WILLAMETTE FARMER: PORTLAND, OREGON, FEBRUARY 24, 1882 ' rv """r4r a: ' ,.- Issued tvery Wek by the WILLAMETTE FA Km It riBLlSIIIM' CO. f M i.a S5 TERMS OF SUHSCnilTION. MM rear, (TcmUfe paid). In advance JU months, (Pottag paid), in advance . &) thin fix months will be, per month . . ADVERSIS1NO RATES: Advertisements ill be lnrtnl, provldlnf tn art I expectable, at the following Uble o( nXf i Om Inch of space per month -w1 Fare inches of space per raonth J.J -Oae-hall column per month 1. w y column per month SOW pfl.in.u aaIh n( fm An tmilleation. Publication Office: No. Hwhlajton Street. lp lain, room No. 5 and Al rintini.iw AoriEJir.T. rnrJj-' Fruit Recorder and Cott-ve Gardener i the Jxt Journal on fruits, cardens nJ floers, published U tb United States, pnee i. As this i a standaid Journal that ecry fiinil.v should read, we hate made axranfemcntf to club with it and to lurniih Its prem iums to our own subscriber on the folio Inc terms: Any peron lhfnc to renew subscription, who pay $t.U',CT anv ne subscriber who semi; ui S3.1J ill receive the KitxtK and Fruit Iteconler one year, and can hare any one of the premiums he may name alo. Any subriber ho has already paid up. can send us 75c more and hate the ltecorder one J ear and a prem lam. Any person ho will send 2.50 for a n sub scriber, can have the Fmlt Keeorder and either re of thf premiums as compensation for trouble in procuring BJ a Dew subscriber. Tiie premiums are: t ii plants of the famous bharp!e strawberry. 6 plant" of the new early and most productive, large, buck cap raspberry known, the Tvler. t -6 plant of Tajlors prolific, the hardiest and rjxt prolific blackberry known. 7 S stron? well rooted, hardy and beautiful roe. 1 Helena Honeysuckle, the mcxl beautiful frown. 1J Purdy's Small Fruit Infractor, 64 pwre. It Ule Mte ewrrann oi James A. liarnem. 50TE Simply cie the number opposite the prem' Smi and don't describe it. CASH IN ADVANCE. From this time we thai adhere strictly to the Cash System. All papers will be punc tually discontinued when subscriptions expire unless they have been renewed. No exceptions can be made, as the mailing flerk will obey orders and follow an invaria ble rule. To old and new subscribers we say : With prompt collections we can and will make a better newspaper and give better satisfaction. Notices will be mailed a month before sub Kriptions expire, notifying subscribers of that act and requesting them to renew. Some interesting communications are crowd ed out of this issue, but will appear next week. We have written a paper on "The Tariff, " (a accordance with the request of Elder Sweeney, but have not room for it this week. The only excuse we can make for the un fairness of some of our editorial brethren it, that they are running a political game just new, and riding anti-monoply as a hobby. So they abuse any one who takes reasonable tad conservative ground. We hope they will 11 be as reliably anti-monopoly after the elec tion, but we calmly predict that when their fame hall have been played out they will eool off amazingly, while the Farmer will be the most reliable friend the good cause will bare to depend upon. Speculation co.nxer.vi.vc the world's pros pect for bretdstutfi in 18S2 seem to be gener ally made by those interested in that line of business and the general impression seems to be that there will be abundant supplies from various sources. The European journals try (0 make out that supplies from Russia, India, tad the other regions that produce surplus grain will hold American wheat in check, but when the time comes we expect to see the United States take the lead as usual. It is far too long before harvest to say with any certainty what the world's supply will be, but 0 far indications are favorable to good harvests. The world is horrified to know that perse cution of the Jews in Ruisia has been carried to for months, atter a fashion that a Sioux Indian could not make more barbarous. In trer forty cities the Jewish quarters have been pillaged and often burned; hundreds, if not thousands of murders have been perpetrated Mid everywhere women have been outraged and often have died in consequence. These fact are published in detail by responsible journals and the charge is made that Russian I soldiers have often assisted the rioter, while their officers and the government refuse to interfere to protect the despised Jews. These atrocities carry the world back to the age of burbaris m . The Editor of the Farmer believes he can beat satisfy the minds of anti-monopolists by jNtetiug them, and will be glad to do so on any occasion when they hold county or gen oral gatherings. He stands ready for the fierc- at inquisition and will sustain on the rostrum what he has written in his office. His inter Mtl are identified with the producers of the North West. While he does not fr Tor undue excitement or thn unreason able assertions of Elliott, he always has and always will uphold the right of the people to Ojptrol the franchises they grant. The cor porations arc necessary to us and have rights, but our business is to sustain the rights of the people. A fair mind will consider the rights of both. TV! IjO not understand that the most ultra anti-monopolist expects to do anything more than regulate fares and freights by proper legislation. That has always been our posi tion and no man can show a single line in the Farmer to the contrary. To support that yiew it is not necessary to make out that Vil Jard is a swindler or to tell lies about his pro ject. Such excitement disgusts reasonable men and does no good. A legislative inquiry can call out all the facts necessary and legis lative action can control all such franchises. This region wants roads and must have them. We have waited thirty-two years to seo such development as now is in progress and the Wjllauktti Farmer doesn't hesitate to Bay that it is glad the time has'come, "If that is reason, make tho most of it," IS COMPETITION POSSIBLE? Chicago has four outlets to (he Atlan'ic in shape of as many railroad lines, and as these could not agrvo how they would divide the spoil, they have lately been at "war" with each other, and freights have been as low as five cents a huslicl, on wheat and corn, for one thousand miles' carriage. Now the belligcr cut lines havo made peace and formed "a pool" that is to la t for five years, which means that they agree to carry for 'JO cents a hundred pounds to New York, IS cents to Philadelphia, and IT cents to Raltiniore, but the interesting feature comes in, that illus trates the fertility of expecting competition from railroads, that during the next five years these thtvc great lines are to liiake montly ad justment of their business and their profits are U be divided pro nita. It looks as if l'Jc a bushel was cheap ttinugh for carrying corn from Chicago to New York, but the railroads have fixed it to suit themselves. Many are deceived with the idea that rail road competition is pnsime. loitiuuiation is possible, but competition will prove a delu sion. We have Untight over this subject freely of late, and taking this action of thf Eastern trunk lines and the combination of the three trunk lines to the Pacific, that has lately been effected as we have before stated, we arrive at the conclusion that no good re sults are to lc expected from railroad compe tition under ordinary circumstances, and the question arrives: now can any country or region be lest benefitted by railroad construc tion ? We answer as follows: If a harmonioui railroad system can be made to answer the needs of this region, it will be better for us than to have conflicting and competing lines that will right ahile, and then combine and "pool their earnings," as those great Eastern roads have done. Rut those roads lead to different points and rail- ...3. A.l...l - 1l f .1 . 1 M I luuus Hit; uc-ucu iu an ui wicin, wnue nere ue have the natural port of the Columbia river that invites the commerce of the interior. If a perfect railroad system is made to concentrate here, and is built and operated in an econom ical roanuer, no one will deny that it can do the business cheaper than two competing lines can do it. If two great systems should center at Portland they would eventually make a combination and pool their earning? on the basis of at least paying interest in the cost of both, and the expense of managing, operating and repairing two lines will be more than for one system so planned as to reach every pro ductive region to best advantage. Take the position of the most advanced anti-monopolists; thit eventually government shall own the roads. If that time comes, we uill hae to buy all these lines at their cost, and that will be an unnecessary tax. Take the more conservative ground, that National and State laws should reeulate fares and freights. Even then the rates will have to bo assessed with a view to paying interest on cost of all these roads, and on the expense of repairing and operating them, uhich will cost producers and consumers more than one sys tem would, well planned, built at reasonable cost, and operated under one capable manage ment. Six different corporations are talked of aB competing for the trade of the Columbia re gion j let us suppose they have made no com bination, and that each is reaching out for business. The North Pacific has its main line down the north bank of the Columbia and its road over the mountains from the Sound ; the O. R. 4 N. Co. controls the south bank of the Columbia and has wide reaching branches; the Oregon Short line crosres Middle Oregon, and enters the Willamette valley, and comes to Portland by the Minto pass ; the Oregon Pa cific comes from Boise, enters Linn county by the Sweet Home pass, and goes to Yaquina ; the Central Pacific sends up its branch road from Nevada. All of these corporations strive to build branches to reach the productive regions east of the mountaias and of this val ley. Is it for our good to have all these en terprises carried through to completion ! Submit this question to the popular vote and the majority of people will say ; "Let's have them all. If they can afford to build them we can stand it." Let us see whether we can "stand it." Suppose these six systems to be all competing under different manage ments. Is it not evident that there would 1 at least two or three times as much money ex pended in tmildinij roads as would be necessa ry ! If these opposing interests finally agre to combine and "pool their earnings," will not each one insist on making dividends on its full cost? To operate these roads efficient ly, will it not require a very unnecessary out lay ! In brief, if more'roads are built than we need, will we not, in one wav or another have to pay for building them and tor keep ing them running when built? At the present timo the Villard interest controls the Northern Pacific, the 0. R. & N, Co., the Oregon and California, and the nar row gaugo roads. If that or any other combi nation of capital will construct such roads as the country needs and can support, and will be satisfied to make a fair profit on their in vestments, it will be of more benefit to us, and cost us less, than if all these lines shall build their roads and afterwards combine as they inevitably will to make tho people sup port them. Even the Legislature could not ask them to take less than interett on the money expended, and that would he more than we could pay. We aruue from the standpoint that the peo ple, through the Legislature, have tne power to regulate the franchises they have granted. If we are to pay a fair piofit on investments, it will permanently and unjustly tax us to have such investments made on an extravagant basis. Rut you say : Villard will not build roads where ho h not interested j ho will not build the road to Yaquina ? If any short line needs to bo ijuilt. it will bo easy for thoso intcreatcd to get it built. If nicatis raiso money or plrdpo their credit for enough to constitute a margin, to cnhlo tlirm tn licirrott mnnm' inftt as liltint .Inra fn build anv road that cmim-rco need. And I nM" wll k"'l' "!' tho "Mwilion to irk on .. l .1 1 be e.vinl anil locks at tho (JimciiIch oi tnu ka ovule, if I . . . I IMPnOVlNQ RIVER NAVIGATION. Wo rauuotseo the object of Pnttlnml Jour when built, State Legislation can prov necessary, fot interchange of commerce ! tweeu such needed branch or short lines and the trunk lines of the country, on a fair kiiis: but wo understand that railroad are always willing to make Mich interchange in other States and would naturally do so here. We need railroads, but only such as we have use for. They should bo built not on speculation but on business principles. If the Oregon Pacific can connect Middlo Oregon with the East and with the Willamette val ley, and open a new port on the coast, it will offer manifest advantages. Wo aro not depre cating the building of any ro.vls that are nreded, but putting before the people a sut' gisticn that we may get "too much of a good thing," more than we can afford to pay for; for, when all is said and dour, whatever com pany kocs through the formality of buildu g railroads, the peoplo will have to pay fur them, or they never 'Till bo paid for. FACTS ABOUT WHEAT AND TONNAGE- The opinion waa freely expressed, last Fall, that freights would be lower in the Spring, perhaps in February, and that was induce ment for many farmers and otheis to hold their wheat, expectini; that prices abroad would hold up and perhaps improve later in the seasou. Some features of the situation are especially interesting, and we mil pro ceed to sum them up that all interested can draw their own conclusions. Oregon and Washington prove to have less wheat for export than we all figured last Fall. The common estimate placed the whole surplus from the Columbia river at 300,000 tous, and some figured that we should have .'IV.'O.OOO tons to export this season, but we now only '250,000 tons as tho probable exact stir plus duiing the current harvest year. So we come out of the "little end of the horn' in our figuring, that too when we had left over about 1,500,000 bushels from 1SS0. California went the other way. It was as serted that she would not have over one mil lion tons of wheat to ship, but tho wheat sur plus, including the quantity held oier fiom 1S&0, which waa nearly as much as the sur plus from the last crop, will average I,."00,000 tons, and the entire surplus from the Pacific States will not fall much short of l.'JoO.OOO tons, or ."iO.OOO.OOO bushels of heat. Tim is sixty per cent moie than was shipped from San Francisco and tho Columbia river lat year, and that year our tonnage was largely in excess of any former year. Last Fall it was impossible to believe that we could get shipping to carry off the sup posed surplus, and already we seo abundance of freighting at our command, and that too, when the surplus of California is largely more than was expected. Freights hare lately declined contiderably and will probably come down still lower. Wheat was worth 82 J cents a bushel at Salem at one time last Fall, when freights were one half higher than they are to-day and if Eng lish prices had remained at their highest fig ure in the Fall, wheat would now be worth $1.00 to 1.12 per bushel through the Wil lamette Valley. This last item shows how near we came to having a good market at this time. All that we anticipated concerning freights is being realized, but the decline in breadstuff comes very unpleasantly to disturb our hopes. Tho man who holds wheat says : "Will wheat go higher or lower ?" Thit is what no human foresight can anticipate, but it is not very dangerous to hold wheat a month or two longer. It is for the purpose of answering such questions that we recite all these conditions the present year, so that every man can un- derttand the full situation and judge for himself. lumbia. It puU them under iinpiitat.oii of wishing to defeat any poisihln competition in freights, which ii probably not the object they have in view. Portland ii desirous of having the water way from the ocian to her hare made as iH-rfectHs human ellort can do it, and it is vcrv evident that people lino oppose outlay by government on the upper river, hopinir to havu more means placed by (.'(in gress tv tho credit of tho lower ricr im provement fund and the improvement of the Columbia Kir. It wou'd look better if the tnattt r wero put in that shape as if it were more necessary just now to improve the Iwr than to work on the canal at tho Cascades. Hut tho people of the Upper Columbia are impatient of opposition to tho only project that can ultimately give them competition in freights. They c.itct tho canal and locks at the Cascades first, and the cuial and locks at the Dalles afterwards. They know that the government is able to accomplish it all, and expect it all to bo done. Any public man w ho will tako tlio poaition that work nt tho Cas cade is a waste of money, will find his caret r ended iu a summary way. We do not expect ever to see the benefits of the Columbia river improvement, but our young men, and thoae in life's prime ought to seo it, and a wise K1 ley looks forward for generations. The work could le all doun in a few years if Congress could be mado to sec its ncceiwity. Portland must not stand in tho way and use its millions to ag-r-iudi70 judf at thn ex pense of tho rest vt tho Columbia region. When Mr. Villard addressed the Hoard o( Trade he said that Portland was able lo make the liver navigable for lU own benefit. Major Thompson w rites to the Hoard of Trade that ho is working for a large appropriation for the improvement of tho bar, because that Is too Lig a job for Portland to undertake, and he doesn't care so much about an appropriation to improve tho river bars, because that is within thu means of Portland to tecoinplish. Mr. Villard anil Mayor Thompson are cor net in demanding that Portland shall work out its own saKation to a certain extent. ine minions acquired lieie have in great measure come from tho producers of this region, and capital can afford to protect itself by such improvements of the river as com merce needs. Production looks on the shallow and dangerous liar as a tax it must pay; the same it true of tho obstructions of tho Upper Columbia. Tho good ro.ults that have fol lowed the opening of navigation on tho Wil- lamette answer all that can bo -uid ai-ainst opening theColuiiilita ni the same manner. TIIE DUTY Of CITIZENBHIP. PROGRESS OF DEVELOPMENT. THE DOOM OP POLYQAMY. opening Yaquina to commerce will benefit the After all these year, snd after the evils and horrors of Mormonism have shocked the world beyond forbearance, there seems a probability that a law will pass Congress suf ficiently strict and full enough in its powers to deal a death blow to polvgamy. We hear already that the Mormon delegate, the many married Cannon, is in despair because this bill passed the Senate, and the rest of us can congratulate ourselves that having passed the Senate and received the plaudits of the nation and the world, it cannot fail to pass the House. The bill seems to meet every possiblo re quirement to be effective; all men who are guilty of polvgamy, or who cohabit with more than one woman, are not only punished as criminals, but are disfranchised and incapable of holding office. The political existence of Utah is abolished the instant the act goes into effect, as the ulective offices are all declared vacant and the government of the territory is vested in a commission of five persons, to be appointed by the President, with tho consent of the Senate. This commission shall ap point to minor positions and administer the laws until a Legislature shall bo elected under this act by voters who are not polygamists. Polygamy or bigamy is also mado punishable as a criminal offense, and polygamists are not eligible to (it as jurors. It is not believed that Mormonism can out last polygamy and the lots of political power. This bill is intended to deal with it firmly and show to the world that Mormonism is no loncer to defy all law and propriety. We shall hear of wailing and gnashim of teeth at Utah, but the situation will admit of no equivocation. With tho full intent ond force of the government to aid them, tho "Gen tiles" will assert themselves, and tho nou polygamous Mormons will ho more independ ent. This act will also encourage a good class of people to ftcttlo in Utah. It is to bo hoped that the passage of this bill will check the growth of Mormonism in New Mexico, No Willamette valley, Villard cannot prevent its vada, Arizona, Idaho and elsewhere, whero it being done, and it only requires that men of ha been gaiuing a frothold. We announced in last issue news received just as we were going to press, that the Sound region was to be advantaged by the building of a railroad from Tacoma to Seattle, a dis tance of forty rniUs along the shore. The attorney for tho Northern Pacific road, Mr. James McNaught, of Seattle, was in this city last week and showed us tho evidence that the work is to bo pushed through immediate ly by the Oregon and Trans-continental Com pany. It seems to bo tho object of this cor poration to own the controlling interest in the Northern Pacific, Railway and Navigation and Oregon Improvement Companies, ard to build such branch roads and extensions of the Northern Pacific as that Company is not authorized to construct under its charter. It it a question whether the Northern Pacific can build further down the Sound after mak ing a terminus at Tacoma. Although it is mid winter, the work ot rail road construction is being pushed in every direction. Hundreds of hands and a great outfit of munitions and tools have been sent south and work is now being done beyond Roseburg. We also learn that the Central Pacific is working north from Redding. We may look for connection with California by the end of IsS.i, though no promises are made. Tho Northern Pacific has had 1,500 men at work all Winter, on tho Clarke's Fork divis ion, in Northern Mantana, and we learn that tho samo company has arranged to get im mense supplies by the Utah Northern road to usu in the construction of work in Central Montana. All that human energy can do will be done to push work at both ends. Contracts have been let by the Railway and Navigation Company for (-railing the road over the Kluo Mountains to ('rand Ronde Valley, which will require heavy work. It has been asserted that the Oregon Short Line, to connect 1 laker City with the Union Pacific road at Granger, in Wyoming, would be com pleted this season, but that will not be ac complished as neither of the corporations seem ablo to reach Ilaker City in 1882. It remains to be seen what the Oregon Pa cific will accomplish in 1S82. We do not understand that they have definite plans fur ther than to connect tide water on Yaquina Ray with the railroad system of the Wil lamette Valley as soon as possible. This should bo accomplished by September, if the work is pushed as the other companies are pushing their lines. Tho farmers of Linn, Lano and Benton counties aro looking with much expectation to the furnishing of another outlet for their products, and also hope the Oregon Pacific will carry out tho promise of building a line through Middlo Orcpon, with Eastern connection via Iioise City, It seems that tho topography of Middle Oregon is not unfavorable to such a lino of railroad. Unless some great financial crush comes to destroy confidence, wo may expect all these great enterprises to succeed within two years. Tho most reasonable opponents of monopoly seem to ngreu that wo need theso roads and should do nothing to embarrass their con struction, and when they aro completed wo can talco whatever steps aro necessary to pro tect ourcelvcs against iiiiduu exact! -.nu. It will bo pciftctly safo, however, to elect a Legislature that can bo depended on to meet any emergency that may ariso. Only four mouths, and even Ica-i time, will iiitrtumo lief oio thu hii'iiliUI election of thu Statu of Oregon. Already wo lit ur thu x)lit' lo .il win uhoon in thu distance!. Not thu war cues of thu embattled people, but thn an iioiiucpiiu'iitt of thu politicians who uoiiliilcut ly proe t run thu political machine to suit thrmselvis. Go to thu Kilitical center nf any county in tint Statu and rrmaiii quietly ob servant a short while, and you will perccivs that a set of old political hacks aro talking up matters in thu intercut of some ring oi clique, who imagine they own this or that party, .Tins uo mo is thu casu in Marion county, where wo occasionally go, ami whero wn na turally havu know lidgu of rings and clique, and where wo have always fought thrill. When there thn other day wo heard tho names of people of that county talked of lor nllico, who could never bu nominated for position by tho intelligent inassrs of voters, but who aru intriguing to got a nomination by any means, believing that party fueling and macliliiu drill will elect them if so nominated. Thu sninn is trim here in Portland, whero men nru puttini; up their game for ollico as co lly ns they bar ter for leal catatu, mid expect to get a clean titlu from thu peoplu if they can run their wires, so as to manipulate thu conventions. Eight years ago, tho Wn.iaMi.TTK Fahmku ted thu van of an liidecndcut (Militical move ment that wis ctedltaulo to the pi-opln. Good men of all putlc jollied It, and nitli a littlo cat her start it would h.xvo swept tho State. As it was, it controlled tho Igislaturu and thwarted many schemes. Ih.it movement hrnucht reasonable men, who had differed lHilitically, into harmony, and cooled and re freshed thu jtolitical atmosphere for years af terwards. This ear theru la much less indit. ical rancor in thu popular mind than usual, but there is no talk of Independence. Then is no piohahility that men will break loose from political organizations, ami the political games must all bo pUvd for what tlu-y aro worth. Tho Wu.HMirrTK PauMr.u doc not pro wo to be jurtisan. It has faith in thn peo ple but not in H)htlcal artlt-s. It Is disposed to freely discuss any situation that ansrs, and seek for a rwncdy for existing uvilt. Political parties, as they aro constituted, arti "evil, wnl that continually." Parties are a nrcrasily, but the moment onu is nrganiz! wilitical sharpers step to tho front and manipulate them in the interest of sellislmess. There aro always leading minds who control popular fa vor, and whoso control is not alwsya honest. Tho great majority of tho people gtt their politics as they do their groceries ami other warr, on trust. They are swayed t.y stronirtr minds; men of opuUr manners, who cultivate public favor as a trade, take all tho respon. hility of thinking ami acting off thu minds ot their adlu-rmt; lead thciii to thu tulitical contest in organized battalion and vntc them solidly, in phalanx form, dead against their own best interests. Tho truth is, that American liberty i oftnn a tremendous farce. A wise a.ul paternal despotism is comfortable alongside of it, and a respectable constitutional monarchy shin's by comparison. England holds lur railroad and telegraph system iu check, owns tho tele graphs and controls thu railroads, but in tho United States thu railroad and Udegraph mo nopolies are more powerful than thu English monarchy and twrliament combined. In Eng land tho evils of a depraved civil service wero reformed by one administration- yes, by one of the greatest aristocrats who ever governed England whilu to-dav our own country is cursed with the most despicable, civil service known outside of Turkey. Spain and Austria and Russia havo a better system, and Franco and Germany are vastly superior. Theru ru ten minions of voter in thn Uni ted States who imagine thoy are thu "sov ereign people," but they are only puppet in tho hands of ten thousand demagogues who rule tho laud. Theso demagogues havo their willing, and perhaps: hired agents in every neighborhood, who managa tho primaries, and having owu the seed they know what the harvet will bu. If a ring is formed, it is in the interest of machinations that aro past finding out by tho honest and credulous voter. The village ring has wide ramifications ; somo Senatorial or Gubcrnatiorial ospuaut is tho Paul who plants, and soinu political ring or monopoly combination is thu Axdloa who waters and sprouts thu sued. The county convention follow ; tho Statu convention and National convention aro simply the result of the village primaries through tho land, and our liberties are a mockery, because the best citizen despises thu tricks that rulu tho pri maries, anil so stays away, and lets tho trick- iters "run tho machine." Ono of our sweetest poet has pictured the effect of tho ballot iu thu hands of freemen, that falls as silently "As snowllak't falls upon tho sod, nut executes tho ireumans will As lightning docs thu will of God." Itut unhappily for American liberty, too of ton the ballot goes astray and forges lightning that is destructive to thu rights of tho people. Our Statu is not yet in thu condition that California is placed by a monopoly thot brooks no criticism, and which, as Judge Hoisu says. takes nnu-fifth of its yearly profits of g'J-J . 000,000 from thu truflic of thu North Pacific. Wo havo independent minds among us, and no power can imposu upon us if tho peoplu of both political organizations will attend tho primaries, and put only honest ami competent men up for office. It is nioro important to at tend tho primaries than to voto on election day, just as it is more important to put your seed iu well than to harvest it. Thcro is no recourse, after thu nominations aiu iniulo, One ounco of prevention is worth a pound of cure. So our advico is, that in uve'iy precinct in Urcgon nil tho voters uinliu it n conscien tious duty to attend tho piimuiica, M jf y(m find that any suspijioiis "slatu" ha boon Hindu, don't liusitato to "smash" it. If any man wants nllico, nominato soum onu nlso, It has always licen our principle that all tho capahlii mid disinterested men at tlio prima, lies, nnd that will bo death to nil rings ,n,i monopolies. Keep all nspirnntn in t tin hack.. giouiidt don't let any candidate for ollico show hi hum! without liresklng it. If honest ,i capnblii representative of tho peoplu mntn convention and select good mini for .lci, not t becan so they want ollico, but because the pro. pie choose them, wo need Imvu no fear of tU consequence. If a competent liiisltnr, mints next Fall, elected to rupirscnt the po, pie, and not known a thn representative ol ring and demagogue and ollleoseokers, )), will havu no trouble in choosing somo good man to repromnt Oregon in thn United Ktstti Sunoto. Such men can go to work deliberate, ly tn frnmu all iifcessary law to protect tlia people. Thn long and thu short of it Is, that tlit pcgplo of Oregon are master of their own ilestliiie. If they exercise their privilege a voter wisely, thuy can csta'ilislt hero as good government a thu world know. During many year wo havu continually tt theso fact biifora our render, and endeavored to impress iihjii their mind thu importaiica of a pi-jper exercise nf thu duty of cltlrenslilp, THE 0UE00H PAClt'lO RAILROAD. Wn learn, through iixchsuge at Albany and Corvalll, that the Oregon Pacific Rail, road Comaiiy I making all picparatlon to put their road through as soon as pnssililo from Yaquina Hay to this valliy, and that material and equipment arc laing provided for thu ua of thu road when constructed Tho company u also lookinu up thu Ut location for a bridgo acioaa thu Willamette river at or mar Albany, and making proposition U the county authorities to construct a doubln bndgu acros that ner, we suppose (or the accommodation of ordinary travel a well a railroad tram. Thu same, authority say the company is already looking to tho construc tion of it road across thn mountains toward Middlo Oregon. It really teem a if those who doubted tho intention of this compan to push its nterprine, a ha been talktd of, am to be agreeably disappointed, for many who wuh th project will havo felt douht alxiut It tin-celt. Tint importance of Oil enti rprise, simply a mean of developing another shipping poit, cannot be overestimated for thu farmer of the Willamette valley, who dclre to lj ihdepciid- A cut of thu exaction of Portland and tho ei crsiivo tax of thn river and luir pilotage and towagn system that really oppresses our com merce. Tho construction of thu road to Ya qtiiua mean tho improvement of that harbor, so a to accommodate vessels fitted to move our grain and Dour and other prixlucta, It will also connect with this valley and with that port, a largo and productive region in Southern Wasco and Grant counties that now i utilized only for grazing purpose, but which will invite ngriciiltuial development as soon a it can poasea transportation facllltioi. During the Fall wu interviewed Mr. Sum merville, of Pruierville, and gathered from him many interesting fact concerning that region, which we gavn to tho publio at that timo. Wo especially consulted Mr. Summer villo concerning tho lay of the country with reect to the construction of a railroad on tho line proiiotcd by tho Oregon Pacific, ami learned from him that tlm muting conditions ant favorable to thn construction of such a road o far a appearance indicate. Ho say thn routu will naturally follow around the southern spur of the Hlue mountain, and will develop tho Malheur country well as tho Crooked River country, croMing tho Cas cade by one of tho Sautlam poaaos. A yet no other railroad offer to go to the relief ol that middU region of Oregon, and by i doing thu Oregon Pacific will not only make the development of that wide region possible, but will bring it into friendly oom mercisl relations with tho Willamette valley. It trad it will also naturally go to build up the commercial importaucu of Yaquina a tho outlet for Its surplus product. We can see material advantage to follow tho construction of thu Oregon Pacific, and hnpo to find tho expectation realized of tho thousands inter ested iu its completion. 1 A Railroad from Kllckllat to Yakima. Wo lately had a call from Mr. Wash, editor ami publisher of thu (ioldemlalo (VoiWif, ono of thn best local journals in tho UpMtr country. Ho rays peoplu there look for thu speedy con struction of a railroad to intersect Yakima valley and thu Klickitat valley, with terminal point nt Ainsworth on thn east and Klickitat Landing on the wet, to reach which the road will follow tho Klickitat river to its mouth, ten miles bulow Dalle City. When this road is built it will open to producer an extensive region that will swell greatly our export pro ducts. Surveyor am now in the field locat ing the proposed line of road. TllK Albany Democrat ayi Sam Clarko goes after the Anti- Monopoly movement by nbiisimz S. G. Elliott. He may kill oil a doon of Elliott', and the anti - mo nopoliats will still prosper. Tho organization in tin county uiimhnr among its members thu very liest inuii no havu. They oro mini of avcrugu intellect, good suno, and aro well enough posted on what I going on in our country, to that thuy am ablo to conduct the bilsiuiHs of Ungues mill work for tho object of their organization without tho help of Mr, Elliott, or any other single individual. Thu Democrat is corruot iu its assertions that tho anti -monopolist of Linn county aro ablu to conduct the business of the league without Elliott. It does us gnat wrona in "aying that wo oppose nnti-nionopoly, anti' wo requust it to uithor show ono word.stlioro wo do so, or do us justice in saying'it was mi takun. Farmer of Linn comity, who mail this loiirnal, should rocognlzo that out of ro spnet for thitiii wn havu ox posed Elliott, Wo bulievu in tho fminurs but not in Elliott. good citizen has to do, is to ulcct honest and April, Multnomah Pomona arance. This (.'rango mot last Saturday at East Port land Grnngo Hall and officer fr $& wcro installed by Judgu llohe, Miistor of'tho Htato Giuiigo. Tho grango ad join nod to "meet iiuxfc tliiiuitt thu naiiiu plaoo tho third Saturday of