mp-; y'5WiWB8WHHMBIBWBBWiMMlfcMlfcLii''JlJiimi-VittHiiatjitiai.a'.iiw)T-' -1 kraMaMitrjiiwiiis . . t " -..-.i.., . -. . - . . . . - iiinMiBiirtjwwiranrT i WILLAMETTE PAEMER: PORTLAND, OBEGON, JANUARY 19, 1883 4 i a irt J' "I J issued every Week by the WIlLAm.TTK FAIMII.B ITHLIHIIINO CO. TKRMS OF tiUBSCltllTlOKf One year, IPosUko paid). In adl nice I IW Six months, (Postaj(e pad!), In alliance l. Lees thin lx month 111 be, licr month 25 ADVEHMSINQ 11ATE8 : Alvertlscments 1U he inserted, providing tn re lespei-UMe, mt the following Utile of rates I Qnolncli of space per month 2.- hree Inches of apace per month 6 00 ins half column iter month . 1600 Jn column tier month 30 00 C4LSunulB copies sent free on application. l'uWI:atlnu01llco: No. 6 Washtofrton btreet. Up U'rs. roorr No BandTiA ll III 1111. Il'is amiimmii:nt. Thofollonlujf arc autliorlttd to receipt for subscrip tions to this paper til wlicro we liae no agents re mittances MUST be made, (expenses paid), to us by KcirlsUred Letter, or .Monti Orders, or Express. ALL l'Al'KIIS lllbt'OM IM I.I) AT TUB EXPIKA TION OF Till: TJllK PAID 10U. Amltv . . It LSimpion i Lebanon . hinitli Aurori .. .ileo Sillier Itrnwimillo .W It Kirk Butteiillc .JolinllaUlicller llutta Creek Khkinln Brooks W II Hurrl Ucllcvue Crawfonlsillle Icvilsvllle IICMcTliiiinonds l.ooklnff (Jlass. II Cochran I.I in J i L Abrams I jfjieKc... JWhtraniru MeYIInMllIcJ Mel'lilllilM H uouoins r' S Thayer watch all proceedings of politic! or business to see how they affect you; we serve up to you valuable information of the world's pro gress and make a contribution in every issue to the pleasures of home. So far as we are able, and you turnith the means, we serve you in evcrydepaitment of life that can affect you, to the best of our study and comprehen sion. We Bubmit, then, fur your considera tion If it is not icasonably your duty (and your interest as well) to sustain a journal that represents you closely, and has no other aim than to Bervo you well. The many years of this service answer whether we can seivo jou efficiently. Jell Hails! Mi Coy Itcbt (links Jit 1'lcisant OotUieo Or. .J llhhortridxu Marl... ..It II ltutherford Coruillls .Mcjcr Harris Mohiwk .J S Churchill diamine): A Jetle Monuiolllll aleniollc Jamaicus K Korbei N'oYnnihlll flw Kappliiirtoti Dai ton I: CllaJ.injl'oell alley TK Willi mis Drains lion J (" Drain Pilot Iloek .11 (iillhni tllt, 1 II hmitli Pendleton l.ot l.llennoro jufiir .1 Dnfur Jr lerrjdilu J Vt Mcllrew Roll .Thomas I" arte I ka.uitlllll UWIIandsilcr KlkUin A II Haines llllcrside. ..,C I' Knonlcs Rneene Hon .1 II MKIiiiu Hosi htirir 8 K Ilaramiil Klltli-hiiri; Him M b ihj Sweet Home .7. II .Muss Vonst (tr tie s llujits Silmi . S W L'hureli Fox Valley A n (lu.lner SUjton ...A IMlirdnir UoMlien . .J llunUikir (sublimity. . Jno Dovmimr airtrtii ..AC Itijininil Sfo J H Jlorrla dermis Malltcli'llJMieild W M Powers (loldilHhle.il FMyloriCo.Tanitent John Lupcr IIirrlsburL'...IIon If Hmltli'WIIbur ...Hon Tlios Hmitli nulscy.. Muck, Pearl U Co .Williinctte P....M wilklns Irvlna .. A I! .luinliiirsjvrillu. ...A A Williamson Independence n L Hodirlili Weston . ..L 8 Wood Jacksonville. ..Max SIulleriWaitsburL' WN Smljli Jlinetlon W II ISuber Walla Walla Jjaeons JofTirmn ,J W Itoland'Zens S SQImblo Foil the infc r.riation of all our readers we inform thorn that we have the latest markets in each issue. Sonvi people think the daily papers only get the 'atist nows. They forget that it is ours tho moment it is published, and wo give it I" idem. Besides this, at 10 o'clock on publicali.il day we can got all tho import ant news tl.... -.-ill be published tho day fol lowing. Nh n-wapipir lus any advantage ovei us in fin mailing innikct intelligence. Wo linvu fun. ! that whin the editor himself works tipt'n treots there aiu not many who can get up rro c valuable points in tho same time. Tiik Wall.. Wall Statesman has great faith that ttomcti au tho Si mid will be tho great port for the pioduccra of tho interior. The grain an I products of the country Kist of tlm CaRcaihs will lie bought by oxportera and shipped wheiovir they can ship tho choipo-t. That is I'm i iru iioh-. Kxporten aro working for milt, ami aio not interested in tno sue cubs of towns. If goMiiwicnt improves tho ontiti'ie'i to tho Ciiluiuliia wi tlint it can admit tomnierco safely, as will mi iloulit liu ilone, and if the river Bhall be cleaned of bars, ns will also lie done, then commerce will fiud its way to I'm tliiml and slnii-i will load thcio Wu vulture to Inlieve tlint Walla Walh nlieat will como to l'ortland for many a ye.u to eoiiie'. Thkiik us no uuwsnapor in tho Northwoit that any w ay mi u (ills the pl.ico wu oceiipy in Bupiilym,' farmers with inloim.itiim Biuted to this part of tho country, reliable facts of agri e'liltuie, coiiKiiiiiircations from the people, Xiod family leading and mUcelluuy of a scien tific and pr ititnblo kind. The w hole ciiclo of lioiuti is liciietited; thu father has Iih eolitl agiicultural f icts, the mother her household mutters .mil the jo ny their department. The Wilmmh'ir Fahmmi will educate tho young tube ptuctical men and women if thoy read it, and lliu elders will flint that thoy all the time learn somo new thing that is tn thoir ad vantage tn Know alto, llesidea this we give you le'li.ililo mnrkut news. Tiik Yakima S'vjnaX in its first isue figures up the land grant of the N. I. K. K. as worth $50,000 t3 $100,000 a mile, and complains be cause 30,000,000 to the cast is to he exchanged for preferred ttock. Tho Signal makes its calculations from prices charged by J. M. Willis, land agent at Spraguc. When Mr. Willis was htrc in December ho informed us that only one-fourth of all the land within the grant, west of Sprague an 1 north of the ra 1 road, in Spokane :cuuty, was fit for cultiva tion, and much of that is of inferior quality. When Mr. Lamboru, General Land Commis sioner of tho N. 1'. H. It., wa9 hero last fall, ho told ua the land grant of the N. 1'. would baldly average 50 cents an acre. Ifitnas worth what the Signal thinks it is the com pany's stock would bo worth 200 per cent, in stead of 45. The preferred st ick represents tho interest of bondholders at tho time of Jay Cooke's failure, actual cash loaned tho com pany, and it is only wotth 85 c's. This pre f erred stock when the company reorganized was to be taken at par in payment for lands, and it now seems that English holders of it are converting it into land in preference to owning the stock, as provided in case of all holders. This wo know, because we remem ber the terms of reorganization. Any man who wants to buy railroad land will mako something by purchasing preferred stock at 85c to pay for it with. Tho Signal strikes us as one of the most attractive journals we re ceive, both as to mechadical appearance and its manifest editorial ability. Iti figures are basnl on current opinions. We happen to know something about t!io values of land, so wo correct it as above. Yet, for all tha', the land grant of the N. P, K. K. is tho making of the road and worth millions of dollars. A FAMBEES STORY. Wk should liko to have a club gotten up at every post-office in tho country, and will make a libeial offer to any responsible pel son who will umlertako tno work. TOO MUCH EDUCATION DEMANDED Tiik .I'Mriuii accuses 114 of favoring exten sive, liud grants to railroads that ref usu 1 1 eomplv with the conditions of the grauts, a po'itiuu we havo never held. Fair treatment of honestly conducted enterprises is all wu favor. All the interest wo have is not to see thei completion of the Northern road deferred by the tillibustering of its opponents. The Ontral monopoly Is' th meanest corporation iu,txisteuce; a set of men that have gathered iiiueUiithortraiis-eoutincut.il routes aud want Con'H'si to revoke tho land grant of the Nwithi rn I'ucilie, so ai to defer tho completion otthis road to hold thu l'acil' Xorthwcatttill longer stlliji ct to their extol . . 80MK nopspe-rs pander to public preju dice, pUviug for popularity by criticising all eipnssioiis friendly to corporations. Wo lie licVe in popular rights agauat corporations, and 111 holding them subject to public uo at a faifprice. Wo glory in the decision of the Supieiuu Court 111 thu so-oilleel granger oast', Wtta) thu people should exact fair treatment float those who eujoy gnat publio franchises) kut as Cougiest distinctly aud without limit ir"-ciNetl thb lauds along the Northern l'acitio road (or thu purpose of aiding construction cf tint roul, whoover should build it, we don't wish U see tho grant revoked and construe- lioint Uioiv.nl luiiJereil. N o li-ivo Waited long lo it, and now that Uis near completion, want no disappointment. Vikw r.i AuiniiT It is much tho duty of the fainii' 1 1 siippoit hi' omu reliablu newspaper .u-it . to mppoit his district school or his ehmeli Tho latter is necessary to keep in new liu iiioi.il condition and his higher lu the. the sell ml U thu nursery for improve uicnt aud duMlopuient, but the farmer's own newspaper, devotes! to his iutensts and tain il H( do(eiiMi of Uitin, lus a claim that should stand t nrl 111 the ureter of his iteem. For uiatiy years wo have served our frieuds. We have often given them information ?f great value, lu all these yean we have never w a word or done a thiug to forfeit their nteeui, Kch week we bring ti) )OU the latent market reporu on which you can depend) we discuss the svtlairi'ot theUinstu your interest i'wt Congress is doing the right thing in passing Acts to reform the civil service, but it is pro posed to act vory absurdly in prescribing the test for ollicc holding. Candida'cs are to be subjtctcd to a competition as to their know ledge of geographical and mathenutical sub jects and other matters entirely foreign to tin ir duties, and which are beyond tho infor mation of nine tenths of the well read men of tho country. All a candidate needs to know U how to conduct tho duties of his depart ment and to win promotion in it. It is a fact that wo all realie, that tho best bojs of schools make tho dunces of after life, A parrot-like ability to memorize facts aud re cite lessons 'snot often accompaniid by prac tical common sense. It is told of Carlisle that ho was always a backward and painstaking student. Ho had for competitor a 11 lick learning boy who led him all through school and college, and was always held up to him as .111 example of what liu ought to do and be. lint tho head boy of tho school lived and died the proprietor of 1 giocer's shop in Olisgow, whilo Thomas Carlisle possessed wisdom and originality that uudu him the foremost in n of letters of his time. If tho standard of com petition is placed upon tho ability ti recito school lessons that thu wisest invariably foi B6t, and only tho most triviil thinkers ie mutiib.T, then tho olUceswill bo dUtiibuted among tho shallow minded of rur race, Tno merchant, or other business man, selects as sistants for their especial capacity to do his work. It is true in overy branch of business, and every profession, that the steady thinker and hard worker wins success. The mere ca pacity to answer the Hue of questions pro posed by examiners is not satisfactory evi dence of ability and integrity in affairs of business. Such limitation as civil service reformers propose would shut out liiauy sons of farmers and mechanics, w ho are entirely compotent to transact business, but have not hid Cduct tionil opportunities to enable them to coin peto with high school graduates. The uoni-p-titiou system looks like a premium offered for memorizing facti of history, geogriphy and science that will luxe np place in the du ties of official iu subordinate positions. Many of the most able men in our county never had schojling and were self taught. Among the most distinguished of Americans Henry Clay, for mstauce the acquisition of the mere rudiments of kuon ledge answered all necessary purpose. It opeued the secrets of learning to a willing mind that made use of all tho treasury of kuowledite. A cjinmon school udocatio'i fits any man for the highest p.isitiou in our'goverument, if ho uses it as a loer to raise hi nself by. The mere ability to read and wrjto ausneia if the poxesor has native power to use knowledge aright. The dilticnlty svetna to to tint tefotmen are im practicable. They are too often thevrisla who do not understand thu win Id's ways or the world's nee'ds The ciwl son ice is In uee 1 cf practical good sense to put reform in acme operation aud giu it assurance of success en the same basis a successful business man duds requisite in his own management of affairs In tho interest of ttie poor toy, who needs office as much as tho rich man's sou, we ob ject to the propose'el tluinuieiy that It only calculated to e the official patronage of the giivernmoul ler tnoe wno nave nau toexi op jxirtuuitte's to le well schooled. The couutry boy, witn good common sense ana tno eauca We have read, with a great deal of interest, the truthful story we publish to-day of a friend of ours, who did what he tolls in his communication, and lives to respect himself for doing It, and to enjoy his well earned property. To sum up the matter a little dif ferently, our friend has now 120 acres of land paid for, located favorably and quite near Portland, that he can keep on clearing, and in five years more it will be all cleared, and worth $100 an aero. He has a fortune in his possession, all due to his intelligence, indus try and economy. He is intelligent, jet never has economized in denying himself a newspa per. He has always taken the Fabmer, and wo count him among our steadfast friends. We have met him in grange halls, which shows that he is intelligent in realising that co-operation and sociability are necessary among farmers. He is not so saving as to avoid paying the dues, to keep up tho grange. His case illustrates tho value of good husband ry. He tells how his eggs supplied a great part of tho family needs. We wish ho had told how he made his income, as that would be an incentive to many new beginners. We firmly believe, and hive said within a month, that a farmer should live off his farm, and have his wheat ciop for profit. Tne tanrngs from the dairy and poultry yard and gorden oupht to supply tho family, with good man agement. Our friend evidently had a help inato in his wife, and that is no email item in any man's capacity to succ cd. Had they possessed pride of appearance and bought things to Bustain it, they would not to-day havo the noto paid and the deed for the laud in their pockets. We hold this lesson up to every man who is starting in life. In this country, with good health and strength, there is no good reason for failure, or even for hard times. Take farmers as a class, and if they lived within their means, as our correspondent has, they could win independence as easily. Almost every product of the farm bears a high price. Tho building of railroads bringB every part of our country within reach of market. Butter and eggs can be shipped to this or some other market, from the remotest parts of the Willamette. The towns through tho valley all create a demand for farm products. Store bills, as our correspondent says, have driven many a farmer to Bell out and go elsewhere, probably to be worried by other store bills. Living in Portland four years, we have learned the cost of the things grown by tho farmer. We have concluded to live agiin, soon, in Salem, within a half hour's walk of our own little farm, so as to save the great ex pense of buying things we can grow on tho place. Living here, we have all become more convinced of the pleasure and profit of coun try life, and anxious to enjoy such free priv ileges as no city can bestow. The only fault we find with our friend's communication is that he does not affix his name to it. It is modesty on his part. He desires to give others the benefit of his experi ence, but does it under an assumed name However, we can personally vouch fir him and his statements, Anv pers in, not a subscriber, who will get us three new subscribers, not now on our list, and remit $7.50, will receive the paper free ouu uir as eumjieusaii jii lur ine euuib. OREOON PAPEKS. Under this title Mr. D. H. Stearns has published an intcrestiug volumo of sketches conce'rninp Oregon, descriptho of the scenery of different distiicts, and containing excellent lithographs of many towns, mountain views and prominent bji'dings and other objects. I'ho front eo cr has a view taken from the hills back of Portland, with the city near by; the Willamette river, Kast l'ortland and Al bion; tho Luck ground of lulls growing into tho grand Cascado Mountains, with the seicne picseucu of Mount Hood crowning all. Tho book has pamphlet covers, all four pages devoted to elogunt landscape lithographs of Portland and suburbs. The volume is shaped to admit of its illustrations being well dis p'ayed, us its pages are wider than they are long. The presont volumo contains over 120 illustrations, including the finest views and landscapes about Poitlaud, and beautiful views Jrom tho valleys in Union and liaker oountiei among tho Illue Mountain ranges, The towns and ranches iu Grande Hondo val ley and Powdoi Kiver valley are not only well depicted but well described. The variety off-red consists of landscape views aud resi dences, public edifices, railroad works and business blocks in Portland, with living descriptions of the city aud all its surrouud inga written by tho best literary tilent in tho State. Tho whole constitutes a life picture of Oregou from different standpoints. Mr. Stearns has not dished up here the old and lucleneyed photographs of Columbia river scenery, with which the world must be fa miliar, but has gone to tho beautiful scenes among the Blue Mountains, of which the world has little knowledge, and exercised his own accomplishment as an artist iu sketching from nature. The volume contains over forty ltnds;apes. besides maps and charts to show th contempt ited improvements near Port land, aud the city and its suburbs. Too views l.jjtoru u vgou include, many farms and tno tine animals kept on stock Tne price is $1, and the book will 11. WHAT 18 O00D FABMIXO. J. Brandt, Jr., is Superintendent of the Oregon California railroad, and a vory busy man in the great responsibilities. Such a man is certain to have correct ideas andti put them in execution. He owns a farm in Wash ington county where he has some fine stoct. He was speaking the other day of lack of ceonomy and system in farming, and alluded to the fact that many of our farmer; neglect to save manure, which accumulates and actu ally beds in some barns so that the owners have to move them away from the manure piles. Since converging with Mr. Brandt wu have actually bien told of several instances where farmers havo moved barns to get away from manure. Oue occurred in Howell Prai rie, and Mr. Brandt quoted a well known gentleman of Harrisburg as another, who told him he would never haul out a load of ma nure, and that ho had actually moved his barn to get away from manure accumulations. Good farming requires that all the manure made on the farm should be saved and util ized. To do the best ecrvice manure should be used when it is strong and fresh. Of course well rotted manure is good for something, but before the ammonia evaporates it is worth much more, Tho timo has come when the Willamette Valley farmer needs to sie everything ho can, and his barn manure is woith far more than most think. Take up works on good, practicil farming, and you will read that tiblo manure is tho best fer tilizer known. It contains all the constitu ents needed for lestoring the soil, aud with a little plaster is the best fertilizer to be had. Mr. Brandt bought a farm that had been run ti wheat for nearly 30 years ; tho old fields only brought fifteen bushels to the acre. He saved and hauled out manure and brought the land up to 35 bushels. Hay is very high this season. Ot some of this ground he re stored he made a meadow, and besides feed ing all that was required to his stock he had 40 tons of hay to spare that he sold for $20 a ton $S00 for the lot, a fair interest on the value of a good farm, and produced off of 20 to 25 acres. Every farmer should combine stock with wheat farming, and mako and feed hay and not crops tn the stock. Saving and using the manure and feeding the crop on the place as much as possible will keep up its productive capacity. There is too much wheat grown and too little harvested. It doesn't yield enough to the acre. Good farming is needed to keep up the soil and keep up the farmers too. We gi" the illustrations above related to show what practical business farming ao complishes. It has been our aim, always, to study facts and sum up results to our readers. When locating a prune orchard, seven years ago, we chose a location quite near to Salem, so as to bo able to procure manure from town stables. If our farmers would study to save manure in good condition, and apply it at the proper time, they would receive practical ben efits from it well worth the effort. Hero is a topio we present to our readers, and we frame two inquiries and submit, hop ing they will be taken up and thoroughly dis cussed : FinsT: How to save manure in the best minner and with lea't expense? This includes tho whole question of feeding all kintls of stock, whether the manure should be shcl teied and stored, and as to bedding animals with straw or something to absorb liquid ma nures. This is no trifling subject, but of first class importance. Second: How to apply stable manure! This involves consideration of the climate and the effect of rains. Whether to haul out and spread in fall, w inter or spring. Whether to scatter tn plowed or unplowed ground. If it Is best to plow or cultivate the manure in. Both of these que&tious will bo of interest. Wo want to know prectical results ot manure 011 all crops iu our c'imate. FAILURE OF CO-OPERATION. We have said considerable of late about the failure or suspension of all the cooperative schemes, especially those connected with the gJange, in Oregon. The New York Timet concludes that the conditions must be differ ent from those existing in England, where co operative societies and business ventures meet with success and are placed on a permanent basis. It takes for iti text the suspension of the Co-operative Dress Association, capital $250,000, tiiat was intended to supply first c!ass goods to ladies of New York, It failed to compete with the skilled merchants, and, with very liberal support, had to give up bus iness. Cooperation dies not thrive on our soil, East or West, probabiy because of the cjoso competition of all trade. We still be lieve that our larmers, when organized in the grange, could operate with success, as the Linn County Council does, through an agent, and sicure reduced prices for implements aud supplies. The success of tho Liun County Business Coune'l shows that good can be ac complished in this way, and the example should be followed in every county. If your friend or neighbor does not take this paper, why cannot you persuade him to try it, and so do a favor to hini. to ns and yourself To him because he will get a good newspaper to read, to us because wo waut more patrons, and to yourself hesause wo pay well for the trouble ou take. Selecting Merino Ranis. Whili it is not practicable to use a different ram for every ewe in the flock, and in most cases the select on must be confined to one, still great care and careful investigation should be exercised in selecting first, to ob tain a ram that has as many excellent points, and as few weak or defective ones as possi ble; secondly, to be very sure that whatever weak points tho flock, as a whole, may have, is represented in as strong manner as possible in the ram selected. Ho should be especially good where the flock is weak, not only in his own character, but he should come from a flock that, as a rule, excel in those points wanted, and finally, these desired character- is ics should have been possessed, if possible, in a marked degree, for many generations, in the ram's own immediate ancestors. Among all our stock animals there are none that re quire as much careful study in selecting, or have bo mary points that should be consid ered as the rams to improve our Merino usually made there is very little chance for improvement with the ram selected. iSrodt ournnj. In-Door Work. The importance of planning for in-door work during stormy days, is not fully appreciated. Thero are many things that can be done as well when it rains as during fair days. With small farmers, the threshing of tho little amount of grain raised may be done by hand in stormy weather. The tools should be thor oughly cleaned, mended, and painted, if this is necessary, and put in readiness for the busy time of spring. A good day s work ms.y be given to the oiling and repairing of the harness. There are enough jobs that may be done under cover to fill all the rainy cHvs, if there is only planning for it. At this season there may be feed racks needed, and a day at the tool bench is far more profitaHo in every way than 0110 spent in lounging, especially if it bo done at tho village stcre. Make the most of every day, and not count stormy days as blank ones. Western Farmer. What It did for an Old Lady. WHAT THE PEOPLE SAY ol some of rauehes. be mailed on remittance of the same to D, Meartis, Poitlaud, Oregon. lion raiuexl by three months school ever)'! Tun Yakima Signal, vol. 1, No. 1, was i med at Yakima, W. T., the first week iu Jauuiry. It is a lirgu size eightpago paper, aud very haudto nely printed. Its publishers are J. M. and Mrs. P. 1). Adams. The Signal occupies a good field, and the first number show s journalistic ability. In appearance and in the nutter it contains it tak-s rank among the lst journals outside of Portland, aud ought to receive support to correspond with its manifest efforts. Yakima county is a re gion that the world knows muck too little about, aud that we luxe lately written con. tiderably concerning from, the accounts of our friends. Hereafter, we ahall bona tj find in wluter iu a couutry district, can till, auy of the Signal full account of the wide region it the subordinate noaltlons. and tike his I renretenta to Induda in our' t.iehA. nf k chancre for future'promotion, . " , J! Pacifio Northwejt. Mr. Win. West, of Chehalis, . T., seuds us five uew subscribers and says: "Ihae done this iu order to get the farmers inter ested in the support of a paper that advocates their interests and furnishes them with infor mat!on without which no farmer can be suc cessful, I hope for the day, in the near fu ture, to see the farmers united and working together Intelligently for their common goed I know no better way to get them aroused, and to thinking and working for themselves, than to become subscribers to the Fakmer. "Farmers, as a class, are slow to act in combination, which I think is owing to their isolated way of living, and not to any lack of sense or appreciation of its advantages. If only a majority of them once get to reading the Fakmeh they will soon commence to act for themselves. I hope that you will.contiuue tj make your paper as valuable to our inter ests, and also meet w ith ample remuneration for your effjiti." Note If all our readers would take the same interest tlia1, Mr. West does, aud that many others like him do, it would have two good results. 1st, It would bring a large number of readers and workers within the in fluence of this journal, and si aid our efforts to induce fa-mcrs through all this region to work togeth'runderstandingly. 2d, It would improve the financial condition of this paper and give it more strength to work for the good of its patrons We fully appreciate such frieudly efforts, and shall never ceaso to de serve the vOnfiJerce of our friends, so far as we rosscss ability to work for them. 1 j Tiik Farmer is preparing a general descrip tion of the Pacifio Northwest, to be used for Eastern circulation, and thinking many of our readers may Ixi glad of something of the kind to send to friends in other State, we publish th same in the inside of this issue. The rest will appear next week. Ditivnx, Wis., Sept. 2t, 1873. Gists I have taken not quite one bottle of the Hop Bitter. ' I was a feeble old man of 78 whn I got it. To-day 1 am aa active and feel a well as I did at 30. I a great many that omiI auob, a mediai. D. Borer. CoanocToy Station-, N.Y., Dec. 28, 1878. Gents A number of people had been using your Bitters here, and with marked effect. In one case, a lady of over seventy years had been Bick for years, and for the past ten years has not been able to be around half the time. About six months ago she got so feeblo she was helpless. Her old remedies or physicians being of no avail, I sent to Deposit, forty-five miles away, and got a bottle of Hop Bitters. It improve! her so she was able to dress her self and walk about the house. When she had taken the second bottlo she was able to take care of her own room and walk out to her neighbor's,' and has improved all the time since. My wito and children also have de rived great benefit from their use, W, B. Hathawat, Agent U. S. Ex. Co. Who Should Come to this Country i We have two communications to-day front persona in the East, asking several questions, which summed up, are, who should com to this country f Wo answer for thi so and eth ers; no one should think of emigrating with out sufficient means for self-support for at least a short time after reselling this section, Labor is a. scarce article hero just now, but not all those who emigrate cire to do tbt rough sort of work requited; nor are all who come mechanics, so that suitable employment immediately upon arrival cannot always b relied upon, and thero is nothing more dis couraging to the new-comer than to become a subject of publio or private charity. This caution applies particularly to heads of fam ilies', who would be cruelly derelictcd in their duty to exposothosc depending on them to the risk of destitution or haidsnlp on arrival here. Good health is tho first requisite of a person who proposes to emigrato to this country, with a view of improving his condition in life. Although the climate hero is bo favorable as to insure exemption from many disposes whick prevail in other States, an. I to promise relief in certain ailment), the chances are that emi gration will prove a mistake in the case of confirmed invalids, who arc compelled to work for a liviog. Generally speaking, persons a customolto ordinary mechanical labor, and w ho unite frugal habits with pitsctnng industry, will ruu no risk in coming h ie, b 't individuals unwilling to woik, or accustomed to live by their wits, aro not wanted except by ths police foicc of city and county. Idle is will only go from bad to worse, and adventurers will not prosper. This is tho pooirtt country in thu world for wit-living rtpieueiitatives. It requires health, labor, courage and pcrsistenc to succeed hero as elsewhere, and emigrants must expect this. Capitalists cannot make a mistake by investing their money here, either in real estate or manufactures. The whole territory is now infused with a new life, and possessed of an activity in excess of anything of the like heretofore Been. Its population is being rapidly augmented, and its resource are being developed in a more than corre sponding manner. For all that is produced there is a demand, and probably more is pro duced here per capita than by any other equal population in the United States. The most prudent and practical men in our midst hay never entertained the shadow of a doubt in regard to the capacity of the resources of this country to support a population ol 30,000 peo ple, or of that number of people looting here finally. These resources oflcr an unbounded field for enterprise, and the attention they deserve is being attracted steadily. A man. with a capital of muscle and courage, need not w ait for something to turn up. He con go to work and create opportunities. Ex. Everybody that has tried Ammen's Congk Syrup continues its use; besides they tell thei neighbors of it. We were in a drug store th other day when a customer asked me for a bottle of Ammen's Cough Syrup, saying, "I do not know anything about it myself, but my neighbor advised me to buy it for my cold, and tells me that the use of three bottle has entirely cured his cough of two years standing; in fact, he says 'it is tho best medi cine in the world for coughs, colds and lung complaints," and that a one-dollar bottle did him more good than all the prescriptions h had from the doctors. " Since we have succeeded in interesting San Franc'sco capitalists in the development of the resources of Southwestern Oregon, we can uow safely hope that a diversity of enter prises will spring up in a hitherto sparsely settled and yet wild region of country. The country through which the proposed Coo's Bay railroad runs certainly possesses a inulti plicity of resources which ought to enlist and encourage any enterprising class of capitalists: The wave of enthusiasm seems a; last to have struck a class of men who have enterprise, persevorence. ami capital to be at) e to engage in opening to the commercial world a.countrv; rich in its mineral, timber and agricultural re sources and reap therefrom the result a d ben efits which are sure to follow. That a lively iuterest has been awakened among the capi talists of San Francisco is evident from the newspaper comments of that city, who , are, defining the outline of our country with its advantages and urging the necessity of open ing it to the outer world. PlaindtaUr. Th Bad and Worthleu are never imitated or counterfeited. This is especially true of a family medicine, and it ia positive proof that the remedy imitated is of the highest value. As soon as it had teen tested and proved by the whole world that Hop Bitters w-aa the purest, best and most valuable family medicine on earth, many imi tations spring up and began to steal the no tices in which the press and people of the oountry had expressed the merits of H. II.. and iu every way trying to induce suffering invalids to use their stuff instead, expecting to make money ou the credit ond good name of iu it. Jiany otner started nostrums put up iu similar 6tyle to H. B., with variously de visee! names in which the word "Hop" or "linn" M ..d Man.! in m ,w tn !...I..An -1 to believe they were the same as Hon Bitten. All such pretended remedies or cures, no mat ter what their style or name is, and especially euuosi iiiii me woru "nop or ouopa in their name or in any,way connected w 1th the-n or, their name, are imitations or counterfeit. Beware of them. Touch nose of them. ITu. nouuog uut genuine Hop Bitters, with a bunch or cluster of green Hop on the hita label. Trut nothing else. Druggist and dealer are warned against dealing in iraita tion or counterfeit. The Umatilla Reservation. From the report on the bill published last Tuesday, written by Senator Slater, and sub mitted March 9, 18S2, by Senator Dawes, we glean the following facts about the Umatilla reservation; " The Umatilla reservation was cieated by treaty with the Walla Walla, Cayuse, and Uina' ilia tribes and bands of Indians, occupy, ing lands partly in Washit-gton Territory and partly in Oregon, which treaty was promul gated April 11, 1859. The reservation con tains 208,800 acres of land, of w hich 150,000 is tillable; the residue is pastuie and timber lands. These Indians cul ivated in 1881, a shown by tho agent's report. 4.000 acres. broke during the year 2,000 acres now land, produced 10,000 bushels of wheat, 2 COO bush els of corn, 6,000 bushels of oats and barley, 6, 000 bushels of vegetables, cut 900 tons of hay, 75,000 fe.t of lumber, 1,000 cords of wood, and built 10,000 rods of fences. 'They have 10,000 head of horses, 50 head of mules, 400 head of cattle, 5 head of swine, mid 3,000 head of sheep. The amount of lands required for allotment according to the provision of this bill will not exceed 70,000 acres. This with pasture and timber lands, to be used in common, will amount to 120,000 acres. Not leas than 50,- 000 acres of timber and pasture lands will be icit alter all allotments The number of Indians on t(iis reservation, as shown by the 'report of the agent for 1881, is 751. Males, 330; females, 421. Of th whole number 504 are wholly clad in citizen' dress, and 123 partly. Tao hundred and fifty-two families are reported as rngiged in ag riculture, and 162 male Indians undertake manual labor in civilized pursuits. They eara by labor in civilized pursuits 65 per cent of their subsistence and support, procure 12 per cent, by 'hunting and nshing, and receive in rations from the government 23 per cent. Kast Qregonian. Canal at' The Dalle. The report of O. F. Powell, corps of engi neers, of his survey for a canal aid locks at The Dalles, is an instructive document Capt. Powell states that the total fall from Celilp to Dalles City,. a distance of 13.6 miles, is, at ex treme low water 61.7 feet, at extreme high water 56 5 feet. The dietince from safe water above Celilo Falls to navigable river next above The Dalle Landing is 56 feet; the total fall at low water is 80.7; this fall decrease gradually to flood stage when it becomes ."3.2 feet. To overcome these falls four plana an suggested. Capt Powell recommends the re moval of obstruction;, below Celilo Falls and the construction of a canal and locks arcund them. While building the canal and locks h proposes to use a free wa'eon mad fl.fl mile long, to be converted into a free railroad port age of less than two miles in length, as soon i me cnannei is maue nayigatile to the Itot 01 tho falls. To carry out this plan, including the canal, he estimates, would cost $10,617, 343 71, and he thinks that with appropriations 0 $1,000,000 a year the .work cculd be com pleted in about eleven year from commence ment. Ex. W.Don't wear dingy and faded thin wk.n the ten-cent Diamond Dye will mako them a t good a new. Thy are perfect. Vi hen your wife1 health is bad, when your children are sickly, when you feel worn out, use Brown's Iron Bitter. Three new utecritr and $7.60 will enti tie you to the WiiXAsiEmFAKiitBcnejear. There i no neighkorhood in all the North west where an active rnsn, weman, girl, or boy cannot earn a year1 suUcrirticn to thi paper by a little attention for a few day. (Twill cart your old,