> VW* f i »t I - 11 i r M ir i I f « ■r I ’ i ' j 5 * ; .♦* I r I \ 7^ "Sii» - -Uta,,.. . • ■ ' I I" 1 J ■ . /j. _ . ■ ■ t 14^. ‘ j i V r f I t s. k V». f- * / in 1 X ? ♦ I VOL. I. J / 9. I fi : —* A! i 1 ; i «! 11 k I ! r V ( T > i; L1 - ! 4 4 r J I Î t - - t fz’ ¡A ‘‘ s ! •• / LAFAY ETTE, OREGON. BY UPTON- _________ _ » TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. 00. 2 00. One Copy One Year............................ One Copy Six Months,........................ RATES OF ADVERTISING. J One Square, 12 Lines or less, one Inser­ tion,' . . . , .... $3.00. For each subsequent insertion, . . 1,00. A liberal deduction will be made on Quartery, Yearly, and half Yearly Adver­ tisements. Hotel, Medical and Law Cards, $10,00 per annum. i j . COUNTY OFFICIAL DIRECTORY. || »Judge, J. W*. Cowles; Commissioners, S. Brutcher. Henry Hewitt; Sheriff. L. L. Whit­ comb ; Clerk, S. C. Adams; Assessor, Chas. HarfHley Treasurer, J >hn W. Watts: Schoo) Superintendent, Rev. John Spencer; Coroner, W. W. Brown ; Surveyor, A. S. Watt. I i n DENTIST RY . h i II I i M V X. DR. Ä. O. PHILLIPS, SURGEON I1’ I •< I » 1 • • / jLk • Tender» hikPrfessionnl Services to the citizens of Lafayette and Surrounding country. nl2tf. I t S. HURLÖÜRT. > JI- r ' II ATTORNEY AT LAW, t Lafayette, Yamhill ^County, Oregon. Will practice in the Supreme, Circuit nn i all of tlk« Cvurke of th»» bthte. 4 r ; ■ ---------------------------- ---------------- ------------- -------------------,------------------- --------- i DR. H.*J. BOUGHTON. “WE DID IT.” - . - k • . r J * . J Late Physician & Surgeon, Y r E. C. BRADSHAW, ‘ ATTORNEY COUNSELOR AT LAW, AND LICITOR IN CHANCERY. ' Lafayette, Oregon. so- * 'A’t- TTill practice in the District and Supreme Courts of Oregon. Taxes Paid, Collections made, and Proceeds Promptly remitted. ■ ■> ■ ï ' U i *■« r • t- i , — — ---------- - * ■ .......... . I t .*» ■- j , A. F. and A. t 1 f ll ’ * • I . ’V 1 B oundlessness of M oral I nflu ­ ence .— Away among the Alleghenies is r AND 1 . .41 - ■! mm ■» - - - - — II BBi , I LA FA YETTI LODGE, NO. 3, Frew and Accepted Blasona. Meets in Lafayette on the 1st. and 3rd Friday of each month, at half past 6 in the afternoon. ‘ v Brethren of the order, in good standing are invited to attend. ■ T. V. B. EMBREE, W. M ■ ’ 1J A -V H - • ■ G eo Et. S teward Sec’ y. ' a spring so small that a single’ox, on a summer’s day, could drain it dry dry,. It r. .. . steals its unobtrusive way among the hills till it spreads out into the tbe beautiful Ohio. Thence it stretches out a thousand miles leaving on its banks its hundred villages and cities, and cultivated farms, and bear­ ing ou its bosom more than half a thou sand steamboats. Then joining the Mis­ sissippi, it stretches away some twelve hundred miles more, till it falls into the emblem of eternity.' It is one of the great tributaries of the ocean, which, obe dient only to God, shall roll and roar till the ’ angel, with one foot on thé sea and the; other on the land, shall lift up his hands to Heaven and swear that time shall be no longer. So with moral influence. It is a rill—rivnlet—or an ocean bound­ less and fathomless as eternity. • * U * ” 'Hr T 1 ‘ ’ W hat D ouglas T hought of L in ­ coln ..-— During the delivery of a speech by Mr. Douglas after Lincoln’s election to the Presidency, the question Was pro­ - pounded to him whether or not he would HE undersigned wduld respectfully an­ accept an offioe from Lincoln, to which he nounce to the travelling public, Chat he replied in tbe following style: has, at tbe Lafayette crossing of the Yambill; “I have only to say that I cannot be­ A LARGE, NEW AND SAFE FERRY BOAT, lieve that any manteputed to be a gentle­ oo which be can cross Teams, Stock, ■ i sf' -• * ■ \ • f i z 4’ ! ■ ; : - • ' it • H H '■ -■ • . ■■ 1 ‘1 ■■ ■ I 11 ■ ' ' -, im s t f A U-f, i i |i ' - ; 41 ’ a a a a aJ^ • I j i. I j i • t fl ?■' 4 j' ». 1 f |: #’ • » ■ I- Ì F I ‘ir ¥ I I ; ... »I J •4»'' : t ■ < I 1 .n I ♦ r :/>' J J «• •••. *'U. ’ di ■ ; ■*-, i « . J' A. r I. # ■ a • k / J A 9 i :ll---------- < I 5 V J I M >- A /* * A I - ! -, i - 1 1 ï PW v r4 J / /] 4 i '] r<- 'S ■f J’ J f n ■fli1 • I i f f * : - y..,, *•> ur» : f » 5 j 4 •«* r - «!'’n- - > »V 1 a 1-1 1 : ■ * I • t : iKj - { _ _ 1 _ a J * I I J z* n Mo. Al A ■> W. ' 1 ■ I F i jk ■ z ’ k * • * '' " I « ? / 4 5 ♦ » j u it. I I t t ■ 4 1 >■ I r % » I I "t I f < K. ■ k 4 e r ♦ ! L » •. > ' i i i , ■ •L << 4 » d' * *■■ I I •. - 4 ; H 4 ‘ / — ■ rt ». • III IL I I « i I' .-- ! I Ï ‘ ■ ! 4 i I i ? r r Hi 1 » I ä . j 1 « ‘■j i I. « I » ’ » ? .J -lì * t i « <• rfi i. ! . »■ I I fc' 'S ¡Ì 'I-' 51 ■ Bd a I I s i i X • : *■ 1 I r : J f’ I ' it I li ‘ri ; j » * ■ ■J; l !■ • • » i t Î - .1 li L-. ^-1 ■ r i W «V .. . x-i f V • . • • ■ •1 I * If ■ ! X' s * i ♦ \ • ./ IA mn 4 ■ «’ \ Ì I I • ? I r'^ i 'L ♦ J i r ! ■ I s V •a 6 ’a 3 * . T I : ■ * z* What It Does. ¡lit • k ■ I I .' t 1 . i N ew S enators . —The New York Tri­ bune of the 23d of June, gives a list of 1 New I ork Hera d, a Republican Senators whose terms will expire with The A feeling of ■ responsibility ■ i is; necessary ? h i to the prompt and faithful discharge ot paper, but now supporting I resident John- pregr>nt Congress, which we append f 1 Foster of Connecticut, Trtimbull i of duty. The performance of woik must be son in his struggle with the disumonists, attended with this feeling to finsuro its thus forcibly epitomizes the Civil Rights if|inois> McDougal of California, . Harris execution in the best manner apd at sea­ 4’1"; jl , . L ! 1 of New .york, York, Lane of Indiana^ IndianAl'x Pomero/ viueruy sonable time. Children ’ can easily be ' Shall the negro intermarry with our ofKan8a8 Kirkwood of Iowa, Davis of taught this, without unduly ta ig|ng them. daughters, and take an equal place in our Kentucky, Cresswell of Maryland, Brown Let^ the little boy knowjQiat L. — he is ex­ househib’d? The Civil Rights Bill says ’ of iil80uri Clark of New' Hampshire, 1 ■ p i '• --------- of rrtv:_ petted pected to keep hie his playthings in’place and that hef shall. . . ’ ’ ! ! Nye of Neavada. cu Shermau Ohio; rzA.._ Sovr­ i in order, to have thp kind lings ready for Shall negroes intermingle with our re-' an of Pennsylvania, Howe of .Wisconsin,- ■ I the fire, or to care for thujchick|ns, or for fined ladies jn steaming lint theatres, bail ; : and Nesmith of Oregon, finish their terms 'or some- Skip—u ake hirp responsible ior some­ rooms, opera houses and railroad cars? ¡on the 4th cf March, 1867. General O. J i 1 i IH' . || ver, in it it- ­ 1 he Civil Rights- Bol jdoclares that he ; g Ferry has been elected to succeed thing however insignificant sofver, ¡1 . » J J self, that thing may be—itassis jfe in form- must J J , r, • Foster. Senator Trumbull will doubt« f il efe that the L Shal the negro, supercede Grant as ieg8 be re elected, even should Be’ have' i ing a most valuable habit. j i thing to be done is done just a| the time Geueral-in-chief United M-in’Chief of the U nited States such formidable fnrmidnhlfi nomnpHtnrs competitors in in csneiiM caucus as appointed for it and in the time assigned army? The Civil Rights Bill says that General Logan and Governor Oglesby. L- 1 to its performance. he can do so. ' Î Nye and Howe have fair chance» of con­ The little girl can dugt t.h^room, ar­ Is a negro five times better than a white tinuing for still another term. Governor range the chairs, and, as she gwws older,’ man that the former should vote immedi­ Bramlette is likely to take the place of trim the lamps or set theïable for meals, ately, while the lattor has to undergo five his rival?. Senator Lane of Indiana de* 11 ■; or prepare some part of the fowl for the years probation if he brings hi‘s skill, la­ clines a re election, and Speaker Colfax Ì family. Especially, should tlfey all, as bor and money to this country from abroad? and Julian *Te uamed for the succession. soon as they are old enough to |>e taught, The Civil Rights bill declares that the ne­ Hickman Kelly), Ketchum, Wilmot and- I I how to dq it, be responsible, fore the neat­ gro is five timuh better. Cameron ate named for Cowanbs seat In ness of their flower oi vegetable gardens, Shall the farms of the Great West and the Senate ; the choice is likely to rest Ì and for the health of all she plants they the whole cctintry be owned by negroes, I on a new man and not one of the old po- cultivate. f s I / and white Ipbor be made subservient to I . liticians. Governor Cartiey is anxious This, instead of interfering ^ith their negro proprietorship ? The Civil Rights to succeed Pomeroy, and General Blair * bodily growth and mental development, Bill Bi.1 provides for this condition of things, things will contest the Senatorship with Gratz assists them; it promote^ thekhildreu’s Are iwve to have negroes filling positions Brown. Corftelious Cole, a member of of posticaptains United Stains.Na- ................. inGhe ” ’ happiucss, and gives thein-a set ¡sc of use* M t the House, will take the place pf Sanator fulness and self-rpspect most s ¡ilutary in The Civil Rights Bill says that we McDougall, Mr. Harlan that of Kirk­ IL - ' - 1/ , .. its effect on their bharacters, | Do not hl- are wood, and Representative Patterson the low them, from caprice, or a ' teuiporary Is this a white man’s Government for seat of Daniel Clark. Samuel W. W*. Pat ­ J r feeling of indolepce. or ind tnation to white men ? The Civil Rights Bill says I terson; the Senator ! elect from New '■ finish anything elso th«y may 6 edpinjg at that i it iis Dot. i Hampshire, was formerly ’ Pro.* Professor ___ of V. I the time, to Jefer their jworl ,'f:f it is Are we We to <|iave negroes representing Mathematics in Dartmouth College, and i deenn d expedient, for any cause ,that they this Government as United States minis- still holds, it is saiff, the appointment ment of r-' should omit it, let them arràn J with an ters at the Courts of France and Hhg- Professor of Astronomy, I. IJ J Rill says that we other to do it for a const'leittioa , either of land ? jThe.Civil Rights ß • -1 ■’ . i Ì »flection or similar servicj; bii ; h.vveLtbc a«?. How To A void Tns CnoLfc Tn» C holera .— En- , „ . , , , , work done, and prijniptly qonej If pjdp- lear con- Shall negroes pit in Congress, in the- deaver if possible to keep a cl_ erly taught, children will«j|o | h-’artily. Cabinet and other high stations »ide by science, and two or three^ihirts- I • 1 ’ ; . fL I •!_ 1 • . ’m 1 T • 1 T » • 1 As their capacity natucallyli. Cl ea»es,|. in­ side Whenever you have nothin- othlng else to to* with white meu. The Civil Rights --------------- Tr crease the importunée of^theg Work for Bill sa^» do, take a bath. - „ , ;■ s •■ ' r f , sa|s that thev may. j which they are resport-ûblÆ Work “ eight hours' ar day ” and more' Shall our children see a negro in the Such children will beeotpe ef icient mpn President’.^ chair? The Civil Rights Bill if you feel like it. and women in society, «nd fi ul honor provide» fojr such a contingency. Rise with the lark, but avoi4 larks in » them. , L * I J the evening. a t ----- '*1 -, 17- ¡ r I • Be above ground in all your dwelling» dwellings, _ W hat J l C urse is D ebt . —-X., man and above board io all your dealiugs- D ying , N ations . 4-Why < |q natio: ms ï ¡s T. or . j can b 3 truly and entirely free in j Love your neighbors as yoqrself, but die? Cultivated Greece fetid i si conquer-1 ! though word, and action, who is its vic- don’t have too many of them-ip th* same ing Rome, Vandal, and Goth ¡pand Hun, Il Ol‘ ! ’ without doubt, the greatest house with you. and Mooro, aril Pole, au4 T irk ate all of all t io 4vili* which hich escaped from Pan Pan- ­ Eat when you are hungry, d rink when dead or dyint. Why ? IjiMc’dered by ! dora’s^ lox upon the jvorld. jw It is deadi- you are thirsty,-and sleep when you «are- i nations more powerful? SvAllowed by i her than the^cells of the Inquisition—it sleepy ; but be careful what you eat, earthquakesn? Swept away earthquake«,? avfay b pestilence I chains both* the soul and body, Like a what you drink, and where you isleep. r or plague, r'w* . or _ ‘Starved by pitili ss famine ? shadow, it meets a n jan at every corner, Avoid public conveyances, e^en if you- Not by any of these.. these Not b ' the light­ Aye, eaeu closer tha n the shadow is its are driven to the necessity of making use ning and thunder; thunder ; hot: by t le icm|pe«t coinpanior|f»hip, for, t ^unshine or shade, of your legs walking two or three miles • and the storm’; nor by poi^phtg air or vol- I it never leaves him. i ’ ' I ' It is a tormentor a day. • eanife canife fires did they die. dio. ^$<|r TMv perished perisl which gives to the unhappy prisoner no __ Avoid long dresses (this to women)' by moral degradation, degradatioe, thq legitimate re­ nly the most superhuman exer* -• 1----- Tf ’H"------ '"I --f-- - ---- r----- .-w... and leave th« sweeping of the streets to4 1 -4 sult Li of 1 gluttony, intemperahbe.?and effemi­ tions èan ever- weaken, muph less break the city contractors. nacy!. When a nation become^ rich, then I and throw off the i chains with which i^ _ Toll the doctors that“ whenever they ! there is leisure -and the meatus of indul­ is fever ' i loading 1 - : its captive ; and nothing comeYvithin a mile of your house they gence in the appetites and (payions of na­ but its total and complete annihilation ;A.‘ are welcyme to stay there all njght.” « ture which wept the body and wreck the can secure you from the baleful presence Keep clear of’ the Fenians. ,1 mind. As whh nations sq fvifh families. of the stony-eyed and merciless captor. • Don’t get scared before you are hurt,- I .L'i! J , J i ’, ■ Wealth takes away the wholesome stynu- * . ’ I nor efen then. iu5 to effort, idleness opensjthè floodgates i Get your life ensured. Vulgarity. of passionate indulgence, ind the heir of Make.your will.-- millions dies heirless and' po|r, and both It would be amusing, if it ; were not’ name and memory inglorioiidjr rot.. Every day brings additional proofs that' disgusling, to witness the awkward affec­ If, then, there is any trutlf or force in tation of contempt, which our Radical co- the friends of the President amj his policy Pr argument, each man owes it4 himself, to tempurjaries sh ,.__ to shoulder in the fall towarcls their thoir adver adver- ­ will stand shoulder his country, aüd, more tbdn al, to his ma­ temporaries display to^artls I saries. A boor who hap graduated from elections. No matter what party they have / ker, to live a life of temperance, industry • a Gounitry CQunjtry academy, where whore he ha» learned acted with heretofore,a common enemy and- f anu and sen self denial as to eveiy evety aqin atjimal gratifi- to a common cause will induce every patriot asti 1T astonish his bumpkin associates* by catiop; and with these, £avi^g ' ‘ j an eye to stringing M stringi together vapid sentences and to make any sacrifice to restore the Union the glory of God, this natic i of ours will meanit and save the country from anotbef war.; meaningless phruses, procures a ¡ooth-pick live with increasing pipspepty and re­ and d rosper its madca-^ LU lAvA Vfl- a walking-stick, as embleq| of re­ Tbe iron heel of fanaticism, in I IVO nown. rcer, is now attempting to crusi h out State for an n' editor, éditai, as ig- finement, and sets up fur I rights, and if successful, it wil 1 soon seek I narant of thb proprieties of public con- "— t r i I t , i.l .J j trover: Y sy — as " of — the amenities of .Social ... in­ to extinguish State lines. If there ever A C ure run, for C ancer — — ga. |A writer xx VVU» Y — ~ writer 1U in .------------ the Philadelphia evenjng evening Journal j|ui claim» (¡ercourse, i A vulgarian* of tbisl kind al- was a time that eternal vigilance was the price of liberty, it ’ is ’ at the i present mo- 1_____ ■ _ 11-àil iPi It »...«O LL k!a lì« 11- to have an infallible curb foucancer. The ways betrays his low’breeding by the su­ ment. Wfe believe that thè soldiers of the* Î recipe is: The yuice of tha*sheep sorrel perciliousness of his tone, and'the style i country will rally against any attempt at pressed, and exposed on a p|wl ter plate in of addressing t.his opponents by their cen tralixation.—Nat. In tell igeqcer. y the sbn, uniil somei ‘ ;• jellied. Apply Qhri an i name or some billingsgate epi- nothing of politics but it on tho skin over and around the can­ thet. 11 lo knows f I G rand L arceny .4-A man known as ¡reonal antagonisms growing out the personal I antagonisms growing out of ot Gu||i,er was arrested a couple of davf I*’ • » cer, the application to be continued until me the 8jooo at tbe DalleS) 00 tb Z- f ?. the cancer and its roots lodfeen and drop party strife, pod deems aesault upon I _ A. C L _ — rwViizfclr n>i 1 I Wai « «* a L^I _ _ ’ 2/• * Is _ _ •! out, which will . he in.the course of three private character and business relations of bing a woman named Davis, of several or fopr days. vhich his opponents the chief object of political i articles of jewelry and $130 in coin. Th« days, The rp|e iiugrjclifnts ingredients of ^hich 1 the pewter is composed, cabining with controversy. Nine out of ten of the woman at the tiipe of the ery Watf fir 'f Radical editors upon the Pacific coast are the -r"* acid of the plant, are- liéVed to/w a dying condition, and whiles '*• r?<*uv> U,D w thizing of which the “organ ” [Ore- with her be managed to stealhfer ear-rings important in the compound! •The leaVes i ^e kind 1 _ i .. aw 1 a arfe A ’ — whi —. 1 _ ^botanists call g°nianQ 1 furnishes 1 a fair medium sample.— of the sheep r. a sorrel from her ears and the rings off her fingers. sagittate,, which is resenf iifliLg in k hape Heralc. Information of the robbery was*given to’ above is stubborn truth. The op- Marshal Keeler, who arrested Gulliver on the head of an arrow. Tie,writer also states that he cured bis < Jm-ns by an ap position press of Oregon, withone noble board the steamer bound for Poi >rtland, and plication of thb haves of i bp sheep sorrel exception, the Statesman under the con­ took him to “ Ferg’s” hotel, where he to them, which in a few tjpura softened trol 0f ' Mr. i Gaston, seem greatly noir now awaits his ms trial triat at the tne ne^ next term of I _i at the thought that a single the Circuit“ Court. The stolen articles •t. them so much that they Muld be polled distressed ► Democratic atic paper should flourish any- any­ were found i on his person at the time of I off and a eyre effected. ,f ? f-Ii 4 where. Thoylose no opportunity to strike, his arresU^-Herald. j r I in their feebly way, at the business inter­ I H eld to A nswer . —william Powell, ests of all papers that oppose their views, A fine steamer has been built on the ««wa WUW.M ww XJU^VUC, charged with‘the murder of his wife, was I be nji.« ilk and water concern at Eugene, Mississippi river, at Quincy, Illiniois, and 1 yesterdy committed by Judge Ross, be­ ind the Oregonian vie with eaoh other in called the Andrew Johnson, as a‘ compli­ I I fore whom, the examination^tvok place 1t> such upffianly tactics. , . > ment to the President of the United - await1 the action of the grunff Jury. - J ut States. Tbe citizens of Cuincy preseh* I officer started yesterday with the juris pris ' AF >oet say« pa: M Ob, she was fair, but ted tbe Captain with a set of colors, and I i oner for Fort Stoilaeoon, in which he WH sorrow came 1 and le ift hit I copy of tbfe Constitution, and a portrait i. traces there, ” be oonfined unti until Urbe /th*» -nAri. rh* What became e of tt bo next term of the President. Generali Singleton he rest of the harness, District CeREUTtz Court.— Puait Sound Weekly Week/ts. e — Puget i — j« made the pyegeataffon gpeeejjj' doi ¡en,t state >. « I • T1 t is » i i i I • Ijr I ’■ J-i I RESPONSIBILITY * It is amusing to hear deserters form the draft and able bodied young men who never exposed their precious bodies in sight of the enemy, loudly vaunting the prowess of their party, and talking about what “we’’did in “suppressing the le- bellion,” and how “ we have the right to dictate terms to the enemy. Who can name one General, dielinguiehed for gal­ lant services in the field, and whose hands arc not spiled by plunder, who does not sustain the . reconstruction policy of the President against the vindictive and de-, structive policy of the Radicals in Con­ gress ? The soldiers, excluded from all intellignnce during the war but such as was obtained through Abolition paper» which were alone permitted circulation among them, were taught to believe that the Democratic party was in lull sympa­ thy with the enemy, and hostile to them­ selves ; but how many of them, even uu der such influences, accept the nogro­ equality pc licy of the Radicals ? The Veteran Soldiers Association of “ San Francisco unanimously refused to join the procession on the late celebration of Inde­ pendence Day unless thte negroes were ex­ cluded. and every Radical paper in San Francisco denounced such exclusion as an cutrage. Show us a man who'talks of viudictive measures towards the South, and we will be bound to show you a pol­ troon who never exposed himself to dan­ der in vindicating the integrity of the Union, or one who disgraced himself by cowardice and incompetency if thrown into such situation. Brave men never torture prisoners or insult a fal en enemy. The natural sympathies of tbe Radicals are exhibited in every conflict between ¡honorable whi and cowards and sneaks, by taking sides with the latter. Of all the false pretences set up by the Radicals none is more mandacious an 1 impudent than that of claiming the'exclusive credit of having conquered the South, or of hav ling contributed, to that result in a degree proportionate to their numbers, Lvery m m whp allow» hid reason and Observa­ tion fair play will acknowledge this fact. No one need go beyond the circle of his own acquaintance for a comparison by which to judge. lie will find with no- noble exception, the most notorious cow­ ard.«, the most blawling declaimcrs for vengeance, Take, lake, for tor example, General Steele, than whom few men have present­ ed a better fighting record, and the best specimen of the Radical leader that can . be J found . in -i -v c. . ■ 1 Lwould the State. The formdi demand nothin? from the conquer« Jed ene -. my, but submission to the Constitution anii the laws; the latter will talWoudly of “ the conquest WE have Won ” and de­ mand the blood of the vanquished, under the pretext of “ punishing treason-” The men who provoked the war, had little to do with fighting the battles; the men who oppose the restoration of the Union, did little to defend it when imperiled.— Ore­ gon Herald* :• *' t’ I I F I i ♦ i ■ I l-Z- * ■ I LAFAYETTE, OREGON. TÊl-t i: BDITOR AND PUBLISHER. ì I I8SUED EVERY TUESDAY, J. H- : p ' a I — I k. jka . ;< I É ■ 11» ‘ •y a ». 4 / e f 1 1 I I ! * I f> 1 1 ■ ( i I -i . * I - z t —‘