O o CO o O o o o . -rr rrr- a ? ; r"J Is oitEi; t nrr. osecox. nr. i:, IiiJifiVroiic? in Tojiiics. Grai: ting1 that it is not necessary that the entire voting clement of this countrv be absolute working, politi- cinps, is that any reason why people should .jibsent themselves from the polls entirely, ignoring their own best interests, and refraining to give utterance to thei? heart's voices and liouest convictions? People say that the tracks are so crooked on which politics are wCw1 run, that no man desiring safety to his reputation can allow his name to come before the people as a candidate- fr public ofllce. If this be true, upon whom,5D rra pray.fis t'ue b'ame to fall? "Why, upon tlioso apathetic voters, who keep away from the polls, eschewing prima.rb-3 ayd caucuses, and allowing o the making of tickets, platforms, and parties to fall into ihe hands of iu competent ,an many tiiaes nnscrniu lous men. If we mistake not, it was Addfton who wrote thut .-.tilling ap ical in the 1'iv.t itor, to the good men of two contending parties to unite or the overthrow of the knaves, vLo 2;ad crept into j'ower during tlie im mobility of the Le tter classes. We can scarcely dare to ask this much, for there are good men in both of the great parties, men who consci entiously hold certain principles, ami wiio truly think that through the medium of their party is the Ile pub'icl? only salvation men, in u woiil, who would .saeriliee anything rather than their honest "on vietions. t'-onseqiu-ntly, we do not ask these cMe:i fojan a I u-tcrim relinquishment of thdr principles. All we desire is that the gocd Democrats and good llepublii- ins take control of their r? spective parties. Politics will then be elev!it"d to the height to which the sei"!KO of governing freeman is !ysorving.0 We as them to exhibit i a Jively iii teres t in th our instititions, and s workings of to be readv with their suffrages and influences forcv.Ti.it they honestly think the best i"siiiiM:e for the nation. We have more t fear frJm tl;e inactivity Cf the better classes thuu from the eor rnptiiiti of the officeholders. The lethargy of our good men is a tacit endorse in :-u t (f the official rascalities. "While the early llomans jealously watched their liberties, the "Eternal City", was th capital of the world; when woaith and its attendant iudif feicenej crept in, "llonie was no more Homo than a foul dungeon." Is it any, Wonder that villainy is ram- i pant in t'i land when our best peo ple (to v.'.iom our lower classes look for patriotism, alii amonj whom for leaders) stay at homo, with utter unconcern as to the fate of the na tion? If nothing -else, give us the example of your pivsence, and show ait least J hat you are filled with hon est desire. The ohl beggar who dim pes up to the polls to cast hi. ballet, showes more true love of country than a thousand st.vy-at-homu tax-payers. The strength of these indifferent people, if brought into working power, can scarcely le credited. The now great parties lwo;iId he pigiuiW in comparison. Unt the other day a dispatch of the following purport was received in Portland from New York: "The Tri' 'c claims that the Democratic rparty was beaten ia Ttieday's elec- tion by inflation, as the Republicans were a year ago by Giantism and third term. Tho two elections prove the existence of an independent vota with power and intelligence to dictate5 the result in tlie Presidential election next yea r" True, the strength c-jts, but it is in a state of inertia, and wihi have some propelling Jforee -to make manifest . it latent power. Do not say that "orv- littlo vote can not stem the great ii l1." Many and "many a time has th" '"ballot of one man changed the whole face of af fairs and perhaps tho f.ite of nations' A single vote made Jefferson Presi dent of tlie United States! His elec tion depended on too Statt of New York. The Legislature of the State under a former provision of the Coiis stitutioa named the electors who should vote for tho President. The city of New York sent the Assembly man whose vote decided the political complexion of the electors in Jeffer son's favor. This man was elected by a majority of one vote. One vote decided the Governorship of Massa chusetts when Marcus Mortomwas elected. The popular vote cast was alyout 100,000. One vote elected ' William Allen to Congress m lS'.H, r.nd one vote subsequently made him U. S. Senator. One voto seut Thos. Ewiug to the U. S. Senate, aud his vote there gave t ho presiding officer an opportunity to cast the deciding voto against the confirmation of Mar tin Van IVaren us Minister to R:ig layd. This made Van Buren the most popular man of his party, and soon after made him President of the United States. Only in the last elec- tion in California, Solano county, was carried by tho Democratic party by one vote. Hundreds of simila? instances might be cited, all tending to prove tho one fundamental doo- iri..uf tl1.Wi...T.l.r inrrtnn m-.mitv in th:s State, with twelve, hundred odd voters, jolled l-jsi man nan max numuer at iue recent Congressional election. If ( there are people so little interested in the ate of onr country-as to allew j aii election to go, as - it were, by de fault they should lie disfranchised,', and treated as beyond the pale of. the ltepublio's protection. Surely, for people who take no interest in.tbe i , A. .L . ' ;:, -1 faro of the uation.it cannot ba j wei expected that the country wi peril or sacrifice itself! The Imprisonment of Ilia Boys. The Oreooiiiati has the' folio wing ! sensible remarks ina regard t'o the i f. - - ' ' 1 TA I boys who have been sent to the Peni tentiary: ;. -0' " ' '.' "Four little bojs were seiit from Portland to the Stats Pern tenfiary last week, to sorye a term for-felony. The oldest Of these' lads' is; aoder fifteen and the youngest under 'ten vears of. ae. Ao5 ybt, .youpgr as they are, thc-y.fl.re "not sent op . for their first oeose,- nor. fbv the eeoond, They lu.ve aji)ecu "before the' Police Court several times, for offenses, of lesser magnitude., and -sorae, if not all of the.m have served put term's of imprisonment in the county jail of this coujlfy. Tbey have been .&d monishod by the Police" Jndg, re monstrated with by the peace-oiScers and by gen tldmsn .interested iu .sav ing theel frpm the end. to which they have come; but admonition a-ud re monstrance hava been alike ittiavail ing. At last they have corn to the point to w)iicsh hoodlumism leads. From the potty offenses of, children, tLey went Qfit step b' Step, till, in the tenijer ajjoof children, they com mit tPd the crimes of men, and now they are sytr?riug the penalty which men suffer who commit sack crimes as make it necessary to c.on&ne them in the State prusou. "With hair cut short, and dressed in. the .livery of disgrace, they enter vpon the stage of life. "It does cot- se'sni to be jnst the thing to stinrt such children to such confinement. Human nature, unad- vised of the facts except of the one fact that thev are children revolts -revolts nature ! : facts' ! at the idea, liufc human when possessed of all the ceases to revolt, and says it is right. Efforts were made to restrain these young Criminals by' every means at eommaftd, and when ptlast Iho clos ing suene came and. the sentence was pry jounced "rvhich consigned them to felons eadhi, to hatd labor and dis grace, a last uffovt was made to have one, at least, of them pardoned out and put ifndtir such restraint as would render it impossible for him to continue hi- criminal coarse. Jvervthuig failed, and all5 the chil- dren were carried off" together. "Hero is a lesson for parents and for children. lb h? now demonstrated that boythat uommit crimes will be punished. It is now proved that courts and juries will do their duty, and that the feeliug3 of pity which all have for children, will not stand between the law and the. youthful rogue. Hoys may learn from this what toexpect if they disregard the in-trnction of parents," and parents may see what their children will come to if permitted to ruu into vicious courses, if is to be hoped this lesson will not bo lost. "It Vi no? likely all these' four boys were worse by 'nature than nianj' who have escaped the punish ment they are receiving. It is not llkely;they were all so predisposed byC nature to crime that they could j not have been so trailed as to mako them respectable and useful mem bers of society. But one fell into evil ways and drew others after him. At first it was one, then two, then others were drawn in, and at last the four go together to prison, leaving behind them more, who will soon meet them in the penitentiary, un less they abandon the courses they are now pursuing. It is the cor i upting influence of evil association that has brought these boy to where they are. It is well they have gone, for they would only have led. other boys into the same mode of life if they had been turned loose. It will be well for the community when the next lot go, unless the cases of these lads shall deter the others from com mitting crimes. If this is the only' way for the community to be pro tected against the corrupting influ ence of these depraved children, let them all bo confined in the peniten tiarv." We fully endorse the following from the St. Paul Press and recom mend it, as practical advice, to the voters of Oregon: "Ask yourself with regard to every candidate on your ticket, is tie capable? Is he honest? and if you have a doubt on w ouujcui, beraicn out uis name and substitute thereon the name of a man with regard to whom there is not a shadow cf doubt. Let the b" n'r, - f lfUi ' hM been guilty 01 endorsing a rnVnA " j When we all learn to follow our own j better judgment and convictions of j right, and vote for men instead of j party, then, and not till then, 'will j we seea reform in the administration of public uffairs, TlrU the orlv .' way that we can convince politician ; that something more than the en- , .WnK. .6, conventioo o politi- fni1riu J-i t,; 11'.' . election of a candidatehe must be one wuose cLa-acter for Iionesty is j beyond suspicion. Tha KcfbrntSchool Agaiii. ; . yv ."fear, despite sill the efforts of the gbod rh&h of -Portland,' that the attenVpt to establish a ' reform school in ovii- State, will at least for the present, prove ' n ; failure. The great dilSonlty in. the way seems to be that -.. y. ; J. , . to estaojisn ana support sucu an ln stifcotion thiUQ can be raised in any dnfr o'orint " alone, while, conld the wTjole'State be thoroughly canvassed by those -who have the matter most at hoaxt, and are. prepared to demon I I ' 3- J 1. - 1 i. 11 strate an4 rove its necessity, there wotild -be no danger of its ultimate sue-eese. .2To'w is the time to work wh&a there- have just been sent a batch of .little boys, the youngest but nineyears of age", to the penitentiary, to serve bat terms, side by side with the' most . iuirdened wretches that have ever cursed society. To be sure, the example will be a lesson to others, and was, "under the circumstances, an unavoidable necessity. But does not our nature revolt at the idea of such a necessity in this age of pro gress and civilization? We are in formed, young as these boys are, this is not the first time they havo been placed behind the prison bars as a punishment, so we cannot reasonably expect the penitentiary to exert over them a reformatory influence which those philanthropic institutions, the city and county jails of Portland, failed to do. Judging the future by the past, we have no reason to sup pose the boys are going to be im proved by a term in the State prison, j We send'them there for punishment, i like old offenders as they are, then ! turn tbem out again, as we have done ! before, to prey upon society. Would j it not be better a more humane j p'au, too to have them exf cuted at j once? Are we now to say to the ! world, by letting this matter fall to the ground, that Oregon is too poor to have a reform school ? Better the ' subject had never been broached than ! that such an. impression should be i allowed to fret abroad. Our citizens ! "uoweu lo &et ;unu,iu. vur emz;en 1)ave "l.vays responded liberally to j tlie calIs for au for every -worthy en- i terprise, and wo believe now, could i a favorable plan belayed before them, j dearest. No additional mouey that they would not bo long in making j i Piid to a good teacher in ever lost up the necessary funds for the estab- or thrown away. As far as possible, lishment of this humane institution. the same teacher should be employed The following, which we clip from i from year to year. Nothing is more the Oreyonittn, seems the most pr tc- i detrimental to the real progress of ticable of anything we have been, ('pupils than a frequent change 'of and we are ready to welcome any plan teachers. Children w ho are atvus which can be carried out, so it is an j tomed to the .same teacher can ahviiyri improvement on our present system : ' mako Ur better progress with t!u ir Let there be a reform schoolorgan- studios than with a stranger, and the ized as a part of the State penitenti- j teacher can also do them far better ary a reform school department, j jastiee. When a teacher is employed We see no considerable objection to ; . i ..t i i n . i : , , t -. J the parents should do ail in their such a plan, while it possesses many 1 . advantages. It would be entirely l,owor to uphold hi ; hands in the safe. The young criminals would be j government of his school. Unless as completely shut out from socio- j iie is backed bv their moral support, of their keeper, as could be desired The expense would be but a trifle, as the State owns tho grounds and per haps all the buildings necessary for a long time, and would" add nothing i to the guarding force about the pris on. There would have to be about two employes immediately connected with the care of the children, and these could be got at a compensation not exceeding $1,200 each per year. Let this subject have careful consid eration. It has been spoken of favor able by some of our citizens, who hae taken an active interest in the subject of preventing juvenile crime, and, we are persuaded, it will be the more favorably received generally, the more it is studied. Irayer-5leetlngs. The noon day prayer meetings which were given, in Allen's dance cellar in New York, are said to have produced much good.. Allen him self, at one time known as "the wick edest man in New York," is said to" have been thoroughly converted, aud now is engaged, like tho ex-English prize-fighter, Beudigo, in spreading the good work among his own and lower classes. Business men in New lork City to this day attend the once resort of vice as regularly as the priest reads his breviary. The effi cacy of prayer in this place is said to have been, on numerous occasions, most fully demonstrated. From a correspondent we learn that during the noon prayer meeting of the Young Men's Christian Asso ciation at Portland, a well known gambler arose, and drawing Uom his pocket an elegantly made card box, said: "I want to be a Christiau," handing at the same time Ihe card box to a member of the Association, "audi want, you to take, this and remember me in your prayers." He then took two packs of cards from his pockets and gave one to General Howard and one to Rev. Mr. Chatin, Secretary of the Association'. "As these implements of vice were given up, accompanied by earnest", pathetic words mnnv in i)o rnnm iriru rvn-n-r! j to tears. And we have no doubt but j there was that rejoicing iu Heaven whioh the Oooj B ,,Iv- tells ns come3 I from tho'roturn of a con- frit inn Tr 1 T MaKE Imp"ovemext. The ; liari tlmQS have nnw lasted two full ; yeai'9" " 1"US d jt a change we , U'nst v?OJ't nore t'"- we import, Ca:lfi6 our t''w:noe, ami have a sctt!tnl onetary basis. ' ; ' The VTV. 7.." j Lonan llTl'C 1 j (SI 000) for the be- QtlCJd I 1 ' essay on. Code of International Law. There were twenty-nine competitors for the prize. rublic Schools. After having made a very general tour through this county, in visiting its schools, it may not be amiss to speak of their present condition, and to make some suggestions in regard to them. The interest in these schools is very considerable, still, in many places,0 not so much so as it should be, jadgiug from the length of the schools which they have each year, of the condition of the school buildings, and of their furniture. In a few distiicts there are very good school buildings and well furnished, such as would do credit to any peo ple like circumstanced. They are also willing to bo taxed so as to sup port a school eight or nine months in the year, and to pay a fair salary for the services of a good teacher; but while this is the case with a few, it is not so with all, not even the major r.ivt. In too many districts every, attempt at taxation is voted down, teachers are secured at the very smallest wages possible, and the school buildings are allowed to go to rack and ruin for want of the needed repairs. Doubtless much of this is owing to the limited means which many possess, but still I be lieve that if the people only thought so, there would bo no difficulty in securing at least a six months' school every year, and of having good school buildings well furnished. No district ought to be satisfied with only a three months' school during the year. A school of that length " s mut--" time and money thrown away, for nearly all children forget iu the nine months that they are out of school what they had learned in the three. Children only jnt begiu to learn how to study at the end of three months. And when they are only learning how each year it is easy to see how little they will know. But not only should an effort be made to secure more than a three months' school, there should ftl be an .effort made to secure the best teachers. And this can only be .v.-.j. v u vm done by offering a good salary. this, as in all other things, In the. cheapest article is commonly the W - V V V 1. V -All. -".Wil. room he must be supreme, and any interference with his rules and regu lations is destructive of all that can make his school of benefit to their children. If at any time it is thought that there is good reason for com plaint, then the teacher should be seen in person, and that without the knowledge of their children. There is nothing so utterly ruinous to chil dren as believing them to be perfect, giving a Toady credence to all their complaints against their teacher, and letting them know that .you do so. Tlie teacher has a hard lot at best, and ho ought to be supported and encouraged in every possible way, by the patrons of the school. I notice that the furniture, in many of the school houses is not wdiat it ought to be. In order to promote good government and the comfort of the children, the desk i ought to be of such a size as not to accommodate more than two pupils, and tlie seats should be of different distances from the floor, so that all the children may rest their feet upon it. There is nothing so cruel as to require little children to sit still all day long in the school-room with their feet dangling. Let older persons try it for a little .while, and they would soon find how very uncomfortable is such a posi tion. There should be in every school room good blackboards. A teacher's success is very dependent upon their aid. The more he can present any subject before the sight of a child, the more clearly and intelligently will it be made known to him. What a child sees he generally remembers and understands far better than what he simply commits to memory out of the text book. Regularity in attendance at school is a matter of the very first impor tance, and yet we fear that many fail to realize it. They allow the:r chil dren to be absent on the slightest provocation, not thinking for a mo ment that such absence, if but for one day, may interfere very materi ally with their progress. And yet such h very often tlie case. Absence from a single recitation may prove of untold inconvenience and trouble to the child. A connecting link may thus be lost which makes all that fol lows dark and unintelligible. In some districts there seems to be a habit of using the public funds a year in advance of the time for wtioh they are drawn. This, while done no doubt with the best intentions, is clearly an injustioe and wrong. It is not difficult to see that the ohii dren whodraw the money are often times not the children who receive the benefit of it. A family of ohil dren, for instances come into a dis trict, and draw the pro-rata of the public fund. but that which they draw must be Spent in paying for the school taught the 'previous year, and thus they 'are deprived of that which in all right and justice belongs to them. We hope that the mere statement of I this wroner is sufficient to lead to its T. ! i'?z ueing reenneu. J. W. S ELI. WOOD, C&unty School Superintendent. COURTESY OF BANCROFT LTRRARYl Xews of the Wreck. Three bodies and two trunks have been picked up by the Gussie Tel fair and the Oliver WTolcott. One of the bodies is George Vining of Puyallnp, and another supposed to be Mrs. Lawson of Victoria. The Wolcott has taken Iudians and ca noes to search along the shore. Neil O. Henley, the quartermaster saved by the Wolcott, says the sec ond mate told him that he thought the mate, with eight of the crew in a boat, got clear of the ship. They may be lizard from yet. His statement substantiates' Jel ly's story that tlie loss of the Pacific was tlie result of a collision. Of the eight who were on the raft originally with him, he was tlie sole survivor. His cries attracted the attention of the passengers of a passing steamer, and a boat being lowered, he was saved. Tlie Oliver Wolcott steaming up Barclay Sound, the first Indian vil lage was hailed, ,and a canoe came off containing a wh'ite man, -who came aboard and introduced himself as the first mate of the ship Orpheus. He stated that he had been run into the Thursday night previous by a steamer, and was wrecked on the-fol-lowing Saturday morning on an is land near by Copper Island. The captain and crew had got ashore safely, and were encamped further up. Proceeding in the direction in dicated, another canoe iqiproachcd, in which was Captain Sawyer of the ship Orpheus. He gave the follow ing account of the disaster: On Thursday evening he was approach ing the Cape, andwas by his reckon ing, about twenty miles off, with a fresli southeast breeze, steering .about northwest before the wind. His man at the wheel first saw the steamer's head light off the port bow, and then immediately after straight ahead. He conld se neither of her side lights, and eould not make out which direction she was coming. He put his helm ararboard and turned his ship's heal off shore. The steamer, by this time, had got very near him, arid blew one whistle, and in less than half a minute after, her bow struck his vessel a glancing blow just abaft the fore chains, crushing in the rail and breaking his phmldng down to near the copper. She surged alongside of her, strik ing and grating along his starboard side, carrying away all his starboard braces and jigging on that side nnd also his foretop mast and topgallant ma-t. Capt. Sawer states he hailed the steamer as she surged past and called to them to lay by him, ami send him a boat, as he th.n supposed his ship to be in a sinking condition, but no one answered his hail, nei ther did- he see any one oii her deck. She drifted or steamed away, he was not certain which.- and he afterwards saw-a llash lijrht, which he took for asicrnalat that time they had heard ! his hail and would Ivy by him. lie i saw her no more, and his ship . tion. lie l.tv to the remainder of that night and nearly all day Friday repairing his rig.-riug, and that after noon got under wny und again made "ail for the land, allowing for two knots north )itlu-rly set off the current o.Mtioii, frmu which he bad , ci t i i re to. Soon after danc he for Lis po first hov made a light, which lie took for Cape Flattery, not knowing that thre was a lijcrht on the coast farther north, nor did his latest sailing make note of any. He allowed five miles clear ance for Duncan rock and .consider ed himself safe after entering the straits of Fnca. w hen about 5. o'clock Saturday morning, his ship scraped over a reef, and immediately after struck her bow on a rock, stnolr fast and filled. Tlie. light he mistook for Flattery is on Cape Beale, the en trance to Barclay Sound, 35 miles north of the former. How the ship escaped dangers" passed before she struck is a mystery to all who have examined tho admiralty chart of Barclay Sourwl. The ship will prove a. total loss. Capt. Sawyer got all the valuables lie could out of her, and encamped on tlie shore with his wife and crew in tents made of her sails. He had hired a canoa from the Indians and started his mate to Victoria for help, but the weather was so bad that tho Indian's would not venture out on .the" voyage, so they were found when the Walcott arrived. Lieut. Havwood took them aboard his vessel with the most val uable portion of tho goods saved, leaving the 6rst mate of the Orpheus in charge of the wreck until her own ers could be consulted. All were landed safely at Port Townsend on Friday morning. Nothing ' was heard or seen in Barclay Sound of anything pertaining to the unfor tunate Pacific. Too much praise cannot be given to Capt. llarwood and the other .officers and crew of the revenue cutter Wolcott for then energy and activity shown on the oc casion, und also to Peter Thompson, a pilct, who volunteered his service! as h j was well acquainted with the shores of Vancouver Island and the surroundings of the Straits of Fnca, and also to Mr. Huntington, the In dian agent at Neah Bay reservation, and, in fact, all with whom we came in contact. Capt. llarwood and Pilot Peter Thompson went to the wreck of the Orpheus and examined it carefully. They say that the ship was undoubt edly struck by the steamer, just abaft the forward riprprinpr. Advance Wak-sixg. The Oregon ian and some other papers of the State are consulting their Lloyds Ptcgister, and now that tho Pacific has gone to the bottom of tho sea, bravely announcing to the public that for near ten years she has been rated A 2, and saying that they knew she was unfit for passenger carrying. If they know so, why did they not warn the people before the disaster? Gentlemen, please look at your Lloyds again, and tell us how many more of theso coasting stitnerS are rated A 2, and unfit for use, aud do it before they go to the bottom. It might save some few lives theso stormy times. Speak out. In the W. T. Legislature, theill prohibiting the sale of liquors on "TiV . , ' "W13, amended so that it y.i u.ji ue niegai to open the saloon i after the polls have been closed after which the bill was passed. ItTER f K03I NEW YOltK. . -.Fto-m Onr Xlcguiar Gorrcsr-ondcnt. s ' Neav.Ybk;Nov. 3, 1S75. ' Tamilian j Hall vas yesterday badly defeatetl'.by .the. coalition formed by the union' of the' ! 'shof t-hair" Demo crats ud'.ihe'. Republicans., The action of the. Republfcar s was char acterized by. theii1 .usiiaV willingness to sell out" to ".the 'highest bidder. They have" a 'habit in'ttli'is city of sell ing their birthrjght .for a mess of pottage, eating the-pottage and repu diating the Sale. Polities makes strange bed-fellows, and the party represented by thS Times, who were so loud in their cries against the ring of Tweed, as soon. as. Tammany makes a movement of reul reform, by casting out all w ho were connected with that riug, unites with tho supporters of those cast oat in returning them to office. John K.. Hackett is the prin cipal criminal 'judge in this city, and is called "Becorder.". ".He "is the in timate friend of Geo. Barnard, who was judge and. was impched, ex Mayor Ha-11, of. riug notoriety, who escap.ed. punishment through Hack elt's iufetramentalityi and indeed has been hand in glor with all theiug. On the downfall of that po-wer, Hall was put on trial '.with the others. Garvin was the' ring. District Attor ney, but the ca3es were conducted for the people -by "Wheeler H. Peck ham & O'Conor. As the trial pro gressed things began to look 'very dark for Hall, so Garvin, on th last day of his term of office, and without notica to Peckham & O'Conor, waiv ed a nolle prosequi, as ftgainst Hall, which motion Hackett grantud, and ante-dated it five days, so as to pre1 vent an interview. This, and taking fees as counsel for the city at the same time he was liecordt-r, to the' extent of $21,000, and suspending sentence in cases of nearly 200 con victed criminals, made his nomina tion slightly obnoxious to honest people. However, he rah on the "high wages" ticket, and as the Ke publicaus wanted to i-e-elecb their District Attorney, Phelps, and voted for Democrats for nearly every coun ty office, tlie anti-lummany, qwou dam Tweed party carried the duy r-''""' '""" c-.o.u? , . . . . . - 000; Prem una on loans and sales of wuh pretty fair majorities. Morns- goIJf $pj2,000,000. The stringer sey is State Senator, and it is hoped j execution of the lawa pertaining to ho will act in accordance with the j the collection of faxes on disiiikj wi-hes of the republicans who voted 1 SP";3 is commended as tho sure-it . ,--., r -it- .-ii u i gnard against the " commission of for him. As the Legislature will be . ..llul, uX C0lt:lill ninemWl;ts ,n ! of that party, perhaps he will be per- i untied to set up a faro tabiemone.' j of tho lobbies at Albany. The elec j tion passed off very quietly, the hard j times preventing any reckless "trcat- ing," aud the saloons" did a .smaller j business than usual. In the State, tho Demoonitd have probablv carried the general tiokwt, ... ... ,- - A, WhiCii is a vindication of Governor I . xnuea ana ms reiorin.s, ana is a death-blow to inflation . Indeed that party has received- several death blows among tlie eleven States that held elections yesterday. It. is that tuonght that alone makes endurable the election of Hartraaft and his cor rupt crowd injPennsylvania. A curious aud rather unusual oc currence was tho Loiding in Brook lyn of a mammoth prayer meeting by tho evangelists, Moody and San kay. They have, been successful in that towu beyond the most sanguine expectations, having received efhe hearty co-oparation of the5miuisters of. all denominations: Their audi ences have not t'yily filled the im mense l'iink in which their meetings are Leld, but .several auxiliary meet ings have had to be started in neigh boring churches, conducted bytheir re-spectivo pastors, and to wlych Sankey would make short visits, singing his wonderfully inspiring Stg. ... . ll. t Or- The following bills have been ap proved by the Governor oj Washing ton Territory: Disposal "of lots at Vancouver, sale to persons; sale of liquors on election days; for relief of G. II. White; to protect deer iu Island county- to improve roads in Pierce, King and Cowlitz; construc tion of ditches and drains; to onfer jurisdiction in Snohomish district court; defining' vagrancy; defining nuisance; defining boundaries Whit man county; Seattle charter; amend ing Walla Walla charter; quartz mining; sale of egprs b.y weight; fire engine at Walla Walla: election of officers in new counties; ho law in Snohomish; organizing Columbia county; sheep Jaw in San Juan; per mitting J. M. Whitman and wife to adopt children; to prevent contagion among domestic animals; sheriff to Klikitat; to protect game; notaries; liog law in Thurston, Cowlitz and Islarul counties; to amend license law; declaring Spokane navigable; crimes and puuishments criminal cases; authorizing Olympia 'to levy a special tax; subdivision of district? courts; to paint and fence the capi tol; to repeal the public printing act approved 18G3; administrators; titles to university lands; amending Port Townsend charter; Territorial war rants; to form State government. Hard, horny hands, 'embrowned by the sun and roughened by labor, are more-honorable than white ones that never reached c?ut to help a fellow creature, or aided a dollar to tho world's wealth. Until something can be invented to takotho pjaoe and do the work of cloves, without creating suspicion, we shall consider Yankee ingenuity wofully incomplete. The Detroit girls prevent their lovers from going Lack on them by them as "my intended husband." Cut this receipt out: it i is believed to be a dead shot. Donald 3IcKay is keeping store in Bay City, Cqos county. a Cat hollo sionary, was shot m the H.ri.f i.I nml lvt lu- Aril.,l r"-"una n i r chief. He reached Victoria Rocket, Thursday, and his are healing. in tho wounds Moody and Sankey, assisted l,v 100 clergymen from vurious church" continue their reival inBroohha'0 with crowds daily' to hear them. The coal mine explosion in Bel gium was more destructive of ljftt than was at first surmised, and 4 dead have been taken out. Spain and the Pope are still nesro- ttiating ami treating, but nothim. definite has been reached. Spain has sent 800 more troops to Cuba, and 500 additional will embark in a few days. The Glasgow cottou mills, valued at 150,000, were burned on the lit. and 1.200 emplo-ees are left without work. 0 The Beecher-Loederjierjury caseia being pressed on. Another terrible disaster at fea is reported by the brig Centaur, arrived at New York, Nov (11th, from Gray town. Oct. 21 her master took oa board a Spanish negro, the sole sur vivor on board the bark Toronto of Glasgow, which was wrecked neur Navissa (?), wlieu or how is known, as the negro was unable to iell. He simply knew that the bark eucouutered a violent storm after she left Navissa, and when driven near tho shore the Captain ordered all t the long boat. A sea soon washed Seven of 'them off aud only seveu other were then left; in the boat. They had no provisions and drifted about for days the rains giving thera wateraud tlie ouly sustenance all tht time. At last all jerished ex cept the. negro, who was insensible " when found.- He hsl eaten sea weed and existed on sea birds and fish, wdiije thus desolate. 'Some of hid COnipnnions had leaped overboard insane pchaps. They had scraped tliv' dirt off the boat's sides for food, as tlie boat picked up shoCs.0 The steamer Waco buiLed in Gal veston harbor, had on board oOO ca.s(-.s petroleum. The vessel had no right to carry- this oil without the necessary certificate, and her owners will bo prosecuted. Washington, Nov. 11. The Com missioner of Internal Revenue has completed his very vrdumiijous report-for t e fiscal j ear, to June DO, 1S75. Tij'C total recipts in tlie Treas ury, exclusive of notes aral loans ;u-9 thus stated: Cnstcms, $l,l7;),000,(.!.(); Internal Revenue. SIJoB.OMJKjU; T-: i 5lii'M'ii.I),.i i: . t . i the law concerning rectifiers aro suggested, lne total loss to t! Go eminent by frauds during tho Inst ten months is cstimatt d at 51, 6T),0U0. There hae been seized 'A distilleries, o rectifying houses, ai d fiifty U. S. gaugtis and .store kc.p-as have been found implicated in ti.o crooked bnsin ess. Yi in the report it is manliest that the Govt vmih ut las a good deal yet to learn and to do ia tlie solution and j-etth nx nt of ll.o whisky traffic. High duties had to ; muclt smuggling, and it may be pos sible that a similar effect is produced by very stringent legislation on this subject. Commissioner Bmdett, of the gen eral lauil office, will, in Jiis forthcom ing" report, strongly ra.o:nmeud t!Ct all timber land oil'vied by the gov ernment be appraised and thrown open to purchasers at not less than their appraised value. Ho is of opinion that unless they are thus placed under private guardianship iho rine-jforestsof the country willsooa he wantonly exhausted by lumber com panies and speculat -rs, who are row stripping the land under cover of dummy pre-emption entries, or with out any pretense of accordance v.ith law, while the government derives no revenue from its properly, and the country- sustains almost irrepa rable damage 'fu.m the sweeping denudation of large areas of its water sheds, he will also condemn the prac tice of extending the system oi sub division surveys over immense bod ies of worthless land west 6f the Lun dreth meridian, and suggest that only s ich tracts be minutely sur veyed as have any attractions for settlers. The recommendation of h;s predecessor that the pre emption laws be abolished and the homestead sys tem be made the only method of ac quiring title to agricultural lands is repeated and earnestly urged upon the attention of Congress. c Louisville, Ivy., Nov. 13. The jurv in the case of the United States vs.'Bill Smart, Geo. Mefiort, John Owan and Geo. Hall, charged with conspiracy against the government, and intimidating Willis Bushel, act ing U. S. marshal, in the discharge of his duties, returned a verdict this morning of guilty as regards Smart and Meffoi t. Mercy was begged iu behall of Mtffort, on account of ill health. San- Fhancisco. Nov. It. A smart shock of earthquake occurred at V:5o this evening. Vibrations were from east to west. No d mage reported. Severe shocks of earthquake were felt at San Diego, DAHahiein, Los Angeles, and San Bernardino on the 15th inst. Southern California is having a copious rainfall. The production of gold in Mon tana this year has been very satis- year to tho miners sorinir there has been an average Snonthly shipment of SIOO.OOU m dust by Wells, l argo -o., " that Territory. Chester P. Harden . indicted for the murder of Daniel McMalion, was last week arraigned at Jacksonville, and will perhaps be tried ere long. He was carried into court and pre sented a rather maciated appearance. Vve learn that there have been two pool made up of 10,000 and 12.00U bushels of wheat, respectively, , ny some of the farmers storing at Lin- U1U. 1 l ICU"Y,.-tsMits itself ! ,?i0LVIf k i Ti miii ri i l v nil S'Uu " " The village of Hubbard's Station, in Marion county, is improving. They have a lyceuru, and are about to start a graded school. Father Brabant,