TflE- INDEPENDENT. SATURDAY, JANUARY 27TII, 1SS3. OENTEALIZATION. The greatest danger to American fliVerty to-day is the centralization of ' wr in the federal govern ment which g ' m m 'in so farvremovedj from the people and ' tho avenues so blocked by red tape that there is no ogportunity for the average ''.iH'tA .nnM.rli the 'soat of iusticc. WW Ti " ' -r 4 i. -!v, In a country so vast as ours, wlucn . " CW"."V . . - .encompasses every variety of soil and ' climate, where the interests oi tue peo-1 f pie are so diversified, it is impossible 1 ; - ,rvrntnmt. e othed with absolute authority and an unlim ited power of taxation, to do equal and ,txact justice to all sections, however pure and well disposed those in author ity may be. The love of power is so inherent in mankind and the opportu nity for abuse so great that it renders it extremely dangerous to personal and j nronertv rights to trust to a federal r.arnt0 f,nm t,A rW , ' jnassos vl peopie a uura, tu cSm- ' tioa ot municipal affairs, which of right ' belong to the people in their individual J -or local capacity. Should Congress ,J1 ,.fa Unn-'fni- ihm . J ;next twenty years to encreach Pon the State and municipal governments and multiply the innumerable subjects J over which they take jurisdiction, at - w ,w; rb ae m u uj f, . Its. iwemy years, mw , loft for the people to regulate. Hu- f man ffovernments are regulated upon I two theories. One on the idea of the the foreigner! If this be dona to pro--:v i,;a ,t Th. tl,. t.acfc our ."hipbuildcr-, it fails; if it be UiTlliC "K"" Vi "'" ex on the idea of popular sovereignty, where the people themselves ire the fountain source of all nower. The More nearly the people keep the affairs J ,, . - , I ef government witnm tneir own xeacu tho better will they be enabled to le- j tect and regulate abuics. It is bv fre- J ian. nftrii.-inatirin in and conducting becomo familiar witn ana mtoresiea m i them. Whenever they suuer their rirkts nd urivileees to be taken away . J.l. & .Hatant r remote . , ia. - .jorernmen. thoy there ny surrenuer a proportionate part of their sovereignty and in the same ratio becomo vassals aad bv degrees lose a knowledge of and interest in those afiairs of go rernment which concern them most. Amendments to the Code- Section 558 of tho criminal code is amended to read as follows: Hc. 558. , If anv bailee with or .,,... , , without hire, shall embezile or wrong- ' fully convert to his own use, or shall seereto with intent to convert to his wn u- or shall fail, neglect or refuse ta deliver, keep or account for, accord- .... 1 . , . . . ing to the nature of his trust, any raoney or property ot anotuer, aenveicu or intrusted to his care or control, and which mav be the subiect of larcenv. such bailee upon conviction thereof , , , , . , Bn u uccuicu guu.jr puaisked accordingly; ana h any sucn bailee shall reeievo grain of any kind f rooi differont bailors, and mix the ; same and store it together, in bulk, in such ease in an indictment charging ' such bailoo so mixing and storing graia with committing, with reference to said grain, the crime denned hall bt .made penal in this section, it shall not m bo necessary to charge in said indict ment or prove on the trial, that the ownership of said grain is in more than ' one of said bailors. And every mort ' gaga of personal property, having pos ' session of property mortgaged, shall be ! deemed a bailee within the provisions of this section. 1 Section 564 as amended reads: Sec 2. That section 564 of said ti tle, be, and the same is hereby amended 8e as to read as follows: See. 564. If any person shall by any false pretenses, or bv any privy or false token, and with intent to defraud obtain or attempt to obtain from any other peraon, any money er property j 'whatever, or shall obtain or attempt to obtain with the like intent, the sigua- i "turo of any person to any writing, the false making whereof would be punish ablo as fcrgery, such person upon con. victioa thereof, shall be punished by imprisoament in the penitentiary not less thaa one, nor more than five years. ?The making of a bill of sale, or; assign ' montt or mortgage of personal property by any person not the owner thereof, for tho purpose of obtaining money or credit, or to securo.an existing indobt edaoss, shall be doomed a false pretense within the meaning of this section. Tki Republican press is worried pror the passage of Pendleton's Civil feervico Reform Bill. However, it suits he people-at large, and after the utter failure of the Hubbell Fund to accom plish any good, wo are surprised that our. Republican friends should so deep ly regret the abolition of tho political assessment practices. Ten families are expeoted to arrive in Jackson eonnty from Texas in a few weeks. oua sheetiug laws. Our shipping laws have been very little understood, but tho j ple are aware that bp some mismanagement the American flag no longer floats over tte ocejin. The true reason for this state 0f affairs is ably stated by Hon . gp q9X extracts of whose speech in te House, we give: it is beyond doubt that the orgin of our navigation laws was a compact with slavery. Now England was en- 1 - . gaged in shipping and in transporting 11 i t,a and selling slaves to the south. She doairaa to hold the monopoly of that trade, lhis she procured far a period by the extension of the time for the exuncuuu ut iu aiave iraae to lOUO. The compact.was completed by the nav igation laws of 1 (90 and 192. Ton- tiage duts and imposts gave to th. American the entire commerce and prohibited foreign ship "owners from engaging in our trade. Again, in 1S1G, 1817 and 1820, the odious British nav igation laws, against-wbieh our fathers rebelled, were re-enacted bv Congress. Every ; discrimination possible WilS made against foreigners. These Jaws, whose origin is found in the horrers of the middle passage, and wUse hhtovy h ft payfc q the m (h orracefui experience of our country, have ceased to protect American ship- ping. CHAXGED CONDITIONS OF SHIPPING. lndeu, the protection of these laws by the whirligig and ravages of time is given to the foreigner, to the Brilou. We drive to him the carrying of our persons onu property; load him with lareessesof freight and fare, and forbid our own folks from enjoying even a share m the hnudreJ and 0ja millions which our laws transfer out of our pro duce and producers to tho pocket of done to prbtect our shipowner, it fails, xiie owner, if he would build here! must do it at a loss of 25 or 30 per cent. If he would buy, be must bu tb 3 thu luldei and owner are burdened by the clmg- . of thig qIJ man of thQ s-eas J can build as cheap here as we can abroad, we need no protection: it we cn not bu"d as cheap here as abroad, who caa procure his veaael in thQ be&t market I This open competition, as to pur. cta and use of ships of all kinds, I nve changed, or ought to change, the awg govern our marine. The iavr8 of eighty years ago are not suited I to our changed condition. These laws suited sail, not iron or steam. As soon think of returning to the stage coach and footman for laud conveyance, cr to the skin boat of the Esquimaux or junk of the Chinese for sea transporta tion, as to rim the ocean fleet of to-day under he ancient laws. Nav. as well think of discarding the rew motors as return even to the wooden paddles of I v " ij i""-j -vv tonnage and its little subsidy, , . , . . dxlced our disasters are as obsolete, in- j operative as the slave trade itself. The wj model upon which our navigation law?3 were moulded has been shattered, and our shipping to-dav, with all these resric.ions, guards and prohibi'tions, ave a3 useiess and uninteresting as the j 'fat weed that rots on Lethe's wharf." The census reports our marvelous p - i - - -ua n,, and mill. We are producers of food for ourselves and mankind; oil, gold, silver, and coal, and raihoada beyond the wildest dreams, all the result of natural and applied industry; yet we are so poor that the $WO,000,000 of the carrying trade, whose Pactolian current should be ours, is turned from us. At the end of the fiscal year 1882 we had a tonnage of 4,165,933 in that business, of which 1,292,294 was iu the foreign carrying trade, figures A-hich show a decrease in ono year of 43,000 tons. Yet the coasting trade grew and railroad transportation grew. In ten years from 1871 to 1881 the miles of railroad leaped up from 60,283 to 104,813, and exports from our farms more than quadrupled. Export has grown wonderfully, but your railroad magnate is petted by bonds, lands and monopolizing charters. lie may own a railroad and no- bide his property un der a foreign flag. He may not ignore his civic right, while the American shipowner must cringe down below the hatchway while -the Spanish flag of blood and gold, or the British union- jack, or the Norwegian or German en sign, float ' over his clandestine prop ertv. It is notorious that not a little of foreign tonnage is owned by Ameri cans. The form in which it is hidden by mortgage, is explained in the testi mony. Ihe "Ked fetar Jmo between Antwerp and the United States is nine- tenths owned in Pennsylvania. Their ships are building en the Mersey. They ask proposals from our shipbuild ers, and found them fifteen per cent. more 'than the foreign shipbuilders, and they are compelled to go under foreign nag?. In fact the best part of the capital of our country employed in shipping or ship using is under alien flags. TH TRUE REMEDY. . If it be said again that the ropeal of tho navigation laws will destroy our shipyards, wo reply that tlro is noth ing on our stocks of much general con sequence in iron ship building: and since the business will nov ixmuneratr without subsidies or bounties er general taxes on all the people for one interest, let us try the experiment which other nations have tried successfully, namely, buy abroad, since we cannot build at home. . It. Is argued that because a great many poer ships are built in England, those are the ships we would buy if we could! Undoubtedly theie are many poor can iages built in England. "We arj at liberty to import land vehicles, while we cannot import vehiclos to be used on the water. When we do im port carriages we import the best. The Americans are not fools. Let tho buy er of a horse or of a ship beware. Why should not trade and labor be left a little to natural laws? Are there not regulations more powerful than con gress can makel Repeal burdens and restraints; stop stimulation; practice non - interventien these are maxims only less radical and wholesome than the natural precepts which ordain them. v,. , "Why not allow the merchant, if he thinks ho can do it, to get his ship abroad, and try, at least, to run it 1 tie will not charge the treasury -for his failure and loss. In time, as in Germany, .the. owner ship leads to repair, and repair t build- Ihe nnajber of shipyards and worKShops increases,;, and the tonnage leaps ui under this impulse. -That which seemed a mustard.-seed becomes a mighty tree. Every nation has tried the frfrfs ship experiment ' but the Uniti-xt HtatesJ and we are lowest 'to-uay in our i'lrorioriionste sijai6 or the navi- ut tho world. No one can sny it is a, .utile: re until it is cried, vli other schemes and especially its oppo site, protection or slavery ha vo been tried and failed. The commercial emi nence of Great Britain, not to speak of Germany, France, Italy and Norway, is supreme logic for the trial of the ex periment. Germany is the best illus tration; she has not as good coal and iron as wo have, but she begm to buy her ships on the Clyde, as wo might have done a score of years ago.. She builds now more than she buys. She has never subsidized. Her tonnage iu 1856 '57, when ours began to decline, was but 166,000; last year the 'had 950, 000; ours in eleven years dropped from 4,400,000 to 60,000 and all its vast in come was lost. Last week I ro.id that a new steel steamship, the Ilugia, of 6500 tons, was turned out for our trade from the Vul can Works at Stettin, warranted f or the safety of 1200 passengers, with steel hfe boats and steam steering gear, and a refinement in the reversal of her engines in seven seconds. Her growth has been in iron Arew steamers, which she began to buv abroad. She could not afi'ordto wait, this phlegmatic pea pie, for her own shipyards to aiise, but began to repair in the blacksmith shops and little foundries of her ufree towns, and now where the little furnace glowed mighty engines are made to mate tho ocean m her wildest tempest. Even Japan has a fleet of fifty-seven iron steamers, and China loaves us lag gard and progressive. Fifty years ot Cathay nay, twenty years is Tixrth more than a century of our ex perience. Twentv years ago Norway and Swe den traded with us, and had but 20,000 tons in the trade; now they have 850, 000. Th 3 Viking is abroad, and we are stupidly looking on. Everybody is making money out of our carrying and commerce but ourselves. What avails it that ourso is the largest carry ing trade of any nation, since we do not do the work! It adds to the hu miliation. SYMPTOMS OF A torpid'' Liver. Loss of Appetite, Bowels costive, Tcin in the Head, with a dull 6ens-;tioa in tea back part," Pain under tba Shouia-dr blade, fullnes3 after eating-, vrltn a ciita elination to exertion cf buoy or iinl, j Irritability of temper, Lo7 spirits, wit'i a feeling: of having elected tern duty, Weariness, Dizziness, I'lutteriTia at the Heart, Dots before the eyes, YcUow Bsvn, Headache generally over the xiUt oya. Restlessness, with fitful di'caiEa, suhiy colored Urine, and. CONST!!? ATI 9?!, TTJTT'S PI'WS are sp-c'.;sl'ty : h'.s M to Bucli cases, one dosa ?!', s n r..iii;.? of feel"ma; as to astonirtU tl suiveyir. Thoy Inrrase t2 Miil.'i,'i tV body to 'f!ie on TPiwu, tus tt'- tf a. ; tionrialjPiS. an i by t-v Titu- ,vti'K t; t jri?rf'8liv 'JTf:;. iii'C'ii ! Xt.-;if.x .'.rt disced. Price - vcauu ." 11:1 a? 13. "t. ill SB- d umn U s tiii Ghat Haib on Wktstteiis chaneM 1o a Ci.of.v Ulack by a sitifflcapjilioalior! of t!"!.s Uve. It parts a natural color, nets Instiintan&Oiisiy. Sold by UruggisLs. cr sent fcy exnrcss oa r&cfcipt cf si. OFF2CT3. 35 ST., ICEtT STCT5K. CD,. TTTT3 B IKOL of T!n'l InroraaMon Cttful llmib iU Vj tsUrd l liit oa m-tiiicaLljr J WW' T2 1 Dest in tlie world- Get tlie gennino. Every package lias our trade. mark and is marked xraaer s. SOLS EV- ERYWHSSE. . ; no 35-ly NOTICE. pointed Ii.spector of Sheep for Douglas county, by tho Hon. County Court of said county, and hav ing filed the neuessary bond, is now ready to perform the duties appertaining to said office, whenever called upon. I THOMAS SMITH, biieep inspector roraougias countjr, Oregon Wilbnr, Oregon, December 2, 1882. FINE FAEMS FOB- ANE FABM CONTAININO 431 AND 89-100 J acres, 18 miles front Rosebunr. on the Coos Bar stage road, and known as the "Eighteen Mile House." Has frood dwelling, laie bars and outhousee, with orchard and good garden. Is well fenced. A good sized creek flows throuarh the place, near the house and barn, fart level, balance rolline land. Grain. grass and timber. renity ot timber for fuel, fencing and build ng purpose, j Is a good tavern stand, be- in? near trie loot 01 oaopt range ot mountains. Toll gate and stage station adjoining. Climate healthy, water pure. Terms, part cash, and part, on Uberai A LSO ADJOIKIKO A FARM OF 199 ACRES, i witn good dwelling and barn and outbuilding with a bearing orchard One-half plow land and bal ance timber land, and, all well watered. These farms will be sold either together or seperately, to suit purcnasers. Apply ta nermann & iiau, itoseburg, urejon. A LSO, 427 ACRES KEAR THE TOWN OF a l Looking Glass, in pouglas county. 125 acres of plow land of ibjo best quality, balance pasture land, insr- pieniy uivoaa. auu iir uniuor lor iuei ana ienc- Ail well watered,' with dwelling barn and good orchard. Price 4,000 One thousand down, balance on easy terms. A fee simple title guaranteed. En quire of Hermann c IMl, uoseburg, or A. t . Urevn & Uo. jOakiaddi PIE. TTENKY GVTERMAN AND LOUIS BELFILS XJl bava obtained the right for lxwglas ocuuty for laying . Continuous Concrete I'ipc, for conveying water, and Louia BelCla and Geori?e Frotsman have oDtained the ngut lor josoj-nine aua Curry counties, and wiU selUanaor individual niclita Slid lay pipe at the cheapest figures. Any size from to 22 inches I urniahed. This pipe is much Oheaper than "Wood, iron or Lead ! Tt is also well suited for Irrigation or Minuig purpose and can, be laid any distance without joiuta.. . THE KEN0 SALOON Taikington & Johnson Props. OPPOSITE THE METPvOPOLITA:N HOTEL, HOSEBUIIG. WHERE CAJJ EE FoUND A FINE CTLLTARD 1 V Table and tho best brands of Wines, Liquors, nud C'isrars. Lcatiinj? periodicals on tlie t&lile. Con cert and free lutmh every evening, but positively no true whiakev. na2-tf 3 U IT THE UMPHUA VALLEY kVSiLLS THE IN THE MARKET. Addrest. A. TEA HNS, Canjonville Oregon. ep4 BU1T U AN YON VIbLE M ILLS Mannfactnred from ouly the best of wheat, I have for sale also Bran. Shorts an d Middlings, Bacon, Haras, Laid, etc. cured in the most scientific manner. Purchasers will do me a favor to in spect my fctock at the Caoyonvilie' W. KRAMER. BUY . THE UMPQUA VALVEY iVIILLS a jssl is? THE BKT .IN THE MARKET. ; Addew A. VT. STEARNSsCiio:TU.-' JAMES DEARL1NG, Blacksmith amer, And welll-knowu to tlie people of Douar pn covnty, would respectfully unnounco that he i- prepared to do all kinds of work in Ida lino, and gm-iraiitces satisu faction. . , IIORE-snOEINQ A .SPECIALTY. Any fartn'T liavinjra plow to hliarpen or macliinery to repair will do wtll to U'vo me a call ut my ol l etand. I have a full tocl:.of iroh and 8te?lj and having purchased theeamo at alow price, on do work, so far as prict s ara concerned, cbesi -pat than any who will at fo'inpt competition, JAS. DKAiihlNO. j fbl? lui Oakland. On gonJ 'MB M Si 13 CLARKE & BAKER, v Proprictois. Faying purchased the above named mills of K. Sttphena & Co.,- we are now prepared to furnish any amount ViilsT QUALITY OF LUMBER j Evt.r o Cored to the public inDougias county. We have just purchased one of the Weatheriy, Hugg & Hichardson No. 1 rianess and maihers and are pre-, pared to do better work than other milla iu the couuty. r i We will furnish at tlie mill No. 1 lumber at the following prices: Dressed rustic... $lt per M Flooring (dreesjed & matched $15 per M Lumber dressed on one tidef U per M Lumber dresBed oil two side$I6 peril Houxn 1 u mber 8 to $ 10 per M. W e have an extra quality of lumber equal to any found on Coos. Ray, and will cuarrantoe to give satisfaction to all those favoring um with their orders rostotlice addres, Umpqua terry Oregon. CLAiilvii & bAiVjiiw. SMOKE w. fcjffswis & co;s CELEBRATED CLEAN SWEEP CIGAR, THE BEST" IJf ROSEBIRG, Manufactured expreesly for, and for B&le only at A. C. MARK'S CIGAR STORK Quality not Quantity is the Besire IT YOU WANT PURE Drugs and Medicine Chemicals, etc., do stt forppet to eall on HEELER; E. G&BBEHT M5TKTLE GREEK. Also Veeps on hand the J. H. Cutter whiskies, Holland Gia, Jamaica Rum, and the fijest Wi nes and Brandies 'or medical use. 'Phyaiciftfla jPerBcriptionB CONCRETE ptcialty. IHITCH UP !- But Before MB 'MOW WOOBWAEB SOH'S H A P 01 In A II it AND BUY A Harness or a Saddle One of the biggest and best stock of nothing but tho best :VERY.T Dont Fail to CozriQ and See Us! W. &. WOOBWAEB z SOH. SUBSCRIBE: 3sf"QtJ3i TIJ DOUGLAS INDEPBNDBNT! - THE ONLY DOnCXiASCOniTTY, OREGON Suhscria don Price $2:50 Per Tear. ren5l M INCLUDING EVErY VAbIETT OF LADIES' DBESS GOODS, OFT HE LATEST STYLE. Styles, of all Variety and Shades -AT THE - ' . . BEJORE PUBCIIASNU ELSE WitlSKF', BY SO DOING GOOD BARGAINS C AN BE SEC jllitt) They wou4d auionnce . that ther have jusunc- ved fend new avr j.u liHnd one ff tb Largest Stock of Hardware Ever brought to Douglas, en 1 when adled to their STO VPS OF ALL PAT TERNS and READY MADE TINWARE, they areprepared to dciare they have th bt-8-i. supply iu their line of any house in Southern Oregon, which they propoa can purchasa elsewhere Iu '.he shape of budding: mattrials superior inducements to purchasers. Tr? We van give jou bargains in the lo.f .m where Buck's, Bonanza, Farmer, Utility. Dexter, Pacific, W iie WeBt, Clarendon Occidei Iron King, Empire City,and other stoves and ranges. The L;8t of workmen aro constantly employed m the manufacture of our Tinware and buyers should learn our prices. We have also taragins to offer in guns, such as Winchester, Sharp and ther Riee, as well as in Shot-guns and Pisto's. ' AVe are also Agenis for the White Peerles and New Home Sewing Macl.ia- wateu we sell atlowest rates and warrant a9 couinl te m every respect, We can also supply Averill and Rubber Faints, 1 lie best In the market, at. slowest ratep. Give us a call, inspect ur Htock, inquire as to our pricea, and wo promise to suit ah any onecau. . ' SHERIDAN BROS. .We continue to act&saolicitorsfor trafle-marks, copyrights, etc., for i the United States, and to owwn pat 1 ents in Canada. England, Franoe, Germany, ana au oiner couuuiw. eharge for examinapon oi moaeia vr uw laga. Advice by mail free. Patenta obtained throughne are noticed u the SCIENTIFIC AMBRICAS, which 688 the largest circulation, and is the most influ ential newspaper of its kind published in the world. The advantages of such a notice every patentee understand. . , , . Thialarpre and rplendidly lUUBtrated news paper ispubUshedSvEEliLY at $3.20 a year, and is admitted to bo the best paper devoted to science, mechanics, inventions, engineerine works, and other departments of industrial progress, published in any country. Single copies by mail, 10 cents. Sold by all news dealers. - - ' - - , . Address, LIunn & Co., publiehera of Scien tific American. 261 Broadway, New York. Handbook about patents mailed free. : You do Tliat M n NEW SET OF goods evr brought to to "m. We use leather iuui have got a ft ours, oreeon. (Newspaper IN -OF - Or ii ta way t locke, butte, etc, we can offer u.a ng brands ol stoves, not equalled else SUMMONS. la t Oirtuit Oourt in and for Dougli County, State of Oregon. Eliza A. McC&rty, plff. Suit in equity for diYorce. Wimam McCarty. ) To WkuAjn McCastt, Pefkxda.vt: IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OP OREGON: You ar hereby required to appear and answer the compliant filed against you by the plaintiff. EUza A. J , muvwn ntuwn coon ua uit, on Ol bcfiMM tlu fint ilu al th nv. nn1.. : j - - - "j - .uuk wiu t Mua Court, to-wit" TttA nmnd UmH ilu t i.u jt May, A. . 1833, and if you fail to bo answer the said va for want rf s.n &nwr rxA . 0 - - nuuij VO VIM eenrt for the relief demanded in said complaint to wiU for a decide diseolrinir the marrian contract T "v wtc cwoug ana aeieuuant, lor aoca alimony am the onnrt nur Am 4.. :k .v- . r - . w " .jvv.. WW care d custody of the minor children, Francis McCarty. third interest in and to the foUowiag described real property, to-wit: The northeast quarter of southeast auarter of Rtinn r in tAwnahin m & . . . west, and the north half of southwest quarter and southwest quarter of northwest quarter of section 9 townshlD 28. nnnth ranaa uaium mu . Z r wchi wuuuiiu? loo acres, and for such other relief as the court Mav rr. , K lvl ana aisDorsements of th!S Slllt. This llirmnnm is k . . . . rI -a t, V : . r""'" orur oi we Hob. R. 5. Bean, judge of the said cireuit court for J?011?'" ecunty State of Oref on, made and entered JOSEPHSON, i . ,A4, i. W. HAMILTON, J040" ; nnttff'a Attorney. Sherman, Clay & Co. - Pacific Coast Agents for tlio Celebrated v VS - '-. '. - O i - S V'." 4A ::sk-: STSaLlKd- OS&ANS The above cut rpprpst-rts yl SO .which will sell for S1UO. $C3raja,StOrtrinoiith VPtb iatprcst upon tl-ferrrd tuts, one per ceiit por month. Good tool aa.l book included. Address SHEU3IA.V, CtAY fc CO. . ' Cor.'Keamy and Sutter Sts., " au Fruncisee. Cal. ". Sherman3 Clav & Co. Aleuts for tlie Celebrated UPRIGHT, SQUARE I GBAND Acknowledf eS by all Mnfiical Anthorifies to bo the BEST PIANO row maimfact tired. Prices as low ai:d teits s s easy bb coneistent with thorough worliiaaiiehip. Address t . SHERMAN, CliAY & CO. v Cor. Kearny and Sutter Sts.. Kan Francisco, Cal. The only Inetraments that children can play as well as grown persons. Only five minutes time required to learn bovr to manage them. Any kind of tiroes can be played. Finest accom paniment for the voice in pinging. They aro Bold bo low that any family can easily procure ne. Having one no family could pet along without. Pi ices of different styles $8, SIO, $12 and SI 4, Including twenty-five feet of music. Sond for catalogues and price list. Ad ress SHERMAN, CLAY & CO. Sola Agents for the Pacific Coast 'Cor, Kearny and Salter Sts., (" ' San FrancLsco, Cal. For prices and terms, addresi- snERStAN, CLAY & C- :. General Agents for Pacific Coast, Cor. Kearny ami Sattertai San Francisco. aL pu.tland, ok,; 9 Gexeuai. Aor.srs for the Nouth- IV.ciro Ooast. Next door to the MstroyjLiav The '.iri'Irt-st -iio ! ;ts or-euif a- neat ami e.iiitKUMe bxv'-:- s.i-i; t!ie ne can' give sVs-fu-ei a lo-.-tH-waa m ty 'lV'ti Hi ;-, a v !i. His i;ri-" .- nj; Hair 'utf,Kj , V 'o-nti: i'juviu-i:, 1 ct. Ali I nsk- is a i'ih-- i! i , .-i I r.,4t sli.ill WiiHor to b p if to tho tpt. - CilAiiLivS- IlA.r..GY " AT THE OLD E.STA3;LISJi:aENT OF MOS: APPL1S, NEXT DOO II TO MA i Iv'3 ,t. v CO., OFFEIt-5 KOIt SALE THE FINEST VARIETY OF TOBACCO, CIO AUS AND CON FECTIONEI1Y EVER OFFERED 1' ROSE BURG, AT PRICES LOWER THAN; THE LOWEST. CIGARETTES A SPECIALTY. A FINE SUPPLY OF HOLI DAY GOODS. In the County Court of the State of Orejr m for the County of Douglaw. In the matter of the estate Woodson PaUemou deceased. Citation for sale of real estate. TO JOEL PATTERSON, ANGELINE CROUCn, Martha Jane Lee, and Lovey Porter, heir at U and next of kin of Woodson Patrson dVwased. .Ia. the name of the 8Ute of Oregon, greeting: A. Kirkendall, adiaini jtrator ef said estate, bavin? heretofore filed in the said County Court of Douglas, County, Oregon, his petition asking for an order to, sell the real estate belonging to the estate- of said deceased, to-wit: The South half of North, half of donation claim No. 40, of Abraham Patterson and wife, situated in Douglas county, Oregon, ebntainiar ICO. 4 5 acres (excepting- thereirom, one. acre of the, northwest corner of said land).. The. court having- set Tuesday, the second day of January, at the court bouse of said couuty, a time "and plase for bearing: objections to said petition, and ordered that citation, be served upon the heirs and next of kin ef said de ceased, and it appearinsr by the return upon said cita tion that Lovey Porter, an heir at law of the said de-, ceased could not be found in said Sfate and ceunty, the court therefore duly made, and entered its order. cOntinuinarthe time for hearing objection to said petition until February 20th, 1SS3, at ten o'clock A. M. of said day, at the court house In Rosebur0', Ore gon, at which time you and each of yon and all other persons interested in said estate, are required to ap pear in said court and ihow cause, if any there be. why an order of sale should not be made as prayed tor in tne petition, xrua citation is puoiiaue jf Attest: G. W. fclMtf A.L.L,. wranty wars HsavaKx k Hall, attorneys for administrator. ;. Janl3-U w I - " " IV.' CX