lit u tlit btt, M well M the Diot areila
IjIb mm Hint coulil have been selected
from tlio thousand, of good And treat mm
now In the rank of tho Il-publicao party,
lit bad kuowa Mr. Lincoln when, like
klmwir, lit was struggling with poverty,
without in'oucy or fumily liiflueuct, with
notliiuj; to depend on hut hi good name,
liii Indomitable pcrsevcruncc, and liii own
right trui, to make hi way to the high and
honorable onit!ori lie nowocenpics; tnd to
tliow that ha did not belong to, tnd Imd
no sympathy with, tlmt clafc of Whig pol
iticians Just described hy my friend who
preceded me, denominated In old Jackson
tiins Iho "silk Mocking and rudlc nhirt
Kcntry," (and he ndiuitled there were Buch
men in tho Whitf party of those diys,)
lint tiny oro not now ax a gcncrul thing in
the ranks of the Jti-publirnn party; they
re following the h ad of that old federal
aristocrat, James Uucbatian, who boasted
in early life, that " if lit thought lit hud a
drop of Democratic hlood in his vein, he
would open them aud Irt it out." Dut hear
what Mr. Lincoln says in a private letter
written to mo in November, Speak
ing of hit content with Mr. JJouglo, tnd
the positions then occupied by old Whigs
nud old Democrat, he says
" Politics are terribly mixed up here
silica you left. A a spfeiiueiis, it will "'.tin
atruuge to you that I was bent eu over three
hundred in Stngmnon, that gave eight
hundred Whig majority in 1H.18.1 nnd hud
over eighteen hundred in Cook county
Cook county used to girt over two thous
nnd Democratic J. Perhaps still stranger
thut both the were openly against
tut aud for Douglas. On tho con
trary, John and it eorgo Webber and sev-
oral such old Democrat were furiously for
mo. A a general rule, out or tsanguinon,
a well a In it, much of the plain old
Democracy U with us, while nearly all the
old exclusive ilk stocking W Inggcry is
OjraiiiHt ns; I do not mean nearly ull the
old Whig party, but nearly ull the
nice, exclusive son. Aud why not? There
bus been nothing in politics since the Revo
lution so congenial to their nature as the
present position of the great Democratic
parly."
Dr. llusnr continuedlie said that
evory mun the leant acquainted with the
old Whig and Democratic partica of Illinois
and with their present condition, knew thq
etatcmeut of Mr. Lincoln to bo true to tho
letter, ltuttt simple nHjeverution fMr.
Lincoln was never, to hi knowledge, ser
ously questioned, even by hi political cn-l
emles; nnd therefore needed no cnnfh'mutioii
Here Dr. II. alluded to some incidents inl
the early history of Mr. Lincoln, bis origin
lii early associations, his habit of life; hi.
open, frank, generous nature; the unbend
itig and persevering energy with which he
prosecuted the objects of his pursuit; Lis
proverbial honesty nnd integrity of charac
ter; he, with great energy and enthusiasm
deduced from nil these consideration, thai!
it wns hot possible in the nuturo of things!
that Mr. Lincoln could do any thing ill
elected President, that could militate di-l
rcclly or indirectly against tho great in
terests and permanent welfare of the toil
lug millions of this great nation, and thud
ho would be elected l'rcsidcht in November
nczt; fur, said Dr. II., the poor old man
as he look around upon hi children, cloth
ed in linsey, spun nud woven by hi hones!
wife, will remember that Abraham Lincoln
In his youth was like one of thuin; und,
regardless of ull former party prejudice or
associations, regardless or platforms nud
every thing else but tlut mun, he will pledge
hi wife thut if he live till November, he
will vote for him. The young man us he
lay ilon u hi uxe, his uniul, or hi mechan
ical tool, to wipe the swcul from his brow,
will remember that Abruham Lincoln, in
his youth, toiled liko him, for hi own daily
bread; and will believe thut if elected 1W
ideiit, ha will sympathise with him in his
daily toil, and do every thing in his power
10 promote ms wcimro, ami keep the road
open for him to reach ns distinguished a
position ns he occupies; nnd he, too, will go
nuu voto ioi nun.
Tho Doctor said that ha endorsed the
platform most cordially as a whole, while
lit would have preferred a ehnngo of lan
guage In one of tho resolutions, which it;
teemed to him conflicted somewhat with the
power claimed for the pcoplo of the territo
ries by the Republicans of Oregon, na enun
ciated In their platform. Ho said in con
clusion, that if the pcoplo of Oregon acted
wisely, they would vote for Mr. Lincoln
for l'resideut, nud hi old personal and po
litical friend, V.. D. Iiuker, to the Senate.
With Mr. Lincoln for President, who i
emphatically a frontier nmn, and Col Da-
ker, (who knows tin want of Oregon and
tho IVillc coast generally, nnd who has
the ability and energy to present them
In a way that shall command the favorable
action ol Congress,) in a position to yield
efficient aid ta hi administration, he
would guarantee the payment of the war
debt; the construction of tho Pacific lUil
Hoad, and prompt and efficient protection to
all the material interest of Oregon, that
havo been o Kcjudiiloucly uegltcted bv tlit
former uud present administration. II
had no desire for oflice, and if he continued
to be prospered in his professional business,
it would be greatly to hi ouniary interest
to refuse tlit best ollice in Oregon,
thould it lie tendered to him; therefore,
be claimed that hi ardent support of Mr.
Lincolu waa uninfluenced by selfish consid
erations, but prompted by lore for tht
man, anj the belief that he would admin
ister the government to tht satisfaction of
th peoplt f the wholt l uion, by dealing
jnstly wiih all.
Ma. WM. L. ADAMS was loudly call
ed for, an. I made a most excellent nJ th
iuent speech. Ut id, that as a matter
of expediency and truilabiliiy, he Imd fa
vored tho nomination of Mr, Date, a t
dialinguishcd gentleman from Illiuo:, who
wat at bit house last winter, would bear
him witness; but that 10 far at the mau
nml hla principle were rfiiietrucd, Mr.
Liucolo wa hU favorite abovt any other,
man that had bceu named. Our Illiho.s
friend, Mr. Adam, ssid, Insisted that Mr.
Lincoln wai the man for the cri.U, and the
cholct madt of him by the Chicago Con
vention, provel that lit wan not wrong
111 hit JuJgment of hi availibility. lie
thought no Republican could or would
obj'-ct to him, and he believed he would
excite an enthusiasm throughout the North
ern and Kustcru State, thut would cijunl,
if not surpass, the excitement of 1840, and
tlmt he would be elected over Douglas
or any other man, be did not eutertaiu the
shudow of a doubt.
J. 11. McIJIlIDR, Kq., being culled for,
cuino furwurd and said that he endorsed
the proceeding of the Chicago Convention
cordiully uud heartily. He did so, liM,
because in tlit main he approved tho pint -
form, nnd next, because ho had confidence
in the nominees, and thut if it was possible
for tho Contention to do a Utter thing
than to adopt the platform which they did,
it was done when they placed tho name
of Lincoln and Hamlin upon the Hag that
waved above It.
He said bo wished here to meet tht
charge of " ncyro njuulily," that nrgumeiit
of Ignorance and weapon of vulgarity, so
often used against the Republican party.
He then read the following extract from a
speech made by Mr. Lincoln, In a Joint de
bate between him and Mr. Douglas, held
at Charleston, Illinois, on the 2.'ith of Sq-
tcmber, 1858:
" While I wat at the hotel to-day en
uliloi ly e-eniieman caned iiiioii me to Know
whether I was really in favor of producing
n perfect cquulity between the ncgiwg ami
white people, urcat laughter. lulu I
mu not proposed lo myselt on tins occasion
to say much on thut subject, yet a the
picitiou was asked me, I thought I would
occupy perhaps live minut"s m saving some
tiling ill regard to it. I will suy then that
I nm not, nor ever have been, in fuvor ol
bringing uliout in any way the social and
polilicul cquulity of tho whito and black
races: tlmt 1 am not and never have been
,i favor of making voters or juror e fl
negroes, nor of qualifying them to hold of
lice, nor to intermarry with white people;
and I will say in addition to thi that there
W a physical dillerencc between the white
nnd liluck races which I believe will forever
forbid Iho two races living together on
of social nnd political equality. And in
somuch as they cannot so live, whilu they
do remain together, there must bo the po
sitiou of superior and inferior, I, us iniicl J
as any other nmn, am in favor of huviii
thesiiiurinr position assigned to the whit
I say upon this occasion, I do not percciv
that l)( cause tho wli.le man is to have tl
xnperior position the negro should be ch
pied everything. I do not understand that
because 1 do not want n wti'o woman tor
a slave, I must necessarily want hi r for a
Wife. K'liecrs.l Sly understaiidin is tlmt I
cnii just let her nlone. 1 urn now m my
iiriiuin year, and 1 certainly never havj Imd
black woman lor either it slave or wile.
So it seems to me quito possible for us d
get along without making either slaves or
wives of negroes. I will add to this (hat
nove never seen, to my knowledge, a
man, woman or child who was in favor of
producing a perfect equality, sociul aud
political, between negroes and white men
1 rucollect of but one distinguished instance
. I... . T I . .. I . P .i . .
mm i ever nenru oi so ireniieuur as lo He
entirely satisfied ot its correct net an
t lint is 1 1 io enso of Juil-'o Douclas's ol
ii iciui, Kim. uicnaru m. joiiiisoii, iniililt-r
and cheer. I will also add lo the few ro
marks I have made, for I am net going lo
liler al Inrin) upon this subject. Unit I have
never had the least iipprelunsion Hint I or
my iveimls would marry neerocs ifther
was no law to keep them from it f hum-liter
But as Judge Pon-lus and his friouds seem
to bo in great apprehension that they might,
I there were no law to keep them Irom it.
roars of laughter, 1 I give him the most
olenin pledge that 1 will, to the very last,
-land by the law of this State, which for
bid the marrying of w hito people with
negroes i .ununited liiughterond applause
I will add one further word, which i this.
tlmt I do not understand there is anyplace
wnero an aitrral.on of the social nnd noliti
cnl relations of the negro and the whito mar
can be changed except m the State Lc:
Mature not in the Congress of tho United
States and ns 1 do not really apprehend
tho approach of any such thinr umolf. nud
a Judge Douglas seems to be iu constant
norror that some such danger is rapidlv
hppronching, nrnimt as the bt tt mran's
Waprrvent it that tht Judge bi Irpl at komt
tim p,aceu in Me blale Lfg.tlature to fiyht
mm mniturt. 1 1 proarious luughter and
lipplauso.
Sir. Mcuride continued Mr. Lincoln
had the endorsement of the highest demo
cratic authority as to both his integrity
and capacity, that of Mr. Doiijlas. Mr.
Douglas had said that " he had known
Mr. Lincoln for tho last thirty ye.irs, nnd
that in every position he had discharge: his
duties with ilil! und ability." When a
man' merits wring from his opponent an
admission aud compliment of thi kind, its
justice must be acknowledged.
Mr. Meltrido rioke further showing
that the jjiecial interest of the Pacific
coast, tnc Homestead Bill and Pacific
IUilroad measures, required, that whether
wt eiidoracd the platform aud principles of
the party, on the question of slavery, or
not, wt ought to sustain iu nominees,
because of their being pledged to these
great interests, which were of vital and '
paramount importance to us. I tl
Mr McB. .pcU about thirty aiinn.ea, I
and hi tpeech a received with attention '
and approbation. I
Ma. M. CRAWFORD waancxt called
for. Ut took tiie stand, and tiaong other
thinja said that it seoied since the Supreme
! Court In the I'rd Scott cant had under
taken (lit control of th. polilicul fiuentious
of tho day, It wn funhionable to cluiw for
Court all riul'li, ami that the other
brunches of the government tho legitlotlve
and executive were being swallowed up
by the Irn -ii'iinible Judicial monster. Our
00 Slate election wua going Itepublican
it wa found, tnd to avert such dire cu
lan.ity, a Supruno Judge order a wom
otlicer, H much an li'mvlf, to go baik to
liia county, overhuul the return fu hi
office, and bring Shell toint more vole ! !
Thi wu mrrylng out the doctrine of the
C'barlwton Convention, which took the
ground that the only great polilicul que
lion of our time wn a judicial ijuetiiun I
Mil. 0. L. WOODS being loudly called
fur, responded, and faid thut the law, and
not politic, wui hi (Uld; thut ho hud de
sired that other whose habit and iuclina
tioni better bcQttcd them for addressing
such meetings would occupy tho time.
Hut, ho said, tlmt hi disinclination wai
nut owing to any lack of cntbusisusra or
I polilicul fervor, for ho believed thut no mnu
! in tho American i'cpublio could more
fully endorse, nnd give a heartier support
to the Chicago Convention than ho could.
Ho suid that while he might htvo hud his
personal preference he cousidsred that the
exigencies of the time, nud the importance
tho issue now before tho Americun people,
roquircd that all Individual preference
should be Ignored, and the great principle
of Human Liberty, of Justice and naturul
right, alone kept steadily in view. Here
Mr. W. poke feelingly of the spirit of the
Revolution, of its consecration to freedom,
and of tho doctrine of tho foundation of
our government, as enunciated in the
Declaration of Independence nnd the Con
stitution of the United State. He said
that freedom of thought, of speech, and of
action constituted tho palladium of our
Liberties; that it was for that that the
bnttht of the Revolution were fought, and
without which thi government was a des
potism. He said that the South denied
tlmt right, that iu 15 of the 33 State of
this Union no man dared express his sen
timents if they conflicted in tho least with
the imaginary interests of the " peculiar
institution" of human slavery; thut iu Eng
land, France, Russia, uniivhert of God'
footstool, except iu the- slave-holding Re
public of America, a mnu was permitted to
express his views in relation to the traffic
" iu the bodies nnd souls of men" but here,
in a hind of freedom, where Liberty is the
watchword, and the booming of leu thous
and cannons and the deafening shouts of
mlllious of freemen Tauntingly proclaim the
kath-kin.ll of tyranny, here ulone freedom
of speech is-rewarded with 'imprisonment,
aiid tripes, nud diuHi
He llmnght thir if there ever was a tinw
when men should come up and battle for
their country, nud labor as became freemen,
hut time was at hand.
Mr. Woods theu referred to the charge
of " Sectionalism," nnd suid thut it was u
ulumny nnd basely false. What consti-
utes Sccioualisin, he inquired; is it because
one portion of the Republic votes for one
man and another for uuolhcr? If that w us
it, the Democrats wore seclioiml as well as
ho Republican. Who elected James
lluchunan iu lfciuu? The South. Where
loes the liullimore Nominee expect his
chief support? Without the lull expectation
of tht militia South, no Democrat would
dare to run. - He said if sectionalism was
found anywhere it was In the South, for
ncy alone were prescriptive. Rut ho pre
ferred to meet them on nobler ground,
and while Democracy played with thu base
passions of men, he preferred to nddress
their belter judgment. All lie asked of
people of tho Union was n fair nud candid
.investigation of tho political issues of the
Jay; with which victory was sure ; with-
ut which, defeat was certain. i
After a fuw more stirring remarks Mr.
Voods closed, pledging hi cordiul nnd
Siearty support to Messrs. Lincoln nnd
Hamlin, at the November election; and
asking nil who held the good of their
country at heart, to coino out and give
them their votes.
Judge SKINNKU, and others, made
tirringand eloquent speeches, pledging
liemselvcs to sustain the nominations.
The following resolutions were then
anuinioiisly adopted, and the meeting
Ijourued with the best feeling.
John R. McDumE, Esq., offered tho fol
wing:
Resolved, That the Republicans of Yam
hill county, agreeing in ull essontiul partic
ulars with the principles laid down
in tiie platform of the National Convention
recently nssembled nt Chicago, Rnd having
the fullest confidence in the capability of
i nc nominees oi mat Convention Messrs.
Lincolu and Hamlin do tdediro to thum
our hearty and cordial support' ut the No-
leiiiuu ciecuou.
On motion of W. L. Adams, the Cen
tral County Committee was instructed to
receive contributions and to procure public
documents for gratuitous distribution, and
to distribute the same.
Maxitacttm ok Canxox ix Exci.avd.
Tht Kuglih gun factories are now at
work night and day on a prodigious scale,
forging the Armstrong; guns of all sizes,
from 6 to 100 pounder. It i expected
that 1,200 pirn,, chieHr of tht larger de-
' i ,n" .v,Mr- During
i 0, ' s Z '1
batteri. of fit-Id artillery have been tnriied
ut "nd equipped for service a well as
SOO 40-poomicrs for aa .al nse. bwiuVs a
larga number of 100 pounders in progress
of manufacture, and which will bt ready
by the Erst of Aocrist tut.
(El)c (Oregon SlrguG.
W. Xi. Adam,
Editor.
OBXOOIT CITY i
satuudayTjuly 14, WJO.
Republican Nomination!.
For I'reiihitt,
Ali HA II AM LLN'COLX,
ok ii.i.ixom.
Fur Vi't I' mi'leu I,
1IANNII5AL HAMLIN,
or JIAIXE.
Pur I'rtiiJmtiul Elteturi,
T. J. I)v, II. J. Texu, W. II. Wtki7
Lincoln' Mmtnallua
Has bceu received ull over Oregon with
probubly more enthusiasm than thut of any
other man would huvo been. The satisfac
tion of all Republican it not ' loud, but
deep.' Tht great inns of the Republicans
in Oregon were, with us, in fuvor of tho
uominntiou of Date not tlmt we consid
ercd him a better man than Lincoln, but
solely on the cround of availability. Wt
Judged that Date was the most avniluble
mnu from the data we had before us at
thi distant stand point. Nevertheless, we
were never inclined to set up our ow u Judg
ment on the' matter of availability against
that of the assembled wisdom of tho Re
publican iiurtr. Indeed, that mutter was
never fully settled till tho meeting of the
Convention nt Chicago. Although the
delegates from various State went there
instructed for this or that favorite, or com
mitted from personal choice to somo ' first
choice' candidate, it became apparent soon
after tht assembling of tho Convention that
1 Honest Abo' was the man who, nbove ull
other, could set the Western prairies on
fire with enthusiasm, and nniko the granite
rocks of New England ring with respons
ive echoes to tho shouts of Western pio
neers, inspired with patriotism, and deter
mined on establishing the doctrine thut
liberty (or Republicanism) is national, nud
slavery (or Democracy) sectional. Like
wise men bent on victory, nnd patriots
sinking personal attachment nnd selfish in
terest In a lurning love for their country,
they were not slow to discover tho palpi
tating of the great public heart, nor tardy
in accepting with enthusiasm the standard
bearer that a thousand unmistakable, indi
cations pointed out as the very man for the
crisis. 1 lie wild enthusiasm with which
hi nomination was received by more than
forty thousand hard-hnndcd Republicans,
assembled iu and around the structuro that
contained the delegation, tho roar of the
cannon without, the shouts of rcioicinz that
made Chicago Jubilant from one end to the
other, the wild olilburMs of entluioiiism
within, young men nud middle-aged men
waving hats, handkerchiefs, and flags, and
shouting till they were hoarse, while old
men sat iu their scats and fairly went for
Joy; nil this rnthusiusm showed that
nominating the gifted und noble. Lincoln
they had struck a responsive chord that
would make tho hearts of millions of pa
triots throb for joy from 0110 end of tho
Union to the other.
In tho name, aud on behnlf, of every
noblo Republican in Oregon, wc send buck
greeting to our Eastern brethren, nnd say
" Well done, good and faithful delcguUs.''
We thank tho delegates from Oregon for
nctiug wisely in voting for Hates till it wa
apparent he was not the man to awaken
the enthusiasm we need, to make a emu
paign not eclipsed by even thut of 1S40,
and theu voting for 'Honest Abe,' tho
very man who, nbove nil other aspirants,
we lovo the best for his nobleness of heart,
his purity of purpose, hi consistency of
character, his noblo fights in behalf of
truth, honor, humanity, human progress,
human liberty, and the Uuion nnd the
Constitution and, above and beyond all,
for his having always fastened the convic
tion ou ns, liy his every net and speech,
that his garments are not tainted with
denmgogism, but that in every contest be
tween right and wrong his noblo nature
keenly sympathizes with the riyht, nnd ho
always cam' whether wrong triumphs or
falls, by being ' voted up or voted dowu.'
Abe Lincoln stands up to-day, by his pre
vious history as a laboring tnnn, by hi at
tachment to every interest of free labor,
by his known interest in the Pacific Rail
road, by his desire to see land given to the
landless, by his partiality to the protection
of home industry, by his hostility to the
revival of the slave trade, by his unaltera
ble determination to resist by all constitu
tional menus the further spread of slavery,
by his utter abhorrence of any unlawful
interference with slavery where it exists by
virtue of local State law, and by his favor
ing retrenchment and reform in every de
partment of the Government by all these
he stands up as tho best known representa
tive of Republicanism in tho Union. Hi
personal character is too pure and nusullied
to be reached by tho pro-slavery hounds
that are bayin; on his track his political
doctrine have passed through the most
fiery ordeal or investigation, nnd have been
so triuoiphautly maintained that Lincoln
stand up to-day as a ' Rig Giant' among
the dwarfs that have encountered him his
statesmanship is second to that of no man
of the West his Jncksonian determination
of character, that induces him to accom
plish whatever he uudcrtakes his impar
tiality, hi cool, calculating consideration,
hit eminent conservatism, hi love for the
Union, his abhorrence of treason, and hi
eminent abilities, point him out the mun
wo need in the Presidential chulr after the
Jlh of March next. That he will bo tri
umphantly elected, we believe; ami if ho
it fleeted, he will Utke h'u irnt, unlet at
tauiuuted, and rule Ihit Government U
0 alt the Uiiiun threatening Demo
erotic tiuiiort ihit tide ff the lute of Jirt
i) nd Lriiutiuue.
llrinriTirllljr f lh IWpnu
Ilea a I'arljr.
"The King blutkguurd who edit tho
Oregon City Airgoosc arrogate nil the
morality, decrnrr, intelligence and religion
to tho lihuk ll.-publieun puny." Drfu
tion't Medium.
Now, Delusion, why do yon, an Oberlin
pursou, talk o naughtily about our nrro
gnting to the Republican pnrty mast of the
intelligence, morulily, and virtue of the
country, when we ure assured by lending
Democrat that we ure right in doing so ?
Davo you forgotten, dear Delusion, thut
Scrauton, whin drinking nt tho bar of a
tuveru iu Portland with Jo Lane and a lot
of whut yu cull ' Puddy Whuck' rough,
turned to Joseph nud drank the following
excellent Democratic toast? " Ocnerul!
wittily, ignorance, und our priuciplfi will
thrive!!"
Have you also forgotten that iu making
the canvus of 1858, you said that Rush
called erery eountry Democrat you ttttyed
with an illiterate J'ike, hit vit imty, hit
children filthy, und hit food intolerable,
while you of course assented to the w hole
of it, and theu added a stump speech on
the bed-bugs ?
Have you forgotten tlmt yoor leading
organ In Oregon (Coon's Express) lately
ussertcd thut " the very nature of thu
tenets held by tho Republican party proved
them to be tho moat intelligent und ob
serving of cur citizens" ?
Have yon olso forgotten that Judge 01
ncy, a leader of the Democracy, said that
" the Republican party embraced the tal
ent, the literature, and the morality of the
country, aud thut Republican principles
were as much superior to Democratic prin
ciples us Republicans were on an average
superior to Deinocruts" ?
Now, Delusion, when wo have the testi
mony of Coon and Olney to the fact tlmt
our party possesses the intelligence, the
morality, nud the talent of the country
us also the testimony of Rush, Delusion,
uud crouton tlmt yuar party ha the
'uuKty, illiterate, biipgy Pikeitet,' nnd
' thrives' best where ' iinornnee and irhis
Ly' are ubuiidant, why do yon blaino us
for nsscuting to the correctness of such
eminent Democratic authority ?
Dit. Mcl!Kim:.-The Oberlin wool - srow
cr tells us in his ' medium of self-defense
thut " lyinjj Billy Adams of the Airgoosc
is out in the last issue of his ih'nj!;y sheet in
favor of his father-in-law, Dr. James Me:
Bride, for tht U. S. Senate." Dclnsinn
calls the Doctor our 'pap,' nnd iiitiuiutea
tlmt it is n family nrruncemciit to -ret him
into the Senate.
It will be uews to most people that we
arc a ' sor.-ir.-luw ' of Dr. McDride. We
ore related to him just as wc nre to Abe
Lincoln, nnd 110 more, and tho Oberlin
ainalguinationist knows it. If we were
related to the Doctor, we eliouldu't be
ashamed to owu it. We have lived a very
near neighbor, wilhin ultno.-t a stone's
throw of him, for nuiny years, nnd know
him well. We have proved him to bo a
gentleman in the highest sense of tlmt
word. lie is a man of mind, of sound
principles, of untarnished niorul character,
01 nooie iinpni-es und a generous nature,
lie is an ornament to society, nnd an houoT
Mo the country, nnd if he ever should b
elected to the U. S. Scnnte, he will do
much toward elevating Oregon in public
estimation from the low estate into which,
she has fallen by our first Sciiatoriul ex
periment. ......
The article in the Argus to which Delu
sion refers was not penned by us nor by
nny of Dr. MeBridc's connections. We
will say, however, for Delusion's bcneCt,
that if the Republicans should be able to
get a Scnntor, there is only one man in
Oregon that wc would prefer to see elected,
to Dr. James McBride.'
Mist not he. Wo hear that since tho
election the sectional organs nt Albany and
Corvallis are rapidly stoking. These sheets
have both done a good service for Repub
licanism, and ought, if possible, to be kept
going a while longer. The mad-dog foam
ing of the Medium nnd the puling fanati
cism of the Union have been admirably
calculated to disgust sensible men with the
Democratic party. These papers onsht to
be kept going till they drivt a few more
Democrats out of that partv. Delusion
oilers to take vegetables in payment for
subscription, and we presume that poor
Slater will do the same thing. Couldn't
the Republicans of Liun nnd Benton spare
a bushel of turnip each to pay for a year's
subscription! A hundred bushels of tur-
nijis, or a half dozen wagon-loads of
squashes, will keep these editors going till
they have demolished their party, and then
you can stop the supplies.
" We are an ox-driver ourself Drla.
lion 1 Medium.
We thought tlmt you were a hog-driver.
and that Linn county had elected yon to
louow your old profession. If your con-
stltneiila WnrA m m HflTITn. t 1 1
,.,, . .-
your amlution, and have your coramiss on
fllledoutby SuljstitutinV "ox-driver tnr
Bog-lriver, we shad not complain, althonsh
wo think the Utter calling is the
adapted to ycur mental capacities.
aarcss to the ,
I propo-. u.linr ai, ;
Hit COrilT-l UWS K U Oi-....i-i..
diiy.July I I, Hi;0, al 1 1
0 clock ...
Iiw Iho Jw Iiiito lw, 0.pr,,j fof' 'T't
18(10 )fuf.-lioliiei,eeiB, of thair ow
now lo U In Ilia Demotrulia Priy 1
1CATox"vw,,
PrtlrcUvt rU.
Al SA I.I-M. will lioljiu,,..
- " tuVaV
on the hull rdiirJnv. 1I10 o,!, I r,N
nt 10 u'cluck a. M. J-'u'ineM r
'. ''y, Iw
iiuire the atliiiliic of evcrv nimZT 1
Orcgoa UlvUloa, Xe,.s,H .
MreU al lluimony Hull every KriiL.
MreU al lluimony Hull every Krid..
at half . 7 oolock. Ilr.tbr.ai iu
neat ttti'lt.! In .,lt..l la , . . . ""MMh,.
It. (1 A l l 1 1
Uk A. MiiKrMuo, U.8. "'iW.r,
"""lb. o. r.
Omnia I.OUOK So.H won, ul tlu-lr II n
lyoPMii. 1I.0 bind unice, on Moo.,,l,
e -u-li week. ISrelhrcn in o.mj in,. .. . "I
toallr.nl. V. ATCOLLAUL W
A. J. C'llit-XAK, I! eo. b'rc'y. i '
Multnomah Lodge Wo 1
i V. & A. M., hold Lt,deoml
A. lion, in Ih. 8m..,,f 'IVmpenineTS 5
th. Snturdiiy ircediiiff Hi. ru Moo,
month, jlietluen iu sood atandii,. .,. 1
iMnlleml. A. L. LOVEJOY W u
I). W. Chaio, Keo'y. """"iW Jl
HuaJxl Hnrk.irllU
irinnl
liwitio, a mild catlmilic, nud Umit li.,-J"
ly remove, frc.in ilir blood, tnd oihor fluid, rf"!?'
body, th iinparilie. .l unlieillby eerelioi-'T
Mifiendi-r 1111.I fd dineufc-, IUg .irikjj-'?
ro.il .r llic inulody. AIUioukIi iroj J
t-ioiui it muy be luUu ut .11 timci wi,,
nufeiy, ileonluiii. 110 Hji.,fu drusio,!
Iilihlule lb. m.m, of luiuvnil Mo.to
lb. conmiiiiiion. , ,
Prepared nnd ld by A. I). & D.8ANDS M
Fulton el , New York. I'rlco Si Mrboiui
.iib lllr. for 85. rwooiai,,
ST Kd Ibo udvertUrnirnl in inollwrenln
Sold by Da. STICK LB, Or Ci,e, JS
l)rugiil geiiernlly. . , "
MffAii-riTrcTn7.-Tiie b,, m..
cell brity which thai pre-eaiiuent medicine U u.
iiiiie.l lor im inviirinble illicncy In all i
lll-UIU'rliM
....... r.v....T... .wvu.v, au reuui-riti Uituui
pri'du-e of oslenialioui pulling not only mmZr
nary but uiiwiirlby ut them. They ut lknt.
by llieir fruiie; their gimi n-urk. ii-.i,fy
1111, 1 lhe Ib.-ive not by die fuitb of lh ereduloi
In nil ew of coiivi ii w, dynpepiiie, biliowuJ
liver ullt-eliuim, pilen, rlieiiinul.aiii, leverann.1 int
olmliua'.. !ienil.nc!ie, mm. I nil genital dm'p.'
nichln of heiiltb, iIicho Pill, have iuvoriubly proved
a certain and nr.i-.ly romcdy. A .ingle mil ig
plnee llie Life l'i!l Ikjimii! I he n-ncb of eompeiiiioi
in the inliinalieiiof every patient.
Dr. illiitlal'a I'liirnix ll.llere will befiiundonil.
ly tfliuufidiui in nil cave, i.f ntTvuim debility, J J
cpiu, houduchc, the niekncss incident to hlain
in delicale beullh, and every kind uf wenkntiaif
llie digt-alive li j;:nm. l-or vale by Dr. IV, B.
jioitai. ) lifi.niniuy, Aew York, laJbi
M..11.:... 11....1 ...i i. i. ""j
llirouijlioiil tin- ciiunlry.
geornlly
1
AVIsUVh tUlsnm or Wild r.fcrrrj.n,
only pure nud fiiuino llulin la, U;1 mrlhebal
Iweiily ycura him been, prepared hy Sktii W.
Kuwlk & Co., of I'.neton; and Iheir ptiMH
ii.iiiie, an w, II a Iho tvrillen Hnulure of L.
Hull, nppenr on lh mili-r rn,pera. At tot
would amid the fiutiou and line llie gttunt,
take 110 ullicr! . , .
WihTAii". Haium up WildCiishht. Tliliii.
rnhiable rein, dy imhe bi-tt one extant for Ike mSt,
Kino, tpeeiiy. and p.-riiinrut vnre of rtufb,
cnlii, tore thront, bri.ueliitii, atlhma, vlrtrin.
pneumonia, croup, Klioripina eovek. blttihr tl
- l 17' "'1 """.',". ""!1 or:T' "a
etrry f.am uf llirmil, elual, nnd lung 4
nipbiot,
a ttfiinn i.oxunimoN nm-ii. ...
"I'll is hone, hul l remedy ahonld be in the kink
of every family and individual, an a limely ipeli
ention of.it Iu a flight oohl will chum jimnediili
relief; while cum-s of long tlandiii)!. olutiulr,
nnd apparently incurable ehcrneter, will wAj
yield lo ila wonderful curativo power and ih
L-ri-at adaptutiou to thu n-iinlt of man when if
llcle.l. . .: .1
I-'ur falc in Cnlifnraia by Itedinirton & Ct.
f feui-y .Jidiii.iou t Co., Churlea Morrdl, Sun Frai
iciaeo; It. II. McDonald & Co., Sirrnmrnlo :
I'.iee, ('i-tliii iV Co., Alur) iville ; Sinilli & llirb,
I'urlland, Dr. gun. frlSyrow
IMFORTANTJTO SHIPPERS!
.i.THE .sn.BXDIU 5 ZW STEAMER...'
II I V AL
Has Commenced Her lingular Tripl
' IlKTWEFJf ' "
OUr.dUN V.ITY AM) 10RT1.A3B,
At Reduced Kates, viz: '
Freight, each way,' lier ton ...........$2W
Passage ; JO
HER owner would sugceal to iliippc"
the public graerully lha importance of pat
ronizing the KIV A I., as in i-o doing they will
ui e a iinif.nii) mid rcusoimbie rat. of I'n-ighU and
pwagu in futaru.
TlieKIVAI, wus not put ou thi trade with
view to having her bought or run off. We in
therefore willing to enter into eontraolt far 0 1
more yiuri with any parly or purlin at tbe ibo"
rutoa.
For further particular., or bnf'ne, pleaea etB
oft the following nt-enin: W. C. DEMENT ACo.,
Oregon City, 11. LAW, Porthui, oroobeatJ,
where Ibo Cnpinin will be huppy to we yon, ni
transact any biibinem on the terma herein met
lioned. UEOUGE A. PEASE,
OregouCity, July 14, 1860-14 . Ctyw.
CHARLES BARRETT, ,.
(olo roT oFfioa,) T
' PORTLAND, OGN., 7
BUYS nil lind, of
FRUITS, STRAWBERRIES, i
Cherrien, Applet, $c, dC., .
sella all kind, of . ' . ," ,
Nutt, Orange, Fig, Raitini, Cfl"h"
Stationery," Newsjiapers, Periodi
cals, Novel, etc.
Aernt forthe San Frnnciteo BuOetit mi
Alia California, the lie it papert pubtuud
Pacific caant.
UTAH Und, of Product hougM ai
committion. June Sum
BOOKS! BOOKS!
1
AT THE OREGOX CITY BOOK STOl,
consiatiug of. ....
Standard Religious. ' jriscellan-
eous, and Poetical works,
Waverly and Dickens's Novels,
&c, &c., &c
Stationery, of all kinds, etc '
April 38 D. D. STEPHEXSOS-
' In Justice's Court
Statt ef Oregon, .. i
County of Clarlnm, I '
TO JOSEPHIXE PARA:
iron k...h ik.t wntW.n
X men! h. been i-word .raint y-tai f?
! prnDertr attaek.! ik Mit .V, drmaa
! Vinton amonaiir.eto aeee.ty iMn l'v.Vy"
' x ..ni- iL. 1 k i,tm.
-'"tic of Ibe Peac In and forwi-l ewinty.
' of a.. .. m ..iKk . . J"
, IWI Ifcawtw -
I roeBt "illl . raderJ t;uuit too.o i ,Tn
irnj 40 I. par 11 debt J. 9. -""
I Jnae i), l"0O.-IU4
fhtotj-