Of s WEEKLY tORVALLlS GAZETTE CORVALLIS. - - FEBRUARY 13. 1880 A YEAR AGO. Down In the fbiest a year ago Blossoms were falling and skies were gray. Crimson leaves rustled mint and low. Blue mists saddened the far away; A moist west wind in the motmimg trees Bearing the echo of distant seas. Ah. little love, I can see you now Hall In snaaow anu uu ui Standing undr the beeo.uen bough. When the flush or summer wast past anu For tneDtirange sweet autumn has cast her Over mylove and our long farewell. Dead leaves drifting about her feet. Crimson and russet, tawny gold; High above her the blossoms meet, Dving and only a summer old; Our love still blooms through a winter's snow, Since the day we parted a year ago. A sweet little picture to lay in my heart, Wherever my fortune may bid me go; I bear you too, love we did not part Don l lhe forest a year ago. Call it a fancy, or what you will. The dreamy spell that the autumn weaves; We never parted I hold her still. As I won her first In the falling leaves. COOS BAY BAR ASB ITS BEAD. A LEAF FKOM THE LOG-BOOK OF " ROVER. Dnrintr mv travels on the Northwest Coast I visited Coos Bay in the fall of 1873. The bay is a beautifully situated body of water, supplied by waters flow ing from both branches of Coos River Isthmus and South sloughs and a few minor branches and empties into the ocean. On the right, as you ccme up the Bay, after passing South Slough, is Empire City, a picturesque little village built upon a beach overlooking the sea. Here I concluded to " lay over a trip," and see the sights. Accordingly I en gaged board at the Lockhart Hotel, and was soon ensconceu in a couimrmuie room, where, unlike many an other "sea side hotel," one was made to feel per fectly at home. Being a stranger, I for a time kept secluded, but in a town like Empire one need not remain long ere he finds congenial spirits, and it was so in my case. I soon made the acquaintance of that ubiquitous and ever-entertaining personage, the " oldest inhabitant," and from him learned many interesting inci dents of the early settlement of this por tion of Oregon. He told many weird le gends of Indian massacres, hardships and privations endured by the pioneers, and hair-breadth escapes of hardy sailors who " went down to the sea in ships," and of the noble pioneer women, who walked side by side with the husbands of of their choice in the dark and dreary hours when each twig contained a foe and none were safe from the Indians that roamed the forests. He related all this to me, and after a few days acquaintance invited me to take a sail with him and visit some points of interest, of which offer I gladly availed myself. Coos Bav has many attractions, but the bar for me had the most charm. Why it it was so can only be explained by the fact that, being a " tar," I was always restless when not within the roar of the briny deep. " Here," said he, as we- reached the North spit, "is the burial place of many brave hearts. Ana pointing to the angry waters, said : " Several years ago a " ka- nim " went over there and thirteen In dians met their death while endeavoring to reach the outer beach of Point Arago, and many others have gone down 'neath the billows of this bar." The following evening, in company with " Uncle Dave," I went to North Bend, and there fell in with a jovial crowd of sailors and mill men, among whom were Capt. Elliott, of the Emma Augusta and Capt. McAllep, of the Orient, two as fine gentlemen and true seamen as I have ever met. Besides these two persons were Capt. James McGee, of the tug Escort, ' and Capt. James Hill, of the tug C. J. Brenham. During the evening, the con versation turned on the bar, and tale after tale relating to its treachery was told Capt. Elliott stated that he believed he could save himself if washed overboard while crossing the bar, but how little did he dream that ere forty-eight hours had passed he would be numbered among the ' dead of Coos Bay Bar." Two days after the evening's conversa tion, the Emma Augusta was ready for sea, and it being Sunday. Capt. Hill de cided to tow her out over the bar. A crowd of seafaring men were on the dock when the tug started for the lower bay, where the vessel lay at anchor, and sev eral invited guests stepped on board the C. J. Brenham for a trip over the bar, among whom was the writer. Having taken the Emma Augusta in tow, we pro ceened towards the bar, which wat any thing but smooth. Gradually drawing nearer we could see the heavy swells tum ble in and also break clear across, there being only a small space that seemed at all possible to pass. Capt. Elliott stood by the side of Capt. Hill, near the "man hold" the protection placed around the wheel to more safely protect the "man at the wheel" and appeared to be in an un usually fine frame of mind at the idea of being on his way to San Francisco to spend the holidays, and many a pleasant joke went round. As we neared the bar I saw ihe lynx eye of Capt. Hill lookiug steadily ahead, and having been used to the manner assumed by Captains and Mates in times when courage and deter mination were most demanded, soon per ceived that behind this resolute exterior there was something which made him hesitate ere going too far in case a "turn back " became necessary. When off the point of North Spit steam was slackened and the Captain said: "The bar is very rough this morn ing for the Brenham; what do you think, Capt. Elliott; can we make it ?" "Oh, yesv" replied Capt Elliott. I have crossed out on a rougher bar many a time. What do you think ?" "All right," said Capt. Jim. And away we went. We had passed over the worst without accident, and had begun to breathe easy for there is nothing so trying even to those accustomed to "bar work" as going over an angry bar where each breaker threatens to engulf the boat and bring death to all on board when immediately in front of the boat a huge breaker began to "comb," and before we could prepare ourselves for the shock broke with tremendous fury over the Brenham, sweeping over board Capt. Elliott and the Mate of the tug, named Smith. Every effort was made to save them, but in vain. Poor Elliot was the first to succumb, and it is the impression that he was hurt by striking the rail of the boat when he fell into the sea. Smith was a good swimmer, and for a time it looked as if he would preach the beach, bnt it was not so ordained, and he sank beneath the waves, and his spirit soon followed Capt. Elliott's. The beach for weeks following was traversed to find the bodies. About two weeks after the accident the body of Smith was found and decently interred by the citizens of Empire oity, "Uncle Davy" making the coffin; but the body of Elliott never was given up by the treacherous sea, and the "curlew's rest less cry" is the only requiem chanted above his watery resting place. We safely returned to Empire City; but the sudden and tragical taking off of two noble, generous men in the full bloom of health had an effect upon all who witnessed it that could notbe shaken off in a day. And even now, at times, prunes vividlv before me the scene of those two struggling bravely for life midst the breakers of Coos Bay bar struggling against hope; endeavoring to avert a destiny that could not be averted. Capt. Elliott! No truer, nobler man have I met. A true son of the sea, a careful and courageous captain, a gentle man of fine feeling, and an honest man. May he ever rest in peace 'neath the "breakers" of that "harbor bar," until that day when the "sea shall give up its dead;" then may it be my lot to meet him and to know him on the other shore, as I knew him in the walks of life; for he was truly a friend. About a year after the above event I was again visiting Coos Bay, and was in vited by Capt. Magee to take a trip on the Escort over the bar. Not being well, I declined; beside the image of the catas trophe I had before witnessed came too nainfullv to memory. At this time some thirty vessels were lying at anchor in the lower bay, awaiting a favorable depth of water to pass over the bar, and this day it had been arranged for both tugs, the Escort and Fearless (the latter hftvincr been nut on this bar in place of the C. J. Brenham, which had been as signed to the Columbia bar work) to go out and sound. As was usual on such occasions, the captains of the different vessels were anxious to proceed to sea, and several of them concluded to go down to the bar on the tugs, among them one Capt. Nissen, of the schooner Twilight. He was a fine young man and had just returned from "the old country" with a young wife, and this was his first trip since his return. 'He stood high in the estimation of his employers and was beloved by his crew, and all who knew him appreciated his worth as friend and gentleman. He, like Capt. Elliott, was anxious to sail for San Francisco, and went to take a look at the bar. Everything went well, and when the bar was reached it was not what one used to the sea would call "rough." although it was breaking. The Escort was in the lead, and unmindful of danger. Cantain Nissen and Captain Lorenson, of the schooner Letitia, stood side by side on the house, engaged in an animated conversation. Suddenly the waters began to rise and in an instant the Escort was completely buried under the weight of a treacherous breaker, and Capt. Nissen was floundering in the wrathful waters of that cruel bar. Captain Lorensen would have shared the same fate but for the presence of mind of Captain McGee. As the water swept past him, he felt for he could not see an object going past him which he instinctively grasped and held firm until the boat recovered from the shock, when he found he had rescued a human being from certain destruction. Too much cannot be said in praise of the nerve dis played by Capt. McGee, and all who know him will testify that for stamina and true courage in times of danger, Capt. McGee has but few equals and no superiors. He is surely the right man in the right place. After the Escort had been relieved of the water, attention was turned to Capt. Nissen. To turn the tug upon the bar was an utter impossibility, but as he could be seen swimming, and the Fear less was a short distance astern, it ap peared reasonable that he would oe saved, so the Escort steamed over the bar, turned and started toward the strug s liner man. Life preservers from both boats were thrown him, but it seemed as though the fates had combined against him, lor some drifted almost within his grasp and were washed past upon the angry billows. The current had taken the man toward the North spit, and just as he became exhausted the Fearless came up and threw him a life buoy and a line, both of which he missed, though rue uuoy he missed oy only an arm s length. During this trying ordeal Capt Nissen never uttered a word. Capt. Hill biw that only one chance was left. To lower a small boat was impossible, and the only chance was to get as close as pos sible and try the line once more. Amos Herring, the mate, (commonly called "Jersey"), had another idea, and when the tug neared the drowning man. he slipped a bow line over his body and giving me ena to a oystancicr said: "When I catch him pull us up along side." He instantly jumped overboard, but too late! Just as he reached the man he sank to rise no more, and "Jersey" was hauled on board more dead than alive. His act was rewarded, as was also Capt. Hill's, by the Master Mariners' As sociation with a gold medal, but money nor trinkets can ever repay such heroic acts as were that day enacted upon Coos Bay bar, in order to save human life. The name of Amos Herring deserves to be placed high up on the list of heroes. and his brave deed of imperilling his own life to save that, of another should stand forth in all its brilliancy for ages to come, and should be so preserved that his children and grandchildren may point with pride to Amos Herring, their ances tor, as a hero of the Nineteenth Century. Every effort was made to save Captain Nissen, but all in vain, and after twenty minutes of hard struggling for life he was numbered among the dead of Coos Bay bar, and the next steamer bore to San Francisco the terrible news that his young wife was a widow, for all that was mortal of Capt. Nissen lay low at the bottom of the sea. His body never came ashore, and the probabilities are that as the tide turned ebb shortly after he sunk that it was carried out to sea. Such is the history of two incidents that have come under my observation while visiting Coos Bay. The bar is a short one but no more uglier one can be found when it is aroused by storms and wind. It is at most times easily and safely crossed, and so still and so placid that canoes and small boats can safely cross to sea over its bosom; but when it is in a passion no more majestic sight is seen . The breakers roll mountains high , and their roar resembled the distant thunder of a thousand battle-fields. The angry waters are lashed into foam while the spray is thrown hundreds of yards into the air. From Point Arago one can command a good view of the bar, and can for hours watch with intense inter est its many changes. To- the north stretch the sand spits, and all along the coast from Coos bay to the Umpqua can be seen a dreary waste of sand, a times occasionally relieved by a small m-nwa Af aval-mvmn i na T-T i . W. . . . ,.l. day the eye can discern the sail of craft, bound in, for many leagues at sea; here almost every phase of life is exemplified in nature the calm and placid waters of the bar reminds one of the happy days of infancy when not a breath ruffles the days of early life; again the disturbed seas as they rise suddenly upon the bosom of the bar reminds us of our first great grief and disappointment that quickly revealed to our eyes being no longer a child we m nst arouse and , like the billows that arise upon the tranquil bosom of the bar, struggling against an unseen power behind them we, too, must struggle and bravely win the battle of life; and as the waves become more and more angry how forcibly are we re minded of the many fierce battles fought in life for man s mastery over himself, and of the struggles forced upon us all at one time or another in this life; and as the angry waves swallow up and kill everything within their reach, how. vividlv do scenes of this kind transpire each day among the sons of men? And again, when the bar has become peaceful and serene, does it not carry the mind to old age ? Of one who has fought the battle of life, and in the sere and yenow leaf of declining years sits peacefully down content to wait for the summons that will take him hence to eternal fBt that will never again be disturbed by the turbulent waves of this life Coos bay bar! what sorrow ye have brought to once happy firesides. Know ye the anguish, the days and nights of sorrow that ye have caused once happy homes to endure, and if so, have you no moments of remorse ? No, cruel waters, little care ye; but let us all hope that when the sea gives up its thousands, not one of the dead of Coos bay bar shall be absent, for 'neath you rests the tene ments of noble men, whose spirits "went aloft" to their Maker through your treacherous and angry lashings. But who can say that it is not their gain, and that it was but destiny for those brave men to surrender up life to God amid the roar and turmoil of Coos Bay bar ? Peace to their ashes, and may we all meet them across the bar that divides the mortal and immortal sphere. In the Jaws of a lion. was I was out after porcupines, and lying down one night near a porcupine's hole, waiting for him to come out. had no gun, but only my hunting knife and a large knob kerrie with which to knock the porcupine on the nose; for that, as you know, kills him at once. did not hear a sound until I found the grass near me move and a lion got his paws on me and lifted me up. The brute pressed his claws into me, but, luckily my leather belt prevented his teeth from damaging me, and he earned me, hold ing on to my belt and coat. If either of these had given away I should have been laid hold of in a far more rough manner A lion is like a cat in one thing, he can hold a live creature in his mouth and not damage it, just as I have seen a cat carry a mouse. I knew the nature of the lion enough to know that if I struggled I should have my neck broken, or my head smashed in an instant; so I did not struggle, but quietly drew my knife and thought what was best to do. I thought at first of trying to strike him in the heart, but I could not reach that part of him, and his skin look A so loose that I could not strike deep enough, carried as I was. I knew it would be life or death with me in an instant, so turning myself a bit, I gashed the lion's nose and cut it through. The lion dropped me as I should drop a poison ous snake, and jumped away roaring with pain. He stood for an instant look ing at me but as I did not move, he did not seem to like to carry me again. More than once he came up to within a few yards of me, licking the blood as it poured from his nose; bnt there I re mained like a stone, and he was fairly afraid to tackle me again. I know a buffalo and an ox are very sensitive about the nose, and a cat, if just tipped on the nose, can't stand it, so I thought a lion might be the same, and so it proved. " Straw?" A street car full of passengers was boarded by a man with a book and pen oil in his hand, and he straightway began taking a vote of the passengers. Some answered and some didn't, and some didn't exactly understand what he was up to. w hen he came along to a little old woman, with her lap full of parcels and bundles, she called out: "There is four of us in the family, and we are all grown up; our Christian names are John Henry, Betsy Ann, Melinda and Aaron, and that's all the census you'll get out of me. "lam hot taking the census, madam," he explained, "I am simply "You raise on your water tax if you dare!" she interrupted. "We'll dig a well before we'll pay another red cent "lam not the water tax man; I am canvassing this car " "Well, you can't canvass me! " she snapped. "I'm bothered to death with canvassers at the house, and I don't care what new-fangled clothes wringer you've got l won t subscribe! The passengers were all laughing, and he didn't want to give it up in that way. " Madam," he began, "have you any objections to "I won't sign any petition if I die for it! " she shouted; "and now if you don't stop pestering me I'll open this package oi pepper and ml your eyes for you, and my husband will thrash you to boot!" The man with the book let up and dropped off. Worcester Gazette. a Kentucky JUDGE. "some years ago, observed a well-known criminal lawyer, "I had a case to argue before the eccentric Judge Cleary, of Kentucky. While waiting for my case to come up I listened to the trial of a brawny ruffian who was accused of stealing two mules. He had been caught riding one and leading the other, and, thought both animals bore their owner's brand's, he swore that they had been foaled on his farm and raised by him. Eyery point of evidence was against him, but he swore he was innocent with enough oaths to scare an overland teamster. The jury returning a verdict of guilty without leaving their seats, Judge Cleary then asked him: "Have you anything to say why judgment should not be pronounced against you? "Yes, I have." "What is it?'' "I am innocent, and I hope God may strike me dead if I'm not." The Judge paused a moment. Then he said quietly: "As the Almighty has not seen proper to comply with your request, the sentence of the Court is and he went on to pro nounce it. Servants in Brittany. A few days ago, under press of cir cumstances, and because I could not se cure our regular marketer, I sent my garcon Thoma to the city ten miles away with a large basket of strawberries lor sale. He left here about 4 o'clock in the morning, arrived at the town before the market hour, sold his strawberries, and ought to have been back here about 10 M. Instead of which ihoma, who is a sailor and a jack-of-all-trades, who wears sort of sailor s guernsey and talks a wit o in between French and Breton, got into temptation and fell. Drink did it all. Prick lays low the greater part of our poor Bretons. One sees more people helplessly drunk, or maudlin drunk, here far away from towns, in these rural abodes, than even in England, only they are for the most part quiet; they neither swear nor fight. Poor Thoma kicked quiet over the traces. Perhaps he had felt too much of the Englishman s yoke; perhaps he had done enough work for a month or more. At any rate, he drank, then engaged himself to marry a dirty little uglv woman who did his washing (that is, when he did not do it himself) and finally he bolted away with my strawberry money, and I have not seen him since. I am grieved, not on account of the money, for I owed him as much in wages, but because now my poor Thoma is gone, I have no sailor for my boat, no one so utterly droll, or so beau tifully picturesque, to look at and laugh. For Thoma was the most slipperly sailor, the most idle fellow in the world. lie never did half a day's work while I ha 1 him. He waited till my back wa? turned, and then left spade, vessel, rope or wheelbarrow, without attempting even to put tools away. Only in one way was he ever working happily, and that was the way he knew he was wrong. Under such circumstances he would display an energy worthy of a better cause. Once he went with me to buy a pleasure yacht, but before meeting the owner he agreed with me that he would give his opinion in sly winks. We went on board with the owner, who pointed out the various good points of the vessel, constantly appealing to Thoma for con firmation, and always being backed up by my garcon, but when the owner for an instant turned his back, Thoma screwed up his face into all sorts of con tortions, and managed to convey to me his disproval of the purchase. Our other servant is also an experiment, and a failure: The servant's difficulty not only exists here as elsewhere, but it is aggravated by the independence of the i eople, and their exceedingly dirty habits. Very few country girls care to go out to service, in fact, scarcely at all. Here in th country we are driven into the towns for servants. The women work on the land as hard or harder than the men; moreover, they prefer their independent life to service; they like better to dig, or hoe, or weed, or get the sea-weed for manure, in dirty clothes and sabots, than to submit to the neat ness and respectability of domestic life. They are also in demand for wives. The peasants marry when mere boys, without any apparent means of living, trusting to Providence, and at worst eon tent with black rye and bread and a lick of greasy soup. Our Jaquette is a jeume fiUe (which is the French euphemistic expression for an old maid) . She will never see fifty -five again, if she be not quite sixty. Yet when I asked if she were veuve, I was told she was a jeune Jille. She is as honest as daylight, which is more than 1 can say for most .Bretons, who are pilferers, if not robbers, at least in these parts. She is economical to a fault, wastes nothing, almost eats nothing, keeps the men on soup made of greasy water and bits of bread, and puts even the water used in cooking into the universal soup. The other day she sent in peas with a lot of green-looking water, which one of the party disliking, took it into the kitchen to pour it away; Jacquette requested as a favor that it might be put into her own particular plate of soup, and it was. But Jacquette never washes, or, if she does wash, she does not conquer her dirt. She is dirty in person, and dirty in cooking her food. She is a bad cook, and smokes every thing she cooks. She potters about all day, yet she does not even keep the rooms clean. Upon the ladies fall almost all the household work. Why then do we keep Jacquette? J? irst and foremost because we cannot get any better; next, we like her very much for her good qualities, and lastly, because when once we told her to go in a week, the dear old thing was so meek, so patient, so en during, that we almost wept for her and kept her on. Cornhill Maqazine. The great trouble with profesional ball-clubs is to find a pitcher that will hold water only. Remarkable Rides. More remarkable rides than the famous ride to York are upon record. By dint of keeping constantly in the saddle and having relays of horses all along the road, the Prince de Ligne contrived to cover the miles between Vienna and Paris over five hundred, as the crow flies in six days. This performance was outdone by the Count de Maintenay, who rode the whole distance on one horse, without dismounting. The Count, one of the most accomplished horsemen of his day, was attached to the mission sent by Napoleon to negotiate for the hand of Mary Louise; and was. deputed to carry to his impatient master the formal consent of the Emperor of Aus tria to the marriage, and the miniature of the unwilling bride-elect. To expe dite his journey, six of the finest horses in the Imperial stables were dispatched to different places on the route, that the Count might change his mount; but the Hungarian roadster he bestrode at starting went so fast and stayed so well that the relays were not called into ser vice, and the matrimonial messenger ar rived at his destination leng before he was expected, but so exhausted that he was fain to crave permission to be seated in the Emperor's presence as he delivered up the all important mission, and repeated the Archduchess' message to her future lord. A jeweled snuff box, sixty thousand francs and the good steed he had ridden, rewarded the Count for his expedition. The Count de Mainte nay's feat was repeated in 1874 by an Austrian lieutenant, who undertook to ride his horse, Cardoc, from Vienna to Paris in fourteen days. He was unlucky enough to lose bis way in the Black For est, and so waste seven hours, and was further delayed by an accident to his horse; nevertheless, he accomplished his task, with more than two hours to the good. ' It pays to keep a cow out of the pound. Charles Lamb remarked of one of his critics, "The more I think of him, the less I think of him." "Goat button shoes" are advertised in the market just as if they could be goat without propensity for buttin. Piety in Animals. Proofs of sagacity involving what would seem processes of judgment, infer ence and generalization fairly equal those of the average man, have been made familiar to us by the reports of natural ists without number, if not by opportu nities of personal observation. Of what acquirements animals of all sorts are capable, under man's skillful and patient tuition, all must be fairly convinced. To this culture of the intellect and the emo tions we are taught by Dr. Lindsay to superadd the development of the relig ious feeling in animals, whether in the form of natural piety or of a kind of ani mal Kulturkampf. Not only does the dog, for instance, worship his master and learn from his example to display deco rum in kirk or chapel, but, in common with many other species outside the pale of humanity, he is capable of religious feeling and action of a direct and sponta neous character. The seemingly be havior of the Scottish collie in kirk is conspicuous among the attributes which have given that sagacious quadruped its high and well-earned reputation. Nor is devotional decorum, all impar tial critics of the . ways of animals will learn with pleasure, confined to a single class of theological opinion. "In France, a Catholic country, on the contrary, dogs attend prayer or mass with their masters, exhibiting in the grand cathedrals of that beautiful land a becoming behavior, in cluding a gravity of look and demeanor, silence, and motionlessness, an attitude of apparent attention or intentness, and a probable feeling of awe, produced, it may be, by the dim religious light of such edi fices, or by the varied impressive sights and sounds that environ them" a kind of conduct, in short, only too instructive or suggestive, to irreverent man. Nay, a more emphatic lesson still is taught by his canine companion to many a lax Bo man Catholic, since we are taught on the authority of "Southey," (whatever that may be), that "in Catholic countries church-going dogs have been led to the stage of fasting." JNor are dogs the only animals that may claim occasionally to be pious. "While collies regularly attend church, they cannot be said, as a rule, to take any active or intelligent part in the service ; but in the case of the parrot, which is not usually allowed to attend church, the bird not unfrequently takes a prominent and certainly intelligent part in the pri vate worship of it's master household. Such parrots, for instance, moke re sponses at the proper time an exercise that implies a good deal more than mere memory, mere attention to the service. The have been taught moreover, or they have learned, to repeat man's creeds, to recite prayers, and even, or otherwise in a certain sense, to act as domestic chap lains as substitutes, in other words for man himself. As in so many other cases, the behavior, nay, the very speech, the remark or conversation of the bird are suitable to place, time and other cir cumstances. Thus a certain English Bishop's parrot is (or was) in the habit of saying sometimes quite devoutly and with becoming solemnity, at other times sarcastically or ironically, but in either case at proper seasons and appropriately to the circumstances "let us pray." Of another we are told that it could sing in correct time and measure "There is happy land." Saturday Review. Art Vestiges in Afghanistan. paper, entitled "Art Vestiges in Afghan istan; the results of some recent explor ations in the Jelalabed Valley," was read on Wednesday night by William Simp son of the Illustrated London News, at the weekly meeting of the Society of Arts. Sir T. Douglas Forsyth, K. C. 8 I., C. B., presided. Mr. Simpson stated that, being for some months last winter in the Jelalabad Valley with the force under General Sir S. Browne, he visited and sketched most of the Buddhist re mains in that region. In addition, he made excavations under the auspices of the late Sir Louis Cavagnari, and had brought materials on which might be formed a knowledge of the Buddhist architecture in the valley. The remains are now little more than mounds, the number of which was immense. As the Buddhist establishments were monas teries, there seemed to have been a pop illation of ascetics alone far greater than the whole population of to-day. At pres ent there is neither art nor architecture in the Jelalabad Valley. In the Budd hist period, on the contrary, the country must nave been in a nign state oi civm zation. A style of architecture was fol lowed in which sculpture was largely used, and the effect heightened by color and gold. Mr. Simpson gave a large number of interesting details respecting the architectural styles of Afghanistan and India, the various influences to be traced in them, and his discoveries in the Jelalabad Valley. A strangely com posite character belonged to the archi tecture of the Buddhist period in Afghan istan. It had received a capital from Persia, a Corinthian capital with frieze and mouldings from Greece, and an arch from India. At Venice the architecture of Western Europe combined with that of Byzantium. Afghanistan had some points of resemblance to the City of the Sea. It was formerly a trade' route and a gate of conquest. These conditions brought together in it the arts of West ern and Eastern Asia. Some of the few sculptures he found indicated that this art had made considerable progress Having expressed the hope that further --x- '1. 1J 1 - J v. .:n-. explorations wuuiu uo uuuc, ua ojotuiuj described his excavations at the Asm Posh Tope, near Jelalabad, the date of which he placed about 400 or 500 A. D. Mr. Simpson's remarks were illustrated by numerous sketches and photographs Leeds Mercury, December 12th. Endurance of the Digger Indians. While the thermometer has been hugging zero; while the ears and noses and hands of the white man have been tingling with cold; while the earth has been covered with snow, and ice has formed on exposed bodies of water, the Digger Indian has been displaying his utter lack of sensitiveness to cold. Several of the red men of the forest who come to town daily from the adjacent campooda are conspicuous for thin bodily attire. With a pair of gauzy pants, and a shirt, all ragged and torn, barefooted and bareheaded, they wander about without any apparent regard for the frigid atmosphere which surrounds them. A kind-hearted lady saw one of ; them in this condition passing her house the other day, and asked him if he didn't want a wair of shoes to keep his feet off the ice and snow. "Ugh," he answered "white mahala she wear 'em. Injun he no papoose. He all same big pine tree." Trying to chew caramels with false teeth ranks with trying to untie a shoe string with mittens on your hands, or to do business without advertising. The Cologne Cathedral. Cologn? Cathedral is at length ap proaching completion, and it is confi dently stated that August next year will see ihe mighty minster finished. Begun in the very midst of the "ages of faith," wnen monarchs beggared themselves to raise magnificent structures, of which only picturesque ruins now remain for the world to look at, this extraordinary temple of the Christian faith lagged be hind all its contemporaries in the work of construction, saw them reach their mature glory, decline, and sink to ruin, itself being all the time an unfinished fabric. The first stone of Cologne Cathedral was laid m 1248, about the time when all the grandest eclesiastical edifices now left, perfect or ruined, in Europe wore either just finished, or, like Notre Dame, in Paris, were in rapid progress; but while the most elaborate of them took only three centuries to bring i . . f i-i yi 1 a w peritenon, Cologne minster has l sorbed more than double the time, and is not finished yet. It is unnecessary to give all the reasons of this delay. Suffice it to mention a "personage" not to be mentioned without extreme caution to ears polite, hindered the work from the beginning with a pertinacity only natural, pernaps, under the circumstan ces, and that this supernatural "ob structionist succeeded so far that onlv after a lapse of six hundred and thirty- two years will the great fabric be hailed as a perfected christian temple. It took nearly three centuries that is, from 1248 to 1517 to complete the choir, and since that date it has requsred liberal aid from nearly all the sovereigns of Europe to keep the construction going. The cathedral is 510 feet long and 230 feet broad; the nave is supported by 100 columns, the four central of which are no less than 40 feet in circumference; the choir is 160 feet in height, and the two great towers are each 500 feet high. What now remains to be done is the last stage and crowning decoration of the stately towers. The massive caps of stonework have to be laid on, and then on their summits have to be fixed the gigantic "foliated crosses, "almost 30 feet high, which are to crown the towers and proclaim to all the world the faith to which the work is dedicated. This done, Gothic architecture will be able to point to an acknowledged masterpiece, and the bones of the 11,000 virgins may rest quiet in their shrine. It is only to be hoped that when next August arrives Eurape will fitly celebrate the occasion on own merits, without inquiring too curiosity into the value of the accom panying legends. ft F & LOCK COMPANY, pit i, OOd.OOO. General C filers nd fannfetctory CINCINNATI, OHIO. Pacific Brakch, No. 210 Sansome St., S. F Agency (r Oregon and Washington Territory, With II AWLEY, DODD k CO., Portland. lit MAS PA I EXT COX CRETE FIRE-PROOF SAFES. Hv hem tst4 by the laest disastrous ermfla gndUm in the tfutilry, Tney are. ttitrtmgfciy ttf prtftf. fhty f. tree ff&ut 'l t m pi ,' .-. Thir tntmtftfiij te fceynftut y.fpm. AUhtmgft abmi i.vM - met :- n now in um, h "t r-A t"M tncvts tv-rtvrl Yyy imm ttf the nwt Hmntrmtg w-wtftegratiM m tt$ KtKtnr, there it mt t tatew tw w.v I wlMrma one of l&ew U- t v w r Ms HALL'S PATENT DOVETAILED BURGLAR-PROOF llave never been broken 0pn and robbed by burglar or robber. Hall's burglar work is protected try letters patent, and his work cannot be equaled lawfully. His patent bolt is superior to any jn use. His patent locks cannot be icked by the most skillful experts or burglar. By one of the greatest improvements known, the Gross Automatic Movement, our locks are operated without any arbor or spindle passing through the door and into the lock. Our locks cannot be opened or picked by bur glars or exjierts, (as in case of other locks), and we will put from $1,000 o -VI 0,040 behind them any time against an equal amount. The most skilled workmen only are employed. Their work cannot be excelled. Hall's Safes and Locks can be relied on at all timet). They are carjfully and thorughly constructed. THEY ABE THE BEhT SAFE Made in America, or any other country. One Thousand Dollars To any person who can prove that one of Hall's patent burglar-proof safes has ever been broken open and robbed by burglars up to thtj 'sjia present time. Sl B. S. WILLIAMS, Agent for Oregon and W. T. The Ex-Queen's Reception. The Duchess de la Torre was universally pronounced the most beautiful and best dressed woman in the theater, but all honors of the evening were for the Queen-mother, Isabel. The King and Young queen were only looked at when they entered, but when Queen Isabel came to the front of the box there was a universal murmur of applause, admira tion and affectionate greeting, and in the bull-fight the next afternoon there was positive enthusiasm. The crowds there, always noisy, saluted her with roars of applause, and all along the Calle Alcala coming home she was the object of the most boisterous demonstrations from the people. This reception for Queen Isabel 'vas scarcely expected, still it sur prises no one. For the women of their generation in Madrid, she is the sister of all; her children, too, were born when their were, and some of her little ones have been taken just as theirs, too, have died, on the same day, in the same week, or in the same month, so that the anniversaries of her life are theirs also. And the great, generous heart that beats under the ample bosom of the frail, faulty Isabel has prompted the willing hand to so many charitable actions, so much has she given to starving widows for the education of their sons, to fathers struggling under the weight of large families and ready to perish, to needy Generals who have led their hosts to battle, and to impoverished authors, that it is utterly impossible for the people of Madrid not to love her, although they cannot respect her. Correspondence N. Y. Post Long Parliamentary Connection. The most remarkable instance of a long Parliamentary connection is found in the little borough of Caine, in Wiltshire, for Sir Lionel Duckett, who was Lord Mayor in 1572, purchased the hundred of Caine, and his nephew, Stephen Duckett, was returned for the borough in 1684. Caine was represented by a Ducket without interruption from the reign of Queen Elizabeth to that of George III., when the manor was sold in 1765 to Lord Shelburne, the ancestor of the Marquis of Landsowne. The in fluence of the Lord of the Manor is still paramount in spite of the reform bills and the ballot, but the sitting member will scarcely secure his re-election on such easy terms as his predecessor in the last century, for all that the burgesses of Came expected from their representa tiv in 1754- was a, hiick-feaat ever vear. and ten guineas for wine to drink his health. The connection of the Masters with Cirencester is of still longer duration, for George Master of the Abbey was returned for the borough in 1586, and his lineal descendent. Charles Mas ter Jr., the heir apparent of the Abbey, is the sitting member in 1878. But although the Masters have in almost everv generation represented Cirences ter. thev have not held the seat without interruption as the Duckets did at Caine. The Athenaaum. At a certain church not ten thousand miles from Oil City, recently, a man of an enthusiastic nature became convinced of the error of his way and determined to reform. He joined the church, but found it exceedingly difficult to jave up all his bad habits. Among othePthings he had been an inveterate swearer, and his tongue would persist in slipping quite frequently. Last Sunday he went to church, and being sleepy, began nodding. Finally he got his oane in front of him, and' resting his head on the handle, went to the land of Nod. He was sleeping sweetly and serenely, when some sinful cuss kicked the cane out, and the newly-converted Christian's head came down on the back of the seat in front of him like a pile-driver, causing him to ejaculate with unnecessary em phasis, "Great God!" "Is this the place," she asked, as she wandered down the barren sands, "where a young lady a beautiful young lady fell in the water last season, and was rescued by a gallant young man, whom she afterwards married?" He looked at her carefully and estimated her at a square 47, with false teeth, and said: "Yes, madame, bnt I do not know how to swim." Ufllee wHti Hawley 28febl6:9tf. 11 odd Co.. Portland. Bees Hamlin. Emmett F. Wrenn. DRAYAGE ! DRAY AGE! Hamlin &c Wrenn. Propr's. HAVING JUST RETURNED FROM Salem with a new truck, ami having leased the barn formerly occupied by .lames Eg lin, we are now prcpa:ed to do all kinds of D RAYING AD HAULING, either in the city or country, at the lowest living rates. Can be found at the old truck stand. A share of the public patronage resjwi'tfully solic ited. Corvullis, Dec. 27. 1878. 15:62tf JOB PRINTING, the Gazette Job Printing House IS NOW PREPARED TO DO Plain and Ornamental Printing, As neat and Cheap as it can bo done by any Office on the Coast. bill He ds, jrster HendM Hole lMadM. Ma einnti, P ornmtnes. Ball TIche'B Invltftttotra circulars, ItnHlne a nrdN. ViHiiMtif Cnrds, .Abe's. Dttdsers. small Pester, huvsliipra l eicnl tilnulia' Bank Sotea, feltlplff Becelpfa. Urd-r ilnffHH, Maataj Tfa. tc. Ete lers by mail promptly filled. Esti mates furnished. AUGUST KNIGHT, CABINET MIH3ie, UNDERTAKER, Cor. Second and Monroe Sts., CORVALLIS, - QMS, Keeps constantly on hand all kinds of FUBNITURE COFFINS AND CASKETS. Work done to order on short notice, and at reasonable rates. Corvallis. Jan. L 1S77. U:lw ROBERT N. BAKER. Fashionable Tailor, PVRMERLY OF ALB 4 NY, WHERE HE has given his patrons perfect satisfaction, has determined to locate in Corvallis, where he hopes to be favored with a share of the public f All wnrlr warranted, when mink; under his supervision. Repairing and cleaning promptly attended to. uorvaius, oau. i,ioq'. -".v. FftAftKLW CAUTHORN, M. D., PHYSICIAN ANU SUBGEON, torvalllM, Oregonf Special attention given to surgery and diseases of the Eye. Can be found at his office, in rear of Graham, Hamilton 4 Co. '9 Drug Store, upstairs, dnr or night. 7ne J, 1879. l-2Stf