rV'-. Li- 4, HTTb Y ' .; ,, - I"' 'A''.? "jPI " L ' i i :OL..3, JST0. 25. DALLAS, OREGON, SATURDAY. AUGUST 24, 1872. WHOLE NO. 129. tl n a; a v w 1 ;3 , t ! I i -- i I- ! 1 ftr3J It'r r a lift it iw b I inn If Issued Every Saturday Korning, at DalisTPolk bounty, 'Oregon. ;i?r cl sullivan BbpiuteTonj SUBSCRIPTION KATES. NtE C?OPIES-Dne Year, $2 OOV'Six Months, f 1 JS. fttMMootbv$l 00, -, '."For lu6of ten ofaoro $1 T5 per an n of. lSmbci;ijiU mutt bejwid (ny t advance TWTO'i" .: .' Oa tqaare (10 lines orless, first inaeEtWf 3 00 tf.anh BnhaAouent insertion.................... 1 00 WWH -V W tT- - ----- A lihcr&l -deduction will be made to Quar terly and yearly advertisers. "' Professional cards will be inserted at $12 00 pt snnajov .;):.; . Transient advertisements must be paid for la 'advance to insure publication. All other ad 'erasing bills must be paid quarterly. , Lejal tenders taken at their current value. Blanks and Job Work of every description furnished at low rates on short notice. Extra liitliicciiicnts lor Clubbing! DEHOREST'3 ILLUSTRATED MONTHLY A splendid offer to our Subscriber? : We will send the above Popular ami Valuable ilnjjv aine. for one year with the $3 0 Curomo. r gcther with our paper fr only $5 ; or.f..r $1 0 cxtrC Hfawttha'a Woiitir, r for $ j 50 wt will vend Deuiorest's M.nthlj lr one year, tu.th Chr..m.s. and th Orkgos Hkihbiicas. Or for $30w vill ei.d tLe , Kti'CBt ic .n and Deuiorest's Monthly for one year. xThis is a Splendid (Tliam-c to secure the b-t Ma.iraiine, Eleint Chr:u'H. and a jjood County Paper tr nearly half ihe value. tiul the amount to thi-i. office, and the Magazine and Cbrouios will be promptly forw-ir le l. W. tJ K N S INli S n R M O II E ST, S."8, Ilroadtcay, .N'eio Yurk. THE ILLUSTRATED ' PIIKENOLOrt KA L JOl'UXAL, is in every repuct a Fir.t Class Mainline. Hi articles are ot th.j hihei intercjit to all. ltte i he what tve are mi l how to make the innM f o'irelves. The inf. rui -ion it coutii'is on the Lwn of Life mid llciltd is well w irth the price of the M .ri7ine t every Family. It i. puhU-h ; I at $ 5 0 a rear. It a epeci.il arrangement we are enabh-d ti offt-r the PaK so logical Jotuvi. s u Pretii'i-im t--r a new f ubscrtber. t- tlrt OuK.r. iN Kkitblic. or will forni-h the Phrkx i.o(;ir vi. Joi sts ai. mi Ukkoon Rkpi bi-ICAS -tUi.trh.-r for $M0 We conitucnd the Jot'ii.iAL to all who waul u gttui Magazine". Tilton On i rant's Ilv iioniinatioii. FEARFUL SCOUIUU.MJ OF TIIK NF.IM) TIST. Now th.it the Hnl.vlelphri Convpn tion has hushed its hmfin.r over the . Presulent's renominati)n, ami submit itself in sifence to the soUcr oi-inl thoujrht ot the American people, let n eonsiJer what was iu du'y. ami how it left i his undone. It ouht to have resented and defeated the President's attempt to re-nominate himself; instead of which it recame the very insrrutm nt for accomplishinf thn scheme. It ouht to have impeached him at the bar of pub lie opinion for his numerous violations of law instead of which it sutlers theo outrages tb go urieondemncd. Itouhtio have exposed the frauds pcrpetrattd in his custom-houses, instead of which it blindly shut its eyos to its enormities. It ouirht to have denounced his double dealing with the civil service reform, instead of which it has made this re form impossibfe hy enacting the two term principle. It ought to have pro tested against his federal intrusions in to'local affairs, instead of which it ;, in a dp a , high-sounding declaration, in favor both 6f atatc-rfghfs '"""and t!inr vi . olator. . It ought to have d oounccd Tit . . r O . the corrupt incumbents whom t ho Vrrs . ldent has retained in otiice, lntea l oh which it became an accomplice for their retention iri' power during another fonr years. It ought to have commiserated ; the country on the administration 'is ig nomiuious surrender to England, in stead of which it calks this shamelesR ncss an "honorable compromise." It ought to have la;d bare the failure of the President's policy'with the Indians, '.- instead of which it took no notice of ""the rVcent "br6bdyk rnassacres on the Jrontie, or Gen Sheridan's report of wWidVspread . Indian " . hostilities.; It ought to have rebuked the President's attempt, thiouirh his partisans in Con greSSj lO BireiCii mama. w uici South, instead of which it silently join ed in the scheme to carry i he n-xt pres idential electiorfat the f)oint of the lay onet- It OU2hV tp K.-ive given a stinging , rebuke to Jth 'Pendent's extraordinary ' ' lavisnqep of public offices amon hi re'arivtjs, instead of which .it sees in the nepotism of a ruler no crime, against the state. , - ' ' ' ; WIO jTHE-DELEO ATE3 WERE. Three-fourths of the Philadelphia '' delegates consisted of those 1 lte c)abUcans who oace sympathetically aid m - w ' ed arid abetted the impeachment ot Andrew Johnson flr violating ihe ten ure of office law- hut . (J rant's offences auainst the laws have been more nu merous than Joimson's. If there was legal ,s;ro4iud., for the imftfiichment, .of the one, there is far more 'for the im peachment of thp :othcr. We challenge even, Mr, Boutwejl,. with his cehsltal rhetoric borrowed frotti;the hwWin he sky," to prove (j rant less guihy tn lJ6lrnfedn aktdrr ioltfttorif law: ilt was in violation of faw that the Preai-' dent, without the auihorrzauon of Qon gresR, rttif hrvm the'knavyin a warlike act against Hati. It Was in 'violatioh of jaw that he sold arms to one Europe an nation to be used against another; It waslalvToiatioti of la w tTiat he 'dUp fid of the Secor and Chorpenning cla Uus. ttis now in daily and notorious viola tion of law that he surrounds himself with military instead of civil seeretar les. THE PRESIDENT'S VIOLATIOK OF LAW. These are tpes of his violations of the plain letter of written statutes. Seores of eases can he added wherein h- has violated what Montesq-iieu called- The spirit of the laws." lie has violated the spirit of the Supreme Ltw by usurp pinr for him-clt function which that eharter reserves to tin states alofi' He hn.s vi dated self iovernmMit by suspend t lie operation ofhci! li.v H ha violated pubiie liberty by intruding hitnelf into political eouventi oh to coo trol them in t'e interest of hi adminis tration atid renonun ttiori. lie h is vi olated the moral s -ne of the people by ueh arhii rar lip!aoemcnts from po sition as lb at of Mr tnnner from rh chairmanship of the ('ornmifto on For ei:nIlelations and by such retenfiou- in .ffi ;e 'is tint of Leet aiol Stocking and o'h?r leeches on the pub't- rcvcill" lie has vio!.ifel e onto n niof ility' b . t.kiitg ptivafe ojjts and rewardi-itr tin .'iver with pubile crnobiao'tjfs. He bis viol if el tii oif usii! of .oir'e manly breed'tii; fiy eofetioj: new-paef offices an ! demandi'iy: "the te'voval offensive tiifiir- who have fa-Men in? his difivor by criticism on his in il idminUtr ati -n Ho h is vil;tt.l tti common s'and ird of" priva'. cbar ieti r fiy over addiction to the wine-cup Til K SILLY EXECUriVK The shullo est of ail answet s o these charges is that b wi r' nominate 1 unifrmo'tslv lnt unmiinon.ly b vthotni Not by the repiblieati iartv whih he h is tevored in twain, like a bouse divide l ajninsf i'selt. I'vcr 'man who has partisans and no j.ub man is without them em tret unanimous vote forai his own friends Three vears airo the President had a party; now he ha': only a part of one. That noble, roy d. invincible party no longer exists- The President Ins put ao end to it. Almost any oilier man C oild -have united if. Almost no other could have divided it. To v chosen chief was reserved the sad distinction of destroying it. He has wrought more mischief to our politic than ten Andrew Johnsons. Nav, more if tho House and Senate had contiud in the me sensitive and inflamed tenmer toward a law-breakini: Executive a they mtio ifestcd in May, 1S0S, President Grant would have been impeached at Xash iuton instead of being renominated at Philadelphia. tl HIS NOMINATION A CALAMITY - There are two osprec'.s in w II rciuimiuutiuii is especially a calatuify to thfc'fonhtry;onc a syd blow at ofiici ijhon c-ty, the other as a blow at popular lib erty j- Al,t9p'iblic.. honesty, if an' Amori- cin President can enrich a whole army r relatives ny oesfowing on inem tne public funds, why may not other pub lic officers do the same' For instauce. if the President gives lucrative posts to his father, his brother, his brothers-in-law, his cousins, his nephews, and his wife's connections, why not Mr. Touias Murphy in like manner call to gether the whole circle of his kith and kin, and portion out among them the salaried and fat places of tho Custom Ho jsc? Why may not Mr. Patrick Jones do the same with the clerkships of the Post Office ? Why not Mr. Casey tho same at New Orleans? Why not every other principle office holder the same everywhere so that tho 50.01)0 offices in the gift of the Administration shall thus be considered the family property of a. few favored appointees? In other words, why should not the whole goverumeut be turned at once (like tho presidency itself) into a con tcotal giftcnterpri.se. ? - As to public liberty, if in time of peace the military power is to ro'gn su pfenio over the civil, then farewell re publicanism! Indeed, the republican party itself, as one reads its debates in . " ', - v - A Congress, has large y lo t (or etiitt-d , its instiuct lor republicanism Mr. Sumner's fearful indictment of the President, accompanied as it was with proofs and specifications, was auswered how? By au admission of 'ho guilty facts, coupled with tho stouriiug ex tcuuatiou that they were frivolou-. Is there uepotisin? 'c, .but it is a trifling priuiir. Is Uier(' gift takiug? Ves, but it f ajjvenial oHyuce. Is, there lave break iug? tV but it js , of "nq cppsiquence Li kes Senator Carpcuteri the al'Uiladel phia jou i volition rf cynidered jf ta'eae ihiugs -uorthv olr4otjce!8 t$, w v- i XIBETYt SMOTnERK ; How ijuenche J ' is J the ancient'spirit ofSaken tibe-ty! Huw our forefathers, both ot Old England and New, would; have ieeuted such encroachments by; the govetnmeut of tho people ! Johiij ilumpdoir", rather thau pay ol hhidiu ; aud l - pence for ship m moy, made j a revolution in England. Ttrc Bostooi-j aus rather than pay 0 pence per pouuu on tea, made a revolution iu America.' The geuius ot Liberty is like a sensitive plant it uted not be stuck, but ou'.y' touched, to show when it is wouuded. Preside ut (iraut iia viO ated the laws more tiigraiillj thaii iving Charles i or tiootge III; and it argues a deadliest to the cutluenlot liberty to ulli.r ctl Violation U pa! umeuktd. 1 Ha it tuiue, then, to this that the American peop e uio ki tar oubstrv icni lo the cxtuug nuliiary ugtme u!? iu Le lud.licrcut to tho sutie;naey ol citi law f .Nut so. They ate g -Uhsr-tug wrath against (he day ot wr.it li. buups ihe ptesent tendency of tie .vdmitiisira'.iou is rebuked auU reversed w, predict. Ititt it (iiatitis rc elected - wh.chuiiy ll-aveii to.bid! the Vjry men who were lately chCuntig Um re i inoiati oi will o iteuiandlo hts lai ,i. ueiiiocot mi all I'll e WAit he continued, j O.ni tiling moie. War against the .South uoi ot bayonets, iul ot pissioj! y; nuue the K- w o is the hecci ary re-t ill td tiaiit, s teno.i.in atiou. ."iiitoi .Wollou sliuek. the keynote Vd i lie liiaiil caiiipuiun wlien he i-ad. "It ia i lie oid battle over auio PCtWCCU tiC o..y in blue and the toys in gry ' lit nil S in i i h ba t oreiviuiy said tbc iliitij in unuiher form, The aoti siavcry tut tie is not yet fought ou(." ."v the n noMii.ii ion uf thu man w ho iit.eied the UuXMi, il us have peuCc, is lo serve an the bais ol a renewal jot war. J he ptMiii-c t" peace is tobc cut dowu like a shriveled stalk cast j us fuel into a le-lighted tire, ijuch la the tuol'at ol l'hliadeiphui. TItk; FULfc.DM..N si CMNDtTtuN. Not suet', to our minds, is the true philosophy ot tho hour. We believe I hat the ant i-slavery battle im$ been fought out. Siavcry is abolished ; and the Thirteenth Amendment inikesjits re-enactment impos-.ble. Ihe ne-to has been invested with the right of suffrage ; and the Fourteenth and Fif teenth Amendments makes ins disen franchise unlit impotole. Legal y the negro stands exactly where t tic wite man dit'iuctaliywhtvcr stigma rests upon him is far more oppressive iu tho .Voi lb thau iu the South. jMr. Sumnci's civil r gbts bill is more need ed here thau there. For iustahcfej o iMethodist bishop, rmly a week or-jtwo ago.protested iu Hie, Tribune against : the' exuiusiou of, a, colored . Methydis, preacher from the ciimmon wayfarer's privilege, of refreshment at tlie 1) rlon .tavern in rultou Alrrket. that Same; bisop; and the entire General Confer- euee of that same denomination,! was sitting in the cuurehlieai city ofj thu Nortfi, iu whose public schoo s colored children and white are forbidden to associate! If therefore what Oerrit Smith calls auti slavery battle is not yet fought out, its chief remaining battle ground is in ihe North rather tlmn h.. S..nth Th. ro u mi PTistin.r difference of opinion couceruiug the negro in which the South takes one side, and the North the other rp 10 1 array one section of the union against uie ouier on mo nero tiuesuon w gj, the j(lte of tho State election, with create a fa he issue which hug no xwt- anthin like the rapidity with which ence in reality In reviving thisf an- it iaa riSCII gir,c0 the adjournment of tagoiiLsiii; the Philadelphia Oonveutiou ; jatj,ore Convention as iaereditahle ha failed to adjust itself to tho cir-; ai lt m;ly appear The (irantire tintc cumstauccd of the time. Feigmjd and j tiCkct will be elecled by such an iueon ficticious is the contest which Senator 'fiUJerablo ntnj-.rity, it elected at all, that Morton prefigure when he re paints in Novetnhor the Statu will be added to the hoys in hlue us once nioro ..fighting tlc Greeley column. The acce.sions tho boys in gray. The boys in blue arc especially noticeable iu the smaller Iwve put off their blue ; the boys in towns iu the iutcrior. gray tavo put off their gray.j Ihe former union soldiers now mingle ; freely wui uiuiryieuow cuizens oi tne ouum, i. . i.. ! 1 1 . - . i- . . L.t ... . I. and the Confederate soldiers now do tho same in tho North. From the mo- ment when there was an end to tho political distinction between ft white ,j uua u hlack, iiotii that moment there was an end of the partizau dis tiction betweeu h blue coat and a gray.- OUR MOTTO. The Convention, recognizing this great 'fact, "built upon the evtot in marble.". It dand to say that thi re we no longer a war, no longer a rebellion, no longestraitor. It buried the past. Us mot Lo waslet bygones be by goues." Ut ciasjpcd hands across the bloody chasm. f '; - i . .WHAT TIE ORANTITES TROPOSE TO , DO. ' f. , - , - - - , jj - f , But the Philadelphia Confentron, not content to see ihe' iouth "accepting the verdict of the war, not content to sue the former slaveholders subscribing to the doctrit.e of political equality, not content to see the original secess ionists pledgciug themselves to tho per petual union of these States, not-con tent to see the rebels volunteering to keep inviolate the uational debt, not content to sec the whole South joyfully accepting the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendment and seekiug to be at peace not only with the negro lyt with the North, not content with alt this, the Philadelphia t Convention pioposes to tight the finished battle over again; re-converting our present friends into our former foes ; re-imp. riling the peace and safety of the negro by m ncessarially creating a political antag onism against him iu tho South ; aud rc-kiudluig a quenched animosity be t'i"!ii the sections at a moment when both are equa ly auiious to he of one mind and heart. In other words, in a city of brotherly love the Philadel phia Convention inaugurated a policy of uutraurual strife. THE PARALLEL. Let us, therefore, draw a parallel between the two Republican parties. Cincinnati, ftcsh from the people, initiated a long needed movement ot re lorm ; Philadelphia, drawing its breath itotu the public o'hees, clamored like eljqacis iu a theater fur a continuetice of thu iidministr.it ion and the re-ar -poitituient ot its liliy thousand paid stipendiaries Ctueinnuii declared for he oue-term pnuciple; Philadelphia was as huh as the grave concerning this central and main-spring measure of civil service reform Cincinnati demanded that our foreign pol ey should ask for iiolhi .g that was not right, aud submit to nothing lhat was wrong ; Pniiadelphia, forgetting this maxim u? Jack sou, connived at the Alabama sur. tender, and gave this ignominy the name of honor Cincinnati protested against elevating the military power over civil law; Philadelphia entertained itseif with a picture of liratit on horse back, as typical of the administration which it seeks to maintain in power. Cincinnati denounced the abuses which the government his feared to investi gate ; Philadelphia was pre-arranged uiech tuisiu, hubordlnating the individ ual frcoioiu of its delegates to effect a Unanimity which did not eiist, by an enginery which it-ef was one of the chief abuses of which the adminisira turn has been gui'ty. Cincinnati was tor universal amnesty ; Philadelphia was for Hunting this clemency Cm cinuati denounced the distribution of public offices among persons who had giei gifts to ti e President j Philadel plita represented the interests of these givers aud receivers. . Cincinnati de nounced, nepotism iPhi'adciphia baud aged its eyes iu blindness to, it Chin cinnati indicted the President as u violator of law; Philadelphia gave a ' fyenplMiit'n i-omplimcnt to hi practical ( wistJom Cincinnati proposes to unite 1 t he Nortrfm!oOTtTrr-W I asis of j liberty, equality; and fraternity PhiU 1 mielphia determines to tear opc u alresh I healed wounds of the iwo s ctious. j Cincinnati is for peace ; iMnl.idclphia i br w:r- Fellow couiitryuien choose, ! between them I A Vermont corresnondent of the New I f, ! York Tribune writer . If the Liberal tiJo conlinuu:J TiAWA uuti September A vote f-T Grant is a vote for the wn-,.ilnan 4,r ... iy..:.. f,.- h n..r. - ' ... r ial benefit of Gen. Grant and his fain. Hy. '"Nepotisui." Let us. have a 1 peico. I'liOFKsSIONAL CARDS, ,i V IS A 1 Ti K X V UA1 ftfu. SAL O 0 N. fl IIC FIKP.T QUALITY OP 1. Winen. Liquern, Ales Porter. Cigars ete.. etc.. dipen.l at Una Temple of IWcbui. All the Mat papera kept on file in tbo reading ruotu- Call and stun hin, Win Clinghaa Pro. W. H. R UtlELl, Has focate.l in Dallftg, "tnrl is rca-Ij to atteml b U tbow requiring bis aoi.-t ince Artificial Teeth of the very fineet and Lest kind. " ' Satiifuctioa guaranteed, or no charges made. N.w is the time to call on the Doctor. Office, oppoaite Kincaid'a Photogfapfcic Gal lery. - 37-tr .1011 J. IIAI.V, f Vy A: Con nel I c v a t - Law. DALLAM, OK !.(; . Will prat tlec in the Curta of Record and In tciiur Court. Collectioua attended to promptly. OFFICE In the Court House. 41-tf J. C. GRUBBS, M. DM PHYSICIAN AND -UH;PC.Vf Offeri bin Servicer to the Citixcns Dallas and Vicinity. OFFICEA NICHOLS' Drug Store. 34-tf J.U.SITES.xM.D Phyficiao and Surgeon Dallae Oregoa OF FIVE t Residence 24 tf .1. A. A IPIjISjSATI2, A ITy A: CouiiicIlor at Law, OFFICE IN COURT HOCSE, DALLAS, POLK COUNTY, OREGON. 29-tf Dn. Sage's CATnnn"RF.MKTr.$jOO reward fr an ineurl.d cr. Sold by drugift, or t'V muil. 7 criog. PamphL-t free Address K. V. Praree.M. D., Bufl-l.i.N , V. I. C. MUIjIjIVAIV, Attorney & Counsellor-At-Law, Dallas, flrcgon, Will practice in all the CourU of the Sute. 1 K. B riSKK. CM. HALL. Dim. PISKO cti HALL, OFFICE No I MOORES' BLOCK, a!eni.. Oregon lo if rui:i:LV patkoaizi: HOaE INDUSTRY. rniltS IS THE ONLY WAY TO INSURE X, ihe pcrmtneut growth of any cummuaity. In fupplyiug our homed with PJ t VI fintti, well a other things, it Fbonld b practiced. I have on hand a full H.-i-rluieut of. everything in thii hue. Shop near Wnjmire'a mill. Dallas, Orvicoo W, C. WILLS. It tf . OEM" SALOON IAll STKEEX, IXDE- r1bo bent of wines, liquors, nlet, porters and i TEMPERANCE COK RIALS always on hand, tiutt Havana fiara. Free rcadintr rooms attached to the saloon. R. M. Beau Pr. ; t. - i 27. tf OKO. H. JCySKS JONES A PATTPRSON, Real Estate, Iiisiirancc ' ?' '" : AND General Aftents, SALEM, OREGON Prompt attention given to the General Agency 'Uuniuesi. 'It2f U. W.HOIlART. Dallas j. xv. BonAier Buena Vista. I Look Out lb i the l.ocomo live When the Bell Rins! Since the O. C. Railroad lias been completed to Corneliu.4, and prospects of its speedy approach to Dallas and thence to Buena Vinta, be up with the times by patronizing home INDUfcTHY AND P.NTPKPHISE. Why send your money out of the State, and use inferior articles, when you can get the areuuine "Home Manufactured" article by call PROFESSIONAL C A ltDS, t&C, IVUW GROCERY. For everything in the GROCERY LfNfi gO tO , ; fil. C. BROWN'S, MAIN 8THCGT, DALLAS. M ....... L He has on hand a full tupply, 'which ke offeri cheaper thaa any other Store la DaiU. 2-tf PHOTOGliiPIIS, AMBROTYPEaj AND AU Style of Pictures of the best flu lab, TAKEN BY J. II. K INC AID, ' 11 A VINO ALL LATE IMPROVEMENTS IM for taking picture, invite the patrn ae ot tne, public rle5 call . at the poote ifraphiaUallery, Main atrret, oppite Dr. Ka bell'e offie, Dallas. - A r : kX 4i ltf G. B. STfliLEgi- DEALER IN V .Groc e ries, PROVISIONS, Ci?ai and Tobacco, WOOD AND WILLOW WARE &c DALLAS. OREGON. DALLAS LIVERY, FEED h SALE STABLEll Cor. Malu and Court Streets, Thos. G. Richmond, Proprietor. HAVING PURCHASED THE ABOVE Stand of Mr. A. 11. Whitley, we have re Gtted and re stocked it in such a manner ae will satisfactorily meet every want of the com munity. Iluggies, single or double, Hacks, Con cord Wagons, etc., etc.. Furnished at all hoars, day or night, oa short notice. Superior Saddle Horses, let by tlx Day or week. TERMS, REASOHAIILE ' 4 T. O. RICHMOND EOL1 STORE. 1 A VINO PURCHASED A LARGE i"ND II complete Stock of GENERAL MER CHANDIZE, consisting in part of Dry Ooods, Groceries J Glass, 4ueensiTare, Tobacco, Ciprars, And all articles fonnd id a GENERAL VARI ETY bTORE, I would resitfully call the attention of the Public to my Establishment. Highest Cash price paid for , , 1 UKS AND PELTRY. t ; , IU A.J.AY, . , : Eola, Polk Co., Ogn, lo-tf J MUSIC ! MUSIC !' PROF. RUT AN, ? t ill commence his cla?ses in rocal and In f f strnincntal music at the M E Church ba tbo fitst Monday in October next , ' !i . 24 if IISM)MilO HOTICE. Notice is hereby given that the 'partnership ncrefoforof existing under the name of Nich ols d- Coad baa been dissolved. ' The business wilt hereafter be continued voder the firm of Nichols St, Hyde. All persons knowing tbftn selvos indebted to the old, firm, will please call and tettlo either by note or coin." " ! i B F Nichols.? r h SamU Coad. -"'"' 27 S-m OF WORK AT THE LOWEST LTV TNG PRICES, CAN BE HAD RV CALLING ON. ; t RI.TIE & RACn E I 4 DERy STEAM JOB PRINTERS, 03 Front Street, Portland," Oregon. A LAROE ASSORTMENT of BLANKS Circuit. Countv. and Justices' Court, eon i Unt'v on hand. Also, Bonds, Deeds, Mortgaf and Blanks for use in Bankruptcy eases. Advertise i f - . t- , By using Lotterheads, billhor li ilrca. htrs, priuted envelopes, to. Give us !a call et sen i in youx order, ; 4JJ - 1 6 1! v-S v: i . "-