3U " 0 t-- V V o O O 's) o O O o G 0 o O o o o o o 1 (SljciUcckln 4;utcvprisc. OFFICIAL PVPCK FO CLACKAMAS COUNTT. Oreoo City, Oregon , April 12, 1872. Friday DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET. Presidential Electors, GEO. It. HELM, of Linn County. N. II. GATES, of Wasco County. L. F. LAXE, of Dougl.19 County. lor Congress, JOHE BURNETT, of Benton. I'or Judge of First District, P. P. PRIM, of Jackson County District Attorneys, 1st. District J. It. Xirl, of Jackson. 21. District C. AV. KMch, of Lane. Sd. District J. J. Shaw. 4th. Dist. C. 15. Bellinger, of Portland. 5th. District IV. B. L.Hwtll, of Grant. Clackamas County Ticket. For State Senrtor, J o n X M Y E R a. For Representatives, R. SHIPLE J. II. MART IX, JOSEPH LINGO. Sheriff A. F. HEDGES. County Clerk ROBERT F. CAUFIEI.D. Cotintv Commissioners WM. SHARP, TOIIX SAW TELL. Treasurer T. J. McCAKVER- School Superintendent A. NOLTXER. Assessor R. X. WORSII AM. Surveyor JOSEPH A. BURNETT. Coroner DR. II. .VAFFARRAXS. Our Candidates. The nominations made by the Pemo- cratic convention are at our masthead. I faving; received them by telegraph just prior to gotrg to press we are precluded fromQiny lengthy comments. The ticket is a good one, and it is the duty of every Democrat to do his utmost to secure its triumphant election. What it Cost. The election of tlic Radical tick et in tl lis county two years ago cost the tax-payers about six thous and dollars. Mr. Ilnlladny was assessed so that his taxes amounted to a little over six thousand dollars, but the generosity of our county officials, and probably as an ac knowledgement for his past favors, they set aside his assessment and o ordered a new one. Iy this his assessment was so reduced that in stead of paying over six thous and dollars, he paid about tico hundred. This, we presume, was done to repay him for the money he advanced to carry the county. "Will the tax-payers now endorse the party which took from the county treasury this sum? The tax on the present year's assess ment not yet paid, and as Mr. Ilolladay owns the Radical party, and they are relying on him to fur nish the means coin to carry this county with next June, the people may rest assured he will never be required to pay the tax. o "We are informed that he has refus 0 ed to pay it. Why has there been no effort made to collect it? The thing is plain. It never will be done as long as the Radicals hold power in the count-. lie owns them and they do his bidding. Do other tax-payers propose to pay the expenses of the Radical party in elections? This they do when they vote the Radical ticket. 3Ir. Ilolladay only advances the money, and when his taxes become due, it is generously given back to him, and the other tax-payers are called upon to make up the amount. Are the people of Clackamas coun ty SomrC L endorse such outrages upon them by voting the Ben. Ilolladay ticket next June? From the head to the bottom of the Rad ical ticket they belong to him, and they are to do his will when they are; elected. Let the voters look at the past acts of the Radicals in this county and if they do not wish longer to pay the taxes for the Railroad King, vote against even man on his ticket. O o o Tax ox Tvpk and Papki:. One third of the present price of paper and type is for protection. Paper was worth ten years ago one-third less than to-day, and so was type. And this one-third is for protection, or taxes as it is called. The news paper press should keep a look-out for the gentlemen in Congress who oppose the bill of lion. Daniel W. Voorhees, ot Indiana, to place type and printing) material on the Tariff! free list. The People of this conn- try are not in favor ot putting high taxes upon education. f-- f A Probable Kxplanation. It is a well known fact that Mr. Ilolladay lias purchased the con trolling interest in the Radical party of Oregon, and has taken formal possession of the concern, and proposes to run it to suit him self this spring. He has made his boasts that he will carry the State, and it is charged that the Radical nominee for Congress had to give side pledges to hira before he was nominated. Mr. Ilolladay has nothing to ask of Oregon t justify him to expend the largt sums necessary to carry this State, but he has a higher and greatc scheme to accomplish. lie hay favors to ask of Congress and these he cannot get unless he shows a record of his "loyalty" to the party in power. lie wants ad ditional subsidies for his mail steamships from San Francisco to Japan, to enable him to bring to our shores more "heathen Chinee" to compete with and under-work our white laborers. This little scheme has been pending in the present Congress, but it was de feated. He will now make a des perate effort to can y Oregon, and then demand his price. The fol lowing dispatch to the Xew York World, from "Washington, under date of the 20th of March, explains this matter; and the voters of Ore gon t-hould consider well before they cast their votes for men who are known to belong to him, and who are pledged before their elec tion to advance his personal inter ests. It is a well-known fact that the Radicals have no hope of suc cess without the railroad and steamship King, and hence they have given him a bill of sale of the party organization. The dispatch says : The protracted struggle in the House over the inauguration of a subsidiary pol icy for steamship lines was brought to an end in committee of the whole to-day, and the amendment, to the postal bill to in crease the subsidy to $1,000,000 per an num for the Pacific mail steamship line between Cal'fornia and Japan was voted down by yeas S7, njs 92 a sharp, close vote; but nevertheless a victory against the scheme that brought down the Demo cratic side in applause. Not only the floor ot the House, but the galleries, the lobbies, and the telegraph offices manifest ed the greatet possible interest and excite ment as the vcte progressed, and when it was over the telegraph was exceedingly busy for fifteen or twenty minutes with dispatches for Wall 'street announcing the result. It was evidently the most exciting vote taken this session, as the votes taken in committee of the whole are taken by tellers instead of by yeaVand nays. It is quite impossible to give an analysts of the vote, but The count shows that fourteen Democrats voted for the subsidy and about twenty Republicans against it. Those Democrats who voted tor it are as follows: Messrs. Potter. Brooks. Perry, Carroll, Townsend, Warren, and Willi ur.s. of New York ; Sloss, of Alabama; Ken dall, of Nevada; Wad Jell, of North Caro lina ; Connor, of Texas; Swann o! Mary land; Sutherland, of Michigan; and Bar nnm. of Connecticut. Theoniv Democratic member from the Pacific Coast Slater, 4k ( )regon--gave a plucky role against it. The total number of members absent, paired, and not voting was sixty-four, from which fact the friends of the subsidy reason that they will be abl to win when the question comes up again in the House on a yea and nay vote. The next move ment in its support is to be made in the Senate, where land grabs and subsidies go through with great ease. Ocn Fkk. Our worthy Radical County Court appropriated the moneys on hand at the close of last year by some of the road su pervisors to pay them for extra la bor, while they made these very districts pay a tax to the county fund to pay for road work in other districts, which had no surplus on hand. To this kind of work we entered our objections, and we have the satisfaction of knowing that they have been heeded, and at the last term of Court the follow in order was entered : "The Supervisors of Road Districts Nos. 1. S and 38 having been lieretofore at the Feb. term. 1872. ordered to retain surplus money collected by them to pav them for extra labor performed during the year for said districts, and the Court being satis fied that said funds so collected by said supervisors belonged to the districts res pectively as per amount reported. It is therefore ordered and adjudged that the Clerk issue orders on the Treasurer in fa vor of the said districts respectively for the amounts allowed to be retained for extra Tabor.' Road districts Xo. 1, S and 33, may consider themselves in our debt for getting this money back for them. "We ask no fee, but sim ply hope these road districts will acknowledge our services in the case in their behalf. AYnx Canvass. The Jfercuri states npon the authority of Gov ernor G rover, that he will stump the entire State between this and the election, lie will make it mighty warm for the Radicals, having in his possession, and com prehending the magnitude of Rad ical rascalities in our own State affairs, and ho is fully competent to explain them to the full compre hension of our citizens. JIe will give a good account of his? stew ardship, and show the malicious assaults which have bren against his administration to be more than false. The Radicals iiuvi fear him, hence, their dogged and malignant assault on him. Our Special Washington Letter. Washington-, March, 23. 1872. EniTon Enterprise : It iu to be hoped that in future there will be no further in lermption by snow blockades, and that you will receive yotir correspondence reg ularly. The past week baa been devoted by Congress to business, and a Rood deal of legislation has beta accomplished. By a very close Tote lb steamship subsidy to the line from San Francisco to China ind Japan has been defeated. Tie amount of the present subsidy is a half million of dollars for monthly s?rvic. The bill which was lost, proposed to increase tte ubsidy to one million and providing for emi monthly servie. The Tote was very lose for the bill 85 ; against it D2. The riends of the measure do not despair of et getting the bill through this session, i he Senate will yote for it. and if the two Houses should disagree, it Ls believed a committee of conl'trrnce will iv the mil lion. Thus exists much diftereac of opinion ia Congress as to th propriety of voting this mon?y fof ?uch a purpose, whilst the taxes are so burdensome. Oth ers think the commerce of the country would be promoted to an increased ex tent by this aid to the Pacific 11 ail line, and in the end the Treasury would be re imbursed more than the outlay. It crea ted much excitement, and a great deal of debate.. Scarcely any question in the House this winter was so warmly contested as this. If this subsidy stood entirely on its own merits.it would pass, but it was opening the dcor to a large number of similar schemes, involving an expenditure ol about thirty millions of dollars Tea and coffee will be put on the free list on aud after the 1st of July, 1S72. The Senate on yesterday so decided by a vote of S4 ayes to 13 nays. The House had voted by a large majority previously for the importation of tea and coffee free of duty, and that matter may be consider ed as settled, and the business men of the country may make their calculations ac cordingly. OA-" effort will be made, also, to provide for a reduction of ten per cent in the duties on "cotton and silk manu factures, earthenware, glassware, leather and India rubber tnanu'actuis.v Sena tor Sherman, of Ohio. Chairman of the Committee on Finance, suggested that putting tea and coffee on the free list would reduce the revenue some twenty five millions, and that this sum was as much of a reduction as could now be made, in view of the amount nrces..arj to pay the expenses of the government and the interest on the public debt, and fifty millions torrards ths annual reduction of the public d--bt. But his attention was called to the fact that there was a surplus of over one hundred millions in the Treas ury unemployed. There is a strong dis position in both Houses to further reduce tat iff rates, and there is no doubt that the reduction on the goods named above will become a law. The split ia the 'Republican party be comes wider every day. and the .Missouri movement has developed more strength than-was first anticipated. There is to be a State convention in New York, com posed of delegates from all the counties, to appoint delegates to attend the Cincin nali Convention, which meels on the firs', day of .May. Whether or not every coun ty in the State will be represented at Al bany, there is no doubt it will be a large body of Anti-Grant Republicans, and who are for reform and wfco agree wi:h the views of the Liberal R"publican,anl IhU movement will be followed in otherStatcs The Liberal Republicans are not idle. They are making tremendous efforts to secure a lare attendance of influential Republicans at Cincinnati, and make their action as impressive as possible. This they consider ol vital impoitatice. with a view to convince the democracy that they constitute a power in the bind, and there by induce th democrats to pretermit the nomination of a regular democratic tick et. There is no question, however, that the Liberal Republicans constitute a larg er body than was first supposed, their strength has increased in numbers very rapidly in the last two months, and are obtaining accessions daily of dissatisfied Republicans. The party is gaining in strength both in P"nnsy Ivania and Ohio. In the former Slate Gov. Curtin"s friends who hate Grunt cordially, tire at- work in his interest, and want tl.eir favorite nom inated at Cincinnati. Gov. Cur'in is now on his w,y home, having resigned h:s po sition as Miuister to Russia, and his return will promote the activity of his friends in Pennsylvania. In Ohio, the late Secreta ry of the Interior. Gov. Cox. has a host, ol friends, and they hope the Liberal Repub licans will take him tip. and therefore they are doing all they can to mnke the Cincinnati convention a success. The friends of Judge Davis ol Illinois, recent ly nominated by the Labor Reformers. are also working for the nomination tit the hands of the Liberal Republicans. So that there are a great, many circumstances working in favor of a large attendance at Cincinnati. Here at Washington, the Liberal Republicans, have some of their most influential friends laboring with the Democrats to convince that Grant will be defeated "horse, foot, and dragoons." if they will give the leadership in this tight to the Liberal Republicans. These cir cumstances are chronicled to show your leaders that there is a powerful element of opposition composed of Republicans banded together to defeat the re-election ol (Jen. Grant, and the accomplishment of so desirable a result is not at all improb able. 1 he folks at the White House be gin to feel the neeef-sity for actual work and labor to preserve their positions. Within a few days, the name of Dan. Sickles has been introduced for the Vice Presidency on the ticket wish Grant, in order to carry the Stater ol New York. and if Sickles' friends press his claims Cullax will have to subside. It is understood That Gen. Grant prefers Sickles, beeause he likes the man and thinks he can carry New York. The various investigations ordered by Congress are going on and when their re sults are pub.islied the people will open their eyes in astonishment at the numer ous abuses perpetrated by those in posv er. Another defalcation amounting to twen ty thousand dollars has oecuned in the accounts of Col. Stanton. Collector of In ternal Revenue in the Dab into re Disirict. The principal portion of the deficit devel oped in the tax lis;, whereia he had re turned to the Revenue Rureau amounts of uncollected taxes, marked as collectable, which had already been collected and the money pocketed by the defaulter. Col- iin.- pens'eui atrent, was defaulter lor over i70.0oO. aud nothing was done with him aud Stanton will receive the same kind usage at the band of this administration. The harmonious action of your conven tion wiircontribu'.e much to tlx' confidence felt here for the success of the Democrats at the election i l June. When ttx nom- inations are made, let every feeling of rl- vairy generated for the success of favor- COURTESY OF BANCROFT LIBRARY, U. ites in the Convention, subside into an energetic support of the nominees, and -a pull, a strong pull, and a pnll altogether,- be made by every true democrat and conservative in Oregon. Acting thus, success will be the sure reward. The troublous state ol affairs in Mexico, is aftradiag attention here, and a power tul interest is at work to induce our gov eminent to interfere and ultimately to an nex that country to ours. The democrat-, ic organ here, the " Patriot," has -an edit orial m its eolumns this morning looking in that direction strongly b w believed by many that President Juarez himself favors the scheme of Protectorate, and possibly -annexation. You need not be surprised, if some important step in re gard to Mexico should be taken uou. The article from the PalrkU:' is enclos ed, to use, if you deem It of sufficient m terest to your readers. There is a general inquiry just now as to hat bas become of tlie iuouy derived frori the sale of supplies of provisions, clothiug aud arms on hand at the close of thy war. It is known that a large amount of goven"aut property waiSold. but it Ls staled th.H Dot a dollar of the money derived from thK great sales wad wvwr paid into tUw Treasury. Tu House hart adoptwd resolutions calling ou ihm War aud Nvy Dprioaect3 for uiloima tiou ou this subject, but have been unable to get an answer from them. The appro priation bills for thw Army aud Navy are soon to be considered, and thw democrats mean to vote against all approut lawous lor that service until answers are render ed to the resolutions ot inquiry. When these bills come up. you may look lor a lively time in the House"' of Representa tives, for several geutleiueu ate well for tified with facts aud figures, of a very damagiug character a'decting the War and Nn-vy Departments. The Committee on Public Lands in the House report the Salt Lake and Oregon Railroad bill on Tuesday next. VNCLK S.V'j'.S CASH. The balances in the Treasury Depart ment at the close ot business March 23. 1872. were Coin $110,042,747 95. Currency 10 S33.07G Of!. Coin certificates 3!).2Jd.o0l) 00. $KiO.KiB.33 71 Over one hundred and sixty millions of dollars unemployed and locked up in boutwelPs vaults pet National Ranks. PfBLICCS. Ovek-rat,ancei. The Radicals seem to have much to say about the increase of salaries for State officers, yet they never have any thing to say in favor of the biil passed by the Legislature in re gard to the reduction made by them on the fees ot County Clerks and Sheriffs. The fees of these officers were reduced about one third, which will be nearly equal to the entire expenses of our State administration. Clackamas county alone will save over three thou sand dollars per annum in conse quence of this reduction. Had the Radicals been in power this .bill would not have been passed, or if it had, it would have been stolen before it would have become a law, as owe was in 1SG2. This matter of increase has been overbalanced by the reduction and there will be a large balance in favor of the I people. That's So. The East Portland Jji'a has the following in relation to the Clackamas county carpet bag, Good Temp4ar ticket :' From a re'i .ble source we learn that the Radicals of Cluckamat county are not so well pleaded with their county nomina tions as they might bf It appears that a certain unpopular f:ction in the p-rty. which has heretofore hcn kept in obey ance because of r. firing in the minority, combined with the Good Ternrdars. and thus en:: bird to as was desired. nu the lute Convention This had the effect to make the old ' regular."' ill-humored, and in revenge for the defeat they were made suffer in the conversion they propose to defeat the ticket, made up of carpet-baggers and men who are in no wav identified wi'.h the interests of ie people of" that, county. .In this it is to be hoped they will fie sneeesstul. The Democratic ticket comprises some of the best men in Clack amas county, and its election for this rea son, if for no other, is a consummation to be wished. He Owxs Ihir.-Wc lind the following in the Jfertdd of last Saturday. It is another evidence of the fact that Air. Ilolladay owns the Radical party, soul, breeches and body. It says: That Orm-at Pi.a tkoiim. Will the public ever be permitted to see the letter, written by the Radical candidate for Congress, to the Lord Patamount, in order to secure the Salter's support? Is not the said can didate running on two platforms? One made by his party in State Convention Assembled, and the other a pi i Kte pledge, io a certain .Money King, which the people are not permitted to see? One platform is published ; will the people be permitted to have a sight at the other? That's Him. The Herald of the 10th inst. has the following: If we are not mistaken we have heard of their Radical candid it for Senator in Clackamas before Cochran! Hiram Cochran! There are some people over in Washington Territory who know a man of that name, it is said. Does the Clack amas Hiram hail from that region? Is this Uiraiif in the employ cf the railroad? Does he think the Locks improvement a swindle?'' Thf. Lahoii Candioatk. A correspond ent of the Memphis Appecl says of Judge Davis, that he has a broad and catholic feeling for the whole pecple. a reverence for the law. and a desire to see the Consti tution recommitted to the repect and hon or of the people. Our "bnzzunv" friend. A. Noltner, of the Oregon City Entkh'.'iusi- is lliu-Derno-crat'c candidate for School Superintend ent of. Clackamas county. Who dare now uert. that the editorial fraternity are not appreciated by a grateful world? We congratulate lJro. N., and are satisfied that the people of Clackamas county will not regret electing him to that responsible posisli". Albany Democrat. T'.m Most Infamous. The Portsmouth (N. 11.) Patriot ; declares the result ia- that Sate was produced by the most infamous means ever employed in a popular elec tion, and is a triumph of fraud, bribery and coercion, alike disgraceful to the vi. tors and to ile State. J?y such means an endorsement of Gen. Grant and his ad ministration was obtained. In the South j oayoneis prouuee uaoica. utriwmm I in ,ho cri. "'auds are suostuuted. State Jiew3. The Masonic Fraternity at the Dalles are going to build a hall. Burglars are beginning to trouble the people of Portland. Willie Rice has been appointed ticket lgent at the Albany depot. U. S. Marshal Young has caught, at San Francisco. M. S. Hart, defaulting railroad contractor. The farmers in the vicinity of Monmouth are complaining of the re-appearance of the caterpillars. One hundred logs bored endwise and called water pipes were lately shipped from Tumwater, W. T.. to Salem. An Italian dred suddenly at the New Orleans hotel in Portland last Saturday night, by the name ot Jean IJelhomme. A rumor is afloat that the O. S. N. Co. ha sold out their lines of steamers to the Northern Pacific Railroad Company' The Odd Fellows are preparing to cele brate the 53rd anuiversary of the estab lishment of the Order, on the 2tth inst., by a pic nic at Aurora. The Register speaks of a grand excur sion to coma off in a few months. We suppose it means the excursion of the Radicals of Oregon up Salt River iaJuue. Elder K Fisher and. wife, old residents of Wasco county, formely of Oregon City, are about to visit California, with a view to finding a home in a more genial cli mate. Excavating was commenced lat Satur day for the contemplated new Episcopal church. The new churoh is to stand on the Southwest corner of the block on which the present church is situated. Deeds were made out for 8.0'HJ acres of school lands by the Board ot Land Com missioners at Salem, during the month of March. These deeds were for vaiiom quantities in different parts of the State. An attempt -ww tnaVie Last Saturday night to burn the St. Charles hotel at Al bany. The incendiary poured kerosen oil through the parlor window upon the carpet and tried to st fire to it. A Roseburg paper says Mr. Sackett commenced work on last Tuesday, near th Whitmore gap, with a larsre force of Chinamen. We have no i.otice of any contract having been lei south of Wilbur. Farmers, says the Monmouth Messenjer, are now receiving fifty-two and a half cents per pound for wool, and think the price will soon be higher. Those who were so fortunate as to keep their wind, instead of selling it in the fall, will realize a handsome profit thereby. A Salem paper says a resident living about nine miles out on the Albany road brings us cheering reports from that sec tion ot the country. The crops never looked a-s promising as they do to day. -Farmers are nearly through planting on the hills, but in the valleys ami more moist places they have but just commenced. The Territories. The Kalama Beacon has closed its firat volume. The Odd Fellows of Vancouver propose to celebrate f3rd Anniversary of the or der in the United States, on the 26th inst. Mr. Ilallett has completed three miles of grading near Hodjdjn's, aud is pro gressing rapidiy southward. Hash f.ou.-es in Montana charg $20 a week, the boarders furnishing thvir own blankets, during the past winter. A lrge -?eam saw mill is being erected at. W.i lnlu by the Walla Walla' and Co lumbia River Railroad Company, and will be tiiiish.'d by the In of May. Hallett. the contractor on the N. I. R. R. Co's track between the Columbii river and Olympia. wants five hundred white men and a thousand Chinese to work on his contract. A Mortt.ina woman. who imagined some body was seeking her life, rose one bitter cold night recently, ran out on the open praitir over a mite, trampled the snow to m i!te herself a bed. in which she was found soon after half frozen. The following is a summary of the busi ness transacted at llie United States Land Office at Vancouver for the month end ing March 31 1872 : Original homestead entries. 2.101 acres; final homestead en tries. 320 acres ; pre-emprion entries. 3.000 acres ; laud sold for cash. acres; total number of acres disposed of. 4.()1. The Vancouver Iivcjisler says : "A slight tbock or an earthquake visited th'n town at 10 minutes past four p. rn.. on the 27lh inst. It lasted about, four seconds, and seemed to he more severely felt near ihe liver. The inmates of the Quartermas ter's warehouse, situated on the Govern ment wharf, rushed outside, supposing thU a large steamer under full headway, bad collided with the wharf." The Vancouver Register says: The railroad survey i being prosecuted with energy by Capt. Biiney and his party along the bank of the- Columbia. We are given to understand that the l;ne now being surveyed will be ;i4hered to on the final location of the road, with perhaps very slight deviations. The camp is now established about five miles above this place on the river. The line as surveyed eastward from Kalama keeps close along the north bank of the Columbia. The Kalama Jiftcon says : A well known and prominent railroad bovs at Pumphrey's undertook to chastise a Chi nese cook. fut John was equal to the emergency, and. catching tits would-be master by the hair, at the same time bran dishing a hatchet over his head, eaid : Meiican man no sabe me. you bet! Me make hashee you velly soon !' A third party stepped between the combatants and postponed results, or by this time we would have a gravestone marked. 'Sacred to the memory of Captain Torn . who was foully murdered by a Heathen Chi nee.' Telegraphic Clippings- N;:w YortK. April 4. Arrangements for the funeral of Prof. Morse are completed, and it wiil take place ut 10 A. M. to morrow from Mulison Square Pres bv' terian Church. The Assembly to -day adopted appropriate resolut ions in re gard to the death ol Prof. Morse, and ap pointed a committee to attend the funeral. Nfc.w Yoiik. April o Mayor Hull, it is said, will be a witness in his own behalf when the case comes to trial. STOKKS TRIAL. New Youk. April 6. The District At torney says it will be some time, owing lo the pressure of busines. before it will be ready lo bring I be Stoke's case to trial. Tlie voluminous bill of exceptions put in by counsel for the prisoner has hardly yet been digested by the District Attor ney. Miss Mansfield has not visited Stokes since his arrest and will appear as a wit ness on the trial. Stokes is said to be anxious to have the trial brought on. when he claims that startling revelations will be made in Krie rascality and mat ters connected therewith. A dispatch fr m Yeddo. of March 2Gth, announces that an attempt has been made by a party of twelve persons to assasinate the Mikado of Japan. The efforts of the would be murderers proved unsuccessful. The guard of the Mikado captured two ot the party the other ien escaped. This attempted assassination caused great un easiness on Ihe part of Government- Or ders have been issued forbidding foreign ers to go beyond the city limits, of Yeddo. General New3 Items. A civil was is raging in Mexico. Prussia is enlarging her standing army. The Emperor of Brazil's European tour has already cost him $'J00,000. Railroad accidents continue to enrich the undertakers of Eastern cities. Mrs. Fair's new trial was set in the Fif teenth District Court for June 24th. Foreign advices state that Prussia is for tifying iletz with enormous cannon of steel. Tom Fitch was elected second United States Senator by the Utah Legislature. Wm. B. Astor has given 5100.000 to the Astor Library to relieve its preaeut needs. . A London dispatch of the 7th inst. says the Queen returned from her visit to Ger many to-day. It is now definitely settled that the au thor of the Radical Platform got his start in Yamhill. Mrs. Grant and her daughter Nettie,and ex-Secretary Borie and family, sailed April 4th for Europe. A Laramie special ay4.the road is bad ly blockaded east. Two pasenger trains are held there. It is understood that the port of Mazat lau is already in the bands of the Federal authorities of Mexico. Work on the light-house at Cape Foul weather. Yaquina Bay, will be resumed about the 1st of May. A London dispatch of April 3rd says the Prince and Princess of Wales will re turn from the continent soon. Hugh Logan, a young Oregonian, re cently graduated from the St. Louis Medi cal College wi'h high honors. The office of the County Treasurer of Walla Walla county vas entered a few evenings since nd robbed of 520,000. The central of.ice of the Western Union Telegraph Company is elaborately draped in inourutr.g in memory of Prof, iiore. Prince Arthur, says a London dispatch, will shortly be promoted to the rank of in ijor, and will go to India for two years. Theirs and Count Von Armin will soon commence negotiations for the complete evacuation of French towns by German troops. Voluntary subscriptions of French resi dents in Mexico towards the payment rf the 1" rnch Indemnity now amount to 541,000. A Brownsville, Texas, dispatch says Texan rangers are preparing to retaliate and rescue their caltie from Mexico, on the Rio Grande. The Ways and Means Committee, in Congress, voted to fix the tax at t5 cents per gallon en whisky, and a uniform tax of 20 cell's per pound on tobacco. Signers call upon the Utah Democratic Convention to assert the theory that it is their purpose solely to endorse Judge Mo Rean aud oppose admission as a State. In the Senate April "th. on motion of Poineroy from the Committee on Public Lands, the bill granting the right of way to a railroad froia Salt Lake to Portland Oregon, passml. Kexico- We here prtblish the article on Mexico, llrom the Washington J'ofrfo referred to by our correspondent from the Capital. It is an abuse of language to spealt of the situation of Mexico as a problem. That cumot be a problem which admits of but one snlu-ion. and that one which is perlectly well known to everybody. The only indefinite quantity in the whole mat ter has been the question of time, and that element seems now to be no longer indefi nite. When neighborly comi'y gives way to the more supreme, neeessides of self de fence, the time for action has certainly come. There must be an international as well as a municipal law of nuisances. If the man and wife of tlie family next door to us choose to quarrel and -fiiiht.it is none of our business, no matter how disagreea ble it may be. but when the missiles of I" their warfare are so loosely Hung about as to smash our windows, and endanger our pates, it is time to send fjr the police. The situation of Mexico has got to be just so dangerous to onrborders. and. being such h is become a nuisance', and intolerable. Her son libre is a harbor of thieves and smugglers, who feed npon our revenues like leeches upon stock goiny; to water. Her defenceless borders are the resort of ruffians and marauders, who shelter there to makeyaids 11,1011 our people, and go back, after murder and robbery, to enjoy their plunder with impunity. There is no question here of Mexico's interests and welfare, but of the peace and safety of our own citizens, frequently outraged, and constantly menaced. It. was welt enough for us to offset our superior and stronger forces, and civilization, as a reason for not interfering to save Ihe richest country on the globe from chronic anarchy, pov erty, and ruin. It wa- wellenongh to say we would not interlere in Mexico's do mestic concerns, even to save hrr from herself, jusi because we wer her n"iith b or. and ber superior, in strength. But the present question, we repeat, is not one to be determined by the interests ot Mexico. It is a question the sole measure of which is our own capacity for enduring a state of things which must. Very short'y become insufferable. Shall our own line mansion be in perpetual danger of confla gration, bewail e the nud. drunken people next door choose to burn tar barrels, aud set fire to the fences in their back yard ? Shall they be suffered to spread abroad contagions that may strike us all down, because they like fiub. and bid smells, and have ignorant prejudices about vac cination ? lhmeMc rights n;in be sa cred, domestic nliosyncr.tsies are no more than matters of taste, but domestic nui sances that spread cosmrrpolitan stenches must be abated, and when not checked from within, must be dedt with ah extra. And. practically, this is the sum of the whole question with regard tj Mexico. Sai.kof Arms In vkstioatiox. Notwith standing that nn Administration Senator. Patterson, according to Lis own testimony brought to Grant's attention, over a 7ea"r ago, the matter of tlve fraudulent and il legal sale of arms lo- the agents of the French Government, in which Ibese agents had. according 1r the sta'ement. of one of the parties implicated, the highest governmental influences to assist them, and in which, as the Marquis.de Cham bnn says, three or foisr million dollars had Doen "droppvd into somebody's hands, and notwithstanding the notoriety of the whole transactions ami the clear evidence of the use for which the arms were intended. Mr. Grant never made ibe slightest effort to pause an investigation or put a stop to the outrageous business, and declared his ignorance of the whole affair, and. when at last an investigation wis forced by the boldness and pertinac ity of Schurz and Sumner and Trumbull, he procured Ihe packing of a Committee! 00-lavorabU? to the discovery of truth, ity siifl-; the facts; a proceeding not only morally wrong but, as Sumner says, at war with all parliamentary law. In spite of threats anl all nianner'of intimidation the truth is coming out. showing the worst exhibit yet, for that Administration which some one of its defenders has corrrnared in purity to the Administration of Presi dent ashington . Married Our Triend W. B. Lasswell. of Canyon City, was married last week to Miss McFarlan I. of the Dalles. May hap piness and prosperity attend them. Some Sense- George Fraoci3 Train is certainly the most intelligent buffoon and humbug who has appxiared during the present century. Amid a vast mass of chaff, which he offers to the public in bis peecbes and lectures, there are some grains of wheat. Recent ly in one of his windy harangues he de clared there were only two men in tho field as candidates for the Presidency: 'Grant and the Dent family, and the Peo ple's Champion, the Fenian Chief, Com mune Organizer, Presidential Head of In ternationale. Workingmen's Leader, Labor Union Commander. Woman Suffrage Ora tor who now demands your co-operation. After this ridiculous declaration he ut tered the following remarks, which con tain a considerable leaven of common sense and political sagacity : Can the king of the Dent tribe stand fen months of hurrahs? He passes from city to town like a ghost. Nobody cheers. -Nobody speaks to him. Nobody hisses when I denounce his nepotism. Every body cheers when I expose his thieving association in Ihe General Order swindle. (Applause.) The ord party nauseate the people. 1 hey are sick unto death with politicians. (That's so.) Colfax beats Seymour on resignation, giving him fifty on a string. (Laughter.) Iam.no guch a woman, and this is not a proper place if I was. (Loud langbter.) . Colfax, the honest resiguer finally ac cepts. You can't make me Vice-President, says Smiler. the Baptist, unless yon tie me. and there is a rope on the shelf! (Laughter.) So it is all settled. Tbesu Cheville Brothers, to oblige a grateful people, will consent, to run the St. Domingo-Seneca Stone-Corbin Dent -Gift Enter prise four years longer, to the campaign cry of: Fatten the Alabama bondholders and starve the people. w If the present taker has a dead sur thing why axe-grind Worcester. Syracuse, Connecticut and Albany through official -rings' and National Bank money? (That s so.) Why pack committee in Congress, head off investigations in the Senate, and try so bard to wriggle out of the Lert General Order swindle? (Exactly.) If he is certain of his position, why back out id" St. Domingo and tho Carter-Casey fraud in New Orleans? (He isn't sure, and that's what's the matter.) Why feel so shaky about Babcock. Porter and the Russia complication ? If Grant is so pop ular, how happens it that all his Senator ial friends get pushed into the cold? Thay er by Hitchcock, in Nebraska? Butler smashed in Massachusetts? Logan in Illi nois, beating Grant's friend? and Sar gent in California, upsetting Cole? (Ap plause.) How is it the Methodist Ring'' could not save Harlan ? and Sherman wihs iuOuio? Grant's interference in Louis iana makes Warmoth a success, and tho same policy in Missouri put Carl Schurz. and Biair into the Senate. Receipts and. Erpenditures. The recent speech of Mr. Dawes, says the Patriot, taken together with the open tactics of the Protectionists, and other in dications that have crumped out during ihe session, discover to us a good oVal of the strategy which the Administration forces intend to use in the coming cam paign. Ordinarily tne Congress before a Presidential election is eminent tor econ omy. It resorts to cheese-paring, it pinches the budget, and clips its issues in every direction. But the present Con gress evidently intends to fly in the face of tradition and precedent, and to resort to a deliberate system of extravagance, instead of one of thrift. True tolls in stincts, it depends for success rather upon multiplying trie Government's means of corruption than upon increasing its claims to popular favor. The immediate exigen cy that drives it is the necessity of doing baule against Revenue Reform Reduce the tariff, and Pennsylvania and Ohio. Connecticut and Maiue. are .surely lost u Grant, and wilh these all of Grant's chances are lost. But Revenue Reform cannot be combatted face to face without disastrous losses in the West. Conse quently, h must be stabbed in the back, and that is the secret of the controlling impulses.of immediate Congressional ac tion. Expenses are to be increased, through the easy process of multifarious appropriations, until ; hey are equalized! bykreceipts. Then. in order to escape a de ficit, the tariff most be kept where it now is. in th light ot these facts, Mr, i""'s concern aimnt tn.. w...- .,..1 means is very much like the old Post Cap tain's respect tor the exact time of day. "What's o'clo'ck?" he asked or his Lieu tenant. "Couldn't get an obsvrvation.sir." -Make it eight bells, and set the clock accordingly." So Mr. Boutwell and Mr. Dawes and their allies, unwilling to alter the clock of the tariff, hare set the dial of expenditures to suit it. But the people will require a .more satisfactory explana tion than this for the numerous extrava gant appropriations which are boiix con tinually made. The demand Tor Reemi Reform is not to be quieted by the subter fuge of an inordinate budge'. The peo ple will onjy scrutinize the bills the mom closely because they disapprove the. mens employed to procuie their liquid ation. 1 Cost of our Paper Currency. On the 31st or March. 1871. nays the New 1 ork World, the House of Representatives adopted a Resolut in calling on the Sec retary or the Treasury to lurnisli an esti mate of the number of pounds of paper that would be required to replace the na tional bank circulation; also the number of pounds made up into greenbacks, frac tional currency, and bonds, with the coS thereof. The report of the Secretary in response to this inquiry has just been made public. It stales that "it would re place the present national hank circula tion, which at 18 pounds per 1,000 sheets, the weight heretotore used, would be 100. S08 pounds. The average cost of the pa per used Jor the circulation of national banks is 78 cen's per pound," or a total cost of S78.(;; 21. Tbr number of pounds of paper manufactured into legal lenders or greenback notes is given as 2()j;:V.) pounds, costing SI75.3JI.45; man ufactured into fractional currency. 31S, 17G pounds, co-sun" 2 -I3.4(n;.!i- mmJ factored into bonds. 110,873 pounds, cost ing $3C.GSJ.14. The account then stands: . Pounds. Gsl.. National b,nk notes loosrw $7H.6M 2-f greenbacks .w.) 175,341.4.-V t "actional currency 316r17j 243,40f,.94 "ond.. llo,s73 91,.137.3 Internal revenue stamps 78,062 3J,6S9.14r T?.V .' "'-8l2'5"8 23,494.4 ft But this is not all. There is a reserve of paper, to be manufactured into green backs, fractional currency, bonds, and revenue stamps, amounting to 257,18.3 pounds, costing S201.812.3f5; so that the grand total of paper used or to be used in onr paper money U 1 Ofi9.7fJl pounds, costing $830 30f.7tt. It will give the read er some idea of the amazinsr bulk of onr paper money, bonds, ic, to know that ;3.j tons of paper are required for its pro duction. Could the outlay for engraving, printing ink. coloring matter, press work, labor, salaries, and oilier items oT pre paration be ascertained the grand agggre gate would be enormous. Sick. Joe Wilson the Radical eatrdidate for Congress from Ore gon goes into the canvass sick, and it is not hazarding much to say that he will come out of it sicker. W. V. Statesman, c 1 o - ti o 1 V t -4 0 o O o o o