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About Forest Grove independent. (Forest Grove, Washington County, Or.) 1873-1874 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 17, 1874)
otic Jin^cjicn^cnt. V O L . 11. FORESI rrBLisnRn at F o re s t G r o v e , 33. L . . . . U Oregoi O E . Editor nnd Proprietor. TERM S OF SUBSCRIPTION : One year......................................... ?'*' Sit months....................................... I Three months,................... *............ Í ,HI 6iii|¡le coyiea..................................... " RATES OF ADVERTISING: 1 1 SO. 2 SQ. . 4 eoi 1 50 2 00 3 50 • —W > KESrt. •1 00 a 5o 4 50 1 MONTH •> 50 3 oo 5 INI H mo *. 4 50 i ; oo 9 IN) (> IN) 111 (N) \i\ 00 r, Mos. I YEAR. ID 00 15 00 ; k > 00 TIME 1 wkkc 9 1;eol 6 IN) 8 50 12 IN) •jo 00 30 IN) 50 00 tool 10 <10 15 )M> •JO IN) 50 (N) 50 00 yo oo W A S H IN G T O N C O U N TY, O REG O N , THURSDAY * 0 . 26 S E P T E M B E R 17, 1874. F rom t i l l a m o o k . SUMMER FALLOWING. cease about the middle of June. It is showery during the summer THE BLUE AND THE GRAY- I notice in your paper of recent New Correspo ndent and an Odd Fish- j the lesser varieties in tho Oregon months until tho first of October, Sea-Side Arcadia—Tillamook Fast waters. The horse mackerel, are not when the fall rains set in and con dates, both inquiries about, and in By the flow of the inland river, Asleep— Available Resources but Whence the tin ts of iron have fled. | good for much, and the dog-fish are tinue until the middle of December. structions given in regard to Sum Where th* blades of the new gran« quiver, Nobody up yet. winter proper begins,and is mer fallowing. i only hunted for their oil. A ll the Then Asleep *«re the ranks of the dead. As I have had some practical ex ■ streams putting in from the tnain- not nearly so severe as is generally Under the sod and the dew, All Asnooze. land are swarming with salmon-trout supposed. Little or no ice has been perience upon this subject,it may l*s Waiting the Judgment day, and other fresh-water fish. The im- put up at Stika of late, though of of interest to your readers -to know To T hk S t a te sm a n : — In defiance of Und* r the one the Blue, Under the other the Gray. portanee of these northern resources course it formed and was available. the practice and results. a troublesome fear that my hum In tlie Summer of 1872 I fallowed will be understood when reflecting The weather is said to be colder 180 i ble fragment of literature niav be These in the robing of glory. ° 1 1 Those in the gloom of defeat, that at the rate in which the C olu m -; miles south of Stika, and 4o0 miles ! 100 acres, plowing it in June first; slung into vour waste basket, there All with the battle-Mood gory. bia River salmon are being destroy- ! west it is „still warmer. The cold i time,and kept it free from weeds tin -1 to form a brief acquaintanceship w ith In the dusk of eternity meet. ed, the tribe will soon become cx- runs in variable currents, as inEast- til seeding time, at which time the other cast oil’s like unto itself. In Under the s«xl and the dew, tinct; during the past year, as we ern Oregon. The foregoing remarks I soil was in tho very finest condition,a spite of this staring fate, 1 make Waiting the Judgment day; aio informed, from seven to to ten apply to the coast-islands only, us it largo portion having been plowed bold to drop you a line from this Under the laurel the Blue, thousand tons of fish have been ta- is much colder in the mainland, of three times and thoroughly harrowed place of most harmonious calm,where Under the willow the Gray. ken out of that river, and at the which comparatively litte as yet j and pulverized and packed with the life’s stream flows serenely on, un- From the silence of sorrowful hours, roller. Tliv desolate mourners go, same rate of assassination, about live known. bittered, unvexed, by the lucre-tu Lovingly laden with flow« rs. years more will finish up the race. The Native Inhabitants ! 11 was seeded to wheat with drills mult beyond its mountain walls. Alike for tin fri ml and the foe. We pray the Legislature to stop the Arc tho wards of tho Kovcrnmcnt, ! at the ua,,al awlson' ' ' l,ich <sime " P Here we sit, wise critics of events, Under the sod and the dew, mad havoc, forthw til. and are not as vet cared far as well and 8,00,1 th<> W ln‘ cr w clI> aud ne’er fretted by the throes of "Wall W iting the Judgment day, P o e t r y . THE INDEPENDENT. GROVE, Uiuli r the lost s tile Blue, Und i the lilies the ( Irav. L ocal N otice * .!» cents per line for tin* first insertion, snd invents» line for each , , , subsequent insertion. No notice less than s> " ,th e,tUil1 sp!< &'Ior, 50 cents. The morning snn-rnvs fall, A liberal n «lnotion will V* made on rogn With a touch impartially tender. lar advertise rs. On the blossoms blooming for all. Undi r the sod and the dew# AGENT AT PO RTLAND . O L E G O N —L Waiting the Judgment day, S am ck i . s . AGEN r AT SAN FRANCISCO—I,. IM ' ish - Bordered with gold the Blue KB rooms 20 «V -1,Merchant »Exchange Mellowed with Gold the Gray. California strei t. AGENTS AT NEW YORK C IT Y -S . M. So whet! the summer cnlleth P k t t k n o il l A* Co., 37 Park Row. cor. On forest and field of grain. B -ekman st.-(»EO. P. R owkll A Co., With an equal immiur falleth 41 Park Row. TO Cl » RRESPONPENTS.— All eomnmni- The cooling drip of the ruin. catious intended for insertion in T iik Under the sod and the dew, I sdkpendent ittud hr autheiiticuti ‘1 by Waiting the Judgment day, the name ainl address of the writer — Wt t with the rain the Blue, not necessarily for publication, but asa çuarantv of g'»*! faith. Wet with thi rain the Gray. O F F IC E -N e a r Logan Johnsons Planing Sadly, but not upbraiding. Mills. The generous dei d was »lone. P R O F E S S IO N A L CARDS. In tin* storm of tin years that are fading. No braver battle was won. W ILSO N* U O W L H Y , M , D. Und' r the sod nnd the dew, Waiting the Judgment day, Physician and Surgeon, Under the blossoms the Blue, FOREST NUOVE, - • - * FREGON. Under the garlands the Gray. ; ing’s Buy are four or five feet long | and are said to be equal In llavor to Mineral Resources. Gold is known to exist in consid- , i .... ,t -i i j crable quantities on the niumlaiul . T i i i . near Kodmc Island, where about six- < , ,, ,. . . i . i ; dollar d iv in g s have been worked. I Silver-bearing quartz has been*found * near Prince of W ales’ Island ¡argent- iferous galena is found on Edgcomb Island, and precious stones have been reported from W rangle Island, Y 'ilnaMe copper mines are found on Cupper River, but they are inaceess- il>le on account of hostile iiulians. I Crude petroleum is known of, and 1 vast quantities of asplmltum. L ig - nite ccal abounds on several of the as they ou-ltt to las There are ere a „ srew 6ff m the Spring aplemlidly. There Breeds i l,M^ aH ^ com,r,encc‘l Read few Russians, inanv lrrif . i * . i ,ti 1 1 , , i r. 1 out it began to break down with its 1 and a great number of full-blood In- l n t ii r i , , i own weight, the straw bein'? verv tlians, all of whom require paternal _ . ", ! . *i t e ,i . ......„ * soft and weak, and it did not fill and ; care on the jiart of the government, j \ l nder the government of tho Czar, j " a8 a t^tal loss. On other land adjoining it, which the Russians and half-breeds were had been part in wheat and part in serfs, and when transferred to the oats the same season, and was I nited States rule they supposed plowed, harrowed, and rolled and they could get along without work- seeded in the usual way, and at and lapsed into ¡idleness and dissipa- about the same time as the fallow tion. There are no schools, and no ground, it stood up and filled well resources provided for that purpose j and hundreds of smart, handsome uu*\ * m storms t aim , just before children are mentally perishing for *'lm * ,uu^ l*h " it down. M e the want of governmental care. 't, lm wevei, while that on the street nor the corn rings of Chicago. Anchored by fate t } our fern-patches ! and brush thickets», we enjoy the ! earthly roll of time, undisturbed by . the useless schisms of the world; where tho most radical j hero | crusader would weep to find no ma I terial for her occupation; here where tho eternal boom of the incoming waves of old ocean. But avast,there, i rude correspondent! Cease your dalliance with tho spirit that proposed and produces the forthcoming items to the newly regenerated S tatesm an . Business Stagnation. GRAINS OF GOLD. Each thing lives according to its kind; the heart by love, the intellect by truth, the higher nature of man by intimate communion with God. —Cyapin. Hope is the best part of our riches What sufticeth it that wo have the wealth of tho Indies in our pockets if we have not the hope of heaven in our souls?— Puree. They that deny a God destroy man’s nobility, for certainly man is of kin to the beasts by his body;and if he is not kin to God by his spirit, he is a base and ignoble creature.— Paeon The little mind that loves itself will write and think with the vulgar; but the great mind- will be bravely excentrk*, and scorn fhe beaten road from universal benevolence,— Cold- urn it n. I t is not so much poverty as p re tense, that harasses a ruined man— tho struggle between pride and an empty purse— the keeping up a hol low show that must soon come to an end. Have the courage to appear poor, and you can disarm poverty of its sharpest sting.— Mrs. Jamison. How they Dance at Put-In Bay. People may say that a waltz is a waltz,but it is a mistake; as much as to say a dog is a dog; for there are dogs and dogs, and waltzes and waltzes. W ith one person it is tho poetry of motion; with another it is about as awkward a performance as putting yourself upon a level and going through the motion of run ning up stairs would be. A K en tucky girl is a natural waltzer, and she does it with a charming chic and abandon. An Ohio g irl’s waltzing is easy and,graceful and “ mellodious.” I f she happens to come from Cin cinnati and across the Rhine, sho swings dreamily round and round in the endless “ Dutch waltz.” I f she comes from Chicago, she throws her hair back, jumps up and cracks her heels together, and carries off her astonished partner as though a simoon had struck him, nnd knocks over all intervening obstacles in her mad career around the room. I f sho is from Indiana she creeps slowly and timidly up toiler partner, as though she would like to get into his vest pocket, and melts away with ecstacy as the witching strains of tho “ Blue Danube” sweep through the hall. I f she is from Missouri, sho crooks her body in the middle like a door-hinge, takes her partner by tho shoulders, and makes him miserable in trying io hop around her w ithout treading on her No. 0 shoes. I f sho comes from Michigan, she astonish es her partner by now and then working in a touch of the double- shuffle, or a bit of pigeon-wing, with the waltz step; and if she comes from Arkansas, she throw's both arms around his neck, rolls up her eyes as she floats away, and is heard to mur mur. “ Oh, hug mo, John!” Business of all kinds is dull here; ! islands, and on Bhering’s Bay a va- jor Berry says he has never seen, ,l ' ' <IS " 01* hless. sd dry, in reality, that you could set I rietv o f W hite Coal is found, ami is handsomer or better formed child- * Hotter very striking elbct of fire to it with a fair prospect o f a Summer fallowing.w hich I am able to ; used by the Indians in trying ont ren and young people than are conflagration. Stagnation,you know, relate, happened last year in the fid - ! seal oil. This combustible was late- found among the Alaska half-breeds, according to a now forgotten author, lowing manner: ly discovered in Australia and creti- | and they are smart, naturally intel- (perhaps it’s Beecher,) “ is the fore About the 10th of Juno there , ted great interest in Europe. Iron, ligent, and want to learn, but there runner of damnation,” and when we came a very heavy rain, (upon the , manganese, marble in several varie- is nobodv and no monev to instruct get a little of the prophesied warmth already verv wet soil)—it being a I O FFICE - At his Hodden«*, West of No more shall the war cry sever, ties, smoke l topaz and ohrvstal are them. Y\ ill not our Oregon l OJ‘ - * . that is to accompany the latter, we John on's Planing Milbi ul'J:ly , verv wet and backward Spring here, Or the winding river be red; kttown to exist in more or less quan gressinen take this matter tq> may be enabled to raise better cu Tiny banish onr ang* r fort ver, tities. jiresent the claims of these poor which prevented us from planting! cumbers. W hen they laurel tin* graves of our di'ftd. corn. AVe had one “ land” of two I young people at Washington? W . II. S A Y L O R , M. I)., The Timber Resources Und' r the sod and the dew. Available Resources. acres that was plowed, which we did Waiting toe Judgment day, A Universal Drunk. Physician and Surgeon. Are immense,but their extent is still not get planted in corn in conse- ! 1 here are two sources of profit here Love and tears for the Blue, Formerly the employees and wards qnenee of llie wet, and several acres ! that could be successfully drained unknown bovoml the fact that it is FOREST GROVE. - - 1 * OREGON Tears and love for the Gruv. °uiicient to pay for the Territ ory of the Fur Company received only a which we did not plow at all. In ' by the capitalist. These are tho OFFICE -A t the Drug Stor ini Bleck "ontli ten times over. There ¡ire untold fixed ration of liquor, and the im- the latter part of June we replowed ! lumber business and salmon fishing. RESIDENCE—Corn.. ? IV T A .- 3 C o llo .x iy . m22:lv r>f the Drag Store. millions of feet of yellow aromatic portation .and manufacture of intox- i t h e t w o a c r e s o f land nn<l planted to j Every snare rod of mountain, and cedar, a most beautiful wood; there mating drink* wore under restriction. beans, but owing to the continued many parts of the valley, are bur THE ALASKA PURCHASE. ( i m . H. D c r h a m , H. Y. T h o m pso n . ----- j is «ii abundance of spruce, pine, but j Our Government stopped the iidpor- wet they did nut conic up; so on the dened with their tall fir, spruce or Jjistrtrt Attor»'y. Policy of the Late Secretary Seward— no fir. O f smaller woods there is tat ion of liqiior and made it contra- u^h t>f j ujv wo ,qowed these two cedar timber,all of which would find Durham Sc Thompson General View of the Territory-lts something like the Oregon crabap- hand, but the discharged soldiers acres the third time and sowed it to ready market in Portland or San J T T O i: -V E Y S -A T -L A IE , Rivers, forests. Fisheries and pie, nnd another small tree resent- J invented the manufacture of a dia- turnips; the bu«»sdestroyed them as Francisco. I can perceive no rea No. 109 First Street, People-A Variety Of Intcnsting V>ling the Irish thorn, together with helical stuff called L m W icmo , w hich fast as they caine up. and thus the son why suflicent capital to erect a OREGON. P O R T L A N D ,.................. Information. alders and willows along the streams. | is distilled from almost anything ground was plowed three times, but first-class steam saw mill would not ----- The extent of the timber is supposed that will rot and ferment; the Indi no crop grew upon it, not even a be a lucrative investment. AVe have ALFRED K IN N E Y, M. D.f In the c u t s e of a i 0'*f-nt iutet- pe greater than that ofOregon and ans have found out the nrocessand process am! crop of weeds. four mills here now, but three of Territory combined are manufacturing all they can con S X T X X G E O T N T . view with Major M. P . Bmmv.we ob- W ashingtou Now, the effect upon the ground these are the old puritanic, up-and- tained agieat deal of new and inter- though of a diflerent sort and still sume. The result is that the whole f f ic e in pek um s b u il d in g , is this: This season we have plowed down, stage-coach style, whose mo N. AV. corner of First niel Washing esting information concerning that valuable aboriginal population are on a ever- and planted the whole field in corn; notonous strokes would, in glorious ton Streets, Portland. Orejen. n:¡7 ly far-off and so long mysterious region I . . . rt j i lasting big dtunk, and destroying ; til0 ground on either sid<* of the tw o Athenian days,have rutiled the grav Agricultural Products. of which our people generally have themselves as fast as they ex a11, ^ ere I acres which had been plowed three ity of Diogenes. The fourth mill is K VLEîaU STOTT. a very erroneous impression. Major ; There is a general impression that C. Â. BALL. nothing will grow m Alaska and i 1111 ' 11,h 'no fi' hl for our lady cru- ]asf season was all plowed and j a circular also, run by the drowning Berry has beeri an extensive travel B A L L A STO TT, that it is a region of hostile winter sa<^ is ' Getter still, for an intelli- planted on the same day this season, | element, unsubstantially built, and er, ]>articularly in tlie AYcst, and his A T T O U N K Y L A T L V W, and savage icebergs, all of which is : liumane and C hristian govern -; ^]10 ¿wo acres working much the now the bone of litigation between sharp eyes and intelligent mind are j No. fi Dekura’» Blork, extravagant nonsense. On open meu ' i finest; but to-day tho growing corn some interested parties, and stands ( tery apt ty take in the condition of lttud and alongthe streams,succulent ! Incremation. on each side of tlii fallow is very rusticating in the breeze awaiting PO RTLAND , CREGUN. tilings a; they arc. In the perform h£Ô:ly For some l.JOO miles along the nearly twice as large as that on the judgment. These mills, however, ance of his ofii *0 as Collector of the ; grasses grow luxuriantly and some-! Who Use Long Words. fallow ground, and is of a dark cut very fair lumber, hut are not run j ports of Alaska, he lias seen much times to a height of three feet and a coast, the Indians burn their dead, FR A N K L. STOTT, timothy and build a small burial-house in healthful growth, while the billow is more than a fourth of the year. of the territory,and duringhis recent half. Red-top and wild Bigwords are great favorites with peo Salmon Fisheries. visit here he took pains to inform us abound <>n the islands, and in the which they deposit the ashes of a of ¡i sickly, dull cast. ple of small ideas and weak concep A l t o r n e y - a t - L a w , In another part of the field, which The salmon that enter our tions. They are often employed by as well as we could comprehend mainland something very like Ken- whole family, from time to time. A was plowed and planted this season j tucky blue-grass grows extensively, pictorial representation of a shark, IIIT. I >' no Ho, n R eoo V. bay are in now ise inferior to those of men of mind when they use language without actual observation, of tho Office in new Court House. made whale or some other marine animal the same as that part which was not tlie Columbia. The singlo fishery region and things so intelligently Considerable hay has been that may best conceal their thoughts. this year, tho haying season being | is painted on the side of the sepul- plow ed at all last year, there is a here, which, for lack of means, is described. \\ ith few exceptions,however,illiter nearly the same .as in Oregon. Here- chral tenement, by way of epitaph marked difference in the appearance not w orked every year, and when THOMAS H. TONGUE. ate and half educated persons uso Judiciousness of the Purchase. tufore theGovernmcut has been pay- or family history. This has been the of the corn now growing upon it in run barely clears five hundred dol more “ big words” than people of Attorney - a t - L a w < The general impression prevails ing JiO ¡i ton for imported hay, in case for ages untold. M’ hen a “ ca- favor of that which was not plowed lars the season, could bo with the thorough education. It is a very that in purchasing Alaska Territory Hillsboro, Washington County, Oregon. gold, but this year the agents are ' hoc Indian” dies, his friends smash at all, and upon which a largo proper amount of capital made to common but a veiy egregious mis from the Russian government, Scc- cutting and storing native hay for a hole in his canoe and leave the growth of weeds grew last season easily yield from six to ten thousand take to suppose that long words aro retaryScwiird,ina<le a foolish bargain, ai)0Ut £;{() }i ton, >u currency. Bar- vessel to decay, indicating that his and was burned off late in the Fall, dollars per annum. I have more to ¡ fc. t>. BHATTUCf. B. KILLIN. more genteel than short ones—just and that the *7,2iM,(iltt) paid 'v'ad h*y was raised last year, and it | life-voyage is over,— a gloriously p o - ! Now, what is tho cause of these say from these parts, but as editors * as the same sort of people imagine S lia ttu c k A K i l l i n , measurably thrown uwav. This con- yielded as well as elsewhere. I ’ot'i- ctical idea, for poor savages. results,which are not at all favorable are bored with so many iong contri high colors and flashy figuers improve A T T O U S E Y S A S D ( O C X S’ K W H | ception has been established in the toes> turnips, onions and the like to Summer fallowing, (on my farm butions (mine is very short) I will The Rivers of the North. the style of dress. They are the kind public mind b\ the nonsensical bab }i;iVc* ¡ill been produce l on tho is- at least?) A T LAW . refrain for the present from a fur- . of *olk-- who don’t begin, but always There are seven large rivers, some . ble of ignorant or unfriendly jour- )n.n<ls and generally turn out as in The causes which suggest them tlicr indulgence of my eloquence.— Deknm's Building, First Street, “ commence.” They don’t eat and of them mighty streams, draining 1 n.'dists, who have been airin'? their other places. selves to me are, first, that it is a Frank• Lainlt in the Statesman. PO RTLAND . OREGON. drink,lmt“ partake of refreshments.” Alaska Territory. First, from the m ___ _ slender wits at the expense of the requisite to the fertility of tho soil Wild Fruits They aro never sick, but “ extremely south, the Naas, as large as the T V il-! greatest statesman that lias lived , Good News to Old Maids. B U S IN E S S CARD S, & LO D G ES. Kincc the times of Richelieu, eu.l Arc not known; l,ut berries of rati- lamette; next throe unnamed rivers that tho surface ho covered with a indisposed.” And instead of dying, growth of vegetation, which is the at last,they “ decease.” The strength who has gone into history in com ous kinds aro plentiful: three sorts each nearly, if not quite as large; j means, lungs, or medium through A London fashion journal in a of buckle-berries; strawberries of then the Htackin, still larger, next of the English language is in tho pany with Metternich, Fai inest on late issue says: unprecedented excellence and flavor, tho Tarcoe, noiulv as great as the which and by which the * sun and short words—chiefly monosylables N O TAR Y PUBLIC AND COLLECTOR. and Bismark. Major Berry, after a Middle-aged ladies are looking up air convey to the earth the proper of Saxon derivation—and people who general find extensive observation of M1< ^ as no^ known elsewheie, cran- Columbia; next the Chilkat, and ties which they contain and furnish in the matrimonial market. It is be T EGAL PAPERS DRAWN. ACK- the country, is of opinion that the berrics* of wbich " rcat quantities lastly, the trein endous Yukon, the! are in earnest seldom use any other. \J ii'iwlt 'lei ini'nts taki n. Will attimi to (he soil for the benefit of future coming quite the fashion in England Love, hate, auger, grief, jov, ex ^rmi.tiv to' »n',tX tiniss'.’ntriist.1'! m 7ns purchase of Alaska was the wisest being shipped to San Francisco j Amazon of tho Pole, emptying into, for men to marry women older than nifi ly and Portland; and two varieties o f : the Strait of Bherin". Of this vast ; cropP ° r vc8etation* press themselves in short words and ture. act of aggrandizement that our gov themselves. Thus the brilliant them as ' flood not much is known, but it is ! Secomll{ ‘. that tho raw soil is <le ‘ direct sentences; while cunning false ernment has performed since the salmon-berries, some of wife of the brilliant Secretary for JoDn Cooper, \ said to be much hir-'er than the pnvo'' of tais means of oxlialat,ou hood nnd affectation delight in what acquisition of Louisiana, and in sup- large as ordinary plums. ! India, tho Marquis of Salisbury, is Horace calls verba susquepedalia— Cattle Ranges. ! Columbia and that a steamboat as* from the ftirof such ln'°P erties as il /> A S T I S T A S D J E IF E L E l i port of that judgment, he gives a ! several years his senior, and now the ¡ words “ a foot and a half long.” The Valley of Tarcoe is 100 miles ' il ncdrl.v a thousand miles, contaius for future plant food, and I rapid detail of its suprising resour- | Earl cf Pembroke, tho greatest j long, with an average width of five I t would seem that everything grows also that k ^ 1 m actual- V p i L i r i T S TH E PATRONAGE OF TH E ceB. ! “ catch” in England, who is .74, is to I During the past week wheat has Offii «* rnr V —>\r. U’i.r/l w h i t i h H . t , more and more majestic and tremen- 1 ^ S1™ * oft at lcast 8ome of lts P *°P - Its Immense Fisheries. ; ,llik*s> ckiefly of ri<:h prairie. As a he married to Lad v Gertrude Talbot i been pouring into Corvallis at the n oil. 1 r W limit »ml Pin*» Stri *-ts. ., . .. . cattle pasturage it is believed to be . ' dous as we approath tho inscrutable erties whon (>xPoso<1 to lho air nnd who is 24. Lord Pembroke is the rate of 7,000 to 6,000 bushels por F ro m the southern extremity of 1 ° quite ¡is good as the corresponding and forbidden secrets of the Pole, 8unshine without its natural cover- son of the late well known Sidney day, Hamilton Bros, alone receiv FOREST GROVE LODGE, No. 136, thc Territory to Bhering’s Straits, region in Wisconsin and Northern W lien Dr. Kane was overtaken b v in" ' Herbert, and inhereted vast estates ¡ ing 2,000 bushels per day. These some two thousand miles, the coast I. O. G. T„ Iowa. Tho agricultural rescourccs ¡m Arctic storm ,hetanchored his ship : ^ Jtb those facts before me, I con- of both his uncle and father. He is gentlemen say there is about srx is ono continuous fishery, as well as to an iceberg by means of the lar- elude that tho best way to improve e e t s a t it s h a l l e v e r y k a t - t . . . . . . are as yet untried and unknown. the greatest property owner in and times as much Fall wheat as ever nriluy i vHiin«, Ht *; uViofk; All a vast archipelago of islands, islands gost cable know n to nautical science, our soil without applying fertilizers, Climate Pröpertics. around Dublin, and has at least before, mostly sown on Summer fal V 7 ; v ; 7 ; '‘ l7 : i i i : £ UDg ar,‘ : almost indefinitely. TheV fish re- and such was tho prodigious strain is simply to rest it, but not to plow On the coast-islands the climate j upon it that the monstrous chord vi- j ¡t — Corre*nowb>nnc Prairie Farmer. £100,0011 a vear. Lord Pembroke's ¡ lowed ground, and is consequently — --------------- 1 Hourccs consist of herring, caudle- mother, Lady Herbert o f Lea, who almost entirely freo from trash,they IIO L H H O O K L O IH .I. NO. 3 0 , 1 fish, salmon halibut, cod, horse- is less severe than in Norway, b u t; brated and sang like the strings of , A. F . A A. M mackerel, shark or dog-fish, whales, som ewhat colder than the north" of ftn ^ olia“ harp— a manifestation of f Music is tlie only one o f the five is well known as an author, joined having received several lots bo clean , i ,. , , ri.i , . ' power winch was enough to make arts in which not onlv man, hut ¡ill Xs. FOREST GROVE, OREGON. M .o , lnimp-backed salmon, or spoonbibs, j England, liio seasons arc about , Cll,sar or an Alexander quail in ter other animals, have a common prop tho communion of the Church of that it was found to be a waste of Sritiirrlay M°ri- the 1 nil Moon in 0ther and less important varie- I equally divided. Spring rains begin i ror and liiilo from tho presence of erty- mice and oleplmats, spiders Rome soon after her her husband’s time to pass it through the eleva tors. death. and birds.— Richter. .tauuM »!^ mndid tofttiuL m E r H ' ties. The "ica t salmon of Bhcr- about the middle of March, and Nature’s terrible G od.— Statesman O S. Hughes, M I j _ 1/1 < 1 firwl • oti.l U _ £.1i ! A. . i 111 • / \ n .1 • i I j j M X