-.jj-"'-"'' A ' if a If : ''I 1 H $ r I . ..j f s - - - ir !j 4 '1 V i 5 31) e (Sutcrprisc. OREGON CITY. TIIl'KSIM. SEPT. 2bM.5?S The Telegram-Heo Affray -Portland Police. -Tlic Last week, after public notification in the Telesram that unless retraction of offensive words were made in the Bee within two days disagreeable resnlts l wonld follow, and intimating blood shed. The Standtrd, in commenting on tin ? sorry spectacle tho day before the afi'ray, said that unless some more moderation was exhibited, one or tho other, or both of the rival papers would j be in mourning before long. Tho next I i . M . - i' . . :c -i t I uay mo prediction was veiiiieu. y is contend tho authorities had public noti fication that an affray was pending, and that they were very remiss in duty that Macdonald, for hi3 threat, was not called np and bonnd over to keep the peace. Peace officers, and especially tho polio? department, should exercise more discretion in matters of this kind. Here were two journalists that had, from day to day for months, been revil injand abusing each other like fish women, and it culminated in a final Ktiug that was too much for Macdonald, and he demands a retraction, coupled with a menace. Then is when the po lice authorities, had they been alive and alert to the duties of their calling, should have interceded and command ed tho peace; but, instead, all things were made easy for the culmination of tho tragedy. No police officer appear ed on the sceno until long after the af fray was over, and then came innocent ly forward, as if tho contretemps was unexpected. We think a revision of the police department, and the putting of a head there, who will not only bo vigilant to catch criminals, but for ward to prevent crime, is due from the powers that bo in Portland, for the protection of her citizens. We hope, too, that tho coming Legislature will enact tho bill of one of the Representa tives from Marion connty (Mr. Kams by, in House bill No. 12) , which pro vides that the calling of opprobrious names or epithets is m equivalent to an assault, and that the evil-doer can be fined therefor as if it were a bodily as- s.tnlt. Such a law on our statute books would have prevented tho last affray, and will save many in the future. A reviling pen or tongno is the greatest provocator of physical breach of the peace of all the appliances of the de praved. The law should make answer able by fine, expressions calculated to enrage and invito to physical retalia tion. We regret tho tragedy of last Thursday, but think Macdonald was fully as much to blame as Mercer, but the first unfortunately fe'l in the strug gle; and tLe cries of a widow and or phan fall unhee'dod over the "dull", cold ear of death," a victim to a style of journalism, we hope this tragic event n will terminate. The New Senator. Senator Slater, for six years to shine like a meteor for the good or ill of all Oregon, glides into the horizon. Wo have always ha-1 a good impression of Slater, as he appears to be honest, ami well intentioned, and, we believe, has the welfare of the State above auy care of partisanship thoroughly at heart, "There is much for him to do, and, if accomplished, will have to bo won al most single-handed so far as the eid or effort of the balance of the Oregon del egation will avail. Grover is a detesta ble milk-sop, who, from his well-known hermaiihrodite composition, cannot bo counted as sound and faithful on any subject. Ho is a bundle of hesitating abstractions on every question, save extreme partisanship, and is as cold to tho vital wants os the State of Oregon as ho is callous to tho call of consist ency or honor. Tho duty, then.to take the beacon light of- Oregon progress from the able hand of Senator Mitchell who ha3 advanced it high in line, de volves upon Slater alone. To sustain it to that height will requiro great ef fort; and to advance it on the road, Senator Mitchell, with the concurrence of tho people, has marked out, will make Senator Slater's position more conspicuous, and more onerous than any other of- the Oregon delegation. He is known to be in sympathy with the enthralled people of Eastern Oregon, concurs in the Mitchell plan of railroad emancipation, and will be looked upon as the especial champion of the Ore gon idea, as opposed to the menace of the North Pacific railroad ring. We believe he lias it in his power, if his efforts ere crowned with success, to perpetuate his hold on the ofiice, as the people of Oregon are not slow to re ward 'their laureled champions. We say this much of Senator Slater because we regard political differences of little moment. Nothing is now so kaleido scopic as politics;, and on vital issues, pave perhaps a lingering fondness for the musty relic of States' rights, he is a pood enough Republican for us; and, from present indications, he will bo counted out of the Democratic fold in toto on the financial question, as tho ...... . - -.- , -t. d,.... Kueemaoie paper money, wnuo oiaiei is as pronounced the other way. A hope Senator Slater's star will rise steadily to the zenith; and if his iuHn- ence will extend as far, and capacity for vor La ns prolonged as the man whose seat ho invades, wo .shall hope not to eeo it eclipsed in this centur Clackamas Couutv needs a change in the manner of working the is to bo hope 1 that ocrSt;! will solve the problem. roads and it oi:s at Salpra A Little Faith Yet. Ever since Galileo made utteranco to the immortal declaration " that the world still moves,"we hove had an almost abiding confidence in the declara tion. Occasionally things have hap pened to shak'3 our belief, and for a ! time doubt and mistrnsthave enveloped j us in impenetrable gloom. Brother Jasper, of Virginia, who powerfully j quotes senprureto prove that the ' sun do move" iiictead of the earth, wa3 one disturbing elr-ineut. Brother Ire land's incessant end eternal standing line that "wheat on shore or afloat at Astoria is always equal in value to wheat afioat or on shore in San Fran cisco," whereby tho unhappy Granger La3 been led to believe that a Portland ring wa3 gouging him, lias also much exercised us against the Galileoian as sertion. Wo have expostulated with brother Ireland in many ways to get him to, take down that flaunting pre varication; we have figured its incon sistency to him; we have offered him a thousand dollars a cargo to make the declaration good; we have transcend ed gentlemanly bounds, and in the mightiness of our protestations, charac terized it as a " lie," but still spbinx- after week, came the cold, calculating, vilainous declaration, as if there were no hereafter, nor no guilty conscience to answer to. We had given it up; Ireland would not answer us, and stuck to the declaration. We had calculated that the type would wear out in two or three years, and were gathering all our reserved powers for the purpose of a grand out-burst ol pas ionate appeal by the end of that time in tho hope of softening tho icy coccles of his heirt, and to induce him to acknowledge the corn. Oat of tho gloom of such sur roundings, what was our surprise and jay iu a recent issue of the Asforian, to find that the stereotyped expression WU3 modified, softened, changed, and while it now no longer trespasses on the tivith, treads on the toes of possibility. It reads: "Wheat afloat or iu store in Astoria should be of equal value with wheat aflo.it or on shore in San Francisco." We begin to feel surer now that the world moves. Ireland has been moved and there can bo no disturbance of this emerald without the balance of the world sympathizing. Only one doubt remains to throw a black shadow across , our peaceful breast: that is Brother Jas per, of Virginia. If we could only:- convince him that the sun is immova ble; that it is the world swinging on its huge 'axis that makes it possible for his congregation to invade neighboring lien roott3 without being observed, we shoul 1 feel that there is little else to live for. What a sumturn bonum of achievement Ireland converted, and brother Jasper giving the credit of day and forage-time where it properly belongs. Portland Bridge. The people of Portland and East Portland are greatly in need of a means of communication between the two, and; find the ferries there in operation hardly up to the requirement of the times. This necessitates-tho building of a bridge, and a bill has been introduced in the Legislature to permit a corpora tion to construct one. After the first and general impulse of a bridge come3 tho second consideration of where it is to be located; and as many diverse views as there aro streets terminating in the river are to be heard in relation to it. As an outsider in no way affected by the final location.allow us to add our chin music to the general chorus now begun on that subject. Portland is a city of sixteen thousand inhabitants to-day, with a mile and a half of river front; in less than five years it will be a city of fifty thousand inhabitants, and four mile3 of river front. Her present need is a bridge uniting as nearly as possible the center of one to the center of the other. The first bridge being the center one should be located be tween Washington and Yamhill jstreets on the Portland side, a3 this unques tionably marks the boundaries of th&H centre of the city, as it will continue to for time. It will be but a few years hjjnce that there will bo urgent necessi-! ty for another bridge between Stephen's addition in East Portland and the north line of tho Caruthers estate, and one connecting Albina with North Port land, and they are certain to be con structed. We hear a few timid river front owners are fearful that a bridge will impair the valae of their, wharfage fronts above the bridge, but this fear is utterly fallacious. Whoever has seen how expeditiously the draw is opened for the passage of vessels on Chicago river will have his fears quickly dissi pated, as it amounts there to no ob struction at all. The tug whistles a signal for the draw, tud in a minute of time the bridge is swung around, the vessel passes through, and not five minutes of time elapses before business progresses as before It is an utterly groundless, senseless and unreasonable objection, and onlv arises turon?li want of kuowlwVft nf the scientific means now in use to make ' ' i the draw-bridge no obstruction at all. W(J shouij- raliicr e should rather regard it as benn ' ficial to the f ion tape above the bridge ! as it will almost inevitably center the ' - l :n i a - -11, . ' ireigiitage ot the Upper lllamette j l"" tl shutUo of commerce will tly backward j aud forward through the draw, and no i j one can be , effected in a hurtful sense ! where valuations are inerp:xinr lav : 1 tlav as thc.V uow are all over Portland. ! A central bridge is badlv needed, and S '; oe,q located elsewhere would-be a profit- ' iv;-i i:sestrr.ert lor several year? to come. . . J':- 3 Proposed Change of Assessment. At least a dozen modifications of the present Assessment-law have already been introduced by various members of the Legislature, and it will be very strange if some one or the other does not meet the views cf the majority, ami so change tho present form whieluis manifestly defective. Among those iu- troduced, is one by Senator Watt, of Washington county, which lias the raer it of brevity and originality combined; and we are of the impression that it will be fount? the element wanting to meet th.3 requirements cf effective and com prehensive assessment, which has been a siue-qna-no'i long sought for. Tho bill provides that the County Assessor may divide his county into suitable districts and appoint deputy assessors to assist him in the different fields as signed to each. The Assessor must call on each and every taxpayer, or property holder in their respective dis tricts, and require them to give under oath a list of all tho taxable property of whatever kind, owned, controlled, or in the possession of the person as sessed, on a given date, the first Mon day in March; the assessment and oath to be taken on blanks, and a copy given to tho person assessed, on his ap plication. The bill provides that no deduction shall bo made for indebtedness, but when a person is indebted on the first Monday of March of any year he shall be entitled to a credit or set-off from his creditor on the note to the amount of the State and county tax for thecur r3nt year on the full amount of said note, together with interest on taxes thus paid, until set off, is allowed. A tender of the aaiount due on a note, less the taxes, as above provided, shall be deemed a full lender. In all suits to recover on notes, when judgment is rendered, it shall be fur an amount, less the taxes, as above. Tho term note, us used in this act shall be construed to mean all notes in writing, made and signed by any person, whereby he shall promise to pay to any other person, or his order wnto bearer, any sum of money therein mentioned, whether with or without mortgage. Section 5 reads: "Any property wil fully concealed, removed, transferred, or misreprcsnjed by the owner or agent thereof to evade taxation, upon discov ery, must be assessed at not exceeding five times its value, and the assess- ments so made shall stand." Section 5 reads: " On receipt of the assessment list made by Deputy Asses sor, the Couuty Assessor shall imme diately proceed to enter the assessments thus madb in the county assessment roll; he shall note opposite each assess ment, in full, or by initials, tho nafne of the Deputy making the assessment. Wherever he finds property assessed more than once, or omitted, he shall make tho proper correction. When ever property is assessed at a price manifestly below its full cash value, he shall immediately notify the Deputy making the assessment and tho party assessed, to appear before him on a day named, to show cause why such valuation shall not be increased. Ho shall make no deductions, except on tho application of the party assessed, and on showing of facts to justify. The county shall be at no cost in such ex aminations, either to pay Deputy As sessors, -vitnesses or parties assessed. i All equalization and correction of the county assessments must bo made by the County Assessor at his office, and be completed before the first Monday of June. No oijher equalization shall be made within tho county." The Assessor is put under a penalty of ?00 who shall knowingly approve of an undervaluation, or omits assessa ble property, or who fails to render to the proper authorities tho assessment roll, completed as the law requires, and within tho time prescribed. This is tho substance of tho bill, and we hope it will become a law. It leaves the settlement of indebtedness deduc tions where it properly belongs be tween tho debtor and creditor. The evasion practiced by ''trading notes," as cited bv Gov. Thayer, would be f ntile, and it would have the effect of adding forty million dollars to the as sessment rolls in the State of Oregon. We regard it as a bill admirably drawn, and is perfect in all its details. The penalty on the Assessor for dereliction will nervo him to the task of faithful and impurticai action, and the thimble rigging of the wily will not avail to seduce him from the narrow path of duty. The bill, operating from a different basis, comprehends the suggestions we have frequently made as necessary to secure " equal and exact assessment," and we hope to see it placed upon our statute books. l'rayer and Yellow Fever It is not often that wo feel inclined to go to Scott's relief, but finding him just now besieged by a sanctimonious crowd, among them the lately converted Bee and Slumlord, who have attacked him because of his suggestion that sanitary measures are necessary, rather than i SDPPcation, to avert the dreaded sway ot lellow Jack in the South. Tonv is spasmodic in his moods, and if he had been sounded iust after the lust elec tion, he would have bitterly bewailed the futile uuctiou of prayer, as he wasn't among the elect; but just now that his great dispenser cf gifts, for whom he earnestly prayed, is made Senator, ho sees cause, on the' far-off horizon, of 1860 to leadir nreseu COURTESY OF UNIVERSITY thanks and say, " We supplicated and our prayers were answered." As for tho Bee, wo think we are able to discern a hvpocritical cant, which j may b3 taken as expiation for blood on its hearthstone, or a holy honor for ; fear of a sheeted visitation from tho dead, to account for its sudden and uu-, exampled purity. We differ from the Standard and Bee, and cannot counte nance their covert arraignment of Christianity for all the horror, death, woo and misery entailed upon that des olate and afilicted laud, and the self constituted champions of the failh who now rush into the breach, to insist on j the efficacy of piayer as the solvent for the dreaded scourge, are emissaries of the evil one to cast imputations ou re ligion. Hew dreadful tho thought; how execrable and devilish the idea that Christians, who had power through prayer to gtay tho murderous hand of death, have waited so Jong before ad ministering the balm. Have they with held that incense which wafted to the Throne of Grace would have brought soothing to tho fevered brow, convalescence to the stricken and heal ing to the sorrowful until death's har vest is nearly over? We resist the im putation; we cannot f iT5n them as ac cessories to so dire a visitation; 'they are not, from laggard inertness until now, responsible for the abandoned homes, the desolate and decimated land under the heavy afiliction of yel low fever. They have not held the plow with which death has furrowed tho soil; they have not helped to rear tho black shadows of despair which en shroud tho sunny boutli into whose impenetrable fold ascend the wail of the fatherless, the motherless, the child It -ee, and the hunger-stricken. Could prayer avert this woe? Then tho keepers ot t'io iaitli are accessory to all this human misery. We deny the presumption, and whoever asserts it accuses Christianity, as an accomplice through inertia of festering death, and the thousand multiplied woes attendant upon so wide-spread a scourge which makes death and oblivion tho sweetest chalice of all. For once Scott is right. Christianity is not responsible for tho "deep damna nation of their taking off." Climatic causes, ami want ot sanitary measures for tiie purification of tho atmosphere aro wholly, and only the causes of the scourge, and tho remedy lies in the re moral of these causes by natural meth ods. The sickly sentimentality of prayer as a removing or averting means, condemns its advocates Irom the be ginning, we insist tuat it praver is the motor that i!ie Standard and the Bee should anticipate troubles of this kind, and keep things moving along without any lncuon. We would es pecially recommend to the Bee manage ment to lay aside pistol and live on tn-ayor awhile, and all to blend charity and forgiveness instead of vindiotive- ncss and malice in their indi vidua! hitioiiS, an exemplification of whi-:h we herein by fraterni:dncr with brother Scott have powerfully illuslra ted against our-inclinntions. Silver Dollars for Orccnhacks. It is evident from the last circular of the Treasury Department that a vig orous effort is about to be mado to get tho new standard dollar into circulation Hitherto not more than a million have gone into the pockets of tho people All the rest, which havo been paid out in purchases of silver bullion havo found their way directly back into tho Treas ury vaults through their receipt in lieu of gold coin for customs duties The new plan proposed. Which, it is thought, may brinf? them into more pconeral use, is for the Government to furnish as many as banks located at a distance from the commercial cities mny wish to take in exchange for lega tenders, the Government dofrayiug the cost of transportation from tho different mints. Iu this way everybody who wants silver dollars instead of paper can have them ai par, and it is probab ably calculated at the cost of returniug them iu New York and other points where they can be made use of in pay ments of duties will lend to hinder their taking the course which they have hitherto followed namely, a bee-line to the nearest Custom-house. It is plain that in this action the Treasury is caring out the intentions of the Silver bill, and abandoning the policy of ab. struction3 or iuaction. The people will now have an opportunity to get standard dollars if they desire them, and the only question is, How many;'. will they take? At the present price of silver in tho London market says tho Chronicle the intrinsic value of the 4.123- grain dollars is loss than eighty -eight cents, so that adding tho cost of coinage, it is evident that the Governments maues a profit of upwards of ten per cent upon every dollar coin ed. Whether in exchange for green backs, tho people will take a silver dollar which although it bears a Gov ernment stamp and is a legal tender for all debts public and private, is rated at twelve per cent above its actual value as bullion, is a question which the in- exouorable logic of facts alone can de termine. The first llepnplican victory in Maine was in 1851. In 1S53 the -Democratic majority on Governor was: 3,898. In 1854 Morrill, lienablican, received 41, 852 votes; Purvis, Democrat, 28,300; P-eed, Whig, 1,417. Morrill was re elected Governor in 1555 and in 1S5C Hamlin was elected by a majority of 24,540. There has been a line of Ile pnhliean Governors from 1854 to tho pr-sent. BANCROFT LIBRARY, OF CALIFOPJIIA, The American of the Future. BY J CLICS LETTER NO. 3.1 The composite nature of onr people, on which I elaborately treated in my last letter, kees tho social circle in an almost transitory state; but in spite of the traditionary customs of the foreign rorticn of our population, which they j lave carried here with them, and to j which they hold on with a tenacity that ; is proverbial, the native-born Arneri- ! can has been thus far able to keep up, and to innovate customs and habits that are thoroughly heterogenous on Ameri- ! can soil. The American temperament is an embodiment of alacrity, and as such requires and demands active is- sues. The well-deserved sobriquet of being fast, that tho American people have earned, is quite as applicable to j their business habits as well as to their i i mode of living. European countries j have found to -their sorrow that the young Bepublic of a century no longer needs their aid; and that, having mas tered their own necessities, are also able to supply all parts of the earth with anything and everything that man re quires. It is an iudisxntable fact that the American people, as a wnole, aro'the best fed and clothed of nil tho civilized nations of tho earth. And although there is a geuoral depression through out the country, it is hardly noticeable, except in largo cities. In our inland towns and villages you wili find the people living at the same rate of extrav agance as they did in the glowing times during tho war. Tho few buildings that aro here and there being built, are more or less mortgaged , or in debt, and the peoplo outwardly appearing pros perous, but are really insolvent. During the war, and while cng.iged in suppress ing the Southern Tie-bellion, the United States Government were most profuse in their issues of paper money. As it fell in value, labor and commodities rose to most fictitious prices, and these prices were maintained for several years after peace was declared. The icople thought this flourishing condition of things was going to last forever; enterprises of every nature weie launch ed out on the most extensive and gigan tic scales; factories and mills were built, of all descriptions; railroads were built, and largo speculations made in the mining interest, and vaiious cor porations allowed fabulous iuduce- ments to propitiate what was consiaereel ,, , ... . . ' ' , . ! the grand miliemiiom of the American people. The country enjoyed a great deal of prosperity after the war, but the inevitable collapse canto. This was to a certain extent aceountablo for by the violent iinctuations which had taken place in the valno of the iatioual cur rency. The failure of Jay Cock & Co. put the fiuishiag stroke to tho closing scene of Atnerie in prosperity for a time. The country is still snfle'iug from tho depression caused by that financial . . tllC, lirj':iralU-I'il 111 its illteiiSUJ, and -. -, .' mi . it3 duration, lhe evidences of tins pan in are brought home to one every moment of the' day: the merchant deplores tho loss of his trade; mills and manufactories are either closed altogether, or are run ning with an attenuated staff of hands, and many thousands, both of skilled and unskilled artisans are going about, with their hands in their pockets, impa tiently awaiting the coming of more prosperous time3. Tho crisis has al ready lusted more than five years, and although there is a growing feeling that tho bottom has at last been reached, yet under the most favorable circumstances a considerable time must, elapse before any improvement will make itself felt among the mass of the working popula tion. So far wo havo -viewed our posi tion as we stand as a peoplo, politiealy and socially, and I think we shall not be drifting too far from tho truh when we claim that as a whole wo can bear comparisou with any other nation of peoplo, with the exception that we have not got to our level settled down, as it were, and it is the purport of theso let ters to show at their close what the ideas of the writer aro as to the future of our people. Heligiously, we are as enthusiastic and persevering in the propagation of the divine truth as is consistent with onr intelligence and means; and the un restrained liberty of opinion that we enjoy has given birth to a number of dogmas and isms that no other country possesses. Space will not allow us to enter as minutely as wa would desire ou many other minor matters, so we will closo the social topic and enter into tho com mercial question next week. (To he continued.) Press Convention. Tlic-ro will bo a meeting of tho pub lishers aud editors of Oregon and Washington Territory, for the purposu of taking into consideration the proprie ty -of forming a Press Association, such as has recently b en organized in Cal- norma and other btates, on Wednes day evening, October ), at 7:30, at Salem Oregon. All papers favorable to this subject, will please publish this call and add their signature to the same: ExTEiauiisE, Oregon City. Standard, Portland, liecord, Salem, Astorian, Astoria. Independent, Hillsboro, lie. or('.r, McMinnYille, Jfuc'eus, Ilarrisburg. Gazitle, Corvalli.s. Democrat, Corvallis, Inland Empire, The Dalles, An important decision in bankruptcy casos has been rendered by Judge Choate of New York. In opposition to to the rulirg of one of the register he hold3 that creditors have at nil stages of bankruptcy proceedings the right to examino creditors, which is something of a satisfaction. Sept 22 to tho wife of John HAJtlllED. On Sept. 2-d, at tho residence ot the bride's mother, near larshtield, by Alex. Thompson, J. 1'., l- U. Jones and Miss .Sarah C'olson. ru-;u. Xei:r Osweiro, Sept 20, Uzzie J.. Wifrt of Al bert .;. Walling, Jr.. aged 21 yours. NEW TO-DAY. Sherirr. Sale. T" Y VIUTL'E OF A WRIT OF KXFCUTIOX ' 1 issued Auj;ust:ilst, 1S7S, out ol t ho Circuit court of the State of Oregon, for Clackamas county, to me, us Slu rili of. said county, directed pursuant to a dr-ereo entered April 2 'tli, 17H, in a suit, wherein W. Kuene i Dement, is phrintilf, and T.J. Mat loci , 1 lopie it". Matlock, John 8. Smiili, James A. W'es ; ton, S. II. Alh-n and C. II. rwis, under the : linn-name of Alien & Lew:.-., are defendants, ; commanding me to make sabs of the property hereinafter depcriiied, to make the sum of j live hu-ntred and tilt v -five and sixt v-six hun i dredths dollars (?"i.(i(i) in jrold coin, witn in i terest since April 2-jth, 1S7S, at twelve percent, i per annum, together with forty-four and i seventy-live hundredths dollars U 1 1.751 costs and disbursements, and liity-live and lilty ! six hundredths dollars l.V.o!) In like coin, , for attorneys fees, bearih.2: interest nt ten per j cent, per unnurii, decreed in favor of said I plaint liT, W. 1 uene Dement, and the further sum of fourteen hundred ami seventy-six ; and sixteen hundredths dollars ($U7.h) in troldeoin, d"creeil in luvorof defendant Thoo j dore J. Matioek,; iruinst the defendants Smith . and Weston, I have levied this l it h day oi'Sep j tember, A. D. 1873, upu the follovinir i described premises, s'lluat .- in Clackamas ; county, Oregon, to-wit : I A part of tiie donation claim of V: T. Mat- lock, bounded as toiiows: IJejji lining at a 1 point on the south line of s.iid ciaim, twenty I chains irom the east corner r hereof: rut.niii? ; nlon-j said liiv in i wester';;. direction sixty i chains, to the south c. rner of said claim; j t hence, at riht angles:-, in a nort herly direc- tion nUmtf the west line of said claim twenty i chains; thence, at rijrht angles, in an easterly j direction sixty chains; thence, at riht an gles, in a southerly direction twenty chains, ! to tli: placo of beginning; containing l-U ! e.eres. inr.re or less. And, in pursi!-incr of said writ, I wili, on Wednesday,' ictobor 23d, A. 1 . 1"78, at 1 o'clock, p. ai., proceed to sell the same at public auc tion, for casli in sold coin, to me in hand paid, to the highest tedder, at the Court house door, in Orojron City, Clackamas county. Ore por, to satisfy the above -described execution, costs and accruing costs and disbursements. Said land will be sold in two separate par cels, to-wit : 1st. A part of the. donation land claim of W. T. Matlock, known as claim No. S7, in township -1 south, rane 2 east of Willamette Meridian, bounded as follows: Hejiinning at u rock twenty chains south sixty-eiprht de crees west irom the northeast corner of said claim; running thence south sixty-eiirht de crees west twenty-four and thirty-nine huc dreths chains; thenca norlh twtnty.two de crees west one chain; thence south sixty eie;iit decrees west, two and sixty-one hun dredths chains ; thence north twenty-two ds- rees west nineteen chains; thence north i sixty-eijiht decrees east twen! y-Seven chains; i thence south t wei)ty-tw decrees east, twenty ' chains, to place-ol beginning; containing 53.75 j acres. ! 2nd. The remainder of said 120 ncr- tract, j J. ( J. 1'Ild.ShUilV, Sheriff or Clackamas Co.. Ogn. ' Oregon City, Oregon, Sept.:, ISTS-tw. Johnson, McCc-va & jlacriiiii, Att'ys. A ci in i n : strat o r In the County Couit of Clackamas county, Oregon. In the matter of thecstate of Adam Weathers ton, deee -s; d. TN I'UTisuance of aN JL Court made in sa d it, nt OI-DEIl OF SAID tter on the 21tn day ! of Sept.. 1K7S, Cue undersigned will, on j !iauttlay the 2otH tlay or Oct-. A. D. ; 1878, at 1 o'clock p. m., at the Court House door in Oregon City, Clacka mas county, Or--) iron, proceed to s"ll at public auction to the highest bidder, t lie following described prem ' is.'s to-wit: Ail of block frieveu (li) m tiie ; County Addition to Orejron City, Clackamas ' county, Orejron. Said j-rop. rty will be sold I lree Irom encumbrances an-l on easy terms, 1 to be made known at saie. Deed at purchas ers expense. J. T. .M'i'ii.K.'.J.N , sej t.Jf -lv. Adm'r o- sai'l estate. U. S. Land Offick, Or.tcr Citt,) Orefron, Hept. "Itll, IS7S i TtOMPI.AIXT HAYING RKHX KXTEHTSD I J at this oi.ice by lloraee c. Urown aaainst j Thomas J. hamberkiin for abandoning bis homestead entr-' No. :1'!', !ft; d January j ,;,u. 1S77. upon tha nor. li h-.if of. i he southeast fourth of section No. is, township 1 south. ranjre 1 east, in Clackamas county, orejron, with a view to th cancellation o said entry, said parties are her-by siiinmo led toappea at this ofiiee on the -Z-'ilh day of October, ISTS, at V) o'clock a. .-vr., to respond and furnish tes timony concemliiir s.ii.l -.Uietred abondoii- ! ment. Tj. T. rSAJUN". K-srist'T, 1 T. It. IlAi:UION, Uec-'ivcr. I Oregon City, Sept. -, lTS-tw. FALL STOCK- t,bavi:o nETiT.:.::n lately fi:o:;i San Francisco, with lhe best selected I would call attention to ti LATEST STYLC3 Which I will sell, for Cash at POTL,AXI IMtSCSiS. The same have been bought at Bankrupt Sales, so I can give Inducements, I INVITE THE PUBLIC TO EXAMINE before purchasing elsewhere. Xhe following can be had and I DEFT COMPETITION: DryCdods Clctlilnjr, Winter Wev, Boots a.iil Shoea Ilatsanii Ca.;-.s, Groceries, Crockery, Hardware, (ilassware, I CiaUery and PI a tod lVare, Paints, Oils, f VViiidows, Doors, and I21iii!x. All kinds of produce bought and sold 1. SELLING. Oregon City, Sept. lf, lST3-tf. i n ; -? : "VJOTICE IS HEKEKY JIVEN THAT TIIE X co-partnersh ip lieretolore -xisl ing und -r the name and style of Fellows & Harding is this day dissolved by mutual consent; H.J. Harding retiring. A.!! aeeourts and liabilities willbescttletlbyE.il. Fellows who will con tinue business at the old strimi, E. P.. FELLOWS, II. J. HAKDINti. Oregon Citv, Sept. 10. bS7S-;t. rLELIC EXOI.VITIGX OF TEAt'HEfiS. A1 LIj PERSONS DESIRING ( ERTII-T- cates for teaching in the public schools of Clackamas county will appear lor exami nation nt t he Oregon City (Seminary on Sat urday, September :'.th, 1S7. N. W. RANDALL, Count v Superintendent. Oregon City. SopL lit. lS7S-td. LINCOLN 1SAKEUY. j "V j i t TOTICE TK IIEUEHY THAT I HAVE uurchased the interest of II. J. Harding the Lincoln llakcry and will Contincie liiisiiiess at. the old sdand. I will pay ail liabilit ies aud collect all accounts duo the firm. Thankful for past patronage I hope to merit a con tinuance of the same. E. It. FELLOWS. Oregon City, Sept.. i9, 1S73-2W. ' I0 rgl'-lE tLNDERSKJNE D WOULD RE JL ppectfully aunnutiw to 1 he public that he has a large stock of coflins on hand and has just completed one of the finest Hearses in tiie State, and is now prepared to attend to any orders In that line. C". I. WIXSCT. Oregon City, Mny . 1S7S tf . . ZSar this city, Meldrum, a hoy. UKSE3TAKER, CARRIGAGi AND ESTABLISHED 1SGO. S. & A. P. LACEY. ATTD R M EYS-AT- LAW, 521) Seventh Stmt, Washington, D, C. Patents nntl Inventors. Werseeuro Lettebf Pa text on Inven tions. Xo attorney fees in advance in appli cations foe I'atents in the United States. Xo charges unless the patent is granted.' xf) additional fees for obtaining and conducthi" a rehearing. Special attention siven to terference Cases before the Patent OUiee, Ex tensions liefore Congress, Iplringement uits in ditrerent Stall's, and tll litigA'.ion a,ir taining to Inventions or Patents. We ais pro cure Patents :in Cunada and other rorei''n count lies. Send Stamp for Pamphlet givhi" full instruction and terms. " tT, S. Courts and Departments. CI lims prosecuted In the Supreme Court of the United States, Court of Claims, and ail nlasses ofjwar claims betore.the Executivo Departments. Arrears of Pay anil Bunt-. Officers, Soldiers ana Sailors of the late war, or their heirs, are in many cases en titled to money from the tiovc-rnment, of which they have no knowledge. Write fu!l liistory-of service, and state amount of pay and bounty received. Enclose stctnp, and a full reply alter examination, will be giveu you withont charge. Pensions. All Officers, Soldiers and Sailors, at present disabled, however slightly, from wounds, ruptnre or other injuries, or diseases reeeWea or contracted in the line of duty in the It war can obtain a pension. Many now draw ing pensions are entitled to increase. C S. General Land OfHce. Contested Land Cases.Private Itnd Claims, Mining .Pre-emption, and'l lomesiead Cases presented before the iiencral I .and Ollico aud Department of the Interior. Land Warrants. We pay cash for Bounty Land Warrants and Addil ional Homestead Scrip. We invite nirrMpmi'doncn wltn nil iiirtlufi naviug an lor sale, and give full and explicit instruc tions where assignments are imperfect. We conduct our buisness in seperato Bureaus, having therein the assistance nf able atd exiTlenced lawyers and clerks, and give our closest personal supervision to every important paper prepared in each case. Promptest attention thus secured to ail business intrusted to us. Liberal arrangements made with attorneys in all classes of business. Address U. S. vv, A. P. LiCEV, Attorneys, Washing ton, I). C. We prefere to Tion. M. i. Emory. Pmsi-. dent 2d National r.ank, Washington, D. C. j C. E. Prentiss, Esq., Cashier German Am. National PanK, Wnshir.gton. D. C. ; Hon. C. Eewey, Irest. liar. Xatl. Hank, Cadiz.Uhio; lion. It. Waldron, V. Prcst. 1st Natl. 15ank, Ilillsidale, Mich.; J. It. Hann5,E sq.. Cashier City Natl. Cank, Denver, Col, :J. D. Knox, Esq., Hanker, Topeka, Kansas.. F. HANSON it i HAS OPESED TUB B&KLOW HOUSE- T HAVE GIVEN THIS POPULAR HOI'SE fl a. thorough renovation from cellar to Kar ri t, and proiMse to make it a hous second to none in Oregon, this side of Portland. Every thins will be done to advance the com fort of the guests, xhe House, is lar,je and commodious. rf:irt ami I: Hiring per week 35 OO .", jji.I per vt cei. - -i "Iea.ls and Ecus eacii - j Krec Cojic? to and fraiR the Hotel. Oregon City. Auir. 3D. ISTS-tf. ( LACK.V.IIlS o'tXl'f UiKEtTOilY. TEEMS OF COURT. Circuit Court Fourth Monday in April and the Fourth -Monday in September. ' Count; Court First Mondays in January, April, duly and September. Vmintt Snt Oregon City. I cunt- Officer our.tv Judge, J. K. Wait; County Clerk. W. II. II. Fouts: i-heriir, John tr. Pilsbury ; Treasurer, V. S. Dement ; .ehocl Superintendent, N. W. ltandall; Assessor. Jos. I'-arstoi'.- : C ironor, W. f Greaves ; Sur veyor, -N.t). Waldeu; Commissioners, .Jacob Kaujr aud Albert Vi'a'iiug. I.IVK UUalNE-SS AND PIIOFFKSIONA J. MEN'. Ijf.cjinr.t Johnson cc McCown, and E. L. IvtMham. factors V. X. Davis, Oregon City ; aiiJ r Knight, Canby. Ih'i.tUt J. V lei. Jru:i'i'-tt Ward A KardiTig. Jlerchnnt Thos. Chartnau, dry goods si).' groceries; AeUerm.ni I'.ros.. dry goods am., groceries: Fellows 'c llariiin, p-i'rl.s: l. tei iing, dry goods and groceries ; II. A. Hughes, dry goods and grocer i s. 1 Intel CJiif iiouse, Harlow- House. cvr Saltxm Chris. Z.iuner, at the derw-.t. j,n,:-7rrV. H. Highli -id. li'ioks awl s:!itj,icr:r J. M. Bacon, poslofuce. Flouriiiri -W.' .1. D. Mill' r. UrcuTi'ii iln;vii -l & i adder. Jfcnt'x iC' citrfdi' John Sell ram. ,S'i;c Mit-'s CJeorge r.roTJghton and C.Cutiin. JAveru Stable E. H. Clements. Johnson, Mcrovvn tc "d irram, Ally's. "VOTIfK IS ilEKEUY UIVEX THAT I j have filed my dual report and account with vouchers in the County Court of tiie S'-tdr- of Oregon for the county of Clackamas, in the matter of theestateof Irfwis IThomas, dec-used, and it was ordered by said Court that Monday, the yn day of (ictobi r be set fur the hearing of said report and objec ions thereto if a-y there be filed by any erson therein intsr-'Sted, and it was further ordered that notice iif said final settlement be ub lished in the Oregon City Estf.rprise four week. JOHN" HOOK, Adm'r estat" Lewis L. Thomas. Oregon City, Sept. 5, 187o'.4w. JK. V.A1T. COUNTY JLTCE, tVILL s bo at his ofiice in this city every Monday from ! o'clock a. M. to 4 v. sr. fcr the transac tion of probate business. Oregon Cit .July IS, lSTS-tf. ctico. U. S. L4.ni) Offick, Oregon City. 1 Oregon, Sept. V, 1S7S. J f COMPLAINT HAYING VKEX ENTEKED at this orlic" by Pascal Paquelte against. Lewis s. Wood for abandoning li is homestead entrv No, J,f!, ilated January 5, 1871, upon J he west half hi of southwest U of section H, 1 S., li. 1 E in Clackamas county, Oregon, with a view to the cancellation of said entry: the said parties are hereby summoned to ap pearat this ofiice on the Kth day of October, 187S. at M o'clock p. in., to respond and fur nish t est i mon v concerning said alleged aban donment. " L. T. PAKLV, ltegister. sephMw. T H UARiiI.SJN, Receiver. X. ,1". XOlUX" PAINTING, KALS03IINING AND PLASTERING. WILL CONTRACT P.Y THE SQUARE or by the job. The best stock in the market used in every Instance. Orders left at the Postollice will receive prompt, att'-ntion. Oregon City, April 1. IRTS-tf. - - ThTis. za u r e r , DEPOT SALOON, Opiosite the Railroad Depot, KEEPSTIIKBKSTBEER A NO CIGARS in the City. Oive him a call. Js'5-tf. Choice Dargain. I X Xt ACRES OF RICH LAND ON A .09 the Clackamas liver JJji miles irom Oregon City; I mie from 1 Mill Railroad station ; 25 acres in cultivation ; 5 Si acres of orchard ; 40 acres under fn'.; tine running water on the place. Price, i,ou. S8i)() doA-n; balance on time. A mort gage ius rted on the first r'."1- Obehon Ctty, Aug Sth, 1S7S-31H. G - T "-v I 1 f : 1 '. 1 -t 1 1 f 5 7,