; me:.- 1 ews!-!-. '"Cisco, Oai 1 C' --' iW VOL 2. "WTiSTON UMATILLA COUNTY, OREGON, SATURDAY. JULY 17. I8S0 a- V -A 7EST03f T75LY LEADER. .W.T. wnxxAatsojr, ' J a. rv h'cou. lira m Evxav Sxtd&day Mosxrsa, bro. VKATiiXA cowrr OB. f . - 4- atahserlatteai Tar,(ota). Stx MauUa raraa MmUm.... ... 00 ... t 00 ... 1 69 .11 CU AmVmO !) taaartfcm.... ' na I iamtioa T Saaana, ia toaartkm aaa4Moaal tnaarUoa. Tana Saiavaa. ana iaantioa...., MkMdlUMUIBMrUO..... ' QoarUr Colamn, ftnt Lnatrtioa. . . tk adaiUaaal tannine .... .n so u . t 00 . 1 00 .IN .. 1 (0 . 6 60 ..too . I 1 1 1 1 I Kv Willi t T MMttMJiA liWkl mm par Um lrt buarUoa, l'H anU Par no Mcfa iliUMil taatUaa. Arfrartiaiat, Mils payaa a,mr. rat laaartkm, Md 17 cant par tquan aach ntbaaquant iMittoatpajrabla awoUUjr Won. Slaaala tmowMiimti a! Mrtha, marriaf as - um win m inaanaa witoout etuur . UDlluary mm it lor aeoocdinf to Wnfcth. , A Bill STECiaEJf Le-ST. By ragout.) Cood-bya Swcatbaxt, Wb ! rtrire to forg tha oM bra. And laara to lor tha oawT Ton naver Uwoffat M Biai at Thai I ni rrowinr tlrari Or woraa, raganUd with laditi iMtBintl oav ladmtttdl Aad Uxn KxrfatT and trieada Woold alwaya ba at atrifa WltlrlMr I ls-ad o datriy Yat could Botamka mj wila. Do not haap nproacaaa ' Or blaaw inon raw haad: inrs oa im lauiv aot Wnaterar may ba add. Loradaadto Will narar Aod Uuwjrh wa may elaaa tha hurt, I'U taail TWO aavaDMBta, imifiia; VataUUwa'l Captain Ingalls, of the schooner Chal . ctdony, baa let slip an opportunity to aoake a amall fortune, and at the same time' settle the long vexed duertion as to the reality of the elusive and possibly mythical sea serpent. His story as told in the Argut, of Portland, Maine, June t, runs as follows: "Last Saturday, about one o'olook in the afternoon, we were slowly sailing past Monhegan, there being but very little wind, about twenty miles southwest of the island, when we caught sight of what looked like a large schooner, bot tom up. As the object lay almost dead ahead, we made directly for it, but be fore we got very close a Cape Ann schooner lay to and sent a boat crew to inspect what plainly now appeared to oe a monstrous carcass 01 some species or other.' We finally hove to, about a . ship's length- off and took a leisurely a. af survey of the thing. It was dead, and Aoated on the water with its belly, a dirty brown color, up. Its head was at least twenty feet long, and about ten fset thrOUffh the thickest nnint. Ahnnt laid way of the body, which was, I should guess, about foity feet long, were two fins, of a very clear white, each about twelve feet in length. The body seemed to taper from the back of the head down to the size of a small log, distinct from the whale tribe, as the end had nothing that looked like a fluke. The shape of the creature's head was more like a tierce than anything I can liken it to. I have teen almost all kinds o shapes that can be found in these waters, but never saw the like of this before. a wo years ago, on Beguin, 1 saw shooting through the water a thing which resembled this creature considera bly, but I didn't get close enough to say for certain The men from the Cape Ana schooner got on this dead creature, and one of the boys cut a double shuffle on his belly, which for all the world looked like the bottom of a schooner covered with barnacles and scawed by the weather. We would have towed the thing to Portland had thore been any wind, hut as there- wasn't, we steered way and left it What sort of a sea monster this was I can't say for sure, but iu my opinion, it was the original 'sea serpent' which has been seen once in a while for years past, and which, when alive, was too swift a swimmer for any satying vessel to get along side of." The report of the captain of the "Cape Ann schooner" will be in order new. tha pain. Wan, Hula I aupbaaa yotfra right; AadawttttirtaakMt; - . Bat wtoyavabaninmlaftaN, -- Myitis ataka in Um vaat- Tct, I would notraiat a ivfut. Though it may wrack my Ilia; For yoovU know mora raal bapplneia Whan yon'r anothat'a wifa. Wa hara known our Joy togathrr. And bndour aorrowa, too . Parhap thay'U aaam tha awaatar Whi wa hara aaid adieu. Bars-iUak tali rteg. And whan yen ara old and gray. Sat to youraeH , tha ona that gar it, Oara love and heart away. AKFIEU. 8omb texts for Democratic campaign orators this year : Garfield and the De Golyer paving contracts. Csrfield and the Credit Mobilier. Garfield and the alary-grab. Garfield and the Sanborn Jayne business.' Garfield and infamous Federal Election Law. Garfield and the vote .of Louisiana in 1876. Garfield and the Electoral Commission. Garfield and the Mexican War pensions. Gerfield and the Chinese What record it is! Wheat was sewn on the plantation of J. L. Larramoro, Ttt Co., Georgia, on Nov. 24th, 1879 and reaped April 10th. Only four and a half months ma turing. The harvesting' was unusually arly even for Georgia. The flour was in the English market on the 24th of Kay. We invite the attention of our read ers to the following extract from the New Yerk Herald, a paper of an - inde pendent type, which h, however, never been accusal tf any partial leanines toward t'ae Democracy. When such a paper, with Republican affinities, comes out boldly and squarely, stating that the charges against Garfield are damaging unless disproved, and even goes so far editorially as to invite him to use its columns and welcome, for that purpose. The New York Timet, the great leading- Republican paper of the United States, speaking of Garfield in .some of his transactions a few years agu said "Messrs. Kelly and Garfield present i very distressing figure. Their partici pation in rae ureait Bloomer anair is complicated by the toost unfortunate con traductions of testimony." . That was before Garfield was a candi date for President, and when there was no special motive in disguising facts. The New York Tribune says about them: "Well, the wickedness of all of it is that these men betrayed the trust of the peo ple, deceived their constituents, and by evasions and falsehood confessed the transaction to be disgraceful." Now, in the face of such statements as these, from such sources, does it not require 'sublime cheek" to call these investiga tions, and charges of fraud, "Democrat ic infamy V The charges were made by Republicans, and the verdict rendered by the same. Now, let us look at the attitude of our leading political papers at Portland, the Standard and Oregon tan. The former has made eight separ ate and distinct charges against Garfield, proving them irem the Congrettional Record and from leading Republican papers. It has challenged the Oregonian to "confute even the most inconsiderable of them," and as yet, that well-informed journal has ignomimouely ailed! That carries its own comment: We hare no doubt that the Republi cans will discover faults enough in the ticket chosen at Cincinnati yesterday, and we may presently try our own hands at picking it to pieces. But we will con tent ourselves for the moment with sug gesting certain general observious bear ings, upon the country and upon both parties, of the action of the Democrats. In the first place, it is an undoubted and very great benefit to the country that the nomination of General Hancock makes impossible what, in the common political slang is called a. "bloody shirt campaign." . The Southern question, so called, has been for years not merely a sterile, but a mischievous issue in our politics. It has been assiduously kept alive by designing leaders in the Republi can party, not entirely because it was a convenient way for them to "fire the Northern hearts" and secure votes by. alarming the prejudices of the voters, but quite as much because it enabled the Republican leaders year after year to put aside, til real quustions, all needed re forms, all actions on subjects of general interests and importance, on the pretext that it was once more necessary to "save the country" or to "strike for liberty and equal rights. We have no doubt that even now ejSort ,wil be made to drig the South' into the convaas, but it will not succeed. The Democratic candidate ''waiji soldier of the Union one of - tW most xIoVs, tincoapromiaing and brilliant generals of the war for the Union; he is a Northern with purely Northern ideas; he fought under General Grant in theblood- iest and most desperately contested series of battles in the war; he was always placed by Grant in the fore-front of the battle. It would be ridiculous for any one to pretend to doubt the loyalty to the Union and to liberty of the general whose gallant and brilliant conduct in the Wilderness, at Spottsyl vaniav Cold Harbor and in all the fierce battles .which followed, made him 'a trusted efiicer-of General Grant, and won4- for him the plaudits of thw-whole country. If any Republican stump orator shall pretend that the Government cannot . safely be trusted to Goners! Hancock, he will sure ly be laughed at. Nor can it be said that Hancock would be a nose of wax in the hands of other men. He is a man of his own mind. It will be said, of course, that he is a mili tary man; but the reply may well be made that it is surely a good Bign that Democrats of all sections united cordial-; ly in his nomination; it is surely a happy omen that the Southern men, the "rebel brigadiers," as it is the mean partisan fashion to call them, were among the earliest to rally to bis support in the Convention, thus showing that they are not at all animated by that hatred of Union men with which it has been the custom to charge them. It was the boast of the third termers that the South was ready and anxious to rally around General Grant. Well, they have gathered very zealously about one ot General Grant's most distinguished and trusted lieutenants, and if it was a sign of merit in them in one case it can scarcely be less so in the other. The nomination of General Hancock is of impotanee to the country, therefore, ' because it perforce eliminates-the- old sectional issue from our politics, and places them for the first time in many years on a broad and national plane. It enables the country to choose withpu prejudice, without sectional alarm, and to ehoose for itself between two lines of policy clearly marked out, very decidedly difiereing one from the other, and on which men may reasonably and sensibly disagree. The Republican party stands for centralization, for a larger concentra tion of power, in the bands of the Feder. al uovernment, tor wbat is called "pater nal system," and a considerable part of the country agrees with them in this view which is fairly presented by their candi date. The Democrats stand for decen tralization, fo.r local self-government, for a strict limitation of the Federal power according to the Constitution ; and a con siderable pai-t of the country agrees with them. General Hancock's civil record makes him one of the most distinguished representatives of this Democratic policy. His constant deference to civil law and to civil officer during his military com mand in Louisiana and Texas after the war shows that he is much more than a mere soldier; that he has clear and well defined views on the most important points of national policy, views' which are honorble to him and which-give him a deserved and high rank among states men. Between General Garfield and General Hancock the voters may choose freely and safely according to their views of what is the best policy, and with no fear that the Union or any man's rights in the country will be endangered by the election of either. It is another advantage for the- coun try that, being Able thus to choose with out prejudice or alarm, the voters will be able to consider the bearing of the two nominations on those material inter ests of the country which are, after all, its real interests. It has been widely felt, for example, even by many Repub licans, that it is not well to' keep one party in power too long. It is often said by thoughtful Republicans that it would be well for their party if it could pass into the minority for a season. . But the Democratio nominations in previous years have not been such as to inspire confidence in this independent class of voters. With the present Democratic picket this oijection doesnot lie. If any irdter thjaka it mil for the country to save a- change of parties he need not fear to aet upon his thought Every in terest will be as safe with General Han cock as with General Garfield; both are devoted Union soldiers; both are loyal citizens, both are men incapable of suffer ing harm to the Republic; in the hands of either, the honor of the flag, the safe ty of our: institutions, the rights of all men in every part of the country will be safe. It ia a , great happiness for the country that no demagogue can, in this canvass, frighten the voters bythe pre tence f danger to the country or to any legitimate interest in it, from the success, of one or the other party. " ' rnuxATawx r cussex fall. , . The plan to furnish Rochester, New York, with power for manufacturing and for running street cars through the utili zation ot the falls of the Genesee in compressing air, was described some weeks ago. All the power of the lower falls, save what is needed to run two wheels ior factories already in operation has been purchased by the ih venter of the system, and a promising beginning has been made. According to the Roch ester Union, a large gang ot men are at work building the crib just below the falls on the oast side of the river in a cove which seems to have been made natural for this purpose. This founda tion is 100 feet long by 75 feet wide, and will have an average depth of 13 feet. It Js being constructed of logs of solid oak timber, bolted together, and the center will be filled with atone. . On top of the stone will be erected the der rick, 125 feet high, and the -water will pour into it f rem the top of the falls through the bulkhead at one end of the dam. . The stand pipes will run from the top of the derrick to the cylinders on the crib, which will be in ts neighborhood of 500 feet long. The whole machinery will be roofed in. The difficulty in the way of getting the materials to the place, they all having to be lowered over the falls, makes the work of construction somewhat slow.; It is expected, how- i ever that the application of the system to the propulsion of street cars will be possible in September next Scientific American. -DEALERS PURE DBGS Pateat Medicines, - - Chemicals. ' . Glass," . Aniline Dyes, 4?8St7. LUBIJTS, LLTfDBOEOS ASD anOtKLW 1 urV LitJUOrSj Sold only on Physicians' Fteacrfptioaa. ' " IMPEBJSAHBli PA111T AIID ATAIAUTIC LEAO, -CO A LARGE AKD ifmtXBCtXjtf STwOC OT . . fjb Blank Book, School Books, ., pett 'V.. Papterla, c legality 2LY s " a f-;a -? v.j. Prescriptions Carefully Comopurvded t alVJiourt Ala, jCtelaa UmU laMcattafc Lard aa4Sj Musical Instruments, VaUtrS f nH stse. EEaUEslA. MM Bargains Bargains Baxgxiina Wbolsale and CENTERVILLL The understand has been instructed to sell the CfHCLI tTCCJ . CONSISTING OP ' ' ' - -, DRY GOODS, GROCERIES, CROCKERY and . GLASSWAcE AT GREATLY REDUDED PRiCES,' : 1 u To make room for a large SPRING STOCK, Jndalai . i assortment of Roots and .Shoes. " Bob Ingersell stalks up to a large, ancient structure, shakes his fist, pulls off his coat, and goes to work to tear it down. "What are you doing, Bob!" asks a look-er-on. "Going to tear the old thing down," says Bob; don't like the looks of it." "Well," says the looker on, "suppose now, instead of trying to tear that 'old thing down, you go to work and put up another to beat it; and if you beat it, why then I'll turn in and help you pull , down this one." "Oh, go west," says Bob; "I'm no architect." A pamphlet is being collated at Wasl. ington, the Pittsburg Post asserts, of which a million of copies will be printed showing the record of DeGoIyer on the Credit Mobilier, back pay grab, and other matters. The pamphlet will con tain extracts from editorial articles pub lished in the leading Republican news papers about the, time of the Credit Mo bilier and District "ring" exposure, and will also be illustrated by contempora neous cratoons from Harper '$ Weekly'&nd other periodicals. ; ; ... Or the two citizens who were injured by the recent buggy accident near the Tucannon, one good citizen, Montgomery, has died and was buried at Waitsburg. on Saturday last; the other, .Mr. Dan Kaup, at last accounts Was still lying in a state of insensibility. Dr. Mauzey' of Walla Walla, who was called to attend him, gives it as his opinion" that either brain fever or softening of the brain will supervene. NortkxoeH Tribune. Mr. Kaup is a brother-in-law of our friend Mr. Palmer of Milton. : Thkee baa been .eonriderable talk .of trouble with the ; Indians, but so far no&ing has occurred . that may excite any unusual apprehensions. But it does seem hard that some system cannot be adopted that wiU . relieve the public mind of this constant dread of an uprising among the savages, 7 . Coffee, Tea, Sugar, Tobacco and Cigars a- specialty. Also Coal Oil, Clear as Crystal, Guaranteed Free from 3 JFMta Substance and Non Explosive. - Ready Made Clothing at Coot r Please call and examine for yourselves bsfors Ihij itewnere. Centkrvil February 6th, 1880. A. C. SlTTnELAJfD, Afent. M. y. WORMINGTOlf, M1XTON, OREGOH. 4" DRY GOODS, GROCERIES, CROCKERY CLASSvWE, Heavy Stock of BOOTS and CHOSO, COAL OIL TOBACCO and cigars canned fruits of ALL KIKS3. Hardware. Iron and - '. J - V rti ha jtoob tut CLOVES OF ALL KINDS A SPECIALTY '.J l - ..3 ISmk Y'i s"Producc taken in-Excluuige. - -. - . ' Corner Main and 3d Sts Walla .WalLk. Wholsale and Retail Dealers In Drw Goods- Fancy Goods, notion? CLOTHING BOOTS and SHOES HATS and CAPS, 6H We are m rnceipt of a r , fisrul ts-sdt imt Bought Previoue to Ike-Recent. In an kinds of goods, and we are therefore prepared if fT t3 Lower Than the LoweotI PARTICULAR ATTENTION PAID TO 0R5EI31