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About Lafayette courier. (Lafayette, Or.) 1866-1??? | View Entire Issue (Aug. 25, 1868)
M H I I flit < 1 ,r -F' o K ; . i >■ vV li I » ■ 4L - ■ i r • fl • ' X f ■ !A j j L i .. A-:■ V 1 ■ « J: TÄi I I í / b'■ ■=* I_ 1 ’ ' . - r JÍ L i Í i» ; « . ’ « ¡ 1 ■ V- :. . - .nL-------' jfX • * ■ - r ‘ » ■ • • ’ -’f-' ' *•» • - ¿q ■ » *-•><- **•" - . j ; t j . *. * - - f r - . ' ”• .■ V" k i * 5 ■ r e I if 111 ¡I I » L u i." ib- a tit; J w. jd -ZM3ON, F«» j < « V Jordon where the radicals cease from ers will come and flood ua. ; impeaching and the r nigger am at rest. Mark the difference between the c tb Dr, Timijthy and Other radical quacks, Spirited, noble, generous-hearted man, uho make a note of the diognosis, and prepare will not do others an injury to1 benefit ' J your prescriptions. li j ' ____ -H* _____ 1 )k_ .J:.. ^Jill I himself, and the pusillanimous, small- “Gentlemen of the medical staff, stand II t ‘ PuEsiDEJrti ili I U I: I I _■ I j I’ Seymour. » Horatio .1 nient, a horde of the moon-eyed, 1 1868. TIK i>I)AY L - ♦ OF NEW YOKKJf. .1 ■ i-lr' ri H a I ------ • , ■ . > > siF |p I % |l f i ft S. F ÇIADWICK, of Douglas County JOHN BURNETT, of Bentnq Cennty. J. H SLER, of Union County. ■■■ '■■■» ■ ■' « . • * » i i I The In earning tide. 9 « * It is J well known fact that a i evolution i ' j kr’''l «> • ■ I read the transactions of the world, for the day before, and consult with each other as / to the prospects for the future from ♦ I m ffiJI ill of.sentiment occurs first in the, , cities.— People living in Cities, each morning Í 9 a i 4 the Ik' * 4 indications of the present. We may therefore prognosticate what will be the political state of the country by observing what is the complcctioQ of the / / < I « people of the cities. Boston which at the last Presidential election ! 10,000, majority I gave Lincoln McClellan oyer has eleted a Democratic mayor. Baltimore gave a republican majority qf over 12,000 I at the Presidential election in 1861. f In 1867 she gave a democratic; majority , of I over 15,000. / affaiis from which wo clip tho following r What is wanted and expected, of the next Legislature is a thorough overhauling of the 8 different department« <»f this State It is to he hdped that their first biieinosp afterorgan from Hong Kong China, arrivef ¡1 izing will i|e the appointment cf a Committee land on the 18th inst. H r i of their ablest matubers, with, power to send ■ I for persons and papers; they should employ The Herald of August 19th/a two or thrpe qf the idlest' accountants in the on State, and’ devote tliiufr entire energies to a She left Yockahama for the last the 7th of July and met with 0op|innci w Careful riftpog of 'the administration of our Suite finances. It is true that even such a calms that prolonged he y»ge- process might develpp nothing,put the prop Wa hoarded her from a sloop b< >r an- er transactions. It Ould han ly be expect Hl J ohors were down, and learned il»e foregoing particn’arn from parties ou the ship, I As ed that cvqh such a coraiu ttee <?ould discov could l ave been expected, she was nol in a er all of tlie instances where the money of butTmfei very cleanly condition, but from j at wo the Slate pas been.jloaued to individuals f at < saw and heard it is our opinion |Mt h^r exorbitant thtes uf interest, yet 1 am satis fied that qtiOiigh can be ferreted out to make officers deserve credit for having a urja final i disposition<o| the entire batch of State a gree of ollioial« under the circumstatìoes circumstances even the [• oilicial« [’> • j G ' . order which we q'bsefvvri.ii •rve<1. There Then always — ... His Expediency the. “ Sneezer, ” is, remain i ?gu atiine great dificuity in enforcing police ing quietjubtil Be |pes what the Legislature* quiet’ulitil be siees amongbt immigrants on ...... ship hmri fespoH- ------ s.r..^„.. .ru ‘ Ion* .M.jg voyagew. but the Jennie Al will do about a recount of the vote, and will ally on with his ibe people with* hi« . verbose ao l .. . n • ice after hax ing beqn at sea fur ne« ly’three ( not bore turgid, eloquence, until after, the Legislature an many months is in no worse rotte condition condìtiòn ; t th >Bn 'l'his is to be- regretted, as the adjourns. ' TI i» >aS(jeu- Dbine.-e dens oh AlJtr8treét. . ’fhed, « are not c< idtos. but Democracy are losing votes i t tfvery day that gers, we are informed, independent Chinàunn wbopaid heir own tue “Snepzer” remains off ihd stump. « ir R aleigh aleigh . . I I'*' R Tb.y iHVsage. i aqd are* noi under orde . They ____ I bere _ to pefihauently . ; and are come Reside, Grants opinion of himself. - j : t the forerunpfrs of an itiirbqnse immi- oputs Font sent to I / Hon^ Kong by gratiom as aecoptits In 1864 he wrote to a freind in Illinois, in iw in) Portland, haVe created Chinamen litii reply to.fh® suggestion of his being elected a furore tbruughout the Empire. President : . - ’ * i 1 //'■< i ? I III I' ; / ’ I [ •,17 * I ! li; i “I sboiuld regard such a oonsumaton as How lohg before this coast will belong C hina Snip.—From the For dailies we learn that the Frenlch i ■7 Jennie Alice, 450 chiuameo |*" fl I FOR PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS, ♦ i- a very able letter, "concerning our State Francia P. Blair OF MISSOURI. J 1 F or V ick P resident . 9. . K-’ sou led selfish being who thinks «nd cares l 4 by with forks.” i ’ I. “ -J > < r*r. only for self. The East side I IJ f Sensible Correspondence. 7 ’’«. employ chinameli, Out upOI Co. O t i ' I’ ■ ’ Joi .The Herald* of the 13th inst, contains if th^y do not desist -------------- —-r-i-f ! 4 .1 Id b Philadelphia, which gave : i. ’ ! I: it It ’■// J ' i I • I • Wi fl I I being J1 Ir ‘ I « I - i / i ■a bis monkey on the shady side of political EDITOR - - f > f & il Í EKL7 COFKIFK • K I asaCMK 9 C «l 4 Í « T* I I I t • T t. I / ■ i* » t-.,- . iK. ï. ft « ’ • G rant A nxiuus to bb a D i C tatou .--A prominent officer of the Union army, while driving with a friend a fpvv days wince, took occasion to eulogize some of the character istics of Grant, declaring that the Ameri can people did not understand him. “I saw,” said this officer, “a great deal (f him during the war, and know all his strong and weak points.” “But,” asked one of the party, “do you think he is the right man to elect President of thaUnited States ?” To this the Union * „ officer re- re plied ; '‘•That depends upon jcircumstan- ces. If the people desire military rule» Grant should be elected^ for, from my knowledge of the man,T will stake my reputation ou oa»the - the prediction that if be he is elected he will procla m himself Dictator withip twelve months after he is sworn in within in- to office ?” This is the opion of a Unioa Union .. . . • soldidr who held close personal relations with Grant during the greater portion of 4he late war. — World. ' • ' *'.■ • ’ ■ * ‘ 111 »-«as ClRCULATB TH® ^«MOCRATIC i P a FKRI. J : "Elsewhere the reader will find au advertise ment getting forth unuaual newspaper in 4 done mention, the part of the Louievity* Journal. The long-eetablisbsd favorite h<is uked a new and still more vigorous lease |n ■ W ely -r-F' enlarged aak life. It ba* been immingoljr aifi I improved, and is confessedly ths ehemeiL cheapest adlv the i as well as one of the. best newspapers in the world. Its club rates are astonishing. Its campaign rates are equally so. Persons irsenà who desire a great paper, complete in evoty -, ri (. • part, published on the border representing i the Democracy of both sections of the Union ■ will be suited exactly with the Louisfjlltf * I Ï ■V ♦ , r Sf >> 0 Í T » t !?- A Journal. » M The New York Tribune said Cfrant, we know , rtgarde the acquittal \ of the president as a calamity.” ' :ij. J I » ♦- • i « But that cock would’nt fight, and |he • S eymour and B lair .—The Placer name of the General has lost its magic Herald says : We have passed through power. For months past the voice of the seven Presidential,elections have heard the people has been heard in condemnation answering echoes to the announcement.of fifteen Presidential nominations, but have never known such an answering shout, su.ch a sudden, spontaneous, universal outcry of joy as has burst from the united Democratic and conservative passes on the announcement of the nomination of Sey mour and Blair. There is no mistaking the public puise, no misconstruing the public demonstration of joy, and no mis givings as to the final and triumphant elec tion of Seymour and Blair. Keep the ball rolling, and all will be well at sunset November the 3d, 1868. i. I of radicalism, and in November, nigger- china-bondholding mongrell’sm wilr be swallowed up by an overwhelming defeat. A Grant ratification meeting in Wplls- vill, New York, a town .of 2,000 inhabit ant#, called together nine boys andf ten Ç I: radical office holders. [ j r f And it is said I that the boys are about to denounce the rant move because the Gra.d men made 'ift I ♦ 1 fuss 4i about the boys using up their box?s i for bonfires. -------------- - 'H lace .—A Hamilton pa His P roper P lace F in Ohio Radicai iditor ? per says of a certain MR. JEFFEPSON’S AUTHORITY. , He is a blackguard, and not fit to he an The black and'tans are raising a terri editor. He ought to ibe in Gongresg with unfortunate for myself, if ble.howl about President Johnson’s re- Donnelly and Washburne. In the|*|>re88r highly T 4 ■ to the Chinese if this population it ! allow- not for tpe.country.’’ • Linceln over 11,000 majority in 18G4, fusing to enforce au unconstitutional law, Í ed to come here and find home with us. The President insir ucted him to acoom- 4 gave a democratic majority of over £,000 I ■ Sr' - I . j ‘ ' In a lettei to be on it! I Oregon has a population not to a exceed pany Campbell, to Mexico, and advise him and Frank Biair’s letter. ; , t j. at the last election. Lincoln carried S pne hundred thousand people. Now. with •Edward Liviogfton, dated 1 Washington, T he L atest A dvice .—ThiM B^tto concerning his official duties. To the i I 11 .1 'Y* A. F __ 1 » I :______ '■ _ _ l Louis in 1864 by about 6,000 majo-ity.- November 1st, 1801, President Jefferson County Press says : Grant, at last Recounts Secretary ofWar, Gen Grant said? At the municipal election Held there this support of a population, with the 'tide I said: . * was suffering from mania a potu, broke ••I WQu'd not dare to counsel the Minister * ‘ The president is to have the laws exe spring the Democrats elected everything. away from those watching him, and near •h once fairly started, we may ye^ have, in- in any matter beyond stationing troops cn • Cincinatti gave Lincoln a majority in 1864^ side of one year, a population of two bun United; States soil. * * * r I sincerely (Juted. He may order an offense then to be ly beat a cross eyed nigger to death, from undertaking a prosecuted. If he sees a prosecution put hope I l may . „ * be excused 2,2 ef about 6,000. Within a few weeks dred and fifty thousand, tWq thirds of duty so' foreign to^iny office and 1 tastes astii at into a truin which is not lawful, he mayior- swearing it was Beast Butler, . . ' ! vv ni ?! der it to be discontinued and put into kgal Cincinoatti has elected J a Democratic whom are cbinamen. contemplated.” j ■ a E xpensive - — —Thurlow remarks rjXPENSLVE- inuriow Weed vveea remarrs- He wrote to the President op the same against Duane for vn offense againsi the 1 g i Mayor and Common Council. In 1861 ' ■ l • IM White men, bow do you like the “black subject: senate founded on the sedition act 1 affirm % ‘‘We do net say that Mr. Greeley was paid TlkAT ACT TO BE NO LAW BECAUSE IN ('FPOgJ- San Francisco gave ^Lincoln 4,313 ma -and taqic prospects ? “It is a diplomatic service for which I am not fittbd either by education or taste, It TJON TO THE CONSTITUTION. AND I SHALL like a common lobby man, but we do knoT7 jority : in 18G7 Gov. Haight received, in h m l. i I' i I li ! r il I 1 I nI if til ' ’ I I I > i V has nee» ssarily tb be conducted with the TREAT IT AS A XU l LITV WHEREVER IT COMES that Dean Richmond—‘peace tJ his ash DLETON^ lherefoae I'lliercfoae the came city, a majority of 3.848 ovei 1 1 ! LETTER FROM FEN. State department, with which tnv duties do in the way of my rUNcnoNii. I' j es,—has often said in our presence that direct that prosecution to be discontinued both Gorham and Fay* ¡0°°^ county, of Hi The following private letter from . Mr. not COI >|ueot me. Again, then, I most re and a new One to be commenced, Jounded ‘Greely was a d—d expensive cuss.’ M ii. spectsi ally but urgently repeat my request to Î ’ on whatever other law might be in existence which Chicago is the chief part, gave Pendleton was addressed to i Washington Dgtou be txcjus Sed (i t»m the performance of a duty ! Hrl if' I i T ¿S entirely out ofiqy sphere, and one, too, which against the offense. This was done, and ' I ' C annot A fford I t .—Has th Liocolu in 1864 a majority of 24,316 in ■F ■’ U I tl Be man on j McLean of the Ohio delegation, befor.t can bei so much bettor performed by others.” Um grand juiy iuiding no other law against i I - a total vo*e of 23,018* Chicago is now il, declined doing anything under the bill. horseback spoken ? Said the $ew? YoA I I I J1 111 •-1 I thLt delegation left Ohio, ana was . hand General Gradt does nót under estimate There appears to me to be no weak partin recent charter Democratic. In the Tribune, editorially, August 1V, 1867 : ed to J no. A- Green, Jr., oq their arrival his al lifies and qualifications. 11' FT ï*il any offthes« positious or inferences.” I election at Jersey City, O’ Neill (Demo 4 • Í * - * /‘Probably General Grant can afford to* ba | No proposition was made to impeach in New York. It utters nob le sentiments? ' ' L • ft* ? / ■ ■- I*.',. crat), was elected M»yor by 800 majority^ a deaf and dumb candidate, but this coun-i Ì li ' ' •.lb' ' and is a credit alike to the hëa d and heart CoMEpY of errors . The Orcgpnian t ays : Mr. Jefferson for refusing to enfuroe an a Democratic gain of nearly 900. The r ilr try cannot afford to.elect a deaf and dumb I I : ■ unconstitutional law. The law was finally of itsdiq ingi ished author. “Ap oid soldier who has lost an arm «ays : City of Portland in our own State, also Presideut.” I am ivaiting to see if the people of (his coun conceded by all parties to be unconstitu C incinnati , Thursday, June 25 furnishes no mean example of the greaij lîxL r ¡ i* try aye going to elect Horatio Seymour, and — Mr D ea R S ir : Y ou left mj office this if they do I wjll ewear that I lost my arm iti tional, and Mr. Jefferson was honored Wade Hampton says i Insist that if a J »» •ö change that is upon us. The last sands morning before I was aware I Seek a threshing-machine, not in defence of my with reelection to the Presidency for dis- majority of white voters give the Electoral of Radicalism are now being run . The you at home, but you are no lhe,-.. I must country.” > * < College to Seymour and Blai|^ that they ■i regaiding it. r say what I wau to by note. As suor ion as you ' I » sun of Democratic Constitutional liberty is g« t*to New York, see Goven nor Seymour. “‘ Tstj, he is not old. shall be put in the White Hanse at the: v I lii ^¡.tl ! : j . í i point of the bayonet. The, \World says about to break upon us in full orbed glory You know well what was my Reling before 2o|i, He isn’t a Soldier. f S enator S umner .—Repudiates the there is nothing objectionable, in this, and But it will not conrb too soon, for a and after 1 heard from him la^ t fall. He is f 3d, he hasn’t lost an arm, but was born to-day the fbreino>tmin io ouj arty in the declares the contrary couisqh would be« suffrage plank in the Chicago platform* craven.— Oregonian. year or more of - delay and the Pacific United States. His ability, I n, amJ deformed. ' i . Jj i, ■* i P ' r experience pot him at the be C of our states* Coast would be chinaized and the South 4Ù, he isn’t waiting for the election, a »So does Senator Yates, The New York What do you. say, reader T pl » met. He commands my entii a confidence ---- ----- --------—• ir l-' "— * ' if All niggerized with Grant as dictator} and a I would rather trust him tb n myself with but is waging to see whether he can’t steal Tribune bolds the same opinion. < D runk as ever .—Some df the rads the next four years. You knuM 1 rm sincere, someihing, or have somebody somebody circulate a the leading rads do. They argue that if terrible revolution upon us. For the peo something, Make him feel this, and tha^ b oau rely on are trying to get Senator Yates to resign. ple, after it had been fully aceomplbhed, me and my friends. I have a ftural pride, (subscription for his benefit. Congress has control of suffrage in any Yates says he will do so if Grant and wi of my coon 5tb, like many other rads, would make an effort, perhaps in vain to an honest pride, in the good wj * State it bas control of it in all the States. trymen ; but you know better r I an any one Chandler and Wade and thosqother drunk restore the “Union as it was”. But it else, that it is neither egotistic* I nor over swear to that or any other The position is unassailable. The Tri • 4;:- 'r '■. '.i J if I en fellows will lead off. ■L make anything by it. were better that wa prevent the evil while ruling, and that I am ready and anxious to bune says: “We can give the ignorant give up the nomination tqahyboc Iv who can f Why should not Grant decline being aj • .==_’' we can, than to attempt to cure it it get one single vote more than mj millions of freedmen in the rebel States, Ex • I* >Wf- but Nb P * olicy candidate if Yates is to be ostracised for 4 1 ' ^L1 ria".! * *' IJ ikilli I rP’! JHI • L press all this frankly to thu Governor, .'— The New York World- >Vern( fully seated itself upon us like the old « has I the ballot, and at the same time rt fa e it drunkenness? .Yates does mre get drunk delicately, and let him und :r»tand n>v views «aysh General'Grant’s declaration that man upon thb back of Sinbad the Sailor of men aud measures as I r, have frequently to the educated thousands in the 'North. often er than Grant. given them to you. Good bye ti » God bless he will ¡have nio policy but the will of the L —r---------- - ------------- ----------- L people to guide him, reminds one of a If we attempt such jugglery we shall find Yours truly, . 1 ’.M I’, I h ‘il . ■» i you. I Chinamen Naturalized. G eo .' E ÍNDLETON. It seems that Mumford, banged by Ben similar declaration of the great Mr. Pick I, -not, the negroes, cheHed-but ourselves.” I To W ashington M c L ea Butler iu New Orleans, was partner of _ Tho Springfield ((Massachusetts) wick of his policy, at the great election at *r' ■ ■ IT . - --- - --- , „ * Mr. Clarence Logan, of Philadelphia, Ben’s brother in a SanFranoisco faro, publu’ Ln , atansw|ll, between the Buffo and the Blueg, of March 7th says : i. in Which the Hon. Samuel Slumkey just returned from Savannah, having ob bank and Batler, the colonel, was heavily The great mule-rider—Grt ‘•Thomas Rowpan. of Boston, procured on r was? the candidate of the Blues, ¿and served Hie election there,has made a Wednesday the naturalization of Ah Chang monkey has again mounted tl The ¡fetter's death, | . ‘ j" -' . . ' t i statement that in one ward in thajt city indebted to Mumford. thus giviug Boston a Chinese cii zen, had Hon. Horatio Fizkins of the •Buff.-r- 1 aud we may expect to see soi several negroes were supplied by a wag cancelled the obligation. Ben. Butler’s, setting an example to California that the . Gcldiii Slate will not follow very soon.” ing stiff legged, with a mixture of squeal “Slumkey forever !” roared the honest with labels of -‘Coster’s rat and roach ex fraternal affection is the ffrtt pleasing r terminator ” and voted them as ballots. The naturalization laws are made by and dust; but the jackass he is now riding and independent. trait thus far developed in his otherwise I ‘‘SiUmkey forever !” echoed Mr. Pick Some of the very intelligent suffragans Congress, and are “uniform throughout is a cross between an allig ;ator, a rhinoc. i uoticed a cut of a rat on the supposed bal somewhat repulsive character and history*, £ i “ No Filkin! ” the United States.”! This naturalization eros, a jack rabbit and wick, taking off his hat. poodle dog pup > lot, asked what it meant. They were told “ Certainly not ! ” shou. roamed the crowd it stootBfor the “rati fi-cation of the con occurcd prior to the late China treaty, and aud distantly related to^ tl ë cay I T he reply of Seeley Mott to the urgent lyota tribe, stitution. ” “ Who is Slumkey ? ” They wondered, believed and solicitatiens and importunities of a life in ted^* Mr. Pickwick. I • ! • now that both governments recognize the | and besides is blindj •3 if-it Ï voted, After this, who prates about edu- « * “ I don ’ t know, ispered M t . Tubman. wl ringboned, knock kneedjii glandered, right of Americans to become chinamcn, surance agent, is characteristic of*the man. cated voters, and who doubts that the lied Mr. Pickwick, f •‘Hush, dont ask re| and ohinamen to become citizens of the sweenied, srring-balt, i colored troops fought nobly ?—N. Y. Being urged beyond hie ^®t of good* acked. spav- IL r questio. I; its always best to do wha£ an WoHd. United Stites, it is fair to presume vast ined, Foundered, wind nature one day, and warmed by the per en cankered,, J th. i mob do od these occasions. ,M But sup. t » . ' ■ » versity of the agent, he emphatically ex ly more c’ninamen will become ntCuraliz sore eyed, and cata- ■ white eyed with e there are two mobs, ” suggested Mr. A. monkey, dressed ever so fine, and put claimed, “He’d be d—d if he’d play any ed Amei icons, than Americans become ract, , hoot-bouDd, hide windgalled ánjobgrass. ¡ ‘‘Shout with the largest, r re- ting t;ng on ever so many airs, is nothing but a » n.furtdized ohinamen. it is troubled e-evi'/amj» plied Mr; Pickwick monkey still. It is breeding and senn« that game where he bad to die te win. and now i ‘ I ./ I i « oomtitute i the true gentleman.— Wapelt» • Chins is so densely populated that she ers, bof, worms, blind i, distemper 1 ’' ‘ I ’ iW1 ■ have said more q umes could not Republican. 5 e ■ «¡j »reds to send pan of her people abroad, scratches, scours, grip ! ■ ‘ X « otes, farcy, The interest on United. «States beads, Andjt nigger “clothed with purple and i J » fulling due July 1st imountU •wd America »«ffercs much greater facili- inflamahon of the lun I f 8*10 132,00t- t igO, sit-fasts, »Í ■ il I Í if 1 I I I fine linneu ” and with political power, and Democratic majerity Kertnckey gives a MNI £>r money n aking and 1 he pursuit of sallendurj, strangles vives, wind- Thia is all to be paid in gold, by .. j. of 93,00»). Idaho gives an evcrwhelming managed, manipulated, and voted by the °Q°. 4 • • huppiiiv>4, and as there are always thqse galls, inflamitory fe^ indice, ai.a D^tnocraiio majority.— also Montana. Freedmen’s Bureau or Massachusetts the poor, laboring producers, traders mo* I whose selfish l propensities^ill induce them hydrophobia. lie is i F ruggltng m iJCvery State and prominent placa where, I te» tba rink yankees is but a nigyer— the connecting chaniesand professional men » «tumble at an election has boan bcfd,s.nce Grant’s noia- to emph y the loathsome and inferior ra I ■ W I H nea-texed bondholder, r link between the mnokey and mao. • ces, if they can make à small percent the first bridge and w I G<ant and insuiau has gane DemoçratU mi ’ TFT »4 1 - . 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