The Best the IS. lliIsas'doir vVe'e - … · 0 0 G O o O o O G 0 0 nr.,..,,;,. vep.r were elected:...

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0 0 G O o O o O G 0 0 elected: J. nr.,..,,;,. vep.r were Orrgan tix tlie U. H. fccnutc. ljc lllcckln iSntcrpvisc. OREGON LEATHER ! The Best on the CofiST. yaf ?SM ' Manufacturer of It is said that" Gov. Woods ha; accepted rhvitation to stump the State of Cali- fornia, in behalf of the Union State and AUCTION ' ANDJWmrissioy A. IS. lliIsas'doir" AUCTIONEER! 5 Corner of Front and Oak streets, Portland AUCTION SALES Of Real Estate, Groceries, GpncralMerrl dise and Horses, Lan- - Every Wednesday and Saturday t A. B. RicriARnsoA-- , Auctioneer O AT PRIVATE ALE. English refined Par and PunchV T . Wc lake the following telegraphic news from dispatches to the Oregoniaa. Sheridan will complete his reconstruction work at one-fift- h less expense than Gen. Sickles says be requires in his district. r Yvclls Fargo & Co., send coaches regu- larly from Julesburg to Denver with a sufficient military force to protect the route from Indians. Gen. Rawlings and Gen. Dodge, of the Union Pacific Railroad, have left for tlie West. Rawlings will fix the point at 'the base of the mountains where the triple subsidy commences. A San Francisco dispatch of last Mon- day says of flour -- sales of 740 bbls Imper- ial extra, at current rates ; city brands, superfine hlf sks per l'JC lbs, $35 25 ; qrsks $5 2o(W oO ; extra hit sks $CG 25 ; qr sks So 25G 50. Wheat We understand that from $1 40 to $1 Oregon City, Oregon : V. C. IIIHXAXI), KDITOil AND rKOI'RIETOR. Saturday, July 6tli, 1367. it A T TIIK REQUEST OF MANY 1 - iluenti.il citizens of Oregon Citv, this an a l in published i'or a IMiblie Meeting to held at the court House on next Mon- - i.iv evening, to take such steps as'inay be .leenied necessary to secure the erection, ore-huildin- g at thi., place, of the of Orcffon Iron Works! O - Lately destroyed by fire at .Portland. t ! the Natural Advantages with which ihiA city is so bountifully supplied are to 01 t?e improved by the ingenuity of man it is mgiiiy necessary that all persons, directly int erested, act together in concert for such purpose, and by ofterinar inducements in- - vito capitalists to come amonsr us. 13 the present instance we are author- - ied to say that the most liberal nrooosi- - I ...Ill . . 1. T. H'A.,-.- - v"ii ni .:.hu iu uuu .vmhsuo, f to select a site here on the grounds ol the T. Company, Jwo of th(! Numbering Companies, (if jK.t the third), agree to contribute to the The' Common Council'and the Count v Commissioners will be petitioned for an xemption from taxes for city and county 1 1 rui puc: iui siceiiam penou .rrangmenhs may be effected, and urgently e-- lii.it a general attendance will result . . , i... n .: ...it 1. ii iM.m im.n no excuse prevent your being there. The matter is surely in the hands of this community D. C. IRELAND. July h. IP ("17. IlailroiMl Suit. The Oregon Central Railroad Company (incorporated last September,) brought Miit in the Circuit Court of Marion county, at the June term, praying for an injunc tion to restrain the Oregon Central Rail- - mad Companj' (incorporated a couple of Omonths since) from the use of plaintiff's Ouarne, and from usurping its ofiices, mak- ing contracts, etc. The Ikcord ofSatur- d.iy furnishes the following synopsis of the ease and the decision of the court : Oregon Central Railroad Company vs. Oregon Central Railroad Company. The o.np'ahu ailepcs that the nlaintiff is n. rnr- - poratioii organized under the general in- - .rporation law of Oregon, under the cor porate name of Oregou Central Railroad Company; that it lias certain valuable franchises, secured by act of Congress, ind also from the Legislature of this State, in the shape of lands, right of way. the l.ihhofthe State to pay seven per cent interest cm one million dollars of bonds, ce.; a! so, that the defendant, who is sued is a corporation under the. same name, has wrongfully assumed the corporate name f th plaintiff, is usurping and intruding CJsself ijjto the offices of plaintiff, and in- fringing on the use of its corporate name (Vind functions, and prays a perpetual in- - .r.iiicuou restraining ueiendant lrora the ise of plaintiffs corporate name and from 1 usurping its ofiices, making contracts. &c. Defendants demurred to complaint, on the following grounds, in substance : 1st, Tiiat the plaintiff, according to its own showing in the complaint, .. is nnt a W.iilv .0.., authorized corporation, on account of de- fects in Its organization, as shown in the compla'nt. 2d, That the plaintiff's rem- - 0edy, if any, is quo icarranto, and not by mw"'" j r:ig D' G" IL Conor' Brown. G. II. P-- j P S F Chadwiek, G. K.; A. B. Richard- son, Cartwright, G. Sec ; J. G- - S.; C. M. II. Couch. G. Treasurer : B. F. Qoodwrn, c. of ii.; J. n-- vVe'e ling. G. R- - A. C; Contracts to the amount of $40,000 were made last week at the Oregon Iron Works mill machinery for ihe upper Columbia. Mr. J. B. Underwood of Eugene City, wIU probably be appointed to the posi- tion of Krister in Bankruptcy fortius District. Hon. W. C. Johnson of this city, and Mr. S. A. Moreland of Portland as- sisted in the fourth of July celebration at Needv. A private letter from Camp Lyon, dated the 10th, states that Lieut. Waymire was there filling the duties of A. A. Q. M., and A. C. S. Maj. Hand had gone to Cal- - norma, ana am luumuuj, ua, ,k,. Harr would go out on a long campaign with 40 men, joining (Jon. Crook. Their operations would be west of Stein s Moun- tain. During tl;e last of May contracts were let for supplies of forage and fuel at Camp Lyon, much below the prices paid last year. In 1SGG hay cost $C0 per ton ; wood $14 to 18 per cord ; grain lOi cts per pound. This yeav Hay is furnished at $21; wood at $9.87 ; grain" "at 3j cts per pound. The contracts involve about Camp Lyon is IS miles west of the Owyhee mines, and is yerypleasantly sit uated. On the Huh Mr. Elian Ward was and wounded In the left arm, by Robert Bean, near Walla Walla. I'ean'gave him- self up, and was held in the light bonds cf $1,000. Tae Unionist thinks Senator Williams would be the best man for President, Colfax for Vice President. We are not particular. ..:e. Suit voursvlf. Paper flour sacks won't do for Oregon-Cotto- n and linen are just as cheap, and a rreat deal more useful when the "Staff of Life" is gone out of them. New mines, and placers worked previous to the Frazer excitement, have been found on the Met-- ! Low, nd Va-na:k- c in Wash-- I v. g ton Territory. Mine3 on John .Day continue to pay well. Wages arc from $4 to $4 50 per day. Beautiful quartz has been obtained on the Coast Fork of the Vullamette river. The State Journal says on Wednesday of this week Messrs. A. S. Patterson, C. ii Mosos, Jcel Ware and't Dorace Stratton went eight or ten mile3 up the river on a fishing excursion taking iheir boat upon a wagon. Next morning they started down and arrived at Eugene in the eve ning with ahunured fine trout. The Sentinel says that on Yrednesday the 21 ih ult., a company of Chinese miners discovered part of the remains of some large animal, probably a Mammoth or Mastadoii, w hile drifting in Missouri Gulch. about three miles from Jacksonville The people of Crescent City are to hare a breakwater, of stone work. The Sentinel says Lieut. IT tier has visited the place for the purpose of iookingafter the ma- terials. Doth the loading political writers of Sa- lem Lave been to the Penitentiary lately. ihe llec.or-.- l ot 'i uesday has the following : Rev. I. D. Driver preached Sunday evening at the Congregational Church. During the services, one ot the spindles nuts of his buggy was' taken off and thrown on the ground, and there found this morning. Fortunately, and providentially, ?dr. Driver Lad the spin dles reset on Friday, and they being pei- - j fecily true, the wheel went to his house, over a mile, in safety. He was driving a fiery ycnr.g horse at the lime, and the re sults of an accident might have been very serious to himself and his lady. The ques tion is, did some boy, finding the nut easily turned, take it off and find himself unable to replace it, or was it the work of some one who purposely risked life and property to be in mischief? If the latter, he should be discovered and pnnisLcfl. A little at- tention now, may save eome of the youth of our city, who grow reckless in propor- tion to their opportunities, a term in the penitentiary. The flouring nilll of the Willamette Manufacturing Company, at Salem, ship- ped three hundred and thirteen and one-ha- lf tons of flour in the month cf June. One hundred and three tons went io the Quartermaster of the Department of the Columbia ; and the remainder to San Francisco. The Unionist says : " According to our opinion, there is no company organized in this State that can receive any benefit from the U. S. Lands, or State aid towards building a railroad, nor can they even be authorized to do so, until the Legislature of this State has met and by joint resolu- tion designated a company to receive the aid and lands above mentioned. We re-gr- ot as much as anybody the muss our railroad prospects have got into, but the Legislature is our only source of remedy, and until that body meets, tilings must re- main as they are. If companies can go on and build roads without Government or Stale aid, we will be glad of it ; if not. we must be content to abide our time. The Record, edited by S. A. Clarke, says the above position is undoubtedly correct. Tut: Califorxi.v Grain Crop. The Cali- fornia Bee of the 20th, says: The harvest, which a fortnight ago, from general rumor, was thought to bo little more than half a crop, will probably bo nearly a full one in most of the grain growing counties. Such are now tlie reports, says the Alta. from Napa, Alameda. Santa Clara, San Joaquin, Yolo and Sonoma. The area planted is a fourth greater than last year, and the yield will no doubt be greater. The yield of fruit will be enormous, save in the far north, where it has suffered from late frosts. The agricultural prospects were never seemingly go prosperous as at tins time. When Senator Williams, in response to ! the serenade givea Lim in this city, says an the Oreoonian, staled thai he drafted the bill which is known as the reconstruction law, a good many Democrats in private life as well as of the press, affected to dis- credit the statement and sought to make is appear that the Senator hud told it as a sort of cock-and-bu- ll story to give himself importance before the people ofgOre- - gon, which his public services would not warrant. This, of roil nni. ' bibition of partisan spleen and that sort on unchantabloness which never permits his rc!??!r J ,see anyftic?rd OT great in a political opponent. We have a bit of testimony fi om another Kmimn hi r rfiirr oni in frr-r- ii. i - , . ,, 1 UU11I& ur- - ,umam3 in tue Senate, which will serve to gratiry me benator 3 friends, and which will not be particularly relished by CM f hU nnnnvuMll ... , 1 .wuiu.iuuic mm ueuuie 01m. ine on editor ot the btaic Journal writing from Whinortnn. M?iv 9toh in-n- u !,..- - i.,. " ' ihe arrival b f Senator Willi is . . . . after speaking of hie certainty of recon- - struction upon the uist principles of uni- - versal liberty and equal rights as pro- - Vlda m the reconstruction act, says : It must bo peculiarly gratifying to the people of Oregon one of the youngest of " ci and least nonnlmis nf nil il. know lhat Ju1S " illiams was the author and first mover of this great national mea sure of reconstruction. Ue -- lrw a.n anUir an1 lM(linfr.n(lvfinn)n rr ihn f.,, in were the two most important bills passed by the Thirty-nint- h Congress. For a man who has been in the Senate but a part of one term, in the midst of the most distin guished statesmen of the liepublicwho have served in that body twelve to fifteen years, to have originated and carried through the leading measures of a very important Congress, is a distinction, I be lievc, which no other Senator has ever gained. Aside from his character as a legislator, he ranks high on the commit tees, lie was chairman of the committee on Contingent Expenses and it is not usual to place a new Senator at the head of a committee and is now chairman of the committee on Public Land Claims. He 7 is a member of the Finance Committee the most important of all the committees in the Senate. There is but two who rank above him on this committee Sherman, 0 'Ohio, its chairman, and Governor Morgan, of New. York. Senator Williams is making his mark as a statesman ; is gaining a r.a tional reputation, which will make his name of, great value to the people Orrcon and the I'aciiic coast, as well as the coun try at large Disaster. The burning of the Oregon Iron Works, at Portland, on Wednesday morning, v as a disaster to thai place. The following account of the lire is from the Orcgonkta of Thursday : Wo have been enabled by thorough and persistent in- - Iuiry to la' before our readers further of the particulars relating to tne destruction of the Oregon Iron Foundry yesterday morning. The following are the owners of stock in the company as near as we can ascertain them : Stephen Coffin, (whose interest covered two-fifth- s of the entire establishment) D. McCully, A. McCulIy. E. M. Cooke, S. T. Church, AY. S. Fowell, J. W. Clawson, Dr. Yv II. Watkins, Win. C. Jamison, A. Myers and ine loss is estimated by tlie President, without any definite and de- terminate knowledge below the figures wo mentioned yesterday mornicg-S80,00- 0. There was an insurance on the works to the extent of $10,000. Mr. McCully, tlie President, having loaned the company $10,000, required it to securean insurance to that amount for his benefit, which was done. The fire originated in the extreme south-we- st corner of the casting building, which is located on the south-wes- t corner of the block. On Tuesday, the men in that part of the works had been casting, and had run off the surplus metal from the cupola into a corner of the building, upon which surplus metal the laborers had placed the flasks (being the casing of the sand of which the molds are made.) and being decidedly combustible, the heat re- tained by the metal caused their ignition, which led to the rapid envelopment of the whole establishment by the ravenous ele- ment. At the west side of the building, one header completed and one nearly completed were saved, one small lathe but a beautiful piece of mechanism, was carried from the building unhurt. The books and papers belonging to the busi ness of the concern were all saved. The loss of each individual stockholder is not to be known until further developments and thorough investigation of all the losses. The heaviest loser is Stephen Coffin, placed at about $ 10,000. Mr. Davis, the patentee of the reaper being manufactured by the w orus tor mm, is aboat bu.OOO. There were twenty of the reapers quite if not entirely completed. Governor Gibbs, a short time since sold out his entire inter est, thereby saving himself from loss. Stephen Coffin a short time since, we un- derstand, sold an interest to Mr. Masters, and was negotiating for a transfer cf a still further interest, but the negotiation was not complete. One important piece of machinery called a slotting machine (which in English is a machine for mor- tising iron) passed the fiery ordeal with- out receiving any damage. Y"e learn, after further inquiry , that Wm. Lair Hill, Esq., is a loser by about $1,700. The firemen did their duty as became them, and worked with a will to save all the property they possibly could, Although there was no wind, still the houses on the north, across the street, would have been consumed had not the firemen stayed its scorching effects upon the roof of the resi- dence near by. Had there been a breeze, even, from the northwest, the Central Public School House, a fine building, would have been in danger ; hut with Portland firemen at the apparatus, and with half a show, they would have saved it harmless from fire and baptised it with water in les? time than it takes us to write Congressional tickets. The invitation o. comes from a large number of the most prominent Union men of that State. This . a flattering compliment to our State. Fred. Schwatka has passed examination for and been admitted as a Cadet at Yv'est Point. At the regular session of the Board of Examiners, he was ill at Balti more, but was passed at .a special ' sitting the 20ih inst. So says his dispatch to friends here. Subsequent to the conclusion of the railroad, suit, at Salem, on Friday after- noon, Samuel Clark, of the Record, and J. Gaston, attorney for the defeated railroad on company, had a pugilistic encounter, in which, however, no great amount of blood was spilled, thanks to the intervention of bystanders. This is the first collision" the Oregon Central Railroad. A correspondent of ihe Mountaineer, writing from Canyon City, says : A pros pecting parly. to Crooked river is being talked of, to start from here in a short time, and from what I can learn it will be composed of the right sort of men ; so that before fall we may expect to hear of the place being found where the emigrants '43 hammered the out on their wagon tire:-?- We learn from a reliable source, savs the Mountaineer, that there is a great com- motion among the Government contractors and gentlemen connected with the Q. M. Department, relative to the letting of con- tracts for transportation and etceteras. A ladies" fair will be held at St. Pauls Church, on the French Prairie, on the Sth and 8th of July. Of the object of the fair, we are not informed. Gov. Woods has accepted the Yaqulna Pay .Wagon Road, says the Record. He says of it, that it is the best mountain .road he ever saw. The steamer Yidchna, Capt. Coo, Master, on her last trip to Lewiston, made the en- tire distance from Celilo to Lewiston 27t) miles at the rapid rate of 41 hours and 33 minutes, running time. Returning the Yakima made the same distance (from Lewiston back to Celilo) in hours and minutes. Adding to the latter the time usually occupied in making the distance from Celilo to Portland, about 9 hours, the trip could have been made to Portland in i uours ami minutes, and me entire trip from Portland to Lewiston and back in the astonishing short time of 72 hoard and 42 minutes. Further, we are informed that from Lewiston to Fori Benton, by the Lolo Fork trail, in the summer, the entire instance can be made in ( days, wuich would bring us within 1 1 days, 2 hours and f3 minutes of Fort Beaton.. Cape. Miller formerly in command of the bark Almalia, is now the master of the Architect, running between San Francisco and Paget Sound. The following items of news we clip from the Mountaineer of the 26th uit : The up-riv- er freights have been very good du- ring the last week. The down-rive- r freights for the week ending Thursday 2Cth, amounted to 3000 pounds wool ; 220 quarter sacks Hoar and 1200; hides Yvro are informed that Mes.rrs. Robbins & Weaver of this city have a contract for transporting one hundred anil eighty tons of Government freight from San Francisco to the different military camps in Idaho Territory. They also have the transport ing of one hundred tons of flour from Waila YValla to the same destination. The freight is shipped from San Francisco to Portland in sailing vessels, and from Port land to Yvrallu!a bv the O.S.N. Co. "s boats, and we are told, considerable cheaper than It can be carried by an other route We are glad to learn, by a private but authentic letter, that Col. Marshall and Capt. Eckerson, U. S. A., have been honorably acquitted of all the charges preferred against them by the Court of In- quiry which recently sat upon their case at Fort Poise, composed of able and hon- orable officers of the army, Corporal Kennedy, Co. F., U. S Artillery, arrived in this city on Wednesday, from Walla Yv'alla, in charge of two men of the 8th Cavalry, who he was conducting to Fort Vancouver for trial, one for dese'rtlon and the other for being drunk and disorderly. The Roseburg paper says that Senator Williams will address the citizens of that place on the 20th of July. The Advocate says Clear Creek camp-meeti- ng is now in progress, under the di- rection of Rev. J. F. Devore, P. P. and Rev. C. Alderson, P. C. There is also a camp meeting in progress in the Browns- ville circuit. The Salem Record says : " The church edifice being constructed on the southeast corner of High and Center streets, by the " Christian'-- ' denomination, popularly known as " Campbcliites'' will be one of the handsomest in the city. It is of brick, the walls being 22 feet in the clear. It stands 3Gx5G feet on the ground, and is only four feet each way smaller than the 31. E. Church. The building is now ready for the plasterer, and so for ward to completion that it is expected ser vices will bo held there in the month cf August. We have cur opinion of a man who would strike a woman, rob a hen roost, or steal from a local Editor. Yfo condole friend Pull, who, while subbing lor Capt. Crandall, had his cherry orchard robbed. Portland is raising about five hundred vigorous young chaps for the Penitentiary. Oregon City has about twenty fifh like tendencies. Consternation exists nmorg the Salem people, who found out one fine day lately, that Salem didn't own Marion Square so much as she used to. The widow of the donor of the land claims it. They say a pettifogger or two is at the bottom of the case. The Masonic Fraternity of Oregon met in Grand Lodge at Portland week before last. The following of.icer." fc--r the e:isa ALL KINDS OF LEATHERS Miiataukie, Oregon-- . UNDERSIGNED WISHES TO THE DEALERS AND MANUFACTURERS That he is prcpnrcd to furnish as coed and durable un article of Leather as can be made on the Pacific Coast, at the following rates : Harness Leather, per lb 28 to 30 cents. lif-av- for Concord 83 " Skirting, per pound 23 to S2 11 1 tin'-- , in the side 35 " Cut, per scpiure foot, 1,00 Side, upper, " " " 10 to 20 cents. Grain Leather " " " IS to 22 " Li-di- t Dufi, or Grain for Wo- men's work 13 to 20 " CalfSkins, per doz 830 00 to $40 00 Kin " " 4e00 t 60 00 Bridle, per sine o 10 4 00 'Y.lhir. ier side 1 00 to . 2 50 T 1 Lace Leather, per side. 4 00 - !"?T I do not think that Harness Leather should necessarily be made in Santa Cruz, in or der to stand the test cf our climate ; T" Nor do I think that Pflting. in order to.beur the strain .of Oregon Machinery, must be made m the Atlantic fctates. ALL I ASK IS A - i JL it XM. 0 JI -- t, lv . Ar( prove, to the satisfaction of all concerned, that Oregon Leather is the best on the Coast. Ail orders wm meet vnuv prompt a- tcution Address THOMAS ARMSTRONG, J0.lv ) Mibvaukie, Oregon. IMPORTER OF Hard Wood Lumber COACH, CARRIAGE, AND WAGON MATERIALS ! Portland, Oregon. TTAR NOW ON HAND asd TO ARRIVE a I the finest stock ever imported te this coast. Reing selected under his personal supervision he can warrant it to be of the best, and would cull the attention of dealers and wagon makers to his assortment of EASTERN OAK, ASH, AND HICKORY, PLANK, WHITE WOOD. HUBS, SPOKES, FELLOES AXLES, POLES, BENT RIMS Shaft, Bows, Single-tree- , Plata Beams and Handles, d'C. Orders for the abore, also for Roxes, Thim- - bies, fckeins, Iron and Steel, promptly tilled. KOISEKT I. LAW, Commission Merchant, 38 First st , Corner of J'ine, Portland, Oregon. T" Consignments solicited. (30. ly DAILY OVERLAND MAIL Tl OUTE! TO CALIFORNIA. to Sax FRANCISCO IN SIX THROUGH the U. S. Mail aud W. V. & Co.'s Exp!-"- . II. . CORbWT & Co , 1 BOriiS p.y this route passengers avoid the risk of Ocean travel. Fussing tiironi:li Ureron Cin Halein, . Albany, CofvalSis, , . ... 'Oakland, . Win- - ... -- Chester, Jtoscburg, CanyonriUe, Jacksonville and in California : Yreka, Trinity Center, Shasta, lied iiiuli, lchama, Chico, Oroviue, Marysvidc to Sacramento. Connecting with thr fifiilr stnnros to itl m i n i n t t n w n in ern C ibfornla and southern Oregon ; also with the Railroad from Oroville to Sacra- - memo ; aiso connecting wun me central and resume their seats at pleasure, at any time within one month, upon notifying the Agent at the office w here they lay over. JFar to SRcramciilo &50. Stages leave the Portland office (Arrigo-ni'- s Hotel,) daily at o'clock. So.Sm) B. O. WHITEHOUSE, Agent. CHARM AN & RRO.. Oregon City Agents. 11 SiMSHEiMER & CO,, New Y'ork Manufacturers of Bell Metal Patent Agraffe Grand Scale Pianofortes ! rpiIE,. UNDERSIGNED WOULD RE3-- X pect fully announce to his old natrnns and the public generally, that he will keen luuswmi)- - on nana a gooa assortment ot the above class Fianos, which he offers whoie- - sale aud retail at New York prices. AGEXT FOR ETEIXWAT & SOX3 Celebrated Pianofortes ! AXD A.E. THOMPSON'S Patent Swell at.d Voice Tkemelo Ciiorai, Organ. N. B. Pianos and Organs carefully tuned and repaired.' 1'. .SINSHEIMER 36.1y) ' 1 11 Front st. Portland, Oregon POKY SALOON. Main street, Oregon City, C"sss... One door north of the Post uuice. "tfjr JAMES Propr. This popular saloon is always supplied with the very best oualitv of V"inf nnH Liquors, Ale, Porter. Reer and Cider Cigars i anu iooacco. uive me a call. 7:1 y JAMES MANN. A. G. BRADFORD, TXS REMOVED THE BALANCE OF JLJL his stock of Wines and Liquors, I . yt . r tt c- - TO ., - x j M.rM, su-cci- , voruaiui, Urc "on . . . . ..... i viit rear oi ins iormer place oi .v.jii.vjo. i .n in 11 ail L Ml Jiitlil I'lIlO mcs and Brandies, will do well to call Lmpty j'ipca and Barrel: for Sale. (27. tf 0 o English Square and Octagon Cast sWi -- Horse shoes, Files, ' Rasps, saws ; Screws, Fry-pans- , sheet iron, R.'g Iron- - o A large assoitmcnt of Groceries and Liquors A. D. Richardson, Auctioneer! CHAS. HODGE . . CIIAS. eTc.VLEF . .GEO. W. SXELL, H0BGZJ, CALEF k C0.9 DEALERS IS o DETJGS and MEDIOJNES h TAINTS, OILS, AVD VaXDCTlV GLASS O r 1 RXISHES, BR US J IRS, Rj IXTEUs Materia!, and Druggists Sundries 07 Front Street, S5.) Portland, Oregon. mu&m abb isp One door south from the corner of First and Morrison streets, near the Western, Portland, Oregon. m. T. Shanalian, IMPORTER ASD DEALER IN MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS ' NINE EN OR A VINOS, PICTURE FRAMES And MOLDINGS. rpiIE FINEST AND LARGEST STOCK X of Engravings, Cromos, Plain and co- lored Lithographs, etc., ever before cii'erwl in this market, just received and fur sale at GREATLY- - KEBUCEC PRffJES! also : Vieus of Columbia River Scenery'; Constantly on hand. AG EXT FOR EnAKBUItv's CELEBHATS sud Scale Fisa&os I Which have given universal satit-faction- , and which he guarantees to sell at San Fran- cisco prices. Special attention given to framing J hotograpii etc. r. Shanahan, formerly of A. K lev s establishment, San Jt- raucisco, will a- ttend to tuning and repairing Pianos, Melo-deon- s, and all kinds of .Musical Instruments. I'ianos for Rent. (C'i.ly TEA AND PAPER HANGING 1 tl i a A j No. 113 Front street, Portland, LEAVE TO I FORM THF. X)E that they kec-- an stock9 of CAP. PETS, PAPER HANGINGS, FLOOIL AN I) TA PLE OIL CLOTHS, WINDOW SHAD ESJD A M j Iv LACK GUI IT A INS, CORNICES AND BANDS, GILT MOLDINGS, And all goods in the CARPET & UPHOLSTERY LINE t o "We Import or Goods Direct from the I5.st, a. mi svll nl San Francisco I?i iccs I WALTER 2Sft, 113 Front street, nearly opposite Vaazfin' Vi nan, i'oriland, Uregon. 85. FAfiMERS'OF 0EEG0NI LOOKOUT FOR THE H7i f v1. o THE CHEAPEST! MOST DURABLE! AND O LIGHTEST DRAFT IlEAPEU IN TIIE UNITED STATES. UNDERSIGNED ARE NOW MAIfc THE and have placed in market for the coming harvest, fifty of the above named Reapers, which they "will cheap, aod WARRANT TO GIVE Than any Other Beaper ever ( o BROUGHT TO TIIE PACIFIC COAST! For sale by tne OUEGOX IKOXVORKS, SG.tf) Portland, Oregon. DE, KUFELAND'S CFLE3RATED SWISS STOIiIAGH BITTERS. TRY The best Purifier of the Blood! A Pleasant Tonic ! IT A very Agreeable Drink ! Unsurpassed for acting surely b TRY gently on the secretions of tbeiuu-liey- s, IT bowels, stomach and liver. For sale at all wholesale and retail liquor, drug, and grocery stores. SOBODY SHOULD BE WITHOUT Ef L G. Friscu, Proprietor. Tayloo & Bendel, Sole Agent.. C''.ly) 413 Clay St., iu Francuc.-- . O 0 0 i. i G O - u O o O o O o o O O G 0 o o o o Q 0 O o - I TS . , v . CO is being paid in the interior for the new crop. Ordinary old, $1 50 ; coast $1 50 ; good itnilling si Go. Senator Thayer sent the following dis- patch to Gen. "Grant and the Secretary of the Interior : "If Gen. Puford report ed what the telegraph attributes to him in regard to Indians matters, he is guiliv of reckless misrepresentation or cruel stupidity. The warfare now being car ried on upon the plains by jhe savage Indians upon small parties of deicnse less settlers, railroad surveying parties and laborers is barbarous and unprovoked. The Government must not be deluded by any such reports as Buibrd's." An official disuatcli notifying the Aus- - train Minister of the execution of Maxi- - milion on the 19th had been received. Juarez refuses to give up the body to the Emperor of Austria. Napa'ein hs been' notified of his death through the cable. Jhe event produced great excite- - men i among the foreign ministers. Nearly all called on Count Wydenderck to con- - sole with him. Comodore Rao of the steamer Jacony telegraphs to the .Navy Department to the same effect. It is be- - lieved that Juarez consented reluctantly to the execution of Maximilian. lie m- - formed a messenger of our Government that he was disposed to spare his life but the pressure of the Mexican leaders and people was too great to Avithstand. MARRIED. At Portland. June 50th, by the Rev. Mr. Parens, II r. Thomas Rowley, of Oregon City, and Mrs. C. Blackwell, of v aehingtan county. Kcw Advertisements. W. F. KIGHFIELD, Established since 1S49, at the old stand, Ma ix Stuekt, Ukl.gox Citv. SZb,. An assortment of Watches, .Tew- - t'vT3. clrv, and Seth Thomas' weight Clocks, all of which are warranted to be as represented. jfe'gjw Repairiiigs done on short notice, . r , u thankful lor past favors. (. 0. P. IflASON, Attorney and Counselor at Lav, 102 Front St., Portland, Oregon. Is fHy prepared to aitend to any business under the Rankrupt Law. Divorces obtained on the most reasonable terms, and no charges made for services where the divorce is denied. 57. ly BaiTTGH & GRAY, Attorneys at L aw, No. GTG Seventh st,, P. O. Box 1034, Washington Citt, 1). C. O FECIAL ATTENTION OIVEN to LAND Business, before the General Land Oilicc and Interior Department, and generally to business before the Executive Departments lid uonrress Having had vcars of experience in the General Land Oillce, arl a long and succes-fu- l practice in land claims aud controversies, wc arc enabled to oiler valuable services be- fore the U. S. Supreme Court, Interior De- partment, and General Land Office. e reier generally ro iui u. iiann Ofhccrs. 3 in Notice HEREBY GIVEN, that the Assessor's IS Rooks for the assessment of all theprop- - of Oregon City, for the year 1SG7, has been approved and placed in the Collector s hands lor collection. ah persons owing enner property, poll, . or road taxes, are hereby re- - i ii : i i. ai i quired to settle ine same w itci me proper ci- - licer immediately, and save costs. JAMES M. MOO It E, Recorder. July Sd, 1S67. (57.3t llotice tO Johll Findsermacker. 1lTOU ARE HEREBY' NOTIFIED TIIAT I will, on Saturday tlie third day ot Auzust, 1S(!7, at the hour ot 1 o clock 1'. M., apply to enter at the Oregon City Land Office the N. W. quarter of section S, T 2 SR 1 W, and that I will then and there produce tes- - timonv to show that you have forfeited your ritdit to said tract of land, by abandonment thereof. JASFER ORAliEL. June 29th, 1SG7. (G7.lt Kotice to Leonard A. Cuminings. OUGH vs. LEONARD A. IIClIARD Contest for land m T. 1 Is. R. 5 E. Notice to Leonard A. Cummings, Richard Ough havinc; applied at. this odice to enter as a jwc-emptio- n right, the lot 4 of section 21, tlie N. V. quarter ot N. W quarter of section 28, and the E. half of N. h. quarter ot section 2;, m T. 1 N. It. 5 E., alleging lhat you have abandoned said land, and filing proof in support of such allegation ; You are, therefore, hereby no tified that j"Ou will be allowed until the 30th day ot July, 107, to appear at tins oihee and establish your right to said tract of laud, otherwise said proof of abandonment will be taken as true, and j our cutry thereof re ported tor cancilation. OWEN WADE, Register. II EN R Y W A R REN , Receiver. Land Oflice, Oregon City Oregon, June 24, ISO. (SG.4t instate CI lilOinas J OimSOn, deceased, TN THE COUNTY COURT OF CLACKA mas County, State of Oregon. In the matter ' of tlie estate of Thomas Johnson deceased. F. O. McCown, administrator of said estate, having hied his accounts for a tinal settlement in said County Court, it was ordered by the Court that Monday the 5ih day of August, 1867, be fixed as the day for a final settlement and determination of said accounts. Therefore, notice is hereby given to all parties interest ed in said matter, to appear on said day at U1C uut "se 111 vit-So- vn, v,iai;h..iiiius County, State of Oregon, and make their JlI BvJvUlll.ij k I lilt V 1 vl 11 i JJy order of W. T. MATLOCK. County Judge of Clackamas , Co., Oregon. f ff.l.. T..l i 1 r ,.T- - B N IHE CO Li MY COURT OF CLACK A- - X mas County, State of Oregon. -- In the matter of the estate of William Smith, de- - ceased. Francis Smith, executrix of said estate, having filed her accounts for final set- - "ciucui. in Biuu vuuri, it. was oruereu by the Court that Monday ihe 5th day of August, 1SG7, be fixed as the day for a final settlement and determination of said accounts. Therefore, notice is hereby given to all parties interest- ed in said matter, to appear on said day at tho Court House in Oregon City, Clackamas Count3. State of Oregon, and make their ohir.tiona to sahl accounts hfino- - n!)n.-f.- l 4r a w.v., .1 ...... .M. V By order of W. T. MATLOCK. County Judge of Clackamas Co., Oregon Oregon City, July 1st, 17. ?7 - t injunction. d, That the complaint does I Lair Hill J-n- staffc facts sufficient to constitute a Wra' Master3 i'aciiic nanroaa to uie Atlantic Mates, Stages stop over night at Jacksonville and Yrcka, for passengers to rest. Passengers will be permitted to lay over at any point. cau.--e of suit, or that authorize a court of equity to interfere by injunction. 4th, That several causes of suit are improperly united. The Court sustained the demurrer gen-rra- y. holding that according to the lan- - guagn 01 u:e complaint it tailed to show that plaintiff was a legally authorized cor- poration. The Court further held that the con-plain- (which contained twenty pages of closely written matter) did not present a case that would authorize the interfer- ence of a court of equity, or the issuing of an injunction, that the mere adoption of q the same corporate name of plaintiff did not authorize an injunction, except the compiaint had shown an interference with five rights and functions of plaintiff, and this the Court held the complaint failed to show ; that the mere fact of the' defend- ant, assuming, the same corporate name of plaintiff and of making contracts in that name, aad issuing stock and bonds in such name, was not such an interference with any rights of plaintiff a3 would authorize an injunction. This decision goes directly to the whole merits of the plaintiffs case, and it is im- possible to make any amendment that will entitle plaintiff to another standinjr in Court. Not Very Pleasant. Tlie Iferahl has all along complained that the Orcgonian Uyes not deal fairly with it, socially or otherwise. We observe that the Herald goes a little farther accepts contracts for printing with request to furnish Orcgonian with copy, but forgets ihe request. That t?ort of business courtesy looks very bad, and Democrats as well as Republicans re- mark about it. q The Pack.k$ Lixe. The bark Sam 3ler r'df, cf the Oregon Packet Line, is now at Portland. The Live Yankee is about ready to sail. The Arrival is en route. TunoLon. The C. O. & M. S. S. Com pany have arranged to ticket passengers through from San Francisco to Boise City, and intermediate places, at reduced rates. a for.il arrangement. Locate irCapt. M. Keeler has finally reached New York and located at 55 Lib ert v Street, as nn Orecon Commission Agent, for buying and shipping direct. Still Ui'. The Albany Journal sees in the names of Hon. Schuyler Colfax and 3 Ion. Geo. II. Williams, two fitting men to sit at the head of this Government. I:pia- - Speeches. The Lewiston Journal U publishing the simple, but truthful and vandid speeches, made at the late treaty V- - z. Vcrr Indians. COURTESY OF BANCROFT LIBRARY, TrMTlT-lTRTT- DIT nflLTTTDPNTA .

Transcript of The Best the IS. lliIsas'doir vVe'e - … · 0 0 G O o O o O G 0 0 nr.,..,,;,. vep.r were elected:...

Page 1: The Best the IS. lliIsas'doir vVe'e - … · 0 0 G O o O o O G 0 0 nr.,..,,;,. vep.r were elected: J. ljc lllcckln iSntcrpvisc. Orrgan tix tlie U. H. fccnutc. OREGON LEATHER! The

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elected: J.nr.,..,,;,. vep.r wereOrrgan tix tlie U. H. fccnutc.ljc lllcckln iSntcrpvisc.

OREGON LEATHER !

The Best on the CofiST.

yaf ?SM ' Manufacturer of

It is said that" Gov. Woods ha; acceptedrhvitation to stump the State of Cali-

fornia, in behalf of the Union State and

AUCTION '

ANDJWmrissioyA. IS. lliIsas'doir"

AUCTIONEER!5

Corner of Front and Oak streets, Portland

AUCTION SALESOf Real Estate, Groceries, GpncralMerrl

dise and Horses, Lan- -

Every Wednesday and Saturday tA. B. RicriARnsoA-- ,

AuctioneerO

AT PRIVATE ALE.English refined Par and PunchV T .

Wc lake the following telegraphic newsfrom dispatches to the Oregoniaa.

Sheridan will complete his reconstructionwork at one-fift- h less expense than Gen.Sickles says be requires in his district. r

Yvclls Fargo & Co., send coaches regu-larly from Julesburg to Denver with asufficient military force to protect theroute from Indians.

Gen. Rawlings and Gen. Dodge, ofthe Union Pacific Railroad, have left fortlie West. Rawlings will fix the point at'the base of the mountains where the triplesubsidy commences.

A San Francisco dispatch of last Mon-

day says of flour --sales of 740 bbls Imper-ial extra, at current rates ;city brands, superfine hlf sks per l'JC lbs,$35 25 ; qrsks $5 2o(W oO ; extra hitsks $CG 25 ; qr sks So 25G 50. Wheat

We understand that from $1 40 to $1

Oregon City, Oregon :

V. C. IIIHXAXI), KDITOil AND rKOI'RIETOR.

Saturday, July 6tli, 1367.

it

A T TIIK REQUEST OF MANY1 - iluenti.il citizens of Oregon Citv, this ana l in published i'or a IMiblie Meeting to

held at the court House on next Mon- -i.iv evening, to take such steps as'inay be

.leenied necessary to secure the erection,ore-huildin- g at thi., place, of the of

Orcffon Iron Works!O -

Lately destroyed by fire at .Portland.t

! the Natural Advantages with whichihiA city is so bountifully supplied are to 01

t?e improved by the ingenuity of man it ismgiiiy necessary that all persons, directlyint erested, act together in concert for suchpurpose, and by ofterinar inducements in- -vito capitalists to come amonsr us.

13 the present instance we are author- -ied to say that the most liberal nrooosi- - I

...Ill. . 1. T. H'A.,-.- -v"ii ni .:.hu iu uuu .vmhsuo, fto select a site here on the grounds ol the

T. Company,Jwo of th(! Numbering Companies, (if

jK.t the third), agree to contribute to the

The' Common Council'and the Count vCommissioners will be petitioned for an

xemption from taxes for city and county1 1

rui puc: iui siceiiam penou

.rrangmenhs may be effected, and urgentlye-- lii.it a general attendance will result

. . ,i... n .: ...it 1. iiiM.m im.n no excuse preventyour being there. The matter is surely inthe hands of this community

D. C. IRELAND.July h. IP ("17.

IlailroiMl Suit.

The Oregon Central Railroad Company(incorporated last September,) broughtMiit in the Circuit Court of Marion county,at the June term, praying for an injunction to restrain the Oregon Central Rail- -

mad Companj' (incorporated a couple ofOmonths since) from the use of plaintiff'sOuarne, and from usurping its ofiices, mak-

ing contracts, etc. The Ikcord ofSatur-d.iy furnishes the following synopsis ofthe ease and the decision of the court :

Oregon Central Railroad Company vs.Oregon Central Railroad Company. Theo.np'ahu ailepcs that the nlaintiff is n. rnr- -

poratioii organized under the general in- -

.rporation law of Oregon, under the corporate name of Oregou Central RailroadCompany; that it lias certain valuablefranchises, secured by act of Congress,ind also from the Legislature of this State,in the shape of lands, right of way. thel.ihhofthe State to pay seven per centinterest cm one million dollars of bonds,ce.; a! so, that the defendant, who is suedis a corporation under the. same name, has

wrongfully assumed the corporate namef th plaintiff, is usurping and intruding

CJsself ijjto the offices of plaintiff, and in-

fringing on the use of its corporate name(Vind functions, and prays a perpetual in- -

.r.iiicuou restraining ueiendant lrora theise of plaintiffs corporate name and from 1

usurping its ofiices, making contracts. &c.Defendants demurred to complaint, on

the following grounds, in substance : 1st,Tiiat the plaintiff, according to its ownshowing in the complaint,

.. is nnt a W.iilv.0..,authorized corporation, on account of de-fects in Its organization, as shown in thecompla'nt. 2d, That the plaintiff's rem- -

0edy, if any, is quo icarranto, and not by

mw"'" jr:ig D' G" ILConor'Brown. G. II. P-- j

P S F Chadwiek, G. K.; A. B. Richard-

son, Cartwright, G. Sec ; J.G- - S.; C. M.

II. Couch. G. Treasurer : B. F. Qoodwrn,

c. of ii.; J. n-- vVe'eling. G. R- - A. C;Contracts to the amount of $40,000 were

made last week at the Oregon Iron Works

mill machinery for ihe upper Columbia.

Mr. J. B. Underwood of Eugene City,

wIU probably be appointed to the posi-

tion of Krister in Bankruptcy fortiusDistrict.

Hon. W. C. Johnson of this city, and

Mr. S. A. Moreland of Portland as-

sisted in the fourth of July celebration at

Needv.A private letter from Camp Lyon, dated

the 10th, states that Lieut. Waymire

was there filling the duties of A. A. Q. M.,

and A. C. S. Maj. Hand had gone to Cal- -

norma, ana am luumuuj, ua, ,k,.Harr would go out on a long campaign

with 40 men, joining (Jon. Crook. Their

operations would be west of Stein s Moun-

tain.During tl;e last of May contracts were

let for supplies of forage and fuel at CampLyon, much below the prices paid lastyear. In 1SGG hay cost $C0 per ton ;

wood $14 to 18 per cord ; grain lOi ctsper pound. This yeav Hay is furnished at$21; wood at $9.87 ; grain" "at 3j ctsper pound. The contracts involve about

Camp Lyon is IS miles west of theOwyhee mines, and is yerypleasantly situated.

On the Huh Mr. Elian Ward wasand wounded In the left arm, by RobertBean, near Walla Walla. I'ean'gave him-

self up, and was held in the light bonds cf$1,000.

Tae Unionist thinks Senator Williamswould be the best man for President,Colfax for Vice President. We are notparticular. ..:e. Suit voursvlf.

Paper flour sacks won't do for Oregon-Cotto- n

and linen are just as cheap, and arreat deal more useful when the "Staff ofLife" is gone out of them.

New mines, and placers worked previousto the Frazer excitement, have been foundon the Met-- ! Low, nd Va-na:k- c in Wash-- I

v. g ton Territory.Mine3 on John .Day continue to pay

well. Wages arc from $4 to $4 50 perday.

Beautiful quartz has been obtained onthe Coast Fork of the Vullamette river.

The State Journal says on Wednesdayof this week Messrs. A. S. Patterson, C. iiMosos, Jcel Ware and't Dorace Strattonwent eight or ten mile3 up the river on afishing excursion taking iheir boat upona wagon. Next morning they starteddown and arrived at Eugene in the evening with ahunured fine trout.

The Sentinel says that on Yrednesdaythe 21 ih ult., a company of Chinese minersdiscovered part of the remains of somelarge animal, probably a Mammoth orMastadoii, w hile drifting in Missouri Gulch.about three miles from Jacksonville

The people of Crescent City are to harea breakwater, of stone work. The Sentinelsays Lieut. IT tier has visited the placefor the purpose of iookingafter the ma-

terials.Doth the loading political writers of Sa-

lem Lave been to the Penitentiary lately.ihe llec.or-.- l ot 'i uesday has the

following : Rev. I. D. Driver preachedSunday evening at the CongregationalChurch. During the services, one ot thespindles nuts of his buggy was' taken offand thrown on the ground, and therefound this morning. Fortunately, andprovidentially, ?dr. Driver Lad the spindles reset on Friday, and they being pei--

j fecily true, the wheel went to his house,over a mile, in safety. He was driving afiery ycnr.g horse at the lime, and the results of an accident might have been veryserious to himself and his lady. The question is, did some boy, finding the nut easilyturned, take it off and find himself unableto replace it, or was it the work of someone who purposely risked life and propertyto be in mischief? If the latter, he shouldbe discovered and pnnisLcfl. A little at-

tention now, may save eome of the youthof our city, who grow reckless in propor-tion to their opportunities, a term in thepenitentiary.

The flouring nilll of the WillametteManufacturing Company, at Salem, ship-

ped three hundred and thirteen and one-ha- lf

tons of flour in the month cf June.One hundred and three tons went io theQuartermaster of the Department of theColumbia ; and the remainder to SanFrancisco.

The Unionist says : " According to ouropinion, there is no company organized inthis State that can receive any benefitfrom the U. S. Lands, or State aid towardsbuilding a railroad, nor can they even beauthorized to do so, until the Legislatureof this State has met and by joint resolu-tion designated a company to receive theaid and lands above mentioned. We re-gr- ot

as much as anybody the muss ourrailroad prospects have got into, but theLegislature is our only source of remedy,and until that body meets, tilings must re-

main as they are. If companies can goon and build roads without Governmentor Stale aid, we will be glad of it ; if not.we must be content to abide our time.The Record, edited by S. A. Clarke, saysthe above position is undoubtedly correct.

Tut: Califorxi.v Grain Crop. The Cali-fornia Bee of the 20th, says: The harvest,which a fortnight ago, from general rumor,was thought to bo little more than half acrop, will probably bo nearly a full onein most of the grain growing counties.Such are now tlie reports, says the Alta.from Napa, Alameda. Santa Clara, SanJoaquin, Yolo and Sonoma. The areaplanted is a fourth greater than last year,and the yield will no doubt be greater.The yield of fruit will be enormous, savein the far north, where it has suffered fromlate frosts. The agricultural prospectswere never seemingly go prosperous as attins time.

When Senator Williams, in response to !

the serenade givea Lim in this city, says anthe Oreoonian, staled thai he drafted thebill which is known as the reconstructionlaw, a good many Democrats in privatelife as well as of the press, affected to dis-

credit the statement and sought to make isappear that the Senator hud told it as a

sort of cock-and-bu- ll story to give himselfimportance before the people ofgOre- -

gon, which his public services would notwarrant. This, of roil nni.'

bibition of partisan spleen and that sort onunchantabloness which never permits his

rc!??!r J ,see anyftic?rd OT

great in a political opponent. We have abit of testimony fi om another Kmimnhi r rfiirr oni in frr-r- ii. i -

, . ,, 1 UU11I&ur- - ,umam3 in tue Senate, which will

serve to gratiry me benator 3 friends, andwhich will not be particularly relished byCM f hU nnnnvuMll... , 1

.wuiu.iuuic mm ueuuie 01m. ine oneditor ot the btaic Journal writing fromWhinortnn. M?iv 9toh in-n- u !,..-- i.,." '

ihe arrival b f Senator Willi is. . . .after speaking of hie certainty of recon- -

struction upon the uist principles of uni- -

versal liberty and equal rights as pro- -

Vlda m the reconstruction act, says :

It must bo peculiarly gratifying to thepeople of Oregon one of the youngest of" ciand least nonnlmis nf nil il.know lhat Ju1S " illiams was the authorand first mover of this great national measure of reconstruction. Ue -- lrw a.nanUir an1 lM(linfr.n(lvfinn)n rr ihn f.,, in

were the two most important bills passedby the Thirty-nint- h Congress. For a manwho has been in the Senate but a part ofone term, in the midst of the most distinguished statesmen of the liepublicwhohave served in that body twelve to fifteenyears, to have originated and carriedthrough the leading measures of a veryimportant Congress, is a distinction, I believc, which no other Senator has evergained. Aside from his character as alegislator, he ranks high on the committees, lie was chairman of the committeeon Contingent Expenses and it is notusual to place a new Senator at the headof a committee and is now chairman ofthe committee on Public Land Claims. He 7is a member of the Finance Committeethe most important of all the committeesin the Senate. There is but two who rankabove him on this committee Sherman, 0

'Ohio, its chairman, and Governor Morgan,of New. York. Senator Williams is makinghis mark as a statesman ; is gaining a r.ational reputation, which will make hisname of, great value to the people Orrconand the I'aciiic coast, as well as the country at large

Disaster. The burning of the OregonIron Works, at Portland, on Wednesdaymorning, v as a disaster to thai place. Thefollowing account of the lire is from theOrcgonkta of Thursday : Wo have beenenabled by thorough and persistent in- -

Iuiry to la' before our readers further ofthe particulars relating to tne destructionof the Oregon Iron Foundry yesterdaymorning. The following are the ownersof stock in the company as near as we canascertain them : Stephen Coffin, (whoseinterest covered two-fifth- s of the entireestablishment) D. McCully, A. McCulIy.E. M. Cooke, S. T. Church, AY. S. Fowell,J. W. Clawson, Dr. Yv II. Watkins, Win.

C. Jamison, A. Myers andine loss is estimated by

tlie President, without any definite and de-

terminate knowledge below the figureswo mentioned yesterday mornicg-S80,00- 0.

There was an insurance on the works tothe extent of $10,000. Mr. McCully, tliePresident, having loaned the company$10,000, required it to securean insuranceto that amount for his benefit, which wasdone. The fire originated in the extremesouth-we- st corner of the casting building,which is located on the south-wes- t cornerof the block. On Tuesday, the men inthat part of the works had been casting,and had run off the surplus metal from thecupola into a corner of the building, uponwhich surplus metal the laborers hadplaced the flasks (being the casing of thesand of which the molds are made.) andbeing decidedly combustible, the heat re-

tained by the metal caused their ignition,which led to the rapid envelopment of thewhole establishment by the ravenous ele-

ment. At the west side of the building,one header completed and one nearlycompleted were saved, one small lathebut a beautiful piece of mechanism, wascarried from the building unhurt. Thebooks and papers belonging to the business of the concern were all saved. Theloss of each individual stockholder is notto be known until further developmentsand thorough investigation of all the losses.The heaviest loser is Stephen Coffin, placedat about $ 10,000. Mr. Davis, the patenteeof the reaper being manufactured by thew orus tor mm, is aboat bu.OOO. Therewere twenty of the reapers quite if notentirely completed. Governor Gibbs, ashort time since sold out his entire interest, thereby saving himself from loss.Stephen Coffin a short time since, we un-

derstand, sold an interest to Mr. Masters,and was negotiating for a transfer cf astill further interest, but the negotiationwas not complete. One important pieceof machinery called a slotting machine(which in English is a machine for mor-tising iron) passed the fiery ordeal with-out receiving any damage. Y"e learn,after further inquiry , that Wm. Lair Hill,Esq., is a loser by about $1,700. Thefiremen did their duty as became them,and worked with a will to save all theproperty they possibly could, Althoughthere was no wind, still the houses on thenorth, across the street, would have beenconsumed had not the firemen stayed itsscorching effects upon the roof of the resi-dence near by. Had there been a breeze,even, from the northwest, the CentralPublic School House, a fine building,would have been in danger ; hut withPortland firemen at the apparatus, andwith half a show, they would have savedit harmless from fire and baptised it withwater in les? time than it takes us to write

Congressional tickets. The invitation o.comes from a large number of the most

prominent Union men of that State. This.

a flattering compliment to our State.Fred. Schwatka has passed examination for

and been admitted as a Cadet at Yv'est

Point. At the regular session of theBoard of Examiners, he was ill at Baltimore, but was passed at .a special ' sitting

the 20ih inst. So says his dispatch to

friends here.Subsequent to the conclusion of the

railroad, suit, at Salem, on Friday after-

noon, Samuel Clark, of the Record, and J.Gaston, attorney for the defeated railroad oncompany, had a pugilistic encounter, inwhich, however, no great amount of bloodwas spilled, thanks to the intervention ofbystanders. This is the first collision"

the Oregon Central Railroad.A correspondent of ihe Mountaineer,

writing from Canyon City, says : A prospecting parly. to Crooked river is beingtalked of, to start from here in a shorttime, and from what I can learn it will becomposed of the right sort of men ; sothat before fall we may expect to hear ofthe place being found where the emigrants

'43 hammered the out on theirwagon tire:-?-

We learn from a reliable source, savsthe Mountaineer, that there is a great com-

motion among the Government contractorsand gentlemen connected with the Q. M.

Department, relative to the letting of con-

tracts for transportation and etceteras.A ladies" fair will be held at St. Pauls

Church, on the French Prairie, on the Sthand 8th of July. Of the object of the fair,we are not informed.

Gov. Woods has accepted the YaqulnaPay .Wagon Road, says the Record. Hesays of it, that it is the best mountain .roadhe ever saw.

The steamer Yidchna, Capt. Coo, Master,on her last trip to Lewiston, made the en-

tire distance from Celilo to Lewiston 27t)

miles at the rapid rate of 41 hours and 33minutes, running time. Returning theYakima made the same distance (fromLewiston back to Celilo) in hours and

minutes. Adding to the latter the timeusually occupied in making the distancefrom Celilo to Portland, about 9 hours,the trip could have been made to Portlandin i uours ami minutes, and me entiretrip from Portland to Lewiston and backin the astonishing short time of 72 hoardand 42 minutes. Further, we are informedthat from Lewiston to Fori Benton, by theLolo Fork trail, in the summer, the entireinstance can be made in ( days, wuichwould bring us within 1 1 days, 2 hoursand f3 minutes of Fort Beaton..

Cape. Miller formerly in command of thebark Almalia, is now the master of theArchitect, running between San Franciscoand Paget Sound.

The following items of news we clipfrom the Mountaineer of the 26th uit : Theup-riv- er freights have been very good du-

ring the last week. The down-rive- r

freights for the week ending Thursday2Cth, amounted to 3000 pounds wool ; 220quarter sacks Hoar and 1200; hidesYvro are informed that Mes.rrs. Robbins &

Weaver of this city have a contract fortransporting one hundred anil eighty tonsof Government freight from San Franciscoto the different military camps in IdahoTerritory. They also have the transporting of one hundred tons of flour fromWaila YValla to the same destination. Thefreight is shipped from San Francisco toPortland in sailing vessels, and from Portland to Yvrallu!a bv the O.S.N. Co. "s boats,and we are told, considerable cheaperthan It can be carried by an other route

We are glad to learn, by a privatebut authentic letter, that Col. Marshalland Capt. Eckerson, U. S. A., have beenhonorably acquitted of all the chargespreferred against them by the Court of In-

quiry which recently sat upon their caseat Fort Poise, composed of able and hon-orable officers of the army, CorporalKennedy, Co. F., U. S Artillery, arrivedin this city on Wednesday, from WallaYv'alla, in charge of two men of the 8thCavalry, who he was conducting to FortVancouver for trial, one for dese'rtlon andthe other for being drunk and disorderly.

The Roseburg paper says that SenatorWilliams will address the citizens of thatplace on the 20th of July.

The Advocate says Clear Creek camp-meeti- ng

is now in progress, under the di-

rection of Rev. J. F. Devore, P. P. andRev. C. Alderson, P. C. There is also acamp meeting in progress in the Browns-ville circuit.

The Salem Record says : " The churchedifice being constructed on the southeastcorner of High and Center streets, by the" Christian'-- ' denomination, popularlyknown as " Campbcliites'' will be oneof the handsomest in the city. Itis of brick, the walls being 22 feet in theclear. It stands 3Gx5G feet on the ground,and is only four feet each way smallerthan the 31. E. Church. The building isnow ready for the plasterer, and so forward to completion that it is expected services will bo held there in the month cfAugust.

We have cur opinion of a man whowould strike a woman, rob a hen roost, orsteal from a local Editor. Yfo condolefriend Pull, who, while subbing lor Capt.Crandall, had his cherry orchard robbed.

Portland is raising about five hundredvigorous young chaps for the Penitentiary.Oregon City has about twenty fifh liketendencies.

Consternation exists nmorg the Salempeople, who found out one fine day lately,that Salem didn't own Marion Square somuch as she used to. The widow of thedonor of the land claims it. They say apettifogger or two is at the bottom of thecase.

The Masonic Fraternity of Oregon metin Grand Lodge at Portland week beforelast. The following of.icer." fc--r the e:isa

ALL KINDS OF LEATHERS

Miiataukie, Oregon-- .

UNDERSIGNED WISHES TOTHE

DEALERSAND MANUFACTURERS

That he is prcpnrcd to furnish as coed anddurable un article of Leather as can be madeon the Pacific Coast, at the following rates :

Harness Leather, per lb 28 to 30 cents.lif-av- for Concord 83 "

Skirting, per pound 23 to S211 1 tin'-- , in the side 35

" Cut, per scpiure foot, 1,00Side, upper, " " " 10 to 20 cents.Grain Leather " " " IS to 22 "Li-di- t Dufi, or Grain for Wo-

men's work 13 to 20 "CalfSkins, per doz 830 00 to $40 00Kin " " 4e00 t 60 00Bridle, per sine o 10 4 00'Y.lhir. ier side 1 00 to

.

2 50T 1

Lace Leather, per side. 4 00-

!"?T I do not think that Harness Leathershould necessarily be made in Santa Cruz, inor der to stand the test cf our climate ;

T" Nor do I think that Pflting. in orderto.beur the strain.of Oregon Machinery, mustbe made m the Atlantic fctates.

ALL I ASK IS A- iJL it XM. 0 JI --t, lv .Ar( prove, to the satisfaction of all

concerned, that Oregon Leather is the beston the Coast.

Ail orders wm meet vnuv prompt a-

tcution AddressTHOMAS ARMSTRONG,

J0.lv ) Mibvaukie, Oregon.

IMPORTER OF

Hard Wood LumberCOACH, CARRIAGE,

AND WAGON MATERIALS !

Portland, Oregon.

TTAR NOW ON HAND asd TO ARRIVEa I the finest stock ever imported te this

coast. Reing selected under his personalsupervision he can warrant it to be of thebest, and would cull the attention of dealersand wagon makers to his assortment of

EASTERN OAK,ASH, AND HICKORY,

PLANK,WHITE WOOD.

HUBS, SPOKES, FELLOESAXLES, POLES, BENT RIMS

Shaft, Bows, Single-tree- , PlataBeams and Handles, d'C.

Orders for the abore, also for Roxes, Thim- -

bies, fckeins, Iron and Steel, promptlytilled.

KOISEKT I. LAW,Commission Merchant, 38 First st ,

Corner of J'ine, Portland, Oregon.T" Consignments solicited. (30. ly

DAILY OVERLAND

MAIL Tl OUTE!TO CALIFORNIA.

to Sax FRANCISCO IN SIXTHROUGH the U. S. Mail aud W.V. & Co.'s Exp!-"- .

II. . CORbWT & Co , 1 BOriiSp.y this route passengers avoid the risk of

Ocean travel. Fussing tiironi:li Ureron CinHalein,.

Albany, CofvalSis,, . ...'Oakland,

.Win- -...

--Chester, Jtoscburg, CanyonriUe, Jacksonvilleand in California : Yreka, Trinity Center,

Shasta, lied iiiuli, lchama, Chico, Oroviue,Marysvidc to Sacramento. Connecting withthr fifiilr stnnros to itl m i n i n t t n w n inern C ibfornla and southern Oregon ; alsowith the Railroad from Oroville to Sacra- -memo ; aiso connecting wun me central

and resume their seats at pleasure, at anytime within one month, upon notifying theAgent at the office w here they lay over.

JFar to SRcramciilo &50.Stages leave the Portland office (Arrigo-ni'- s

Hotel,) daily at o'clock.So.Sm) B. O. WHITEHOUSE, Agent.

CHARM AN & RRO.. Oregon City Agents.

11 SiMSHEiMER & CO,,New Y'ork Manufacturers of

Bell Metal Patent Agraffe

Grand Scale Pianofortes !

rpiIE,. UNDERSIGNED WOULD RE3-- X

pect fully announce to his old natrnnsand the public generally, that he will keenluuswmi)- - on nana a gooa assortment ot theabove class Fianos, which he offers whoie- -sale aud retail at New York prices.

AGEXT FOR ETEIXWAT & SOX3

Celebrated Pianofortes !

AXD

A.E. THOMPSON'SPatent Swell at.d Voice Tkemelo

Ciiorai, Organ.N. B. Pianos and Organs carefully tuned

and repaired.' 1'. .SINSHEIMER36.1y) ' 1 11 Front st. Portland, Oregon

POKY SALOON.Main street, Oregon City,

C"sss... One door north of the Postuuice."tfjr

JAMES Propr.This popular saloon is always supplied

with the very best oualitv of V"inf nnHLiquors, Ale, Porter. Reer and Cider Cigars

i anu iooacco. uive me a call.7:1 y JAMES MANN.

A. G. BRADFORD,TXS REMOVED THE BALANCE OFJLJL his stock of

Wines and Liquors,I. yt .r tt c- -

TO ., -x j M.rM, su-cci-, voruaiui, Urc "on .

. . . .....i viit rear oi ins iormer place oi

.v.jii.vjo. i .n in 11 ail L Ml Jiitlil I'lIlOmcs and Brandies, will do well to callLmpty j'ipca and Barrel: for Sale. (27. tf

0

o

English Square and Octagon Cast sWi --

Horse shoes, Files, 'Rasps, saws ;Screws, Fry-pans- , sheet iron, R.'g Iron- -

o

A large assoitmcnt of Groceries and LiquorsA. D. Richardson, Auctioneer!

CHAS. HODGE . . CIIAS. eTc.VLEF . .GEO. W. SXELL,

H0BGZJ, CALEF k C0.9

DEALERS ISo

DETJGS and MEDIOJNESh

TAINTS, OILS, AVD VaXDCTlV GLASS

Or 1 RXISHES, BR USJIRS, Rj IXTEUs

Materia!, and Druggists Sundries

07 Front Street,S5.) Portland, Oregon.

mu&m abb isp

One door south from the corner of First andMorrison streets, near the Western,

Portland, Oregon.

m. T. Shanalian,IMPORTER ASD DEALER IN

MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS 'NINE EN OR A VINOS,PICTURE FRAMES

And MOLDINGS.rpiIE FINEST AND LARGEST STOCKX of Engravings, Cromos, Plain and co-

lored Lithographs, etc., ever before cii'erwlin this market, just received and fur sale at

GREATLY- - KEBUCEC PRffJES!also :

Vieus of Columbia River Scenery';Constantly on hand.

AG EXT FOR EnAKBUItv's CELEBHATS

sud Scale Fisa&os I

Which have given universal satit-faction- ,

and which he guarantees to sell at San Fran-cisco prices.

Special attention given to framingJ hotograpii etc.

r. Shanahan, formerly of A. Klev s establishment, San Jt- raucisco, will a-ttend to tuning and repairing Pianos, Melo-deon- s,

and all kinds of .Musical Instruments.I'ianos for Rent. (C'i.ly

TEA

AND PAPER HANGING

1 tli a A

jNo. 113 Front street, Portland,

LEAVE TO I FORM THF.X)E that they kec-- an stock9of

CAP. PETS,PAPER HANGINGS,

FLOOIL AN I) TA PLEOIL CLOTHS,

WINDOW SHAD ESJD A M j Iv

LACK GUI IT A INS,CORNICES AND BANDS,

GILT MOLDINGS,

And all goods in theCARPET & UPHOLSTERY LINE t

o"We Import or Goods Direct from the

I5.st, a. mi svll nl San FranciscoI?i iccs I

WALTER 2Sft,113 Front street, nearly opposite Vaazfin'

Vi nan, i'oriland, Uregon. 85.

FAfiMERS'OF 0EEG0NI

LOOKOUT FOR THE

H7i fv1.

oTHE CHEAPEST!

MOST DURABLE!

AND O

LIGHTEST DRAFT IlEAPEU

IN TIIE UNITED STATES.

UNDERSIGNED ARE NOW MAIfcTHE and have placed in marketfor the coming harvest, fifty of the abovenamed Reapers, which they "will cheap, aod

WARRANT TO GIVE

Than any Other Beaper ever(

oBROUGHT TO TIIE PACIFIC COAST!

For sale by tneOUEGOX IKOXVORKS,

SG.tf) Portland, Oregon.

DE, KUFELAND'SCFLE3RATED

SWISS STOIiIAGH BITTERS.

TRY The best Purifier of the Blood!A Pleasant Tonic !

IT A very Agreeable Drink !

Unsurpassed for acting surely bTRY gently on the secretions of tbeiuu-liey- s,

IT bowels, stomach and liver.

For sale at all wholesale and retail liquor,drug, and grocery stores.

SOBODY SHOULD BE WITHOUT Ef

L G. Friscu, Proprietor.Tayloo & Bendel, Sole Agent..

C''.ly) 413 Clay St., iu Francuc.-- .

O

0 0

i.

i

GO -

u

O

o

O

o

O o

oO

O

G

0

o

oo

o

Q

0

O

o

-I

TS.

, v .

CO is being paid in the interior for thenew crop. Ordinary old, $1 50 ; coast$1 50 ; good itnilling si Go.

Senator Thayer sent the following dis-

patch to Gen. "Grant and the Secretaryof the Interior : "If Gen. Puford reported what the telegraph attributes to himin regard to Indians matters, he is guilivof reckless misrepresentation or cruelstupidity. The warfare now being carried on upon the plains by jhe savageIndians upon small parties of deicnseless settlers, railroad surveying parties andlaborers is barbarous and unprovoked.The Government must not be deluded byany such reports as Buibrd's."

An official disuatcli notifying the Aus- -

train Minister of the execution of Maxi- -

milion on the 19th had been received.Juarez refuses to give up the body tothe Emperor of Austria. Napa'ein h sbeen' notified of his death through thecable. Jhe event produced great excite- -

men i among the foreign ministers. Nearlyall called on Count Wydenderck to con- -

sole with him. Comodore Rao of thesteamer Jacony telegraphs to the .NavyDepartment to the same effect. It is be- -

lieved that Juarez consented reluctantlyto the execution of Maximilian. lie m- -

formed a messenger of our Governmentthat he was disposed to spare his lifebut the pressure of the Mexican leadersand people was too great to Avithstand.

MARRIED. At Portland. June 50th, by theRev. Mr. Parens, II r. Thomas Rowley, ofOregon City, and Mrs. C. Blackwell, of

v aehingtan county.

Kcw Advertisements.

W. F. KIGHFIELD,Established since 1S49, at the old stand,

Ma ix Stuekt, Ukl.gox Citv.SZb,. An assortment of Watches, .Tew- -

t'vT3. clrv, and Seth Thomas' weightClocks, all of which are warrantedto be as represented.

jfe'gjw Repairiiigs done on short notice,.r , u thankful lor past favors. (.

0. P. IflASON,Attorney and Counselor at Lav,

102 Front St., Portland, Oregon.

Is fHy prepared to aitend to anybusiness under the Rankrupt Law.

Divorces obtained on the most reasonableterms, and no charges made for serviceswhere the divorce is denied. 57. ly

BaiTTGH & GRAY,

Attorneys at L aw,No. GTG Seventh st,, P. O. Box 1034,

Washington Citt, 1). C.

O FECIAL ATTENTION OIVEN to LANDBusiness, before the General Land Oilicc

and Interior Department, and generally tobusiness before the Executive Departments

lid uonrressHaving had vcars of experience in the

General Land Oillce, arl a long and succes-fu- lpractice in land claims aud controversies,

wc arc enabled to oiler valuable services be-

fore the U. S. Supreme Court, Interior De-

partment, and General Land Office.e reier generally ro iui u. iiann

Ofhccrs. 3 in

NoticeHEREBY GIVEN, that the Assessor'sISRooks for the assessment of all theprop- -

of Oregon City, for the year 1SG7, has beenapproved and placed in the Collector s handslor collection. ah persons owing ennerproperty, poll,

.

or road taxes, are hereby re- -i i i : i i. a i i

quired to settle ine same w itci me proper ci- -

licer immediately, and save costs.JAMES M. MOO It E, Recorder.

July Sd, 1S67. (57.3t

llotice tO Johll Findsermacker.1lTOU ARE HEREBY' NOTIFIED TIIAT

I will, on Saturday tlie third day otAuzust, 1S(!7, at the hour ot 1 o clock 1'. M.,apply to enter at the Oregon City Land Officethe N. W. quarter of section S, T 2 S R 1 W,and that I will then and there produce tes- -

timonv to show that you have forfeited yourritdit to said tract of land, by abandonmentthereof. JASFER ORAliEL.

June 29th, 1SG7. (G7.lt

Kotice to Leonard A. Cuminings.OUGH vs. LEONARD A.IIClIARD Contest for land m T. 1

Is. R. 5 E. Notice to Leonard A. Cummings,Richard Ough havinc; applied at. this odiceto enter as a jwc-emptio- n right, the lot 4 ofsection 21, tlie N. V. quarter ot N. Wquarter of section 28, and the E. half ofN. h. quarter ot section 2;, m T. 1 N.It. 5 E., alleging lhat you have abandonedsaid land, and filing proof in support of suchallegation ; You are, therefore, hereby notified that j"Ou will be allowed until the 30thday ot July, 107, to appear at tins oihee andestablish your right to said tract of laud,otherwise said proof of abandonment willbe taken as true, and j our cutry thereof reported tor cancilation.

OWEN WADE, Register.II EN R Y W A R REN , Receiver.

Land Oflice, Oregon City Oregon, June 24,ISO. (SG.4t

instate CI lilOinas J OimSOn, deceased,TN THE COUNTY COURT OF CLACKA

mas County, State of Oregon. In thematter ' of tlie estate of Thomas Johnsondeceased. F. O. McCown, administrator ofsaid estate, having hied his accounts for atinal settlement in said County Court, it wasordered by the Court thatMonday the 5ih day ofAugust, 1867,be fixed as the day for a final settlement anddetermination of said accounts. Therefore,notice is hereby given to all parties interested in said matter, to appear on said day atU1C uut "se 111 vit-So- vn, v,iai;h..iiiiusCounty, State of Oregon, and make their

JlI BvJvUlll.ij k I lilt V 1 vl 11 i

JJy order of W. T. MATLOCK.County Judge of Clackamas

,Co., Oregon.

f ff.l.. T..l i 1 r ,.T- -

B N IHE CO Li MY COURT OF CLACK A- -X mas County, State of Oregon. -- In thematter of the estate of William Smith, de- -ceased. Francis Smith, executrix of saidestate, having filed her accounts for final set- -

"ciucui. in Biuu vuuri, it. was oruereuby the Court thatMonday ihe 5th day of August, 1SG7,be fixed as the day for a final settlement anddetermination of said accounts. Therefore,notice is hereby given to all parties interest-ed in said matter, to appear on said day attho Court House in Oregon City, ClackamasCount3. State of Oregon, and make theirohir.tiona to sahl accounts hfino- - n!)n.-f.- l 4ra w.v., .1.......M. V

By order of W. T. MATLOCK.County Judge of Clackamas Co., Oregon

Oregon City, July 1st, 17. ?7 - t

injunction. d, That the complaint does I Lair Hill J-n-

staffc facts sufficient to constitute a Wra' Master3

i'aciiic nanroaa to uie Atlantic Mates,Stages stop over night at Jacksonville and

Yrcka, for passengers to rest. Passengerswill be permitted to lay over at any point.

cau.--e of suit, or that authorize a court ofequity to interfere by injunction. 4th,That several causes of suit are improperlyunited.

The Court sustained the demurrer gen-rra- y.

holding that according to the lan- -

guagn 01 u:e complaint it tailed to showthat plaintiff was a legally authorized cor-poration. The Court further held that thecon-plain- (which contained twenty pagesof closely written matter) did not presenta case that would authorize the interfer-ence of a court of equity, or the issuing ofan injunction, that the mere adoption of

q the same corporate name of plaintiff didnot authorize an injunction, except thecompiaint had shown an interference withfive rights and functions of plaintiff, andthis the Court held the complaint failedto show ; that the mere fact of the' defend-ant, assuming, the same corporate name ofplaintiff and of making contracts in thatname, aad issuing stock and bonds in suchname, was not such an interference withany rights of plaintiff a3 would authorizean injunction.

This decision goes directly to the wholemerits of the plaintiffs case, and it is im-

possible to make any amendment that willentitle plaintiff to another standinjr inCourt.

Not Very Pleasant. Tlie Iferahl hasall along complained that the OrcgonianUyes not deal fairly with it, socially orotherwise. We observe that the Heraldgoes a little farther accepts contracts forprinting with request to furnish Orcgonianwith copy, but forgets ihe request. Thatt?ort of business courtesy looks very bad,and Democrats as well as Republicans re-

mark about it.

q The Pack.k$ Lixe. The bark Sam 3lerr'df, cf the Oregon Packet Line, is now atPortland. The Live Yankee is about readyto sail. The Arrival is en route.

TunoLon. The C. O. & M. S. S. Com

pany have arranged to ticket passengersthrough from San Francisco to Boise City,and intermediate places, at reduced rates.

a for.il arrangement.

Locate irCapt. M. Keeler has finallyreached New York and located at 55 Libert v Street, as nn Orecon CommissionAgent, for buying and shipping direct.

Still Ui'. The Albany Journal sees inthe names of Hon. Schuyler Colfax and3 Ion. Geo. II. Williams, two fitting men tosit at the head of this Government.

I:pia- - Speeches. The Lewiston JournalU publishing the simple, but truthful andvandid speeches, made at the late treatyV- - z. Vcrr Indians.

COURTESY OF BANCROFT LIBRARY,TrMTlT-lTRTT- DIT nflLTTTDPNTA .