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About The Oregon weekly statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1878-1884 | View Entire Issue (May 14, 1886)
o TI1EOKEGON STATIS.MAN: FJilDAY.SIAY 180. WEEKLY STATESMAN -Published Try Friday by the- STATESMAN PUB. CO. WBSCHirTlOX RATES: One yer. in !viire Six mouths, in adnee 2 W 1 iCBcSORIREKS PESIRTNG THE APPRESS n( their papers ebaaeed must te the rat of thir tanner .s.oiriee. as well as of the office ti w tuofa -vby wish the paper biwured. SAMPLE COPIES. If ymi tore friends ia the East, or anywhere elee, h w Htx twelve Uif Weekly STATES VAX, aeint in their dwm to this office, and they wil! receive ampk eopies free of charge. We wanlfi lie greatly nitcued if each one of onr HbrriWr would lend in names of their friend or neighbor win-are. not bow utibscri er. un thii may be the .niewtw of increasing nrHt. Ynar friend in the East, especially, tnltt he vleaaed to reaTl an Oregon publica fWxt, and it will be the mtuns of turning their trontiiMi to Oregon wilt c-Tirw to adopting It -a tfc-ir permanent BomM. Send in the name. STATE KEPUBLICAS TICKET. FnrC"gres ftiSGF.F: BERUAXK.wf Hongtas. Fat bnpreme JtnJee JOHN K. WALDO, ft Mr.ltnoinah. Tor Governor THOMAS R. CORKEUUti. of Washington. Tor Beeretarv of -State GEORGE w. McBRIPE, of Columbia. For fixate Treasurer HENRY L. liAR3TON,f Umatilla. ForBnpC Pnblie Instruction E. B- MeELROY. of Bentas. -Forte Printer FRANK C. BAKER, of Kriitoomah- -For jodee of Third Bintriet R-I". BOISE, of Marlon. Far Prosecmtne Attorrcev C 3UHN6. of Polk. COUXTY EE1TBL1CA?.' TICKET. ForFnte Senator J. B. nrjnClaL L. CHA M- BERLIX. J. S. IXKJXEY. For Representatives-. T. GEEGfi. c F. HICsS. . J. r"E.VIu.ETON, W. B. CCI.VEK, . U. AAFULAJ.1 1 . MMl fci. U1HA.S For Count? Judse T.c. SHAW. For Comauaaiuuers ForCieak For Sheriff For T-eeiHaer For Seaora bupt . . . For A.weor For Surveyor -. For Coroner . . , . . G.P. TERRELL, J. X. DAVIS. ..Jf.N. CHAPMAN. JOHS W. IfLVTO. APG. GIESY. ..GEfV A- fEERLES. JiENToS PATToX. JOHN KEW50S1E. W. C. W ARIXXER. STIAX HTKISG. Albany IWilieUn : Harvey Scott fe had y mixed. He is just betwist and lie tween. He don't kisow whether he' afoot or horseback, whether lie is a buck ing male or a kicking jackass. Both o- litical parties fcave not come Bp to hip ideal in their nomination for governor. The republicans have nominated Mr. Cornelius of Washington county, person ally a good man, but, if, unless, excejtt, whether and leafrt, he's not Scott's ideal of the stuff a governor should be made of. He is too plain and honest and sensible and practical for tlie enobish sensibilities of the House of Scott, who prefer an exec utive dude to a practical governor. The democrats have nominated -Mr. Pennoyer, of Multnomah county, for governor, who t anti-Chinese in his convictions. Thin don't suit the bell-wether of the Orego nian, for tlie Chinese Six Companies own an interest in that concern, own in fact a majority of the stock, and Mr. Pennoyer'e administration of mate affairs would con flict with Lollagonian interests. Sa'oee ? Harvey wants a fwn-of-a-grm on wiieeis for governor, a ring-tail snorter, sonwthing like himself, tlie double distilled quintes sence of egotism, cynicism and diabolism. A governor to suit Harvey mtist V anti AlitchU, pro-Chin, high licexiee, tariff for revenue only, and liave a pruiound admiration for H. W. Scott, and a holy reverence fir the great, immacalate Orx gonian. TaE county democracy is advertising its ticket in our columns. Compare the personnel of the same with the names at the head of this page, and decide which crowd yon want to carry on the county's and state's business. IK you believe in a reward for faithful performance of trusts, or do you want to display your in gratitude and vote so as to shew that you tkm't care how the public affairs are administered T whether efficiently or hon estiy, or not. Pejcdleto is bound to have the sack this time. If the "prohibitionists" fill their ticket they are liable to have a man from Pendleton, too, for they are on a (Sill hunt for a man from eastern Oregon who wants to be crucified on the third party cross bad enough to allow his name to decorate their ticket for the office of treasurer. M. Zola, the French novelist, says his countrymen are at heart for a king. They love to look up to some one. "Theref'jre," b continues, "the proletarian volcano will not burst in France, but in the Uni ted States." There L one comfort, we have lots of room for it to burst in. Wnx Judge Strahan please take the fioor and explain to the voters of the etate of Oregon all tlie points of the Mo Cormell will case? It might lie inter esting. The United States senate has lassed bills to authorize seven bridges over the Mississippi river. Pretty soon that stream will be roofed over. Those eloquent flashes of silence of the Oregonian were very prominent and no ticeable in yesterday's issue. Thk decency and gd order of Oregon will "boycott" Mr. Pennoyer's political 1 aspirations. j Scott still chews f he spiteful cud of revenge. SENILE HATK. Tlie mere fact that the occasion of lay ing the corncr-s.oue of a monument to the confederate dead at Montgomery, the cap ital of Alabama, was made the pretext for sumniening Jefferson Davis from the re tirement of lleau voirto jwse as the central figure-of that ceremony, called forth, so far asbeervatiou extended, not a single protest or remonstrance from loyal lips or pen. His presence was regstrded as sim ply as anachronism , an J the genera! sen timent typified itself in a shrug or a smiie, or resolved itself into some such fec'ing as possesses a man when he sees a child pleased with a rattle or tickled with a straw. When, at Montgomery, on the day set ayart for the ceremony above al-1 luded to Davis, for the first time in many 4 years veued the still air with his mouth ings, these was in his studied disavowal of any intention to say anything which could rouse the animosities which it was hoied had been buried iu those graves in which the wearers alike of the blue and the grey sleep tlie sleeping which knows no further waking ; when he was careful to say that, 3est his feelings might lead him to tranegTess the proprieties of the occasion, he kad committed such though te as he imagtsod lie might safely utter without giving offence to the north, or which might rsact .disastrously upon ids friends, the people of this country accept ed ius ungracious and unnecessary qual ifications of his real sentiments in good faith, and the show in which he took a part went on without protest ; and the whole transaction would ere this have been consigned to biivion except among those who followed the bastard banner of the mistaken soutJi to its final furling on the historic soil of Virginia. Davis reminded the philosophic obser ver of his conduct at Montgomery of nothing so much as thai "gray and gap toothed man" as "leaa as death" whom the poet laureate has immortalized in his "Vision of Sin," and a such the men of the present were conteat to let him pass as an interloper among scenes and policies with which he has nothing in common. But, fed for days upon the plaudits of men whom hLs very presence seems have inspired with hata and fury, bin withered anatomy appears to have taken oa a new lease of temporary virility, and all the sweltering venom of his soul seemed to outpour iiseif in male dictions upon those who thwarted his treason and made him that most wretched of ail thingn, a man without a country. If, deliberating, as he must have done, ciin his intended utterances before under taking his pilgrimage of hate; if, brood ing, as he must have brooded, ujton the wrongs real or imagined, which cuhuin- j ated in his defeat and that of his cause, he, not knowing, or not caring, what the teaier of his hearers might be, had, on iieing presented to his audience, like the Cheap John Cataiine that he is, apostro phised those whom with senile arrogance he tenfis 'Yankees' and exclaimed, "Look to your hearths. Here I fling, hatred and full defiance in yonr faces," there would haw been som&hing mock heroic at any rate, in his disulav. But, first to admit the downfall of his j ill starred caose.the shipwreck of his j perfidious barque, built in the ecipse and j "' , "ku iu tuuuwtri j acteu a promise ironi mm ttiat the Orego loyaity to tha Union of which the several i nian would give hm only one editorial of states are as they always have been and j disapproval. This it has done, in a mild ever wilt he integral and muisaoiubie parts, and then to boast of unrepentanee, and proclaim his sorrow that his cause had failed, that his pirate ship had lieen stranded on the rocks, is to present him self, in the sliaye of Alexander after he was buried in tiie earth, and to smeil like him. The ancient ghosts that squeak ed and gibbered in the Koman sheets a little ere the mightiest Julius fell, were such stuff as Jefferson Davis was made of. He and his will take nothing by his utter ances. They offend the living and ir.suit t he dead. They give the lie totiie manly utterances with which the true soldiers of the lost cause have accepted the situa tion. All thine?., however, have their i use, negative, il not positive. If haply the spirit of reljeilion still lives in the south, if "that goal of constitutional lib erty" about which Jefferson Davis prat-.s, and to which he says the southern states are tending, means a revival of the old issues, pushed again to the dread arbitra ment of the sword, we tell Iiavis and Ids followers that for every southern heart fired anew bv Davis' wild utterances, there wji be an unndred loyal liosom in j journalistic ass, and such a jieevish olit which the flames of a newiy aroused and j ical turncoat, that it is "liable to do any foully outraged patriotism will 'burst into consumingfire. As for any immediate eff ect which these utterances may have, the Astorian puts the whole matter into a nutshell, so to sjieak. That journal says : "Jeff Davis is traveling through Ala- j bama and Georgia manufacturing capital j as fast as he can talk for republican news-, papers. When the Alabamans and (jeorgians enthusiastically cheer tlie vet- ; eran who superfluous lags upon the stage the newspaper report containing the ac- count of the applause referring to the lost ; cause elicited, is carefully laid awav for j future use. All the cheering and hurrah will have its echo in coming elections." The democrats of Oregon may well make a note of tlie Astorian 's brief but pregnant disquisition njion this nnp!eai,t subject. '- These is no disputing the fact that ti e Oregonian is the best newspaper in the Northwest, also that it is editorially the most inconsistent, untrus' worthy and un- reliable. THE COXMl'XE. The disloyal and alien followers of the red flag iu the cities of Chicago and Afil waukee have started otit to capture the earth. They have raised the cry of trea son against our governmmit, whose laws they have not respect enouph tooliey, and whose institutions they have not sense enough to understand. They form ed a disturbing element at hoaie, where probably they had some cause for com plaint in regard to the restrictions of their lilrties, and were invited to come to America, tlie "asylum for the oppressed , of all nations," where their liberties are almost without restraint, and their oppor tunities are equal to the most favored, and they are up in arms against the best government tinder the sun! They de mand a "social" government, and the ab olition of private wealth. With their bellies full of stale bi-er, they cry for bread for their families. The howling, vagabond, alien, mob of thieves and cut throats want to run our eaeiCry and make and administer our laws. They de mand a division of property, and lazy, improvident mendicants, want to be put an an equal footing with industrious and frugal citizens, who had energy enough to acquire a competence. The miserable rascals have too much liberty. There is no longer any such thing as treason. The word has lost its signification. The blood thirsty devils have votes, and jioliticians will get down on their bellies to d hom age to auything that votes. They are treated too well. Every mother's son of those that raise a red flag of communism should lie shot down in his tracks, or hung np to the most convenient lamp post. They are as dangerous to society as aaurderers, and Bhould lie treated with the aame kind of medicine. N wonder that Emperor William of Germany banished the Poles from his borders and bought their possessions, that his people might b rid of this dangvroa element. The Iiowlinjr socialistic mob does not want to work. Their's is the trade of tie assaswin and the roblier. They don't want peace and order, prosperity and contentment. They have no reason. Their arguments are the torch and the dynamite. Put the patience of the American ;ko ple will become worn out by this luwicss mob, and when the opie do rise up in their might they will teach all the social ists left on this side of the Plutonian shores a lesson in decorum and rcsjiect that will last tiwm for a generation. There is too rtu-h putiwe shown the mendicants. There bhould lie more cold lead and less argument uod on them. Whenever a man gets to tninking that the United St::tes government h1ioi:M lie overthrown and a social government set up in its ashes, it Is time fur that man to emigrate, and, to inspire the rest of the followers of the red flag with man? resjiect for the laws, the Ufa ted States should give even- one caught in the act of think ing socialistic thoughts, a free ;ass over the hemp route. "lSfU'ENCt," It is now saiil that before Pennoyer was nominated for governor a committee of democrats waited on II. W. Scott and ex- way, with soft gioved hands, as it were, and the future will reveal whether or not the programme will lie carried out. If it is, who will be influenced by such a pros titute of a newspaper? Talk about inde pendnce ! Botdi ! When the shadow of what Hcott once was and might yet lie consents to such an arrangement as this, will respectability or reason pay any at tention to his ranting, prompted by the gangrene of jealousy, the consuming fire of hate ? Oh, Consistency: Mr. Scott, your political chickens wili come home to roost. .Mark tliese words. The Oregonian is running the "prohi bition" ticket at the head of its columns ; but it don't say whether it i supporting that ticket or not. It is, however, opjios- . ing parts of both the other tickets, and it , it didn't have something to fall back on it would lie a political orphan. But one j question : How can a high license jrajier i support a prohibition ticket? Tlie Orego ' nian, however, can no longer surprise ' Oregon i-eopie. It is such an egregious thing. It has no f;xed policy or principle, and the public can no longer have any more confidence in it than a Irfiir-taiied, yellow dog. If you call that indepen dence, you would ca-i an a.aai!u or a sui cide independent. Holmox, allow us to introduce vou to Mr. Scott. Mr. Houston is the .'m,hibitMm" candidate for governor; e i .1 . i i . . . ''Ir- S'utt doe ,l,e fclck a( t oa the Gre" gonian. Hope your acquaintance will lie 10 your mutual benefit, Third party " prohibitionist," take ! heart; lor don't you wt- 11. W. Scott makim; c-Hirtosies at you? Pet out your I hand, and he will come t it r.nkt. Tiik next tiling on the programme j republican victory, then the 4th of July. The one is coming as surely as the other. - W.vtsb is still reclining in the lap of "Insi in this section ; and if he don't let iro pretty s-xn there wilt 1k; a scandal. THE 1EMK KATIC STATE Tit KKT. The democratic state ticket isi before the people at Oregon tor criticism. If the democrats had a shadow of a chance, Uiey have lost tlie opportunity by putting forth such men for the resjieotive offices. Syl vester Pennoyer, their nominee for gover nor is uia&.er of a saw-mill iu Portland, at f300 per month. He -oses as tlie la boring man's friend. It is a very cheap trick, and it is too transparent to catch any laboring man who can see three inch es In-fore his uo?e, for he has always paid lower wages to and lieen more exacting with his men than any other employer of the same kind of labor. He ia the boss crank of tlie state, and has no fitness whatever for the office. He would rather disgrace than grace the high jiositiou to which he has gull enough to aspire. X. L. Putler for congressman, is a "lit tle lawyer man" at Ihillas. He will not run very fast. He has not energy enough to run much. Sitting is his favorite os ture. He would have about as much in fluence in Washington as a wooden man, and the jwople of this groat and growing state, who want their interests represent ed, will not exchange Buelt a man as Din ger Hermann for such a man as Putler. K. S. Strahan, of Albany, would like to be supreme judge, and the corporations and wholesale liquor dealers, and such, want him there. For this simple reason, alone, he should be beaten, and will 1. Waldo is the people's man, able, honest and honorable, and the princeliest cajv italist has no more snow, and no less, be fore him, than the jioorest beggar. Hight and justice alone hold influence over him and his actions. II. F. Gihliotis, of The Indies, for secre tary of state was selected for his geograph ical position, not for his fitness or deserv ing qu!ities. He will lie one of the last horses over the political wire in the race. George Washington Webb, of Pendle ton, runs a hardware store there, and is reported to be a fair, average, every-day man; but Mr. Marston, our candidate, comes from the same place, and he is a republican, and a man of integrity and honesty, so we leant ironi democratic as well as republican sources. Charley Nickell, o: Jacksonville, who wants to lie state printer, is an unscrupu lous, though successful man, and thor oughly uiij.opuiar among his own jieople. Having that kind of a reputation at home, what kind of treatment can he expect from abroad? The candidate for sujierintenilei.t of public instruction is Kev. J. U. N. Ik'!!, editor of the ltoseburg Iteview. Mr. Pell is a good neighlwr, and a very agreeable gentleman, hit his qualifications do not fit him for the oilice for which he is nom inated ; and the writer do not think lie will press himself forward to any great ex tent, for no one knows and esteems his "friend, the enemy,' Prut. Mcllir.y. liet ter than does Mr. Dell. KING ltt XL Tlie Oregon Vidette and Anti-Monoi-olist says Marion county republicans are tired oi "ring rule," and now have a first class chance to throw off the galling yoke, and vote in the democratic ticket '. Where is the republican who is tired of any ring rule, and where is the ring rule ? Where does the ring come in? When an officer does his whole duty, is that an in dication that he belongs to a ring? Ko one but a democrat or a disapiioint ed Cifliire seeker has yet hinted ut the ex istence of any ring. The wish is father of the thought. There is no ring in this county, but t'tiere is a wholesome and strictly honest administration of the coun ty's affairs, open and ai.ove-lioard, and every detail, every act, is oin to, and in vites the strictest scrutiny. Taxpayers, do not take our word for it. Si- for your selves. If you find any ring, or any trick ery, or a scheme, then score them : but do not take the words of jiolitiral mal contents and enemies in a matter so deep ly affecting vour interests. t'KO.K MK. ISELL. For supt. o? public instruction J. it. y. Dell of Ioug!as was nominated, and fully appreciates the high honor thus ten dered, and believes that the requisite qualifications for this important trust, are time and adaption to this work, in order to serve the people with honor, and profit to the incumbent, and realizing that no great amounof special honor to the state, nor particular profit to the individual was apparent, he declined. In Denton coun ty once by "an over sight" the democrats failed to nominate a loan against Prof. McESroy for county mijieriniendent, and "an oversight" of that kind now in the state, would not imperil our school work, nor bring the world to a premature end. fKoneiiur Keview, Kev. J. li. X. Bell, democratic candidate for superintendent of public instruction, editor. Ukv. Sam Sma:.;. said that a certain Mississippi editor ha in't "sense eno.igh toieed a calf." The editor retorted that Small iw a liar, and could take it any way lie pleased. The Kansas City Time ad vises him to take it one third down and the balance in one and two vears. A.'vth:no to avenge the election of I Mitchell, so the Oregonian will support j the "prohibition" ticket to try to defeat j the republican party; but it is the worst I thing that could happen to the "prohibi tion" ticket. OUR SATURDAY NIHHT. EiirroR Statksmax : Duriitgthc week that has just slid into the henceness of eternity the most exciting scone on the world's stage was the tragedy of the com mune ia Chicago and Milwaukee. The followeis of the red flag, the communists, the anarchists, have pit a sneaking idea that all governments are wrong. They want a social government, when1 nobody is to own any tiling, but the control of ull projierty and everything else is to bo tin der the government, and they lire idiotic enough to imagine that such a state of affairs is coming, and that when it is real ized they will have nothing to do except to bask in the sunlight of happiness and kick up their heels for joy all the year round, and Sundays, too. They are lalior ing under the hallucination that they will then all have free lieer and whisky, and they can stay drunk all the time and have a dicken- of a time generally. But to attain to this ate of perfect social fe licity they think e -vthing else must be overthrown, and river- of blood must run in the general preliminary butchery. This is what socialism means. This is communism, the doctrine of the followers of the murderous red flag. Such fanat icism in this country is inexcusable. In the big cities they have men whose duty it is to go round and catch dogs ithout collars on, and kill them, if unclaimed af ter a short time. They should also have men out to lasso cnmniutiists, for they are a worse element thun vagabond dogs. A mangy, flea-ridden, Wi-tailed yellow dog, without a master or a friend, is a better element ir. our wieial fabric, for a dog cannot talk. Whenever a communis: is caught he should lie made the subject of a necktie entertainment forthwith. If this thing should lie kept up it would not lie Ions till socialists were few and far lie tween as the angels' visits of old. It is a very natural trait of human na ture that nisi to thint's foreign, shrouded by vague and doubtful tilings. An Italian ojiera will be a success in a great, city, where an American opera will not pay the expense of the ushers. It is the same spirit that so! 1 a ix acb-blow vaso recently at the .Morgan s.ue iu New York City, only four iii' hes high, fur tl8,fn. jtlt real value was only a tew d'-llars, but its foreign connections arid age brought 'lie money. Pepl will stand on the r.tggvd elite of expectancy and look over the high hat.s of faxhion to bear and see a singer who has been to Paris f Here! Pronounce that Par-ec!) or Italy, though his or her voice may resemble that of a steam calliope in distress. Ikm't understand me, that I would try to chanae the drift of this nat ural tendency, for I ewldn't if I would, and wouldn't if I couid. If the eople want to pay a million dollars f ir a jieach b'.ow vase no larger than aftf.ger-bowl, or pay $."iO dollars a night to listen to an Italian operant's their business, not yours or mine; but it's rather funny, ain't it? President Cleveland might as well put crajie on the White House door and re tin; from the business. Two hundred sew ing women of Buffalo have lioycotted his "iurther political aspirations,' liecause Miss Frankie Foisom bought her trousseau in Paris, instead of patronizing home in dustry. They insist that they could tog Grove.r's bride out in better shaie than any measly French dress-maker, and are after his scalp with the broom-stick of revenge. Let tie.- country give them room, and th'-v will put the everlasting kilio-.h on imported trousseaus. Xt:o H. Pux. 01 i: zkm.iii s. EinTOK Statesman: It is currently re-iort-d that ex-Governor W. W. Thayer, who is now one of the justices of the su preme court of Oregon, threw aside the judicial ermine and left the ha!i of justice and came down to the democratic state convention at Portlund this uk, and i,-i conjunction with barney Goldsmith. Joe Teal, and a lew other illustrious lights of the democratic party, became so over anxious that lion. It. S Strahan, of Al bany, should ie nominated for supreme judge that no stone was left unturned to accomplish such purpose. Well, Judge Strahan was nominated, and no doubt the ex-Governor and clarney ioldsmith and Joe Teal are happy, but may not lie so happy when sterling a:id upright Judge Waldo will wu!k over the track as in Lvw. Perhaps the ex-Governor will then learn that when a man is elected to a high ju dicial jsisition as he has !;en he should not descend to mix vp with political squabbles, but reiuemlier the eleventh commandent. The people want to know why so much anxiety for Judge Strahan 's nomination and election. Are there not many other good and upright lawyers in Oregon that the corporations will support? Have Barney Goldsmith and Joe Teal any litigation jndirig or likely to come before the supreme court, in which they do not want the sterling Judge Waldo, the peo ple's man, to get a lick at? Why is it that Judge Strahan, the attorney for the Oregon Pacific railway company, with a good salary, is willing to sacrifice such for the supreme judgeship unless it tie as said by a prominent jxjlitician of Port land in speaking of the stale treasurer's ollice, "It is a good office without any salary." Votek. Portland, Or., Mav tith, 1886. It would be a disgrace to the state of Oregon to elect Pennoyer for governor and Strahan to thegupremi bench. While the bombs arp crashing and re volvers are clattering, It is well that the whole hind should heat the still, Hinull vcice of American labor protesting that it has no M'lniuthy with the Annrchist murders jierpolrited in Chicago. Labor is lawful, wants its righN, and will got them. Anarchy is lawless, an I will get its rights, too. Ir the democratic delegate to the state convention had sent their proxies to the republican state convention with insl ruc tions to choose a democratic candidate for governor, they would und.Mibteilly have selected Sylvester Pennoyer. Me Minnville Daily Caia-iiaign. TO WHOM IT MAY COMI SS, 1 HEREBY OlVE NOTICE THAT MY WIFE, 1 Leiiora E. ShtilU, hitw h-ft ray bt'tl ncd board without JiisU cue or provocation, mid I brre by warn sll I'Hrtlen coneerni'd mil lo hmtnir or Itive lierrri-dit on my Recount, a I wili py uu lill'.n nhe nmv contract Irwin ttiin ilnte. JOHN II SlIfl.T Wflodburn. Or. May M. i 1 ft NOTICE. 1 LI. PERSONS HAVING CLAIMS AGAINST .A the entitle of Ketiltt'u Lewi, lute dix-vAiHHl, will pre-entthe me properly rertllitd, within ninty rty (nun dme of thin uutire lo imder nrned ni Aniimvilli!. Marion Fount) . OreKn, and all perMUm owing, kiimr will nettle within Mm time. ABXEIt LEWIS. May lath. tsss. M4 Hw For the Helm. FA It Mil ICS 1 ATTENTION l ee only tlie Caliornla finnd (urged and Hand Kininhetl Sack !N"ecHlle ! With flitter In the rye. Each needle ruarxn teed. Price. 5o eem. Ak ymir dealer for them, or o-der irum the ninnufarturem, W ill A Pink, SIR Mnrket tireel. S F. .1 14 4m CAI.iroUNIANS Jt .wP I'OU IT. Among the l'0 kinds of cci'.h bound (luIUr volume given a'y by the Rocbeoier, (N. Y.) American Rurnl Howe fur every II lutnorip lion to the jrrea: l p iee, 4f column, Hiirtr old weekly, w hich are .".x? inches lrom awu 300 paeit, are theav: Law without Iji yer-.Kurm A Stock Breeders." Family Cycioj-euia, uni.ie. Fiona CveioMMtiM. Iinnel.on it Medc.oi!ii-!r World Cyclopedia, Five yeari. h:I- rethe Mawt Pop. history civil wiir, I uiver-iiiHi-l ii -noim holh side".) Boy' t niver.H! I'a-iime.. Our book and pnper one yeur. p '-t pnid fl.I.i. Reference. Hon. C. Parson. Mn'Tl. en ter. vanillic eopiea, 2. Addreni., Rural ji .lie Co,, Limited, Box . Koehe ter, N Y. CURED! i men Tim m tt Bwtifcntital :nirt Tiuiflu. ttjy k ; UiMim romfortatil limit 'tTeseUl rtlWa flHrn iXlmr nna.lM 1-11 i N wmlilD for i-fti.!. I m ariiwa u rtrawmui ewd m Beror m u ay ttw." lfm. It iu, t hui. Mm m ntlralr PMUmA hrlib br Gmama AMhaui 1 Tht rtff, homuutn, tUw rTTBji AothattS Cn.-w U all Toaj clam V tl. It fill. or Jf f'Mt ttrvwxlU, JI. I 'tt pfarvWu renniiRmk 6 (frmui Asifeaut art It nrft mo. Jr-i. jr L TtlnU Le4jurra nA.a IT n ii i mUmr UMtw MUa. it. M; ttngsbt p.. . mn r -rn ll m t rr H WUiU UJ Wl CIITUr wi t t ti iw irrr uBlt XKirrftf I ami' ' KIICRIFrK Si t I.E. VOTICE !! HEREIiY GIVEN THAT. HYV IK .1 tiie oi an execution duly Uio-d out of ttut Hon circuit Court of the mho-of (irecoii (or tin county of Marion, end to nie dir. -cm! on roe 7tli (lay of lluv, wl.ert'in A. N. Ol.ltert.pif. , recovered a ;udno-c.t iu.-ml 1. J. liiimin trti. deft., nl judsrmeiit beiuit for tiie s'!moffv'.?t and imere?4f tuereoii nr. tne rate of ten ir cent, per annum from tiie nh day of l eSir;iiry, 1;, and l-SMi'i cowls and di-.lturti'meiit., loiie-fier with aecruiiur. cint.uiid cvji-ii!!"-, I nave ;c i,,.l upon and sell at public auction on Hot or day, the 12tli duy oi June, ISSil, At the court hoiiw door, In BiUent, Marlon County, Orcon, at one o'Rloek p. in. ol aid day to tlie hiEoes! I.idder. (or ca.-l. In hand or . ! de day of aie r1: tlie rijrii" . title and intcre.t which the naid di-leiidiin'.. o ,1. luu.inore nd on ,r after the Dth day of Ktbruary, !".',, in or to :ae (iiUowiiijr deer)oed reni e-ta-.e. to it- Iot ntimlier live (.. in him-k number two (. a how n by tlie reeordeil plot of the city of Snietu Marion coutitv, Uregoi.. Viy II. l"So. .ISO. W. MINI -" r,t BlicrtiT MarioH Count), ur. MfEKIFK'H MACtl. VOTP E IS HKHEIiV GIVES THAT BY V'.H lue of an execution, d';c(c Hu urd.-r of ale duly indued out of tiie Hon. circuit Co.iri of the ntie of on-con ior the eounrr of Marion" and to lue ittreclett on the '.SO ilay of Mny 1,, w herein erena W iciner. pi!t., jeeovcreii a JinK-ineiit and d-r-rne of forec,m:re neain-t A J. HiiKev, A. '1 '. GUIx-n. K. N. Gllliert. ti tt JoLn on. J. II I.nliu J. F. Crown, Jon,;(,, fmlileiru Henry hchomaker. John lltiiflo-n, Jamc- ! Brown, 1.. K. Fiulert.m, J. Ii. Brower. and J M. bruwn. di-feiidanta. -inid iudemeiit Ih-Iiu; for trie tnnn of : t.rr im in 1'nited htnt Roid coin nnd lutereM thereon n' tlie rate of ten percent, i.t-r aiiiium lrom the r.th day of Febnotrv, w, the dste of s:tid juua-ineut. aud Hii Hi eot, tone-her witn ai-eru-.iu! exits aint crpeiinvi- I n il! ... Ll puidic auction on Sal urilav, the 12th i'.uj orjone, fsS'J, At the court hotue door hi s ii(-:n. Mirion county, Oreitou. at two o cmek, p m. m ,! to tin hiidieni bidder for ca.n in i.r.;;J on ti.v day of .a.e, ail the riKht.titic and iii-.i-ret iiich the aliove named defeiidniit A J. Haiccy hail i,., or after the '.d day of Luneinher, Ivi la u'j p tlie (ollowini; de.erlbed ren! e tate, to ii Tiie nortii oaifof ine north hiui" of doiiaooii hue! claim of Catherine Hagry and toe ncr.- : Andrew llairey eWim number njtvt'n-, '? nituiiie in u-i;',. . veu , wuti:.' r.ii,ir-iv. , ('-) of toe w iliame-.te ine.-id hi. in M-in county, m ite of iin coii eve and except r,;: acren deeded Heo-mlier ri,l., o.Aionwii.c.m-V by A. J. HKey aim wife for the .n Wai-h.u fir.t of the lien of me pmiiitlrT Cre.iB W iei.-r on nald premiie,. i.nd next for i, , tUfai ;iou of the iiem. of the several defend-on H ereon in the urdr of theirpriori-v a .et forf.i Ii sa-d decree, nudl w ill furt'ier, I: ne-.,a., . 4U like mimic, ni On- cnn- time elel pine,-' 'for the y r.idietioii of i,; lii n, i.l u,v defendant Oiiberi Hro.. i, 1 Jofm.,,.u Lnmi i;,,. .. order of -.iieir pn ri y ,Ki f,.r i, j ,;,. ,le. cree 7ed the fol, on i7 de.criia d ti : pp-j ci ty, vir: '1 he noo'li n .If of the nor!". ,i .' the dobntiou lnd i' nun of Csuiemie Hhki-v til theheirof Aiulr -iv II otev. claim No i.s'm!s. ate in T. 7 s , H. j W f Wiliametle merldi.--.. in Mmjiiit I'luii iy, :t'?oii. . bated M..y 1.. lax-. JS. W. MIN'fo "'" Sneriff Jlarlon IJoi:.it, "SALJM" Pure Linseed Oil. The oltenlioii ,f eoiiauiuera of I iut oil who dealre eoml iliirul.l,- work, in ,t- llljf culled lo our oil, u alwava rellubl. lor pnrlty, uuil general excellcm iiua'.lly that cuii tint Im- rici-llml. , Onr bolli-d ol! ia ull genlue kettle l...l.e;. i The market, are full ef Eastern mid t ; lr ; ma chenp oil, motly adiilteialed. m!1 of In er ' ior miaiity. and can tie oiU t a.moi.., anr price. i Of miii'w witli am i, uii tvwiiu ,i.i: h i t toeonij-.eUr, t-entuna ioteml l,,K the erect loi. f K,MKI , bullillnen are xlvlnefl I., UM. ,,, ! K ; LKM F-l HE Ll.SM.KU Olt." If ,.,,r U i el ileul.m a nt hori our oil in Htu-k. on , aitpllvMtlon our lowoat f-io.li priceawlll b (flven.Hnd onlim promptly lillrfl ut I'm ncer Oil Worka. MiU-m. Orexoii. W. bllA 1 & Ml.Na, 1'roprleiora. LlKSett keep Iwleiu pure liiiteeil Hi.