4 V 1 :-tr . - VOL. 1. NO. 17. San FrR- " CANYON CITY, OREGON, S YTURDAY, AUGUST 1870 7 : :'h- 1 :: 4 4 Tie Grant Gonnty News. ! rUIlLISIIED SVERY SATURDAY MORNING by S. H. SHEPHERD, Editor and PrnusiiEit. SUBSCRIPTION: Per Year, : : : $3 Six Months, : : : 1 INVAHI AULY IX ADVANCE. 00 75 -. O RATES OK ADVJSKTISENGr. Notices in local Column, 20 cents per line, each insertion. Transient advertisttnents, per square of ll lines L 00 for iir-t, ami SI for each subsequent insertion in advance Leal advertisements charge I as transient, and must he paid lor upon expiration. No certili -ate or" publica tion given un'il the foe is mid. Y early advorti'Otn'i'L on very liber terms Professiomd Cave's, ( one inch or less) 81") pry annum. Personal and Political Com mu ideation charged as advertisements. The above rat vi 1 b. strictly adhered to. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. C. W. Pakrhii. ATTORNEY AT LAV. Canyon City, Oke;on. M. L. OLMSTKAD. ATTORNEY AT LAW, Canyon City, Oueoon, Geo. B. (Jrur.KY, jSLttornoy fxit Xjx7S7-, Canyon City, Ouecon. M. Dust ix, Attorney at Law, Canyon Citv. Oregon. F. C.UORSLKY,M D. GRADUATE OF THE IVEKSITV OF PENX- sylvaniu, April S, 1S7S. Canyon ( Vv. Or iron. Ofiiee in his I)nig Store, Ma'n Street Or-iers for Druus prom try filled. No professional nitron aire solicifcerl unless directions ate s vhtlv followed J. W. HOWARD. M. IX, Canyon City, GuantCo., Ouecon. 0. M. DODSON, M. D., K. H. BOIiSY. XD 23 ZST "37 X S'P, 5Sf-DpntHl Rooms, Opposite tho Mothudist Oburch. Canyon City, Okegok. G. I. IIAZELTINE, Fliotosraplior, CANYON CITY, OHEOON. m 9 O J. 1KT "5?" O IJ OITT MILK-3IAK The best of Milk furnislied to Hie citizens of Canyon City ev 2ry moaning, by the gallon or quart; at reasonable rates. JOHN SCHMIDT, Carpenter and Wagon Makek Canyon City, Oregon. Dealer in Hardwood, Spokes i and Felloes,' Furniture, Ohairs, Paints, Glass, and Windosv-sasii. onTTTunnD STATE XEWS. From the Portland Standard- Doutilas county premises big'crops. Baker City has its regular blue rib bon club. There are no houses to let in Jack sonYille. Not stealing is on the .increa-e at Astoria. Pcrcheron stock is said to kick like m iles. Jackson county supports two min strel troupes. Freights on the Upper Columbia are falling off. Roseburg gets ovcrSSOOO from tax ex and licences. Lem Iling has been sent to the jail at Salem for keeping an opium den. The E-iitor of the Astorian had two fresh shad presented to him on the 19t!i inst. It is probable the Harvest Queen has made her last trip to Lewiston for the feus )!. About. GO families camped at Silver Lake, near Piineville, Was'co cnunty, last summer. A thunder storm did much damage j to crop in .'he upper end of Jackson f coutu v Jat week. Howard, of 'he Chcmket.' Hotel, at Sah'in, i- said to be the best runner and jumoer in the state. Peter Wilhem has beaten every com petitor at billiards in Astoria, and is announced to be the champion. 'p.ob White'' quail, introduce 1 by Henry Akeny, have niido thtdr ap pearance near Independence, Polk county. The third annu d fair of the Baker County Agricidtural Society will be gin on September loth and continue for six da s. Articles of incorporation have bpen drawn up and signed for the purposo of organizing the Ro-vburg Library Associat on. The Yieux:emps (old time, Rocks) brothers, the w rid renowned and ever thirsty bilks are he-iding toward Oregon f'r-ni Siskiyou coi:try; C1. A party of prospect '-r-, s;v the Douglas Independent, cotnpri-ing Dr. J. II. McOord. Dr. Isarni s, Tom De- vans and . K. Meyers have returned from a trip to the head wat rs of Cow creek. Fiom the latter Lcentletnan we lern that all -ire satisfied that they have "struck it rich " They located three quartz ledges, which were, discov ered near .Mf. Bolivat , and a number of placer claims. Riehard , (ioriron. who accidi ntl y shot himself lat week, was brought co Pendleton from lama-Prairie, and is 1 iicttin' al . me finely. Tho State-man says: '-AH aboard j for the fair gronnd" will be heard no , more. The S;dem and Silvorton. Rail road will attend to that business this year. Two Salem printers announce them selves as the champion croquet players of the capital. We shall next hear of jackstone and "mumblv" peg matches. A man named Smith, who works for the Beagle Brothers of Granite creek, was shot in the arm on the 4th in a drunken row. Budd Beagle narrowly escaped death while trying to quell the disturbance The Canyon City camp meeting suc ceeded in converting about 12 of the wayward ones. Dr. Hall's horse ran away at Salem, broke the buggy, threw out the doctor and broke its owq shoulder. "Wosley Parker, of Wolf creek, Uu ion county, sheared 32 pounds of clean wool from one merino sheep this spring. Rice, the mind reader, wlio is at Coos county, the East Oregonian says, is a bilk, and an unworthy member of the I. 0.0. F. The Army of the Nation. Washington, Julv 13. A state ment has been issued by the war de partment, giving the number of men furnished for the union army by each state and territory and the DL-triet of Columbia, from April 15, ISGi, to the close of the rebellion. It shows that the total numb.-r of volunteers Was 2.G7S,967, distributed as follows: Maine, 72,114; New Hamshire, 3G, 020; Vermont, 35,202; Mas-sachuset's, 152,048; Rhode Island. 28,G99; Con necticut, 57,379; New Yrork: 4G7,047; New Jersey, 81,020; Pennsylvania, 305,107; Delaware, 13,G70; Maryland, 50,310; West Virginia. 32,068; Dist. of Columbia, 16,872; Ohio, 319,650; Indiana, 197,147; Illinois, 259,147; Miehi-an, 89,372; Wisconsin, 90,124; Minnesota, 25,052; Iowa, 270,309: Missouri, 109,111; Kentucky. 79.025 Kansas, 20,151; Tonne.-sec, 31,002; Arkansas, S,2S9; North Carolina, 3,- too; Ualttornia, JO.o; jNcvaua, 1, fiioo. r ioii. t7-..i.: ..... n uou, vyiugun, leu1, v iiaauigioii ilti i tory, 9G4; Nebraska Ten itoiy, 3,157: Colorado Territory, 49U3: Dakota Ter ritory, 25G; New Mexico Territory, G5G1: Alabama, 2576; Florida, 2190; Louisi: n.i, 8224; Mississippi, 545; Texa-, 19G5; Indian Nation, 3053. Tho troops furnished by the South ern States were, with the except ion of Have of Loui-iana, nearly all white. Florida furnished two regiments of cavalry, Alabama one white ngiment and Missi-sippi on- b-itia'ion. Be Fiiank. Never deceive for the sake of a foolish jest, or to excite the laughter of a few companions at the expense of a fi iutl. Be anxious when you relate anything to tell it jut as it occurred' Never vary in the least de gie". 'The reason whv ur eats are so often saluted by false reports n be ci use peojde in telling real things add a ntuc to tuoni, arm as they pass throuuh a dozen mouths the oriirinal stories are turned into oinotliinir n tirely difft rent. So when you attempt 'o tell anything that you have een with your own eyes, relate it correctly in every patticula', and as you grow older ou will reap the adva tage of ibis course. Our tes.iaiOiii.ils show that long standing c.-ses of Scrofula, Bad Lers, etc., have been cured by cii;ht or ten boit!(j of Pfu:id.:r's Orcgun Blood Pu i ifier. Declined. We have received a communication from a responsible par ty, living at Mitchell, Wasco county, giving an account, of a farmer living on Sh"0 Fly cotring to that place Mitchell and getting drunk, and when on his Way home killing the horse he was riding with a knife, etc., winch we respectfully decline publishiiu, for the reason that the man when sober is :l fajr itvertge citizen, and for a further rc..,son, that he is the father of an ex- cedent family. The affair will travel fat enough without puttint it into the papers. We heartily sympathize with the family that is so unfortunae as to have a husband and father avIio is in the habit of getting even "occasional ly" bea.-tly intoxicated. We thank our correspondent for sending us the item, and hope he will not feel hurt that we do not Ditblish it. Mountaineer. We are in tiie s one boat, Bro Hand, and also hope our correspondent will not feel hurt that we did not publish the communication. Several large trees were uprooted at Pendleton bv the windstorm last week. The Congregational Church of Sa lem, will not accept Minister Knight's resignation. Snow storm and black frot Dear Prineville, Wasco county, on the 4th and 5th. Hannah Neal, a Sweedish girl of New York, took nitrous oxide for the extraction of nineteen teeth, and laughed herself insane. BREVITIES. Nashville wiil cekdjrate her centenni al April 23, 1880. San Antonio is fast becoming the great wool mat ki t of 'Texas. West Texas doctors now speak of j that section as the health belt. A man died in Ireland last year aged 10G, who left a daughter 15 years old. In the public schools of Mississippi there are more colored than white chil dren. The sum of S350,000 was spent for beer in Cincimati during tho saeuger fest week. uNo more campmeetings with Sun day trains'' is the derision of the Bal timore chuich people. The operation of removing the rhrht eye has been successfully performed on Mr. Plimsol, M. P., the sailors friend. Tne t'pple crop throughout Western North Carolina was almost whollv do- stroyed by severe, frosts in the month of May. Boston has a Spiritualist, named Powell, who makes motions over carefully washed slate, and when it is reversed a beautiful duawing appears. "I cannot tell,'' says an old convict, how many crimes are arranged in pris on and afterward successfully carried out, but their name is leirion." .It is a-S"rted that the woman in Si beria comprise only 15 or 20 per cen of the population, and that a dreadful state of demoralization is the result. Lillie Duer, who shot and killed Ellen I lea rn. at Snow Hill, Md., has writ i en a lovo story for the Philadel phia Times, and contemplate!- a lectur ing tour. The English Factories Act requires that, no woman .slmll be employi-d con- tinously for more than four hours and a half. Aftervorking for that length of time she must have a rest. i The Zulu King Cotywayu's messen gers, when on a mission of peace to Lord Chelmsford, are reported to have asked: '-Why do the English hide like ant-bears in holes? Let them come out and fight in the opm. If they beat, we submit at once." A f rmer in Ilolden, Me., relates that, being much annoved with crows pulling up his corn, he placed a large umbrella in the field in otder to flight on them away. He "was a good deil surprised one wet day in finding a good flock seeking shelter under it fom the rait;. The umbrella is now used for another purpo-e. Riackberr'es are black; blueberries are blue: billberries have bills, and raspberries grow on raspy bushes: but wintorgrecn berries are red, elderber ries have nothing in particular to do with elders; gooseberries are not eaten bv geese: strawberries do not come from straw, andmulberries arc no re lation to the .Journal. M ulligans. Chicago A man at Chapmanville, Ya., had a chance ty find out how long he could stand on his toes. RoloVrs took his money, hanged him to a tree and left him. By pressing his toes to the ground he could relieve the choking of the noose around his neck, and in that way he stood for thirteen hours, but was on the point of giving up when help came. Yicks Monthly says that plants with white blossoms have a larger propor tion of fragrant species than any oth ers; uext come red, then yellow and blue, and lastly orange and brown. The flowers of spring are white and highly fragrant; those of summer are red and yellow, and less fragrant; thoe of autumn and winter are darkor, and with lesa perfume. Lake George, N. Y., July 18. Columbia won the college race to-day. Wesleyau 2d, Cornell 3d. Time S:2G. Indian News. For the last few weeks, re ports have been going the rounds, says the Fast Orego nian, that Snake Indians are in the 151 ue Mountains, and occasionally come down to the camps on the Umatilla with a view of stealing horses. These reports are without foundation so far as we have been able to learn. In our opinion we io w something is wron somewhere. The Umatilla have an object of their own to accomplish and have selected this lying course to do it. On Major Corn oyer's departure for "Washington, D. C. in company with some Umatilla? all the old squaws were up and bound for the other side of the Columbia, savin tr tbev were going to gather camas, but up to this time none have return ed, and upon close- observa tion you will be convinced that only able-bodied and young squaws, and young able bodied bucks, all well armed, remain this side of the Colum bia with all their good horses. Fridaj- evening, last week, the report was brought to town that a Snake Indian had been killed near the house of one of the Chiefs on the Umatilla riv er, near the Agency, and in or der to uphold the fact they will show were something has been dragged over the ground bleeding like a "stuck hog7 Something is up, and what it is we will soon know, it may be the object of the Umatillas to make us actually believe that Snakes are about and that upon the killing of a white man or the stealing of horses, that "The Snakes done it.,; Sunday last, on account of the above rumor, soldiers ar rived at the Umatilla Agency to investigate and see whether or not Snake Indians were in the Blue Mountains. About iifty-five in all came from Wal la Walla., and are now camped at the Agency under charge of . Capt. Bendier. Walla Walla has it, or did have it, that 150 Indians had come from the mountains, and were interfering with the In- dians on this reserve, and that Pendleton was in danger, also that hotter, the stage driver, -I had been stopped between here and Weston. Now cumcs the unfounded news irom Umatilla that a per son, (whom all are acquainted with and whose name will not appear in print), there had tilled a Umatilla siwash. All such rumors are afloat, aud "everyone has been told by some one else about it; it nust be a fact for so-and-so told me.'7 A Memphis physician advocates the hcory that free perspiration will cure nearly every disease by expelling it through the pores. He advertises a resort for invalids where "the sun pours down with unrestricted lierceDess," a cooling breeze is unknown, and the thermometer indicates over 90 dav af ter day. He admits that life theie would be unendurable but for the con sciousness that the suffering is inci dendtal to cure. The last buffalo was killed in East arn Oregon on Burnt river in 1837, by the father of Chief Joseph; the bones of these animals are often ploughed up in the valleys of Powder river, espe. chilly in Eagle valley