MISCELLANEOUS r . ÛE<». BOOMJiB. ' W. K. ROBERT*. w ADŸBltTISEMEHTS. COX & EARHART BOOKER & ROBERTS, Auction and Commission Dealers WHOLESALE AND RETAIL MONTANA Flour. Mill Feed and Crain MO.ORES’ BLOCK: «ALEM Books and Stationery O regon . PofiTX-AND, ■ f I, [Successors to J, K. Gill.} 4“l 1 r Jihf Í.3 gtft-j» j ate* STRATTON & WALLER, sAMna, STATE STREET. WHOLESALE A RETAIL DEALERS IN R exiakkh . !» ■ is —A.-re. —re—• 1 1 Ô6 « N 2.V3 1 1 N 3 N 1 4 Hl . 1 N N 5 821. . 1-1. • «78Í 11,', 'N 7P81 . . I N 9133 ' lW.Ttt-o.tH 1-.. — N ' 11 57| • . 1 .. N 12 61 .. 1 . N 13 úT 1 N N 11 w r . 1566 . i N I--“*' 8 bn ,>t; i . N 1 1 18'60 ¡ 117. N 1 ' 1 N 1 b'20‘57! . 1 ' N 1 ‘•tHfbL -11... -- N 1 I 22 11 ■ 1 . N •I«23 ; h /. 1. N il Í-. * r h—t- —N- rejJ 1 26 65’ 1 NW 67 Smoky 1 N 1 2H741. . 1 ■ •N f.29 74i -41.. N .1! 1 80 76fc . 1 N 31 61 . 1 . N •I ' -« I From the. Apostolic Tîiïieà. I The-nrnliition to be an earnest- inves­ tigator of Scriptural truth is a very htndnble one. That we_ have mimy > brethren thus ambitious, the ’’Qudnst Departments’” of onr various papers ; amply proves. But from an examina­ tion of a large number of these queries, ‘ the writer has been forced to draw some very unfavorably ' conclusions re- dating, to them. Many show a jiaiiw Memory is.liKc A yast shcot of canvas, splitting çontentiousn. m T. wlrii’h çgyors surrounding Jis in all diati^tions, on not of the true spirit of inquiry,. ...Surh which is printed in bold au'-Findelible , a quuarion as the following should not | characters all tliec-acLs of our litese be allowed to waste printer’^ ink and | This canvas is so large and so mysieri-, ] Tax an editor's brajhs; ously arranged, that it can never be all "Dear Brother Errgeticns'. ' occupied; neither can we prevent the “A bo ‘bells! mentioned in Exodus scenes being placed upon itr for the xxviii : 23;'xxxix : 25, typical of church, 'magical artist of the mind is always bells“?' "This question has exercised ont ! standing with instruments reajly to pho­ qlass for the-last three Lord’s days, and . tograph every act, whether good or bad, , wb submit it to your able pen for solu­ public or private, known to the world tion. -If the opinion that these ‘bells’ ; or only to ourselves and our God, ani? are ( typieal of church, bells be oorroet, Í I hold that they aré not matters of J place them at their intended place on . then ( the canvas, from whence neither time ( expediency, and as the word • is in the ! 5 g' sis of the passage is (that . cultivated LANDS. located in ALL parta of the STATE, for HALE. risy^-cruelty, and everything repulsive the belhs when shaken from the east to morality’ and refinement; yet there l towards the west give ont a prolonged BEAL'ESTATE and other Property pur­ ure thousands of men nround ns, - tintinnabulât ion clear aronnd the sa­ chased for Correspondents, in th« CITY and throughout the WTATEH and TERlilTORIEB v.ho pass themselves os perfect exam- 1 cerdotal hem of the epliod, and up as 1 with treat care^uuL.mi.. the most ADVANTA ----- ----- -------- plea of refinement, morality and good far as the sacred breastplate. It is GEOUS TEEMS. taste, who are every day of their lives sjmply emblematic, of the great fact I HOI S and STI 4tU - LEAKED, LO A NS decorating the walls of their memory i that the sacred functionary ‘still li-. NEGO HATED, and CLAIMS OF AL' DES­ with just such pictures as these. 1 The For further light oil this subject, the CRIPTIONS PROMPTLY COLLECTED and man who would thus hang such deco- ! inquirer.is referred to the learned pro- a General FINANCIAL and AGENCY BUSI- NEKS transacted. ration* in his parlor, would not be com­ dfuetion just mentioned.” pelled to behold them but a small part ’ S ocial SxcoraitxCT.—All mon aro more or less of the time, or he might remove them svneophatie, but all manare not curiously so. entirely if he wished; but the decora- j The recluse and.the misa.-.thiopo aro not excep­ tions of tho memory are always before tions. Thoir vory peculiarities constitute the- us and eannot be.jfaken away. If every | arm by which they loan upon others. Your of Boston, published a poem which it nolmdies, and no* get a helling once a yey. announces as from the spirit of Alice Sycophancy has its rise in a necessity of onr Cary. We quote a few lines: eartjily state. We are . dépendant rmo upon Dry-iloqd., Groceries, Uoqt«, Hhoes, Etc. "The voice of dear one«, «oft and low, another. The rhercantlle life fnrnialiea an apt flaid come again, when from a* j-on go, illustration. From the village "store keeper" I Agents'+.r all kifi-ls of Agricultural Imple­ -And bring na new.from over tho river, to the merchant prince each is dependantupon a I ment* and Sowing Machine«.. Will ««Il low for BLAIN, YOUNG A CO.- That shall Still onr hearts for ever and ever. lees or greater number of hia follow men to | Cach-or Produce. 22yl supply Rim the condition« by which ho makes ; Allsuiy, Oregon. "I have MM «Ram for I find it here his w«y tn the World. Ho. renta not, if he That there’s communion twixt me and yon would, bo independent. This sense of depend­ Twist the life below and lieaven abdve.” etc. Ferriage .Now, if Alice Gary were on the foot­ ence pushed to findue extreme is sycophancy. OF THE SALEM STEAM* FERRY stool, she'wouldn’t own such poetry. Persons kept in prison for tong periods of time | Strange that, if in the better world, she’ have found soeial «ompanioDship in giants, in I should drop back to' a‘ sillier style and rat» ami in mice. Thu is * nXlural longing, more awkwardness in rhetoric than any and wilt, in order to its palification, lead ns girl in school days! The very attempt Into sycophancy ere we .are aware of it lie who to thake a point on Alice Cary's absence can get along in life and steer filear of truoule ico' in favor of the Boston Devilment is but fawning and sycophancy, and yet not lie disso­ a near evidence of the delusioD, Such cial, ■ has learned the hardest lesson in the stuff as the Banner of Light calls poetry book of eibics. Stnmi1. fr1 , from the skies, is nothing but smoke snd^ gas from another place.— MethotUet RJ-* border. ' — U3 Front street, Portland, Oregon. K7“ ALL KINDS OF COUNTY PRINTING and BOOK-BINDING to order, at reasonable rate»- / ' , -r ; " fob. 18-1101'J :y - - Take TSToticg.v All accounts due me MUST bet paid in 60 day* from date. R, CLARKE. Wheat taken at $1.00 per bushel, on all ac­ counts. Dixie, July 81. 1871. - 49ntf LEABO’S FERRY! A New .and Commodious BoatK Ban by suspension pulleys. • “• MOORE’S CORNER. MAIN STREET, The Road » in good condition, and the banks have been greatly improved. A Competent Ferry man will always be in at- tehdance. CHAS. W. PETTYJOHN» Li’f -• Proprietor. CÇNERAL MERCHANDISE School Books CkOTtUNO, GROCERIES; DRESS GOODS, TRIMMINGS, Albany Biqnk Books HATS, CAPS, BOOTS AND SHOES. Oregon. Stationery, Musical AGRICULTURAL Façfljçr’s and Mechanic’s Tools. MACHINERY instruments, - Hu¿_LSpoke«,BentRimeShafte, Pole»,Holt», Ac. Sheet ZM aisííj , Eté. J 1 KN RY BOON r . Offer for sale the following, spendici an- Mortñient of machipea: ‘ „ Swcrp.itake Th:-esht-rs- With new improve­ ments for 1871, which makes Uiiff* the best' I mauliinr ever brought to this coast Gcnniiii- Btifkryc J{ui|iir mi:] Mower 1 mbjHud hand and Helf-rakcrti’ - taivoHzcs. This machine stondA, at the ®ry head~of American Reapers, and for strength«TLeauty ftnd eaceUtmcu» baa_3)0 Qffual. New Yd» It Combined iIva.pur and ITdWer --with automatic self-raking attachment— , two sizes. This machine is too veil known tom i cummendatioh ixeiu.' Wf guarwiiee it i» every respect. New York II and Reaper siul Meivtr— Combined, wilT do good work under alt cir­ cumstances. Burt*« bineJ , Iliapir an «Lrdng/«xlicrj|, ■ the market. .» DEALER IN ' ’ . Books & Stationery, O regon . S alem , Musical Instruments, Stoves and Tinware! OREGON, Mower—QidnZ' o L oujxm » uj :—;— Easterly Reaper-nn