F t i v v -"y " ' A JV it i a i t j W Tsnua ADTERTISING RATES. R oatsos 2.S0 For Moath Far aa Inch of advertising (pace, to theflret month; 94,00 Per Xttonth Fortuolnihen; r,od Per Month Kcr thrco nihc, llh rcawr.atle terms for lontf time adtcrtliementr, Lecnl Advertisement I'ublhhcd on FAtoraMe Termi HUMMUS MKN DetlrliK liberal tpare 111 liax tpecta termt; not teas than (U per month lot a column of twenty Incite. )F SUBSCRIPTION orris tux Willamette Farmer. imu: Jtji itaiaptJ6o ' 2,50 Per Annum. j. SjTWIth tho added espenso ol nn en g urged luue c cannot aflonl tlio (viper Vi ''thout prc-j ment at lc than ' t? 90,00. TEX Uerealter our Invariable charge 111 be $2,50 in advnee, or m $3.00 flflpr Six mnnlhc. Arid prefer to liave pay In advance. i 1 ..( 4 a VOL. XL Home Circle Department. Wo nro veil awai-o of tlio fact tlmt tho Yaluo of tlio Faiimf.ii a a family paticr ia derived A inucll from A U'nll.pnnillli-frfl ITnnin f Circlo Department as from any other. O' l iio tins department has been neglected, ow ing to tho ill health of Mrs. Clarke, tho edi tor, liut Wfl am frliul in mnv that nhn la Well I Tj tgain, and will talco renewed Interest in her worn, mougii it may uo mat tor a icw wcck u to come, during which tlmo she will be re I moving to Portland to commenco housckecp t ing there, alio will hardly bo ablo to devote as f much time to it as alio could wish. When we are fairly llxcd and at headquarters with tho wholo family, every department of tho paper hall havo tho attention its importance de- rxnnili i Poultry on a Large Bcalo. Liko cvcrythlug else, poultry requires to ;have common sense used in its management, t There is common sense in a few hens being ikcpt by any man living in a city and having a small yard at the back of his homo, where perhaps he has a stablo with a pair of horses) but thcro would bo folly in his having great , numbers. Tiioro is good common scmo in ! having a lino lot of fowls running around every farm homestead, but none in keeping so many as to bring on disease Thcro would bo common senso in placing 1,000 hens in fam , Hies of CO over 'J00 acres, giving them full liberty to rango where they pleased, and hav ing their roosts so constructed that a yoko of oxen or a pair of horses could Ira hitched to I them and haul them to a now site when crops ( growing near required tho absenco of tho poultry, or when a coop hod been a good wliilo in one place, and tho surroundings were I becoming too much saturated with the manure, I On a largo farm with springs and running streams ol water, JU.UUU might Iks Kept ny .tersevcring attention in moving when uects .4 Xarv. and bv nlowino' soma crouiid all the hilo near by., and. also by planting patches I rye in Sepfimb, i to givo them green food through the winter, which would be availablo whenever the snow is not lying thereon. But it would bo folly for 10,000 or only 1,000 to be kept confined upon a few acres, yid ex)ect anything but disaster. With nmplo rango fowls will bo healthy in small families, and Wequlre little besides what they will find by foraging, at tho same tlmo they will lay eggs enough to make 92 per hen. Hut confine them on a few acres, and they will eat double of purchased food, and lay not more than 75 cents' worth of eggs per head in proportion to tho closo confinement. Ex. Hydraulic Mining. Editor Willamette Farmer; Had the old miner in the days of Sutter been told that there could bo invented a pro cess for mining placer mines, aud that one operation alono would perform tho labors of a hundred men in tho same length of time, ho would laugh at tho idea) thinking, no doubt, that such a thing was imuosiiblc, and could never be done. Vet snch has been done. The hydraulio mining pix, one of the great inventions in the history of mining, docs the work with ease and perfection. How insig nificant would seem the primitive and almost nodern method of mining when compared to the swift and more wonderful process now in rogue. The modern miner, in his search for gold, fackles even tho boldest of mountains, and with tho aid of the hydraulio giant, cuts and levers it in twain sifts its very contents un til the most tiny hidden treasure is brought ,o his view. Huge boulders are lifted from their restiug-places and carried away with the debris of the mine on the flood of water to the valleys below, there to work a mighty change in the peaceful homes of many a quiet settler. 8. A. ltonnocaii. Wildkrville, Josephine Co., Or., Feb. 10. Marion and Linn County Map. Editor Willamette Fanners Those maps of Kdgar Williams & Co. are regarded by many of your subscribers here as a huge bilk; and whether they may be correct as to some localities, they are regarded as be ing so incorrect in many respects as to be ut terly unreliable as a wholo. Not only this, but in my copy, as well as in another belong- ping to one of my neighbors, some of the leaves dropped out, proving so far the binding not well done. In some instances I can buv them now for $5.00, one-third of the coat, aud one i told me he could buy twenty of them for a dollar apiece. (How this may be I don't ow). They are sharp. They seem to me to pro ceed in this manner: first corral the county officers, Judge and all; then the county pa lters, as far as they can (see Statesman and Farmer); and then proceed to catch the Jl fry at leisure. 0. W. Hot. Sublimity, Feb. e. A Word for the Owls. Header, did you ever watch tho owl long enough to leant its benefit to tho farmer! Wo have seen with painful regret boys club bing tho little benefactor while seeking its prey of mico about tho barn. The littlo birds subsist entirely on mice and insects which seek their food by night. The owl is nocturnal, and therefore his habits aro not so well understood by many people as birds which fly by day, though quite tamo and often building its nest near tho farmer's house or outbuildings, where it may bo seen in tho twilight perched on a tree near by, or in tho bam, ready to pounco on the mout o that dnro show his head after dark. It is superior to puss, for tho reason that it can lly and over take mousey before ho can reach his hiding placo after being caught nibbling tho harness or tho groin-sacks, which ho does apparently out of wanton mischief. Mrs. Owl is not only useful in the barn, but will go to tho meadow or tho field of newly-sown wheat, where she is often seen lurched on a fence or a trie, ready to make war and destruction on the nocturnal pest of tho farmer. A species similar to tho snowy (ml whoio habits aro both nocturnal and crepuscular, which feeds on rats, rabbits, squirrels, etc. This bird may bo seen in cloudy weather, in tho morning and in tho twilight, busily (lying over the mi ado w in search of its prey, for it is an industrious and vigilant hunttr, and also generally keeps out of gunshot of tho wander ing lad who would fire on her for mere sjort. This bird often, when not persecuted, rears its young in the hollow of a tree near tho farm premises. It is an honest benefactor, and will not steal tho littlo chicken and other young fowls from their mother, like tho thiev ing rat is often known to do, but will often light upon him whilo engaged in his nocturnal depredations. No use, Mr. JUt, to squeal, for tho owl knows perfectly well how to hold you and prevtnt biting. You must now ay for the young chickens, turkeys, ducks, and the old goose' goiling by a feast on your own carcase by owl and owlets. We have tho long-cored owl, which proys on tho smaller quadnieds and insects, is noc turnal and very shy, but sometimes becomes a notorious thief by committing nocturnal depredations cu the domestic fowls of tho farmer, and when that gentleman puts in an appearance with a shot-gun, tho depredator departs in haste to a safe distance, to watch the landlord hunt in imagination tho skunk or some moon-eyed celtstial. Many times, after the farmer has returned to bed, his slumber aro again disturbed by tho cackling of some old hen announcing the return of the roguu to the hcn-roont, S. H. S. Dayton, Or., Feb. 10, 1879. Benefit of Laughing. Dr. Greene, in his "Problem of Health,'' say there is not tho remotest corner or little inlet of the minute blood-vessels of tho hu man body that does not feel some wavelet from the convulsion occasioned by good, hearty laughttr. Tho life principle, or tho central man, is shaken to its innermost depths, sending new tide of life and strength to tho surface, thus materially tending to in sure good health to tho person who indulge therein. The blood moves moro rapidly, and convey a different impression to all the organ of the kkty, as it visit them on that particu lar mystio journey when tho man is laughing, from what it doe at other times. For this reason every good, hearty laugh in which a person indulges tends to lengthen hi life, conveying, a it does, new and distinct stim ulus to the vital forces. Doubtless the time will come when physicians, conceding more importance than they now do to the influence of the mind upon the vital forces of the body, will make their prescription more with ref erence to the mind and less to drugs for the body, and will, in so doing, find the best aud most effective method of producing tho re quired effect upon the patient. Starting Tomato Plants in Paper Boxef. A correspondent of tho Iowa Homestead gives his method cf starting tomato plants He makes a wooden box two feet long, six inches wide and six inches deep. In this he seta 3d paper boxes two inches square on top and eix inches deep, without top or bottom. The boxes are made from pieces of strong paper ten inches long and six inches wide, folded so aa to make five parts, each two inches wide. Unfold these and pin the two ends flatly together. Nearly fill these boxes with fine, rich soil, and drop a half dozen seed in each. The large box can be put on a window-sill, or wherever is convenient. When the plants are well started, cut down to one in each box, and when the weather will ad mit, transplant to the open ground, wetting the soil in the boxes so tiiey can be handled without dropping the soil. Leave the tops of tho boxes an inch above the surface, to protect the young plants from cut-w orms. PORTLAND, OREGON, FEBRUARY 21. Tho Map Bilk. Pleasant Oiiovr. Farm, Morion Co., Or., Feb. 13, 1&70, I Editor illamctto Former! I would liko siiaco in your columns to soy n few words about this swindle, as I understand thoso samo sharps are starting in on two other counties in this State, as they did in Linn and Marion last year. Now, Mr. Editor, not withstanding those men havo been smart enough to corral all of our county and part of tho State olliccrs, and part of tho editors in this SUtc. we say they corralcd them, for wo do not know what other term to give it, for wo sco their names siimcd to articles stating mat tins map was a complete ami cor rect man. which wo claim is incorrect. I would liko to know what right thoso men havo to blow on an article that is as big n swiudlo as this mop, any moro than wo havo to givo an opinion, when we can substantiate an mat wo say in regard t it. Tti ittn flrf t.lnj-A T.. ... flml. .,.!. .. IIIVIII., JIUIVV tllUY, Ul fcllll. .lk,Vlll(. I I'l, resented that thoso maps should bo well put together, and Hell bound. This is not tho case, for 1 know of several that tho leaves aro falling out now. In the next place, they rep rcacnted that each man' land ihoiild bo marked on tho map oorrcctly, thou ing tho lines and tho number of acres each man owned. Tlnjt is not done. Thuy havo pro tended to do so, but havo failed in tho at tempt. I do not know how it Is in other ports of tho county, but I do know how It is in mis. incro is not one mans una in twenty that is marked correctly, nor his buildings located as they were to be. And yet ono would supioic, from tho puffs that I havo seen in two or thrco new (papers, that this map Is Just what each man In those coun ties should carry with him to keep from git ting lost. Now, one reason, I ray, they must havo corralcd some of the newapapers. I know of somo of them that have refused to publish ar ticles exposing tho swindlo of thoso maps. I do not proposo to understand tho duties of newspapers or thoso that edit them, but be lieve that it is the duty of all such men, when there is such a swindle as this going on. if they do not feel disposed to say anything about it themselves, they should allow others to speak through their papers, as each man is responsible for what ho says, not tho editor of the psixr. I got'somo of this swindlct they brought ono to my house and left it, 1 examined it and found that I was swindled. In a few dav after thev camo back to mv placo and claimed that I owed them SI 6.00. After giving him a pieco of my iniud, I gavo him the fifteen dollars, and told him that I considered the man worthless; that ho could toko it for five dollars; ho said ho would, but did not, aud I guess tho reason why ho did not was, that ho knew whero ho could get several for S-'.CO. Now if thoso editors that havu refused to publish articles exposing this swiudlo havo not been supplied with those mps, they can git all they want in this neighborhood at their own price. Notk cr Ewtok. No ono has "corralcd' us. Wo of course publish what op!o havo to say on this subject, A ncpaptr that would refuse to do so has not much claim to public confidence. Membership of State Orange. Oregon Static ( ramie, Mastku'i) Oitick, Osweuo, Feb. 17th, 167a Editor Willamctto Farmer; Permit me through your paper to call tho attention of the Stato Orange Deputies throughout thejjuriidiction, to Article Second of the lly-laws of the Stato Orange, which reads as follows) ARTICLE II MEMBEIHIIIP. Section 1. This Orange shall bo composed of representatives from each county in this Jurisdiction, chosiu by thrco delegates from each Grange thereof, uon tho basis of ono Master or Past Master, and oue Matron, the wife of a Master or Past Master, for every six Granges, and one Master or Past Master, and ono Matron the wife of a Master or Fait Master, for every fraction thereof. Masters, Past Masters, and their wives, who are Matrons, shall bo honorary members, entitled to the fifth degree, and eligible to oliice, but not entitled to vote. tin: 2. And it shall he the duty of the delegates of each county to meet at the county seat of their respective counties on the first Saturday of April, or within tin day there after of tach year, between the hour of 7 A. m. and '-' r. x., and elect representative to the State Grange., for the ensuing year, of which meetings four weeks notice shall be given by the Deputies for said county, I trust tho Deputies will not fail to give the notice required by tho above article, and that the subordinate Granges will not fail to elect delegates to their county Grange. Conventions at the regular meetings in March. A. It. Sinru.v, Master Oregon State Grange. Dog and Sbeep. "For two year in succession dogs havo killed our sheep. The tax on dog annually collected in each town is set apart to pay the damages they cause. The damage so far ex ceed the award that several year will elapse before the tax will pay off claims already audited. Any oue who kteps a dog and dot not give him three "square" meals a day, ought to be fined. If this weru dono thcro would be but viry few sheep killed by dogs. Until this is dene or &t all events until dogs aro better fed the starving cur will help himself to mutton. He really ought not to be blamed as much as the thoughtless or cruel owner," So speaks the genial Col. Curtis in the N. Y. Tribune. Neglect of Young Chlckeni. Whilo t le.'famior is busy during harvesting, and ihil this family in the stress of tho season Is p-esscd Into service, tho growing chickens ro sometimes forgotten, and cr haps a fcV hints may bring to mind their sit uation. j Iho hens Icavo tho chicks, they feel lost at night, and poke themselves into nasty cor-, or into old boxes, coops or bar rels, wlicn,tht.y pile together, sometimes one on tho othtr, crushing the weaker ones to death before) this stato of things is (Uncovered. Often the tilth accumulates so thickly that thoy lie bn a hnp of it at night, and liccomo infestel vth parasites. A very littlo care will renuxly this, and keep tho birds in health. Sometimes, however, they aro very stuhbornVtout a place of their own choosing. They cithtjr run back to the samo place, after Wing driven away, or they scatter in all direc tions, thus-running into greater danger. Provide temporary houses or l.trgo boxes with low perches, and placo them near tho coops rhHfw ere ticcnpicil by the hens nnd chtVkt. llradually move tho coopi townrds tho teraViufy house h little every day. )y this mean) the chicks will get near to tlio new roosting-placcs, and by moving away ono coop at a;?;Tio, they will settlo Into tho tem porary home. This, in turn, cin bo moved near the fowl-house which they aro to occupy. This will live a great deal of annoyance, for wuat is more tantalizing man running down chlckeni night after night, whilo they are willing tlwt yon should rejieat the operation M eftcn Ut you please. If they take to n placo w1miq you cannot get in, and they aro pcrsiitcoy you may sometimes drivo down a few stakrs.and block tho entrance with an old door or a few boards. If you havu convenient tree frr ti.tru to roost on, by all mean let them itt-hem during summer and early fall. Although it Is some trouble, and requires a little pooytsmpcr to get them in their houses fti ttii,filMlmo or two when cold weather coniet.t'tttriOr'jiialtli'.-MMlMlin will ronar your pains. Fed them with grain twIC'a day, even theugli tney get miicn o; tneir owu livinrj for some grain is necessary for their health, and moreover, it lessens any inclina tion of their to do mischief in the garden among. t tho fruit. llural Now Yorker, How to Manage Poultry. CONIINI'KH. Tho houio lieing prepared aud tho number of fowls selected, and everything in order, to prove tho matter fully, an account should be kept. First, tho cost of your house and poultry fixturts, then tho cost of your fowls. Tho houso is eight feet high, eight feet wide, and twclvo feet long, and the coat should not exceed tUO. Suppssing the number of hens to bo tvo dozen, at the rate of four dollars per dojen, making tho capital invested not over ?30. Hegin your account on tho first of tho month, charge the amount of food you feed each day to the iKiultry, and givo them credit for every egg thoy lay. He careful not to cheat them cither in the food or tho num ber of eggs they turn over to you, for If you manage them properly they will soon bring back the ?30 you have aid out on them, and a handsome profit lcid(.s. Hoir to manage them to make them lay is the question now. 'Hiiro are several way to do this, principally by feed, although they must be kept frto from lice. First of all things, be sure to kiep fresh water so that fiey can haeadrink a soon a they come off the roost. This I havo learned by watch ing my fowls when turned out in the morn- ijg, whin they will go direct to tho crtek if not detained, and take a drink before eating their breakfast. After they havo had water, feed them aliout one gill of wheat to each bird. Ikiil the wheat every few days. At night, or in the evening liefore going to rooit, give them a good feed of bran maah mixed with the scraps and dish-water from the houte. Alio givo them a small quantity '' freih meat, which it better if it lie cooked. Keep all disease from them by using c food. This article can be obtaiuid from at poultry fancier, as they cannot do without i'. and it tost but a trifle. It will keep tin plumage bright and tho comb red, aud help to make them lay. Poultry-raising is a scientific And pleasant I business, an ornament to any farm, and pays a good profit when thus managtd, Wii. Short, Alder Grote Poultry Yards, To bo continmd. The Paloute Country. Tlio publishers of thu Palouse Gazette have iuutd a littlo iamphlct that dtacriU Whit oan County, W. T., and pin-pictures the Uwns as will as thu charming end divirsified country of which wo hear so much. We have no reason to suppose tho a Ivantcges of the country ovtritatod, or its projucts overrated, and the jaiaphlct, which wo hate lwrusid with intertst, deserves to be widely ciicu- litiU. It is well written, tau compiled witn care. 1870. Why They Wear Out Early. Several of our leading doctor givo it as their opinion that no man who takes his own lifo is in his right mind. It is also agreed that tho stylo of living in New York and tho stylo of doing business predisposes n man to that morbid condition that induces a man to take his life. Tho rush, thu drivo and excito ment are almost continuous. Men who are good for anything, havo their heads full. Thu brain is liko a hot-box on a railroad train only men hold up on tho train, and thoy don't on tho strcot. There' hardly a promi nent man doing business In tho Stock Ex change who has not work enough for half a dorcn men. A an Illustration t Tlio president of ono of our leading bank has been under thu doctor's core for over a year. Ho comes down to thu bank every moiulug at 10 o'clock and remains until fi r. Jl. Hcslilc thu iin memo businci of his own institution, at 1 1 o'clock ho goes down to Wall street, where ho is a silent luirtncr iu a stock houso. At 1 o'clock lie is bao'( Again nt tho Innk, His privato ollico is crowded with tho prominent business men of New York. Ho has at least six Institutions in which hois a manager, n director, or a president. These Institutions represent every variety of investment. He sides this, ho is At tho head of an immense denomination that gavo last year $.V),(XX) to help the educational interests of hi church out of a tight place. Tho different societies that he represent keep him without A mo ment's leisure through tho day, and hi even ings aro all consumed in business. I heard him say last week that ho never slept after 3 o'clock in tho morning. How such a man lives with such a pressure ujion him is mai vclous. He of courso won't livoout half his days. Ho is a specimen of New York bust nca lifo. Our city I full of prematura old men older at 30 than their father aro at (JOj prematurely bald, limping around with canes, with their underpinning knocked out; unablo to relish their food unless it ia covered with the "most panjpwt plie,i or iWsiheddowu with a delugo of liquor, Oue of our most eminent physicians said the other day t "Nine tenth of our citizen who go to tho iniauo Asylum go there for want of sloop and want of nutritious food." Considering tho style of our living and of our business, It is not at all a marvel that wo havo so many suicides. ilurk-igh s Letter to Honton Journal. Making Asparagus Beds. Tho quickest way to obtain asparagus is to purchase plants, because by doing so thu beds aro fit for cutting ono or two year earlier would bo tho caso were they started from seeds. To commence with thu liegiuiilmr, however, obtain seed as early us kmIIi!o in thu spriui:, aud sow In wide drills, soy five inches in width, and fifteen inches ainrt, about as ijeas aru sown. Keep thu soil mellow and the weeds destroyed, and in tho autumn, if thu soil Is good, you will hotu onu-ycar-old plant to transplant. One-year-old plants nro pretty small, and many prefer to keep them in the seed-bed until two yearn of ago, An ouiico of seed is sufficient fur a drill nlniut '2H ftet in length. In making a bed for tho plant, select a good, mellow soil, and male, it deep and rich. An asparagus bed once made, will keep in good condition for half a century, so tho work should bu well done. Tho bids must lie narrow, so as to permit of cutting to the centra without stepping npon them. Set tho plant not less than V inches apart iu the clear, spreading tho root out nat urally, aud not crowding them Into a hole, and so deep that tho crown or toji of tho plant will be about thrco inches below the surface. In removiug tho weed hatu tare not to injure the young shouts, and it is beat to do this by hand a much as iKiiMu. Hal is a good manure for asiarapus ustd with such fre-' b tl re COi j littl ' lllui Mr. North' uneful I towns c Don't fa two bits. ! NO. 1. Address to Santlam Orange, P. of H. DELIVERED AT INSTALLATION JAN. L 1870. of orncEiis, This is tho beginning of another year, which no doubt will bo fraught with its cares, toils nnd disapjwintments, as preceding ones. Hut to tho really thoughtful, they aro only tho means to test our ability to overcome tho greater trials of lifo and lit us, by a school of practical knowledge, for tho groat duties of lifo which await us in tho future, lly over coming difficulties, conquering each vicious thought or habit, places us one step higher on tho scale of progression and improvement, aud one degree nearer that statu of being which was designed by the Supreme Hulerof tho Universe. Thcso trials, trouble and difficulties of life are intcrsitcraod with good, grand and noble thoughts, deeds and Actions, aud a happy con sciousnes of having striven to do our duty to our fellownien, thereby having dono our tfnty to God for our own Itcncflt and Improvement; to glorify God by fulfllliiiL' ono of his m-patcst natural low progression. Science teaches us that tho world was not created iu six lit cral days of "t hours each, but at six separata ami instinct penotis ul tlmo. Hint our In-mi-tifnl world, with all Its living million of life, thu million of world in space, moving in regular but unlieotcii tuitha through siiaco, drawing heat and light from tho great centre, was not tho work of 144 hours, but by tho fixed law of adhesion and cohesion matter was collected aud held together as a molten moss, nnd by the projier equalizing of tho great powers thu one mulling tho globe, out into siiaco, tho other Attracting to tho sun our world assumed its regular pathway in thu heavens, lly the action of tho atmosphore, tho outsldo liecamo cool and hard, consequent ly a emit, which was entirely surrounded by water. Next was vonvulsions of tho earth, which formed dry land; noxt, pulverized ruck, which, by tho action of thu natural liu uiciits, formed soil; next, land alternately submerged and liphratcd; next, vegetable; noxt, animal life, and last, man. Nor wcro all plant created nt mice, but tho low er order first, which was sea-weed. Then, as tho soil was improved, new and superior plant audi tree sprang up to beautify tho world aud to roudor it moro pleasant for the aliodo of tho future man. Neither wa nil animal life cre ated at one time, Insects, fish and reptile being before the larger and suiierior ones. And Ust.of ,all wan man thu crowning effort of ere atlou, after which God rested aud "called it tho Sabbath, which I bellovo ia now upon us, fur In this period has no new thing been cre ated, and In commemoration of that event tho Isrtelites were commanded to rest tijKm thu Sabbath tlay, and to keep it holy. Hut to return. Wo see in the order of cro ntiou that nothing was brought into oxistenoo until mo worm ami it surroundings were prepared to receivu each jiarticular tiling cre ated. This exemplifies the low of gradual development, and man lieing posseasrd of reasoning nwer, was designed to utiliso ev erything which wa created, for tho iiurtxian of Improvement and prognssion, thereby each succeeding generation upprnocliiug n littlo nearer to that iicrfectlou which woh destined for him from thu beginning, which wonllhuiMj to obtain when wo shall havo ried over tho river. Then let us each strive to lay asidu soma vicious liabit or evil thought, thereby making us lietfer men ami women than wo weru last year, and rendering ourselves moro happy, cheerful and contented happy that, wo nro rendering our felluw-lieiug moro ' happy; cheerful from thu consciouaut'ss within that at least sumo careworn And troubled mind ha had it burden lightened, thereby blessing tl as u means of brightening their lite, ami making sunshine where all was darkness; con tented, that wo aru filling the dcatiuiea for which wo weru designed from tho liegiuuing, ami although it may cost us a great ellurt, yet wu know that wo shall receivu our ronartf. Finally, brother and sistcrr, will w o each as individuals strive to Im better, do lietter and think 1-etter than wu have heretofore! If wu will, tho Santiam Grange never was so useful or beneficial as it will bo this) ear, llu diligent and fruitful In defending and main tabling tho nohlo principle, of our Order, which cau bu Inst accomplished by practice and example. Attend your Grange as regu larly as jioasiblu, encouraging other ' " same, as when wu do not " as friends and thorn-'" (' ,-M 1