fi-
1850, and Nelson, in April 1, 1851 from the inter
ference of one district court with the processes of
another. Thus it was impossible, for a time, to main
tain order in Judge Pratt s district (the second) in two
instances, sentences for contempt passed by him being
practically nullified by the interference of the judge
of the first district.
Among the changes occurring at this time none were more perceptible than the diminishing import ance of the Hudson s Bay Company s business in Oregon. Not only the gold mania carried off their servants, but the naturalization act did likewise, and also the prospect of a title to six hundred and forty acres of land. And not only did their servants desert them, but the United States revenue officers and Ind ian agents pursued them at every turn. 4 When Thorn ton was at Puget Sound in 1849 he caused the arrest of Captain Morris, of the Harpooner, an English ves sel which had transported Hill s artillery company to Nisqually, for giving the customary grog to the Ind ians and half-breeds hired to discharge the vessel in the absence of white labor. Captain Morris was held to bail in five hundred dollars by Judge Bryant, to appear before him at the next term .of court. What the decision would have been can only be conjectured, as in the absence of the judges the case never came to trial. Morris was released on a promise never to return to those waters. 5
But these annoyances were light compared to those
i~*
which arose out of the establishment of a port of
cials, had purchased a lot of side-saddles before leaving New York, and other goods at auction, for sale in Oregon. His saddles cost him $7.50 and $13, and he sold them to women whose husbands had been to the gold mines for 850, $60, and 75. A gross of playing cards, purchased for a cent a pack at auc tion, sold to the soldiers for 1.50 a pack. Brown sugar purchased for 5c. a pound by the barrel brought ten times that amount; and so on, the goods being sold for him at the fur company s store. Stronys Hist. Or., MS , 27-30.
4 Roberts says, in his Recollections, MS., that Douglas left Vancouver just in time to save his peace of mind; and it was perhaps partly with that object, for he was a strict disciplinarian, and could never have bent to the new order of things.
- Roberto? Recollections, MS., 16.