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About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 27, 1887)
(fUlC SUMMARY. AGRICULTURAL. i Principal EvcaU public Interest I Devoted to the InteresU of Farmers ud Stockmen. Keeping Vp the Noll. W - m m a paper read belore a prommen liaaeter. agricultural association of Canada, Mr. 7" mim(i' special Irom Kooert JUraore of Montreal, t Zif AlUne railway a'l.T-. f this country mart east of SJV8. iu the 411 the railway older and thickly populated countries 01 t-urope, where the soil bad become barren and sterile from long-continuoui cropping, the attention of the farmers wae directed to the fact by scientists that MimnLhlnor mnut Ka il.na In tra. i t. . miriuujh n J I wv v . vj - u8n, .4 entile killed and vent the country frera becoroinz a bar- n,an an excursion train alien ',, mad U number more or less ft. train was compoeed "six day coacliea ana y hreo baggage cam. It &sengera,nexcur- : was so neavy ui hitched to it, ana koiiind time. ..-tion east of here, is and the run there .was L minutes; so tu fojot those fifteen coaches fit engines shooting ., . rf & null? a I be understood- Ch.UorH., -u- T itbt living fi"-- "9t of Chatsworth is a where the railroad tracic mn about ten feet deep :. Over this was . nnrv wooden trestle ... train came thun- on it what was the horror of the front engine - !. hrideo was on iiro. this eyes leaped the bright the next meum Tiwrn waa no chance 'a n,ra heen a warning, it ..a. a mile to stop that ?,.,. of wood, iron and hu- L,d the train was within one lfora they flashed l-iii intotho engineer's I nfld over in safety, the f r" . :i. A. if i keeping mo "" .,v i1,p hridtte fell beneath it, ren wilderness like ancient Palestine which at one time was exceedingly for tile. The farmers took with the idea, and on the recommendation of ihn noioiv I tnnnd for Niagara lists went into a more systematic cul I " vov that I tivntinn fif (hu mil hv lutttar tillotro drainago and rotation of crops. The 7tl is plc WM one an( exPectatioue of the farmers were sat- time. Chats- iaiied for a time, as this system utilized a large quantity of plant food that was lying latent in the soil, but after.a few years they were again abruptly aroused from this mythical dream by the fact that their land was again becoming ex hausted, showing that this better sys tern of tillaee did not prevent the de- l ,.rii and on the pletion of the soil, but only made avail 1 iiiivinirfreieht, sped able the remainder of the plant food that was lying dormant in the soil The same kind of thing is now on something of a boom in this country, Most of the agricultural papers are recommending drainage, more thor ough culture and rotation of crops as a means of keeping up the soil. The drainaee and thorough -tillage may be classed as a permauent good, but the rotation of crops cannot be so classed. It ia simply taking from the soil with one crop the plant food not needed by another, and eventually all these ele ments will have been exhausted, and then the soil will be poor, indeed. The rotation creates no new supply pf needed elemonts, and hence unless something bo added to make up the loss caused by the crops removed there can be otherwise than nothing to re move sooner or later. A supply ean tint. nniriA without a source. This failure to keep up the lands in Eurouo on the new plan put the chem ists to work, and they learned that the soil must contain certain elements of plant food to be productive, and since lone croppine had exhausted them they must bo supplied, not by mechan ical means, but by direct application. This theory is still recognized to be auito correct, with tho further theory that the soil, however' fertile, contains inexhaustible supplies of these essen Hal constituents. With these facts staring the farmer in the face he had either to let his land become barren and sterile, or get a supply of these in gredients, in some shape or other, to take the place of the waste going on. A new departure was then adopted in the shape of mixed farming that i Vaeninir a certain number of stock, nPinninnllv dairv stock, to utilize all tho rnu irher nroduee of the farm and have it converted into manure and put back into tho land. . This was to be the great cure-all for the prevailing evil, and, indeed, is now considered by a Li- anlinol of our own farmers as be- incr all thatia reauisite not only to ut they wero broken ana Keep up, - s i.i nf t in han lv used SOU. 1 UlB IB a m. Y every couteiyauio njr, r V. .' RnA. it vnrv hard to eradicate. The theory is greatly .tromrtlifinnd hv personal observation fnt- in manv cases where this method fuirW whII carried out. the land be comes much more productive than it was when crops were taken off contin urtiialV. A! d although wo are pleased to admit this fact as far as it goes, yet we mav rest assured history will repeat itself, rud we have only to look up the nf Hima of the older countries to find that, with the most careful sys m nf mixed farming, where nothing ; .u off but milk, butter and cheese, as the case may be, along with some up the grain before it should be cov ered by the plow. , the O reeks believed the plow waa the ift of the Goddess Ceres, and proba bly would have considered it a sacri lege to improve it by any human in genuity. This is doubtless ono reaaon why the ancient plow remained so long in u,se without any material improve ment in its construction. It was sometimes tlmped so as to raise- the soil, as by a flat wedge ; at other times the wedge was turned on edge to move the soil to ono side and secure an open furrow for the seed to fall into, but it was not till the fifteenth century that there was any indication of the idea of combining the two forms of the wedge into the twutmg mold-board. It was only a little more than a contury ago that the plow began to take the gen eral form of the plow of the present day, and the improvements are due to number of inventors in different parts of the world. The Dutch of Hol land gave the pattern for all our sub sequent improvements, but to Thomas Jefferson is due tho discovery and demonstration of the principle of the twist in the mold-boaid. Webster took niuiih interest in the improvement of plows, but it remained for Governor llolbrook of Vermont, to givo us tho perfect plow of the present day. COAST CULLINGS. Devoted Principally to Washington Territory and California. Everything of General Interest in a Condensed Form. have been tho ter- of the train which saved i)1A eneineer and nis nre- lie next engine went down, 5 . - 1 l J-.ll. WHO tly the aeeu oi u iust five minutes of mid- Swn in the ditch lay the sec- I . rni:i.n1 Via- I Fncineer Mcouniui;- lnr " . u.. Jt.. a Fireman Appiecaw imuij hn ton were piled the throe lire, on top of each other, 8a card house after he had jith his hand. Then came iy coaches. They were tele Lara never were before, and ihem were pressed in just Uh fnr ono. The second car id through the car ahead of wim woodwork aside like sd resting on the tops of the nverv nasseneer in the las lvinn dead and dying un- I Out of that car but four me alive. On top ot the sec- lay the third, its bottom ith the blood ot its victims, three ars were not so badly Olery. Though a nativeof the swamp, when cultivated celery needs well-drained land and is very susceptible to injury from an excess of moisture, l'eter Henderson says that the soil best suit ed is a deep, rich loam. Nothing is better than well-drained meadow or bottom land. If black and peaty it will answor, but it is absolutely neces sary that it be free from too much moisture. The greatest dimculty in raising colery is in starting tho plants, the seed being delicate and alowol termination. A bed of rich soil should be prepared and the seed sown in me drills and liehtly covered. When an inch high the plants should be thinned out to an inch or so apart, and when three or four niches high they are rcadv to be transplanted. If the trench system is to be followed.ditches should beduirafoot wide, two loetueepanu four feot anart. Into the bottom 01 t.hpsn trenches should be put ten to Reatile has 3,594 children ot school age. - Clarke county, W.T., has 8,000 in habitants. Kittitas county, W. T., has a popu lation of 5,443 inhabitants. Spokane Falls,. W. T.,has a new 1,800 hook and ladder wagon. The Salvation Army at Marysvillo, Cal., has made a Chinese convert. Walla Walla county's assessment shows property worth $5,200,000. Fire at Needles, Cal., destroyed the principal business portion of the town, The assessed valuation of Seattle is $11,872,328, and of King county $16, 861,72'J. The Seattlo A West Coast Railroad is to bo completed to Snohomish by October 1st. A failure to vaccinate is punished at Pluenix. A. T.. by $300 fine or six months in jail. Lightning struck and killed fourteen cows belonging to Mrs.- red lounian iu Colfax county, ?. M. A narrow-cauce railroad, extending from Reno, Nevada, nprthward, will probably be built to Bueanviiio wituin a year. A new town has been laid out on the line of the Spokane & I'alouse Railroad. The company will put up shops there. An exulosion of the Giant Fowder Works at Berkeley caused the total de- Htruclion of the buildints and death of several Chinamen. The population in California ad vanced irom eoi.ooo in ioov iu 952 in 1886. In the last six months has gained more rapidly than ever. Wm. Rhoades, a pioneer miner, was found dead in the Bitter Root moun tains, Idaho, recently. He was buried in the snow which was fifty feet deep. Two sons of 11. S. Hollingsworth.of Colfax, were drowned in the mill-race at that place. They were ageu u anu OREGON NEWS. 0. C. . K. TIKI TABU. Mall Train 'orth, 9:41 a. M. Mall train aoulh. SjX P. M. orrici hours, euoekx citt poiTorncxt flrnaral IHIItcit. from T a. M. to 7 P.M. Money Unlvr. f ram I a. M. to a r. u. twelve inches of well -decayed stable 9 years, and were both good swimmers. manure, thoroughly mixed with soil. In this the plants should be set out a foot apart, and shaded from the hot sun when first transplanted. In cul tivation care must be taken not to handle the plants when the dew is on the leaves, and dirt must not be al lowed to reach the center of the plant, At Ran Francisco Michael Kennedy was shot four times and had his throat cntlivn. woman named lanny lien- - ... . . , . i 1 1 dry, who then shot hereon anu cuv hit owu ihroat. T-r-ITnion aoldiersof California have requestod tho Congressional delega tion of that State to preson a w or the stalks will rust and be until for aHow eftCn prisoner 0f war $2 for each market, wnon me jay gp0nt in prison, eigineen inciies nigu me un.iii3-uF i1:.if ,i.,l t P--S must be commenced, bu, ,care W. P. fchuatar fi" a t.A lav oil in irausn i mh wili i. ii i miumw wn - Irom tne center oi nm uium. vt ---- , , . . , f .v. 5i... ,.. i.i ncriul in despair ouded his luo STbT iff had" g F.ucce in STSSi nearly all tho order. hlnnchinir celerv by the use of sawdust in tne xerniwj. ? . . mi I a !nii.il of earth in banking up. mere ch mf of Polica Crowley, oi can la no Hanper from rust, and the stalks lma sent to every ottloer on " . . . i .1 . . . ..!.- are much whiter and tenuerer mu tne Mco force a circular, statins tuv -1 3 I V. . .-. ! when eartn is useu Jber and beam represented a uman frame or a broken stantly the air was filled with of the wounded and the f thoso about to dio. The men and the screams of wo- ited to make nn appall- d, and above all could be agonizing cries of littlo cliu- some instances they lay pin- j;side of their dead parents, jnan with both legs broken through the corn to the side lie, and feeling her loved fea- the darkness pressed some !) her lips, and asked hor bow Tim hnnev cron in California will .,, be only one-ienin oi iat jennjww Checso-making is a safe business to stick to, for it is not as liable to ce overdone as butter-making, and tne will keen loncer and boar transportation better. - ik. p,iip Hommissioners have firmly otnrminpil to dismiss from the force any officer whoentore a drinking place while on duty. A number of prominent citizens of California have sent an mvtation to Roscoe Conkling, New York's ex-Senator, to visit this coast and deliver a series of speeches and orations, uio proceeds of which are to ue lorwarueu to tho Grant monument fund. The spring litter of pigs should be removed from the sow aud turned on tho ini-pr. A warm mess in the morn- nf moulded eround n.iMlinorn will railRQ them to inir tiea on the track Zw very ap dly6, as they will also so- the engineer saw the obstruction 6rU '. " -i C..J .. ! tT. Twelve ll cure a large snare oi meir nwu u inno vv v.-.... field. Clackamas county has 4.5S9 school childreu. Benton county is to build a $50,000 courthouse. Cougar scalps bring $8 bounty in Columbia county. A lodge of Odd Fellows is to be in stituted at OnUrio. A railroad from Baker City to Granite creek is projected. Sixty men are at work in the Mal heur valley surveying a railroad line. The cornerstone of the now agricul tural college at Corvalhs will belaid soon. The Freemasons of Hillsboro laid the cornerstone ot the new P. ot II. brick building. The O. R. A N. Company are build- ing an iron bridge across the John Day rhoron their road. A son ot Wra. Gregory ."fiigeil four teen years, was drowned in uuno creek, Jackson county. A forest fire in the coast range de stroyed Jonos & Co.'s sawmill ut Nes- tucca and did olhor damage. A German shoeivhordor named Do- niMOn, was killed by rocks rolling on him, in tho vicinity of Mount itood. The Douglas county fair will be hold on the fair grounds near Dillard's sta tion, commencing September lllli aud ending tho 17th. A colony of Ulinofs peoplo have pur chased 3,000 acres of land in Hood river valley, and will cultivate fruits largely for outside markets. A new and rich mineral district has been discovered near Joseph, Wallowa county. Some line niarblo quarries havo been discovered there. A twelvo-year old son of Bob Haeer, of Mikecha, on the summit of the Bluo mountains, Umatilla county, dieu irom tho effects of a rattlesnake into. Since tho institution of the Ordorof Good Templars in this btate, oot odecs have been chartered up to date. Of this number only 70 are iu exist ence. Charles Koen, a teamstor, employe of the Southern Pacific Company, was shot fatally by C. H. Caldwell, Keeper of a dance houso located in Bunch- town. Julius Soffncr, a coal miner in, tho Newport mines, was buried under a . I M.1.!ln mats of coal wincn leu on mm mn ho was loading his car. He was in stantly killed. The Tendleton & Wallula Railroad is graded and ready for tho rail, ltiey are expected in few days, and tno roau will be finished in time to move grain this season. The County Court of Benton has refused to construct an armory for tho militia of Corvallis, holding that it is the 8tate'i place to furnish tho money for such a building. firmiL Mcitemont has been caused in Jacksonville over rich Btrikes in tho mining district near that city. Ore assaying several thousand dollars per ton has been found. Moulds and counterfeit coins have been found in an old cabin in the Blue mountains. It is not known who left thorn thoro. Parties in Toudloton have them at present. ltpRiKlrr, (mm T a. M. U4 F. M. Malli fur north clow al V:lft A. M. Mail for amah clow at 1:30 e. M. Mailt for Krauklla cUm at J A. ii. Monday bel clou at T a. M. Moaday aa& T Matta'tor Cartwrighi eloae T A. . Moatta? . anil Thurxlav. Mailt for Mai DR. L F. JONES, Physician and Surgeon. WILL ATTICS I) TO 1 1 callt day or ntKht. rnoncssioNAt OrrioR-tTpttalm In Hayt1 brlrk: orcanba fouml at K. H. LwVfj k tot rtruir ttore, Offio huura: to M mh 1 to I e. t u I r. m. DR. J. C. GRAY, OFFICR OVER GRAND K STORK. ALL work warranted. Laiiahlnc pw adiuliiUteretl for palnlaaw tracuun ol loum. GEO. W. KINSEY, J ustice of the Peace. UKALK9TATK FOR 8ALK-T0WN L0T9 and fariiia. C'olliHJllont promptly aV Wnilrd to. ltKMiiiaNOK-Cornor Kleventh and High 81a, KuKne I'lly. OrtKou. D. T. PRITCHARD, WATCHMAKER AND JEW ELERt Repairing of Watfihra and Clocks leoiilvd with punoluallty and al a reaaoiiable coat. lVlllamette Htrert. Eaarn t'lty, On F. M. WILKINSa Practical DrngEist I CtBiaist . i An attempt was made, FCnnably fi n,en are al worV DRUGS, MEDICINES, nruahca, l'alnta, tilaaa, Oils, LeaCa, TOILET ARTICLES, Eta Phyalolana' Praeorlptlona Compounded. SPORTSMAN'S EMPORIUH C. 31. ii own, Practical Gunsmith CUN8, RIFLES Flailing- Taokle aud Materia SewlRi MacuiralMlcsof All Imfli Tor Salt ; Repairing done lh the neatest style and warranted. Guns Loaned and Ammunition Fornlahti Shop on Willamette Street, oppotlte roatofflae. A feeble groan was the only beef, the son graauauy i.n.1 thp nr.TKnati.nt. iWaV Dieted Ol plant IOOU, uiiu c- i - - . . , - i l - t mn tn anrnni- ft felt the forms of his dead child, cried out : ''My God, nothing more for me to live ;J taking a pistol Out of his pulled the tri'gRer. Tho ball iiight through his brain, and r dead bodies wero lain side ju Chatsworth until identified, f oner had the wreck occurred cene of robbery commenced, ml of unspeakable miscreants, h and criminal, wero on hand. guerrillas who thront; a bat- ilie night after the conflict, to m the dead, so last night did man hyenas plunder the dead e terrible accident, and took shoes which covered their hey went into the car when was burning fiercely under- ana when the poor wretches r'fe Dinned thero beceed for is to helD them out. stripped their watches and iewelry and their norknta. When the (dies were laid out in tho corn iese hyenas turned them over ff tearch for valuables. Who I wretches are is rot "known. i they are a gang of pickpock p accompanied the train, or Jobber gang who were lurking Ticinity cannot be said. The J suspicion, however, exists, and re many who give it credence, fe accident waa a deliberately 'l case of train-wrecking, that f'dge was set on fire by mis- r who hoped to seize theopportu fit-red; and the fact that the f was so far consumed at the j'be train came along, and the f ct that the train was an hour iiulf late, are pointed out as evi- 3'Ji a careiul conspiracy. ilf much loneer timo to accom' plish this end as compared with ra s ing and soiling off crops direct, yet the fact remains the same exhaustion is iust as surely and steadily going on. As already stated, nothing new is be ing created. Tho manurial matter re tnrued to the soil by the stock had been taken from it by tho stock, and hence every particle of it not returned ia just that much toward eventual ex- the farmer who ufes nothing, but farm-yard matture pro-.i..-,l nn thfi farm from crops grown on the farm, is all the time exhausting Ul MrnrLnro holds that farming found a nn the use of the manure made on the farm alone ii, cconomic . , " -u: .oinstrommon sense. fPfr, bnn6m an. by which the - rvormaneuiiy -r something ol asuiiauie t;u.wv STrawn to it from a source beyond ? . Ar.it mav exhaust at the larm. outu u.... -j , ine.' . ,.. la.hut the farmer de- S keeVup his soil has nothing to do with tnav. iuB1..Cro . . i .ii mn onn. nonestlyi i.nn mr ir t-1. Hi. vuw - - -1 - ' is the oniy iuio manent prosperity. The PJw. The plow in some form doubUew dates back at least 3,wu or trW u Proved by chiseleJ slabs upon an cteSt monuments. For many centu- Clt-u. t"" ..i...ii:kJ.lffa ries it was but a crooaeu n of the earliest representations hows it as being drawn by leur men, who took portions oi me ui.u -r- wnotou .wo other men tfan,l or feet. The first plows In twenty days the eggs of one hen nul(l i.reod the weiuht of her body. So of any bird. . Yet the whole of that mass of albumen is drawn directly from her blood. If stinted in food, of ii Tvn.il.Uimit the numler as VUUICV i . v- . - - well as tho size of the eggs. Pi lr nut vnur breeders, the pigs with i,n.r lwlie. liroad bucts anu ueoi, '""6 " ' . . L..l .!. ,. round hams. Meieci a orteu ui hair on it. A good coat of hair counts on a hog as well as any animal. It is a protection in summer anu in wwu.i. j-hama boomers are contemplat Mther raid inir ih Tnilian Ter ? nd U. S. troops have been sent H them off In pruning trees of any kind it is better to leave ono strong brancn or limb than two or three wcaK ones, it better to keep limbs uiinneu urn, ii...tif. linlr and IllttKe too W v ' , ,, heads. Let the sun's rays in an through tho treo. Young chickens, as soon as weaned, should bo provided witli suuamo perches. Make them low anu o.. . level. It will be better for their health to get the young lowis on ino gruu.m as soon as possible. Do not neglect to provide a door or slide. Experiments show that when cut hoy and ground grain are fed to stock the cost of feeding is lessened suffi ciently to pay for labor neccesary to pre- .i.-. anrl irind the eraia, and that tlie lncreaucu ia nntippfib le when compared wiui those fed upon wholo grain and uncut hay. . . Twelve hun dred peoplo were on the train. Thomas Wilson, captain of the O. n x, vs ammrr North raciiic, arop- ped dead on the deck ol that vessel at Port Townsend, W. T. He was aged about 44, has been in the O. B. & J, employ for many years, and was the most popular man in the Borvice. rw A. II. Pavson. United States engineer recommends appropriations I for next fiscal year's expenditures as fnilnwa! Kan Joaquin river, Cal., $119,000; Mokelumno river, f 2,000; Fetaluma crcclc, ?z,uw; oacramiiv and Fenther rivers, iu,wu; boldt harbor and bays, $250,000. Over $55,000 havo been contributed to the relic! ol tne suuerera i-j mo naimo disaster. The committee havo .r f.r.ninoil to book widows and chil dren to their original homes, providing transportation and nil incidental ex penses, and aubrequcntly purchasing an annuity for them. tri. ...in nf ihn ramus mine No. 2 :.. T.i,n i.a lwen consummated lor $2 750.000 in cash and mortgage bonds, and f UJy,uwiii inecuiujmuj New York parlies are the purchosers. An expert says thero aro irom tw.e to twenty feet of quartz, averaging f JJ in carload lots. Golden trout are found in but one place in tho world thai is m ne Lnnlr a nf Mount Whitney, up near the banks of everlasting snow. They have ruriuimvcy, - ,. .... , in l i ne results oi tno f " - excellent, tho cliannoi being uroauuimu and deepened. w n. Ilala shot and killed a large pelican from the courthouse window witii l.ia "iiptt-ciin" that measured Hivit m . ioht feet five inches from tip to tip . . . .a t 1 .a - .i:.....niA The bird was on tne iaae at a uuiuukw of several hundred yards, B0CIETIIS. Boot and Shoe Storo. A. HUNT, Proprietor. WIU hemriM twp t tamiiltU itook of is flh(inl uuaua. n.-nii.'i t nnnu Ml II A. F. AND A. M h. H.'.'a. rirli and ihlid Weiluiiadara In each DIOIlUl. SVKVCK1X Ml'TTlC 1,01 (UK NO. 9. 1. O, O. JleeU every Tueedar evening- ..tMf iii'ii at. a" AMPMKST no. Jlrctt on Ihn tocond and fourth Woduot- dajra in each nionlh. .w...vif mlif'lf K'n is A. fi. IT. W. Vj Mw'w'at Mawinio Hull the second and fourth Fridays in each nionlh. . T it. GKAHY POST NO. f. O. A. It MKKT8 fj. at Mawinio Hall tliullrtt and Hl"l " days of each month. ByordjT. Commanukh. ..i.i.-n nr rti4V iriMKVDS. SIKKTS ) the llml aii.l llilrd Hulurday eveiiliiaat Matonlo Hall. iJy oruirr oi Ladies', Misses' an. CMlto1 IHTTOS IIOOTM. Slippers, White and Black, Sandals, FIRS KID SHOES, 1 MEN'S AND BOTS BOOTS AND SHOES'! And In fact evrylhliyr In the Hoot and rllioe line, to hlh I Intend to devoid my (Hiioclul atuinuun. MY COOOS ARE FIKST-CkAt And (runrantwd at reprefwnled, and wll. be wild for Hie Idwent nrlcet Hint a goo article can be aUurdcd, V. Hunt. 0. c. -.-t-TTir tiliT.F. NO. 7. 1. O. O. T. MEETS K ...V. Haiunlav nltfht In Odd KHIom T KAIHNO rrTAnnASDOrilOI't MKKT8 U at IheU. I . t.nuren noon at MO. Vltllore maae wcicomo. Central Market, Eugene City Business Directory. JTIhUgv AtzWntUina PROPRIETORS. BETTMAN, O.-Drr Irooda, clotliln. irrocenoa and aoaeral nierclianmiin, touuiwoai. "" u.'inr....iian.l Klulith ttreuU . . . i i. . 1. ...Jam I . , 1 .1.- I 6lllen f "Jr Ht" .BnTr.?t.'W.Ua;neiie WUI keap contunu, on hand a full .up, t uaon Hflventh mna cwnin. witn nana ""- , ,.. :; n(ll drawu by cattle were gum , handle while the plowman, with hw Kand, sowed the grain. Other men Sowed as attendants to scare away Ss and prevent them from picking Farmers residing in the vicinity of the great Shrader gas well near Ko konio, Indiana, go on record as har vesting the firat wheat by natural gas licht. A dozen self-binders and men shocking wheat at the lonely hour of midnight, was truly a nove, r., which was witnessed by hundreds of people who surrounded the fields ol 1..:- -arrijcea. The constant roar grain " - o - . . of the Shrader well can be heard eight miles away, while the light can be seen at Burlington, fifteen miles weft ol i - Tli a tout im.l td flow of cas from rhi. well i- 15,000,000 cubic feet every owner twenty-four hours. .i. mm trfHiitiiiii nan tuav " Those who saw the first specimens of these trout that were brought down r.m Hi had of AVhitney creek thought that they were made up for show that Btrips of gold-leaf had been glued to their sides. At the Bank of Murray may be seen a nugget recently taken out of one ol the few placer claims wiucu "j linr wn rked. which weighs 33 ounces, 4 pennyweights and 10 grain, being over four cunces larger than any hero tofore produced in the Out d' Alone placers. It is not as smooth as most of the large nuggets, appearing to have -i-l.pd tmt a abort distance. Ine is unwilling to suuo w was found. ritlKNDLY 8 II.-Doeli-r In dry gnodt, clolh ' ,J T and ' ,"r.l mrchan.ll. Wlllamelt. laruet, between Klahth and Mulh. t t tn,.l, l.n and turaron. Wlllam- Uiil? ttreeL between Seventh and taghtli. nnniq C -Keen on hand fine wlnea, llnnora, "ffiand and billiard tahla. Wftoiav " 7-.1 iJown Klahth and Mnlh. HOIIS. CHAS. M.-Ouiinltland shni. falrlnK doiie In tho nl,t ttylo aud war- ' r 7 .IM.I f I't'KKY J. H.-WaUrhroakor and J""1,,r' Utofa rk of imwta In hU line. V UUm- ttte ttreeU In KllaworiU a arua tiom. PEEF, ..ac irura. uiajneiicui, uul NiiiUi. . . . 1 S POST OFFICE -A new tWr or ennar,, achool bookt Just received at Ihe poat olltoe. T' I UHINKHAUT, J- H. Hoota. tlvn and eaHatre I here it K,v,;.r ";lt L.r.n,orA at-:iai Hiock l naiiiw;r. " - . . l-1 told at lower ralct tuaa oj nnjwus uv , MUTTON. PORK AND VEAL. Which they will an" U w niarkot privet. A fair thare of the publlo patronage aoUeltal TO THE f ABJIEBSt Wa will pay the hlaheat market prloe toe fat cattle, liogt and thee p. Shop oa "Willamette Street, IUCEM CITY, OHECON. Meats anrtw. t any part of the ot charKe. )uall