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About Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1871-188? | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1873)
o o o o o G C O O 3 O o o o o 3 3 o e v o o 0 Pi (;l)7lTVrI-S 3IAE1-H 21, hi). KlVli POINTS IN i'LLOWJ-IIII. IJrothers conic- anl k-t u- ponder Vii;;t we -Mnson.s vowed to do, When j.rcT.-iire.l, at yonder altar, Wo ;t-iuM(d a solemn vow; IM.t ami knee, Lreast, hand ami check,' JcL them now our clinics speak. Foot to foot on iiktcv's ernunl, When we hear a brother's cry, llnnzry, thirsty, barefoot, naked, Willi io'l's niercy, let us Jly; Tliis of u'll our thoughts the chief, How wo best my biin relief. Knee to knee, in earnest praying, None but (iti.l to hear or heed, All our voe and sins confessing;, 1 At us for eaeh other plead ; Let the spirit of our call J'.o to pray for brothers all. lreast to breast, in sacred casket, At life's centre let us seal Kvery truth to us entru.-dincr, Nor one holy IhiiiiT revenl: AVhat a Mason vowed to shield Let him die but never yield. Hand to back : a brother's falling See, Ins burdens are too jrreat 1 S; retell tin? treti -rous h:iii I and hold him Up before il is too lale; l 'ich l i.ht hand is a Mason's prop Made to hold another up. Cheek to ehrek, the timely warning, Wiien the tempier strives to w in, l'r.:e ibrolher's Ixmnden duly, W.u n hiisnu' apiiroaehhe; sm Warn him o'f-'lhv t leadly sna.ie, in lam wiih a brotlier s eare. J'.rother! often let us pnler What we Misuin vowed lo do, When prepared at yonder altar We :i.v.ime.l a solemn vw ; Foot and lan e, hrea-l, h:udandchoek, J.et ti!iem ou oar unties .-.peak. ' 9 ?' ' ni;M:iANi an: tvii-'i:. "i:-..t ::t mornin', last at niuht, I thlikof tle-e. K' -v to all my heart's delight. S'ii.-(;in.-e i, " ea-ii faney hi ilit, Ji ; and crown ot every Iie,u!, Art linm to me. X) r with the irood ceninete, To do or die"; Tilt liiv-i ll' l.ein ath thy feet, i-'le-sh imd fa-hioii al.iiieate, O j:i-o '.to early, lie dow n late? TIs ail for l!:ee. Art r.ct thou my 1 ream of dreams, oJ-r e ery niulil? 1Tci y day" ilh lovin;; beams, Cl"i t hy .-pirit chines and fleams, i-Tk the sun on all my streams, n.ah warm and bright. Far and near, how fir above me! Fa i" and near, how near to love me! llle-is in", tcaeii me, prove me; 1 1 whii mate ! ientle niKt ress, s:ti?0 -iv- l lovelv, O My sweet tale. i I I not a n first wek:iew, Plight thee ::1V troth? .": v-iliat ihou siioidd'.t never rue; J W nVwe'er va yuan I lime miuht h : 'ie-li-ie sh mid never chanvje u two? '-' ! Triu one, true both. The years a bely hau l have laid I ' m my b '. , 'omii "miu : i ery primi--e made To heart and so-.i'l.to iioard and bed? Tn is only v:ulvlli to be --aid: lVai:-.eiod, deir wife? Antiquity oi the &er;ttircs. l"e-.vof us stop to tliii'k Low old t:;e liible is. Yet th(i Setipt.ires are l'elieved ly ca'.xlid critics to contain the filost areieiit forms of truth now known to mei:. With the aiils ,f clirorKtl;eic;d hibes. .niv one unv easily le.ake proist;tllo comparisons belween the antipiity of the books and tnat oi oliu r v.'ritii'.vfsand events. The Kerij)ti;res contain the ouly au thentii; hi.itory of the world liefore the liood. AVe lii.ul in the IVn'a-ten-li 'DO or two stanzas of joe try conipi .-ed in t'ie ant'-dcluvian pa-riod. The Hebrew statutes were enacted a thousand ye;vs before Justinian re fomiedO the lloaiau jurisprudence. In the Ihble v. e lia.ve the record of charaetered rights secured to the people move tha:i two thousand years li 1'ore the YLigi;a C'harta. AN'liat a sei;s;U i m avouM be pro duced if the lirsT chapter of (ieresis sliould appear i'.r the iirst time in n one of our jiapirs to-morrow! Yet ''there can be no doubt that chapter contains ihe old: d w ritiii;;-, twentv tive liiindred years before tlie inve'n tio i of pviidii-.e;. XeDoplion's record of the conversations of Socrates, in his r.Ieniorbiiia. seems an old hook t us, yet si::d;U. topic;? were ilis-euv-ed in Eeelesiastes six liundred years before. The Works of Tacitus, I'lubireh and (Vuctdlian are not modern, yet the books of tho New Test.unei't are older titan they. As to the book of Job, its" a.cve is beyondronieeture. Those who make it ;.i modern r.s they can are com pelled to place its origin at least one thousand years b.-fore "Homer. Whencrriani -was Ivinpf of Troy, Job wa-of remote r.ntiipaity. Tlie name of Alexander ha-, no modern sound for us, yet when Alexander invaded Syria, the b ;ok ,.f Joli miht have been read before him as the Work of :Tt authU" more time honored then than the name of Alexander is now. The writing o,' C-onfucinsaro mod ern compared with rnot of the llible. and the imi.-t that the Hindoos can justly cle.i:n forctheir sacred book-;, the Vodas. is that tliey were v.rivten live hundred years after the death of Moses. The Koran i; a book fresh from the press compared with the Scriptures. ctToo Inactive. If a woman desires to retain the possession of a healthv oraru-.-ation, she must not remain in ert and idle three-fourths of the time. The -women who sit down by the lire to '"keep quiet" and muse over novels, while the physical health 'rows del ieate day by day, and the mind inor Gbtd from lack of exercise, and occu 1'aUon. are more to lie pitied than the over worked voincn of the land, w ho rise early in the luomimjr. refreshed aiter'sweet sleep, and vdth glowing cheeks, quick steps and strong m:is cles. bejn the tak of the day. The workers live longer raid enjoy more th:i:fthe idlers. Women expect men to exert themselves, and rain or shine to po forth to arduous labor, and en courage th?m not to waste their time aiid strength hy uusi:ig whit they aeeomplish. Why not adopt the same plan in reference to themselves, therefore? That it would work well there can he little f.ouht, for health and happiness can sttrelv he attained by eheevful activity. S'ew J-jrs-.yJfj- ti'.llUC. iy-T ""o1liy ttemorC,son of Amos Whittemore tne inventorof theeotton hand-cardniacluno, died in New York w Hw i-'-V1- - as 1,orn 0Aest Cambrid.-e, Mas.. on the l(th vi March ti t. o o Chinamen or While Men Which t LIX'TLT-.E V,X IiEV. FATJIJH: liOUCIIAItl), ,S. J. EVILS AEISIVG IT.OJI Tllil III I'OIITATION OF CHINE-Sn. IYoia the San Francr.seo Alta. Tiev. Father Bouchard, S. J., lec tured last evening tit St. Fraiiem' church, Vallojo street, on " China men or White jren Yliich?" The church, which is one of the largest in the city, was crowded, and many were unable to obtain admittance. The subjects elected by the Itev. lec turer is more popular now than it has been for sometime. Attention has been called to the effects, of Chinese emigration on "our hoys," and it has been made the theme of dis course before Temperance organiza tions and other societies. Father Bouchard is admittedly a gentleman whose reputation as a scholar and thinker stands very high He is a close ohsorver of current events, and as a lecturer he is tiuent and even brilliant. He touches all subjects upon Avhich he lectures with great care, yet he exhausts them, so to speak ; and while his extreme cau tion and nice selection of phrases make his remarks entirely uiiobjec tior.ahle, he still cuts as severely and perhaps more severely, than they who disregard the feelings of those who ftifier from them in opinion. Under all the circumstances, the an nouncement of a lecture by Father Bouchard on the subject selected could not have failed to draw a large attendance. Before proceeding to the subject of his lecture Father Bouchard said he was smTering from a severe cold, but he should try to entertain the audi ence. The subject was a strange one for him, but it is exciting a good deal of interest, lie considered it strange himself that he should have selected it, and almost wished that he had not. But he seized it that he may make it tlm means of helping the goodSistei-s of Presentation Convent. The question of the importation of the Chinese is one of great import ance, and he was glad the people were waking rip to the fact. The importation of thousands of idolaters to our country can be of no good. The journals speak of the wealth to To obtained hy cheap labor, hut the journalists who vide free over our railroads would do well to examine still closer this question of free labor. In less favored governments w here labor is cheap we lind a pampered aristocracy who live at the expense of the many. When the rate of wages is low, the moral and intellec tual status of the people has fallen. Cheap labor has left many monu ments of it:; results ; sach as the Pyramids of Egypt, the C'oliiseum at Borne, and other Collo sal ruir.s. What citizen of the United States, who pretends to love Ids country, would say let us also leave great works like those behind re. even if we i:i.i-t reduce ten or twenty mil lions of our people to that servitude of the builders of those monuments f Egypt and Borne V Such language would be treasonable, and the man uttering it would deserve to be in carcerated for life. In Great Britain cheap labor aid d hy machinery, have reduced the con dition of the operative to an abjeei and degraded condition, to live;; of suffering and toil worse than slavery. Are citizens of the United States wil ling to have their fellow oiii :ens re duced ! the same miserable condi tion ? The man who would sav lie is. is a parasite and a fratricide. lie could cat the throat of his father and of his mother and sell his country for self the only god he wor.-hips. If money was the only object, the ar gument of those who favor the intro duction of Chinese would seem good. As it is, however, based on a low, sor did, degraded basis, for which every thing worth having is to he sacriiiced, it must he refutd I. The cheap labor of the Chinese is no advantage1 to the oountry in which they live. If cheap labor existed among our own people, and that there was a jiroportionate reduction in rents, etc., it would be perhaps of s mc bencilt. Bat how much of the money earned hy the Chinese do tliey invest here ? The lecturer answered this question by referring to the everyday assertion that Chinese r.end their money homo, and go with it. There are, said he, about eleven thousand Chinese in this city, and I am informed lv ihe Assessor that thev pav onlv tf'.hOoO taxes, or about one-third of the amount paid by one citizen. The loss bv lire occasioned through thfcir carelessness is greater than all that lias been realize;! from their labor. By their agency white citizens are driven from honorable labor to leal lives of infamv. lint we cannot blame the Chinese, and I condemn all harsh measures toward them. They come here or are 1 trough t uit here, and they find employment, and those employers helj to hring about that which they may live long enough to repent. The lecturer then referred to the inconsistency of mak ing war on slavery in the South whil,. they introduce another class of hu man servitude: for these Chinamen como here to serve out an allotted 'dme of bondage, diilering little from At' riean slavery. It also encourages slavery in China ; and those men who encourage the one, or employ slave labor, deserve the condemnation of Ids fe'lo w man. The speaker insisted that it was unconstitutional and ille gal, and deserving of the severest censure. A great many think that the C iiinese are benefitted bv eemin" aeaong ns. Our phiIantln.V i-.f-; '?L religions zealots teach them to read, and then introduce them to the Bi hle. The effort is commendable but the result is not equal to the rfort ami the whole eubrt is abortive-' ltness the unfortunate vom-u who mfest the city. I doubt that they will ever be conv-'vV'.l t- . ,i. - impossible to convert them at home. if uakohe nns,ionaries who have ?(nl,VV':UVOrt0a OUt Of the -e -0,000.000 oi souls in China and t:ie tie cast-awn v taiien m charge bv the mts d nuns. And he believed his Pro" ant brethren were not even ces -ful. Even if tliey came here "free m any censurable Lumbers ti,.,.. j would he dangerous to our country ' because they are an inferior race. " j The speaker then went on to shoAv that, with a civilization ex'endine- ' hack more than ihoOO vears. with an ' immense population and wealth Avith ' a large sea-board giving them facil- ! ities for communication Avith foreign ' powers, they have stood still. and ! have made no advancement in science I ciMlization, commerce, or tig --.s ! They are not a hrave people, as evinced by their wars with England and France. He referred to the ef fect upon the morals of tho people, and summing up, said : " Yet these people are willing to desecrate the land that gave birth to a Washing ton ; to men who proclaimed in the ears of the British lion the Declara tion of Independence; to desecrate the 'home of the brave and the land of the free,' oy introducing those vicious, immoral pagans, to this free countrv. The lecturer then drew a glowin"- contrast lie t ween the Chinese and white men, and said we want the white man to perpetuate our glorious institutions, to maintain our self respect at homo and our influence abroad, and to make this American Itepuhlie eternal. The lecturer thanked the audience for their presence and kind attention, and then left the pulpit. Another "Litigant" Kill. It will ho remembered howl utterly the llepuhlican press denounced the "Act to protect litigants," character izing it as an "outrage upon popular rights, enacted for the purpose of maintaining a pauper press, which would starve without the enforced patronage of unwilling Itepiiblic ans." One would have thought that these chivalrous editors would scorn to be beneiitted by a similar measure, and that none but impecunious Dem ocratic publishers could be so base as to accept patronage under such circumstances ! But, gentle reader, such a supposition would be falla cious, and had the Bitigant Act giv en the advertising to those indignant Badieal scribblers, they -would have defended it as one of the be.r.t meas ures ever enacted by a California Legislature. To show that wo are correct in this declaration, Ave will cite modern instance is nec essary m perfecting title to home stead and pre eruption chums to the !ublie lauds to have certain notices published, and if all such publica tions were given to one iaier in each ".'"I VLA.JLIAV I, it. IIVI.IHI 4l lilt l.tlVt." to the lucky proprietors. Willis Drummond, Commissioner of the General Land Olliee, has promul gated an order requiring all such notices in the Stockton District to be published in the Stockton Lu U y ,--, and that journal now employs the type a while a go used toprint denun ciations of the " Litigant Act," in perfo.iming this services for the un willing settlers of the San Joaquin Yalley. It makes a great difference as to whose ox is gored. The Imh: l;l;t thought the Litigant Act Bull a terrible l.ea-t ; but the Land Ooicc Bull is a most lovely creature! The Fresno J-J.fpos',''jr is of quite a diil'erent opinion, however ; and the editou gives vent to his ju.-t indigna tion in the folio v. ing vigorous terms : "The action of Commissioner Drummond., making the Sioeton i,, ':',f the organ of the Laud 0:Uee for ihe Stock Ion D;sti it is a most unwarranted and uncalled for interference with private business. It is a "litigant bill" of the worst t lass. The Stockton I, ,'rj-, ih ,J is an adm!ni -'( ration organ ; a repre sentative of every Bad iced scheme of plunder, and has no feeling or inter est in common with the people of the District vhi -k is to be made to fur nish subsistence for it by the uncall ed for edict of Willis Drummond. The J.il-jru,l,-;,t ha; a circulation of one copy in this county. We receive1 that one as an exchange. We do not think it circulates over one hundred copies in all the counties of the Stockton District, outside of San Joaquin. Under this mandatory or der of the Commissioner", for the re-asou of its limited circulation, evil disposed parties will be enabled to possess them ;elves of land, and min ing claims, the rightful property of others, without any notice being seen by the parties interested. If the Commissioner thought the local pa pers were charging too high, why did ho not establish his prices, and let the work still remain at the dis posal of the county papers which alone can give a proper notice ? Bed tliis was only the ostensible o! eject of the order. The real reason is to bo found in the fact that between now and the H2d day of Ahirch all home stead and pre-emption applications made prior to the 'S2 day of ?Iareh, 1S'2, must be proven up, and this, together with the new applications, will throw, at the prices established, lifieen or twenty thousand dollars' worth of adveiiising per year into the hands of the proprietors of the I,i'.l-Kil.-ut. The country publish ers frequently take their pay from the applicants in farm produce ana! labor, but the organ will demand and re ceive coin." .fosa Arit'-;. Ia;Iiy 3Iitsf. What's the matter, Boh?' ' Sam, Avho am IV" Y'hy. you are yourself, Boh Har rison, ain't you?" Xo. far from it." "Why, what's the matter?" "Well, sir I'm so mixed up I don't knov.- avIio I am." " Don"! take it so hard to heart." " I ain't; I'm taking it in m- hand kerchief." " Well, sir, Avhai's the matter?" " Whv, I am married." "Married? ha! ha! ha! Avhy, sir, you should he happy." "Yes. but how many are so?" "Yell, sir, as I said' liefore, don t take it so hard tell us all about it.'" "Well, Sam, I'll tell you how it is. Y'ou see. I married a Avidder, and this Avidder had a daughter." "Oh yes! I see how it is. You haAe been making love to this daughter." "Xo! worse than that. Y'ou see, my father was a widower, and he married this daughter, so that makes mv father my son-in-law, don't it? Well don't von see how I am mixed m.?" Well, sh "Xo, I or ly wi.-h it Avas. Don't yovt se niA- stepdaughter is mv stepmother, ain't she? A Yell, then n r mother is my grandmother, ain't she? "Well, I am married to her, ain't I? So that makes mo mv oAvn raudfathes-, doesn't it?"' There have been some recent hor rible murders by the Piegan Indians in Montana. As the victims were only Avhites, the matter will probably he compromised by a Peace Commis sion, unless the Piegans, a la Modoc, spurn the otter of amnesty, a iicav roservation, protection and provis ions. 'I'Jtjsit i in. "ViuDttTiSI Oi?' "bANUitOJjT'LlbHAKY," DIVERS IT! OF CALIFORNIA, BERTIE LEY, CALIFORNIA How I Became a Temperance Man. In my young days I used to in dulge quite freely, although I never was a hard drinker. A thorough knowledge of the business, adtod to a good capacity, made it easy with me. It Avas no work at all, and I would rather drink than not. I have done more deep thinking and scheming and planning to lay out a day's campaign for drinking, than would have been necessary to have urosecutcd asuccessfulmilitary i . . i exuedition into an enemy s country. i would lav out mv lino of march and rush up anil down the front of well-known saloons, and happen in so many different places in such a short space of time that I really as tonished my acquaintances. In the morning there would he the lunch houses to visit, which was no small job, for I often had to go through every one of them from one end of town to the other before find ing the gentleman I was looking for, and I never would have found him if some one hadn't asked me up to take a drink. But those were the truly happy days. Since I have risen to opulence, and hcen aide to walk into a saloon and order with a certainty of not being kicked out, I have f jund there is more real pleasure in pursuit than possession. The man who has no amhition hut to keep his belly full, and do that too on the least amount of work pos sible, is truly miserable. If happy he don't see beyond his nose, he thinks he vo-c every thing. But I digress. Afy wife never saw me drunk but once, and it effected me so I could not have the heart to repeat it. I- will never forget that evening. I was pretty tight when I got home, hut inTess than fifteen minutes I was perfectly sober. She had been sweeping and was sitting in the front room with a broom in her hand. As I entered the house she smolled my breath, and it threw her into hysterics. "The broom commenced playing about, and she commenced dancing. I endeavored to quiet her nerves, but it Avas no use. She Avas too bad ly frightened,, and I started to leave, but somehow or other the broomstick came in contact Avith my head, and broke it the broomstick in two. It Avas a new instrument that I had made her a present of the day Ave went to housekee 'ing, and I felt so sorry for her that I fell down on the lloor unconscious. When. I came to, the neighhors had me stretched out on the sofa and avc re bathing my head Avith cold water. My OA-os wove hoth black they are ii a t u r a 1 1 y and t e r r i b 1 y s av oi ! o n . The accident to the broom came near proving fa'al to me. IhlL i : eli and never said any thing to h'-r about it. a a, as so sorry But I have for her I aid n- been verv car.'i'ul ince not to f right- en her. I never travel for health, 1 1 have made several voyages for the on .pose of enjoying" sprees. TUev are not healthy in our house Ax E."gt.ih:i DtvoneE Stouy. A correspondent of the "Cincinnati ('otn-,'-rci(-, Avritir.g from London under date of January 2-'U. says: The fol lowing story is toll in the inns of court ; The late Chief Justice Manle had brought before him a poor sailor charged Avith bigamy. The sailor pleaded guilty, and, on being asked if he had anvthig to sav a1i- the usu al sentence should not he passed, said: "May it please your lordship, my Avii'e ran away Avith another m: n and left me Avitha family of children whom my duties as a British sail; r hardly enabled me to take care of without another wife. What ought I to have doiu "Prisone said his lordship, sternly. 'I Avill tell von what you ought to have done; you ought to have employed a posse of policemen to pursue ' that cloning wife and to have establised a case of (rl i. con. against her; you ought then to have goiie up to the House ot J-ords and secured irom their lordsiups a divorce and then married again. You may sav such a proeed nre would nave cost von live or six hundred pounds, whereas you have not so many pence. But, sir, that in. oves no u'aereuce. ac 1:5 mv OUsi- smoss. sitting ne re as an English judge, to inform yon that this is not a country where there is one Jaw for the rich and another for the poor." The story represents a bit of the irony under which the costly machinery of the lord's court in such cases made way for the di.orec court". Ccner.U iter.;? Illinois' penitentiary has giA-en her a net. i.ro'if r - i . o ,! ilurmg the oast year. Mr. Fronde is to ship from Eng land a series of articles for &cri'uJts'ri Mouth!.. Baltimore is tiving to raise !", Ol.!!) for a statue of the old English Lord after Avhieh.it is named. It is estimated that since the discov ery of gold, Xevada county. Califor nia, has yielded 61X.00:),(.K)0, and her mines are not exhausted yet. Senator Morton of Indiana charac terizes the election of CahlAvell, Sen ator from Kansas, as the most ilagrant ca-e of bribery in American politics. con-iderahle tide of emigration is now sotting toward the Spokane and Palouso countries on the Upper CYJumbia. Much good land there aAvaits settlement. One hundred Apaches recently sur rendered th --m -elves as. p;-.. .oners of Avar at Camp (i rant. The rigid pro ceeding" of Gen. Crook gave this "bent" to their minds. Edwin Forrest left personal estate valued at .J!.o,sd. He died poss essed of over jlUO,00) securities on deposit, stocks, etc., jeAvelry 1,071, painting 17,000, and a library con taining 7,.Jo7 books. HEW YORK HOTEL (Deutfches Gafthaus.) No. 17 Front Rrert, Opposite the Mall Steamship Landinjr, PORTIi.VXD, OHEGOX. ir.ROTHFCS, J. J. WILRE.S, Proprietors. Hoard Week P.oartl Week with I.ou,or:r. Hoard ".1 Day .?.oo . li.lHt THOMAS GHAR51AN ESTABLISHED 1853. DESIRES TO INFORM THE CITIZENS of Oregon City and of the Willamette alley, that he is stilt on hand and doing business on the old motto, that .1 Xinible Six l'cncc it Tlcttcr than a Slow Shilling. I have just returned from San Francisco, Avhere 1 purchased one of the LARGEST AMD BEST SELECTED STOCK Or GOODS' ever before ofTerod in this city ; and consists in part, as follows : Hoots and .Shoos, Clothing, Dry (joods, Hats and Caps, Hosiery of Every Description, Hardware, Groceries, Paints and Oils, Sash and Doors, China wa re, Q uce ns wa re, Stoneware, Crockery, 1 'luted wa r; CS lass ware, Jewelry of Various Qualities And Styles, Clocks and Watches, Ladies and Cents' Furnishing Patent Medicines, Goods, Fancy No- llope, Faming tions of Eyery Imp'emeiitsof Description All Kinds, Carp- ts, Mattings, Oil Cloth, Wall Paper, etc., Of the above list, I can say my stock is the MO si T COHPLETB ever offered in this market, and was selet"d wit h especial care lor tin- Onion City t radi'. All ot which I now olfer for sale at the Lowest f.larket F?atc3. N o usf1 for the ladi s, or any one els, to think of going to Portland to buy goods lor I am J ttTim in 'I to Sell. Vlic.ip and not to allow myself to bu HDERSOLD IN THE STATE CF WILCOX. All I ask is a fair chance and quick pay ments, believing as I do that Twenty Years Experience in Oregon City enables nv to know th r -quirements of t he trade. Com.- one and all and see for yourselves that the old stand ol THOMAS CIIAIiMAX cannot be beaten in quality or price. f wo. i'd be us -les.ij lor me to tell you all t lie advantages I can olf -r you in tle-sal'-ol g .-ds, a, r-v ry st.r- tnul advert i- -. e- s that, and probably you have been disap pointed. A!l I wish to say is C3.!i?, mid Stv,:iu:l Extuimi? for Yonrselvfs fori do not wish to make any m 'stakes. My obj -ct is to tell all my old "friends now that. I am still alive, and desirous to s- 1 1 goods cheap, tor cash, or upon such terms as agr -i-u upon, j e.ariKing all lor the liber al patronage heretotor-1 bestowed. THOS. CI I.MIMAN, Main Street, Oregon Cily, Legal Tenders and County Scrip taken at mar.v. I rates. 1 1IOS. CIIAKMAN. rO'"0),DiX) lbs wool wanted bv THOS. CHAKMAN. GREAT EKGITEMENT!! GOODXEWS! !'!? RICES F.ECLTED TO SLIT THE TWES. LOOK OUT FOE GOOD ACKERS AP3 &GO. b iTAvr-: jr 1 iL stock of ST RECEIVED A IAUCiE SP1UXG AXJ) SUMMER GOODS, which they offer CHEAPER THAN THE CHEAPEST! We would say come and con-inep your self before l.urehasingelsewhere. Our stock consists in part of Fancy and Staple Pry (Joods, Clothing, Hats, Hoots and Shoes, Ladies and (ients Furnishing Goods, Notions, O'rocer ies, Hard Avare, and a great many other articles too numcr ours to mention ; also, Poors, Windows, Glass and Putty, etc., etc. All kinds of Produce taken in rvphnn. for Goods. ALSO Wool Wanted For which avc pay the Highest Prices. S. ACKERMAN & CO. Oregon City, March 21, lVT3-tf. IMPERIAL MILLS, Siivier, LrJIocaue k Co. Oregon City. Keep const tint ly on hand for solo Flour, Middling, Plan and Chicken Feed. Parties purchasing feed must furnish the sack. OREGON CITY BREWERY! J v ? -.i.ii.ri 1. fir it i AYIXU PFKCHAS- .ty, ed the alntvo P.rew- JstZj cry wishes to inform the public i hat he is now prepared to manufacture a Xo. 1 qual ity of LAG Jill IiJiJiR, as good as can Ih obtained anywhere in the Slate. Orders solicited and prompt'v tilled. mmm restauraht 0 X, Jjl OWINO TO THE CONTINFEH 11,1. FU'ssof the Proprietor, leoll Itelotiey, tne P-AKNM IlKSTA I'KAXT is olfer-'d fol'nale. To any one within;; to engage in liiis busi ness, a. baraiii is oiferee. I.KOX Df.I.OCEV. Oregon Ciiy, Oct. IS, j7. johw s e i a r a m , jlaiu St., Oregon Cily. )l.M'F.rn"RER AM) IMP'IRTER OF Siiddlfji, Iljiritest, 1 c. Which hf: oKi r.its as cheap as can be had in the state, at WHOLESALE RETAIL. fi 7"! warra nt my goods as r present . Oregon City, Apr 1 IT, l.-u'-U. a m a n s a 3 0 $ u C. A. KAAS, - - Prop. Slain Street, Oregon City. f EST PILI.I.MU TAPT.ES B Jt h.-iv-'1 been int rodiM-ed, ai in oi:r-:;;ox ;ind t he propri- ti r in vit es t lie :i;t ml hi ol tic- I o vera tuts ioi:iuilar aaius -meiii to them. tjti-: j: a it is st. . SVJ'VI.IEl) with all th" cti. tie -st tci lit i-s of I.i-juors and 'i-j.ar-:. Seoteh. lisn :uul lUiui-biei air a ly famous Wiii.-hi.-.- and Paneh ; ;t;o a No. 1 s?!i rit; (;.u.u::y is e-mii'-e; iv--o:i ( I n :; M T :e i-y, Jan. J , l.'J- MASOXIC HALL PUII.DING, Oreron Cily, : : : On 5011. KEEKS CONSTANTLY . " "''l on hand and lor sal1, - -lie;.p!orcasJi, W ' "' '''"' '-C? P.irlfjr, I'edrooni, Oiliee, Sift ingroom, and Kitchen Furniture, P.ureaus, Ijiunges, Itoeking ( 'lie irs. What not s, Pedsteads, Waslistands.Curl'tl Hair, and Pulu M a 1 1 r e s ses, I "a hi Pillows, Spring fieds. Picture Frames, Mouldings, etc., etc. Sp-cial attention given to l"pho!st'-ry woi-k in an 11s i-rancnes. orders tilled with prompt ne-ss. Itepairing done with neat nes and dispafen. 1- urniture made ord- r I--"' and examine for yourslves. lTnia v7J EHTERPHISE BOOK h JOB offic: OK-:(CXCITY, : OKHCJOX. w.iS,;:;rr:i,A,:Ei to kxk- JOB PRINTING, such as CARDS, i:n.r.-iiKATh rAMI'JII.HTS, 1 ):-; i) s, MOIiTGAGIiS, 7. .1 P. K r.s, l KTTiin-iiKA ns. in fact all kind.? of work done a in Printine Ollice, at 43 rOKTLANI) 111 1 CES. ALL KINDS OF LEGAL BLANKS const andy on hand, and for s..b...f .... i,.,.. 1 price as can be had in the State. -yrxrv 2s. A X D SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. Oregon City, March 21, lST3-tf. Xoiic: of Fua ScttK'ment. In th matter of ihe LsUte of J. S. MeAmmon. uijce.tsed. J. MAMMON, APMINTSTRATOR OF count with prayer fer final settkm.-nt, it wits or dere 1 hy th,: Court that Monday, the Ith day of . j sei apart xor tne li'.-anngoiucctious to Slid reTvirt. at u-'iii h te.w. n .,rna,i,.Mit. el arc hereby notified to appear ami make their ot.j etions if auy they huv.?. Jty oitler of .-vncsc: .i. k. WAIT, vomit v Jnd:re. 11. F. CAUFI -LD, Clerk. ma7wi - I -.v. -.. - t- WATCHES AND JEWELRY. THE UXliE H I G X E D AX nounce to t lie citizens of Oregon v. ,7 City and Clackamas county that they have just opened a JEWELRY ESTABLISHMENT ix Oregon City, Main street, next door north of Shades S:1. loon, where they Avill keep on hand .and Tor sale all goods pertainiiig to their line, attho lowest livino katks. Especial attention given to the repairing of FixeTimkPikcks. All goods sold and work done warrant, d. GEO. A. HAAS & SON. Oregon City, Feb. , lS73-tf. o WAGCN AMD CARRIAGE M A ST TLT FACTORY ! reiHE UNPEHSIOXED, JL liaving increased the di mensions of his premises, at the old stand on the Corner of Jlaiit and THird Street, O Oregon Cily, Oregon, Takes 1 his method of informing his old pa trons, and as many new ones as may i. pleased to call, that he is now prepan-tl, wit h ample room, good materials, and tin , very best of mechanics, to build si new, r"-'1 construct, make, paint, iron ami turn nut all complete, any sort--tf a vehicle from a com moil Cart to a Concord Coach. Try nie. IJIsnitsiiiitliitir, Horse and General Jobbing neatly, quieklv, and cheaply done. - 1 A VII SM i i II. WILLIA3I SIXGEIt HAS KSTA UIASIIKD A FAGTQRY FO TrlE rAiiUFACTUPiZ OF Ft:rnii:t.i ro, and Doors, and 3iorL!)i.xr; OF ALL. SIZES. Tle-y will aNo do Turning of every "de scription to order, WITH NEATNESS AND PTSPATCH! , r?".Ml Avfirk Avarr.mt'-d. Shop on 're-elf Kiver, m City Mills. I a-wis' biioit G OUT OF T S. J. McCORMIOK "ITS If ATTV TO 1NFOKM JUS NfMLKOl fi ierl, iwliou.-, aud the iiablic iu j.Mii-ni!, thut he has -w ,- II K , hKk.UiLLN but. ii AT ns:xt cs:r"Tij.ti. jjai$:v1-:t, "Willi ;v Complete Stock of o C tat :1c ;t ery, c lank Backs, GOLD PELS, CUTLERY, ETC., Whkli lie will d'sposc of -IT THE LOWEST rc.SSIBLE fliTfES. Sal.-, rijit lens J7o(-. iv,-d f.,r all tl.cCri idar Nc.-pI-i aud Magazines, Avlii.-h will he ik'-livi'i-.lto any part of the State. TlVblin. --7A- V. O "Vrai sew ewryfting needed 1 a family, froza o " -cai. iu vae i:(jiiiest lairic, it iojn ?ronr: ttcssk, ziohz: iisxis or -vonic, A5D IHTTTEU WOKK,0 Tlian any other machine. If there is a Tloronce Sevrins JTa chirio '.vithia one thousand miles of Kan Francisco rot working veil and pivmpr entire F.atLsfnet:on, if I am in lormed of it, it Avill ? rfV-ivV-.! tr without expense of ur.v hiiivl to i-.o evner. SAMUEL HILL, Agent, 13 New Montgomery Street, Grand Hcte! Bu:!dinr, an Francisco. Seiul for Circulars and aamjrie rf the itorfc. Active JLgenta wanted im every place. tfl pr (Jinfl ptTdity! Awnts wantotl ; All 43 vJ LU ij) J i-i.e. -e of working people, of -ii iu-r bi-x, youirr or oM, make moie mone y at work tor u.s hi their epare moments, or all the line, tli;in at anything else. I'articnlars tree. AJ-lrcss ti. Stinmn & ':., I'ortlaci, Maine, fciptetubcr 27lh, 1S72:15'. .olicD of Filial Settlement, o In the matter of the Kstate of Charles Cuttinsr Sr., dcceascl : in the Cour.ty Court for Clacka ma count v, Stafe of Oregon. rnMIi; A I "MINIS HATOlt tUTSATD ESTATK haviu. tilefl hi account for linal (settlement thereof, it onlered by thn Court that Mondav, the 7th djy of April, 1;3, at 1 o'clock p. m. of said day, be set apart for said final settlement wi'h haiVs Cutting, Jr., the administrator thereof. Hy order uf J k AV -VIT i'-A'.VV'L--5-l. Clerk. ' to.Judw. UL KIVT A: V AHIiKN, Atfys for AJiaiuLrtiat'jr. niaT w 1 O o o e o -0 O O O O C G 0 C0 o O O O o O o o