Willamette farmer. (Salem, Or.) 1869-1887, December 29, 1882, Page 7, Image 7

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grange 5peprmcnt.
Natlon.il Orange
The siitotntliannualsesaionof tho National
Grnngo ai licltl lat month in the city of In
dinnijio'i', Intl. The opening address was
mailu by J. Woodman, Matter, of Michigan,
from which wn select the following s "It
should l distinctly uneltrstooel that every
grange is a school in which practical lessons
ore to he It-arm d upon every ijuotion affect
ing the farm- r' tailing, and in o.-dtr to make
thiso schools p-otitahlo, they must ho con
ducted upon practical and emmon-seme
principle. He-try memher shonl 1 he en
couracd to take part in these txcrcie, for
all questions relating to tho farm and the
farm end the household arc piofitililo and in
exhaustible themes for discussion, and can
alwa)s be made interesting to e cry intelli
gent farmer. The meetings should bo so inter
esting and attractive that no member am
fford to ho absent from them; and the greet
ings of brothers and sisters should bo so cor
dial that the humbhat members, though poor
nd burdened with tares, may feel and know
that tiny are not doomed to toil through
wiary life isolated and alone, without friends,
aympathi, rotit.ty or hope of achancement.
Make t'icin feel that they are mornbers of a
great bn thcrliootl, which extends into ecry
gtate and every locality in tho land, all
united in sjinpathy uel interest by ths thit
bind as gi ntly as a silken thread, yet Btrong
as a band of steel, all workiug for tho same
1 jctt tho education and olevati )n of Amer
ican farmers."
Governor l'ortcr, of Indiana, made an ad
dress in which he commended the social fea
tures of the Order, and the admission of
woman to tsiual privileges and duties, and
poke of the many advantages that must arise
nun htr advuo and counsel. He expressed
aurjmsojthat agricultural meetings seemed
commonly to ptwicaj so few attractions and
' r(ero so poori ntt' ntleil. Why is It, he asked,
that faiuurs w.ll come for miles around to
meetings were Ihicknoyed political themes are
to ho dtcuscd, aud luteii with wycr inter
est to orators kindled into emotion by their
absorbed .11 te ntion yet, when the State Hoard
of Agriculture, tomposed of picktd men from
the fan g cl is, meet each lecurring year to
consider the uants, prospects and conditions
of agriculture, a room twenty feet square will
hold the audit nets that nsseniblo to hear its
discussions? Our farmers aru not deuidof
inUieat in tlit'ii iK-ciip ition. Tluy aruiutelli
gent. 'I hey mo iiiick to take ndvantago of
all useful d'Hcmcrus nntl inentioiis. I'hey
aro, perlmps, more than any nthei tlass, su.
ceptible to the ihiruiH of oratory. A'hy,
when iigritiilttii.il themes uie anywheie to be
(tiiuuuul, aro they geiurally so little at
tracted tn heir lhe ilisciifsion ? Cm jou
tiach us how to invest with a higher eharin
the" tin mo which, kiutlling the putt, full so
ignally to awaken the spirit of uiatur ?
1), V,itt Aiken, of South C.iroliua, mul :
Wo hao eoinu tn Indianapolis, not with our
bun una uuf'iilud, but as nijuut, liuliistiuus
class, llitont upon lining what we can to fur
tlur tho pioipuity of tho people. Wo Imu
come hum tho four ends of the country, mid
lien-, in the tenter of our f.u-u-.ithliig agricul
tural reiMiure.es, wo hau assemliltd to tonstilt
upon iniasiiics for the aileaiiceiiient of the
couiinon mtt rests of all. A l'atron of Hus
biudryiii South Cuniliiii will nlwuje mvo
vriteoino tn a l'.itrou of lluslumli) in Iitli
ann. Our pm pose is to elevate the talluii.' of
the Ainerit'iui fanner, but in sajiug this I am
uot to bo Intel prett d us intimating that his
pursuit is not already one of the most I onon
bin. Wo well mideratind how tho farmer is
geiurally consult ml the hewer ol wood and
the ilinuur of wnttruf all other awicitioiia
How tiitu lits become the reference to the
"horny-handed farmer 1" It retjairea more
industry uud us much science to master agri
culture as an other pursuit. The objeet of
the grangu orgamttiou is to teaeli farmers to
improve tho intthoda of agriculture and to
plaoo the puuult upon a higher plane than it
is now accorded to publio opinion,
.1. II. llriglutni, Muster of the Ohio Orange,
sanl agriculture in thu past had been ueg
Jrcted, and the me tings of the grangu hud
not been properly attended, Tluru was no
enthusiasm and no s)stcm of wt rk, and, as a
result, agriculture did not occup) the position
among otlitr mttreats that it ought to. The
secret sessions aiu not for the purpose i f doing
ail) thing detiimeutal to tho mtt rests of any
other class, but simply to protect the orgaui
Zatiiu, and it ia necessary that there aheuld
tie Vimo social iutercourao among farmers.
Nothing camo to tako tho place of the rail)
.. sooiiil gatherings of the piontera the racings,
tTie"iiilltiugs and tho imsl'iiia until the
grange was organized. We expect to hae
better methods of tilling the aoil and ot mak
ing bettir homes. One thing to Ire deplortd
is thst the farmeii lit some States do not
take the interest in agriculture that they do
in po itics One of the objects ot the grange
is to educate the ) truth of the country for bet
ter cllUruship,
a rang Ja siting
Gmi No. 10 held an vnthuaiaatic meeting
at Grand Prairie, Saturday, IWceinlwr 2ud,
at Orange 1111, which was attended by about
200, fioni all parts of the county, Speeches
were made for tho good of the Order, aud a
general good tune had, The dinner has not
lx fll oeirjuaaexl. The ladies presented the
Grange with a ten ga lou eotfre tank, which
wasgteatly appreciate! sail- eiuickly einpiiotl.
The in t meclilig will he held at Knox tlutte,
on Saturday, January tl, I8S.1, when another
tirt-olae tune may Iwexpecti-tl The elec
tion of otbotrs will tr.o plaeo at that time
Time meetings are occurs nu of great
moment to tho tanner, and are the uitaut of
milting t'lem, ami making them interested lu
taJi othtr'a ami tl eir w oik, and IiswIhiui
the means of great grod. They aliiniM W
l.rpt up, and, fieun appearaucxr, 1,11 be, in a
lively manner tl l vi lute', IHih
Orange Election.
Siiedds, Dec. 11, 1882.
Editor Willimctte Fanner:
Oak Plain Grange htld their election Dec.
11th, and clectttl the fo'l iwing nurniil ofliters
for the ensuing ytar: M., J. B Comctt; 0.,
Jonas Davis; h., J. W. Fletcher; S., It II.
Wright; A. S., W. Flttcher; Chap , Solen
Taylor; T., John Kobinett; htc, H. II.
Sprenger; O., S Brock; Seres, Mrs. D. A
Davis; Pomona, Mrs. M. A. Powers; Flora,
Mrs. Sarah Cornett; L. A. S., Jlis Ailclie
IHis. The grange suspended busintts at
twelve o'clcck, and were invited to sit down
to a sumptuous rerast.
Granite Election
Ham. of ISutteUkancik, Deo. 20, 1882.
Kditor Willimetto Firmer:'
At the Annual clettion of liuttc Orange,
No. 148, P. of II., held Dec 20, 1882. the
following officers were elected, who will be
installed on January I, 1SS.1: M s'er, J. A.
K chardson; Overseer, A. H. Heath; Lee-
tnrtr, Thomas Paulsen Steward, Alex, fins
tiij A sistant Stoard, A. K Heath; Chap
li i, Mrp. F, M. Paulsen; Treasurer, Mrs. K
1! Heath; Secretary, C. F. Tigird; Gate
leper, J. A. Gustin; Teres, Mrs. H. Foster;
Pomona, Mrs. M. h llici nbon; Flora, Mrs.
M. A. Tigard; Lady Assistant Steward, Mrs.
I C. Ma ion; Trustees, A. II. Hcith, J. F.
C .ley, It. II. Tyson.
Tlios. Pat'Lsrs, Stc, pro tern.
Orange Meeting.
Salkm, Dec,
18S2.
1'tlitor Willamette Farmer:
Tho Marion County Pomona Grange will
hold the first regul r meeting of next year on
1 hursday, January 4th, nt 11 o'clock A. M.
Olliccrs for 1883 to be installed and o her
t ry imporlant bu-iuess to bo attended to.
1 ourth degree members of the Order cordially
invited to put in an appearaucc on and day at
a' the Grange Hall in this city. Let us anti
t pite a good tune.
j1.. STUOMi, ntcretary.
Educated Farmers
Lawyers, physicians, clerg) ineu and literary
in n make tho discipline of their intellect a
ro istant study. They read more, think more,
mi 1 write moro than the laboring classes
The differenco between the educated and mi-
located portions of society in a real tliU'cicncc.
Now a proud anil lay fellow may rail at tl
s ve ir at this, and havo his labor for his
.mis. Thtro is only ono wayrtallyto get
over it, and that is to rear up a generation of,
e U educated, thinking, reading farmers and
luothanicK. Your skill and industry are
I, It; and they put you in this- lcspects ahead
of any other lass, .lu-t as soon os your
londs arc felt as much as jour hands am,
fioy will bring you to the top.
Many of our best fanners aiu men of great
i .ttur.il shrew dneas; but wh u they wtre
) ling, they "hail no elnnte of learning "
Tin v feel tho loss, anil tiny am giving their
tlildren tho best edueition ihty can. Far
mi rs' sons constitute tlntu fiftl s of th edu-
citeil tl.as. Hut tlit- tiling is that tilt) aie
not ediieiteil as finners. When they In gin
1 1 study they ltao tho farm. They do not
t tpect to rt turn tn it. The idei of eei ding
a hoy to the school, the academy, an 1 the
tnlltge, uud then li t nig linn go luck to fann
ing, is regarded as n ineie waste of tune ami
money. You ben how it is exen nut nig )our
ht les. If a boy Ins an etlueatn n jou expi ct
him tn be nhwyer, tlnctor, or .a pieicher.
You Uctil) admit tint a farmer does not need
such mi education; and if jou think so jou
tiinnot hi uno others if tluy follow your
example.
There is no reason why men of tho very
highest education should not go to a farm for
living. If a sou of mine weio brought up
on purpose to bo a farmer, if that was the
railing which he preferred, I still would cdti
eato him if ho had common senso to In gin
with. He would bo aa much better for it as
a farmer as ho would aa a lawyer. There ia
uo reason w hy a tliop uglily scientific educa
tion ahould not be g'neu to oory farmer and
every mechanic. Iffnry Waul lletthtr, in
Flotrers, Fntit ami FiiniiiiHj,
Cornelius J. Palmer.
The subject ot this sketch
was horn in
Terre Haute, Indiana, September 14, 1S22.
At tho age of 20, in the year 18.11, he came
to this toast. A little more than one-half of
hia life, therefore, haa been spent in tins part
of the laud, that we call more particularly our
own. He was one of the pioneers of the Pa
cific Northwest. Those who came to this
country at as oariy a day aa he, have now lie
come a ery small company. They would be
easily numbered, and the enumeration of them
will be incre-asingly less and Itsa difficult.
Those pioneers, of the lumber of whom Mr.
Palmer was a genuine representative, were
barely men, who love much of the burden and
danger of the settlement of the country. We
cannot but renminbi r them with gratitude.
The comforts of cmliution, ao far aa we have
them, have come to ua largely upon their
shoulders It was a different thing coming to
this country 30 years ago from what it is now.
A six months' mis by an ox team or a ait
mouths' voyage half around the world, in
atead of a two weeks' ride by rail, was the
means of getting here, and unless one was
here, past tho penl, genuine perils, too,
of storm, and heat, and cold ; and of etana
tiou, and of Indians (all of in know how many
early immigrants left their bones somewhere
on the plains, neer setting foct opm the
laud of their hopes) ; past all these dangers,
out e here, one was icawly Iwtter tnan bur
led, as far us the ouUide world was con
crrnesl. M ill came around about once a ) ear.
No telegraph existed. One might die tee
and not be wept for until inoutts after by
father, or mother, or frirmla, who were still
prajiiigfnr him at among the living. One
might die here and parent or friends never
learn hit ft.t-, to many t'io Mudi of accidents
and o uucertain the n euis of commuuira-
WILLAMETTE FARMER: PORTLAND, OREGON, DECEMBER
tion. ft was because such men as Mr.
Palmer carr.o here and lived that our country
out here liecamc valuable in the eyes of the
rot of the world, and that II this is now
changed. Whatever there was of danger,
whatever there was of loneliness, whatever
there waa of dread in this pioneer life, he
bore pvtitntly and courageously ; and we en
joy tho fruits of his labor.
This pioneer life has been spent very
largt ly upon the banks of the Columbia He
early engaged in the mercantile business at
the Cascades, and was very successful. In
1850, thm 34 years of age, occurred the Cas
cade maspacrc, in which 17 white men were
killed. Among those slain was a brother of
Mr. Palmer. The massacre occurred at the
Upper Cascades. Mr. Palmer himself was at
the Middle Cascades, and so escaped.
In 18."0, Mr. Palmer suffered the accident
which made him partly an invalid the re
mainder of his life. He fell from a bridge
which spanned a gorge, upon a bed ot rock.
His left side has been paraljzed ever sine.
Ho spent a year at Hood river, and another
year here, living in the family of Mr. Jose
lynn, the man who might be called the patri
arch of White Salmon. In 1862 he went
upon the place where he died, being, during
the last two years of his feeblencs, in the
csro of Mr. Eagan. Having lived so long in
the sight of the Columbia, it seems very
fitting that his dust he upon the lull top
always overlooking it.
No man ever Hied and died without leav
ing something to regret. No man ever
passed through life without wishing that
some things m'ght be changed. There wore
opportunities for tloing good that were not
Used. Tht re were tempeatioua to doing bad
that were not resisted. There were yearn
ings alter Gotl that were allowed to die, as
tender trees die without care. None but the
all perfc;t One, the Son of God, and the Si n
of Man, can look across the broken years of
a lifetime and think that it was all fair. All
lives ore very much checkered. Wo would
fain beliove thcro is good in the most of them,
as we know that there is bad in the Lest i f
them. But when death comes across a life,
what is it that we remember! How the bad
S' cms to crumble and sink out of sight, and
the g od appeals without so many stains. A
j onng man tlies. wo no iut remember his
indolence, his waywardness, his unkindness,
low ever little or much these may have
s'ninetl his character, antl these are deep
stains. Hut how fondly wo will dwell upon
tho manliness, the courage, tho thoughtful
ness, tho cheerfulness, the honesty, that
every now and then were breaking through
the clouds of his lower self.
A young woman dies. We forget tho little
fiivolities, and vanities, and ptttincss that
n-rribly mar many a fair one, but we remem
ber the womanliness, and devotion, and kind
lies, and piety tl at are as beautiful as the
gems of morning.
One comes to his death in full age. What
ho has done well we would inscribe upon his
tombstone, w litre all may read. What ho
has dono badlj-w e would bury deep under
the ground, This is because1 there is .iu eter
nal distinction between light and wrong.
Go id is not the same as I ad ; selfishness and
dishorn i are not tho same as love and integ-
ritj. Fvil is not worthy of remembrance. It
is worthy only of oblivion and torgttfuhics.
Let it rest ; let it decay ; put it out of sight,
and of m nd as tpj'cklj' as possible. But good
is worthy of everlasting remembrance, to in
hibit tlKittern.il mansion and shine forever
and ever. Death tradicatcg tho bail, con
sumes it, but has no power to mar tho g od.
No tlotrotr cau destroy righteousness. The
daj- tho death-day shall try our work by
the. Wo may be building with gold, or silier,
or stones, wood, clay or stubblo ; but u lit n
dea'h passes over our work, only the substan
tial stnuos, und gold, and silver can remain.
The wood, and clay, and stubblo must be
swept aw ay into smoke. .
We are all sinful enough, all imperfect
enough. God only knows how much we lack,
and the righteousness of God, the All Merciful
One, the All-Atouing One, alono can stand
us in store through life, and death, and eter
nity. Into his hands we commit our spirits ;
into hia hands wo commit the soula of our
f i ieuds. Hia everlasting arms are around and
a'nut one underneath, and the Judge of all
the earth will alwaya tin right,
Mr. Neal Power's life has now the great
real of death upon it. To us in lines of living
light, the good that he has done should
alwaya bo visible.
But we need not seek his merits to disclose,
Nor draw his frail ties from their elreal
abode;
They alike in trembling hope repose.
The bosom of hia Father and his Goel.
For him the labors, tho Bufferings, the op
portunities of this life are ended. Hut for ua
the labors, the suilerings, the opportunities of
time still remain. Oh, how this dead one be
fore ua appoali, in tones clearer than the liv
ing can command, like the voice of good Abel's
blood crying from the ground, that we ahould
wry on ou labor 'a energetically and honestly,
that we should endure our sufferings patient
ly and liravely, that we should improve our
opportunities well, until life be ended. Then
we need not be afraid of leaving hopes when
we go through death, but only gaina.
Trotting Stock.
There ia a conatantlj- increasing demand for
American trotting-breet horses in all parts ol
the world, and scarcely a w ek passes that
aome are uot aent to foreign countries. This
ia an assurance of the necessity of our farmers
aiding in the circulation of a journal whose
columns will be devoted to the development
of all stock whoae poiuU can be utilized to
advance the breexl of American stock, which
has such a wide field as the blue gran region
of Kentucky and the broad prairiea with the
rich v.illejaof tho West and Middle States.
We shall devote a lare epsee to American
trotters, and hope our corrrspondeu'a will
urnUh ua with all the data that it attainable,
" Iu union there it strength," au.l the eae -
e.t w v to scooaiWi.!, a unity of actiou . . '
fullest extent it b tskin: a paper .tevohd to '
agricultural lutereeU auel atitirg it. I
Washington Terrltorr
America.
Boys In South
The following letter wo tnkc from the Col
fax Gazrtte, and it is readable as well as the
experience of two "native" boj-s of this
country in that far-away country and land of
promise :
Colony California,
Province of Santa Fe,
October 12, 1882.
Dear Father Wo arrived in Buenos
Ayres on the 1st of September, after a very
pleasant ocean voyago of forty two days.
From there we wont by rail and boit to San
Nicholas, a small city in the Province of
Buenos Ayres, whtio wo met with a Mr,
Crawford, a pioneer of this country, who vol
unteered to accompany us in our travels, and
his company was very acceptable, from the
fact that he could talk Spanish and we could
not.
We started from San Nicholas by stage
over as fine a country as one would care to
see. Stage riding here is very exciting. We
started with eight horsta hitched to the stage
(horses being saddled, instead of harnessed,) by
a rope or chain fastened to a ciech ring and
only two lines, both on the lead hcrsts. It
lakes two men to run such an outfit, one to
dnve and the' other to whip. We started at
a run, with the "engineer" applying his
whip at every jump, keeping up the gait for
three leagues, when one ot the horses
dropped dead and another was caught from
off the grass and put in his place, and on we
went to Rossaro, the New York of Argentine
Itepublic, and from thero to ban Javier, a
small village on tho banks of a river bearing
the same name, and an arm of the great river,
Parana, navigable to this poiut. Here we
find plenty of timber, something we did not
see in the lower provinces, except occasion
ally a bamboo.tret. The trees here are the
algaroba and cobratcha, both fine timber for
making wagons and furniture, aud the nan-tl-ey,
which makes the finest fence post in the
world; once put in tho giouutl, they never
need resetting. A few wcro taken up here a
short time since which were planted over a
hundred years ago, and found in i-s good con
dition as when first placed in the ground.
We find no saw mills here. In their stead
vvo find the whip saw is used. Houses are
generally made of brick; still there is timber
here for all purposes if they only had ma
chinery to work it up, but the country is new
as j-et, and until the Calitornia colony came
hero it was inhabited by Indians, El Padre,
the priest, being the only white man in the
place ; but Moore and his handful of followers
not only run them out of tho country and
k lied many of them, but caused them and
tho gouch to have a horror ct the guerriago,
as they call foreigners. The)- are very differ
ent from oar Indians. Here all they care for
is to steal ; there they want blood.
The s il of Argentine is not spotted as it is
n the Pacific Coast, but the same all over,
a rich, black, Bandy soil that will grow any
thing jou plant. Corn, wheat, oats, barley
and all kinds of fiuits and vegetables do well,
with the exception of apples, which do not
grow so well as they elo in Oiegon and Wash
ington. Nowhere on the Pacific Coast can
you tintl oranges halt so eoocl tho natives
almost live on them.
Thero is verj" little farming elone here, but
wlnt is do'ie is well paid for. Corn brings
Jl antl wheat S2 per bushel, but even then
people tlo not care to farm, while cattle paj
flO per cent, per annum, and aro no trouble or
oxpei en, I hoy uon t havo to put up hay for
winter, as tho I'rass is green all the year
round. Wo arrived here during the dryest
aeuson of tho year and found the grass as
ureen as in tho spring, anil people who have
lived heie for years say they never saw it
dry.
A gueringo is exempt from tax for five
years. McLanc, the manager of the Califor
nia colouj-, who ca.ne here 17 years ago, says
he has, paid but one tax' in that time. He is
quite an old man, but says this is the place
for him, and says it boats any part of Califor
nia for climate. Two years ago the mercury
indicated as high as 105, and the people
haven't get over talking about it yet. The
nights aro not sultry here as they are in the
Eastern States, but it has its drawbacks as
well as other countries. In tho swamps the
mosquitoes prod a fellow as he passes through
them. Once during the past 17 years the
locust have destroyed the crops and even
eaten all the leaves from the trees.
We started with one of the colonists from
San Javier to look at the camp as they call
it hero nine leagues away. We traveled for
seven days over tho most beautiful country
it has peen my pleasure to see, just rolling
enough to please the eye of an Oregoniao,
covered with grass two feet high, and so
thick that the ground cannot be seen. Small
streams of water and groves of timber here
there, and small lakes, on which fowl of every
description swarm. I saw more deer in one
day's travel than in all my life before.
Land is offered for sale a mile square for
400, or a league for $2,000. There are 6,400
acres in a league. Spanish miles are longer
than ours, ana they calculate a league will
support 0,000 head of cattle.
Our trip having cost ua some (2,000 more
than we expected, we aro consequently short
of money, and not being familiar with the
Snauiah language, we are more or less embar
rassed, but we are gradually picking up the
lm;o of ths people, and traveling over the
country aa beat we can. Wages are so low
that an American would starve to death try
ing to work, and a man without capital can
do nothiug here. Oae must have money
enough to buy a league of land. They will
give time on part of the purchase money;
tl eu a litt e.start in cattle aud he is all nght
If he hain't got that, there ia na use for him
in the -cuntry If yon or any of our fnenda
at home feel foolish euougn to advance us
uouey enough to secure a league of land. I
am aatittied that in five years we can prove it
toltii oavin? invefctmt-nt. Wi am ,i nt-r
am "tUtinl tint m hvn years e cn prove il
?' e. f J1"8 'mS W? 3 ' V1
eut staj lug with the California colon)-, but '
, - .1.1 nntliln-. Imt tt- ,ii. . .i....
noanci 1 autatsnee.
Two
29, 1882.
Besaesaber This.
If you are sick, Hop titters will surely aid Naturt In
miking roe veil when all rise fall.
It you are costive or ijiftplic, or are suffering from
anr other ol the numeooui dlicura ot the stomach or
bowels, It Is your own fault If you rtmaln 1H, for Hep
Bitters are a sovereign remedy In all such complaints.
If jou are wasting aveaj with any form of Kltlncy
Jliease, stop tempting Death this moment, antl turn for
a cure to Hop Bltt rs
If jou are alclc with that terrible sickness Nervous
ness, jou will find a '-Balm in O Head" In the ou of
Hop Bitters. ,,
If vou are a frequenter, or a resident of a miasmatic
district, barric ide your sytem airnlrt the scourge ot
all countries malarial, epidemic, billons, and Intermit
tent fevers by the use of II p Bitters.
If jou hare rouyh, pimply or sallow skin, bad brenth,
pains and aches, and feel miserable generally. Hop Bit
ters will frire jou fair skin, rich blood, aud aweetest
breath, health, and comfort.
In short thej cure all Dlseasej of the stomach,
Bowels, Blood, l Iver, Nerves, Kidnevs, Brlght's Disease.
00 will be paid for a case they w ill not cure help.
That poor, bedridden, invalid wife, el-tcr, mother, or
daughter, can be made the plctU'e of health, by a few
bottles of Hop Bitters, coating but a trifle. Will you.
Hklnnr Men,
"Wells' Health Renewer" reitorea healtn and visor,
cnrcs Djapepbia, Impotence, btxual Debility tl.
Oregon Railway antl Naviga
tion Company.
OCEAN DIVISION.
Between San Francisco and rortland.
Leaving San Francisco at 10 a. at.
i State ot j I neen '
Columbia. California. Oregon. of the Pacific
1 ov.. .."tTSov HINov 15 Nov 18
Nov ttNov 2.5 ov 29 Dec.' 2
Dec 6 Dec 9 Dec 13 Dec 10
Dec SO Dec. 21 Dec 27 Dec 30
Jan ... 3 Jan e. Jan 10 Jan 13
Jan 17 Jan 20 Jan 21 Jan il
Leai e Portland at 12 00 o'clock, Midnight.
Nov 14 Nov 17 Nc.v 21 Nov 24
Nov 28 Dec 1 Dec. 5 Deo 8
Dec 12 Dec 16 Dec 19 Dec 72
Dec 28 Dec 89 Jan 2Jai,- 6
Jan 9 Jan 12 Jan la Jan 19
Jan 2jJan 2flJan 30
Through Tickets sold to all points in the United
State-, Canada and Europe.
Right reaen ed to change steamers or sailing days.
Fare Cabir, $20. te-rage, 810. Children, 12 years,
full fare; from 12 to 5, half fare; nnder 6, free.
RAILROAD DIVISIONS.
Leave Portland for The Dalles, Umatilla, Walla Walla,
and up rhcr points at 4 o'clock P. M.
MIDIrLK rOLIinillt, WILLAMETTE A.D
YIMI11LL HIiKH IITl!Sl(r..
Leave Portland
for
Hon. (Toes. I Wed. Thiir I Frl. Sat
Dalles and Upper
uoiumoia-....
Astoria and Low
er Columbia. . .
Dayton
Victoria, BC...
Corvallis and In
termedlate pts
7 All
7 AM 7 AM
7 AM
DAM
7 AM
8AM
7 AM
6 AM
7AM
tit
6 AM
7 AM
6AM.1 M
..7 AM
6 AM
6 AM
..j AM
6 AM
A. L. MAXWELL,
Ticket agent O. R. &N. Co.
JOnN MUIR,
Superintendent of Traffic.
C. H. PRESCOTT,
Manager
C. N. POTTER,
NURSERYMAN,
SALEM, OR.
Fruit, Shade and Ornamental
Trees, Shrubbery,-Vines
Etc.
ta.Has an especially line lot oflil
PLUM and PRUNE TREES,
OF THE
VERY BEST VARIETY.
AeltlressC. N. POTTER,
NovlStt Salem, Oregon.
II. CAKPE1VTEK, 31. I.
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON.
(Late of Salem )
Offlco up Btalrs, X. W. Corner of 2d and Morrison St
PORTLAND t OREGON.
Will practice in Portland and surrounding1 countiv
au&rl'tf
The Town of
8ELLW00D
On the East bank of the W jlasaettee 3) miles
from the business center of Portland
"VFFER3 PETTER INDUCEMENTS IN TIIE
eat of reaching the city.
HEALTHrVUESS OF LOCATION,
GOOD DKAIXAGK,
And facilities for procuring pare water, and plenty of It
than any other addition to tht city of Portland.
The Oompanrs
Ferry RoatDollj,
Is at present malting four trips per dry. Its NEW
FERKY BOAT will next Summer make hourly trips
to and from the town, making th dlsUnc inalde of
16 minutes, sod when necessary salt hcur trips will b.
made.
Lots art sold en the popular
IXaTALUUttiT PLAN, tTITMOIT UTKKE8T,
N UUktU PAYMENTS.
. . n rnje froai llOOJto ISlOindni..,.
Monthly ayments of $10 Facti.
tSsVFor Maps and clrculara'address,
T. A. WOOD,
OBTLAND, OBEOON
DR. WITIIYCOMBE, V. 8.
TBTERINAK Y S URGEON.
PortUael, Oregaa.
Writes Preacrlptiona 'jr Pikso all cUaaet of Mock
ric,S for each pre.ctij.tioo writtea. State armn)
ton Mdaarfaalmalau near aepoaait,',.
raUesce Ov ThireetBU, y 8tfc
TUTT'S i
PILLS!
SYMPTOMS OF A J
TORPID LIVER. J
Loss of Appetite, Bowels eoatlvn. Pain I. But
ha TTuJ wtf.1. m .4..tl .1 " .".."
Dart. Fain under th
blade, fullness after eating, with a disin
clination to exertion of body or mind
imcaDtmr or temp-r, Jjow spirits, with :
a feeling of having n glected some dutrXh
weariness, Dizzlne. s, fluttering at the Tn
TTa Tl. KrAn .. a...... Srll.aiJ7lS S. V
Headache trenerallv over the rlht i,Bat
BeBtlessness, with fitful dreams, highly
colored Urine, and
CONSTIPATION.
luiin riM.Tnrr especially nunpiea to ryi
such casps, orntloHe effects such a change ,
of feeling an t nntonlBh the sufferer. J
They Ineroune th Apptll,and cause tbcllo k
body to Tnke ou Fleti, thus the lystem U fW
nonrtebed. and by itip.r Tonle Art Ion on th
DlffMllve Ornu. netralnr MtooU art pro-111 h
duced. Price - cents. 33 Hurray (,, N. . aq
TUTT'S HAIR DYE.
aBarHAiROBWrtrsRPRs chanced toaQLowr Wl
Black by a single application of tala Dvk. leim-
Earts a natural color, acts -Xnataataneoeisly. Soldvi
7 Druggists, or seat hr express em receipt of 11. ' her
OFFICK. m MCRBA V ST., NEW TOItK. Ant
f Br. TTTTS IIMIL of TU.rbl. IsroraaUns dVridll
CKfal BmlaSi will k BilM MIKE oa arpllraUaeJ 1
S250 WILL BUY
I
Tlao
tost Pony
SAW MILL
Yet OITercsl for the Money.
W Bend for Clroalrtr.
RICHMOND MACHINE WORKS.
RICIIHOXD r,i
4E GREAT CURE
D urn Id A T I O IM
.. " .w "" " 1 V ITS HI
kS-n-BZ-J-ftt3-Il- B 'l-A-HI Im
aa k is for all tho painful diseases of the M
uuNbTt,UIVEK AND BOWELS.
It fl(1TS Una tlsa afiriitnwt rfil.. - .u i .
--'- "" jiaivi ut uio ueriu poison
tnat causes the dreadful suffering which
rf ww -muo v juiuu.uuu8ui can realize.
rw JU Wl- WA4iE3
-- .,UiJb u.imi ut una lej-x-uie cufieaae
havo been quickly relioved, and in short time
price. $u Liqiiuou inn, soiu ia n net. cists.
WLLiClTD'SOIs- Sz Co., Burlington Vt
trTT
"".BHSSiSS conabd CO'S
ROS
1 uuutwuujiLnu
SPLENDID POT PLANTS. oueclallvDre-
pnred for Immediate Bloom. O: vrretl
safely by mall osrpa.d,itttll i obtefflef-.bfi l.n
did laricues, your choice, all labeled, forg,!- 12
for 82; 10 for S3: 2Tfor3: 35forC3: 75 for
SI0:l00for3l3. VA'H CIVE a ll-.-i-cmo
Presentofcholcor.udvaluabloROSci,,rco
with every order. Our NEW CUIDE, runj-ut,
Trtatiie on the Hoi, 76 pp. eUqantlu illustrated frr
loall THE DINCEE & CONARD CO.
Rose Growera, Weat Drove, Cheater Co, P.
UbfcJ iiUSE PILLS
iburgh.4
ELESGOPESSS;r'r.cfe
mometera, and Compa. H, tV .1. HXCK.
Manufactnrinff.Optidans. PlillndHphfn, Pal
ti-Sen4 for llfubtrated lrlred CuttUoae.
-
Garmore's'Sfi.il,.
A lBTCUtd and worn hr htm
Rerresptlj restoring the heariiiff. .En
rely deaf for thirty veirs. he hean with
ihem, even wh.wers. distinctly. Are
not bbfterrnble, and remain in posi
tion without aid. Descriptive Circular
Free. flArTinw7r,,Li...
byhoru$e4rdmro. Mine is the only
successful artificial Ear Drum manu
factored.
JOHN GARMORE,
Filth Sr Race Sek, Cincinnati; 0k
Simpson & Eillingsworth
REAL ESTATE
aiD
GENERAL BROKERS,
(No. 12, Unlou Block, up stain )
Frout SI reel, rurllanil, Oregon.
Orrics Hoi rs From 8, a, , to 8 30 r u.
DEXXISOX & WATSON.
ATTORNEYS - AT - LAW,
Room 31, Union Block, rortland, Of egon.
j ess Up,
THE DENTIST,
(UP STAIRS)
Cor. 1st and Salmon, Portland, Oregon.
BIMNEHS r.IHC.tlie.
u.u.u.
exJLUMrJLA i
rTT, TT.T . " commereUl College Joonul.
Glrinjr full Information relating to one ol the mt
Practical Institutions for th. Buslntsa Trainlnr of the
Tonne; and Middle And of either sea1, lent free on
awUcaUotu riTMudeost Admitted - Week
tteiy In Ike Tear. Address:
W. 8. JAMES, Boi &sj pott,an'!. Ore.
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