Image provided by: Yamhill County Historical Society; McMinnville, OR
About Lafayette courier. (Lafayette, Or.) 1866-1??? | View Entire Issue (March 19, 1867)
í i i ’ * f .7' • 4 4 < -i fi í ♦ - '-* k ) í 'í lì — 9 5 9 V » 7 . 7 V • * « ■ ./ !• I i » * ■- ! 1 ■I i TUESDAY, MARCH 19 th , 18G7 X I • 1 1* u . -F - ---------------- ---- - -■/ 1 . == - J r i * /’I 4 .. t > ✓ 4 fi •< X - t A » > « < * • H I ? 1 H » i h 4 C-4 r 4 f f I 9 ’ s X.-.i * »♦ y fit i F V 1 r t, » i » -J / I V V 4 • • » * Jr « Í t : the Rotunda of the Capitol of the Nation. ------ T• ;'W A R eligious paper enthusiastically an nounces that two of the J udges of the Supreme Court of the ÜDÎ.ed States can not live long—will scarcely be able to ever again sit in their capacities as Judges ; they being advanced in years atfd grown feeble in consequence of protracted ail ments. The 8ame paper concludes, with blasphemous satisfaction, that tbe antici pated providential disqualification of thé said two Judges will leave a radical ma jority on the Supreme bench. It is among tbe least of the fiendish manifestations of latter day Christians to invoke the direst ■9 curses of God Almighty upon the heads of all who regard their solemn oath as in anywise binding upon them, or who square •* • - their actions thereby. P osted .—The Mountaineer says that the Lafayette C ourier and Albany Jour nal are just now running a tilt against each • other, and that it don’t matter which gets the best of it. For the information of our mountain co temporary, we will just say, that thé iAl bany Journal has been dead fulL niue months. It^uailed before the onward march of Democracy. •-1. i (' Sr * ■ R etrenchment ,—The? tax payers of Portland have cause to congratulate them selves in consideration of the fact that the city Government has at last passed Out of the hands of the radicals, who, for the past while have ’apparently taxed their skill to the utmost for pretexts under which|to squander the people’s subs&nce. Mayor Holmes is inaugurating reforms in all the departments of the municipality,— The city printing will be transferred from the Oregonian to the Daily Heraldi, - p ' *! ‘ 5 •L 4 I «.■ S F h » - - } Í f ♦ V ’ * I XI ■ ■ . r R I A ■ -I < IW ' • R eturned . —ftlajor General Sterling Price has returned to his native, State by the way of New Orleans, He is saiad to have bepn the object one perpetual ova tion during hiSi entire passage up the river. The total number of arrests in Mobile, du ring the past year were 5,118, of which ^3,138 were whites, and 1,980 negroes. When it is remembered that the colored population in Mobile is s. veral thousand greater than that of the white, the “ superiority ” of the latter rare in that city is made strikingly manifest by the above.— Oregonian. y forks are alo Mr. C- wil itled i( The he dnd^signed Directorsof School District No. ¿2, ,, m Yambill County, Oresgou, ... — -’O’ ,T O » will receive scaled P rofosils until the T B I »iwortb their entire oost. >ho canvass for a work en- imily. the Farm, the Gar- » book of rare ■ merit of its ■ 11 B ■: - i *■ W - I Sec ond day of April, 1867, ¿ng or — ■■ NORI H AND SOUTH. . ~~ -y • I i ■ * •• j ÏOTICE > hereby giyi n that there will be a meeting of the Stockholders of the Yamhill Steam mJl__ _ • x kt - i Transportation ind Navigation Company" in MuAIinnville, oi April 6th, for the purposb of completing th¡ 4 organization and electing Directors. ; O.G.SAYIOR, ! 2 fe \J. H. BERRY, ' * Corporator f C. G- ROWELL, MoMinnvil] Maroh3d, 1807. 4-w6 I P itle river, at the south-east uth>keast corner corner di of donated to Michael Laframbois and AineÜi- mee running north upon the ^ine di- ♦'dmg pedonation claims oLsaid Higly and Lap anibtfis, to the south east corner of said . Higly’Or f of said ' claim; I thence west to the land owi :d by John Ijash; ash; thence thence south south h's line to the "**" Willamette rivdr; rn said river to the place of begin lining 160 acr< L. L. whítcomb L ■r^ _,w Sheriff of Yaihhill Co., ’ Oregon, L 12-n7 4-w y 4-w6 ■ í I I i i I e Ä. Í Fi Ì - i I ; > t a ; j I » < ■ ? 4 ■> 1 4 f J Ü Mi’ ■ t-.i » n «I £ * 4 r » Í -■> the U. S. ; i 4 .*! A rmy R hvolvr , 44-100 in Calibre. I N avy i 36-100 in Calibre, ” (Self Cocking.! Navy Calibre. B elt ATrxTT »■ rx ■ rv zx w B els Navy size Calibre. P olice 1 ” Navy size Calibre. Now pocket Revolver^ , with Vii ULI Loading ¿juauiug Lever. » P ocket ” Self (locking. Self Coeking. Repeating Pistols, Elliot pt., pos. 22 32 Carf. F Vest poctet n “ . 21 & X 32 ______ No. . Z_, 22, 30 Cartridge1 G un C am , using No. 32 Cartridge. / . S ingée Barrol S hot G unsj « ... R evolving R ifle , 36 & 44-100 Calibre. B reach L i OA g «.„ ding x ™ R if L e ., NoJ 32 Calibre. B reach L oading C arbine , i|o. 46 Cartridge. U. S, R ifled (Steel arre),) with Sabre Bay’t U. 8. R ifled ifled M usket usket , Sprinheld Sprinfield pattern, Our new Breach Loading Arms have just been approved and adopted for * Military service in Europe. 7 7 ■ I E. REMINGTON & SONS T< . I AÍJAV71X, lion , ¡New L. _ York. ':?-7 Agent, A lbert E. C rane , San Fran- oct 23 'G6. no 39. vl. oisco, Cal. • ». • 9 .4 [ » I I i ? r 1 ■ U-j---------- t a- ' xo. i; 1 m 9 » I X i 7 « ■f J I /? ■ - . Y ocom , ■. S. 7 G. A. ? I w. C.T. -i, Invoice o: ifTINWARBaldCo. t, A . Fresh . ¿pious ‘ effusions etf ” oi f new goods at Clem i» Eckiges' y A Jj ZK - ri t 4 i £ I p •• i ìli ‘f - ■ ’ • F" 7.-1 / .’I f f & ■ \ I L' •day evemning at Unity 7. //. X S'"i7 -■ School : • i I ER GOOD TEMPLARS., -e I i A -INDEPENDENT < • b , ■ I I «' I Government since 1861. \ F i ■ > ’IT*® t. ■ 1 f M-v r-JBE i . .. » 1 " ■’ ; I I ------ Hr- Upwards: of 200,000 ( J Furnished :« elt Himton, Oregon 9 « ZFIRU ARMS I ¡ • , REMINGTON ’S — V A f. B X ; « t I - M W hat think you of our new says thé r 1 D avis ' V ug ; et . l B le F aij | K iller , The great family mediclt nes of tbe age ’akçn intern- i f udden colds, all^, it cuifqs ioughs, weak i—4 T he O regon ?! krj Stomach, gepera debility, nursing sore mouth KKALD has entered upon canker, liver ccmplaint, dyspi fpsia, or indi- second year of jrts career of usefulness cestioi), cramp and nr'rl pain in [ the stomach, proF[>crity. ljowel complaint painter’s colicf, Asiatic cliol- l,r i rx Speaking of thh close of the volume and the Hek4 dial rrhocannd dysentery. Sbld by all med i ci nib s dealers. future of tho paper, the editor says: I j| [ DAVli ’ VEGETABLE I, AIX KILLER, Considering, tho circumstances/ under Pofsosses viri tut ?, which not ilpne removes .1. ______ _______________________________________ __ which tlie paptpi ’wajs started, the manner . <> r phin instanti fljl but regulates 1 the stomach' its starting, and the' einbarrassmenti I entail eptqile« !« j g vbs Strengt me and vigor loXhe system, upon it iu in yufccqueiice, its suei success ha« nu yi»?^quence its it ft; o:w of dhe inedicues i that s worth more “T^sonFBit^oxpectalions and I assu red itii' I iMh gdld4 hl ’■ „■.. j ..“ ’ » | i \ ' permanency? I ■ I Í - ■ ■ : ' ì I lent in testing I Don xzyii ’t t. ex^iern va |» vi iv^iiiig new remedies, (I? when you tian t ie genuine baih Killer, which Thé ebp^. extract is but a reiteratrh ' I • T I 4 ' VI I 1 . d j f efy body kno ¡vs to be goed. f.¿i _L___________ Jtì person J who i is the ____ verdict of epery sensible Tilo Wocdstoi'r k (C. W ) Tei o tin el says: “It g v.. niera , aj .. b v-“ lb ■/ at milted fact, t!i|at the medicine the early career at all posier t) ^coining 0 kanufictared bp Ferry Davis & son has been ■..it/'* the Herald. ,■* ns^ ument ‘ i i iu alleviating much »pain, and SHEBIFF ’ S SAI.E. > The editor Ifurtner remarks : » giving relief to millions ofsufiiring humapity. I'he medichi faculty almost every where re- Y VIRTUE Y VIRTUE OF OF AN EXECUTION is ’• In conclA'ivn, we would earnestly im :ou[iik iid the Pkin Killer, and its reputation is Circuit Court of the State sued but of the Ciri press upon Mpocrats the impôt tance of now 0f ibV?H|he I as ___ the most beuefli<:ial _ _____ T¿ial family of Oregon, for the County oi Vamhill, and to taking the palfifr and paging fur it wheô ue dow iá io use, and may be be-I taker, inter- me direcitd^ in favor of Jobr. 1V. Allen, An-*~ and* n W. me direct 7 ,n I ” |MerinaUy to expei paid, theyisubscribelj A general credit system ar ‘ against Devi F F„ # Allen, for Uije sum of twelve i. r"4 would rujn newspaper eiïterpris^ I hundred ; • and eighteen dollars and thirty cents, :1 ■ ' I 7 ’ . ; .7 damages, and forty sone dollars and in tho country.A y.j; A man wh_ who _ keeps _r_ ¡a tav»- debt and Summons, r t twenty-five ~ . cents 7- costs. I rave on , this 8th cm on a puf blie thoroughfare, ancj trusts the Ci rcuit Court of th q State of.Ore- dayof Mr.rch, 1867, levied upon as the prop> all the travel^ 1 who st p with hiui to the k * • -> / t • n a 1_ _^i___ /•_ 11 _ __ in ahd* for Yamhill Couii ty, (50 cts. Rev I erty en, the following of the said' Lev. F. Al amount of tl>|i| ! bills, would be as likely to i cancelled.) J ___ A_2 personal property, to wit: Two described sûcèêed aS publisher who sends bis r H ____ ___ _ icrts, Plaintiff, vs Wm. Jtthnson, dark bay mares, five year» old-; two, two papers to subite; fibers throughout the coun- Johnson, L. T. years old nare colts, arid one dark brown three > Travis Johnson, John, n [ 1 •_ t . ] 7 ----- . ' r, try ou credit, i ; ¡^^hnsdn, Lucinda M ’ Culloch, ,'.7 M "jladisod wears old ir.arc.colt, and for want of sufficient . \ j ’» * ■ •'ti.. 'f-*! Mfr .^'(jjulioch, .Barbara Jqlknsob, B. John ¡personal property, * “ * ‘ ‘ v1 JUCulloclt, J<»bnson, roperty, I have, also, levied upon ifcuni ¿rod Houston, Johnson ’ legaji repre- (he following described real I estate belonging T he Na„orti al Democratic 1 Committee LALH an t L» at n »1 $eQt|ftikd4 énd 4 . heirs law of J^tójies rJ Si Jolu) John ; to said .lievi F. All en, lying and being situ- " have decided- not. to call a National Con son, ijdticéiU'pd, Defendants. - i.’y-k/l -X in om Ytamhill ,-x W* 1 i t 1 1 k Conn tv. Oregon, to wrt J Thé • atéd ! vention until t|e regular’’ term, next year, > ff’o Win. Johnson, Travis Johnsop, John undivided and third part of he donation land . UíHinisoéf L. 3’. Johpsonl Lucinda MUub claim of Solomon AHenj as let -of to him by claim of Solomon J to npminàte? candidates fyr President and iMajliion M’Cullorq, Barbara Jbhffson, the proper anfnorilies, lock anfuorities, and containing .three Vice President [ • L I j • J |Bl .Johnson, and Hpastóà Johnson, Des hundred and ten acres, i- 7 . aud will . cxpbse tho1 . 4 ■ —JL-------- • .. Únts: • same to stile, at public auction, to the highest shle, bidder, at the Court Hou|e deor, the State of Oregon, you iThe name of\ Bidder, at the Court House dcor, in in §aid §aid H on . H. XYlCorbett has been released heÁbyfsumme •ned ___ and required to aps .1 County of Yamhill, for cash in hand, on the at his own ret ie»t from the further pro answejr an 'action no, „ third dayjof April,* 1867, between tho hours i , ’ j W on file in the ks offide in and for Yamhill County Ore- of 9 o’cioi Ik, a . m ., and 4 o’clock, p . M^-of said prietorshipofl le Daily Overlhnd Mail. i'asking leave to issue an execution on a day, to s k‘,isfy said judgment and costs and judgálfffk ¡covered '■ H ’ by ! plairitiff, Wiliam Rob- L. L. WJ HTCCfMB, accruing tosts. M isses ^*». 4 H, H. Gale announce erts, agwinit James S. Johnson, deceased, and Sheriff df Yamhill Co., Oregon, -t^ I |te, March 8, I8QJ. j Ransqii» Çlai ,«rk, on the 12, day of Oct., 1852, 12-n7 4-w Lafayei in a prospectus that, on May 1st Ensuing, for thrfce hundred and sixty dollars, in the ___ ■ < • 1 ■ '■ I ’ *’ _ I • • ' tboy will commence the puhlica^pn of the Uniteci St ajtes District Count, in and foa.Yanli r hill C^iiptyi, then Territory of Oregon, within Roseburg Ens^», atvRoseburg, Oregon.—- ten d d^S from the tho service of this he date of t|: < L — i you, if served in Yamhill is hpon set sumoc We shopld thifik that the Umpqua Valley -X. ’ r li z' i H ■ I H I Coutil ltd within twenty days if served would sustain h loCad organ abundantly. in at y btlrir county in this state; ‘ »tale ; and that if • - _Ai . L_. . I | . ;J;l i you ($4 to answer within suid time, plaintiff F- ■ . \ ; . fli S z’7’ ’• j IT I A * • * „ to the Court for leave to issue an It is po health y to “ cuddle up M |in bed. will apply judginenl , for nine hundj- execution ■ bn said _ > I I —[Halt's Jouipal of Health, l.J r_... *L-r. [S- red forty',four dollar ie amount of said i' k ’■ ■ these cold _Iow can a Batchelor help it judgjiiient and. interest, besides b judgjin^n't costs and dis[ nights. —(Uataleras Chronicle. nights.-4* ' burseOieiits herein expenjefo.' I . _O/v SOLD ¡BY GUN DEA LERS- AND Cease to b^’a batchelor.—[Sacramento By order ci Hon. R. P. Boise, Judge I THE TRADE GENERALLY. M . . r Bee. E. C. BrAiDsuAT, Pitffs Att'y. f K 1 oary l; ’ in _ .a n _ 19 v2 no4 6w And become a rppentant sinner during February 15, 1867 Prices Reduced July 1st, 1866. ?F 1 I the rest of yop; natural life.—[Healdsburg (Cal.) Standar<|.* SHERIFF ’S SAM.E. The Oregonian omitted to mention in That you had not I done so years before 1 I ■I* ' < r ‘ ■ • i; i • 1 • ■ - the above connection the fact that of you did. TO WHOM‘¡IT ¡MAY CONCERN, i r . H- ue of an executi )n to me directed ' I a • ,l" 5,118 whites arrested as aforesaid, 4,793 a deerr ® of foreclosure made and entered C aj » t . A. P.jANKENEY, IS au old Yam- were Yankees I from the North , who had heillo|i | Circuit Court, n and for Yamhill I’ - : I’’ T, > EU I I I County, Diil the I3th day o b April, 1864, arid 71 i 1 r ■' ' : ' ' r gone down there to prey upon what they Lillian. r hltr zi rA I ). ! 7 i . • • ■ , •! 7- I . ' Ì jn avdr ’ of W. C. Dement, and against Isaac had- sapposed an unsuspecting people.— 7T ! ■ i—T~ —— !ßn, for the sum of six ;een hundred and ■ 1 1 thirty dollars. ($1,630 00,) and costa and ac- Try again neighbor. Wo insist that or NEW ‘ BOOT AND SHOE cruing costs. Now, ?’ therefore, in pursuance dinary candor would dictate that you give of the poer in me vested a nd in obedience to ■ y saic' writ and decree, :J- 1 ’ I wil 4 expose to public all the facts as you go. ’ I ‘ ‘ ~ I sal< and will sell at public vendue, according curding —4----- --------------------- -f- ' I I ’ g to aw a the Court Horn e door, in Lafay- H A n A ge of G houls .—The editor of . otto, on 1 >4 third day of April, 1867, betwee the N. Y. Observer, a professedly religious npHB undersiined begs leave i to announce the hoan bf 9 o’clock, a . St., and 4 p. m ., , bf $aiq| di vy, to the highest bidder, for òr cash in baa/established han 411 o the right, titldj journal, goes into ecstasies because of JL to thè public, that he hai , interest 1 and estate j ■ ■ ‘ ' I ,, hii£i8eli in Dayton. Oregon. i, in ‘ the business of of t »iki ‘ Jpaac Ogden, in ahd to the followii Sheridan’s barbarous order interdicting' Shoes oí all and des« bribed property and renl estate, to wit: »g •of manufacturing Boots and an____ funeral honors to the remains of Gen. Al every deccriptiqn and pattern. The e sopth half of the lane claim ’ eiuim donated aonated to Harvey Higly and wife by the United-States bert Sidney Johnson, by the citizens of .. Gents’ and Ladies’ r Go' e licit, in accordance to MAn Act of Galveston, Texas. Boóte, Shoes or Gaiters s 7 • ; • ■*. S donating land to settlers in Oregon, Co i • ■ ’ W .Ji Did we entertain a doubt as to there made to order on short notice and satisfac approvai d September 27th, 1850,” lying arid . ! being in tl e County of Yainhill, andVomprïs*. — - guaranteed. r,------------------ „ I beiDg a hell, we would yet be compelled ,tion pf Sections r m^part iin^- BTMeDdingdone on the shortest notice, nJ 27 ’ an Tj! ~ ' Of ----- T’3’ & S- I S. RAYMOWD. to acknowledge the necessity for a state of i. ’ I ! . S. RAYftlOWD. tod being the part of said claim ue* -- —— : signated Jas |i Dayton, ftfprch 17, 1867. -, n8 ly Mtit inuring i - to A --tffanda Higly, wifeiof dire punishment for those hyenas in human Higly, and bounded as .follows:;— shape, who profess to be fojlotfers of the ] i ig at a point on the north bank of th meek and lowly Jesus, and can, with sac rilegious complaceny, mock the woes of those stricken down by sore bereavements. Few besides Christians (?) are capable of actions at once so heathen-like and das tardly. j i ! ■ * ding, for the buiL.. o, erecting — „ and construí . _ a School House in and for said Dist, and jn the town of Lafayette, of the following followjpg dims»», sions, viz: Fifty-six by Thirty-two feet in ’ size, uro stories wrica high uigii, oi 14 and 12 feet each, size, Two « respective^. Said School house to be set upon Pillars Pillais constructed of stone, and not less . , than 12x36 inches in size, to be settled in the ground tori inches and to rise at the highest point, twelve inches above the surface ; to be dispersed ’under the foundation timbers of 5 said building at distances .from each other of not more than six feet trom center to center of said pillars. Said House to be substantially Framed, eatherboarded on the dut-side, and witbin. lined and Periled 1 within. I ; 1 A Belfry or Bell Tower to be constructed on the same. Bidders to include in their propsitionjs, the painting of said house throu - had SDv an» out with three substantial coats of ItSu oil paints. i _ two kinds will required : BidiLo the contractor to furnish all Firstly, —--------------- - | . and . singular the materials for the construction of said housi, and secondly, for t^e performance of the work, al< ne, the Directors furnishing the mater als on the ground therefor. Draft, p lans, and specifictions may be seen atlhe store of C. Eckles in Lafayette. Proposiils^o be handed or forwarded to R. L. Simpson, CleLk.oi said Board of Directors. Payments to be made to said contractor or contractors, in Gold and Silver coin. Said bff ilding to be completed and finished • and use, . within four ready for occupancy ------ r e months tfom the date of the letting of said contract. , - ‘ 2 . - ' I Í Ì • rectors reserve to themselves the The D_______ , right to rtjcct any and all bids for sufficient cause. ' J Said Contractor or contractors, will ’be re « duired to enter into, and execute to said Di- ■yectors, with good and sufficient securities, of said con bonds for the faithful performaece ] tenus cf the same when tract according to the I I ■ Hl let to hiiU or them. Signed] thid February 18. 1867 867* ’ ‘ J oèn B ird . H- H. S now / C, JE ckles . . THE PEOPLE’ 3 FRIEÑD, • I K • MH ilk k44 4 l. DHOLERA! , Perrjr Davis—Sir : The benefits I have eil fron the use ot your invaluable reme- rei ie Paih Hjil.er, induces me to pen a word in Its praisfc. I Experience Experience has nas convinced convince me iue thit for iHea jac) o, Indifest'on. Fain in the Stomach, [oi* ativ other part of th(j system, s>- •vera Chillis, ! Weariness, common Colds, Hoarseness, CiroiJHKA, Cholera iJorbus, Diar- rhepa, Dvsentjvry, Toothache, etc., thefe is *tottfrtFG BETTEirTHaN the P ain KipEEf. I have d from a severe attack of this hour re<?ovtfrec ----- — _ ( by using t^ro teaspoon* the Sick Headaclje, — .. o -y- r —-r i 1 i- ‘ 7■ i 4 thé Sick Head I- ’ ‘ infos, al tbirly minutes jhterval, in r fulls, taken at and without which no library can bo com ■ir r L • t. T ' '-.U I i hot water. _ I am ¡confident 1 WibcvlaSs winwrglass full - of ------------------ iff ' plete. that Ihrongh the blessing of Godbit saved me lì I “ Lee and Lid Generals ” a biograph i ea i , fi 01» the cholera during the summer of 1843. Travelling throng; i heat, dust, toil, change 01 sketch of tho ’ ¿heat soldier and humanita- Jict and constant!exposure 'o an infected at* r i • tt ; rian, his portrait, letters to his i friends pre- mospbere, my sj steni was daily predisposed to dvsent; ery nttacksl mcoihpani d With pain, in the Rebellion ¡!f<>r|w^ifeb ithe lJ’a n Killer was a 8 ▼ereign rem vious to bis his engaging i 11 -, one tablfcspionfu 1 curing the worst case letters from m ft ifl. Lee to the Federal com- off. iff an hour, or at inc it, half a c oy I. I have mander* who d her arrested and taken heard of many cases o Dysentery being cured prispu’e^, and II )rtrqits of nearly all tho by its use. Fut in the teeth it will stop the tootbacha.! ¡Gratitude Çrâtdude and a ci cesire esire for its Confederal G erals who rendered them- toothache p this unsolici' gpner?il àse,; baa 1 selves oonspic is during the ted test itnoiii |l Ù tho war. » 1 1 xl I ifrl; ./IL. : I [0-0 TÁY LOR, Jr.' Minister Ü. Tho üngYaViny* contained in these three of the Gospel. 4 ff JT’ i N ew BooKSr^Mrj James L. Campbel A ntiquated -* The Pbrttind dailies, mention the fact that petitions are being will canvass Yamhill and other counties circulated and ex'ensiuely signed, asking for sub8C;iptiofi8^for ‘‘Lee and his Geni 1 ». J^ntaining ”*-a » book ¿containing 500 500 pages pages and an 1 our delegation in Congress to use their in era 1, »>!._ fluence in favor of abolishing the Sunday numerous steel |cngraving?. “ History of the Great Rebellion ” by the Hon. John mail Service on the daily line. - - and — 11 Lie -- M I “ ” Farragut Naval ' At no matter what incortvenieneb to tbe T. Headley, and^" HMHHID business public, there Is yet an element in Commanders,’*? I y Headley also. I hie three invaluable works, every community that would enforce their The above k peculiar and puritanical viffws by statutory The Unionist assumes that Democrats provisions upon tho rest of mankind.— are “ doomed to political banishment ” be Linsley, the clerical fiend who beat his cause they dared] to raise their voices i tittle eon abselutely to death for refusing during the late bloody crusade, for peace ! to sffy his prayers, would doubtleB3[ join Let us examine this thing a little. In enthusiastically in a demand for a more 1847, the United States wa3 at war with a ....... ’ Li 7. stringent Sunday Law. » 1 T __ _ __ ____ foreign enemy—ftlexico. The u martyr Sunday Law enthusiasts dwell with President was then serving his only term great unction upon the Scriptural injunc in Congress. In j conjunction with Tom tion to rest on the §abbath or seventh day, Corwin, Wm. H. Seward, Lewis D. Camp and seem to lose sight of the equafiy im- bell and in fact all of the great lights of periti ve cominand which says : “ Si« days the party then opposed to the Democracy, shaft thou work.’r We have been curious Mr> Lincoln opposed that war with might to learn which, in the estimation of these and main—his voiee was for peace. On furious Sunday Law advocates, was guilty one occasion, when there was a bill up be of the greater immorality, the man who fore the House providing supplies for our idled’away the six days and observed the[ brave soldiers in ftlexico, he not only voted seventh, or he who worked the allotted six agaiust it, but said in a speech against days including the scvpnth. As well the measure that a never by a vote of his might we attempt to run Christianity by. should as much as a peck of buckwheat steam, as to run and regulate it by law. j bran be appropriated for such purposes.” Though the notions once entertained He was not only for peace on any terms, respecting mao's obligations respecting tl4 but he would starve our soldiers to death, observance of the Sabbath have undergone simply for the crime of enlisting in their great modifications and inutaiions;yet there country’s service to repel the wanton en are those still living who aré so far behind croachments upon our soil and insults to this a|ge progress as to clamor for th|e. our flag, of a foreign foe, Tom Corwin ..w /■» í* é I. i r. . re? V. A V. té antique puritan order of things W when it publicly-' declared that had he the power woo mnd-» hv Til llffhnCß tí) kiss was uiadi by statute a a BO penal offence to kisi “ he would welcome our soldiers with one’s wile on the Sabbath day. ( bloody hands to hospitable graves.” Were Just such beings, but a few years since, these men doomed to political banishment ? adduced labored arguments to prove that Let us see. In I860 Abraham Lincoln was printing, gunpowder, vaccination)Tailroads elected President of the United States and ana telegraphs were inventus Of the immediately made Seward Prenceir of his I N | l nr devil, himself. Cabinet, and sent Corwin as Minister to ” rh~! 7 [l ftlexico. In 1864 “ Old Abe ” was re- the A I S * light E rror .j . —In ’ | noticing 1 1 ' I I elected when he retained Seward and Cor Gol(l-C9in-tax c&ee lately decided by the win in their places and the party that now dooms Democrats to eternal infamy for Supreme Court of the United States last; week, we were in erfor in stating that il counselling peace among the people of the which had been same country and same race, sai l “Amen? wasi the Lane county.,cnse p ■ ' I ■ 1 decision iu cflïct' how- ’ Truly a bright future awaits the Democracy so decided. The covers that case, and sustains the since desiring peace between brothers is all eveir, i ■ ■ j : 0 i ■ IL [•I I people as we then stated. « IL I • that can be alleged against it. p;------------- r---------- I I Speaking of tbe Mexican war, old Josh R esigned .—tllon; J. S, Smith baa ré- -■ I • j: F ! L •” i i Giddings said : sighed the position of Superintendent of “ But they (his friends) would permit him to say that he never had and never would, thepSalem Woolen Factory, and Hon. L. F. vote for a dollar or a man in a war which he Grover has been eketed in his stead. Mr. ■bad so long denounced as wicked and bars Grover ranks first among the legal profes* barons. The same party which now essays to sion, and is withal a man of thorough bus interests of the corpo- i consign Democrats to ’‘political banish iness habits. The F 4 ■ - f ■"[ ■ ' ment,” place a marble bust of Giddings, in ration cannot suffer in his hands.! r i ■ DM PROFOUND LOGIC. V ¥ > F I i I ) è .'y mi ui w util T) {ffi*** It is the undoubted right of this people to canvass public measures and the merits of publie men.'*— W ebstek . ? ’ « / ♦ i * Kditor. i « • X 5 K i i i ! Í I i % A - ' - t * •> J. II. (Jpton, * ■ t ■’ t > >✓' A Í THE COURIER • I < Ä Ä ~ < • I ! t ! * I , i 1 i M < t t ; - F Ê* . ■ '* : Í f I Ì ■ * I ? X * 4 I r r ! ! I? w z • 4 y 'f ■ 1 *■ 4 ti.'i F 4 ■» i ■» ■ Ik ! - I 1 •* : h .1» > r «Í./ ■ » J k