4 t 5 V . c o o VOL. 8. OREGON CITY, OREGON, FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1874. O NO. 30, Of if ill' f IF ft iF I i& to 4y )& & I THE ENTERPRISE. i'local democratic newspaper K O It T n i: Farmer, Business Man, Family Circle. K IilT.D EVERY FRIDAY. Lv. xoLrrisrn:R, tDlTOR A XD PUBLISHER. OFFICIAL PAPER FOB. CLACKAMAS CO. OFKf'E rw Ir. Thessins's Briefc, nexl djor to John Myers' store, up-stairs. Term of Subscription J 8i(il Copy One Year, In Advance $2.50 : " Six Months " " 1.50 lYrm of Advertising Trthsi-nt advertisements, including hll legal noHces, square ot twelve Un-s one wk -- $ 2.50 Freach subs 'ue?u insL-rtion l.0 One Column, one year 120.00 a tarter" ' " 40- Business Card, 1 square, one year 12.00 SOCIETY XO TICES. OKIXOV I.OIKJK XO. 3, I. I. O. .fi-et every Thursday Ki evening at 7'u o'clock, in the iSvi Oui Fellows' Hall, Main street. Members of the Or der'are invited to attend. Bv order N.G. uifiiiicc.v ii-:c:iu?hi.oik:u xo. 3, I, t). t. r ., -Met is on '.no fxt- ,.1 ..,,.1 .,iiilh 'I'lii-s- f 'li-i-' ------- ------ ri etal evenings each nioiiui, ....a,.; at ""At oVloek. in the Odd IVfl.ws' JIall. MemU-r-sof the Degree ar livited to attend. AiT.vo.iiAii i,oix;i: xo. i,A.r. fc .a . M., Holds its i-egnlar com- a iiju .ieatioin on the First and .Vv Third S.it unlays in eaeh month, at J oYloek from ihe-tli of Sep. temU-r to the :.'Kh of March ; and 7'i o'clock from the li'Hh of March to the 'J it Si of Septcnioer. iirethren in good Mtauding are invited to attend. liy order of W. M. FALLS llXCAMlMlliNT XO. -l,I.O. O.K.. Meets at Odd Fellows' 0 CS Hall on the 1 irt amlThird Tties- ,o7 d av of eaeh month, l'ati iarelis in 'jjod standing ;irc invited to attend. rV.lFK r.M'AMlMSi.M' . 2, C. li.. Ii. Meets it il 1 l-VUows' Hall, in re-Z-: -itV Or-.Mii, on S ituril.i evening, at 7 .,-.'! .f-'c. .!eiil.. rs i the i.r.-1- r :ir - m-ni- .l to :M'-n I. M. .'. Ai MK . C. J. I. l-. v - n, II. s. maJ.ly ? v -v A" s .v c .4 i.' J x .J. W. M. 3.)., I'M Y.-iiClAX AXU SI RGEOX, H (s o .v r i t )', o ; o .v. toyoin--" t"i-st:ilrs in Charman's r.rlek, M n stn-. t. soirl Hi. W. H. WATICIMS, M- D. I Sur'i'iosi. C i t 1 : I I -K 1.1 i'i Ho.v's T ii!pl'-,f"rrii r P.r,a:ll Alii r tr- ts. H 'sivi. ucv cor;u r of .l.nri a:i'l S-v.'.-itii str-ets. Vi'. V.. jl Oil EL AM), AT TORNEY-AT-LAVV; it'.:j;o.v t-i'i'Y. iiti-:tx. ATTORN EY-AT-LAW: 0?Z".3?1 CITY, - - OREGON. Bi.iFKIi.TE Charm m's riek. Main si. oniarlsTJ :tf. JTTOJViVS 1D t'OrXSELflRS AT-LAW. O rog on Gity, Oregon. ayWIll praetiec in all th- Courts of the tat. isiwfial attention jjivi-n to casi-s in tie- l.. uuiti unie at ur:'i;on Lity. - o.uirlTJ-tt'. h. T. I A 11 IT, ArO HZ. Y-AT-L A W, oniTTjx rirr. OR EG OX. FFICF. Over Topfs Tin Store, Main ifr,s"- lmarTMf. ICE-CREAM SALOON' A X I) 11 T A IT 11 A ?vtT : LOL'IS SAAL, Pr'oj.rhior. Main Street, - Oregon City. I t'E ri.KAM WILL r,E SERVED FROM ,m S"-J-Vr l.hls Uati lhX l"e Summer s.. n. 11U. best qualities ot K1IKXC1I and AMEKIfAX CANDIES. Ice for-sale in quantities to suit. )i V1k IS r'WTOKKICEEUILDIXG. lgal " ikUts C lackamas Count v Or. de , n.! Oregon city Or"rl BOUGHT AND SOLD ROTARY PIJ1JLIC. to ;'"iated. roilH-tions att-n,od to and a v -neral Crokeae business carried 1 Jantitf. J:0IIX 31. 1IAC0X, V-egon City, Oregon. t..trytman 4 Warner's old stand l-'rom Another Tax-Payer. Oiif.oon City, May 11, 1874. Editor Enteki'hise : I notice in Your last issue, which I got bold of by accident as I am not a subscriber, that there was no money paid into the general city fund from the taxes received. This must be an error, or there has been some speculation prac ticed. I paid my entire taxes in coin, and I see no reason why the money I paid should not have reached the Treasury. If the charges you make are true, you will confer a favor on lie by letting me have some evidence on the subject, and also inform me who it was that collected the taxes. I have been a Kepubliean all along, and voted the entire city ticket last week. Had I known these facts, I can assure you I would not have done so. If such barefaced pecula ulations are true the people ought to know the facts, and be on their guard in the future. I know that more or less money has always been collected on account of citj- taxes, and how it is that only while H. L. Kelly was Assessor and Collector that coin was paid into the general fund, is a mat ter of surprise to me, and I cannot understand it. I am not prepared to believe that such cond.net would lie tolerated by the city authorities, and trust you will give this matter your further attention. Yours, A ltErtTlIiIOAX. In reply to our correspondent, we would state that we had been inform ed by several persons that no coin had reached the City Treasury, and wc took the trouble, in order to an swer the above inquiry, to ascertain from the Treasurer himself as to whether any money had been paid into the general fund of the Treas ury, and we learn that less, than 10 was paid. Hon. 1). P. Thompson told us before he went to Washington, and about the time he was posting notices about the street that he wish ed to buy script, that ho had been obliged to pay all his taxes in coin because a certain broker demanded too much fdl his script, and lie was now going to raise the county and city warrants so as to malfe him come up. tSinee his return and the nomination ol the lta4ical ticket, he appears not to remember whether he paid coin or script. Uut there are plenty who do remember what tl ey paid their taxes in. That there has been peculation, we have good reasi n to believe. Mr. Caldwell was tax Collector, but Y. P. Burns was his deputy and did all the work. The sum collected last year by Mr. Kelly, when the script was pretty generally circulated and down to 75 cents, was 17'.) ; and this year as it appears, it was less than r? 10. The matter ought to b investigated by the Council, and if the facts are not as we have stated them, we will cheerfully give the parties interested the benelit of correct ions. I Sow They Kcpui'.iale. To show the Republican party Las "repudiated" the corruption of Gov. Woods' Administration, says an ex change, we need only mention the fact that the party has in every pos sible instance publicly and privately befriended every individual connect ed with that Administration. It made Woods Governor of Utah. It made Major Berry U. S. Collector at Sitka. It elected Tom Patton to the Legislature. It has now nominated Gen. Heed for the samo position. It shielded Sam May from the pun ishment due to his crimes by puting up partisan juries to aquit him in the iery teeth of the law as given them bv the court. It passed a law directing the State Treasurer to pay every dollar of the stealings and swindles of Woods and his colleagues fter the facts had been duly report ed. And to crown it all no conven tion or paper or authorized spokes man of the party has ever, by the slightest word or hint, condemned any of the thieving of that Adminis tration. Healthy old repudiation" that. What to Do. A good joke is told of E. M. YVaite, Bepublieau candi date for State printer, while at Dal las, Wednesday night, and the best part of it is the truth. The Demo cratic and ltepublican candidates were treated to a serenade in the evening Gov. Grover and Mr. Brown being serenaded lirst. Just before Brown's turn came to ac knowledge the courtesy by a few remarks, Waite rushed frantically up to him and said, "Brown, what arc you going to say? I suppose I'll have to say something, and I would like to know beforehand, so I can prepare a little something." Brown replied, "I've got an old Fourth of July oration tliat I delivered last summer, and am going to shoot that off. That's all the pieee-I know." "My God Almighty!" said Waite, "I can't reply to that what shall I do?" Mercury. An exchange says that it is a downright impertinence for the Ke publican party in Oregon to be run ning candidates for State onicers while the cases brought against ex Seeretarv May to recover his steal ings are" still pending. It will be time enough to ask the people to trust another Republican adminis tration after they have got back rbat the last one stole. Oregon Pioneer Association. Butteville, May Sth. 1874. At a meeting of 'the Executive Board of the Oregon Pioneer Associ ation, called for the purpose of mak ing arrangements for the annual re union of the Oregon Pioneers, to be , A"0ra' Manon Count v, on the loth of June ensuing, the follow ing order was adopted; A proposition to extend a special invitation to the Pioneer and Histor ical Society of Astoria, earnestly so liciting its officers and members to meet with thia Association, on the occasion of its approaching annual camp reunion at Aurora, and with one accord join in commemoration of the grand results eminating from the early pioneers of Oregon Territo ry, was received with .a unanimous responce in the affirmative. The procession -will be formed promptly at half-past ten o'clock, near the Aurora railroad station, under the direction of W. J. Ilerren, Chief Marshal, assisted by his aids, Wallace Graham, By von Grim and Jonathan Wagner, headed by the Pioneer Band. The procession will move directly to the beautifully im proved grounds of the Aurora Park, where every necessary accommoda tion for the comfort of the multitude will be found. Exercises at the Speak er's stand will be opened by the President at eleven o'clock A. M., who will then introduce the pioneer minister, Bev. J. E. Parrish, Chap lain of the Association. At the con clusion of the invocation, the Hon. Stephen F. Chadwick will deliver the occasional address, a copy of which is required to be preserved With the archives of the Association. The Pioneer dinner will be pre pared by the citizens of Aurora, and served in the park at half-past one o'clock P. M., upon terms of perfect equality for all present who may choose to participate at the festive board. During the afternoon and evening short addresses may be expected from Gov. Grover, Judge Deady, the Hon. John Minto, and other Pi oneers from elif'ferent sections of the State and Washington Teritory. Ample preparation will be made for ail who may choose to spend the evening in the phrasing entertain ment of the social circle, or join in the amusement ef the mazy dance. And those who may prefer, can be enteitained at the hill, where the f ithers and mothers of Oregon's civ i 7. it ion will assemble, many of whom can recount the trials and pri vations and triumphs of pioneering on :hls coast more than thirty years ago. The annual election of o.Tuers of the Association will t.-.hn place dur irg the meeting. All Pioneers and the public generally, are invited to attend. The Board, in asking a further in elnlijcence of your columns, would take the onportnnitv of lendei ing to the members of the press- its grate ful remembrance of past favors, espe cially are we indebted to the Pioneer papers of our State, and would say in behalf of the Association that its members will be pleased to welcome von one and all at our annual feast. The business demanding the im mediate attention of the Board being now disposed of, the meeting ad journed to meet at Aurora on Thurs day, the 28th iust.. at one o'clock P.'M. W. II. Hki.s, Secretary O. P. A. tY ho is Tolinau f ' The Salem R'-'ord gives this bit of history relative to the Custem House candidate for Governor: The people of Oregon are of course interested in knowing about candi elates oti'ered for their suffrage, and as Teilman is represented as a man of the people and a farmer, there is a supposition in his case that lie is in nomination without the dictation of the railroad ring in his favor. With this claim made in his behalf we make the following statement of his antecedents: In 1872. dining the contest for U. S. Senator, the ring' was obliged to call on every partisan for aid. Tohnan was sent for to come the length tof the State and watch over the Jackson county delegation, in the intert-st of Mitchell, and he came hero ami helped the ring elect its Sen ator. In 1870 he was working for the election of Williams in the same way, and it strikes us as very natural that the ring should now reward him by this nomination for Governor. A very stringent bill, providing for comjmlsory t-d neat ion has just passed the Xew York Assembly, by 08 to 3.". It provides that every child in the State, between the ages of 8 and lo shall attend some school or be instructed at home at least fourteen weeks in every year, aud that no child shall be employed to labor in any business whatever tlur ing the school hours of any school el ay, unless the child has attendetl school fourteen weeks out ol the hftv-two next proceeding any and and every year in which such child shall be employed. The bill empowers Schoed Ti nstees to enforce tlK-se rules, and to furnish text-books in all cass where parents are unable to provide them. Although the bill has passed the Assembly, there is lit tle probability that it will become a law as all the Democrats and several Republican in the Senate will vote against it. -o - A sentimental editor says, " it is comforting to know that one eye watches fondly for our coming, and looks brighter when we come." A cotemrorary is grieved to learn that his " brother of the quill has a wife with one ovc." COURTESY Forfeited their Confidence. Dick Williams," in his speech in this city saiel if there had been any corruption useel in Portland he elid not know it. The Xeics gays by making such assertions he forfeited the confidence and rospect of his listeners." We are tohl that scores of men, who hael intendeel to sup port him, hearing these statements from his lips, cemclueled (as they could not help conclueiing that a man so ignorant or intruthfl was not fit to go to Congress. Of course Mr. Williams knows of election frauels in Peirtland. He well knows that several huudreel illegal votes were polleel both in the general elec tion of two years ago and the elec tion last fall. He knew all about the perturbation into which the Iting members were thrown by the prosecution of the bribers auel re peaters last fall; he well knows what A knocking together there was of lliug knees, allthe way from Mulkey to Scott, while these trials were pending; he knows that juries were packed; that scores of witnesses were shippeel off some to San Fran cisco, others to Victoria that other witnesses were cached away where Ring Marshals and Sheriffs conhl not or wouhl not find them. He jenows certainly that the removal of Geivernor Gibbs from the Uniteel States Attorneyship was elue to his energy in pushing investigation into the election crimes of which we are speaking-; that the appointment of a venal tool of the Ring to succeed Gibbs was a means adopted by the Ring to put an end to these prosecu tions ami save themselves from the Penitentiary, whicu threatened them. Mr. Williams, it is fair to presume, was in all the se-crets of the Ring. He eloublcss conferreel with them on all important occasions, met with them in their midnight, councils and listeneel to the plans of the conspir ators, if he did not assist them. Mr. Williams' relations with Hippie leave no room for doubt in tlie-se matters. It is for candid and intelligent men to elecide for themselves whether it is reasonable te) siipptjse that a man maintaining these relations would not know something, if not all, of the secrets of tlie guilty Ring. As for his know lenlgei of what everybody lms know ledge, to-wit: that bribery and repeating was carried on in a wholesale manner in this city at the last two elections, there is nothing to decide about it. It is only neces sary to know that Mr. Williams has eirgans of sense and can prece'ivc to determine that point. Mi. Williams' fellowship with the-e men is bad enough; his denial of all knowledge in the matter ot their crimes is worse. IYrhaps we have no right to be surprised at his llillsboro disclaimer. The man who can persuade himself to become the t ol eif Hippie is capable of much that the better class ef men in tlui community cannot account for or indorse. When, therefore, the peo ple of Washington county hear ?Jr. Williams em the stump ileclare that he knows nothing about election frauds in Portland, they will find a satisfactory explanation of his con duct iii the fact that he is carrying the Hippie Hag. At His Old Tricks. Ocr readers will remember one A. J. Curtis, who was arresteel at this place some twt years ago and taken back to Nebraska, for robbing Wells, Fargo & Co., and was subsequently tried and sentenced to one year's im prisonment. But through the influ ences of friends he was soon pardon ed. Ho gained the good opinion of the people here, and his conduct was such as to have given them a very goovl opinion ef him. But he is a bad egg. "We find the following ac count ef him in the Albany 7iV.yAv: Nearly four ye-ars ago a young man calling himself A. J. Curtis, arrived in Portland from the east. Being possessed of good address, well ed ucated, with engaging manners, he was soon employed in the (). & C. Railroad Co.'s" office as telegraph operator. As soon as the road had progressed as far as Salem, Curtis was reportetl for promotion, as he was a tine operator and had proveel a diligent employee. Ho was at once transferred from Portland to Oregon City as agent and operator. Soon after this transfer, an officer arriveul from Nebraska with a requisition lor Mr. Bear Curtis, it scorns, was only an Vm, J. K. Bear being his true name, lfe had embezzleil money while employed as a telegraph oper ator in Nebraska, and then abscond ed. He was taken back, but through the influence of a rich brother, the matter was settled. According to the Orcfrti tan , on last Sunday Dr. O. P. S. Piu miner received a postal card from A. Mitchell, General ,Sti perintendent of the Illinois Central Riilroao, giving a minute descrip tion of Curtis, alias Bear, asking in formation of his whereabouts. At tached to the card is a photograph of the fast young man. It seems that Bear was agent for the Illinois Central at Waverly, Iowa, and ran away Jan. 28, 1874, stealing $l,oJ0. Bear is a bail egg. At a Democratic Convention held at La Grande on the 2d inst.. follow ing persons were nominated: Legis- I lature, E. S. McComas, Dunham, Wright; County Judge, E. C. Brai nard; Sheriff, J. L. Curtis; Clerk, It. S. Gates; Commissioners, J. S. Kenneely ami E. 1 Nevels; Treasur er, J. Hoffer; Assessor, J. Harris. Sorrow shows us the truth, as the darkness of night brings out the stars. OF BANCROFT LIBRARY. Dr. It. .1. Dawne. For the past week the Raelical and Inelepenelent press has been circu lating all kinilsof fnlse ru'tiors, pub lished uneler fictitious rames, in regard to Dr. Dawne. We extract the follcwirg paragraphs from a lengthy letter published in the States Rights Democrat, signeel by A. P. Miller, M. D., who attended a course of lectures nt the University, at I Salem, last winter. The writer says: In the OrejOiiian of May Oth, I observed a eorresponelence uneler the euphonious handle of " Timbuctoo," from Albany, in which the exercised writer, aware of coming events from their present shaelows, utters a feline I wail of despair at the inevitable mil lennium aoout to "JJawne upon the prospects auel aspirations of the Independent candidate for the office of State Superintendent-. Now, Tim, I happen to know some thing of Dr. Dawne and his qualifi cations as a teacher, especially in the Medical Department of Willam ette University. I was a student of that University last winter and listened with pleasure and profit to a course of lectures delivereel by Dr. Dawne, so, Mr. Tim, I speak not from hearsay, but personal knowleelge and observation when I say, among so many esteem ed Professors there was scarcely one more highly appreciated than Dr. Dawne. To 1113- knowledge his mode of teaching was unexceptionable to the class, and more than once have I. heard the remark by el iiTerent mem bers that it wtmld be. to our advan tage could we have had more lec tures f om Dr. Dawn? and less from some ot ier chairs, (not speaking ilis paragingly of any.) This I am pos itive of as one of the class, and whatever ti nt 1 there mav bo in the balance cf Tim's charges. I am able to state, from my personal and inti mate acquaintance with ,Dr. Dawne as one of his students, that this charge is false, and he who made it is cither ignorant of the facts in the case, or has willfully lieel, and has our permission to hang himself upon which ever horn of the dilemma suits him best. Tim charges that those lectures were lorroiccd (as he is assured.) As to the. facts of this, many quotations were "made by him from Dr. Hammond, a work recog nized by the faculty as si standard authority upon Dr. Dawne's Chair, and a work used as a text book by the school. In making such quota tions hewas not an exception to the balance of the faculty, who gave authority for their own statements, te practice, which, beyond a doubt, would not be beneath the aping of even Mr. Oglesby if he is or ever lias been acquainted -with the art of teaching. Again, Mr. Tim acknowledges the I faculty proposed to promote Dr. j Dawne to a more; important Chair in the Department. Wis not t? at evi dence of itself on part of the faculty sufficient as to the meritof Dr. Dawne as a teacher? I have heard more than ene of the faculty pay him the com pliment of being a competent and successful teacher, and they well know- the high estimation in which he was held by the class. One would be led to suppose from Tim's state ment as to the interview betw eon Drs. Dawne and Carpenter, in regard to Dr. Dawne's Diploma, that no exam ination of Dr. Dawne's qualification as'a physician had ever been made, and that the faculty had simply cre ated a chair in that body, and invited him to accept it, which ho did, with out knowing any more of his compe tency than 1:5s own statement. If this bo true, which I disbelieve, it certainly reflects severely upon the faculty, clearly making them ehargc ! ablv with imposition upon the class they essayed to teach. As to the copied sermons of Dr. Daw ne, I can sav but this: I have frequently been in his office when writing his ser mons, and if copied, it surely mmt have been from memory, where they were most accurately en graft oil by a thorough and careful study. As to the assertion of Dr. Geary in regard to the sermon in question if. is not positive upon the word of Tim, that such assertion was made, but if c en so, certainly vanity and political I ar tering in the late connection ef Dr. Geary with the Hippie Convention is sufficient evidence of his filihility as to accept his statement, with elue allowance. Justice to whom justice is due is my motto, and in justice to Dr. Dawne, (as far as I have asserted from my own personal knowledge) as a gentleman and teacher, it is my purpose to refute the charges preferred by Tim am confident nine-tenths of his class will sustain me in what I have written in his defense. If Tim feels confident of having told the truth, I challenge him to contradict anything I have said with proof, and name his indi viduals, and also be so kind as not to take refuge dehind a uom tlt plaint;, but throw off his mask and lend the influence of his good name to what he has covertly assertetl. Falsi:. The opposition press and speakers are, as usual, verv harel up for something to say against the Democratic candielates, and resort to all sorts of misrepresentations. One of these is that Hon. A H Brown, candidate for T ed for the bill whereby the State was to pav the Lock and Dam Com pany SfiOO.OOO for a ten years' lease of the Locks. This is unqualifiedly false. Mr. Brown could not have voted for it, as the bill was killed in the House where it was originally introduced by Ben Simpson, and did not reach the Senate. Try gain. Tirrrs. The Arkansas Troubles. To understanel the situation in Ar kansas, it is necessary to know that in 1872, Baxter ami Brooks were rival candielates for the office of Governor. Baxter was a Southern scalawag, or in other worels.a native of the South, convertoel into a Republican. Brooks was a Greeley man, an original Abo litionist, and was supported by the Democrats ami Conservatives. There can be no eloubt that Brooks was fairly elected, yet at that time Baxter had t e support of the paternal Fel eral Government anel he was inang urateel. Time went on and Baxter returned to his first love. He went back on his new-made Radical friends and eoepnetteel with the Democrats. In the meantime Brooks was not idle. He saw how things were working, ami it oceured to him that he might yet get the office, provideel he chang ed his politics. Brooks was a chap lain during the war, and near the close of it, he commanded a negro regiment. Ho . therefore became sweet on the negroes. He became also the frieml of Powel Clayton, McClure and other elistingnished Radical rascals. Encouraged by Federal influence he at last attempt ed a cot'jy (VKtat, and getting a writ of ouster from a corrupt Judge, he forcibly ejecteel Baxter from the State House. Baxter thereupon removeil his Gubernatorial office to St. John's College which is on the outskirts of the city of Little Rock, and near the Arsenal. His advanced post he es tablisheel in the Anthony House, but a short elistance from the state capitol, the location of which places we are as familiar with, as the streets of Ottumwa. Brooks, entrenches himself in the State House and calls feir troops, issues proclamations ele nouncing Baxter as a traitor. Bax ter follows suit anel pronounces Brooks a pretender and usurper. Each of these demagogues call upon the paternal government for assist ance and the paternal government answers that it will only interfere to prevent bloodshed. Yet it is evielent that all of Grant's sympathies are now with Brooks, whom he kept out of the office sixteen months ago, and would have kept him out longer, had not Brooks changed his coat and given in his adhesion to paternalism. The entire affair is disgraceful in the extreme and no decent man can avow- himself iiv favor of either of the demagogues. It is the legiti mate result of a mongrel voting pop ulatiem, the conversion of ignorant negroes into American citizens. Mexico and South America furnish ample proofs oi the degeneracy and demoralization which follows the amalgamation of the rae-es and we are beginning to have a taste of South American and Mexican hell in the Southern states of this country. One of tin; Carolinas has been trans ferred into a negro Dahomey, im poverished anil wretched. Missis sippi, once a rich and powerful com monwealth is but the haunt of vaga bonds and office holding mulottoes. Lousiana is debased, degradetl and on the downward road to ruin, and now Arkansas is in a state of civil war and all this for the benefit of negroes who neither appreciate lib erty or are willing to accord equal rights to the whites. 3Iore Jut. The Salem Record, an Inelependent organ, which is not so low elown as the Regular Ring organs, has the following in regard to the feu for eleeds: We have taken a little pains to ex amine the charge of Judge Teilman that the School Lane! Commissioners are illegally charging $5 for each deed made, and putting the money in their own pockets. The act of 0-tober27th, 18(M, Code, page 8S5, has the following provision in rela tion to State lands last of Section G: "And -when the purchase meiney, and interest, if any, shall be fully paid, the pui chafer shall receive a deed, substantially in the following form, on the payment of a fee in coin of live dollars therefor." -The provision that the fund raised by the fie collection of this five dollar fee shouM go to pay the salary of the Com nissions 400 each was after wards repealed, but we cannot see that the f-c-tion provieling for the lee has ever been repealed. Since then the fee has been collected and deposited in the treasury. Col. Cann reports 3.175 deposited up to September, 1S72, and as much more has been collected and deposited since then. As his report was made to the last Legislature and ap proveel, we elon't see the use of charging fraud. The spirit of falsehood doesn't really help any cause. A I,eak in ihc Matter of Henls. In the canvass of 1870, Grover and Chadwick complained to the people about the extravagance of Woods and May. Let us see how the two " ad minstrations will compare in the matter of rents, for instance. May paid Jo. Holmaafor the entire up per part of his building $350 per quarter, or 1,400 per year. This was enough. The instant, however, that Grover and Chadwick got in they not only refused an advanta geous offer made by Col. Reed, for the rent of the Opera House, but they raised the rent paid J. Holman to 500 per quarter, or 2,000 per year. Sltitesman. The above statement is not true. For additional facilities the rents were increased during Mr. May's term as Secretary of State. He paiel me 500 per quarter, or 2,000 per annum, and when his successor. Mr. Chadwick came into office I tolel him what the rent was and have received the same rent from him that I diel from Mr. May. Joseph Hozm:av. SaVm, May 13, 1SU. Hon. II. Hrovvn. From the Bedrock Democrat. We see it stateel in some of the Re publican papers in the Willamette Valley that Richard Williams, the Republican candidate ofor Congress, is attacking the Democratic candi date for State Treasurer. At Cor vallis, on Tuesday, the 21st of April, he is reported, in the Corvallis Ga zette as saying as follows : 0 " He then denounced Mr. La Dow and Mr. Brown (candidate for State 1 reasurer) as having been accessories to the iniquities, and having accom plished one theft of 10,000 from the school fund fpr a small country school house, The Raker City Acad emy,' anel tried to engineer a similar thieving operation of S10,000 for a similar institution in Umatilla county-" At other places he is reported as saying thatp the security which theo State has for the ten thousand dollar loaned to the Baker City Academy Company is not worth three "hundred dollars. Every person in BSker county anel Eastern Oregon knows the above to be a false anel incorrect statement,-but, for the benelit ot per sons in other portions of the State, we publish the following statement made out by Mr. Wni. F. McCrary, Secretary of the Academy Company anel Postmaster at this city. Mr. Mc Crary is a good, reliable and respon sible Republican citizen of our city, and his statement cannot and will not be elisputed. It will be seen that the actual amount that Iras been paidD on account of the Acaelemy, and give no account of the increase iuthe value of the property : STATEMENT OF THE COST OF THE ACADEMY nuiLnixo, GRoirrrns, tc., at baker CITY, OREOOJf : Cost of biiiUlinjr, as per contract wit h F. II. Twiggs 57,800 00 Ioss su.staineel by tire S3,'A0 00 Amount recovered from con t ra ct or 2, o00 00 Ieavinfr amount of loss sustaUied Value of Academy grounds, four acre $100 per aire. Cost, of seats, desks, etc Cost of stoves and, pipe Cost, of Philosophical Ararat us Cost of one eight-day clock . Cost of out huilelings Cost of well and fixtures TOO 00 0 400 00 200 00 50 0O 175 00 15 OO 100 00 a5oo Total cost 59,475 00 The above is a true statement of the cost and real cash value of the above Institu tion, ns I verilv believe. Wm. F. McCrary. Sec-y B. C. A. Coj, Baker City, May 3, 1874. The Acaelemy buiTeling is two sto ries high, 40 feet wiele by about 72 in length, and is well anel substantially built, of the best material, in the wood line. Instead of the above being a theft upon the Treasury of the State we, as well as the people of Eastern Ore gon, consider it a legitimate business transaction and that the property mortgaged to the State is amply suf- ficient to secure the State from loss, and that Hon. A. H. Brown done a noble and praise-worthy -act lhy en abling our citizens to erect anel main tain a school equal to any in the State. The property is now worth elouble what it cost. The least Mr. Will lams or any other public man says against the Baker City Academy the 'better it will be for his popularity anil good stanelinc in Eastern Oregon. The Scheme lievived. It is settled that the Woods-May Ad ministration fad a scheme on foot to fasten "the unfinished anel unfor tunate" Opera House upon the State of Oregon-a scheme that was only defeated by the overthrow of tho Republican party. If the Republi can ticket shonlel sncceeel in the com ing election, that scheme will be put th rough. It has alreadv been reviv ed by Republican newspapers. Ti e building is crarked badly, arel it threatens to tumble down, tlepito every effort to hold it together. Un less it can be shoved off upon tho State within the next four years it will be too laf e. The Stare now pays 3,320 per annum, rental. It uses fourteen rooms anel one arsenal all of which it gets for the sum named. Sam May lyul contracteel for three rooms in the Opora-IIouse. two in the third story and one at the head of the theater stairs in 4he second story, anel all of them inaccessible and inconvenient, at 2,000 per an num, anel agreeel to aelvanre State money to assist in finishing the house, and did actually advance 700 for that purpose, which the State lost. The Republican party approve all this, and its spokesmen are ena gaged in talking up the May-Opera steal again. The scheme, if carrieel out, will result in a net steal of not loss than from seven to ten thousand dollars per annum, besides involving the risk of having' the Treasurer's office and Secretary of State's office, with all their records, buried under the ruins of that immrnse ju'le of brick and mortar, cancel "Reed's Opera-llouse." Daily Xeics. Mcch talk was causeel eluring tho week by the dishwatery tone of the Ilawk-Eife. It was saiel that "Indt? pendents" -would not "come out"o and hence it was open for an engage m nt. About the truth of the mat ter is this: The Republican candi elate for State Printer, E. M. Waite, has a juelgment against the enter prising youth who slings filth for the "Independents" and incidentally remarked to him as he imbibed a glass of rot-gut (at Gale's expense) that if he wouhl "quit his foolish ness he would give him the judg ment." So the "war'into Egypt'o man surrenelereel. But the way Waite got 8150 on this account was this: He told Tolman (the man who never bets on horse races) that Gale could be bought for 300 and if be (Tolman) would pay 1")0 he would pay tho balance. So Waite made 150 clear money and got an organ. Later, however, his Independent friends have "seen" him and the Ilaick-Ev in itself once more. Gunrtl. " 'I G o O O J3 O o O o o o o o Q 0 C