She grimiwn (SxyxtM. (IHSFKO SVBKT TBIPAY.) HY. KrTATttlck . Publishers One Tr f ? 8.x M.mtln ;'2 Tbi MouHM - I Vayal.V in a iItum) TKRMS OF ADVERTISINO. Pne square, first insertion J j Eiif h aJdi.iuiiitl uucrUoU 1 " (LOCAL.) ... Wal Notice, jx-r line ........IS cent Regular aoi tieuint irrteJ upou liberal terma. JOB PRINTING 3BANON EXPR1 Ett7 fl ariytton of Job Printini Eons ca stsrt Kstics. Local Blanks, Business Cards. Letter Beads, Bill Head, Circulars, Posters, Etc. .- ExaeaUd in ssod tyi u4 at lowfc tiring piiem. VOL. II. LEBANON, OREGON, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1883. NO. 39. E SOCIETY NOTICES. LEBAXOX tflWR, Srt. 44, A. F A. M: MU at their uew hail iu Mamic Block, en Saturdaj .vanillic, ou or beiure U; tuU . SOJ( w M I.EB AVON LOME. NO. 47. I O. O F.: MM -unVty Miiui of -h wrvk. at Wd r.ll-.w rlall. Mala street: tUiung Vrtkrei cordially inUl W atteu.1 J. J. I IIAUI.TOS.M.U. HONOR I.H1XJE NO. S, A O. tr. W.. t.kanon. Ore .u- Mtrii every first anil third Tluriji Uiii in Uie month. K. K KlWUlt M. W . A R. CYRUS & CO., Real Estate, Insurance & Loan Agent. . General Collection aa Xetary roblle Baslaess Promptly Alteiule to. M. N. KECK, DE81CNER AND SC'JLP.T.OR. Manufacturer of Monuments and Headstones. AND ALL KISD9 OF I KHETERY WORK FIXE MOKCMEXTS A SPECIALTY. Opp RiTere Housa. ALB1ST. OREGON. SAW 3IILL FOR SALE. A Double Circular Water Power Saw Mill, Near L,?lixoii, Or. Capacity abut 500 ) feet pi r d ay. Also, 4 acres of land on which the sawmill is located. PRICE, $2,000 Also h ave a larjse stock of FIRST QUALITY LUMBER At lowest market rates for cash. . W. WHEELER. Lebanon. Or. WINTER Artistic Photographer, BROWNSVILLE, OR. Enlarging from Small Pictures. In stantaneous Process. WORK WARRANTED. G. T- COTTON, DEALER IN Groceries and Provisions. TOBACCO Sc CIGARS, SMOKERS' ARTICLES, Foreign and Domestic Fruits, CONFECTIONERY, (taeeatnare and Glassware, Lamps and Lamp Vixtnres. Main St., Lebanon, Ore con. ST. JOHITS HOTEL . Sweethome, Oregon, JOHN T. DAVIS, Proprietor The table is supplied with the very beet the market affords. Nice-clean beds, and satisfaction guaranteed to all guests. In connection with the above house JOHN DONACA Keeps a Feed and Sale Stable, and will accommodate tourists and travelers with teams, guides and outfits. BURKHART & BILYEU, Proprietors of the Livery, Sals ana Feea StaMes IjF.BAOX. OR. Southeast Corner of Main and Sherman. Fine Buggies, Hacks,Har ness and GOOD RELIABLE HORSES - For parties going to Brownsville, Wi terloo, Sweet Home, Scio, and all parts of Linn County. )ML kinds of Teaming PCXI AT REASONABLE RATES. SCIENCE OF NAMES. A System Submitted for the Benefit ut Fathers and Mothers. Writers spend much time and thought in selecting a name for a play or novel, for they know that success is largely dependent, on it. Parents, however, are strangely careless and unscientific in giving names to children. Usually, when a new-comer arrives, some old family name is taken, or if the parents exercise an original choice, they are too much excited to be guided by any sound euphonic principles. They for got that not only from the social point of view it is very advantageous to have one's name remembered, but that from the business point of view notoriety is capital, and must be obtained by per sistent and ingenious advertising. The economy cf the public stock of energy wasted in innumerable unconscious ef forts to remember a name without any corners for the memory to grasp, but persistently thrust before it, wo ild re sult in an increase of available mental force applicable to settling the ques tion of future probation, or to raising the ethical standard, or to reforming the tariff, or to disposing of the sur plus. The importance of the subject leads me to suggest one or two of the chief fundamental principles of the sci ence of naming children. The system is simple, and any provident parent i.n easily master and apply it. 1. Avoid odd, or eccentric, or poetic combinations, and be guided by en phonic quality only. It is true that an odd name may be remembered, but the associa tions with it will not be pleasing. The idea of oddity or affectation may attach to the shadowy personality built up in the mind of the public. Under this rule hyphenated names, especially hyphenated Christian names like Floyd Jones Robinson, are to be avoided. Writing the first given name with an initial and the second In full is also evidently opposed to correct scientific principles. 2. The best form of name Is a dactyl and a spondee, like "Jeremy Taylor." Every one has heard of the "Shakes peare of divines," and has a dim idea of an agreeable personality attached to the name. Had his name been Charles Taylor, it is far within bounds to say that his reputation would be about one third of what it is now. 3. If the surname is not one that can be treated according to the above rule, it should be fitted with a given name, such as to bring the combination as nearly as possible to the above length and cadence, as. Sidney Dobell, Ellery Vane, Henry Ward Beeoher. Dante Rossetti, Theodore Watts, and the like; or, otherwise, to two long syllables, like Mark Twain or Bret Harte. The subdivision of this branch of the subject are too numerous to be given, but all rest on principle No. 2. The phonic value of the surname is, under our custom, the controlling ele ment in practically applying the science of names. The great value of names beginning with Mac or O is evident, because they so readily combine with the ordinary Christian names. Anv one would be favorably disposed to Arthur O'Connor, for instance. A boy pervades our quiet neighborhood simply because his name is Johnny MacW hotter, lie is not in any respect a remarkable boy, but his name forces him into prominence by its phonic value. There are some ten or twelve boys who are comrades, but he and another dactyl-spondee boy. Emory Watson, are the only ones ever spoken of. No doubt there are others who do as much mischief and make more noie. but these two reap all the fame. Atlantic GREEK DANCING GIRLS. Their Artistic Attire snd Grseefal Mo tions Graphically Described. In the middle of the square was a ring or coil of maidens, the eldest per haps twenty years of age, the youngest hardly more than five years old. No two were dressed exactly alike, yet there was a general similarity in style. All wore long white skirts, some of delicate materials and others of heavy stuff. The overskirt, reaching to the knea, was dark and full, hanging in many folds. A broad bolt of silk hung below the waist. An elaborate apron of great variety of color and decora tion, reached nearly to the ankles. Each maiden wore a close-fitting vest, generally of red, bright blue, or gilt. This was cut low and round in front, and served as stays. Over the upper part of the breast hung a little stom acher, on which were strung jingling gold and silver coins, the girl's chief dowry. Over and around the head (sometimes covering the lower part of the face), was wrapped a gray 'ker chief. Seven of the girls, however, who always stood near the head of the line, wore veils of white tissue. The maiden's sleeves showed no organic connection with any outer garment; fitted the arm closely and were of some silk stuff, with stripes running around the arm. The whole costume was bright with harmonious colors. About sixty of these maidens danced together, with arms interlaced In a double line, for hours. The dance was led by one or two young men at the head of the line attached to the maid ens only by means of a handkerchief. The music was only the humming of the girls rarely did the words of the song become really articulate. The steps were simple, generally three forward, followed by three backward ob liquely, so as to movo in a circle. 1 saw no ''mixed dances" of men and women in Greece, though these have been imported to the cities. The men, however, as in Homer's day, have their own dances, which are much more vig orous than those of the girl. cr&- uer,t Magazine. . . . . Burmese cats- are curious looking ani mals. They have a joint in the middle of their tails, which appendage is in con sequence crooked and sticks out in an angle. They are fine specimens of the cat race and very useful in a house. They will attack a venomous snake with out hesitation, and show much dexterity in killing one, biting it on the back close to the head. If bitten, as one of my fa vorite Toms was once by a cobra, they will retire to the jungle, where they eat some herb nature points out to them, and, after the expiration of a iew days, iome back to the house very lean and lUngry, but well and frisky as ever. EAGLE AND RATTLESNAKE. A Porty-Ftv Slinutes' Fifth to the Klul.h On the W Ild Pralrls. On a beautiful September morning 1 was cantering along on my pony, cross ing a mountain divide, drinking in the fresh air, admiring the snow-capped mountains, the lofty pines, the waters ol the ereek alive with trout, and, far in the distance, the head-waters of the Missouri winding tboir serpentine way through the valley. On every side the beauty of the scene was augumented by herds of doer and antelope, which dot ted the land In the distance, but the stillness was suddenly broken by the shrill scream of an engle. High up la the heavens I saw him prepare to de scend, and down, down he came, with the swiftness of a shooting star, until he had nearly reached the earth, when he spread his powerful pinions and eased himself down until he had nearly reached terra firm a, when, with a sud den swoop, he lighted upon a great prairie rattler, about five feet long, and a battle commenced such as I had never before witnessed. I rode slowly up to the combatants, as near as I could with out disturbing them, and eagerly watched the progress of the fight. The bird was one of the largest bald eagles, and the snake was a monster of it kind, being three inches in diameter. The eagle, with Its crest thrown back, ran up to the snake and gave it a blow over the head with its wings that com pletely stunned it, just as it was in the act of striking at him with all its force. Quick as thought the eagle then caught it in its talons, soared about Un feet in the air, gave it a furious shaking, and let it fall to the earth, where it lay coiled in a warlike attitude, rattling and hissing in great wrath. The eagle made a second attack in the same man ner as before, but the snake watched its chance this time, and when the eagle was close enough thrust its head be tween his head and wing, and, with a desperate effort, wound itself around the eagle's body, and it looked for a moment a though the powerful bird must die. But. with a violent Sap of his wings, he broke the deadly embrace, caught the snake, gave it a number of jerks. ana threw it down again. The blood was oozing from several places in the rattler's body, which seemed to make the eagk more excited than ever. The antagonists now remained some ."eet apart, and seemed to be re-ting, while the rattler kept up a deep buz zing, perhaps to intimidate the bird. The eagle next tried another plan, wheeling around his enemy :n a circle ; but the serpent was acquainted with this dodge, and kept full in his face. Thus foiled, the agle began to whip the rattler with the tips of his wings, his head well thrown back, but the snake dodged the blows. The eagle then made ti feint, jumped to ouo side and struck it a fearful blow, caught it by the middle and shook it until the ir.ake was about to entwine itself around his body, when he again threw it to the ground- Both showed signs or great fatigue, but neither seemed inclined to give way. ine eagle ran around and around his victim, in every conceivable way. but so far the snake managed to hold him off, until he threw back lm head and made a desperate drive. The snake struck with all its force as the e&fle came in contact with its head, and. whHe trying to coil around hit body, was caught and carried up intr '.he air, where It was almost jerked in twain, and when it reached the groumi again its entrails were hanging out, and It writhed and twisted in great pain. The proud bird stood looking on with the victorious air of a pugilist who hn. won a world renowned battle, his head erect and his wings resting on the ground. For the first time he cast hih large eyes upon me, showing neithe; surprise nor anger at my presence ; ht seemed to understand that I would noi molest him, for he turned to the snaki and gave it another good shaking to make sure of its death. 1 was temptec to take him home as a trophy of the battle, but his unshaken confidence ir me unnerved my arm. When the agon ies of death were over and his enemj had ceased writhing he stretched hh wings, seized his prey where the skii was not broken, and with a steady flight bore it to a mountain crag, the highesl one In the neighboring mountain. A. he slowly winged his way the huge sor pent eould be seen hanging from hU powerful claws. The fight lasted three quarters of an hour, and had the eagle been less careful of his eyes and head he could have torn the snake to atoms in a moment ; but he seemed to realize the danger of the poisonous nature of the snake, and gained his victory by the exercise of his strategic Instinct. American Field. Red Tap in Russia. How easy it Is in Russia to get a high official's signature to any sort of n document may be illustrated by an an ecdote that I have every reason to be lieve 1b absolutely true A "stola nachalnlk," or bead of a bureau, in the provincial administration of Tobolsk, while boasting one day about his power to shape and direct governmental action, made a wager with another chinovnik that he could get the Gov ernor of the province the late Gov srnor Lissogorski to sign amauuscript copy of the Lord's Prayer. He wrote the prayer out in the form of an official document on a sheet of stamped paper, numbered it, attached the proper seal 10 it, and handed it to the Governor with a pile of other papers which re tired signature. He won his wager. The Governor duly signed the LordV I'wiyer, and it was probably as harmless n official document as ever came out f his office. Oeorys Jiennan, in ,'cnlurjf. A curious experiment consists in taking a water fl:isk or other wide mouthed bottle and placing a small cork in the neck while holding it in a horizontal position. It will seem an easy matter to blow the oork Into the bottle, but upon trial it will be found almost impossible to do so. The harder one blows ihe more forcibly Is the cork ejected out of the bottle. The expla I nation is tbat the bottle is already full of air, so that no more can be blown into it: nd the only effect produced by Vowing is to compress the ir sireaay inside. .. . . PACIFIC COAST NEWS. Typhoid malaria is prevalent at Rip aria, and tevtral have died of it. A party of fifteen emigrants have m rived at Vancouver from Kansas. Blackfroets have nipped things on the Columbia river near Vancouver. The Ellensborg foundry will be ready for business bt foro the first of January. Capitalists are negotiating for the purchase of Ihe Bay Horse mine at Huntington. In the way of firewood Walla Walla is getting iuto a close corner, there be ing but little iu the yards. Mr. A. Chambers and others of Lyn den are agitating a creamery and cheese factory at that place. Frank Led mm, of Vancouver, who had an accident policy, had his arm put out by the kick of a horse. Wm. Hamilton, of Hamilton's is land, one of the oldest settlers at the Cascades, died Monday evening. EUensburg is looking for a capital ist who will build it a first-class hotel for a reasonable consideration. The Milton Eagle says a hog weigh ing 541 pouuds was brought to that place and sold lately. The laying of the pipes and mains st Baker City for the water works were to commence in a day or so. The Roaie OUen brought 1,200 cases of salmon toAawria from Tillamook and had hersmokestack knocked over board. John Stanton, of Kara eld, Uma tilla county, was erased with grief be cause he learned the death cf a sister in Canada. Masons and carpenters at E lons burg are busy early and lte, and pleas ant weather makes it possible to kef p on building. A petition is be circulated and num eroutly igned asking for the appoint ment of J. D. Lanian as postmaster at Walla Walla. Shoo Fly and Andy Lee, two fall grown Chinamen, both born in Walla Walla, Toted at the last election. Each voted a mixed ticket. Orley Hu'l, of Walla Walla, has a puilet hutched last March that is now raising its second brood of chickens. That teats any fish story of late. The snag-boat Skagit is at wurk in he river above LyrnVn taking cut snags, which will make the Nooksack navigable to the creasing. - The sailor who smashe.1 a $125 plate glas window at C. H. Cooper's store, Astoria, i in jail with his hand badly cut and no money to pay for the win dow. The St. Elmo hotel has opened 9cross the British boundary, near Blaine, and a barroom is a feature that astonishes the temperance people of B:aiue. Lane county's hop crop ftr 1883 is estimated at about 5,000 bales. The entire yield of the Stte is estimated at between 12,000 and 20,000 bales. Ei'gar Nicholson was riding a scrub rare near Dayton tiben a run broke and his lioire pulled around and threw him and left him with a broken leg. Thomas Dook, of Wenatchee, when driving to EUensburg and coming down a hill, was thrown in front of the wheels. One of them passed over him, breaking the bone of his hip. The Baker City Democrat urges cit izens there to purchase the grounds for the Baker County Agricultural society as a joint stock company and put it under capable management. There will be a grand wolf hunt Saturday three miles south of Salem, near Mc Kinney s. The parties choose sides. The one that gets the scalp gets a reward of f 10 and a delicious supper at the others expense. Mr. Cornwall's company make no eecrct of their intentions to build the Beilingham Bay & British. Columbia road to their Nooksack coal mines in the early spring. They are ballasting the railroad with ashes as far as com peted. The $15 per bushel wheat swindlers have made their appearance in Linn eountylo collect payment on notes held by them. Tiny hold notes to the amount of $3,000 in Linn county. Some of the parties intend to contest the case. William Perry Bruce, one of the pioneers of Walla Walla county, died at W aitsburg on Saturday last, aged C3 years. Mr. Bruce crossed the plains in 1854, locating in the Willamette valley. In the spring of 1861 he bought a claim where Waitsburg now stands, and has lived there continu ously since. The farmers of Baker county should prepare themselves to supply the creamery with their surplus cream, thus reaping a good reward for their pains and enhancing the value of their cows. The Democrat says that cews that are now selling for $15 will be worth $3o as soon as the creamery gets in running order. Concerning the wheat market the Albany Democrat says: The first of the season Corvaius was in the lead in the wheat market, but Albany soon caught up. Then Salem was far be hind. The O. P. boats etarted, and now that city leads us one cent, which we cannot understand, as consider able of the wheat comes this way. Wheat is 76 cents a bushel at Albany "tnd one cent more at Salem. A Cheeky Kane. . Kane Can't I put baby in the crib, ttu'ainl Mother No; doggie Is in the crib. Wait till doggie has had his nap. Boston Courier. Business Prosperous. Phlladelpbian llow's business In the west! Chicago Man First class. Our firm suc ceeded in borrowing $40,000 butt week. Phil adelphia Record. No News. A scarcity of 100 bills is reported. This will be nothing new to a great many people. ITEMS OF GENERAL INTEREST. Mrs. Frances Hod gen Burnett ex pects to spend the winter at Washing ton. Charles A. Dana of the New York 8un sailed for Europe on the steam- feLip La Normandie. - Over $4,000,000 has been put into building improvements at Denver, Col., during the past year. New York will have to struggle along with only 309 real society folks this season. Ward McAllister ingoing to pass the winter in California. A workingworaan's society in De troit, formed ten years ago to takeca.e f girls unemployed and Eet them work, has K) thrived that it recently didicated a fine building for its pur poses. Colored women in New York citv have organized "the women's charily and industrial club" for the ht lp ol their sUters, and have i-'Hsed a f ur story house as a "home for friendless colored girls." A prison official thinks it would be a great scheme to tattoo convict His idea is for each penal institution to adopt a different matk or mono gram, and then the problem of identi fying convicts will ba solved. King George of Greece hai formally notified Prime Minister TricoupU of the betrothal of Princess Alexandra to Grand Duke Paul of Ru-tsia, A Te Deum was sung in the royal chapel in honor of the event. Mine. lima de Murska, the once favorite Hungarian song8tre?, sailed for Europe this week. She is said to be dying and in straitened circum stances, and her musical friends made up a purse to enable her to reach her home.J Princeton college catalogue, just ie- cued, shows that there are in the un dergraduate academic department 463 students, iu the school of science 111, poet-graduates 9U. Altogether there is a total of 6G? student as seoiuct Gil last year. A clergyman in Newark, N. J., whose wife complained that the mem bers of the congregation were vry distant toward her, took occasion to' remark from the pulo.t a few Sundays ago that his wife would like to be in troduced to several women of the congregation. Over $100,000 has already been spent -in the New Cumberland oil field in West Virginia, and the re ports are so encouraging that the ex citement among the producers is at a teyer beat. 1 he leases have u 11 been taken up and territory cannot be bad at a big premium. By means of recent improvenieat made in the manufacture of rid e, as many as one hundred and twenty can now be rolled in an hour by one ma chine. They are straightened cold and bored with corresponding speed, and even the rifling is done automati cally, so that one man tending six ma chines can turn out sixty or seventy barrels per day. ith the old rilling machine twenty barrels were about the limit of a day's work. Recently a gentleman who was traveling in Switzerland found a verit able curiosity in a museum in the lit tle town of Soleure. It was a bird's nest made of imperfect watch springs which had been thrown out of the lit tle watch factories which abound in that district. Some bird considered 1 hem excellent material of which to construct her nest, aud with infinite care worked them torether into as per fect a atruclnre of the kind as one eould desire to see. According to C. Koechlia's paper in the Mulhouse Industrial 8 eiety's Bulletin on the resistance opposed to bleaching operations by dressing, the latter only dissolves in lyes which con tain at least 15 grm., but better up to 25 grm. soda lye to 1 lit. water. As regards H. Kocchliu's new bleaching method he said that with sulphuric acid the best white was obtained, par ticularly if I to 1 grin, acid per 1 lit. water were used at 80 deg. C. ; and thai sulphuric acid, contrary to the accepted theory, removes lime better from tissues than hydrochloric acid does. Albert Royal aud brother, both of Orlando, Fla., went on the Wekiva River, below Clay springs, the other day on a deer and bear hunt. They arrived at their camping place before sunaown aud concluded to take a short hunt before dark. They had not gone far before they came across a bear sign which they followed up, eooii coming in sight cf one of unusual size, which they succeeded iu bring ing down the first shot. One remain iug to care for the dead bear, the other kept on and soon found an other, whieh he alto killed, the whole time cccupd not exceeding thirty minutes. The first bear weighed four huadrcd pounds and the other two hundred and fifty pounds. She Not Mr. Harding, it can never be. But I will always be a sister He (rising) Oh, that's the deal, Is it! Well, then, sister, if you've got your thimble handy I wish you would sjw up the knees of my trousers that I have atoriflawi In findmz - - - - - -' AGRICULTURAL. The cotton plant has been proposed as a substitute for jute. Over one million bushels of pota toes were imported last year into this country. The vine growers of the Argentine Republic have engiged in the produc tion oi raisins. Crops in Guatemala have been cut short by a severe drought. In many departments of Salvador all crops have been lost for want of rain. In Nicaragua als i a famine is threatened on account of drought. The annual valu-) of the dairy pro duct of ihe State of Illinois equals the value of the gold production of the Uuited States. Who says the cow is not the best friend of the farmer? . A Michigan man says that his Blancbestei fctrawberry (pistillate var iety) were so much influenced in form by the Sharples growing near that he sold them for Sharpies. There are many instances where thirty-five bushels tf grain might just as . well be grown on one acre as twenty, if the right Yoriety had been sown. It is reported that the round-headed apj le-borer has been successfully ex cluded from trees by placing fresh manure around the hose of the trees and in contact with it. The cost of a colt at three years old is said by a correspondent of Rural New Yorker, who hs computed it, to be $84. He also t tales that such colts should sell for $150. Toads are the policemen of the garden. They speedily transport in sect depredators to a place where tbe r will do lio more harm. And this in terior jail ii quite capacious. Mr. Havmeyer, of New Jersey, has twenty-four tiloa of 2,090 ton capac ity. He recently opened one that was tilled seven years 'ago and found its contents in excellent condition. The ihtrodcctiou of labor-saving machinery Las disarranged the old methods of farming, and in nothing more than in the changes it has neces- ltaied in the employment of hired htlp. Mrs. W. M. Dills, of Springfield, Mo., has charge of a stack farm and is said to be the best judge of horse flesh in that vicinity. She comes naturally by her knowledge, as she is a Kentucky woman. It is just a centmy since the first fuchsia was introduced in Europe. Since that time travelers in the moun tains of tropical America have brought back specimens. Now there are fifty distinct species known. As the grass disappears let the change from green to dry food be as gradual as possible, in order to pre vent the cow from falling off in milk To do this begin the ne of hy and other dry food now, so as to supply the deficiency of tne pasture. Good, clean seed wheat of a variety well adapted to the soil, should be se lected for seeding. There should fee no delay now in having the wheat iu, as the better the growth the less La bility of the young plants being thrown out by the frost next spucg. Guide boards have been growing numerous in the country towns of New England for a few years past Iu some sections of Massachusetts at every corner are set 6olid granite posts leu feet high, to which are bolted iron sign boards with raised letters. Freoerviug eggs f.r winter use is not difficult, but care is required. Egs from hens not ia company with males will keep three limes as long as those containing the germs of chicks. Keep the egg on racks in a cool place, and turn them half over twice a week. Oil is cheaper than machinery, so use it freely on all the working parts of the mowers and reapeis. Lumber is also cheaper, and when not in use every piece should be carefully housed, as well as all the tools used about the farm. Tools, carts and iaa chii-es rust out much fastei than they will wear out. In the dairy contest at the Minne sota State .Fair, a few days ago, a Holstein-Friesian cow took the first prize and ano tier took the second. The butter 'test is reported to have beeu tbe severest known to science. These two Holstein-Friecian cows were just of)' from grass, and had received 110 grnin or other special preparation. Damp floors cause cold, due to evaporation. The feet of animals are injured, and disease of the limbs oc curs when they are compelled to stand or sleep on damp locations. Ihe bed of the animal is very import ant. It is economical to use clean, dry material daily, and not delay changing the bedding until the whale is saturated with urine. If the ground is damp a one-horse plow should be run through the spaces between the strawberry rows in order to allow the surplus water to flow off ' . r. . . .... in winter, (straw perries are partial to somewhat damp locations, but in the winter and early spring, when heavy rains cause the water to stand on the plants, it is injurious. The frost will aleo heave up the plants if the ground is too-wet. The sweet and sour apple question is sure to be discussed at this season, A recent writer remarks that sweet apples are generally considered much more valuable for feeding than sour, but there ia less difference than many suppose. If well ripened, even sour apples contain a good deal of sweet. I which is to the taste overcome by a Mignt disproportion 01 acid. Those who have fed seur ripe apples find them nearly or quite as nutritive as sweet ones. They should not, how eve r, be given to hogs which are fed corn in the earx as it jwiir mv . Wolves are doing great damage in Northern Montana by destroying ttock. In Choteau County Charles Adair s was compelled to fly from the beasts the oiher night, when they de stroyed eighty of bis thorough-bred bucks. One hundred and fifty sheep were killed in one flock, and also thirty colts belonging to another ranchman. The - wolves also attack travelers. If cows are led a liberal ration cf palatable, nutritious ground feed night and morning they re-qmre no driving. No dog or boy is necessary to chase the fields over to persuade them, bul atx-ut nulking time they are ready to walk from pasture to barn quietly, and the pails will be fuller as there has been no excitement. Keep cows quiet and they give better returns. Thus saving of labor and patience pays in part lor grain fed. Will it pay to cut rough forage for stock? To cut it involves the utiliza tion of parts which tbe animal would otherwise reject, but when cut will be swallowed without hesitation, and nourish the animal just as much as any pari of the forage. It has been found that to cut evergreen sugar com makes a gain of 10 per cent, m feed ing value, but to cnt the ordinary dried coin-stalk adds SO to 40 per cent. The standard of value is the result in butter. Economy with the corn crop means that the fodder should be stored under cover and not left standing in the helda, as is often practiced. Good fod der is valuable and highly relished by all classes of stock, but it can be in jured by exposure as easily as bay. No matter how much care is taken the shocks will plow over in wia ter, by which means a large share of fodder is mined by being oa the ground. If cattle are tamed in on it they will trample a portion ali. The barn is the proper pLice for it. Considerable of success on the part of farmers depends upon keeping a close eye to the market. The first of any new crop will almost always com mand a high price, and soon after, when there is a rush for the market, prices rapidly decline. Unless one can be anions: the first it is better to hold until the prices have passed the last Bla.ee and come back to a more norma) condition. It ia the forcing of the market that brings low prices, snd for that reason a close watch should be kept of the reputed snpply and demand. As the cold increases wi'.h approach to winter, farmers should bear in mind that an increased amount cf food or material is r. quired to maintain bodily heat ; and if animal are only able to procure maintenance ration?, the in creased beat required tD maintain a normal heat of the body must be gen erated from a consumption of ele ments of heat that have been acenma lated in the shape of fat and tissue, How much better to furnish the re quired heat by means of protection from the cold by a shelter thsttbe.eby eaves any waste of accumulated fat which may be continually held against severe emergencies. The mending of the fences and 1 pairing of the ditches and drains are usually laid aside, along with cutting the supply of wood, for winter employ ment ; but thongh this has been the custom an the poet, yet It is doubtful if such work can be economically done ia winter. Digging post-holes when tbe ground is frozen, anu hauling wood over rough roads, or being caught with a load in a snow storm, are more laborious than doing the work in the fall, when the materials for building can be more easily procured and the work one in a shorter time. All the outdoor work should be done before- the winter comes on. The wiuter will give ample employment with inside work. Manure making and stock feediug are j bs for winter, and much of the grain con be thrashed and cleaned letter on. If any of the work to be done is to be postponed let it be such as can be done under shelter. All land intended fur spring seed ing should be plowed in the fall, not only for the purpose of avoiding the hurry of work in the spring but also to assist in getting the land in better condition. There is no surer remedy foi destroying cutworms in the soil than fall plowing, which opens the soil to frost, thereby nt only destroy ing the worms and other insects bu hlso assisting to pulverise the soil by alternate freezing and thawing, the expansion and contraction causing all lumps and clods to fall to pieces. Where the soil is well drained no plowing will be necessary in the spring, if the ground be well broken late io the fall. If the outside work can be done before winter the spring w.ll open with the heaviest portion of the work done, leaving only such as can not be done at any other season ex cept in spring. Mrs. Burnett's Bright Boy. Some one recently asked Mrs. Burnett's son v lvian, the original of "Larue Lord rauntierov, what was meant by "so ciety." "Society,n Baid Vivian, "why tt s a thing where there's lots Of people, who all come to your house, and they come up to your mamma, who is in the drawing room looking very beautiful, in a lovely dress, and they shake hands with her and say, 'Why, how do you do! ' and then they gabble, gabble, gabble, gabble. gabble, and then they come up again to your mamma and say, Oh. I m so sorry. but I must go now, good by, and then tixry go away, and that s ail. Boston Hear Id. ' . For Cleaning Plg'a feet. i A machine for cleaning pig's feet is about the last thing expected in the lino or invention, out tnas macrune nas been devised, and does its work by the succes sive impact against the material to be cleaned of steel knives held on a revolv ing cylinder by flexible connections, like rubber or other elastic materials- The BXeaaenecr Bot's DcUs-hC A Japanese story writer has just finished a -novel in ninety volumes, li a Japanese mes-t aunger boy evur ets, hoidcf Jim stars, Portland Market Report. WHEAT Vanev. 1 40a1 a-?i ' Walla Walla, $1 321 35. ; BARLEY Whole. SO 8.',1 00- ground, per ton, 20 002l 50. OATS Milliner. 32a34. ; fl. 23 30c . HAY Baled, $1013. SEED Blue Grass. 11 5c Tim. othy, 78c; Red Clover, ll12e. FLOUR Patent RnlW. S OO Country Brand, $4 50. EGGS Per doz, 30c BUTTER Fancr roll, ner rxrand. 25c; pickled, 2225c; inferior grade, 2022j3. 4 CHEESE Eastern. 3l3Jc: Ore gon, 13 14c.; California, 14c. ' VEGETABLES Beets, rr sack. tl 00 ; cabbage, per lb., lc ; carrots, per fck., $ 75 ; lettuce, per doz. 10c ; -onions,! 85; potatoes, per 100 lbs., 40c.; radishes, per doz., 15 20c; rhubarb, per lb, 6c r - MONEY In comb, per lb, 18c; strained, 5 gsi. tins, per lb. 8Jc POULTRY Chickens. rr do . $3 004 00; ducks, per doz, $5 00 6 00; geese, $6 00 7 00; turkeys, per lb, 12 c PROVISIONS Oregon hams, Us per lb.: Eastern. 15Stl6c: Eastern breakfast bacon, 12c per lb.; Oregon lOfailc: Eastern lard. 10all4c lb. ; Oregon, 10c HREES FKUITS Artr1c. S fift - (A 75c: Sicilr lemons. SB O0?.fi SO California, $6 006 50; Naval oranges $6 00; Riverside, $5 00; Mediterra nean, $4 25. DRIED FRUITS Sn n AAeA arw pies, 4c. per lb. ; machine dried, 10(3 I 11c, pit 1 ess plums, 7c,; Itahanj prunes. 10(al2c: reaches. 1043lle .: raisins, $2 402 50. HIDES Drv beef hid. 12rti3- culls, 67c.;kipand calf, IQ.glic; Marram, iu l2c ; tallow, 44Ac. WOOL Vallev. 15(3 1 Sc. - Extern Oregon. 19 15c , LUMBER Rough, per M, $10 00 ; edged, per M, $12 00; T. and G. sheathing, per M, $13 00 ; No. 2 floor ing, per M, $18 00; No. 2 ceiling, per M,$18 00; No.2rustic,perM,$18 00; clear rough, per M, $20 00 ; clear P. 4 S, per M, $22 50; No. 1 flooring, per M, $22 50; No. 1 ceiling, per M, $22 50; No. 1 rustic, per M, $22 50; sapping , per M, $2o 00 ; over li inches wide, extra, $1 00 ; lengths 40 to 50, extra, $2 00; lengths 50 to 60, extra, $4 00; 1 lath, per M, $2 25; 1 lath, per M, $2 50. COFFEE Quote Salvador, 17c Costa Rica, 18 20c. ; Rio, 1820c. ; Java, 27c; ArbuckleVs rasted,22c MEAT Beef, wholesale, 2i. ; dressed, 6c; sheep, 3c; dressed, 6c; bogs, dressed, 6i7c; veal, 57c BEANS Quote email whites, $4 50; pinks, $3; bayos, $3; butter, ti 50; Limaa, $4 50 per centaL PICKLES Kegs craoted steady at $1 35. SALT Liverpool grades of fine quoted $18, $19 and $20 for the three sizes ; stock salt, $10. SUGAR Prices for barrels; Golden C,6ic; extra C, Cfc; dry granulated 7c. ; crushed, fine crushed, cube and powdered, 7jc. ; extra C, 6c : halves and boxes, c higher. The UsVIbk of tlve Tlolin. "Yiolins that are made as they shooM be," explained the dealer, "have fifty eight different pieces. The wood of tha belly, or sounding board, should be of soft red fir, a kind only growing on the Tyrol ese mountains. It ia light and strong, and being of loose grain gives free passage to the waves of sound. The trees are cut in the winter after the sap has ceased to flow, and the wood is thor oughly seasoned before called fit for use. The older the wood the better. For the neck, back and sides Swiss sycamore is regarded the only proper wood. It an swers to a different note than the fir, a fact that has been found necessary to the highest harmony. The violins are shaped by exact rule, but tbe slightest variation in any of the curves gives a difference of tone, so that no two instruments sound exactly alike." Several violins of the same make and in all respects apparently alike were tested to demonstrate this. They were all tuned in fifths, the lowest giving wha ta techmcally known as middle U, this being the correct way to tune a 'violin, but under the bow there was a marked difference in the quality of tone. "Did it ever occur to you, " was.-seked the rerjorter. "that the strain unt on & violin by tne strings la something tre mendous! When toned to concert pitch the tension of each storing is about eighty -pounds, making 820 pounds for the four. Yet the thin shell, so frail that a babe could splinter it, will resist that strain for centuries. Of couvse, the body is strengthened by little strips glued inside at different points; but it seems none the less marvelous to me. "Globe-Democrat. Houses ef the Hindus. It is noteworthy that there is no word In the Hindustani language that signifies home. There are the house, the house hold, the dwelling; but no home I The son is always expected to bring his bride to his father's house. If there are sev eral sons in a family, the household be comes a large one by the time they axe all married. Every house, when practi cable, is built around an opeu space, or court yard, the entrance to which is se cured by a strong gate. A room is set apart for the special use of erfch family composing the household, although, as a rule, all the men eat together, and after ward the women do the same, but they store their own property in their private looms. The house, if that of a poor man, is built of mud or sundried bricks; if that of a rich man, it is built of kiln dried bricks in a substantial manner. There ia usually one room, at least, set apart for the men, where they may receive visit from their friends without the privacy of the domestic circle being invaded. There is a well, or small tank, in the court yard, and perhaps a few flowers for iiLI worship. If there are cows, horses or goats belonging to the family, they are stabled ia this inclosure. All the work of the family is performed in it, eicej. i, perhaps, the washirg and sewing, which are done outside by persons c f I'. CsStte. The woiaer. of il- r ; BURKHART & BILYEU r