is a son of Hon. Harrison lhtrks- dale, who died in the Confederate ser vice, and a brother of the late General Woi. Barksdule. He is one of the meat popular young men in the county.never was in any manner "wild, and never before had a ditticulty of any kind. He was recently nominated by the Demo cratic patty for chancery clerk, the most lucrative otiice in the county. As such a nominee he entered the canvass, and did not hesitate to express his opinion on the stump that the Inde tiendcnts, of which II. M. Dixon was the head end front, should not be elect ed to oflico. THE CAUSE OF TIIE AFKUAY. Owing to Harksdales Bpceches,Dixon vowed vengeance. He took every oc casion to denounce Barksdale in the vilest language. He stated oienly,and at all times, "that he (Dixon) had ls?en seeking an opportunity to kill Jim Barksdale, but that he (Barksdale) was such a d d cowardly s ot a b that he would never give him a chance. IhiB remark: ot Dixon s, made upon many different occasions, was constant ly repeated to Hurksdale. I presume no less than fifty persons Lave Leard Dixon make it. Upon t lie trial it will be proven that many iicrsona, citizens of Yazoo C'tty,umi visitors to the place, strangers to both men heard Dixon say it, not only in private, but in public crowds upon the streets of the town. He was overheard by two prominent gentlemen planning to assassinate Air. Barksdale. The gentlemen gave their names to the Democratic county execu tive committee, and the fact was pub lished in the local papers. Finding that all this did not give him (Dixon) the opiortunity he sought to kill Barks dale, whom he had marked as the fourth victim of his deadly pistol, he turned the venom of his foul tongue upon Barksdale's female relatives upon bis widowed mother and sisters,than whom no more lovely women live in the South. Of them he said all that a man lost to all sense of honor and self-re spect could say. This will be proven in the courts; and for this latter oilense, and not for his remarks about or threats against Barksdale himself, Dixon now fills a bloody grave. PARTICULARS OF TIIE "AFFRAY. Thus matters stood upon the morn ing of the 19th inst. Upon that day Dixon was walking down the street, armed as usual with a large army-sized revolver, his lavonte weapon, upon which he relied to "deal out" death to Li3 enemies. Barksdale saw him, and taking a double-barreled shot gun from an adjoining store, walked out into the middle of the street, and called out "Dixon, Dixon, defend yourself." Dix on heard and saw Barksdale, and ad vaneod upon him, attempting as he ad vancod to draw Lis pistol. It hung in the scabbard. As Dixon advanced Barksdalo cockod bis gun and raised it to his shoulder. Dixon, finding that his trusty wcaKn had failod him, and that Le was about to meet the fate be bad upon throe other occasions meted out to others, started to run, when Barksdale's gun ctacked, and be re ceived the load just under the shoulder blade. -Uiyon ran into an alley way crying "murder," and partly up" a flight of steps, where be halted and fired four shots at Harksdale.who remained stand ing in the middle of the street When the smoke cleared away Barksdale fired a second time, but the load went into the door facing. Dixon full, and died at 4 :30 o'clock that evening. Barks dale surrendered to the sheriff and was placed in jail. Two days sfter he was admitted to jail by the Magistrate's court iu the sum of f 15,000. . Tenons charged with murder cannot be bailed in this State; so they must bare graded the ri ime, if crime it was, to man slaitghter. The Circuit Court meeta in December, when, if indicted, be will be tried. His friends and those most dear to him are satisfied at bis caurse, and he would not hesitate to be tried by any fair-minded jury, in Kentucky or elsewhere. 1 am one of his friends, but I bave tried to give a true and fair statement of the "Yazoe affair." THE MM Ml AX a BETTBXISa ASAI. t'uHnnave, one of the four returning board villains of Ixuisiana,is in trouble. and has gone to the man whom he fraud ulently bellied to count in for assistance in thia,bis Lour of need. It seems that the attorneys whom the returnina board employed to defend it from the criminal suits that were brought against it for fraud'and perjury, bare sued the board for their pay, and that tbey bare recov ered at law about jgS.OOO. Casanare, who is a New Orleans undertaker, is the only one of the quartette who has any property that is comeatable, and the lawyers hare levied on it, and were about to sell bim out In bis dilemma be flies to Washington to get bis there to aid him. He ears that pals hen the proceedings were begun Messrs. Anderson and Wells, against whom the prosecution was particularly and spe cially directed, employed Sleaars. Cul lom and Castillaoe, attorneys, to defend them. 1 assented to it upon the assur ance of Mr. Anderson, who showed me a letter which be said was from Wash ington, and, I supposed, written by Secretary Sherman, to the effect that the funds were to be sent to defray all the expenses incurred in our defense. Messrs. Cullom and Caatillane charged 5,000 for their services,? 1,875 of which was Jid, leaving a balance of $3,125, which amount Cssanave has been trying to raise in Washington. He first called on His Fraudulencr, Mr. Hayes, who received bim cour teously, but made no oiler to relieve mn, i.nd advised him to see Anderson. Gen. Sypiier, who accomttanied Caaa- nave, suggested to Hayes that be eon vey his wishes in this regard to Mr. Anderson in authoritative form, which would no doubt induce Anderson to pay. I . r r . . . w -7 out i or vasanave to return to .Louisiana with Hayes' verbal message would be useless. 11 ayes took alarm at this sug gestion and retreated behind the cabi net which was about assembling, Casanave next called upon Secretary McUrary, who expressed much sympa thy for him. Mac, like bis great name sake, George Washington, of blessed memory, couldn't tell a lie, and said, Casanave, if 1 was able I would pay this judgment myself, bus 1 am a poor man and live entirely on my salary. It should be paid at once." Casanave says be grateful to the secretary for his sympathy, but would bave preferred substantial relief. Poor Casanave next saw Sherman, who tendered bim $100. This made the Creole mad, and he flung the bill, so to speak, in the great financiers face. He then went out and began to threat en, and the result was that the fraudu lent administration among them raised 1,750. which sum has enabled Casa nave to' stay the execution until Jan uary 1, 18S0, between the present and which time be expects the beneficiaries of the fraud and perjury of himself and his three associates will have concluded it is the best thing they can do to pay up the remaining amount If they don't he will make some revelations that will startle the honest members of the Republican party and disgost them with the criminality of their leaders and the present fraudulent administra tion particularly. Enough bas been revealed already to convince unpreju diced people that a more outrageous fraud was never perpetrated than that by which the returning board and "vis iting statesmen" secured the electoral vote of the State of Louisiana for Hayes. - "Yon make me think." John Wil Ham said, dropping upon the sofa be. side the prettiest em in JNorta last Sunday evening, "of a bank wherin the wild thyme grows." "Do I ?" she murmured. -It is so nice, but that Is pa's step In the hall and unless you can drop out of the front window before I get through you'll have a little wild time with him, my own, for he loves you not But John William didn't quite make it, and now you can make him grow wild time and time again by simply asking him what makes bim go lame when he walks. He knows, but he won t tell. "Dear singer I Thou haat never ta'en my baud, nor looked into my face all tenderwise," sings Mary Clemmer to John G. "Whit tier. Of course ha hasn't, Mary he s no such man. TBITMSEB RlTllI ACT. I it enacted hy the Senate and the House of Hepreeentativee of the United istatct of America in Congreu alternated, That the act entitled "An Act to amend the act entitled 'An Act to encourage the growth of timber on Western Prai- i 1 r u ,4 1 u T J t. vi, jiruTsu uumu id, ion, m and the same is hereby amended to read as follows: That any person who is the bead of a family, or who bas ar rived at the age of 21 rears, and is a sitizcA of the United States, or shall have , filed bis declaration to become such, as required by the naturalization laws of the United States, who shall plant, protect, and keep in a healthy, growing condition for eight years ten acres of timber, on any J section of any oi the public lands or the u nited Htates, or five acres on any legal subdivision of eighty acra, ar Z) acres on any legal subdirtaien of 40 acres or less, shall be n titled t a patent for the whole of said 4 section, or of such legal subdi vision of 80 or 40 acres, or fractional subdivision of less than 40 acres, as the case may be. at the expiration of said eight years, on making proof of such fact by not less than two credible wit nesses: and a full compliance of the fur ther conditions as provided in section two: Provided further, That not more than of any section shall be thus granted, and that no person shall make more than ene entry under the provis ions of this act Sec. 2. Thai the person applying for tne benefits of this act shall, upon application to the register of the land district in which be or she is about to make such entry, make affidavit before the register or receiver, or the clerk of some court of record, or outoer author ized to administer oaths in the district where the land is situated; which affi davit sliall be aa follows, to-wit: I, ,harlng filed my application.No. for an entry voder the provisions of an act entitled "An Act to amend an act entitled 'An Act to encourage the growth of timber on the Western Prai- nea,' " approved , 187-, do sol emnly swear (or aflirm) that I am the bead of a fanuiy (or over zi years of sge), sod a citizen of the United States or bave declared my intention to be come such); that the section of land specibed in my appucatien is composed exclusively f prairie lands, or other londt devoid of timber; that this filing and entry is made for the cultivation of timber, and for my own exclusive use and benefit; that I bave made the said application in good faith, and not for the purpose of speculation, or di rectly or indirectly for the benefit or use of any other person or persons whomsoever: that I intend to bold and cultivate this land, and to fully comply with the provisiens of this said act; and that I bave not heretofore made an en try under this act, or the acts of which this is amendatory. And upon filing said affidavit, with said register and said receiver, and on payment of f 10 if the tract applied for is more than 80 acres, and $5 if it is 80 acres or lesa,he or she shall thereupon be permitted to enter the quantity of laad specified; and the party making such an entry ot a 4 section under the provisions et this act shall be required to break or plow 5 acres covered thereby the first year, 5 acre the second year, and to culti vate in crop or otherwise the 5 acres broken or plowed the first year: the third year be or she shall cultivate to crop or otherwise the 5 acres broken the second year, ana to plant in timber seeds, or cuttings the 5 acres first bro ken or plowed, and to cultivate and put in crop or otherwise the remaining o acres, and the fourth year to plant in timber, seeds or cuttings the remaining 5 acres. All entries of less quantity than one 1 section shall be plowed, planted, cultivated and planted to trees, tree seeas, or cutung,in too awme man ner and in the same proportion as here inbefore provided for a section. Pro vided, howtmer. That in case such trees, , . . ! . 1 . seeds, or cuttings shall be destroyed by grasshoppers, r by extreme and unusu al drouth, for any year or term of years, the time for planting such trees, seeds, or cuttings shall be extended one year for every such year that they are so de stroyed. . Provided further, That the person making such entry shall, before he or she shall be entitled to such ex tension of time, file with the register and the receiver of the proper land-of fice aa affidavit, corroborated by two witnesses, setting forth the destruction of such trees, and that, in consequence of such destruction, he or she is com pelled to seek an extension of time, in accordanoe with the provisions of this act!' And provided further. That no final certificate shall be civen, or patent issued, for the land so entered until the expiration of eight years from the date of such entry; and if, at the expiration of such time, or at any time within five years thereafter, the person mating - . -. . ... such entry, or, u he or she be dead, his or her . heirs or legal representatives, shall prove bv two credible witnesses that be or she or ; tbev have planted, - - - . . . and, for not less than 8 years, have cul tivated and protected such quantity and character as aforesaid; that not less than 2,700 trees were planted on each acre, and that at the time of making such proof there shall be then growing at least 75 living and thrifty trees to each acre, they shall receive a patent for such tract of land.' Sec. 3 ' That if at any time after the filing of said affidavit, and prior to the patent for said land, the claimant shall fail to comply with any of the require ments of said act then and ' in that event such land shall be subject to en try under the ' homestead laws, or by some other persons under the provis ions of this act Provided, That the party making claim to said land, either as a homestead settler, or under this act, shall give, at the time of filing his application, such notice to the original claimant aa shall be prescribed by the rules established by the Commissioner of the General Land-Office; and the rights cf the party shall be determined as ia other contested cases. ' Ssfl. 4. That no land acquired un der the provisions of this act shall, in any event, become liable to the satis faction of any debt or debts contracted prior to the issuing of the final certiQ cate therefor. Sua. 5. Thatthe Commissioner of the General Land-Office is hereby required to prepare and issue such rules and reg ulations, consistent with this act, as shall be necessary and proper to carry its provisions into effect; and that the registers and receivers of the several land-offices shall each be entitled to re ceive two dollars at the time of entry, and the like sum when the claim is finally established and the final certifi cate issued. Sec. C. That the fifth section of the act entitled "An Act in addition to an act to punish crimes against the United states, ana lor other purposes, ap proved March 3d, 1857, shall extend to all oaths, affirmations, and affidavits required or authorized by this act Sec. 7. That parties who bave al ready mads entries tinder the acts ap proved March 3d, 1873, and March 13, 1874, or which this is amendatory ihail be permitted to complete the same up on full compliance with the provisions of this act; that is. tbev shall, at the time of making their final proof, have bad under cultivation, as required by this act an amountrof timber sufficient to make the number of acres required oy this act. . Wee. 8. All acts and parts of acts in conflict with this act are hereby re pealed. Approved June 14, 1878. HiMirsurm tarcKftaAtti riATrostM. The resolutions of the crcenback convention declare that stability in prices an only be secored by mahv talnlng a uniform relation between the volume and uses et money, and this can be secured only by full legal tender money Issued by the govern ment ; that legal tender greenbacks should be substituted for national bank notes to circulation, and favor the Immediate use of the coin in the treasury for the reduction of the bond ed debt. The soldier and sailor shounld receive a dollar as good as the bondholder, and If in defiance of the contract, honesty, equity and na tional honor require the paymeut of 100 cents in cold for 40 cents loaned. it is alike demanded by honesty .equi ty and honor that the same measure be meted to those who shed their blood In the cause of their country's salvation and received depreciated money. Tne truth of greenback phil osophy has been gradually vindicated Dy tne adoption or two greenback: measures, viz: Stoppage of con- tractioenn 1878, and the raisins of greenbacks to the point of receiving them at tne custom house. Also a graduated and progressive tax on incomes exceeding $1,000, with a to tal of small homesteads, Is right and In accordance with the constitutional rule that taxes should be equal and proportional: that resumption is a sham and delusion by makine paper I notes redeemable in paper U. S. Ie- cal notes and those notes exchangea ble for coin over only one counter in the United States in sums of not less than fifty dollsrs ; that hours of labor shall be shortened and employment of young children In exhausting lac- tory work prevented ; that labor sav ing macninery is a boon or uoa rather than an engine of torture to wring out larger profits for capital by bring ing tne laborer into heart breaking I competition with muscles that never tire. The national creenDacic labor party will support no candidate for the state legislature unless he be pledged to vote for a compulsory se cret ballot, cordially endorse amend ments to tbe homestead act presented to Cos cress oy xlendnck u. w right, of Pensylvania, and favor abolition of poll tax. SBILI TAB IJUUiU BB BBICATEBr Although ft has been said that ev ery farmer should net try to be a ge ologist, meteorologist, chemist, etc., or study medicine to be bis own doc tor, or law to make it unneccessary to employ a lawyer, or theology, witn the sole view or doing msown preacn ing, still there is little doubt that all general information, ana tne more exact the better, has a tendency, if II . 1 l. .,. tarn wen eupHuou, vj no uocui mera oess juwreaio. .verjr gu.u wi uuairca u gauio u i, small expense, large crops, witn as lltue injury as poaaiDie to tne source oi prou action, no a.uoi, u " without being familiar with the gen eral principles in the various depart ments sf his profession and under standing most thoroughly the art of agriculture. The man who grows crops well must understand the na ture of soils, which Includes more re search than would enable him to ar rive at the concluislon that one is san dy and another clayey, etc. Also, if he would market his crops to advan- taee, and properly attend to the mul tituue er arxairs mat accumulate aoout the farmer of to-day. he must possess some knowledge beyond the common branches of reading, writing, ana arithmetin What kind of education. then should the farmer hava? What ever other opinions they may , enter- tain in resrard to the farmer's educa- tion, all will agree that one of the most essential branch! of that edu - cation shall be a thorough training in buslness affairs. This more than any other one thine will fit him for the various and many-Bided transactions I ence, rather than the calling. A far of his buav lite. It is neoessarv thatlmer of equal learning: and culture he should be a manor business as well as a producer. It Is, then to be re garded a, ahopeful sign of the times tnat bo many oi our larmers- sons are ,j : Haaf.,aa .hw.. in business affairs. It is a guarantee that in future they will take a higher standing, and be more independent and self-reliant. A big head is no more an evidence 1 ; i n :.. i,;i bra Mu vl a t I VWa. V mm unit A government uniform. suit the U. 3 A. I 111 HEX, KEAD AMD P0.1DEK. While Iladlcal loaders In the north are waving the bloody shirt," in the south they (these radical loaders) have given high offices to hundreds of rebel officers of the confederate army. Whenever a man who was a relxd officer says he is a radical, the radical leaders immediately send him a com mission to a high office. In the touth the radicals say, Dear confederate officers, come to our arms, and keep us in power and we will give you the fat of the land," In .the north the radicals cry, "Fire, sword, death to rebels." Among the hundreds of confeder ate officers In office under radical ap pointmeut, the following are selected as a few specimens. Head the list: . 1. Brigadier General A. T. Acker man, Grant's Attorney General of the United States, whose business it was to intaruct Grant iu constitutional du ties and obligations, and to give written 'opinions on constitutional and Law questions to all other depart ments or tne government 2. Brigadier General D. M. Ke. Postmaster General under Hayes. 3. Col. Hughes, radical United States District Judge In Virginia. j 4. uoi. John s. Moeby, the celebra-! ted guerilla and secesh marauder of Virginia; now radical American! jj j Consul at Hong Kong. China, at salary of $5,000 per year. o. coL Settle, radical United States district Judge In North Carolina. . Gov. Hoiden of North Carolina. wt. ... -I ? ' I miwwsiicuiuB uruinance oi secesa-1 Ion; now radical postmaster atlial-l elgh, the radical leader in North Car- 7. CoL Lusk and Mr. Younir : thelj , , . " - - nrsta radical United States Attor-li: t5Kn,dJ'.treVel,Ue m1 a , , . . wir. iraucr 01 me re- of the secesh ordinance; was Grant's ... . . . " I mmm mr u VK4VI11MS HI1U OlUCt j Minister Plenipotentiary to Russia. (Note. Orr was a dlsunionist when a member of Congress as lone as 1850. lie bad as much, or more. to do with brioeing on the civil war as Jeff Davis. 9. Major Morph Is. of Mississippi. of the confederate cavalry service and a famous scout ; now radical or Mississippi. 10. CoL Chandler, one of tbe rebel officers at the alleged It Pillow mas sacre; now radical' United States District Attorney of MIssLssippi. xi. cou u. v. Henderson, a fa-1 mous cavalry raider of Misissippi, I now radical United States revenue! collector, 12. General Longstseet. of Louisi ana, who dealt carnage and desola tion te 20.000 homes of Northern families and shed oceans of union bleed; Grant's Surveyor of the Port of New Orleans, and at preJent radi-1 cal leader and organizer In Alabama. I He is now excessively loyal to Hayes I and the radical party. I 13. CoL wm. Lough, radical Dis-1 txict Judge of Louisiana. I 14 CeL Smith, radical Postmaster I at Baton Rouge. I 15. Ex-Senator Foote.of Louisiana, known when a Senator in Congress I at Washington, thirty years ago, as Uiangman Jr oote," w-bo subsequent-1 ly encouraged sesession,trampled and I spit upon tne union Hag, was a Sena tor in the rebel Congress, from Miss-1 issippi, and who dealt In vituperative speeches against Northern Democrats for fighting the union;' now radical Director of tbe United States Mint at New Orleans, and one of the recog - nized lights of the radicals in Loulsi - ana. lie is regarded as a special fa - votite and pet of Hayes and his cabi net 16. Sam M. Clare, a home-guard. Keokuk, Io wa, During the war a non combatant Tbe post office in this city was taken by ex rebel Gen eral Postmaster General Key, from a scarred Union General, at Clark's solicitation, and given to Clark who never smelt powder nor looked a rebel soldier in the face and whose merit in the eyes ot the radical leaders is that he is a radical editor who waves, in nearly every editorial in the Gate Gty the Uoody 6hirt antl denounces I J 1 uemocrats wno fought for the union Bympathizers. Even Col. Trimble, i who led a sabre charge where scores 0f rebels were cut down, and many 0f his own men killed, and who was himself shot through the face by a rebel bullet, ia denounced as a secesh sympathizer by the non-fighting suc cessor to the soldier be put out ot office. Reflect on the above facte. A WOBD TO FAKMEKS' SONS. Farmers' sons are quite apt to sup pose that they can only attain to any coveted position in life through an - 1 avenue of some trade or profession. i iney iook aueui ana una me weaiwy I men nearly all belonging to these classes. They do not stop to consider I mat oaiy me weaitny ones comes to 1 view ; that for every one of those - 1 who has acquired wealth or distinc tion, ninety-nine others have failed and disappeared, or have never risen to notice at all. They act on the be- 1 lief that they are the only persons l that can be called into public life, ig- noring the fact that it is the training they get that constitutes the differ- I with' the lawyer would, we believe, - 1 find himself In just as good request, with perhaps-many chances ia his ivr. it sue wnuct auowa me pro- fpscinnol man fr nnrtvua oil th advantages at the eUrt, he must eX. j pect to find himself at a disadvantage J H the way through. DtVto Rural. Puck says that a man learning to of I play the cornet interests all Lis neigh I v.,, a mm Do church-singers wear choral jew elry. WKETTStlJor ASCI EST It is nearly 200 years since William III. of England, violating h's own royal proclamation, sent a band of hii soldiersof the Campbell clan and slaugh tered all the inhabitants of the valley of Glencoe, by the stream which Ossian calls "the dark torrent of Cona." The Macdonalds, to which clan those un happy people belonged, have never for gotten that "military execution," which was really a wholesale murder : and to this day the old resentful feeling crops out, sometimes suddenly and in unex pected places. The Halifax (N. 8.) llerall lays : "A good story is told of the Marnnis of Lome ami twoGlengary Highlanders who called on him the other day. Kver since the massacre at fih-ncm-, in which the Catnptelbf did the Moody work of the crown, the clan CampltJ! ha : been in bad odor with the cUn Mi donald, and other sects ; indeed, it in. r Irorerb that the Macdonalds air! Campbells 'canna eat o' the same Ic&iJ- pot' The Glengary men, Maedonahbi to the backlmne, were in Ottawa on business, and, after much debate, re solved to pay their respects to the Mar quis of Lorne as the Governor General, not as a son of the Galium Mor. On their way to the hall they had talked the matter over again, and one of them suggested that iwhat the Marquis. being a Ompbell, would refuse to see a uouiuuiuu, in wuicn rase tneir position would be humiliating. At the gate they met the Martini i t n: ' i Z ucm 1U1 nr l 1 U II W, liic Jl IIMJIUIIU IUAU :e n. m .-. ... -1 1 ,., ',.1 .1 . Marqu ExcdlerjcT ret)Hed i.t...i,... -r.t-.r. , I uomuus, nuu mas, oir cionn -uacuonaia cmt: . 'Forgiven the Campbells f cried one of ure iuikub. jrurzuiicn uiencue 1 Dir t-i ; .-j r . . . .o " 7T - V V aT ? fin w forcn or furwt r ml with l.tu tho . " J. 1 4 ll 1 t A t t choleric Gaels turned their faces toward Ottawa. The Marquis, however, disclosed bun- self, and, after a hearty handshaking, the feud was temporarily healed. The visitors were turned over to the Argyle- sbire piper, who is a prominent member of tbe household, and by bim treated so handsomely that on their depart uie they frank Iv acquitted the Marania of all responsibility for the massacre." tbe reKMATie.1 r cMaaarrEBt. in are is a practical as well as so- entitle basis for the position taken by the Rev. Phillips Brooks, in a recent discourse in New York, namely, that tne law of evolution rules in uioril as well as in the physicial world : ''Na ture does not create, but is alway? de veloping. In last summer's root, na ture finds the germ for nextsuniujer's verdure. If somebody should trive me a diamond to carry to Euroi I can know exactly how much wuuld be lost were I to drop it into the sea ; but if a seed should be given me, I con only regard it with awe as con- taining, concealed within It, the food of untold generations. That la the difference between looking at truth as a diamond or as a seed a fund or germinal. "W all training oi ciiaracler, coa tinuity and economy must bosupreme. The notion that character is spontu- neous is held by most people in tho earlier portion or their lives, an l is I wrong. When they discover this, 1 nine-tenths change to tbe other su- 1 pre me. This is wrong, too. Hosts 1 of young men thiuk that character 1 will form of itself and that they v. ill 1 necessarily become belter as Iboy grow older. Hosts of old men be lieve that their character is fixed and that it is impossible for them to be come better. Such beliefs are fool ish. People are also wrong in think ing that they can put off their bad traits and put on good traits. Ihe old failures cannot be be thus trans formed, but out of the old habits new can be formed. This is what many a poor creature needs to keep. We must make what we are to be out of what we are already." THE SlEZ CANAL. At a recent meeting of the Suez Canal Company some important sta tistics of its working were given. It appears that the receipts of the Com pany and the tonnage of ships pass ing through the canal showed inlSTS for the first time since tho opening a threatening diminution. In 1870 there passed through the canal 4S6 ships, representing a tonnage of 435,- 000, and the receipts wereU,159,&00r.; in 1873 there were 1,173 ships with a tonnage of 2,085,000, and the re ceipts were 22,897,009f.; in 1S77 there were 1,663 ships, with a tonnage of 3,418,000, andthe receipts were 33,774,000f. But in 1878 the number of ships declined to 1,593, tonnage to 3,291,000, and tha re ceipts to 31, 098,000 f. It may be some consolation to learn that five- sixths of the whole tonnage passing through the canal is British The diminution of the traffic is unequally distriDUtej English traffic haa fall- en off by only 2 J per cent .German by nearly 45 per cent, Danish by 5.1 per cent, and Egyptian by 47 per cent. On tbe other hand, the trade under the French, Spanish, Portuguese,and American flags ha9 slightly increased. It Is to be noted that the falling off in the receipts last year would have been much more considerable but for 1 Z trarjSn0rt of th Tndiari trooos ic and transport oi me maian troops tc ami the Mediterranean. Inventera aa Patentees should neni for instructions, (nrms, fer enoes, etc., to Kdison Brothers, Solicitors, of Patent, Washington, I). C, who fur nish the same without charge. K lison - Brothers is a well-known ami sucet ssfnl I nrai oi jarsro w iwrionce, nawug i i es- ablissbed siace lbifi. li:lif Wonder the 3 urglL ;li d o not es ia Africa, a jMuiHonieai g:i No Lijnors Sold. M:12tf -j