August. THE WEST SHORE. 225 other public works will be added. An Orphan Asylum, conducted by private charity, is one of the benevolent enter prises of the city. Salem is well built, a good propor tion of the business houses being sub-! stantial brick structures. Of these, the Chemeketa House, the Bank building, and the Opera House and Commercial Hotel, are handsome structures, as well as many of the stores. Three daily and three weekly papers are published here, among the rest the Willamette Farmer a valuable journal, weft representing the interests of Oregon agriculture. The Fair Grounds of the State Ag ricultural Society are just outside the town limits, and arc every year being made more and more attractive, as the Society gets out of debt, and com mences to realize a profit on its man agement. Salem never has been and never will be anything of a speculative town. It is steady and sure, having a certain prosperity guaranteed it by its location, and the character of its people. The Oregon & California railroad has a station both at Salem and at the Fair Grounds, the latter only in use during the annual exhibition, which I calls together the people from the I length and breadth of the country. Eastern Pi hlications. We have made favorable arrangements with all . LI' 1 ...Ln tne leading buieru puwwof wfivra" by we are enabled to furnish the eastern papers and magazines at less than the publishers rates. Send us your list with a three-cent stamp for return pos tage, and we will give you our price. ; For instance, a person desiring to sub scribe for Harper's Monthly. Scribner's and Frank Leslie's Illustrated, w ould require three letters, nine-cent postage, three postal orders, thirty cents. Sub scription, $12.00. Total, $1.39. By sending the order to us, it would re quire but one letter, and w e will furnish tbe three publications for $10.50; all 1 other publications at a like reduction. DoMKSTlCATK TllOl'T, HoW TO Brkkd and Gkow them. A 36 7 - page volume of the above title, by Mr. Liv ingstone Stone, has reached us. It is without a doubt the most complete book of the kind ever written, and Mr. Stone handles the subject understaml ingly, he having had years of practical experience as a trout breeder. We have perused the work carefully, and assert that any one taking any interest at all in fish-culture, will enjoy the reading of this elegant volume as a rare treat. The mechanical part of the work was executed by J. R, Osgood & Co., Boston, which is in itself guar antee of its elegance. ym orecon. -rboiob) r. a. mm.