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About Liberal Republican. (Dallas, Or.) 1872-1??? | View Entire Issue (Oct. 25, 1873)
r-- fill INDEPENDENT IN POLITICS AND RELIGION. 1 vo. 4; DALLAS, ORGSON. SATUAY, OCT 25, 1873. . NO. '32 J 4 Oi&clal Paper for Polk County. If If sued Ever) Saturday Mornings at Dallas, Folk County, Oregon. P. C.SUMJVAN PROPRIETOR, 8TJB3CEIPTI0U RATES. tflXOLE COPIES One Year, ,$200.: Six tlontbs, $1 25 .Three Months, $100 : For Clubs of ten or more $1 75 per annum. fab$crijli?n must.bt pctid ttrietly in advance ADVERTISING KATES, r ? ' One square (12 lines or less), first insert'n, 2 50 Each subseuefatlnsertion-. ........ v I 00 A liberal deduction will be made to quar terly and yearly adTertisers. It ; "5 ?.' ' Professional cards will be inserted at $12 00 per annum. . ..,. r $4 4 i'W. - . ' Transient advertisements must be paid for in advance to : insure publication.'! All other ad realising bills must be paid quarterly. legal tenders taken at their current value. Blanks atfd Job "Work of every description tyrn.i8b.ed at low rates on short notice. THE ILLUSTRATED PHRENOLOGICAL JOURNAL, Mja every respect, a Firit Class Magazine. Its articles are of the highest Interest to all. It teaches -what we are and how to make the most ofourselvcs. The Informa tion it contains on the Laws of-Lifo and Health is well worth the price of the Magaaineto every Family. - Ifcis published at f 3 00 a year. By, gp.eelal arrangement we are enabled - to offee thepHBESOXOCiCAt, Jours At as a Premium lor a new tubscribers to tho Oregos Reppbmcak or will furnish the Phrenological Jocrsal and ORCGO-vJEPt-'BtiCAK together", for $100 We ommend tha JouraL to all who 1 nt good magazine 1 . -Mi " PROFESSIONAL CARDS. Attorney & Couiuenor-AJ-Law Dallas, Oregon, ' Will praetic is all the Courts 0 f the State. 1 ' . A. -.x J i -4. A,-- STL C SIMPSON E B ST05E 1 ill r SO I & STOIV E Attorneys at Law. Will practice in all the Courts of the 3d Ju dicial District. OFFICE In Executive building' opposjt Chemeketa Hotel Salem May 10 1-y'e B I BoilB' " " P L Willis poise & wi i. L i s, J SALlv5f, OREGON. ):m i : ', Will pratftlje In "all the courts in the State 'T Atir- inscIIcr-at-tLaw DAIiliAS. OREGON. 1 W ill paetici ln"tha Courts of Record and In- erior Courts. Collections attendod to promptly OFFICE In the Court House. 41-tf 9. SITES, U. D. ft- I t C OBDBBS, A. U. 0 BR SUITES pi IPlivsiciaiis and v OsaTiiBca paoPBniv sef Fes to the oitizens of Dallas and. viciu OFFICE -In rear of Nichols . & Hyde's Drug 'Store. i ; ; 1 1 iFcb22 73tf 4 IV. II. It U B E fi I. ClBoa f one dooVNorti !f too' Post Offico ! " , D ALLAS ;.. OGN Particular attention given to the!regulation hildren's teeth. work warranted Jan1l'73tf included on pan 9 NEW ADVERTISEMENTS rt. "S3 O L' D ! " ' V -i fr - u '"''.' : riJST OIVE MOMENT, IF YOU PLEASE. I desire to detain you only long Mto saythat it will not be neecsaa Fall to go to'Salom or any otber pi chaso your furniture. Vot I am prepared to furn sUop fu Dallas outhe shortest notlceor as l!tIe money astbey cau bejpurchated any where, all kinds of DED R003I, , , PALOIi, k i " ; J SITTING ROOM or iKITCHKN FUlLVlfUiTTT.- Alo kept on band or furofchod to order, al 1 if A , : : i .... - :r , . -- kJndi and the b$st quality of ih and doois, call immediately and Jcxatuino my stoci f FURNITURE DOORS and SASH consult my prices and terms it shall cost you nothing to cxamino I chargo nothing tor lay time come at once and see me befri spending a dollar in my lino el3ewhero and X "ill save you money. A few doors east of tho posto3ce, mill St r , . - J. M. Campbell Sept. 6, 1S73 :(f ' NEW GOODS ! . NEW GOODS ! FOR THE PRESENT SEASON. Wo l respeAfully call tho attention-of tho , JPublic to.our Well Selected Stock of Ladies' Dress Gooas, Ladies' and Misses' ilats, ; Cents' Faruishlng' Good,T ' i Gloves, Gaiter. Etc Hard yare. Groceries,; School (looks, ' Stationery, Ac, n Fact Everything Found In a Firs. Class Retail Store. I'.j "'- ... i We' can assure our Matrons that wo will bo up with the times., . . . , . r r- . ' - .' n ': f . f, Come and Examine our Stock beforo'pur .. -1 ,, s -" , - r ' chasing elsewhere. Country Produce taken in exohange f r ' i Qoods!'- ft V N. A J D. LEE. I Dallas April 22, 1871. 1 ,7 .? y 4 LL KINDS V OP WORK, SEWIN V Washing jind Ironing, 4c.,done by M urnet on short notice and on reasonable ti. All ordora loft at the house, south-wot part of Dallas will he immediately attendod t ft - NEW AD veiitisemknt: D E U Gc S Hi H 0 af H to Dittos:: drugs f PAIN f., . OILS G LAS WEATHSRFOnD & CO i 1: 1 , ; i vrs. aAl.I.M OltCGOV. ImKrtcrs and Dealers in FOREIGN and DOMESTIC, DlllJdS, Drugiitsl Sundries Patent Mo'Jfeloe-i, Paiat. Oila,. (JlaM,Ies Medicines Compounded anJ rrecripim filled. Puro Wine? and Liquors for Medicinal pur. P"!!S. . . Orders steaded to wifh accuracy and prompt WEATIIEIIFOUO & CO. ' CO.MMERCIAL FTEET, SALEM .OREGON DALLAS ADVERTISEMENTS. mm W. GILBERT, SALEM OitECON I 11 ill Pay Tlic Highest Cali Price For hides, piiirs v rims OPERA SALQ0A'. In Opera Building. COURT STREET S A I.E. If, OGN. O II. SMITH, PROP. The llest (Quality of WINES, LIQUORS a CIGARS ALWAVH OM HANI). BILLIARD TAULKS. Of tho latest'and mostjimproved Stjlc OPEN ALL NIGHT. LACREOLUCADEMV DALLAS POLlifcCOUiTY, OGN. The first term for the Academic yea 1873-4 will nommenco September 15. A COMMEUCIxVL DEPARTMENT Will ho opened November 3,1853,. Students may hore enjoy every facility fo acquiring a thorough Academic and Business edacatiqn. Diplomas will bo awarded to thoso who com plete tho prescribed courao of study. Students will bo admitted at any time and charged from the timo of entering until tho close of the term, no dedic tioDS. will be made for absence excopt in case of protracted sickness. For further information address tho Princt al, W. D. NICHOLS. Aug 18 tf MAIUIYING FOIl MONI3Y, 'I tell you, . Jearl Grey, you ro foolish in jour notion of marriage.? This Move in a cottage', businea h better to reud of than to experience. -Just- imagioc yourself to lo. married to a poor man j you would have to do all the drudgery of the houe and you would soon get tired of it." 'I do not think so, Cousin Claudia, think I could be happy with a poor man, if I lovud him. 1 1, not pretend to sav that it is wise for a jirl to marry 1 ui.iti who has. no niiiins of support. What I mean U this, that woman can he happy with a man' who hus some steady employ no ,t " "Like Trucy Gordon, eh ?" ' Oil, no! Not hke him particularly," answered Pe rl, blushing. 'l do not believe in sueli nonsense"! a I believe in the old saying, 'Mono v makes the mare go When I marry, I shall marry some rich man. - 0 let us hurry and got ready for the ball." Aud here the conversation ended. f?JClaudia Uaily was the daughter of Mr Charles liiiiy. bhe was the rcnuted heiress of a hundred thuusaud dollars. She was beautiful very beautiful, taid Peter Finney. Sume paid jhe was too cold and proud to be real y lovely ; but the majority acknowledged her to be the most beautiful girl that vihited the catublihmeut ol Mrs. ilenry King. Pearl Grey was the only child of Mr Charles Bailey' i;tcr. She had been left an orphan at an early age. She was the owner of a small fortune, and ifter leaving school, had come to rcMde wiih hcruocle. Shu was a . awevt, prcity creature, loved and admired by evr, one. She was the kind of a girl thot would make u man love his 1 home, and he would find more real enjoyment tbtrt than he cou'd abroad she did not belitvc in marrying for wont"'; she believed iu the sacreduets of love. The room of Mrs. Ilenry Kinjr were brilliantly illuminaledfor the elite cf j tho city were assembled there. Foremost among tin many very beautifuj girls, snonc CJau lu iJailey. Iier hiud was claimed for the first danco by Mr. William .Veil sou f the I late Joseph Xei Joseph Neil had been a successful merchant, and, btiig of p,oud family, had hoeu admitted to the best society. l?ut he speculated heavily and lost ; this broke his heart, and he died. His son, William, was still invttcJ by the "uppyr ten" to their reception, but prudent mtmmis told their daughters that he was no fit match for them. Me loved Claudia Bailey with his whole heart, but had not declared his love ou account of his reduced circumstances. The w.ltz was over, and william asked for a few moments' conversation with Claudia in tho , conservatory This request she granted. "Miss Hailey Claudia," cried Willie. "I love you. I do not ask you to marry 1110 now ; all that I ask of you is to say that you loye me, and I will work hard, and soon will bo iu a position to offer you a home ; if not as luxurious as the one you now occupy, it will at least be comfortable.' "Mr.: Neil, t am surprised at your presumption! Please say tvx more about this. ; Let us go back to the ball room, aud I will try and , forget your impudent language ' "Pearl Grey looked so lovely that.IIer baud was claimed by Mr. Titnoth Manners, for the fiiit dance. lie was descended from an old Iris "l family, was about fifty years old, and immensely rich. 4 lie asked Pearl for a privato interview, and then and thero mado an offer of his heart, hand and fortune. IJ is" offer was kindly - but firmly declined. - "Well, how did you enjoy the nst-embly V aked Claudia Baily, as she ond learl met alter the ball. 'Very much indeed." , I "I had two oflers of marriage to-niht one from William Naal,' and the other from William Evens." " r And r wfiicli did you actept ?" said Pearl. " ' "Why ! 1107s sixty if a day." llI kuow it ; hut he is vory rich." I have also had two offers to-night-, one Irom Mr. Manners and the othe from Tracy Gordon' ; ? "(if course you have accepted Mr Mauuers " - 'I did not. I have promise Tracy to be his wife within two months " "Well, all I have to say is, you were very foolish. , , Five Years have passed, and Pearl Cordon is the happy mother t of two children. She is as happy as the dav is long, ilcr husbind , by close app'ieatiou to business, hag becotue a rieh mat:. - Claukia Evens h clu!dlef and she and her husband lead wretched lives. lie has become a jealous, tyracical husband, and she is what is called "a women of the world." Sho found, hen it was too late,that money cannot purchase happiness." 1 - ,0 ; .. , . , ....tNx - DIDN'T STAY MOHhVN A MINtTli. A colored man,' having admired a colored widow living a short distance form hiio, but being afraid to come and reveal his passion, went to a white man of his acquaintance, the other day, and dbked him to write the lady a letter asking her hand in marriage. The friend wrote, telling the woman, in a ow brief lines that the s!ze of her ' feet was the talk ...f her neighborhood, and of asking hr if she could not pare them a li'.'e. The name of the colored man was j-igiicd, and he was to call on her Sunday night fur an answer The writer of the letter m.t the neuro limping along the street, and asked him what the widow said. , The mm showed him a blood shot eye, a scratched nose, a lame leg, aud a spot on the scalp ' where a handful of wool had been jerked out,;and he answerediu solemn tones : ''She didn't siy nuffin, and I didn't stay dare morc'u a minute I" CuKTiT.m.K WiTNKSS. At one timn Webber had had a difficult case to plead, and a verdict was rendered airainstiiis client. One of the witnesses came. to him, and said, 'Mr. Vebter, if I had thought wo should have lost the case, I might have testified a great deal more than I lid." 'It is of no consequence," replied the lawyer, ' the jury did not believe a word you said." "Ilould aisy, Mike," said ono of two Irish pedestrians, .reverentially ap proaoheda milestone. uThread lightly" said he'for here lies a very ould man." Pat carefully spelled out tho insotiption U tltimore ono hundred and fifty four miles," and theu continued ; "He was one hundred and fifty four years ould, and his name was Miles from iJaltimore " A good story is told of Uouvart, a celebrated 'French , physiciarf. , Ou cutering the chamber of a Marquis, whom he had attended through! a very dangerous illness, he was accosted by his uoblc patient in tho followiug terms : , s ' "Good-day to you, Mr. Bouvart ; I feel quite in spirits, I think my fever has left me." I am sure it has," replied Bouvart dryly. t4The very first expression your lordship, made use of convinced mo of Pray, explain yourself," ' 'Nothing is easier. In tho first days of your Mlness,i when your lito is in danger.; I was your deci est friend, as you began to get better, I was your good Bouvart, and now I am Mr. Mr. Bouvart. Depend upon it you aro quito recovered Till: SITUATION. Thn OTPiWi svsfem of tho-co'anlrtru" " ' , . received,-in. the failure of Jay' Cooke, a blow so snddeD and 'unexpecttd, that forB time it paralyzed 'tWmiacrj of tho country back to the reraot'l village. It is by no means yet ascri' tained how far the credit system thnr stricken can recover, nor exactly howJ;il far it has received fatal injury! OneP thing, however, is certain, that the trade and commerce of the country and production and industry mut be,: renewed, whether upon the fragments of the broken credit of the past, or b. upon an entirely new and perhap more enduring basis. In the interval of doubt a to the shape matters or lo assume, and where the existing sfte of 1 things is to end, there is at least the vomforting assurance that the worKf cl restoration must begin on the basis of the grain and provisions of the 'coautrjft and that here in the West wc: must feel the cheerful warmth of th first breeze of returning business conducted' on a substantial foundation. The New 4 York Stock Hoard met yesterday ftrj the firt time since Sept' 20, and itwaa rcfrtcd that all the unsettled business up to thvt date, after arduous crforU had been satisfactorily closed, and that" t here had beeu no suspent-iouar Tlf gale of stocks was limited, , wjth a , blight improvement in a few dividendj-, bearing railroad stock?,and a decline Tn others, especially in Vaodeibrits Hoel In Philadelphia, the Vuspendedj " j; bouses of K. W. Clark & Co. Ana oQ' ite Haven & Hrother present menu of theit , assests, and JiaJilics, j which at hi K;k. . favorably. onjfer. lu our Phii. h.-ipU .patcJie9jWta" nsl of the uiioos cuq.oratiousVwhich to., day will pay mianuual intjfe their d'.-bts ai.'d mortgages. ,,,, mrA The Secretary of the Treasury has ' writteu a letter to the oBccrs of the, New York Produce Exchange, giving hvs reasons for declining to lend National currency to banks and btherV upon the pledge of gold placed in the, Hank ol England, the said, currencyjp. be used only tor bill of exchange. , The reasons of the Secretary are, conclusive, that it is no part of the , Government to buy and sell. gold as i:U matter of trad , or to lend money pq , pledge of gold, or any other security, v, j, This puts an end to the various scheme . by which it has ben proposed that the President and Secretary of the Treasury , can use the pubblic money to extricate ., A corporations or individuala from .ftnaj cial embarrassment. ,." !i ti iv The fiual closing of the Union .i f National Hank, as announced jo,? t , yesterday's Tribune, had for a. time a . ,j depressing effect upon, the local market,,r but this vrora off during the dayr.and 0j hope for a speedy tcruwuatioD. ofr.th ff panic again revived, 6 AVircscot thU-f morning the opinions oF various, welKvaMSf known merchanU on the effect J of thoj bet second suspension of that bank.? Iq,i lCnia Citv. where there are laraav 1 transactions in stock for this markeUn?') 1 tho closing produced lor a tiOi considerable excitement. It did not ioterfero with thei shipment of stocki ng nor did it have tho effect of suspending, the prtparatiofls for tke season'stcjcii packing. ; Tho flow of' : currency to Chicago continues uudiminishqdtW.;) receipts yesterday aggregating $3,000 000. The receipts within the last sixt. days amount to a considerable euumm,! and us loug ns the world wanU bread l f & the money must come her; to buy iU?Mi! As soon as the immense- stock, now in iw store has been moved, shipments to the n;m city will be renewed. The strailroadfivdw receipts having fallen off, they dojuol now deposit, but ; pay out from their at ai own treasury to, their employes JXhainU receipts of internal revenue haa 1 alien i off, but tins is a natural CQnsequqnco.-1;? of the interruption of distillation -v Such was tho general aspect of the. situation last night. Chiqago Tribune