VOL. 3 No. 3. HOOD. BY S. L, SIMI'SON. White dMpOt of the wild Cascadeo J I greet tuee an ttie twilight shades Haunt the disheveled, broken wall Where sheaves of sun light burninu yet On frosty tower mid minaret Portray, tnoe, reigning overall. And gleaming like a silver tent Above the tlr-frlnged battlement, Cold Jefferson Is crowned with flame ; Fair as a group of fallen stars, The Sisters, linked with sunset bars, Pledge thee as Monarch yet again. The blazing qUlTtf of the jtorm Has bttUR upon thy lonely form, Sheathing ita raggeit barbs of fire, When night has crushed Its tempest wings Against thy granite anchoring: I read no record of their Ire, The centuries which o'er thee trnrnp, Like spectres of their shudow-camp, l)eo,ueath thee neither sear or stain ; The gliding dimple of the sea, The stars' sweot-eyed eternity, Do not a lovlier youtli maintain ! And misty flashes of the morn Are first npnn thy shoulders born, When all the world Is dark below; And sunset's last and lovely ray Dropped by the weary hand of Day Wreathes thy pale brow with llng'rlng glow. Thus Memory and Hope are wrought Trium pliant as the sculptor's thought When syllabeled In marble speech; And Uud-word like a prophet's prayer Thou seulesl the heaven's windy stair, The quiet of the spheres to teach. And what an empire! rough and shorn, Hy old disorders ploughed and torn, Hun-ward the mighty realms are spread; In brolderv of wood and mead, Willamette's green mosaics lead Down where the rushing breakers tread. Lodfd in thy helmel's ley clasp The star of conquest resls at last Never to lead the bold again; It's rays like spears of sliver laid Across the grave, but newly made The Pioneer's, In sea-side glen. An iron arm with gleam'ng coll , Has won a wilderness of Toil! The traffic of the seas are wed: The morning of a brighter age Than ever lit historic page. Lifts In the west Its golden head! With mutterings of doubt and fear, And dark Willi battle lone and drear, The Pagan iplrllof the past Stalks through the silence and the night That deepen with the ages' fight Conscious of God and Truth at laat! The Desert hungers for the Sphinx, It's tawny ocean swells and sinks About her and the Pyramids; The MI moon's ghostly wings of sand Will surely shroud them as they stand, And seal those sad nud weary lids; And still a hand In crystal matt Here, flashing to the c.oudx, will hail The tomb of Egypt's cruel Jest; And where the sen-tides leap and shine Along the New World's bonier line, Proclaim the Emi-ire ok the West! from Rockland. Here arc two roads The great lack of this country is c to Yakima, wc selected the Canyon ' ergy. Three or four men of energy : route, which hud just been completed, and enterprise could, if they tried, mako and is the nearer and leaUt mountain- this one of the richest counties in tho ou. One day through the canyon and , Territory, for as soon as the advantages one over the Indian reservation brought 1 f the country become knowrtiMhe va us to Yakima City, ninety-five miles cant land will be taken and a way to from the Dalles. As we breathe the!mrket Will he made, and instead of pure mountain air, we think with a lounging away the time and making a feeling akin to pity of those poor be- living, as now, the settlers will nightcd souls who are wearing out turn their attention to agricultural pur thci lives by close confinement in their suits, and certainly no soil is better cab offices and shops, while Uncle Sam has culated to repay the husbandman for hundreds of acres in these beautiful val- his labor than this, More anon, lies which may be had for thc taking. Ii.i.itsthation BY Picti'UES. One The pure air and water, combined with 1 of thc great contrasts between the the needful outdoor exercise, would i School Honks used by the fathers and others of our land, when those now used bv tlv when young, nud ,c children, is the A TRIP TO YAKIMA, V. T. HY HARRY HARR1NU. Crossing thc Columbia river at the Dalles, we camped at Rockland, the county seat of Klickatat county, and a place that well deserves its name, as it contains several acres of the most rocky land imaginable, and four or five houses. In thc morning, after an easy drive of four or five miles over rolling bunch grass prairie, we begin to ascend Klick atat mountain. At noon we arrived at thc sumjnit, having traveled ten miles. As we had quite a load this was pretty good time ; there is, however, room for improvement in the road. The after noon drive is across Klickatat valley a rolling bunch grass prairie. (Jolden dale is a thriving little village, situated on Klickatat creek, twenty-five miles give a new lease of life to many a man ami woman w no arc now snonening MSC 0f pictures. As n curious instance their days behind thc counter or over (,f illustrating the meaning of words the needle. Thc land law allows wid- by pictures, look at the tree pictures of ows ami spinsters equal rights with ship on page 1751 of Webster's Una- v , . r... 11 -it 1 1 bridged Dictionary, these alone illus- men. 1 akima City is well situated . . 1 13 .1 . ; . i I trite the meaning 0 mure than one near the junction of thc akima and W(ms mu ,mm f.,r i,ctUM. Attanum. Thc Attanum valley Is than they can be defined by any de- abotit twenty-five miles long and an scription in words. average of one and a half wide. This refers only to the valley proper. There , are thousands of acres of sage brush Wedding Annivi-usauiks. FlraU cotton ; 2ty paper; 3d, leather; 5th, wooden, 7th, woolen; 10th; tin) itth land on thc rollinff hills that men of silk and line linen; 1 5th, crystal ; 20th, enma; ztn, stiver; 30m, peari ; 40111, rubies; 50th, golden; 75th, diamond, Cigars. The number of cigars, chcrouts, and cigarettes of domestic manufacture and importation iii the United States during the year 1 SyrtT was nearly 1000.000.000. Assuming county seat is a grist mill,a brewery, the average length of each to be three three stores, one harness shop, two Inchet, the united length of the above saloons, one drug store and about thirty IWIMW is 94,697 miles, nearly four energy and capital in either money or muscle: could turn to (Magnificent farms by irrigation, as there is water enough in the Attanum to irrigate thc whole country. At the head of the valley i a sawmill, and at Yakama City, the idc times the circumference of the earth. MOl'NT 1ft i I Till: MONARCH Of THE CASCADE. Fun M it I, mi.lt fir,nnlow fit Ddtai