1-m.iMii.u h:tiy. y C I A. 'X CliKV K. K THE REGISTER BUILDING, f.trrur Fi-rrtt nrui J-'irst S';rcs. I TEKW IX .M'VASCK. One ropv, mie your 50 One iniiv. Vix months 1 10 i o !! t twenty, each copy W 00 S'.nirle copies Ton cents. Sitcri!.i,rs outside of I. inn connty will be cHu rrci ivnt 7ti for tly-year as tttnt is the amount of postage per ammm which we are required to pay on each, paiivr mailuil ly us. :j-tit for the Ilejstotcr. The following; nimii"! centlcmcn nreniilhor- el to wis' arid nit-ipt for snliscriptioii" to the KnnsTK : in the localities inenlinnira : Messrs. KirU" & Hume... Brownsville. Wih'r( (iHts- V. V. smith . P. Tomnkins '. . . H. rinuuhton A. Wheeler & t o Missm. Smith & Uraslielil. . J. It. Irvine Thos. U. lii'vnnM . .Crnwfordsville. Ifitlsey. Ilarrisbnrt; . .. . . l'Noum. Shedd. lunction City. . Scio. Salem. fill I AY. AVCr ST :i, 177. The Kcukuk Gat 7y characterizes the civil service rules a? "finical, im practicable and largely absurd." In Maine tlsc nevancrs of both sides arc coming out with hearty approval of the civil service reform orders. A foreign correspondent thinks if the Czar had brought his motlicr-iii-law. to the Danube she would have made him cross loner liefi. re now. The ltirluiitoii Jiticf.-i ic terms the president's civil service order ''this last freak,'' and s'a f greater exhibition of cheap demagognery than was ever in dulged in " The Dubuque 7Vu,, in speaking of the presidential order reforming lhecril service, says "it will challenge more ridi cule for its alsnrdity than the Pope's bull against the comet." Mr. Hayes says that the two great de (ires of his administration are the heal ing tif the factional controversies, the restoration of national unity, and the destruction of the partnership between the civil service and politics. Troops that left San Francisco on the morning of the 14lh hist, were disem barked at T.ewiston on the evening of the 10th iust. An instance of the quick est dispatch in the matter of transporta tion that has ever occurred on the Pa cific coast. The distance is upwards of twelve' hundred miles. STATi: All'.lllM. The Democrats are always most formidable where they have not been. During the last decade their greatest glory has been to talk ot suspicioncd corruption in national affairs, but they strive hard to pjevent any examinations into the doings of State administrations where the Democracy have controlled the wheel of fortune ; and they as vigor ously fight shy ot going into details of Democratic municipal transactions. Be ing such persistent whiners, they gener ally make comparatively good political figures in States where they are in the majority ; but their showings are scarce ly so well to look upot in those commu nities where 1-emocrats must prepare the steward's account. To ilh.strato this condition of things, our owu State may be taken as an example. While the Democrats have been complaining of the extravagance of the Republican party, which has continually reduced the debt and raised the credit of the nation, the "unwashed" reformers, socalled, of this State have lieen doing sorry things, for which they must soon givo an account. Generally they have greatly increased the State debt, and have squandered the State and school lands. They have been most extravagant in the expendi ture of public moneys, generally to re ward political favorites. Every depart ment and every division of the depart ments of the State gover:;mcr.t have been run roost expensively, and politi cians have reaped the advantages. The State printing has cost at the rate of nearly G0,000 per term, while less than half that amount would be considered "fat" by priyate concerns. The asylum has been a source of immense profit to the keeper of the insane, and consequent ly of proportionate loss to the State. The treasurer has found means to "le gally" levy on unusual perquisites, and the State department hajs found occasion for the expensive employment of such talent that favorites would gain rich profits, though a benefit has seldom ac crued to the State. The time is coming tor a searching examination into objects for which hundreds of thousands of dol lars of the people's money Jiaye been so lavishly expendedjduring the Democrat ic administration. The Democracy of Oregon found the Presidential election was up-hill business for them, but the ascent will become astonishingly abrupt for them when inside facta of the State administration have been laid before the people. In 1878 the Democracy of Oregon must fight on the defensive, and tacts and figures- are in a sorry plight ibr them. They mnst answer for their iskic"5s stewardship'. Portland Bee.. A SSI A EE BOV, "Oh! I saj-, she's out,? "sard small Ned, a he opened the door. "She'tt gone to the dressmaker's, but she'll be back so. n, 'cause she's got to friz her hair for dinner. Come in and wait." I accepted the invitation, and install ed myself iu the easiest chair in the par lor, after rolling it to the bay-window, so as to command a view of the street, while Ned "histed" himself, as ho call ed it, on a marble-topjied table beside me, aijd sat there, with the crispy oheck iness of early boy-hood, whistling and swinging his feet. Ned was a chap often years, with a remarkable memory as f was fated to discover the youngest brother of Miss Victoria Conrad ; and Miss Victoria Conrad was a handsome, dashing, clev er girl whom I had met at a picnic the preceding summer, and with whom I liad immediately fallen desperately in j love. j I use the word "desperately" advised-! ly, for it was my first really serious en- ! tanglcraciit, and my charmer, being a I thorough mistress of the arts liy which young and susceptible male hearts arc subjugated, had enthralled mc most completely. True, liefore I cast myself at her foot, j I iiau telt a great tenderness tor a sweet little third or fourth cousin of mine, a slight pa'e young g rl, with hair of the faintest gold and eyes of the softest blue, and an innocent, trustinir, child like look in hor pretty face. I Sut beside -Miss Conrad, with her magnificent form, glorious auburn tress es, and wonderful big'black eyes, May Newton faded into insignificance. It was as though one placed a delicate, cream-colored lily in tho-same vase with a gorgeous, llaine-dashevl-with-critnson-leaved, brown-throated gladiole. , -And so I found, on becoming ac quainted with Miss Conrad, that ray feeling for May, which had existed since our earliest c-Mldhood, was only a tenderness, while my feeling for Victo ria, although but three months old, al ready amounted to a passion. Iut, in spue of my infatuation for the lt. T ....., i.t:.l ... .k. .i ' lai-ri, i. nas nut ohiiu 10 inu iaei n;;it, i she was a finished coquette, and I j didn't half like the way, after the very decided encouragement she had given f me, she flirted with my intimate friend j Charley Thornton. Sometimes, indeed, j it flashed upon me that there l ad been i a-lovc anair between them which had not entirely ended even now, and it was after one of these flashes I had sought her house, determined to discov er what her real feelings toward me were, and resolved that when I left her it should bo cither as an accepted or re jected suitor. - To speak frankly, I had every reason to believe, in spite of the flashes, it would be as an accepted one. For as much as TrTornton was distinguished by Miss Conrad above her other admir ers, just so much had I been of late dis tinguished above Thornton. Ar.d we j two were equal in age, looks, family, education, and (our lady-love thought) fortune. I say our lady-love thought, tor the truth was, compared to me, Charley was poor. How rich I was 1 had taken care should not be known ; tor though only threc-and-twenty, I had already grown tired of a single life, with its attendant boarding-houses, and was looking for a wile, with a view to a comfortable home of my own. And like Lord Burleigh and other romantic, poetical fellows, I wanted to be loved for myself alone. Only Charley Thornton knew of my recent;y inherited wealth, and him I had bound by all that is sacred in friend ship not to disclose it. "So in singling mo out for favor,"' I argued, "Victoria leads me to suppose she loves me. And it 6he consents to become my wife that supposition will turn into a happy certainty, for she ccrainly, with her lieanty and talents, might make a much finer match than the one I ofler her. And what delight it will be when the words are spoken that will seal my happiness and make her all my own, to seo her resplendent eyes grow larger and brighter as she learns that in accepting a few thousand she has become the mistress of halt a million !" But to go back to the small boy, swinging his feet and evidently anxious to enter into conversation. "I say," he blurts out at last, "do yon like to look at photographs? Charley Thornton does. Ife and Vic looked at this book" taking one from the table on which he sat "for raore'n an hour the other day. I like him. He give mc two white mice and a guiu-ea-P'g; the cat ale the mice, and the gutnea-pig's dead. But they wasn't looking at it all the time cither. They was talking. Your picture's there, you know. His used to be on the other page, but he coaxed Vic to put it some where else." "Why?" I asked, ceasing to watch tor the coming of my divinity, and turn ing toward the small boy with awaken ed curiosity. 4'Cause," said Ned, evidently trying to repeat the very words "'cause he jjouldn't bear oven his picture to have always before it the face of his rival, his successful yes, that's it his successful rival." My heart gave a bound. She did love me, then. Poor Charley,? "And what reply did your sister make to that?" I asked. "Oh ! she said 'nonsense;' but she took the picture out Charley's, you know and he kissed her hand, and she carried it up to her room, and it's there now, hanging bstween tho 'Ilugenot Lovers' and 'His only Friend. Ho's a poor barefooted boy a-lying fast asleep in the road, and his only friend's a dog one of them big fellows, you know " . 'Yes, yes," I interrupted, rather im patiently ; "I know all about it." Ned, evidently somewhat ofTendcd, is silent for about three minutes, and then he began again. "Oh my, didn't they talk that day ! Vic sent word5 to every body else that came that she was out. Wasn't that a whopper? I was smug gled up on the sofa over in that dark corner there, and they didn't see me, and I heard every word they said. Wouldn't Vie have boxed my ears if she had caught me !" "I wonder what they talked of," I said to myself, with a jealous qualm to tell the truth, Pd been a little stag gered by the picture episode ; and then though it wasn't exactly the right thing to do, although certainty excusable in a case like this, where a man's whole hap. pincss was at stake, I made up my mind it possible to find out. 'Xed," said I, "I saw a splendid knife the other day six blades." "Six blades!" repeated Ned, his eyes sparkling. "Yes, or five blades and a file, I don't remember which- It , was a beauty, though, and it I wasn't afraid you'd cut yourself with it, I'd buy it and give it to you." "Cut myself!" said the small boy, with infinite scorn ; "I ain't a baby." "Well," said I, "the knife shall "be yours." And then I continued, in a nonchalant manner : "What was it you said your sister and Mr. Thornton were talking about V" "1 didn't say nothing," said Ned: "When '11 you bring the knife?" "You shall have it tomorrow," I re plied. "Did they say anything about me, tor Instance V :Oii, lots !" said Ned. starling off i rapid!-. "Charley said, 'Oh, Vic. you'd never have given me up it I handn't tol l you how rich he was. What a fool I've been ! 1 might have known that that would haveboen too much ot ! ""j1'-'"''. llo- morally 1( prous a' let me see: 'Lead llg not into 1 a"d rofnlou you are inwardly, the temptation' 'temptation tor such a i rmn' Vveil-V au,i idleness which you girl as vou are. Good heavens" and '! ,,"i,ctirS 'P"'i this community de hn crraUf.l rt i,; i clare as from the housetops. ou are though he was going to pull it out:"! aim tne smau uoy suited tlie action to the word, and tugged at his own cutly locks with siii.ii an assumption of des peration as brought tears into his eves. " 'GtMjd heavens !' he says, how "sel fish and cruel you are !" I'm sure I don't know how I can love yon. Are you going to marry him ?' "And Vic says, 'I am.' " "Oh .' you are, "thinks the attentive listener. 'It. VO!l),l llO lhll CllK- 1 clini-ot-. ' ., ... . . ow., me small boy rattles on, "for us to get never could be happy without a lire house, and a carriage, tnd ali sorts of : nobby things,' and ever so much more ; I can't remember. 'And so be a good I boy, 'she says, 'and console yourself: with May Newton. She likes yon, I'm ; sure, and she is a sweet little thing, and i would make you an excellent wife.' j "I don't, believe she ever will, then,' j I muttered between mv teeth. "(Jo on, ' Ned." " j " 'No, she wouldn't,' says Charley ; 'and as lor liking ine, you never weie more mistaken in your life; or if she! does like me, it is because I am the 1 ' friend ot tl ie man she loves- Arthur yes she Cell,'" (I'm Arthur Bcii) loves him as dearly as I do vou. and has loyed him for years. It was for his sake she refused handsome Phil Akcrs, to say nothing ot that rich old bachelor Quimby that all the other girls are pull ing caps fur. Poor little wretch ! I know how to pity her.' 'You'll both recover,' says. Vie, 'and ten chances to one, fall in love with each other. There's nothing like catching a ball on the bounce. ' " "'A heart on the rebound,' I think you mean, Ned," I say, with astonish ing calmness. "Well, perhaps I do," assents the small-boy, whistling a couple of bars of "Yankee Doodle" thoughtfully. "Any how," ending with a false note that m o l-nc - ilwi.l.l 1 4 T , .... I . tf she'd marry you, 'cause you was slap- ! bang-set-'em-up-airain rich : and Chat ley smashed his hat on his head and walked out of the room like this," and slipping from the table, the smad boy teized my hat from my hand, literally smashed" it upon his curly head, and strode nut into the hall in such a melo dramitic manner that I smiled in spite of myself. When he returned, I left tho easy chair not quite as much at ease as when I sat down in it took possess ion of my hat, restored it as much as possibo to its original shape, and said, "Ned, you've been remarkably enter taining in tact, 1 never met sucr. an eptei tabling small boy before : but I won't wait any longer. Givo my re spects to your sister " "Don't you mean your love?" asks Ned, with wide-opened eyes, and adds, uouiiueimaiiy, "un needn't be bashful. H J .. ' 11 it i i come now, vou I know ad about it, yon know." - "I don't mean my love," I say, most emphatically. "And when'll you come again ?" "Impossible to tell." "But the knife the one with six blades and a file?" "I'll scud it to-morrow morning ear ly." ' "You're a trump!" exclaims the small boy, cutting a caper. "And, I say when you marry Vic and ask me out to your country-house to spend my vacation, will you give me a boat and a Shetland pony one of them real jolly onen with hair hanging down all over its eyes ?" "When" I marry Vic I will, " I prom ise, solemly. "Good-by." But I never marr.y Vie. ' . Mr. Quimby, the rich old bachelor, does, though ; and a precious time, they say she has with the cranky, hot tempered, astlmiatic old fellow. , My wife has soft blue eyes and faint golden hair; acd I have como to the conclusion that a delicate, cream-colored lily is much to Ije preferred to a gorge ous rlamc-dashed-with-crimson-leaved, brown-throated gladiole. The greenbackers of Iowa have can didates ot their own for Governor and State officers. They resolved that "the silver dollar should be rcmoDelized and made legal tender for payment of all Government bonds ami other debts" f.r httlo n-h;i u r K'i;.. i . i night debauchery. ,: , , , , , , . , you as well as I could love anybody,! lM .l' ! cm hnvc vo. a,1ll,atc i crs heated brow. and then I'd be jolly miserable; for I 1-Z? J uT?C he- Hioyes W bent on the darling must have a seal-skin jacket and a new ! j' .r f t,,ts .le"'.,,,,e ,ury a,,. white pa ,,cr before him, and his fin-efs switch, and hair like mine costs like' ; f T ' muhocCA" ullUl I moved nervously, and the pencil was a Oh, no; thats what she said to ma '".!,', ono can I . . ' Urlt? flirt Hftf-l . 1 ..wn . 1 . . . . ..1 1 ima iijuiiin;. i im?:u sin savs - i-tr i : . . . - , t.. I . . . . .... : . T 1 r - n.v utiri Uf" mtciL ULl 11 I 111 1L . I 1 - . . I r ' A ,3C2fiES SS5TEXCE. In passino- sentence upon some liquor j Ile was a friend of mine and used ire dealers in the Slate ol Iowa recently, i qcHy to open; and give me advice as . j to how I ought to run my paper. J udge Ilibbard addressed them concern-1 1Ie was a mi:Ilister) and consequently ing their crimes in the following words thought I should devote it a little more which can bMi commend themselves to the good judgment of all : While there are greater crimes known to the law, which are punishable with great severity, there are none which in volve more of those qualities known as despicable "meanness and audacity than tne selling ot intoxicating liquors. 'I here :g something in the taking ot numan ii!e by v iolence so instantaneous niui, lb aiHi LUI I 1111.0 LtiW lUlliVAH V(- all, and yet we look upon the man who takes human life quite as surely, but by a slow lingering process, if not without condemnation, at least without horror. You who stand before the court for sen- ! tence are in .every moral sense murder j ers, and you are in the spirit, if not in the letter, guilty of manslaughter; for the law says that whoever accelerates the death of a human being unlawfully is trinity ot the crime. lour bloated vicitms upon lho witness stand, and who undoubtedly committed perjury to screen you from the "law, not only abundantly testify that, you are accelerating death, but that you are inducing men to com mit still greater crimes than your own. You still maintain the appearance of livinsr m idleness and eatinor the lnead j of orphans, watered with widow's tears, j You are stealthily killing your victims j and murdering t le peace and industry i of the community, and thereby conven I ing happy, industri jus homes into mise j ry, thriftless poverty and rags. You i are sowing the seeds of ignorance, and ; id leneness, and want among the geuera I tions to come: -Anxious wives and mothers watch and pray in tears nightly with desolate j heaits tor the coming home ot your vic I tims whom you are luring with the wiles and smiles ol the devil into mid- depravity to which his species can he brought until he looks unon the doso- late ruin caused by your l.olhsh trafho. l ou are persistent, defiant law-break- .... snumss.y ooasc mat in ueti- , MJppiemeilt raessago from Heaven be a nee of law and moral sense of the com- ....mjr v wnSCont ime m your wick- lt , . . Au v .T.I -10U' ,CTi ,t,4,e,,,mPcratlV0 duty of this court to let fall upon you c nvnviiy me arm oi me law, that yon shall either be driven from your nefari- ons traffic or ruined in your fortunes or wicked prosperity. i ou have become a stench to the nostrils of the c immuni ty, and all good men are praying that you may lie speedily reformed or sum marily -destroyed. By the providence of God and the favor of this court, these prayers shall be speedily answered by signal and exact justice tor your crimes. This court will feci a proud satisfaction in taking from you by law your iil-got- ie . gumn, anu g.ving it to the common scnuoi itiiid oi tnis county, where, let! us hope, it will assist in educating the j rising youth to shun your vices and wicked practices. i And, finally, let ine entreat you, t' you arc- not lost to every sentiment oi ! humanity, to desist from your criminal, j vagabond traihe and betake yourselves j to some honest calling for a liveli! ood and you may yet become a virtuous usctul citizen, and entitled to tl.o re- I -pect ol a Chustian community; while ! V" Pe."llKt '" wny, J'onr own ru- i ...... ....... inn iltcuu as j you deserve, the execration of mas kind. You may think that the sentence of the court is harsh and unjustly severe, but tho court assures you "that", compar ed with your crimes and the desolation oou have already brought upon the it is mild in the extreme. IIOHESTEAp UW. Under ther homestead law every head of a family, male or female, or sinj'e man over twenty-one years is a citizen ot the United Mates, or having declared his intention to become such, can enter, on payment of tho registry fees, ranging from scveii to twenty-two "dollars, eighty acres of any of the laud' reserved by the government within tho limits ol" tho railioad grants, excepting lands bearing gold, silver, cinnabar or copper, and one hundred and sixty acres if the claim is situated outside of the latter,"" always providing, however, that the claimant has never at any time "entered" any of me lands m any other ."Mate or I erritory oi ine l mon After five years bona, 1 tide residence upon and impr. vement of! the land, liie government will givo the j claimant a regular title. Under the preemption laws, persons possessing the same qualifications as claimants under the homestead laws not being in posses sion of 320 acres in any of the States, may "enter" at a land office, on pay ment of a fee of two dollars and estab lish a pre-emption right ; that is, a right to take a tract of 1G0 acres, either with in or without a railroad grant, wherever the land shall be offered for sale by the government, at two dollars and fifty cents per acre in the former and one dol lar and twenty-five cents in the'latter case. Land offices are located at Oregon City, in Clackamas county, Rosebud, in Douglass county, Lakeview, in Lake county, Dalles, in Wasco conn.'y, and La Grande, in Union county ; also at w ana y ana ana Uoltax in W T. -The financial muddle in Ohio must be pretty bad since the attitude of the Hon. George 11 Pendleton is in doubt. His friends hint mysteriously that he is not such a bad inflationist after all, and his old party allies are calling upon him to come out and define his position, since they want, "no Esau in the tones of Jacob." II If XEWSPAiB COSTRIMITIOS. j to the cause ot religion, and uot quite so much to politics. Ho said it could be made a power for good in the) western land, in which we had both caist our fortunes. lie was a lojvcr of the original, too, and said he disliked to see reprint, and thought I should write more take the j tml0j ,n facl 1U1 t)e papeil rio.llt j wjti, gQotj I)CW- ftufl. That 'seemed such au easv lor hin that d 1 ventured to av- " Brother you had a glorh.-na meeting last night at the school house, I hear , suppose yon Write it up for me?" He didn't seem as though he wanted I urged. lie blushed a little and stood around, awkward like. He had never been honored with an invitation to write for the press before I still limed, Then he took off his gloves. And his hat, and his overcoat- Then I gave him a seat at the table with paper and pencil. j lie sat down to editorial work. , He had elways been talking about how it should; be done, and now he was at it. He started in. I went about my work, and iiaving written a column or two of matter for the week's paper, left him still writing, while I wenCont to solicit some adver tisements, j I was gone an hour or two, and when I came back he was still at it. He was sweating awfully. The table and tloor were white with eopy.paper, and the pencil in his hand was much demolished in length. I went to ; dinner. When I returned he was at it yet. , There was more paper scattered around, t ho j pencil was shorter and he was wetter, i It was summer. 1 he hours dra acred aloncr into the grow irignieneci. i knew I had only a smad weekly paper, and Ue was a patent inward would ,ot M ot ; i r . hold the contents of the Bible, and a At asl tllC man ,oo1mh1 ai)tl u idly advancing with a piece of paier in his hand, suddenly turned and went j back to clia a wGrd '1 hen he came on again, and, like rtiir d'Twi t'-i.-l .nt-tn.-l I -V. 1)eM OHt lhe ' ad , , ' "Will that do?" I looked. There were just seven lines of it, ad vertising measme. He was a largo man weighed over 300 pounds then, but when T met him throe weeks later he weighed less than 125. lie had been sick. lhe seven-line-i.'ine-hour effort j too much for him was But it was not lost. lie never ad vised an editor again. Neither did he ever compose again. It was hard work for him to write and he saw he was not cut out for "an editor. I We hail with pleasure the advent of ! the ladies slipper. It has long been in I retirement, it adds a new attraction to thn clival 'I'l.n h" i..:.. lir,. ,t- Q ,tt ,ri ,:..f. has passed whose only street view of the feminine ankle has b?en through leather. At last the stocking of onr grandmoth er's is revealed. Tho clean white hose is a power in the land. Its influence is sudden, mysterious, subtile, and magnet ic It concentrates all eves as to a fo- cus on itself. It amuses and interests the lounger. It affords to the hurried man of business a momentary respite. It redoubles the liabilities of lho careless to be run over. It is not without a charm fey the aged breast. No portion of a ladies apparel is more effective. The snowy ancle, if at all symmetrical, half compensates lor a plain face. It is a make-weight in the dower of feminine beauty of which woman for long years has leen robbed. For tho boot is ex pensive. A little worn, and it becomes missbappen and ugly. We welcome the slipper. Long may it reign. The simpler the style the better. A inuiinM Uenerowlty. There was crape hanging to a door on Hcanbien street - yesterday afternoon and a bov six or nevn vm t-M ctA at the gate with pale face and red eyes, A ragged, tobacco-chewing imp, about twelve years old, came slamming along, and he wai making ready to stick his finger into tho email boy's eye, through tho bars of the gate, when ho cangfit sight of the crape. "Sumbody dead" he asked. "Yes, my pa," gasped the little ono. "Ilonky! but that's tuff!" exclaimed the imp, and ho began searching his pockets, ofter discovering that his per sonal property amounted to three nails, and an old cigar, stub and a clay pipe, he said : - r r ' "See here, bub, I'd like to give you candy, or a knife, or sumthin' to kinder make you feel good, but I can't do it. I'm dead-broke and feel in' half sick, but Pll lei 1 'you what I'll do. I could chaw yon up in ono minute, but you can come out here and I II let you take mo down and maul me, and I'll holler like a loon, and all the boys around here will think yon are the wickedest tighter east ot the avenue." The small boy might have appreciated the motive, but he didn't accept the offer. ; Refugees say the Russian troops at tacked wagon trains fleeing to Shumla and murdered people indiscriminately minil in ri ill nltoi.n.i XATfilXOMAL ASETDOTE. The Rev. Mr. C- . , t ItTfpvt'iltUlC clergyman m the interior of the State relates the following anecdote. A couple came to him to get married. Af ter the knot was tied the bridegroom ad dressed him with : "II rtu miisli .1 .. Lax, mister?' J Why, "replied the Clergyman, "I generally take whatever is offered me. Sometimes more sometimes less. I leave it to the bridegroom." "Yes but how much do you ax, I say ?" repeated the happy man. "I have just said," returned the cler gyman, "that I left it to the decision of the bridegroom. Some give me ten dollars, some five, some three, some two, some one, and some only a quarter ot a one." "A quarter, ,ha ! ' said the bride groom ; "well, that's as reasonable as a body could ax. Let me see if I've got the money " He took out his pocket book, there was no money' there; he fumbled in all his pockets, but not a sixpence could he find. "Dang it," said he, "I thought I had some money with mc; but I recollect now, 'twas in my tot her trowser's pocket. Hetty, have you got such a thing as two shill ings about ye ?" "Me!" said the bride, with a mixture of shame and indignation "I'm aston ished at ye, to come here to be married without a cent of money to pay for it !" If I'd known it afore, I wouldn't come a step with ye ; yon might have gone alone to be married for all me." "'es, but consider, Hetty," said the bridegroom in a soothing tone, "we're married now, and it can't be helped yon have got sich a thing as a couple of shillings" "Here, take 'em," interrupted the an gry bride, who during this speech had leen searching in her work-bag ; "and don't yon," said she, with a significant motion ot her finger "don't you serve me another sich a trick Works Hrld In Reserve by Ue Creator. A local itemizer who never offends. A school teacher who can treat every pupil alike and satisfy all. A woman with a pretty foot who never lifts her skirts ankle high. A seventeen-year old lad who knows half as much as he will ten years later. An editor who can conduct a live newspaper and keep off of other people's toes. A professional politician who thinks an editor's services deserving ot any thing but curses. A clersrvmatl will ran nrpooli cr o- I keep on the right side of the Lord and .11 I au nis congregation at the same time. A town free from tieonln wlin nm-nr can find anything so nice, so cheap and so si usn as can do had in other places. An individual calling himself anon ymotn, who never curses an editor h r carrying a dirty load that he dare not shoulder. A gossip who never supplements his or her poisoned tail with. the words, "you mnsn't tell anybody for the world what I told you." A business man who cannot afford to advertise, lftit can afford to see people pass his door to patronize his enterpris ing neighbor who sows his seed in the newspaper, which is returned to him an hundred fold. When tha great Creator presents the world with these works of his hand, tho creating of while blackbirds will not be impossible. Mrs. Allen, of Omaha, after twenty five years of childless married life, gave birth to a boy, and in announcing the happy event to her relatives in Maine,, she wrote : "Long have I wandered in lonely, cheerless gloom, but thank Heav en, I now bask in the sonshiue !" . - Two Pennsylvania tramns stormed ai. tho house of a lone widow, and one went in to beg. Very soon he came out with a bloody nose and a first class black eye. "Well, did you get any thing, Jack?" "Yes," growled the sufferer, "I've got the widow's might." "No," she said, and the wrinkles in her face smoothed out pleasantly ; "no I dc not remember the last 47-year lo custs.! I was an infant then." Special IVoliccs. Musicai.. -Miss Nettie Piper, teacher of Vocal and Instrumental music, has recent ly located in Albany, and prepared to give lessons in tho above named branches. Has had several years experience in teacliinp;. and can give the best of references. 4 IIAIT1X, Stanipiimr, ratting and Fit. t ing, Viain Sewing, Hair Weaving, etc. Cutting an1 fltfinpr Children's Clotliinpr n ftncelnllv. .nn at tne rooms adjoining the Kbjirtku otllee Albany, OrCKon. Mks. Coj.1.. Van Cleve. Majou White Is located one door west of Fox Bro.'s, First street, Albany, where he is prepared to do all work in his line, such as repairing watches, clocks and jew elry. Also, engraves door-plates, silver ware, Ac. Give him a call. The Richmond Range is a great wood saver, and as it throws out less heat than any other good range or stove, it is way tip tor Summer use. TO roXSLrMI'TIVES.--The oil vert ieer.bav inj? been permanently eared of that dread dis ease. Conduit pi ion. by a simple lvineily.isanx ious to make known to his fellow nnfte'rero the means of nun;. To nil who desire it, he will send a eopv of the prescription nsed (free of eliavsrc). with the directions for preparing and lining the same, which they will And a rare rare for Consumption. Asthma, ISronehiti,e. Parties wish in the prescription will please ad dress Kev. E. A. Wilson, 1(4 Peiin St., Williams burg, N. Y. . lisv9J ton43v9 Error of To' tli. A gentleman who snf ferert for 3'ears from Xcrvous nubility. Prema ture Decay, ami all theeffects of youthful indis cretion will, for thesakeof snfferinsrhumanlty, send free to all who need It. the recipe and di rection for niakiiis; the simple remedy by which he. was eur5d. Kult'crers wishing to profit by the advertiser's experience can do so by ad dressing in perreet eontjdence, Joil-N B. Oohen, 42 Cedar SU, New York. n43v9 A CARD. To all who are snffcrinq: from the errors and Indiscretions of youth, nervous weakness, early decay, loss of manhood. Ac.. I will send a rcci)io that. 'will cure yon, F1SEE OF CHAltUE. Tlits Brreiit remetly was discovered by a missionary In youth America. Send a self-addressed enve lops to the Kkv. .Ioski'H T. Ikhun.. Station , JSiUc JJouttr, jV Foi . liSvtt - - Sensible Advice. I - You are asked every day. through Uig columns of your newspapers and by your Druggist to usie something for your Dys pensia and Liver Complaint that vou know notfiinnr about- votit orel liseftnrnofi1 unnnrl. ing money with but little success. Iff ow h to give you satisfactory proof that Green's $ August Flower will cure you of Dyspepsia Jk. and Liver Complaint with all its effects, such a9 Sour Stomach. Sick Headache, " f Habitual Costivene.9 palpitation of the iieart, jicart-nurn, water-brash, dullness at the pit of the Stomach. Yellow Skin. coated tongue. Coming up of food 81 viniiig, low piru,, etc., we as you pa po to your Druggist and get a sampIeSotUe of Green's August Flower for 10 ctnt9 and try it, or a regular size lor 75 cjits, two doses will relieve you. . r n44v9 PINPM3.-I will mall (free) recipe for preparing a simple Vcjcetahte li&m that will re move Tan, Freckles, PlmpleVanrt Blotcboa, leayniK the stein soil, clear atid beautiful : alo instructions ifor prortuclns a lt1Xnriant jrrowth ot hair on in bald head orsuioy,h face. Address Ken. andelf & Co., box 4121, fro. 5 Wooster-St., Now York. V . ton!3v FOR SAIfe j A VERY XreSHlAllT.E misil0aa ot RGxlOO feet on the corner of Second nncj Washington streets. Alhnnv chmery, tovret her witlv a lot ut urn It are, lad ders, wheel barrows, tiarrow. Ac., Ac., all to bo sold off cheap for ea-sh, inconsequence of re moval on account of sickness. Knqntre on tho -?'.j,nie. iwuer ana jaa- premises oi PUTNAM CO. Albany, Jan. 19, 1S77-H17 j - Lntesl and Most Reliable i formation tibout the KI.ACK HJIL.S, Nonhern Wvomfnjr and the ritat Indian War will always Ito found In tho Oldest, Largest. Cheapest in the lilack ani B fchi t"A PER in Wyo ming. LGADKK Kstahllsbcd in 1807. Iailv,$l a month 10 a rear. Weekly, 3 mo. l fi mo. ai.no 1 year.&i.50 mils sintfle copy, 10 cts. II. Glarke, Pnbllsher, Cheyenno, Wyo. v'Jnl.'.w , FOR BLANK DEEDS, Neatly executed. Call ?it tlie Register Office OREGON SOLID KOU SMERItlLZ, ' & CULTIVATOR SEEDER. All Important Parts saafio of 1B.C2T, aaa BuraWo as Iron can to. 7- r. Adjusti'elo to aay roaiilrol T.-liils la motion. Depth. ITovcr Clcs cr Chokes en Stu'b'blo or '"TrasJiy" Ground. A rranRel for two. three or four horses abreast Lightest Ilral't ilac-hiue in use. Covers and cut s all t lie eroiind. Broadcast Seeders will sow all kinds o( RTitin, wet or dry. j EVE21Y 33AC1BIXE RAaTED. W A IS. - I ask every farmer to examine nir Seeder anrl Cultivator iN'foro pniilmsim; an Eastern Ja ehino; For fnnhev part icuiars address JAI5:S SHEltlllEE, IBHrrisburgr, Ore&on, Febraarj' 9, ls77-2Pv9 JOB PRIX ING TJAVIKO rURCIIARED THE EC- ' ' It ... ... -. h of the "State Kitrbts Democrat ani i "Alhanv Uetriwer " I oaduuic iu ijLsk-viass myio, PROMPTLY & RCASOSABLY, - AU lUuda of I BOOK & JO J POSTERS AND PROGRAMMES Of Every DcscrlptloM. - BILL r HEADS AND STATEMEKTS, Rills, ol Fare. LETTER HEADS BRIEr AND LEGAL BLARES. -Cards of all Kinds and Colors, Circulars, I'amphlets, i Receipts, Mortgage and Bscs': i i i MANS EI EL. D & MONTHIT,' i r i i L I