voL a . I iV'; ♦I 1 MX •I —- CôÙViièr. Viafaÿettè m , ■ ,n li. , Working • —— T he F armer ’ s M otto .—Let the was The following «. “ Good farms, farmer ’ s motto be: true, has been publishea in several 4 ‘ ‘ Silvfer et, bv Miss «Mr good stafck, good seed on good cul- ofour exchanges, add is still worthy Esther Sturgill, the Baker City TER^ ÙF SUBSCRIPTION. tivation.” So said Gen. Bierce at of further circulation: ny, last winter, «nd the au- 4 Jbbfc Vropy, O m * Year, . | >fan an agricultural address 00 the close of 4 . - ri ”lf a man buys anew yet unknown:i p Jlvl‘ 11 jèm» C«py, Sta Month«, ta in Ohio, in 1 1857. ; More than this, if his cow can bawl th^e tiafes on ■■■_ have any toknow oo make farming a science, in which without winking, the 1 £ author of thifr. article is, your heads as well as your hands pected to proclaim it witlg you may find out by paying strict are employed; let there be system flourish. If he starts a RATES OF ADVERTISING : attention to the reading of it. 1W 1 2W 1 :iW 1 3M 6M 1 1YR. and reason in all your operations; business, his first thought *uf to ' pFirètr-Ypu find me tobe annoy- inhabitant« of evry village 1 Inch, in 1 25 I 75 f6 oo »00 TiTW study to make your farms beauti bribe the local with d five cent ing Entice, cigar to write up a five dollar puf. and ebuntry town, and my second 2lneli«a, 475 2 50 3 00 I B 00 11? I 18 00 ful, and your lands lovely. 4 Slnohefi, 250 360 4 50 1 0 00 18 1 22 00 by kindness, the birds to visit and Indeed, he thinks it is 4 mission “ * to get ridJipf my first, they used t , 20 1 30 00 cheer your dwellings with their fluche», I 300 4 00 5 00 1 11 of the local to one side, aiid point and are generally 22 1 32 00 4 Col. i 450 5'501[TbO| 18 music. We would not associate out the superior qnalitiestof a rat 20'L 28 1 38 00 Third-I am f > Co)- . 1 500 TÔ0 1 Col. 1 ‘700 9 00 IS 1 20 30 1 50^0 with man or beast that would wan farrier dog, and coolly a$k him to orfhting office and gen 50 1 90 00 tonly kill the birds that cheerily ‘gi^eliim a hoist.’ He d|n i ’t care ladies generally like to 18 1 30 1 Col. 1 10 1 15 Bu-rioQM notice* in the Local Columns, 25 sing around our dwellings and our anything abought; it, oiili Sprigg- with them; and also a«1 cent* per line, each insertion. farms, he who would do this is fit ings has a dog he thinks is a blister, involving a question for on For legal and transient advert»ement*S5.- ted for treason and murder. > and some of z em wanted f * 1 ™ hia4 put or decision, and also of 60 per square of 12 lines, for the first inser Who docs not, with the fresh in* fust to take the conceit out of the substantive in English. tion, and 81.00 per square for each subsequent nsertion. ness of early morning, eall up the Sprigging». Everybody* wa Ants to Fourth—You will find nie in «U Lepal Advertisements to be Paid for up memory of the garden of his in be ‘put in;’ they are the •RBAtll the founderies and m on making Proof by the Publisher. fancy and childhood; the robin’s A m , but no one says, ‘HA local’ and without me t Personal Ad vs. 50 Ct*. a Line. Suberiptions Sent East, SI 00 a Year. nest in the old cherry tree, and put yourself inside th’r' suit of comparatively little machinery in the chipping birds in the current clothes, or throw yo outside nie. P. C. 81LLIVAN. bushes; the flowers planted by his this oyster stew, or put 1 is watch of the New mother and nurtured by his sisters ? in your pocket I’ On, DO, h . course Attorney at Law, In all our wanderings the memory not, that would cost ething. we all did Dallas, Oregon. of our childhood’s birds and flow The shoe is on the other ffoot, you to-day; and ers is associated with our mother * ILL PRACTICE IN THE COURTS see. The local is sup to know also a Goddess of Revenge. of Yaruhill, Polk end other counties i and sisters and our early home. everything about other|peoples’ Seventh—-I may be found in < 201y M Oregon. Farmers, as you would have business, and is ¿expected expecteddo shew ’|o show ery house throughout _ all -11 the ¿ctors S- -11 family e - .. your children intelligent and hap r up in every from the grog shop up py, and their memory of after life broil in town. If the vitó tongue minister Abbey, or WATCHES, pleasant or repulsive, so make your of scandal finds a viotin people thedral, and am gladly locks . <t sewing machines farms and your childrens’ homes. wonder why he don’t ri about kings and beggars every da LEANED AND REPAIRED by —Ex. with his note book and gather up EighthpGo where you llw . “ W. C. B edwell . L afayette T reatment of S tock .—There the vituperative bits of scandal for am between you and the M ' ll I i I 0 L J Illi 4ill |M “ ™ his ■ paper. When a lninst|bl troupe is one fact connected with the 11 >*■ breeding of our future herds, to arrives in town, the agent rushes Ninth--~I am wh«t the heavenly E. C. BRADSHAW. which it would be well if breeders into the printing pffice, aifd calling bodies do; every day, and am there .Attorney at Law, would give njore attention, It is for the local, he slips a picket or fore fixed, fiem and obstinate. / LAFAYETTE, OREGON. the impdi rtance that attaches to the two into his hand, and whispers, Tenth-r-I was accessory to the to proclaim it witj^jttand Draw us a big housed put in Revolutionary War, and therefore care and treatment of high blood ‘ ted Office in the Court Home. ‘“ ? "i* _ ILEL ’ !’ and, patting him ipenny jpatroniz- prompted the Independence of the ed animals. It is important to the strong improvement of any breed of ani ingly on the back, the ageftt admits American people. bribe the local d five cent inferiority of with the troupe, but mals. that they receive kind and the Eleventh—Without me the bil W. M. RAMSEY, ircntle treatment, with a generous we are not to ‘let on.’ It is no sin lows of the ocean would to for the local to lie. To ¿ease the rest, and the .Attorney at Law fare. It ia useless to hope for any ■ V r of t great improvement in the breed of lecturer the locaH« forced to sit deep would LAFAYETTE, OREGON. animals, if little or no care is tak- two mortal hours to hear ‘an insip Twelfth—Such I am in' Office mi the Cotfrt Hou.«e. id discourse so that he. cap ‘ write on to protect them from the vicis- take me as a whole, and v u ii.lmlf him up. ’ And ro ft goes. ¿ All are sisitudes of climate, food, or find that I have been “ anxious to appear favorable in for centuries and a; starvation. Attempts have been made in re print, but few are Iwillinfl to pay without me there W. D. FENTON, peated instances, to our knowledge, for it. The local’sjtime fe worth ing.' sad J wailing—gnarirhij to rear the Durham short horn up nothing but to write puffs?for am teeth, famine and death to fa on the same fare that the old New bitious persons. ‘ It don’t ¡rest him ing things. 4 if I SHERIDAN, OGN, England red cattle thrive upon; anything,to live, j” - - As I am now in the or drinkX or trav< but every such attempt has been a you, the question na Ch>nenres the State for 8TYIÆ, FASHION, and DURABILITY. nlTm3 to him. > failure. The short horn must be of no use “Who AmI?L^ f —1 • ____ --------- better fed, and better cared for, or Treatment of Miìfac for 1 itter* «Misare a their progeny will relapse into in JAMA* MC CAIX. KVGENB 8VLLIVAN. f • ferior stock, even though the blood MeCAIN 4* SULLIVAN, Milk designed for butter-mak “t doy» when be pure on the part of both sire ing, as a rule, should be agitated ated ng was considered ATTONTEYS AT LAW, and dam.--- Ex. 1 .i H i- nffl means te cream of grace, and anniversary m' I as little as possible until tlieqream procès- fl L afayette , O regon . If William 1 ♦. Anderson, a .1 A Ann Arbor, has risen, We cannot say’ that sions, picnics and Chriptmi n of the Were ip the very distant I ill PRACTICE IN ALL OF THE Midi;,' write» to the American such a moderate aj Stato Court». marllvStf Farmers’ Club Ihit he has lost milk as would aris from many o<<hjs fowls in the following skimming, as above di ’bed, • i I manner;—The first symptom ap would lessen the quantity cream, Sunday School teacher “John, how many CHAS.Â. BALL. * BfOTT pears is lameness io one leg; after This has been abundently proved there ?” BALL <fc STOTT, ‘ a few days both legs become so by experiments made on milk, a _ weak that they cannot stand, and port ion of which has been Retained 1 ♦ “Two.” Attorneys at Law> pine away and die in two weeks, at the farm, and the rest: sent by (Sternly) “How mar t,'iffl.Three, sir.” 111 First Street, Opposite Occidental Hotel. and sometimes less than that In wagon and railTto the cjty. city. In “John, kow m-a-uy In reference to this matter, Wash; numerous instance« where e a » care care- PORTLAND, OREGON. I ington Hills, of Long Island, says: ful test of such milk h|* been there?” janlOtf “ Four, sir. “One cause of the disease > com made, the milk that hai least At fivo jbe flogging comm plained of is allowing the fowls to distributed, threw up tHe moat J and continued, .while John eat pumpkin seeds. About^tbe time cream. * J A ------ - rapidly and by regí farmers take in their corn and Volcer made the following ex «ion to ten. Beyond gather their pumpkins, almost inva- periment: He look 100 measures ribly the cattle are treated to a’ of new milk and set it aside fused to go, and was meal of pumpkins. . If the turkys for twenty-four hours, at a tem home. I As he di length, along, he met'á «I PRINCIPAL. are around the barn-yard they also perature of 62 degrees Fahrenheit, mheit, way to the same school have a meal of seeds, and so sure when it gave twelve per lent, nt. of “Going to that Sun •»-x, ‘ a« they do so they wil|| be lame. cream by measure, while! aF the < fMYERM COMMENCED SEPTEMBER 15. “Yes.” JL J873. ______ r Sometimes it kills them. At any same time a little quantity, quantity of the j fJYou are, arg you? TUITlONj rate they do not get over it. They same milk, after having been gent many Gode are there 1 will stay lame all the season, and lv HIGHEST GRADES........ .«7 per Quarter. ly shaken in a bbttie. bottle, threw dp- up- “One,”7«toutly an INTERMEDIATE GRADE 5 “ nothing will fatten them.” ; only eight per, cent, of cream. boy—“one.” PRIMARY^* * * ' • 4 •• M LANGUAGES, (extra)'.I per menth. James M. Bookstaver, of Ruth This shows that the shading Jo “Go “One,” chuckled . IWPapib can enter at any time. which milk is subject, when car- erford Park, N. J., writes to the .noSO-tf with on, ¡my boy; go on up —................................. — ried long distances io wi agons or time same Club and says that he opened your one God, and a bv railway, has the qffect of ten, the crops of two valuable chickens yoa will have of it. breaking some of the cream glob v to that died suddenly, and they were and they flogged me ulea, in consequence of whieh whidh death” T- H filled with corn and squash seeds. ules, __ .._ -S___ ii_ either the fatty matters remain T The seeds had created a watery ?»£ Mart Tayldr Principal CMQrwin/1 oil » r* wk11 mOrC that suspended in the milk, or more ¿ There are in Provid I, W7Y0R GIVING THE YOUNG MEN OF fluid, greatly discolored, JC Oregon a thorough Business Education could find no outlet, and evidently probably the cream thrqwn up eighty-five jewelpry in fat.— X .Ji ^Villardj j shops employing twenty-t at caused the death of the fowls. gets richer hmv ---------- Mhis is something new to us, and! dred and fifty persons, NE HALF THE USUAL PRICES, Oranges arc raised in Sdn Ber- iop at Albany, Linn County at all may be to our readers; but it is at nardino measuring 16 inches in a business of si^ Slid time«: • ' ( ‘ . ” least worth investigating, t Every dollars annually. Th circumference. ♦ r fall and winter we hear farmers braces every grac -------- — PAT AND NIGHT SCHOOL and others complain of their fowls A healthy man who coi its to est and best, to tl farmers and others wishing to edacate their sodden! dying, and llve^ipon other« doesn ’ t bo to the variety is as 1 sons can obtain full partiefila« by .addresa- one iAf the PrindpaJ, genuity of the hu ptfmS, £ublihhe<l ev¿ry VMUy by t ■< Id > « yix I -il- ■' ‘ T W r C • V ■ ■ - * *■ J - ‘ ■ I . ■ ■ —...................... ■ - - ' • I ’■ _ l I 5 * I. * *** ’ i ■ ■_ T-r ! I i* f’isL Fashionatile Bool Maker, ■ ■■ ; I f 1 t M í W < i ■Is, » < ¿ r Í I fl ) ___ « I ■ I . fcl« r __ — —J.. , , „ ¥! I Albany Commercial Caller I J (* „ » Wome >n—-What r ■ III I is to be CLIPPINGS. > ? I The hardest - agricultural I rork The only very extensive and i long-lived ---- u - î L j l organization ___ of women on a farm—Raising a njortag h t r are the societies ieties called called orders in the Boman Catholic ! Church. Tfio amount of work that is done by these organizations in the way of charity, education, and prop- agandism, is perfectly astonishing. Their existence for centuries and their progi’ess at the present day afford« proof that Women can or ganize and govern when properly directed. There are thousands of wamen enrolled mroi in these numerous sociefîetj on orders; J . and these or- ~~ ganizatioM • m | i are rapidly increasing, i and “ * by the ' rules adapting them- selves to the material and moral wants and the intellectual require- ments of thé progressive civiliza- i tion..of ’ «... i the world. J — They are mis- mogt effective sionaries o\ character, teaching by example andpractic and practice more than by words. What is 1 the secret of their suc cess and permanency ? Is not this question wejl worth study ? When we see ho “ ‘ efficient organized bodies of wpmen can be made, does it not become us who are in terested in t|ie vexed question of woman’s woi >rk " and wages to ex- e: amine the pi iractical operation of a system which provides for so many women while successfully throw- ing them in to organized bodies governed by codes of laws and rules whose utility has stood the test of time ? Could we 'not modi- fy and apply those laws to meet the demand! of the masses of working women in this country ? Can none but Roman Catholic women unite and organize? Is it necessary tilt t all such organíza tions should ' te composed of worn- en bound by la vow of celibacy? Hav» not American women suffi cient incentives to induce them to form co-operative organizations, with laws med to meet the material an moral wants ' of workers in jtlie ranks of labor, trade intellectual effort, organiza tions as vari< ‘ 1. earnest and effec- tiva as the < dera for women in the Boman Catholic Church ? 1 ;—11 ■ *» I ■ Never court the favor o' the' rich flattering their vanity or heir I c vices. There^s a y’e differanci be* tween yearning for money and eirningit. By the side of the lar drone, the convicted criminal looms up as an angel. Econemy is one thing, parsi mony another. *And tney ar $ different as black and wiiite. Matrimonial—It -is not nowadays for a man to off hand if there’» nothing in it. The light of friendship is|like the light of phosphorus- plainest when all around is |ark. ' The superiority superiority of some men mem is merely local. » They are ¿res b«- e.. cause their associations are v- An ingenious Boston girifhas taught a squirrel, in his revoking cage, to turn her sewing m L California claims tohave gained ion 25,000 population by emigrJ/- within the last twelve months. f Texarkana, the southern If" inus of the Cairo and Fultou 1 ail- road is*named from Texas, Ad 11- sas, and Louisaua. ido Mrs. Edwin M* M. Stanton, wide widow of the late Secretary, is seriojs ill’ at her home in Germantown. || A son and daughter of thejjhm bus Davy Crockett are living Ju ous Acton, Hood county, Texas,* Texas, Fires—What shall We do Them ?” queries the Chicago at tlie head of its leader.. Pu ou-ut, stupid'. A citizen of Rock county, W cousin, is recorded to have said, can always tell water when I it—it looks 60 much like gin.” || The Independent Republjgan. ticket has been successful in i.yr oming notwithstanding the efforts of Gov. Campbell and his officials. No women were, .nominated i^or r elected. ]•'. 7 ■ < -'n I ala! ii The colleges of the New TMg » land States, New York, New <|er- sy,_ and Pennsylvania, confered during the present year 2,515 |de- groes, of which one hundred ¿nd eighty-two were honorary. t r It Is important that the public should fully linderetand ihe extent * wrong -------- in ¡n expelling the set set- of the tlers from ti ne ceded lands in Kan- sas for the benefit of twp railroad corporations. These lands were The value of the whiskey |lc*{ occupied by industrious emigrants stroyed by Gen. Stanley in fhc at an early day in the settlement Yellowstone expedition was eight of that part of the state, the oc thousand dollars. This was apan • J cupants complying with every form from what was destroyed by drink and regulation required by law aw to ing. " secure them in r the 1-“ 7 possession ------ of The Supreme Court of Wised»4 were their property. The lands were sin has affirmed the constitution then a wilderness; the settler« settlers, have cultivated them.*and by their ity of the Graham liquor law. labor immensely increased their its opinion the Court says value. Many of the settlers are the Legislature possesses the now comparatively old men, and qualified power of prdhibiti * *” « growing up around It may lipense, and affect the have families them. Yet I by means of careless cense with such restraints, co legislation and nd unjust decisions in tions, and responsibilities as the Interior-Department, these pleases, growing out of tho * act hardy pioneers of civilization are sale. It may couple the li threatened with éviction from with conditions so oppressive ai their homps, and one hundred burdensome that no citizen can : thousand acres of improved lands ford to apply for or accept rightfully belonging •nging ‘to them «re are privilege and engage in the to bo given to railroad corpora* ;« ness; and thns the act, thoughn ere not even in ex- tions which were ex inally otherwise, may amount t istence until long after they had prohibitory law. The decisio settled upon aud improved their regarded as a signal victory farms. There is good . reason to the temperance party. ' f believe that tlie seizure of these* i The following extract is farms is only a part ia one of the from the Cincinnati Gazette, most gigantic land-grabfcing land-grabbing ijournal of Deacon Richtifd oncooted, including vthe truly good man: schemes ever among other atures the absorp “This is the verdict of tho tion of a great portion of the In dian Territory by railroad com plo* and when President would have have no no poliw pol _______ panies and ladd speculators. The said he ous Senator Harlan enforce against the will of thi peo-i name of the pious i.t|i is mentioned r in _ connection __ _____ __ with pie, he Set an example thift it? this plot, whidh Of itself is-enough would be well for Congressmen to*? to suggest the conclusion that no follow;''and if in furtherance oft! scruples of codscience are likely to thi* iden, he had vetoed t arw-gFi gTab bill, even* at the t interfere with its consummation. o5the increase of his ewr A gentleman reading a news- it Aould have been the me paper a few. days ago, asked a ulaf act of hi» life?r- friend: “What’» 1* the meaning of ■’It is not often that rco the Bohemian Diet, about ; which dork and patriotism can be we hear so much of late ?” • “Free expressed in the same num lunches,” was the reply. words than we'have here