. WHAT OF THAT? Tired! Wen, what of that? Ridst fancy life wa spent on beds of ease, Fluttering the rose leave scattered by the breeze? Come, rouse thee! work while it is called to-day!. Coward, aria! go forth upon thy way! Lonely! And what of that? Rome must be lonely! 'tis not given to all To feel a heart responsive rise and fall, To blend another life into its own; Work may be done in loneliness. Work on. Dark! WeU, what ol that? Didst fondly dream the sun would never set? DoHt fear to lose thy way? Take courage yet! Learn then to walk by faith and not by sight; Thy steps will guided be, and guided right. Hard! Well, what of that? Iridst fancy life one Summer holiday. With lessons none to learn, and naught but play? Go, get thee to thy task! Conquer or die! It must be learned. Learn it then, patiently. Uo help! Nay, 'tis not so! Though human help be far, thy God is nigh. W'ho feeds the ravens, bears His children's cry. He's near thee, wheresoe'er thy footstejis roam, And tie will guide thee, light thee, help thee home. ALMOST k CRIME. "You ask ne to tell you about it, children and I will, I onlj warn you to let it be a lesson to you in future years not to give way to passion or malice." "You would hardly imagine such a tough old greybeard at your 'Uncle Ned' is now, was eyer a slender stripling jouth, whose mind was filled with ro mance, and whose soft Vomunisli heart seemed to be only for love, but such I was at two and twenty." "Many is the maiden I had kissed under the mistletoe and beaued home from singing school, but up to the Sum mer I mentioned, I had never met one that stirred more than a passing fancy. That Summer my father told me he was going to send me on a journey to New Hampshire, to finish some business he had begun by letter with his old friend Owen Dalton. "I was glad enough to undertake the mission, for in those days, when rail roads were as scarce as hens' teeth, young men got -reiy little chance to go from home, so one Monday morning I clambered on top of the old stage coach and started off, feeling almost for the first time, a sense of my independence and freedom. "My journey was uneventful, until we arrived at Concord, and stopped at " the old Eagle House to bait the horses and allow the passengers to dine. Here I picked up my lirst acquaintance, as travelers so frequently do, and was sur prised to find that he was going on the coach with me. "He was a young man of perhaps 25, light hair, blue eyes, a bright ingenious expression, to as frank a mouth as I ever saw. I was immediately attracted to hjm. He clambered up on top of the coach as I did, and drawing from his pocket a leather cigar-case offered me one. "I had never smoked a cigar, but felt a kind of shame to refuse, so I took one and lighted it with as much or perhaps much more importance than an old smoker. We glided into a conversa tion. "Where did you say you were go- I asked. "To Daltonville." "To Daltonville 1" "Yes; is there anything strange in that 1" "No, but I was surprised; I am go ing there, too." "Well, I know most of the families about there," he returned, puffing his cigar; "Whom do you visit V "The Daltons !" "The Daltons "Yes; is there anything strange in that ?" I asked, as I laughingly repeated his very words, in the meantime watch ing the smoke as it curled up from my cigar. "No, nothing strange, except that we should meet, I am distantly related to the family, and am going there to spend a couple of months. Do you know Anna t" "Anna," I asked; "is there a young lady there ," "Yes, my boy, a young and handsome lady, one you can't help liking." "Oh, very well, then, I'll driver, what are you wobbling over the road for?" "Shure, sir, an' I think the only wobble, as you call it, is in that segar yer a smoking." "Sure enough, I felt my head whirl ing, and 1 should have fallen off the ve hicle had it not been for the assistance of my new-found friend, who took my arm. "I feel sick so sick," I murmered. "I guess you are not used to strong cigars ! Driver, stop until I help the young man msiue oi iue etiacu. i It. ' i 1 ...1..4. l 4 JL SCiircttiy lciueuiucicu wnai uip- pened afterwards, except that I was an awful sick man; but gradually I began to feel better, and by the time we stop ped for the night, 1 had almost recov ered. Albert Warville and myself had be come the best of friends. He had cared for me during my illness and not ou word did he say of my weakness. That night the driver approached me and said 'fiegorra, sur, if th first part of that segar was az voile as the lasht, I don't blame ye fur gettin' sick,' but I put no stock in what he said, for I should not have known whether it was good or bad. "Well, we arrived, after a few days' travel, at Daltonville. This little vil lage, nestled in a valley near one of the most precipitous mountains of the Fran conia range. It was a place of romance, and I built future hojes on the beauties of the surrounding scenery, for I was fond of hunting and fishing and had had q'iite a good deal of experience. "We were cordially welcomed at the Dalton house, where I found my friend was hailed as 'Cousin Albert.' I did not see Anna Dalton until the supper hour, although I don't doubt Albert did, as he made" himself at once at home, leaving me with the two boy3 of the house, Henry and Willie. "During the afternoon I gained their youthful hearts by promising to make each of them an Indian. low. When I saw Anna Dalton I was not suqirised that Albert called her handsome, I should have called her beautiful, for 'A fairer fair vision ne'er greeted my 'sight.' " It was but the work of a few hours for me to fall desperately, madly, boy ishly in love with her. "Two weeks glided by, I had begun to pay attentions to the beautiful Anna, although I could not tell whether she was playing with me, or was in earnest She received my address as the queen might the homage of her subjects, then, just ai I was on the point of telling her my feelings, she would begin to trill some melody and dance out of the room. I was gettmg frantic, I felt that I must 'gush,' or the pent-up waters of my soul would burst through all restraints. But no ! Anna s manner precluded the possibility af any gusli' on my part. In despair some days 1 d don my hunting suit ami shoulder my gun and spend an afternoon in the woods, sometimes with Albert, oftener with him, for truth to tell, I was becoming madly jealous of hiiu and of his quiet authoritative ways. One day I had hunted the house over for Anna, resolved to tell her how much I loved her and to tell the truth concern ing her regard for me. "I was destined to find out in a much morqi abrupt and disagreeable manner. I could not find her. I then asked after the boys. Their mother told me they had taken the bows I had made for them and gone up the mountain target shooting. I found my gun and con cluded to go up the mountain myself and shoot some small game. "About a quarter of a mile from the house was a beautiful waterfall called Sylvan Glade Cataract, and by this lim pid stream was the nearest path up the mount. . . It was approached by a narrow path and was surrounded by a thick mass of undergrowth and trees so that you would not imagine it's promixity until quite upon it. 1 strode up the path vexed that I did not see Anna while the mood was on rie to tell her all. "I approached the cataract and heard voices but kept steadily on parting the bushes only to see. "my Anna," as I had come to term her, in the snns of Albert Warville, while he pressed kiss after kiss upon her lips, which maddened while it calmed me. "I stepped into the inclosure and Al bert released the girl as I tapped him roughly on the shoulder. "Come with me, Albert Warville !" I saidJ "My tone was so authoritive that he followed me without a word until we had put a dozen paces between ourselves and Anna. ''Now Albert Warville, what right have you to the caresses of that girl V I hissed, my heart beating fiercely while my face must have been drawn and hard. "The right of my affianced wife, Ned Baker, and I thought you too much of a gentleman to seek t interrupt such a relationship." "I reeled and staggered as though I had been struck a blow, while ha went quietly back to Anna and together they started down the mountain. Then I seemed to awaken to my condition and beat n breast and tore my hair in a maniacal fashion, which I look back on now with amusement, although at that time it was sternest reality. "I watched them clear down the mountain side and saw Anna cross the plateau alone. Was he coming back to me ! Oh no, I could not meet him, my brain seemed on fire and was filled with wicked murderous thoughts. "Desperately I plunged on through the woods not knowing or caring where my steps led me. "I last I paused, for theie, standing right ahead of me was the form of Albert Warville. He was standing near the edge of "the cliff" as it is called, a rocky projection with a sheer descent of some forty-five feet, and appeared to be meditating and looking off, while I no ticed Anna's light blue scaf around his neck. Instinctively I raised my gun to fire at him, when on second thought I low ered it, I remembered Anna's brothers were in the woods somewhere, but my brain was maddened and whirling, and for the time being I was carried away with passion at what I termed his vil lainy. ; I was crazed and frenzied to see Anna's blue scarf encircling his neck. I bent to the ground and seized a large stone; casting it with a decision long practice had taught me, I heard it strike him with a dull thud. - I saw him topple and fall, and waited to hear his death scream but there was no sound. All was as still as death As still as death? My God, that was an awful thought that was the thought that made me sane again. I fell to the ground utterly in capable of motion. . "The few moments I lay there seemed like dreadful hours to me; then as con sciousness came back it appeared to be a hideous dream, and I dragged myself to the edge of the cliff and looked over. There he lay all curled up in a heap. Oh, merciful heaven! was I to go through uie with the stain or a murderer on my hand. But I must arouse myself I must act; and the first thing was to dispose of the bodv; sol started on a round about path, the only way to reach the bottom of the cliff. As I neared the sjwt I was sure I heard voices, and gaz ing through the trees I saw little Henry and Willie Dalton standing on the body. "I turned to fly, wild with agonizing thoughts, but I was seen, and the two boys started after me, crying lustily: "Cousin Ned! Cousin Ned !" "I turned and met them. "Was it you, Cousin Ned, that knock ed him off ! asked Willie. "I gave up all for lost, and falling on my face cried out: "May God forgive me. It was I '" "The two boys sprang to my side and lifted me up. Said Willie, "What's the matter Cousin Ned, there's no harm done ?" While Henry cried out: "We weie going to shoot at him, but we can set him up just as well down here." "I started to my feet, I spai ng to the ob ject it was a dummy filled with straw. The boys had used some old clothes of Albert's, his hat and their sister's scarf. "I laughed wildly, then hysterically, and at I lust somewhat naturally, as I said with an effort; "How's that for theatricals, boys, I fooled you didn't I ?" "Yes vou did Cousin Ned," returned Willie, you acted as though you were frightened near to death." "Now children you have the story. That cured my first case of love and my terribled passions for ever. I stood up at the marriage of Albert Warrille and Cousin Anna, as I got to calling her, and no one has ever heard lefore the story of how I committed Almost a Clime Wants To. The Norristown Herald wants to send the nine-wived man to jail for 250 years because no fair-minded gentleman would try to maka a corner in -wives until Dr. Mary Walker and Mr, Tilden had each secured one. " Ben ' Horan's Change of Lile. "Ben" Hogan, noted once as a prize fighter, was found by a World reporter yesterday in some apartments on the second floor of 7G Crosby street, mar ried to a wise little housewife, who keeps their rooms as neat as a pin. Ben was seated by a table, thoughfully munching an apple and poring over a well-worn Bible. He is a large man, with broad, square shoulders, muscular limbs, and a broad, good-natured face, not much impaired in expression by the scars of many ring and bar-room fights. "I was going up town one Sunday night," he said, "hunting for some sort of amusement You see, I had always sjMint Sunday nights in variety halls, and when I saw the lights in front of the Park Theatre I went in to see what was going on. lnstaed of dancing and variety business, I saw Brother Sawyer preaching to a good house, and telling them how he had been a drunkard and gambler, and how contented and com fortable he was after he had reformed. Somehow Sawyer's story interested me. I was all of a shake with wine drinking and, although I had come East with $10,000, I had drank and gambled it all away. It interested me to know that a man could get out of such a slough. On my way home I determined to give up drinking. When I got home I told her (jerking his head toward his wife) so, and she could hardly sleep for anxi ety to have me take the pledge, She persuaded me until early next morning, when we went up to a place on the Bow ery, and I signed the pledge. It was no easy thing to keep, I can tell you. My nerves were all gone. 1 walked the floor that day in agony. Every muscle was in a quiver, and I could not sleep. Late that evening, for the first time in my life, I prayed to God to help me. I don't know how long it was; but after some time it seemed like a flash came over me, and I felt easy and relieved. I sent her out for a Bible. One was never in the house lief ore. She gave 75 cents for this one (lifting the worn volume that he had been reading), and soon afterward I went to bed and slept easy through the night W e went to see Brother Saywer, and every night since we go to meetings somewhere." "When did your prize-fighting life be gin f the rejiorter asked. " hen the war broke out 1 was m Nashville," Hogan answered. "I began by following the army- not as a soldier, for I don't think Td have leen much of a tighter that way alwavs looking out for myself always. Well, I made lots of money, but some way I had to sjiend it in getting myself out of trouble. 1 never fought much on my own account, and never a bar-room fight unless I as in liquor. Well, I followed the army down to Port Royal and Hilton Head, and from there I went to the Dry Tor tugas. I played cards of all sorts from New Orleans up the river to Cincinnati and Pittsburg. Why, I had plenty or money when I was in Pittsburg. I had a span of horses and $27,000 to the good in the bank. At that time I made up my mind to quit drinking and gam bling, for I had plenty to keep me the rest of my life. That did not last long, though. My money dwindled away in loans ami other ways until I landed in Saratoga, at the beginning of a Sum mer, with only $10,000 in my pocket. I left there with 815, and that bor rowed." "Was that about the time ot your fight with Tom Allen ?" the reported en quired. "Oh, about that fight," Hogan replied, somewhat irresponsibly, but with in creased interest "That came about in this way : I had been living around in the oil regioiis, making plenty of money and drinking heavily. My stomach was all gone. The skin of my hands was shriveled and cracked, and the doctors told ine that the Hot Springs water was all that could cure me. Me and my partner started right off and stopped in St. Louis. There we met Tom Allen, who was spoiling to fight some one. I was willing to accommodate him, but my friends urged me to cure myself first I would not wait, but planked the lAoney right down. You see I al ways back myself," Hogan said, with manifest professional pride. "Every thing was fixed, but when I got to the Hot Springs the doctors said they could do nothing for me. They advised me to go over into the Choctaw Nation and drink the fresh blood of game for awhile. My partner and I took nine gallons of whisky and a lot of ammuni tion and started off. We had a glorious time for nine weeks, and I was all right after that, and Allen and myself had our fight The set-to was a tough one; it came out a draw." "You had other ring fights, had you not?" "Oh, yes, and I never lost one of them," he answered. "There was Ryan and Holliday, Iwth of them easy jobs. The light with Donnelly was the hardest I ever had. I was rojied into that They thought they had put up a job to have me well licked. I had gone over to, Canada on a gambling tour, and they brought me-against Donnelly :n a bar room. Crowing soon resulted in a match to be fought within two. weeks. We fought 38 minutes, and he knocked me down 1 1 times. I gave him a 'good one' in the side that broke three of his ribs for him and won the fight." "Have you met many of your sport ing friends since, your reformation 1" the rejiorter asked. " Yes; they have called on me from all sides. 'What are you going to do, Ben f they ask; 'all you know is gam bling, prize-fighting and saloon-keeping.' My answer is that I have broad shoul ders, strong hands and a stout heart. Since my reformation she and I find $8 a week is enough to pay our rent and give us all we want. I used to make almost a 100 a week when I was hav ing stones broken against my ribs in a side-show. Now, if I can only earn 6 a week, we can make it lodge, clothe and board us, and we'll know just where it comes from and where it goes to, every cent of it I am happier since the change, and she, I know, is' said he, with another backward nod toward his wife, who buried her face in her hand kerchief and sobbed noticeably, if not audibly, ' - The Cincinnati Enquirer "Essays ca Man" in one canto, as follows ; Man's a vapor. Fall of woes, Starts a paper, Up he goes. The Story or Some Girls. This truthful story is about some par ticular girls that Erastus Bailey, of somewhere out in Michigan, had on hand. There were six of Mr. Bai ley's girls, all daughters, and all will ing to be marred, as the old gentleman was willing they should be. He put them on the matrimonial market in one sweet bunch, utterly regardless of ex pense in she way of curl papers, store frizzes, hooks-and-eyes and hair pins; they were displayed before young men, middle aged men, and all kinds of men, on all kinds of occasions, but none of Mr. Bailey's six daughters fished for a husband .with any kind of luck; not one of them made a catch. Other men's daughters went off like hot cakes, it seemed to Bailey, although neither he nor his girls could see any reason why men should lie so miserably stupid. Bailey's girls were everywhere, and yet no man ever went where they were; they were offered free of charge to any body who would take them off the old man's hands, but nobody seemed to want cheap girls with red hair and pug noses. It will probably never lie found out how the idea came to strike Mr. Bailey, but he fmallyfcresolved to withdraw his girls from the market, and that not one of them would listen to any kind of an offer of marriage. Only philosophers know why he settled upon such' a re markable course as this, but ne was him self a philosopher. Mr. Bailey consulted his six red headed girls and then went down town and told everyliody that he had put a stop to all fooling around his daughters; that he had locked them up and would stay at home with a club to keep the boys off, if less determined measures failed. The effect was im mediate and tremendouj. In two days some of the boys began to watch when the old man left the house, and then they slid in to see his pug nosed daugh ters, but they always slid out a few minutes before pa came home. When Mr. Bailey was told of these things he put a padlock on his gate, and the boys jumped over the fence, rather liking the romance of the thing. In two weeks one of the girls lowered herself from a second story window, ran off with one of the boys and got m? tried. Old Mr. Bailey tore around in a dreadful way before the public, put some iron bars across the windows to prevent the es cape of any more girls, and congratu lated himself on his cuteness. In an other 10 days the-second girl got off in a manner utterly inexplicable, and came back with a husband, and a third settletl herself for better or worse with a bank cashier, only a little while further on. This is all the matrimony that occurred in that family at last advices, but the old gentleman is waiting with abundant hope that the other girls will glide nois essly out through the cellar, or fly out the chimney, and climb the fence and get married. With three girls on his hands still, he has bought a shot gun and chained an unusually ferocious dog in the back yard, and put an extra bolt on the back door. He gives a regular warning of these things all over the town every day and hopes for the worst It will certainly be realized, for cvery qody knows as well as Mr. Bailey, th when you lock up something there are always lots of people waiting for a good chance to break in and carry it ofl; and this ' always works the more so with a girl than anything else. A man who wouldn't steal your purse doesn't have any scruples about carrying oft' your girl. There is probably no moral to this story, but it is an enduring lesson to all fathers; lock up your daughters. Rules for Writers of the Press. "Causeur" knows that he will deserve and win the thanks of all managing edi tors if he can but impress these few sim ple rules ujjoix the minds of those who write occasionally for. the press: Write upon one side of the leaf only. Why? Because it is often necessary to cut the pages into "takes" fpr the com positors, and this cannot be done when both sides are written upon. Write clearly and distinctly, being particularly careful in the mutter of proper names and words from foreign languages. Why? Because you have no right to ask either editor or compos itor to waste his time puzzling out the results of your selfish carelessness. Don't write in microscopic hand. Why? Because the compositor, has to read it across his case at a distance of nearly two feet Also, because the edi tor often wants te make additions and other changes. Don't begin at the very top of the first page. Why? Because if you have written a head for your article, the edi tor will probably want to change it, and if you have not which is the better way he must write one. Besides, he wants room in which to write instruc tions to the printer as to the type to be used, when and where the proof is to be sent, etc. Never roll your manuscript. Why? Because it maddens and exasperates everyone who touches it editor,com positor and proof reader. Ie brief. Why? Because people don't read long stories. The number of readers which any two articles have is inversely p-oportioned to the square of their respective lengths. That is, a half column article is read by four times as many peopls as one of double that length. Have the fear of waste basket con stantly before your eyes. Why? Be cause it will often happen that the edi tor will want to communicate with you, and because he needs to know the writer's name at a guarantee of good faitli. If you use a pseudonym or initials, write your own name and ad dress below it It will never be divulged. "These precepts in thy memory keep," and for fear you might forget them, cut them out and put them where you can readily run through them when tempted to spill innocent ink. Not the Correct' Answer. "Now, boys," said a Sunday-school teacher, who was trying to impress the doctrine of rejientance. on the class; "now, boys, Judas, as I have told you, betrayed his master, and then went and hanged him self. What was the best thing he could have done before hanging himself?" "The very best thing he could ha' done," said the very worst boy in the class, "was to change his mind." His Sunday School Advocate wag at once stopped.- "Mosquitoes," observed a cynic, "have gone to their long hum." Too Bad. When I last visited the opera, I was much (surprised and annoyed by the con duct of a little gentleman, who, from the moment the curtain went up, did not cease to start up in his seat, and strike his brow, all the while uttering exclam ations of surprise and delight "What aih you ?" said I at last "Wonderful ' .Surprising! Dd- you know, sir, he added, turning to me, that I never studied Italian in my life, and vet I understand every word the singers are saying "Why, said I, "that's easily accounted for they're singing in French." "Are they ?" he said, with an air of disapMjintment; "I'm so sorry, because if it had been Italian I'd have known another language. It's too bad." "Whereas, dress with trains raise in the streets clouds of dust injurious to the public health, the wearing of such dresses in the street is hereby prohibit ed," says an ordinance just promulgated in Prague. A Publication of Rare Merit. The West Shore, Oregon's illustrated pajier, which is now in its fourth suc cessful year of publication, has, with the commencement of the fourth volume, been enlarged to 32 pages. Every num ber is now neatly stitched, trimmed and enveloed in a handsome granite cover. In the editorial and engraving depart ment new talent has been engaged, mak ing the West Shore in its present shape one of the best and cheapest publications in the world. As a pure, cleanly-kept family pajier it has not an equal on the Pacific coast, whilst to friends abroad it is without doubt the very best publica tion. Its descriptive articles about our resources are truthfully written,' while the engravings of buildings and scenery in the Pacific northwest are artistically executed and will give to those abroad a better idea of our great country than a year's numljers of any other paper. Now is the time to subscribe, as the price at present, and to all those subscribing be fore the 1st of January, is 1 50 per year, including iKstage. After that time the price will lie raised to $2 per an num. Specimen copies sent on receipt of 20 cents. Address 1. Samuel, PuIj lisher, Diawer 3, Portland, Oregon. A I'bt ot Uratltuile. Iff ever a man owed a debt of gratitude, l do to Hall's Balsam for the luns. Three years a(i 1 was with one foot in the grave ami the other just ready to to follow, with that dreaded disease, consumption. A friend of mine recommended Hall's Balsam as the last resort. Thank God. 1 tried it. The Unit bottle 1 used did me more goid than nil the physicians in CiiicifKiati, and I tried all the best in the "citv. 1 conthmt j to use Hall's Balsam until 1 had taken six bottles, and to day 1 am as well as any other man in the citv, You can publish this if it will do anvgood. H. RORTER. The above Is one of the many letters that we receive. For coughs, colds, consumption, there is nothing equul to Hall's Balsam for the luus. For sale by all drug gist. HOlHiE, DAVIS A CO., Agents. For Dysjiepsia use Pfunder's Oregon Blood Purifier. A certain and speedy cure. The Willamette Stove Works, of Portland, makes the best Stoves sold in this market Buyers should sustain home manufacture by insisting on hav ing goods of this make and buying no other. Hansen, of Portland, sends out the most reliable seed and the best trees. Address II. Hansen, Portland, Oregon, for catalogue and price list. For diseases of the Liver and Kidneys try the Oregon Blood Purifier. gST In maklnic any iinrrlinNV or In writing In renpoune to any advertise ment in thin paper you will please men tion the name ol tbe paper. DRY GOODS. I AWES AT A DISTANCE FROM PORTLAND CAS J deal with us as satisfactorily as at our counters, We keep the Laiyest and Finest Stock of Dry Goods, DressJGoods, Silks, Cloaks, And everything requisite to a strictly FIRST-CLASS ESTABLISHMENT, in Oregon. It will cost very little to send to us for samples and prices, and it will enable everybody to take advantage of the recent decline in the price of DRY UOODS. We also keep a Full Line of CENTS' FURNISHING COOOS. Clarke & Henderson, Corner First anil WaHhliiglou Street, PORTLAND, OREGON. Commercial Union Insurance Co,, Of London. Capital 912,500,000. IKYIXtt WEBB, General Agents for Oregon. Xo. IB North Front. St,. Portland. BEST PLOW Iff THE WORLD is mm or Oliver's Chilled Metal. It will ran 1 J enter, tarn and do better work of all kinds, than any other plow made. Beware of Imitatlona. See that the name "Olivib" and this trade mark are on the beam of the Plow. The genuine Olotb Chitabd Plows can b had only from as, or oar authorized agents. KNAPP, BUR.RELL & CO. General Agent. For Oregon and Washington Territory, PORTLAND, OREGOS. SCROLL SAWS ! HOLLY & WALNUT. 8AW AND PATTERNS. 4aT Write for Price List DITTOS & HALL. Tortland, Or. GREAT REDUCTION IN PRICES. J SIMON & CO., Dealers in Doors, Windows, Blinds and Glass WEIGHTS, CORDS AND PULLEYS, 128 Front St., bet. Washington Aider. e4 Im PORTLAND, OREGON. Children can Make Money Raising Chickens. Luther Myers, N A I.EM, OREO.V. Send for Catalogue and direc tions for mr-' - woujvr, pay. .-susw A B ELL, FEOTOGRAf HEB. No. 167 and 169 First Street Portland, Oregon. J sia-. i 1851 KNAPP, BURRELL ri w Front, First THE CELEBRATED BAIN FARM WAGON. This cut represents the BAIN THIMBLE-SKEIN WAGON, medium size, com pletc, with Top Box, Roller Brake and spring Seat. The Bain Wagon so wel known to the fanners and freighters of this coast that it seems needless for us to say anything in its praise. We have sold them for the thirteen years, and warranted every one sold, and the total claims for defective material or workman ship during that time have not amounted to one cent on tach wagon sold. This fact Sicaks louder than anything we can say in their jiraiHe. The rutent bkcln 1 ilit;nsr. On the Bain Wagon is a valuable improvement, and is on no other wagon Foi the coming season all farm wagons will have the new Patent Oil Tuhcs with IlraMtt Screw t'nr.M, Which avoid the necessity of taking off the wheels to oil the axles an arrangement which teamsters will fully appreciate. We feel safe in asserting that there is no other wagon iu the market that ill compare with the Bain as now niade in quality of materia! jssfcd, and in coniplctt ness unci excellency of workmanship. Our wagons are made to order, especially for iour trade, and we pay extra to have all the timber kxtka sklkctkd out of thoroughly seasoned stock. All the wheels are put through soaked in boiling linseed oil before setting of tires, making shrink age iuip8siblc. Mr. Bain does this in a more thorough manner than some others, who simply make a pretense of doing it, and make tbe application, if at all, only in "hotmeuaUik: Ooes. " lite wotid work, tires and iroriini? are extra heavv. but at the same time everything is well proortioiicd.! We chalk nge the most critical cou)arison with any and every other make of wagon, and while we d not claim to sell th "cheapest" wagun, as far as dollars and cents are concerned, we do claim to sell as good a wagon as can be made, and one that will prove the cheapest in the end. taf" Send for Circular and Price Lists, j ' 1 OREGON HACK OR FOUR SPRING WAGON. i . GUARANTEED THE LARGEST STOCK. THE BEST ASSORTMENT. THE LEADING MACHINES. The Oldest and Leading House in the Trade and Prices always at the lowest Living Kates. A T T E N T ION, FAR M E R S ! , RJkJSTTS. BROS, cfc OO., Plows, Harrows, AT THE LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES. The Following are lite Goods we are selling The La Uelle Wagons, FARM. FREIGHT AM SPRING, manufactured in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, in close proximity to the best timber region in the I tiiied States. The ready sale of these wauons has been truly wonderful, over 000 hav ing been sold in Oregon since January l,i lb" 8. This, with the unbounded satisfaction they .have given, sjieaks for itself. We claim the most thoroughly ironed and best finished wagon in the market, and will fully warrant every wagim for one year Bnford's Black Hawk and Clipper Plows, Biiionl s California Sulky Plows, Collins Uenuilie KHHl niet'f riOWS, Hllil Sino"l(? Plows I ' ' j the strongest and best-finished Plows in the market. llEEJIBi:B-H keep only FlrNf-elnNM Ciooriw, all of whieh we FI LM' HAttRAST TIKAL MAt lllM.UY. r send lor Circular and Reduced l'rice l.Mn. Oregon Standard Soap Works, IKVIXG a- WEBB, Proprietor!, PORTLAND, OREGON. The only steam factory north of San Francisco. Send for circular and price list. , Coker's Employment Agency, Furnishes HELP of all Kinds FREE OF CHARGE. C4T Correspondence Solicited. J. R. COKER, Portland, Oregon. Milwaukie Nurseries. ESTABLISHED 1847. t FOR SEASON 1878-79 j i LARGE STOCK, 1 LOW PRICES, Send for Our CatHlone. ! I Seth Luelling & Son, j nilwankie, Oregon, USE NONE BUT THE COLUMBIA COAL OIL, THE BEST IN THE MARKET. j II. A KKKMAX A CO., i Role Agent for the North Pacific Coast, 6 and 3 North Front Street, Portland, Ogn. j THE CHIEF OF HEALING COMPOUNDS. HENRY'S Carbolic SalveJ j The Most Powerful Healing j . Agent Ever Discovered. Physicians give it the highest recommendations. POINTS TO BE BORNE IN MIND. Carbolic Salve positively cures the worst sores. Carbolic Salve mstantlj allays the pain of burns. Carbolic Salve cures all cutaneous eruptions. Carbolic Salve removes pimples and blotches. Carbolic Salve will cure cuts and bruises. HENRY'S CARBOLIC SALVE ranks at the head of all salves, Ointments and other Healing Compounds, and has achieved a greater reputa tion and a larger sale than any other similar prcira- tion. ine most VIRULENT SORES AND ULCERS Have been cured with wondrous rapidity by the use of Carbolic Salve, and it is prescribed now almost univer sally by Physicians throughout the country in their practice. Testimonials from the most respectable sources, med ical and otherwise, are constantly accumulating on our hands, demonstrating the sovereign) efficacy of This Great External Remedy; and that the cures which it effects are as prompt as they are complete. The two following excerpt are all we deem it necessary to insert: Ueorge B. Lincoln, President of the Board of Health, N. Y., writes: "Your Carbolic Salve is an excellent article, and I thank you for. This is another evidence of the great value of the discovery of carbolic ackL" D. R. Locke (Petroleum V. Nasby), of New York, states that he had " on the forefinger of his right hand, one of those pleasant pets, a run-'round.' The finger became inflamed to a degree unbearable. ", a friend dressed it with Caroolic Salve, and in 20 minute the pain bad so much subsided as to give a fair night's rest. The inflamation left the finger in a day.' , Henry's Carbolic Salve is need extensively in Hospitals, and is fount to be not onlv a thorough purifier and diaiidectant, but also the most wonderful and speedy healing remedy ever known. Sold by all Druggist. Price 25 cents. ! JOHN F. HENRY CCRRAX k CO., 8 College Place, New York. Beware of imitations. Ask forj Henry 'i Carbolic Salve and and no other. i ' HODOE, DAVIS CO.'. Agent. and Ash Streets, Portland, Oregon, IMrOIlTEBH O 5F1 fAMjMMMTS aiidACHlNES. TO BE THE BEST HACK IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN Seeders, Drills "Wagons', The Brown Sulky Plow, Champion of the Field, made entirely of Iron and Steel. The draft direct from end of beam. By the une of two levers, the plow can be made to run level even the side hill. The sale of this SIXKY has been enormous, not alone on this coast but ALL OVER THE WORLD. La Dow?s Jointed Pulverizing Harrow, A"3T . The Beat in the Market. The Wheel Gangs being united by a scries of Vniversal Joint Boxes, allows each part to accommodate itself to uneven surfaces. Wheels larger than any other made. The inner wheels of each gang are brought HOLIDAY GO OD S! ALISKY & HEGELE. CANDY MANUFACTURERS. n AVING GREATLY ENLARGED OCR FACTORY WE ARE NOW PREPARED BETTER THAN EYER TO supply Dealers with a superior Article of all Kinds of French and American OAXDIBS, Also offer them a large stock of Christmas Goods, such as Sugar Toys, Glazed Toys, Fancy Gilt Heart, Tree Or naments, Fancy Payer boxes, Christmas Tree Caudles, Glass Balls, Cornucopias, Imitations of Animals, etc., for selection. Send for our catalogues and price list for 1878-79. - ALISKY & HEGELE. So. 113 First Street-Factors- 28 Alder Street. Adjoining; Odd Fellow Temple. P. O. BOX 64. J. .A.. eSTllOWHIIIODGE. Direct Importer and Dealer in LEATHER AND SHOE FINDINGS, o. 141 Front SU. Portland. Or. W00DBURN .NURSERIES. Frnlt, Kbade, Ornamental and Nat Trees, Vine and Phrnbbery. Choice Trees, 25 cents each, $10 per hundred. Ser.d for Catalogue and Price List. J. H, BETTLEMIER, Woodburo, Oregon. JOHN H. WOOBRUWI, CIGAR MANUFACTURER, VND DEALKR IN FIVE HAVANA CIGARS, Ci garettes, uid the best brands of Chewing and Smoking Tobacco. No Chinese Employed o. 65 Fir i Ntrt, IortlAnl. Or. OREGON CORN. 148 Bushels to the Acre. 4 FfER 18 YEARS OF EXPERIMENTS I HAVE produced a new variety of W-fcxlto JEM -I ret Com. That ripens thoroughly and yields large crops in the climate of Oregon. To enable farmers to secure a change of crop and produce another more profitable than wheat I will sell this seed at the following prices for tis sea son: 2 50 per bushel delivered at the depot in Oregon City, or in one pound packages, postage paid, twenty five cents each. P. M. RINK ARSON, ; . - Oregon City, Oregn. FINE FARM FOR SALE. BOO Aor . ONE OF THE BEST FARMS IN OREGON. IN A fine state of cultivat:on, fully fenced, excellent bHildings, steam power and all late improvements in agricultural machinery. Everything to be sold at a bargain, it produced lO.Ouu bushels of wheat in 1877 and 8,000 bushels in 1873. Is good for an average of nine thousand bushels every year. Price 30 per acre, terms to suit the buyer. D. H. STEARNS & CO., " Real Estate Agents Portland, Oregon. CORROSIVE SUBLIMATE Ground Sulphur, Flour bulphur, Carbollo lheep Dip, Xlnchan's (sheep Dip, Wakelee'a Hheep Hath, Sulphate Zlno, A.rnl-, FOR THE CURE OF SCAB IN SHEEP Y For sale by H0DE, DAVIS CO., Wholesale XruirtClit. SEEDS. SEEDS. HACHEXEY & BEX0, SEEDSMEN, NORTHWEST .COR. FIRST AND TAYLOR STREETS: ! . ' ' Portland, Oregon. ' HAVE ON HAND A FULL, COMPLETE AND Fresh Stock of Field, Flower and Garden Seeds, tdjrube, Fruit and Ornamental Tree. Bulbs, etc., which have been carefully selected, and offer the same lor sal at the lowest market rate. CsTCaUloguee furnished on application. & CO., 185-8. description and Prices. Sizr No. 2. Patent wheels, three feet eight inches and four feet tw inches high. iSolid collar axles, one and one-eighth inches; plain bed, -with j latent round corners ; two jiU jis ; top of body bound with iron; '.eatber dash; two cushioned seats, with laxy backs; ltli pole and ratchet brake. Capacity, 800 pounds. Pi ice, with patent wheels, 200. Sir.K No. 3. Solid collar axles, one and one-fourth inches; same style and finish as sixe 2. Capacity, 1,000 pounds. Price, 210. Sizr No. 4 One and three-eighths inch solid colla axles; same fittings as other. Capacity, 1,500 pounds. Price, with patent wheels, $220. Same wagon with longer bed and three seats, 230- IN MARKET. Etc,: Et near to a cutting edge with each oilier, throwing the . loosened earth in opposite directions from the center, leaving no ridge in ttiAoanter, which ha beea a great objection heretofoajAte all Harrows of the kind. The cutting angle of the wheel gangs can be changed instantly and fastened at any desired angle, both at once, by means of the hand lever by the driver without leaving the seat. jr Earmera, buy no other until you see the La Dow'a. McSherry Drills and Seeders, IMPROVED FORCE FEED. Bunching nr the grain la an impossibility with the McSherry brill. In this Drill and Seeder, straws and obstructions are carried out by the spiral wheels. The quantity to be sown per acre is regulated by cog wheels, the only reliable man ner to sow grain. Fall and C omplete Une of AC RICH 1 FRANK BROTHERS & CO., ' 104 and lOS Front Street, Portland, Oregon; PORTLAND, OR EGO EXCLUSIVE Carriage and "Wagon Hardware, Axles, Springs, Forged and Malleable Irons, Buggy and Carriage Top Trimmings. All Hardware required to complete a job. CARRIAGE & WAGON WOODWORK. Hubs, Spokes, Rims, Spokes, Shafts, Pol' Hickory and Whitewood Lumtx Oak, Ash, And th justly Celebrated ' c SARVEN PATENT WHEELS. We call the attention of the public and all old custo mers to the above advertisement, and as we are the only establishment engaged exclusively hi the line in Ore- -gon, we intend to pay close attention to the wants of the market and our customers. Our stock is large, new, and selected expressly lor in, and is being increased by every steamer. ' E. J. KORTHRUP A OO.. Corner of First and 31 it its street) PORTLAND, OREGON. BURTON HOUSE, Corner Third staid P MtreeUt, Near the Steamship Landings and Railroad Depots, PORTLAND, OREOON Lewiston & Fretland, Proprietor (Late of Minn sots. House.) Wilt spue no pains nor expense to maka this horns THE BENT HOTEL IX PORTLAND. IJfT I ill!- t rw TP r - La f ilr i YUiy SOLE AGENTS FOR THE INRITALLED STANDARD jSD KSTEY ORGAITS, D. W. PRENTICE CO., . Music Dealers, Portland, Oregon. --i PAA'IEL J. Jf ALARKET. Shipper,, Commission ' Merchant, And Wholesale Dealer In GRAIN, FLOUR, FEED, DAIRY PRODUCE, PRO vision. Hops, Hides, Bags, Afiricultural Seeds, Staple Groceries. Consignments and order sob cited. Office and Warehouse, No. 46 First street, Portland, Or San Francnoo Office, S4C Davis street. Morning Star Restaurant. Comer Second and Washington Streets, Portland, Ogn. . C. RIDER, Proprietor. Board, per month, trom...,-.fX 00 to C30 OO Board, per week, from ... 00 to 8 09 Board, per day, fnm... . 75 to 1H Board, per meal, from . . ii to 60 Private Room for Ladies sad Families. , And all kinds of Marble Work. : Send for mustratious. Designs and Price Lists before you order frum anybody else. WILLIAM YOCNO, Portland, Oregea,