nn STATE J CP ID 1TU1.L .BL (HAN l 0 DEVOTED TO THE POLITICAL AND GENERAL INTERESTS OF THE PEOPLE VOL. I. EUGENE CITY, OREGON, OCTOBER 18, 1802. NO. 40. J1 al THE STATE REl'l'BLICAX Published every Saturday by J. NEWTON G ALE. Terms of Subscription. Tb. Rcpublicax will be published ut t j 50 a rear in ad Vance; f 'l 00 if iuij at th end of six months; or tl on mt tba close of the year. One dollar additiuuui will be fchsrired for each vcar payment is neglected. X-& No papers discontinued uulil ull arrearages are ia, except at our option. Rates of Advertising. 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Tho following remarks from tho leading edito rial article i tho Portland Daily Times, of tho 1 1th inst.. we commend to our rcrders as the most sensible comments we have yet seen on tho President's emancipation proclamation : Since the promulgation of tho President's mancipation policy we have watched, with no little anxiety, for an expression of opinion thereon by tho Union press of tho Pacific coast, well knowing that in most cases these journals indi cate public sentiment in their several localities. We are gratified to seo so far as our observa tions have extended that there seems to be an Imoa V'itod sentiment in favor of sustaining theA. x stration in any policy, consistent with our lloptt 1can form of Government and the Mowers delegated by tho Constitution, provided it will aid in tho overthrow of tho Southern re bellion. It deems to be a generally conceded fact that we have temporiz d too long already ; lhat our Government has wasted much of its strength and power in its vain efforts to conquer tho rebels, while th ' institution of slavery the rery origin and foundation of all our great troub les, and now tho life and support ot their cause was to bo so sacredly guarded and protected. Iictbre the commencement of tho war, not one out often of the people of tho North would have given their assent to the policy of emancipation, nor would they do so now, were it not that ex perience has taught thorn, the severe lesson that slavery and the Union cannot both bo saved that either one or tho other must perish. To cUjoso between tow evils is now their only hopo. Thoso who have stood by us in the darkest hours of our adversity will not forsake us now, even though compelled to swallow a bitter pill. The nation is writhing under a malignant fever and requires tho most potent ot remedies. Let it lie given quickly, and if the overloaded stomach of the patient shall happen to disgorge " Cufl'oo " among other billious discharges, it can't be lielped ; desperate cases often require desperate remedies. SJES. PlIELPS ASD TUB CoXTKABAND. A gOll- tleman up town, who, the other day, missed his u boy," learned that tho lad was at Gtrrollton. He at once repaired to the headquarters of Gen. Phelps, and stated his case that ho was in search of a runaway negro. "You have lost a man, have you 1" observed the General, inquiringly and dryly. " Yes, sir," responded the other. " Verry well," said the General, " tho negroes are over yonder ; if your boy is there he can go with you, if he wishes." The gentleman asked further, that a guido might bo sent with him, as he did not know tho road and paths. " Certainly," aid the General " Orderly, call Major Scott." Presently the Major mado his appearance, and the General instructed him to conduct the gen tleman to the negro camp, and assist him in find ing his " boy," and to say to the " boy " that he had his (the General's) permission to return with his master. Thereupon the Major spoke : 11 General, I am th boy tho gentleman is in search of. I do not want to return." " This is all I can do," observed the General. TI19 droll part of this incident is, that the General was ig norant of the fact that the gentleman was Scott's piaster. The " Major " has hitherto been known in darkey circles as a great orotor ; ho is now known as M Major Scott, of the Black Guards." Queer things have come out ot Secession. A'. 0. Delta. A young Vermontcr, who owned a pet black bear, was bantered recently by a couple of young sportsmen from Boston, who had gone up the wilds of tho Green Mountain State for a hunt, to let them try their dogs (three rather powerful ereaturs) upon his pet (tho bear) to be kept chained to a post by a chain about twelve feet long. The Vermont boy, unable to resist the Appeal of five new and bright half dollars, and having faith in his pet, agreed to the trial. The result was three dead dogs, two mortified Ilostoniaus one triumphant bear and a jubilant Vermont juvenile. - A man with glass eye canuut rcal-cycs any tiling. AGIIICXLTI KAL COLLEGE. II1011 School, Eugene City, ) Okeqok, October 1802. J Hon. A. C. Gwds, Sir: By your InaugurM Address-i 1 which you tinnouiipcthe splendid dona tion o( 90,000 acres of land for tho establishment t one or more agricultural colleges, and in which you evince a deep interest in tho all important subject of education, you aroused the hopes and aspirations ot our educators at tho near pros pect of an enterprise fraught with future good to this youthful State. I therefore need no apol ogy for troubling your Excellency with thi letter, nor will I apologize for tho incompleteness of my remarks 011 tho grouds of other absorbing occupations, being mindful of Dr. Johnson s ai swer to Mrs. Macauly when sho ascribed the errors in her History of England to her having too many irons in tho fire. " Then madam, put your history where your irons are." I intend not at present to discuss the plan of study which ought to do adopted, the number of professors to bo appointed, tho rate of foes to be charged, or any other of tho multitudinous ques tions of detail which will form tho subjects of future- communications, and which must receive tho anxious attention of thoso in whoso hands will bo placed tho solemn responsibility of launching this new college. I propose simply to treat of this yet unborn institution in relation to extending educational agencies, and inquire how these may gain most and escape injury from its influence. Nor is this a frivolous or unim- portant topic. With all admiration of voluntary zeal and energy I feel keenly that in tho action of what is sometimes called tho voluntary sys tern there is an enormous waste of benevolent intentions of liberal expenditures, and cduca tional means. Much of what is boasted as the diffusion of education is but making tho stream run in a greater number of channels, with a sad loss of depth and forco in each. It seems some times to be supposed that by pouring water from vessel to vessel tho quantity of liquid is increased, and new wells are sunk which drain the old sur- roundiug wells more or less completely ; and tho number of wells is made the evidence of the abundant supply of tho puro clement. Schools aro multiplied, or rather school houses (for walls floor and roof do not constitute a school, even desks and benches to boot). Pupils are pushed by modes of pressure ignorantly diversified iuto the new reservoirs, and statists triumph in the march of intellect and the efficiency of the oluntary principle. A nearer insight might show that, perhaps in stead of ono good school there are several rickety and inefficient ; instead of ono well-paid master, there are several under-paid, and not over qual- ficd ; that tho whole process is to pupils one not of multiplication but division ; and as to efficien cy not of addition but subtraction. Thus the zeal of one sect raises schools in which teaching cheap and yet perhaps dear at the price; the zeal of another not to be out done, much to the benefit of carpenters, builds a rival temple and out bids its prototype. Dozens of schools pro viously existing give up their respective quota of pupils to swell the new roll call, and to stim ulate at periodical meetings the flagging iuthusi asm of subscribers. It is timo that all men were mado to see that to diffuse education among thoso who previously had it not, is a widely dif erent thing from directing into this or that chan nel the education of those already being taught ; and that the multiplication of school houses is not exactly the same thing as the diffusion of knowledge the advneement of education or the improvement of the teacher's character and social position. Well, then, 1 am anxious that the means of education presently existing should be strength ened, not impaired by this promised and promising agency the Agricultural Col lege and I trust that had I no personal interest in the subject I should feel as deeply as now its great importance. Practically the great question is this: Is the new institution to give the means and tho motive for carrying onward the instruction of our youth to a point far beyond what is attained or attainable in our present schools, beyond what has hitherto been thought even desirable by many ; or is it to sink, as others have done, into a mere rival school com peting powerfully with existing establishment"), by admitting pupils of all ages and stages of ad vancement, by force of large funds, by the prestige of patronage, and a public name 1 I cannot doubt that by tho intelligent portion of the public it is wished and hoped, and expected to achieve something higher and greater than has yet been attempted or at least achieved. It is very desirable to raiso tho standard of knowledge by inducing a longer period of sub jection to the influences of instruction in prepara tory schools ; and not to provide for the young in one certain place ot an instruction no more Advance J than lhat given before in many places. The improvement of the quality of instruction up to the usual point is, doubtless, an important object; but surely it should be the carrying forward ot instruction bevond that point lhat - should be the owect ol tho new coil-ire j With the example of other .v-calkJ college , before us, there is no small reason to fear that this excellent intention may be rendered void ; or at all events, there is reason that caro should bo taken to prevent degeneracy and failure on this point. ..Ask any earnest teacher, desirous not merely to receive his fees but to train up intelligent and well-informed youths, what is his chief grievance and hindrance ; he will surely answer, " the pre mature remomval of my pupils from school." No sooner dp they reach tho point whero their studies becomo interesting to thorn when their previous labors aro beginning to bear fruit when they seo the bearing and tho uso of much that, in tho earlier stage, seemed dry and of ques tionable advantage when they begin to lovo knowlodgo with disinterested and fervent love and when it is a pleasure to teach them not less than for them to learn then, like tho wafarers on Mirza's bridge, a trap door opens, and they fall through into tho swift current of business cares and business duties. The scaffolding so painfully and elaborately reared is suddenly thrown down, before the building is much more than begun, certainly long before it approaches its completion. When I think of this anomaly, I am forcibly reminded of tho famous recipe for dressing cucumbers in Disriaeli's " Vivian Gray " " You must be careful," said Mr. Beck endorfi", " to pick out tho straightest, thinnest skinned, most seedless cucumber that you can find. Six hours before you want to eat it, put the stalk in cold water, on a marble slab not tho whole oucumber, that's nonsense. Then paro it very carefully, so as to .take off all the green outside, and no more. Slice it as thin as possible, spread it over your dish, and spriuklc it with a good deal of white pepper, red pepper, salt, and mustard seed. Mix some oil aud com mon vinegar with a little Chili and drain it on thorn. Open a largo window, very wide, and throw it all out." But lo quit illustration for sad reality. Tho evil is great, and increasing with the pressuro of the times, and the onward rush of competition. When business is brisk, there is a demand for youths and they must leave school ; if business bo dull it is cxponsivo and inconvenient to keep thorn at school. W"heiico comes this usago 1 Trace tho evil to its root and wo shall find that it arises from tho preva lent low estimate of tho subject and naturo of education. On almost all hands it is viewed simply and solely as a preparation for what is called euphoniously tho duties of lifo ; that is this or that round of professional routine. Rightly judged, no higher end can bo assigned to education than a praparation for the duties of life, but the.se duties involve much beyond and above tho bread-winning efficiency of the shop or of the mart. It is not, however, in tho great circle of human obligation, but in Ihc narrow circle of tho handicraft, tho headeraft, or tho trade, that tho youth is at school to bo qualified to move. J. he raw material of humanity must be worked up into fitness for office use : all tend ency and faculty not distinctly bearing on this is ignored as nonexisling, it may be, depreciated as supcrllous, or even unsafe. Tho result is, that w here a so-called profession is not tho des iny pre-ordained (and even there the principle is not less involved) tho business of teaching is sadly marred of its fair proportions. The do sired attainment and fitness being small, it fol lows that at an early ago it may bo expected to be reached. Education, to bo valued rightly, must be possessed, and parents who are uueduca ted or half educated themselves, even if they do not fall into tho most uncommon error ot sup posing that what they have managed to do wiltiout cannot be indispensable to their children; even if they desire, as 1 know full well that the majority of parents do, that their children should have advantages which early fortune denied to them are almost necessitated to fix a low limit to their aspirations, and to bo content with a slender modicum of attainment. Nay, they are apt to look with some distrust and jealousy on literary and scientific tastes as likely to interfere with strict attention to business. "All that thing," say they, " is very well ; books aro well enough in their place, but no book is so good as the day-book unless it bo the ledger." A youth must not, therefore, be allowed to dwell so long on such pursuits as to endanger his "settling down " to the position of a business man. And yet, surely we ought not, at this timo of the world s history, to need to lcaru that tho tner- canlile, mechanical aud agricultural lifo is not ncompatiblo with very high attainments, the most reliacd taste, and with a well furnished and accomplished mind. Oil ! that man were every where and always regarded more a the man and less as tho merchant and manufacturer ; more as the man thinking, feeling and living, than as the man hammering, or weaving, chaffering and earning the means to live ! Such, however, be ing the stilt prevailing feeling or our place ani time, the teacher must make head egaint it as best he may. Much that is now permitted or connived at in a school course is thus rendered objectless and inoperative. Tho teacher has 110 inducement to hold out to his young ehargo to master certain kinds of learning. Of reading, writing, and account, they see clearly tho use and purpose, but of much beside, the value is to them a vague tradition. There is no future on which to fix their thoughts, no arena wnere they shall hereafter try tho strength they aro now gaining, there is no current of general feeling j "i ambition lo sweep away iuJiviJiul ol.jeUioii and individual indll'erence. In tho largo public towards which all are pushing on with eager and emulous speed ; but in our local schools the raco is without a goal, or in a direction opposito to the goal. Tho great practical disideratum then is, some prospective standard, up to which all must bo habituated to look, and by which they must bo trained to try themselves in anticipation; which shall givo reality and definiteness to early study, and supply tho subsidiary motives on which tho teacher of tho young must ever greatly rely. Hero is tho great function of tho college, tlioujj h it is obvious that tho same condition of popular feeling which blights tho efforts of the school teacher, will at tho outset bo a difficulty in tho way of tho college's success ; but it will speak with authority ; w here the hapless teacher isolated and disregarded, plods on ro-ignedly, or quits his profession in desdair. The question now arises : Are tho students on their en trance to bo well or ill qualified 1 Is tho collego to be open, without restriction, to all who choose to apply for admission ? Or must tho student prove himself to possess a certain amount of well digested and diversified knowledge? If the former, tho issue is easy to bo foreseen. The collego will degenerate, as wo havo seen in some instances, into a mere school for tho elementary instruction of boys, for whom tho strictest method anddisciplineofa real school aro infinitely more adapted than the comparative independence and freedom of the college life. Let, therefore, un entraneo examination be fixed ; not too rigorous at first, but becoming more severe, year, after year, up to a certain point, and in a moment, as by tho waving of a magic wand, a stimulus is given to all schools, private and public, throughout the whole region in which tho inllueuco of tho collego will be felt. ieaehcrs must thou begin to put their house in order : tho sluggish will be roused to actiou ; the faithful will be hopefully sustained in a more continuous course, and tho ignorant and incom petent will bo forced to quit tho field. If, too, is must ere long be tho case, a collego course becomes the ordinary destination of our youth, tho pupils also of our schools will becomo a dif ferent raco from tho lounging, absent-minded, and insensate throng that form tho mass of our present school boys. They will have a motive and a stimulus to continued exertion hitherto unknown, and they will no longer bo ablo to content themselves with a perlunctary prepara tion of tho next day's task. Tho standard of at tainment required at tho entrance on a college lifo, is, in fact, tho kcy-noto of tho whole future composition. Any mistake on this point at the outset of this great design, will throw serious difficulties in tho way of its future success. It is then most ardently to be hoped that a respect- ablo entrance examination will be enforced, ns an essential portion of tho now collego nrrango mcnt3. It will bo a source of regret if the trustees bo not appointed early say two years betoro tho opening ot tho collego so that they may mature their plan, and be ablo to announce publicly the extent of qualification that would bo required. Iho existing schools might, in th interval, be working up to this standard, aud tho collego might have, al its very outset, a body of better prepared students than it would other wise bo likely to find. As thoso schools would languish and seriously sutler from any laxity in this ono vital matter. it is, on the other hand, impossible to overesti inato tho advantago they will derive from a well arranged entrance examination, stringent, but not too severe ; neither too narrow nor too com prehensivo. Not merely will tho subjects al reauy laugni 111 scnoois no carried onward to a higher point, but ninny subjects of great impor tauce, and quitewithin the reach of boys between 11 and 10 years of age, will begin to receive their duo share of attention. English literature and composition, logic, general history, chemistry, botany, and other subjects which aro now scarcely known in schools, will tako a place in their daily working, and all that is now taught will bo better taught. I purpose, should your Excellency again permit mo to address you, to advert from timo to time to other collateral topics, connected with the collego and education genorally. I should regret any attempt at present to form a University. The ideal of a colbgiato system seems to me ono grand national university, with cognato colleges throughout tho country. 1 have tho honor to be, sir, Your Excellency's Obedient, humble servant, BERNARD CORN LUI S. KAfiTKK.N XKWS. Portress Monroe, Oct. 3J. The Richmond Whig of tho 1st October, speaks of Lincoln's proclamation as ordaining servile insurrection in tho Confederate States, and says: "It is by a dash of the pen to destroy four thousand millions of our property, and is a bid for slaves to riso in insurrection, with an assurance of aid from the whole military and naval rower of the United States." It speaks of the cruelty of tho Admin istration, and says Butler is a saint compared with his master. Our military operations, says the Whig, are henceforth to assume a very grave character, and we find that a new programme is necessary to destroy all terms between us and tho United States. Tho next campaign will be a tremendous one, both for magnitude and tho character of its operations. IV-t our authorities prepare the whole strength of our people for a tremendous shock. Tho enemy aro making great preparations as well as issuing fiendish proclamations. We must respond with equal energy. If we don't, wo are lost, Tins Whig says, tho movements of Ijco and Jackson were toward Warreiiton on Saturday Cincinnati, Wet. 4lh. A military order military order was issued to-day. suspending the drills of the eitv military organizations till further order. '.oii. pon Jeiice liuiu 'itiRiul Morgan army at Grcensburg, Ky., says that his retreat was the most arduous aud hazardous of tho war. During tho march northward ho was constantly harassed by rebel cavalry. On one occasion ho marched fourteen hours per day for three successive days. Tho troops had no water except what they could find in stagnant pools. Notwithstanding their hardships, tho troops are in fino health. All tho guns nt tho Gap were brought away except four thirty-two pounders, which were too heavy for transportation. The trunnions of theso were knocked olf before they were abandoned. AVashington, Oct. 1th. A dispatch from the headquarters of the-Army of the Potomac, dated Oct. 3d, says : " The President reviewed tho several corps of tho Army of tho Potomac to day." Now York, Oct. 1th. The Marion, from New Orleans on tho 25th of September, and Key West on the 2iUh, has arrived. General Butler has ordered all citizens, mala and female, abovo tho ago of cightcon, to tako tho oath of allegiance before Oct. 1st, on pain of imprisonment and confiscation of property. A number of guerrillas from tho country abovo on tho right bank of the river, caino down to tho city on tho 22d, and surrendered thorn, selves. They had becomo disgusted with tho lifo of outlawry they had been leading. They say that hundreds nioro will escape nt tho first opportunity, Philadelphia, Oct. 4th. A Louisville dispatch dated Oct. 3d, to tho Inquirer, says the rebels) had begun to fortify Frankfort, Ky., but are now evacuating. The samo dispatch says the rebels, thirty thousand strong, are fortifying tho south bank of Salt river. Tho Federal advanco occu pies tho northern bank. New York, Oct. 4th. A private letter from an olliccr in Garibaldi's army tenders tho servi ces of four or five thousand veteran soldiers, already equipped, nnd two hundred officers, to light for the I uion. and asks that tho Slate of New York engage them. Tho English iron clad atenmor Sunbeam, from Liverpool, was captured while attempting to enter Wilmington, N. C. ller cargo, valued at a quarter of a million of dollars, consisted of brandy and gunpowder, St. Louis, Oct. 4th. Tho Springfield (Mo.) correspondent of tho Democrat, writing under dato ot October 1st, says: Artillery firing was yesterday and this forenoon heard in tho direc tion of Stircoxio. At noon to-day, word waa re ceived that a fight had taken placo. Tho result is not ascertained, and the number of the enemy is not known. A refugee from McBride's command reports that nearly every ablo bodied man in tho north ern portion of Arkansas is cither a conscript or a refugee. Their treatment is renrcsonted n cruel, and their homes aro robbed by armed bands of plunderers, who seize all tho property that they can by nny possibility uso for tho army, leaving women and children without tho necessaries of lifoi Two brigades of tho Kansas army arrived at Sarcoxio on the 25th of September. Tho rebel Coffee, with 3,000 men, was at Newtonia, fifteen miles south of that place. Hearing of tho approach of the Kansas troops, ho retreated southward, Tho rebels at Sarcoxio say they have 10,000 men at Cowskin Prairie, and also 30,000 in Arkansas, near tho State line, and as soon ns thoso forces join they intend marching direct for St. Louis. All tho prisoners taken tell of tho rich booty promised them when they tako St. Louis. It appears that such promises aro tho incentives used to keep their men together Chicago, Oct. 4lh. Tho following account of General Morgan's retreat from Cumberland Gap is telegraphed by tho (Quartermaster of his army 1 "Tho advanco brigado of Morgan's command, from Cumberland Gap, arrived at Grcensburg, Ky., on tho 3d, aacr an exhausting march of sixteen days, having to mako tho roads in many places. Tho men aro shoeless, hatlcss and almost naked. For days tho men wcro without rations, gathering subsistence from tho standing com in tho fields, which they grated to make bread, after tho fatigues of tho day. Tho men bore their hardships and privations with remark ablo fortitude, They were marchod undor arras for twenty hours' yestoi day, skirmishing in tho woods on each sido of tho road, and repelling rebel attacks in front and rear. The enemy blockaded the way in every ulnco thev nossihlv could, and harassed tho column in every con ceivublo manner. The army is ten thousand strong, with a magnificent park of artillery, con sisting of twenty-cight pieces, six of which are tweiity.pounders. Four hundred wagons wcro brought through safely. Iho works at tho Gai wcro left in ruins." Chicago, Oct, 4th. A Cairo dispatch, received at ten o'clock to-night, snvs: " A terriblo bnttl is raging in tho vicinity of Corinth. It com menced yesterday morning, and raged without cessation until threo o'clock thi ft..rnnn which is tho date of the last report from Bethel Station, twenty miles this side of Corinth. At that hour cannonading was distinctly heard. We can get no particulars to-night, as rail and telegraph communication i cut off at Bethel. Cairo, Oct. 0th. We can cet 110 distinct an. count of Friday's battle at Corinth. On Satur day morning, Price attacked Ro-M-crans' right wing, and Van Dorn and Lovell his led. Tho assault was made with great determination. At one timo our center was penctratod, and the rebels reached Corinth I louse, near tho center of tho town. They wcro then driven out at tho point of tho bayonet. Van Dorn led his column over tho abattis on tho left to wilhin fifty yards of tho ditch, exposed all the time to a scathing fire of grapo and canister, and was drircn lack by a charge of tho Twenty-seventh Ohio and Eleventh Missouri. The battle lasted till 1:30 a. m., when tho rebels retreated towards Ilatchie, I Seo second page.