ALBANY REGISTER. V. 8- Official Paper An- Oreson. SATURDAY, OCTOBER U, 1873. - Bepnollcan Candidate. FOR CONGRESS, HIRAM SMITH, or inw. Our Candidate. Hiram Surra, the Republican can didate for Cougress, is a bedrock Re publicanalways and under all cir cumstances true as steel to the party and its measures. He was among the first on the Pacific coast to respond to the call of the Sanitary Commission, giving as a first installment, one thous and dollars toward procuring medicines and other necessaries for the sick and wounded soldiers during our great war. A man oflarge business capac ity, of irreproachable character, and possessed of an active, indomitable energy which never lags and which will know no defeat in the attainment of righteous ends. A man of the people, he will labor for the elevation and protection of labor; an honest min, he'will be controlled by no clique or ring ; and gifted with sound judg ment and discrimination, he will al ways be found laboring for those meas ures calculated to benefit and increase tbe prosperity of his State and of the whole people. If the people of Oregon want a man upon whom they can rely, a man who never breaks laith, a man win) does not change his political views with every shifting breez, Hiram Smith meets and fills the want. As to his purity of character, no breath of suspicion rests upon it; of his honesty, after an active business life of more than a quarter of a century, there is noue to gainsay it ; of his capability, his whole business life, which has been a continued success, without one mis take to mar Its brilliancy, speaks loud ly and emphatically. With a unblem ished record for honesty, integrity, so briety; with a pure and unsullied private diameter; standing high in commercial circles as a man of more than ordinary business capacity; en dowed with great energy and persever ance, and tact and skill in the accom plishment of his purposes ; possessing social qualities of the highest order, added to a warm and generous heart, and a hand that ilways opens at the call of charity, without blot or blem ish to mar his qualities of mind or head or heart, the candidate of the Re publican party for Congress, Hos. Hiram Smi, stands confessedly the peer of any mau in Oregon to-day, and confidently asks the support and vote of every man who loves honesty and abhors hipocrisy, who approves of temperance and sobriety as opposed to drunkenness and debauchery ; a man who is in simpathy with the party in power, and who, by his own force of character, backed by untiring energy and will to accomplish hi? undertak ings, can and will do more tor Oregon, than could his opponent, Nesmith. were he multiplied a hundred times. A Ma of the People. The de mand of the hour being for a true, hon est, capable, upright man a man in sympathy with the masses was met in the nomination of Hiram Smith, a man of stainless reputation and unde niable business qualifications. He is not a political wire-worker; is not mixed up with rings or cliques, but is a man of the people, who will go to Congress to work for all measures cal culated to advance the interests of his State all measures calculated to bene fit her people, advance tbe gro'vth, in crease the prosperity, wealth and hap piness of the masses, With such a man In Congress, the future of Ore goo is bright with promise. SCASED' Democratic journals all over the State, as the day of election approaches, show their alarm by ap pealing to Democrats, with fulsome flatter' and in endearing terms,' to come oat and vote, and not let tbe station go by default. They have aeen the handwritiug on the wall ; they know that defeat is written on tfr ftsMlfh banner. Vale, Nesmlth. The Outlook. From every quarter comes the most cheering news for the success of our candidate for Congress. While it is conceded that the Democratic vote east of the mountains will fall off one thousand or more, the Republicans there, to a man, will vote for Hiram Smith. Those sturdy old Democrats cannot be driven or coaxed into sup porting the suppressor of Democratic newspapers to voting fora man whose record is so crooked and cowardly as Nesmith's. We are assured that Mult nomah will give, at the very least, GOO majority for Hiram Smith. Com ing nearer home, the disaffection in the Republican ranks in Marion coun ty, which showed itself after the ad journment of the State Convention, has almost entirely disappeared, while six hundred Democratic voters of that county have declared their determina tion not to vote for Nesmlth, and it is believed that many of them wfll vote for Hiram Smith. Lane will give a good round majority tor the Republi can candidate, as well as Douglas, while it is believed that even Jackson county, the Gibraltar of Democracy, will give her vote for Hiram Smith. Here, at home, on every hand we find citizens who have always, from infan cy up, held to the principles of the Democratic party, now solemnly de clare they will not, under any circum stance or for any consideration, vote for J. W. Xesraith. They have no confidence in him either as a Democrat or as a man. The Democratic vote will fall far short of what it was at the last election, and we have hopes ot carrying old Linn for Hiram Smith by a much larger vote than did Grant a few months ago. In view of all thesecheering facts Republicans should feel encouraged to keep up the battle until the polls are closed on Monday, 'that an overwhelmingly glorious and unprecedented victory may crown the canvass of 1873. Nesmlth a Deserter. Below we print an extract from a letter to us, from one of the oldest and most reliable settlers of Oregon, now a resident of Washington Territory. He is a firm believer, it will be seen, in the assertion of Mrs. Duniway, that J. N. Smith and not J. W. Nesmlth is the name of the Democratic candi date for Congress. But here is the extract : Coll. Van Cleve Dear Sir: I believe Mrs. Duniway to be correct in lier assertions about "J. W. Nesmith," and this Is one of the reasons for my belief : Some years ago, Nesmith un dertook to run for Congress against Thurston, and made a speech at Salem. Thurston followed him, and then and there, in a large crowd, charged and proved, by men that knew him, that he (Nesmith) was a deserter from the U. S. army when he came to Oregon. This statement can be proven by plen ty of witnesses now living in Marion county who were present and heard Thurston on the occasion referred to. Nesmith v:er went to miotlier appoint ment in Hint canvass. OLD SETTLER. Oct on Such IlYPOCRisr. Yester day's Democrat quotes Nesmith its saying in his speeches : "By the pov erty and toil that surrounded my cra dle, by the struggles of my youth and early manhood, by the labors of my maturer years, and by this good right arm, I declare that I will ever oppose monopolies that oppress the people." Very pretty, even if the sentiment was delivered years ago by another ; but to show, the hypocrisy of the man that now utters it, we have only to remark that he Is making his pilgrim age up and down the railroad with a "pass" from Ben Holladay in his pocket! False. The editor of the Oregon City Enterprise says: "Dr. Geary as saulted the editor of the Albany paper on the public street," etc. This Is simply a falsehood. Dr. Geary neither assaulted the "editor of the Albany paper," the supposed editor or any employee of the Albany paper, or any other man, on the street or off of It, at any time or any place. This kind of mendacity won't do, Mr. Enterprise. Try some other line of argument, if you have any. In Powder River Vallev. Baker County, some of the grain is not yet ripe enough for the sickle. Is More Proof Wanted? The Oregoniany seeing at last that Republicans were awakening to the fact that it was no longer entitled to their support as a Republican Journal, having gone over, "horse, foot and dragoons," to the Democracy, during the latter part of the present week has been endeavoring, with more than Its usual amount of cheek, to prove that it is a true Republican journal, and is truly anxious for the success ot Republican principles. As an evidence of its true Republi canism and its desire to purify the Republican party, in the same breath it asks Republicans to abstain from voting that Nesmith may be elected to Congress! The election of Nesmith to repre sent us in Congress would purify the Republican party, wouldn't it? The election of a man whose campaign speeches are so foul and obscene that his own party journals dare not pub lish them, would le an achievement of which Republicans would be proud, wouldn't they? The Oregonian insists on the election of Nesmith asa matter of purification, when it knows, if it knows anything, that every man, out side of the Democratic party, who aids and abets the election of Nes mith as against Hiram Smith, docs so without a shadow of reason otlier than a fixed and set purpose of disrupting and destroying the Republican party. That this is the case with the Orego nian, its every issue is positive proof. Tho cloven foot is shown in every line, in every sentence penned by its Gree ley editors ; and the wayfaring man, though a fool, cannot read its contin ued impeachment of representa tive Republicans, not only here but elsewhere, its misrepresentations ol Republican tenets and doctrine, with out being made aware of the fact that its assertion of Republicanism is as false as it Is cowardly. As still another evidence of the perfidy of the OreMwi, we copy a portion of a communication to the Mullet in from Mr. David Powell, of Portland, a gentleman pretty well known in Oregon, and one, too, whose thruthfulness will not be gainsayed by those who know him : I was present at the Albany Convention. The editor of the Oregnnian, W. Lair Hill, was also there. We returned to Portland on the same train. On the way down lie and I had a conversation on the Con vention anfl on party affairs in gener al. He stated in the most emphatic language that he cared nothing what ever for the Republican party : that his only object was to beat it ; that he intended to "burst it" in this State, and cared not for the consequences. He had nothing to a:k of tlie party, and wanted nothing except to disrupt and beat it. Most Rnpubl'cans have been regret fully forced to the conclusion, from the course of the paper for some time. that its real animus was something of this kind, nut my object in this com munication is not to draw inferences, but only to state just what the editor of the Oregnnian himself told me. I have done this in nearly the language spoken to me, and have fairly repre sented the spirit and meaning of the editor's remarks. David Powell. Portland, October 8, 1S73. Of no Value. The solemn assur ances ot Democratic journals that Nesmith, if elected to Congress, will . hereafter prove true to the party plac ing him in nomination, only excites a laugh of derision from the average bedrocker. No amount of falsehood, mixed with ever so much soft-soap, on the part of these journals, will Induce representative Democrats to cast a vote for the man who lias done so much to cripple and destroy the Democratic party in Oregon. The Man Wanted. Hiram Smith being in favor of the improvement of the VV'illamette, and pledging himself to dtjfvote his energies to securing an appropriation from tlie General Gov ernment to that end, certainly meets the demands of the farmers and bus iness men of the Willamette Valley, and for this reason If for no other, should receive their hearty support St the polls on Monday. Carried. On the 8th, the citizens ol Pierce county, W. T., voted on the question of granting $200,000 bonds toward building a railroad from Olympia to TeuGio. It was decided jbjprtfnt the bonds by nearly 100 ma- The Export Trade Paralysed. The shippers of New York are in a bad way. The export trade is at a stand-still. One company has six steamers waiting for freight, and the freight will not come, for there is no money to move it. Tlie New York Times says this of the effect on Euro pean steamships : Several of the steamship lines be tween this port and Liverpool have determined to reduce their rates, ow ing to the difficulty experienced in obtaining cargoes since the pwilc, the stringency of money preventing some of the largest merchants from shipping freight. A reduction of llj'd per bushel in the freight of grain" is an nounced by some companies, with a view of securing shipments, but it is feared that many an out-going vessel will be forced to sail with only a bal last load. The difficulty experienced in negotiating exchanges has seriously interfered With exports, none but the wealthiest merchants being able to purchase nndcrexisting circumstances. Even firms of the highest, respectabil ity will, it is feared, oe unable to take ndvantage of the reduction in tariffs, offered as an inducement by the steam ship companies. For the most part those vessels that have sailed obtained a full caigo, but the superintendents of lines fear that the next vessels will be short of the average freight. The Killing of WiiiTLEV.-JThe following particulars of the killing of A. H. Whitley at Dallas last Monday are given in a letter to the Statesman : It seems that Whitley and the Glazes and Holmes had an altercation in the afternoon in front )f the old hotel, and weapons were drawn on both sides, butiriends Interposed and matters were quieted. Whitley was persuaded by Uncle Jake Sears to leave town to avoid bloodshed, lie went out to his farm, but being angry and somewhat in liquor, drove so recklessly as to break something about his buggy and he returned to town to have it repaired. While standing by the buggy in front of Teals' wagon and blacksmith shop, giving directions to Charley Teal about repairing the buggy, Till Glaze came up behind him with a Colt's navy revolver and shot him down, one shot taking efiect in the back of the head, coining out at the chin, and the other striking the left temple and coming out behind the right ear. He expired instantly. This is a brief statement of tlie facts as I have gathered them lrom others, as I was not in town at tlie time the trage dy took place. A coroner's jury was sworn and examined the body, but have not yet brought in their finding. Not a Granger. We have it from reliable authority that J. W. Nesmith is not a Granger docs not belong to tlie order. So all the fine writing in yesterday's Democrat about Oregon's sending the first Granger to Congress must have had reference to Hiram Smith, who is a Granger, and who will be our next Congressman. . . As to Character. While the Re publican candklate for Congress stands high as a gentleman of undisputed probity, ability and honesty, socially and morally stainless, the Democratic candidate's first, last and only recom mendation, even by his most ardent admirers, is that ho is the chief black guard of the Pacific coast. The Farmer's Candidate. The interests of Hiram Smith being iden tified with the farmer's interests, he Is the true farmer's candidate, and will receive their votes. The Danish Legislature was opened on tlie Cth, No royal speech was de livered. Morton, Rose & Co., of London, have been appointed Fiscal Agents of the State Department in Europe. PACIFIC COAST NEWS. Baker County Jail now has eleven inmates. The Union County Fair will open on the 14th inst. The comer stone of an Episcopal Church will be laid soon at Baker City. Hor3e stealing is reported In the Spokane country. Two men. Scranton and Maize, are the ones known to be implicated. The gross value of the property of Baker County Is 1072.029 ; indebted ness and exemption, $332,991. Total taxable property, $039,038. FINANCIAL ANO COMMERCIAL. Gold, m New York; 111& Legal tenders 89stiK). W5aat lu Liverpool 13s 7d9186 9d5 Club, 13s13s 2d. No change In San Francisco, Port land or home markets. DRY GOODS, ETC. 90 8'Sf f? !J BUB 5 a.i.Si j u Q 8 R 3 9 a s m u p rr p ft fin 190 w H N ?q g r s ih ft " g ft m v. e ,i an" p r v M P sv e 9 j v - ti w r- 0 21 U lifts Nil 5 2. I'm to 19 WATCHES JE WELRY. J. D. titus. j. n. Trena. CIIAS. BOUF.OAr.DES. TITUS, BOURGARDES & CO,, DEAI.E11H IN 5 b0W9tJ JEWELRY, Silver & Plated Ware. anj DIAMOND SPECTACLES. M ANUFACTUREI) and adjusted especially for tho Pacitlc Coast by tho NATIONAL ELGIN WATCH CO. of KIkIm, Illinois, viz: Pacific, California and San FranrtMco WATCH, and we most confldentlv vtx, ommend them to the mhie, as possoSSlnit more good (malltloa for tlie price than any other Watch In the market. We also keei all other brands of Ebrin Waltliam and Swiss Watches, Clocks, jVsr- uirj , Oliver ami riatoa ware, ALSO Pistols and Cartridge. Retiring a Specialty. EaTAII Work Done ami (toofls NttMt Warranted to be as Ucprcsentad. Tito, Bonrgardes A Co., AT JOHHOANTBB'8 OLD STAJTO, First street, ALBANY, OBBUWK a si' m z ST 2 " m 1 2" JO 2 3 8 H g ? jB