if WILLAMETTE FAllMEIt: OKTLAiND. OREGON, AUGUST 18, 1882. Vi i iMuuj every Week L the Wii.i..m.nr. faiimf.r im iimkhim. ro TIlllilN OK HUIlKCItli'TlOft. Ono .t-nr, (ioti.ye J'alrl), In advance 9 2.60 SIX nonius, trnswie pawl, in auvance . ..... --- Less i hari six month' w III lc, ptr month ADVKIIM8INO HATES : Advertisements will ho Inserted, providing tn ro mpseUhh , at the lollowlnir table ot rates I Ono Inch of space per month... . f 2.w) Tlir-si Inel-es of jtv jier month Jj.on Ons-hslf enbimn per niontl in On roliirmi ier innntll,.... 0 00 t$,iiiiile copies im nt free on application iiiMleation Oilier: No. 6 Washl.iKton Street. Up talrs. rooms Kn. Tumi f-A, I'l lU.lilll'.K'.H ANXOl'MXJIE'sT. The following: sre authorized to receipt for subscrlp tlons to this piper, tn W hero wo have no airctits re mittance lll.'bT ho li sile, (cxpenits paid), to us by llcjil tend I.c tor, or Honey Orders, or Kipress. ALI.I'AI'l:llHI)!FrONTINli:i AT THE KXPIIIA tion or tin: tiih paid kok. Amltv it liStnilwin Lebanon (IW Smith U'lavillp.H'J.McTlninionds Aurora Oeo Miller BrouiMvlllo W HKIrk I.ooldui!-(ll.ua. .M Cochran Buttol Ilk-. . John Halchrllor Butto Creek ...K hkcrvln Brook W II Harris Bellovuo JcfflUvIs Uncoil I, Abrams McMinnvlllc.J Mcl'hllllps HrCny ..8 ltobblns tit Pleasant.. .KB Thayer Crawfor,IsilIc..I!r.bt (ll.iss Uottiire Gr..J II sliortrlJ;?c ConallU.. .Meyer Harris Marl.. ..It II Rutherford Mohawk ..J 8 Churchill Monmouth . . W Watcrhouse NoVamhtll. OWtapplwitnii Ufianiioar A jotie Damisuus H Furbos Dayton.... II C lla-lawsy Drains.. ..Hon JO Drain Dallas JDBmltli Dufur -A .1 liufur, Jr Kola Thomas Pearco Elkton A II llalncs towellVtllcy.TK Willi inn Pilot Hock K (Jllllaui 1'endlcton.. Lot I.lvirmoro Perryelale.. ..J W McHrow I'leaKatitlllll.OWIIandsiker Hlversldo C K Knowles Koseliur...S K Kamoinl KtiL'!iift..f!onJ II McChui.? Sweet Home 7. 11 Moss Ellcii.bilnr.. Hon M llllcy Salem ....H w emiren ....A D Gardner forest Oroyo H Hughes, htnyton. fox Valley. .A I) CSsrdner Sublimity.. Jno liowiiinir Goshen .J Hsndsikor.Scio J Morris Oaston AC Itavmnnd Mioild W M Towers fjerv.il) M Mitchell Tangent John I.upcr Uoldendalo.il V Sa.llor.V. Col Turner KBMatteson Ilarrlsbiiri;...IIou II Hniilli flalscv.. .Illack. l-earl A- Co1 Wilbur... .Hon Thos Mnllll Willamette K....M Wllklns Welles A A Wllllani-on irvlnir A C Jennlnirs fndeoi-fiileneii. W L HllllHn Weston I, H Wood Jacksonville. ..Mai Milllcr Wallsburir W IS SlM'n Junction W II Ilib-r Walla Walla. .1 Jacobs Jeffers'-t ,j W Ho'and Zcna. .8 BGlmble To TIlnsK WHO KNOW Ralph C. Gcer, Ks., the rnirniam of ttio Corvallis Onzette will lit) appreciated wli-n it accuses him of having got riili at " good farming " How niiny yearn is it since his friends made him County Clerk to s.ivo him from ruin? Wo don't care to follow up tlm delicate subject, hilt tlio Gazette will have to take some other text to make out a cane against us than ltalph Oecr's financial micce-is as a farmer. 1'kom Hon. Jam II. Si.atf.ic, U. S. Senator, wo havo nci.-ivcd a package of Agricultural Reports. They are oxcccdii gly inteiesting anil profusely illustrated with colored plates. The several subjects considered are of intoicst to many, nnd uro composed of articles on "Sorghum," "Injurious IiiBects to Trees and Fruits," "Native (Irassea," "Swiuo Plaguo," "I'leun- I'lipumoiii i," nml many other inter, osting subjects. Wo will send to a limited number of our subscribers a cony upon appli cation. They will bo sent post free. Wim.K imviNii peach plums wo made two ace n rat m lests to iletcrmino the yield nf dried fruit in proportion to tho green. Twenty five pound', in two nepirato cHorta, turned offOj pounds of good dried product, making 1.1 J pounds to .til of groun plums. In this fruit 80 pounds counts a bushel. Tho yield "ns then '-'7 pound in 100. Wo can sell choice dried Iruit at 10 cents, so a bushol of green plums will yield dried fruit woith ?2. 10, ami after deducting tlm cost of drying and pack ing tlm fruir, wo have $1.75 per bushel lift proceeds for tlm greon Iruit in the orchard. To hrinu n i;ood prico tho fruit must bo nicely cured. Unless it is it will remain "a drug on tho market." AcrimniNil TO THK Corvnllis (iiizette the people of Oregon all way, cout tuully, that Mr. Villaid spends his timo telling us what to do. How to go to woik and disprove this terrible aui-iisatioii wo don't know. When we think of it, it doesn't really allVct us. Tho churgii is against Mr, Villaid, a gentle man with uliom wo luvo no neijuaiutaiici-. Under tho eircu instance wo drill leave it for tho (lazdle a d .Mr. Villard to settle their own iliil'er ucix. The only way uocau pi as the Corv.illis Oautla would bo to iub'isli that the O. P. H It. Ca's. ro id to Vniiiilna as bui't and in running order and tU.it Col, T KgertouItoggisagre.it c.ipitilist mid man of truth. As wo uuiiiot say this with a goo 1 conscience, wo sli ill luvo tJ do without nu compliment from tho llautle. If w want Woodcock on toast (or on a touting fork), wo know how to get it wlieneuT tho "guuo is woith t o c.iiiillu." Tilt: Coiivau.m uipeis place us in a situa tion wu dip mo when they appropriate tliu-o columns, letwoin them, to ourM-H. Wo haven't the conceit to think our realers caio to lmvo any ib fouse wo could mako against Col. Hogg's i ryun". If wo have mined the prospects of i he V,n)iiiua road wo are oir,v fur It, but it ciuildii't bo much of nrailrmd that the Wui.AMi.TrK l'AUMKit could kill without inU'ii- i git. Instead of tt sitting mi niueh til ent and editorial pieo nnd all the slimier tho Uatrllt v-nt, we suggest that it would 1 gootl idea for Cnl. Hogg's org ilia to go ti wnrk and eleir Cul. llu-g'tchaiaeterfioiu the pain ful i-hulii ol circumstances that now tluiiw a shadow from it. If they will only (uuii.li fact that l-ill bi utfil fur this pill poHx wo shall bo gl.ul in assist. Hut they iienlu't tiy to driiiulisli us; it c.n't be ilon-j. Many sm ill wits have tm-il it, already, and toinuwuy haveu'l iIoiik it. Wo still liio to help the next until woo wanta to build a lailtvud to Yiimiii Hi)'. l'llltTI.MI Ulls.N..-iS Cou.iuk The pill's pent) ol this uM isiublnh d iustitntio is as aurul as tin lo was all ntU'iuUiU'o of IM olui- am (( l-i h sevws, Thu ages of s.liolus r-iugil from 1 1 to III e irs. The reputation of tli "Old N.i in al" li is in iiowiaii lo en lessoiusl under the nv iii.iuagment, but, to tho iwn tiary, I us U i n unit is still leading all others. Tlitf lnii-oit.nl. 0-- of a butiniM tdiu-jtiuii fur tho mi us i Iniiiii fully apprtvi ito I. It is not nu t for young man to think tint ho mult .il all ln time In a ltteiar isluoa tiou. I icon: a busineta inlucutiou is aboluti yuec.ks r)-. FRUIT DRY1H0. We cemmenced drying peach plums, in the new Acme dryer, oti the first of August. Kruit drying has to be learned like any other business, and no dryer has or will be invented so perfect that it will ran without brains to manage it. The inventor of trio Acme was suc cessful in designing a good theory and de serves a great dial of credit, but owing to his injudicious instructions one of the driers al ready built on bis process took firoand burned up in part, all because he asserts that fruit can be put cloin down to the heater. Wo havo already discovered that the brick wall should bo built up 18 to 24 inches above the top of the heating apparatus, instead of being nearly on the level with it. Th creation of a hi t air reservoir bcluw the fruit is advis.ible, as the heat will thus have chance to equalize itself, whereas now, notwithstanding the inventor's assertion that tho he-it will lie equal through out tho compartment, it is far from being so when his instructions are earned out. Also, on his instructions, a very inferior quality of sheet iron was used in making the covers and deflecting pans, whereas a trifling moie cost would have recured a much better article. Wo became disgusted, very thoroughly, with this fault, and shall have to build the brick walls at least a toot higher bo'ore they can answer a pcrftct purpose. Still at-other fault of the inventor is in not providing sullicient draft for the hot air. We discovered lhat when the air circulated freely and carried oil the steam quickly, tho result wss much hand somer fruit, and at length we goc the fruit to be amber and color slid almost transparent. The dryers put up in Poitlaud have that fault, and it should be remedied in all others that are const! uuted. Whin wo Bhowed sainpUs of our dried fruit last week to the gentleman who bought of us list year, who is a buyer always in the mar ket, we wero inuih cntifiod to have him say that the fruit wu sold him last year was finer than any ho saw in the inaiket all the season. Perhaps ho didn't ree all tho good fruit, but his satisfaction was matter of honest prido ou our part. Tho fruit we make now is really superior to tint of a year ago Tho diH'eren.-o is duo to tho improved process, f-r the regula tion of hc.it in the Bonn process gives all tho facility that can be desiied. Wo profess to bilievo that no human skill can make finer tliietl fruit than was turned out from our Acme ilrjcr last week. Wo drill givo ocoi sional notes of the wotk for tho benefit of our readers, not fiom mo ives of couctit, but be cause we desire to havo our experience, which has boen costly, bo of ue to the public. Wo belieVH in cleanliness, anil the Kditor of the Homo Circle insists that everything shall bo dono, as well at tho factory, as it would bd done in the kitchen of thu most fastidious housckteper. It is needless tn say that the Homo Circle takes a great interest in this do pirtment. A man has lui especial business about a fruit dryer, except to bring in the frj.it, keep up tiies, and do heavy work, A woman is worth more, when used to the dry er and when she understands how to regulate boat, for which purpose theie are ther mometers to judgo by, than any mail. That we found to be the case last yi ur. Kruit should never be used until it is per fectly lipo. No one can haul fruit, miles in a wagon, to a dryer, and have it in as gooil con dition as when taken fresh from the tree, and carried to a dryer in the miiUtof the orchard. It is easily cathoieil, for our pi hi is to spreail a largo sheet, with a slit to admit tho body of thu tree, and go through the orchard daily, shaking each treo gently, so throwing down tho ripe fruit, which falls in tho sheet, and so is kept clean, is then poured into baskets and taken in to bj worked up. In caso any fruit falls on tue giouml, or if there is any suspicion of dust or dirt on the fiuit, ic is carefully tvashud b foru pitted. Tho factor) Hour is of b-st ilooiii g, ami can bo clciutd easily. We keep every fiainu and wire cloth tray, us clean us need be, and believe that when, in future years, people who appreciate cleanliness tii d that our fruit is cured with so much ctu, they will creatu u demand fur it. It pays to do such work well, and thu fact that ur fruit got a good r- put.U ion last ear has enabled us to contract in advance to pirties ho bought it there. We h ivo said far more than wo intended to, on this subj ct, but found facts to talk of and so kept on. Anothtr mutter ol actual impott unco is to pick fiuit in good merchantable shape, to suit tho trade and take tnu custom er's eye. It is t-ay ei.ough to do all this. Without cue and skill you uauunt dry fruit successfully, and often all thu profit lies in tho skill with which such articles aio pre par- d fur market. Ore. on ln-s auih an oppoituiuty to be rich by fruit growing, and so much prosperity of the future is involved in this matter, that wo havo dwelt on it at somo length, and in tend to work it up as fully as netdabofrom time to time. TUE MARUIAQE INSURANCE MATTER. Mr, lttrhro, of Line county, last week spoke very plainly about the msuiier in which the Murige Insurance Company wound up Its affairs. As we advertised fur tint company wu ful under obligation to state the facts of our connection with It. 1 he concern staitol with the nsmes of some of tho most responsi ble men of tins city as its directors, men who arugenernlli considered lionoral le and n-spoii. be We we; e assured by the agent that the enterprise was pnn-ressiui! very f ,vorbly,iid that tho first mouth upmed wit'i nil em riuons amount of business. Hr also atsurid us that tint scheme wit i.r.utio ililj and conducted on a plan that lu.l suooeok-d will elsewhere, Sj we took the a.herti-oineut aud uia.le fa vur.tble mention of tlio business. When it discontinue I wo wero inform. d that the com-p-viy was hint rally refunding all priiuiumt necivinl. Wo were phased to think tlm they were acting to honorably, T' e state. menu now uu le ro u t sitisfnoUiry, and we legret that w ever did .inythiuj lo induce mir readers til pitrotiim the soli- me, lit con. chimin, wo frel much surprise, lint the indl. idutlt who lent tluir Mines to culor a scheme that is liable to be denounced aa a fraud should allow the concern to fail and their good name be questioned. The lo-ses cannot be so heavy that such men cannot easily pay them. Their own tredit demands that whatever loss occurs should not fall on those who believed the names of the directors insured the responsibility of the company. IMPORTING INSECT PESTS. Of late a great deal of California fruit has been brought to Portland. After the arrival of a steamer from Sm Francisco hundreds of boxes of this fruit are distnbut tl through the city and forwarded to all inteiior towns of the Willamette Valley and up the Columbia. If there aro insect pests in Californii fruit we are importing them and sparing no pains to propagate them and spread them broadcast through the land. Take apples that come from that State and you will rind that many of them are wormy. That worm is the grub of tlio codling moth, thu most vicious of all in sect pests. Take up any number of the Hural Press and yr.n will read about the loss occasioned to California by this pest, aud efforts made to destroy it. It is destructive to fruit wherever it is known, and considered a scourge to fruit growers. If we escape it in Oregon t'ds year it will be a wonder. Karly in the season, at tho suggestion of P. P. Brad foul, Pbq an extensive fruit grower near Portland, we called attention to the danger to be appiehended, but there was then no remedy possible. We write this in obedience to our own appreciation of the dan ger, having intended to allude to it for some weeks, but we aro directly reminded of it by J. H. Lambert, K-q,, of Milwaukie, one of our most successful fruit men, who siu-g- sts that during the session of the Legislature, which will meet next month, suitable legisla tion shall bo passed, providing, by the most stringent statute, for examination of all im ported fruits, with a view to excluding such as cannot show n clean bill of hoilth. The importance of this matter cannot bo over-estimated. It means the saving of hun dreds of thousands of dollars to producers. Onco admitted hero and uo shall have an etcrna. fight against thesa destructives. Ore gon has been exempt, hitherto, from such damage as Cilifomia complains of, hut m shall not long be exempt if unrestricted im port it ion of L'rccn fiuit is allowed. In presenting this matter wn request our friends to express their views freely as to the best means of legislating against this danger. Wo also urge its importance on the priss of OrcL-on and Washington, and hope to see a united effort of all journals to make the facts known and secure the passage of a law that will answer the purpose. PROHIBITION. At tho piesent time thieo States in the Union Maine, Kansas and Iowa prohibit the sile or manufacture of spirituous liquor. In the two last nauud tho peoplo have adopted a couxtitutional amendment to that cfTecr, a course far m-ro elfectivo than a law which a legislature limy p.-lfs or can repeal. It takes a majority of the popular vote to change the constitution, and thu peoplo of Iowa and Kan sas will hive a fair chance to test the results of prohibition it tln-y will honestly enforce it. The succi ss of tho friends of Temperance in these thieo Stites will encourage temperance men cvcrywhuie to labor for icform. The evils of iiitempciancc cannot be overestimated. Cmne lives on alcohol, nnd mi-ery has its fountain head in strong drink. The only u-m-cdy is to destroy tro i-ouree. The time is cer tainly coming, when moral scut'iuent will as sert itself atrainst tho existence of a cause that is so often a curse. Tho uses for alcohol in the arts and in the expeuments of eieuco can be met, as wo provide the deadliest poisons for their legitimate uses, but the use of alcohol as n drink is uucallo I for. To what xtent we should uo in prohibition is an important urns tion. Wines aro not always perni don-, ai d I t'io moderate use of beer and cider may mt bi always objectionable. Certainly, tho us" of these beverages by many leads to no evil con sequence, but there uro many others who com mence as wine, beer or cider drinkers, who ond as sots. Tho appetite giows ou such per sous, and their mill involves disgrace and (ldisro.lation, misi-iy nnd suffering, fur their families. What the world needs is a strong policy that shall root out the evil. The Legislature- meetB soon, and the tem perance men and wointn of Oregon should de mand of their Senators and Representatives thu passage of a constitutional amendment fa voi ing prohibition. The adoption of such a resolution by two successive Legislatures is necessary befoie thu submission of tho amend ment to the populir vote. Tho member of the Legislature who votes against such a ptoposi tion simply refuses to allow the voters of the Statu to decide an im rt-nt question for themselves. They cannot afford to take the c,ruud that their misters, the voters of Ore pon, aro not fit judces of such iiuestious of publi) morality. Their constituents win may oppose prohibition, will not dare to find fault with them for r-ferring this matter to tho di rect vot of the people. What we desire is to have a popular verdict tor or against prohibition. Wo dull acquicce if the xotu is a"ainst prohibition, beiause we believe tho will of tho majority shi uld rule; but uo demand the opportunity of having a full and fair exprvs-ion of the popular niiud on this ini0rtut question. Mil. KiciUKlis, the correspondent of the Dry GookIs lltjtorter, of San Fran- isco, c died at our office tint week, Mr, liichards in tends visiting every section of this State, Washington Territory an I llritish Columbia, and neks reliable information as to the re sources, iirosluctlout, etc., Ot the .Northwest for public itiou in tho columns of the J!e- fKirltr, o hope both merchant and farmers in the different placet he visit will givo him every facility iu their power to learn the truth regarding what believe to be the lairett arid m.ut promisiug section of our uttiou. GRASSES AMD PASTURES. .NCMBI-R HI. In traveling lately we have noticed the dried-up pastures with melancholy interest, because they indicate a lack of something most essential to agricultural prosperity. It has been a very dry summer. As a conse quence of this drouth, eriis'es have ceased to grow, and pastures look bare and seem to of fer, in many instances, little food f-ir cattle or stock. At the same time, when there has been a clover fit Id, and after the first crop of hay has been taken off, you can s-e the second growth alieady half-knee hi.h, and lo.-king tempting to even tho human looker-on. Why not havo clover fields for mi Isummer pasture? You may say that if cbely pastured the clo ver field will look bare enough, and here comes in a fact, connected with nil pasture grasses, of very great impoitance. If you let stock run over and muss and trample on giass, they spoil nearly as much as thev eat, and you fail to receive anywhere near the ben efit from pasture land that you ought to se cure. Fen:in way pays a good profit to the fanner when it divides up good pasture into small lots. Instead of one field of 40 acres, m.kc f urof ten acres, and use them alternate ly, and you will be able to keep one-half more stock than you can keep on 40 acres all in one field. Say that you pasture each lot oue week and rest it three weeks. During that interval it makes growth, freshens up and bi comes a temnting place for the stock to enjoy. Nine tenths of the world fails to appreciate the fact that cattle, horses, sheep and even swine, havo perceptions that are worth cultivating. They all know and enjoy what tastes good. A fresh bite of clover is a lare "tid bit" to an animal, as much to as a choice item of rating is tn a man. The man who cannot learn tint animals have tastes, appetites and apprecia tion of good food and good, kind treatment, is unfit to own a good horse or a choice cow. Therefore, it is the best policy to study the tastes of animals and gratity those reasonable tasteB when possible, especially so when there is piofit to vour-elf in doing so. It is a fact, also, that it always pays to do any and every thing well. If it can't be done well, it won't pay to do it all. To illustrate this: Make a pasture, subdi vide 1 as we have said above, ai d you will soon find your stock looking forward at the end of each week for the change into the fresh field. The very sense of change will be n pleas ure to them, and you will find that they will show steady improvement under treatment of this kind, when, i ruumi-g iu a common pas ture of the same dimensions, they would do very poorly, This fact, (that pasture subdi vided and allowed to rest and recuperate will support one-half moro stock) is not guess woik, by any means, but is the experiei ce of good farming the world ov r. Estimate the jost of the fencing requisite, and the good ro suits to he derived of it, and you must see that no good farmer can afford to havo all his pasture in one common field with no chance for rest and growth all the dry season. A branch of business that the farmer too of ten neL'lccts is raising aud fattening ot swine. We allow the Western pork packer to ship his mea's and lard from Chicago, and St. Louis, and Kansas City, or Omaha, aud fill the Port land market with meats that should be grown and manufactured in our own country. Peo ple say they cannot afford to winter hogs, and in many instances they are very poorly cared for, sun mer or winter. A good grass lot, es pecially clover, will kep swim- thriving much of the time, and the farmer who fixes himself for it by fencing oil' laud for tho pm po-o in small lot', so that he can change from one to tho other, can make his pasture do a great pirt towards keeping his pigs, aud tho man who is thus prepared can raise pigs and fatten them to much better advantage than if they starved on thu highway up to the ti-,o u hen ho g ts ready to put them up to fatten. The hog tint has stirved and squealed thnuidi the win'l'". Pri"g and summer is not in condition to fatten easily in the fall. Keep y ui1 pigs growini; and thriving, and they will make purkquickiri they will make heavier and bo better meat. When your merchant learns ' ow your pork is made, your cur- d meats w ill bo sought or by his best customers, and you will get an extra price for having a good re putation, especially if it is well deserved. That pastures should be made with care, and p S'ess every rood quality that grass cmi give them, wo believe, is bojond question. The extravagant man may waste money iu in judicious experiments, of course: but the pru dent man w-ll go to work to test thi matter sen.iblv, father the experience of oilier and 11 f !.: , , -.. oavr uu ui ins owu, ann no win soon realize from well directed efforts such results a will be entirely satis'actory. THE COMINQ STATE FAIR. The coming State Pair promises to be an exceptionally good one. Efforts are being put torwant to harmonize the whole affair, ami exhibitors seem tn tako icuewcd interest in trying to bring it back to its old standard. The geii.ral fe ling stems to be to put out every effort, and if they fail, then so fails the rair Hie society has valuable grounds, and ha spent immense sums fixing it up. and we do hope to tea it have a prosp-rous year. The superintendents of tho s vcral exhibits will hereafter be chosen at thu time of th i awards, thus doing away with any attempt at partial, ity. This item doue will plea-e many. Still another important item will be a circus. So to enoourige tuch thows the society hat given the circut free ground rent; all they will lie ohligsd to buy will he ticket It seem a. though a circut would h.lp to draw a crowd, and the effort to e.et such a show here will tueet with general favor. State pipers inteics'ed in the welfare of the State Agricultural Society will please C1'V- They don't have taint ut Wett. A cloud just ttuntert up and examines a town ami then collapse right over it. Xi.bo.ly escapes but the newspaper reporters aud the book t;ent. STATU iBiVS Sherman's circus Lad a $1200 house at Wes ton. Weston has a big trade with the Umatilla Indians. A white gopher has been found in Jackson county. There was on August 1st ten feet of enow at Crater lake. The thermometer recently s'.eod 108 in the shade at Weston. The salmon havo ceased running in the Fr?er river, B C. Oue million cases of salmon is the estimate made for the Pacific coast. John Hailey has taken charge of the LiaL villa Port Kluuath mall roule. tVquille loggers receive from ?9 to 10 s thousand for their white cedar. The Jacksonville S'lttinel says stiges are arriving and departing ou lime acaiu. Pacific Univ.-rsity has just recaived $5000 to he i.pulied on the new building fund. An entire outfit ol ne.v mitenal hasheen ordered for the Sentinel, of Union county. Gov. Thayer has appointed John S. Kays' of iiuena Vista, notary pubt:e for the next two years. The Coos Bay Kews says that Messrs. Ping and Wluteaker are at work on the bay select ing swamp lands. The city marshal ol Walla Wnlla refuses to issue permits to street brokers to ply their trades ou Mindays nnd Tuesdays The Ashland Manufacturing Company is having a lively call fiom the cities of the c as t for its supeiior white blankets. Porty-five men are at work on the telc graph line between Klamath and Bid well, aud r .. Ml u :.l 1 .... L! .. I .. lll.l. lb win uu iiuisueii y oepteiiiuci ivbu. The Point Adams Packing Company in terms the Aslorlm that they will erect a can nery at Upper Asioiia next season. At the firemen's election held in The Dalles on August 6th, .Mr. George Munger was elect- d chief by a majority ol five votes. The north spit at tho mouth of the Coquille river was gradually washiog away and the prospect was good for a north channel soon. The city council of La Grande at a regular meeting levied a tax of ten mills for Dublic improvements and the assessor is now on bis rounds. The recoiid bridge across the Umatilla river on the Baker City branch road is finished and the track layers aro going rapidly on to Pen dleion. A letter has been received from the manu factory from which the Eugene hand engine was onleied, t-iat it will be about 30 days be toieitcau be shipped. Maikctable hogs have been sold for as high as 71 cents a pound grost in Rogue River val ley, and are i-oi-cj at even that price. These jro top figuns, however, Mr. J H, Moore, of Portland, who owned i he teirv between Salem and Polk county, has sold his interest therein to Thos. Holma'u, of that city, for SI 2,000. The Overland Stage Company have settled with Mrs. Bine, the latter of whom was in jured by im up-et near Ashland recently. Tho company paid $1000 and costs in full settle ment. The colleciatc vear of the Wasco Inde pendent Academy will commence Sept 4-h witli a tuft ana uiile corps ot teachers. We are not advised as to tue members of tho faculty. The camp outfit belonging to W. M. Tur ner's company of surveyors was burned iu Like county last week while the men were ut in the field, and the loss amounts to about S100. A Umatilla fiend was fined for tying a stick of wood in the mouth of a neighbor's horse that had been breaking into his grain, lie plea ed guilty like a man and paid his fine of S15 and c sts. The Western Union Telegraph Company will build a telegraph lino from Umatilla to Piuilletoo, a distance of 41 miles, and expect to havo it in operation as soon as p.les can be secured, put up and the wires stretched. Mr. James Putnam, who had his arm so badly mangled by a thresher at Oak Grove, in Polk county, had the same amputated, near the shntildir. by Dr. Reynolds, assisted b Drs. Hall and Jeffries, of Salem, Tho following is tho vote for officers of the Astoria Pire Department : W, J. Barrv re ceived 67 lor chief engineer; C. H. Stockton, received 37; for first assistant, F. P, Hicks nceived 1(0; for second assistant, Joe Cnar ttrs got 87. The Yaquina bay railroad has 0000 tons of st' el rails iu the warehouses ol Sau Franci.-co. on which SIOS.OOO tariff must he paid All of this m .st bo paid by the valley farmeis to protect Pennsylvania millionairts. A fine thing is protection, for the wealthy. The Ku.ene Guard says farmers have been busy this wiek harvestinz Fall rn-ain. From all n ports wo have heard, it seems that the grain is turning out much better than antici pated, ami even better than last year. All available machinery will be at work Monday. Many if the cram fields in tho vininitv of Cnquille City and Myrtle Point, says the Mail, have been harvested, while those still standing look well, but the farmers generally c niplaii of short crops in conscqnence of the mm uiuy ury season, wnicn lias been favor able for hay makers. The coining race at the State Fair promise to be by far the most interesting ever held in Oreiiou. This department will bo under the immediate supervision of exnerieneed rnoo horse men, who will leave uothiug undone to add to the encouragement of fine stock to par ticipate in the several contests. The Salem Statesman says Marshal M. G. ll.irbcrd has been appointed U. 8. deputy in erahal fir this (list net. There wa great strife among a few for the place, but Mr. Har hord was Considered the most fitted for the p .sitiou, which doubtless he will fill with efficiency and profit to the government. At the present time, say the lleeurd, there is unusual interest taken in horse trainiug in preparation for the fair, which begius five wieks from Monday. Several Dead Shot aud Anvil two-year-olds will be entered. There are al.o several young horses from Walla i am in iraiuing at the fair grounds hour or five emigrant team passed through 1 eiidletou this week which had a prnawroui look about them. Pine auimals, nice wtgons, cl. anly dressed people and tidy looking chil. dreu. What causid the East Orejonian to i old up it hand and scream, wo the fact tuat one of the paity wore kid glove. The county clerk of Jackson county 'hi notified all road supervisor to exterminate the weed known as the dagger cockle-burr in their respective districts, and on their neglect or refusal to atteud to thit act at once each supervisor shall be liable to a fine of $25, to be recovered by suit of the district attorney. An Indian by the name of Geo. Colwith was examined before Justice Backus, of Hood river pro-cinct, for tho crime of larceny of a horse a few day ago. He wat held to antwer the charge in the turn of SiVl f-,llln,. tn ... which amount, he wit remanded to the county jiil, and Sheriff Storrs took him in his cut tody last Tuesday evening, lavs thu Josji. ta'uutr. The Roseburg Plaindra'rw that the ma chinerv has arrived for th- flouring mill above that tnwp. Work is leina pushed on the race and in 40 days the m-icliimry will be in operation. It is to run three sets of burrs and operated by improv.il mar imry and good water power. It will be ready for this year's crop. There is room in th'-ir building for a large amount of s-iked and bos-i grain and flour, every inch of wn.ich n i d ubt will be utilized. TKItRITOIMAL Eigs aro worth 40 cents nt "Seattle. Wheat is GO cent per buhel .it Wnitsburg. The Olfax Democrat has been moved to Palnuse City, The Seattle papers want a street railroad to Lake Union, A $10,000 farog-imo was opened in Walla Walla a few days ago. Buildings in rnur'e of erection iu Seattle will cost nearly $250,000. Waitsburg will soon be blessed with a real bakery shop. Venders of trifles are obliged to pay a license at Se-ittle or a finn The Congreg-ttinnal Association ol Wash ington is in session at Sesttlo. Gov. Newell ha been det-,ined Eist by ' some sickness in his immediate family. The Co'fax Democrat urcres nron-"r oreven tinns oeainst fires again occurring in thit sity. Pierc coun'y proros" to -U the old court house at Steilacnom, which has done duty for the past quarter century. The thirmrmeter last week reached 110' at Yakima City. Good coal has been discovered near Horse Shoe Bend, Idaho. The county commii.iner" havo made, a re duction of 4 mil's of the t.--x m the valuation of property in Walla Walla county A .pn of marble ri-nilnr. i' no equal to the finest Italian n-arbl, has been discovered at Lake Pen d'Oreille and has since been sold foe 810,000. An Indian on the Simeon reservation while fcedint? n thresher the other dsy, had one of his hands cut off by the s-prator. Klickitat Pete was his coennmen. Tho historical ske'eh of Walla Walla conntv. pnhMhed bv Col. Gilbert, will be brought out about Nov 1st It will reach an edition nf over 2000 eoru'es. The Yakima Record learns that a few cases of black-leg has anpearnl cmon? tho cattle tip on the Ahtanum. Extreme cafe should be taken to prevent its spread. The Walla Walls, ITn'mn psys that vege tables of all kinds ar scirci and high, caused liv the demind to supreV the railroad em pl"ves on the line ol tV N P. R. K. Much impr-ivment is und-r way at Snoho mish Citv. New hnues are building and old houses repairing, whil-nib!itiiins, repainting, etc , are under vicorons wav. So that bright little paper the Eye informs ns. Tho new ofhVers nf Port-. Townsend are J. H. Van Bokkelen, enm-riinlng magistrate; R. C Hdl. clerk; C M Bradshaw, attorney; D. H Hill, treasurer; P V, James, surveyor; C. H. James, harbor rr.ater, and D. H, Hill, assessor, Mr. J, P. Stewart, of Pnvallun. has Dicked 7030 pounds of berries from one acre on his nlncn this vear, 1000 of which he nut un. and 6000 he has sold nt an nveragK prico of 10 cents per p-und over nod above the cost of (licking. He has pml $100 to Indians for niokintr them and realized at these figures $(100, which is a very fair showing for one acre. THE O. P. R. R. If the Benton Leader and Corvallis Gazette could write as sensible an editorial as the fol lowing from the Albany Herald, they might tako equal rank with the Herald in jour nalim : Tho question is asked us frequently, "What abonr tho O. P. R. R. J" "Are they coing to build it!" "nave they sold out ?'' "What do thev mean?" "What aro they tryinutoget through them?" "Why don't vou cive them fits ?" and so on ad infinitum, world without end. We do not blame the people for being anxious to know something about the condition and prospects of the road, nd we do not blame the railroad company for keening their business to themselves. So there it K you se, six'of one and half-dozen of the other. If you know anything more about the prospect of the road being built since you commenced reading this article keep on, and the chanc-s are you will find out something; more about it after a while. If an editor has anv vlnablc rews he should cive it to the pople at the first dash, and not cru cify them with a long preamble. That's the wav wo do. if it take all summer. That's why so many editors fail to make their papers interesting; they havo no knack of coming right tn the piint, whether there is anv point tto como to or not That's where we excel; we always mnke it a point to come to the point whn there is any point to come to, and if no point is in F-ieh why we keep right on com ing anyway. It is lamentable to pick up a newspapr, especially when you are in a great hurry see the point ? and to have to digest hslf i column of middlings to find one kernel of wheat, nnd when you do find it, what have ynu found ? What do you know more about the O. P R. R. than yew did before you commenced reading this article? What do we know ? What does the company know? Plowers and Seeders. Staver & Walker are just receiving a very large and complete itock of the celebrated J. I Case plows, harrows and cultivators lor the fall trade. These goods have been made ex pressly for the requirements of the farmers of the Pacific Northwest, and their superiority is universally conceded by all who have used them. They will soon have a full supply of the "Triumph" grain drills and seeders. These machines are made" by J. W. Stoddard k Co., r.avtnn, Ohio, and are nneqnaled for beauty of finish and perfect working qualities. Considerable attention is being devoted by them to the saw mill trade, and they are pre pired to furnish steam outfits, on short notice, for any power desired. Still In the Workshop. To do good work the mechanic must have good health. If long hours of confinement in close rooms have enfeebled his hand or dim med his sight, let him as once, and before some organio trouble appears, take plenty of Hop Bitters. His system will be rejuvenated, hit nerves strengthened, hit sight become clear, and the whole constitution be built up to a higher working condition. The hide and fur dealers of Walla Wall hve bought thi year $50,000 worth of skins and pelts. One dealer, M. D. Wisdom, pur. ched 2.400 beef hides, 1,800 sheep pelts. 1.000 elk hides, 11,000 pounds of deer skint, 800 pounds of beaver skins, besides furs anil ikins of the otter, mirtin, lynx, fox, etc Sit Hats." Clears out rats, talc, rosxbet, file, tots, bed.bugt, tkunxt, durauctls, joi-hm. (c. PnurjrUtt. I s. iMuii0mmmtmitmimmmimtmma4