OCT 31 1903 VOL. a-No. 9. rOKTLAXD, OREGON, MAY, 1878. OREGON SCENERY. It" is, perhaps, tOO common an error to speak of our own country as b.ing destitute of those scenes that are 1 interesting to the tourist, or that awaken the multitude of tender emo tions which the contemplation of the vast, the ancient, or the beautiful, in- i variably inspire. It is true that we j may not be able to point to ivy-robed I ruins resplendent in story, massive ca-' thedrals with age that are hoary, castles enshrined in weird legends so gory, nor tombs that recall petty tyrant's vain glory, and yet We have simple scenes,) replete with pathos, that are as potent j to purify the mind and elevate the) soul, us those in foreign lands, A few weeks ago I was riding along j the lordly Columbia. On my left were frowning, black, precipitous bluffs,' whose plumes of graceful fir swayed i softly to and fro in the morping breeze J on my right the placid waters of the i noble river were gliding as silently and serenely toward the Pacific as the stream of Time to the ocean of Eter nity. A turn in the trail revealed a small clearing and the ruins of an old log cabin. It was a pensive picture por trayed on the canvas of civilization by the pencil of Decay. The corners of the cabin were crumbling beneath the heavy hand of Time. The roof had fallen in, and moss grew upon the door step. The chimney was a mouldering mass of shapeless ruin. Every vestige of man's presence was fast disappear ing, though this had been once a hu man habitation a happy home. Now silence ami solitude swayed their scep tre over its desolation. Still the scene was sublime in its silence, like a passion strongly felt that finds not utterance, and suggestive in its solitude as the contemplation of the death of Love $r the., grave of Hope. The sparkling spring yet bubbles from the hne of t1c blufl. The remains of a rude reservoir are still there; but the path leading to it, once trodden by the feet of youthful innocence, Is now no longer percepti ble. The fragrant thyme, planted by the hand of affection, struggles bravely with the indigenous vegetation, us if determined that uncouth nature shall not resurnV unquestioned sway in that spot made sacred by human toil. The silent teaching of that sad scene was full of significance, Riding on, I came upon a rude bar rier of rocks, reaching from the river to the Muff, At a little distance from it was a similar barricade; both were dilapidated. Had the broken barriers and the deserted home the same sad history? Had the former proved in sufficient to protect the latter ? The fearful Indian tragcilics of 1S55 arc still fresh iu Ihcntimln of many, and their recollection provokes an ardent ud-uiit-AtliMi jfor thcindaunlcUf nud un ostentatious heroism of our early pio neersthose vanguards of civilization and Christianitywhose noble deeds are for ever embalmed in the fragrant aronTK of a people! gratitude ami praise. GOV1 A LES80N WORTH HKKIMNt;. The recent failure of the Dime Savings Hank, at Sacramento, should serve as a caution to our people ,m to where they deposit money. This Sac ramento institution seems to have been a sort of a retail concern, doing a little in brokerage, lauds, stocks, etc., and now that the bottom hns dropped out the people there lose about $. 5,00a We have a very similar concern here, which also advertises to receive and pay interest on deposits. Suppose they failed, how much on the dollar rould be realized on their heavily mortgaged real estate ? .;.,;-.-. - fl ' ; " - , - ; ...... , . ,i' THE PLAZA AT SACRAMENTO, CAUPOM A.