Willamette farmer. (Salem, Or.) 1869-1887, September 10, 1875, SUPPLEMENT, Image 12

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    SSSSBSESSssf&ammamsammmn
muiwtMfti Mimseww
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I
Tka.tan's Column. Trajan's col
umn wits erected at Homo in tlio mid
ji. -ii. -..-..., .,.iml nfior t in same
emperor: but tlio other buildings of
tins lorum mu i. i.h-v, hj """'
library, temples, arches, porticoes, stat
ue.s, etc.-have all Wen thrown
down, leaving the column alone staiul
iiiL' in its original position, "was
erected by tlio Senate ami people or
Jloinc in commemoration of tlio victo
ries obtained by tlio Emperor Trojan
in his two expeditions against tlio JM
cians; In the ilrst of wlucli lie compell
ed them to sue for peace, and In the
second conquered them entirely.
There does not, probably, exist any
monument in tlio world more precious
or more exquisite in its proportions
Hum Trajan's column, nor one which
lias rendered more capital .service. It
is of pure Carrara marble, 'i ho .shaft
is about ninety-seven feet, by twelve
diameter at tho base, and ten below
Hie capital, which, like the shaft, is
Doric, and composed of a single block
of stone. The statue is composed of
thirfv-threo enormous blocks of mar
ble, of which eight compose the b.ie,
twentv-threo the shaft, one the capital
mid one tho pedestal supporting the
htatue. Every -stono is hollowed In
the middle, so as to consist, in fact,
of u mere ring; and a central vertica
fipcituro is loriiieu, wim-u - i --"
bv n spiral stalu-iwe fiom the bottom to
the top. Tho column was anciently
bin-mounted byustatuo of tho liiiiiper
or, and later by u llguro of the. apostle
Ht. Paul. The he id of the original fig
ure supported a golden ball, Which is
now preserved In tho capital, anil
which is mid to have eontained the
Sislieof tlio emperor. ., .
A verv leiiiniealilo feature- in this
column is the mode in wliiclj it hiIm
orated. There N a series of bns-rolioK
riiniiing round tho (olumn iiiiuiasroiitl
ing spiral libbon, which makes twenty
revolution-, or turns of the biiitl beloro
reaching the top. On this is represent
ed (lie chief incidents in Hie 1;
victoiles of Timj.im, together With tho
two tilumph-il pio ''ssioiiH y which
they were celel rati d. The bas-reliefs
represent the arms, the accoutrements,
tho engine-, of war, the dwellings of
the barbarian--; wo discern tho breed
of tho wairlors and tlieir horses; we
look upon the ships of the time, canoes
and quinqiieromes; women of all
ranks, pi lests of all theologies, sieges,
andasMult Muh are the merits ol
this-culptured host, that I'ollydore of
Carravaggio, (Julio itoniano, MiJmel
Angelo, and all the olllcer.s or the
Jtenaisince have drawn thonce models
of style and picture-quo strategy. J he
pictures aie not fewer than between
two and three thousand, the figure ot
'Trajan himself occurring as ni.iny as
ilftv times. In the lower part oi the
shaft the liguros aio each about two
feet in height; but a- they ascend, anil
siro further removed from tho eye,
llioir dimensions are enlarged, and aio
liioio deeply woiked, till at the top
they become nearly doublo tho .size ol
those below.
From Tiir. Mkrosi-oit. to tiii:
AVolil)i,ir,i..-The other day a Detroit
father purchased a microscope lor his
Mill, a boy of ten, patted the lad on tho
bliouldoi! and said to him:
"Mvmiii, take this microscope, and go
out and study the beauties of nature."
Tho boy left all other amusements
for that, and ho took such gieat inter
est and inipioved so rapidly, that at
tho tea table, to which several visitors
wit down with the family, ho lelt that
lie must make mhup remarks. 'I uriiing
ton lady, he inquired:
" Did you overlook at cheese through
ft mli'i-os'iope'.'"
" 1 don't think 1 ever did," she re
plied pleasantly.
"Well, you Just ought to seo tho
things erawl "
"John! John! " exclaimed tho fath
er, .shaking his head at the boy across
tlio table.
John sub-ided for a moment or two,
and when his mother pas-ed thocheeso
around, everybody .said, " Thank you,
no." Pretty soon the young student,
desiring lo'mollify his father, asked;
" Kat her, did you ever look at a toad
through a uili-io-cope'.'"
" 1 will talk with you after .supper,"
replied the parent scowling at the boy.
John was rather disappointed at his
failure to arou-e iMithu-tasni, and just
as the sir i beuies were bolus passed
mound, he reniaiked:
"Well, you just ought to look at a
strawberry om-o through the micro
wopo! They look just like warts, they
do, and you think you seo bugs run
ning "
".lawn! " -aid lilt mother.
" Hov! " warned his father.
"Well, they look woim'ii llio's heads!"
protested the boy, who imagined that
they doubted his truthfulness, " for
ilios "
i Hov ! " said the father, making a
motion' for John to leave tho table.
John lelt, and as soon as It was con
venient Tor him to do so, tho father es
oorted tho lad to tho wash room in the
basement, bounced him around, and
said:
" Jly son, glmmo that micro-cope,
mid you take tho a and go outandstu
lv the beauties of that woodpile! "
Jftlnt boy continues to feel as he
does at present, ho will become a bank
robber instead of a naturalist. Detroit
JYer y.w.
Tt in said that about 0,000 die every
venr In India from Miako bites, while in
Iho cour.su of IvSliT-S-O as miny as OKI
parsons were destroyed lu same coun
Irv by tigeivs. Many in India aro op
iwseo to tho destruction of those mil
liuils, except, in fair light as game,
fn that to a certain extent there is in
tut country what may bo called tiger
preserving M'. Hi the above result.
BETTER THAN GOLD.
TSettor than grandeur, bettor than pold,
Tlinn rank nml titlo a thousand fold,
In n lioallliy body, a mind at me,
Anil slmplo pleasures that alivavs ptpa'P;
A boart ttiat can fool for a nelglibor'n wee
And share his jojs nllli a initial b'owi
With sympathlos large enonah to enfold
All men as brothers, is bolter than gold.
Hotter ttjan pold.ls a conscience elenr,
Tlio' tolllni? for bread tn an humble sphere;
Doubly blest with content anil health,
Unlrled bv the Inst of cares of wealth.
liOtvly llvlnK and loftv tlfoumht
Adorn and oiiiioWh a p'ior maii'n cot:
For man and morals, or nature'x plan,
Are tho gdnulnu test of a gentleman.
Hatter than cold U swoot repoo
Of tho cons of toll when their bors cloe;
Hatter than pold Is a poor man' deep,
And the balm that drops ou his slumbers
deep.
Hrlng sleeping draughts to tlio downy bed,
Whole luxury pillows his aching hoad;
His simpler opiate labor deems
A shorter road to the land of drcjms.
Hattor than gold Is a thinking mind
That In tho realm of books cm llud
A treasure snrp-iHlnir Australian ore,
And live with tho iun.it and rooiI ofyore.
The sago's lorn and the poet's lay,
The Klorios of empires pasHed away;
Tho world'n gret drama will thus enfold
And jiold a pleasure better than gold.
Hattor than i;old Is a peaceful homo,
Whoro all the llreslde charities come;
The shrine of love nud the heivon ot llfj,
Hillowod by motlier, or sister, or wife.
However liumblu the homo may be,
Or tried by mrrow with Heat en's decree,
Tho blessings th.it inner wore bought or
(sold,
And centre thrre, aro better than gold.
MOLLY MOMARTY.
Molly Morlarty,
I'lnk of pioprinty,
Molly MorUrty, Molly my o n;
Shuro 'tis vour Tim is sail,
How could ills heart bo ulad,
Since liko an Iclulo Molly has (rown.
Ooh 't ttns j our eyes so hluo
(lut my poor heait in two,
lOich took a half or Ir, can led it off;
Tliiin when I spoke of Ioe,
Swore by tho stars Hhot e.
Suro'tvses uuUind of jeu, Molly, to scoff.
Oftat my cibln dnnr,
Wlien tho dull day Is o'er,
Hvlly 1 sit and send slns on tlio gnlo;
Kiln Irom my tvmplnt; eyes
Fully a stream supiilles,
Where drink thu co.va that aregrazad in the
valo.
Virs In it praMn pstUi,
ltuunliiK a riitiiu' match,
K)v in tho buttormllk diinking her (ill;
Cow lu the c.ibb.ines,
Making sad ravages
Every thing gone to destruction at will.
Honn In tho waters deep,
'lim'a woary head shall sleep,
Suckers and shiners shall nibble my nosoj
Waves rolling over mo,
Singing a lullaby,
Or a sad requlum when tho wind blows.
What's lli.it you'ro sayln', joy?
Tim, come and kiss me. bov !"
Here, hould my hat, while I ship ou tfco
11 u re;
Como to my arms, my love,
Molly, iny'turtlo dove,
Wh'oop! what a jewel you are, to be sure.
PniMUDicn. No man on earth is .so
much to bo pitied as the man of preju
dices, lie builds a wall of mud around
himself by which he shuts out tho .sun
light, and shuts himself in, away from
all genial influences. No man is so
miserable as ho. His mind grows nar
rower every day instead of oxpanding
us it should, like the flower that opens
it.s rosy petals to tho sun and dews of
heaven. Such a m in is liko the dog in
tlio manger; he neither grows fat him
self, nor cm believe that any body else
is flourishing.
Tho man of prejudico is generally
Ignorant. He is unable to see but one
side of people or tilings, and that is tho
dark side, lie is a man that reads lit
tle or nothing, so that his mind is not
informed or enlarged, but is compressed
into tho inllnitesini d compass of self
and tlio narrow surroundings. JIo meas
ures all things from his darkned
sphere, and cannot get light enough to
seo tha others aio outstripping him on
every hand, and that ho will soon bo
loft alono to gropo in tho increasing
darkness.
The man of prejudico has never
traveled; has not seen much of the
world, if he had his prejudico would
have been knocked away or worn oil"
by attrition. As it is, they have grown
aiul increased like the barnacles on the
sides of a ship which hinder her pro
gress more and more. Such a man can
seo nothing, believe nothing good of
those against whom his prejudices have
nri-en. He looks for, and hopes for
their downfall or failure.
The man of prejudice is really a crim
inal, lie has passed Judgment before
hand, and stands ready to east dirt on
Ids neighbor's lair name. Hois not to
bo trusted. He is not tit to boon a jury
whoro correct judgment is called for;
in hishundslawund jtistieo must sutler,
(ilvo him no place of trust, pass him by
ou the other side. Ho is not safe as a
member of society, whose very founda
tions he would destroy. Ills opinion is
not worth a straw, and the people soon
find him out. His iiillueuce Is at zero,
because of his freedom in expressing
Ids distorted or false opinion oi'others.
Journal of Hdiwatlon.
Kentucky, a State which possesses
tho greatest cavo in tho woild, as well
as some other things of unusual magni
tude, Is to have, it Is claimed, tho
highest bridge In the world. It is to
be constructed of iron, by tho Baltimore
Ilridgo Company, for tho Cincinnati
Southern Hallway, to span tho Ken
tucky Itiver at a point near Shaker
Ferry, whoro tho grade lino U "275 feot
tl Inched above tho water.
Tho Russian Government Is engagert !
In putting fifty thousand cavalry on a
war footing. ,
The Steamship Soythia's Encountsr with
a Whale.
The Cork Examiner lias the subjoin
ed particulars of the encounter of the
steamship Scytiiia witli a huge whale
to which it may be added that Mr.
John E. Shopard, of Brooklyn, who
was a passenger on board the bcythia
at tho time of the extraordinary co II
sion, .savu there was no perceptible
shock felt when the whale was struck.
Neither ho nor nny other passenger In
the &aloon knew anything of the occur
ences until the whale was killed and
the steamer's propeller broken, 'xhe
big fish, which was upwards of ilfty
feet long, was afterwards taken on board
by a tug, and conveyed into port. 'I he
Examiner .'ays:
Tho Canard Royal Mail StcamerSey
thia, which arrived inOtiecnstown har
bor yesterday morning, from Liverpool,
met with an extraordinary accident. It
all went well during the passage down
tho channel, the weather being mode
rate, and tho sea smooth, and when be
tween Jlnllcotton Island Roche's Point,
distant from tho land about three miles,
the ship struck something which caused
her to vibrate all over. Several of the
passengers felt the shock, and looking
overboard they saw a hugo whale lise
at tho stern, and leap over ten feet out
of the water. A volume of blood also
burst from tho fish audit wasclearly seen
that the propeller had cut a gash estimat
ed at twelve foetlongthwisOjtliroughtho
body of tho iisli, which is stated, by the
eye witnesses, to have been over flftv
feet long. The ship at the time of the
casualty was steaming thirteen miles
an hour. For yards round whoro tho
fish roso the sea was a beer color from
blood. Immediately on the arrival at
Queenstown, Captain Haines commu
niated with the Queenstown agent, Mr.
McQueen, who had divers sent down to
examine tho propeller, and it was
ascertained that one of the four blades
of the propeller had been broken clear
off. This collision must have been la
tnl lo tho whale, which will, if picked
up, bo a good prize for the Ballcotton
fishing boats. It, issuppo-cd that the
lish was iu-Ieep w lien inn into by the
steamer. Had the occuneiKo taken
place during the night, the shock would
have created a panic on board, and
would have been attributed to sunken
Wieckage. Too ship, otherwise than
the loss of the blade of her tan, is not
injured. Manv people aro incredulous
respecting this strange occurrence, and
tho account given of the accident would
,nf lu. ).rttin'jl irlilKil'lIK'. WITH lint it
that so many of the saloon and steerage
passengers saw the whale as lie rote
under the ship's stern. The diver who
went down to examine the propeller
states that there are particles ot tho
flesh of tho fish as if it were glued and
besmeared about the propeller. It is a
fatty substance.,
Tho dead whale has since floated
ashore.
1,'iiirTj tut Rwi vr. Iiii'i:. Dr. V,ol-
lows, of Now York, preached a di-
courso in ins ciiurcn lcccimy, wmi-u
was directed at the false maimer in
which children are brought up in this
country. Ho iis-erted that there was
never inn-thing like it in any other na
tion. Tho cause of the trouble with
children is, that we have a generation
of untrained parents, in haste to be rich,
tho husband toiling and the wife ex
pending, no timo given to the careful
training of the children at home,
daughters kept from all practic d knowl
edge of domestic Hie, exciting and sen
sational matters aro discus-ed in the
household whore only pure and peace
ful thoughts should prevail, Ostenta
tion being the rule, self-restialnt in
both manners and speech almost un
known, and a condition of tilings pre
vailing that would inevitably produce
a generation whose future could hardly
bo forotold. Dr. Hollows told a volume
of truths, but nothing but hard ex
perience will impress them on the gen
eral mind.
Ahout Kr.Yst. The invention of keys
is attributed to tho L-icedromonlans.
They were lirat iiiado of wood, and tho
earliest form was that of a crook intro
duced into a hole, to r.ii-e a latch or
removo a bolt. Such ancient keys as
exist aro mostly of bronze and various
shapes; tlio nio-jt remarkable are those
which have the' shaft terminated on
one side of tho works and on the other
by a ring. Those have been supposed
by some to be tho keys presented by
husbands to their wives, and whiih
were resigned upon divorce or sopira
tiivi. Among tho Anglo-Saxons a ser
vant was keeper of tho keys. Trades
men formally wore bundles of them at
their girdles,
"What thi: Giianoi: has Doxi:.
Our order has accomplished a vast deal
in Arkansas. It has taught tho farmer
to produce what ho consumes and live
at home. It has cheapened what he is
compelled to buy. It has taught him
self-reliance. It is making of the pro
ducers intelligent beings and men and
women of inlluence. It has given us a
genoral spring harvest of small grain
and gra-sos a tiling unknown before
in the annals of our State. It has ele
vated tho fanning class socially and
morally. It has been tho great lever in
elevating our State to itsprosont happy
political condition. Arkansas Graiijc.
Dr. Benjamin Clark in tlio London'
Milk Journal, states that in tho Ka.st
Indies warm milk is used to a great
extent as a specific for diarrhea. A
pint every four hours, says this writer,
will cheek the most violent diarrhea,
stomach ache, indolent cholera anil
dysentery. Tho ml k should nover bo
boiled but only heated sufHciently to bo
agreeably warm nut loo hot to drink.
Milk which bus been boiled is nut tit
lor ii.-o.
LlH-lMlMWi
CENTENNIAL.
1770. 1870.
PBOCLARHATBQM.
Chicago andHorth-West-ern
Railway.
T!o a'opuliu Iloutc overland.
"B'SA'nKar.ns fob rnicioo viwn Fan.
J I'lti.bini;. riilaili-li!.j:'.Titrnl. Ijiabre, Nlv
York, llo-tnn. or nuy point Kt, ebtnild buy lliulr
Tit AA SOOSTIN HIVT.V I. TICKIi VS
Ia the I'lnncer ItotMe,
THE
Chicago and Northwestern liailwny.
this is Tim ursT uoute east
' Its Tuck I of STEM, ItU S, mill on It hi. tjn
tlil-i-ountry. 11 thiirontopie. licnijr riioliiti'ai'of
nno tii. i i- w'i m r ttmrt in it nn mcr ut-Lii alu' in
Chicago n-necLoiceoimuiuium my m." .iixw..v
K'j:
UV THE PITTSIHJRO. TOUT WAYNE ASP CI1I-
CAUO A.NII 1'UMJI!)I1iV.'iahaiiiiiah,
3Tim0UGH TKAIN JiAILY, Hl'h fnllmuii P.1
ucP(.jrtliroiiEhtol'lillailclpiiu ami .uv York
on each train.
ITIIUOL'OII TfJAIN. wlthl'ullnnn PalacoCars to
II tltl Jiore ami Wilmington.
nv tiik r,Mcn pitoitR ANnanemow south.
ki:n haii.way Aisn co.n motion (nuw
YOISK CKNTItAl. AND EUIE lSULUOADfe):
O TIlllOI'OIl THMKS DAilY'. tli l'llac Dran
tj In" Uoom and hiher IVhco blt(plii-0aii' through
to Now York
uv the xirninAN centrat, mxn tiicxk.
uitKvr WI-TUIlN AJIJ l.ltlll AND HEW
YuliK CENTK V. It li. AYS
O TllimUOlI 'I ItAlNH, ith l'nlWnn Vilam Driw-
Invito in s.inl Vicr-I'ff '' "i Uirni.'li to New
Yoik, to Ni.-fe-i.ra Fulls, lii.flilo, itochieui, or Now
oik city.
1IY BALTIMORE AND OHIO HAU.RO AD:
,T THROUGH VUMNs IJUtiY, wlih I'lillman P'
mJ ace firs for Nun ark, Ziiicsvllli', Wncul.ng, Wu'h
liin'lon, ami llaltin.orj, without charge.
IhM tlin SHORTEST, REST, amlpivv lino nin-nlnu-
the- l'ullinn och-braH 1 1'iLU'H bl.hkPIN'U
OARS AND COACIIKS, po.iiit'ClliiB lth Hi'l' " Pa
cific Rillroad at OJIAiIA. knit fion til" WEST. la
r.ronl Jiinctlnn. l utliall, Cirtac H iphl. Clinton,
Slirllnsr, Md DI1.011. lor CHIUAUO AND 'J lift
LVbf.
Thlpipulai rouli'l. nunrinoil for tpnil, Com
fort, mid Ha civ. 'Iho nmoili, well lrtlUft-il. nml
p.rritt ttxrk i.l fttil rallrf, hu icldiriti-il Pullinan
IMicj Shciiini. Oir-., the lurlut Telegraph SiMcm
of iuov.ii-t.-uui.-.. the r.t'Ukirlty with whli.li they run,
tl oiulm railP.iirnis.emeiit for iiinmn,' tLrnuuli ca -to
t hluinfrnmn'l point We't. n-ime top'si.ng. rs
all the c otntorts in n, micro Rill.iy lrmlin'. No
cti-iii:i.' of CuimuI no tulloti. dils.. lit 1 ink..
ra.'Piiccr. will llml tltkei. U i this I'aviiRo Route
at 1.10 t.inni Ticket OlUce ol tho Central l'aci'lc
Jttillroi I, Sierainenlo.
1 Ickct ior tale in all the Ticket Ofikus of tho Cen
tral l'acllic Itnl ro ol.
W II s-TENNETT, Gen. Pas. Agent.
3UHTIN HUnillTl', Hen f-tip.
II. P hl'ANWOOll, C.einai Agent, 121 Mont
gomery tllet, ban FiiiulIccii. aiUttl
WOTBCS
TO
Farmers and Wool-Growers,
Wo irll hao
12,400 2E3COdc3l
or
ANGORA GOATS !
In the vliinlty ot .Tnds .rvlllo, Oif;on, liy the firft
(iiv of Al'Ul ST, 1-T), and .iU then pr cenl t-iwiri
snleni. Porbon Uliinc to purchaxeoi m ii tlio Hoali"
lhlllg ho ,n ,liii, pnlutf, will phacu llt to
Jackson. ill-, & (1 nuiiiu thl pot olVt.' and th near
it p"Iur in the '(.art to ll.elr plu m ret-lilentc. mil
wo will -nhl-i. Ihun by rail ulwhit time wi will I c
at Hif-h t.o nt.
Wc will mIi okv kind -f OoitR Hint roavh' ilo-ireil,
for n Ailrjirlcn, nml tor li mo o y tlun .ni.nl lolc
could bi nhlaliii'd lri.ni anj other m nun
tKT WE WH.I. HAE A I.l. OltAIJVO. FROM
IlAU'-'HU'.KDS UP TO -1 PlUtc-i.LT STANDARD.
.1mi. a few I"liro BSri'tili..
Addrc., IV.tl. 3W. liAMJISI'SI.
Ht kmiilile, Ort-'on,
Or tiVNDRU.M & RODOKIts,
July 7, l&TJliu WaMontil'i" Oil.
JONES & PArTERSLW
HAVK
FARMS FOR SALE
AM)
Buy and Soil City Property,
rent Hdirsss,
NEGOTIATE LOANS,
AND
Make Co3eclions.
JIGSWTS TOH.
Mntnal Life Iusuranco Company
OP NEW YORK.
Union "Firo Insurance Comp'y
OK SAN FRANCISCO.
JTEP ON HAND, you RIlATUITOrS CIROU
13i latlon, their " DiTrliitho La ml C'lienlr," a. id
"Iirtc-lpitio Circular ami Weatliir lino.-J ot Or
e'.'oii "
Oilier on cronml flwor, OPERA nOUSE IILOCK,
SU.i:U. llltEiiOV. aplOy
BOOTS and SHOES
Made to Older.
w Fiirni'Ts anil their Families
l . am u .alii remlntlcd thit I cin make
v!y-,:t3Se 'oodtl'tliii; ant itiIk-bIi.o lll0T
inal SIH.'L, of tlieior) lot (juitlli , ntamoet
reso.iablo lrne. Ktl'Allil.Nl! niaily djue All
work wurranud.
HENRY DIPPEL.
TAKE NOTICB tint my ?hop I umv renmed to
ono licur north nf luib!nV etubtt. on (mmoidal gt ,
n ttw iiuori wiiitri rf Ntwejupcrlllot k.
halcm, Ana. I-!, 175. Gm
Brooks &, MoParland,
(Succeiisoris to Fremh & Co.)
W1I0LESAI,E AND TAIL DEALERS IN
CienoraL RflcrchandicE,
Corner of second and Wajhlnclon itrect.,
DALLEs CITY, OREGON,
apll.w
Mrs. Eohrer's How Remedy
ro?. Tsca zanscs
IS 3TSSTJX0 mm woxdkufvl svccessi
milld PITHKLY VKOKTARLE nEMEDY HAS
X no equal in Din relief aiid euro ot Coughs, Colds,
llinia, HronchltU, Crocp, Whooping Cough, Mea
lo. .tc. It ha. produced irniw nmarkablo Hire.,
Iu by rtruKslit" peuerallv. Prtpircd only by
Ilr. K. UOHICRII, Monmouth. Or.,
To whom all ltlen of lniinrt l.onM bo "''dreed.
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
OPERA H0D8B, SAT.KM.
S. E. comer, at hoad of .tilt. .
fl!y
JOHN G. WRIGHT,
Dealer In
FAMILY GHGCEEIE3,.
Crockory and Glassware,
Wcoden and Willow Ware,
Tobacco and Cigars,
COJiaiEXtCIAk STRUCT.
Salem, April 20, 1173 d&"lf
I!STAIL(Hfli:: ISSA.
Willasactie Nurserv
G.W. WALLING & SON,
PROPRIETORS.
Os-wego, Clackamas co., Oregon.
Grower. of tho Choicest Varieties of
Particular attention bIicii to Chirry, Prnne aiid Plum
Irees tf-t
" LUCIUS Br3Ji,
Saccei"or to J. M. Khei.hi & Co.,
85 IilbcrtJ' nt., - - NEW TOItK,
TAOR nHYINCl AND FORWARDINO FROM
i; Niw York via Ipthmqi-, PacIDc Rnllroid, and
Vave Horn, all kind, of Jlerchondlpe, and lor tho .ale
of Product, from the l'acllic coa.t, for the collection
of mm cv. Ac oct6tf
ROiJGJUiiJS. MEYER & CO.,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS.
rOKTLAND, OREGON.
TfJIAItMEnS LINK TO LIVERPOOL DIRECT.
X1 Freljhl taken In lols to tuit. bhlppcr.
lilbornl ndvnilccH raiiJu on Pioduco .hipped
to our Llerpool ilouo.
OP PISH TOR SALE
500,000 G.rain Bags,
6,000 Wool Bags,
20 Bales Fleece T-ivioo.
fct.27 diwlf
Piiraer's Patent California Fruit-Dryer.
lntcutcd Dec. HO, 187-1.
THIS IS TUB CHEAPEST AND 3IOST Eco
nomical, larcet eapclty, and mot spiidy dryer,
and Rive. Iho Irull a hetlir ilmor, than any other nia
ililnu vvcrti cnled. 1st It only require, n .lied tn
tturk mid. r, Sd It ha. holler, entire, and etcam
pnnlptliatcnn ho UM'd for other purposes, In connection
Milti llwDrvvr. or .ipii.ilely. !id Tho cost 1. ono
hill le. thun any otlnr of tho ranw cajiailty, and
there!, no daw? r of burning the lruit. A sninple
iiiaihliic t. In full i.perntion atttio factory of t-pi.ul-iHni;
.t Kin . No. 81 Heale droit, ban Francl.co, Cal.
yend for Circular, to
S. A. CI.ARKH, Salem,
A'-ert fur Orearon and WihliiL-ton.
nihKtf T. .1. MATLOCK, Ajjiut at I'm Hand.
HEW GROCERY STORE,
North .side of Stale Street, first door
west of Van Wagner's Fur
niture Store,
XS THE PLVrE TO FURCHAHK PAJIILY OR0
ceries, as I paid cat-h lor the tntire Ht. ck, upd lon
.cquentli pmcuamd them ut tho LoWIi'aT pubaiblo
cost. 1 am prepared to .ill
Cheap for Casli and Kcndy Pay.
Vy motto Is, "Ready pay, quick talc, and i-mall
proilt.," lly lhi. mean. I can bell jjood. CHEM'UH
thin uiy other house in Salem. II yon have a dollar
to .pene1, call and .( i- that what 1 ted )ou 1. trio.
ft-." I altto Invo oine ery nlco and jtood PRINTS,
which 1 will till 11 yurdu to ibo tlolhir.
baleui March 13H. J 1'. VEATCH.
Sheep Cured of the Scab
Disease!
THE UNDERSIGNED WILL, UPON APPLIOA
tion, eoicnsje to euro Sheep having tho "fcCAU
DISEASE" ior
Ten Cents por Hoad.
Application hv letter or In perwin will h attended
to prouptly. K. tift If B,
ati-U ritxUt, Polk coM OruOD.
Salem Flouring EiDls.
BEST FAMILY FLOUR,
BAKER'S PATRA, XXX.
SUVSnFINK AND ORAIIAM,
JtlHDLINOS, HRAN, AND SHORTS,.
Coiiwtjuitlj- ou XXuutl.
IiliOKt. Price in 0-A.SXI
Paid for Wheat
ATAZ.Ii TIXXES.
K. O. KINNKT,
sept iatr
ient 8. 1'. M. Co
Cheapest Pump ftlade,
AND
The Best for all Purposes,-
I. TUB
COM3ION
WOOD PUMP,
MANUFACTURED BY A. PRESCOTT, AT TIIC
Capital Lumber Mill, Sak-ui, Oregon. These
haie hten
Thoroughly Tested
In Oregon, many hailns been manufactured and .old
last Tear-that glw perfect .atUfactlun. I manufac
ture and .ell
Wood Pump'', Tubinr, and Pipe.
Bpalrlnir promp-ly attenaid to. All work war
ranled. P Ice. a. follon.:
Twelve-fool Well $12
t W'OUD PlI'S SOLO Clll'AP.jm
Salem, Juno 1 U 1373, A. rUEhUOn
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