. , . W. U. ABABt, SUITOS AMU raorBIKTOB. ORZOOIf CITY I SATURDAY", Al'ltlL 17, 1858. REPUELICANNOMINATIONS, ; ' Ute Ticket rot fttriuiKTtTiv ve eumiiM, J. K. McUIUDK, of Yimhlli; -..,.- FOR OOVRRMOR, - - JOHN DKNNY, of Marion. : ton 8KCRETARY OF RTATR, LEAN DEI; HOLMES, of Clackamas. ' FOR STATE TREASURER E.L. AITLEUATE, of Urr.piua. ' , FOR STATU TKINTER, D. W. CRAIG, of Clat-karast. "Tli Republican convention met in Ibii Cilj last Saturday, and adjourned over (o ot'El Saturday, A r il 21, to nominal coumjr ticket. Tlie nationals met ai Eugene City on Ike 8lli intt.i and nominated the following ticket : For Representative to Congrru, j. K. Kelly of Clackamat ; Governor, E. M. Darnum of Polk ; Scerrtsrj of Slate, K.A.Rice of Josephine; State Taeaturer, J. L. Brumley of Lane; State 1'rinter, James O'.Meara of Portland. So far at men are concerned, tlie ticket it quite respectable one. If by indorsing the meo,, voters were not called upon to indorse a rotten platform, there would be lesi objection to intelligent and honest pa triots among the nationals supporting the ticket than there happens to be jttat now. That our rcaJers may see the platform for themselves, we give it iu full : Resolved, That we adopt and endorse the principles ami sentiments proclaimed by, and promulgated from the National Democratic Convention which met at Cin cinnati, in June, 1 6o0, fur our political text book, and that we accept no other ar. lielet of faith than are in them contained. Resolved, That we have confidence in the integrity of the Democratic Administration of the Union and will ever give in our alio. 4jiar.ee to the support of Demooralio meat ures and to the advocacy nf properly chosen exponents and standard-bearers el the Dem ooralio cause. Resolved, Thut we believe in the cardin al principles of popular sovereignty end in the rilil of the people of the Territories, as well as of the Suites, to fr.nne And adopt 'their constitutions and all local laws for their own government consistent with and agreeably to tho constitution of the United State. ' Resolved,' That we re. assert the great principles nf the right of the represented to instruct the representative and proclaim it the bounden duly of tho representative to obey the insi ructions of his constituents or tetign whatever position ho may at that time hold. . Rosolved, That we heartily npprove anJ gratefully acknowledge the wi?o stigges ioni and potent services of President Buch anan in behalf of the earliest practicable construction of the Pacific Railroad. ' There is the kite upon which tho na tionals are expected to go tip. The follow ing is the tail of il : . Rosolved, That we have full confidence in the ability of our esteemed Delegate in "Congress lion. Joseph Lane and that lie merits the approbations of the Democ racy of Oregon, for the untiring zeal and devotion he bos manifested in his efforts to procure our admissien into the Union and secure the payment of our War Debt. We hve not room this week to sny what we desire lo in regard to this platform, ow ing to the lute hour that wo got hold of it. "While the pi ut form is not as palpably nnd pointedly pro-slavery as we feared it would bo, yet, in indorsing the " Democratic Ad ministration," it as positively sanctions ts words cnuld do tho frauds, usurpations, and tyranny that make up the Lecompton pol icy of the present Administration. In this platform there is not a single issue made with the Sulorn dynasty upon the great question 'which now convulses the natiou in regard to the right of the people of a Territory to adopt or reject a constitution 'before it is fastened upon them by Con gress. Il as to bo expected that the Sa lom dynasty would indorse any kind of fraud and villainy that might bo inaugu rated at Washington, but we saw no par ticular necessity for the nationals taking sides with an Administration which lias driven the honest men out of tho party in almost every free Slate. If they had ta ken sides with Douglas, there might have teen some show for their success. Their great love for Jo Lane will be appreciated by some o( the nationals down this way. If such men as Cullurd, llees, Starkweath r, and Judge Olds of Yamhill can be in duced to gulp down this platform without making a wry face, their dirt eating capac ities are greater than we had supposed. We have thought from the beginning that this republican movement was prem ature and unwise, and wes'ill think so. It see tin 10 have originated with a few men in and Hlmut Oregon City, who without Constitution with other portions of the ter ritory, and without the know ledge or con sent of those w ho have a riulit to erf we at least, in matters of this kind, called the con vention, adopted their platform and nomina ted their candidates." Oregonian. So fur as the Republican movement hav ing originated in and about Oregon City, without consultation with other portions of the Territory, we suppose the Oregonian alludes to the fact that the Argus has steadily, persistently, and zealously advo cated Republican priocrolct since the first grand Republican movement was inaugu rated ia the'Sialtu; ana ja baa, eita, far nearly two years, as steadily and persist ently continued to advocate thorough Republican organization in Oregno, based upon sound national principle, at the only effective method of eventually placing the adminittrution of the Government in honrtt and capable handt. In doing this, while we may have done so " without the know! edge or consent of those who had a right to advhe," we have tho satisfaction of having tuken the " advice" of our own judgment and of having acted in accordance with a conviction of duty. The path of duty lay ing before us, we chose to step into it "without conferring" with flesh and blood, or going up to the Salem Sanhedrim, or even down to Portland to confer with our much-esteemed, and highly-gifted, quoo dam fellow. laborer of the Oregonian, who then thought, note thinks, and probably aluinyi will think, a Republican organiza tion "premature." Of course, if Mr great objection to the rotten dynasty at Salem, and the equally tietchcrous, anti-republi can, and rotten one at Washington city, lies in tin fact that they are "party organ izations," then of course it is high time to ditbsnd, and after having ignored all or ganization, conventions, and platforms, make a universal proclamation that the field is entirely open to every self-inflated apirant to office, who knows no higher principles than merely "opposition to tho democracy," and who has no other views of a correctly conducted campaign than an rena containing the well-drilled, system atized, and eflicered black -democracy on one side, and a conglomerate host of the odds and ends of the opposition on the oth er, divided and wrangling among them selves, and cut up into some half dozen qunds, each headed by piobably as many independent candidates, each carrying his platform pasted to his back, and all con tained in UA pitcher into the democracy." While such a scramble may once in twenty years result in an overthrow of the modern democracy, by the laws of chance, (see Harney' Algebra,) the demecrocy, falsely so called, will find themselves snug ly installed as the head of the government nineteen years out of twenty. This is so, and any man might to see it, through only an ordinary pair of leather spectacles. We understand the getters-up of this republican movement strenuously insist upon organization as all important to suc cess. This carries with it the admission that the pcoplo will merjje their individual ity into party organization, which is the h ading feature of the Salem plulform or ganization, nguinsl which the great mass cf tho republicans have mado war." Or egonian. So then tho Oregonian has made the discovery at last that the great objec tion to the Salem dynasty consists in tho fact that the dynasty is a "party organi. zation." Of course tho same objection stands Dgainst the "Nationals," Ameri cans," and all other parlies. "The old line whig" forces, which are at present dis banded and scattered to the four winds, must be with the Oregonian the beuu ideal of a genuine opposition to the de mocracy. The conviction that " the people will not merge their individuality into a party organization," was what probably once iaduced the editor of the Oregonian to run up his name at his mast-head as a candidate for tho Legislature "indepen dent of parly" when his name at the tame time occupied a place in the tame paper at a regular nominee of the Know Nothing party, u Uard Dcmocracy.'l Czapkay's organ, iu noticing Rev. W.F. Doyokin's paper iu Illinois, boasted that Doyakin was a " hard." We make a few extracts from Doyokin's paper of Feb. 27lh, as samples of 11 hard (!) democracy" : " Mr. Douglas, in this report, ransacks the whole field of controversy in Kansas, beginning nt tho very first of it, and comes up lo the present date nnd with data of facts in tho history of Kansas legislation, proves bare faced, intended, consuinmale fraud in tho Lecompton constitution ; and thut, at the lowest estimate, two thirds of the pcoplo of Kansas have, in a legal way, at the ballot box, repudiated it. Besides, Mr. Doujjlns' argumemts should satisfy any intelligent mind, that the Lecompton and the Topeka constitutions are both aliko, illegal, and should both alike be n jected. Mr. Douglas' views throughout, are di rcct!y opposite to .Mr. Buchanan's, in his special message ; and while ho speaks respectably of the President, he explicitly denounces his views. These two great Stutrsinon are on this question, directly oppoiite each other. "The truth is, Mr. Ruchanan has seen fit, most evidently, to sympathise with the South in this grenl question, at the expense of the Kansas Nebraska bill ; nnd by a sys lent of Administrative cognizance to South, em duplicity, and pro-slavery propngnnd ism will come nigh, if not entirely, fasten ing on the people of Kansas a constitution against their will. I!ul the North mnsi meet and defend it, if in the range of hu man effort." ' "The South in all this, has acted very unwUi ly, for by the passing of this bill, all parlies of the North will fuse into opposi tion to the South, and make to clearly defined, political parlies of the nation, one North, the other South ; The North hav inn very largely the preponderance, will fail in the future to be as conciliatory as heretofore." In noticing the fact that a Methodist teacher of a High School in Nashville, Tennessee, had raised a muss tmong his brethren by introducing dancing into hit school, Doyakin says: " Cat we simply eotice the mere exer cise of youthful sportivroes, under the eye ef parental teachers, if called dancing, is a great sit), while the holding tbosMrhJ of men and women in the chains of siarerr, buying and selling them separating liusbanu anil wue, parents aim con dren. ko.. is wholly unnoticed even sane tilled wilh Patriarchal examiil. Verily, a man must have lost his appreciation of consistency, at least, lo become a christian on these terms I No wonder the world is skeptic I" If that Is " hard democracy," wt should like to know what liucbanan would call "soft democracy." Doyakin seems to have his eye skinned to the faot that the fire-eaters, in putting ihelr hook through the nose of Buchanan, have driven the great mats of the Northern democracy into the ranks of tbe Republi cans. We might add that roost of the Dou glas organs squint very strongly that way. (r How fortunate it was that our con. sliiutional convention met and submitted iba whole constitution to the people before Ruchsnan had fully inaugurated bis Kan sas policy of forcing a slavery constitution upon the people without permitting a single man lo vote against it. Such Is the blind and truckling subserviency of the Oregon Democracy to party, at evinced in their late resolutions indorsing Ruchanan, that if the convention for framing a constitution had been delayed till now, we doubt not the Democracy would have acted on Buch anan's suggestion, and refused lo submit the constitution to the people. fcT The present Administration it like ly to make good tbe prediction of the St. Louis News that it would make a finish of Democracy in every free State where poor Pierce had failed to exterminate it. We see that in Now Hampshire, II. Rumncy, late Democratio leader in the Legislature, Sullivnn, an influential party leader, and Judge Sargent, late Democratic Speaker of the House, havo renounced black democ racy, and united with the Republicans. The papers slate that the rank and file of the Democracy are joining the Republicans by the hundred. TUe New Cold Mine. The following diulogue actually occurred between a Democrat and a citizen this wcrk : Dem. What is your opinion of llioje new gold mines on Prazic-r's river we bear so much about ! Citizen. My opinion is, the mines will turn out to be very extensive nnd very rich. Dein. What is your reason for thiuk- ing so fit. I believe it, and have believed it for nine years, from information I received of that country from old mountaineers in California in 1340. Resides, I have seon in the Herald printed at Steilacoom a state ment that the Hudson's Bay Company at Victoria have taken in one hundred and ten pounds of gold dust from the Indians within the last month, which was all taken from stirfaco diggings by means of the rudest implements. Dem. What is the character of the Herald for veracity f Cit- Good, so far as I know. It is a new paper, neutral in politics; besides, I eannot conceive what objeot it would have in getting up an excitement, unless it would be to draw a crowd lo Washington Territory. In that case, when the decep tion was found out, it would operate much to the injury of the paper. Dom. Yes ; I see no reason really why a paper would intentionally misrepresent a thing of that kind ; but then you know people judge of tho correctness ef news a good deal from the character of the pap?r it is pl'Micd in, For instance, when ! seo a statement in The Argus I place a good deal of reliance on it; whereas, if 1 should see the same statement in the Times I should give no sort of heed to it. Cit. Very true; but your best way is to w ait till you are sure of the truth of the report beforo you atari, even if you have any notion of going to the mines. But, if they are ever so rich, I am not sure but we had better stay at home and work on, rais ing produce for tbe mining consumers. If the country is again flooded with gold, the man who stays at home and is industrious will be just as well ofT in the long run, if not belter than he who goes lo the mines. Besides, he will run no risks of life and health, and will bo comfortably housed and fed. Bern. I shouldn't wonder. Cit. I was here in '48, at the time the California gold excitement carried ofT so many, and in looking around among our citizens now, I find that those who stayed at home, cultivated their farms, attended lo iheir stock, and nursed tho babies, are fully as well off as those w ho went to Cal ifornia and made from 8-30 to 8100 a day. Dem. Speaking of "stock," reminds me that the Oregonians didn't take very good care of it last winter. Cit. Very trne. From the best infor mation I have, not less than 9100,000 worth of stock died this spring out of pure starvation, showing a shameful and culpa, ble neglect on the part of their owners in providing feed. Now, suppese the people run off to the mines, and fail lo prepare fur next winter, which will probably be a hard one instead of losing 8100,000 worth, they will no doubt lose three times that amount, besides failing to save two millions' worth of produce which, being put together, make the harxLome sum of two million and three hundred thousand dollars as a dead loss amounting probably to more than two thirds of all the gold that would ever reach as from the mines. Counting io the damage sustained from the stagnation of improvements, and tbe minus side would overbalance the plus. Dem. Yet. I see how it is. Those who go to tho mines may do well, whilu those who stay at home and use their lima prop, erly are tun to, and, like the returned Californian who " went to California wilh his wash-bowl on his knee," they may con sole themselves that Id working the "dig gings" at home " Bv the course of naler. They'll find lomrgold in every later." OCT The Pioneer & Democrat and the Herald of W. T. both state that from the most reliable information the Hudson's Bay Cnrapsny at Victoria have taken in within a few months one hundred and ten pounds of coarse gold, which had been picked up by the Indisnt In the new diggings on Pre tier's and Thompson's river. There has btea a general stampede of lumbermen, day. laborers, and citizens, besides a pretty general desertion from the regular soldiery for the new El Dorado, where those who have gone out are reported to be making from $8 to 930 a day, with the constant ex pectation of soon striking upon the fo" lain head of all the gold veins in the worl Orrioa Poetry. We have had frequent occasion lo give specimens of original poetry, from manu script, as well as from Oregon papers. Our bills and dales, murmuring brooks, cascades, and roaring cataracts, are inspiring every thing with song. We have no apace for all the contributions we receive, although their authors no doubt think we evince very bad taste in publishing what we o'o, in the exclusion of Ilia fruits of their labors over the midnight oil. We give space to the following anonymous article this week. We have no knowledge of the author, but cheerfully introduce him to our readers to our reader nets : S iel tht Hill 1858 as one of the Clackamas poet Oswego Clsekimas Co Apriel On the death of an Uncle For tho Argus. We miis the know tine though art gon We do not hcare thy voice eney more We do not see the io the force! nor among; I'll bending flowers nor trees we mist the over wlmir Thy teat ia vtesnt now wo set lha no mors For Ihough hast gon two try s nollur world O that we could but we the mice agaiu Rut why do wo mornt thy loss since though art goo to a hnppyer home Wt love to hears of the one we love to well Since though art gon lo the tomb hare thtre it no gloom Wt heart thy friends speak of thy loss all with regret For he was mild and loveley at the morning rust Thy clienrvacanl in the parlor now garden and its rieasant walks are all looking for something that is lost Thy carage and horse looktt as though they ware lost In silentnett they are teearct teen eney more P. J. T. this it not the true name Excus my btd wrighting if you please then I will wright some mora for tht argus A common man, upon entering the sta ble end seeing that horse " nicker," prick up his ears, and roll up his eyes, would have supposed that he was "locking for his oats" hut the true poet dicovers, aa if by inspiration, that he was "looking for something lost" (his dead master ) t3 " They the Republicans adopt ed a platform, which we shall publish next week, provided ihe convention send mi a copy." Oregonian. Tho Convention requested us lo print the platform and proceedings on the out side of tho Argus, and send it to you in lime for the inside of the Oregonian, all of which we did. 3T The Republicans of Yamhill connty have nominated tbe following county tick. et: Stole SeiiS'or A. it. cider. Mate and Territorial Legislatures Anrof. rVni VVjJI. Odell. County Judge John Ca rey. County Clerk J. W. Cows. Treasurer Oliver Moore. Assessor James Graves. The ticket is as good a one as could probably have been made in the county, and we hope it will be elected by a respectable majority. W The Yamhill Nationals have nom inated A. Shuck and A. V. Short for Stale Legislature, R. Lottghiin and Wright for Territorial Legislature, G. W. Lawson for State Senator, Judge Olds for County Judge, Courtney Walker for County Clerk, and Clark Rogers for Sheriff. !Uabllca Nominations ! Cltlttt C.e. Astoria, April 10, 1858. The adjourned Republican convention of Clatsop county met ibis day, at the court house, pursuant to adjournment, and was called to order by the Hon. Chas. Stevens, President of the convention. A committee was appointed to report the names of the different offices to be filled at the ensuing June election under the State and Territorial organizations. While the committee was out, P. W. Gillett, Esq., was called upon to give an account of the Territorial and State Re publican convention recently held al Sa lem, and to which he was delegate from this county. He gave a satisfactory, and highly encouraging, to the cause of Repub licanism, account of the proceedings of said convention, and of the stale of feeling and uniiy of purpose existing among all the delegates to said convention. The committee on nominations reported, and upon the report the convention pro ceeded to nominate. Voted to defer the nomination of State Senator until "be other counties Wash ington, Columbia, and Tillamook are heard from, wilh the view of concurring in the nomination made by said counties. Fer State Representative W. W. Par ker was nomiaated, subject to the eoacur- renceof Tillamook onuiiiy convention. Territorial Representative Phillip Gear ha'U i County Judge Chat. Stevens. Territorial Probata Judge Chat. Ste. vent. County Clerk James Wayne, Territorial County Audiior-Jae. Wayne, County Treasurer David Ingalls. Ter. Co. Treat. David Ingalls. SherifT, State fc Ter. Geo. R. McEwen. Assessor Frederick Kelchurn. Co. Commissioner D. E. Tease. Voied lhat the nominations be declared unanimous, and that the proceedings of the convention be sent to the Oregon Argus and otber papers of the Territory wilh re quest lo publish. W, W. Parker, Seo'yi Son! IIumbvo about Seror Crvkltiks. It it a fact being gradually developed through lha independent English prest, thai the cruelties so copiously charged upon the Sepoy rebels, have had eiistem chiefly In tbe imaginations of the Indian letter writers. Authenticated instances of the dreadful mutilations, and all lhat tori of thing, of which we have heard to much, are extremely rare. Even Nana Sahib turns out lo have been by no means so black a Devil at he hat been painted. The Englith are in procets of a revolution of feeling on the matter, and are ashamed of themselves for becoming ferocious concern ing fictitious horrors. Thr Effects of Mooslioht. Profes sor Piiuza Smith, tho Astronomer Royal for Scotland, in his interesting account of a recent scientific expedition made by him io ihe Peak of TenerifTe, has set al rest the quaslio texata of ihe heal of ihe moonlight. He says that his thermnmetrical instru ment! were sensibly affected by the moon's nien'ts were sensibly nytf eVl. tt d,,, n ciipied by him al di wetl of tw3 stations oc different elevations' In tropical climaten, meat which it expoed to the moonlight rapidly becomes putrid ; and in tho West Icdios the negroes, who will lie sweltering and uncovered beneath the full glare of a Iroi.ic"! sun, carefully muffta thrir heads and fuces when exposed to lha moonbeams, which they believe will c iue swelling and distortion of the featurs, and sometimes even blindness. tff- Dr. UuysoU't lmtrtvf Extract Yellow Dock and Ssrsapnrilla it now put up iu the lurgt-tt sized (quart) bodies, and is acknowledged to be Ihe best CSuriupanllt mudo at it certified by tlie wonderful cures il has performed, tht original copies of whit h tre in Ihe liuuds of Hit proprietor. Remember, this it the only true md origiutl arti cle. The medicine, if uaeil accunliiig to direc tion!, WILL CURE, WITHOUT FA lL,Scruf ula, king's evil, eincen, tumors, eruptions of the kin, erysipelas, chronic tore eyes, ringworm 01 tellers, rheumatism, pain in Hie hours or joints, old sorer and ulcers, swelling of the glund, syplii lie,dyrpepsia, salt rlirum, diseases of Ihe kidneys, lost uf appeiite, diaean arising from the um of mercury, pain in the tiJt and ahoulders, general debility, juundii-t and costiveuest. tJT The genuine is put up in quart Dollies. PARK & WIIIT1J, Sole Agent, 132 IVasAincron ft., San Franeitet. Da. A.H. STEELE, iteaf, Oregon City. ladepeadeat f.tnltle. I announce myself it to independent candidate for Ihe Suit and Territorial Legitluture, sulijot to tho decision of the voters of Clackamas county at tht poll.. JAMES BARLOW. f3ff" Wo tit requested lo announct W. T. MATLOCK as a candidate for Supreme Judge in tho 4th J udicial District. He expects It most and address his fcllow-eilixens, in conjunction wilh Mr. Wait, previous to the June election. April 10. HAR&ISSl "Ton the 1 1 1 It of April, in Clackamas City, by Rev. D. E. Blaine, Mr. Class: Niuon Uassa MAN to Miss ISAFIIINSA Collabu, all of this county. McZtllN 1M V IXtXJQ C0ZL21OS. mHE REGULAR Summer Term of this In- L stilu'ln" will commence ou Wkdkisdav, Ar ea 3iaT," 1858, aud con!'""" twenly-two weeks. The design of tht iw'itution it to tr" y?.B, men to (Ainl indeptniitnily and correctly. V u seek the real intellectual aud moral Improvement. It It expected that all who repair lo thit Pco to pend a season of comparative retirement from the world, will have the design ef the Institution dis tinctly in view. Tbe Faculty consists of the following persons: Rav. Geo. C. Chandlis, D. D., President, and Professor of Moral and Intellectual Philosophy. J. D. Purr, A. M., Professor of Latin and Greek Languages. C. II. Mattoon, Professor of Mathematics. Mr. Mattoon travels during tht summer (after July 1st) for the purpose of securing an endow ment for the Institution, but takes his post aa Teacher at the commencement of the fall term. Mr. Post comes into Ihe Inttitulion as won at the Professorship is endowed. TERMS. From $6 to $10 per quarter, ac cording lo the advancement of the pupil lo be paid in advance. Board and other aecommoda linni can be obtained at low rates. Books aud tlstionery furnished at the Inatituti u. It ia desirable lhat all should commence at the beginning of Ihe term, if possible. The College ia located nt McMinnville, one of ihe most pleasant situations in Oregon, ou the!utli Fork of the Yamhill River, about four miles from Lafayette (Ihe comity seal), aud in the midst of an enterprising and religious community and. it is thought, irrsents ttry nperior accommodations for such aa desire a thorough and utrful educa tion. HENRY WAUREV, 1 w3 President of the Board of Trustees. 25,000 for tale by f V 1 i.M 1 , FEET OF FIR LUMBER tonrrnant si pi ti, JOS. BAF.STOW. UNION MARKET. I HAVE just opened an cxtt-nsiva Maikst ilouec &. UuTciita't Shop iu tht building next door below the Post Office, where I shall keep con stantly ou hsnd a supply of BEEF, PORK, MUTTON, VEAL, and other kinds of meat, at well aa Vegetable; Butler, Lard, and every th'iig common lo a mar ket house. The meat department will be kept in a style superior lo anything heretofore seen in thit cily, and patront will be accommodated at to terms. Call and try me. WM. NESBIT. Oregon City, April 10, 1858. 52tf Probate Xfotice. XOTICE N hereby g.veu that I'hebe Pendel ton, administratrix of the estalt of Cham peny Pendelton, late of Clackamas county, de ceased, hat rendered her accounts (ir final settle ment to tht I'rubxte court of said county, and Ihe first Tuesday in May uext it appointed for Ihe ad justnHUt of the same at Orrgon City in aaid eounty. ROBERT CAUFIKLD, April 10, 1 859 -Nw3 JifO ' Vnhatt. - XMPORTAHT. ' ' T -TIIK WAB DEBT WILL BB f Alt) it fLkem ssMa m M ev AVF. RKMOVBD I. th. Brie, fci on Warn forrteri. eeUitti l. J'"' iWnwt Ce., .her. i. w.Aj awsa en the same eld pita. Wt havt en hsud a general tieurtnui-i w n Goads. GreorriM. I'lJJTZySjL thin, ll fannnwtnl,. AM w7hW Wrbeier'e kVsiaibrltliosi CITT BOOK 8TORK. .C.4IMSWOITM. WM. DIEIonirT AI.11WOUTII DILRDOBrr WHOI.UAI.R AND EITAIt ' DEALERS IN GROCERIES DRY GOODS, CLOTHING Boott cfc Short, and Crockery, ' la tbt atw rirt-prouf Itrkk Maib erassr ORROON CITT, O.T. . ' M. UIBRDORKK AV CO. HAVE RE. movea" te iht NKW FIMB PHoor KMICK, nest door to Iht brick fonMrlv L liulmea. The Ami will hereafter be kaowa Z AINBWOHTH h DIKRDORFF. AINSWORTH&DIERCCr.FF. WE ARK NOW OPEKIR0 ia THR Hew rire-rroof Brisk, A LABOR AND WSLt AtSOITIO ITOCI ar GENERAL UERCJIAXDISE. Fteling perfeelly tecum tgalntt Art, we will at Offer Greater Inducement! than ever , to tht puUie. Wt are eonttsally In receipt f te'tcled wilh tht grettesl cart (as U priest tad quality), tnd art confident lhat tur facilities win enable ua lo oflVr tnd tell gaodt AT PORTLAND PRICES! (freights tn), and would advise all ibua) vmliag this cily lo purchase gouds, lo tiemiM ear ttssE aud pm ee before purchasing elsewhere. Wt havt, and art just rtetivitg, ta bmite tf SKY-QOOBI, consisting in part of Iht following articles Coekt eo, Pacific, lladli-y, Cuueslegu, Kprague, Ptnl.t Allen, Kali Rier, Merriinac, Urigi,siid tamer, tut other choict PRINTS, all tale ttylet; tag lish it. Frrucb merinos, LyeneM cloth, H(etiaitad mhtr Debate) brass, wool, k. muelia dt Itlats. bUck, blue, purple, Jr. pink nwriuos, fsucy plaits, jaconet, book, twits, (c mull muslin, laitu. ent. aeit, collin, bdkft It skirls, drras & bouatt triia miiiga, French & domeatie ginghams, Frteea lawns from l?J lo 'iSs, blut, mixed, ft grey sad net, wool Jt cutlmi jeaix, evltonade, Ueavatd tad brown sheeting from 3-4 lo 1 0-4 wide, brews tad blenched drills, dru m, hickory thirling ejileaia, murine, browu, tud I null liurn, nankeen, d-tptr, tnd crash, a large lot uf baea aud I bread lacst and edging, heak-ry, d.e. MEN'S BOYS? CLOTHING: niue, black, and brow cloth coals 10 dot ktk cloth vcata, S dot while and burl' Marseilles io, velvet aud satin do ) 31) dot autiiiel paws, eosskie tud fancy eawiuit-rt do, 3U dot merino and enllta undernhuta, gtey, blut, & black clh over ctaa), with a geurml assorsment of geula' furaiahin gooda. BOOTS SHOES - Men's, boys', tad youths' boola; lad es', misses', and vhildrtua' me rncco, goat, kid, tnd call Congrtat boola, with h without heels ( ladies' kid srippm (3 1 IB Off . Rio and Java eofiee, black aud green lea, N. O., China, Batavia Islaad, t'al. refined, and crumbed sugar, East Boston, Cat, sugar house, and gsldaa syrup; salt, S lo ;'UU lb ks j 1 00 kgs nails, aaa'd sites Hill's pa'.o, chemical and English soap, snap powders, powder, shot, and lead, yeast pow der, kaleraliw, errant tartar, smoking and chewier tobacco, grttm earn, feat, tomatoes, elroai ate blackberriet, iu 2 lb tins ; spice, prpp. I, and eaaeii, pearl barley, macaroni, verm celli, corn stares, almonds, walnula, Brati! nuts, ramus, Chili peach es, dried fruit mackerel, in or a hlf bblt, aaidiasa. A fine aaaortment of CROCKERY $ TABLE CUTLERY t 20 crulet assorted ware, 40 doi steel picks, 3D Dutch and IMIa hoet. White Lead, Oil, and Window Glatt; wilh a variety of other articlea usually kept. IT Wt will pay cash for wheat, Dour, bates, butter, eggs, aud almost everything tht ftrmti hat for salt. A. D. Oregon Cily, April 10, 18:8. JUST RECEIVED, the lateet Hyk of taut a lATia WONNETS, Ughom ft ttrtw flats. A1NSWOKT11 & DIERDORFF. land for Sale. 1 HALF SECTION of rood laso XX. is for sule, situated on Ctaekamm, i j;; miles N.E of Oregon City 40 aeruuu-JlJ der fence, half of which it under tuUivtlief wilh a young ubchaad of about ISO trees, some which are bearing J betides a small frame boost tnd out-buildings. The properly will be sold for cash, tr traded lot nmperlv in Oregon Cily or Portltnd. For farlBtr ' T.: r.u. -.1 .....f il,. Im SUf particulars, t""" ul ,uv . a Columbia DUinf rORTLAND, 0. T. THE proprietors of this favorite Eating Ettal lithment respectfully inform ill whom iletaj cernt, thtt tlity have leased, aud are atw etfgtd in repairing, cliauging, cleansing, refilling, sad improving the building on ihe corner tf Washington tut , formerly known as tht COLUal. BIAN, and recently at tht CARTER HOUSE, adjoining iht COLUMBIA DINING HALL, for Ihe belter accommodation of tbe traveling eat muuily with board and lodging. The houes i bo completed, and richly furnished wilh 100 ofiae beet bedo in Oregon, and ready for the aceeaats datioo of travelers aud weekly boarienUditttT gents by tho 20th March. When opentuVit will be known as tht " COLUMBIA," and kept in munnerand etyle second to bobs ia Oregt Prices will alwayi ilwayt be tht lowest, and farea best, at Heretofore. 52wl , Divorce Notice. DUtrict Court, Territory of Oregon Seen Judicial UiettkU M. E. Overly ' 1 e. Til E defendant Is notified that a eomplaiBt has hn RI..I in ih nflua of Iht clerk ef tea i r M......I.. court for Clackamas county ia said Diswet, ty ing for a divorce from Iht bonds of '""J1'' tnd that a hearing will be hid thereon on llw aw day or the uext term thereof lo be held at rorusae in raid District on the first Moudey of May nan and unlets he then and there appears and antweti tht said complaint, il will bt taken at "" and Uie prayer thereof be granted by thaeouri. " ' A.110LBKOOK, , April3,18o8-5lw5 raff's Alt j Xffotictt. THIS it to certify thtt my wife ter"""" my bed aud board in April, l8'""d "rt ia now living with another man, I bavt ""Fjj best to stale to the publ e lhat she hat never yw been divorced from me, coraequtnlly Bel tettaas m.rri.g.i.illeg...FRANcigsJ Oregon Cily, April 3, 1858. R. CARTER'S PULMONARY BALSAM just received by ti raise al tee ..i'tir nul!i2 STOKE tMII'.t''. VH I March it7, lead. HORSE-SB OEXWG-i THOSE wha wish to get their H O 1 8 t well okod, and tpeedUy dot, pleas. eaO on OLD DICK, at lh. B smith shop P' '" McKwMVwtttt Oreg-mCUf,Mrrrk7tme