The Democratic times. (Jacksonville, Or.) 1871-1907, October 07, 1871, Image 1

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    ADVERTISEMENTS,
QThq «penMiratic firnes.
ime
Published Every Saturday Morning
BY J. N. T. MILLER & CO.,
Publishers and Proprietors.
OFriCE---On California St,, over Reames 4 Wil-
ton's Livery Stable.
In T he D emocratic T imes will be charged
the following rates
First insertion, (ten lines or less)................. >3
For each week thereafter................................... $1
A liberal deduction from the above rate» will
made on quarterly and yearly advertisement».
♦
I
,f3 00
$1 50
Ot
te
JOB PRINTING.
JACKSONVILLE, OREGON, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1871.
VOL. 1.
LEGAL TENDERS taken at par f«f
subscription.
NO. 40
1 1 ■ ’ 1 -....... -->>*■
I
A BIT OF POLITICAL HISTORY
ABOUT OREGON
fields of wheat andcorh.
and put in nomination three candidates
for Presidential Electors in opposition to
There is nothing produced in the “sun­
JACKSON COVNTY.
the
three candidates for Electors nomi­
ny
south
”
—
Southern
Oregon
—
that
can
­
The following truthful extract from the
[On tlie 21st day of August there ar­
[From Portland Bulletin, Sept. 30th.]
F irst J cdicial D istrict .—Circuit Judge, P.
nated
by the Democrat icStateConvention,
not,
by
irrigation,
be
raised
in
Eastern
rived, by the steamer Savannah, the re­
letter of an Oregonian abroad, to the
P. Prim ; Prosecuting Attorney. H. K. Hanna.
From
our
neighbor,
the
Herald,
of
Oregon.
This
statement
is
established
and
they
voted for their own three, and
r’uoi'y—Circuit Court, Second Monday mains of thirty-two Confederate soldiers,
Willamette Farmer, bears its own com­ yesterday, we copy the following:
by
numerous
successful
experiments
by
thus
caused
Oregon to go for Lincoln.
in February and November. County Court, first exhumed from the memorable field of
“
We
have
seen
it
charged,
in
a
cotem-
I
the
settlers.
Geo.
Nourse,
of
Lakeville,
ment
:
They
authorized
a Committee to nomi­
Monday in each month.
Gettysburg—now about to be upturned
porary
journal,
that
Gov.
Grover
bolted
on
Link
River,
has
a
garden
of
about
nate
a
candidate
for Congress to contest
In all my travels thus far I have not
by the plowshare—to be consigned to
f’ouu'y Ojfirer*— Judge. L. J C. Duncan ;
the
nomination
of
the
Democratic
Con
­
two
acres,
well
irrigated,
in
which
vege
­
Col.
Shell
’
s
seat
—
he
having been elected
seen the word Oregon printed in any of
Clerk, Sila* J. Day ; Sheriff. Henry Klippel ; their final resting place beneath the soil tables and fruits of all kinds grow to the
vention held in Eugene City in 1859. ‘ in June, 1860, in spite of the efforts of Mr.
the
numerous
guide
books
that
are
scat
­
Deputy Sheriff. E. D. Foudray ; Treasurer, John of their native Georgia. The remains greatest perfection. In June last a host
tered along the route, and thrust into The Salem Mercury sets that charge at Grover’s associates to defeat him and to
Neuber : Assessor, David Redpath : County Com­ were interred on the afternoon of that
rest as follows :
elect Mr. Logan—aud that Committee
missioners, John S. Herrin. Thomas Wright ; day in Laurel Grove Cemetery, with ap­ of crickets, for the first time, came down one’s face at every opportunity. Nobody
“‘He (Gov. Grover,) was a delegate to put in Judge Thayer and voted for him at
and
cleaned
out
his
garden.
In
July
he
•School Superintendent, Win. M. Turner; Survey- propriate ceremonies, in the presence of
knows where Oregon is—that there is
and n-*owed his garden, and I scenery there far surpassing the sickly that Convention for Marion county, elect­ the Presidential election of 1860. Andto
■or, J. S. Howard ; Coroner. L. Gaming.
thousands of people. Rev. Father Ryan, replanted
on
the
1st
of
September, two months af­ illustrations of scenery in California on ed on a basis of representation to which conclude the matter we may add that,
Jaeks.nrillr Prrcitirr,— Justice of the Peace, the “Poet Priest,” wrote the following
ter,
he
had
a
crop in the place of the the Central Pacific—that the Columbia is a majority of the Convention objected, from 1858, when Mr. Grover was himself
sJauie* R. W ide ; Constable, N. Stephenson.
verses, which were read upon tlie occa­ one eaten up fine
by the crickets.
the grandest river of the West—that the r and by a rule of the Convention the dele­ the leading candidate on the ticket, down
Tr rn nf Jyrk*’>nrilte.— Trustees, James A. Wil­ sion.]
The practicability and advantages of
climate is a thousand times more desira­ gates from Marion and some other coun­ to late in the campaign of 1864, after he
low, N. Fisher. Lewis Ziglcr, John Bilger and J.
ble than that of California in the summer ties, were cut down in numbers. The had become to believe that McClellan
IRRIGATION
-S. Howard; Reeor ler. I . S. Hayden; Tre.u-
Gather the sacred dust
Marion delegation was instructed by the
be elected President, Mr. Grover’s
•jrer, Henry Pape ; Marshal. James P. McDaniel
Of the warrors tried and true,
Is going to be tried on a large scale. season ; in a word, the tourist learns County Convention to attend as a whole would
voice
was
heard in favor of any
Wh > bore the Flag of our Nation’s trust,
Jesse D. Carr has made a contract with i nothing of Oregon until he reaches San or withdraw as a whole ; not being ad­ Democratic never
JOSEPHINE CotNTT.
ticket in this State; and in
And fell in the cause, though Lost, still Just,
j
Francisco,
and
not
then
till
after
he
has
Jesse Applegate to cut a ditch or canal
mitted entire they withdrew entire, un­ 1S66 lie was again silent. But in 1868, as
Aud died for me and vou.
Cosnh/ Oftierrt.— Judge. J. IL Sifer» ; Sheriff,
from Lost River through Klamath Val­ ! refused to visit all the places of resort of der instructions. But they held a sepa­ I soon
Daniel L. Green : Clerk. Charles Hughe* : Aws-
as he saw, or thought he saw, a first-
ley into Klamath River, a distance of 10 1 any celebrity in that State. The reason rate meeting and resolved to support rate chance
•or, R. E. Folev; Treasurer. Wtn. Nuueke;
Gather them one and all !
for the promotion of his own
{of
this
is
that
California
spends
her
Commissioners, Th >;nas G. Patterson, 11. W<>"d
miles, at a cost of $50,000. This ditch
From the Private to the Chief.
whatever nominations the Democratic party interests and had strong hopes of
j
money
in
printing
documents
giving
in
­
■eock; School Superiuteudent, R. 11. Midili
Come they from hovel or princely hall.
will tap Lost River at the gap of Klam­
State Convention made, and did so in the I the fruition of his own ambitious desires.
worth.
They fell for ns. nnd for them should fall
ath Valley, and drain Tule Lake, into formation to the pleasure-seeking visitors elections which followed.
he pitched in with all the cold zeal ana
The tea's of a Nation’s grief.
Jat.phinr ('••nnty. — Circuit Court. 2d Monday
which Lost River empties itself, and { where these sights may be seen, and giv­
“
‘
Gov. Grover has never omitted to I chilling enthusiasm of his selfish and
ing
illustrations
of
them.
A
“
guidebook
County
in April and Fourth M >nd:iy in Oct >ber
thereby drain at least 350,000 acres of
at a general election in Oregon ; and Arctic nature, to put himself at {he front
Court, First M >nday in January, April, July and
Gather the corpses st-ewn
of Oregon,” with illustrations of the vote
what
is
now
known
as
swamp
land,
and
he
has
voted in Oregon for twenty-years of the foam of success, so as to be sure and
October.
O’er many a battle-plain ;
with the water of this lake and river, ir­ grand scenery on the Columbia, through i —his entire political life. He has voted have himself cast highest among the up-
From many a grave that lie.’ so lone,
rigate, through the medium ot this ditch i Washington Territory, Silver Creek I at each election the entire Democratic heaved drift which the tidal wave of
Without a name and without a stone,
the Klamath Valley, on the Eastern side Falls in Marion county, scenes on the I ticket,, and never scratched a name ex­ the Oregon Democracy that swept over
Gather the Southern slain.
of the Klamath River, bringing at least i Lebanon road over the mountains, Fish cept his own. The record is open.’ ”
1 the State in 1870 stirred up from
We care not whence they enme.
350,(XX) acres more to yield from five to ’ and Cedar Lakes on top of the mountains,
Neither our neighbo: or the editor of I the bottom and brought to the beach.
our
Soda
Springs,
and
other
places
of
Dear i* their lifeless clay !
JACKSONVILLE LODGE N®. 10
ten times the grass that it does at pre­
Salem Mercury were in Oregon in It is remarkable that during the war Mr.
Whether known, or unknown, to fame,
I note in our State, and sold at a low figure 1 the
sent,
or
what
is
more
like,
convert
the
1859,
and consequently they cannot know Grover never so much as spoke a loud
Their cau’e and country still the same—
olds its regular meetings
whole valley into wheat fields, that will ! on the trains going west, would bring to anything of the matter in controversy word in favor of a Democratic ticket in
They
died
—
and
wore
the
Gray.
every Saturday evening at the Odd Fel
vie with the Umpqua or Rogue River the State every summer thousands of except from heresay. From what source the State, and if he stood on either side
persons traveling for observation, and do the Mercury obtained its version of the
valleys in productiveness.
Wherever the brave have died.
of the fence, it was on the side which
G.
Mr. Carr has the capital and enterprise, more toward advertising us abroad than ! story it is easy to divine. The charge as urged the destruction of the Democratic
They should not rest apart ;
other
means
that
could
be
adopted.
It
is
Living, they struggled side by side,—
and Mr. Applegate has the brain and ex­
to Grover’s bolting was made by the
time we were manifesting some energy. Jacksonville T imes , a Democratic organ, party in the land. This is his record—
! T ,
Why should th« hand of Death divide
perience to accomplish the work.
1 rustees.
and "there is more of the same sort to
a . L. s.
A single heart from heart?
The value of this work as a precedent
whose editor personally knows whereof tell about. It isopen—it is undeniable.
and encouragement to other capitalists
he speaks, and we happen to personally If our cotemporaries of the Mercury or
RELATIVE RANK OF CITIES.
Degree meeting, last Mviidny
Gather their scattered clay.
to
go
and
do
likewise,
will
be
invaluable
know that what he says is truth. We the Herald wish to have the printed,
i, nt 7J o’clock p. m.
Wherever it in-.v rest ;
to
the
district
and
to
the
State.
It
t—f
will
add that he could have made his case
Ju’t a« they inarched to the b'ondy fray ;
The cities of New York, Philadelphia very much stronger against Mr. Grover, positive, incontrovertible proofs of its
'will be literally turning the wilderness
Ju«t n* they fell on the hnttlc-day ;
fidelity to the truth, we will cheerfully
1 into a fruitful field. The land will cost and Brooklyn maintain the same relative and been equally truthful in so doing.
No. 1, ’m-
Bury them breast to breast.
furnish the same to them. But if they
rank
as
to
population
that
they
did
in
Mr. Carr not more than $975,000. The
The Mercury has been grossly misin­ will be wise in behalf of their party, so
The foetnan need not <lrea<l
ditch and other improvements will cost I860. There has been considerable shift­ formed in regard to the subject. We very far as Mr. Grover’s record can affect its
Thi* u»ther:ns of the brave ;
$100,000, making in all $1,075,000. In ing of places, however, among those that distinctly remember the event, but even destiny either way, they will in future
With 'iit sword or flair, and with nound'e'S tread. three years, when the Oregon Railway now constitute the remainder of the
were our memory to prove faulty we have «levóte their columns to subjects which
We muster once in re "iir deathless dead—
twenty foremost cities of the Union.
reaches
the
Klamath
Lake
Valley,
these
the
printed record of those days to sustain
Out of each lonely grave.
During the last decade St. Louis has every assertion we shall make in connec­ will pan out a good deal better and not
700,(MM) acres of drained and irrigated
near so damagingly. Mr. Grover has
lands will be worth at least $5 per acre, ascended the scale from the eighth to the tion with it. The trouble had its origin his eyes set upon a seat in the Senate.
Tim f. cmen need nd frown :
1 making a total of $3,500,000, giving him fourth.
early'in 1859, when Mr. Grover returned
They nre nil powerle*.« now —
Chicago, in a t similar^ proportion, , from Washington as the first Representa­ No other feature of his body will ever
We gather tbef here, and we lay them down, la clear profit on his investment of $2,-
rest there.
changes from the ninth to the fifth.
An 1 t nr* nnd r r.ivers are the only crown
’ 425,000.
tive of Oregon in Congress, and found
We bring to wreathe each brow.
This will ap)K?ar fabulous to many, but Baltimore, which in 1860 was the fourth that Judge Stout had received the nomi­
DR. L. DA 'FORTH,
M ark the P rophecy .—Those who
I have been on the ground, examined it retrogrades to the sixth.
nation which he had expected himself for are felicitating themselves upon the idea
And »he dead 'hu- meet the dead,
Boston pursues the same direction, from a return to that seat. On his arrival in
¡carfully, and the facts will sustain my
that the Democratic party of the United
Whi e the living o'er them weep :
the
fifth to the seventh.
¡conclusions.
The
laud
will
cost
Mr.
Carr
this city from the steamer, Mr. Grover States will debauch itself in the Conven­
And 'be men wl. m I.-» and Stonewall led ;
Cincinnati retires a step from the sev­ , authorized the statement that he should tion next year, by incor|>oratiug the ac­
¡$1.25 per acre, and he will have ten years
And the he.rt’ th t om»e t > get her 'Jed ;
enth
to the eighth.
j to pay the 350,000 acres of swamp land.
Together -till «h‘i'1 -I.Tp.
join in the canvass in behalf of Judge
of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth
New Orleans falls back from the sixth Stout and the Democracy. On his arrival ceptance
A company is being organized to cut a
Amendments into the Presidential plat­
ditch from Klamath Lake down to the i t° the ninth,
at Salem he learned this did not suit his
may make up their minds to sur­
San Francisco, taking <*» noble forward co-workers, and he subsequently denied form,
west side of Link River, that will irrigate
render
or"leave. After the Ohio election
the entire portion of the Klamath Val­ leap, vaults from the fifteenth to the that he had made any such authoriza­ in October, we shall hear no more of this
We take great pleasure in laying be­ iev, «...
on the west
Klamath
----- -- side
- of
..." the ZL1
........ . , tenth.
tion. He did not. support Judge Stout.
from Democrats North. Al­
IT’ixxo s»tr< « t
fore o r readers another letter from Mr. I River—t portion of the valley 20 miles
Buffalo lags behind from the tenth to On the contrary his course wrought great nonsense
ready the mistake has lieen discovered,
loss to the Democratic cause and serious­
Hugh <ma’.l, the correspondent of the S. long by 5 miles broad. The same com­ the eleventh.
we learn from some of the best inform­
‘
» *i eihe < !<1
Washington makes a stride from the ly reduced the Democratic vote, lie made as
F. J.'Hetin, descriptive of the region east pany intend lowering the bar a few feet
el!
and most prominent DenxxTats of
out
of fourteenth to the twelfth.
at
the
entrance
of
Lake
River,
<
.........
only
one
speech
in
Salem
in
that
canvass
Ohio
—men who were for the “New De­
of
the
<
’
asca
les
:
A IK
L Vi.Hi Si’ABI
Newark, New Jersey’s thriving metro- and that was of damaging character to
Klamath Lake, that will drain many
I.,
parture.
” They now say it was a great
C lear L ake , Ogn., Sept. 13th, 1871. j thousands of acres of swamp lands along po'is, drops, nevertnoless, from the elev­ Judge Stout. It certainly occasioned
blunder,
and that if the (’onvention were
Oregon is steadily and rapidly secur- i the margin of Klamath Lake, that are enth to the thirteenth.
deep regret to the Democrats who listen­ to come off’to-day, the Departure would
.n
Ta
Louisville, twelfth in rank in 1S60, is ed to it, and it greatly pleased Logan’s not receive a corporal’s guard ; that the
ing a;i i building up for itself a high re­ now useless, hut when drained will raise
Dit. W. JACK-ON.
friends and all who wishful to have Stout Democratic masses are not for it; that
putation for wheat and flour, sheep and' grass, hay, wheat and barley equal to any now assigned to the fourteenth.
Cleveland, four steps forward, mounts defeated. Before the campaign closed, we
wool; it will be soon be equally distin­ in the State.
shall gain nothing’from the Radicals
DE1TTIST. guished for it- herds, flocks and dairies.
from the nineteenth to the fifteenth.
whilst a candidate for the United States by it, and great fears are entertained lest
DAIRIES.
Pittsburg alone retains the same rela­ Senate, Mr. Grover did, in writing, state
D •■it.il Room- in !• iLLn; f rtn-r'y oceiipi* *) by From Portland in the north to Ashland
One of the many peculiarities of this
the movement result in irreparable dam­
Dr. E 11. Grevnuian. corner Caln•■rnia and F-lfii in the south, a distance of 3(M) miles» lake country, is its adaptation forproduc- tive rank now as then, the sixteenth.
that he would make sjieechcs in favor of age to the party in that State. Tbe
Street’. Ail -tyl * of Dent il work done on ,-hort there are many products in common, yet; ¡ng niilk and butter of the choicest and
Jersey City rises from twentieth to the Judge Stout and the Democratic ticket, “New Departure,” as a Democratic meas-
nut.ee. nt reduced price’, Pirtieular attention there are marked and distinct features of rjc|ie8t character.
importance
of seventeenth.
on condition that the Democrats in the , ure, is already dead. Mark the predic­
. The celebrated milk
given to the regulation of children’s teeth. Teeth
Detroit
recedes
from
the
seventeenth
Legislature, thru in session, should elect tion—it will never be heard of in a De­
climate,
soil
and
productions,
that
are
ca-
an
j
butter
of
Orange
county,
New York
•xtr-iOte i With >ul p liu by the use *»f the late
to
the
eighteenth.
him
to the. Senate! During the canvass mocratic convention after the Fall elec­
pable
of
meeting
the
many
and
varied
state,
is
not
sweeter
or
richer.
work
warranted.
method of local an:i»tli*s;.i Al
. As there
Milwaukee from the eighteenth to the he played the “indisposition” dodge, but tions.
wants of the people, leaving a great sur­ are no convenient facilities to market,
Satisfaction guaranteed.
Those who ‘would not get rid of
nov20 3m.
plus for exportation, and capable of vast the demand is very limited, but as soon nineteenth.
he was robust enough to hasten from these amendments if they could,’ but de­
Nov. 2l)rli, 1S6'J.
Albany, which was, ten years ago, the Salem to Champoeg to combat Senators sire to ‘accept them and build on them,’
increase and improvement in quantity as the railway crosses this country, these
thirteenth,
now takes the' old place of Lane and Delazon Smith on the stump— will have to move their trumpery from
and quality. The peculiar feature of
dairies for the manufacture of butter and
Jersey
City,
the twentieth.
who were canvassing in company for the the •Democratic household.—LouisiaTZo
SOUTH-EASTERN OREGON
cheese will be numerous and profitable.
success
of the Democratic ticket—and so Ledger.
Is its wonderful capacity and adaptation The Portland and San Francisco markets
he undersigned have establish for raisingcattle and sheep. It isemphat- can get large supplies from this vast I Is the D emocratic P arty D ead ?— was be always well enough to make trips
The Democratic party to-day is stronger into l’olk and Yamhill, where the disaf­
a Real E-t.ite Agency in connect on with
A “G ifted ” P resident .—Among all
...... .................
ically and essentially
a grazing countrj’ grazing country. The supply can be than it ever was in its history. It means fected
their Law Office, and are prepared to buy and sell
were numerous, to stir up and keep the Presidents the United States has ever
—
a
land
of
herds
and"flocks^a
land
of
j
made
equal
to
the
demand.
There
is
no
real estate in thi- and ndjoi.iing counties. Record»
now to win, and I do not say that it can- alive the disaffection towards Judge Stout had, there can be no doubt but General
I
•earched and abstracts of title prepared with dis­ dairies for the manufacture of butter and ! richer grass and no finer cattle in Oregon not win.—Horace Greeley, at Vicksburg.
: than here. Calvesa year old are as large ! You make light of the Democracy, but and in favor of Logan's election. He dis­ Grant is by far the most “gifted.” Tbe
patch and accuracy. Parties at a distance can cheese of the choicest kinds.
communicate with us by addressing
The extent of this district of country is 'as two-year olds in any other part of the I to-day, in the State of New York, there played wonderful toughness against pros­ Detroit Free Pre«« draws the following
FAY A REA,
200 miles long by 150 broad, within the State, and sell for $10 each ; those of two is a clean Democratic majority of 90,(XX). tration from indisposition likewise in his picture of him at Long Branch : “Grant
Jacksonville. Oregon.
bounds of Jackson county. It has almost years old arc as large as those usually We never did have the Irish, and now extraordinary efforts to be chosen Sena­ draws considerable attention at Long
■pj22-tf.
April 22. 1871.
and in his anxiety for the place he Branch, despite the other attractions.
every variety of grasses that cattle are three years old, and sell for $20. Prime we are losing the Germans.— New York tor,
seemed
as ready to get the support of the He rides in a carriage presented to him,
milk
cows
sell
from
$40
to
$50.
Bands
fond of and thrive on; it abounds in
K. B. WATSON.
•C. W. KARLF.R.
K-
Times,
Radical.
Repubicans
as of the Democrats in the behind a span of horses presented by an
bunch grass. There are three kinds of of cattle, including calves above a year
Legislature.
On the day of the election i , office seeker, harnessed up in a gear pre-
KAHLER & WATSON,
Grant, with his Ku-KIux bill, thinks
sage brush—yellow, white and black. old, sell for an average of $25 per head.
he
voted
the
Democratic ticket, we ad-I ' suited by a Philadelphian, driven by a
he
can
kill
the
Democracy.
It
will
take
The former is never eaten by stock of any
NO MAIL LINES NOR POST OFFICES.
mit,
but
he
voted
it merely to preserve I ' man in the employ of the government,
more
men,
by
a
million,
than
he
had
at
Attorney and Counsellor-at-taw, kind—it is an unmitigated nuisance. All classes are depending on wagons
appearances.
So
did
the gentlemen who and returns home to a cottage bought by
Appomattox.
—
Netc
York
Sun,
Radical.
I The white sage, after frost, is pleasant and private friends for letters and news­
then
edited
the
Salem
Statesman vote a New York house, walks on carjiets sent
JACKSONVILLE, OREGON,
and nourishing to both cattle and sheep ; papers, the former charging 25 cents for I A great deal has been said about the the Democratic ticket ; yet
his paper all him by A. T. Stewart, eats from dishes
dead Democracy. Those who think it is
and the black sage is freely eaten by cat­
Will practice in the Supreme Court, District, and tle, and particularly by sheep, at all sea­ bringing a letter or newspaper from Jack­ dead, surely never read the story of its through the campaign labored assiduous- ! the gift of a Boston man, and rises from
sonville, Ashland or Yreka. If settlers
to turn voters, from the support of ’ the table to go to bed on the gift of a
other Court’ of thi* State.
sons of the year. It is as delicious to and others get a letter or paper once a resurrection. There will be signs in the ily
Stout to the support of Logan. And Mr. ! cabinet maker of Troy.” From the num­
OFFICE—In building formerly occupied by 0.
sheep as bread and butter to a hungry month, they think themselves fortunate.
8nd
' Grover took care to vote at a late hour in
Jacob*—opposite Court House square.
boy.
This state of things is an insult to the
democratic party |gets its soldiers in the day, so that his example thin, in vio­ berless presents he receives, he may be
AN ARID REGION.
JAMES D. FAY.
l>. B. REA.
county and district, and a disgrace to the
^a88-) Republi- lent contrast to his conduct throughout appropriately called the gifted President»
Radical.
FAY & RFA
There la little rain in this district of Government. I am informed on reliable I can,
...............
the coinpaign, should not serve to induce
H arsh , but M erited .—That piquant
He is a fool or traitor who expects to others to cast their votes the same way.
country, A moderate fall of snow assists authority that Congress sanctions a mail
wit
inimitable satirist, the “Town
Attorneys and Counsellors-atXaw, in moistening the soil, But the snow line ; that the Postmaster-General asked win an easy victory over the Democratic And it was notorious that year that the Crier and
”
of
the San Francisco News Letter,
peaks and the snow ranges are so many for blds to carry the mail, and got offers party in 1872. Grant can never do it election of Judge Stout, instead of being presents this:
OFFICE—In Court Hons«, up stairs.
great reservoirs, that afford an ample on very low terms, and then this same w ith the bayonet.— N. K Evening Post, due to Mr. Grover and his political asso-, The woman who, in the pursuits of her
Will practice in the Supreme and other Court»
supply of water to feed the numerous and official arbitrarily decided that a mail Radical.
dates, was accomplished in spite of all aim of giving to the race better speci-
I
of this State.
magnificent lakes, great rivers and innu­ service was unnecessary. Among the
They may say what they please, but their underground efforts to defeat him. j ■ mens of womanhood and manhood, shall
;
c_..'’.L.. i do not
—i
W Particular attention paid to the collection merable springs, and these lakes, rivers, settlers and travelers there is a feeling of those who are the most confident
As to the subsequent events in connec­ breed from half a dozen sires, should be
■of Claims aguin.’t the Fedrral and State Govern­ creeks and springs are so favorably situ­ universal indignation and contempt at know Democrats, They are the most tion with this defection and schism in the as much respected in society as she who
ment*. the Entry of Land* under the Pre-emption I ated that the whole country’ is well wa­ such meanness and injustice.
It will dangerous when they seem the most Democratic party of Oregon the rec ird is adheres, from mere habit it may be, or
and Homaitead Laws, and to the Entry of Mineral tered, anti can be made available for irri­ take me 18 hours to reach a post office to whipped. Do not put any faith in them
open, plain, and most unfortunate for Mr. from the absence of any high ambition,
Lode« under the recent Act of Congre*«. 1 tf.
gating every valley in south-eastern Ore­ mail this letter.
and do not trust them. In retreat they Groverand his partisan factionists. Their to one. — Woodhull <t Claflin's Weekly.
are treacherous and often fatal.— Louis­ conduct came near defeating Col. Sheil [A neighbor of ours has a pen of nice,
gon.
A careful estimate of the number of C ulture of L ima B eans .—The prin­ ville Commercial, Radical.
for Congress in 18(i0 ; their action caused dirty pigs. One of them died the other
cattle and sheep this vast grazing coun­ cipal point in the successful culture of the
Thayer
to run for Congress in November
T he Springfield Republican calls a of that year, and by it he got a seat in day, breaking the set. Our neighbor de­
try will sustain, is at least 1,000,000 head Lima bean, is to get the seed well start­
us to say that he esteems the writer
Wintjen & Helms, Proprietors. of cattle and as many sheep. This will ed. The best way of doing this is to family in Ohio, which has eighteen chil­ the Congress which met in extia session sires
of
the
above amply qualified to fill the
be surprising to many persons in Oregon, plant in a hill of light earth, made so by dren, “the champion family.’’ The N. in July, 1861, from which Col. Sheil suc­ vacancy. NVe think the survivors ought
sifting
the
soil,
if
it
can
be
had
in
no
oth
­
Y. Sun, a leading Republican paper, says ceeded at last in ousting him ; and so did
Oregou St., next to Odd Fellows’ Building. and still more so to those outside of the
State, who have been accustomed to think er way. A shovel full of well rotted ma­ this is a mistake, the real champion fam­ the division and defection begun by L. F. I to be consulted.]
nure should go into each hill. Some ily is the Grant family. The number of
essrs , wintjen a helms beg to of tlie Willamette Valley as the only por­ mix sand and muck, and, after placing its children is not large, but Its offshoots Grover and his followers produce the de- i A fire - proof fence can be made by
inform their friends and the pub ic generally tion of Oregon worth mentioning. But
feat of Gen. Lane and Delazon Smith for j
tlie Willamette Valley with all its great­ each seed with the germ downward in 1 and relations are almost countless, and the United States Senate and give the ; following these directions: Make a wash
that they have thoroughly refitted their saloon,
one part fine sand and one part wood
•nd reduced the price of liquor» to
ness as a wheat-producing district, is on­ the hill, sift the covering over it through they are all successfully quartered on the election to Col. Bakerand Gen. Nesmith. ! of
ashes,
well sifted, and three ¡»arts of lime
ly the entrance of Oregon. South-eas­ a wire sieve. The season for planting is Treasury. No other family in the world
ground
up with oil, and mix them well
The
Jacksonville
T
imes
is
correct
in
tern Oregon is a third larger than the already past, as corn-planting time is can approach the Grant family in the tal-
I
I together. Apply this to u fence viith &
saying
that
Mr.
Grover
bolted
or
seceded
about
the
right
time.
The
after
cultiva-
e
nt
its
chief
exhibits
for
pensioning
his
Willamette Valley, and will, in five
—the first coat thin, the second
years, be as distinguished for its flocks tion is the same as tor the common pole- worthless relations upon the public crib, from the Democratic Convention held in brush
thick.
This adheres to the boards or
Eugene
City.
lie
led
the
bolters
or
se-
bean.
—
Pomeroy's
Democrat.
and herds as the Willamette is now for
planks
so
strongly as to resist either an
Loss of H air in H orses .—Use gly- coders on that occasion. The Mercury is
its wheat and flour.
iron
tool
or
fire, aud is, besides, impene­
•
wrong
in
saying
the
bolters
or
seceders
j
W hen you visit the President to ap­ cerine, two ounces, sulphur, one ounce,
Should the grass, in time, begin to fail
English Ale and Porter,
trable
by
water.
The experiment is
-
met
and
“
resolved
to
support
whatever
from being overstocked, or other causes, ply for an office never wear a new hat. acetate of lead two drachms, water eight
A
worth
tryin
g.
______ _
nominations
the
Democratic
State
Con-
|
ounces.
To
be
well
mixed
and
applied
together with the finest brands of liquor» and ci­ the production of grass can be multiplied One with a Dent is preferred.
l
vention
made,
”
and
that
they
“
did
so
in
by
means
of
a
sponge.
five-fold by the wonderful facilities for
gars always on hand.
Statistics place it beyond doubt that a
; the elections w|jicli followed.” They did
E very plain girl has one consolation
irrigating. Should the settlers think pro­
handsome
widow has three chances for
50 Points of Billiards for Brinks. per, at some future time, this country —though not a pretty young lady, she T he key to Darwin’s theory which is | nothing of the kind. On the contrary
i
marriage
to
a maiden’s one.
I they organized a bob-tail Convention.
apparent to all is—Mon-key.
April l»t. 1870.
xprl-tf.
can be, by irrigation, turned into fruitful will, if she lives, be a pretty old girl.
OFFICIAL DIRECTORY.
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Ot
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