A Ml ill ■ HI I"' »HIMIHill»».. II M'llHIU / . Oe ^cmorratirShnrs. Published Every Saturday Morning Bj CHAS. NICKELL, RATES OF ADVERTISING. EDITOR ANO PROPRIETOR. Advertisements will be Inserted in the T imes at the following rates : Ono square, one insertion........................$3.00 each subsequent one........... 1.00 Legal advertisements inserted reasonably. A fair reduction from the above rates made to yearly and time advertisers. Yearly advertisements payable quarterly. Job printing neatly and promjitly execut­ ed, and at reasonable rates. C ounty W akrants always at taken par. OFFICE—On Oregon Street, in Orth's Brick Building. Kate* of Subscription : C*no copv, |*er annum,......................... •• six mouths,................................. 2.no “ three months,............................. 1.00 /Hiwiitbly ni Ath'itnce. OFFICIAL DIRECTORY. VOL. VII. JACKSONVILLE, OREGON, SATURDAY, FEB. 3, 1877. PROFESSION AL CAROS. STATE OF OREGON. WK.WEKAL NOTEN ANI» NEON. NO. 6. THE ORKUOX •’ARE. C • ......................................................... L. F. Grover A. C. JONES. >*s cretai v ot Slate.....................S. F. Chadwick ■state Treasurer,......................................... A. H. Brown ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW, state Fruiter.............................................. M. V. Brown SupT of Publie Instruction... L. L. Rowland JACKSONVILLE, OGN., As the result of the Presidential elec­ The New Jersey Democrats elected W ashington , Jan. 9th.—Senator John R. McPherson to the U. S. Sen­ tion will partly be decided by the Morton is getting more than he bar- ate, beating Frelinghuysen one vote. Judges of the Supreme Court, accord­ gained for out of the Oregon case. ing to the new compromise, a new FIRST JUDICIAL lUSTRICT. The Pittsburg ZW now reads the Interest is manifested in the identity Mr. Klippel, one of the Democratic Circuit Judge..................................... 1*. !’• Frinì Will practice in nil the Courts of the State. proverb: “A returning lioard in hand of the different Associates and under candidates for elector, and J. N. T. Office in Orth’s building—up-stairs. District Attorney,....................... H. K. Hanna is worth more than any majority in the which Administration appointed. In Miller, one of the electors appointed JACKSON COl’NTY. by Cronin, were examined. Their tes­ returns.” order that there may be no State bias timony James Spence, M. D went to show a distinct refusal Stock loaning is to be stopped in either in favor of Tilden or Hayes, the on the part of Cartwright and Odell to San Francisco—at least the stock brok­ Judges whose circuits embrace either H O M E O P A T II I C 1» Il Y S I C I A N , ers are going to make an effort in that Ohio or New York are debarred from co-operate with Cronin, because they direction. serving on the committee for settling began operations by declaring a va­ cancy in the case of Watts and went Hofine « Ranch, near Kerbyville. A late number of Harper'» Weekly the electoral vote. This proviso neces­ ahead immediately to accept his resig­ has a life-size picture of Cronin’s nose. sarily shuts out Chief Justice Waite, nation as postmaster and replace him G. H. AIKEN, M. D„ We are perfectly correct when we say of Ohio, and Associate Justice Hunt, in the college. This of itself places who has New York in his circuit. The 1’ 11 Y S 1 C I A N A N D S U R G E O N , its nobby. refusal beyond all question. four who will positively serve, are I their Morton then approached the witnesses A majority of the House committee ¡Judge Clifford of the First Circuit, Jacksonville. Ureiron. on Territories, in charge of Cannon’s Judge Strong of the Third Circuit, with inquiries as to how much they were paid, and was informed that Office—One door west of the W. U. Tele­ bill to admit Utah as a State, are op­ Judge Miller of the Eight Circuit, and aside from receiving a single dollar posed to it. graph office. Judge Field of tho Ninth Circuit. they were actually out of pocket for I The Douglas Jndependenf contains These four will elect a fifth Judge from their traveling expenses to Salem, and J. A. CALLENDER, M. D., an outrage story of infanticide which one of tho three remaining Justices, that Chairman Bellinger for this rea­ P II Y S I C I A N A N D S U R G E O N , recently happened at Canyonville. Swayne, Davis and Bradley. As it is son would not allow them to contrib­ LAKE COUNTY. doubtful which one of these three will ute to the subscription th»*n being Both the mother and child died. County Judge................................ E. C. Mason JACKSONVILLE, OREGON. receive the appointment we have pre­ i s. c. Moss, During Montgomery Queen’s tour pared no sketch of their lives, confin­ raised to retain counsel for the Demo­ County Commissioners,...... <( A crats in the event of the contest reach­ with his circus through California, Sheriff........................................... T. .1. Braltain Office at residence, on Fifth street, op­ Oregon and British Columbia, last year, ing ourself to the simple statement ing the courts. Both witnesses testi­ Clerk............................................. R. B. Halion posite the Court House. that Democrats would prefer Judge Treasurer........................................ )• L« Hanks he lacked $4,600 of making his regular Davis to either of the others. Con­ fied that they had pistols in their Assessor............................................... M. Riggs pockets on the day the Electoral Col­ expenses. H. K. HANNA, School sii|>ermlvmivnl......... 11. Al. 1 halciier cerning those who will act, we have lege met. Surveyor............................... Frank ( bevsman A pretended agent of an Eastern thrown together the following inter­ ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR AT LAW, Then a Republican lawyer by the court sittings . nursery recently sold a lot of bogus I esting facts: Judge Nathan Clifford, of Dolph was called. He testi­ name Jackium CoMaf.v.—Circuit Court, second Jacksonville. Oregon, fruit trees to many Washington county whose Circuit embraces Maine, New Monday ill February, June and November. fied to having carried arms on his per­ County Court, urst .Holiday in each month. Will practice in all th? Courts of tho State. farmers at exorbitant prices. Look Hampshire, Massachusetts and Rhode son on the day the college was formed, Prompt attention given to all business left out for him. .hnupitiue County.— Circuit Court, iourih island, was horn in Rumne.v, Crafton and it seems that many of both parties Monday in April ami fourth Monday in or- in my rare. county, New Hampshire, on the 18th did the same, as popular excitement Columbia, Jan. 24—Col. Childs, loner. County Court, first Monday in Jan- ; Otlive in Orth’s Brick Building—upstairs. president of Carolina National bank, of August, 18(13. He studied at the ran so high that some conflict was ex­ nnty.— t ircuil Court, fourth Mon- ' C. W. K All LEK. E. B. WATSON. denies under oath Senator Nash’s state­ Haverhill Academy ami at the Hamp­ pected. Mr. Dolph admitted, when rlav m June; County Court, lirst Monday ment of the attempt to bribe him, ton Literary Institute. He \{&/ailmit- under cross-fire from Senator Kernan, KAHLER A WATSON, in January, April, July and October. ted to the bar ami moved I'o3l line in that he had told Secretary of State Nash, to vote for Tilden. TOWS OF JACKSONVILLE. VrroRNEYS A COUNSELORS-AT-LAW, 1827. From 1830 to 1831 he was a Chadwick that Gov. Grover should not | N. Fisher, President, Two or more surgeons of the San member, ami two years Speaker of the I Al. Caton, JACKSONVILLE OREGON, Francisco division of the National State legislature. He was Attorney be allowed to leave the State alive. Trustee*,......................i David Cronemiller, Medical institute of Indianapolis, Ind., General for the State of Maine from He distinctly admitted the legality of j J. .Xunan, t George Brown. will visit Portland on the 1 4th of Feb­ 1834 to 1S38, member of Congress from Cronin’s certificate by characterizing Recorder....................................... U. •>. Hayden I ruary next, and will remain one week. 183!) to 18 13, ami All’y. General from Gov. Grover’s action as a crime against '1 reasurcr,....................................... Henry r aja- ilie people of tin* State, for which they ... ................................................... L »’• AlcDamel We learn that the new mill recently 1840 to 1847. In the latter year he had no legal redress. Alorton and H. KELLY, Street Commissioner.................... I. •' • Weiss erected at tho Lucky Queen mine was was appointed United States Commis­ ATTORNEY A COUNSELOR-AT-LAW, started np on the 24th ult., and that sioner to Mexico, and was subsequently Mitchell both grew nervous under his reported threats aud damaging admis­ SOCIET Y NOTICES. it worked to a charm, giving entire sent as United States Minister to that sions. JACKSONVILLE, OREGON, sitisfaction to builders and owners. Republie. On his return he settled in Jarksoin ¡lie Lodsr Ao. 10, I. II. II. F., Mr. Cartwright, one of the Repub­ Portland, Maine, ami in 1858 was ap­ lican Hohls its regmar meetings every electors, testified that he asked Wm. Hayes, counsel for tho Demo­ pointed by President Buchanan an Saturday evening at me Odd b et- cratic State Central Committee, says Associate Justice of the Supreme Court Cronin to produce the certificates of low’s Hall, brulliers in good standing are the electors three or four times, and invited to attend. that about 18,000 voles were cast on of the United States. J. 11. HYZER, N. G. Cronin refused each time. lie (Cart­ certificates not according to law, and D aniel C rone . millek , Rec. sec y. Judge George McDowell Strong was wright) had a pistol in his pocket on JAMES S. HOWARD, consequently there was no legal elec­ horn at Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania —♦ - ■ —— i day the Electoral College met; it U.S. DEPUTY MINERAL SURVEYOR tion in California. Jacksonville Maunu Ao. IIs, I. II. R. M., October 12th, 1795, and was educated the was a seven-shooter, but he does not Holds its regular meetings every Thursday The Oregon and California Railroad at the College of New Jersey, graduat­ know whether it was loaded or not. FOR JACKSON, evening at me Odd r enows’ Hail. Bromel­ Company have confidence in the rich­ ing in 1817. He published asketch of in good standing are invited to attend. As to the $8,<>00 sensation Morton is ness and extent of their coal property. I tws relative to “Slavery in several of getting fretful and exasperated over E. JACOBS, O. C. .M ax M uller , R. N. They will soon commence the develop­ the States,” and from 1827 to 1856 he I its failure On Friday, Charles Di- ment of the coal vein near Comstock’s contributed many powerful articles to mond, of New York, will show the Ilrrzoiiiiiii Porahonlas Trib? Ao. 1. Im­ mill, in Douglas comity, and will con­ the law jour nals e pleased to have persons promise and genuine patriotism. The held with honor to himself and ids well, so ns to go into winter quarters possessing curiosities and specimens bring slightest invasion of the spirit of the countrymen. J?rom this it will be seen strong. They will then, with proper them in, and we will place them in the Cab­ Constitution should he earnestly depre ­ that but one of the Justices has been inet for insiH*ction. feed and care, pass through the winter WINTJEN A HELMS. cated; but the adoption of this measure appointed by a Democratic Adminis­ all right. It is thought that sheep can Jacksonville, Aug. 5, 1874. 32tf. could not in any event produce such tration ; but as we have too much re­ take care of themselves, but no kind California Street, Jacksonville, Oregon. despicable results as would surely fol­ spect for our Judges of the Supreme of stock has more need of a careful, at­ EAGLE SAMPLE ROOMS, low the final disagreement of the two Court to hold for an instant that they tentive man to take care of them. p VERY OPERATION PERTAINING TO Houses and, therefore, he was disposed can be influenced by party spirit, we C alifornia S treet , J the jaw skilfully ¡»erfbrined at reasona­ to favor it. gladly accept them as the final power “I ALWAYS did love to gaze on the ble rates. Proprietor. No more credit will lie given after the S. P. JONES, Washington, Jan. 24.—A Chicago which is to settle the much vexed children in their sports,” said Potter first of January, 1876. I will take all kinds Tribune spec'al says: While the slatt^ Presidential question— Standard. ^as he pensively contemplated a crowd of produce. inent is denied that the President is Office and residence on corner of Califor­ ONE BUT THE CHOICEST AND BEST T he Utica Herald says lint: a young of urchins; “I am carried back to nia and Fifth street*, Jacksonville. Wines, Brandies, Whiskies and Cigars favorably inclined to the electoral com­ woman in that city who had inordi­ Just then the baseball came over his kept. promise bill, It is ascertained that all nately big ears, but otherwise pretty, way and tried to get into his vest DRINKS, 12 J CENTS. New Boot and Shoe Store, the men bers of the Cabinet, with the went to New York and had them cut pocket and doubled him up. When exception of Secretary Fish, are opposed down by a skillful surgeon. The oper­ his breath came back lie shouted, “You NO CREDIT IN THE FUTURE—it don’t C altfornia S treet , pay. Families needing anything in our line to it, and will not favor its being signed young r gamuffins, if I catch you play­ ran always lie supplied with the purest and if passed and submitted to the Presi­ ation was successful, and now her ears Oregon. l>est to l>e found on the Coast. Give me a Jacksonville, are small, symmetrical, and nut badly ing ball on the street again I’ll get the dent. Unless the bill js promptly police after you.” call, and you w'ill be well satisfied. scarred. ! signed and not retained fur considera­ tion for a few days, it will become in­ A B it of H istory .—Chamberlain aving permanently located A ny work, no matter how humble, All Kinds of Job Printing in Jacksonville, the undersigned re­ operative. The opponents of the bill went to South Carolina a pauper. He that a man honors by efficient labor, spectfully informs the public that he is feel sanguine that the measure will not is now a millionaire. Meanwhile the will be found important enough to se­ prepared* to do all kinds of work in the boot NEATLY & CHEAPLY EXECUTED AT receive the President’s approval with­ State has been plundered of $15,061),- cure respect for himself and credit fur and shoe making lino. . Satisfaction guaran­ out full consideration. teed. M. CA1ON. 000, The Times Office. I his name. FURNITURE WARE-ROOM, THE ASHLAND IRON WORKS, M I I H 8ECBETABY CHADWICK. The following, in relation to Secre­ tary Chadwick, we clip from the Phil­ adelphia Evening Star : Hon. Stephen Fowler Chadwick, the Secretary of the State of Oregon, apent New Year’s day in this city visiting the Star office, places of historic inter­ est, and also the Centennial grounds, to look after the disposition of the dis­ play of his State, some portions of which 81ill remain subject to his or­ der,. while the larger part has been contributed to the permanent exhibi­ tion which is to be held in the Main building. Mr. Chadwick was the State canvasser of the electoral vote of Ore­ gon and brought to Washington last week the returns of theaelection in that State, and testified in the Cronin-Watts contest, before the Committee of Priv­ ileges and Elections. He being a Democratic elector, also carried to Washington the electoral vote of Ore­ gon at the time Seymour ran for Pres­ ident. Mr. Chadwick has been for twenty- five years one of Oregon’s most con­ spicuous and esteemed lawyers. He is a native of Connecticut, and a representative of the pioneer element that struck out for the Pacific slope in ’49. He was chosen orator of the Pio­ neer Association of his State at its last celebration, and the orator at the lay­ ing of the cornerstone of the new State Capitol at Salem, he being at that time Grand Master of Oregon. Mr. Chadwick was a guest of the Continental Hotel and left this morn­ ing for New York, when he departs for Oregon on Thursday or Friday. In personal appearance he bears a striking resemblance to President Grant, both in form and feature, and has been many times mistaken for tho President during his trip, both hero and in Washington. Like all the rest of tho representa­ tives of the Pacific Slope, Mr. Chad­ wick is enthusiastic in his praises of their fertile lands and salubrious cli­ mate, and reports that on 13th of De­ cember, when he left home, the farm­ ers were plowing all over the Wil­ lamette Valley for their spring crop of wheat, with the thermometer at 56 degrees. Mr. Chadwick succeeds Gov. Grover after the fourth of March for the un­ expired term of that gentleman, who goes to the United States Senate. N ew D ouble E agles .—New dies for the production of $20 pieces, dif­ ferent from tlie old ones in many re­ spects, have recently, been received at the mint in San Francisco. Unless those facts were generally known the issue of 1877 might cause some trouble among bankers, brokers and others who handle much coin, and look out for counterfeits. In the new dies the head of Liberty, which in old ones was leaning to the right, is now per­ pendicular. The outlines of the face and the hair are brought out more prominently, giving to the coin the appearance of being much larger. On the reverse side three important changes have been made. On the old issues there were the words at the bot­ tom “TWENTY D,” but now the de­ nomination is expressed plainly, “TWENTY DOLLARS.” In tho scroll underneath the coat of arms, tho words, “E Pluribus Unum,” are en­ graved much larger; they could only be made out with difficulty on the old ones, but can easily be read now. Above tho coat of arms tho upper row of stars is thrown up in the halo and the oval disposition of the stars widened. The engraving is much bet­ ter than in the old issues, and the whole coin looks more handsome and attractive to the eye. There is no dif­ ference in the weight, fineness or size of the coin. The mint commenced coining the new double eagles a few weeks ago. C hocolate C ream D rops .—Take two cupfuls of white sugar, one-half cupful of milk; put them into a sauce­ pan and heat until it boils; then boil hard five minutes precisely. Net the pan in a di*h of cold water; stir until the mixture creams and cools enough to handle, then mould into small drops, laying them on a buttered platter. Flavor If you prefer. Take half a cake of baker’s chocolate, scrape fine, put it into a bowl and set in the top of a »teaming, not boiling, tea-kettle till dis­ solved; then take the creams, one at a time, and drop in the chocolate, roll over quickly, take out with a fork and slip on a buttered platter. Be careful not to let the chocolate cook, or it will harden. There ia an elector named Cronin, Who has set tho Rtqmblicans groanin’; For he was elected And Watts was rejected, And that ’s Watts the matter with Cronin ! ■ , !■ » ................. A n Indianapolis dog goes mad when ho hears a piano played, but there’s hundreds of tuen who do the same thing. S ubscribe for the T imes . •At -