i PKOFKSSIONAL CAKD W1LU3ICTT I'MYEKSITY. C-M-KM. ORKiSONMlie oldest mid lai-jrc-t. IJ Incorporati-d S-liiAil in tin S(ati. (.'lawtral ( mnmi-r.-lal, X, nnal and SWciitili,-, emir-eH el Mii.lv. Kor I'nil liUomiatioii a tdivs the I'rei-Mi-lit, T. M. catch, Or . X. TKHKV, 8iv. of 1JM Trii.siies. Set. 7. tlAwlv in. i:. ft. 11 siii;. o DKKIi 'K -Xci. 1, Mivnn' lili.k. Itesl- len.-;.-- Ontr: :s;ieet. i ),i,)situ V niver.-liv. k.:U J. t.HI BJl'i, M. I. piIVSH'lAN AM) SUICKOX, oP.ots lite lasand vivthHy. uiiT.MnU" ms. n. ".u:i-i:vi nr.. t)iivsi'.jaa' AM) si;iu:i-;ox, OnV-c and -I lii-sid'-tve on A.ttienv sini:t, liea 'y mji Mte '.lie I'ntKfrccntiiini-t I'lliuvli. Sa'i.-m. mill. 71. tf TTOi;XfYS AT ..V. IM-HanO, io pm. ttlli.vi-. nji .sruiy---i. . .-.onicr From ' -tin I WasliiiigKm Sciift?. .Sj)t.21(Ui w VTTiS:XEVS AT LAV,' awl .lirtlfir ill Cliaii.-ery, A Many, Orc'Hi. I.. H1NX, Xo'arv. I'nliu.-. I iilio-:luu i'inl coiivevaik---; ja-niuntlv at tended to. " lv,tf . l:. li.v.UMS, Notary TulilUs C X. TEKRV, .ttirni-y t Law TKSUtl. OKFl: K OVKK TIIK BANK, Sal.-xu. Oi ami. ileal Estate. Jnsiiranci- and lol livtim; Avenls. lieal K-tttle in Use CUv nn I l'" mks. .UistHxl of all titles in Ma-lioin-onin-.-. ikic 4U-wfc!' JAM XX A. IWILUiOMtX, 31. !., I)IIY:sJi I AN AN W1M1KOX. (Late Belivu" JIh-jl'i.'iI Me li.al foiU-irc New York City.) s itli.re Jn ti,re s JJrick, '.-sili-m. ( t-.ni. Ke-si- don,-,-., iAite titu X. iii. ww ul Matriop as, eta re. a: w. royal, Ifc.I. l.STA'l E AliKNT. Ci;v l'rn.evly IV and Kami lip-sale. fJuu-cs lo real Mid lvnts ot:H-.uiL UK. E. Y. Cii'.SE, OFl-IlK JiI'JUb.'N'S ItlWK, iif sJain, S:iit.iiL ( ireiruil. Kntriiii'i' n SlaU-slni-t o)iMM4te Ibu iini 7!if oi That.M'r .4 Su, ;;uil alstMti I'unnvpiviiii trwt. o'jK-ile lirni; :-?t,ru J. V. ShiUwv. x jilDlf imi,'III.IJ!& HILLIABS, VTri.2JXi YS A foNrdXAKS AT JLA"W' Will n, lk ; in hiili ialand Stale I'niirl.s. nil. ; -X o. ili;J''ir.sl sti', i'jkjt i'uft Otlieu), lui-iu-iii,l, Drcfwui. ly SALuiV, DRAT & HACK CO., Fori Urlor mul Khipporx, CITY DSAYMErj a K&OKMtK, All fre'JitMir i!Uin tin- riiy loiest&!iijrl. ieli.-e and , 'ii rir.MM-. rule term-. I an"iM!'es , distant ly :n aiiintUinee t i'on vev ius-s'itp-rs ti.'irsiirli"i'.tsT; -uiioitjili'iviiS e!. 1'i .i tT.il. ilu:' Harble WorlL. MONROE & STALER, j ; a Lints ix MonumentSj 0belisks.,7ombsJ Eead and Foot Stones, 1-:XE'.TTE1 JX CALIFORNIA, VERMONT -AND -f'iiten.. 4ri'-.Ka, And .2ranch Shop at Albany. Jmii'ldu j r.i.'i.N.NOX 1P.HB. MYERS BROS. (CtHveRmrK l! invld "ol.l, iMPiau'Kre-i axd de.u.ku's ix '3'ovet, Pumps, rtn and Lead Pip-: IK IHSKK 'IfOKK, Ae., .ml 5Iar.n.iii-.niiTs of " Tin, Sfceetlror. ar.d Copper Ware. Sjic-ifc; Kltpjil'eii jrt.d ti. AAiiii, r.vMii eni5 'veoirin;. AImi Au'i'i-.ls f.ir.Lefl'e'V AipctVan IVliJ': 'Tnrtiim: Water V Inx'L 'nr lenns sne isi) Salmi. Jeii. 1 1. ."jr. Sweot Oiclcz FAR.RAR BROTHcR'S. DISSOLUTION. -XfrrncEis nnim ;ivKVTHATrnE linRid ). UmiHim & '.. limiy M;n- dnefnrrrs- is Oil day rtisilvfd. and the 5nstnps vr iv iire:tfter cndn,-'ed iiy i). I-Tmnsnn. tvIio jtssim.''s ad hAli'it:es .anvl to wliiniiill airnimtB will lie liai I. i. I.AMVSOX. i-uaa c u.vKirr. Sji'eiT.. .Jhti. l"i,lS7i. Willarnetta tininersity. HAI.K-TKilM W.UTNS VKr.l.TAKY "rtv 1M72. Tniitlst tilrrin xttlrit, time jfcy Minlv for rinviindm--,tf Terr. Salem, Jan. ill. II Q Reductionjn Prices! ST. CHARLES HOTEL, 'o::iLk.i, - - - - o3tMox. Only Hrst-Clr Ho'd in the Cily. "I'rHMMiiit lwn ii1 IIoiikI !). . S-J (. 5ei Tin- Tio-t r'eaaiit a.v. iml: iens; tjible ;md niien-Uih-e ui,rtir,ci-sU at tlie nlwn. ii'a ,,on ln,irs. JoHX J. JAt ills. iviiUw rri,,itetir. MISCKLIJW'KOl" SflLEMp,OH'WORKS. ,B. F. DRAKE, Proprietor, MALI-: 32, OUI-KiO.X. Seau rileys. Sje.v 'Mi .-:s .Milts. IK,!- n I'Mn. and an Uti-i- f !- i tKi.i. -Ii,,rt iiiHt'e. "ttern ii.Tltir iKuie In IK I various l'liTV'.s. and !l kind.- el Sim-? and lr"ii in.i.uf miniier. M.i,-i.i- o I""' :i, l-s tar.J-!.ed ar -lu.v: not'. ;i;?VkWc-vU'.. WaODBUKNJiURSERY. .1. II. S, t:V'i.iT. at IVe-lKirii Sl.-.ii'i, . A C. K. I'... Matioa c .1111 y, ran ,.r,'l ln.1U t'K Uit-UMi lUWl'HS fur Jill lierts of I II L IT, OUX Ai-'F.xrrAb, and M.T BfAIUXi; TUEES. jJiTA riioieo ivjkc.'ioa Shrulibcry . Ail Jress orders l J. II. Si;rTLKMIKU, octSlwtf Jervais. Oregoa- 7000 CHERRY TREES -AI- W00D3URM NURSERY, Fnr 2.1 eirulr, aiiitve. .Ires J. II, w1m Solvt Varteli-. Ail .Sf'lll.KniKR, i,n-aiH (X'lt- Stationary Engine. Junes it rattersim, o(Ji-r for sale a Steaui I'.nfTlne, (ncwi liitn. li lvnv,'iu tn.-li stroke. I'as Jriiu Uiil, '.I feet Ion?, 1H Inrlu-s u1de 9 Iik-Iiim 'kuti Crank Slialt i,-t kni., 4 Iik-Iico in di 3111MM1T. lljilaive Wheel, h tki-t H lis ties in li:iini'ler. mid ivcitrlis I.inhi wnnds. I'rlee !fe.-,n deliitaxsl i Jortin,L MURDER WILL OUT! , If Jim boy Dr. J. I'. P. ran Don IJi-rgh' ( clebrated Sovereign Worm Syrup! An iiieiliililc ami furti euro to cxie1 woruis f'foto ('liildrtn. ,T They like t take it, anJ, in fact, cry It it. I'ricc One Dollar. T" '"' had nt hii! oGirc, llooius Nu. 9 iioil 22, ( .H UKkcta ll.itul, Salem. i.,t2fi THE VOL. 21. NO. 30. Too Much Allegory. T!ie jirofiiinlily il tiie ;",'.' ha i-uliiiitiutwl in ptiraUi' :t;nl l::is loiiiiil exiiressiiMi in tin; Mory "f :t lmni'hliai'k prince. I;ut it lun ft 'vnsit; jn :tt- tomptin to nisiki-j: ' JsI0rLP little alli'gory. Unit .t iiifnum ... .. villi's to U-ll vh:it tilil lilllrll ln-t- tiT ylien.( it was originally written, how a liudcliback lioi-aim a ni!er ami set a fasliinii which evcrylMiily followed iii iiuitntiu;; tiie liiinch. Afcordinto the J ,'.'? (Jnnst. is a ravenous smoker , ainl ihcrelinu this o!lit i;ils the "Xi-w York ittoni House have inado a iirnctiin of .-teal-int; .sfjpirs. If the segars were as weak as the application they would not he worth appropriating. if the Jh fvhl wauls to "point a moral ami adorn a tale" why don't it quote Tammany anil show up IJoss 'JVeeil and liis Itin. men who steal ly millions, while thivm",li all of Cr.infs career there is not a reasouahle suspicion that any jiersonal dishonesty has ixUU'd. Kven in relation to the New York Custom House tljore is no reason found to :icciiso him of complicity with any of the alleged irregularities. The liiie; or'ans must keep up vicr y enough to Ik- somewhat origtiial aitd not fill hack the po'urtss .mccdous of past ages to illustrate their own fatuity, ft itviii's no allegory to show up ti? fact Ihat cwiran State is mismanaged. V have only to show up the Litigant Hill, tlx-Swamp Land Kiil. the Canal and Locks oicratiou and tlie w.j the Slate salaries were raised, wIk-ii tlx' 'oust itnt ion said they should have no iiKTease. to make a case that the people can plainly ami forcibly understand and will act lipim. We can place the cl;iirn1crs nf uion than one of the King agi-ms and favor ites before the public to plead otrr causi;. I tut we won't lie i'lilKitil in our con clusions or suonose thai iH-ctmse we have tuts to use. our opponent should also wield them. The vitv force of our fads drives them to the use of tables we give it up thai they have no other siKiw. That being tlw. case the I lemocratii' organs may as well be al supplkil with CiiU'iTer's Traveis. rifsops I-'ablis and the Arabian Xiglits. so that with Carl Shinv.' late speecli iii the Senate tiny s-:m make s iv-liei1able camin'.ign. I The A utiles! j Hill. Tlnte was a strong dispospiinii 0:1 the Ktrt of tlw Ih pubiii-an parry ii ( ongr"ss ti jms a (Ji-iK'ral Amnesty Kill tiie present session and remove ( the. disabilities lnmi all or ner.riy all j the late r-iels in the .South. Much ' time tip to the iresent has ixwn !evo- teil to tlx' jn-iiding Amnesty !i!L which lias p.nal'y been rejected in thf-. 1 Senate wifn h midouhtiv'Iy eds the 'matter for this session. Several rea j sons have combined t prodrtee this ! summary rejection of the tiili. One i may K- tlie developments in the Kit I KIux trials in South Carolina, and j other manifestations which go to es j tabiish tktt upon uianj" jxtoiis to 4 whom the franchise is ikav denied Amnesty would be a waste of clenien 1 cv. Wv have always felt liuit tin? ( rovertiuietit. has waited its forgivness upon thotst r.ds of thyse who plotted treasoii and have ihtit repeiued it, but would lie as sr,re t do it again as occasion should oftvr. Too much leni ency has encouraged such to be inso lent and vindictive and Ku Klnx out rages have iiecn the result. Another -reason for the rcr. ftion of tle Aniiw-sty Itill. wa probably found in (lie accumulation of amendments in relation to i1. Senator Sunnier wanted to enact in tliat connection every ho! 1- by that lb- bad devi -ed. and as be could not sneeeeil be voti-d to reject the bill. There wa- a great difference in th.e views t utertaiued and the sng-ge.-tious offered . There was too mucii politics invohi'l and too little real statesmanship, and therefore it is as well that the in itter has gone over. Tlie ihiiiiIkt of pi rsons now disfran chised cannot !" very great, and tiie priile and ambition of .b-tf Javis anil other leading conlederates can wait .s'ltisliiition for a year or so longer without detriment to the public good. Kven if they should never obtain re lief until they a-k for forgiveness pen itently, tlie- world may continue to re volve and our general prosH-ri;y as a nation may endure ti.ihnpared. Xvisl the Caricaturist. i The follow ing sketch id' Xasf. pnv j babiy Ihe most sitcii'ssinl ami In-si ! known cariiiituri-t now living, re- poricd to be given to a reMrter in Phil ndelphia. recetitiy, by Xasby will, no doubt. I; read villi interest by all laiuiliar with Xast's pictm-os : "Thus. Na -t. is a man thirty-four years of age, and al.nut five feet seven inches hi higlrt. He litis a keen, s-harj) eye. and a good (jerinan face, has black hair, and is dapjier and neat in his person. I I null j , ,i- j iiciny. and came over hero when he u as almut 1 live vctirs oi aire. 1 is ftt!iT wanted him to ! a jeweler, but lie was already betrothed toart. 1'r.ink ! I-slJe, 1 think, liroutrh'i hint out, first. ! nt the time, he sent him lo Knglaud to ; make liictures of the great iieenau- Sviyers prize fight. And then, v.-hen Ihe war broke out. the Harpers sent ! him South to sketch bailies. !t was in lS'ii just after the election, wiieu ail tlie countiy was clamoring for peace at I any price.'that, lit; struck the particular i vein in which he lias simv become (anions. "1 he picture lie drew then, entitled "Peace," was grand. It rei resenU;d a Union stildicr's gwve, over the tombstone of which was weeping Columbia. At the foot stood a com panion to the dead loyalist, stripped of hi arms, and shaking hands with a rebel armed to the teeth and with one foot upon the grave. That picture nindo his reputation. Ilc was as well known the next day as lie is: now. It was circulated by millions as a cam paign document. He lives, I think in Xo. 100, Twenty -fifth street, Xew York, near JIarleui. in a modest frame house. Hi wife and his three sons constitute his family. Tliey have no servants. At the end of tlie. lot on which his house stands is a one-story 1 trick building, wliere he does his work.-' He has the quaintest collection of curi osities, chiefly of art, that can Ik; imagined. II is wife is a lady of rare, intelligeiii-e, who assists bim greatly in ins lanors. mm; is a relative of .lames Parton. Nast is a man of in domitable courage and rare intelli gence. Politically, he is a most in tense rat heal. The lat thing Ik; dots is always his best. Xat is a moralist a man who niii-t have an idea. His le.iicil is savage and bitter, and cuts like a knout. He tells in ten strokes of his jiencil wliat it would take vol umes to express." "The strongest propensity in a wo man's nature," says a careful student ofthe sex, " is to want to know what is going on, and tlie next is to boss the job." KilitorLil CiiiTcspondcnce. 'ii!,T!.imi. r,jb. 11. I 1 couldn't have l'-lt much rain b hinil lue at Salem for they seem to liavc H all on hand here anil more n - coniii.sg. It is astonishmg where J. ortiaim gets an 11s weainer, 101 n will rsiu here wlien there is not a thouglit of it twenty miles oil' in any direction, and I lave twice this winter found itsSiackground of hills whitened witha.snow mantle when there was no svak of it elsewlicre ; such was the case je.stTlay. My oiuioii is that when JiuTe is not snow or rain enough to go around Portland gets it all. whkis inespoiiils with the average modesty of its metroiKiHtan claims. They tell me here Uiai, times are really dull antwich is probably the case, for the silnnsbia river has beeti closi-d so much of the winter that nobody dare come down from that lialfol creation. Uit thill -or not these people go tearing around ami nittlii: alMitit with noi-e enough to !ock several modest towns f this sia. Portland will never die of ;in oveiv3)se of modesty, tluit is one siiisfai-t U-Mi. SAtK tl' TIIK HCKAl.li. The mit intporatanl -thing 1 hear of is the sak' nf the li;":h The Poss 1 and the t-li'w-i have, purchasiil it. The "(ro Kiiw ftjiows " have collected their asset; and gathered togi'tlier their chips and whetstones and have traded tlie ingenuous Semple and the State Printing Patterson out of their pet iiiStitulkui and hereafter the con cern will lv known as the -Oro Kino Klcplnuit. Morning Kdition." Itoss Hallix'k walked through it on Monday, and raisiNl tiie Oro Pino ll.ig on the ruins. Tlte business manager and canvasser of the old concern was a publican and he realizes that "Othel lo's occupation is gone up." The late local mitt or whose wit boiled and fused so late ami earlv that he had to lie bound owr to answer to the next Crand .lury. hasceasi djto he local and thi clepiiant loftily waves trunk to bW him adieu. Tliere is only one thing about this business I regret and con sider unfair, it seems that our origi nal and duplicate of the ( iovernnrship. meanins: tl iy. onriovernerrover i iiud his (ioveriior .Miller, came down : on tlie Jiiniut ia-r wcck jikc me ":i on tbc fold and held Cou-u'tations and j ;-,t ion and the people aiv fully awan tried to prev:ribe for the invalid, but , j ()!-:f n.. o..a l.'i-ui fi.Mnu-j e-noe dioi'e. more 1 r,- , , . as tliev iini snu tirove on me nqinain. ; The Salem Ping has a right to control such littlit things as newspapers and ; trinventions. etc.. and as long as their I money Isold-: out probably they ciu J succeed i;i doing it. I never appreci ated what injury the t'hemeketa Hotel fiasco hail done the virtue and intelli- j rence of our town until 1 heard that, i they could not raise the ispl.tKKI needed to buy tl Portland organ, and were not adtuitied to even a share by the! Piss and I hief when they bought, it. i Crover ipakes P.osse and t'hiels of ' Police amU hen I hey buy newspajx rs ; V run lof Jim Xesmith or tiny other, man hut GTover. 'liny tike his ap-j liointini'iits and disappointments alike ' with cjiuiuimity. Xewspapt-s pas cunvnt here in ex- : change for all sorts of property. I am j told that Lappeus turned in a one-fourth J interest in the Last Portland Park to j help ;wy for his interest, and Hailed; swapped off shares in the Willamette Iron works to get hi intel'st. About , nine months from now when they get . tired of feeding the elephant, they may ' lx"r!adto c?'t the old possessions back again. Alwit'T liiirtUMi. i c.,.5.t.M,i td iinoroveme, its show th::t this town is gi-owing njiidly and it- business is bound to increase and its government in a great measure troej prosperity will overcome all bars and left city, to give the leading palrou obstacles. even those in the bottoms ot i ailorded by ils municipal govern tlie rivers. I give it up Ihat Portlom! has got such a start, that, even Kalama cant mlcli till "'"'l it- l'rehapi Asto ria may sometime get a railroad and forge ahead into commercial grandeur hut it u iil It; many a year, if ever, be fore Portland will find a rival, hardly before I he Xor)h Pacific terminus is located and .1 town fulfills the future destiny that await s a commercial me tropolis on t he waters of Paget Smnd. Fortunately this people have some thing ioaiuuse themselves with this rainy weather. Ceo.. P.. YValdron. I with an assorted crew of theatrical artists eamo up from San 1- ranciscn on purpo-e lo ilo them benefits, and I went to see, and hear Posedale last evening and must do justice to the ef forts of the V.'aldroti Tnnipe by saying that the play which was very interest ing and entirely moral and proper in spirit, was well rendered and received with applau-e by a good audience. The tvoujie is better appreciated than any ever Intc before and reajisa lo!ter reward in the way of ca.-h. There is nothing remarkable going on and the newspaper ine:i complain that items tire not overabundant. There are -o many new-paper- here that, it is not strange that there are not ilemenottgh to go the rounds. S. A. ('. IU'liii li Al.ivi:. The following i n rious incident comes ro us from relia ble sources ' A few days ago a man re siding in the Xiutli Ward, named Puskowski, after being sick with the small-pox for some time. dietX as was supposed. According to the regula tions recently passed oy tne i.oaitt oi jieanu, lit; was ouneii suoruy a tier ms dec-ease. His sister, who it seems was not satisfied with the hasty manner in which her brother was disposed of. was so worked up by the circumstances and so certain that all was not right, that to satisfy herself she had the body exhumed some six hours atter the burial. To her own joy, and to the amazement of those who had pro nounced the man dead, it was found that life still remained in the body ot the buried one. He was at once bikcn back to his house, and after considera ble exertion, and tlie appiii-ation of proper restoratives, be was virtually hrooght back to life again. He is now living and doing well. Improbable as the circumstances may seem, yet such things have happened, and tlie veracity of oiir informant .s"enis to vouch for ifs reality. There are not many mortals who enjoy tiie privilege at having fvo funeral's, hut, Puskowski is undoubt edly 'one of them. An old lady to her niece: "Cood gracious, Matilda, hut it's cold; my teeth are actually chaffering Loving niece: " Well, don't let. them chatter too much, or they may tell where you bought ctn." Some of the most trusted lighthouse keepers on the Atlantic coast are women. A late Cairo sensation is an infant that came into the world jxvssc.sing twenty-one pounds of humanity. SALEM, OREGON, AViiat do we Need 3 The political ntvsi(ie f oiTi-sile 11ml to be hummed up in view oi" tl c approiteliing electiouainl ottr llrst cihty is to arm the popular mini! with j.-ts, for facts grow into reasons and fur nish natural deductions, for Sbeir foun dation. Our first election in refate-sen-tirclv to State matters and SJate iriet ests, so we can atRirtl for ont- inonnent to leave the broader Held t" national politics to consider what are ihc ueds of Oregon within herse!'". Tjoofc tuck through the whole cour-e of t-gisl.isfon in our Stab" from 1S; until ?S7t .tu'd let us consider if Me need .nuy ntorw hone-t legislation than we had then? During all that time tliere v.-as not a job iut up nor an axe ground at the party exiense. Much ot the 5mjx'. too. Kepublieans were in overtbehoing majority so tint tlie I Joinocnvii.? (.po sition in tise l'gis!atiuv anKxsit'd to a nonentity, jrf esspd nointimiw and was ,over!ess to either do v n'Mst. The .!lepublii,-ui party was oistditpotcnt and yet it will stand to its t.m(ic for all time that its jHiwer was uc prosti tuted for personal apgraniSswoiviit. Ilui ii'g the years of l!epub',T-;fts rule we did not pi-rii ips enjoy ;rtediou but we ct-rt:.inly ilid 110I suibr,- sa.dcr actual abuses, and the whoi- cVvade from 1 Silll to lv7() ticitig sune'i up we invite a comparison with tin n-conl made by I.Mii(Kraev in 1s7ti ao. not denyiujj-that. it would have . asirde as. complete a recon! in if ti er.- had Ik'cu no Jlepnb!ic:iu tlovernt-c .-tabling in the way. j lfsjO was a l;iiier yefir lor Denrce ! racy for it carried the general election ' by a si'iateb. smd gained a maj-'rirv oi" ' the Legislature a:id made shoi-t work ' of opposition by ttttt.ing out a many ! Kepubliean member-' of each ll'iisira : 1 was necessary to make their itfirk J eay and plain. Then we ha-.t the I Litigant Act with its legalized -te jl ! intrs. The t anal iV Links pill vthich paid p.arty favorites : premium of $7 tlOtl over what The People's Tran-pur-taMou ("oinpany was ready tocontniet. f ir. which compelled that coqionniou to sell out to Pen Uoliad iy. anil sr gave him t!:e opportunity to mouopo- yy,t il! the trai!s;.ortafion of the be-f tlol) ofour S!;;!e. Tltat last restrlr. ..... ,,f;..,.'.. ,1 was entireiv due to Denioi'ritie leiri 1 hen came the Swamp Laud Act which was a deliberate and prenu'iii- i tated swindle because the Hill as orig ! inally iutrodun'd was uuexeep'iotiabic , am! was p,t up i:i .uvorda::cc with the iautl laws of the t'nited S:,te-. milking provision for the appointment of a ; Swamp Land Coiiiinis-ioit who situuld ! .ascertain the amount of itch land;. ' and providing that they should ! mi:--j veyed and title acquired from Ihe j United States, ami "ff'-r that should ' lie ai-couiplidied the lands were to bo ! sdld to the highest bidder above a price iixed as a ba-is. and if not reclaimed ' within ten years they were to rvvert ; back to the State, 'i he original bill was sound, just, politic. The original ' i'ramer of it was an honest man and ; de-dred to protect the intervt f th . State, but his work was entirely thrown astoe by a J leinoctatic Senate I mil nit tee which smelt out a speculation : everv section was stricken out and a ;;i!l invented in the interest of a land grabbing Ping which framed n law in the interest of speculators nnd pushed it through without argument and com pleted as great a political corruption as the Stale gave opportunity to in vent. Then look at the Portland Metro- pohtap I ollei T!ee Aet 111, tell rill lile-f. pretense, tot away the ritrlit ot s4f ment info the hands of political favor ites? That was an act of cool ami de liberate partisanship, which linUu-h-i-.tsly -tares the public out of counie-nam-e; a piece of deformity and cor i option which sets a precedent for the placing of every town in our State under the grinding heel of any party holding power. What single act of a tli-iufeivsted public nature did the la.-t Legislature pass? Jiid it reform the school laws? Did il. ecouomi.t; the revenue? No. It ignored schools a ; tin y don't leiich Democracv. It did what successive Pep; inhlicati Legi-latuifs had refused to do, added ignored the Constitution and it. least sii.IKH) ier aiiuuui to the salaries of State oliicer i'hat last forms another count in our indict ment against Democracy. Do we need any more of this legis lation? But Democracy has sins of omission as well as of commission lying at its door. It violated Ihe Con stitution fo maintain its hold on power? It reui-ed deliberately ro-i'u-td t:i cornel the apportionment, as ordered by the Cou-titution, to con form to the Pnited Stales census re turns of IS7n, and by that means .-,-(fill people living in Uepublicau comi ties will not U; represented in the next Legislature. What does )regon need ? Is if a State goy -rnun'iff, dishonest, eorrnpt. aggrandizing power for a par ty, ami setting an example lbr future misconduct of all parties, or a popu lar government for the people? We challenge a comparison with : (.,, a1V0 summary, which is incom plete, and you can count in every de falcation or record of mismanagement, you choose, and llcpublicanisin will shine by contrast. The Governorship ol Woods with tlie State Prison man aged by Maj. Kerry, will compare favorably with tlie tricky and dishon est deinagogism known rascality Biil Wat kinds. of Crover ami the of his pet ruffian On the western coast of Africa is the State of Hierio. Kamhnll is tin; king thenjpf. Ho is evidently a wise and prudent, monarch, and has not postiioned preparations for death. An envoy extraordinary from this country has recently brought to one of tlie .principal cabinet makers of Paris, in structions for making a cofiin for the king. It is to be three meters iu length and a meter and a half in hei'dit. blue in color, polished and varnisfied, and the nails are to lie made of gold. It is to rest on four feet of massive silver. The interior wjll lie lined with red velvet, and a magnificent cushion will be. placed for the head to repose, on. Six windows will lie made bi the lid, and window s are also to be placed in the sides. The maker has also re ceived orders to place inside the coffin six bottles of old cognac, two pipe, ami a chews-boa nl and cliess-men. Thee objects are destined to accompa ny his majesty on his voyage to th,; other world. WJUEKIT WEDNEDY, FEBRUARY 21, 1872. STATE ITEWS. !" ' IurtlsnJ. We omipile tlie following from yes terday's hx-tj'inien : The Ilen'M hfith had in its day many nxasTers ; and now it has got, if rejwrt be trw, a taJf dozen all at once. It is said tiuit Mtsr. Semple and Pat terson have sold out tlteir interest to tlu; "Oro Pino Fellows," whoever they may 'Jv Report tnentions in this eounctliou M:es-r. A. li. llallock. j ComniissioiH'rand Conncihnan. and J. Ji. Ijipjxus, tliief, eti4. The mine au thority states tliat 3Jr. iJ. is to be the big boss of tltf. concern, and that here after every tiling As to be hunky-dory, wluiiever that" mav mean : but not i even Mauani Ktiuior tsayi? anything j ;ihot;t w l are to be the secondary j liosse.s. It is only known thaX thci-e is ' to be sttuie reixtn.struiiou. omu new ! departure, peduu, and all that soil ! of tiling; Imt uhiih particular schwil of Deiuocxacy it uiill hereafu train in j is not. dclinitclj known. These lie ! stirring times for1l tilt) wings, and as I iniglit have lut-ii i:xtncU(i, there is i lunch fluUeriug. ! The steamer Jlayiraixl left yeflenlay ; morniiig for tlx; Oweades, awl reached j tlun.; in about die usunl time, niecting with no ire;. Wifi daiio left tlie 1 fctlles ; early in ! itiarniiig, mm reached the l."pft!T Ca"it' J)llj5i o'lli-ik. I'. M ! ha.iirJ' t l:tir;,b4 J'lte j.iv-. ii jJms ir-ori-ii to le i'lii-ii. iti.ii i naviipitku Is resnmiil, not to Tip nter- I nijitiiJ ayain. it is f.peil. this winter. I The Jlstyvai',1 an-iTed back at hulf J jutst seven o'cliHk. bringing aljont 50 i passwioers from uper tixuitry. I They represent tlii' blockade as fatTiiig j been extremely tod k; us. tin; people, be ' inir cwt oil' from tlte receipt of all but ! Ihe liv-al t'siajKTS. Jtu-iness got to ' lie very dull. too. a-'id altogether I lie 1 situation wasanrlhLiig but eiiviable- i A inoveiiient is on foot in this city to ; ju titioii ll;e next J-; slattire to license j g-uu'iliiig;. ! A Mrs. I;i;ti'; urtDving on 1'otrrili street, y.-slenlay, s!i;i'd, fell and in jured hesseit si-veveiy. I It is ikiw detluili'h- -tated that tlx; suit invoK"uT t)m Cuvuthers e-tate j have been coiupronji-i'i', and the pro ; rrarli'tttrit share of ;h'nnaittA allot- I It is oh htvu tltrci a ltiiuil ,r of pcr , suns ii: nhom She gr.-.n-J .Jury is likely , lo In- iuK-restfil. hate boca calleti away ; ,n Ims'uiess. of tssirv- within the 1 la-i tv : o;- thrii; ilays- Tiie great i'.itch o:j Purnt IJiver is ', tintsiiiil sir! resdy fr water. S'.ealing is die iTerxiliug form of larn-ny nt tin Dalles. j T!' coldc-l, n'eather u Powtk r river - valley wr.s rn degrm- below zero. This was cm SmihJ.iv. t'te lib iot. I 'J'I' Paker jjr,-rri s.tys tlie tiiining prospivts of (taker . it v an; vrv Haltering, il t stiiii.iK -- that llje yield of liakcr coc,:.; v w ill be from half lo twiv-ihirds more thxa 1&. year. Tlie aunur.l imvting nf t'oe Dalles , Military Pond ConqAay was held on ! the inst.. Mnl llu' fiilliiw ing ju rsons wen; ek'Cteil Director.-: Me'-rs. O. i Hiuuason. 'irtor Tfi-vilf. Al. ZielxT, j O. W. IVenvcr and (,. S. Savage. A grent cxi-iteinc-il was nquirted at ! Canyon Cily a few d.-.vs ago ivr the tlisisivTy of a rich ntiue within :!(!0 ! yarv's of tlie Court llmiv. Tiie ledge is eight feet thick, ami yields gold in fabulous ijtiaiditics. 'Pile tli-ev-iy. it is In-lifted, wiil create a. jvvoSitioii in ! affairs at Canyon City. The Territories, j A pnivr atOlyuipia has hegnu to pul'Ji.di Culltiis novels. ! .t Walla Waiia on tl; 27th ult.. tin j groitud was fn)-nto thedepth :f eight "mclies. I Sime tla-s ago Uoise. river. In-low j Boise City, lxvnmc janimed with ice. j A dam was formed and tiie water i llimiil over the Iwnks until if was within eight inches of the 1'iighest mark ever known. Tile river was at tne lowest stage. Light members of tlie Walla Walia bar address a leng letter to lion. S. Garlielde, setting forth their objections to the amendments to the civil practice ait of that. Territoty. parsed by the re cent Legislature, anfl ask to have Con gress disapprove of the amended law. Idaho is one hundred anil odd thou sand dollars in debt ; her credit. per cent, discount; several of her counties, bankrupt, and the substance of herpco ple fast fading away in taxes; and every year but, the llrst since the organ ization of Idaho she litis been under Democratic rule. Cms willows arc highly favored in England. It lias Iieen judicially de cided in that fight little island that a married woman is entitlei I to vote at municipal elections, if she hapeiis to lie living apart, from her hu-iiaud. The hi w as now interpreted is that every woman can vote for municipal oliicers if sIm' i an independent householder, or. having a husband, if she is not under his coniro! which puts the gras widow on a political fooling w ith spinsters, and sure enough widow s. Mvi.'A Cl.AKK G.viNlts. The weird old woman. Myra Clark Caint-s. has got a baek-set iu a Loui-iana Court at fast. A judge lias had the nerve lo de cide that My fa is the illegitimate daughter of Daniel Clark, or hauiel Clark is the illegitimate father ot Myra it makes but ill tie difference which ami therefore she is nof entitled lo ! property embracing a large share of i the city of Xew Orleans. j A Nebraska man has invented n j powerful, double-acting salv which I shows towers never exhibited U-fore j by any salve. The inventor accident ally cut. on tne tan ot a won. aii'i im mediately after, applying some of the salve to the stump, a new tail grew out. Then, licking up the tail, he a piied some of the salve to the raw end. and a new wolf grew out, but he was a wild wolf, and had to be sliot. Ieeidedly the clevesest matron in all Euroe is the wife of the present King of Denmark. Just consider the lint; " mate-lies." site has managed to obtain tor licr children. One daughter is tlie future Empress of Kusshw the other the luture Queen of England. One of her sons is tlie King of the Greeks and now the son-in-law of a Czar. Neither God nor man exacts a wife to submit to brutality ; but a woman who. finding herself outgrowing her husband or disappointed in him, vet takes up the cross, anil, fitting Iter shoulders to it. hears it in silence to her life's end. has joys that tlte world knows not of. and reaches tlie highest tyiie, of woni-.tuliood. Every cat in Paris is to In- taxis1 three franees a year : from which it may be surmised tliat tliere will 1 fewer cats iu the houses and more ral) bits iu the restaurants. A boy of five summers in New Eng land recently, while at his devotions, surprised tin: family by praying that he might have sixly brothers and one hundred sisters. A bar Western lady, who was not posted in history, and who had 'for gotten her geography, asked a friend who wis going to Utah to bring her a couple of .Mormons for her aquarium. The City and County. Erw WeduetiUt'j's Ddi'y. Hosni.K Ixihaxs. Yesterday Mr. C. S. AVood worth receivetl a letter bearing date ot Feb. oth, from Iviu Applegate, agent u Yuinax, stating tliat the Moiloc Indians wen; making preparations tor hostilities, and that trouble was expected soon. Tliere is a band of Modocs who lelt the reserva tion some three years ago and who could not lie induced to come back, but have ever been wild and trouble some. This same band of Indians an; tlie ones that committed the massacre a few year ago at Rocky Point. While Mr. Appleirate was hen; a lew weeks ago on olhcial business, these hostile Indians, in bis absence, made a break tqion tin; reservation and tool; away the remainder of their tribe, so that now the whole Modoc tribe have arrayed themselves against the whites. War councils heve been held audit is feared that blood will yet be shed at the hands of these savages. In Laurel Yallov the whites are building a fort for defense and the people oencrally arc preparing foremergenc.iiv. AXOTllKlt CAXIiIUATK KIi A PosT OKFICK. His remarkable that scarcely had Mr:, pnniway let': us w hen !, r hi Ihieutv beeune apparent in ihe ebttlii tio.is ot onrpi sMi-iiT f-iit:lK- p'.!,'..!: itioif. Tliere are not Postotliees enough to go around and supply all the Woman's Iiights women in the world with one a-piece, but we insist upon it that a lair sized one shall be saved for the wife of a son of St. Crispin, who il is said gave emphasis to the last lecture of Mrs. Diuiiway hy "cleatiitig out" a "horrid" man who daivd to get in her wav nnd who was found trviic'to turn Iter calves and cows out info the street. We have it from her husband who very naturally is proud that his wife main tained the family honor. Will Mrs. Diiniway come soon again, for items are sii s,-iree of late ih '.t we could make good use of a few female as saults and batteries, hut the items will lose all their flavor if these assaults are made on an editor. Thk Yakima Otntiiv. Peio;ts li.'.ve Ih.'cii current to the effect Ihat the winter lets Iwen more. severe in Yaki ma v.ii ley t let ! in other localities cast of the mountains. We hardly think this to he correct, though the snow unt il. ive been deeper there than in some olher jilace-. yet it remained on the gt-ouud a ,-hoiter time. Yesterday Mr. Arthur Prey man. v, ho his a band oi cattle numbering four hundred head on the Lower Yakima, received a let ter bearing date Koh. di It. which stated that the snow in lint vicinity begin I" melton tlie lo'ii of .iatiuary, and a; ihe time of writing it was all gone. When ihe letter- was written Mr. it. had -t inilv three or four old co-v-. and they were poor w hen the winter bespin. Mr. t'oqwr. who also has ea! . lie in Yakima v alley has ree'-ived new : fully as favorable as th-- above. ;niii P"Wis. A gel. fn -ma ;i fi"!" (lie country tells us that he has !:ih p tii-coven-d a very important fact thai people ca.n ha e good roads hi white" de-pite Ihe vs-t quantities of rain tha' usually fail, ile says I hat. the joaii leading to Salem Prairie from Ni -rib Salem as far as il has been proN-r!y worked, is perf' ctly solid, so lunch so as to admit of a load of thirty hundred pomrts Ireimr b-mleil bv tivolim-s's. i he general lay oi' the country is sue i that ;our public highways can always Ik-kept in good condition with a little attention, and n hkiii as this fact be comes generally known, we diall i x-Mi-t lo hear of the number now deplo ring the bad condition of our public roads. U comiug con-iderablv less. F, sTl.UX Mtroox. We were shown yesterday a ielti r addressed to Win. Kinney, of this city, and w ritten by W. IS. May who re-ides at Weston at tin foot ofthe Blue Mountains, mar Wild Horse creek. The letter was dated Feb. "2d and stated that the weather was very severe and those who were short of fi-ed were losing stin k. 0,n 111:111 on the F.ilouse lo-t live hundred head of cattle, while another living o i Wild Horse creek who started into the winter witii thirteen hundred head ot slioop had only one hundred and twenty loft. Many had lost half there flocks" These Ins.; s. ilv- letter staled wen- sustained by Iho-e alxue vli were out or feed. :. tid t here f,-ed w a plenly but litl!i stock had siill'en'-l. Vi'l'NT day last vx Tin: Pivki:. On Mott- d, a'er in logs was seen coming down t..e r:vi r with a small raft, intending to dispose of the same at one of the sawmills of liiis place ; but as tin; river was swooleu and the current -tror.g he was unable to gain the still waters -t the bay, ami the relentless fide s-.vept Iioth him and his logs far down the river until they were lost to sight. He returned the same evening an I report ed that be found a market for his log; at Lincoln, six miles away. The an cient adage that "iiiuettnd tide wait for no man" the fellow declared to be true, for had lie lieguu to ply his oar-' in time, he might tasily have sold his logs here. I. O. C. T. M' tubers of ( apil il Lodge are i-,-!i,e ted lo meet at their Hall at 7 n'cIo-.-k fl.is evening. The object of the meeting i- to make ar rangements for the eiiterlaituneiit to lie given on the -J-Jd. A -t oilier- is to lie established iu the hall for the re ception of Yalenlines. It Js to ft. hojied thai every member will Ih- ihs. cut as the meeting is eNM-ctcd lo be a highly pleasing a il.iir. Dou'i forget to bring your Valentine. ST. Vai v.xTixb's Son Mill . The ladies of the 1". 1. Church will give :i grand sociable this eveding at ltecd's Ojiera House, which will 1h; enlivened by the resuscitation of the merry old wav of observing St. Valentine's eve. This evening then; will lie fun for all. It is desired that the ladies leave their names with Ihe clerk at (he entrance ol tlie dressing room. In Town. For a few days past. Uncle Jesse Applegate has been visit ing with ohl time friends here iu the city, ami will leave hy this eveniiig's train for his home in Soul hern Oregon. He is aoootiiaiiied by Mr. A. McDon ald of Fort Colville. where b; has been residing for thirty years and until now lias Vallev. never seel ii the W lllamette Foi'ND. A dark lur cape was found on ( jiimnerc'ial street near Court street, on last Sunday evening. If tlte lady wl;o lost Hk; aforesaid caiic will call at the bag fatrfory. Mr. Chceshrough will return it to her. Advertising lo-t raies has become dreadful monoton ous ot late. Who is nest? Nkw Coons. Yestenlay Mr. L. Byrne reivivcd a fresli supply of gro ceries, eotifi'i-tioiicry. etc., anl coust.--quently he is prepared to do a good part by his many customers, lie is also manufacturing the liest of crack ers, and !-in ti'l all order, at short notice. ST A TEisW A N $2 50 per Ki-om Tloirxrtoy Daily. Masonic. On Tuesday night at Corvallis, a Lodge of PerP'ctio-i was est.-ibli.shed. called Ainsworth Lodge, A. A- S. It., w hich called thither sev eral gentlemen both from this city and Portland. Those who went from Sa lem were Messrs. Chadwick, Fleisch man, T. McP. Pattoti, P.. P. Brown, and O. !. Carr; from Portland. Messrs. Ainsworth, Thompson, Con don, Morris, Col. I. 1!- Moores, and (L M. Stroud. All except the last two went and returned in company by the steamer Alice, and a general good time was had. The following oflioers were duly elected and installed. : -bis. It Kavlev. T. P. C. M. : Kratus Holgati . S. C n .: tieorge "Mercer. . L Wm. Hamilton, ii. 1.; li W. Wilson. i. S.; -f. It. Lee, C. M. ( - .). K. t on-rle. J. O. P.; I. S. Pal mer. S. (L P.; W.ilJaiv I iiioner. L-ihvin. Al- Ai;i:i;.-Ti:t). A few days ago Mau r'nv Craves forged an order for a pair ot Ixiot.s in the name id" his brother-in-law, and having done the job success fully, eleai-od for pin ts unknown. Sup jiosiiig tliat he had gone south. Consta ble CotVey telegraphed to the various stations along the line ordering his ar rest in a :V he should lie detected. Vst-n?;i,r MMM-uUitf a dispatch nu' front the Sheriff of Lane county stat ing that he kid arrested young Craves and wtiiikl hohl him in custody subject to orders. Yesterday afternoon 'ust- ici- .Murnliv is-ui'd a warrant lor ms ar rest, and accordingly Constable Coffey left for Kiigeue by the evening train and will n turn bv the i.irly tniiu to day. THAT Sm iai;I.K. The soeiable given i at the Opera Mouse by tlie ladies of j the 1". P. Church on last evening was i plea s'mvr enough. ' The merry old way j of celebrating St. Yalciitine's Kve eu j livened the oec.i-io:i, and that way was las follows: Each lady that entered j the hall gave her name to the clerk. ; who enrolled the same upon a slip of ; paHr. upon which was printed the j words "My Valentine." which was ; then placed in a box. From this hox i each young gentleman drew a slip of ' pa per as' chance directed, and she i whose name it bore became the val ient hie of hint who had draw n it. The. : province of cac'u getitleuian alterdrau i ing, was ; go in search ot his valen : tine which he did. and this way of ' iiairinir otVcivated an immense amount oi nightcr. l lie ati.-iir v. as wen sch'-uicd am! well carried out. and as this was something new those w ho did not attetit miss"d a good th'ng. Fit'i.M YA'.'i ixa Bay. F. D. Dodge. Ksq.. arrived in tin- city yesterday, direct from Yaqiiina. lie it ports the stir ' among the people of the Kay to Ih- as gr.-a". proportionaliy as any where in tiie valley. About ten days ag the schooner Klnorah airived at that, port from San Francisco with two hundred tons of fn ight. Hon. Ken. Simpson returned by the schooner finui hisvi-itto Wa-hiugtoii. lb- ep"ets Xo be in Salem in a few days. The schooner's nrgo consisted chiefly of1 ! potatoes and lioitr; a quantity ol ce ment and iron was also brought for the construction of tin- Lighthouse at "ao i-'ouiweather. live mijes north if the ; Bay. The new steamer built bv Dr. Kellogg js ready tor service and is awaiting inspection. Oi:. Hakiiy! On Wedne-day night some fellow- was out pntroling tlie ; streets and on every corner would itv j out frantically "Oh. Harry!' ' was evidently iu great di-tre He ami und'.-r -uch ii-rura-t.imi s it was very liattn.il that be sb-'Uld lie on the hunt of a frieml, fir ni-ery loves conittany. He continued hi- -e.t'vh and en all ! night !o:.g. and early yesterday morn ing be wa- found in the mud on Com- 1 mcrciai s:;v,.. .-till crying out for k-is "Harry." If- was dead drunk, but nevertheless fneid Harry" iii the ; pei-sini of Marshal Fisher, who ordered a dray upon which he was transported to the calafmose. I l;s ,-ase w ill iconic i up iu the Police Court this morning. Yai.i:nti:-i.s. The rush at the pivt , oflic ye-terd-iy was immense. Little , boys and girl-, young men and tnaid ' ens, al.-o many of older growih v.eiv , hii..ing about i.i ipicd. of l!ie little j "jokers." The lover" - saint ruled sii- jireme and multitudes worshqiod at his shrit.e. We haven't the least idea , a s ,i to1-exact number of little mis sives ih.it Were tluitering around, but surety ibe-s- wen- thousands. Should j there chance fo If those who failed to ' obtain a 'e'.'e ' ri they need not feel -lighted, as St. Valentine" a day in this country lasts week. WcitK. T!ii and oaly a few i not liarti-aularlv i - pi-t w hat a lew. j loafers in this city are i in love with. Thcv . hang around .-a loons ail day. and at. : night watch for a suitable r-ubject out j of which to Ibvce a few dollars. The community should set its seal on all ' such worthless fellows, and force them i to work for their living whether they i want to or nor. ; laliir is em-obl'm ' ll'llelic,- wi'llott calling in I if" i ' iii;i'cioent . Laoor. ni inly, honest g and there is no ex ; it. Xo iegitiiiiatt! xem-vt from its re- ' i'i.'iM ixo. We hear of .-onic of our firmers who now plowing new kind. I u! it i-. a little to,iwf losiir .the old-ground. Land plowed now will bring ahuo-: as go-n a crop as , though it had been plowed i.i the fall. A lew uril s of good weal Iter now i would b" Worth thou,ruds of dollars i to the Willamette valley. C.iNsim KAr.i.i. Hm;.Yiii may talk about fat. lH-ef and f it mutton. Iml the "biggest" and tattt;st porker of the season 'wai sold to neighlHir Ncsbitt yestenlay. It weighfi IKi.t pounds, and came from tlie Waldo Hills. Pui.Hilul s. The C. P. Church of this city have commenced a series of meetings and will protract the same as long as thf! interest, increases. Relig ious services are still iicing continued at the Methodist and Evangelical churches. Cm itcil r.r.l.i.. Tlie hell or the South Salem M. K. Chuivb, arrived by ihe fa-ight train yesterday, and will lie taken over ami placed iu him lion to-day. ' Xkw Sidewalk. sV new sidewalk j is m-mg constrtictctl in lront oi tne i Court House, anil is lx-ing elevated iu accordant-' with the grade established by the city. Ox thk Pivki:. Tlte new steamer Aliiv, Capt. Bell, came down from l orvallis yesterday with seventy tons of w heat for On-gon City and several passengers for this place. 1'KitfoxAi.. lion. E. D. Skill tick. Ex-Gov. Coo. L. Curry and Dr. J. V. Hawthorne arc at pre.-ent guests of tlie citv and are stopping at the Tremont Hotel. 11 Fotxi). A bunch of keys not a i-ipe was found yestenlay, and the -ante can Ih- bad by calling at th" Bel 1 edere s do in. -Lit Annum in Advance From Friday's Vnibj. Notes by the Wav. We left Port land .with regret yesterday, for we watited to see how much it could rain there when it tried. The rain feJl there knee deep every twenty-four hours for a while without any effort and finally scared a steam whistle at night so that irscreamed itself to sleep, also did the same hy us. The Hat country between liere and Portland is capable of being inundated, and at the present time duck ponds and goose pastures are well displa3"ed. It the rains last two weeks longer as Gov. AVhiteaker once said there is no telling where the 'Willamette valley will bring up. All the jieople in the towns north, along the railroad are living on mud and water rough diet but very abun dant. AH the land in this valley is now "in soak." which is rather a deseratc state of things after such a good finan cial year. We were shown the sot on the floor of the passenger ear, where, at the time of the collision on Sunday last. Mrs. Duniwuy fell down and bruised her arm. The Conductor was much alarmed but has discovered on examination iliat no serious damage was done to the car." He is opxi-ed lo umg that kind of a car-pet. j'Mi1C fiiio Tnrv.. Two yotmg men who found Salem too dull for them, invested themselves Til their liest clothes day liefore yesterday, hired a good turnout and went to lndoieiiil ence to have a little dani-e. The dance came off and they showed off to great advantage in those clotlios. and the next day yesterday tliey liierally make it break for home. While one drove, the other, just to encourage the team, touched them upon the Hank, but ihe team outflanked them by lim ning away like every thing through all sorts of nitnl. breaking tlie httggy and spilling out Ihe good clothes in the mud. I ut the boys who were inside the dry goods hung on to the lines and were dragged and dragged and lie dragged so that their iiices Iiad to lie patched up varioii-ly and their good clothes were nowhere. The horses had the l-st of it entirely. Those clothes or not exactly for sale, but it is evident that they were to relit. Waivi.d ax Examination. Yes terday morning Maurice Graves, charged with the crime of forgery, was brought down from Eugene city iu charge of Constable Coffey, and was taken lie fore Justice Murphy fin-examination. The trial was not goie- into, as the defendant waived an examina tion. His bail was fixed at fcKHV. in default of which he was taken to jail to await Ihe action ofthe grand jury which convenes on the second Monday in March. L'i:rrr.!.i('x ( 'KXTitAt. Cojimitti:f.. ! -The billowing arc the names of uiemlx r- of the Marion County Cen tral Committee for their resjiectivt; precincts; Silem. T. P.. ltickey ; East Salem. J. H. M-oi-es ; North Sa lem. James Pickev ; Aurora. T. Keil ; Bittteville. (i. A. Cone, dr.: Belpassi, 'ti. Darst ; ChatiiNX'g. J. Hoofers Laiiish. M. A. Wade; Abiqua, Henry Stafford: Silvi-rton. P ilph tieer"; Sublimity. .1. Barker: .b-flei-son. T. Sfeiver; Howell Prairie, ti. F. Me Corkle; Lincoln, 11. Smith. Ox Till: Ai.ick. The uew steamer Alice arrived here at four o'clock yes terday afternoon, having pissed over the distance between Canemah and this plate in six hours and thirty-three minutes. After remaining at the wharf lor ten minutes si m set out for 1 orvallis. The Alice is much the lli-t't--st as well as the prettiest boat on the upiier river. O. & C. Kaii.1!Oaii. The track is now laid to a point twenty-one miles South ot Eugene, and the same will be eotnpl'-ied to Ilawley's inside of two weeks. Grading has reached ak land. Passenger trains go no further south than Eugene, but construction trains go as far as the track is com pleted. Work on the road is badly i;tiK'ded on account of the weather. ANSWKtti U Cfi'.tltllTI.Y. A student of the lniver.-iiy reciting in trigonom etry the other day. defined a marin er's compass as a "four cornered square box standing on a three legged, tripod which always points to the north." The Professor fainted. PlsiMi. The heavy rains of yester day and tiie day liefore. have sent the river up in a hurry. By this evening the mighty Willamette will be slo pntg over." STll.l. TI1KY l LY. ipent lues were fllying alxiiit almost as iitunerously vesterdav as on the dav In-fore. Ar.oi T S.mai.i.tox. It is said that tlie spread of smalljiox. one of the most contagious diseases known, may lie easily prevented, and the danger to pel-sous residing in the. same house with a smallpox patient may Ik; in a great degree averted hy observing the following simple rules: The patient should lie completely isolated fi-oin all other i-soiis of the House except the. nurse. Carbolic, jiowder or chloride of lime should Ih; sprinkled before the door of the room occupied hy the pa tient. Carbolic lowder. moistened v. Ult a little water, should he placed iu the room also. The nur-K; should never leave the room without washing thoroughly with carbolic soap, ami changing the clot lies worn while at tending on the patient. All bedding used iu Ihe room should be destroyed as soon as the patient leaves it.antl the chandier thoroughly cleaned with dis infectants. The clothes worn by the patient while suffering from the dis ease should also be destroyed. Vac cination should also lie extensively made use of. It is said of ( atharine M. Sedgwick whose "Life and Letters" have just been publisliod by the Messrs. Har)ier that her love for children was pecu liarly tender. She ami every child who- came near licr seemed bound together by the strotigc-t mutual at traction. It was a practice of liors, when her little nieces went to bed, to lie down ln-.-ide theiii and tell them a story. Her stories, invented at the moment, were often continued from night to night ; and in that case she was frequently reproved for mistakes iu tin; names of tlte cliaracters or the in cidents ot tlie story. A niece of hers says ; "At -scvcnty-llvc I have seen her sit on tlie lloor and play 'Hunt the Slipper' with as much zest as any ot the ihildren." Sin; encouraged the most iillectiouate familiarity of man ner. One of the most noteworthy dona tions on Chicago record is that from live hundred disabled soldiers-dn the "National Asylum" at Augusta. Maine. With syui-iatlictic k'arts they sent a contribution of $217 "for the relief of the sufferers by the late dis astrous fire. True devotion dots not consist iu a loiig face, regulation sighs, and leni tent won Is ; it coiisists in devout deeds, hi charitable word-, in a sweet, ten der, elevated pure life that influence-, and lx-tters everyone w ho inhale th same atmo-jiliere. WI Li lt has been said that a man can d. i.nything he resolves to (lo ; this iiuiM, howeven be taken with the limitation tliat lie shall resolve to do only things that are possible. , To resolve that lie will climb to the moon, will certainly never take him to that intcrestins sat ellite; and to resolve Hiat he will grow to lie eleven feet high, will not cany his scalp to that altitude alxtve his stockings. Still, the saying i -deserved tribute to the w ill, as a force; for will is a lorce, and a trctlieiidoua one at tliat, sometimes. It cannot be seen, lieard, nor handled; it Is invisi ble, intangible, and Inaudible; nut vet it is a jiowcr, liccausc it sets otlier lowers and agencies' in motion, and ainmiplishes great filings through Ihem. There are two kinds of will jxiwer the aggressive and tlie pa.vlvc. The former gieraly tikes the form of what we call enterprise; H dares to Invade fields hitherto unexplored, or to essay objecU that appear impossible of execution, and show to the world how much can be done with little means. This kind of will makes men great ; it is the chief element In tlw constitution of such men as Najiolcon, Ca-sar, and Cromwell. But the jmssive will power Is an ar ticle much more needed by the com mon run of men, in these days of imi tation, when every one tends to follow the example of tlie mass, and to do as others do, whether it he right or wrong. The aggressive will acts on others and subdues Hutu to its authority ; the lassive will acts on its owner and sub dues hiiu. It is a power of resistance, and is ot inlinile value in keeping us -anchored steadfast to principle, when we are in danger of being swept away by the tide of temptations around us. We -ee the full lieauty anil glory of ; a strong will when tt is exerted to con ! trol soli". Too often It is the main oV I ject of a powerful mind to govern oth I ers, to assert pre-eiuinciinc, to faceup-. jm-iliou. and to shape desfinv. Kut the grand sphere of th" will is the gov ernment ofour lassions, desires and i emotions. To control ,-iml direct these I aright, i.'i-it-i all the moral energies I and foi-iv tlwt can it excrtisl. .Power oversi'lf. Jhi wirU-OMM retnjitntloii. to J meet iiillici',i. to i nihire ii.ililships, to ; make s.-icritii-es this .-.loiii- can give 1 iIh- iniinl a resolun delermiiiatioii to j duty, and c:iu form tin' basis of a good i and virtuous character. We arc all. ; and at all times, yielding fo mnie thiug; we are ever giving up one thing to another, submitting either to some I thing ourselves, or to outside infhi j enci-s. But the iliili ivn.i- U-twi-eli men is. that some are weakly, yielding i up their U-ller natures to what is low. I sensual ami degrading, while others bow only to the highest, jT-olutely ! keeping under a wise control lln-ir :i j M-tiles. desii-es and inclinal ions. ( He who jmisscssi, this attribute itity j lie safe i i the mid-t of moral M-rils. w herever be will to 1 afe ; be has only to will that be will not yield U i temptation, and Ihe victory is won. Tho-e feeble, will-less iersons. who I wish to do right, but arc con-tantlv I yielding to the temptation todo wrong. I an; to lie pitied ; thev air chips in a, I stream, that halt ami whirl round in j the eddy of good resolution, for a time. ; to go on. and down with the stream, j at last. Tliey aiv not very evil at I heart : but they are weak mere crea I tnres of circumstatii-e ; having no "w ill power of tlx ir own. to ..-ivi' them from tlie intlnences tliat jmsli against tbeiu. Young people are assailed hy tempt ation :Ua'iii)o-t every slip they take, and they need a stern. resolute will to oppose iliem. Youlli. joy. society, desii-e, lieauty. all eoiilbiue to entice them out ol the hard r '.id of j irtue. and unless they acquire tlie j habit tif res'istiag tltoti. they are in j danger of being drawn iriflrievaltly ! out of their U-a rings. nil IIMa. fnp. I po.-e that he cannot contrail this habit ; i some have a strong will from lln-ir birth, but others may cultivate it by careful practice, and. win-nonce at (piired, if will repay all it has cost. Kut a beginning must Ik- made in youth. Wrestle with small teuipla tious at first, and overcome them; tlx victory will inspire coutideinv. atv e.-tch new triumph will strengthen tlx soul for mortal wrestle with the gteal er dangers that all are called to meet sometime in life. I Bkkt 1Li;tk. The literary critic of the Louisville C'O'i or J'-nrunf one of the ablest and perhaps most con-s ie-ia. tious and impartial in tlx- country thus does up Bret Harte iu his review ofthe last numlier of tlm .Vhm'it . Bn-t H.irfe wsrm.. nim-e Iw went to llosfon. to have fallen under the sjx-ll of Whlttier and Lowell. His jtoenis are neat, but imitative. " (Jraml niotber Teutertlen " might have lieeu written by Aldrich or Stedman. P lacks the shine of the golden shore : the esprit of tiie frontier ; the flavor of tne. mines. Indeed. Mr. llarle lias about as much turn in poetry as Mr. Dickens bad. that is, plenty 'of senti ment and an ear for jingle no more, no less. He does violence to his gen ius when he quits the company of Wil liam Nye and Truthful .lames. He ought to ln-nd himself on an elaborate fiction, in which such characters as "Tennessee.,- Parduer and the Luck of Poa ring Ca in ()." skill show them selves thrctigh the mazes (f a plot and th--phases of consecutive xx-ues and Inci dents. We are of those who regnnt Mr. Harte as not inferior as a pro-f-piK-t and story Idler to any living au thor. Bur. be will never get on in Verse. .Mr. Hay and Joaquin Miller are U-ttcr jxiers in his ow n field than be is. aim be cannot hope to enter tlx li-ts with bit tier as a siiegcr of New England. A Thehaii Mummj Pit. ; Our guide, young and incxporicini-d j was all jabln-r and dirt ; be minted fo ; a crevice in the side ot tlie mountain I which we had approached. He I thought tliat wir should lintl our way ! in there. On entering, we found our (selves' In n square cli.iiiilier. Ilie dim i recess of which were s-eanvlv lit no bv j our ton-lies. and fell into I tripiM.il over 1 stone. lxittOUl a hole: but the was soft, and I got up unhurt, though mv torch was extinguished. Fortun ately, that of my guide was not. 'When we had light enough to look almut us, judge of our horror when the llanie threw Its flickering and uiiocr t.iin glare over rows umti rows of .shriveled, distorted corpses amlblack cning mummies, drawn up anH1 con tract (.il into every sort of tearful po sition ; liimtlicrs were unrolli-d, and the gniund strewed and covered with their loathsome remains, which era .-lied and crackled as our feet waded, ankle deep, among the broken, decayed limits and hones, detached from their arclitiieiit-)ike Ixxlies. At. one time, upon touchiii" the leg. the re-t of tlie body and head moved and Imwcd slow ly forward, sd-inlng to glare with its socket less" eyes. One of my friends, .stumbling with force, displaced a mum my, which prekibly kid lain on its slab for thousands oi" years, and kid Ik-couh; drv and brittle as tinder: the I bend snapiied, nodded and rolled nt ins iet-i. nt- wen-, in uiil, in one ot the hundred of mummy pits that honeycomb the mountains overlooking Ihe plain of the great city, whose ieo ple. from king to slave, (deep alike, relied, as in one vast mausoleum of nature. IIot-si KF.i.riNt; Hints. All kinds of Kiultry and meat, can be cooked quick er by adding to the water iu which they are boiled a little vineirar or n piece of lemon. By tlte use of an acid there will lie considerable savin" of hie, as well asshorteiiitirfif lime. Its action is lieneflcial on old. tough meats. rendering them quite tender and easy to lie digested. Tainted mean anil fowls will lose tk-ir bad taste and odor I f cooked in this wav. ami if not used ! freely no taste of it will he ac quired. The call for a State Convention of the Republican pirty of Missouri kis Iieen issued, signed bv the regular ilc ptihlieati State Committee, and ten menilx-rs of -the IJh-r-i! Keptililictu State Csuiituittee. Tl; Coiiveotioii is to meet in Jetl'crsou. Feb. 21. and will select delegates lo tlx- National Itepillilii-iii Convent ion, and select a St4ite Central ttunmittee of tle P--tublicaii party. "Ih j on think, "asked Mrs. Pepi-r, "that a little temiH-r is a had thing lit a woirfart?" "Certainly not ma'.-iui." replied rt galliint ihilosopher; "it is a gmd tiling, anil slie ouglit never to lo-e it." A Chiiti go 1-iily f.xiud her diamond ring in the ruins of h-t h'il-e sw f a-. -a Ib-r the lire.