( I VOL. X. I'KINKVIIJj:, CUOOK COUNTY, OKKflON, THUKSDAY, OCTOIJKK 8, I'JO:'. NO. 10. TEMFLETON & SON U - DICAUCIIH IN Drugs and Chemicals, Patent Modiclnoa nncl Tollot Articles JWIlm nml I.lqttom fr intt lli'dl iurin-tvt only l'li'iilrluni) jhhh mII) lion c w fully r(iiiijtfUfu!(t, 7f W1FH!WWHW-W'7WWOT K A. II. LIPPMAN & CO. M ANUFACTt.'HKUM FURNITURE AND UEAJ.KHrt IN Wood, Cloth and JVletallic Caskes. 'KMltALMINCS A SPKCIALTY AND ALL KIMDH I'P BUILEING MATERIAL 1MI'I.K CuNJiTK'.'rnnN' t;uW MAN I I'Ol.lii;U Ylll;l.K WIUTiMi v l.KY iru.i;i.K KAY ACTION The Pittsburg Visible Typewriter It. L. DUNN, Agent, HEND KOU CAI AI.'XIUK 1H '' HU'oM, Portland Orotfon. ( f t u It'll lllnetiii'jf. .'Vi vires will lio licit im fullo.va : IIAI'TlMTM I'liiirville--punching the second and foil r ih Hunting h, Hubb.it h school every Sunday at '1 i), in. rnyir meeting every Wcilnrs- tiny evening at H o'clock. tlayhliii'k preaching every third tll (III V. Ilci.tl preaching lvi ry first tfun d.iy. licv. Tiipl. t pastor, rcsidenci! Uiijtliiit parsonage 1'iinevilli) Ore. 1'IIKhllY t'KIIIAN I i i i.t-v i 1 1- luciteliiiiu the fust nut) thin) Sundays, Sabbath ml. (Mil every Sunday morning ill 10 a. in. I'myer uncling every Wcdues ()uy eveiiing lit S u'cltiek. Uev I!. I,. Alter Residence, nl Mci''uiltiirlls hotel. W. K. t lli'in ii. I'tiiiuvill'1- preaching thu f'C!ii,d nut ftiurtli Sunday a ut ll;i, m. and every Sunday evening ut S -jViuek. Suliliiitli Bchoul every iSuntJay ut 10 n. m. I'ijnvorth le.igiio every Sunday I'veniiili ul 7. J), in. I'rayer ni, tin)? every Thursday evening nt X o'c'lui'k. Willow Creek preaching firl-t Sunday in each month nt 11 a. ni. Cluypiiol preaching third Sunday in em li month at 1 1 n. in. Howard preaching the Saturday evening preeceding the third Sun day in eaeh month. Itev. If. ('. LIFE AND ADVENTURES OF JOE MEEK HY MUD FRA.Nl'Kt FI I.I.KR VICTOR. KAI'.LY DAYS IN OIIKGON. The chiiract' r of tho JMuekfeet li) inliiiliited thu Rood l.untinjj ground on tho o .Btum ido of the Koeky Mounluiim, in already pretty tv.ll given. They wi ro tall, tin ewy, well made felluwo; good hurnemen, find good fightcrn. though inclinet 1 1 marauding and inur lerinu. They dreKsed eotn- e-J, the women arid children were r.-rnoved ; and if tho village was beaten they niado presents to their conquerors Such were the de circus ImhitH of the warriors of the lewer Columbia. These were the people who livtd almost exclusively by fishing, and whose climate was a mild and fi-rtnbly and even Ii.iiid40(iiely, as moist one. Fishing, in which both dreH goes among savages, and ul'.oether were more to be feared than despiced. Thu Crows reeembled the Black list, h ho'e eiieniies they were, in all the b'jforo-mentioned traits, but wero if pofrible, even more preda tory in their habits. Unlike the IJIackfcet, however, they were not l ho enemies of all mankind ; and even were disputed to cultivate some friendliness wiih the white traders and trappers, in order, as they acknowledged, to strengthen their o vii h .in Is uisainH tho Iilauk fe.t. They Ioj inhabited a ton country, full of game, and had h irtes in abundance. These were the mountain tribes. Comparing these with the coast tribes, there was a striking differ ence. The natives of the Colum- scxes engaged about equally, was an important accomplishment, since it was by fish they lived in ibis world ; and by being good fish ermen that they had hopes of the next one. The houses in which they lived, instead of being lodges made of buffalo skins, wero of a larg size and very well constiuct ed, being made out of cedar planks. An excavation was firs' made in the earth two or three feet deep, probably to secure greater warmth in winter. A double row of cedar post) wag then planted firmly all round the excavation, and between these the planks were laid, or, sometimes cedar bark, so overlap ped as to exclude the rain andj wind. The ridge pole of the roof; iarnn fclintinrtpil nil ft row of tallrri . , , ., . itritiona posts, passing tnrougn ine center of the building, and notched to re- then ern tide of the Cascade range to! mountains, a people lived, the simc, yet different from the Chin ooks. They resembled them in form, features, and manner of get ting a living. Put they were more warlike and more enterprising; they even had some notions of com merce, being traders between the coast Indians and those to the eust of them. They too were great fiidi erinen, but used the net instead of fishing in boats. Great scaffold ing were erected every year at the narrows of the Columbia, known as The Dallc, where, as the salmon pised up the liver in the spring' in incredible numbers, they were caught and dried. After drying, tfie fish were then pounded fine be tween two stones, pressed tightly into packages or bales of about a hundred pounds, covered with mat ting, and corded up for transporta tion. The bales wero then placed in storehouses built to receive them, where they awaited customers. By and by there came from the THE OLD RELIABLE 33 fek ( -ii mi vgr m Absolutely Pure WERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE be planted every night and raised every morning. Their women, too, were good riders, and comfortably clad in dregsed ekins, kept white with chalk. So wealthy were tome of the chief that they could count coast other Indians, with different j their fifteen hundred head of horses varieties offish, to exchanire for ! grazing on tneir grassy uplands. I the salmon in tho Wish-ram ware- Horse-racing was their delight, and bouses. And by and by there ; betting on them their besetting came from the plains to the east ward, others who had horses, camas-root, bear-gross, fur robes, and whatever constituted the wealth of thenouritains and plains, . to exchange fjr the rich and tiu vice, for undies iney used Horse hair cords, attached around the animal's mouth. This was suffic ient to check him, andHiy laying a hand on his side or that of the horse's neck, the rider could wheel either direction. The ! . . Clark niL-tor. residence M. K. nar- bi t were not a tall and robust peo i..:.. ..:!.., . ..!.. tik- thnuft oant iif the Kockv ceive it. The rafters were Chilian F.ndenvor meets at the ! Mountains, who lived by hunting, ; covered with planks or bark, fas- ''niuii church every Sunday uven h.g nt 7 p. m. SB! 1 Hotel E. O. HYDE, M. D., (i'"i art rin!'Mvj Phvsiclan and Sureeon, 1'UiN'KVlLLE. UliKllUN. Cull promptly ulti njiril, tt.iy and iiiijlit Flieir height rarely exceeded five ' tened down with ropes made of the feel six inches; their forms werejfibre ofthe cedar bark. A house good, rather iuclining to fatness, i mada in this manner, and often a their faces round, features coarse, : hundred feet long by thirty or forty but complexion light, and thoir.'wide, accommodated several fami- o.lmnr. r.f t!, rv.tnmbi'n ibim in J t. I f . . . . 111. Tbee Wiih ram Indians were ; "mpie ana easy nmng saaaie was sharp traders, and mually made a etutTsd deer-skin, with etirrups of something by their exchanges ; so j wood, resembling in shape those that they grew rich and insolent, j used by the Meiicp?, aqd covered and it was dangerom for the un- j with deer-skin seted On wet, so as warv stranger to pass their wav. J to tighten in drying.' The saddles of Of all the tribes cf the Columbia,! v-omen were furnished with a they perpetrated the most outrages j Pr deer's ntlert for the pom- uf'ww i.i v(fi,uvul. j - r o D., Prineville J. H. ROSENBERC, M, ruINKVII.lilC. OKKUON. Oflu'i' lira 1 iwr n-irt'i .. l'i"m.lp'iii A Son', lirr.if turn. ori'll K HlH !:S lOlo li AM, I" lti't T l "K H. P. BELKNAP, M. D., Physician and Surgeon. rr.lNEVIt.LK. OHEOON. nm It .iamnii A ttliimli t'o'. trns Store eyes lurje and intelligent. Tho j lies, who each had their separate j trdVe(.r anJ 6tniger withi0 j Iq ruany things their customs ' TMOKOUOHLy (NOVTfO':ltO i sttruRNiaMio TMBOuoour j American Plan Rates 'C IS. McDowell, 91 Ot I tin j un I'l-oprtctor.' r , , a CIaJsJU.UlMMMWlAMA"l"ft,l',a",,Aaau,' 9 t Real Instate For Sale ! A. D. MORRISON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AN SUHECON I'! Imivllln, Ort-iron till.i-fl Nv Ih-'T l -'Uiunii- I'niK toro I o!) (.mnipllv ilirmtt-il I". A.CJ.INE. ih;n nsT, -l!tNKVII.I.I5. OKK'IOX. M. R. ICCS, Attorney at Law and notary, Main tfti-ent, I'llnovlllo, Orotfon. ottl.-c n pit t r t lon.llnr. I" I'oarl tl.mso. fustnm of flittciiini their heads in ! entrance and fireplace; the en infancy gave them a grotef que and trance being by a low oval-shappd unnatural appearance, otherwise j door, and a flight of steps, they could not bo called ill-looking, j The canoes of these people were On tho first advent of white men j each cut out of a single logofce among them, they were accustom-' dar; and were often thirty feet long ed to go entirely naked, except i ! and five wide at midships. They winter, when a panther skin, or a i were gaily painted, and their shape mantle of other skins sewed to-1 was handsome, with a very long gethcF, served to protect them from i bow so constructed as to cut the the cold; or if tho weather was! surf in landing with tho greatest rainy, as it generally was inthatjease, or the more readily to go inilJtr climate, along mantle ofjthrough a rough sea. The oars rut-h mats, like the toga of the were abaut five feet long, and bent ancient Kamaus, look the place of j n theshapeofa crs-cent ; which th.it made ofukins. To this was; shape enabled them to draw them added a conical hat, woven of'odgewiso through the water with i,'d little or no noise this noiseless and accoutrements resembled those Still briber t;i the past, on the o Mexicans, irom wnom, no their gates. great grassy plains, watered by beautiful streams, coming down doubt, they were borrowed. Like the Mexican, they threw the lasso For tlefeiifive provided with a armor Iney were tunic of elkskin double, descending to the ankles, with holes in it lor the arms, and (mite impenetrable to arrows. A nesi being an important quality in hunting the sea otter, which is al ways caught sleeping on the rocks. The single instrument which suf- ; Seed to build canoes and houses frn,,, tl, , n ., i i n li ved t he Ca v- to catch the wild horse. Their uses, Yakimas, Nez Percei, Wal- horsei, too, were of Mextcan stock, lah Wallah, and FlaiUeaJs ; a.jn many f them bore the brand different in their appearance and of that country, having been ob u.t.n. .,.;. riiiTrnt niml pa nf , tai ned in some of their not infre living would naturally make them. The Crook County Ural Kstato and Abstract Co. has rropcrty to Soil V. A. BELL, Attn rney-nt-Law NOTARY PUBLIC. JtUK lo Court House. i , tifl'.l'ti Oil altl'Ct i ruisKVii.it:, uui:0N. helmet of similar material covered ! was the chisel ; generally being a u the head, rendeiing them like piece of old iron obtained irom Achilles, invulnerable except in t some vessel and fixed in a wooden the heels.' In this secure dress i handle. A stone mallet aided they went to brittle in their canoes, them iH using the chisel; and with notice being first given '.o the ene-! this simple "kit" of tools they con myoflhe intended attack. Their j trived to manufacture plates, bowls, buttles luiuht therefore be termed i carved oars, and many ornamental Instead of having many canoes, they had many horses; and in place of drawing tho fishing net, or trolling lazily along line, or spearing fih from a canoe, they rode pall me'.l to the chase, or sallied out to battle with the hos tile Blackfeet, whose country lay between them and the good hunt ing grounds, where the great herds of bufl'.ilo were. Being Nimrods by nature, they were dressed in com plete suits of skins, instead of go- e naked, like their brethren in the lower country. Being wander ing and pastoral in their habits, tie lived in lodges, which could quent journeys into California and A tli-.l lurin nl II'" '. 'U villi A un II..U.. u. I..I In l-rim-iill-- H" ' !''' A ilt linliriivcl murk lUit.'li "I i, I nut- .I'l' rute- tlt-illliAII't will !m dull mi.) Uini IHKC nil U'V t l"illirr lttl 'Jul liit "I t Hl'' A rh. . Iri'l I't I'n'turii I n4 r..illnlliil HI'' Nine iti ul On hur t l'h hmr Suliiin. (iro"H Thi l I I'iriiftlii. A riu.rolluii liiliTi"! lit i Cell III Jr. tin. .....nl Mhri. ul HI. irk lu Mlr.r III I lin Haul la in MllllHH !'! Hell In iiilniTnlii. ,V flti. r..,..li til '. .rro.. ...... I..'l'"l Mr" "'" "ri" 'ni." t C. W. QAfJ NES, I Al'I'.UlNKV AV l.V' SI NOV.VUY ITUI.lt: X j I UlKVll.l.E. OKKUON. i omrr on '"'I"1 "i '' I'rli'.o. llii'. ,.(4, ,11 1 'I ( ( tho 1 lll'H'10'"' ,.,i d.il.l Mluluif ('. 11,1. ,!i. trlii. I irin. ti I'.l.io tu In' m'V kIIi.IIa. linn', t, .... U'i!l,..v t'rr.k. i .n irrr, hi runiiii ihii'i ....I ntlirr ...,.1,1,11 . .... I ' , , ' J , . it .'t I.n.t I. In .Hull., . I"."'".. ' "" r" iiiKlmliir l .lurii Utul. I'll UT. Ill llllllir ... .lltttl lK.t A K'H.,1 Iii.u.i miit tho .. In I'riiu I... urtiK i,r ftf.i-i'Um armu lui.'l. . ""'"'"y VJ, ., t ll.'.l It'" W Hint H.rlu, N (I'll'l'N Iho Dill"! il III tl.O lll Mt" lillrf" """ (i Hull ml U." "" :i !! i M. E. HRINtC, ,iril:M Y AM fiH'NSBI.01! AT I.W A Klrcet, llolw.wti Flrat Second PUIN1CV11.1.U',. OUfMUN. ,1 1, Mcl't l lAH'Il, Abstractor of Titles riiiicvilie, Oregon. compound duels, in which each parly observed great punctilious tu'ss and decorum. Fainted and armor-encased, tho warriors in two flotillas of canoes were rowed to the battlt! ground by their women, when tho battle raged fuiiously for Fount lime; not, however, doing things. Like the men of all savage na tions, they made slaves of their captives, and their women. The dreys ofthe latter consisted merely of a short petticoat, manufactured from the fibre of the cedar baik, previously soaked and prepared. material was worked into a ir A It I l.nrnlllll. v i tit . nmii'l ink. li.rtti-.l, lilriil liulii. Till' r, un jtutuiT n .tiin: l"'1' .un, For further partlculors Inqtlro of J. Lr WcC"lloch. manager of tho Crook County Ronl Cstato anu Abstract Co., Prlnovlllo, Oregon. i ;'..yv. W i t- rr- ,u a aJIMIITC! ' V. SUItF IN 4 MINUTES ,,.lcti i-'i'-o in' l.lifltiurtlt". i,l'"'"j Eli ' 3 , lttiuth Hook biif ; niiv erent harm to either side. If; this nn'v one chanced to be killed, that j fringe, attached lo a girdle, and on ly long enough to reach the middle ofthe thigh. When the season re quired it, they added a mantle of fkins. Their bodies wore anointed with fish-oil, and sometimes paint ed with red ochre in imitation of the men. For ornaments they wore strings of glass beads, and al so of white shell found on the northern coast, called haiqua. Such wete the Chinook, who lived upon the coast. Farther up tho river, on the east- side considered itself beaten, and retired from tho conflict to mourn jver and bury the estimable and departed brace. If the case was a stubborn one, requiring ' several tltivs lighting, tho opponents en campid near each other, keeping up a confusion of cries, taunts, menaces, and raillery, during the whole night; after they resumed the conflict, and continued it until cno was beaten. If ti village was I ) be attacked, notice being receiv- I JEST OP ALL WHISKIES. itanjUutii (EUtlt. KOU 8.U.K ONLY BY HENDERSON & POLLARD. N'ew Mexico. As all the wild horses of Ameri ca are said to have sprung from a with hook and i 6mal band, turned loose upon the plains by Cortez, it would be in teresting to know at what time they came to he used by the north ern Indians, or whether the horse and Indian did not emigrate to gether. If the horse came to the Indian, great must have been the change effected by the advent of this new element in the savage's life. It is impossible to conceive, however, that the Indian ever could have lived on these immense plains, barren of everything but wild grass, without his horse. With him he does well enough, for he not only "lives on horseback." by which means he car. quickly reach a country abounding in game, but he literally lives ort' horse-flesb, when other game is Red is the color of danger, whether on ;he ' semaphore or on the sVitu When the face is reddened by eruptions, when boils break out on the body, or. the engry red of sorea and ulcers is displayed in the flesh, it is nature's danger signal. The blood is olwlructcd and tainted by impurities, and there can t no safety until the blood is made mire. Dr. Pierce's Golden Med ical Discovery purifies the blood, and removes the effete matter whicli clojrs and corrupts it. It cures pim ples, boils, eczema, scrofula, sores, ulcers and other consequences CI impure blood. -1 ft-t'l prcatly thankful for what vmtr iiHxliciui; tins itoue for uir." writes Mr. Ctt.is. Ho.vl, of KalUnikn. Mich. "I suf fereil with wmtiilii ot the hc;il fortwelv viMrs. Tricil evt-iy kind, of mcilidnc that hi-arvl of but found, no cure. K very aim tll.it IvXikni at my hcait slid, lltty iiever 8.iw auvth'ujf like It. The last e.octcr X doctored ivith before applying to you I pit wors every dtiy. Wits so miscnilile t!-;it 1 wm liuahle to do onv work at oil. After Inking two or three bottles of your 'CoMea Medical Piicovery' and umu;; the loe il treatment vou prescribed for me. I w;i cured ami uy head was entirely tree Irom acrofula.w Accept uo substitute for Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. There is no other medicine which is just as Kood" for diseases of th3 blcxxl and the eruptions which art esuseil by the blood's impurity. FRRP r,r- Wff0' Common Sens Meillcai Adviser is sent the on receipt f sump to pay ex!nse of mailing mly Send twetitv-one one-ceut stamps for the lxxk in paper covers, or tlurtv oae stamps for the cloth -bound vol nme. Address Dr. K. V. Iterce, bui iato, N.V. tristTsecrn.. moutU oflhe scarce. ... ..,.' Cuiious as tber .fact the Indians at the Columbia and tho.se of "Kew Meii co speak languages similar In con struction to that of the Atec and from this fact, and the others .before mentioned, it may be very fairly iuferred that difference of circumstances and localit ies have made of the diflereut tribes what they are. As to thu Indian's moral nature, that is pretty niuuh alike every where; and with some rare excep tions, the rarest of which is, per haps, the Flathead and Nez Perces nations, all are cruel, thieving, and treacherous. The Indian gospel is literally the "gospel of blood ;" an "eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth." Vengeance is as much a commandment to him as any part of the decalogue is to the Christian. But we haye digressed far from our narrative; and as it will be neces sary to refer to the subject of the moral code of savages further on in our narrative, we leave it for the present. (To be continued.) , . ,