Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1871-188?, November 08, 1872, Image 2

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Slj'clUcckin (Enterprise.
Or'FtOIAL PAPER OF CLACKAMAS COINTY.
REGON CITY, OREGON, NOV. 1S72.
o
The Ilcsult.
O
The Grantites had an election
throughout the United States last
Tuesday, and as appears from the
returns published elsewhere, there
was but little opposition made any
where to their verdict that they de
sire to be the slaves of a corrupt
ring for the ensuing four years. AVe
had hoped that the American, pqg-
le were sick of the Present-Taker
and his venal follower?, but the re
sult last Tuesday shows otherwise,
and the people have endorsed the
rarty in power that is, those who
exercised the right to vote. In our
own State, Greeley is defeated by
about 2,500. This result docs not
by nn means indicate that the
Grant party is endorsed by a ma
jority of her citizens; but when
the returns are all in, the contrary
will be easily sbown. In every
county in the State Democrats de
clined to vote for Greeley, and the
vote of the State will show a de
crease of more than the Kadical
majority obtained, Uesides, there
were probably from 300 to 400 O'
Conor votes polled. Hence we do
not consider that the vote cast last
Tuesday was any test whatever of!
the strength of the two parties in
this State, and we presume that the
mhio state of affairs existed in all
the other States. The Liberal vote
cast in Oregon was very small, und
Greeley's strength was almost en
tirely from Democrats.
"While we advocated the support
of Mr. Greelev by the Democracy
not because he was a Democrat,
but because he had been nominated
by our party convention we do
not question the Democracy of any
irtat who saw fit not to vote for
him, and all such will readily and
cheerfully in the future act togeth
er when the issues are between
(S)
Democrats and Democratic princi- ;
pies. The issues presented in the
last election were not such as could
reasonably have been expected to
receive the unanimous endorsement
of the party. We consider that
the convention committed a seri
ous error by nominating Greeley.
The defeat sustained should bv no
means discourage the Democracy
of the country. Both the candi
dates who were defeated have been
prominent Radicals. They have
taken with them out of the Admin
istration ranks thousands of its
leaders. They cannot godxick to
Grant, unless they phi' the part of
cowardly sycophants. The- will
continue to add new recruits every
day during Grant's next term, and
when the election of 1870 occurs,
they will either bring their entire
strength to the Democracy, or will
attempt a ticket of their own. Let
Democrats closs up their lines.
Make read to fight shoulder to
shoulder hereafter. United and re
inforced, we must continue our
work. The defeat of Mr. Greeley
is by no means the death of the
Democracy, nor is its mission end
ed. Truth is eternal. Neither
defeat nor victory can add to or
take from it. Though all mankind
may at times apparently reject it,
the truth must ever stand firm, and
iu the cud be triumphant. In sup
port of the declarations and prin
ciples of the party opposed to the
Administration have been support
ed by the best and purest men of
the country. Money and offices i
rcrn rmirrpil wbrdlv nn llw siilo nt'
. ' " j
inc party in power, anu uie mer
cenary bands of American politic
lin -f1rrl-nrl .-k li o f cf o ti .1 i ...1
j wor.d at K'run are on i ho largest scale
Though defeated now, the Demo- j Some idea o! the importance of The under
C ratio Liberal party is the Coming j taking may be g itix-red from the fact that
power. Though overwhelmed for I ,ho buiMinpr itself will caver six times the
the present, it Is the means destin- i Paw of tho Palais le l'l-xpo.dtion at Pari.
cd in the next four years to rescue
tho Government, country, and the
public liberty from the dangers and
perils which arc upon us.
Bi:Tini."i At; a ix. "We find the
following in the New York Herald account of Congress having made no ap
of the 10th nit.: "It is reported I propriations, tLe representation of Amer
that Attorney-General Williams i !ean n,uaufactmvs wil1 not be rge
. . -, . r- .I o i ! a nnunt be desired; but as the exhibition
intends to retire Irom the ( abmet ;' f r -
; ot goouj is a Term of nuvertiseniont we
after the election, and that he will I see no good reason why the public should
be succeeded by General Pristow, ! 1! IVSZ Tfrxhif V':t!,,ortat5on
' ol guuus laeiOntiinfr to wealthy riirn.m-
of Kentucky, the present Solicitor I
General. Should his intention be
carried OUt there IS no doubt that ! incurring tae expense oi transportation
T , ... . . -i ! we do not feel called noon to pay their
Judge A llliams Will be as.ed to advertising bills. At the same time we
serve as President of the Commis-' wish ,,he position all success, and de
. , ..... e . i sire tha'. American industry should be
Sion lor the adjudication Ot the properly represented ; but thosj who
Alabama elaimlnit Congress is l 'rrV !he In"o!iu onSv'. ininstice to W
j the expenses.
exiHJGted to establish nt. its comin?r
session, and of which according to !
- i
present design?, Mr. Bancroft Da- . to the sum oi vx,vii r,,mn now - ' 0 ' -Vi;
vis lately aSent at Geneva, is also j much larger would it be if Kobe- j 20; evH T00
to be a iiK'tnber. A desire to en-: son and his tnends were to dis-1 brnska, l,ooo-' Virginia J out' I
ter into professional engagements j OYfrQ all the stuns out of which and Alabama claimed ' Ihy-.l'l?
i signed as the cause of the re- Government has been Secored bv ' er is elected Mavor ofX S
tjrement ot tho Attoniev (irnoni ; It... r o,.... 'l -c,v iolk
Our Xew School .Law.
Decidedly the most meritorious
measure passed by the last Legis
lature is the law creating the office
of State Superintendent of Public
Instruction, a State Board of Edu
cation, and otherwise amending
Bur very defective school system.
The present law is peculiarly adapt
ed to the wants and condition of
our young State. Xot cumbersome
and unwieldy like the school law
of California and other States, but
compact and simple, only endeav
oring to supply those wants of
which the State has in the past so
deeply felt the need. There are still
some defects in the law but what
law has not defects? AYe do not
altogether approve of the manner
of selecting the text books for the
State, but at the same lime we re
alize that a fairer proposition than
the one leaving the selection of
text-books to a vote of the County
Superintendents could hardly be
offered. If the several County Su
perintendents before making selec
tions, would call to their aid and
assistance I lie most experienced
teachers of their counties, they
would doubtless secure a series of
text-books that would give great
er satisfaction to parents and
teachers than if they relied
on their own judgment in
the matter. This assistance they
will doubtless call for.
There are other defects in the
law of minor importance, we might
mention, as in the election of Di
rectors; we think it should be spec
ified that the polls should be kept
open a certain number of hours,
especially in populous districts in
order that all might have airoppor
tunity to vote. As the law now
stands the polls may be closed
within five minutes alter being
opened, thus debarring some from
the privilege of voting.
These are some of the defects of
the law. Y'e will not attempt to
show up its good points as it has
too manv to enumerate in the
s10rt soace
a single article. On
the whole we congratulate the
State on having secured so great
an improvement in the school law.
Separation of Church and Slate
Kn-laud.
Mr. Jacob Bright one of the
Liberal members of Parliament
from Manchester, has been making
a speech to his constituents in favor
of the disestablishment and disen
dowmeut of the English Church,
in which he brought forward a new
and original argument. He said
that Parliament, being omnipitcnt
with regard to the Church, could
do with it what it liked; and then
he proceeded to ask, what was this
Parliament which had such ex
traordinary power over a religious
institution '? Answering his own
question, he said it consisted of
two chambers for the most part
composed of the richest men iu the
kingdom. The Xew Testament
told us that a rich man should
hardly enter the kingdom of heav
en ; yet these men, laboring under
special spiritual disabilities, assum
ed to be the fittest person to ar
range and control the machinery
by which other people were to get
to heaven! They could determine
what the Church should icach,
could altar its observances.arrange
and rearrage the whole ecclesiasti
cal machinery. Mr. Bright thought
the State or Parliamentary Church
the most singular institution now
existing in England, and undertook
to say that it was no longer a
question of whether, but only of
when, it should be disestablished
and disendowed.
The Vienna Exposition.
The preparations fr the exposition of
the art ami industrial products of the
, - ...
uciuj; uiiiuB in mi countries 10 secure a
complete representation of art and indus
trial products. The various systems of
public instruction will be contrasted, and
we hope that the result will not be unfa
vorable to our public school system. On
tions. Unless exhibitors betieVe that the
exposition of their wares is likely to be
sufficiently profitable to iusf.i'v them in
1 he Conscience r und has swelled '
. .i i' f-. -v. - -- i . I
i.'ieni ; it) '-',it. piuaraniv.
Condition of Arizona.
A constant reading of the Ari
zona papers, with their endless cat
alogues of Indian outrages, brings
the following editorial extract from
the Arizona Miner of the 21st nit.,
published at Prescott, out of the
realm of exaggeration into that of
stern reality:
It will soon be ten years since we first
arrived in this Territory, and in looking
back over our Inn? residence here, memo
ry fails to point out one week in which
one or mure while men have not been
murdered by Indians, and in which valua
ble property has not been stolen or de
stroyed by the same people. For five
years of this time our duty as editor of
this paper has compelled, us to record
most'of the bloody deeds that have been
enacted, as well as to note and comment
upon the losses that have been sustained
by our citizens. And, again, it has fallen
to our lot to view the mangled remains of
many of the victims of savage ferocity; to
feel for those whose last dollars worth of
property was taken (rom them; to lose
property of our own; to be made a target
of by Apaches; to be un the watch against
surprise, and to have our hair erect itself,
and to stand, ride and walk in fear and
trembling of lurking savages. Need we
say. then, that we are tired of the unpleas
ant duty it has forced us to perform?
Scarcely.
The article then recounts the
outrages "within past few weeks,"
which exhibit ten men killed and
about a hundred cattle, eight mules
and several horses stolen. The
melancholy part of all of this is that
a pet theory at Washington con
demns those who have the temerity
to live in .and open up this Ten itory
to be robbed and murdered by the
ruthless brutes for whom the "peace
policy was inaugurated. The In
dians on a reservation start out
and murder and murder and rob
right and left. Instead of swift
punishment being dealt out liberal
ly, the savages are besought
by the agents, v, ith tears in their
eyes to come in and bo fed out of
the public crib.
The stage robbery on the road
from "Wickenburg, in November
last, by which six persons were
murdered, was stated at first to be
the work of Mexican. This view
was supported, we learn by those
interested in proving the Apaches
wingless angels. An investigation,
balked at first by the peace policy
authorities, has now been carried
out by that stanch Indian fighter,
vieneral' Crook, which fixes the
guilt on the Apaehe-Mohavcs. A
stratagem was resorted to for the
purpose of capturing the offenders,
which did not completely succeed,
as the Indians suspected the ruse,
and, at the attempt to arrest one of
their number, showed light. The
result was seven Indians killed and
a soldier mortally wounded. Since
then one hundred Apache-Vumas
have returned, to the reservation,
"anxious to live at peace with the
wiiites, but determined to kill Ira
traba," tin Indian who gave infor
mation about the Wickenburir
massacre to General Crook. These
red gentlemen are to be fed, and
have been mildly .requested not to
kill Jratraba. Is it not timo all
this child's play with human tigers
should cease? Vast territories are
rendered worse than wilderness by
this policy. In a wilderness men
may perish struggling against the
odds of nature; but in addition to
these difficulties we have a premium
put upon murder through this poli
cy, which the cunning Indians
themselves laugh at. Indians who
adopt no other life but one of mur
der and rapine should be extermin
ated, on the same principle that a
city vagrant is sent to" prison.
Election lieturns.
The returns of the election up
to the hour of going to press are
meagre and indefinite. Enough,
however is known that the present
usurper of the "While House has
another four years in-anted him in
which to sell out the public offices
and to provide for his relatives.
The popular majority in the Union
will probably be over a half a mil
lion, und lie will get about two
hundred and seventy-five out of
the three hundred and sixty-six
electoral votes. If the rest of the
country can endure Grant and his
administration for another term,
we can. Following are the latest
returns :
Keturns from thirty counties in
Missouri, received at noon Thurs
day, give Greeley 0,000 majority.
Twenty-nine States for Grant, with
5 79,415 popular majority. Penn
sylvania, 120,000; .Massachusetts
7:3,o IT; Illinois 50,000; Michigan
50,000; Iowa 50,000; New York
45,000; Maine 30,000; Indiana 23-
uuo; .Minnesota i!0,000; crmont !
17,000; Wisconsin 15,000; South !
Carolina lo,000; Js ew Jersey 1 2 -000;
North Carolina 10,000; Phodc
Island S,30S; California 7,000; Mis
sissippi 0,000; 1-londa doubtful-
iiampnire a,U0U; -y est er-
'Mlll'l .- (ill!!- I itiw-t it,
, , , v .uuvvilLUL
1
Oregon and its Beauties.
We find the following beautiful
description of Oregon going the
rounds of the Eastern press, from
a correspondent : "Yesterday I
thought 1 had a pretty good idea
of Oregon ; to-day I think I know
very little about it. This is how
it came to change my mind : I
received a call from Gov. Gibbs,
who, by the way, is a true Chris
tian gentleman, but believes as
most Oregonians do, that it the
garden of Eden was not located
on the Willamette river, it was
through some mistake. In the
course of conversation he said to
me, 4 Well, you are going away
without seeing our State. You
Eastern men come here, spend a
week, see xi few of our mountains
rivers, und think Oregon is a moun
tainous, wooden State, whereas
thrte-fourths of it is prairie with
out a stick of timber on it.' Im
mediately I made up my mind to
be reticent about Oregon. I trav
eled a number of hundred miles
through the State. I saw some
things; I did not see those ptairies
good reason why, it took all the
time I had to spare to see a few of
the hills. O, Mr. Editor, I wish
you could have climbed with me
up Kobinson's Hill, back of Port
land. I have been to the tops of
the principal mountains in the
East, but I was never paid so lib
erally as by Kobinson's. Itself
capped as no Eastern mountain
could be, with cherry, pear and ap
ple orchards, it looks down on the
b e a u t i f u 1 W i ! la n 1 e 1 1 e r i v e r, w i n d i 1 1 g
around its base. Portland is wedg
ed in between the river banks and
the hill; a lew miles away the no
ble Columbia pours its Hood to
wards ihe Pacific. Away to the
north loom up Mt. Hood, Mt. Cra
gin, Mt. Adams, and Mt. St. Hel
ens, clothed in eternal snows of
white against the blue sky beyond ;
the sun' lights up their sides and
they glow like molten silver; now
the clouds descend on old Mt.IIood
and half of her 18,000 feet is hid
den ; lower the cloud descends, and
now we see the white peak and
base, while the black cloud seems
like a mighty girdle bound around
her. Turning, we look to the south
west, and see fur away the cele
brated Coast Kauge, to the south
east lie the Cascade Mountains,
while bills and valleys,covercd with
primeval forests stretch away to
the south as far as eve can reach
"i-iuiiiohanl in Washington Ttrrirory.
"While Ave have met with a de
feat in Oregon, our neighboring
Territory has come up most noblv
to the work and has uiven at least
1,000 majority to that old ami ven
erable Democrat, Hon. O. 15. Mc
Fadden, and retired to private life
the ' Silver-toned Orator,'1 Selucius
Oare'Ielde. "We congratulate the
good people of "Washington Terri
tory in having achieved this grand
victory, and having defeated one
of the corrupt and venal followers
of the Administration. J mitre
McFadden is a man from the peo
ple, an old citizen of the Territory,
honest and capable, lie knows
the wants of the people who have
elected him, and there will be no
neglect on his part to advance the
interest of the people who have
elected him by such a handsome
majority. I his is the first time
since 1SG2 that a Democrat has
been elected from Washington
Territory. All honor to her free
and noble citizens.
Ti:a"nks. A friend, on learning
that three or four of our patrons
had discontinued, their paper be
cause wo deemed it our duty to
support the nojnince of the party,
has generously plodded himself to
furnish us two subscribers for each
one- discontinued. Our friend has
our thanks, and we can assure him
and all others concerned, that no
matter how obnoxious candidates
nominated by our legally consti
tuted conventions may be to us, as
loner as we claim to run .a party
paper, the part if shall have the in
11 nonce of the paper.
Ci.ACKArA.s Cotntv. We have
not been able to obtain the official
vote of this county for this issue.
Grant has :lbout 200 majoriay. We
think that the vote cast in the
comity is fully 250 less than was
polled last spring, and there were
between fifty and sixty O'Conor
votes cast. Had Greeley received
the strength of the Democratic
party in this county, he would have
had at least one hundred majority.
The four Canyon City mail robbers
were sentenced to the penitentiary for life
by J udge Deady, A new trial was denied '
them.
COURTESY OF BANCROFr LIBRARY,
IVERSITT OF CALIFORNIA,
Election Returns.
MARYLAND.
Eat-timouk. Nov. 5. The election quiet
' "liALTi.MOiiK. Nov. "c The indication
are that the Stale wi'l give (Greeley 5.000
... ,i. r lit
tnajoiny. n.i.-on im-ui.) is prooaoiy
elected to Congress in the 1- list District,
and Archer (Don.) in the Second District.
In the Fifth District the contest is close.
Loiindes Rep.) is elected iu the l-'onr'.h i
District by 500 majority.
T LINN ESS KK.
Memphis. Nov. 5. Election proceeed
ing quietly. Little interest manifested.
The indications are that there will be a
lijht vote.
.Memphis. Nov. 5. Partial returns indi
cate the defeat of Andy Johnson and
leave the race between Maynard and
Cheatham, w'uh chances in lavor of May
naid for Congressman at-1 irge.
lUIODE ISLAM.
Pi;ovukxce. Nov. 5. Voting is pro
ceeding steadily. Democrats polling a
light vote. At noon Grant was leading
Greeley two to one.
ruovinKXCK, Nov. 7. Rhode Island
gives a Republican majority of 8,338.
OHIO.
Cincinnati. Nov. 5. The election is
progressing quietly. At ten o'clock the
vote appears to be little short of that cast
at tin kStalo election.
Coi.i mhi s, Nov. 5. Returns so far re
ceived indicate
Slate ul 40.000.
Grant's majority in the
MAINE.
Poini.ANi). Nov. 5. Tho election is
quiet, wiili indications of small aggregate
vote and larger Republican majority than
in September.
PouTi.ANo. Nov. 5. Gram's net gain at
Portland over the vote of September is
lid; Lewiston, 572; liangor, G10.
nj.iNois.
Ciiic.voo. Nov. 5. The day is disagree
able. There has been a rain storm since
last evening. The election is very quiet.
The probabi'Hy id that a large vote will
be pulled.
Chicago. Nov. 5. Returns from the
cily and State come iu very slowly.
E gh'een pri cincts ot iight wards and one
town in Cook courtly give Grant a net
majority ol 815. The Suite, will probably
give Graat 30.000 or 40.000 majority.
Cinc.viio, Nov. (j. Returns from the
ci'y are incomplete, but enortgh is known
to show that Grant's majority is at least.
8.000. Additional returns lrom the In
terior do not materially alter the estimate
heretofore made ot a Republican m ijor
ity for President of 30.000.
M A SS.V f.'IIt'S ETTS.
Poston. Nov. 5. The vote is heavy,
and indications ar' that there will be a
larger Republican majority than ever be
lore.
Wokceste::. Nov. 5. In this city, at
1 p.m.. Giant was 1 40;j ahead.
JJosion, Nov. 5. (.'rant's majority in
Massachusetts is about 05.000. l ull .State
ticket elected, with increased Republican
majority in the Legislature.
NOK I'll CAKOLIX.V.
Raeeiou. (X. C). Nov. 5 It isestima
ted there wib be ;v tailing off of 35 per c-nt.
fro.ii Ihe August v le in this city.
Wti.MiNG I'o.x. Nov. 5.- -The vote at three
o'clock showed trains for Greelev oil the
vote ot August. There is a he.
off in the vote of both parlies,
cations of Greeley gains.
RAt.Eioii, Nov. 5 This city
bury show Republican gains
vy iaiitrig
wi.h ittdi
and S.ilis
over the
election ol Aw
Wii.Mt.M; ion
:t.
Nov,
-Unofficial returns
for this city give Grat.t 1M)8 m ijoriiy.
Rai.ekei. Nov. 5.--Pa.tial returns from
about twenty live cuinties iodic i'e that
the State has gone lor Grant by between
5.000 and 8.000.
NEW ilvmpsii i:k,
conn (N- IL )..N"ov 5. Thr election
throughout the Sta:e
At Koene ihe Libo!
Straight Democrats
progressing quietly,
ill Republic ins and
are strongly voting
At N ishna Gi et ley
Ihe Greelev ticket. At N is!
is riot jioiliiig tiie tu.i Liberal vote. l ew
( )'Coiior votes being pode.l. Roth sides
express hopes of carrying ihe S"tafe,
though the betiiug general ly is t tvorable
to the Repubiieans.
Poi: tsmoi i it ( N. H.). Nov. 5. Itidica
j tiotiS ate that Grant s majority m the City
! wiii be be: v. een 2.00 ) and ". 000.
GoNCoiti). Nov. 5. N:i;e:ee:i towns give
Grant ID. 1151; Greeley, lfiilli. The tate
givts (Jrant nver i 000 uKijoiity.
Ni-:w IIavkn. Nov. (5. Returns from all
but lour towns give Grant a majority of
-J .4 JO, and a pluiaiiiy ot
xi-:vr vokk.
Nkw Vouk Nov. 5. Weather clear and
pleasant, and favorable as could be desir
ed for election. The election so far is
quiet. I.'i the down-town districts more
than half Ihe registcrei votes were polled
at 1 J a. m.
Rocmlstkp.. Nov. 5. .Susan H. Anthony
and eijrht other women went in a body to
the polls and presented b ilioLs which were
received and deposited in the billot-box.
Eighteen women are registered in tho
same district.
Alhany. Nov. 5. Voting is proceeding
quietly. The indications are that the vote
will be larger than usual, lijth parties
were well represented at noon. E ich ap
peared satisiicd wiih the prospect. At
that time the vote was pretty even.
Ni:w Vokk. Nov. 5. The total vo!o in
ihe ciiy for Greeley is 77,527, and Grnnt
51.590. Greeley's majority is 22.D2S
against GO.OOt) for Sieymour iu 1SLS. Grant
hss probably carried the State by 15J,000
or 10,000.
Nkw Vokk, Nov. C. Foriy -three towns
and 2'J districts give Dix 5,213 more ma
jority. The vote for mayor, with only a
lew districts to bear from, is as follows:
Ilavemever (Rep.). -10 2 DC; Lawrence
(Dein ). as 305; U'Rrien (Anpolo H ill
Dem.). 21,810.
rENNSYLVANIA.
Pti ila PKi.Tii i a, Nov. 5. The election is
progressing very quietly. The vote is
smaller tiun usual. The Democrats make
no effort, some of them even voiing for
Grant. In seven precincts taken indis
criminately in the first three hours, the
vote stood: Grant 511; Greeley, l(j2. At
one p. m. the returns from all" the wards
give Grant 21013 majority. It is said
that Greeley will have 20.000 less votes
than Ruckalew polled. j
Pirrsut ;:;(;. Nov. 5. At 1:30 p. m. in 21 !
wards of Piu.-burg and Alleghany City,
Grant.s majority was 1 117.
Eiuk, Nov. 5. Very little interest is
taken iu the election." The Republicans
will not poll a full vote, and the indica
tions are now that not over fifty per cent,
ol the Democratic vote wiil be polled.
Pi rrstii t:i;. Nov. 5. Republican majori
ty in Alleghany county will approximate
18.000. Twelve wards in Pittsburg give
Grant -1.42G and Greeley 1.S12.
P!ULAi)Ki.ritA. Nov. 5. (J rant's majori
ty iu this city, except in tho Twenty
eighth ward, is 43.30G. lie curries every
ward in the city.
PuiLAKELVtiiA. Nov. G. The VoW7i
Amorictn estimates Grant's majority in
the State at 125.000.
LOUISIANA.
Nkw Oiu.lans, Nov. 1. The Republi
cans claim the State by 31.000. The
Democrats claim the State by 20.000. and
the city by from 10.000 to 12.000. Gov
ernor Warmoth thinks the State has gone
for Greeley and Brown by 15.000 majority
and claims three, and probably four Con
gressmen .
Nkw OitLKANs. Nov. 5. The Ilfpublicau
says that all estimates t.re necessarily bas
ed upon a knowledge of various parties
before election, but the general feeling
appears to be that the Republicans have
carried the city by a small majority and
the State by i t least lO.OOO majority.
The Bee thinks the Creeley and hisi
y ana msion
State ticket has carried the city by 8.000
or 10.000. and that indications are that
tne btate ticket is elected. The Picainwe
svs the Parisbof Orleans polled 28.024
i yvii-!). iuni esumaies me
City for Creeley nt 11.000,
majority in the
j 1 CI;ue committee claim
! ,UMr.v n the interior and a majority
I of im. 1,1 ,1)e Sta!t-
.NEW UKLKAXS. .Nov. The Reptlbli
can Slate Central Committee claim the
State by a large majority. Unofficial re
turns from fourteen parishes give Greelev
a majority of 1.952.
VEtlMOXT.
MoxTPEi.iEit. Nov. 5.- Sixty-nine towns
give Grant IS KJ5 and Greeley t 2$.
O "Conor's vote is very light. Three Re
publican nominees are'elected to Congress
by the usual majority.' Eighty towns'give
Grant 23.3G8 and Greeley (3,400.
CONNECTICUT.
Hartford. Nov. 5. Gen. Hawlev's ma
jority in this district is 011. Willi ore
small town to hear trom,Connec ijut sroes
tor Grant by about 3.000 majority.
NEW JEItSEV.
Xewakk. Nov. 5. Returns Irom tho citv
are incomplete, but indicate from 5,000 t'j
0.000 for Grant, and a Republican majori
ty in both branches of the Legislature.
Newark. Nov. 0. The Republicans
claim the State by S.500
nEI.AWAUE.
Wilmington. Nov. 5. Republicans
claim the State by from 1.000 to 2,000 ma
jority. Wr;.MrN;roN, Nov. 7 G-ant and Wil
son canied the State by a Small majority.
Li.rge Republican gains throughout the
State.
YiltGrNIA.
A i.KXAN'itt! a. Nov. 5.The vote between
Greeley and Grant is a tie. Harris (Con
servative), in the Seventh District, is
e'ee'e 1 to Congress, llauton (Conserva
tive), in the Eighth, is also elected.
Rich.monh, Nov. 5. Virginia is coneod
fd to Greeley by 5.000 majority. S. II.
Piatt (Republican) is chosen to Congress.
Richmond, Nov. 0. In 08 precincts in
3) counties, including Richmond City,
Grant has 2.003 m ijority. In these pre
eine's the Democrats made but few g-tins.
The Republicans gained steadily,
parties claim the State.
SOUTH CAROLINA.
Chakle-ton. Nov. 5. Returns
various portions ol' Soudi Carolina
Roth
from
itidi-
cat" tnai (iraui n is a neavv
mi
The white vote is verv light.
m.ij u-.ty
;eokh a.
Ai"f;t"STA, Nov. 5. Greeley's majority
in this city is about 300. and in the county
500. Returns are meagre, and the otlicial
count from the State at large cannot be
had to-nilit. The indications are that
Greeley's majority will be about 30,000.
A LAP. A MA.
Montgomery. Nov. 5. Returns are
meagre, but indicate that the State goes
tor Greeley and Democratic Stale ticket.
New Yoke. Nov. 5. A semi official dis
n ttch from Washington says that Alabama
gives 10.000 majority lor Grant. -
MISSISSIPPI.
New Orleans. Nov. 5. Thirly-fi ye
towns and stations in ?lississippi shows
ni nority of I s:')'.) for Grant. Only eleven
of these towns give a mrjori'y for Greeley.
ten s.
.s !
from w Orleans. Nov. 5. All dis
1 ex as report election quiet.
patches
It coti-
tiuues two
days.
I LOR I OA.
Nov. 5. Part:
I AM.AMASS
returns
received indie tte the election ol Iiloxharn
(Libera!) for Governor.
Tallauass::. Nov. (. Major! lies in five
CO'iniies partially hear I fiom. The esti
mated Republican majori'y is 3.000.
K KNTl'l.'K V.
I n! NV'! 1 I." Vl V "l T'l!i J!
- i oe elect ion pass
turtis are scattered.
ed off v.-rv quiellv.
l) it indicate a very S i r T : t vote in the citv.
jives Gn-eley 15 .): ) majority.
Loi'isvit.i.K . Nov
fall OA'S : (if'elev,
O'Cot.er. 170.
b.-
vote nere is a
Grant, G.UD1:
.231;
JNT'LWA.
Ino; ANAi'ot.r.s. Nov. 5. The Republican
Stale Committee claim a majoiity in the
State of from 10.000 to 15.000." The Dem
ocratic Central Coiumiitee concede the
State 5.000.
l.NiUANArtiLis. Nov. G. Additional re
turns show continued Republican trains.
j Fmm 310 precincts out of 1.20G in the
' State, so far as heard Irom. the net Re
j pubiicati gain is 1 1 .000.
i
I KANSAS.
Toi'kka. Nov. G. Returns from the
j State at- large show Republican gains,
i Topeka gives a Republican majority of
S.0...2: Shawnee county. 1.500 Republican:
Lo.i connly. 3 2 0 )0 Re)ublican; Miami
county Sen Republican So far the Lib
erals have carried only one count v. Fif
teen precinels in Franklin county give
Grant b JO majoiity.
IOWA.
Dks Moinks. Nov. 5 The indications
arc that (Jrant has carried the State by
40,000. Specials to the Mate L'ojislir in
licate Grant's majority at from 50.000 to
G0.OO0.
Di inqt K. Nov. 5. The Republican
Committee claim the State bv 50 000. The
Congressmen are Republican, although 1
ioe contest win no very c!o-e.
Chicago. Nov. G. Republican in-qVi v
in Iowa is not less than 50.000. The en
tire Republican delega ioa to Congress is
elected.
MICUIfiAN.
Dktkoit, Nov. 5. -Grant's majority in
30 towns is estimated at about 21 000. "
Latku Michigan gives Grant 30.000
majority.
DKioiT. Nov. G. The State h s gone
probably 50.000 majority for (Jrant.
Scarcely a doubt that all nine Congress
men elected are Republicans. Legisla
ture, largo Republican gains in both
branches.
WISCONSIN'.
M ilwalkie. Nov. 5. Democrats concede
Ihe Republican majority in tlu; State at
from lit 000 to 15.000.
Maki.son. Nov. o The State of Wis
consin give3 15.00!) Republican majority.
MINNKSSOTA.
Sr. Pall, Nov. 5. The Republican
Stale Central Committee claim Ihe State
for Grant. Averill is elected in the Third
District by o.OOO majority.
r Pai l. Nov. 0. Enough Returns
are
for
in to show thtit the Stale has
Grant by 18,000 to 20.000.
Missoer.i.
Kansas Cirr Nov. C Tho Democratic
county ticket is elected by at least 1.000 1
majority. It is thought G rant will carry
the State, but it is not sure.
NLT.UASKA.
Omaha. Nov. 5. The election pas-ed off
quietly, with full vote cast. Republicans
claim 10.000 majority.
CALIFORNIA.
San FitANCtsco, Nov. 5.- The- election
is very quiet; no crowds ubont the polling
places. The vote so far is comparatively
small, owing to the slowness of the officers
of election. Daniel Mc Neil. D. IL Rail,
anil Samuel Uoothby were arrested for
violating the new election law. It is itn
possible to say how tiie vote stands, owing
to the similarity ol the ballots. Roth
parties are confident of success in this city.
The Courts are all closed, and miny firms
suspended busines for to-day. Many hun
dreds are voting sigainst subsidy, regard
less of the warning of the Republican J
State Central Commiltce. !
The election closed as quietly as it j
- -.iuougu in several nrM;...
i; ,r . lrei
I iZ "r. , " C11
s m.-n
"Ot y,.i
lot
it
ow
airr
cin
eitii
rot
Francisco. Impossible to tell hVnF
vote stands, hut l&I1w?Jr" .w "e
held
11 h
s ch
pi a
city by 2.500
mnjoritV . n
estimate as high as 5.000. "'ll-'ng the
Um
Th
r are returns from
Sin Francisco, but the eft, i. ... ,c,s
n r ranewco. but the city has r ! . Q
gone lar-ely for Grant and v .. ...
lv no-ntnaf ,h.. rl 1 . - V ""'nUlo-.
. . . i .
J .... vuiui rtuu MlUSlUv
Returns from fifty precincts in GaHfornK
outside of san Francisco shows a rnai
!or Grant of 1.550. out of D.000 1. 1 "1" ?
ed. The Republican State Central Co,, '
mittee claim California by S.000 majorilv
Kisrht precincts in the First Coivrt-sM ' '
I -''Slim-
ni !'i:ucc give Houghton 200
"1- 7 rity'
iiiirty-lwo preciiK-ts criVl. !.,.. -
jor.ty In the Third District ten precincts
give Coghlan 12 majority.
There is much excitement on the tree's
in the vicinity of the (bulletin boards a-id
the announcements of ihe vote were re
Cf ived with great clieerfng by the crowd
The conn ing proceeds slow) y.
Th- total vote ol the city is about
000 larger than expected, from the slow
ness m noting in ine early part of the dn
v.
lieturns come m slowly Total
2
Vote
.1 is. in tlie el
flection in JSCS the vote
Returns from nftrun .....
was
:..;.). Jieturns Irom
cincts give Grant a majority of (ISO n
ti-subsidy was carried by an overwhelm
ing majority. Twenty-nine precincts u,
hear 'rom. q
-In ninety-six precincts In California
outside of San Francisco and Sacra in-,.'0'
Grant has 4.500 majority out of 20o)oii
votes.
Sa FitANCtsro. Nov. 5. Grant's ma
jorities are reported as follows; Ii)d:ann
10 000; Iowa. 40 000.; Illinois.' 30 Ot'O
North Carolina. 5.000; New Jersey. 3 OOu
Greeley's majority in New -York City is
23 000. against Seymour's majority ofCO
00!). New York State gives Grant abo.it
2.J.O00. New Hampshire, -1.000. NevaU
has gore for Grant, but the Regulative
ticket is very doubtful.
Republican advices from the East re
port tint Pennsylvani i gives grant 100
0 ) ) majority. In New York State. Grant s
majority. 25.000. New England soliOfW0
Grant. Delaware 2.000 for Grant. O
San Francisco. Nov. . California givrs
Grant about 0.500; Page, 2.00!); Coftilun
..'o, jiougnion, .,w; Clayton. 1.0J0.
Later Complete return of ih0 c;tT
saow a total vote of 23.12," Grant's ma
jority. 587: Clayton, lor Congress, 1 054
tor Colorado subsidy, 13 845. " '
San Francisco, Nov. (..Corrected re
turns ootids city show Grant's majority
to be 5!)5; Claytou'3 majority. 1 17y
against subsidy. 15.818.
Returns from counties, towns and pre
cincts continue to be received at head
quarters of the Republican State Central
Committee and by the Associated Press.
Giant has probably carried the State by
about 8.000 majority. Clayton elected
to Congress from this District by .17!i
majority. Oghlam. Houghton and Page
ate all probably elected, although full re
turns Horn their districts are not in. The
election of their opponents i claimed by
the Democratic Sta'e Central Cotnm ttee
San Francisco. Nov. 0. From Nevada
the returns are incomplete. Jones h..K
carried Story. Lyon. Washro and Otn.s
by counties. No estimate has been re
ceived of the probable majority in the
State.
Jhe Press of Xew York Ci v on
tl e
Hestitt of the "Election.
O
Nkw Vor.ic. Nov. G. The ll'ml' elec
tion estimates give (Jrant 23 States and
Greeley 8. or 203 electoral votes .,, 0
for Greeley. The popular majority for
Grant is placed at 350,000. Tt'e Ih mhl
editorially says: '-Whether the result w: 1
be accounted lor by the poprd.tr strength
of General (Jrant on the one hand, or the
weakness of Greeley and tie? feebleness
of the liberal Repuoiieans combined wi.h
the Democratic bolt, on the other hand, it
is in many respects the most remarkable
ol any Presidential election in the history
o! t ho country.
The Trihtntc gives Grant 2G0 electoral
votes at the lowest, and S2 lor Greelev.
with the rest doubtful. There is scarteiv
a parallel, it says, in the completeness c'
the rout ar-.d triumph. Grant has n.i
four years' more power, with Congres
sional majorities. Whatever reform be
may-eei-: to effect, he will have the aid cf
he Trlh'.)ie.
T he World places the popular innjori
'ies at 3)0.0)0. It says that the dd'eut
is due to the Democracy imrrenderiag to
Greeley; that the duw ra'.izi: i m coi.s--q
iont upon the New York ring specula
tions ot a y ,9r or two ago disheartened
the prtrty and c m-ed tin riouiiaa.ion at
Baltimore; that the party had not recov
ered in lime from the Tammany taint to
do anythtrg until too late.
The 'limes jrives (Jrant 300 eVc'end
votes and Greeley -13, vi.h the balar.cn
doubtful.
Smith when risked whether le
had been seriously injured by the
explosion of the boiler of a steamer,
replied that ;he was so used H
being blown nj by his wife that a
mere steamer had no etll-et ujhui
him.
An honest country parson, who,
in tiie time of great drought was
asked to pray for rain, "Til will
ingly do it to oblige you, hut it is
to no purpose while the wind is in
this quarter."
A trushino- poet asks in the fint
line of a recent eifusion, ''JIow
many weary pilgrims lie?"' c
give it up, but experience ha
taught us that there are a good
many.
A drunkard, on being told that
the earth is round and turns on
its axis all the time, said: I "believe
that, for I've never been able to.
stand on the darned thing.
A cut lemon kcut on the wash-
stand, and rubbed over the hands
daily, after washing, and not Wip
ed otf for some minutes, is an ex
cellent remedy for chapped hamK
-o- ' '
Five musquitoes were seen sit
ting around the candle last evening,
warming their feet, before starting
out on a foraging expedition. IhfV
were arrested.
What is the difference between
a spendthrift and a leather bed?
One is hard up and the other is
soft down.
To tint the wails of a room buiT,
which in many cases is a striking
and pretty color, add yellow ochre
to the whitewash until the color
suits you
Lemon juice will allay therrita
tion caused by the bites of mosqui
toes and llies.
.
An oyster shell put into ft tea
kettle will prevent its being cover
ed with scale.
The juice of pean pods is a Cl,rc
or warts.
nnnno,1 --.lit. 1 -
o
o0
o
0
IS