sec VOL. 1. NO. 4G. CANYON CITY, OREGON, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1880. TERMS: $3. PER YEAR. wr,r mi PROFESSIONAL CARDS. C. W. PARRIsn, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Canyon Citv, Oregon. pi. L. OLMSTEAD, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Canyon City, Oiiegox, Geo. B. Cukuey, Canyon City, Oregon. M. Du.sti.s-, Attorney at Law, Canyon City, Oregon. F. C. IIOrlSLEY,M 1). frUA.DU.VTK OF THE UNIVERSITY OF PENN- pylvania, April 8, 1S-IS. Canyon City, Oregon. Office in his Drug Store, M:i'n Street. Orders for Drugs promtly filled. No professional patronage solicited unless directions ai o s'riotlv followed J. W. 1 COWARD, M. D., Canyon City, Grant Co., Oregon. O.M. D0D302T, H. D., 2jTiviario City, - Qs""- II. BC"L"EY, D S T I S T, TWiil Roogb, Opp-ssitQ tb. ftt'aodist Canyon City, Oueoon. 0. T. IIAZELTINE, 3P Xx o v o 3: X c, ip la o , CANYON CITY, oni:aoN ECLECTIC PHYSICIAN. Kcsidonco--Jchn Day. Grant Coun ty Oregon. t. c ii v )':. ATTORNEY AND Ol'NST.l.OR AT LAW, Baker City, Oregon. Office corncy of Court Avenue snd Liberty Strert. Frank feCaiiurcvs Variety Stores John Day City, - - DSA.L2B IX Oregon- CHOICE GROCERIES, TOBACCO, CIGARS, STATIONERY, NUTS AND CONFECTIONERY, ETC., ETC. Would reppectfully solicit a sharo of the patronage of the citizens of John Xy and surrounding country. MAIN STREET, JOHN DAY, OREGON. IIL BETSCHAN k Announce that they have re ceived a full and well assorted Stock of GENERAL MERCHANDISE, which they offer 0-A.SBL Having bought for Cash we ore prepared to sell our Goods ( ;heaper than they were ever I.efore sold in this Market. Canyon City, Jan. 16. 1880. CHEAP TOP Hotels. N. Rulisok, A. II. Groth. CITY HOTEL Canyon City, Oregon, RTJLISOK & GEOTH, - - Proprietors Ucg leave to inform their friendj And tho Public Generally1 Tht they can be found at tho OLD STAND, And are alvraws rcaij to furnish good Board and Lodging AT .MODERATE PRICES. GOLDEN EAGLE HOTEL, Canyon City, Oregon. The undersigned takes pleasure in announcing to his Patrons arid the geu- oral public that after a trial of nearly a year, he feels confident of success in Hotel business. I shall endeavor to gaiu tbc esteem cf my guests, and give them their mou ey's worth. Terms of Board ami Lodjinr, Invar iably Cah: Board and lodging.por single d:iy,$l:50. " without lodging,per single day, 1. Board and Iodizing, per week, 7. without lodging, per week, $5. JOHN S KG EIll) A IIL, Proprietor. Grange Hotel. PRAIRIE CITY, OREGON, J. IL ITardnian, Proprietor. The Bccosimods'iona at tho aboro Hotel are gooil, and crorj oars will b taka to make guests feci at borne. jI53fCouifortab!e lcdo, tad na good ?. itblt as the m&rkst afTWda furnishad at rcieosablc J&tOB. HAWKEY HOTEL Fort Harney, Oregon. Irorietor Having completed my note! I am prepared to entertain the traveling public with care and comfort. The table is supplied with the best the market attbrds. The beds are neat and clean. DALLES AND BAKER CXTf STAGE LINE, Yaile & Co., Proprietors. Depart from Canyon City for Tho Dalles and Baker City, Daily. Arrives from tho same points, Daily. R. 0. Williamson, Sup't. CANYON CITY & McDERMIT STAGELINE, FRANK HeBEAN, - - Proprietor Departs from Canyon City on Monday, Thursday, and Sat urday of each week. Arrives at Canyon City on Sunday, Wednesday and Fri day of each week. Put up expressly for Family Use, in three pound cans. Warranted, finer, better and cheaper than the Imported To matoes, By G. W. Houston, Canyon City, Oregon. For sale by Phil. Metschan fc Go., Gundlach & Bro and the Proprietor, IIL OREGON. In aoawer to Eastern correspondents too numeroug to address personally, wo will try aad condense answers to their question! into a short letter to them in this form. Western Oregon haa a very mild and oven climato, tho thermometer rarely falling to zero and rarely rising above 90. In Eastern Oregon the range is wider, fay from 15 below to 100 above zero. Suow usu ally falls in both "Western and East ern Oragon every Winter, but dees not coutinue on tho ground more than a few days in Western and a few weeks moat in Eastern Oregon. Cattle Win. tcr in both sections without other food than grows in the pastures. Thra is however such a variety of climatoJ ac cording to the location, whethor ou tho sea const, in the vallevs of the interior, or on tho sided and in the canyons of tho CaoiNtde range, that any mtn can bo suited with rxaclly tho kind ho like, Biiywhero betweeu tho mildest and best on tho continent, and the ruggedncss of Lapland. AVe wiite from whero snow cannot lay buyoud x few days in ihc se verest Winter and whero vro have seen but a dozen onowy days in five years, yot could look from our window upon perpetual mow, but for intervening buildings. Government land enn bo got under homcatcad and pre-emption law all over tho country from within ten miles of this citv to the tops of the mountains, and away eastward towerd Idaho aud northward to the British lino. Somo is within "railroad limits," whero but eighty acres can be home- steaded, rnd somo beyond, where t!u head of a family can take up 1 GO acres. Ex-soldiers can tuke 1G0 anywhere. Some of it is timbered, some is brush land, eoino open prairio, bouio hilly, every varioty, in fact, that could bo do- sired, except steriie, rocky or worthless land yet this can be had by climbing the mountains. There hns heeti some difficulty in the way of obtaining work easily and readily as a farm bond in Winter, but in Summer all can find work, in fact there is no country in the world where a poor man, with vim and ambition ean so reauilv hotter hia con dition, as in Oregon. A new impetus to railroad building will mako the cer tainty of labor gronter in futuje than it has been in the past. We doubt if an honest man over suffered for want of work in Oregon, though here as else where, there are those who eternally 'want work" without getting it. The opportunities for cattle and shoep farm ing are still gc )d, though the rapid set tlement of the frontier country is like ly soon to interfere with tho business. Farming proper is moro certain and proStabio in Oregon, than in any of the Western States, as th& climatic condi tions do not produce ctoims, sudden changes, frosts, or scourges of any kind to damage crops. Tlio only nota ble instance of tha kind was a partial lo3.s ot tho vl'6'iw crop in a fow sections from rust once in thirty years. Indi ans aro no more of a bugbear in the farmer's way in Oregon than in Con necticut,) unless ho chooses to go be- vonu r.il others a.nd anion"? thctw. Plenty of government land can be ob tained where one would never boo an Indian. Farm products bring as good prices on tho avorage at Portland as they do in Chicago, Milwaukee or St. Louis. Fraits of ull kinds grow in the greatest profusion, astonishing to East ern people. Improved farms are held at from 0" 50 to $75 per aero, accord in to location, character, improve--mente, fer.coB, buildings, etc. Beo. The Pacific Mail Co. have announced a war of raiea to San Francisco for pas sengers and freights. From and af ter to-day rate for passage will be $75 for firstclass and $35 for steerage. In opposition the railroad companies offer the following rates: First class, 3100; second class, $75: third class, 45. When. When you aoa a bov diiobcuint aud disrespectful to his parents, mean to brothers nud biutors, eriud lo animals, aod given to lying ju-. for tha fun of it, it is not always a sure sign ihat he is going into businaja with, the devil, but a pretty sufo cue. "When you e a girl kinking bor front hair, und fuofiiisr her time awov while hor mothe r ia doinj hcusbold, you may coaclude tbac the man Ttho splices with rht girl will be one of the worst fooled individuals you ever saw. Wl ien you soo an old bioheior, who ought to b3 squaring up his accounts and gotliug ready for a funeral eutor taimuput, railing at womankiuil, vou may conclude that it ia u sort of sour apple revenge for soroo oi? tho vigorous kicking he recaived in the das ofuuld lang synff. When you see maiden advanced iu yonrj turning up hrr nnsrd ornament at tho lors of crcafiou you mny cor. cludo she hns given up nil hopes of capturing a lord for hav uvn use. When vou see a mt4i: surf-kiini around saying unkind things ubtmt ev- rybody else you may conclude that ho is mad became everybody olao is not as mean as he is. When you see married people psiiie ulai ly conspieiousi in their endoaTinrnfe in public you caji conclude thjvk there would bo room fr a four-ver-old tie phant between them wlien at liome. When you see an old siinnor put on new robes und pluy the ml o Hnint you v.Mid not conclude that tht devil h going out of business. When you poe tho various ohristiati denominations ouit lioirt'iiiir nwav at & 1 oach other and unitint: in their battle ; gainst tha devil you cau conclu-fo that that distinguished iudividual won't have as soft a thing of it as he now hn.". When you see a man bat hia eyrs, gmack h's lips and look wise, it is not positive evidence that ho ia a lineal de scendant of Solomau. When you see a man croaking and growling and grumbling at everything around him it is not benevolent to wish that a vacant place in his family ceme- try wan filled, but it is natural. . Why Sei,f-Made Men ahe Mohe Apt to Succeed. Self-made men aro more -certain than others of success in life for tho reason that, bo to speak, aro more thoroughly mado that is to say, with them the formation of charac ter is moro solid because it is the result of severe discipline, of a determined will, of a .settled purpose. It is not the mere accumulation of tho teachings of others, to which, too often, only a lazy and drowsy attention has been given. The folf-made man starts at the bottom, lie has not only io learn by himself how to ascend the steep and rugged staira before him, but he haa to rack his brain how to construct the ttoirs themselves by which he shall ascend. Hence he understands more accurately than another all the conditions of suc cess. IIi3 attentions become more fixed. His thouuhts are habitually concentra ted on whatever he undertakes. Ilin judgement is matured by the necessi ty imposed upon him for its constant e.;eroiso. lie in vrury and watchful, aud robuatin all hia being, as the gymanast by oontant exercise excels in the de velopment of muscle. Hence it is thai tho community feel greater confidence in self-mudo men. There ii a common feeling tha3 ho who has succeeded against great oddfl, who haa made his ' mark where thos possessed of raanv advantages over hia have failed to make theirs, must poesess in himself re markable elements of aucefss. And the community is right- The self-made men ae on the whole the safest to be intrusted witn great undertakings. The stuff of -which they are made has been found to be of the durable kind. A Man Shot. On Moud&y after uoou ut Cciilo, a man named Scofcty Sharp acoidently or inUutioi ally, says th Mountaineer, shot a man nasied James 2iIoNTar, tho ball striking him in the hit breast, a short distance abovo the heart. It appears the men had bueu drinking and, at the time of the abooting, woro skylarking. Mc Xear was brought to town the same" e-veuing and vras taken to the Dulled House, whuro he liea io a very tritical oti-idiiiou, -with the ohances of recover- iug aaint him. McNe&r is about 27 yoars old and has beeki employed as cook ou thi steamer John Gates. Scotty was eo!; arrosted at last ac- OOUUti. LanI) Office Business. A visit to tho JLjrtn(i 0mco ftt tha Dli!,t3 coaled tho fact that a lari;o amount of land is being taken up, tho majority nf which is ia that section of tha county lying butwctfn tho Desohutea anfl John Day rivjir-?. The following is the amount taken this mouth up t Wednesday at? 11 o'clock A. 51.: 33 timber culture cl.iims, 5,7b0 acre; 44 prj-emption claims, 7,0-10 cres; 10 homestead ap plication, 2,t09 acres, besides two cash entries. The larger number of pcoplo tnkii.g land arc irom Walla AYalla, "W, T Standard. The Monumental Mine. And now came the defendant, Sum Parrish, laet Sunday, says the East Oregon iao, and p'aced in Wells, Fargo & Co's of fice in this town, two silver bricks, worth Si, 277 29 and 81,304 Gl- He reports the mill was broken down, for" the last two weeks, they have had to band all tho pulley with tire iron, as oao and another gav out almost every day. Sam is sanguine that the mill will ruti after awhile, and a.ys things muat quit broakiug brfore long, and then he will put iu an appearance onco a week vith bullion. Jo.iqtdn Miller was at Barnum'a Ifo e', Bftltimoie, a few weeks ago. He wiore a friend in Nw Jersy, and end ed the letter: '"Come and see me when- aver you can; I urn at Barnum's." The friend, who dors not appear to have been familiar with Baltimore, auswer ed: "I am sorrv vou have commoncocl exhibiting yoursalf. If you had stuck to literature you would have made your mark and fortune. Whereabouts is the show now V The city editor of t!s Leader has sued a man for 200 for money loaned. Two hundred dollars 1 A city editor ! Monoy to loan ! Why, what are 7 Bloss our souls, this looks ! Thore is neod of investigation here. Des Moines Register. TAKE "WARNING I TAKE WARNING ! TAKE "WARNING-! All those who have received the Gii ant Cousty New- one year on time will please TAKE NOTICE TAKE NOTICE TAKE NOTICE That unless they pay their Subscrip tum by the time the year expires tho paper will be discontinued to their address. THE YEAR EXPIRES THE YEAR EXPIRES THE YEAR EXPIRES APRIL TENTH, APRIL TENTH, APRIL TENTH. The Blaineites claim Illinois against all othur caudidatos. TheNutumal Democratic Committee meets in Washington, on the 23d. Wdiaeu have a right to vote for school ollkors in Now York hereaf ter. C- C. Barrow, charged -with robbing the mails at Larimie, has been acquit ted. The workingmen of San Francisco1 have notified the- Mission "Woolen Milte to dischc?ge their Chinamen 2r Ah