VOL. XIV. BUSINESS OPENINGS AND OPPORTUNITIES. In a review of the general characteristics and advantages of Eastern and Western Ore gon and Washington, we have shown that while the country cast of the Cascade range offers inducements to a farming and pastoral population, as it lies in a measure open for the plow, that the western region, with its differ ent climate and much of its area heavily tim bered, also possesses great resources, 'that en title it to be in time the seat of immense wealth and prosperity of an enduring nature. This journal naturally views this great field, newly developing, with an eye to agricultural advantages, and as calculated to invite and support a farming population, but we propose now to consider the inducements that exist here for the fostering of all business enter prises and manufacturing interests, as well as the field that lies open for the investment of capital in the development of our great na tural resources. TRADE OPENINGS. Of course, it does not need to be said that the settling up of new districts, and the con struction of additional railroad lines, create openings for trade continually. This retail trade is supplied from wholesale houses in Portland and Walla Walla. The opportunity for business enterprise includes the establish ment of wholesale houses at suitable potuts, down to the opening of retail stor.s in the remote districts of a country that possesses more territory than the six New England States and New "York and Pennsylvania all combined, lucre is no portion of our conti nent that to-day offers greater rewnids for in vestment ot business capital. COAL AND COAL USD. Taking a more comprehensive view of our dormant resources, it is apparent that capital can find here a wide field for speculative in vestment. This is not particularly advisable, so far as the people heie arc concerned, but reviewing the situation we see that such ia the fact. A milling concern on Puget Sound is said to have millions of capital. It owns immense mills; has a fleet of ships to carry the lumber these mills make, and has secured perhaps a hundred thousand acres of the best timber land adjacent to tho Sound. This is only one company. Take the coal lands along tho Sound: These are of immense extmt and not practically located, but already some of the greatest capitalists of the nation are secur ing inteicsts in them and running branch rail roads to develope them. The Villard interest has secured much of these lands, is already mining coal of good quality extensively, and has heavy steam colliers engaged in carrying coal to the markets of the Columbia river and California. The coal fields of the Sound coun try aro not by any means definitely located; coal exists all along the coast of Oregon and Washington, and probably of equal extent and value along the Willamette, Umpqua and Rogue River valleys; also an excellent quality of coal is shown in this city, from near Hepp ner, in Umatilla county, east of the Cascade range. .We cite these facts to show that while capital is on the jlti vive it has not by any means exhausted the opportunity. DEPOSITS OP IRON ORE. Take the iron interest: Certainly any com pany, with sufficient capital and experience, that would commence manufacture of steel and iron rails, and manufacture of iron gener ally, suited to the needs of the Pacific region, must succeed. There will be cheap Chinese labor for the common woik, and skilled labor can be brought here; we have illitiinate forests to yield charcoal, and coal mines are almost contiguous to the iron beds on the Sound, while limestone, to use as a flux, also abounds there. The iron worker has in his favor the protective tariff, and the heavy freight charge on all iron brought here, and it would seem that this ought to lecure success for the man ufacturer who comeB properly equipped for the work. SIllFBUILDINll. Shipbuilding is successfully inaugurated on Coos Bay, as well as at Puget Sound, and whatever advantage the possession of the best forests of ship timber give, we have an excess of quantity, aud at practically no cost. If wooden vessels can be made available in com merce, then our western bays and harbors in vite shipbuilders from Maine and Nova Scotia to come here and .commence work under ad vantages, such as Maine and Nova Scotia never knew. We could recite the achieve ments made and swift voyages accomplished by ships built here, if it was necessary, but the shipbuilder can appreciate the situation from what we have' said, and can see, also; that instead of having to make a five months' voyage to come here for a cargo, the new ship would find a good charter for a w heat freight to Europe, waiting its completion. WOODEN WAKE. The world uses an immense quantity of wooden ware, and our vast forests offer an op- pirtuuity, in conncctfon with our abui.dan'.a and convenient water powers, to establish factories on a large scale, and furnish, such wares to the world at large. Wo have won dered that such an enterprise was not com menced here long ago. On the Sound we hear of a stave factory that does a great business, which is carried on by San Francisco capital Hoop poles, also, are abundant; the manufac ture of barrels could be made an immense business, and the product shipped to all parts of the world. Our woods consist of pine, cedar, ppruce, fir, tamarck, hackmetuck, hemlock, oak, alder, maple, balm or cotton- wood, ash, and still other varieties, in great abundance. Our uhe, oaks, maples, myrtles, and laurels, aro among tne most beautiful of woods used for furniture. We havo three fac tories in or near this city that turn out furni ture of beautiful design, much of it made from native woods, and sash, blinds and doors, etc., are made throughout the w hole region from pir.c, cedar and other woods. AGRICULTURAL MACHINERY. This country imports enormous shipments of wagons, carriages and agricultural ma chinery, while we also have growing establish ments that make carriages, wagons, plows, etc., using Eastern hickory for carriage at.d wagon work. The success of these estab lishments proves that whenever a great estab lishment shall start here for manufacture of agricultural machinery on a large scale, it will be a success. We have all the timber neces sary fir making plow beams and every part of cultivators, reapers, harvesters and threshers; our iron of home manufacture is equal to the best Swedes or Norway. It is not possible, with native woods at such tniall cost, and iron of such quality, home-made, that such a man ufactory, on the largest scale, could not be made to succeed by using our domestic pro ducts, and be kept successfully at work to supply the harvest fields of this coast. There would be ample protection in the heavy freight charpe, and a loyal spirit would induce our farmers to welcome and sustain tuch an enterprise. HIDES AND LEATHER California tanners have put an end to our manufacture of leather, almost entirely, by discriminating against us in sale of leather. Now, nearly all our hides are sent to San Francisco, and they sell them back to us as leather. Here is a great opening for a tanner with enterprise, and money to back it. Hides sell here at the rates we quote in our price current. A tannery, on a largo teale, well conducted would be a success, and connected with a boot and bIioo factory, would be a still greater success. As it is, we import harness leather for the use of our harness makers, for that is a branch of manufacturing that is ex tensively and successfully carried on. Abut the only tannery of any extent, in the coun try now, is at Astoria. Its proprietors carry on the manufacture of boots and shoes with it, and have had to enlarge their business of late years to supply the increasing demand for their goods. WOOL AND WOOLENS. Woolen manufacture has had fair success here for many years, and as we grow ten mil lions of pounds of excellent clothing wool (medium grade Merino,) it would be possible for a large woolen factory to procure, at pi line cost, wools of the leveral qualities needed to sustain any ordinary business. The Oregon City mills, under close management and using Chinese labor to some extent which is tract able, leliable and efficient, and obtainable when white labor sometimes cannot be had is successful and finds a market through the Pacific States, and as far East as Montana, Colorado, Utah and New Mexico. This con' cern makes up a great deal of clothing of all kinds, and so workb up a trade under all pos sible advantages. There are excellent water pow era to be had on the line of Willamette Valley railroads, and an experienced iranufac turer will find capital here ready to assist him if he can show that he has experience, and capital of his own that has been made in that business. (LAX AND LINENS. Thin country is as naturally adiptcd to flax culture as Ireland, and its flax sent back to .Belfast factories is .pronounced of the best fiber. We have an oil mill that manufactures linseed oil at a profit, and also have a twine factory at Albany that works up the fiber, but the time is to come when the growing of flax and manufacture of linen will be at distinct a business as it is in the North of Ireland. Our climate and soil produce a fiber of such qual ity that'it can be woven into delicate fabrics. At the Mechanic's Fair, held in this city last fall, Mr. Molwn showed a rope-making ma chine in full operation. We should produce the hemp and jute here to make what rope and cord we require, and to supply the mil lions of bags needed to convey our grain and vegetables to market. PORTLAND, OREGON, FRIDAY, MARCH 31, 1883. WHEAT AM) FLOUR. Our country abounds in water privileges that arc convenient to water ways or railways, and offer every convenience to those who need cheap power to drive machinery; which fact must be borne in mind by all who contem plate entering upon an industrial career in this region. East of tho mountains there are sites for the location of flouring mills, and prob ably there is no business that will afford more reliable returns than flouring thovwheat of the newly developing wheat-grow ing districts, a good flour, that obtains a merchantable re putation, if produced in greater quantity than is needed for the home market, can bo shipped to Europe at a profit. We know a miller in this valley, who says he sends his flour to England, and docs better than when he sells in this market. The great merchant mills of Oregon, that depend on the foreign trade and send off whole cargoes, cleared about twenty cents per bushel on the wheat shipped during the harvest year, that ended July 1st, 1881, which we know to be the fact in at least two instances. FOUNDRIES AND MACHINE SHOPS. In the city of. Portland there aro several large foundries and machino shops; some of these wcro started by industrious but prudent men, who had hardly enough capital to own their tools, but who now own large work's and have heavy interests in real estate to show their positive success. There aro smaller es tablishments thraugh the country. Stove manufacture has become a successful branch of iron working, and is carried on here, at Gcrvais, and at Salem, so that we are inde pendent of foreign work in that respect. Iron manufacture in all its branches is but in its infancy, and the situation here is so new and favorable that it invites the attention of those who have the means at command, and have gained the experience uccessaiy to carry on such business successfully. PAPFU MANUFACTURE. There is one paper mill in the country, which does a fair but not heavy business. Most of our paper supply, for newspapers, comes from the East. Tho present need of the country is for a complete paper manufactory that will turn out a supply of all kinds of pa per suited to this growing trade. PIMI AND FISHERIES. Enterprising steamboat men could find a field for energy and capital here as there aro many bays and streams that need small boats, and the greater rivers aud Puget Sound have a growing commerce that requires more and better facilities. Our fisheries furnish a topic that cannot easily be exhausted. There aro scoies of great canning concerns along the Columbia and still more are contemplated, but there are small streams putting into the bays and ocean, that have not yet been tested, that would pay well if canneries could bo placed there. It is not probable that any great length of time will elapse before these streams are all occupied from Mount St. Elia to San Francisco, but the ocean furnishes a field for enterprise that cannot be easily occupied, or monopolized, and which to-day invites the at tention of those who have prosecuted the same business on the northeastern coast of our continent. It is safe to say that the North Pacific deep sea fisheries are fully as extensive as those oj the North Atlantic, and far more inviting to the fishermen, and those who own the fishing fiats, because they present few such dangers as arise from storms along the North At'autic seaboard. Here, there is never, or scarcely ever, a wind or storm that cannot be weathered on the open sea, or danger that a vessel will be driven ashore. The frightful loss of life that we so frequently hear of as oc curring there need not cccuron this coast, and the fish supply will answer nil tho demands upon it for all time. We have touched casually on many impor tant topic, so that Eastern readers may form some idea of the ii.ducements our Northwest coast and its iuterior ofler to labor aid capi tal. We have magnified nothing, and, in fact, have not done anything like justice to the topics we have treated, but have only aimed to present the crude outlines of matter's that the intelligent reader can fill up as he reads. These topics are of scope and mag nitude far beyond the capacity of ordinary journalism to treat in full. From Cottage Drove. A correspondent writing to us from Cottage drove, uiulfr date of March 15th, says : Last week we had asnow storm here, heavier than we had for years before; the snow was eight inches deep in the valley, aud is said to have been five feet where the road crosses the Caliapooya mountains. This week the giound is in good condition for the plow and is get ting a lively stirring. Surgical Appointment Owing to change in steamers the surgeons of the Pacific Surgical Institute have fixed their appointment for Portland on April 4th and 5th, when they will be pleased to meet all their old patents at the St. Charles Hotel, and such new one as may desire treatment. ThU Institute will establish a permanent board at Port! nd next all. QorrcfyvmUntq. What a Frland Has to Say. Crow lev, Polk County, Or., March 10. Editor Willamette Farmer: Permit me to write a few lines in commen dation of the Willamette Farmer as a farm ing journal away ahead of all others. We find items and leaders in the Farmer that to us are worth the whole year': subscription. Take, for instance, the leader on 'iCitiznship" in No. 2, of Feb. "4, 18S2; it contains more solid truth than many political hacks will publish. Please republish at least the follow ing portion beginning at : "As snowflako falls upon the sod" to cud of sentence, "If any man wants office nominate someone else." But rather give us the whole article; it will make the Farmer many friends. We also find a valuable article in No. 4, March 10, with the heading "Assessment and Taxation." But we think, "Mr. Editor, upon further reflec tion, that you would hardly agree with Mr. B. in "believing it inexpedient to assess notes and accounts, which are mere representatives of value," etc. Now, Mr. Editor, what is money, if not a representative of value? And would you not tax cash in hand ? In my opinion it would be a law in harmony with many other bad laws wo have to carry in favor of the rich aud against the laboring farmer. It used to be the watchword ,of our lathers, "Protect the poor, capital is able to protect itself." But how do we find it now ? Capital combines ami crushes honest labor throughout tho United States. Manufacturers can coinbino under our present high protective laws and charrc exorbitant puces lor their goods, but tho piodueer can "grin and bear it." Time wrs, when wo had but two or three million aires in the United States, that all worked smqot lily alone together, but now, when we hae millionaires by tho hundreds, things grind and cause friction. It takes no prophet to see what this will fiuully cud in. Some one has said, "unrestrained liberty is licentious ness," and that is precisely the disease capital suffers from, or will sutler from. It is so og gicssivc that it will finally accomplish its ow n destruction. But, Mr. Editor, theso remarks are getting too lengthy, and I will close. Yours truly, Geo. II. Kii.fus, Assessment ana Taxes. Junction City, Or., Ma'ch 1C, 18S2. Editor Willametto Farmer : I see in your last issue some amendments to the assessment laws of Oregon suggested. While I am free to admit that there is still room for improvement, 1 do not think the one proposed would be just and equal; that is, to "assess all property .wherever found, at its full cosh value, to the persons in whose hands it is found, allowing no exemptions except notes and accounts, which would include mortgages and all paper representatives of value." Now this, to my miud, would work a great hardship to all poor enterprising mon, as it would force them to pay from 1 to 2 per cent, more on all the borrowed capital they would employ, and at tho same time ex empt their more wealthy neighbors almost entirely from taxation; as, for instance, A, is worth $40,000, ha lives in town, has a com fortable city resideuce valued, we will say, at $4,000, on which he will pay tax at 2 per cent., which would amount to $80, which would be all the taxes he would havo to pay; while on the $30,00) loaned out he would make (or save, which is the same thing) at the same rate $720 in addition to hi stipu lated interest, which amount the poor but enterprising farmers who had this money bor lotted would have to pay. I think this would be a serious drawback to those who might wish to purchase or iinrroe firms, while tho inducement to Joan money would be increased to the detriment of all enterprises that would require borrowed capital, without reducing the rate of interest or taxation ill a com mensurate proportion. Now, as to the valua tion of property, no doubt in many instances it is undervalued; at the same time those who loan inouey would not take-property at its aixisttl value in liquidation of their de mands, which goes to show that tho dis crepancy in valuation is not so great as gen erally supposed. I claim that Uxation should he based on intrinsic values. Now, if a man has $100 dollars in cash, he knows just what ho I as; but if ho has a horse that ho paid $100 for, he must find a man whose circum stances demand such a horse before he can get his $100 back for it (and generally he don't find him). The same way with a farm. The necessity for every man to have a home, places a commercial value on land far above its in tiimic value, taking the ttmsrtl value of a farm as its intrinsic value. Then we will take a farm valued at $10 per acre, which may have a-commercial value of $20 per acre. Now I will venture the assertion that not more than three in five of the farms in Lane county will pay interest and taxes at cuneiit rates on the intrinsic value, (or assessment). Now this is proven by the statement of many penons, that it don't pay to rent out a farm, as the rent will not pay interest and taxes. Now, if these statements are true, I think they prove that real estate should not bo taxed at more than 60 or GO per cent, of its commercial value, which would be about equal to its intrinsic valuo. Another evi dence of this is the fact that capitalists Will not loan more than 40 or 50 per cent, of the commercial value on any farm. My motto i, equal and exact just'eo to all; special favors to uone. J. C. Jenmnhk. Kedhllllan on Butter. Sheridan, March 10, 1882. Editor Willamette Farmer : Reading on article in your issue of the 3d inst. entitled "What is the Matter with tho Butter!"' I would say that Mr. Knapp has j;ood advice on the butter question in general, and what I want to speak of is in behalf of the country and the country butter. The poor price arises from various causes, but I don't blame the Portland buyers for any of them. Of couno Boino farmers' wive? make as fine gilt edged butter as is made in any dairy in the State, while it is true that some make the pooerest. It all goes to the country store together, where all are in debt from one year's end to the other. Tho store keeper piles it up in buckets, pans, boxes, or anything that is handy, and it lies aiound in the dust for a week or so, when it is shipped to Portland, and looks bad, smells bad and brings a bad price. I have known butter to be brought to the store by well-to-do farmers' wives that was in such a bad condition that when they had done their tradinn and had gono homo, the merchant would take it out of doors and throw it away. He dared not say anything about it or he would lose customers. Of course he did not have many such custoine s. I know of some women who only work their butter once, mold it out and take it to the store; there would be lots of milk and water left in if. which would soon sour anil spoil tho but ter. They also let the milk stand until it is funky, in order to get the last drop of cieain from it. Tins is how a'great deal ol the coun try storo butter is managed, and it spoils the talc of the co id country s'.oro butter, as it kll goes to Poi tland together. On the other hand, if farmers who mako butter to sell would do as Mr. Knapp soys, have a creamery wneie tho neighboihood could put their milk to gether, or make the best they can themselves, and send it fresh to Portland to some good firm that is prepared to handle it as J. II. Knapp does, and get the best cash price, and take tht cash and do their trading on the cash system, farmers would certainly rea'ie more satisfactory results. The same rule w ill also apply to the management and marketing ol any other kind of faun products. For exam ple : While potatoes aie selling in Portland at from 80 to 05 cents per bu hel, the couutiy buyers hero nt Sheridan are only paying from 50 to CO cents per bushel. Chickens, when they aro quoted in Poitland at from $1 to f!i per dozen, wcro only selling hero for tiado at $3 per dozen; but if sugir goes up a few cents wo get tho benefit of that. So, hoping that all the farmers will make a hotter quality of butter and manage it so as to get the Inst market price for it, I lcmain yours truly, A Rkdiiillian. The Owl as an Exterminator. Turner, March 22, 18S2. Editor Villamettc Farmer: In your issue of the 17th inst., Mr. J. S. Churchill, of Mohawk, undertakes to gite what he calls "the other Bide" of my article on the owl. I take up the question, because I believe it to be an important one, and well worth dis cussion, not only to farmers, but to those of all ranks, grades and callings, being one which afreets the wel'arc of people, State and nation; and I shall bo very ghd of correction if I fall into error (which is not unlikely), as tho truth of the mattci, and not any one's pet theory, is that which should be established Very few persons deny the usefulness of the insectivorous buds, and yet very few indeed have any adequate conception of tho extent of their usefulness to mankind, But this fact can bo fully demonstrated, not only that tin y are veiy useful, hut that they aro practically iiulinpensibla to uur welfare. It follows there fore that an exterminator, or even a dewiarcr of tho birds under coinideratio'n is an enemy against whim "we should invoke the aid of our law makers in an aggressive warfare of extermination" in our own defense. And now, Mr. .Churiliill, please read my article again, and more caiefully. I think you will find that instead of my saying that tho owl "very likely destroys 1,000 or 1,'JOO 7if during the year," I said, "Supiewiiir Mr. Owl lived exclusively upon quail, ,'10,'i of these would be destroy od each year; but counting the egg unil young destioyed, J as sume that there would bo 500 less each year. " Then I go on to my . "But as tho owl does not confine himself exclusively to quail, hut eats every grouse, pheasant, plover, sparrow, thrush, lark or other useful bird that he can catch napping, from the egg in the nest to tho full grown bird, it is very probable that 1,000 or 1,200 useful birds are annually sacrificed to keep one large owl in good condition." Tins is what 1 did say, and what littlu observation I havo had, and what little thought I have L'ivcn the nubiect. boars me out in mv conclu sions. A neighbor of mine, whom I const It r reliable, told mo ol a nest ot hawks, ol a van ety which build on the ground, whosu young were killed by a hail storm, when tho old ones. annearifiL' not to understand tho situa tion, continued to bring food to the nest for two Mays, ami In that time (hey hail accumu lated nearly thirty youii'j grouse, nltasauU and quiil. Nothing elie was brought. And I onto. had a pet hawk that wouldn't eat a NO. 7. mouse if he could get all the birds ho wanted. Now, as to Mr. Churchill's side of the arvumeii'. "Owls fly during tho night." "Rats, mice and gophers are likewise out at night, conse quently it is more likely that the latter ani mals make up a greater portion of the food of owls than quails, grouse, &c." Wrll, let us Bee. Owls fly at night and can see well at that time, also. "Quails, grouse, Ac," can't see, and as they roost on trees w here the owl can see them, while they can't Bee him, and as he flics noiselessly, they are not warned of his approach while they are asleep with their heads under their wings, "consequently it is more likely that the latter" birds "make up a greater portion of the food of owls" than do "-rats, mice and gophers," which, although "out of nights," can see well, are very likely on the alert, and from their habits, and facil ities for h ding, for escape or defence, it is not probable that owls get many of them. Another thing which tends to favor my theory, is that owh kept in captivity appear to prefer birds to rats, mice, &c, as food. But I am open to conviction or criticism; and if my views are correct, our Legislature ought certainly to "lend its aid to an aggres sive war of extermination on owls," hawks, crows, jays, etc. ; only please read my articles carefully and quote tlictn properly, and 1 won't complain. Naturalist. Blackleg Causes and Possible Remedy. Blackleg or malignant anthorax is prob ably the most dreaded disease that exists in this North Pacific country. It may bo inter esting, as well as profitable, to BOino of your readers to know what the disease really is, and how its ravages may possibly bo miti tatcel. Anthorax is a blood elisca.u duo to a parasitic gei in (bacillus) which comes in con tact with tho blood, either by contagion or in oculation. Animals that aro subject to a sud den access to plcthoia, or thoso that aie thriving and growing rapidly, arc in a predis posing condition which renders them very susceptible to the disease. It spreads among. heids principally through animals that are in a favorable condition to contract the dis ease, coining in contact with tho exudation of animals that have recently elied from tho dis ease. It is also conveyed by insects that per forate the sk:u, caused by their first dipping their perforating apparatus into some diseased product, iwd then carrying it with them to inoculate other portions of the herd. If the germs are exposed to the open air for a she 1 1 length of time they become devitalized, owing to putrifaction, which dcsUvys thoir vitality. Somo soils aro very favorable towards retain ing the vitality of tho germ, especially wet soils of a .rcteiitivo character, tho impervi ous tubsoil, p. eventing natural drainage, aud also excluding tho air, for whenever the germs become embedded in such soil, they retain their vitality and multiply for an indefinite length of time; such lands, until thoy aie thoroughly uudcrdrainod, uro u intinuously infecting herds tlmtraro pastured on thorn. If it were not for insects, tho best way to di.s p ise of diseased carcasses in tho summer time would be to luy them on the surface of an en closed dry piece of ground until putrifaction takes place, which destroys the vitality of the terms. As I have already said that animals in certain conditions aro very susceptiblo to the disease I will endeavor to point out those conditions, and how thoy might be obviated. Stock men who have had the disease In their herds have undoubtedly noticed that it was almost invariably tho fattest and most thrifty calves mid yearlings that became victims to the disease, or animals that were thrivmgvery rapidly at the time; also they possibly have notice.! that the disease wa very prevalent on bottom land. Tho most rational preventive would be to prevent tho animal's tystom be coming in a condition that is favorable to the development and reproduction of tho germs when introduced into tho system, by chang ing them to ilric- and leas luxuriant pastures. Small doses of sulphite of soda or iodide of potash, giviii daily, aro sometimes servicea ble. 'I'lio giving of medicine is totally im practicable on large cattle ranches, The bust jiieveutive, and one that can be iifcil by nil stockiueii, is tho insirtiou of n setou in the lew lap, which piodii in a heuvy Hccietiou of pus, consequently inatei tally b'sjens the ten dency towunls a plothouo condition. The material used should bu three strips of strong tape, about a foot long, braided together and soaked in tin pontine or nocture f cautharidis for seveial days before using. Tho operation consists of running a riiarp knife or setou needle through the dewlap, just in front of the- knees, then pass tho tapu through and fasten to each end a piece of stick or a round pice of leather, lario enough so that the orifice will not admit of its passage through, iusuit tho scrou lietwccu tho skill and tho flush, ami lit it remain until it drops off James Vitiiicumu, V. S. Bridging the Willametto. Citi.cns of Albany and icinity met at the Court House last Friday to consider the pro position of tho Ore-gon Pacific Railroad Com pany to put a railroad and wagon bridge acrosu the Willamette at some jioiiit within the cor porate limits of Albany. After stirring speeches delivered, on motion, tho chair ap pointed I,. I'linii, It, ,H. Htrabau, T, Mouteith, Jason Wheeler, John Crawford and P L. Hackle-man, a committee to confer with the railroad company and learn what was net-en. saiy to 1st done to secure tho building of tho bridge. The sense of tho ine'etiiig favored contributing $20,000 for that purposo, and a committee, consisting of N. Ilaiiui, O, F Simpson, I). 11, Mouteith, J. 11. Foster Jr.. and A. Pierce, wcro appointed to solicit'nib. scriptious. It is thought that sum can be raised, :2I ill f . i t