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About The Democratic times. (Jacksonville, Or.) 1871-1907 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 5, 1872)
2?Iu¡ «ûlcuiornitic firnen. Offlrlal I'itp«>r ft>r Jnckaon County SATURDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 5. 1872 National Democratic .dominations« F or P resident , HORACE GREELEY, of New York. F or V ice -P resident , B. GRATZ BROWN, of Missouri. For Prr«!<len(ial Electors* K. D. SHATTIJ'K, of............ Multn tnah County GEO. R. HELM. "1 ................ Limi 4 Ji. 11. GATES, ui...................... Wa-co • THE CONTEST ENDED The Senatorial contest, so bitterly wag ed by the Corbett and Holladav wings of the Radical party, was ended last Satur day, after several days spent in balloting, by the election of John II. Mitchell, of Portland, Bell Holladay’s candidate for U. S. Senator, the final ballot standing thus: Mitchell, 41 ; Corbett, 12; Prim, 14, ami four members voting blank. Corbett’s name wa< withdrawn by his Radical friends, who (hen voted for Mitchell, but was again put in nomina tion by Hon. A. II. Brown, of Baker,—a Democrat,—and received 12 v< t s—ill Democrats. It was thought by Mr. Corbett that, having succeeded in breaking the Radi cal caucus, he could, in coalition with the Democrats, secure his election, upon go ing into joint convention. But such was not the case. His Opera House speech, made but a short time before the ballot ing commenced, in which he indorsed Grant, and his supposed refusal to support (¡rec ley, blasted all hopes of the coalition, which otherwise might have resulted fa vorably to himself. This fight between themselves and the breaking up of the Radical caucus cannot but be injurious to the Radical party, as it is naturally supposed that a party with such a decisive majority as they had in the Legislature, should select its Senator without any trouble', and nodoubt great ly impairs their prospects for carrying Oregon in November. GRANT vs. THi: JEWS, The following is a copy of the order of expulsion issued by Gen. (¡rant against the Jews in 1862. We commend it to the perusal of our Jewish citizens. H eadquarters 13th A rmy C ords , ) Department of the Tennessee, - Oxford, Miss., Dec. 17, 1862. ) General Order No. 11. The Jews, as a class, violating every regulation of trade established by the Treasury Department, also Department orders, are hereby cxj>e!led from the De partment within twenty-four hours from the receipt of this order by post com manders. They will sec that all this class of peo ple are furnished with passes and requir ed to leave, and any one returning after such notification will be arrested and held in confinement until an opportunity occurs for sending them out as prisoners, unless furnished with a permit from these headquarters. No passes will be given these people to visit headquarters for the purftose of making personal application for trade permits. By order of Major Gen. Grant. J ohn A. R awlins , Ass’t Adjutant General. Official : J. Lovell, Captain and Assist ant Adjutant General. M rs . F air A cquitted .—A dispatch from San Francisco, dated September 30th, says that contrary to all expecta tions, the jury in the Fair case rendered a verdict at 9 o’clock. The Court met and the jury was called in. Uj»on being, asked if they had made a verdict, the foreman answered they had. It was then handed to the Clerk, and amid the stillness of the grave the verdict of “Not Guilty” was read. The verdict was re ceived with astonishment, but no signs of approval or dissent were manifested. The jury was polled and discharged, and immediately the prisoner was discharg ed from custody and left the court room in company with friends and counse’. Mrs. Fair appeared to be greatly excited. Much indignation was manifested at the verdict, but a great portion of the people accepted it as final. H idhway R obbery .—Our attention has frequently been calk'd to the manner In which the Portland dallies pilfer our local items—taking a large number, word for wortl, without giving any credit what ever. But tho Portland Bulletin, not content with stealing several in the above mentioned way, even goes so far as to give the Sentinel credit for articles taken directly from tho T imes . We sug gest that the Portland papers entirely dispense with taking items from the T imes , or give the proper and full credit therefor. SIGNS OK THE TIMES We have cheering news from every quarter. (¡rant men, like tlie wicked mariner, who thanked God that he was not lost, feel that all hope of saving their rotten craft is now gone. And still they brag, and bluff, and attempt to convey the impression that the prevailing winds of this storm are favorable to them. But such, says the Mercury, is not the case. The election in North Carolina, where they expected an overwhelming victory, was an utter defeat of (¡rant. Since then, the Territories of Utah, Montana and Wyoming, habitually Radical, have elected Liberal or Democratic Delegates'to Congress. In Vermont, notwithstand ing the hopelessness of the struggle, the gains have been laid on the side of (¡rec ley, and the losses of the (¡rantites tire considerable. The result in Maine, which the (¡rant men construe into a victory, is really one for the Liberal cause. Friends of reform have reduced the Republican majority of 1868, about 5,000, in the face of adverse circumstan ces unparalleled. We ad 1 the comments of the press: In 1568, as the N. Y. Ho/’k/ reminds us, Andrew Johnson was President, and the Federal power could not (hell be used as a local electioneering agency on the Republicansitie; whereas in 1872 Gen. (¡rant is President, wielding the whole vast patronage and iniluenee of the fed eral government to promote his re-elec tion. This would naturally make a dif ference in Maine of from 3,0(10 to 7,000 votes. And yet, according to the IJ'or/i/'s computation, the Republican majority of 1868 has been cut down nearly 30 per cent. The N. Y. Tribune estimates the change in the vote of Maine, wrought by the Liberal Republican movement, at about 5 per cent., and it is naturally cer tain that in no other part of the I nion will the change be less ;—in few so small. It thereupon comments: Well, 3 per cent, on the last Presiden tial vote shills the States of Pennsylva nia, I m liana, ('onnect ¡cut, ('alifornra and Alabama, from (he (¡rant column to its opposite. Add these to the States al ready Democratic, anil we have 153 out of 181 electoral votes necessary to a choice. But Missouri isclearly 0111s, and her 13 votes leaves but 11 more to make up alter the Grant route in October, out of New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Ar kansas, North Carolina, Ohio, Illinois, and others scarcely less probaldy ours. The lesson, then, of the Maine election is plain:—It reveals a percentage of change, which, with proper organization and work, gives us Pennsylvania and Indiana in October, After these, the battle wins itself. The IJbrZtf arrives at sion: In the Presidential election all the States will vote on the suu:c day preclud ing that concentration of the whole Fed eral iniluenee on a single State, which has now taken place m Maine. If the Republican looses throughout the coun try in November shall equal those in Maine this September, Mr. Greeley will lie triumphantly elected. WJiTSBaWI*— As one leading Republican after an other joins the Liberal ranks, says the Chicago Tribune, tlie party of prejudice, and plunder, and hate, devotes itself to proving that this particular man has been everything that was bad. Trum bull, Palmer, Koerner, Sumner, Banks, Greeley, Curtin, Julian, Clay, Schurz, and many others have been bitterly de nounced. It is painful to think what a consummate set of scoundrels have hith erto led the Republican party. That or ganization is to be congratulated on hav ing freed itself from such men, and hav ing come under the hadeiship of such pure patriots as Cameron, Buller, Mur phy, (¡rant, Bowen, Clayton, Dent, Ca sey, Leet, Pomeroy, and the long line of kindred souls. I S oldiers i or G reeley .—Here are a few of t iie prominent soldiers who fought on the Union side and who will not fight for Grant, but will march under the lead of that glorious old peace-maker, (¡rec ley: Generals Hooker, Meade, Han cock, Banks, McCltrnand, Slocum, Kil patrick, Manson, Pleasanton, Burbridge, Blair, Schurz, Williams, Steadman, Ward, Morgan, Wiley, Heath, Burns, McClellan, Whitely, Banning, Buell, Brinkerhoff, Moore, Tuttle, Hazen, Has kell ami Kirby Smith. These men were Grant's associates in arms ; they know him, and knowing him, they repudiate him. J ohn W. Forney's paper only figures out four majority for (¡rant in the electo ral college. This is leaving it pretty close for a Grant paper. It is about as good as giving it up. The battle is on the side of (»recley, and the people are rejoiced. Bold and determined fighting front this out will give us such an over whelming victory that it will be the last of political rings. Let tlie work be well done, now it is so well begun. The Grant men only appeal to Democrats to save them. Will Democrats help them ? T he result of the straight-out go- straight-to-the-devil Louisville Conven tion is summed up briefly thus: One member from Arkansas arrested for ob taining goods under false pretences; Blanton Duncan’s snoot smashed by a gentleman whom he insulted ; George Francis I rain booted out of the Conven tion, and an outrage upon Chas. O’Conor by attempting to force him to submit to R eturned to its F irst L ove .—The the embrace of the hybrid conclave. Eugene City Guard, which has been op D ead .—Hon. Garrett Davis, United posing Greeley and Brown, has abandon States Senator from Kentucky, died at ed its un-Democrntlc course and hoisted Paris, in that State, on September 22d. the names of the Baltimore nominees. H'- was one of tlie most prominent Dem- This change makes the Democratic press oeritlc Serators, and served his State a unit tex Greeley and Brown in Oregon. with great ability. Requicscat in pace. OREGON RADICAL TRICKERY CAMPAIGN NOTES POSITIVELY SELLING AT COST I Texas promises 35,000 majority for the A new silver coin has come out—three I Baltimore ticket. for a dollar. Pennsylvania, Indiana, Ohio, Nebras A winged calf is on exhibition at the ka and Iowa hold their elections next State Fair. It is said a Digger Indian named this Tuesday. "Wilson is a Know-Nothing, accord State. Dallas has a pig with four eyes and ing to Albeit Pike ; and Grant a drunk hi» business in Jacksonville, of ard, according to Mr. Dennison, of Wash Desiring to doso three legs. fer* hi* entire stock of Families from Tennessee are moving ing City. Full returns from Maine show the Re into Eastern Oregon. publican majority to be 14,082, a falling Work on the Canal and I.oeks in the CONSISTING OF off of about 4,000 votes, compared with Willamette is progressing rapidly. tlie preceding election. The State Fair commenced last Mon Another pretty feature of the civil ser- day, and is progressing finely. vice reform is the payment by the people Hats and Caps, Bouts and Shoes, Hard 11 on. Geo. 11. Helm is stumping Fast-] of $200 a day for government clerks to ware, Groceries, &c., «¡Uc., ern Oregon for Greeley and Brown. do campaign writing. lion. James li. Slater is stumping AT COST AND FREIGHT, It turns out after all, that the Democ Oregon for (¡recley and Brown. racy gained 7,000 votes in Maine, and General Lane is stumping Coos and that the Radical vote fell about 1,000 ('urrv counties for (¡recley and Brown. I will also sell my brick store on Oregon short of (¡rant’s vote in 1868. Carry the street, and dwelling house on California Salem is pleasing its pride with a $15,- news to Hiram. street. MORRIS MENS0R. (>0(> church, and calls it giving to the Jacksonville, Ogn., May 17dr, 1872. [20H33 There are eight Republican members Lord. of the United States Senate who are in A t Albany claims tlie championship in favor of the election of Mr. Greeley, viz : thelinjof youthful mothers. A wife of Sumner, Trumbull, Schurz, Fenton, the age of 17 has three children—triplets. Sprague, Tipton, Rice and West. Wheat continues to pour into the The only (¡rant man running during towns along the Willamette river and the recent election in West Virginia was On Oregon street, Jacksonville. railroads, in exhaustless quantities. J. Brisben Walker, who was defeated for What There is one member in the Legisla Congress by 3,000 majority. ture so tall that the Senatorial aspirants chance for Grant in November? Haring just received from San l’ranciseo a mw had to use a ladder to “catch his ear.” One by one the prominent men who stock of i A man in Polk county has raised some think that Mr. Greeley’s election will HARNESS, BUGGIES A CARRIAGES grass this year which is twelve feet high. kill the financial prosperity of the coun I am now prepared to furnish my patrons, and try are being heard of. The last one is The seed was brought here from Peru. tbo public generally, with a* Mr. Collins, Pension Agent at Washing William Davidson, the well known FINE TURNOUTS real estate agent, of Portland, has been ton. His defalcation is nearly $100,000. Henry Wilson joined the Know-Noth as can be had on the Pacific Coa«t. Saddle horse* adjudged insane and sent to the Asylum. hired to go to any part of the country. Animal* The Portland Bulletin has become a ing Lodge in Ward Four, Boston, in i BOUGHT 4 SOLI). morning paper, and is issued seven times 1853; and did not join the Republican Horses broke to work single er double. Horses party until Sept., 1855. He attended boarded, and the best care bestowed upon them a week. the State Council of Know-Nothings in while in my charge. A Portland lady says her husband is r-tT-MY TERMS ARE REASONABLE.*«^ Springfield, Mass., Aug. _ 7, G 1855. A liberal shase of public patronage is solicited. out for (¡rant—till two o’clock every the life-long Aboli- .M ANN ¡NG k 1:11. Geo. W. Julian, morning. Jacksonville, Ogn.. Februa y 11th, 1871. tionist, attempted reccntly to make a A petition is being circulated asking (¡leeley speech in Newtown, Indiana, legislation favoring woman suffrage in The negroes pelted him down with rot- in Oregon. ten eggs anti rotten tomatoes, The lie CALIFORNIA STREET, (Under Hern»'« Ilall,> The Daily Salem Mercury has again groes have as liitle idea of free speech, Jacksonville, Oregon been, revived, mid is a neat and spicy as have their Radical masters. (,l N. JOS, i, ani ; on gki . ei . ey sheet. “A touching sight,” says the Pittsburg i (¡co. Wright, of (.¡rand Rondc valley, Post,— Moseby, the guerrilla, and Wil "We take the following extract from a has rai-ed a cucumber over a yard long. liam Lloyd Garrison, the Northern Abo ’'SXIIF. UNDERSIGN! I> WOULD RESPECT- letter written to the Salem Mtrcury, by g fu.iy inform the La lies of Jack«, nviiie and He will pickle it in an eave trough. litionist, who pronounced the Con-litu- vi< itiity, that they have ju.-t re -ei'«d from Sau (Jell. Jos. Lane, from Coos county, umler A young preacher, sixteen years of tion ‘a league with death, and covenant Eruucisc > tlieirSpring Stock of Millinery Good* and date of Sept. 20th. The General, as all are prepared to furnish tin ir cust< incrs with the true Democrats, is solid for (¡reeky tnd age, delivered an acceptable discourse in with hell,’ damping o hands across the late»: styles of liars. R omstts . H ats and Box I > bloody chasm, and howling in unison set StiAPK*, Ac. Also a new and fino assert- opinion that I.a Grande last Sunday. Brown, and expresses ment nt al, will go for ('oos county, usually I Warren Cranston, of Marion county, for Grant and corruption.” TRIMMINGS. 01! N A M E N TS, (i reek y. has made 20,000 pounds of cheese the A committee waited on Charles O’Con 1- “Now, a very few words in relation tn past season. NECKLACES, or, last week, and insisted that he ac politico. I made it a point on my way TIDIES, FLOWERS, A monkey on exhibition at Salem cept the Louisville nomination. The to this plttee to have a talk with till that speaks several words very distinctly. He telegraph announced his acceptance ; but RIBBONS. PEARL BEADS, I met or fell in with, and I found not a makes a good Darwinian argument. the report was at once shown to be false and other articles in cur lit e too numoreus te- Democrat that was not for the Greeley (¡en. Joseph. Lane writes that every by the publication of an address made mention. MISSES A. F. and L. A. KENT. and Brown ticket, and had the pleasure Democrat in Coos county favors Greeley, by O’Conor, in reply to the Chairman, Jacksonville. October 13th, 1871. If who are of meeting with some Liberals and that the Old Editor will curry that Moreau, in which the gallant New York equally anxious for the election of that er positively and emphatically says he county by at least 30 majority. ticket. Since my arrival here I have will adhere to his former decision, and Mr. James Cameron, of Yamhill coun had the pleasure of making the ac- cannot accept the nominalion. Thus CALIFORNIA STRi'.ET, (Opponile I’. S. Hotel.) quainttmee of many voters, and nine- ty, has at the Fair grounds at Salem, ends the farce. lbrty-two head of Leicester sheep, lately tenths ot them are for Greeley and A dispatch from New York, say* that JACESCIíVIt^r, OHZCG3J. Brown. You may set down a majority imported from New Zealand. Mayor Banks, of Nashville, fresh from The Oregon Central Railroad is now for Greeley in this county, and no mis l.WAYS on hand the l>c‘t stock of patent aed : Tennessee, brings cheering news from li .me tn vie Riile ai"i Shot Guns, single and take; and as for myself, I wish it dis running to North Yamhill. But a few i iib’.c ; Revolvers of the l.itc't patent» : Pocket that State. Greeley's majority be esti- tinctly understood that 1 am for Greeley more »lays and the iron horse will reach Plato's, neat, small and powerful ; Deri inper*. the i mates nt from 5(1,000 to 75,000. The late-t and l>e»t. Also the best Powder and Powder and Brown, and shall vote for and do all the Yamhill river. managers of the Slate Fair, without dis Flasks ; all sort of Sh t and Pouches : Caps. Two farmers in Hillsboro bet a setting I can for their election. I have not time and everytliintr in the .'-portman's line. tinction of party, have invited Mr. Gree- W.uis, I'he above goods are all of tho 1 v»t quality, and nor space in this letter to tell you how of goose eggs on the result of the Presi 1 Icy to deliver the annual address, at will be sold cheaper tiian the rhea) e»t. XTr~ All very important to our country I regard dential election, and then bet their jack- ! Nashville, on October 5. In the event of orders promptly filled. Rcpaiiing done prompt.y and in good stvle.'&T the election of Greeley to be. He could knives that they would win the eggs. I his acceptance, large numbers from («eor- JOHN .MILLER. and would do much good and no harm, The Columbia District Agricultural I igia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Jacksonville, Sept. 9th, 1871. *• and would be better supported in his ef Society held their third annual fair at Arkansas and Kentucky are expected to forts and recommendations than perhaps Dalles during the past week. The at attend the exercises. would be any other man, however great tendance was large and the exhibition Gen. Grant’s stable is the handsomest he might be. llis head is clear and his highly creditable to all concerned. building in Washington. It was built heart is right, or in other words, hois The late Linn County Fair, just ended with money appropriated for another A (¡rand Fair Ball and Supper will be given honest and lie is capnpble. He would at Albany, was a great success. George purpose, and without obtaining consent give to our much abused country an Ross, formerly ot this place, won five from Congress or the Committee on Pub On FRIDAY EVENING, October 25th» honest, able administration. Between races with his horses “Trillc” and “Hi lic Buildings. The General eared more —AT— (¡rant and Greeley, (and it is quite cer ram.” for his Mares than his Members, and tain that one or the other will be Presi A man named Carson, living near there was no one who had the courage to VEIT SCHUTZ' HALL, Jacksonville. dent), no Democrat sliould hesitate. In Canyonville, was met on the road near breathe even a Neigh to his designs. the name of all that is dear to freemen, his home one day last week by two foot- , The question between (¡rant and Greeley we have had enough of (¡rant. Let us l pads, who relieved him of his loose is whether horsemanship is better than Music by the Jacksonville String Band. Tick have Greeley and save our country from et», inc'udinjr supper, $3.50. 39id change. statesmanship as a qualification for the centralization, from military rule, from Mr. Thomas Parrott of East Portland,’presidency, dishonesty and corruption of the blackest while on a visit to Yamhill county a few kind. I shall vote for Greeley, and I am days since, discovered near the head of New, This Week. none the less a Democrat by so doing. NOTICE TO THE FARMERS, Ash Island, in the Willamette river, two In this case I am for my country.” bones of the extinct mastadou. 1’. A. IIEAKN. WOULD SAY TO THE FARMERS OF H. F. JOHNSON. Southern Oregon, who desire to sow a Cr«t- S ome of our exchanges are publishing Ex-Senator Nesmith and J. C. More ela.-s article of wheat, that 1 have the Egyptian JOHNSON & HEARN, as a curious item a statement to the ef land, of Portland, had a rencounter at Spring w heat for sale, at $ 1.50 per bushel, nt toy farm on Applegate, Jackson county. This wheat Successors to fect that a horse in Coos county pulled Salem on last Monday. Mr. Nesmith took the premium at the World's Fair, in Germa the plug out of the bunghole of a barrel was the attacking party, Moreland mak-i Rantzau «V Shaw and Comstock & Martin, ny, three years ago, an t Hands the drouth better than any other kind. The average yield per acre» for the purpose of slaking his thirst. We ing no defense. The matter grew out of one year with another, ¡«sixty bushels. See spec h'orwnnllnK Couiints^lon do not see anything extraordinary in the a newspaper correspondence, written by imen at the Post Office, Jacksonville. occurrence. Now, if the horse had pull 39m3 El). HENDRICKS. Moreland some time ago, in which he 1 ed the barrel out of the bunghole and used exceptionable language toward Mr. TRY Tliw slaked its thirst with the plug, or if the Nesmith. Mark your Goods care of J. & H. barrel had pulled the bunghole out of the The Radicals of Multnomah county plug and slaked its thirst with the horse, close attention to business we hope t > merit By clone — for — will give a grand exhibition in Portland a continuation of the patronage heretofore ex'eud- or if the plug had pulled the horse out of n40tf. the barrel and slaked its thirst with the this evening, Oct. 5th. They will show i ed to the old firms. C'eughs. Colds, Croup and Bronchiti*. ! bunghole, or if the bunghole had pulled the results of their workings at the Cap LE( 1A L ADV E KT IS EM EN TS, the thirst out of the horse ami slaked ital for the last three weeks, which, of T is an Ague Preventive, Blood Purifier, Invig- the plug with the barrel, or if the barrel orator and Appetiicr, is good for all Nervous course will be Mitchell. No doubt the had pulled the horse out of the bunghole Summons» and Bilious ailments, and is the most efficacious and plugged its thirst with a slake, it gentleman on exhibition will tell the Lung .Medicine extant. AH of its ingredients are might be worth while to make some fuss people what great things he is going to In the Circuit Court of the State < f Oregon, for purely vegetable. Try a bottle. Prepared by WM. II. PARKER, Jackson county. A. E. Clark, 1’1 ff, vs. \>. J. over it. do at Washington. 39m3 Jacksonville, Oregon. The Senatorial contest between the Radicals, just ended, was noted for its ' trickery and fraud as well as its bitter- ness, many being the trieks tliese gents played upon each other. We take from the Oreyonian (Radical) of Scqit. 27th, the following, the names of the pretended participants in which will un doubtedly be recognized by our readers: Yesterday, September 26th, 1872, Hon. Enoch Walker, Representative from Jackson county, ree< ived from the post- ofliceat Salem a letter purporting to have been written by E. K. Anderson, J. M. McCall and Jake Thompson, and refer ring to C. C. Beekman and others, as au thorizing them to use his name, urging him (Walker) to support Mr. Mitchell for Senator, 'flic letter was dated Jack sonville, Sept. 22d, 1872, and opened with the statement that the writers saw by papers that Mr. Walker had vok-d for Corbett. It was postmarked Pliuenix, Sept. 22<l, 1872. Considering this letterasamounting to instruction from his constituency, Mr. Walker changed his vote from Mr. Cor bett to Mr. Mitchell. But the fact that it was dated two days before any vote had been taken, and postmarked at a place nine miles from Jacksonville, aroused suspicion of foul play. Inquiry at the postoilice at Salem disclosed that it was a dropped letter in t hat otlice, and had been deposited two hours before the Jack sonville mail arrived there. A telegram was then sent to Mr. Beekman at Jack sonville, iiupiiring about the the genu ineness of the letter, and he, at a late hour last evening, answered as follows : To Hon. E. F. ir<<//.7r.’ I have not authorized any person to say 1 opposed Corbett, nor have I authorized any one to use my name in any shape whatever in connection with the election of Sena tor. If any person says 1 told him to say one word to either you or Langell in regard to the matter he tells a falsehood. C. C. B eekman . E. B. Watson also telegraphed from Jacksonville the following to A. Y. Thompson : Beekman prefers Corbett to Mitchell, but will not advise our Representatives who to go for, and this is the general feeling here prevalent. E. B. W atson . Verily, for ways that tire dark and trieks that are vain, the Radicals and Chinamen are peculiar. Closing Out Sale ! .V. .ME.TSOfí, MERCHANDISE, ORY Ä FANCY GOODS, FOR CASH ONLY Î EXCELSIOR" I LIVERY STABLE MANNING & 1S1I, Prop’s. MILLINERY STORE, V GRAND FAIR BALL! EGYPTIAN SPRING WHEAT! I MERCHANTS. READING, CÂ1IT0RNIA. BALM MEDICINE! I W ould L ike to K now .—Governor Scott, tlie Grantitc carpct-bag Chief Magistrate of South Carolina, complains that General Grant has spoken of his stealing, but stated he would soon make a speech in which he would prove that when Grant was elected to the Presi dency he and his family were all pool’, and he (Scott) could have bought them out ten times over ; that now (¡rant and his family were all rich, and could buy him out ten times over, and if he had got his by stealing, lie would like to kuow how Grant got his. Clark, Deft. Suit for Divorce. lo W. J. C lahk . said D bf ’ t : In the name of Some six years ago a gentleman resid ALL KINDS OF the State of Oregon, you are hereby required ing in the South noticed the advertise to be and appear in the said Court on the first day ments of four girls who were desirous of of the next term thereof, commencing on the 11th day of November, 1872, and answer the coin opening a correspondence with some plaint filed in this suit, or in default thereof, a de PROMPTLY AND NEATLY DONE young gentlemen, and in a spirit of fun cree will be taken against you for the relief de manded therein, to-wit: for a dissolution of tho —AT THE— lie answered one of them. It led to a marriage contract now existing between yourself correspondence, and now, after a lapse of and plaintiff, and for the care and custody of Lulu six years, the lady has arrived, and on Mabel Clark, the issue ot said marriage. Published by an order of Hon. P. P. Prim, Thursday fulfilled her part of the con i Judge of said Court, made on the 15th day of Au- » 1 18/2. O“O_ tract at Salem, marrying her correspond- I__ gust, —AT THE— KAHLER A WATSON, FAY’ 4 REA, ent, who, by the way, is a resident of L— Attorneys for Plaintiff. I I Jacksonville, Sept. 14th, 1872. n37-wfi. Portland. I JOB PRINTING! LOWEST RATES!