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About Willamette farmer. (Salem, Or.) 1869-1887 | View Entire Issue (May 4, 1883)
St r 1 ' ;iv w it w ( tr W I'J M HI 4i bh i lift lj , nro. .1,; Ifaru r.wi I ID I id lr iwy timnt (ileralnr COMINO HOME AT LABT. The banishment win overlonf?, But It will soon be past I Tn man who wrote Home's sweetest song Is coming home at last I J"or years his poor abode was seen In foreign lands alone, Aud waves have thundered loud between The singer and his own. But he will soon be journeying To friends across the soa : And grander than of any king His welcome here thall be. Be tl andered oVr the dreary earth, Forgotten and alone i He who could teach Home's matchless worth Ne'.r had one of his own. "Neath winter's cloud and summer s sun, 'Along the hilly road, He bore his great heart, and had none To help bim with the load j And wheresoever In bis round He went, with weary tread, His sweet pathetic song he found Had floated tn ahead I He heard the melodies it made Come pealing o'er and o'er, From royal muio band that played Before the alace door : heard its gentle tone of love From many a cottage creep, Where tender crooning mothers strove To sing their babes to sleep I And whereso'er true love had birth This thrilling song had flown j But be who taught Home's matchless worth Had no home of his own I The banishment was over long, Bat it will soon be past ; The man who wrote Home's sweetest song Shall bare a home at last I And he shall rest were laurels wave And fragrant (trasses twine ; His sweetly kept and honored grave Shall be a sacred shine. And pilgrims with glad eyes grown dim Will fondly bend above The it an who sung the triumph hymn Of earth's divincst love. Will Carleton, in Ilarper't Weekly. Alternatives- Love Story. Are there no underwriters for human hopes? for the most precious of intercuts is thoro no insurance ? I had been tempted all day, tempted by fte and the devil. All summer long I had been trying to clasp hands for a life journey With a man I did not love; a man noble of soul and born to the purple, who set up his high lineage against my poor gifts of beauty and song. Ho threw some love into the scales, too, but I, Hod help me, had none to give la return. I had bartered erewhile my whole possessions for a few glances of a dark, dark' eye, and my note had gone to protest. Could I, could I ? It kept following me about with fateful persistency, for tonight I eras to give my answer to my high born lover. I tried to look things in the face, to count the coat. Money was a good thiosr; it insured one warmth In winter and dolicious coolness in summer, and prtttiness and daintiness, and the entrance into good society. Yes, money I a good thing, and position and power, and bouses and lands. So far good) but my soul hungered and thirsted for a love commensu rate with my own, whioh this man, who of fered me purplo and gold, had it not in his power to givp, or, let me qualify that, had it- pot in his nature to give. The stars came out golden and soft, and the fragrant summer dusk orept around me whero I sat inhaling the scent of the roses. Ambi tion and love tore my heart by turn, and weariness, too, put in a poor, pitiful plea, for I was so tired, so tired It was a brilliant future that Reginald Daare offered me, wherein toil and weariness eould never come. I thought of tho purple and fine linen) the luxurious rest; the emolu ment t Then my daily life passed in review before me that of oompanion to a haughty, floe lady, and a singer in a fashionable ?hurch among fashionable saints and sinners. I be gan to croon over the old satiro i In a church which ts garnished with mulllon and gable With altar and rcrudos, with gargoyle aud groin, Th penitents' dreeais am sealskin and utile, : The odor of sanctity's au de cologne. ut surely it Luolier, flying from lladis, . , Could (tie t this crowd, with Its paiilersand paints, Hs would say, looking round at the lords and the ladles, 0 whire Is All slnm rs II this Is All Saints? 1 had entered upon this life from an un loved and unloving home, a home doled out I I me by the tardy justice of a graudunclo who had robbed mo of my inhonttneo. I thought at first I might find tho sangrcal somewhere in this now country, which seemed f fair, but alas I I had not even heard tho swish of wings. I thought of it all the fever and tho fiet; the petty jars) the misunderstandings; the paiu of incomprehension; the minuerdoiied toil; the lagging hours; the awful pauses. This or marriage; this or marriage. It teemed written like a placard oneaith ami sky. It teemed bound like ph) lactt ry upon the brows of the people at they pasted to and fro; and soon the word marriage li st all its tignitieence (or me, aa words do after oft re peating. Did it mean misery or happiness, bliss or woe t This marriage that runt1 its change through my brain mm it God ap pointed ! Did it mean God's blessing or His curse? You kuow I did not love this man that tf fired mo rest front my labors. He had not power to tvoko one thrill at his call. Hut then, lovo is only oue reason why oue should marry a man. There might be loe and plenty of money, aud yi t oue go hungry all oue's life. I have kiiowu iticli thlugs. I had tried to make my life straight and fair, I had tried to keip clean bauds and a pure hearti tried God, who knows the Moreta of all hearts, knows this-to tlht de spair. Long, grt n days, Worn tare of wsaaaud lumlilne; loug ratio nights From whlili tht stlWn slits were (retted out - IW a iiiivm lor uie. Wo ace. through shadows all life long. We come iuto tlii world without our lii g givm a choice as to cur adtcut, aud go out if u in the tare mat mr. We have not been consulted as to birth or death. Mi re and more the praj er of Epicte tus haunts me. "Lead me, Zeus and Dejtiny, whithewoever I am appointed to go; X will follow without wavering; even though I turn coward and shrink, I si all have to follow all the same." , , . Should I marry Mr. Dacre ? Was he a good party? as the world said. Too good for me, as my lady elegantly phrased it. I hsd been born into tho wrld amid fierce throes of mental anguish. Through the ptm of her travail my mother's heart was rent with the greater pnin of my fathers sudden death drowned iff the Cornish coatt, for 1 wasborn-at sea. She lived until I was ten ye irs old, a life of sorrow, and poverty, and renunciation. Then she died, leaving me to the care of a compassionate world and my uncle. Of him I have already spoken. My life dragged on with clogged wheels. I was always at war w.th my surroundings. Though too proud to express it, 1 had never realized my ideal of womanhood, or in any way erown up to my aspirations and dream. If I had grown at all it had been through pain and rcpnsiion-a ftal thing always for a warm hearted, earnest woman. My uncle, Edward Earle, had procured me the friendship (?) of the lady in whose house I had passed a twelvemonth Mrs. Lucien Granger, a distant coisin of his own. I was an unsalaried governess or companion, our re mote cousinship being always made available by my uncle. It was during my residence with that lady that my fate came to me. A young nephew of Mrs. Grsnger t came to the hall. He was an artist, young and handsome and fresh from a four years' sojourn in Home. I need not weary you with the prologue or the epilogue of our love, for words are so poor to express the heart's utterance. 0 golden days! 0 tender, passionate nightsl O princely heart, come back to mel . Alan Leighton was the last son of a high born family; and because of the blue blood the united blood of all the Howards flowing in his veins, Mrs. Granger interposed her fiat against our love, dreading, doubtlets, the ple beian admixture of mine. It is a pity that blood does not always tell. It was an inglorious triumph to me, yet still a triumph, to bare my white arms to the shoul der during our gala nights to which my voice waaalwa)s Invited contrasting their satiny smoothness and perfect contour with the lean, brown appendages Mrs. Granger folded over her aristocratic heart. But a cloud crept into the sky, and its shadow fell across our path. Alan was called suddenly by telegram to England, where his grand old father lay dying. We had but a moment for our farewells, for Alan's heart was rent with sorrow, and I helped to expedito his departure. But r.ne letter ever reached me. His father was dead, and ho was Sir Alan now. "Mv 1'iiecious Hli.en: My father whom I loved and respected above all men, died yes terday. I need not tell ynu how desolate wo feel, and how the light seems to have died out of evory nook and corner. My dear mother is prostratid with tho blow which has taken away the lover of her youth, and shall not be able to return to you for somo weeks. An nounce our betrothal, dearest, to my aunt and uncle, which, you know, was my intention the very night I was railed away Be true to me, my darling Helen, as I shall bo true to you. Good night, my love. I Bhall write at length so soon as the mother and I have matured our nlans for her lonely future. Good night, good night. May angels guard you, and may the good Father fold alout you His everlasting arms. "Your friend ana lover, "Alan Lkiohton." Two vesrs had draseed the ir slow length all ng siuco that letter came, and I bad never hoard from Alan, though craving his presence as the prisoner craves the sunshine. I had written him once, and I had regretted even tl at "He was soon to be wedded to nn earl's handsome daughter," Mrs. Granger rjad aloud from an open letter in her hand; "in fact, it was an old affair, pnV to his visit to the hall." etc , , How I regretted I had written, though tho words had been few, merely aiking if ne had been enabled lo procure me a certain book we had made mention of together, ami tho time una more than a xoar ago when I had tho right thus to address him. And now I O piti ful Christl another woman was to be his wif", and I must never think of the old days, or the old dreams, or look Into his dark eyes, or feel his kisses upon my unkisscd lips! Neveil and I might live tifty years. And oh, tho pity of it, out of all thii world s million nossilulitics I had only the cham e of t V5 ci'hcr to wed Reginald Dacre, a man old enough to bo my father, or to be a companion to somo haughty woman. I had decided upon accepting Mr. Dacrc. The tiny note of barely IWO lines i nau jiiaowu wjiwwh hid im w a book it was nis nieniiy custom w reau. But, Alanl but Alanl I had thought him so true, so noble. I had called him "my prince," "my king," alcne in the warm dusk under the star. "I will not soil my purple with my dust," I had whispered in my heart. "Nor breathe my poison on thy Vonlce glass." ... I went down to the sea to listen to its sullen roar; hear it tell its tale of human misery; of fair faces dead under its waves; of golden and jewels lying on green beds of moss; of argosies gone down, tho wall of human misery t hi ir rcquitm. I tried to remember all this, so that mina might not seem such a great thing amid a world ot Bobbing and toars. It was a good thing to think of the sufferings of others, aud try to ignore jour own; a gcod thing. But, my misery I tho misery of the girl called lit leu Preston! This girl was somewhat of a genius, the people aaul. She possessed tho gift ot tone, and she was haudsomo, too, men said. And she had two chances in tho worl.', and If the had bad money eunuch to have utilizd her a,tft of song she might' have had three. But she had smirched her soul, for all her beauty aud nilta; had beeu false tj her olf, to God aud humanity; false, too, to Reginald Darce, for she kept her love for Alan locked in her heart. "I have sold my soul for houses and lands," the t til, "anil I am wrctcneii. "1 have told myself with open eye," the taid, "knowingly, with malice prtpente. I nave no one wj wauie. inst aiiu ivruut ma vows did not make it right that I should for swear myself." But the sea, w 1th its fuss and fret, made my trartache, and the turbulent water seemed wooing me thithcrvrard. Tho ohimes of our quaint old church, playing an old song, caused a choke in my throat. 1 would go aud iuvokt graud airs from the organ, aud mayhap I should forgi t tho sea's ivar. It was my wont to go there to practice, at d I know the service w ould not W held for a half huur. The lights were turned down to a semi-darknrs, and the old sexton, with whom I was a fanuite, had left the ky in the door for mo. The moon thoue acrrss the organ kes and across my face; and tho truing folds of my white dress looked almost ghostly in its light. O quaint old chiirchl 0 quaint old chliiual Too soon I would be far away from on. over the so to my suitor's lordly hotite, earning with mo a htnxier heart than itij j earn should warrant. lint it was too lata to look back, aud the fau't was iii'iio. Iliad ruined in) own life, and must pay the price. Because I had Ixcn fi rbiddeu the di sire of my e) rs, I had sealed WILLAMETTE FABMEB: PORTLAND, OREGON, MAY 4, my fat. I had bound my hands and had In toned Phoebe Cary's walling words : I hare turned from the good gilts Thy bounty sup plied me, B-cause ot the one which Thy wisdom denied me; I hate oanaagca mine eyes je, miue u.u. ...w doudu me, .... i I hare made me a darkness when light was around Now I cry br the wajslde, O Lord, that I might re ceive LKt U1J Blgllb. "Peccavi," I cried, and my head sank upon the organ, and tears stained the red roses at my throat. , IIT.ln f and mv hrorl urn lifted rentlv and Alan Leighton's tender eyes met mine. 'Alan r was au my RBvumsuuiuub wum utter. lit".. :1 ... I..U. anfTeva.1 " hA oinril. JJ1V glW, J . B-V..X., - J lated, in a tone of exquisite tenderness. Helen, my nrsr, ayo. oniy iove, now wo u.o been wronged. I only learned, an hour before I embarked, that you were not the false woman you had been painted to me. Mrs. Granger wrote me, eighteen months ago, that you had 'married Mr. Dacre, and left with him for Cuba.' A subsequent litter, withou- date or signature, enclosing the tiny pearl pin I had given you, left me no room for doubt. I left England for ever, and have been on the wing ever since, finding no rest for my heart on sea or land. Helen, I suffered as few men suffer because of losing you, and because of your apparent falseness. But I could not wase my own life because of a woman's untruth, so I tied up the broken threads' and tried not to look back. It was by chance I met Herman Sloan, and in the midst of mutual confidences he asked me why I had never returned to America and to the beautiful Helen Preston, who had de clined all suitors, and was still unwed Helen, I embarked that afternoon, and I am here, never to be parted from my darling. When thall we be married, sweet?" "Married I Alan," and the dreary present recurring to me, I withdrew myself from hit arms, and almost unconsciously my lips framed the words : I had died for this last year to know You had loved me. Who shall turn on fate? I care not la love come or go Now; though your love seek mine for mate, Te la too late. "Too late I Helen, my only love, explain your meaning, for pity's sake." men came a Droaen, ai-juinteu wio ui uyr sorrow and temptation when I heard of his handsome and high-born bride; of my weari ness of the hall; of Mrs. Granger; of myself; of Mr. Dacre's constant wooing, and at last of the little note only last night thrust be tween the leaves of his book, making Alan's coming forever too la'o for iny happiness. Rapid hoof-beats along the road, and my courtly lover came in sight. "Savid I Alan," and my words came thick and fast. m?rv.vA Mm in (.nnvprmttinn. Alan, re- garding the hall, Mrs. Granger, the weather, stocks, etc. etc. I Will escape by the vestry UOOl, ny to tne nail 1 oecure me uuk i nuu then, O, Alan. 1" "My darling, my bright darlirgl" but I broke from his clasp and sped away like a ohamois to the hall. I did not heed that the .ABAa fAll fnm mv ttirnnt tlinf; a nnrtion of my lace flounce graced a thorn bush, that my nair, unioosea inraiin lostvmugo, uuu my shoulders. I think if I bad possessed a ..;anB nf nan.. T ahmiM havfl held it aloft. and thonld have shouted, A repnevel a reprieve I at.. It T .... tj fall nf Iiav T annnrAd the note .l 1.M if m mv hra-im. nf hnw I ran ud stairs WUV. . aw .m ..... .-.. . -- and peeped for one moment into the minor, twisting up my smning nair, uuu ujiuj w hush the Kud beating of my heart, of hov I .JI.. .M.a.Avaa .Via YlsfVl amttWl(f til thft church, dodging behind an osage hedge to es cape meeting Mr. iacre, nurryuig ou a bwu as I was free, to be folded clote to Alsn's hiartf ., "And you will not laugh at me, Alan ? "Laugh at you, my darling, and where fore?" "Oh, for my mad flight, for the red roses scattered all along the road; lor my un- Ua.JJ Sab a a. ..,-, rolnrni fitr rrrrkrtnl n (T tft run and steal the note, and, and things.' For answer came tender kisses piesst d upon brow and lips; snd closed eyes, and Mr. Lord Lovel (Mr. Dacre) rode forth from the castle gates alone, lEBOXA BALDWIN. Verona Baldwin is a passenger oa the Geo. W. Klder. which left San Francisco on Satur day last for the Sound. Since her acquittal of the charge of her attempt to murder E. J. Baldwin the has been residing with friends in Alameda, and after much persuasion finally contented to go north and nside with her family. During her brief sojourn there she nai snown buiuu iuihithiibu ww ... .... on the steamer was suoh as to convince ob servers that the It not In a tound ttate of mind. She was accompanied by her attorney, who urged her not to expose herself and try to keep a stout heart. She was disconsolate, saying that she did not care to revisit the scnes of her childhood, and Insisted on com ing ashore. When tho gong sounded notiying people to leave the vessel, her counsel bade her good-bje, which seemed to have a terrible effect upon her. She paced the deck impa tiently, and when the gang plank was drawn made an attempt to regain the Bhore, but was prevented from so doing by tho attorney, who ran tip and succeeded in calming her. She reiterated her statement that she did not waut to return home, and added that she t'ld n t know if she would ever reach Seattle. When the stiamer drew out she wssobscned standing aft with her arms folded on her breast, looking fixedly at tho water; suddenly grasping her purse, w hich coutaiued about $ltiU, and her ticket and tho tag for the trnuk, she placed in her muff and threw it ovirbourd. A number ol boatmen put out, attempting to seize it, but it sank. -v No MonK Wkathkb Rkpom. Orders havo been reoeived from Washington discon tinuing all telegraphio weather reports be tween the different signal service ttationt located on the Pacifio coatt, on and after May ltt. No "Probabilities" will be reoeived from Washington after that date. The reason assigned for this action is the failure of Con- Sress to provide a sufficient appropriation to efray the expenses of the service, and the Pacini coast is the first to suffer from this stupid parsimony. The Shasta Courier sajs : To all enquirers from a distance about the chaucet for obtain iug work ou the railroad, we ttate that we are not personally posted, but hear it re ...! Ik.l lliuni la nnf f tii.iunt lnv iia maud for white laborers. It is understood that Scobie has all the mason force ho wants, ami that the bridge timbers ami such work is framed and prepared below, and the gradirg will be dono by Cbiuamen. Aumitteu to PsontTC. The will ot Amanda J. llosmer, who died iu But Pert laud, was admitttd to probate iu the county court yesterday, and Ruth K. Conser ap pointed oxecutiix, aud C. Creitz, S, R. Har rington and J. O. Stewart, appraisers. The bequests art i To Lillian G, Louser, lets 1 and V?, block 111), iu East Portia ud ; Ms 7 and 8 samo block, to Earl Conser, aud tho rwiduo of the property to Ruth E. t'ounr. JtartUan0Ug.o Cheap Postage at last, and Postal Hotet in Addition. The late Corgrest passed a law which will be hailed with general satisfaction by the peo ple, namely, the reduction of the rato of post age on letters to two cents. The United Stitet may now be considered as standing at the head of the nations in the matter of cheap postal facilities. We are indebted to Mother England for teaching us the A B C of popular postal transmission; for a score of years her rate has been two cents. But no such costs, difficulties, and distances have had to be over come in carrying the mails in Great Britain :s in this country. Her postal rentes are short, her total area being only about one hundred and twenty-two thousand square miles, while ours is not far Irom tnree ana a nan minions nf innars miles. Many of our important towns are from one ia inn ilmiiatnn! milpji Anurt bv the costal routes, over which we have been long carrying letters lor tnree cents, unaer me new raws of two cents, the quantity of letters to be carried will doubtless be greatly augmented. The new two cent rato joes into operation October 1st. The postoffice authorities are engaged in preparing a brand new two cent stamp, with which to inaugurate the happy event. Another eccommodation for the public, will also soon come into vogue, namely, the issue of postal notes for tma'l sums. By payment ai any postoffice a postal note for the amount 11 SO 06 given, wuiuu will uv ijrnu.Q vm ji.u- ntmllon at anv other Dostoffice. The postoffice authorities are making prep arations aa rapidly as possible for the issue of the new prstal not. It is to be engraved with great care, the work upon it to be equtl to that on the national banknotes, in order to protect the holder. It is expected that this note will prove oi great oeneui to au wuu ue sire to use the mails to purchase books, news papers, and merchandise. rhe authorities admit that it it an experiment, and do not expect that the system will any more than pay expenses. Tne Dog. "To no animal is mankind more indebted for faithful and unswerving affection than the dog. His incorruptible fidelity, his forbear ing and enduring attachment, his inexhausti ble attachment, dilligence, ardor and obedi ence have been recognized and eulogized from the earliest times. This valuable quadrupt d may be emphatically termed the friend of man, as, unlike other animals, his attachment is purely personal and influenced by the changes, of time and place. The dog seems to remember only the benefit he has received, and instead of showing resentment when he is fiumshed, exposes himself to torture and even icks the hand from which it comes. With out the aid of this almost reasoning animal, how could man nave resisted tne attacks ot the ferocious tenants of the forest, or have procured sustenance in the ages of the world when agriculture was unknown ? Whoever would write the history oi dogs must write the history of man. for in periods as remote as history reaches we find this ani mal associated with him as his useful servant, and with the growth of agriculture, from an almost despised punuit to a leading place among the industrial sciences, the develop ment ot cue uog nas Kept pace unui ne nas become, in each of the various pursuits for which his particular class hat been bred, a specific and indispensible aid to man. Though the origin of many, if not all of the different breeds, is clouded in obscurity, yet the peculiar traits which characterize miny of them are so marked as to adapt them perfectly to their own particular sphere of usefulness, whether for the farm, the field, the forest, the stream or the pit and prize ring." Bacon. The best bacon Is made from pigs which will not weigh more than 125 pounds when dressed. The rashers or strips for the bacon are cut lengthwise of the pig, and about half of the sides are used. The portion next to the backbone is fatter and lacks in mussle, and is not so good on this account. When bacon is made from Bmall pigs those weighing less than 100 pounds the whole of the sides are used. Red and black Berkshire hogs make the best bacon, because they have the largest proportion of lean meat. Six pounds of Bait ana lour ounces oi saltpetre anouid te used for 100 pounds of meat. Five pounds of brown sugar may also be used, or two quarts' of molasses. If the bacon it cured in a bar rel, the salt, saltpetre and sweetening should be mired and a portion sprinkled on the bot tom of the barrel and some also between tne layers of meat and on the top, and water enough, after the meat is packed closely, put on to cover it. In a month the meat will be ready to smoke. Too much smoke will color the meat and give it a rank taste. Another way to cure bacon it to rub the above mix ture on the flesh side of the strips of bacon and then pile it up one piece above another, and let the mixture strike in. After three da) s rub again and pile up as before. A week after rub again and pile it up, butting the flesh side up every time. The mixture should be divided into three equal parts, to provido for the several rubbings. At the end of a month the meat will be ready for smoking, or before if the salt has all struck in and the surface hat become comparatively dry, which is an indication. After smoking, the rashers should be se.w ed up in bags made of cotton cloth and bung up in a dry, dark place. If the bags are whitewashed on the outside all the better, as this will keep the worms out. JV. Y. Tribune. Strawberry Culture Mr. McHenry, cf St. Charles, Minnesota, says, in regard to the cultivation of straw berries, that be secures the very best results from adopting the following plan hi planting and caring for them : Select good plants of good varieties, and, as tome varieties never fail in any soil or climate, those are the best ones to plant. A rolling plot is the best, and if the soil is a little sandy all the better. Lay off the ground in rows four feet apart for field culture, and three feet for the garden. Set the p'anta in moist dirt, keeping the roots straight!) spread, as nature intended. The plauta once rightly set, success depends en tirely upon the thoroughness of cultivation To obtain choice fruit the pruning mutt be thorough, and all runners should be cut oft after the first of August. The best results are onlv obtaiued bv keeping the plants in hills. lie names as two of the best varieties grown the Cn scout Seedling and Captain Jack, which should be cultivated in alternate rows. The Cresetut Seeding was the most prolific of all berries upon hit ground, aud thrived upon toil w here some of the old standard varieties wouldnot even produce plants. Captain Jack grows rite large, firm fruit, which may be left several das upon the vice after i it ripe without materially injurinc the fruit. 18t3. Pretenrtng Harnesses. The first point to be observed is to keep the leather soft and pliable. This can be done .I- u t,ninff it well charged with oil and grease. Water is a destroyer ot each of these. a ts - A- &nv iia tntmill But mud and saline raoisvuro "i" . - are even mo e destructive. Mud in drying aborbs the grease and opens the pores of the leather, rraking it a ready prey to water, while the salty character of the perspiration from the animals itjures the leather, stitch ina and mounting. It therefore follow a that to preserve a ha. nets the straps should be washed and oiled at intervals as required. To do this effectually the straps should be un buckled and detached, then washed with warm, soft water and brown soap and hung by a slow fire or in the sun until nearly dry, then coated with a mixture of neatsfoot oil and tallow, and allowed to remain in a warm room for several hours, and when perfectly dry rub thoroughly with a woolen rag. The rubbing is important, as it, in addition to re moving surplus oil and grease, tends to close pores and give a finish to the leather. In hanging a harness care should be taken to allow all straps to hang their full length. Light is essential to the care of leather, and when the closet is dark the door should be left open at least half the time during the ah lnHAi. B-.ni.lM n -rptl liohterl. To aay. Jin "" "v --- --- -- clean pUted mountings, use chamois with a llltie-xnpou or iu.kju iwii"" v --.-be scoured as little as possible. Ex, Snoi is tub Arm. Louis Shortridge, liv ing on the Nestucca, has been troubled with bears carrying off his sheep, and a day or two ago ho discovered one among his flock. Call ing some men to aid him, be started in pur suit, By an accident a young man in the party discharged his weapon and sent a ball through Mr. Shortndge's right arm, tearing the flesh off from the shoulaer to the elbow, and badly shattering the bone. The wounded man is now at .Sheridan, Yamhill county, for treatment, and it things go right he will not have to lose his arm. CRrKLTY to Animals. A few days ago Geo. Stewert hired a horse of Magoon to go to the Sandy 'on a little fishing excursion, with Harry Gurr, Lute Cohen and H. Kribs, and alter they reached thtir destination they tied the horse with a rope around his neck and went to the creek. Wnen they returned to the animal he was found dead, having evi dently been strangled with the rope. When th.- party returued a demand was made for the value of the horse, which was refused. Yesterday the parties were arrested in Justice White's court on charges of cruelty to M..lmnla nn.l fha trial la flftf. far WpfiRfldaV. AUiuini., uuv. ,... ...... -... - - - ,. Suit for damages w ill also be commenced. Skinny Hen, "Wells Health Renewir" restores healtn and vigor, cures Dyspepsia, impotence, bexual Uebillty. tl. Stock Breeders' Directory. .KTUnder this head we will publish small advir UsemenU, like the follow tntf, lor per year. Larger advertisements will be charged in proportion. TVM. ROSS, BREEDER OF SPAN IS 11 or AMERICAN MERINO Sheep, Pilot Koek, Lmatilla county, Oregon, e ud lor circulars and descriptions ol sheep. Jlypd JOHN MINTO, B RKEDEIt OF MERINO SHEEP, Balem, Marion County, Oregon. DAVID GUTHKIE, B REEDER OF.LONG-WOOL and SPANISH US nno Hneep. uaiui rout louDiy, ureon. Valuable Bull for Sale! PRICE, - 976. HALF JEK8KY HALF 8HOKTHOKf. A THREE - YEAR OLD BULL. 81RED BY VFJeUo, a lull Jrey, owned ly T. J. Apperson; uaiu HBJMJ l x 4tn, cwneu oy ueo. uinum; vaiu&Die animal (or any i&rmer to hue. Apply to ARTHUR WARNER, SmchSw l)-miles South ol Oregon City, Or. WM. WATSON, commission Agent for .THE SALE OF., GALLOWAY and POLLED ANGUS: Or ABERDEEN CATTLE. I HAVE FOR SALE 100 head ol imported cattle. As an old resident oi ureiron and Washington 1 knew well the require ments ot the Pacific coast stock raisers. ' 3-ures me care ot Piatt ft Evans, Mock Yards, Kansas City, Missouri. dec2it THE TWO FULL-BLOODS, Wide Awake and Marquis THE PRIZE WINNERS AND ACKNOWLEDGED supericr Dralt and AU-W oik sUllions, will make tne present season, commeticiuK April 1st, and ending July 1st, as lollos: Both ot the stations will be at the tither stable, iu balem, Thursdays, triaays and tJatur days; balance ot tloie, MldeAvaae wid beat the (arm ol his owner, while Marquis villi be at Dallas. Tbbus Season. 925; Inaurance, t&. Without any deaire to overrate these animals or to mislead the farmirs ol Oregon, the owner ol these two puie bred stations believes them to be as sires un equalled. He be lives that these two hortcs (the former a Ptriherou Niriuan and the latter a ilyde) and their get have been awarded more premiums u an ai y two sUllions known to the public. Ihe pedurrecs are oinltteu here, .imply because the owner beueves that the public ate familiar with them. For reference to the pedigree ot W ide Awako. see No. 7sS, Vol. 1, Norman stud book, ....ALSO . . ATLA NTIC. This Noble sire is rcgiaured No. IT on the Percteron Norman Stud Book, and will make the season as (ol lows: Srlo Thuisdays, Fridays and Saturdays ot each week. LebasieH Mondays, Tuesdays, awl Wednes days. Terms same u above. mrltimS T. J. FDUUNSON, Salem. MASON CHIEF. BY MAMDRISO PATCH EN. B h HIGH BKEB TatOTTI.NG fWmWf STALLION, tSR-sm' Foaled In 1577 . Bred by Herr & aV-sKaW-Young, Ltxtngton, Kentucky. MAali.S 1,11 ie.r comes of the beat trittlng stock known and lull) Justifies his pedigree by his appear ance. He was imported from Kentucky la October 14SJ. WILL STAIi B at my lace, one mile south ol Aumsville, from March 1ft to April lit. After April 1st will be at Aumsville Monday's, Tuesday's and Wed. nnalay'a. At Siteni Ihuradaj a, Frtd.y's and Satur day's until July ltt. Tt:iJJ. -:5 for season; Hi to tniurancc 411 jod pasturage lor mares (rrm a distance. O. W. PECK, Prop. mchlm3 FRAZER AXLE CREASE. BIT In the World. Set the CenclBe lrrr lurkase has our trade-mark aid is marked I rater's. iold Everywhere. auSJr A HOTED BUT UNTTTIVED WOMAn, . p-rom the Boston Clote. Wt Utn.tiUorti - . The above Is a good likeness of Mrs. LydlR.PIna ham, o( Lynn, Mass., who above all other human brines may be troth fully called the "Dear Friend ot Woman,' as some of her correspondents love to emit her. 8&a Is tealoiuly devoted to her work, which is the outcome; of a life-study, and Is obliged to keep atx lady assistants, to help her answerthe lartre eorrespondenes which dally poors In upon her, each beartna; Its special burden of suffering, or Joy at release from It. Her Vegetable Compound Is a medicine for good and ns evil purposes. I have personally investigated It and am satisfied ot the truth of this. -4 On account of its proven merits. It Is fvoosunendeti and prescribed by the best physicians In the country. One says i "It works like a charm and saves much pain. It win cure entirely the worst form of falllns; of the uterns, Leucorrhosa, Irregular and painful Menstruation, all Ovarian Troubled, Inflammation and ClceraUon,F15odlngs, aU Displacements andthBOOla. seiuent spinal weakness, and Is Mpeelally adapted ts) the Change of life." It permeates every portion of the system, and sjlTSS new life and vigor. It removes falntness, flatulency, destroywall craving for stimulants, and relieves weak ness of the stomach. II cares Bloating, Beadachea, fiervons Prostration, Oeneral Debility, fflceplessseaa, Depression and Indigestion. That feeling of bearing down, causing pain, weight and backache, Is always permanently cored by Its naa. It will at all times, and undr an elrcumsunoes, act In harmony with the law that governs the female system. It costs only (JL per bottle or sbr for IS., and la Bold try druggists, Any advico required as to special eases, and the names of many who have been restond to perfect health by the use ot the Vegetable Compound, ran bo obtained by addressing Kra P, with stamp for reply, at her home In Lynn, Mass. t For Kidney Complaint of ritaer eel this componnd is onsorpassedas abundant testimonials show. .i "Kra. Plnkham's liver PUls," says onawriter, "ar thebttt Ms irorld for the cure of Constipation, Biliousness and Torpidity of tho liver. Her Blood Purifier works wonders In Its special Una and huts fair to equal the Compound In Its popularity. AU must respect her as an Angel of Mercy whose sob ambition Is to do good to others. Philadelphia, Pa. . CO Kra.A.K.IX FARMER'S EXCHANGE I AU Sorts ot Merchandise Exchanged for COUNTRY PRODUCE. Dry Goods, Groceries, Hardware, Crockery, Boots and Shoes, Hats and Caps. Everything a Farmer wants tor sale. Everything a Far. mcr raises wsnted. S. HERMAN, Corner Madison and First Streets, Portland Opposite Scgman, Sabtn & Co's Agricultural Wan- ocaa-i DBS. A. S. & Z, B. NICHOLS, Homeopathic Physicians and Surgeons. Rooms 69, 60, 61 a Union Block, Portland, O Specialties, Dr Z. B. N. Diseases ot Women. DR. A. S. N. Diseases ol Eye, Ear and Throat. USE ROSE PILLS. AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE to sell th best Family Knitting Machine ever Invented. Will knit a pair of stockings with HEEL and TOE complete in 20 minutes. It will also knit a great variety or fancy work (or which then is always a ready market. Send (or circulars and terms to the Twomly Knitting Machine Co., 163 Tn mont Street, Boston, Mass. sepSme E. O. SMITH, OFFICE: No. 167 First Street, between Mor Irison and Yamhill, Portland, Oregoi G.u.G. BUSINESS EDUCATION. COLUMBIA - Commercial College JournaL Giving lull information relating to one ol the most Practical Institutions for the Business Training ol the Young and Middle Agtd ol either sex, lent (ree on application. aVStnttenst Admitted any Week Day In the Year. Address: W. S. JAMES, Box 683, Portland, Ore. oct20v II. CARPENTER, M.D. PHYSICIAN and SURGEON. (Late ol Salem.) Office up stain, N. W. Corner ot Sd and Morrison 81 PORTLAND OREGON. Will practice In Portland and surrounding country. 1 augl-tl' F. S. Akin. Ben Selling. II. E. Dosch. See that our Trade Mark "THE BOSS." and A. S. ft CO., Is on every pair. Every Pair Guaranteed. Jaulme AKIN, cELUNCI k CO. Compton's Automatic Gate THE BEAT THING Of THE KINS. Works Perfectly & Cheaply, all Iroitnml Durable. WE ARE PREP RD TO MAKE THESE GATES to order and hate bought the pitent rifht. GUI snd seo it aorkat ROS3& RICE'S bllOP, oppo- Srf m .gfgfgW W OS -aaaaaaaaaawanBafl LH A USfeagtaallH m t. Laaaa.a.tlHH ID aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaamnaaaaal 9- aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaH DQ raaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaB " niw oani, taiem. de;srm Price: i i 18 to S80. I 1 zTj-mivMn .!."