M.Î? ? Lïl ¡ r ì ifUrf ’ J'1'I FÍiJÍ ! j' .Ti ' J? ‘U « i 1 • 1 - i p; e • ‘ ’Ì X ; h¡y|V11¡ .'b '¡1 ■ - p kuTj J ; i ■ J ’n ’ ! É'-ÎIJ'''- i' r- r* R’¡ ,j; l ì- 1 >¡l i i ■ ’ ' FJ • f J' Sr' ' UÆi * t ■1 2 Undisputed i The Danbury Almanac. l” MAN PUBLISHES TWT THE “NEWS ’ll HÏ8 PROGNOSTICATOR. 1 . * 1 ' No man who remembers the past, summer can fail to understand why I have got out an almanac.* At ainchoKT^I ’fc 1 4 .50 j !» 00 1 l»i 1 224» Alnchea. ¿300 J 41* 0 t«> 1 11 1 20 1 30 0U i Col. r«ÓÌ"Ì5t 8 O()| 18 |22 ! 32 00 j Col. - 1 MO'P'W !H»|20j28 1 38 00 ¡Col. ¡2M|9 00 IÍ¡T» 1 3Ó 1 50 00 ISTI 30 j 50 j 9Ö00 1 Col. 1 » 1 15 B umiwm notices in the Local . Columns, 25 <e«u per line, each insertion. r For legal and transient advertisements $2.- 50 per square of 12 lines, for the first inser tion. and *1.0*per square for eaeh subsequent, use rt ion. J Legal A<fa>rtuHi*eat» to he Paid for up on uu iking Proof by the PvblUker. At*«. 50 Cteu * I niMe.-o tubcriptteas Sent Käst, tt •• a Yswr. * r BUSINESS CARDS. ► * „ V KTOKXK M7LLIVAN. JAMBS MC 0AIX. ' J MeCAIN dk SI LLIVAM, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, LAFAYETTE. OREGON. ILL PRACTICE IN ALL OF THE SUte Ceurta. 'm»rllv8tf W » <CHA*.A. BALL. BALL A STOTT, Attorneys at Law, the eleventh hour I have stepped between man and the elements and said “Dofi’t!” Whether my actions will be sustained, my honesty rec ognized, my sacrifices appreciated and my publishers remunerated, it is for the people to say. It was necessary that some one ehould take hold of the matter. 1 have done so. And so I have got out an almanac of my own. It is my first almanac, but you would hard ly think it. When I look over the wofle myself, and see how complete it is in every department, aud re alize how easy it has been, it seems as if I never did anything else but W4 make wether and fool with astron omy. I don’t think the arrange ments can be improved. I have got all the planets up to going to press, with a full and pleasing as sortment of signs of the zodiac. I might have the other signs cheap er, but I prefer zodiacs. There is a tone and finish to them which place them J^bovo their fellows. r The reader will recognize many familiar characters in looking over PORTLAND, OREGON. z ovr calendars, but ho will ex peri' janlOlf ’ ence much suffering and sorrow W.k M. RAM^ k L and disappointment in searching ’ t • { I - * .■ -Attorney at Law, for moons eqlial in any respect,to those our artist furnishes in * th»j LAFAYETTE, OREGON. little work. They are engraved Office in the Court House. ----- : —4—^------- v . from sketches taken on the fcpot, and can be relied on in any cli E. C. BRADSHAW, «A-ttorneyr at Law, mate. It is not my purpose, of course to elaborate the work in LAFAYETTE, OBEGON. / this note of explanation, but I Office in the Court House. think I may be pardoned in calling the attention qf the student of hu P. c ). «ULLIVAN. ^Attorney at Law, man nature to“ the expression of the eyes in dur moons. By special Dall*«, Oreffea. request I omit on the second page ILL PRACTICE IN THE COURTS of Ysmbü|, Polk »nd other countie« the portrait of the man who had jn Oregon. ■ J 201V 201y po coat on his back, nor any on his stomachy apparently. I should have omitted it anyway. I have always believed there was some * thing repulsive in this exposure; ILL BE AT LAFAYETTE ON THE First Monday of each Mouth and and cutting him open to excite Remain sympathy, with a view to mitiga aprii tf ----------rW ting disgust, has always appeared “ DB. ALFRED KINNEY, * to me to be a coarse and disgrace Surgeon. ful artifice. And just think for one moment of the awful ahsurdity pf the idea. Here is a perfectly PORTLAND,OREGON. Office Hours-9 to II a. m. till after 5 p. m nude man, with a skylight in his fa Office at Night. stomach, and surrounded by things no one can pronounce the name of J. N. MILLER, standing with his legs apart and latoi Uhr! staring at the horizon with as much intensity as if he had made it him- 4! UHTim oei. sejf, and had come to view it from OULD ANNOUNCE TO THE CITI- a new point. We have got a new xens of thi« place and vicinity that man* Jie ha« returned to hi« old stand and is to take his place—a man who prepared to do all work in hi« U m , woh aa ananufactoring WAGONS. BUGGIES, has been brought up to respect so MACKS. Ac. ciety—a man whom it is a pleas H7"Repairing done on short notice. 1^, J ■ » ure to look at and think of in twi PROCLAMATION. light He stands up there and il W hebhas , Under the Act of the LegfrUK lustrates the season for his clothes Ive Assembly, bk, of the Blate State of Oregea. Oregee, en a Litigants" titled “an Act to protect Litigants ” approved and as long as there is an eye to ----- - 24th, 1872, the IxrAYCTTB COURIÄK, -October LaraYCTrtJJOVMM, newspaiier published at Lafayette, in the offend, or ‘a cheek to blush, we _3onty of Yamhill, Oregon, has been desig shall strictly observe our part of «county nated to publish the Legal and Judicial ad- ‘vertiMneata for Mid county at Yamhllh aod the contract I hope you will take Wittiwus. The proprietor of Mid IaM- Trrrn Cointa, ha* filed with the county this little book home to your fam Clerk of said county, a written stipi tton ily and hang it up by a string and adeepting the conditions of said Act, u with a Bond approved as the law' when yon are writing to your with proper roturns and notice theneof, L apayettk Cocsna, is hereby proclaimed wife’« mother, urging her to oome to be appointed and eouflrmed M the medi um through which all Legal aud Judicial ad- and stay all winter, you will find vertamevtB for Mid eoantyof YatnhiU shall be pubiwhed for the period authorised by in this work many valuable* sug ■ ù Done at the city ofSalem, thta 19th day of gestions in regard to the date line. til First Street,Opposite Occidental Hotel. 4 W W ’T W I 1* ±L™ February, February, A. A D. 1872. Attest: L. F. GROVER, Governor of Orepoa. C mavwick . Sec. of State. Yonrs truly. J. M. B ailey . Danbury, Conn., Sept. 1. irkable at least in view pf all th$ antecedent cir M It is positively kbown that the cumstances, that the President’s President of the United States bank account should have fitted so kept a personal account in the First nicely to the financia' •isis i. .¡i r: as < to f National Bank ajf Washington, be .thus overdraw* al ] cw dollars ' L r i Ï which led off in the financial crash when the crash came, 4 month ago, although there was The inquiry nptur .11 arises, did no run or unusual demand by de Cook© notify the ent when positors. It failed to pay simply •finch that becauso all the pubjic and private bankruptcy 1 ing, and fundshad been carried off lor the Wise ached _-, T- aced in his Cooke & use of oi o Jay ay uoose k po » jo . hands which would cover the bal- I The First National held |287,- An0b to his credit and exceed it a 000 of the Treasury deposits at the little, so that the I operation might time of the cxplosjpn, of which look more plausible? Did he go $187,000 had bee< given to it there carrying thisknowled Ige ( with without the. seeprityi required by ihim im and use it to get Sbepli herd ap- law. That was the| result of fa in tod? s jj 'F voritism at the Whiti Hous^which powT are question© which will Th< I J is believed to have been extended tiot'be clearly answ red now, but also to the firm of Jay Oooke & the day is not dish nt when they Co., who owned the^bank. must be answered u ider oath with Henry D» Cooke, ¡president of t ie books and rjecoi 3s of this rot- the broken bank, w|s the confi t&ribank to confini th© answer.— dential agent of General Grant in Jr. 'y. Sun, oa. 25. all bis moneyed transactions. He ♦ ! I —à------ i.Ji» è 44 Hi i S. S. Cox tolls a j 'ood 9tory of made bis investments» drew his 3Stfark Twain. salary, and took care that it was liis first meeting with Mark called on Mr ox, at -the placed at the best possible rate of Capitol in Washingi , and sent interest. J in Ipn card as Samuel Clemens, The same Henry 1 Cooke nacquaint- ceived from1 the president the ot Mr., Cox being tot cd with the name, liis scat to fice of Governor of the District of turliat fho ci Columbia, through vihich he ob spe what the etranger wanted of him, supposing, of coarse, the call tained complete control over its was. a business one. M^-Clemons revenues, which weriBdepQsited in begaq by saying: M I called upon his 1 bank. Ht negotiated all the l ipy Wife's accoun Mr. Cox loans without accountability, and ” in an Enlightened must have profited immensely by said, “Ah. <•< I JO»,” pnr- these operations. | • t. i manner. ie to Id me that About the 9th or 1 Oth of last sued the visitor, she had sat on your knee, n “On mopth Henry D. Cooke visited Mr Cox v nr. 1 rr.■ . . 1 my j knee!” exclaimed Mr. Long Branch. That was a little “Really, sir,” he ¿sj id, “your lan- more than a week before the star guage is iaco nprehensible. ” tling suspension whiqb has produc Yes, ’* resum i« Nfr. , Clemens, “she ed so much misery and ruin. He must have known at that time the used to set on your, * knee; she was little girl t {ben, i and I was not rotten condition of Jay Gooke & ere, so I’m not jealous; don’t Co., from being the Washington ike the trouble to apologize.” take partner of t£ie concern. He cer Here the lqugh came inf expiana- lerethe!%ugh cai tainly knew that that he-Sad he-nad stripped stripped tii orfe followed, and a pleasant ae the First Ni tional B$nk re B^nk of its re- sources, without taking a dollar of quaintance formed on both sides, < O ' M i secunty, to * prop uputheir tottering condition. I ’ i ¿The ostensible object of Cooke ’ s jectof Cooke’s visit to the ^ea^shore residence of the Bresidei|t was to arrange ' for his resignation as Governor, and the appointment of hfe successor* Beyond that nothing is distinctly known, but recent events have in vited much suspicion ¡as to other i motives. | On September 10tl| Cooke for mally resigned the Gp vernorship. as previously concer CLIP Ie , and on the 12th the Presi nt replied from Long Branch ac ' ting the resignation with “regr ,” and eu- ! V logizing th© administration of Cooke and his ring confederates" in the high©8t terms. That was followed by the appointment of A. R. Shepherd; the notorious chief of the plunderers.' jS»if day^ after thid; episode the Firijt National ew Ja tump i was once mak- in a country Just as he was lage owh I ing, Amos Kendall, who , de him, v ;“Tip ’em Tittle Latin, IGtt they won’t _ 3 satisfied withe, The “hero of|^ew Orleans” i tantl tly thought of a few phrase« h new, , and in a : r 1 | I | : i I | voice of thunder, wpund up his speech by exclaiming} “E pluribus unum,' Sirje qua non, Ne plus ultra, Multum in parvo/’ The effect was tremendous, (nd the shouts could be heard for miles L —- ------- J| "i I I-------------------- - A colored philosopher thus un burdened himself on bne^of wo man^ weaknesses: “Jim, de men don’t make such fools of demselves about women as de women do t If women looks at de in, de# see a man in it. Ifdey mouse nibbling, it *” ’s a man; de bed de Bank closed its doorsjbeing pre and; dey all look w ceded a few,hours by the jibuse of fust thing at night Why, I nebber loo r my bed Jay Cooke & Co., whb ha< »9« it as a means of obtaining n tAl-L 1 L _ .!• for their spdoulations; In due tifee a sta sent out by. the ■ • MM. T. — - A and supplemented by filler details dministra- requested to in the organs of the tion, to the ’effect that when the the Blank First National closed-tl^ President’ to have th not onjy ha4 no deposits there,but theyJnUy ; had actually overdrawn:;his account departed friends. 1^1* wbteh Ips since m made 4 Â.Tiew lo i bf instituted at Salt L¡ These are all undisnutc facts, lfch.T er adver- cmsoquenoe accidents i earnestly 3 Of pby, that ente of a fellows WM City on the The Convention of Executive Committees of State Granges of the Patron* of Husbandry, repre senting the States of the Mississip pi Valley, which met at Keokux, Iowa, i adopted the following: “Whereas,We regard completeand accurate agricultural statistics as the foyndation of our control of the business of agriculture, by which we may obtain a suitable re ward for our labors and allow ^he law of supply and demand to oper ate freely in the regulation of pri ces, to the benefit both ot;|>roduc- ers and consumers; therefore be it Ruolvedt That we use our best ef forts to establish or cause to be es tablished in each and every State in pur Union, a system of agricul tural statistics by which we can get exact information of the aver age of Abe principal crops, the amount of liv§ «lock in the country, t - r Hop vines make r. ; , \ “Spirit of the ’—a glass of cider. ’ -r h The hardships of the ocean—iron clads. Music by Handel—that of the Or gan-grinder. Shakespeare has a blacksmith’s shop in Buffalo. • , Where there is much light the shadow is deep. • .. A handsome thing in ladies’ hose— A neat little foot. A daughter of General Rosecrans has entered a convent. _____ - Kit Carson was recently elected constable at North Platte. ■ ’t* Blondin is walking the rope tn In dia and Australia this year. Solitude shows us what we should be; society shows us what we are. Philadelphia has raised $200,600 toward a new academy of fine arts, Mrs. Bose Clinton has assumed the position of lightning slinger at Og den. J Scab in sheep is reported quite prevalent in parte of Southern Oregon the quantity tf produce and the this foil. - number of animals of each kind for A peripatetic show out West goes market.” by the name of Wirirdian Cagliostro- It is stated that the.gharp^rs are go mantheum. Several county clerks in the State ing for the farmers Ef Illinois. The are tussling with the ** Rqn*l i ««.Hen * * swindlers travel through the country assessment rolls., . . / . with samples of goods, representing In Cincinnati recently a widow and themselves to be runners or agents of her four daughters were all married wholesale Grangers’ stores in Chica on the same day. go. They display their samples, offer Jones thinks that the owl is con their goods at exceedingly low prices, sidered a bird of wisdom, because he and take th 3 farmers’ note for the is such a solemn-’un. amount, payable in sixty days. The 4, A fine span of horses backed off the ‘ goods never get around, and the notes wharf at Astoria, Friday, 14th inst., - are traded off innocent third part and were drowned. • • • • ies, and while the former is congratu Laramie aspires to the position of lating himself upon not buying of Queen of tha Mountains. She will middlemen, and wondering why the perspire when she reaches it. goods don’t come, the note turns up. The Ashland sports have swa coin on scrub horse races every The next session of t the State urday for the last ten weeks. Grange of Iowa will be represent An Ohio soldier who was a prisoner ed in the convention of the Geor in Libby for a year is now foreman of gia State Grange, which meets in a tobacco factory in the building. The Carson river'll beenminy deEu> Macon on the 29th of Oct., and enough for the fish to\ome out QftZe the membership^ will not be less sage brush an take to water again./' thart 20,000. Considering how In Ireland, with less than 5,4(XV- 000 inhabitants, the two Shillings li short a time has elapsed since the cense duty was paid on 290,796 do^s. first Grange was organized, the A Michigan farmer has writen to progress of the society in that State Mr. Bergh to know if folding-doors m must be regarded as something ro- hog-pens will be in fashion this sttm- mer. . >; markable. *■ I An old woman’s obstinacy in smok The grangers or Patrons of ing while crossing a Kansas prairie Husbandry, have adopted as a rule started a fire which swept over four counties. . ’ , of their order never to go to law, French astronomer^hinks fie will and to have their disputes settled be A able to find out during the coming by arbitration. The case comes transit of Venus whether the planet on without delay, and each man is inhabited. Road agents are making a profiita- telling his story, a jury of picked ble business by overhauling the Bat neighbors and mutual friends de tle Mountain and Austin stages, near ly every day. cide which is right . battle field of Bull Bun, whinh If it be asked what the Patfons 1-- The ‘ * - * * battle - - • was ■ was a farm when the of Husbandry have accomplished, fought, is now a village with about let it be told to their credit that 300 inha rítante. Two fatigued travelers, having to the progress of their movement has travel ten miles further, comforted led fo a reduction of the passenger tKemselves by the calculation that it ; tariffs on the Illinois railroads from was only five miles each. , AHL. -- New Orleans never had so mafiy three to five cents per mile. highway robbers as now, and the po The grangers have determined to lice are charged with shielding them « deal directly with flouxers and ex and dividing the proceeds.; - porters ¿if grain, and dispense with ^XWhichisthe oldest Miss Antiqui what they call “middlemen.” This ty, old Aunty Deluvial Miss Ann Te- will not effect the first partjof min rior, Miss Ancestor Miss Aun T. Mun - strel entertainments wherein the mid dane or Miss Ann T. Cedent? Two pairs of stairs are necessary to dleman is an important actor. every newspaper offioe in North Car The Patronsof Husbandry in Mar olina; one for the editor to go down shall -county, Hl., declare by resolu as the caller comes up the other. 1 tion that no man without good moral The Des Moine dramatic club is character or who is entahgled with discussing what Desdemona meant politics, job or idfig alliances need ex when she exclaimed, “Would that heaven had made me such a man!11- pect their vote or countenance. a late date / The farmers of Champaign county, _^A California paper contains the following advertisement: Illinois, are shipping grain on the co “Born—In Eureka, August 19, to the operative plan. In a shipment of wife of D. Manheim, a son—a fifteen- i J* ... nineteen car-loads at one time they pounder.” ¡ , save about $500. i . A Georgia; “cracker” was offered four dollars t per day to labor, wbqn A young granger in Pennsylva he exclaimed, “Sir, d’ye s’pose I’d nia tapped two hundred apple trees work when I’ve discovered a fresh coon track?” for cider, and after inquiring of a An editor, writing- to a delinquent neighbor why it didn’t run, spent bubscriber requesting him to pay up his income for two weeks bribing his back dues, concluded1 with “If you pay up, yo« wiU me; if . his hired men not to tell it. you won 11 H oblige you. i - J