o o 0 O o O o o Q o o G 3 o o o o 0 0 o 0 o o o o (EljeiUcckln (Enterprise. Oregon City, Or&gon , D. M. McKENNBY, Ei itor. o John Mykrs, F inaxcial Agent. Saturday : : September 4. 1869. Radical Xaticnal Financiering. From the report of the Secreta ry of the Treasury for lj year 18G6, we learn that the Revenue of the United States collected that year from all sources, amounted to the round sum of 1,329,686,378.34, or about one half -as much as the Xational debt. Of this amount, 300,220,813.42 was derived from the Internal Revenue system, a system of taxation unknown in the United States prior to Republican ?ule. Prior to the new order of things, the Revenue of the United States was gathered from other .sources than direct taxation, and the Internal Revenue system, and gathered in such a manner that it was not felt by the people. The same old channels of national rev enue arc now open and used by the party in power, as much as they were before and in combi nation with this new invention for collecting revenue. Since the report above referred j to was made, and it is the latest i one avc have at our command, there have been three years of peace and prosperity, during which time the material wealth of the country has been very considera bly developed and increased. And during these three years, this in ternal revenue system has been, and is yet, in full operation, and the income derived from it, must necessarily have increased with the increase of the wealth of the 'country. This internal revenue system was created, and is kept in operation, for the ostensible pur pose of paying the heavy national debt which hangs, like an incubus, over this unfortunate trovernment : "but the debt decreases very dis- proportionably to the increase cf the revenue. And, inasmuch as the majority of our people pay some kind of tax under this new system of taxation, it is very natu ral that they should have some de sire to know what becomes of the immense amount of money which rolls into the Treasury of the Uni ted States every year. And for the benefit of those who have sufficient interest in the wel fare of the government to stimulate them to such inquiries, we propose to give a few items as guides to their correct solution, by giving mi the figures as they appear in the Acts of Congress, passed under Democratic rule, and other Acts of Congress, passed under Republican domination. By the appropriation act of Con gress, passed on the 23d of June, 18G0, the last year of Mr. Buchan an's Administration, and at a time when Democrats had a wholesome majority in Congress,' we find the appropriations for t lie Attorney General's Office, for the year end ing June the 3Cth, 1861, to be as follows : For the salary of tlie Attorney General. Assistant Attorney General, Clerks. -nnd Messenger in his office $17,500 For contingent cxpenses.of the office 2,000 For the purchase of law and books necessary for the office For purchase of deficient State Re port.? and Statutes, For fuel and labor For furniture and book cases,'. 500 500 500 300 Total S21.300 By an Act of Congress passed on the 3d of March, I860, and at a time when the Radicals had an overwhelming majority in that body, we find the following prince ly appropriations made for the loyal Attorney General, then in office, viz : For salaries of Attorney General law Clerk, Chief Clerk, two Clorks of clJi four, two Clerks of class three, one clerk of class one. and one messenger .S25 200 For salaries of two assistant Attot- o neys General, at $1,000 each. . . For salary of one clerk For salary of two Clerks of class four ' Contingent expenses of the otfi.ee of Attorney General, uanu-ly : For fuel, labor, stationery, furniture nnd miscellaneous items For the purchase of law and neces sary books for the office ol the S.000 2,000 3,600 10,000 1,000 Total . $-10,800 Being $7,200 more than twice as much as the Attorney General's Office received under a Democratic Administration. While the Kc publican officers of the General Government are receiving such princely salaries, with money thrown in, in $10,000 piles for miscellaneous items, the Radical Leaders, and Radical Press, are howling for Chinese immigration and cheap labor. This would he a profitable subject for Republicans belonging to the laboring class to think of. Will they do it ? Rut this is only one small item compared with other munificent appropriations, made for other of fice holders under the present or der of .things, and which, we pro pose ventilating, from time to time. Rut we wish to call attention, at the present time, to another matter now fresh in the minds of the peo ple, and which will be provided for in some appropriation bill, under the head of contingent expenses or miscellaneous items. It is this: We have been honored with a visit from the Congressional Com mittee on Ways and Means, on of ficial business, it is said; and now we have the Committee on Re trenchment, (what a misnomer) together with their wives and chil dren out on this coast on business connected with their retrenching duties, it is said; and at the pres ent time, we also have Logan II. Root, a Carpet Bagger from Av- kansas, whom the Alta California calls a southern gentleman, (?) he is also on committee business, be ing a member of the committee on Pacific Railroads. And during all this time, being a vacation of Con gress, individual congressmen, and congressional committees are tray cling through the Southern States, ostensibly assisting in reconstruc tion, but really looking alter the 7 mi O good of the Republican party, and for improved lands which can be purchased cheap, or had without purchasing at all. Taking the ac tion of the committees who visit this coast as a criterion, they do not stop long enough in any place t) make investigations that will be of any public benefit. But their actions force home the conclusion that, instead of being on business for the government, they are mak ing visits for pleasure, speculation, and political purposes. Yet, they are members of Con gress, and do now, and will claim in Congress, that they were in the discharge of their duties as such committee men, and will have to be reimbursed for all their expen ditures in such service, besides be ing paid for their valuable time and talent, and they will get it. For these Congressmen are not the men to vote other officers such magnificent salaries and then stint themselves, and they have the whole matter in their own power. Driven to tlic "Wall. Whenever the. leaders and press of a party are forced to misrepre sent facts, and to quote parts of records and documents which nev er had an existence, except in the imaginative and creative brain of the unscrupulous partisans, who make the quotation for the purpose of retaining the blinded adherence of the honest portions of their party such party is certainly driven to the Avail. For some considerable time past the radical leaders and press have pursued such an execrable course ; and they pursue it more closely at the present time, than at any pre vious period in the history of that party, and we now "wish to call at tention to a few such misrepresen tations, of a very recent date. The Sacramento llccord of the 21st ult.,(a radical sheet,) says that the treaty obligation we have made with China forbids the naturaliza tion of Chinamen. The Oregon ian ot the -30th, has a paragraph quoted from the Xew York" Tribune, to the same effect. W e copy in to-day's paper, from the Oregon lan of August T,18CS,the Republican amendments of 18G8, to the China treaty made ten years previous, during Mr. Buchanan's Attorney General,. administration, and we would call! concluded under a Democratic ad attention to the first part of the 5th ministration and that the Demo artu le of that treaty, which reads ! 1 as follows: . Ast. a. Tae Liuted States of America aad the Emperor of QLa cordially re - COURTESY OF TIN TVFPR TTV cognize the inherent and inalienable right of man to change his home and allegiance, and also the mutual advantage of the free migration and emigration of their citizens and subjects respectively from the one country io the other, for purposes of cu rioaiiy, trade, or as permanent residents. This is all there is in the treaty on this subject. Does this forbid the naturalization of Chinamen? What does the right to change a person's allegiance mean ? It as suredly means nothing else than the right to renounce allegiance to one govcrnmcnt,and be naturalized and become the citizen of another, and as such, entitled to the same rights as natural born citizens of his adopted country and govern ment. This right is recognized in the Republican addition to the China treaty, which,if carried out in good faith, means this : The Chinese may be naturalized and become American citizens, and Americans maybe naturalized and become Chinese subjects. Vet, with this provision of the radical amendments to the Chinese treaty staring them in the face, such lead ing radical journals as the Xew York Tribune, Sacramento llecord, and Oregonlan, have the hardened effrontery to assert that this treaty prohibits Chinamen from becoming American citizens. Again, the Oregon Ian of the 1st of September, quotes as a part of this treaty, the following : "Citizens of the United States shall en joy all the privileges of the public educa tional institutions under the control of the government of China, and reciprocally. Chinese subjects shall enjoy all the privi leges of the public educational institutions under the control of the government of the United Stated which arc enjoyed in the icspecilve countries by the citizens or sub jects of the most favored nation." And then, argues that the Uni ted States proposed to give to the Chinese at the Military Academy at West Point, and the Xaval School at Annapolis, the same rights that other nations have, in consideration of similar favors ex tended to Americans in China, and that it was net understood or in tended by such treaty to admit Chinese into any other educational institutions of the country, other tli an those under the immediate control of the general Government, and of the class above named. Xow there is no such language in the treaty as the above, quoted from the Oregon ian, and the Edi tor of that paper knows it. The only thing found in the treaty upon this subject is found in Arti cle 8, which see. Xow what is the object of such misquotations and misrepresentations on thejart of the Radicals ? It must certain ly be for the purpose of deceiving the inquiring and honest members of that party, that have shown marked signs of disapprobation of the Radical policy on the Chinese question. Can any conscientious man follow leaders whose policy he knows to be misrepresentation and decite, or can he adhere to a part-, whose policy cannot stand a fair and truthful statement of its objects and works. Let every man answer for himself, according to the genuineness, or elasticity of his own conscience. Again, the Oregon lan says the treaty was made under the Demo cratic Administration of Andrew Johnson, and therefore the Demo cratic party is responsible for it. This is a very shallow subterfuge. It is true this treaty was made during the Administration of Johnson, and at a time too, when that officer was over-ridden and bound down by a radical and cor rupt Congress. lie was perfectly powerless. It will also be remem bered that the acting minister on the part of the United States in this treaty, negotiations was Wil liam II. Seward, Secretary of State, and he was certainly sufticicntly radical to suit the most zealous of his party ; but when, or by whom he Mas charged with that extra duty, does not appear. It will also be remembered that this treaty was ratified bv a Radical Senate, mi ' and that Andrew Johnson could not have prevented it if had been he Democratic, and had wished to do so ; yet, Republican journals, with a shameless disregard for truth, will unblushingly assert that this abomnible, mongrel treaty was . .i - , uut upon sucn cauiiiig nvpocriis ' , .5111" demagogues. BANCROFT LIBRARY, HV P AT T-EYM3MTA The Idtilio CIi"-8 Tax Case ,Y .Just Decision. It is a well known fact that the Chinese come to this country and make as much in one day as they would in a month at home. It is also a well known fact, that with the exception of a few" Chinese merchants, they never acquire any property in this country, or con tribute any thing towards the sup port of the laws and government by which they arc protected while they are realizing such rich com pensation ; the whole of which is sent home to China, with the ex ception of barely enough to sup ply themselves with a miserable, and scanty living. To remedy this evil, the Idaho Legislature passed a law, in many respects similar to our own, imposing a special tax upon the celestials. The Republi can party, true to their instincts, denounced this law as unjust and a great hardship upon the Chinese citizens of the United States. The Chinese learning these things took advantage of them and proceed ings were instituted in the District Court of Boise county of that mf Territory which resulted in the sheriff being enjoined from collect ing this special tax. An appeal was taken to the Supreme Court of the Territory and has just been de cided by that tribunal, as we learn from the Idaho IVorld. The World says : We were shown yesterday eve ning, just before going to press, the order of. Chief Justice Xoggle, vacating the former order to re strain the sheriff of Boise county from collecting Chinese miners' tax. This action of the Chief Jus tice is at once legal, just, and most salutary to this Territory. The case was argued on behalf of the Chinese, by McBride and IVickett, Esqs., and very ably, on the part of the Sherilf Britten, by Judge Scaniker and Jonas W. Brown, Esq. On receipt of the official order from Chief Justice Xoggle, by mail yesterday, the Sheriif and his Dep uties started out to immediately collect the taxes due and overdue by reason of the restraining order, now happily vacated. W e rejoice at the decision : so will every tax payer and thinking citizen. Telegraphic Clippings. Murderer Sentenced. Toledo, August 30th. Conrad Mies is sentenced to be hanged, Xovember 5th,, for the murder of Solomon Jones. Strut-It by Liglit niiig. Bixgiiamptox, August 30th. Several houses and barns, near here, were struck by lightning on Saturday evening. Xo lives lost. Ar tic Exilor;iioiis. PjIlLADKLPTir A, Aueiist 23. The brig Helen, from Irightal, Greenland, reports that the steamer Panther, with Haves' Arctic Ex ploring Expedition, sailed from Irightal on the 2Gth of June, for Disco, Iceland, and Xorth Green land, whence the Panther is going to Melville Bay. Previous to her arrival at Irightal, the Panther had been at Julian Shaab and Kasse murst, where the expedition had been in the interior taking -photographs. , Massacre isi Cliiim. IIoxukong, via London, Aug. SO. Reports of the massacre of Chris tains and missionaries, in the prov ince of Szcheun, China ar-3 confirm ed. Twenty arc known to have been killed by the populace. ThePekin Government lias instituted an in quiry concerning these outrages. Tlie Chinese Trent y. A Washington special says that Burlingame has telegraphed to the Government, stating that it was not understood that the Chinese Government would ratify the treaty until his return. He denies that the treaty has been rejected. Gov. Senter and tlie President. Gov. Senter had an interview with the President at noon, Avhen the matter of calling the old Legis lature together to ratify the Eif teenth Amendment, was discussed. Senter passed the opinion that the new Legislature would ratify, and it was agreed not advisable to as semble tlie old Legislature, on ac count of the legal doubt of its right to sit. Judge Dent left for Mississippi last night. It has transpired that the President opposed him from the first, telling Dent that his move was simply a trick to carry the State by a use of the name Republican. Tennessee Matters. Stokes urges a general removal of Senter's officers in Tennesce. lie has filed a list in the Post Office Department and one in the Treasury, which he hopes to have acted upon this week. The plans of the Stokes men arc regarded as of the most extreme character by the officials to w hom they have been submitted. They involve the eventual recognition of Stokes and his legislature as the choice of the legal voters of Tennessee. ITlre in u Coal Mine WlLKKSBARRE, Allgllgt 23. Late in tlie afternoon a fire broke out in the Pine Ridge Col liery above this place. The fire caught at the entrance of the mine and burned with fearful rapidity. The wildest excitement prevaifs, thirty men being at the bottom of the mine. The lire originated from an explosion in a fire-damp. The same mine took fire eighteen months ago, and burned furiously for several weeks, and was finally extinguished by being smothered. Tlie superintendent of the mine ar rived here at' midnight, and re ported that all the men were rescu ed alive. The mine is still burn ing, but the men being rescued, it will be smothered out. From Tennessee. Nashville, August 23. At the Republican meeting men tioned last night, Hon. John Trumble presiding, resolutions were adopted calling on Gov. Senter to convene an extra session of the existing Legislature for the purpose of taking action on the Fifteenth Amendment, there being no question in the opinion of the meeting, of the constitutionality and legality of that body. The resolutions Mill be submitted to the Governor immediately in writ ing by Horace Maynard, chairman of a committee appointed for that purpose. A committee of eight, one from each congressional dis trict, have prepared and reported a memorial to the people of the State and Congress, giving a his tory of the late canvass and elec tion, showing that stupendous frauds were perpetrated, denounc ing the election proclamation deny ing the validity of the' election, etc. The memorial don't ask for Congressional or Federal interven tion. Tlie Chinese Mrtiistry. Chicago, Aug-'.st 30. The Tlepubllcayi's Washington special says the cabinet meeting on Tuesday will consider the con duct of Minister Browne and the Chinese treaty. The President is mi known to be much displeased with the conduct of Minister Browne. There is considerable speculation in regard to who will fill the va cancy, the post being regarded as too important to remain long unfill ed. Among the names mentioned is that of Gen. Dodge of the Union Pacific Railroad, who is known to have planned a visit to China, fol lowing Burlingame's return. Gen. Logan is also mentioned, lion. W. D. Mann, of Philadelphia, is mentioned by parties interested in the East India Telegraph Com pany, of which Gov. Curtin is Presi dent. The other names are, John I). Baldwin, editor of the Worces ter Vy, and John Russell Young, late of the Xew York Tribune. Congress will be asked, at the next session, to make Pekin a first class mission. feTCrtY OV A lilGAMIST From the Oregon Unionist, August 30th We propose to set forth, for the benefit of the people of Oregon, the particulars of the personal history of a young man who has figured somewhat extensively for a year or two past before the public, and who seems to have acquired a greater reputation with some of our citizens than lie seemed to have deserved. Something over a year ago, the clergyman of the M. E. Church, at Portland, received let ters from parties in England, ask ing him if he could trace a person residing near there, who, they heard, was passing under tlie name of Cleveland. The writer assumed to be the young man's father, and signed the name of Bycrlv. The clergyman put a notice in the Ad vocate to tlie effect that a Byerly, or a Cleveland, would hear some thing of interest by calling on him, which brought the man immediate ly to his acquaintance. Cleveland, the great trance medium and lectu rer of the spiritualists, confessed to him that he was really Byerly, but denied that he had abandoned a wife in Xew Zealand. Subse quent letters were received from his friends, and sorrowful ones from his wife, and the facts called out were as follows : Cleveland alias Byerly was mar ried when quite young in England ; received from his father a hand some outfit and a cash capital to commence business with in Xew Zealand, where, his wife writes, they would have done well, only lie took a roving disposition, aban doned her, and shipped on a vessel for Puget Sound. His wife and other friends took great pains to trace the unworthy" scamp, wrote to the Methodist pastor at Port land, having heard that he was in that vicinity. When that gentle man discovered him, he had found a wife, had married a young lady named Tryou at Oswego, anil bloomed into a full-grown spiritual trance lecturer. He had taken pains, it seems, to have papers sent to England, reported to have been found on a dead body floating in the Tiver I ho lonr.vc nlf.nt;..! I - - " - ' ' J "I'V 1 V U U 1 1 V U Hit' drowned man as no other than him self, for having married and chang ed his name he wanted to stop fur ther inquiries. Money sent to him by his father was returned unopeii- ed through the Dead Letter Office. That is rather remarkable for lie was rather inclined to appreciate money. The letters of the wife in England are before us now. They are written very prettily, and the writer hateevidently had good ad vantages. She and her husband, she says, were raised in the same Methodist Sunday School. When the Oregon Spiritual As sociation met at French Prarie last spring, Cleveland appeared to great advantage before them in his char acter of trance lecturer. He had no particular qualities to com mend him, and would pass for a young man of weak intellect and very little cultivation, who could go to the lead considerably, and not havefartogo. Asa trance lectu rer he did' and said wonderful things; said things Cleveland did'nt do. When the spirits mov ed him he was eloquent, or learned, or disputatious, just as they impell ed. As Cleveland he was a mere soft looking, nobody," but as a trance lecturer lie developed a surprising change. Whatever it was it has made him no better as a man. The leading spiritualists distrusted him. for they had 'taken his measure tolerably well, and placed limited confidence in him. The majority, however, looked on him with won der and astonishment. To them he spoke with tongues and preached an acceptable gospel. So by a ma jority vote this bigamist and pas se r-by-a-f 'also name, became the chief spiritual lecturer in Oregon. Some of these gentleman aid us now to acquire information for tlie exposure of this miserable scamp, who has lately abandoned his sec ond wife and is, by this time, in San Francisco, to which place he took passage by stage, at Salem, a week ago. Perhaps avc might have passed him by unnoticed, and as too trifling to deserve a notice, but not satisfied with having com mitted bigamy in Oregon, he at tempted to run away, last week, with a young girl from near this place having been obliged to lore go his purpose, when it was vir tually accomplished, because he was short of funds to convey more than himself out of the State. It is certain that he induced a young girl, who lives in Marion county, to leave home and accompany him toward Albany, then came back to Salem and took the stage, bidding her good-bye as he passed the house where he had left her. He is a scamp who will play these tricks again, and the people of California should be warned of his coining and understand his antecedents. FOR THE KJTEUPKISE. Editor Enterprise : An article recently inserted in the E n tk ii n:is k under the heading of "a revolution in geology" taken in connection with other of similar tenor in other newspapers, lias in duced me to prepare one myself for publication. It is about ten years since my personal observations in the vicini ty of the Dalles of the Columbia River led me to the conclusion that a large proportion of the rock ascribed to igneous origin by ge ologists, was in reality met amor phic. 1 expressed my ideas con cerning it at the time to the Rev. Mr. Condon (a geologist of no mean acquirements) who disagreed with me, but did not change my niiiid bv his argument. Three years since, w hile eminent men of sciences were manipulating a thim bles full of earth m pint-pot vessels, striving to resolve the true charac ter of the rock commonly called granite, I was trudging through the Sierras in California, studying closely the effects produced, or the results obtained by the experi ments of a practical chemist that uses the volcano for a crucible, and wields the ice-berg as a pestle, and with the depths of the ocean for a mortar. At that time the proof of the aqueous origin of granite came to inv view as ineontcstiblv as that of a similar origin for any sand-bar now in the Willamette River might appear to the most careful observer. I have moreover at my command, incontrovertible facts, gathered within the scope of my own personal observation, which prove with certainty that the earth has been entirely flooded at least as high as the summit of tlie Sierra Nevada Mountains; and that pre vious to the flood the earth existed with the same conditions of climate and soil, and nearly the same con tour as at the present day. Furthermore, I will here state as deliberate conviction that the ex traordinarily large remains of ani mals which are found imbeded in the ice and frozen soil of Siberia and Russian America, and are fre quently being exhumed in this val ley and other places on the Pacific coast are of those which inhabited the tropical regions of Asia that they were drowned in the great Hood and their remains carried to the places where now found by ocean currents and ice-bergs. That what is termed in geology the glacial tJieory is a false one. That the changes in the earth's surface attributed to glaciers were mainly produced by the agency of strong currents and floating ice in a less number of months thantT supposed centuries which been assigned to the glacial vj I am aware that at this time if such ideas as these emanating f, 0' an obscure person like myself 7 tract any attention at all, they'ar likely to be treated as the idle yl garies of an imaginative mind! Yet I put them forth, confident i,! the anticipation that they ji come to be generally regarded as truths of high import, hi science and religion. JUSTIN CTIENOWETII. o Roai AGKN7.s -The OwyllCe M are ot last Iriday chronicles tllc arrest of seven of a gang of fifron men who had conspired to rob the stage between Elko and Wi,; line, lhey were engaged, the better to conceal their design' ami to accomplish their villainous plJr. pose, as ranchmen and station keepers along the road. L. If Maize, detective of Wells, Far & Co., who joined the gang, caul the arrest of the seven. s LxFoiniKit. The -Herald doift charge anything for advertising spies. There is one in the en? now, direct from Washington on a thieving expedition. We have heard of his prcs'nce,and will giVo him a first class notice if he comes out of his shell. Herald. Patients ix the Ixsaxt: Asylum. Tlie Clerk of the Insane AsylU!IJ kindly furnishes us the following ii j , -i . . , ." 'ning me pauenis aarmttcd, Us- charged, and died. auniur the months of June, July and AurriKt Admitted E. Little, Ah "L((. (a chinaman) F. J. Heron, A. C.' Loring, Jennie W. McCulIougli 5 Discharged Mrs. M, Shurtz J. C. Loony, J. C. Couch, Catherine Saunders 3 Died, Geo. Thrasher, Geo. Frv 9 Total number of State patients- male o;iemaie 31. Private pa tients, 4. Total number remaining in the Asvlum 110. Commercial. The Xew York Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, has received bequests to tlie amount of 6400,000 to aid in carry ing out its objects. &- In Ilopkinton, Mass., a nowlv elected constable, while drunk, went to the house of a citizen, at night, and having awakened liini, commanded him " in the name of the Commonwealth to come out and carry him home' A Man in Massachusetts sleeps seventeen hours a day. He would make a good radical eelitor he Iks so easily. Daniel Bakeman, of Xew York State, a Revolutionary pensioner, has just died, aged 111 years. . -8 Ikox Maxufac:tuke. The pig iron product of Great Britain in 18G8 was 4,800,000 tons,that of the L intent states. i r.re o.OUU ton MAUKIED. At the residence of A. J. Apperson, Eq., in this citv, August 31st, KW hvJnnnsA. Smith. J. P.. Mr. DAVID A. WALLACE, of Yamhill county, and Miss EMILY L. PUA'D, late of Coldwater, Michigan. DIED. In Portland, on Sundav evening August 20th, JSCiV FRANCIS A. PEASE, vomit daughter -of Capt. Georcs A. and Mir.riro Axx Pkase, of this city, aged o years and I) months. u SE PA IX KILLER FOP. CHOLERA AND DOWEL COMPLAINTS. For Boi!-, Cuts, Uruise., and Scald?, 01.1 Sores, Sprains, Swelling of the Joints, Toith ache, Pain in the Face, Neuralgia, and Rheu matism, Frosted Feet, Felons, SOrvE THROAT, SUDDEN COLDS, COUGHS, Sec. Use it for anr of these, and yon will nercr do without it. Its success as a valuable family medicine lias induced others to imi tate and counterfeit the Pain Killer, to some extent. BEWARE OF COUNTERFEITS. Xew Advertisements. jSTOTICE IS IIEUEUY GIVKX To all persons having CHICKEN'S which are in the habit of frequenting rny Garden, that I will this day put out poison on my premises for the purpose of destroying Moles and Goptiers, and that it may be un safe to eat such chickens.. F. WILDE, Oregon C tr. Sept. 4th, 1SC9. J42-U S. D. SMITH. Gf.o. B. COOK. The OCCIDENTAL, FORMERLY Q 7 ESTEKX HOTEL. Cor. First and Morrison Streets. POUT LAM D, OR23. 7T Messrs. Smith Cook have taken this we'l known House, refitted and rcfurnii" it throughout, built a large addition, niakir.S thirty more pleasant rooms, enlarged t!i dining and sitting room, making it by for the best Hotel in Portland. A rail from the traveling pnblic will satisfy them that the above statements are true. SMITH & COOK, Proprietor. X. B. Hot and cold baths attached. 4". & " F. S. 0STHEIM, IMPORTER AXD DEALER IX Segars, Tobacco. Pipes, Stationery CUTLERY, YANKEE NOTIONS, Ac. o No. 83, corner of Front and 'sl!,nf ' ton streets, bre proof brick store, railed tn ();d Corner,, opposite American Exhan Portland, Oie-ouv 3i.3jA