vhcWvmüftaiif Winiw. v- .... nulo, nA ric rimonn. would enkindle sectarian strife In respect to the Public School», of which the estab­ lishment ami support belong exclusively to he States, and which the Democratic party has --hcrished from their foundation, and is resolved to maintain without partiality or preference tor any class, sect or cn-ed, and without contributions from tho Treasury. Second, the false issue by which they seek to light anew the dying I'tiilvin of sectional hate between kindred people, once unnatu­ rally estranged, but now united in one indi­ visible Republic and a common destiny. * ♦ • u finti PtjWr for Jtfkxon, JMrphinr * Ink’ I ItlDAY.. JULY 7. 187« n DEMOCRATIC NOMINATIONS. FOR PRESIDENT: SAMUEL J. TILDEN, «>F NEW YORK. H>R VICE PRESIDENT: THOS. A. HENDRICKS, •»F INDIANA. FOR PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS: W. B. 1ASWELL.............................. Of Gnmt HENllY KI.ll’I’Et........................ leur rights, it behooves a free people to practice also that eternal vigilance which I is the price of lil>erty. Mr«*». I Republican journ.ih are already be­ ginning to catch at very small straws, thereby evincing a drowning condition i*arly in the canvass. As an evidence ot tnt>, says the Sonoma Democrat, they are lustily proclaiming the fact that Cui. John S. Mosby, of Virginia, the ex-guerilla, has authorized the statement that he will support the Hayes» ami Wheeler ticket, and gives it as his opinion that all con*ervalive men in that State “who sei* that n<» g'K>d can come out of the Democratic party” will do the same. The fad that Col. Mosby is the only conserva­ tive man iu Virginia who “sees that way,” takes away even this small 1 crumb of comfort from our Radical friends; and the further fact that the Colonel has been using Grant’s specta- vlea for some time past accounts for this obliquity of Ids vision. The Balarle« ol Civil. SERVICE HFFOKM. members of the next Legislature : HOW THE fl'ttt.Ifl P.!»IT SHALL BE SFSTAIXED. Goveruori. New York pays its Governor an un­ nual salary of $10,000, which is tile highest paid in the Union Louisiana pay« $8,000 ; California, $7,000; Ne- I vada, $6,000. Eight States—Ken- iI tucky, Massachusetts, Missouri, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Texas, Vir­ ginia and Wisconsin—pay $5,000 ; Maryland, $4,500. Three States—Al­ altatna, Georgia and Ohio—$4,000. Arkansas, South Carolina and Florida, pay each $3,500. Kansas, Indiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, New Jersey anti Tennessee, pay each $3,000. Illi­ nois, Iowa and Maine p iy each $3,500. West Virginia pays $2,700 ; Connecti­ cut, $2,000; Oregon, $1,500; Dela­ ware, $1,300 ; and Michigan, Nebras­ ka, New Hampshire, Vermont and Rhode I'lnnil pity their Governors re- •peclively a salary of just $1,000. The muh «. Having no general State ticket to elect this year, we have no better ba­ sis to estimate the status of the State t ian.by taking the vote cast for Prose- ciimg Attorney in the different dis­ tricts. From this vote we find that there were cast near 29,000 votes, says the Standard, and the Democracy got a majority of over 1,000 on lhe district I tickets. This ought to convince the Radicals that Oregon m Democratic. Lane and the Democratic candidates for President and Vice President will earry the Stite by 1,500. Le‘. our Radical friends remember this. I » We demiml a judicious system of prepa­ ration, by public economies, by oilicial re- , trenchments, and L»y a wise financial sys- j tern, whiyh shall enable lhe nation soon to assure the whole world of its perfect readi­ ness to meet any of its promises at the call of the creditor’entitled to payment. We, believe such a system would be well de- ; vised, ami above all, intrustetl to competent hands tor execution, creating at no time an artificial scarcity of currencv, and at no ■ time alarming the public mini) into a with- ' drawal of that vast machinery’ of credit by i which ’A'» per cent, of all busin«?ss transac­ tions arc performed. A system open, pub­ lie ami inspiring general confidence, would from lhe day of its adoption bring healing on its w ings to all our harassed industries, 1 set in motion the wheels ot commerce, man- ’ utaettires and the mechanical arts, restore employment to labor and prosperity to the people. Reform is necessary in sum and inode of Federal taxation, to tho end that capital shall be set free from distrust, and labor liirhtly ‘bur lened. CT HEN ATE—DEMOCRATS. on nearly 4,000 articles, as a master piece ot injustice, inequality ami false pntense. It yields a dwindling, not a yearly rising rev­ enue. It has impoverished many industries to subsidize a few. I It prohibits imports that might j urcba-e the products of American commerce, from the first to an interior rank upon the high seas. It has cut down the sale of American manufactures at Dome and abroad, and depleted thy returns of American agriculture and industiy loltowed by one-half our people. It costs the people live times more than it produces to the Treasury ; obstructs the processes of pro­ duction, and wastes the fruits of labor. It promotes frauds ; fosters smuggling ; en­ riches dishonest officials, and bankrupts honest merchants. We demand that Cus­ tom House taxation shall be only for reve­ nue. Reform is nei-es-ary in the scale of public expense—Federal, Stale and munic­ ipal. REPUBLICANS. I If the American people really want I reform in the public service, they can have it. The great representative of practical reform is before them in the person of Gov. Tilden. He has shown that he has the pluck, the ability and the good intentions of a true reformer. There is a great work for such a man to do, and the people now have an op- pirttfiiity to choose lhe man who can hfid will do |L I DEALER & WORKER IN DEALERS IN TIN, SHEET IRON, COPPER, LEAD, etc. AGRICU1 /r U R AL GENERAL MERCHANDISE/ i Pumps, OREGOÑ. IM PLEM ENTS, JACKSONVILLE. NAILS, A FIRST-CLASS STOCK LOW PRICES WILL Wilf OF STOVES, I i rpiIE UNDERSIGNED TAKE PLEA8- I urc in notifying their friend* and tho public generally that they have nun-based the stock of White it Martin, ana are now receivin'! and ofM-ning a very large, exteu- sive and well-selected assortment of HARDWARE, TINWARE, t POWDER OF EVERY DESCRIPTION, 1 Fuse and Caps, STAPLE DRY-GOODS, © BOOTS AND SITO1S, Wooden and Willow Ware,1 ROPE, NAIIJS, California & Salem Coths and Blanket!, I 4 Ready-Made Clothing, PAINTS, OILS, VARNISHES. GLASS, AGRICULTURAL I I i i i LADIES, CHILDREN A MISSES SHOES. ♦ ETC., ETC. f f We have also In connection with the a1«ovtr a very large and line stock of choice 1 have «»»cured the services of a First-class ( Mechanic, and am prepare«! to do all repair­ Notice is hereby given that the un­ ing promptly mid in suj>crior style. < • R< »< 'ERIES, PAINTS, OILS, NAILS, WIN­ i i DOW GLASS, CAST AND IN CONNECTION WITH THE ABOVE. 1 I am receiving and have constantly on indebted to them, by lwiok account or hand I a full and first-class stock of ( note, to coinè forward without delay STEEL PLOWS, WOOD­ I I EN ANI) WILLOW WARE, ETC. Groceries, I and settle up. G LASSWARE, QUEENS WARE, HARDWARE, CUTLERY, dersigned will shortly retire from busi- ness, and therefore request all person-» Hats and Caps Shot, Brushes, Chains and Hceo, ; I t NOTICE ! IMPI/EMENTS, CUTLERY, WIRE, SACHS BROS. DRY GOODS, Gam Booti., TOBACCO. I W<* «re now ready to sell anything tn our lino at low«'st «*ash pri«*«*«. Persons wishing I GLASSWARE, CROCKERY, Etc., Etc. to buy goo«Is will find it greatly to their «t to be undersold by any house in Jackson S. B. duced San Francisco cost. g»®” Everything hold at reasonable rates. county. ,r-C*«;ive us a <*all, ami then iinlge for Give me a «•«!!. . K. KUBLI. yourself as to our eapacitv to furnish good«- Jacksonville June let, 1870. Jacksonville, Feb. IS, 1875. as above. Rk.AMFX BROS. 1 Jacksonville. Feb. 12. 157.r>. We will continue to sell the re Ready-Made Clothing, I I THE SODA SPRINGS! HURTERS’ EMPORIUM! hardwar : and cut C ry store I AND MARBLE WORKS. I Ho ! Unto All Who Thirst ! California Street, Jacksonville, Oregon I COME YE TN io 4 LWAYSoN 11 \ND THE BllST NTtK’K i ;\ of I’Htent ami Home-made Rifi<> sml double; Rcxohera I shot Gun*, single and of the latest |Mf the Pacific Coast to tho incursions of a race not spreading our language, nor springing I from the same great parent stoek, ana, in fact.now denied citizenship through natural­ ization, as being neither accustomed to the traditions of a progressive civilization nor exercised in liberty under .laws. We de­ noun«« the policy which thus discards the liberty-loving German and tolerates the re­ i vival of the coolie trade in Mongolian wo­ men, imported lor immoral purp«>ses, and Mongolian meu, held to perforin servile labor contracts, and demand such a modifi­ cation of the treaty with tho Chinese Em­ I K. Hunsaker, Win» Porter. Multnomah—Win. Cornell, Gideon pire, or sudi legislation by Congress, with­ I in constitutional limitation, as shall pre­ Tibbets, J. M. Scott, D. Goodsvll, J. vent the further importation or immigration R. Roberts. of the Mongolian race. i ASHLAND, OREGON, I WILL STAND FOR MARES AT THE H stable of the owner, J. A. Cardwell, near Jacksonville,during lhe season of 1876, commencing April 1st and ending July 1st, at the following rates : 815 for each mare, REPUBLICANS. in gold coin or its equivalent, payable at the SIGN PAINTING, I time of service. Benton—R. A. Bensell, James I Mike is 12 years old, was sired by old ORNAMENTAL PAINTING, Chambers. Vermont,out of a thoroughbred Whip inare; Columbia—T. A. McBride. WAGON AND CARRIAGE PAINTING. he i-s a beautiful bay, 17 hands high, well formed, and weighs 1,600 pounds, lie has Cochran, Captain Clackamas—John sired more fine horses, according to the ALL STYLES OF GRAINING DONE. Will. class of mares that have l>een bred to him, I Orders from the country promptly attend­ than any other horse in the world, ot his Douglas—W. F. Benjamin, E. A. ed tn. ’ 21. age, and’he is without doubt the Favorite Kirkpatrick, W. P. T. Grubbe, M. M. Horse where he is known. Melvin. GREAT SACRIFICE I will furnish pasturage to those desiring Grant—F. Winogftr. it at 75 cents j»cr week. I will not be re­ sponsible for anv accidents or escu|>es. Jackson—J. M. McCalJ. — I N— J. A. CARDWELL. L-ine—Rodney Scott,‘Allen Bond. i Marion—wStephen Smith, F. R. II WANTED ! Smith, A. N. Gilbert, D. Payton, H. BLACKSMITHING! « I I I I 20,000 Lbs. of Old Cast Iron, S ALLOUR MERCHANT'S ARESELL- ing out at cost and freight, I am ready elivered at the foundry ’ in to do blacksmithing at cost and freight, but Ashland, for which we will pay the Washington — D. M. C. Gault, C. T. REFORM THE DOMINANT ISSUE, must have the cash when the work in com­ highest price. pleted, Shop on the corner of California Reform is necessary, ana can never be* Tozier. Every farmer has more or less old cast- and Main streets. effected but by making it the control 1 ng Yamhill—J. J. Henderson—27. ings al>out his premises, such as ol«I stoves, DAVID CRON EMILLER. issue ot the elections and lifting it above pinions and other articles. These they INDEPENDENTS. the two falsa issues with which U hi office­ would do well to gather up, and bring them holding class and the party in power seek END 25c. to G eo . P. H owkll 0,0«K),000, in gold, in I860, to $450,000,000, «nirrency.-in 1870 ; our aggregate taxation from 154,000,000, gold, in IskO, to $730,000,000, in currency, in 1570, or in one decade from less than $o per head to more than $18 per head. Since the peace the people have paid to their tax gatherers more than thrice lhe sum of tho national debt, and more thau twice that sum for Federal taxes. Above all, we demand a vigorous frugality in cv- cry department and from every officer of the Government. É. li. REÁÍYÉA T. O. REAMES. Odd Fri linn’ Building, iifhondllr, Orrfcn, I Reform is necessary to put a stop to the prodigate waste of public lands and their Bristow was the representative of diversion from actual settlors by the party in power, which has squandered two hun­ the ide» of reform in Lite Republican dred millions of acres iqsni railroads alone, out of more than thrice that aggregate party, and evidently the choice of the and has disposed of less than a sixth directly to honest inassen of that organization. the tillers of the soil. reform ? K. KUBLI, I Benton—J. B. Lee. Clatsop, Columbia and Tillamook— ’ S. II. Smith. Douglas — James Applegate, G. W. Colvig. Marion—Jas. A. Richardson, Joseph Engle. I Multnomah—M. C. George. Washington—A. S. Watt—8. I Polk—Bentley, Independent—1. WASTE OF PUBLIC LANDS. But h? was not wanted by the men who control the party, and was ruth­ lessly alaugh'.eied at Cincinnati. Til­ den as fully represented the Idea of reform In the Democratic party; and, in the face of a tierce opposition from the ring*, he was triumphantly nomi­ nated as the Democratic candidate fur the Presidency. Which party is sin­ cere In Itu profession of a desire for ♦ i B iker J. W. Wisdom. Benton and Polk—J. S. Palmer. Clackamas—John Myers and J. W. Offield. Coos and Curry—A. G. Brown. Grant—W. H. Clark. Jackson—John 8. Herrin. Josephine—D. L. Green. Lane—R >bt. B. Cothran and John Whiteaker. Linn—S. D. Hahiv, Thos. R. Mtink­ ers and T. P. (Joodman. i Mari'in—M. L Savage. Multnomah—J. 8. M. Van Cleave and T. A. D fvis. Union—M. Jasper. Umatilla—('has. L. Jewell. Wasco and Lake—S. G- Thompson. Yamhill—J. U. Braley, E. C. Brad­ A TARIFF TOR REVENUE ONLY. Wo denoun *e the present tariff levie 1 up­ i shaw 21. The Difference. I I | Reform is necessary in the civil service. Experience proves that efficient and eco­ nomical conduct of the Government busi­ ness is not possible if its civil wrvice is sub­ ject to change at every election, to be a prize fought for at the ballot l»ox, to bt* a brief re­ ward of party zeal instead of leasts of honor assigned for proved Competency and held tor fidelity in the public employ ; that the dispensing of patronage should neither be a tax on the time of all our public men nor the Instruments of their ambition. Here, again, professions falsified in tho perform­ ance attest that the party in power now can work out no practical or satisfactory reform. Reform is necessary even more in tho higher grades of the public service. Presi­ dent. Vive President, Judges, Senator.«, Representatives, < ’a bi net oilicen*—theso and all others in authority are the people’s ser­ i vants. Public offices are not a private perquisite ; they are a public trust. When the annals of this Republic show the disgrace and con- , sure of a Vice President ; a late Speaker of the House of Representatives marketing his ruling as a private officer; three Sena­ tors profiting secretly by their votes as law­ f makers; five Chairmen of the leading Com- I AnUAli VMEXr OF Till: KEPI m.lCAN PARTY. mitiecs <»t the late House of Representatives Reform is necessary to rebuild and estab­ exposed in robbery ; a late Secretary of tho » > lish in tin* hearts of the whole people the Treasury forcing balances in the public i > Union, happily to be n'seuo»! from the dan- accounts ; a late Attorney General misap­ I gi r of a «•orrupt centralization which, after propriating public funds ; a Secretary of the mtlictimr upon ton States the rapacity ot I Treasury enriched or enriching friends by »•arpet-bag tyrannies, has honey-c«>mbed ! I I percentages oft the profits ot contractors the ofiiees of the Federal Govtunmcnt itself I i with his Department ; an Ambassador to with incapacity worst« than fraud; intle'.ing ' England censured in a dishonorable specu­ States and municipalities with thecontugion ! I lation ; the President’s Private Secretary of misrule, and locked fast the prosperity I i barely t scaping conviction upon trial for of aa industrious peopk> with the parulasis I guilty complicity in frauds upon the re •ve ve- ­ of hard time.. Reform is necessary to es- ' I nno Spprpkirv nue • ; Secretary of Wnr War imhud iiiqteached for I tablish a sound currencv, restore the public high erimes and confessed misdemeanors— credit and maintain the national honor. the demonstration is complete that the first i We denounce the failur»* for all eleven years step in reform must be the people’s choice ' to make good the promist* of the legal ten­ of honest men from another party, lest the J der notes which are a changing standard of disease of one political organization infect I value in the hands of the p»*opl«>, and the the body politic—and lest by making no • non-payment ot' which is a disregard of the change of men or party we get no change of ■ plighted faith of the nation. We denounce measures or reform. All these abuses, the improvi'lenc»' which in eleven years of ; wrongs and crimes—the production of six­ p -aee has taken from the people ten times teen year* ascendancy of the Republican tin- whole amount of lhe legal tender notes, party—create a necessity for reform con­ ami s.piiindered four times the sum in use- . fessed by Republicans themselves. But 1» ss expense, without accumulating any re- I their reforms are \ oteil down in convention I serve for their redemption. We denouneo i I ami displaced from the Cabinet. The jMirty’s the financial imbecility of that party which, mass of honest voters is powerless to resist I durii g eleven years ot peace has made no i tho 80,000 office-holders, its leaders and I advam-e toward resumption, no preparation • guides, and reform can only be had by a 1 for resumption, but. instead, has obstructed peaceful civic revolution. We demand a it demption l»\ wasting our resources and i change of parties, that we may have a exhausting all our surplus income; and , change ot measures and of men. i whileannually professing to intend a speedy < return to sj»ecie payment has annually ( THE I.EGINI.ATl UK. added fresh hiiblranees thereto. As such a hindrance we denounce the resumption clause of the Act of 1875, and we demand The following is a correct list of the its repeal. OF DOUGLAS. 4'atrhiiiK 1 the Independent- Democrat from Jack- son with the Democrats, and the In­ dependent Republican from the same county with the Republicans, from the fact that it is informed that they both dechired in the canvass that if elected they would, on all party questions, act with their respective parties. We have also placed in the list of Demo­ cratic Senators Goodman of Linn and Jewell of Umatilla, who were elected two years ago on the Independent tick­ et, but who, we are informed, will act with their party. The two Independ­ ents elected in Polk ami Washington, and the State Senator from Polk, are Republicans in the«r political antece­ dents, and they will probably go with that party on all political questions. D ! eastings and Babbitt metal. Bella cast. Farming machinery, engines, house frouts, stoves, sewing machines, blacksmith-work, and all work wherein iron, steel or brass is used, repaired. Parties desiring anything in our lino will do well to ghe ns a call b<-- fore going elsewhere. All work done with neatness and dispatch at reasonable ratea^ J.-fT' Bring on vonr old east iron. ZIMMERMAN A CO. _ Ashland. April 8. 1876. BAILROAD SALOON, Cor. Caliiórnia and OregonSb»., Jacksonville- HENRY PAPE, ■ Engineer. THROUGH TICKETS, 12 i C ents » pHOICK WINES, LIQUORS AND CI* V > gars constantly on hand. The reading table is also supplied with Eastern periodi­ cals and leading papers of the Coast. SETTLE UP ' VTOTTCK -IS HEREBY . GIVEN. THAT 1.N tho auoountx of lhp firm, ot Manning A I Inh have l>een placed tn mv hands far eoi- lection. All pon»o«s inrteMed t© «aid firm are requested to settle immediately« H. K. HANNA. ‘ Jacksonville. Sept. * 1875. fl I J