o o O O O O eljc lUcckln iCntcvpvisc. OFFICIAL PAPEU FOR CLACKAMAS COUNTY. Oragon City, Oregon , Triday : : : Eliroh 31, 1371. A Warner to the Kext One- The Oregon and California railroad was "constructed through this county by Ben. Hollad ay & Co., under contract, lor twenty-five Thousand dollars .per mile, and it, i. safe to presume that, the gentlemen made some money at it ; but as a basis for as eessment, we w:ll state that this railroad cost the contractors the following bill 01 items . Value of right of way for 21 miles through the county. . $ 6,00U Jron rails. tons per miie, at $8d per ton 1(18.000 Ties. ihUSJ per mile, at 20 cents . vaoh : 8.-100 Clackamas bridge S.UUO Abernethy Creek br.dge ........ 1.000 Trestle- work in Oregon City. . . . 4.UUO Mofalla river bridge and trestle. 8, (WO Station at Oregon City and lots.. 1 ,t);J0 Depot whan at Hock l.-luiid ... 1,000 -Spikes. iish bars, etc, at $500 per mile 10.500 Cost of labor in cotisti notion, at $5,000 per mile 105.000 'Grand total .$320 1)00 We will hazard the opinion that the "Contractors will not deny but that the railroad has cost them this much at least, tirough it develops large profits to them in their undertaking, which concerns im neither her or there ; but what we are coming at, is a vital question to the tax payers of this county, both Democrats and Republicans alike, and a matter in itelf not at all connected with poliiics. vet the people will hold the party who elected these men responsible lor their c:s. What amount has Arthur Warner. SUerilT of Clickaiu is county, assessed this corporation on the above enumerated property? We will inform those wLo cannot conveniently inspect the tx list for themselves. Three hundred and twen ty thoifsand. nine hundred dollars worth of property, at a reasonable valuation, as we have shown, is squeezed down to t went j t ico hundred dollars. In Cte-ar's pathetic style, -What a fall is here, my country men J' and as Matk Antony might have added. Won't all Home howl?" Was the valuation of the pro terry of the Woolen .Milts and the P. T. Company re duced3 in similar proportion ? Was the Standard, the Imperial and the Oregon City Mills placed at a similar deduction from lair value? Was your assessment, reader, by a similar accommodation, made G3 proportionately small ? Of course not. because you had to go up to the -Garrett" to be assessed, which made many of you exclaim like the Dutchman, '-.My God! how high ish dat ?-' We will gently hint en passant, that it was worth six thousand dollars to the Railroad Company (unless, etc.) to pre vail upon our worthy County Judge to annul the assessment of our worthy Coun ty Assessor and allow our worthy (?) County Sheriff to make a new assessment. We have said enough for this time, but our batteries are not spiked, and our worthy Sheriff may expect us to refer fo the subject again. The people, irrespec tive of parties, will view this matter calmly and truly, and on the next judg ment day there will be written on one man's wall we know of, You are weighed in the scales and found wanting.' We have in this sad obituary endeavored to point out a moral, which will be discover ed to read '-A. Warner to the next one. A IIkcoxstrvcted Statu. Frank Blair thus told how Radical reconstruction worked in Missouri : "If Senators,'" he said, "were not animated by passion, by ambi tion, and the lust of power, they would see by that which has been done under their system at the South what we are tending to. I come from a State which lias ju&l escaped this thraldom, and I understand perfectly well what the radical rule is. A more shameful disfranchisement of loyal men and good men never took dace any where in the wei Id than that which has existed in the State of Missouri. It 'Tas a thoroughly arbitrary government, in which one man appointed the registrars, and they the supervisors, and they the judges of election ; and those men arbiirarly. without reason and against, reason, ex eluded an) body they pleased from the ballot. The result was that in the State of Missouri, with a population of over 1. 712.000. we cast at this last election only 1(17.000 votes under confessedly the most liberal registration we have ever had in the State since the war closed, while In diana, with nine!) less population, accord ing to the census, cast 318.000 votes double the number of Missouri." Espoused. A private letter to us from a gentleman it Jacksonville, sn-ys : Allow me to tender yon. on behalf of the citizens of this county, their sincere thanks for i he n-yanly and dignified man ner in which you tame to their relief in the sad all air which occurred in this dace n the ltuh nit. There never was a peo ple worse treated by their count)- papers. They have been made to appear abroad as acqi.iescing in the horrible crime by remaining silent. Rut allow me to in form yon that surli is not the case. They vevi'j'oreed to remain silent, because both were gaged, ami there was no channel left, by which ihey could give vent to- their fceliiijrs. Moke Gkolndsvkli,s. The New York World of March 8;h says : The result of the municipal elecli n irr the interior of the State yesterday is generally favorable to the Democracy. The gains are hand some, and Troy leads off with 2.C0i ma jority tor the Democratic candidate for Mayor a gun of over 1. 000 over Gover nor Hoffman's majority last November. From Washington.-A private letter to us from Washington, under dale of the ltith last., states that Grants Administration is 4 fulling to pieces." A thing as rotten cannot long hang together, and the peo ple hail die -fair whh t w say, let U -fa.l.' It t,M .n count and the sooner it goes iato fra liieufep, tii better lor tbu uatum 1 The Cause of Trouble- The Radical papers are full of Ku-Klux outrages down South-, and they attempt to make it appear as though the Southern people are responsible for this state of af fairs, when the facts are. that the Radicals, scalawag carpet bagg.-rs are responsible for the bad state of affairs. They see that the political current has aet in against them and in order to hold on to treir power they urge on the semi bat barons negroes o depred itions. which the white people, i i self-defense, resist by organized bands, and whatever mischief there is done, is laid on these organizations. It is utterly .m,-js-ib!e for .peace ever t n ign in the South so long as the Ra licals persist in orclng the negro oa an equality with the vhites. and refuse to allow 'hat people to be controlled by w hite men ot their choice. The Federal Government ties the hands of the people, and then censures them for all the wrong done. It. makes Yankee carpet-baggers and rrggers their master, and the l ab-uses them for wot protecting the negro. "The following from -an ex change will give some idea who the guil ty ones are. and what just and righteous reason the people have in organizing themselves into protective societies for self preservation. No one will read it but what he will say that the whites in the south are the ones who are imposed upon, and that the responsibility of all the trouble is chargeable to the Administra tion and its supporter?. Let the people of the South alone, and we are satisfied that, peace would soon reign in every Stale. Hut that would take away the offices from Radical carpet-baggers, and this is at the botb in of the whole cry of "South ern outrages." and to retain them the Government is about to send down so' diers. Here is a pretty picture for our Radical fiiends ta contemplate, one that shows who are the wrong doers: The evidence given in the impeachment trial of Governor iiolden. of North Caro lina, indicated an enormity of cruelty which is a disgrace to civilization. The tying, knocking down, shooting at. im piisonuig. hanging by the neck, pulling up and pulling down, and then pulling up again, the lain ing of the victims, give to this trial the air and interest of the deep est tragedy. One Lucieti M. Murray tes tified to having suffered this sort of treat ment, inflicted by Uerg'en. who said, as testified to by ail the witnesses, that he was acting umler the orders of Governor HoUieii. William ration testified to have been hung up by the neck. A pistol was put to his head ami threats made to shoot him if he did not tell who killed Outlaw, lie was brought to Raleigh and made it con fession, that he might be relieved. George Rogei s. a young man. was next called He testified thai lit: w;is hung up three several times by the neck. The above facts are gathered from the testimony of two day's proceedings. Broken. The Radical papers fry fo make it appear as though Sumner'. re moval from the Chairmanship of the Com mittee on Federal R Unions was of little importance. It is no use for them to at tempt to deceive the people in this matter. The subject is important enough to burst"' the Radical party in two. The honest Republicans will stick to Sumner, and not such time-serving politicians as Grant and his followers. It is also a seri ous matter to the Radicr.I party in select ing such a man as Simon Cameron, of Pennsylvania, his successor. He is of no ability, except as a pothouse politician. He is a ct rriiptionisl of the first order, having bought his election to the United States Senate several times. His profli gacy as First Secretary of War. under Lincoln, is a matter of history and na tional disgrace, lie is a nice man to take Samner's place. Kl: Ki.lx. It is rather amusing to see the Radical journals laboring to manufac ture "Ku-Klux outrages.'' Any little trouble which occurs in the South, is magnified into a huge outrage by the Rad ical journals. Recently the 'Govern ment." as our Radical friends f all the Ad ministration, appointed a nigger on one of the Southern raiiroads as a mail messen ger. A man got on the cars, drunk, and the rugger feeling the importance of his position, being a limb of the ''Govern ment," got into a quarrel u ith the drunken man. when Mr. Nigger got a "head put on him." This has been magnified with as a huge 'ou!rage"J,a:ul the -Government'' has threatened to discontinue the mail service on account ol the drunken affair, and all the Radical papers pronounce it a Ku-Klux outrage. This cry of Ku-Klux outrages" is simply a deception to make an excuse for the Government" to send troops down South to cary the elections in 1872. The people cannot be deceived by such shallow pretences. The ' Octi'.agk.s." To show on what some of the reported Ku-Klux outrages are based, we publish the following, which is made the subject of aa outrage by the Kn-Klux"s. It looks to us as though the niggers are the guilty party. On Monday, in the town of Meridian. Miss., while a negro wa on trial for incen diarism, a negro friend shot and killed the presiding Justice. Then a gen eral melee ensued, the crowd of spectators, a uual in mississippi. being weighted with revolvers, and the two negroe-. were killed. Then the Sheriff called a posse to gether and commenced a general arrest of negroes, in the course of which lour more negroes Were killed. One Item. From facts published else where in this is-ne. it will be seen that the success of Ren. Ilolladay 's ticket in this conn)- last June cost the county, or lax pavers, about six thousand dollars in one little item of the railroad tax. That is pretty good for high. We hope the peo ple will remember this next rear. QrESTiox? A gentleman asks us whether it is safe for a man to try a case be fore a Judge who carries a r -ilroad pass in his pocket wherein the railroad Com pany is a party to the suit ? Some of our fiieiyds who had cases in th last term of Coirt may be able to give an answer to this q ties lion. The We.fi Si'is says that Joseph Smith and Squire Johnson have been arrested on a verdict of a co-oners jury, that they had caused the death of a squair by giving her drugged whifcy. Coming. Our Eastern exchanges began coming again last Tuesday. We got some two months old, which i pretty high. Conditions of the State Lands-Great Loss tyittpuo can negligence. From the Mercury. Our attention has lately been, drawn to the condition of the public lands belong ing to the State, and we must confess to great surprise at the utter con:nsion into which they had fa Hen. L ia matter of as tonishment that dnVingeight years of Rad ical rule, or rather misrule, in Oregon, that so little has been d'-methat is right and so much has been done that is wrong. The neglect and malfeasance in office, in the ma"iia"ement ot the State lauds, has not only resulted in delay, but it has produced loss" to the State to the amount ol thou sands of doilais. and we will give some facts about these lauds. THE LNIVEIISITY LANDS Granted to the State for a University, and which amounted to 40.080 acres, were sev eral years ago selected from excellm tracts lying in the Willamette and Unipqm Valleys. A list, of these lands was made and filed in the Surveyor General's office, which was intended as a notification to the United Stales of lands selected by the State for this purpose. This list was after wards transferred to the Oregon City Land Ofiice. It embraced all in that Land Dis trict and also lands in the Reseburg Dis trict, but the Land Office of the latter District was not notified of the selections made in the sourthern part of the State. Nei.herol these Land Offices paid any attention to the interests of I be State in these lands, and they were consequently left open to private tniry as still being public lands ol the United States. These University selections never hay ing beett approved by the Land O tvices in Oregon Were consequently never pre sented for approval at the General Land Office at. Washington. In the mean time our State authorities paid no attention whatever to the subject. The result has been that up to the time when the present State administiatioti came into ofiice not a single acre of this important, grant was vested in the State. In the mean time nearly one-third ol these lands have been taken by pre-emption and homesiead claimants and rail road corporations, and are lost to the State. A leading branch of the work now going on in the Executive office is the ex amination of the old lists of University Selections, releasing all lands which can not be held and making new selections to complete the amount due the State, and making three sets of papers including the same. Oae to be filed in the Land Office ol the District in which the lands are lo cated, one to be filed in the Executive office, and the third to be transmitted to the General Land Office at Washington. Alter the approval of these select. ons. at the Local Land Office and at the General Land Office they are noted as University Lands on the plats of the United States and therefore they ate held as vested ill the State of Oregon. This work has been completed, as to the class of lands located within the Ore gon City Land District, except as to final approval at Washington, which will prob ably be soon accomplished. Next week, Mr. GiliYy. of the Executive ofiice. will prot; -ed to Urseburg to exam ine the lands there and to loca'e and list selections to complete the amount of Uni versity Lauds to be located in the Rose burg Land District. A"d the whole work will be pushed through to an early con clusion. INDEMNITY SCHOOL T.AXD3. The Sixteenth and Thirty sixth sections in each township of the public lands of Oregon were grained to the State fur com mon school purposes ; but in case any of these sections were occupied by bona fide settlers before the survey of the lands, the State was entitled to locate other lands of the United States in lieu of those occupied, to the same amount, and to notify th.' pro per land offices of those so located, and have tin miipi rovt d and seperate from the pubiie Sands so vested in the Slate. These lands selected were called "Indem nity School Lands." These land- were pretty fully selected at one time by Governor Gibbs. in the Oregon City Land Office only, but, were never approved at Washington. Up to t'e time o! the present State administration no selections of this class had been made in the Rosebuivr District, (except, a beginning to locate, which was never ca'ih-d inioel fect.) nor in the La Grande Land Dissriet. So that all the Indemnity School Lands of the Slate have been virtually left, uuse iected. while the valuable lands which the State might have been possessed of. have been dispo.-ed of by lhe United States, to purchasers and railroad companies, and the Oiniunn Scoo Final has brcu dimiu Lilted ut ten .si one hnf its value In the most criminal ueijljrn ce. ot Itadic d Oijh-lats. The Slate has not -mly lost the opportunity of locating the best indemnity lands, but the School Fund has lost, for many ears, the interest on the moneys, which the land would have brought had they been secured at the proper time. THE 500.000 GHAXT. Mopt. of this grant was located six or seven years ago. but by a blunder which cannot be accounted for. over 100.O0J acres-of this class of lands were located in swamp and over l'owed districts to which the State was entitled already un der another grant, ind winch should have been before this location, secured to the State. Rut the location of so much of this grant in swamps was not indicated in the report, of the same to the General Land 0;lice. and they have been approved. The iSlnle has lost b'j this si.ntj'e trans iclum. over one hundred thousand dollars. About 70. 0)0,acres of this grant reniaii.s yet to be approved. SALTSntlXO LANDS 43.080 acres were due? the State with six Salt Spiings. They have not been loca ted within the time required by the Act of Congress granting the r ght. and these lands are lost, unless revived by Congress. LANDS I'Oii I'LBLIO DULDINGS. Ry Act of Congress admitting Oregon. G.100 acres ot land were authorized to be located by the Governor of the State to assist in erecting public buildings. Noth ing has been done to secure thisrrant. It is thought that these lands may yet be locat ed and field by the state, though twelve years have passed since the right accrued'. Steps are being taken to test tbe right of the State to locate these lauds now. Veterans of the Mexicax War, At a meeting of the survivors of the Mexican service, held at Portland, last Saturday an Oregon branch was organized by the selection of the following officers : Pres ident Gen. E. R. S. Canby ; Vice Pres ident Gen. E. Hamilton : Secretary Lu.yJ Rrooke ; Corresponding Secretary Victor Trevitt ; Treasurer Jas. IE Lappeus. The Democrat says : As we go fo press a painful rumor i3 current to the effect that Mr. Abe. Haekle man. while on his way to Wheeler's camp, on the Cascade Mountain Road, was drowu-ed irr attempting to cross the San tiam. We can trace ihe rumor to no re liable foundation, and therefore think it is only a canard." However, we await anxiously for further tidings of the miss ing one.- In Again. -W. C Carter, Esq.. has again become one of the proprietors of the Corvallis Gazelle. -Billy'' is one of the best fellows in the world, but his poli tics have become corrupted since we first knew him. Thanks. Hons. J. S. Smith and J. II. Slater have our thanks lor public documents. COURTESY OF BANCROFT LIBRARY, TIMTytTPC! TTV Pit? r t t-paomt Chaos Come Again- Governor Scott and his negro, scalawag constituency, says the San Francisco b aminer, having " organized hell" in South Carolina now call on Grant to send them troops to disorganize it. The Governor says he has not sufficient troops or suffic ient morieo transport them, and that the Legislature is about to e arrested by the Ku-Ktux. Of course there will be no money in the Treasury so long as the Radical theives carry the keys of the money chest, and if two thirds of the Legislature were hung, nothing more than justice would be meted out to as Tascall) i et ot scoundrels as ever gathered in council. The attempt, however, to saddle he responsibility of these disturbance,. in any other parties than Governor Scott V wn party Mends, is adding falsehood t v illainy. Of course men who are daily outraged, as are the whites of that State, will not tamely submit. They must, in self-defense, organize to resist outrage. Thus wrong begets wrong ; but, of course, in Radical eyes, is all on one side. The fact is, these disturbances are the necessary result ot the contact of whites with semi-barbarous negroes. It is not in the nature of things that they can live peaceably together on terms of equality. There is a natural irrepressible conflict that carrot be reconciled. At l his time South Carolina is under the control of ig norant, arrogant negroes, who have been taught to hate the native whites by the wicked carpet-baggers and scalawags, who made use of them to obtain office and plunder. Matters, instead of "rettin" better, will continue worse, and either the whites must get ur and leave the field to the negroes and permit South Carolin i to become an American Dahomey and be given over to savagry and all the abomi nations incident to it, or Congress will be obliged to take possession of it as abandoned State territory for there is not a republican government there now and mal.e of it a kind of darky rcserva lion, and rule the ebony " wards of the nation" with bayonets and feed them on public grub. That is what it will conic to. Oil and water will not mix. Either the white or black element must go to the wall. Of course the Radicals will try and crush out the former, and that is the object of Governor Scott's call. In the most, cheerful view we may take of things, we see Utile hope for poor, devoted South Carolina. Ibe Fay -Kalis Aifray- Relow we publish a sworn statement from the daughter of Mr. Ralls, which will be found to corroborate the letters hereto fore published. Mr. Ralls also publishes a long letter, in which he charges the se duction of his daughter on Mr. Fay, but as we did not publish Mr. Fay's defense from tLe Tims, we do not deem it just to publish his statement. The affidavit was published in the Hcraht of the 21st inst : STATE OF OREGON". County ol Jackson, i - S. S. I. Hannah A. Ralls, being duly sworn, depose and say that my name is Hannah A Rail: that my age is twenty-one years ; that I have been working lor James 1). Fay. at his hou.-e in Jacksonville, most of my time during the past eighteen months; that about one yur ago James D. Fay and i were engaged to be married : that we occupied looms up stairs, with only a partition separating them: I. the depon ent, further siy that I was delivered of a child, in Mr. Fay's stable, on the morning ol the li'.th ol 1-Vburary, Ls71 ; that said child was begotten by James D. Fay, in his own house, under promise of marriage. I mi ther slate i h it Mr. Fay knew niy fit nation, and advised me to go home and have my mo. her give ine medicine to de stroy said child; that I was confined some two weeks beloie Mr. Fay or I eitlu r ex pected me to be. I also state that Mr. Fay saw me on my way to his stable, to be con fined. I blither state that Mr. Fay and I occupied the same bed the last, time on Sunday night. IYburary 12. 171. I. Hannah A. 'alls, being duly sworn, depose and say that th;; statements set iorlh in the foregoing aflidivit are true. Hannah A. Ralls. Sworn and subscribed to before me, this blh day of March. A. f). LS71. La F. Gall., J. P. Error. The Orejonian of last Wednes day, says that " W. IJ Barlow sued the O. & C. 11. R. Company for damages."' This is a mistake, as the Railtoad Com pany commenced the suit against Mr. Ii.u low. We shall have something to say of this master next week. Retckxixg. V.'e notice among the pas senger list on the steamer which left San Francisco lhe 2Uth inst.. th'..' name of 1I p; J. S. Smith and family. The people of Oregon 1 ave reason to be proud of Mr. Smith as a public servant, and will all unite in saying " well dou'J thou good and laithfttl servant."' The Walla Walla Htutesman says: Judge Boise has decided that the war rants drawn by Sam Mu'y upon Ihe State Treasury, without authority of law. are il legal. JiuE'e Boise must be careful or he will be read out ol the radical camp. A Judge who refuses to sustain bis piny through thick and thin is out of place in the radical organiz ttion. Take a lesson from Judge Deady. who always meets the expectations of the party that owns him. Go to Work. The Washington corres pondent of the Piovidence Journal says the White House has been thronged all day by members of Congres not re-elected, and in want of a good place. Let them go to work and earn an honest living. Xothi.vg. The telegraph has been very silent as to the results ol local elections held in Eastern towns. The reason of that is. that in all cases Uiey have been favor able to the Democrats, by increase'! ma jorities. Redeced. The fare between Portland and San Fruncisco has been reduced to $30 and $... It is stated this was done on account of a rumor that an opposition was about to be put on the route. A State telegram says that S. Booth was shot at Ashland. or the 26th inst., by A. D. Benton. Very little hope for the recovery of Booth was entertained.- A Washington corresponeent says r" Mr. Grant has just let out the contract for governing the newly-erected territory of the District of Columbia to the private banking firm of Jay Cooke & Co. It ap pears that Forney and his friends had been cooking tip a plan to put John info the (iovernorship. but another Cooke came interfering round and spoiled their broth. Telegraphic Clippings. The following proclamation is issued by the President : Wherhas. It is provided in the Consti tution of the United States that the United States shall protect every State in the Union on application ot the Legislature or of the Executive, when the Legislature cannot be 'convened against domestic violence ; and Whereas. It is provided ih the laws of he United States that in cases of insurrec tion in anv SaU or obstruction to laws hereof, it'shall be lawful for the President ot the United States, on application of the Legislature of such State Cf Executive, when the Legislature connot be convened to call for th the militia o1 any State, or States, or employ such part of the land ind naval forces" sis shall be judged neces sary for the purpose of suppressing such nsurrection. or causing the laws to be Inly executed ; and Whereas. 1 haVe received information hat-a combination of armed men. unau thorized bv law. are now distutbing South Carolina, and committing acts of violence in s iul State of a character and to an extent which render 'he power .f the State -and its officers unequal to the task of protecting life and property and se curing public order therein ; and Whereas. The Legislature of that State is not now in session, and cannot be con vened in time to meet the present emer gency. and the Executive ot said State has therefore made application to me for such part of the military force of the United States as may be necessary and adequate to protect s-id Suite and citizens thereof against domestic violence hereinbefore mentioned, and enforce due execution of lhe laws; and as the laws of the United States require that whenever it may be necessary, in the judgment of the Presi dent of the United States to use military force for the puroose aforesaid, he shall forthwith, by proclamation, command such insurgents to disperse and retire peaceably to their respective abodes, within a limited time ; now. therefore I. U. S. Grant. President of the United States, do command persons composin' the unlawful combinations aforesaid, to disperse and retire peaceably to their re spective abodes, w'uhiu twenty days from this date. . . In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and caused the Seal ol the United States to be affixed. Done at the city of Washington, on the 21th day March. IS71. U. S. Grant. President. Washington, March 2.. In the Senate Scott moved an appropriation of SM VOOO. to pay lhe expenses of the investigation of Southern outrages. Eichmono, Va., March 25. Charles T. Friend, a prominent citizen living near Petersburg, was murdered last night by a band of negroes. Memi-his. March 25. A Little Rock Arkansas dispatch says a disgraceful scene occurred last, night in the Lower House of the Legislature." The Clayton ring having a majority carried every measure sent by the Senate", regardless ol rules, law or precedent over the protest of Conserva tives, who. seeing ail lost unless a quorum was defeated, at 11 o'clock a sufficient number had left to leave the House below a quorum. A call ot the House was ordered, doors locked, and the Sergedtii-at.-Arms sent for absentees. Then fol lowed a scene that would have disgraced a town meeting. Whisky iiowed freely, cigars circulated and a dozen members addressed the chair at once. In the midst of all. one member Mason -who could scarcely preserve his equilibrium, was speaking when Barber (coloied) rose to the point of order, and proceeded to ad dress the Chair.' lie continued his re marks in a loud voice. The Chair could not heat- R u ber, and the ie.Mer left his ehair. i dvaneed up the a; near the Spe.tker " Speaker S Stan 1. ud said. " Mr. Wis uishing) "by God. who h is the i floor this drunken man Ma-on or my self. If he h ts not. I will make hi;, v t.ike his seat." adfatieinir towards Mason, and picking up a book and brandishing it over h:s head. At this petal the Speaker succeeded in restoring order. lM)!ANAfoL;s. Ind.. March 25. Thomas Ringsdoraf. of the Sewing Machine Co. here, was shot and killed in a !rug store at Shelby ville. lad., this evening. If is supposed he was k.llcd by Renjovvsky. proprietor of a store, for insulting lan guage used to his (Renjowsky's) wise. Washington. March o'. the President will transmit a report on Ihe San Domingo Commission to Congress at an early da). He does not intend to reeommend action on it during the nier'eni session, but is de sirous that the Contents shrai be re;-d bv the people in order that they r;i 'V tuna from (itlicia! data a judgment of the ques tion Mnder discussion. The Joint High Commission will con clude its labors in a lew weeks, and as surances come from three distinguished and well informed parties that there will be an equitable set: lenu-ut. of matters ia dispute. If this shall be the result, 'h President will send a treaty to the Senate, should that body be in session. Cit aheestox. March 2G. The Tennessee, with the San Domingo Ceinmissionei s on board arrived oil" the bar at daylight tilts morning. The Commissioners and all the party, except t lie scientific corps came ashore and started at once for Washington. Washington". March 27. Mr. Sumner's speech on San Domingo is loner and diirns fied in tone personal allusions being gen erally avoided ; yet, it is a severe arraign ment of tlie President for violation of in ternational law and n-urpation of war power. Sumner states that it is now in evidence belt re th Senate that the navy of the United States, acting under orders from Washington, has been engaged in measures of violence and of belligerent intervention, waging war without au thority of CYngress He says the whole business is aggravated, when it is consid ered that the declared object of this vio lation is the acquisition" ot half an island in the Carribean sea. and siill fiirther. that this violence has been employed' to prop and maintain a weak ruler him self a usurper upholding him in power, that he might sell his country; and sec ondly, that it. h is been employed to men ace the Black Republic of Havti. Evi dence. Sumner asserts, is conclusive that means have been employ ed by the Execu tive to secure the aggrandizement of for eign territory which cannot be justified. A circumstance has been brought fo lisrht which it is understood will be made the suhjeel of Congressional iuve-'igation. It appears that the State of Alabama is entiiled to several thousand acres of Ag ricultural land serin, under act of Con gress, and that Smith, late Governor of that State, visited Washington a year 1120 for the purpose of causing the iu of the scrip. The Commissioner of the Land Office directed the scrip to be made out. but from some niysiericus reason was never issued. A few days ago Governor Lindsay, of Alabama, receive I a commun nication front a gentleman of Ohio charg ing the existence of a conspiracy for withholding this scrip, by which Alabama five per cent, bonds were to be depreciated in Wall street to j0" cents on the dollar, and then bought in by interested parlies, and under State law exchanged for this scrip. In consequence of an examination in the matter had under the auspices of Gov. Lindsay, of Alabama, a package of ecrip h said to have been discovered m Ihe Land Office, all made out. but en dorsed on envelope, as withheld bv direc tion of Senator Warner. The writer of the warning letter from Ohio chartred that ex Governor Srniih and Senator War ner were interested in this stock jobbing conspiracy. It is said ihit ex-Commissioner Wilson knows all about the affair and there is no doubt some curious revel ations of U o, rr.d other land jobs will be made. Washington. March 23.---While the Commission was coining up on the Aquia river, j-esterday, Fred Douglas was de nied a seat at the dinner table on account of his color, by officers of the boat. The Commissioners indignantly left the fable. New York. March 28. The Tribune's Washington special says a rumor is cur rent that the Ad ininisi ration has decided to drop the San Domingo business for the sake of harmonizing the party. The in ference is drawn from the remark of Mor ton in Hie Senate yesterday, that if the Com missioners report unfavorable to an nexation, he should favor the abandon ment of the project. The declaration is thought to be sisiifi cant. in view of the fact that correspond ents with the Commissioners all announce that the report is unanimously in favor of annexation. Another correspondent says it seems to be the general opinion of the Commissioners that annexation is certain to involve the United States in war with Haysi. RaeZ admitted that Cabral con trolled one thousand square miles of Do mmic.i contira.ms. to Hayti, and ac knoAledged that lie could not protect the Commissioners ia a viMf. to that oortion of the island. The impression is that the report of the Commissioners, when pre sented to Congress, will be rather un favorable than otherwise to annexation. Washington. March 2S. In the Senate. Freii,ig!ni)sen obtained ihe 11 aor and spoke i.i eulogy ol President Grant, and criti cised the action of Sumner in precipitat ing this discussion in advance of the re port ot the Commissioners, from which alone Congress and the public could form tin opinion. Sumner briefly defended his course, say ing he had done simply what, Le believed to be rig in. Schurz next addressed the Senate. He did not think the report ol the Commission ers, who had just returned from a pleas ant jaant to San Domingo, would prove influential, either in the Senate or before the country, for lie thought they were al ready e'.ieCiUally disposed of. Howe continued his reply to Sumner's speech of yesterday, and in defence of the President in the San Domingo matter. In coi. elusion, he said the mission of the Re publican party was not coded. In reply to questions by Howe & Stew art. Schurz denied that discretionary pow er was ves;ed in the President, and cited them to the debates of the Senate iu ISo'J. when Ruehanan asked discretionary pow er to protect our citizens in transit over the Isthmus ot Panama. The Senate then indignantly refused. The tact was Presi dent Giant had laden into the mistake of supposing he was the United States ot America, lie defended the course of Sumner, declaring that he deserved the gratitude of the country. He said the de lemJeis ot the ad mi ii is; ra t ion had appar ently acknowledged themselves defeated on constitutional grounds. Hereupon he ptoceedod in a sarcastic manner to com ment upon the speech of Howe, and said it' it were pr.ven that ordeis had been is sued to our naval commanders ia gros.; vi olation of the Cons i.iL ton, then someihing more than mere rhetorical flourishes about Gen. Grant's services, or the Secretary ol S'a;e and navy would be required to uti swer the proof. He argued that under the Coosiiiu-SoiiaJ clause vestir.g in Cong: ess the war making power, th Exe it ive cO.lld not commit an -act ol un.es.s iu case ol actual invasion of the Territory of the United Siates or by expre.-s Congressional authority. li:s' ructions of tiie Presideut to our n aval force, directing .hem in cer tain contingencies to fire upon vessels ol Hay ii a power with which we sire at peace was m.t clearly u;i usurpation of war-ill iking powe . iit"i4uiii.v:.' xv. til sew?. Pauis. March 2 L -A violent scene oc- cuiied at the au-edng o! the Central Coiu iinliee. A member of lite Conim it I ee dil lered from Gen. Lul.ier, Comuiaiuler ot I ae .National Guards. Luitter threw a Cl iir at Ltie Iie.nl of his c.d.eague, for w iicii he was dr.i-t-ted o u ot iLe meeting and iiumedla.eiy tir-posed of from coin m i iid r-ti .p. iMgns oi disatisiaciiuii have been siio'.va am :ig tue adherents of the Cen.ral Committee. Live Luudred Na tional G.iur.is have be 11 disaimed. pAiii.s. -i irch lit) A Wuml special yesterday imei v.ewed the wbo.e Central Joai.'mi tee u the iiolei de llie. Tire members of the Committee organized iu iiii' iti-.-t place on account of information I i:at iii.ers was co-operating with Bis marck lor the u veri i.ro w of Km RepuLhc. evidence ot which Was overwue. tiling, l'iiiers li.id tried to provoke tue Committee to acis ol violence, but mey waited ami t he Li;n.-ell committed the first, outrage. uy attacking Moiiiiiiartre. The object ol uie Coiiiiiiitieu was to secure municipal iighis lor i'as'is. Iree elections and l tie. ao; ii.itui Oi payment of real during the sit ge. to loiui one Republic under tue regime oi a Cinmiiuue wtiicu is to be more compre hensive Ihais O ven as advocaied b' ijiaue and Hugo, and based upon courpuisory education. Tile Cunnuilieo says we ignore tue eis.iilies Ooverualent a. id dec, are all us ac;s null and vo.d. Ere.-li elections will be held, and a new Assembly cboSeu having lis S' at ill I ails. Members of I iu Comm. uee will no-, accept oiiiee in the new government, but will form a Cordon saniluire Having supervisory power over it. The people ot ail r.u.ks are daily of fering thea" services to us. and otfieers are de erting fiom V r -.idles an l placing 1 1 eiusel ves ai- oar U;Sposal. We d. not w .nt any needless eii'.isioti of blood. Gen. 1: u.'.y wil. not be executed, but Ueas. DucioL and Titichu will be, il caught. We have appointed Garibaldi Commander-in-Chief lie will arrive here to morrow. Menoiii and liiccioiti Gari baldi are his aids. liAViiK. M u-'jh 26. Lavouette and three other agents of the Ceu ral Republican Committee of Paris, who came here on a m.s.-ion of agitation, have been arrested. London", March 27. The Te' jruph's special savs the Government at Versailles has. ordered Gurib ilui's arrest on his ap pearance on French soil. Cheinbault, a late prisoner, succeeds to the Ministry o! W;r. It is generally thought that the Government is defunct, and that liners will be made to re.-ign, Aumale succeed ing him. Thiers rays, privately, that when he has one hundred thousand men he will attack Paris. The official journal of the insurgents sas eighteen balalliotis of Nationals out of twenty-four, in Lyons, support the Communes. The rew Government is pro claimed without bloodshed. The election in Paris passed off quietly with an overwhelming Communist-. majoivt.'. The ie.o u lo iary authority is CJiiipletety dominant. ihe ab- duct ion of Saisset. as Mayor, increases th success ot the revolution, which within a week wiil spread to all the towns and rea der the posi.ion of the Government ill the rural dis'iiets tin enable. Rui'.s.sKi,-. March 26. Razaine is going to Franc.', and Le Ikeeuf to the Hague. Revolution is prevailing in Algeria. Vki:sa!U.ks. March 27. The War Min ister has asked Prefects for a batallion of mobilized volunteers from each of the Department, in purt-umce of a law just pissed. These are to be forwarded to Versailles immediately'. Volunteers will receive one snd a half francs daily. The Minister of War appoints oilicers. "IIe ir the Cry that Comes Across the Seat V Rallying song and chorus. Words and Music by Geo. V. Root. Published by Root &. Cady, Chicago. The above is on the title page of a piece of music just received, and is de cidedly iu the right direction. It is no time to cr ticise the later acts of France. She needs our help and should have it tor j hnm initv's sake, even if she h id not llelTlout the friendly hand waea our YOUNG, No. 416 Spruoc street above Fourth, daya were dark." i Philadelphia. Jfoviriiis Only two radicaLCongressr bem arrested so far tiVs session-one to bigamy, and the other for forgery-bur? then, it must be remembered that arrert are not made in Congress for bribery W. lslattve stealing, and miscellaneous cor ruption. Cocldxt See it. The Committee 6 whom was referred the cdaim of W. Vo Rhinehart. for arresting Henry Mnlke for treasor?." refused to pav ihS) Maioi his little bill. " J Eastern papers say that the Radical, convinced that their teachings have for ever disgusted the people of the country, are organizing secret societies similar to the know nothing order, in tbe hope of again carrying the popular vpte. . Wood's Household Magazine, for March, morehan sustains its well earned reputation of being a valuable (House hold Magazine Its pages present quite an improved appearance, the type nt) be ing so compact; it has the vfT.t of making the print appear larger and mor distmct. Price SI. Address S. S. Wood fc Co., Xewburgh. X. V. A liuidi--(I discuses rimy proceed from one soaice, a diseased or debilitated stomach. ,"o human being can be healthy when diges tion is di-oide-ed. Tons the VtfaAch a-.-J liver and regulate the bowels with Walker's Vi.getable Vinegar, Hitters, anj the work of assimilation and excretiou wii go bravely oa. This vital elixir coiapicrs the causes of all physical irregularities, py uisuring pei feet digestion and a proper fluvr otbile.it u.'Suns pure blood, a vigorous circu atioq. and the prompt dischargtTuf all waste mutter from the svstem." To Ciuca Cough, to rclie.-e all irrita trons of the throat, to prevent hoarseness, to restore perfect soundness and hea:th to the most delicate organization of the human, frame the Lungs, use U'izta 's Ualmnc rf H il l C'uira. Don't think because snufTs an 1 strong or poisonous solutions will not cure Catarilr th it vm -a iiiot be ev.'c. The I'roja ieti.r of Dr. Sfige's Catarrh Remedy offers reward fur a case of Catarrh which he cun nnt care. It costs b it iiftv cents tor a puck age which prepares 'e lull pint. Sai.! by druggists, ( send sixty cents to Dr. Ii. V. Pierce, lytj Seneca street, Buffalo, .. Y., and sret it through t mi. ma if. A .pamphlet ficc. The Genuint; tuts Dr. Pierce's private L. sf. Government Stamjt on each package". 1ST OF LETTERS REMAINING I" j the Post aflice at Oreg-u City, Ai-fH 1-r ls;i. Armstrmicr, Richard, Bores, Chas, Bell. John, IKt'n.ird-.Elizaheth T U ll, John If, Boz-irdus. L.-.vis If, Chapaum, V S Rev, Eckhof, F, Foster. SimueJ, FeiHimr, J jscnii. Hall, .1 S, iiilgries, Henry, Jones, A J, .Mot', Ellen Mrs Sn.'l. J .mos II, Sheppard. S.'oSjs, li tailed for, plcc Had. I (:!(. m. Z-b;;Ion. Let hi, Elzt ar, Peters. J i fin, 2 R -s, J B, Wisdem, N. se sav ad vt-rtised. J. M. BACUN, P. M. n G WILLIAM DAVIDSON, REZAL ESTATE DEALER; PORTLAND, OREGON. REAL ESTATE in iUU CITY and E ST PORTLAND, in the most dtsirhle localities. consi.-t in:r of I.u'fS, HALK BLOCKS a'.d STvJ ULS ; also BLOCKS; HOUSES and Q. IMPROVED FARMS, rind valuable nnrnlfiva-.-d LANDS, located iu ALL parts ,f the JSTAi'E fur SALE. REAL ESTATE and other Property purchased for Con esDoiuicnts, in this t'HV and Miroughout the STATES uihi TERRI-'fORIf-S. wirli g!-e:ir i;i:c and on the iiioi ADVANTAGEOUS TERMS. - HOUSE and STORES LEAPED. LOANS NEGOTIATED, and CLAIMS OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS I'M) SI 1'V.'01 LEOTEM. A d a Ce oral FINANCIAL and AG EN C V BUSIN Ess ti anacted. G O AGENTS of this OFFICE in nil the ITIES arm TOWNS iu the St A I E. will rf-ceiv- d..'seri:.ti.i:S ot FARM PROPERTY and;f-rward the same to the above address; Feb. 71. O ! F;EAL ESTATE EXCHANGE, PORTLAND. - - ORES02J. GEO. JL. CEJimY, DEALER IN REAL ESTATE AND OTHER INVESTMENTS- Commissioner Selecting Swamp arid Ovei-fio-.vod Lands. Farm Liuds sold and purchasers obtained for ail kinds of landed property. Valaab'e securities transferred in exchange for real estate. . L-.aris vezotiited on property, and title? examined mid der."i'!iiined. O Commissions solicited and executed with fid dii y and promptness. , , OFFICE No. u O.i rtcr's Building, corner of Aider and Front streets. l h. 3, 1 -7o;tf' q Willamette Lfal-c .o. 151. o, T Meets every Saturday evening, at the rocma i-vE. corner of Mam and Fifth street. at 7 f-9. o'clock. Visiting members attend. By order of ire invited to Wft. T. 3Isiltnomali I,oi-j; No. 1, A. F.nmt e A. 31. Holds its regular e nrmuniea V'tl''ns otl t!iu and Third Salvr- f liu in each month, at 7 o'clock fn m die -i.th d' September to the 20th Marth", and 7 o'clock from the 2ot!i March to the 2oth of September. Breth ren :n good stauding ar? invited to attend. Dec. -2-3.1 S70, By order of V. M. Kcbercn Degree LctTge o. 2, 1. O. O. F Hcct on the Second and Fourth TUESDAY EVEXLXGS. ot each month, at 7 o'clock, in O ld Fellows Hall. Members of the Degree are invited to" attend. By order of N. G. Oregon L.oige A"t. 3, I. O. of O. K.-- .--'vi v'- Meets every Thursday even tS ino at 7 o'clock, in Odd Fellow's "'vS II all. Mains er-t. Members of the Order ars invited to attend By order. S. ii. CrrvrPF.i) IIaniis and Face, sore lips, dry-" nes-s ot the skin, ,Vc, xc, cured at once by liegeman's Camphor leu with Glycerine. it keeps the hands soft in all weatht r. See that you get liegeman's. S ! 1 by all drug gists, only 2." cents. MuinnTacture'd only Jay liegeman & Co., Chem sis and Druggists," New York. decli-ly ElAnRSAGE GU3DS.- EVERY ONE MLS OWN DOCTOR. A private instructor f r married persons or tbosj abint to be married, bnth male and 1'i-in de, in ev?:ything concerning the phys iology and re'atifsns of our sexual system, . and the production an.i prevention of off spring, iiudii' ing all the new discoveries' nerer befee driven in the English language, by WM. YOUNG, M. D. This' is really a val uable and interesting work. It is written in plain language for the general reader, and" is illustrated' with numerous engravings". All young married people, or those conteiu plati ig marriage, and'Baving the least im pediment to married l.fe, should read thi t.ook. It discloses secrets' that every one should be acquainted with ; still it is a book that must be locked up and not lie about- the i:)usa It w il tie sent to any address receipt of fifty cents. Address Dr. VM