1 I /. L ¡I I I. » I THE COUR 1ER. 7? 5’ * L-l ■' » ----------------- s---------- 1------------------------- ------- 1 .. J 1 1 ' — i TUESDAY, OCT. 16,1866. ' ■ » Minnville on Wednesday . fayette on Thursday evening add at Day — ♦ ton on Friday evening of last week, to ■ - te exhibited their first class <| •• f.- • * . A''7 T he C ircus .—Messrs, j ' ir- m * t I T he E ffect of I ron - on F ruit T rees . -rt-A-Wriiet in the California Farmer states 4L, ---------- , „„„ that he has known nonproductive fruit trees restored " i f i to a prolific state by driving nails and spikes > into lhe trees, near the roots. The _— edil -Jtoradds to this the follow ing: ‘fThe factijof nails and spikes driven 1 B8 ’■ JT into tree? is not ]mew to us, for we have given sev^-al nstances of trees restored K to a i ' healthy I bearing condition by this measure, apd will republish some faots Si ii. Old iron of any kind not only ben- I efits thp ie soil imparting a desired material, but the sap, sap of the tree> tree* when nails are driven into||t, intoyt, soon imparts to the foliage -^1. _ A _ J______ _1_ -1 __ .1 • new color and J life. ‘ Any one can see this bti trial. Besides, iroh scraps, old horse shoes, hoop*, etc., will attract electricity to the plants i and trees and this is what is much I.” very full houses. The peffomapeea are » spoken of by all who witnessed them One or two of the quasi “ conservative being superior to anything ever be! organs at the east are exerting themselves exhibited in the State. ! At this plaoe w furiously in the attempt to convince the are sure they won deserved laurels. 1 Southern Governments that the best thing “ pet Mary Ann >> performed prodigies they can do is to oonvene their Legisla the rope, and received the hearty applause tures immediately, and impress upon the of all who witnessed her astonish ing feats. people the importance of adopting the They will exhibit at Salem duting the late so-called Constitutional Amendments, fair, and wo bespeak for them rioh lest harder terms of admission areim- harvest they so richly deserve hope posed upon them during the approaching they will not forget Yamhill in r fu- THE REMOVAL OF STANTON. Session of Congress. In tn the first place, ture travels through Oregon The news % jpmes frowt Washington that h. the Southern people will probably con- Edwin M. Stanton, the vilest of mankind, elude that almost any te rm s Congrss will now Certainly leave the Cabinet. We T he L yceum .—The La ayette could impose upon them would be an im- have heard'thjs rumor so often, that we last ment, met pursuant to adj begin to distrust it entirely, and shall provement on the one embrt cing the rati- 1 to wait for its realization before we give it otion a Wednesday eve., and fication by them of so infamous a meas a new organization, B. F. Martin was our confidence. In connection with ’this ure as either of the- prop >sed u amend report comes another rumor which we chosen Prest. and Dr. . White Seco 4 exceedingly regret to I hear. It is said that ments and in the second place, they Gov. Daniels, E. C . Bradshaw, Dr. J. President Johnson intèndi to break the have probably not forgotten the manner W. Watts, and J. H. Upton were chosen fall of Stanton by giving him the mission in which they were cajoled into the rati- nes- to Madrid,; iti other words, to let him a committe to select a supject for Wed v i! IT ’ I escape fro^i thecountry unwhipt of jus fication of the ‘‘amendm^n t” abolishing mit! day eve., Oct. 17.. which committee repor- tice. Tf Spanton should have the good slavery.” This V Amendment . ” was ition ;i luck to getaway from these shores, it is ted fhe same eve-, the following (juesti not at all likely that he will eVpr return. submitted to them as the lltimatum to Rcsolvod :■ ' \ That the construction of will h^e.his cowardly carcass is i in some their admission to ail the.fi lights and im. a Pacific Rail road ” at the ptesent time, obscure European town, where he c munities enjoyed by any of the States, in quiet qnhbe plunder he has bagged, is both impolite and * unwise- IT _ assurances ofrthe most pos- and backed by I Watts and Gov. Dao- and wheré-the avenging hand of justice Dr. ' H. Wi cannot reagh him. p itive character, that upen ratifying; siad iels Principals. !| We.leg.'president Johnson, however, amendment, all bariers to f lieir enjoyment I net to.b.efriiend the crimnal, but turn him 1 The Vancover llegister. boasts of an iy of the states. of all rights accorded to an 10PpO on the riie society he has outraged. The American people do not intend eve? » The experience of a few years back unusual amount of permanent improve-; to Sumton, Seward or joe Holt. to forgive Bthnton, ought to teach the Democracy—the con. ments going on in that city at present. In scine * some ;wy these wretches rn.ust be stitutional loving portioh of i the commun, to justice io _ j J * ately fined brought to in .this life, j unless in A M an in Connecticut was thq mcantiine death steps in and I sum-, ity that they had better • c io by their them-jto a higher than earthly tri i mons ’ colors than be subjected to the insults five dollars for getting in some* hay on bunal iV’lv D. tv llnnt- • bubal —-N'jY .Day Book. Sunday to keep it from getting wet. that they once had to suffer, In the 4 I event of a^ other war, the S^uth and the Those same people once.hung an Indian ■» Will not again b* Cajoled. L I 4 * * I1 ■ ' ■ * * i L' • 1.8 - ± ' a .X J. w. “r * ■ 7 W ■■■ # J. ., • '■ ' . W ' •■'.if.' _ 'I—-'C . ■ • LL | • E T 1 ' A G am » of “P oker ’ in f - » New Eng for hoeing his corn on Sunday, Blue Laws, land will stand but a fickle show—they blue devils, witchcraft and radicalism. I I rv ll I 1 I I- • J '. t won’t fight; with the West a hd the South —Yreka Union. I ' . ! In clearing away the ruins of the Can- as one, we will be able to asserti our Wast will be as one man. j rights without fear of intimilatioh. Let- al Bank building, .Portland, a few days since the workman came upon us flee to the rescue. the re- mains of the dbg of the bank watehman. On the night of the great fire. Tray’3 T ruth is mighty and ■MUST ULTI- master being absent, resisting in taking m ately " P re vail .—The following o cotfi parison of the relative results of the treat ment of Union and rebel prisoners of war * J subjected to at t£^t hanls of thei r I ?•. . * 4 • respective captors, we clip fre m the Iler- 1 It has always been pat en t enough to any unprejudiced mind thn t f or brutal barbarity to prisoners of war (¡he Northern '* • "J • ' authroities exceeded those o ’ the South beyond comparison. In the North the Clergy taught that it was no c|rime to mur aid. der a Democrat, much less a confederate prisoner. • 1 . 1 ». To return to . the subjec °f “ rebel .. cruelties to Union prisoner^”—in reply to a resolution of the House of representa tives, 8ays.the Washington Union, calling upon the Secretary of war for ; the number of prisoners of either side, held, and that died during the war he made the fol lowing report : Number of Union pris oners South, 261,940; number of rebel prisoners North,200,000; Out of 261,940 Union prisoners, 22,577 died, Out of 200.000 rebel prisoners. 2^,416 died., . The Union prisoners exceeded the Con federate prisoners'61,640, yejt the deaths of Uni an prisoher8 fell below those of Con federate prisoners 3,860. Two Union pris oners died out of every twentylhree in Southern ithern pens pens ; two Uoniedri Confedrate prison ers died out of every fifteen in Northern pens. Over ten per cent of the prison ers died. This mortality can only be ascribed ' ’ brutal J treatment, to afid . the statisitics show in this a fearful balance against the North. It is ' but simple J v justiq e to recog- nize this fact in making up our account against the South. It should also be re- membered that the North was supplied with abundant resources, whil is the people and the soldiers of the South were suffer- ing for the common necessaries of life, and medicines were made contraband of war by special order of President Lincoln. Every case of suffering in Southern prison pens has been magnified, embellished, illustra ted in wood cuts, and sent broadcast over the land . ; the MH sufferings . _ in i the North ern prison pens have raraly been allowed a parsing notice in the journals of the day. Several thousand prisoners from the extreme South, without overcoats or blankets, were atone.time dumped in the snow at Camp Douglas in the dead of Winter, with frothing to protect them from the rigors of that inhospitable! climate and most exposed situation, bnt rough board barracks and a bundle of si w to each.; Many were frozen to death- «»id hundreds1 «v.w a.y-vu vv vxvovt., died by the slow torture of exposure to eold and disease engendered thereby. * i* - : * care of the treasure, the dog refused Ito leave the banking room where ho had so ofton kept guard with more than fidelity. human Coaxing and threats were alike unavailing. and the faithful brute ' ! ’ ¿-i B Ji 1 ished at his inn 1 -i post. pern 1 i ci His fate caninety C alifornia .— Four persoig had seated themsulves in the mines to p^ a * game _ ~ of “ poker—-the ante, as t*1 for money, a substitute? money,' being a handful of continued gold dust ¡*1 hey ---------- _ _ playing for some time, without either side!winning sidelwinning much. Jt At l|ngtlqone flf the party, who bad a good hand Went a. pinhjii “better.” ‘ _ • ‘|I see th|t; and go a pint.better,, cridd out another, wl^> also had a strong hand. “j See thfct responded the first, and go a quart better^ ; i Well 1 see.that, and go agallon better ! said » tbe other. , This ratfear- disconcerted his adversary,for a moment, a it “over-sized 1 ” ** ” ” his pile, But confident in lhe superior strength of his hand 1 H ' *101 . J.iL lilt V 1 ' 1 . 1 he collected|together all the gold dust he had left, remarked to r “ and ' \ putting ‘ it aside, coolly ‘ : ‘ one of his d mpaoions : .‘‘Here, Jim’ watch my‘pile unt* J go out and dig enough to call him!” 1 4|I t would|we suppose, be a waste of la- Casabi speaking, was as heroic as that i of :• i r li u I bor to attempt to hammer a logical or le ancaa, <. ■ 1i 11'| 1 j 44 gal idea inj|) the head of a confirmed rad The Indianapolis Herald says: j i A gen ical disuni^nist. He is simply incapable tlcman who has b|en traveling ‘ through of reasoqih|g upon anp subject, or of sfee- Morgan and HendPloks counties, informs ing any- thhigrtb the light of fixed truth. *His starting peint is never an established du? that localities tn those countie* are bo one, but always some “moral” vagary qon- ing flooded with negro labor, and that Icerning cerfiing which no two individuals of his own faction' entirly agree and which is .hundreds of white men, dependent on day never, the sjme at two, two different epochs. labor for their daily bread, are being To combat'ferror combat trror which which}j has all shapes, thrown out of employment because they yet no form?,—which, like the chamelion, tlcolor for the occasion ' and will not work as cheap as the - negroes. assumes a tiiolor changes it Without method and without Associations for importing negroes are rule,—wou^d be time and effort thrown formed among the wealthy farmers, and away. ‘ they are being brought into the country by the hundred.” ill I’, erefore, a radical ; disunion L et the horses R oll .—pSvdry person eet states the proposition much accustomed to horses, will have that “if, e' in the heat and violence of noticed the alacrity with which they will the reballi the insurgent states Were seek a rolling place on being relieved entitled to| representation in Congress, from the harness at the close of a warm they lost thleir cause by not keeping their day’s labor. What particular benefit they dfe legation the capitpl,’’ *it would bo a t < derize from rolling in the sand we do not useless to point out its absurdity by indi- exactly know, but the horses understand eating the hr it, else they would not indulge in that spe, betweefl |h$i right of the states to repre cies of pastime. It may serve to allay^an sentation in ¿congress, and the right of itching of the skin, caused by prespiration either housètof congress to eudle or turn or the preforations of their great enemy, out persons not properly elected and qual the flies. But whatever be the reason, ified. ffhe. radical mind 18 not conststu- an indulgence in this species of pleasure, ted in the n anner requisite to comprehend ble exercise should be accorded them the essential difference that often exist whenever inclination prompts to the per between ¡a legal fact and a moral fancy. formance.—Rura|' New Yorker*« Chicago Times. _ r. _ * 1. To P repare B ees ’ W ax . —To * obtain S umme R/B everage ,—To make a cool wqx, boil the combs in a strong muslin summer be^rage’ take one pint of wbisky bag, in a sauce-pan with water enough to stir in a sroohful of whiskey, then add keep it from burning: and/whilst boiling one pint dF ^whiskey, and beat well with continue to press the bag with a wooden a spoon! ^0|ke one gallon • of water, and slice or spoon, to extract the whole, as*you let a servaakcarry it away beyoud your skim off the wax. Drop the wax into cold reach*, tbeuput two spoonfuls of water in water, where it will swim on the surface, a tumbler ;i|fnmebiately throw it out, and The wax thus obtained will still want re fill with whiskey. Flavor with whiskey to fining. to effect which, place it in a clean suitWur ta^te. When it is to be ^ept sauce-pan, and melt it over a slow fire. IongHn wan^a climates, add sufficient spir Then pour off the clenV wax into proper its to prevept souring. vesssels, and let it cool. To .whiten it, i' - » j-:’ -ill' 'I______ ■ if <«-------------- — ■ —— ¡Bi - j_.- make it in thin cakes’ and expose it to to the sun— ■N. N. Y. Coach Maker’s Mag Maz C rops ' Y' qu K “T’s?’—-It is not amiss to Mt S arine. cross one’s *H’s,” in writing else mistakes i' • «-v 1 ¡if ti i r a r ' -i H orace G reeley says Lincoln was al fwr oecqr, $8 in the case of the merchant ways wrong but you could drive him right. wffio wrotsto his agent, who was cruising the'coast of Africa* to send h|n two Johnson is always wrong and wont be drove Johnson’s opinion of Greeley would doubt, monkeys. j N| w the merchant ( was some- less sound very differently. Yreak Union. wha deficient in orthography, so he spell- I KJ • /V* ■j. ' ■ 7 l I - J • L-I Hll M H ' «■ ■■ 11 i ’ • • ' > f i 1 ' ’ ! . , . 1 .■ WS s « 4 r* L « * .-1 * • .1. * 1 Telegraphic., ¡ [ compiled AVE fjust received, and are constant ly receiving the largest and best se lected stock of GENERAL MERCHANDISE- ever brought to this market, consistingjof H PORTLAjrb DAILIES.] from the ;■ 1 ■* 1 Household Property Restored to Gen. P DRY GOODS, W ashingtoa , Oct. 2.—The household effects left at thu Arlington Mansion by Geia- Gen- eeol ajw Icui Lee, , v« or laxuvi, rather, the vuu fragments remaining of them, were recently belivered to tbe the barty authorized by bv Gen. Lee to receive them, this was done, ttre tiro. % National Intelligencer says, under an order from the President. It ap ap- pears that 1 ' ■ ’ nearly i - ir everything of any4* value valuable heirlooms had been; stolen. Ma including some of the f r ily portraits, were taken from the frames, packed in bexes and stored in the upper loft of the mansion since 18(51. These boxes boxcB háv have been broken open 1861. and everything of real value taken away and the letters aud privat« papers of Gen. Lee scattered over the loft. _____ Jik_______ i_________ * : CLOTHING, k.. ;. • h « BOOTS . AND SHOES, J 7 * ' HATS AND CAPS, YANKEE NOTIONS and CROCKERY. I Also a large stock of i f J! 6 Groceries, T ■ And many other articles too numerous t mention. Being favored by having a resides partner in San Francisco, and buying only for Cash, wo are enabled to sell goods as * CHEAP AS ANY HOUSE IN TOWN. Therefore we would respectfully invite th« N bw Y ork ., October 7th.—The reports of public to cal) snd examine our stock before famine in India are confirmed, especially in the purchasing elsewhere. 1 - The Highest Cash Price paid for all kinds region around Calcutta^. The correspondent of the London times, of Produce. date of the 11th Wanted—100,000 Pounds o* writing from that city under i being so crowded of Angust, says the city was ’ Wool. commission- with paupers that the municipal f J---- ;-:pal coromission- ers and merchants bad 1 organized a relief. On Our Motto—“ i QUICK SALE» AND SMALL Monday a public meetii ng~Qf all classes • I * !. held in the town hall to raise a subscription. profits ,” and no humbug. * ■ ' ■! ■'» 14 ill I Roports were read, giving statistics which, Remember the place, opposite the What completed to date, sho w that a; 22 place 18 11,475 people are daily ■ fed in addition to th< Cheer House. t sick in the hopital : ; and with tnis number, I is We guarantee entire satisfaction, or ne increasing at the rate of apout 200 a day. sale. Try us and convince yourselves. It msy be said that 20 000 persons are now * ’ < . > ■ ■ 'll' ■' i Res sul<sisting on charity c aily in Calcqtta. < > GALL AND, GOODMAN & CO., ore appalling, 3 z ports from Bombay are even more says the same authority . Think of 900 dead v Ì 129 Front street, Portland. no28 bodies being picked*up in the streets oif bonii- à yet. bay each morqing^ Ha f thf truth has not yet I ,vuv deaths ucaiipd been told. The last returns duvw show 7,030 in that one station duri ng ¿he week ending XEW FLRXITLREj July 318t If you trebl s that number for the many who became the food .of the jackal and vulture in the lonely jdngle or ditch you will not go beyond the sad truth. It is obvious that the Roard of Reve pue has ceased to re- port the deaths. u The Lan. ino in India. r_ i I ____ - i r 7 I ? ‘ $. ■ z3 4 4f ! San Francisc Dispatches. ftt AUCTION STORKS) - AÍ— L f i S an F rancisco , Oct. >.—¿Messrs. N J i»wm»n A My res have just coi yleted the first silk drpss pattern ever m le in California. It is 8 A CHANCE FCR EVERYBODY. • Í 38 inches wide by 2] yards in length ; is strong, substantial, soft and glossy. The man ufacturers have maqe ai rrangements for cqq - ducting the business )f‘silk manufacturing AT 10 O’GLÓCK, Al M. . erial im- on an extensive scale fr oih raw material ‘ I ' i ported from China and Japan as well aé that prnduced in California, rjMIE undersigned having received. A writ of hadeas cor pus has been taken out and will be argued this evning before Judge Large Consignment« of Dwinelle, on the case of f Thomas Dohahue, Donahue, charged with killing Paterdon. it is under- FURNITURE,*; that the argument for ki# release will be the BEDDING, stimony as establishs testimony insufficiency of parol t^i r j i ing the fact that be in a fugative from jus PULU, i tice. tice, t i I t The libel case of August Kunast vs Fred- WALL PAPER, eric Hess, proprietor o ‘the California Dem*> ocrat, resulted in the. . ury rendering a ver- SHADES, diet for plaintiff for $3f M). CROCKERY, Walter N. Felton am 1 James J. Knowltoh have been discharged f rom their debt£ and GLASSWARE, LAMPS, '4c., 4c,. 4c., ■» i liabilities, by a decree < )f the County Cdurt. .• I ■ I • I T li ’ I • ............... 1 ' ■'! e I ♦R ight and le ? t .4 --Two Quaker girls \-f OFFERS were ironing on thei same table. One asktd the other wbicl 1 side she wonld take Them at Reduced Rates. « ' I the right or left’ Sb ie answered prompi- -,------------------ ly. GIt will be right for ffle me to takth tak^i the J. LORYE A, ♦ left, and then it will be left for thee to ‘ S . take the right. ! i II Nos. 138 and 140 Front «Street^ - ■ 1. ■ i. f I f + t .• A ' j 1i '‘in I- * : J ■ I •I • l.l t 'il ■■ PT ‘ ‘ t' 1 I ’ ■ i '- 12 ■ L R sfitted U p .- -Our no23 and I * ■ 1; I I K*' V R emoved I ! ■ ■ j. 4' ■ — a I m /» ’B- ir 1 ;_____ 1______ 1 a 4 ! I ■■ V ___ two, ________ ed w too f ) .»> and a j he omitted to cross ATTEMTIOM i t his “t,” the agent with some surprise, read the order, “100 monkeys!” At length one .nto port NEW GOODS I NEW .GOODS! ! of the merchant's vessels came into I i ‘ I •' ■, ' H , . Î / I I . > ' x alive —the deck, masts and rigging 1 ’ I . I with grinning faces, The puzzled mer- ehat read the agent's letter with a still PRICES REDUCED! more puzzled brain :-4-Dear sir—Yours of March 10 received. I •end fifty monkeys, Have found it dfficult to procure so large QALLAND/ GOODMAN & CO _____ Will endavor to fill out the a number. i- balance of your order, and forward by J; Ko. 129 Front Street, next ship. Y.ours truly, John Smith.” Opposite*What Cheer House, Portland, Or ■ ■■ - ' egon, . I ■ f s I f o 5 » ■ ■ «Í - ■ ’ i I.« PORTLAND. « • friend S. C. Stiles, Dealer in, and- man ufacturer of, Harness, bridles, Studies, whips, Saddler’s furnishing goods,7 ety., etp., fete., etc., has got himBelf squared abound f__ 1 and faced about and < opened up on front street in Dayton, whe re his old customers 1 as well as new ones will find him pre pared with increased fateilitips for supplying the people with an ug they ean think: of in his line. ‘¡Mr. i files is a superior workman and a popular man in his business. We are pleased to know ¡hat he is meeting with such signal success. Parties wanting any article in his line, cannot, do ¡better 1 I ; 1 i ;« . * : i Í' I ' > ■ j ;'N ' N ew S chool ! The undersigned would say to the pub lic that he will open a School in Dw fayette, on MONDAY, August the 20th, ensuing. Following Branches will be taught, viz : Algebra, Ärihmetic Ast ronomy, Gammar and Philosophy, besides all the Lower Branches. . TERMS : $5, <& $6, Per Qr. . M. Ri CARY. . . - I • . Summons. ! < Just received, at R. L. Simpson’s Fam- ily Grocery, a fresh in voice of goods>d)ick In the Circuit Court OF THE STATE of OR f never waits for his stock to run down, EGON, for the County of YAMHILL, ss. I ' -J ’ ¡1 i • Revenue Stamp, 50 cts, cancelled. Go to Lake & Robi jnson for Stoves and Í J tin ware. Remember t he plaoe: The Emi- William Field, pltf. grant Stove Store, Frmt St. next door to ». vs. « Josephine Field, deft. & Beebe’s. In the? name of the State of ( igon, You are hereby required to appear and answer the T he E lections E Tueç- complaint filed against you in ti above en- titled action, within ten days >tu the date day, Pennsylvania, ofthe service of this Summons upon you,, i f Iowa, held elections for members oE* Con served in this county, or if sei lerved in any other count? of this State, then Wilhiu twen gress. Judging frono the news c_, _ of the re- ty days from tbe date of the s ervice of this suit which has reached this coast upto this Summons upon you ; and if you fail to an- time, the Rads« have achieved ah partial swer, for want thereof, the plain tiff will ap- ply to the court for a decree of divorce dis. triumph, at least. This they will natur solving tbe marriage contract e: listing betw- een plaintiff and defendent as pj rayed ally enough claim for a month or so >yed for in ? Y *.♦ _Y’I said complaint ever. The Democrat^ gained twjA Con- By order of tbe court G. H: Steward: yet gressmen in Ohio. The returns Attorney for plffs; 1 n38fiw, meagre. t i I- ■ I i» i X. ! i ¡ I li. I 5 * - - ;.