MCOBSDAY- JANUARY , 1ST. A BILL OF EXOEPTIOMS. Several gentlemen have taken excep tion toourstateuienls of last week un der head of "Truth, however Unpalata ble," one characterizing tbem as "se vor,'' another ns "sour aa hottetmllk," another as "sweeping," ami another rotiroily declaring, with the niy&tie air assumed by men when speaking to women concerning secret orders, that we "know nothing about Masonry." Now, we bad some trouble ia heading U article referred to to our satisfae lion, and the strictures above named have eonvl need us that au Inspiration must have guided our pencil when, after some ruinates of deliberation, an imperative can lor "copy" loieeu a sudden transcribing of the words above quoted. To the first class of objectors, or, to coin a necessary word, "wlneers," we reply: If what we have said is not true, refute it; if it is true, in your own Individual eases even, correct the gross abuse and share equally and fairly Ufa's VretsBttude with the women who "Cheer pear meager hearth, who b!n an Tear poverty and meet Its harsh demands With unvarying patience, and perf.M-m Ita menial tanks with stained and battered J low many eveiiiugs would you spend in homes devoid of luxury, aud in many Instances hare of even the comforts of life, the children your only company, while your wives were passing pleasant liours in luxuriously furnished halls in the companionship of other women, a per capita tax accruing that, however small, could not be spared without a pit iful sacrifice of family comforts ? ltut you will tell us, perhaps, that there is another side to this. That the brother hood watch In sickness, bury the dead and render aid whan necessary to the survivors. We reply that common hu manity eauees the first doty to be per formed in any neighborhood that we ever lived in; that iu the case of utter impeeunioslty a pitying commonwealth wilt defray the expenses of the second, and as to the last, "a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush," and it must cer tainly be as gratifying to have the ne oouoltloa of life from day to day as to have their possible supply in case of pos slide future stress guaranteed. As to Masonry in the abstract, its mystic rites and ceremonies we of course "know nothing," asour friend has charged, and without desiring to be rude, we will add, we care leas. But the things we have relative to the injustice done i in the middle aud lower walks of life especially, the contributions of motley needed for family expenses to ward building up and sustaining secret orders lu whieh lliey have neither lot nor part have no, veil of secrecy drawn between them and the outer world. They speak not in symbols, aud need no Interpretation, and their plain state ment (s "truth, however unpalatable." A PLAIN PACT. The terrible prevalence of the crime of inf&Hlleide and its cowardly and revolt ing confederate, ante-natal murder, in our large cities, 1ms been proclaimed, lamented over, and its causes discussed for years and yet it grows and thrives. Statistics are given aud comments made upon this subject by our New York cor respondent, whose letter appears on the fourth page of this issue. Every woman, and it seems to us every humanitarian who rem is this will see bow far short the remedies proposed for this crime fall of touching the cause or of even hiutiug at a cure. Why any one cannot bee that the bodily subjugation of women as wives, as mendicants upou the financial bounty of men, is the cause of uine leetiifs of this most abhorrent murder, is a mystery. It is outraged nature turned wgainet herself that prompts aud exe cutes this disnatured crime, aud noth ing not eulightened and perfect eompli nuce with nature's laws will eradicate ft. To talk of controlling such a thing by special and striugent legislation while women are possessed of strong wills to resist by violence If necessary, too tyranny which says to them, "mater nity shall be yours whether you wish It or Hot," is like " children bab bling nonsense in their sport." The wis dom of all the law-makers, coupled with toe vigilance of ail the doctors of medi cine of Ibe uuiverte, eauuot mitigate, certainly cannot abrogate this erime while its prime cause, the subugatiou of mothers as mothers, continues. Those who, willfully blind are deter mined not to see this may exeot in the final summing up ot human things to hear the dread pronuuetameuto, "ye knew your duty but ye did it not." A PLAIN STATEMENT. Ool. T. H. Cann publishes the follow ing statement and declaration: "As a a" of Justice to myself, I desire to that on the 8th day of October the heoke and papers of the land depart ent were taken charge of by the legis lative investigating eommittee, and ou M day I deposited wut, Mr. K. Hirseh, folate Tre:,.tlrei, all the mooey on ha ml belonging to the laud department, for eefe keening, until the report of the committee should be wade. The money Is still in his safe, aud E. . ti, board of laud oomrnfawtonets -xara-1 iao the report the money will u, applied ' where it belongs, and an honorable set tlement will be made, so far as I am coo-! oerned. I have to ssy that each leglsla- tu re s! u tie 1S70 b as ex a m I n ed m y aecou n ta unit mmln nnnronriations for m v nav j r i r,!i .i,o,,,.' est. 1 "" " -"""IsutulngTas good wives always do, all pah! me, and have earned every dollar; the blame herself. As the matter now of it, and neither Slate or private dti- stands, we have two olllelsl notices to have lost a cent by me." The funeral of Caleb Cushlng was as plain as that of any common citizen in a rural towu. A H0U3IMGBENEnT. i We have often bad occasion to refer I to the despicable eoodoet of certain men I who assume the responsibility of decid-1 lug what their wives mav and mav not I subscribe for and read. We have,sinoe 1 " 1 we Isecan the publication of this journal, I by this unwarrantable jurisdiction ! which pompous men assume, and their wives for the sake of peace iwrmit, lq? not only many subscribers, but dues to the amount of several huodred dollars, the husband in many instances not ap pearing in the role of dictator until in arrears for one or more year's subscrip tion. In view of this, we resolved a while ago to give the next petty ty rant who thus defrauded us financially and Ills wife mentally, a rousing bene fit. There can be no more uusploious time for the inauguration of a good work than the first of the year, and the occasion is not wanting, so we will now call upon Mr. (we suppress wmes this time for the wife's soke) Ui"oome into court." Of course he will plead 'not guilty," but let facts be sut- iiiltted to a candid public or a num ber of years part, the name of Miss - has been enrolled upon our list of subscriber, now at one lowu him! now at another, the energetic, ami able ami accomplished ipchoolma'aiii who answered to it taking, reading aud promptlylpaying for the New North west when the yearly bill was pre sented. This lady took it into Iter beau a few months since to marry, and the husband we now arraign was the lucky roan. We had known something of the animu of this man upon the equal rights question, he being the same who, when superintendeutofeounty schools in a certain eouuty u few years ago, insulted Uie intelligence and underrated the ser vices of the lady teachers within his iuri-dietlon so eioselv. Thinking of this, we made out Miss bill (whieh had through over sight been allowed to run a year and half) ami sent it with others some weeks ago to our ageut to collect. The agent iu due time remitted one year's subscription to be placed to her credit, ami with it came the expected order from Hr. to discontinue. We replied by postal card, stating that the order would becomplied with wbea the halt year's subscription still due was paid. This elleted the following letter from the wife: To the Eomior tub Xw HorrHwnrr: Please do not discontinue the my address until the present subscription year expires. The paper was accordingly sent as usual, and the week following an official notice from the postmaster announced that it was "refused." Not proposing to recognize Mr. iu the transac tion so entirely out of "his sphere," w addressed the following letter to his wife, enclosing the aloresaid official notice My Dear Fkiesd: Sums ten days ago we re ceived a note from you. reuuesUag that the Northwest be not discontinued till the doss or another, or the current no ascription year, This waa quite satisfactory, aa we all know that while you wens unmarried your credit was perfectly pmd; and we are willing yet trust your honor about anything. But your order conflicts with your husband's flat, as you will ace by the enclosed, which yon will please I ask him to explain, lie is not the Unit man , who has married one of our sensible subscrib- era and then refused to let her have tbr N KW Northwest. But he will learn by and by that brains are not to be ownedeeen by man right votaries who are ever ready to attempt it If conscious ofa UUle weakness in their own upper story. I am exceedimtly anxious lo be lters tost you have married well, as foa cer tainly deserve a good husband, and I know you would make a capital wife tor a man with a blc enough heart to appreciate you. But, till Mr. explains bis reasons for thus attemptlnc to cat off your postal matter, must, at least for a season, reserve my Judf ment. What would he think of you were to thus attempt to rule his newspaper affairs If he really will not let yon have your paper. I suppose you must submit; but be must In that ease remit balance due (KjOO), or gel a lilUe cralultous advertising in a way that will not salt him. A.J. IrsiU Ai. Portland. January 2. ItT. To this letter the man responded, as before, by a peremptory order, unac companied by tbe cash for arrears, to discontinue the paper immediately, and we, seeing that he so sorely needed a public benefit, resolved to give him one. The motive that prompts this is by no means a personal one. For the lady we entertain the highest respect, aud for the man, iu common with other narrow minded tyrants, the most supreme con tempt; but It Is tbe principle underly ing such an act that we censure, aud feel should be exposed and dealt with according to Its just deserts. Such un warrantable jurisdiction over the indi vidual business of another bears not only the impress of tyranny, but the fruit of falsehood, for nine women out of ten will, to shield the tyrant from tbe obloquy which such conduct merits, smother their humiliation and stifle their conscientiousness aud declare that "they did it," even when tbey know that we have in our jioaseseion their own written statement to the contrary. It is the bane of the race at the present day that tbey were born of mothers who were forced to petty lying in order to screen that which it would be open humiliation to acknowledge, ami com pelled to resort to petty larceny every day of their lives in order to keep their own and their children's wardrobes pre seutable. Tbif state of thiugs will con tinue until a woman's individuality eeaeee in man's estimation to be merged into his own by the marriage bond; and we will hereafter regard it not only a privilege, butour bounden duty to write down in tbe "Blank" list, the names of men who deserve to be so catalogued, aud If occasion requires, give tbe same to tbe public, covered with the odium of their own acts. Since the above was iu type, we have received a second notice from the lady, ordering the paper continued, and as j discontinue from the "head" of the fam j ily, one of tbem savagely imperative, aud two contrary orders from the only 1 ff!" w h?? a "f1 right to decide the matter. Meanwhile, we shall obey tbe latter menU. party, aud await develop- "PALLIATION, THOUGH BX0TT8E BE ' IMPOSSIBLE." The Ban Jose Mercury, always the j friend of. woman, the ehnmpion of the ! weak and the uusparinit denouncer of ' wrong, in ooninieuting upou the infa- mous transactions of the California State Board of Education in peddling, for a stipend, the questions proposed to test the qualifications f teachers, puts in the following sensible plea fur ttie women teacher w ho were unpin aled In the dishonorable business : "It is Uite apparent tnal me sale 01 uesuons ami of positions has been going on for a coo- Iderable time, perhaps for many years, The applicants for certificates and I sehools suspected, if they did not know. that au iuliuenee was at work that gave to the few those advantages that should have belonged only to capacity and in dustry. They must have seen that ap plicants of limited attuinmeut were en abled to secure substantial advantages, through means that they may have suspected but dared not expose, aud could only know when they were them selves implicated with them. In most instances, poor and friendless, they oould hut know that there was a secret 1 power potential for good or evil, thai awarded priien ami position, upon con siderations altaiHtibbt only to the fa- orcd few. That this was acoouiIMied through the connivance of men of au thority, whose word was law, whose iu liuenee was all powerful, and whose actions' were beyond either appeal or In quiry. All this they must have t-een and known. Is It strange that these unknown ami friendless girls shrank Irom attacking such a power? That they did not care to assail influ ences thus iutienched, that would have replied by attack, by insu It and by rutu to themselves, Is it to be wondered at that these helpless aud depeudent teach ers, In sheer deseratiou, availed them selves of menus thus tendered and shrank from a contest thus desperate for themselves ? Before them was urgent necessity, want; around them the usage, the traetiee; beside them the tempter; and we question whether there be many men who, thus urged and thus tempted, would not have also thus fal len. For the wretches who create this necessity, who trafficked upon the urgent needs of these helpless women, we have not words to express our strong loath ing; but for these victims, misguided as they weie, we have much of commis eration." A TIMELY SERMON. Rev. Mr. Eliot preached at the I nlta- j elan Church In this city recently sermon ou the "Death Penalty," which, was most timely. No oue could listen ! and cordial sympathy at least with the speaker's most humane and practical vlews. We would like to give place to toe entire sermoo, out space loforas. space The follow lug were the concluding words: "With ibis testimony, I con elude what yon will bear me witness has been no sentimeutal argument, nor a question as to the right of tbe State, nor an attempt to interfere between the menace of death in particular cases and the fulfillment of that menace. I have simply shown in dry light the de ductions of experience. I have simply tried to break tbe popular fallacy that hanging laws deter criminals or human ise society. I have eodeavored to show that reform iu tbe whole system of con viction and penalty is our best hope of security, and I express the belief that such reform will be followed by a slough ing off of the de.th penalty' as use less, and an encumbrance, a confusion of moral perceptions, rather than a vin dicator of right." CAPITAL PUlflSHaffEirr. AKD iir- TEMPEKAM0E. .Aaron Payne, an old gentleman ninety years of age, who resides In Yamhill county, preachex the following temperance sermon in connection with discussions of plans for the abolishment of capital punishment: "I can, however, propose a plan that would avoid capital punishment in perhaps nine cases out of ten; and that plan is to stop tbe manufacture aud sale of intoxicating drinks. This would rescue from the poerjhouse, the iusaue asylum, the Jien iteutiary and the gibbet nearly all their victims. Ami the cities could dispense with most of their police; their sinks of iuiquity would be dried up, taxation and crime would be greatly reduced, disease aud death would be robbed of more than half Its victims, aud your police courts would be almost dispensed with, and the tnaurauoe on all proiterty greatly reduced. And any city is capable of doing this by her incorporated Mwer. Will you dolt? Till then we eanuot dispense with the death penalty. All of which is respectfully submitted to tbe public geuerally, and to the clergy es pecially." THE LA8T DEVICE. The last device fr laying the drunk enness of men at the door of women Is given upon the authority of an emineut Knglish physic! an win .I, I "ereat immiaii.. " i ui tans alcohol arises from bad cookery." if he wou, teJI famished wlees with empty larders just bow under the circumstances to prac tice "good cookery," they would doubt ess appreciate the results, equally at least Wth lhe me wbos( orlm,,, yielding to the "great temptation to drink alcohol" has, by depriving their families of the barest necessities of life, caused "cookery" of an hi.i i., .lir Ldomlcils to be almo-t numbered amoug .,las. we rail to see how a cook book recommended In this connection as a proper study for vom bv any possibility pla tempting vladds upon the drunkard's table The Xew England Rave a tea ttartv in Woman's Club honor of Lucy tone's sixtieth birth-day, ou the 4th of November. WOMEN AND 0HHBOHB8. A ,,te,ngtellej Methodist preacher once said: "But for the interest awl devotion of the women of onr ehorebes, one-balf of them would die the first year, aud the other half the eecoud.' If a woman had said as much, it would have been considered an exag geration, yet all women who have lu boied iu ebiuub interests know, that there i- much truth iu the statement. Vet often Hie very laiiiisters who are Compelled to acknowledge to similar conviction, discourse eloquently from the text, "Let women keep silence in your churches," ami oommit the pious theft of tskine to their own credit before the world what Is due to the women of their congregation who zealously work iu silence. From the time wheu 1'aiil preached his first missionary sermon iu ) Kurojie to a little company of Jewish i women who met outside the city of l'hlllipe, to the present, wheu two thirds of every coiigregutiun assembled on Sabbath, and nine-tenths of those in attendance at the weekly prayer meet ings are women, woman has composed the rank and file of church member ship, officered ami often clumsily ma neuvered by men. Said ISuekmiuiater seventy-live years ago: "If the time should ever coma when mir churches shall be closed, the .Sabbath no longer mude a day of rest ami worship, but of toil and pleasure, and Christianity Itself cast ofl" as a worthless superslilillou, the last congregation will be a group ol children gathered about their mother, and the lust altar a woman's heart." I,et us hope, should such a time ever arrive, that no jiompous minister who has faithlessly dotted his sacerdotal robes will Intrude upon the little circle with a proposition to the woman to get up a fair and pay oil an ancient church debt or back salary claimed by himself. TOBACCO AND KJTE2JPEBANCE. It Is no uncommon sight, as all who have attended our excellent Saturday eveulug temperauce meetings kuow, to see an advocate of this cause take an enormous quid of tobacco from his mouth wheu he arises to exhort the au dience to eschew the use of stimulauts, aud we have, never heard but one man at those meetings declare tobacco what it is, the close ally of alcohol, urging its discontinuance us a necessary auxiliary measure iu overcoming the appetite for strong drink. They have iu Washing ton Territory a temperauce advocate who does not shrink trout the duty of makitiiif till nl&ttrtiriitutmii. nil this ad- VOCJlU, u Houor Ju(,ge Jjew8 WD0 ,, reported by the Port Towns. nd rffus M MluWH. ..,., , TjwU r ; eently delivered an address, showing by t faots and rias rhtit tha f-il at intaun- MnWie ,uacJ, IUOfB ellor((HHj than is ,.., M1 H fa.d tm- ! ienloee , tbw IM.r uilneco as well as ,inlulr Thll in-i ..i that about niu-tenths of ult the cases which came up before the courts in this judicial dis trict, where the people are taxed to pay tbe euotmuus cost bills, are brought about through the influence of liquor. Many complain at high taxes they are called upon to pay for school purposes; and yet, asked tbe judge, what tobacco user in this district dues not auuuully ly more tobacco tax than school tax 7" AN APPBOPBIATE GIFT. Oue of tbe most satisfactory Christ mas offerings of whicli we have heard, gratifyiugalike to donors and recipieut, was made at Forest.Grove ou Christmas day. This was an elegant aud luxurious es-y chair, a joint gift from friends at Forest Grove, McMiniiyille and Oregon I City to Elder Chandler, whom paraly sis about four years ago rendered dumb awl helpless. The appropriateness of the present will be seen when It is un derstood that Mr. Chandler sits day after day scarcely changing his position for hours, and the friends whose thoughtful kindness prompted the gift realized, perhaps as never before, the troth of the declaration, "It is more blessed to give than to receive," as the venerable and stricken man accepted, with every demonstration of mute thankfulness, their beautiful present. Mr. Chandler in the years now gone has labored in church aud educations! Interests In the places above named, with a zeal aud energy unsurpassed, and this token was tendered as an evidence of the esteem iu w hich he is held by those t ho know him best, and would fain render :i pleasant as may be his patieut waiting upon " The silent, solemn sbore Oftbaivastoeean be mast sail w soon." SOTLIMATEDJ5ELPISHKE8S. What a world of fanaticism, blind to subjugatiou to creed, cant which teaks to obliterate tbe holiest sentiments of a womanly soul and exhortation to strug gle against a natural feeling upon which rests the purity of the marriage rela tion, is contained lu the following brief paragraph, dipped from a Salt Lake pa per that advocates the revolting doc trlne of plural marriages. If the feel ing that causes thetrue woman instinct ively to rebel against the Invasion ofl her sacred domain of wifehood is tetf- j ithnen, then certainly it Is a sublimated Hclflshness that should t-e accorded all honor: "The great cause of trouble in pluralily is the selnshuess of women. It is natural not to like to see another loved by the object of our devotion. We are selfish and narrow-minded in this, and thluk of ourselves aloue, but if we open our hearts to tbe Spirit of God we will overcome this spirit of evil, and If true love exists in our hearts for our husbands the hurdeu will be eaey, and we shall be desirous that our hus bands should obey tbis command of God, and reap a rich reward." Rev. T. F. Campbell has again as sumed editorial charge of the Chriitian jrestenger, D. T. Stauley retiring. Miss Mary Stump labors quite acceptably ' upou that journal also. KBOBNTEYENTS. There is skating at Atlanta Ga., for the first time In tweuty years. Caleb Gushing died at Newbury port, Mas.,'tHi the night of the 3d Inst. A slorm raged at East Buffalo ou Uie 3d with such fury as to cause all suspen sion ol Dusinose. A bill providing for the taking of the tenth census has been introduced. Three million dollars Is fixed as the maximum cost of the work. A Imln of the New York Central ar rived in uuimto ir.'m Albany on the 4th, due on -the ai, drawn by thirteen engines with snow plows. me mercury shim a -zr uetow aero at Chicago on tlteSd. Kxtremeiy oold weather is reported Iu Central aud Southern Kansas. Illinois, Missouri ami The second Baptist Church at St. Tiouis, an Imposing edifice of rough hewn stone, which cost $1.78,000, was de stroyed by fire ou the morning of the 3d, the walls alone remaining. Resumption continues to work smoothly. The amount of gold mll out at tlie sub-treasury on Saturday wus SaO.OUU. ami the amount taken in ex change fur leg:il tender notes, $2U0,0UO. .Secretary Schurz has affirmed the de cision of the eommissloner of the laud office in the ease of Orson It. Willurd vs. the State of Oregon, involving title to land iu lloseburg, Oregon. The decision as affirmed rejects the claim of the State. The requisition ou the post office de partment ou Saturday, for postage stamps, stamped envelopes and postal eards amounted to $516,5S9, included in which were -1,796,500 postal eards. The requisition wus more than double that of any single day in the history of thv department. , A large number of petitions were pre sented to Oougre?s on the 6th, many from women, asking that effect be given the anti-polygamy law of 1S63; and otlters protesting against the so called patent law bill and against the transfer of the Indian bureau to the war department. The Vice-President, on the 7tli, laid before the Senate a memorial from the legislative assembly of the State of Or egon, praying for modification of the treaty between the United States and the Km pi re of China, so as lo stop and prohibit the the importation or immi gration of Chinese or other Asiatic la borers to the Pacific coast; referred. FOSEINKEWS. A diplomatic rupture between Ger many and Deiimark is feared. Great destitution and distress prevail throughout Alsace ami Loraiue. Onan Moneasl, the attempted assas sin of the King of Spain, was executed by gar rote at Madrid on the 4th Inst. A plague has appeared amoug the Cossacks of Astriehan, which is terribly fatal. Out of 193 attacked, 113 have died. Tbe Cornish bank, established 110 years ago, lias suspended. Terrible dis tress among the traders of West Corn wail will result. Oue hundred and twenty Rulgarian villages have been Irarned, and 6,000 persons maseaered during the suppres sion of the insurrection. Foreign em bassadors are petitioned for deliverance from Turkish rule. All the societies in England, con nected with the engineering trade, unite to resist any prolongation of the hours of labor. Demonstration have been mude at tbe principal cities, aud Strikes among freight-train guards are reported. THE DIFFERENCE. The mails of the Unite.! States have been burdened to the extent of tons In weight by asiiig the mall matter of men free through the use of the frank ing privilege. It Is a matter of history, however, that women have always paid for transporting their mail-matter, there being but one exception on record, that of Martha Washington, who, after her husband's death, was allowed the free use of the malls for the rest of her life. This was ordered by act of Coiigreo", April 3d, 1900. Of course this was oot 'intended to be a reenniese for any privation and toll which site endure I or a just reward for services she rendered to the country during the dark days of its sore distress, when in muuy a bleak i winter's camp -The homesick soldier knew ber cheer And blessed her from his couch of pain." Hut because of the faithful service her husband had given to the country There is not the slightest doubt that many a Congressmau has had free use of tbe United States mails for the trans mission of any amount of buiicome speeches to nu admiring constituency, whose wives in the far rural district have not been able to raive a postage stamp to let melr lords know that the children were down with the measies. A L07ELY 8IGHT. Workers in the woinau movement have cause to think with jsride and t pleasure n( Lueretia Molt, brilliant, vl- vaclous, lovely though the frosts of eighty-seven winters have left their rime upon her hair, ami the tolls of an active life of four-score years have left their lmnress unoii her features. As an illustrious ex urn pie of the impress, a woman may make upon her posterity, is mentioned the fact that her daughter, Mrs. Davis, her graud-dutighter, Mrs. Hallowell, and her great-grand-daughter, May Hallowell, now eighteen years of age, are each and all women of re markable beauty and mental endow ment. These four women in a group make a lovely aud luspiring sight. The Weekly Standard has entered upon ita fourth year. -jrwTSJTBIta. SEaTE AND TmUU-rnaUAI. Wheat Is qootad at 84 cents at Indo- peotleoee. The "BMW JCibbon Ulnb" at tjeaiue numbers H6 members. Ttt Coos Ita v comI mines are increas ing their working forces. A stern-wheel steamer for tbe Stiek- eeu River will shortly be built at Seat tle. A telegraph office will soon be opened at Phenix, with Miss I Sargent as op erator. The colored citiseo of Snlem cele brated the anniversary of the emanci palion proclamation in an enthusiastic maimer. A Teachers' Institute, to begin on toe 16th and continue several dsys, is an nounced to be hew at llnsohurg by irol. L. J. Powell. General Howard's new resJiVauee at Vancouver is said to be the finest north of tiie Columbia. It is completed, and win so hi be occupied. T. !. Iteck.of Willow Spring while receutly cleaoiuK un the bed rock em his mining claim, picked up a nugget of gm welgbiug I8 To. Tbe iron for tbe first ten miles of tbe Yaquius Bay Railroad has been bought In Aew York, ami will be shipped about uie zuiu m tins utoutii. The Catholic fair reeenUv held at WhIm Walla netted tte sum of $1,o60m wmrn win oe use I to pay oB the debt on u ratrtck's church. Tbe delightful custom of makiue New Year's calls was very generally observed In Eugene City. It has been mentioned as a noticeable fact that very few ladies offered wiue to tbeir guests on this oc casion. Over fifty teachers were in attend ance at the recent session of the' Teach ers' Institute at Oregon City. Excel lent work was done by some of tbe lead ing educators of the Stale. The friends of education are much encouraged at tbe result. The nuptials of Captain O. C. Apple gate, formerly of the Asbistud Tiding, and Miss Eliza Anderson were cele brated with great eclat at Ashland at Christmas time. The happy couple departed for tbeir home at Klamath Agency on the 28th ult. Our best wishes atteud them. The upper part of Kebaleni Valley is reported as the best body of vacant land iu Western Oregon. There is ample op portunity for settlers seekios homes to Mod them here, where the soli Is fertile, the country well timbered, the climate healthful, aud no fear of molestation from Indians, as in Eastern Oregon and Washington. , Sex ia Industry. Tbe Rev. Joseph Cook, of Boston, re cently preached a powerful sermon npon this topic, from whieh we obtain tbe fol lowing statistics: In 1873, tbe Massachusetts Labor Bu reau received statements of personal earnings and expends from 15,25 women depending for support upon daily wages. Many more than 15,000 returns were received, but the Iwtard struck out of the aecouut all the statements that were in any way imperfect. Over la,0UU good ones remained, complete In every essen tial particular, i undertake to say tbe world never saw as many budgets of poor working girls opened as ere ex amined officially in this commonwealth in ItST-i. Toe average number of days these working women were employed in a year was 258. The average earnings wereeigbty-two cents a day. They worked on tbe aver age more than ten hours a day; that is, more than sixty hours a week. Ouly one in a hundred owned a house. These women were paying on an aver age S'Jif a year rent. The cost of living of the working women was reduced on the average to $lS2Soayear. You are not interested iu these fig ures? Jo, but they may be family sta tistics for your descendants? These propositions represent the con dition ot workingmeo iu Maseaehusetie. In the year 1875 the same bureau re ceived returns from 55,516 men engaged lu the industries of this common wealth, and depending for their support umii daily wages. The average number of days they were em ployed lu the year was ril. Tbeir average earnings $2 01 a day, against S2 cents for women. Only oue in a hundred, however, owned a house. These men were paying on an average $108 a year as rent. The coat of living of workltrgmen was reduced on the average to $4&K W a year. Tlie following sonnet, from TiOngfe' low's new volume, will find apprecia tion amoog literary workers: "Once upon tee land's solitary strand A poet wandered with his book and pen, ' Seeking some Una! word, soma sweat tsnea. Wherewith to close the volume in bis hand. Tbe billows rolled and plungsd npon the sand. The circling seagulls swept beyond his ken. And from the parting cloodraCks,' now and tnea Flashed the red sunset over sea and land. Then by tbe billows at his feet was tossed A broken oar; and carved thereoa he read, Oft was I weary when I tolled at thee;' And like a man who nndslh What wss Ion He wrote the words, then HfUd up his bead And dung bis useless pen Into the sea." A royal unkase proclaimed that Indies attending tbe first reeeition of Her Royal Highness, Princess Ijouise, at Ot tawa, must wear low-necked dresses un less they present a doctor's certificate of III health. Such ridiculous assumption of authority may be well enough in Old England, but it excites supreme con tempt iu America. Think of a woman braving tbe rigors of a Canadian winter, her ouly ermit to cover Iter shoulders aud ehesl in the presence of royalty be ing a physician's certificate of ill health. Faugh ! Indian Police. By the last Congress provMou was made for the organization of a native police force on each of the Indian reservations, for the purpose of preserving onier, encouraging agricul ture, etc prescribed by law, aud they are to re- celve a small salary each. The design I DH IIHTIIWr 111 I I1U bSru In of tne organisation Is not ouly to assist the civil aud military authorities in quelling disturbances, etc , but also to encourage the Indians in their eflorts to acquire a knowledge of tbe useful arts of civilization, and to alii tbeir advauce- tnent in every way. With a proper se- lection of men from thediUereiit tribes, it is thought that much good can be ef- I """ ln c. Mioui.iers, Hips, and feCted by the force. Captain O. C. Ap- I 1 best. Headache, Nr..l,l,i, ll.art Disease, plegHte is about to organize a company Kheumatism, chronic and u-utt Female DJ at Klamath ageucy. Athland 7diny. e.i.esaud Irregularities, -,r, an. 1 Weak Eyes, lieafnes., Kiiiinz In the He.i.l. linnMhlal Af- Letters from China state that during ttaitiuus, uirom. t nii,..n.i i.toerai Debit the receut famine, 7,000,000 tieople died, '' y o1 "e above affliction-, at .it ,, w rooms, Houttiv-it coriirr ol Washitifi,.., 0,000,000 in the single province of and Vl,,ulllvv owr WVunllu "ore'J'. sjbansti. ' suir The Voavu's Xprkftv The following account of, and appeal in behalf of this worthy institution, which has for several years been main tained by tha exertion of a few cour ageous women, appears in a recent is sue of tbe Oregoaian: Our first object is to furnish home for homeless women. During tbe last, ten mouths, we have received over titty boarders, their time raugiog from a siu gle tiay to several inoulua. We have a comfortable house plainly furnished; eotu(orl:! i- tit-tie, ana plain, wholesome food for o per week. We have one sewing machine, and good conveniences for washing and iron ing. Our aim is, -moreover, to help such working women as are willing lo help themselves. o encouragement is giveu auy to remain in idleness. If any are sick, they are properly cared (or, ami wheu able to work, we assist tbem iu finding places as soon as possible. Since the middle of last February, we have hn'i two huudred applications for sllusii u.a. Vte have bad tbe poor, tbe feeble, the old, the young, tbe lame, tbe biiud, tbe partially insane or imbecile, aud one deaf aud dumb; aud iu nearly every lustaoce have been able to tind homes and suitable employment. Furthermore, we try lobelp the stran gers who are flocking to our towu, from all pins of tbe world; to keep our giris out of hotels where they are subject to sbcb fearful temptations, aud out of the way of "ber whose steps take bold on hell " We also help the working woman who may be temporarily disabled, or who requires a season of rest, or who is ontof work, to a home; to girls learn ing trades, to seamstresses, teachers, or auy who may be in ueed, a cheap board ing place which shall be quiet aud com fortable; such a home as may be found in many of our eastern cities, and which lor obvious reasons is especially needed here. As yet, the enterprise is iu its iufaucy, but we hope by persevering ef forts that it may grow with the growth of our city, and finally become an en during monument to tbe Christian phi lanthropy of all who have heretofore, and all of who may in tbe future cou trinute to its success. We are struggling along with inade quate means, and with little help. We need more mooey and more furniture. Above all, we ueed the assistance of good women; we need their symp-athy and help in various ways, which can ouly be lully understood by those in the work. We most earnestly implore the co-operation of all the benevolent men and women in Portland. Shall we not have it?- Tbe TimeJ Seranton our respondent says these are dark days in cabins of tbe Pennsylvania coal mines. Tbe wolf crouches at every door, and if the combination companies outlast this month, tbe miners eao see nothing before tbem but starvation. Tbeir words furnish Christmas tide reading for the country whose barns and grain elevators are bursting with tbe greatest harvest ever seen even in tbis teeming new world A man writing from Kittitas Valley, W. T., of tbe probable Indian disturb ances in Eastern Oregon nnd Wash ington next spring, snys: "A great many settlers are building forts of tbeir own for protection, as in ease of an outbreak the Indians are so close to them that they would not have time to remove tbeir families to places of safety." Good Indian. Aps, tbe Indian mur derer, on being asked by Judge McAr thur, before sentence of death was pro nounced, if be bad anything to say, re plied: "You talk to me ouly as dirt; my body is as dirt to yon now; but you should talk to the spirit that goes from my body. That's all." The little daughter of a leading physi cian in a certain country town pre sented the following as ber first essay -"There was a little girl and she was very sick; aud they sent for my nana and -Hie. lied very quick." ' Xw is tbe time to make up clubs. Tfce U. S. Signal .Service. Gradually the wUd and ungovernable forces of nature are, through science, made of use to ma. FWMwlag la tbe wake of the Ingenious Invention Aw the oof steam and electricity oomes toe organization or Ue U. H. Signal Ser vice. Is it not wonderful that a system eoulj be originated and perfeajed whereby an oper ator can accurately predict the weather ot a distant locality? And yet experience prove, our storm signals" to be relWll& lu i great are me advances made In the science oi medicine. Step by step, uncertainties and doubts have given way to absolute certainty Vae discoveries of Harvey and Jumer have been succeeded by IheGotden Medical Discov ery of Dr. K. V. fierce. So longer need peop le despair because some physician has pr. nouneed the lungs unsound. Hundreds or tes timonials are on Bis In the omee of Dr. Pierre from those who bad abandoned all hope, an u had been given up by physicians and inemls todie. Incipient consumption, bronchitis, ana erofolbas tumor, speedily, sorely, and jier sanenatjr yield to the healing influences oi the Dl-oovery. If Ue bowela be constipated . use Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets. For full particulars, see Pierce's Memorandum Book, given sway by all druggists. Wo4ler of MnsTMetlHiH. Dr. C. M. Wood, tbe celebrated healer, will heal the sick of chronic diseases at the corner or Washington and Front streets, Portland All eatable diseases sneer fully treated wheu every other method fails. Dr. Wood cures by animal magnetism, and can point m the most wonderiul cures ever performed by tins method. No medicine, no surgical instru ments, no pain whatever. Axomsaor h. wood- naa-raxors cures. To theclUxensof Portland Imake the follow ing statement (or pablluaston: Un the J2d r February. 1878, my little boy William, then : yean sad S months old, was stricken with to tal paralysis at 12 o'clock at night, for whieh I coohl assign no reason whatever. He rental ner totally helpless from the body down for two dsys. He hud a high fever, limbs badly swollen, ate nothing, and so great waa his pam that tils nittlit clothes could not be removed from him, ai the least movement caused the roost e.xeruciatlng pain. In this hopeless n, dltion I took him to Dr. C. M. Wood, Maenei .. " j -1 v - sms pviieciis restored our buy iu six treatments 'coiiseeutlvslv, ! " wi,i,i i . ii.uii i.n nnm , V. .... . I T.V!" "H ? sffloU'"! i s.penckk sammovC' Portland, April 23, IsTS. This is to certify that niy little bov i .,, . tun-, and has been weU since von ... . I I. -mslni fast. . ""'eu Dr. Wood cures the follow!n dtsi 'uses: Dys- ' Pepsla. Indigestion, t hrooic Liver Complaint I '-ease ot the Kidneys, Spinal Oonptalnu,'