VOL. 1 % '9 s THE COURIER, -I- AT L persons, and fixing heavy penalties LAFAYETTE, ■ I - Iij I I BY IX 4 ¿ •■ I II 1 Ì j u p T O N i editor and H I J Mr. Dodge introduced a bill to raise rat and the salaries of the Judges of the First ■ ■* Second, Third and Fourth Judicials, to $2,500, and that of the Fifth Judicial » » per annum. • PUB sn r . District to i $6,000 I Z * r JI' : 1' 1 ' I J ■ An attempt is being made to change i ■•I Y the county seat vf Baker County from TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. . . One Copy One Year, . . One Copy Six Months, . . 1 $3 00. Auburn to Baker city, . 200. A B elligerent CiuRC^H member RATES OF ADVERTISING. t ' J lx • I' ■ L I , one Inser­ Ono Square, 12 Lines or .1 less. I ts ,00. tlOHj • • • | • • I i • ’ . . í,00. Fo£ each subsequent insertion, A liberal deduction will be made on Quartery, Yoarly, and half ■- Yearly Adver­ tisements. i Hotel, Medic^Pand .Law CirdS, $10,00 per ■il annum. ' ! L COUNTY OFFICIAL DIRECTORT. a, Commissioners, commissioners, W \V Judge, J. W. Cowles; L. L. Whit Ball, J. tl. Br >wn; Sheriff, ! D. comb; Clerk, S. C. Adams j L. Assessor, Smith; Treasurer, Ctym. ir Eckles; School Superintendent, t, Rev. John bpencer; Spencer; (Joi Coroner, J. W. Watts; ; Surveyor, A. S. Watt. i LAFAYETTE HOUSE OSBORN RATHBUN, PRO. & T GOOD STABMXG, • ' I » ind attentive hostlers. < i ’ ’ 1» ; ■' • - . | • I ■ I. I I i .. ! I | j I In connection with this bouse will be ~ kept Horses, Buggies, «c., &c., to Let no. 34, tf. on reasonable terms. . I ’ ATTORNEY AT LAW, ! % . iafayette, Yamhill County, Oregon.. Will practice in the Supreme, Circuit and all of the Courts of th hs State. I V l- . M ■ « . • I I ' r • r’ DR. H. J. BOUGHTON. . > ■ ' ■* r ’' I laV i I h , . - I J - j m »I 1 11 .p. >i w re I . I ’ sentative Rosenheim, which read as fol- lows f you <( God Dam you, Rosenheim ;• vote for that resolution I Leip to haDg way of representing herself at Washington. The only respectable representative Oregon baa elected® l’or five years, (Mr. Corbitt) the Advocate n irphimelf acknowledges was elec s I ~ ■ • ted in defia icq of the wishes and preference of a large u ajiojrity of the Republicans of the to “ help ” in the matter, l'jlph’a will State. ’ . I is good, hjs instincts are probably such as to prompt him to perpetrate any fiendish mnou T sead ?AtiTioirsLY.-j —The Oregonian, act, but he lacks moral courage. Mh __ , ___ jhaij O'Meara voted in Idaho, suspicious ha^ O'M Dolph is a member of the Baptist Church. draws a fearful piqtuie of the meanness of The House of Representatives on the j so ¡ioing. ha/e . it from his own lips Ex-Gbve&or Daniels voted up there 8th passed a resolution .¿ensuring J. if. that Ex- at the lat^ele|tion, and that he voted the Dolph for using language unbecoming a disunion iickqj. ticket. sfcVe are personally re- Senator and gentleman _________ in the efiort to in­ c6{|iiant (A’ tb| fact that the said Daniels timidate a member of the House, aud de- v0iqd*tbe |stri|pht black ticket in Lafay- ' I W Li ter him from voting for a certain resolution ettejon thq| 4tl loflafct June. Whose ox is gored J. hfayettef C ourier . as his own judgment dictated. Yes. O*Me ira and Weller voted the • I n the House on Oct the Gtb straight cctppe diead ticket, and “ said Dan lowing resolution was offered by t of it. Admitting, then, 24.’ ieisp’i vo;< ason of Wasco, and adopted, these are all illegal votes,; votes, ’ whose ox is nays 18 : gored ?— Idaho Statesman. If Ex-Gov. |)aniels in the short space W hereas , On the 21st; day /•••’! • • • I at . • ’• oftjihe intervening between the time he tember, A. D. 1866, the House ( ¡m Í vi Late Physician & Surgeon, In : Hospital Department, ’ *■ . I 2.1 I ♦ ... Zj Office in Dayton, Oregon A. F. and A. fl. LAFAYETTE LODGE, NO. 3, * ¡Li Free and Accepted Masons. Meets in Lafayette on the 1st and 3rd Friday of each month, at half past 6 in the afternoon. Brethren of the order, in good standing are invited to attend. T. V. I B. EMBREE,/ W. M. G eo II. S teward Sec’y. H 5 ‘ • / • ' ' i. • ' from Grant county, and whdi have since then been declared not e Ie.dted I the to ¡i ij{ /Lr as, J. M. McCoy atid G. Wr Knisetyy; now bolding their seats in this body as members from the county of Grant have; House, declared they should h «ve voted against the Constitutional am indments. AND Brents and MoKeon io favor II ■ i'trsl amendments, and with the vote of said - I / , * • n < ■> j I ' ' I j ■' ■; - j,. ; t 111 i |l kw H!1 I •: II.' COUNSELOR AT LAW, AND so- Vi McCoy and Kinseley against siid amend- LICITOR IN CHANCERY. , h •. I. I . . meats, the vote on said Constitutional Lafayette, Oregon. amendments would have stpod 23 yeas W ill practice in the District and Supreme and 24 nays, and the p; isage of shid Courts of Oregon. /■ I- 111 H Uli fyTaxes Paid, Collections made, and amendment would have been Host ' lost. Proceeds Promptly .remitted. Therefore, resolved by the House of Rep; 1 *i resentatives of the State of], Oregon, j that • - *fr DATAYETTE FEBRY. i ■ ' L i the action of this House in pas ismg said constitutional amendment i did not express the will of this Hoi as it nöw now n ' ! I M -U- —J' ' t - Il ’^*5' i ■ ♦ II* f il I ; . A| i, . ► -i-i I ‘ . I . . i 1| | •■11 Y / i •' I I • t t ' S tudies .— Studies serve for delight for éroamènt’ and for ability. Their chief 4e|ight is in privateness and re­ use for qe|ight tiring ; for foi ornament is in discourse ; and * ‘ judgment F \ and . dispo­ .for^ abilijU is in the sitiop sition of business, for expert men can execute,^nd, execute, s>and, perhaps, judge of particulars one by one; Oije; b4t the general counsels and the fnarshalling of affairs come best Froqi Froqi' ’ th those that are learned. To spdnd too much time in studies is sloth ; to _ lise ilse them too much . for ornament is . . . I • I ‘ ■ i . . - ' affetcation ; to make judgment wholly by thei^ru^is the humor of a scholar. They pepf tet nature^ and are perfected by expetii nep; for natural abilities are ilke natural plants, that need pruning by study; arad stájdies do give □dies themselves do. lit too much at large, except forth direction# they be bounded by experience. Crafty^ men contemn studies, simple men admire i___ , _____ V1 they tnem, and wise men _ use them , ; ; for teach ndt not their own use use ’ but that is a wisdom ¡without them and above f them, won by observation. Read, not to con- iradiot confute, nor to ’ bejieve and tradict qnd end jjonfute, ¡granted, take/or igf anted, nor to find talk and dis- course; but to Some |)e weigh and 0th consider. er8 aWai. ¡ its illegal HE undersigned would respectfully an­ stands, after being purged nounce to the travelling public,.that he members. Resolved that the Secretary lowed, and some few to '‘be chewed and has, at the Lafayette crossing of th« Yamhill, - i Erda copy of digested!; that is, some books are to be of State be directed to forward read d Q®lyio:pait8 only in-parte ; others to be read, but A LARGE, NEW ANI> SAFE FERRY BOAT, the foregoing preamble and res lutiotr to' rea not caripusly; and some few to be read on which be can cross Teams, Stock, &c., Wm- H. Seward, Secretary of wholly, and with diligence and attention., the United States, Within ten days of the Some- books also may be read by deputy, EXPEDITIOUSLY AND CHEAPLY. r and exatets made of them by others; but llni-r- f The -- .a roads --- leading I '• to < and from this crossing passage of the same. Fif] 'Ir ,n-i J that should be only in the less ' important Mr. Upton of Multnomah it « thought arguments, jin6 the meaner sort' of folks are in good repair, and persons from the South going i to Portland, McMinnville, Forest is ineligible to a seat in the House in else distilled books are like common dis C._. ________ Grove _ and Hillsboro, w and from the North, going to Salem, Dallas, Corvallis, will find it consequence of holding the office Of City tilled waters, flashy things. Reading ma- Attorney of Portland. . J|. i! kejh a full man, conference a ready man, to their advantage to patronize this Ferry. JOHN HARRIS. ‘ r '.fl 1 r I’ f U S7 and writing an'exact man, and therefore, Lafayette, July 81,1866. The House committee on Counties have if aman write little, he had need have a ... »1 . great jhemory ;: if heconfer little, he had reported in favor of a bill to repeal the act —¡1 need hate a present wit; and if 2__ he ___2 read organizing Josephene County, or in other little, he bad T. HEMBREE Dealerin Dry Goods _ peed .need have much muoh cunning to words to abolish said Coun k m - ’ • Groceries Hardwore 4c. South side Terri- seem ao know that he doth l _,. — 1„2 not Lord Main Str Ml* eat. □ Streak Baconl tory comprising this county arly belongs I T the cowardly fellow that he chastised in Richmond Ind., witfc a raw hide some- thing less than a year since. • r -01 ¡•F- :•< present abolitionisei, was a disunion par­ ty, and that all true patriots should cut loose from it. Mr. jowan has been m a re ­ *5 I i •- publican ever since that party wi as first organized, but can go with it po longer- 3 f w ♦ •* 9 » A bill for the incorporation of the town of Scio, a town situated in the forks of ■i f Santiam in Linn County. If that place stands any show, Lafayette will certainly have no difficulty in obtaining her char- ' i i ♦ J L- . a '. * •' ' I iL ll i .' T 1 I: 1. I k c 1 : ter- ! V ' r ■ m i ' ' F T he Chicago tinmen is quite' sanguine the succes of tbn Democracy in Illinois the second Tuesday in November next. < y a j , . D on ’ t A gree .—The Sentinel says that the.Grant County tricksters were rightfully ousted, while the corgan ’A. sayrthey were wrongfully, ejected by the- aid of a“ few renegade unionists.” Who r is to be believed in tbe premises ? % ’ . f scats which they had usurped,: and, where i •- 1 lently returned as members of this body ATTORNEY 4 ted for Congress in Indiana against Julian, ■ And whereas, without the votes of said , . G en . Sol. Meredith has been nomiua« amendments were adopted by means of ¡ocrqtic ticket, mostly,” thé question as of the Fire Department of that City. the vote of Thomas H. Brents and M. M. tò to whose ox is gored mostly mostlyest/ est/’ becomes Pity but the wretches who lend them­ ' "'Hl '- B n i frauda ­ h a^der bf solqtion than ever. selves the business of house burnsn g could McKean, who wero illegally. and fraudu by their protest on the journal of this E. C. BRADI SHAW, ✓ i voted the tarantula ticket in Lafayette,and • •. i F rom the Mou ntaiaeer we learn that voteof25yeas to 22 naysj pa the time fie felt called upon again to *• ‘ ex­ constiutitonal amendments to anend the ercise thgjbigh^st prerogative of an Amer an attempt at incendiarism was perpetra­ Constitution of the United States as pro- ican citizen ” ih Idaho, became sufficient­ ted in Dalles City pn the 4th inst The posed by the thirty-ninth (aopgt< ess, which ly reconstructed to vote the good old Dem- town was only sayed by the prompt ad.iou eentatives of the State of ' ■ j; OregOi L r | J I ’’r ♦ • ’ I L aw .—'Law, , a propejly understood, is no •f other than right reason, agreeing with 4 nature, spread abroad among all men/ ever consistent with itself, eternal eternal ; whose office jt is to summon to duty by its oom* i • J mends, to deter from vice by its prohibi- < ‘ mands, rions,—which,; however, to the good, commands or forbids • never — - _ in _ < vain, * never — influences the Wicked either by command. 1 ing or forbidding. I 4 gon without delay These are the fel- lows sentencedfor robbing the safe st Uma iilla. I ': 41 i ! Of If The Army of the POTOMAC. ■ 11 ? fWAVA I.L you.” [ Rosejibeim, not seeming m ich to fear the man who fled his country to escape serving it, did vote for a }bat resolution,” but the intrepied Dolph h ^d failed tocarry out his infamous threat—probably for want of some one possessing ne!’0 enough L Gov.'Woods received a telegram from Red Bluffs, California »to-day, stating that Frank Williams and aqd Daniels, who were among the escaped convicts from Salem, were in that place and recognized by Mr. Wagner of Portandl. Portand. Gov. Woods imem- I diately telegraphed, offering a reward of $500 for the|r arrest and delivery \tp the Sheriff of Jackson co iunty. , They were at ooee _________ once arrested and _ wrl ill ba started for Ore- The Preodent has'appointed Mr. Kin­ sella, editor of tbe Brpo«.lyn Eagle, a dem Sta tpß Sem It fi Lor. But we submit the ques- ocratio paper, postmaster of Brooklyn in n tipn to the « indid j udgment of any reasons* place ofGuo. B. Lincoln, radical. bJeqrian, bet|.l)le republican or Democrat, if, * S enator Cowan of Pennsylvania, late- leaving Mr. . ^Corbett out of view, Oregon has ly made a speech i 3. that statein which he not t of late fcovered herself with shame in the declared that the republican party, as at 14 « 5= » ed to Jackson County, to which County it will; revert if the bill passcs- »I she C andid ?—The Editor of the Chris- tian Advocate at Portland, pays a , deserved tribute to (ue worth of Mr. Corbett, Senator elect, but, as ifdetermined that no one should have -the slightest confidence in, or respect for, his opinums on such subjects, —be closes i. ’ his article asi follows: • » z ” The Pacific plates have dono nobly, of late, in send|ng ible and worthy men to rep »• resent them|p l^>th branches, oi Congress. 0 1 We will ¡simply call the attention of the Aclvocnte n&n -to the fact that'Oregon has . NO. 38. 1 I I . sent to Congr.es^a J. H* D. Henderson, .|a John McBride, and elected a Rufus Mallory.. Barpitig Senator Williams’ tergiversations of opinion-on_grea{ questions of the times, he '1 would’ make’a v ery Í Respectable, United S tate S enator |J.N\ Dolph, the flee the draft-on a-iwuld Sdnat< it from i of U 1 . Multnomah, pending the eleetiqr H 1 i I Í -f I S. Senator, dispatched a billet to Repre­ and •—... ■ HIS HOTEL is still kept for the accom­ modation of boarders and the travelling public. - T ¡COUNTY, 'OREGON. YAMHILL I In the House they have been hammer* ing away for some time at a bill to prohib it the intermarrage of whites witu colored ISSUED EVERY TUESDAY, ” I .1 , Legislative. J OCT., 16, 1866. J j i * I I I be detected and becoming punishment meted out to all of (hem ■< ! li ! ’r 11 , A • rrr ' - T t e D omestic F aults .—-Homes are more often darkened by the countinual recur*» rence of small faults than by the actual pre« ence of any decided vice. These evils are apparently of very dissimilar magnitude; yet it is easier to grapple with |he one than the other. The eastern traveller can combine his forc3 and hunt down the higer that prowls upon his path; but he can scarcely escape the mosquitoes that infest tbe air he breaths, of the fleas tbaft swarm the earth be treads. The drunkard has been ktiown to renounce ?his darling vice; t e slave to dress and extravagance, - her besetting sin ; but the waspish temper/ : the iritaring tone, rude, dogmatic manners, ♦ * and the hundred nameless negligence that spoil the beauty of association, have * issociatii rarely.done ther than pi roceed till the action of disgust and gradual alienation* 1 has turned all the currents of affection from their course, leading nothing but ar ¡* barren track, over which the ................................................. f < «'re skeb ■ stalks etoh of the companionshi I I along. ' • * < *>■ * ■ A ■ -J — ' I G ood R esolutions .—1. To hear as little as possible to the prejudice of others/ 2. To believe nothing of the kind until I am absolutely forced to iU- 3. ; Never to drink in tbe spirit of one who circulates a false report. 4. Always to. moderate, as * far as I oan, tbe unkindness which is e X- pressed towards others. -5. Always to be­ lieve that if tbe other side was heard, » very < different aceount vjould be given of the matter. F air 8iufc-uI have A W oru TO THE - - __ i- found,” said Addison, “that the men, who are really the most fond of woman, and who cherish for them the' highest respect- > arc seldom the most'popular with the sex. Men of great assurance, whose tongues are lightly hung, who make words supply the' places of ideas, and place compliment in the room of sentiment, are their favorites. A due respect for woman leads to reppet- ful action towards them, a|d respect is taken by them for neglect or want of love.” ■: v • . j - r . 1 . . ? ■ C ure for H ydrophobia .—The Leeds Times'says, that the nitrate of silver, rub­ bed into the wound made py tbe teeth of a mad dog, will certainly cure hydropbo-’ bia, or prevent all injurious consequenoea of the wound. It should be applied as a? ■' soon after the accident as possible, In six weeks the virus is disseminated through • the system, and then hope is gone, e. Youatt says he has beeu bitten eight or t ten times, and always Reared himself by this means. _ _________ ________ ’ There are many good farmers, who • never could make good mechanics ; good 1 book-keepers, who coqld never be success- success­ t_: L : “ ful merchants. There are many ripo scholars, who can never make good [ prac-’ tical physicians ; .there are ’ good physi cians, who could never I become good, law- "here is'someth ing yers, and vice versa. There is something • back of an education requisite to " suocess - f; in any profession. The gospel ministry is by no means an exception to the ‘ ’ rule. . M anner in T h ^ P ulpit . ,—The im- portance of pleasing manners and 1 a good delivery in the pul; i it is very forcibly il- lusterated by the following trip incident which we find in ah exchanges Rev. Samuel Treat, grandfather of Robert Treat Paine , was settled in Eas- tham, Mass., a hun dered and fifty years ago. His pastorag e continued for nearly half a century. But , in spite of great learn- ing, and uncommon vigor of thought, his 1 manner'in the pulp t^wasso repulsive out of his own parish 1 e was heard reluctant­ ly even by intelligent congregations. He ---------------- —— married a daughter of Rev. Samuel Wil- •* I • • ■ ’ ■ lard, of Boston. D ouble M inded F armers arm Rs. . —One’ After his marriage with the daughter of Mr. Willard he was sometimes invited geat principle for success in 1 bueiuew, is . bv that gentleman tp preach in his pulpit. learning a trade well and then 6ticking