: ' W " - lln,,,i7 I 11 mtm&& J - THE GRANT COUNTY NEWS. - - Tolimie X. CANYON CITY, GRANT COUNTY. OREGON THURSDAY, MAY 2Jh 1S83. Nit rube?' 0. -- Granl Co. News. PUBLISHED THURSDAY MOUSING, BY D..I.ASBURY. Editor and Proprietor. COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER Subscription S3 00 Six Months 1 f.O Three Months 75 TRANSIENT ADVERTISEMENTS $2.50 per tiuare for flirt, and 1 per qure fur each Miluequcnt insertion Regular julvcrtnin cs made known on an pjieution. No certificUe civen m.til all clargcit . j id All Reading Notices in Locul '.:o!uinn will be charged at the rate of '20 cents per lino for first, and 10 ets each aubesquent inser tion. 5r Special raUs to regular advertiser?. WE ARE PREPARED TO EXECUTE 01' EVERY DESCRIPTION, CHEAPLY Potters, Dodgers, Billheads, Let- terhotds, Notoheads, State ments, Invitations, Tickets, Cards Etc, etc. PRINTED TO ORDER. OFFICIAL DIRECTORY: Co. Judge Olurk Treasurer Conunisftionors Surveyor Sheriff Assessor School Supt. Stock Inspector . N. R. Maxcy. J. T. Muel E. Hall. ( T. A. McKinnon 1 T. II. Meador J. II. Ncal A. C. Dore . . M. D. Cameron H. j? ri-., J. C. Luce Dist. Judges Disr. At'orney ... L. B. Ison G. W. Walker M. I). Clifford PROFESSIONAL CAHDS. ORR, M. D. Canyon City, Ogn. OJttce H Main Street In Rooms formerly oocu 41 ly Or. lleivanl. JQR. (3. W. ItAKRER Tln & Surgeon. Oayn City .... Oron. Fwrwer:- rf lw.i. hat liatetl here, and will -Uuh4 1'rn.V-Monu! calii day or nljht. , OHkc fi.Ue News Office. Doiitlst Canyon Cit- - Oregon Onice in City Hotel. G. T. H AZELTINE. pliotograplio c CANYON CITY, OREGON. A. E. Knight, 3D33KTTIST. From The Dalles, has permanently located at John Dai' City. ALL WOBX WARRANTED. Q A. SWEEIv, tto. ev-at-Law Cany C - Oregon. JAItRISII it CoZAI). ATTORNEYS AT LAW Canyon City, Oregon. p B. R1NEARSON, M. D., Physician and Surgeon PRAIRIE CITY - - - Oregja. (J LAY TOD HUNTER. Collootor or Bills, Notes, and Acounls. Ccnyon City, Oroc All bn.iiae;e entrusted to his care wil receive prompt attutir.n, and all money will bo paid as fast as cj'lectuL Attorney-at-Law AND Kotary Public. PhairieCity - - - Oregon. Also Agent for the sale of School Lands. S'30 Ail Linn Inn n.Li' whig m UIW 1 u H. R. -DEALER IN- GENERAL MERCHANDISE CANYON .CITY, OREGON. Omrholt -DEALERS IN- GENERAL MERCHANDISE, CJjYYO.Y CITY, Or. O PRAIRIE CITY, OR. V- J. W. BATES, Proprietor. The Culinary Department is in charge of Competent and Exj erienced C-oks, who spare no labor to do l.onor to 'he palates of the Public. In Connection with this Popular Hotel is at all times supplied with the Best Brands of Wines, Liquors and Cigars. 33T SVMPLE ROOMS TOR COMMERCIAL TRAVELERS. g S. DENNING. Altornoj'-nl-Titttv. Loxa Creek - - Okkcon J. McCULLOUGH Notary Public. Canyon City - - Oregon ggTOffice with M. D. Cliff rd -2 Land fllitur and Collection j.romptly atten ded to. Deeds ana Mortiitti draw::, and charges reasonable. W A. WltHIIIRE. NiT. llrimo.v. Kuril". Ur. Lakeview, Or. WILSHIRE & HUDSON Attorneys at Law LAKEVIEW AND RfRNS, OltEGON. Will practice in the Circuit Court at Canyon City, and bcrorc tlie L. S. Land Ofllco at Lake view. Anv bunlne in the Land Office entrute.l to us will receive the most prompt attention. tT Lind cases tolicitel. F. 0 IIORSLEY,M. D. Graduate of the University ok P :nnsylvania, April 8, 184 8. Cauyon City, Oregon, (jillce in hisDrugStore, Main Street h-ders for Drugs promptly filled. tTo professional patronage solicted ml iss directionsarestriutlyfollowed J. OLLIVER, JohnDay Milk Ranct Fresh milk delivered daily to my customers in John Day and Canyon cities. Give me your or ders. J. Oliver. Canyon-Mitchell STAGE LINK! Jewctt & Tracy Proprietors. Stage leaves Canyon City with the U. S. Mail at 4 a. m. on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, and nr rivos Monday, Wednesday and Friday. uNTotico Lumber for Sale, AT THE BEAR CREEK MILL Rough Lumber can be had nt the above mill during 1SS8 at $1:2.00 per M. for CaSh, Parties wishing to buy on credit can purchase at S14.C0 per M. by giving approved notes therefor. II. D. WILLIAMS, Proprietor. I SSL Muldrick, K. HALL, Oo. Trons'. AT TIIE- Offlco, Old PostOffice Building. DEALER in Regers Smith's Plated Ware, WATCH KS, JEWELRY, CUTLERY Optical Goods ana Stationery. Subscription reeivid nt Publisher's rates for atl the leading Papers and Magazines published pi thr Unit d States. BAKER CITY FULL ROLLER Flouring Mill. Littleton & Palmer Bros. Proprietors. Try our Flour and become con vinced that it is First-class in ev ery particu ir. Or dors From a t istnuco Promptly CITY HOTEL MAIN STREET Canyon City, Oregon, anoT.ir j- Thompson Proprietors. Traveling men will find this a pleasant anil desirable place at which to stop. GLWB-AXE" TOBACCO. 1 3 (x'ivc us a Or 11 t Democratic Slate Ticket For Congress: 1 Jno. M. Geauin. For Supreme Judge: 'John Burnett. Judge Gth. District: W. M. Ramsey. District Atty., 6thiDi8trict: T$EI. Crawford. if For Representative;; ' D7 F.' MoriusonT For Sheriff: I. J. Haguewood. For Clerk: J. T. Make. T. J. Cozad. For Assessor: For Treasurer: O. P. Cues a i. For School Superintendent; J. I). Dai.v. For Commissioners: II. II. Davis T. A. McKinnon j For Surveyor: Geo. Knisi: ley. For Coroner: M. Dl'STIN. Constable, Canvon Citv Precinc t LEE MILLER. Justice of the Peace u s' Win MILLER. Republican jlate Ticket For member of Congress: Ringer Hermann. For Supreme Judge: W. P. Lord. For Judge, Gth District: J. A. Fee. For Dist., Atty.. Gth Dist: J. L. Rand. Grant For Representative: G For Sheriff: W. Giliiam. W. P. Cray. John W. Sayer. Ciias. Timms. For Clerk: For Assessor: For Treasurer: N. II. Roley. For School Superintendent: E. Hayes. For Commissioners: J. H. McIIaley E. Stewaut For Surveyor: J. II. Neal. For Coroner: S. Ore. Constable, Canvon Citv Precinct CLAY TOD HUNTER. Justice of the Peace " " N. RUL1SON Give Them A Chance. That is to siy, your luns Also all your breathing machinery. Very wonderful machinery it is. Not only the larger air-passages but tho thousands of little tubes and cavities leading from them. When tlmso are clogged and choked with matter which ought, not to be tlure, your lungs can not half do their work. And what they do, they connot do well. Cull it cold, cough, croup, pneumonia, catarrh, consumption or any of the family of throat and noso and head aud lung obstruc tions, all are bad. All ought to be got rid of. There is just cue sure way to get rid of them. That is to take Boschee's German Svr up, which any druggist will sell you at 7o cents a bottle Even if everything else has failed you, you mny depend upon this for ceitain. i . ;-::;iv;iy .t Xntlons, !:r...u! Ai.anth', la over ii biornxy thor .g'ufer?. Yet bhiu the winds ever 80 n tjy, sml ride the vri'-vc3 ever so loftily, aio. ii xnuil man the good shins, tourists .1 b.niliii'"i sagv, r.Hl commercial trav- .k u.'A buM-r m.i-t vi.lt the cmtrrs ot t.r !i.'uiil manufacture. Thut ntro-.-.i" Jn:l:i'lv, li'.iaiiUiuf, together Willi In k' .'ii'ii mi'l in.icii invvnnl uneasiness . n.. ii iiiiliticd when Ili.stetler's Stimuch n4i-3 voi'id have fortitied the voyager ':i!n-t tin-in. toivcJtinuini, nnu m met mi it. itw-temn I rnv-li-rs.uie acquainted . ii.'i t!i-' ju-ttteetne value of tins eImuble ;vu:i.ive ami remedy, nnd nro rarely un- ; nniilnl with it. kimgrnnU to the far . -VtMt Bhonl.I um it as n salVeiuml against a arts. Si ek the aid of the Bittern for dys- ,e.BU, constipation, liver complaint, kid- ! lev troubled, aud nil ailments that Impair . vital powers. no iiarmonioua "bw"" ov-wwu m jb , CONSUMPTION SURELY CURED To tiie Editor Please inform our readers tl.at 1 have a posi tive remedy for the above named disease. By its timely use thou sundri of hoptdess cases have 1 een peiToauenily cured. I shall be glad to send two bottles of my emedy free to any of your nadeis who have consumption if they will send mo their express and post office address. Respectfully, T. A. SLOCUM, M. C., d86uio 181 Pearl at, New York. Grant County ueicratic Ticket County Republican Ticket WASHINGTON CORRESPONDENCE. Weekly Budget of News aa Furnished by our Regular Corres. pondem. Washington, May 14, 1388. The sensation at the Capital this week was the war of epithets accusations and denunciations, between Senators Ingalls of Kan sas and Voorheos of Indiana. It was on Tuesday, and two hours before the time for the Senate to meet visitors began to fill the gal leries, it having been announced by the Senator from Kansas (the President pro tern of the Senate) that he would on that day leave the chair to answer a speech made by the Indiana Senator last week. Ry noon, the opening hour for the Senate, all available space ! on the floor of the Chamber and in the galleries was taken, the doorways wsre jammed with peo ple and out in the corridors there was a curious mass of human ity sullicient to have filled the galleries over again, but of no hope of getting even near one of the doorways that commanded a view of the Interior. Congress men left the all important tariff debate in tiie House of Represen tatives and came over to hear the wrathy speeches, for everylody expected to see Senator Jngalls pour vitriol upon and apply scourges upon the Democratic Senators who had taken excep tion to his recent speech on the Dependent Pension bill. In that speech Mr. Ingalls al luded to Gens. Hancock and Mc Clellan as allies of the Confeder acy, and for this he waR vehem ently attacked by Senator Yoor hees last week. His reply was to Mr. Yoorhees' attack. Lack of space forbids me to give even an epitomized form of the remarks of either of the Sen ators, but the scene in the Senate was one which, perhaps, has nev er been paralleled in the history of that august body. Language became personal in the extreme, and while it was not Rillingsgate, it was far from beyond Billings- gate's best record, and although ! no blows were struck, everybody : held his breath for awhile and thought there would be. In the course of his remarks Mr. Iniralls took occasion to say that Justice Lamar was no law-; vr, never had been, and that he was appointed by a reluctant President only because he was the nearest friend of Jefferson Davis. He made quite a num ber of statements concerning Sen ator Voorhce's political record for the past twenty-five years, some of whii'h the latter branded as campaign lies, saying he did not design to reply to such accusa tions. He would simply spit up on them and trample upon them, kick them. Several times Mr. Yoorhees called Mr. Ingalls a li ar, and a great liar, and one time a dirty dog. Representative Johnson of the State of Indiana who was seated at a desk in rear of Mr. Ingalls was alluded to in several instances as having vouched for the truth of Some statement made in regard to Mr. Yoorhees' past course of conduct. "He is a liar if he intimates such . f i.inir " rvmd the Senator. uit ' never occurred, IieVtr ill the world, 1aSS 111 V word to the ' 1 S(OUIulrel 1 ehilld VOU, and 4.011 - ' 1)lul Il0 ,s im mutinous tcounuroi ami a liir. Tell him I say so." At one time Senator Ingalls said passionately, "If this were a police court, that citi.en there, from Indiana, would be arrested and put in the dock for being drunk and disorderly." There was intense excitemont during the interchange of these compliments, but finally loth Senators seemed to realize that they had gone further 'than thoy had intended. Senators Eutis nnd Gibson of Lonisann, then re plied with some spirit to Mr. i I "galls criticism of Louisana j election methods, and fortunate- j ly the Senate adjourned without the belligerent Senators getting the floor again. It was a long time, however, before that end of the Capitol was cleared. People hung around the corridors look- jK tur ;t continuation out ot doors of the hostilities so fiercely waged within. The verdict of the sobermind jd and made no secret of their in people on the Tuesday's debate : tuition; in fact they announced is that there was nothing to ad- it to every one they met. Staid mire in it; ihat its chief charac-: old Boston's aristocracy was teristics were its shocking lack of . shaken to the depths at such an dignity and its entire want of ap-. imheardof proceeding apparent positeness to any living question ly determined upon the best of of the day; and that such a spec-' faith. Relatives, friends, nnd tacular exhibition might be par- even chance acquaintances, tried donable on the stump, it should ' all manner of reasoning ami pcr- ueer nave taken place on the sun&on upon the wayward cou floor of the United States Senate. ' pie, but to no avail. " The man Satire and indignation were and woman quietly pursued the the fire-arms used, and in regard even tenor of their way, not being to which Senator displayed the in ih least alarmed when legal greatest degree of skill in their proceedings were threatened by management it depended alto- the woman's parents. So a plan gether upon the sympathies of . was patched up by some intimate the audience one way or the oth- friends of the couple by which it er- w.:s hoped to circumvent them in The Senate has been discus- their intention. The man was sing the Chinese Treaty behind j prevailed upon to give a dinner closed doors. j party, to which were invited The tariff debate proceeds in ' prominent society people, includ the House with only an occasion- 'in? the Governor of the State, al little tilt between the speakers j When dessert was put upon tho to break the monotony. j table the talk became general, Comment upon the nomination , and sOon turned upon the per of Mr. Fuller of Illinois, for Chief : verse couple. The man and wo Justice of the United States, has man answered every question bvien favorable to the selection : nut to th'-m with tl mn,t r- from every standpoint. People Demand Protection. Medicines. --Patent What are they? - As a general thing theyare prescriptions having been used with gro,at success by old and well-read Physicians. Thousands of invalids have been unexpectedly cured by their use, and they are the wonder and bread of Physicians and Medical Colleges in the U. S., so much so, that Physicians graduating at Medical Colleccs are reouind to discountenance Pronrietarv Med- lcmcs, as through them the conn try doctor lo.os his most profita-1 lle practice. As a manufacturer of Proirietary Medicines, Dr. G. G. Green, of Woodbury, N- J , advocates most cordially in or- der to prevent the risk that the sick and afflicted are liable to, almost daily by the use of Patent Medicines put out by inexperi eneed persons for aggrandizement only, and the employing of inex perienced doctors by which al most every village and town is cursed; and men claiming to be doctors who had better be under takers, experimenting with their patients and robbing them of their money and health, for the good of the afllicted that our gov ernment protect its People by making laws to regulate the prae- j tice of medicine by better experi enced and more thoroughly edu cated Physicians, and thereby keej) up the honor and credit of the profession, also form laws for the recording of recipes of Propri etary Medicines, under examina tion and decision of experienced Chemists and Physicians ap pointed for that purpose by the Government, before they are li- censed for general use. He would most freely place the recip.j of Boschee's German Syrup and Green's August Flower under such laws, had he the proper pro-, tection, and thereby save the , . r r4l I , ., prejudice ot the people, and avoid the competition and imitation of j worthless medicines. Copied i from the Chicago Mail. Au-z. .3. 1S81 To bashful correspondent The j first thing for you to do is to pop ; the question; the second to ques tion the pop. Burlington Free Press. They Believed in Free-Love. Some years ago, when the free love notions were running around loose in New England, a Roston man and woman who had imbib ed of these doctrines until they affected to dispise all the com mon conventionalities of life, camo , to the concluoion that thev would i live together without ' goine ! through the ridiculous nnd un- necessary ceremony of marriafee. i They both moved in (rood society. - : foct equanimity. Finally tho Governor took a hand in-the con versation. After asking a few questions and commenting on tho answers thereto, in a calm, judi cial manner, he turned to tho man and asked: "Do you Mr. , intend to love and eherish this woman as your wife, for good or evil, for better or worse?" "Yes. sir," nnswered tho man, calmly. 'An.! do you, madam, intend to ob y this man as your hus- j 1:1::,1j for better or worse? for good 1 t:0, sir : t n-'an politely . answered the wo- 1 "er" lv the Powur vested in m as Govorno.- of this common wealt:i, 1 declare you to be man i an l v,u'-' i AnJ t,iU3 the plans of tho co;,Pi! were frustrated, for which they afterwards declared they were heartily thankful. They are now old and respectable resi dents of Chicago. The New Boy. A policeman who was passing through an alley saw half a doz en boys on a fence looking into a back yard, and when he asked wh.tt thev were doing, one of them replied: "Waiting for a boy "What bov?" "Belongs to a family just mov ed in." "What's the matter with him?" "Oh. nothing! We're just go ing to see about something." The officer passed around to the front, and from this fetation h saw the "new boy" come "out and the 1 iggest boy on the fenco d:op doAn. The two went at it hot. and Ivavy, lut presently the now boy came out on top, and all the others dropped down into the yard and offered him a bite of their apples and declared him a B'1 f'-'iiof He had been tasted and found sandy. Detroit rrec pre5JJ .-. The elcphar.t is no longer a necessity to the ivory market. 1 The best ivory is now made from1 potatoes. Tfaig ig a y ,ry 00jging nn(i nc. comn,0,iatin2 world at times rc- o garding money. When a man wants a little it offera no objec tion it lets hiru want.