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About Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194? | View Entire Issue (Aug. 14, 1891)
1 ; t I 4- W 1 Y Li 1 i 4 1 1 1.1 STAliTINfl AS A WRITEl!. HOW PRENTICE MULFORD DRIFTED TOWARD A LITERARY CAREER. tTIa Flrl 1nlnttl..n M Was OMIgrtHo Writ t Kxllev lltntlf -A Sumnt-.T nf r)pr Work from th r"lr Article I to tlt riwwnt t'lui. lHvrljhtM lv tin- Anther.) 1 Ai. .IV. .'V 13 DRIFTED gradually into the occupation of writer, and nrw wrote a line for publication until I was twenty-nine years old. 1 wrote because I couliltit help writing. I found a pleasure in putting my thoughts on piper. It seemed an assist ance to thinking; more clearly. We may think more things in sixty seconds than we can write out in sixty minutes. The time occupied in putting our thoughts down on paper teems as a sort of gov ernor to regulate the outflow of our mental steam or idea. If yon could do this without the aid of pen and ink to keep from thinking too fast you miht live for hours in an eitetupore poem, fancy or fiction of your own. The first article I ever had published appeared in the columns of The Union Democrat, of Sonora, Tuolumne oonnty, Cal. It w an account of the yearly fall opree held by the river miners when the Tuolumne, rose in ita wrath two months earlier than was expected firs years out of six and swept away all our summer's work, dams, flumes, wheels, fl.ricv t-t ic.: r river mining machinery. I: .v. t lur.i-Ikia account of the spre;1 r ' : ',- rv.n'.In of it, and the feel ings. " .1 ...id physical, remorse and repeui.i a-, contrition and heailache, re alized tae day after. The article struck a sympathetic chord tlirougliont the entire county. Four fifths of the population had been there themselves. I wrote this sketch one Sunday after noon under a biir pine tree near my cabin. I- was in a little gulch, and through l .e gulch flowed a little brook. A hundred yards distant the muddy cur rent of the Tuolumne roared and rushed and howled through the Willow Bar and over a pn peron claim. There came flouting in its current a a log or part of a flume or a sluice box or wreck of a water wheel, which the mad river tossed about as if in derision of man's puny work, and perhaps flung it ou a half submerged rock and crashed it to splinters. I know not why, but the picture of the birthplace of my first article has remained Uriuly imprinted in my brain. For n'muit three years between whiles of mining, prelecting, teaching school, running f ir iui-.v, lectin .'i,' and organ izing gigantic mining enterprises, all of which i-ri-h - 1 piv.ni.tnr.'ly, I wrote al most wttitit'iitsly for TU- D.-mocrat over the siguatiav of "D-g-.-rry." By that name 1 I 'Mai' preuy well known in Tuolumne an I t'.ie a!jmiug counties. I bad no ambition to b-eune known as a writer. ' My hig'u'st aspiration wa the pos-H.-.-iuu ,.. a g il l claim which would pay four or five dollars a day. As such a.v.:a:ion increased tho daily income of siicli diggings" as I took hold of diminish'. . At loot such income de scended to tiie stale, of .venty-live cents ler d:i-m. All my worldly goods wre an old gun. a saddle, a pair of blankets, an enfeebled suit of clothes and a trunk with abundant room for many tilings not in it. At tlii-crisis in the early fall of 1!? I received an unexpected letter from Mr. Joseph Lawrence, publisher of The (ol den Era, then the leading literary week ly pap'-r of San Francisco, asking me to take a place on it. To San Francisco 1 went j-traightway, and a more forlorn, seedy specimen of literary iiupecmiiosity never set foot in that city. Mr. Law rence placed m- at one of tho leading hotels. Wc-re he lived, and by the agency of some fresh apparel made me in a measure -presentable. I felt very much out of place among the stylinh people with whom 1 found myself. However, I filled my position on Tlw Era, J believe, acceptably. It was only at certain tine's, with a pen in my hand, that I felt raised above my average shabby, ina-s'-rtivo miciital level. I was called modest and retiring. That was not it at all. I was cowardly, and thought almost every one I met who had a pretentions air was in some way to me nnSnown my superior. Dret Uarte had then a local Oalifornia reputation. So had Mark Twain. I met both of these gentb-Tnen frequently in The Era office. Charles Warren Stod dard, Ralph Kceler, who died so myste riously in Cuba; Newell (Orpheus C. Kerr), Artemus Ward, Adah Menken and several other bright people were regular or occasional contributors to The Era. I remained on The Era about a year. Mr. Lawrence went to-the eastern states. I left the paper soon afUjr his depart nre, and sustained myself on a meager in come by peddling my contributions to various panel's. 1 wrote a good deal for The Diamaiie Chronic,..', a tii al.er pro trramtut uiteet itlnwt in large in a ban- laughed at the idea. Rut on morning ! ; lie did start it. Then they utoppe I ' laughing. i ! Due morning while correcting my proof in The liramatio Chronicle com. ' , pivsmg room the building commence I shaking. It shook and shook, and th ci shook harder. It generated a general tendency on the part of the printers and editors to steer rapidly fgr the stairway. ' I wont with tho rest, bringing up thrt ' rear. That was the groat earthquake of I was the first to go back to tho ' office. It looked as if it had boon em phatically, industriously and elaborately struck by lightning. In about three minutca afterwanl a pjtle, swmsl eom positor put his hiNtd in the dxr. St : ing mo, he exclaimed: "Groat (.Kwltt I Did you stay here through it all?" lu ; advertently I said no. With mow prea- ence of mind I might have said, "yea," ' and gaiued a flue and fleeting reputation for cvmragu. ; In IStVH I had a call to edit The Stock-' 1 ton llaiette, a Democratic campaign v. per. 1 obeyed the call, ran Hie papiT ror five mouths, was well paid, but got tired j of the job and retired to San Francisco, where I skirmished again on the ragged edge of a decent living by throwing in cviutributious wherever tltey would be , accepted. In the latter part of 1S7J an inspiration soited me to go to England to advance by writing and talking the good and glory of California, I raised alnuit f "sH from the business men of Sail Francisco by representing Ui them the profitable possibilities of my self iiu-, IkvsihI mission. t I raised it in about forty-eight hours, . Ralston, the noted Kmker, handinl me ( UK) in gold after a curt and crusty in terview of three minutes. It was like . hearting the liou in the big banker's den, but the liou came dowu with the dust, and 1 left the deu, shaky and per spiring with the agitation of the inter- view. But the five gold twenties were ; in my fist. The San Francisco Bulletin i engaged also to take a certain amount of , correspondence from England. ' To England I went I did there the ' 1 best I could in writing and talking Call-' : fornia wherever I fonnd opportunity, in I cities, towu and Tillages, and think I earned my t-'oO advance wages. I spent two years there. I i One of my greatest troubles was the j English chairman. One cannot give a ! lecture there without a chairman. The ! chairman must be somebody of impor 1 tance also. The English cannot hear anybody without a chairman. The pe-', culiarity and infliction of the English ' chairman is that he will make such a '. i long speech in introducing you and tell ! tng the audience what yon are going to 1 say, so that by the time he is through ' most of the wind is taken out of your : sails and the audience want to go home. ( In 1873 The Bulletin made it an ob , ject for me to visit the Vienna World's fair. I staid there two months, and got ' back to London with four dollars in my pocket, thanking my stars that I had run the gantlet successfully of the many j languages 1 encountered at different railway stations, and had not by mistake got ou some train which might have ' landed me penniless in Turkey or Siberia. I I returned to America in 1873, bring i ing only a wife and nine dollars. After some months of misery as an "occasional contributor" the San Francisco Bulletin sent me as correspondent to the Centen- uial at Philadelphia. I forgot to say that I operated the preceding winter in Xew York as a weekly Sunday eveuing 1 lecturer on divers and sundry descriptive : topics, an occupation that brought me ! more fame than new shirts. I Once during this phascof my existence i I preached from a Unitarian pulpit. But ! not acceptably. They never called for ; me again. Destiny soon after this placed me on l the editorial stall of the New York ; Graphic. There I suggested the Cou ! densed column of local and general mat ! ter under the title of "History of a ! Day." It was just what the paper want ! ed, for their illustrations took up so i much room they had not much left for ; local news. Mr. David Cmly was the I managing editor, and a very good one HEREDITY HORSE BREEDING, Wlit Rtioulil lti Avnliloil In Trying tar AnlmitU Wltltmit IllviuUh, I cannot, as a veterinary surgeon this hastily throw self far from satisfaeb miuatiou without press ujion yon the the avoidant's of breeding from either male or female. Nell.ll T 1 II f M , bring wsw. rr jr f rmt f Jfi 1 1 1 f t Tv v'V.VJ , n toget her. and to my I K J. ' ' r l? v i i i i t V 4 i f fl If I'AM ! ... , , ..., . n L ; .i u. . f m .d k m vt mj m m m m m evwwrrrxi' ' ' . . . i a i I . . . r -f -1 J r- r ' - i T I ; r I , , I ' . ... a . t:t AM .m m m V'l I emieiivortng to liu- f A's'isi i7ii m1 J f f ? t! r . I stern luvessity for i J' 7 T ' V'; ' , a IT 1 i y 6 A t f . T V I animal., - ! f-'l ' ! ' " V 1 J V ' r 7 4 A 9 k U aiT.fted with ,iis. if t, m fj' f -" - - tor:m - wse of a henvlttary imtmv. The Hoyal y,- w ,1.. y Afnt, )W "J",1 )tt,lt rn "7.4 i College of Veterinary Surgeons, at the r f v i VWL', T,. tj' I i lj f J ; rctpiestof the Royal Agricultural f V ' f ' J ilUilMi- ". I 4 V .. i 1 t ety, lately took this subject in hand, and h $ f 5 i :K -'i'f.fv , f t.TJ V' " i after caieful. deliln-rate and mature con- f" i W .it Jrlb i t& t A i' sideraliou, furnished them with the If i. " tj T f V -1 following list of diseases which, by V f 1 tJ k t t f ' .''""; ' kj T g? IP V -V V -. .t.. .Jti,lll net -mI I ,,'lh,,' ; i" r U i r mm-1 r- EAST and SOul Son! hern Paci!!,. I1 1 SHASTA LINE Knptess I'lttillS leuvil I'uiH. , 'it,; 1 r I'..ni.i -. -. II" l r 'il.-. ii,v I p X I Af Ktii,.i a reuuu k.tiiiy unammous concensus of opinion, were tltvlared to bo undoubtedly hereditary: Hiiarlug, In cluding whistling, side bone, navicular ' disease, curb, bone spavin, bog pav- in, grease, shivering and cataract, and, under certain eircuUHtaueeit, splint, string halt, contracbsl feet, wttak feet and bursal enlargements, such as ther ough pin and windgalla You will do well, therefore, gentlemen, to look out j tor these maladies, and refrain from breeding from animals of ettlier sex af-: Aided with them, as also from parents of faulty conformation or delicate cou-j (titution, there being quite enough mis-1 shapeu and unsound horses in the world ' without your deliberately adding to the i number. I A hot un frequent cause of variation tn type is traceable to the tmpressiou protliuvd on the nervous system of the' female at her first coputation, giving ' rise to the stamping of her subsequent ( progeny with one or mow of tho strik- : ing characteristics of her first mate.: Many interesting cases of this natural phenomenon urt) on record, both In the: eipiine specii's and in othci animals, one of the most remarkable being that of a : mare, which twing bred in the first pbtco I to a qnagga, invariably thereafter pro duced foals more or less striped. While in Indiana and Kentucky 1 have frequently noticed horses on th i street which at the distance of a block i or two were hard to distinguish from mules, and on tracing them np when possible I fonnd that the dams of such animal had in almost every Instance been first bred to a jackaaa 1 find this sort of variation frequently ignored en tirely by ths breeder for perhaps ery indifferent and insufficient reason, but when breeding to a typs it should be by no meant lost sight of. Exchange. WILLHMETTE band ; Company OKKKIIS I.MU't KMtMH TO HOME SEEKERS M- tio. dam naiio... iCi.el', an I ti.e h - unig on wL...:, ,a ,..ibo-her (Cii.t;-::. B: 'o;,ii.;) fou.i...o. ... i ':.:') or i:;i';. ;!;-. Ian I'r.iii c2,.o ij'. . ... D) Yo a.);; was always ptuOi . ' ,w ....-. ho wonl 1 4art a great moriilii vapa. Almost every one i One morning while on The Graphic 1 j ' found on my table a letter from The llul- j letin asking me to serve as their Paris cor ! respondent at the exposition of 1873. In ' forty-eight hours 1 was on a French I tteamea I lt;tiiriiiiig after a six months' resi-1 j dence in Paris I resinned iny former j ' place on Tin; Graphic as the head boiler down and condenser of news. I filled . ' that position for six years, and left it in ' ; lux:) because of being thoroughly tired ; ; and sick of chronicling in short meter j ; day after day tho eternal round of inur1 ! ! ders, scandals, burglaries, fires, acei-! S dents unci other events which peoplo . ' deem it indispensable to know and swal- i : low afkT breakfast. 1 became so thor l oughly saturutt-d with the horrors con- Baipjent on civilization us tb feel some ! mornings after Iliad stewed the preced- ing day's miseries down into a small iness that I wanted to go for a dosu of J arsenic, a razor, a pistol or Paris green : myself. So out of consideration for my 1 sanity, if not my life, I left the paper, I for they would not let me do anything else. I retired then on a very miall fortune, and built with my own hands a num- i shackle shanty in a New Jersey wilder J ness, seventeen miles from New York. I It cost $40 and was not an elegant I piece of architecture. Put it filled the I bill. There I commenced writitig my "White Cross" Library series. When nil this was written out I went to Bortwn in 1HHI. It is for sume mys terious rnson iieceMsary to go to Iioston to start any new idea or movement on this planet. There I started tho White Cress Library. I had just money enough to print the first WiO. I had no subscrip tion list at all. I had faith, however, in my ideas. 1 have lnoro now, and expect to increase it in tlie firtnro. That was in May, 188B. : From that time means ami agencies ha vo couie. lii.t idong to further the busi 1 ncrn, wnich is and always has been, 1 , jnay add, on a sell' sustaining basis. And I always will be. The end. PUSNTICS MULTOBO. Solllni graivm Iter Con. The great object in confining cattle in luiuiuer and feeding Uiein green crops is to save expenses, and to obtain more profit from each acre on the farm. Pas turing is nearly always a wasteful prao-j tice, and a farmer cannot afford to carry it on where the land is valued at more than twenty-five dollars an aero. The average uumber of acres to pasture a cow through the summer is six, bt if this same amount of land is carefully! soiled it will prixtiice sufficient food for three or four cows, not simply through j snmmer, but through the winter w;-JL t There is some land which is not fit for soiling. The first crop that will be' fed is rye cut green, which, if sown in I August or November, may tie fed to the ' cows early i:i tiie spring np to the first , of June. After the rye the clover and ' orchard grass nr.? ready, and then the j com an I peas come in succession, keep ing the cows supplied with succulent : gri-en food right through tho spring, ! suuiiuer and fall The silo should also! be brought into use for preserving some of the green food for winter Use, and the 1 dairymen can then keep up the milk flow by supplying the animals with the i very essential food for milk making. ! In soiling the land for the cows some ! go-id system should be adopted which I will save all the time and labor possible. The feeding racks should be as near the j center of the field as convenient, and the whole land divided up in sections. Une j section then should be planted with ear- ly grass, another with early corn, others i with summer hard corn and peas, so' Unit new crops will bo coming into ma- j turity as one is fed to the animals. The ! disadvantages of the soiling system are greater labor and time, but the advan- ! tages are economy in feed and mi In- I creased amount of fodder, and a av Big of all old manure. E. P. Smith in Amer ican Cultivator. , I I Wo have lots ..tix'-'iHIfcct, ltx'JiH feet, all favorably Unld. These lot twice the t.r.linary nit., are but half the usual price of other lots sim ilarly U-atol. Wo have oiit-ucrc, two-acre, five nti-1 ten-acre tracts, suitable for suburban homes, convenient to town, schools, churches, etc., ami of very protluctive soil. A large, growing "Prune Orchar.l," nf which we will sell utrt in small tracts to suit .urvhacM, ami 'v terms. Call and see us and get prices at Oregon City office or.n Robert L'.Taft at Portland offlco, No! 50, Stark street, Portland. Wo are Hendquartora on the Pacific Coust for HARVESTING : MACHINERY OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. 01 It STOCK I ONI-HISM Till! I Kl KSIIATHI Empire Mowers, Empire and Tri umph Reapers and Binders, "Hoosier' "Daisy," "Famous " Hol- lingworth and "Gazelle" Sulky Hay Rakes,Barnes' revolving Horse Rakes, Sterling and Ohio Hay Tedders. rmtifrrlng V. Now I have learned by experimc that it is not profitable to pas turn llotfs on land that will produce twenty-five bushels of wheat ler acre; and that Jt is not necessary that hojjs should net td the ground if properly fed, which nitaii that I hey should KS1 the tiling n y( appetite craves. That there is prottt in hos I san prove. Most of my h'ji have never had their feet ou the ground, be cause. I have uo land cheap enough to pasture them except the stubble lielils. I usually net quite a fine growth pn the pigs while on those. Corn here is Worth twenty-fivo oenta ?"r bushel, and mid- .1K.. i. .!...,., ,i,.n.,,u (,, i u... ally give the young pigs midillingsW .(' the start. From grinding corn and coK, tl(1(.n u,)( voHViier l savo inn oitnun 111 coin meal on every brislud. Cor. Rural New Yorker. lltsloliiv Hay l.ioilers, "l: lli'" Ntuclter llinl f ltuki .1 ) vm ttxt) I'orl.a iiikI 4 iirrlei-.initl (In. Celebrated Steel Frame RANDOLPH HEADER It will j ;t - all Tinners ami dcalrrs to call anil see tn, 1 or write for Uot.Uions liefore mr- i i'ii cnasinir eisewiieli FnlnU wf Intflrent. In entering on the business of horse raising, decido first what breed you will chiefly produce, and then it Is well to stiuk to that as tho main branch of your business, if you find you have hit it. hi deciding between draft horsea and coach horses, this is to bo remembered there is more profit in coach horses than in draft horses, but they are more trouble to train. Remember to cull out tho inferiors from your flock of sheep at least twice a year and fatten and sell them. Particu larly never raise any lambs from weak ami Kcnbby owes. CaM.le may bo dehorned successfully airy time of year except in fly time. The saw is the best tool for performing the operation. Tho horns of calves mny be killed when the animals are two or t hree mouths old and thus all further ojierA tioiis avoided, In time, horns could b bred off cattle altogether. STAVER&WAhKER Now Market Clock, Portland, Oregon, JOHN NISSEN, Ag't, Oregon City, OKl-IIT. M'.XT liooit TO POST oi'l-ICK ,U..i untti. ti,i I, (lull. Hell II , lle.,, ' (ell I'llll Uinalhilrn, .ii e. Nl.r.U. iLl.l.f, lUltl.l.lln' j' I tint ami Cmme ' t lUlsHll'ltil M UI, ii. a I I if ' I'etiUn.l i, i Hi I Ar lii..ni,,t j J .tl.H,tNV t,IM-,,l,,,J ,Vni r a "?.' f'..iui,,l """I.- Pullman Bufft tS!of rm IDICT cic rr,,.. r .ir B-.. .......,,. on in WI, Cw,. IUeli(s i.,ir ruij, . Hula 111,1,1,, BKTVtrrN ftK t l.aNt A Kin t,., M.ll Trln. lUrir,r.w,t4li fiiti. t r.r!Ui,a It liu- M I f.itln. I, Xt AlUll, Sll.l l erir.lli. t..,M,, i,ttuc,i.n f'i'ISli H.ltn,a, r i,r TmlH i.i! :t.,ni t f M I t I'l.tll.lel 4, .v.f IAr Vi-Miiut.m. (,, THROUCH TICKET in Al t, puis r EAST AND SOUTH r.-r iirt.i. n, lull ii, t..,,,u, r.n. me.. ir., rail en c..i,ik. lllr..H t 11, it Korin.VK, r iiim,,k, Ullaet ! tl , aulra UNION PACIf! RY. Ul niUl.V.)!' U Trains (or lbs Kt Ikv A Si audi ( P. M , . w . , w in in i nllml an. I f li. pa Ugait Ntn Oir.wg Pilut", t'iisa PsUrti Mrfpfy V It K V. Ctl.i)MT ht.l.KTO run Tb(uiili on Kipntat -To- 0M AHA, council mxin KANSAS nr CHICA ItltofT t il tSlll, Hi . a. r.inri..n at PurllaitJ t k rlao sna r iH s.mhl )ma r,,r 1'irtha, Bailleuian luauin ri nt tli l't.ililf i't r. w a. I". A I I'nriUM o. ft. i:l.l.t:i. Northern Pacific I Great Overland Rout! TWO J',sT Tl: A I N I'Vll.V j .V'M II N.(. Mf Shortest Line to Chic: Aiet all ...im f !. it ' SI '! I, AMI MIN(Arui rite urt hern P.irllirB.l ll III. Lll'f l IIBHIM ' l'.ialtifer Tl ililia, S-riihd-l la S,.. ttrti l.imirioUH I'.iv t'om'lirt. Piilmitti I'iil.tri' Mei'imf" j Palare tHiunit t ' Kriiin Purl In ml . th !' ! S'ti thai y.iiir li rr-l r. j .Viillii-in Pat ilir II II v j avoid i bnii.' in" 1 lif. uc'n 1'iillman l-l.'-' "iwr1 t oil ,lwi ...... li.-a. lll.iv! ,at,.'li'.,: tili-u l'..Tl!ai,., l..'ltia a't-l I'al ) . lr t.H.niilii tl.rii'l rit. A ui nl, I1 Ml.. I'oriltmtl. Or. i-.l, r.eiirr Ktl.l aii.lU F. L. Posson&Si EED i Omul At. for U. M. Vetri SEED Garden Seel. A HiMitlcr Worker. I'runk 1 1 1 1 II ii i a it , n yoiin man of on, Ohio, states that lir had ler tho rare of two nroininont pkysirians, and need their tiratinenl I unlir'litt.wiis not aldo to uet iirouiid. They proiiouui:ed bis ease Consumption and ineurable. He was peisuaded fo try Dr. Kind's New lliseovery for (!-ii-ntnuption, ('oMnliH and CoIdH and at that time whs not. able to walk aeross the street with out resting. He found, be fore bo bad used half a dollar bottle, that ho was much better; he (Continued to use it and is today enjoying oimI health. If you have any 'throat, Ltinx or Chest trouble try it, W'o guarantee satisfaction, Trial bottle, free ut (i. A. llitrdinii's ilrtiK store. ol Now Try This. It will cost you nothing and will surely do you irood, if you have a CoukIi, Cold," or any tronbla with Throat, Chest nr Lunt's. lr, Kind's New IMscoverv for CoiiHUinption, Coughs nnd Colds is ( i In i n 'm Colii intilliiiei'o to kivu lunri. ,,i inoni'y rc- funded. Siiinrers from l,n (irippo found it just the tiling and under its use had a speedy and perfect recovery. Try a sample boll leal our expeiiHe nnd leain for yourself just how good a thing it is. Trial bottles free ut O. A. Harding's, drugstore. Large sizo 50o. and f 1.00, A Safe Invt'tli i. Is one which is nuaranteed to britif yuil satisfactory results, or in cam of failure a rclurii of purchiiHo price, On thissufti plmi you can buy finn, our ml vertised UriiKeist a bottle of ir. Kind's Nuw liiseov rv lor Cousuinpliou. k is uaianlei.dlo bring rei.,f in eveiy cane then lined for ny lillcclion throat J.uiH's or ( 'best, such us CoiiKuuiption' ltitl.in.mut mil of l.nnH, llronchilis Asthma, Whooping Cough, Croup, etc. It h pIcaHiint anil uirruniil.l,. i.'. lUNle, ,erfeclly safe, and can ulw.ua I,., depended ujion. Trial bottles ice at A. Harding s drug store, Aug. Hon, ung, a wcllknown nmnu liicturerol bouts ami sIioch at H'Ji) Nn St., Sun Antonio. Texas, will iw.i his experience with an attack 'ramps which he relah-s as fo. I Has taken will, i..i . . namp in (he stomach which I believe would have calmed mv ih.nil, 1. lu'cn for the nroiiMit iiki, ,',f ci Cholera 11ml li;,..i eniedv. The lirxl ,1, :.i ... mud, ,;,! in... 1 , .... r , ",""1'1' II Up In "0 ' ,' '"' " ' uiihc, ami .... ; i,n ,.oc,orCOIII, g,,, t,)Wl(,n noi 1 1 liu,,, - nmin uiitays ho 01111 of t,(1 ' my lamiiy Harding. forget of the lows; lie be- was lieineily muni Mln.ru l''ur sale by !, A SEED Crass, Clover and H SEED Trees, llulU, Prrtilwr." SEED llec Kr('i.ers' SIPlie Wc want vol for a fiistniii 1 a trial order, F. L. Posson & 209 2d St. Portland Hwcrnacr In M liter llmH, t,f K. K. WltlTK, WHITE BROTHE! Practical rfrv Will iir,.,o,. pi,,,,., tilevsll""11' 1, t ill", ii.Kl ,u(.llcull"ii t"'",,,n' l"K. Hiii'i'lnl nlteotliiii tflvea .. Uki-k. Kllinnl.' furnliilioJ ' ,,.T ; Csll on or sddrsii yr,(l!ni ' 1 "r