THE WEST SHORE. October. As Kighf Page Monthly Illustrated Paper, publiihed at Portland, Oregon, by L. SAMUKL, j Whinpon-. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION, (Including Postage to any part of the United State:) fJW copy, one year, I 5 Single Numben, .. cent. Fruited by Oso. It. lllMR, cor. Front & Washington -ill. DE MORTUIS NIL NISI BO NUM. The origin of this maxim is not ascer. uiiitJ, and the morality of it is more than doubtful. The popular and practical ren dering of it, is "Speak no evil of the dead." The precept is rigidly obeyed in the composition of the ordinary obituary particularly those published in the religious press. These speak the language" of un varied and unqualified eulogy. If the sub. jeets of these culogiums ever done evil in their lives, il does not "live after them," but contrary to and beyond the aphorism of Marc Jiitmv, "is always interred with I heir bones." The speeches in Congress upon the an j nouticeuiciit of the death of a member, j usually partake of the same characteristic. i' The tncink-r, wlinm living, so many dis- trusted or ilcimunceil, when dead, is held up lo the admiration of the world by his , bereaved and gricf-slrk kcn" combers, as a model Senator or Representative. It is not generally conceded that even' Mason, Odd I'ellow or member of any other social society, while in the flesh, is either dis tinguished for ability or virtue. Indeed, borne of them are very justly regarded as only common mortals, andBtoBay the least, no belter than they should be. Hut no woner has death assed on any one of them, than the fraternal survivors rushainloprint with a stereotycd preamble and resolu tions, to the effect, that the deceased, whose untimely loss ihey arc called upon lo de plore, was a beloved and valuable member ol the community and a paragon of well doing and propriety. If this indiscriminate practice of canon izing a deceased Congressman or Urother is to continue, as it bids fair to, and be come a jKirt of the established ritual of Congress and the social societies, it would lc well to devise some means to hear both hides of the question before pronouncing sentence. As in the case of a crson pro jtosed for sainthood in the Roman Catholic Church, an AJlvcaAu Dinboli might be ap KinteU for such occasions, whose duty it would be to resist the projKwcd eulogy'by calling attention to the faults of the de ceased. If the duty of this Devil's Advocate was honestly performed, it is safe to assume thai the result would sometimes be in his favor; ud the im ial friends of a deceased mortal would lw cautious how ihey subjected his claim lo post mortem honors, to such an otdeal. The fact that he had Riven a tithe of his ill-gotten wealth to the poor often for the most seltish tea nous would count but little in his favor then; for il ought never lo W forgotten that mere cluritv, however lav ish, can never atone (or or expiate a fraud or theft, JtatUkhm ami rtfvnljm-t must . precede any claim lo lorgivcness. Vet in the ease of private obituaries and funeral obsequies, Nomcthing will ul wmvs lie allowed to ilw partiality of surviving fiiemU It cm hardly be expected Out the faults of the dead will I specially noted by those who sincerely mourn his loss. But in the case of a popular favorite, the sentiment of this maxim is often relied upon to prevent a free and fair discussion of bis merits and demerits. Upon the death of a person who has occupied a prominent position in business or public affairs, his life and character are generally considered legitimate subjects of comment and criticism. But if the press of the country is to be muzzled with the maxim De morluis nil nisi bonum, 'what becomes of the truth and what is the comment and the deduction therefrom worth ? It has been claimed that -this maxim should be read w ith verum for bonum, Then it would re quire us to speak only the truth of the dead. To speak the truth of the dead with good motives and justifiable ends, is always proper on the part of a writer or orator; and often it becomes his imperative duty to do so. While tlie partial or paid lessening heap cries to you to stop. Too would like to buy thia, that and the other ; but you know exactly how much money you have left, and it you go on buying more things your purse will soon be empty. You do not see inn wnen you nw.. Yon give your orderi freely, without thought or calculation ; and when the day of payment comes, you find that you have overrun the ConBtable. On every hand we see people living on credit, putting off pay day to the last, making in the end tome desperate effort, either by begging or borrow ing, to scrape the money together, and then struggling on again, with the canker of care eating at their hearts, to the inevitable goal of bank ruptcy. If people would only make a push at the beginning instead of the end, they would save themselves all this misery. The great secret of being solvent, and well-to-do, and comfortable, is to get ahead of your expenses. Eat and drink this month what you earned last month ; not what you are going to earn next month. There are, no doubt, many persons so un fortunately situated that they can never accom plish this. No man can guard against ill-health ; no man can insure himself a well-conducted, help ful family, or a permanent income. There will always be people who cannot help their mis fortunes. But, as a rule, those unfortunates are the opposite extreme meanness in the treatment of the horse. In looking at the construction of a wrv lnnre oortion of our horse stables, I am some. times led to think that the object of the builder must have been to see how wildly ha could depart from every principle of humanity and expediency humanity in compelling a patient and faithful animano remttiu jmimwu up m ww,uimu filthy apartment expediency in thus sacrificing not only the comfort, but the health, and conse quently the usefulness and value of the animal, Light is indispensitle to the plant and to the man; is it less to the horse P If it is, why When the tyrants of the old countries sought to inflict their most fearful punishments, next to death, confinement in a dark cell was considered the most severe. Is it reasonable that the horse whose native home is in the desert and wilderness where there is nothing to obstruct the free light of heaven is it reasonable, I ask, that he should not suffer from confinement generally in our dark and gloomy Btuulttt f I it nut a nkuuo, iu a land like ours where glass enough for a moderate sized win dow con be had for fifty cents, that a valuable horse should be shut np in a dark stall or stable f Let every horse owner's heart, if he has one, answer. " Is foul air wholesome for plants P Certainly ' not. Is it wholesome for men P Most emphati cally, no I If not wholesome for plants or men, ( can it be for the howea P The answer is emphati cally, no 1 " Why, then, are the majority of our stables con strutted without the slightest regard to that most important feature, ventilation? In thousands of coses, an animal, than which none other love she fresh air better, is doomed to confinement for days : and nights at a time, in a stable, the atmosphere tt which is so foul that a man would die in it. How ) many of the diseases to which our horses or sub- 1 iect, may be traced to this unpardonable error. ( I say unpardonable, for no man possessed of either common sense or humanity, would thus punish : one of his best and most faithful friends the i horse. t "A word in conclusion. Fanners I if yon would have healthy, lively, serviceable horses, give ( them plenty of light; God will supply it, if yon l will only furnish the means whereby it can bs ' made to reach your stables. Look to the ventilation of your stable, if you ' would not have prematurely old and worn-out horses. Depend upou it, plenty of light, ana plenty of fresh air in your stabfes, will save yon many a dollar in a lifetime." ' GOOD SAMARITAN HOSPITAL AND ORPHANAGE, PORTLAND, OREGON. eulogist of the popular favorite is holding him up as an example to the rising genera tion, nnd pointing with pride to his public benefactions, such as building Churches and founding Orphan Asylums, the inde pendent and imtartial critic should always be at liberty to shade the picture with the more significant facts, that he seldom, if ever, worshiped God in the one, while his unrestrained life and corrupting ex ample had made the other a necessary evil, Ity all means let us change the read ing of the maxim so as to permit the truth to be spoken of the dead whenever the best interests of society demand it. HINTS FOR HARD TIMES. Credit nuver permits a man to know the real value of money, nor to have full control over his affairs. It presents all his expenses in the aggregate and not in detail. Every one has mora or leu of the miser's love of money of the actual gold pieces and the crisp bank notes. Now, if you have these thingt in your pocket, you see them, as yon make your pur chases, visibly diminishing uuder your eyes. The far loss trouble to society than those in & hotter position who bring their misfortunes upon them selves by deliberate recklessness and extravagance. You may holp a poor, honest, struggling nan, to some purpose. But the utmost you can do for an unthrift is thrown away. You give him money you have earned by hard labor and saved by self denial and economy, and he spends it in pleasures which you have never permitted yourself to en- The best pleasures, those which sweeten life most, and leave not bitterness behiud, ore cheap pleasures. What greater pleasures can a man en joy than the sense of being free and independent P The man with his fine house, his glittering car riage, and his rich banquets, for which he is in debt, is a slave, a prisoner, forever dragging his chain behind him through all the grandeur of the false world in which he moves. GIVE YOUR HORSES LIGHT AND AIR. A correspondent gives some advice on the ven tilation of stables, which every owner of a horse should read and profit by. We have never seen the subject more forcibly presented. nistory informs us that a certain Emperor loved a favorite horse so much that he had a gol den manger made for him. This extravagance ap pears unpardonable in the estimation of many, now-a-days, and yet it is mora pardonable than Family CounTKsiES. In tho family the law of pleasing ought to extend from the highest to the . lowest. You are bound to please your children; and your children are bound to please each other; ' and you are bound to please your servants, if yon ? expect them to please you. Some men are plea. ' ant in the household, and nowhore else. I have known such men. They are good fathers and kind ' husbands. If you had seen them In their own house you would have thought thnt thoy wen ', angels, almost. But if you had seen them on ths ( street, or in the store, or anywhere else oat of tks house, you would have thought them almost demo- r- nioo. But the opposite is apt to be the case. Whoa we are among our neighbors, or among strangers, f we hold ourselves with self-respect, and endeavor I to act with propriety ; but when we get home we i say to ourselves, "I have played a part long ? enough, and am now going to be natural." So we ' sit down, and we are ugly and snappish, and ' blunt, and disagreeable. We lay aside those thou- i sand little courtesies that moke the roughest floor ' smooth, that make the hardest thing like velvet, , and that make life pleasant We expend all our politeness in places where it will be profitable where it will bring silver and gold. ' . y. Correct Spbiuno. We would advise ill f young people to acquire, in early life, the habit of ;' correct speaking and writing; and to abandon, Si ; early as possible, any use of slang words and f phrases. The longer you live, the more difficult L the language will be ; and if the golden age of , youth the proper season for the acquisition of J ' language be passed in its abuse, the unfortunate ' . victim, if neglected, is, very properly, doomed to 1 talk slang for life. Money is not necessary to pro j cure this education. Every man has u in his 1 '- Sower. He has merely to use the language which . ' ie reads, instead of the slang which he hears ; to M form his taste from the best of speakers and poets f in the country. j "" " ''rrmiK ! 0. 8. X. CO. BLOCK, MOST STREET, BETWEEN ASH AND PK POBTLAXD. Wifs and Lady. It is certainly i uot iu good taste for a gentleman to i speak of bis wife as his "Lady," or J ' to register tlieir names upou the books of a hotel as "John Smith and ( Lady," or to ask a friend, "How il i your Lady?" This is fnshiona- ble vulgarity, and invariably betrayi !; a lack of cultivs-1 inn Tli a farm wife is for more '; beautiful, appro-' priate and refined ' whatever may be & said to the contr-1 ry. Suppose f lady should say, i instead of "mj i husband," "mj: gentleman, " or : suppose wo were to spenk of "Mn. Fitz Maurice and ' Gontlemnn " the thin" would be . absolutely ludi-; crous, and its ob-; verse is none the , less so, if rightly considered. A man's wife ia bi wife, and not hi lady and we mar vel that the latter term is not abso-: lutely taboed U such a connection, ' nt least by intel ligent and edo-"'. cated people. I