i Oorvallia Gazette. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING BY W. TZ. CARTER, Editor and Proprietor. TERMS: (coin.) Per Tear, Six Months, Toree Houths, 9 SO 1 SO i oa invariably in advance. CITY ADVERTISEMENTS. M. P. WOODCOCK, Attorney and Counselor at Law, O -.VA Lt.iS : UKEGOII OFFICE ON FIRST STREET, OPP. WOOD COCK Jt BALDWIN'S Hardware store. Sjieoial Httent!o;i given to Collections, Foa closure of Mortgages, ileal Estate cases, Probate a. id Iloail matter?. Will also :-uy an. I sell City Property and Fan Lands, on reasonable lerms. ilarch -II, IH7S. t6-12yl J. K. WEBBER, Main St., Corvallis, Oregon, DEALER IK Stoves, Ranges, FORCE AND LIFT PUMPS. HOUSE FURNISHING HARDWARE, Constantly on hand, the NEW RICHMOND RANGE, Beat In Market. The BONANZA COOK STOVE, Something New. And tbe New VECTA PARLOR STOVE. Jan. 1, 1880. 17:1 if J. R BRY80N, ATTORNEY AT LAW. All business will receive prompt attention. COLLECTIONS A SPECIALTY. Corvallis, July 14, 1879. 16:29tf J. W RAYBURf, ATTORNEY AT LAW, (OKV.tLl.11, I oBieoi. OFFICE On Monroe street, between Second and Third. F8-Spccial attention given to the Collection or Notes and Accounts. 16-ltf JaMS A. YANTIS, Attorney and Counselor at Law, OHVAJulIN, - - - OHKOOH. XV I7ILI. PRACTICE IN ALL THE COURTS of the Stale. Suecial attention eiven to piatteis in Piobate. Collections will receive p otnpt and careful attention. Office in the Court use. 16:ltf. DR F. A. ViNCENT, DENTIST. COUVAl.LIB . ' REGON, QFFICE IN FISHER'S BRICK OVER Max. Friendley's New Store. Ail the latest improvements. Evervthing new and complete. All work warranted. Please give me a call. 18:3tf G. R. FARRA, M. O. PHltiClAN A HI) Si JIG EOS, QFFICE 'OVER GRAHAM A HAMILTON'S Drug Store, Corvallis, Oregon. U-26tf C. CRAWFORD, DEALER IN WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY, SPECTACLES, SILVER WARE, etc AIsk, Mnaloal Instruments Jfco jjas-ltepairing done at tbe most reasonable rates, and all work warranted. Corvallis, Dec. 13, 1877. 14:50tf GKA1U3, lUNlLTft & CO., CO It V A I.I. 1 S ... OXifiUON. DEALERS IN Triig-s, Xitints, EDICINES, CHEMICALS 1)18 STIFFS, OILS, CLASS AND PUTTY. PURE WINES AND L QUORS FOR MEDICINAL USE. And also the the very best assortment of Lamps and Wall Paper ever brought to this plac. AGENTS FOR THE fVRIU CHHKIGU PAINT, SUPERIOR TO ANY OTHER TPIiyiilelaas' t. eserlptlona far ftUly leupwiBdtd. Corvallis Gazette. VOL. XVII. CORVALLIS, OREGON, FRIDAY. AUGUST 6, 1880. NO. 32. CITY ADVERTISEMENTS. Corvallis Lodffe ft o 14, r. A. H. Holds stated Communications on Wednesday on or preceding each full moon. Brethren in good standing cordially invited to attend. By order W.M. Barnam Lodge So. 7, I. o. O. V. Meets on Tuesday evening of each week, in their hall, in Fisher's brick, second story. Mem bers of the order in good standing invited to at tend. By order of N. G. F. A. CHEKOWETH. P. M. J0HN80N. CHENOWETH dt JOHNSON, ATTORNEYS AT LAW COKSALL1S .... OHKttOlI September 4, 1879. 16;36tf UtRJ & WOODWARD, Druggists and Apothecaries, P. O. BUILDING, CORVALLIS, OREGON". Have a complete stock of DBi GS.MEOIUNES, ftLitfTf, 01, BUS, T tT ?. School I'ooks tut oncny, Ao. We buv for Cash, and have cnoioe of the FRESHEST and PUREST Drugs and Me.!:,- ties the market affords. 5Sr Prescriptions accurataly p'enared at half the usual rates. 2Mayl6:lStf AUGUST KNIGHT, Cabinet Maker, UNDERTAKER, Cor. Second and Monroe Sts., CORVALLIS, OBEGON. Keeps constantly on hand all kinds of rUBNITUSE COFFINS AND CASKETS. Work done to order on short notice, and at ri'iio:alih- ruif.s. OrtrvaiiU I ,n I !-77 1 l llf Woodcock & Baldwin (Successors to J. R Bayley & Co,) TTEEP CONSTANTLY ON HAND AT THE fl old stand a large and complete stock of Heavy and hcif Hardware, IRON, STEEL, TOOLS, STOVES, RANG S, ETC Manufactured and Home Made Tin find Copper Ware, Pumps. Pipe, Etc. A good Tinner constantly on hand, and all Job Work neatly and quickly done. Also agents for Knapp. Burreli & Co., for the sale of the best and latest im proved FAR IVt MACHINERY, of all kinds, together with a full assort ment of Agricultural Implements. Sole Agents for the Celebrated ST. L UIS CK&hTsR 0K $ 0VE8 the BEST IN THE WORLD. Also the Norman Range, and many other patterns, in all sizes and styles. 1ST" Particular attention paid to Farmers' wants, and the supplying extras for Farm Machinery, and all information as to such articles, iurnished cheerfully, on applica tion. No pains will be spared to furnish our customers with tbe best goods in market, in our line, and at the lowest prices. Our motto shall be, prompt and fair dealing with all. Call and examine our stock, before going elsewhere. Satisfac tion guaranteed. W00KC0CK & BALDWIN. Corvallis, May, 12, 1879. 14:4tf Bees Hamlin. Emmett F. Weens. DRAY ACE ! DRAY ACE! Hamlin At Wrena. Propr's. HAVING JUST RETURNED FROM Salem wWi a new truck, and haVing leased the barn formerly occupied by James Eg lin, we are now prejia-ed to do all kinds of GRAYING 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 respectfully solic ited. Corvaliis, Dec 27. 1878. I5:52tf FRANKLIN CAUTHORN, M. 0., PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Corvallis, Oregon. Krwvial attention eiven to sureerv and diseases of the Eye. Can be found at his ojftce, in rear of Uraham, ttanuijpn kjo:& iujptqre, up svana, day or night, ' -t-'. " CITY ADVERTISEMENTS. LANDS I FRMS! HOMES! tHAVE FARMS, (Improved and unim proved,) STORES and MILL PROPERTY, very desirable, FOR SALE. These lands are cheap. A lso claims in unsurveyed tracts for sale. . Soldiers of the late rebellion who have, under he Soldiers' Homestead Act, located and made final proof on less than 160 acres, can dispose of tbe balance to me. Write (with stamps to prepay postage). R. A. BENSELL, Newport, Benton county, Oregon. l:2tf H XU. HARRIS, One door South of Otaaham A Hamilton's, I'ORVAI.i IS, . OBSttOSf. GROCERIES. PRO VISIONS, AND Dry Goods. Corvallis, Jan. 3, 1873. l:lvl DRAKE & GRANT, MERCHANT TAILORS, C 'HVAl L..t. - (IHliUHJ. VE HAVE JUST RECEIVED A LARGE and well selected stock it Cloth, viz: VF-J of urlsin'i II road l?lli, rcnoli uHAlm'Tes, (rotcrlt 'lwe;i. and mcrlcuit iltlfu Which re will make up to order in the most approved and lash onable styles. No pains will be s- ared n producing good tilting garments. Partita wishing to purchase cloihs and have them cut out, will s'.o well to all and cxamiue our st4ck. DRAKE A GRANT. Corvallis, April 17 1879. Itt:lfitf Boarding and lodging. P IUMiatii He, -Ion (' . 4rirM. GKOIH.K KSSOR, T ESPECT Kl L LY INFORMS THE TRAV ftling public :h.it h is now prepan.-d and in readinen to keep such boarders as may choose to give him a call, cither by the S MO Hi . -L OAV. OR WEEK. Is ai.-o pu-i-urcd to fu u h liors feed. Lilii'rai (hare ol pubHc patitHiage : . .i i i ti-l . Hive a call. tiEOKOE Ki.SOR. Pbilomal!.. A ril 2H. !7J. H:l8tf J C. MOREUNO, (city attounky.) fTTORVEY AT LAW, POKTLAKI), - - UKKSOX, OFFICE Mfniastes' Brick, First street, between Morrison and Yamhill. 14:38tf THE HTAB BAKERY, flMn Street, Corvallis. HENRY WAKRIOR, PROPRIETOR. Family Supply Store ! Groceries, Bread. Cakes, Pies, Candies, Toys, Etc., Always on Hand. Corvallis, Jan. 1, 1877. U:2tf CORVALLIS Livery, Feed ... AND... SALE STABLE, Main (SC., Co val is. Orcifon. SOL. KING, - Porpr. fkWNING BOTH BARNS I AMP REP A RED 5 to oirer superior accommodations in the Liv ery line. Always ready for a drive, GOOD TEAMS At Low Rates. My stables are first-class in every respect, and competent and obliging hostlers always ready to serve the public REVS'iNABLK CM A HUES FOB UIBE. Particular attention Paid to Boardlaf uracil. ELEGANT HEA.RSE, CARRIAGES AND HACKS FOR FUNERALS Corvallis, Jan. 3, 1879. lo.lyl $300 A MONTH guaranteed. Twelve dollars a day made at home by the industrious. Capital not re quited: we will start yon. Men, women, boys and girls make money faster at work for us than at anything else. The work is light and pleasant, and such as anyone can go right at. Those who are wise who see this notice Ti, i . i i .1 a ? . a r w lu sena us lueir auuresses ul uuw auu ee ivr themselves. Costly outfit and terms free. Now is the time, Those already at work are laying up large sums of money. Address TRUE k CO., Augusta, Maine. Legend of Wallawa. Legends are as common to the Ameri can Indians as the witch tales of New England were common to her people in Colonial times. There is always some thing wild and weird about them that strikes awe to the savage heart and mind, and appeals to his native crednlty and superstition. Legends are pre served by tradition handed down from one generation to another in the same manner by which the story of wrong and suffering is retained in the mind of the savage. The long lapse of time does not lessen the influence, or rather the im pression, a strange, fantastic legend has upon the Indian mind. It may be that the mind of the savage is dark and unen lightened and that his sole desire and thirst is to lead a worthless life, bnt let me here remark, however far it may be from the subject, that the American Indian is more imaginative than any other race of human beings. When he talks he refers to the sun, moon and stars, the mountains, the valleys, the rivers, and almost every object in the natural world to illustrate and impress his thought. However ignorant the savage may be, this is vhe impression I have derived from a close observation of many tribes and careful study of their habits. But to return to the theme. My renders will remember tbe long and bloody struggle the Government bad about two years ago with Joseph's band of renegades who roamed over Northern Idaho and Western Washington Terri tories, and that the struggle on the part of the Indians was made for the posses sion of the Wallowa valley. This valley is ntuated in Eastern Oregon, and is tbe grandest and most beautiful in the world. It is walled off from the rest of the world, and is only accessible through a narrow pass. In the southern portion is a lake of crystal water, which seems to have been in the long past the crater of a volcano; this much is known, its depth has never been ascertained. As Scott has said: For rarely human eye has known A scene so stern aa that dread Jake. With its dark ledge of barren stone. Seems that, primeval earthquake's sway Halb rent a strange and shattered way Through the rude bosom or tbe hill; And that eaeh naked precipice, Salle ravine and dark abyss, Tells of the ontrage still. When in possession of the valley, the Indians never entered the water, and regarded the lake with superstition and awe. Years and years ago, tradition runs, an Indian maiden, the chosen daughter of the chief, and the pride of the tribe, named Wah-tu-wah, lived with her parents near the enchanted lake. An Indian warrior, brave and true, won tbe heart and hand of the dusky maiden; and in the autumn, when the warpath would be forsaken, he would return and claim his bride. Time went on and the warrior returned. Tbe battles over with tbe hostile tribes, be bore with him tbe bloody trophies of his triumph, with which to grace his coming nuptials with Wah-tu-wah. He has al most reached her secluded hut; the lake and the bordering crags are in sight. One moment more and he will be with Wah-tu-wah. But look! see! With wild shriek the warrior sees his future bride leap down the mountain side and run toward the lake, pursued by a fierce monster. With speedy flight, the war rior runs to her rescue. Alas! he is too late. The monster seizes the dusky maiden and disappears beneath the waters. The legend runs that the war rior became but a sigh, and that his restless spirit still broods over and haunts the lake where the maiden disap peared. No Indian ever bathes in its waters, as the hike, is considered sacred to the two Indian ' spirits. Joseph and his tribe are far from their native homes, but. doubtless, they preserve in their traditions, in sacred awe, the legend of the Walla wa. Music. The world has no gratitude; no mem ory for aught but disagreeables. And yet I know not why one should speak of her so hardly, making her, as it were, the scape-goat of individuals so meek and unrevengeful as she is too. I sup pose the cause is cowardice; a collective hatred, too, has all the relish without the bitter after-taste of a personal ani mosity. But to continue. Tbe world hates all musicians because they make a noise. She classes them with Germ en bands, barrel-organs, paper boys, old clothes men, the irresistable sparrow, the matutinal quack of the park-haunting duck, and the town-bred chanticleer, who, by crowing throughout the night, forfeits his only claim to respect. Musi cians violate the peace of the domestic hearth; their art is an obtrusive one. The poet who recites his verses and tears his hair is not, though bis ravings equal those of the Cumsean Sibyl, as a rule, au dible through that razor-like partition which, as in Sweden borg's other world, separates many a Heaven and hell; but the abortive efforts of the tyro-musician cannot be restrained by the thickest and hardest of walls. Shut the window and door, tbe detestable flat notes drift down the chimney with perplexing persever ence. Do what you will, short of stop ping your ears with wax, you cannot es cape those unsirenish sounds. The only resource left to you is to fly to your piano I don't ask if you have one has a prize-fighter fists? Did Fitzgerald pos sess a pair of pistols? to fly to your piano and revenge yourself upon your unoffending neighbor on the other side. Thus the musician is not only the direct means of destroying other people's com fort, bnt is indirectly the author of mul titudinous evils, and consequently an ob ject of universal execration. Would not the composer of "Home, Sweet Home," whoever he may be, turn in bis grave if he knew that his innocent composition was daily torturing the most Christian souls into mingled thoughts of hatred and revenge? The Persians have doubt less lived to curse the king who, in mis taken kindness, when he saw his subjects dancing without music, introduced 12,000 musicians and singers from abroad. The Cornhill Magazine, Sayings About Cats. For living a "cat and dog life," the French say to "love like cats and dogs;" and this leads us to observe that many of the sayings which are current in one language appear in others more or less modified. Thus, we say "to buy a pig in a poke;" but in France, Flanders and elsewhere they say "to buy a cat in a bag." A scalded cat dreads cold waterjust as much as a burnt child dreads the fire; and though a scalded cat does not go back to the kitchen, the Spanish idea is good: "One eye on the pot,' and the other on the cat." The Italian means cat when he is in earnest, does not mean cat when he is in jest, and plays the dead cat when he dissimulates. He calls the cat when he speaks plainly; he sets about skinning the cat when he under takes a hard task; and when he sees no one he finds himself neither cat nor dog. That evil-doers are caught at last, he shows by saying the cat goes so often to the bacon that she leaves her claws there. He goes to see the cat drowned when he lets himself be imposed upon, and he cheats another when he gets him to go and see him fish along with the cat. Though every cat would like a bell, the cat of Messina scratched out its own eyes in order not to see tbe rats. The Spaniard, like the Italian, plays the cat when he dissimulates, but it is not a dead one. The Spaniard says the cat would be a good friend if he did not scratch, and he thinks a cat which mews is not a good mouser. An Italian says one had better be the head of a cat than the tail of a lion ; a wary German goes like a cat round hot broth, and believes it too late to drive the cat away when the cheese is eaten. Many believe that a good cat often loses a mouse, that no cat is too small to scratch, and that you can not keep away the cat when it has tasted cream. The Russian that play for cats means tears for the mice; the Arab says that when the cats and mice are on good terms the provisions suffer; tbe Turk tells us that two cats can hold their own against one lion. Another Turkish say ing is, it is fast day to-day, as the cat said when it could not get at tbe liver. The Englishman fancies that some men have as many lives as a cat that a cat, in fact, has nine lives; yet he holds that care will kill a cat, and that May kittens should be drowned. He is scarcely alone in thinking that the more you stroke a cat's back the higher she raises her tail in other words, that flattery feeds vanity. He lets the cat out of the bag; but so do others, and they all agree that it is in the nature of a cat always to fall on its feet. Only he talks of turn ing cat in pan, and of raining cats and dogs, or sees folks dance bike a cat on hot bricks. The Spaniard says, "Has the cat kit tened?" when he sees a place full of lights; and be asks, "Who has to take the cat out of the water?" when some thing unpleasant has to be done. That any one watches as a cat a mouse, is French as much as English. The French always say, She is as dainty as a cat; it is nothing to whip a cat for; their singers have a cat in the throat when the throat is not clear; and the phrase "cat music" is not unknown. If one has a scratched face, he has been playing with cats; and an impossibility is a mouse's nest in a cat's ear. That people should sometimes go like a cat over hot coals, is intelligible enough. The Queen. Care of the Hands. A writer for an Eastern exchange says: It does not follow that hands which look the worst do the most work; but it may prove that the hands have been treated carelessly, and I might say cruelly. For instance, when a woman plunges her hands into hot water until they look like boiled lobsters, or taking hold of the handles of hot kettles or flat-irons, caus ing them to become like some people's conscience, "seared as with a hot iroti." How it looks to see a well-dressed lady, with hands all scratches, burns or scars! I have wondered if they did not almost wish they could take them off and leave them at home whenever they went in company. Have plenty of soft, thick holders near the stove to take hold of the handles of kettles or pans, Keep a pair of gloves near your sun-bonnet to bring in wood, work in the garden, or to put on when yon sweep, that your hands may not become callous. If they are liable to chap, use plenty of glycerine or wash them in vinegar, and when you sit down to your sewing and your hands feel bike a nutmeg grater, rub them with camphor, and it will make them feel so soft and pliable that you will be enabled to handle the finest fabric without its adhering to your fingers. If you are troubled with salt rheum, use juniper tar soap, which is al most an infallible remedy. Keep a bottle with a few cents' worth of oxalic acid dissolved in it, and marked poison, somewhere handy, and when there are fruit stains, or you have been coloring carpet rags or old garments, use a few drops on the stained parts and they will disappear. If you are in the habit of scraping the pans or kettles with your finger nails, don't do it never again; but keep an old knife for the purpose. Sisters, take good care of your hands, for your husband's sake, for your own sake, for your comfort and for your con venience. If a piece of wood be placed in a de canter of water and tbe focus of a large burning glass is thrown upon it, the wood will be completely charred, though the sides of the decanter through which 4Vta i-QiTO rtaaa will tint Vo OrftllOfl nor 111 v J. tmj " " - - , any way affected, nor the water perceph- 11 3 TC 4.1 lut folon .111 f and the rays be thrown on the water, neither the vessel nor its contents will be in the least affected; but if a piece of metal be put into the water, it soon be comes too hot to be touched, and the water will presently boil. Though pure water alone contained in a transparent vessel cannot be heated, yet, if by a lit tle ink it be made of a dark color, or tbe vessel itself be blackened, the effect speedily takes place. How to Use Glue. The following practical hints on the preparation and use of glue are from the London Furniture Gazette: AH the glue as received from the factory requires the addition of water before it will melt properly, ani every addition of water (while the glue is fresh made) will, up to a certain peint, increase the ad hesiveness and elasticity ; and it is the duty of every man who uses glue to find out just where that point lies, as it is pos sible to melt glue and have it so thick that alter it is dry or set it will be so brit tle as not to adhere to the wood. Some glues will bear more water than others, but all will bear more water than usually falls to their share, and that, too, with a greater increase in the quality of the work. For glue to be properly effective, it re quires to penetrate the pores of the wood, and the more a body of glue penetrates the wood the more substantial tbe joints will remain. Glues that takes the longest to dry are to be preferred to those that dry quick, the slow-drying glues being always the strongest, other things being equal. For general use, no method gives so good result as the following: Break the glue up small, put into an iron kettle, cover the glue with water and allow it to soak 12 hours; after soaking, boil until done. Then pour it into an air-tight box ; leave the cover off until cold, then cover up tight. As glue is required, cut out a portion and melt in tbe usual way. Ex pose no more of the made glue to the at mosphere for any length of time than is nacessary, as the atmosphere is very de structive to made glue. Never heat made glue in a pot that is subjected to the direct heat of the fire or a lamp. AH such methods of heating glue cannot be condemned in terms too senve. Do not use thick glue for joints or ve neering. In all cases work it well into the wood in a similar manner to what painters do with paint. Glue both sur faces of your work,excepting in the case of veneering. Never glue upon hot wood or use bot cauls to veneer with, as the hot wood will absorb all the water in the glue too suddenly, and leave only a very little residue, with no adhesive power in it. Could not Harry Peaceably. It is not intended that man shall marry peaceably. Bill Skittles lives in South Arkansas. For the past six months he has been studying for the ministry, and it occurred to Bill several days ago that just before instituting a re vival it would be a good idea to get married. He mentioned the subject to a young lady and asked her to share his ministerial melancholly hilarity, but tbe young lady said she had promised to marry Zeb Monk, tbe professional well cleaner of of the neighborhood. "Oh, well," said the minister, "I am pretty well acquainted with Zeb, and I don't be lieve he'd kick." The young lady finally agreed, and the wedding day was fixed. Grand preparations were made. The girl's brothers had caught a couple of 'possums, and tbe old lady had baked an immense sweet-potato pie. The Justice of the Peace arrived. The parties took their places. The Justice proceeded with the ceremony, when Zeb Monk walked in and demanded: "Let up thar, boss. Say, cap'n, turn that gal loose." "I reckon I won't," replied Bill. "Well, then," said Zeb, drawing a re volver, "I'll kinder resort to extremi ties." "See here," remarked Bill, "are you in year nest about this thing?" "I reckon I am.' "Do you mean hog's head and turnip greens?" "I reckon I do.". "Right down to corn bread and cab bages?" "I reckon it is." "Well, then, you can take the gal; it was only sweet milk and apple pie with me. I'm in fun. I had a new pair of trowsers and didn't know what to do with 'em. Come a little closer. Is it spar ribs and backbones?" "I reckon it is." "Then the gal's yourn," and with a slight change in the license the marriage proceeded. lAttte Mock (Ark) Gazette. Dbownino an easy Death. The strangest incident perhaps among the many strange incidents that crowded themselves into that terrible hour that followed tbe wreck and the burning of the Narragansett in Long Island Sound, was tbe deliberate suicide by pistol shots of two young men, to avoid death by drowning. It is true that the death produced by a bullet in the brain is one of the most painless of deaths, if the band be steady that pulls the trigger and the aim be true. But, then, so is death by drowning. Science, indeed, insists that it is, or can be made, the easiest of all deaths. The pain experienced in or dinary drowning is, we are told , solely occasioned by the convulsive efforts of the victim not to drown. As soon as these efforts cease and nature is allowed to have her course all pain ceases also; and the testimony of all resuscitated persons concur in this the victim sinks into unconsciousness with pleas ant, and not unpleasant, sensations The water coming into contact with the lung fibre causes an exhileration of the nerves, and this is the last thing a drowning man feels. If a person then had the courage, when he saw that all was absolutely lost and death inevitable, to first expel all the air from his lungs, then leaping into the sea to draw in a full inspiration of water as soon as be got below the surface, science asserts that his death would not only be pain less, but would come to him as sweetly and softly as Blumber or drunkenness or chloroform stupor. If a person had the courage ah, there's the rub! How few men or women would have the courage thus to bid deliberative farewell to life in order to purchase a painless death. Yet, he who could look in a loaded pistol barrel while he pulled the trigger, for this relief, should surely have the nerve to try science's own plan for escaping the last agonies. BATES OF ADVERTISING. I 1 W. I 1 M. I 8 M. t 6 M. I 1 HU 1 Inch 1001 S 00 6 UP 8 00 13 0 2" 200S0070012 00180 8 " I 800 6 00 I 10 00 BOO W 4 " 4 00 70018001BOOBOO M Col. I 6 CO I 90015 002000I8SO y3 ' 7 fQ 12 00 18 00 I 85 00 I 8 00 H " t 10 00 ) 15 Qi) 25 00 40 00 3 1 " I 16 00 20 00 40 00 I 80 00 I ICO Of Notices lu Local Column, 20 cents per line, eaeh insertion. Transient advertisements, per quaraof IS lines. Nonpareil measure, (2 GO for erst, and U for each subsequent insert! in in ADVANCB- Legal advertisements charged as transient, and must be paid for upon expiration. No charge for publisher's affidavit of publication. Yearly advertisements on liberal terms. Protessional Cords, (1 square) 812 per annum. All notices and advertisements Intended for publication should be handed In by noon on wednesdav. The Horse's Frog. If we were to go to many a blacksmith and ask him if he did not think nature had made a mistake inputting the clumsy frog into tbe horse's foot.he would hardly be ready to say yes, and very likely would put on a surprised look. and perhaps explain that in some countries horses did very well without shoes, and so the frog was left to care fcr itself. But while not ready to take ground with you in any . criticism of the plan upon which the foot is constructed, you have but to look in the corner of the shop where two horses stand newly shod ; lift up their feet and ob serve for yourself, that if the smith has ... not said it, the knife has said the frog is a bad thing, and must be cut away. The horses do not stand on the ground, but nearly half an inch higher, on the iron of their" shoes.nd outer shell of their hoof. The practice is as sensible as it would be for a man who had to travel on all fours, taking the weight on the nails of bis fingers and toes rather than on the cush ion which lies behind them. It is always the soft part the india rubber part of the feet of animals that have such which receives the weight, and not the shelly, hard part. We know what an elephant's foot is ; it is all rubber-like. The horee Iris the same eucased in a shell, which gives him accuracy and steadiness of movement. Now, this casing protects the fro?. It grows slowly, the frog grows rapidly. The healthy foot of the colt shows a center, if not projecting, at least level with the line of the hoof. He does not take his weight wholly on tht rim of his feet. Old horses would have feet mere like them if blacksmiths would al low they knew a little less than na ture, and really knew enough to read her intentions. The object in shoeing the animal, aside from the occasional one of changing its gait, is simply to prevent the wear and shattering of the outer shell, and to en able it to take a firmer hold of the ground, escaping tbe slipping of the unshod horn. It is an unfortunate incident of our sys tem of shoeing that the horse is raised from the ground as a boy is when he mounts stilts. Little Duties. A letter carrier in one of our large cities a few months ago, found on reach ing the post office, after a long round of delivery, a letter in his bag overlooked. It would have taken him half an hour to return and deliver it. Ho was very tired and hungry. He thrust it into his pocket and delivered it on his first round the next day. What consequences followed? For want of that letter a great firm had failed to meet their engagements; their notes had gone to protest; a mill closed, and hundreds of poor men were thrown out of employment. The letter carrier himself was dis charged for his oversight and neglect. His family suffered during the winter for many necessaries of life, but his loss was of small account compared to the enormous amount of misery caused by his single failure in duty. Another case: A mechanic who had been out of work a long time in New York went last September to collect a small sum due to him. The gentleman who owed it, being annoyed at some trifle, irritably refused the money. The man went to bis wretched home, and, maddened by the sight of bis hungry wife and children, went out to the back yard and hung himself. The next day an old employer sent to offer him a permanent position. Here was a life lost and a family left paupers because a bill of a dollar or two was not paid at tbe right time. The old Spanish proverb says: "There is no such thing as a trifle in this world." When we think how inextricable the lives of all mankind are tangled to gether, it seems as if every word or action moved a lever which set in motion a gigantic machinery, whose effect is wholly beyfad our control. For this reason, if for no other, let us be careful to perform promptly and well the duties of life even the most trivial. An Afghan Woman's Shoes. The slippers and shoes are of Cabulese make, and are very pretty. . On a pale green background beautiful patterns are worked with gold and silver thread and parti-colored silk until the effect is more like that of a fairy slipper than one for daily use. But a stout leather sole is put on, with high heels rudely bound with iron, and then the work of art is complete. The stalls in which their slippers and shoes are made are the gayest in the whole bazar. A Cab ulese lady's foot is small, almost to de formity, and the baggy trousers by con trast make them appear exceedingly petite. From the few faces seen, and those chiefly of old or passee women, it is difficult to judge of the famed beau ty Cabulese are said to boast of. The children are certainly, as a whole, the prettiest I have ever seen. Their com plexions are red and white, with a tinge of olive pervading the skin, eyes black and lustrous, well-shaped features, teeth to make a Western beauty envious, and bright intelligent looks that sadly belie tho race to which they belong. Their mothers must be beautiful, for their fathers are generally villainous-looking; the .men losing all the pleasing traits which as boys they possessed.' The la dy I hive described as seen in the ze nana, for a moment was certainly hand some, and was far lighter in complexion than a Spaniard; her eyes were really worthy of the praises sung by Hafiz, but the sensuous lips were a little too full and pouting. It was just such a face as one imagines in a harem, and would be in keeping with the languor ous life of a voluptuary to whom sen suality is a guiding star. Such faces always lack character, and wonld soon prove insipid in the eyes of the West. The Cabulese lady, when journeying, is either carried in an elaborate wicker work cage covered with the inevitable flowing linen, or rides, Amazon fashion, on a pony behind her lord. Calcutta Pioneer. . "Honesty is the best policy," bnt too many people claim that they cannot af ford the best of anything.