P HETTY UChjOL GKOUMDS. A Constant Ohji Leuon ti ths Eye. ot JfiTarf lloy ami tilrl. For tmral months In tho yoaralargo proportion of tlw oUildrea of ttiis country spend at leu half of the hours of daylight, for five days f tho week, In or about tlK school-house. At the most susceptible period ot life tJie Influence of those sur roundings must in the aggregate be consid erable, concludes Garden and Forest. A neat and tidy room, with simple and cheer ful denotations, will be a oonataut object lesson to BYery eye. A room with decrepit furniture upon an unclean floor, and with walls and ceiling broken and stained, will teach its lesson, too, in taste aud morals, but it will be quite a different one. It is due to the heai.h of children that they be supplied with i.lmuiaiit light and air. This meausadetauhotl building with ample open space about it, even in the city. Exercise U also essoatial to the healthy development, as well as to the happiness of children, and play is the natural aud spontaneous exer cise and refreshment for both their minds and bodies. A playground may, therefore, be considered a nticessary adjunct to orery school. Children will play wherever they hare room, but it will hardly be argued that a bare space of earth, which will be dusty or muddy as the weather changes, offers every advantage that children should be able to derive from their sohool-grounds. If the school-room can be made to give les sons in cleanliness and order and taste the surroundings of the building should be ar ranged to enforoe the same lossons. That properly ordered sohool-grounds can aid in this direction, and, besides this, be made an important educational auxiliary in some branches of natural science, was the thesis of an interesting paper read before the Massachusetts Horticultural Society by Mr. Leverett M. Chase, master of the Dud ley School, in Roxbury, Mr. Chase argued that the ideal school-ground should be separated into two distinot portions one devoted to the purposes of an outdoor gymnasium, and the other an area of green sward, properly planted with trees, .shrubs, vines in short, a pleasure-garden for the children. They should he taught that the garden is theirs, and a feeling of responsi bility for It should be encouraged. That this sense of ownership will engender such a personal Interest that the exuberant de strnctireness, so often manifested by school boys, will give place to a sentiment of affec tion, and a desire to protect their shrubs and flowers, has been proved in many in stances. If the plants are all carefully la Deled and catalogued; If the children are invited to aid in cultivating them, under proper direction, they will gain much prac tical information as to the laws of plant growth, and if a serious attempt at system atic instruction in certain branches of bot any la connected with the care of the grounds, many lessons which it would be an irksome task to acquire otherwise will be learned without effort, and even with positive delight Prom the knowledge thus gained, and the interest aroused in the school-garden, we may reasonably look for a .growing love of nat urean increasing appreciation of the beauty of trees and their value. If this gen eration of ohildren were reared under such influences ours would be a land of fair gar dens in a quarter of ft century, and there would be no difficulty in securing proper legislation for the preservation of our for ests. Indeed, it is to be feared that ft dis tinctively American forest-policy which shall embrace in its scope the wisest ad ministration of the Nation's forests, and the most inteiligentcareof the farmer's wood lot, will never be adopted until the interest and sympathy of the children are enlisted, so tbattney wm grow up witn sound views and generous sentiments as to the import ance of trees and forests as an element of the National welfare. Of course grounds sufficiently spacious foragardencannotnowbe found connect- ( nA -i.h --- ,ttaiui j ii ; crowded cities large school-gardens will not 1 be nractioable. But there is room for a be- ginning everywhere. A narrow border f along the foundation of the school-house may be made beautiful with flowers from the time when snowdrops appear until frost kills the latest aster. There are few school-yards where a place cannot be found .for some tree or shrub, or where ft vine can not be trained so as to show its own beauty and hide some unsightly object. At all events, soma house-plants can be used to brighten up the school-room and to illustrate by living examples the elementary faeto in botany and horticulture. (Me disadvantage will be that of the teach ers and trustees who must take the lead in this enterprise know so little themselves ot the subjects in which it is proposed to in terest the children. The beginnings of tbjj reform for a genuine reform it will be will be feeble, and much honest effort will he misdirected.. Unsuitable trtu. ..j 1 shrubs will often be selected and they will : the boat he propelled was as gay a be badly planted in improper places. But 'thing as himself. He is also very the very fact that the lack of knowledge en j amenable to civility. He will quarrel these poinu u so lamentable i is thestrong- wlth to rtl Brlt0 h Zilu eat reason that a beginning should be made. l""'! "r"u " "" "r" The attempt will excite inquiry and criu-1 lan6'u8 but English, and after a row ciam, and knowledge will come from the I tenders in payment a sum of money he study and diaeuaaion thus aroused. Portu- deems unworthy of him, though it be nate are those places already provided with j h excess ot the tariff. But the quar- teachers like Mr. Chase, and Mr. Kndicott i ni u n v.. .j i?n, master of the Gibson School in Dorchester, I rel wil!,be ?" oa hU ,ide' "nd lt w111 who, at the meeting above mentioned, ' ,00n dissolve away into resonant added some valuable testimony to the sound- laughter as he invites his copper-col-ness of the positions taken in Mr. Chase's j ored comrades to share the spectacle Te.i .,w .v. . ,1 of the Briton walking off as if he A final suggestion made by Mr. Chase la L , , . . , , worth considering in other site, as well as he,rd n0' aword ol hU PIea- The in Hassscnuseus. it was that prises be offered for the best-kept and most tastefully emiKluaamt scnmn-gnjuuai. THE .NOBILITY. Psinciss EuLixnshas been for weeks past sojourning quietly in London, ac companied by her two little sons. The queen consort of Siam owns wonderfully beautiful thimble. It la shaped like a lotus and made of solid gold, studded with diamonds. Tim only ornament worn by the wid owed Archduchess Stephanie of Aus tria is a locket containing on one aide the portrait of her little daughter and on the other that of her mother, the queen of Belgium. When the princess of Wales was married, the king of the Belgians gave her lace of the value of ten thousand pounds, since trial ana tne princess Ham gUUD VH WVAASjV. VIMft) scasu aawvv MS lace is worth something like fifty thou sand pounds. Philip III., of Spain, was not roasted to death by ft roaring, fire because court etiquette forbade anyone to go to his assistance. He died a natural death, and the same story is told of ft dozen different monarchswho were sticklers for ceremony. , t i THE POPULOUS SB Af 8TATE. MasaMhaMtts S Tw.ntr Cltlas, Bach Bering Oyer SO.OOO Papulation. . Virginia and 'half ot the states In the union combined show no more cities of over twenty thousand Inhabitants than r to be found la Msssaalmsetu, This fart la M rtwdllr sfsnni from tot IUts1tttMUIt(si tbtl ill MHiailayi the New York Evening I'ost, as In none of them are cities huvinjr a leas population than twenty-five thousand ranged according-to thoir population rank. The faot is also so surprising that few persons will believe it with out proof. But there is no place at all with so many inhabitants as twenty thousand In nine states via., Vermont, Mississippi, Nevada, Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, North Dakota and South Dakota. Nine states again have each no more than one town numbering over twenty thousand people. Those states are New Hampshire, Delaware, Maryland, West Virginia, North Caro lina, South Carolina, Louisiana, Ar kansas and Oregon. Four other states Maine, Nebraska, Colorado and Washington count each only two cities that have passed the twenty thousand limit. These three classeB of states amount to twenty-two; that is, half the whole number of the United States, and seventeen is the to tal ot their cities with each a census upward of twenty thousand. Twenty such cities, however, are in the roll of Massachusetts. These are Boston, Worcester, Lowell, Fall Hirer, Cam bridge, Lynn, Lawrence, Springfield, New Bedford, Somerville, Ilolyoke, Salem, Chelsea, Haverhill, Brockton, Taunton, Gloucester, Newton, Maiden, Fitchburg. Three cities of this size and no more appear in the census of Virginia vis., Richmond, Norfolk and Petersburg. -A CHICKEN'S DEVOTION. The Tragic Bnd of a Faithful Hoadan Loral Data Doth. Many a time has the fiokleness of hu man nature been put to the blush by the undying loyalty of a dog or a horse. But rarely has it ocourred, we are sure, that a chicken has found itself unable to live without its master and has de termined to commit suicide rather than live in loneliness. A correspondent of La Nature, a French sclontitlo journal, tell the following tragic story ot a chicken of the Houdsn variety of which his brother had made a pet He says; - "Every morning in coming out of the house the young man brought with him a handful of crumbs cr of grain or of something else that chickens like, and little by little his Houdan net acquired the habit of following him about the place. In a grove near the house there was a benoh. When the young man reached this bench he invariably seated himself, and the fowl, jumping up by his side, peoked the food from his hand and was petted by being stroked on the head and back. "This had gone on for quite a long time when the young man left home to go to college. For the first day or two the chicken seemed not to be incon solable over the loss of its friend, but took its food with the rest After a few days, however, the fowl seemed to be come aware that its friend was not com ing back, and it was seised all at once with an unconquerable melancholy. It . lingered morning after morning under the windows of the house as if waiting for Its master to come out . "Finally it betook itself to the bench where its master had been accustomed to feed it and there remained, its head' under its wing, almost motionless, day and night It was useless to trv to " .7 ? "T , ; to look up when the most temntinir hand- tempt it with food; tho chicken refused ' f ul8 of e"'11 or douKn were thrown down ' before it. Its eyelids were closed, and " intention to die of hunger was so evident that it was deemed merciful to mil it" VENETIAN GONDOLIERS. Hot Quite as PfestoMtqna as Fainted by It Is with grief that I remind my untraveled reader that in Venice the gondola is the cab. Is the cabman a poetio object a person to whom you would indite lyrics or elegies? I trow not But on the other hand, the gon dolier, unlike the London cabman, has his redeeming qualities. He is pict uresque. He used to be more so in the days when he wore red silk stock- lnm and a blue silk jacket, and when caumau, m aucu n vase, wouiu oi course proceed to maledictions, and perhaps go further atllL Indeed, when all is said, the gondolier is not a bad fellow, though, like the pigeons, somewhat spoiled by being photographed in his boat by en- j terprising amateurs a hundred times In the year. Hut In spring, notwith standing the romance of them, one is not strongly attracted toward gondola or gondolier. When a "bora" Is blowing upon the city from the mount ains behind Trieste, and all the lagoon is under ft blue-gray haze, chilly and thick, one is prone to think ot fires, not aquatic expeditions. And many a martyred paterfamilias and his wife, who, at their eldest daughter's bidding, , have inelegantly wriggled into the boat, aud, aided by the emit jompmnjonnta oarsman, judicious- ly dispersed their offspring about the remaining space thereof, aro as eager to leave as they wore unwilling to en ter it II they can be Induced to make anothor such osc.ii-.ii.m, w, i.,.juol for their sum and ewiouli w.wpi tor a regiinonl racltless ol tin daughter's indignant demur about 'U.i 'it wilt look." A playful form of c mipliinunt which the gondi iters band utiuut when they are dUpleascd with each other brings mo to another character istic of Venice. If. in conveying hw party through the "cannietu.' -the oarsman alasnes with a boat, aiming in tho contrary direction, he will pruba blr Call his eruniy "tho eon ol a dog," It Witt It Mstt iMNanM Hlil I Prize Hood's (smparUla mors than any rsmsdy I haw ever taken. I have never bswrabust sad Was subtest to strata htadanlu. and k.rf ao appetite. Sines taking . Hood's Sars&Darllla and Hood's Pills I ant ewsllwomaa, have a good appetite and sleep wU. I ordlslly ' rseenmmd Hood's Bar ssparlUa. Mrs. 8. M. Goieam, Viluaaw Honss, Fillmore, Oallfornis. . ' .. I'tood', Pillu '" " U" nit. Mint Attention! . . If you want A Big White Loaf Use- ...Lebanon Flour Every Sack Guaranteed First-Class For sale by all the lead ing grocers of the city. Call for it Price- 70 Gents per Sack The Cheapest and the Best. Is Your Child Going to College? Have him fitted at the SASTM ACADEMY Thourough preparation libr all collegiate courses. Certificates admit to the leading Colleges on the coast. Normal- Department gradu ates ebtain State and Life di plomas. Music, Art, llook keepiug. Specialties, health and outdoor life, small clas ses and instruction for the in dividual. Winter term opens Sept 23. Tuition $6.50 and $10.00 per term. Send lor catalogue. S. A. HANDLE, A. M., ' Jfrincifal. Oregon Central Eastern R.R. C o. YAQUINA BAY ROUTE, Connect a", Yaqiiina Bay with the 8an Francisco and Yaqulna Hay rl team ship Company Steamship "Farallon" A 1 and firstcUss In every respect Sails from Yaqulna for Ban Francisco about every 8 days. Passenger accommodations unsur passed. Shortest route between the Willamette Valley and California. Fnre from Albany or point west to Sun FrunciBco: Cabin,... $12 00 Steerage, 8 00 Cabin,roundtrip,60ds. 18 00 For sailing duysapply to H, I. Waldbh, Agent, Edwin Stone, llii'ger,, Albany, Corvullis, Oregon. Oregon. Chah. Clark, Supt, . CervalliH, , Orexon. OIW1TS. TRADE MARKS. I 1 OltlON fATIMTi,l COPYRIGHT, aiaj for Infonnatloa ana fres- Hiulbook wtl M 10 HUNN A CO., SB1 Bhoadit, NSW YoBC. Oldeit bnruu for securuig pttenu nt Anertes. . BrerrptWut taken oat by uals brought btloM Um pibllo by a aotlus tn IrMdalurst la Ike I goleittirig Amrliu I J)jb ZJr TD MARKS SiS ' ION fATIDTi, - iff mnm0i j, fOR IT WILL NOT CUU IM An aifl'lwsMa r-M1n anil Wpuvw HVimn. Sold hyUnnofltta or sent by mall. S6o6Ua. and turjpar package. Samples trw. fft IT A The Favorite TOTH MWUH till IiUtotluTeetUsndllnsth,lo, Forsale by N. V. Siiilih. UTERINE THE GREAT LIYER, KIDNEY AND C0KSTIPAT10H CUI1E. ' Pleasant to take by old or young. No griping. The root of the Liverine plant is extensively used in Norway for the cure of Pilos. Sold by all first class drug gists. Wholesale Manufacturers. Anchor S ChkmicalOg. Lebanon, Oregon. BARBER SHOP Beat Shaven, HuirCutoi Shampoo at B. P. KIRK'S Shaving Parlor. NEXT DOOR TO HT. CHAKLES HOTEL. Elegant Baths. Children Kindly Treated. Ladies Hiiir Dressing a Specialty. SIS SrSlW t I I "2 3 6. 5 3 JOh1 lilHIlkM For Nale at ThiM Of flee. I 5 A Baboon . . In Bloomers on a crowded tetroot wouldn't excite a tithe of the interest among tho people that an adver tisement in The Lebanon Express would, Nee what we have to say Here about Job Printing. Have your Stationery and Your Hand-Bills in fact, all your Job Printing done here, All Printing; will be on good matorial and Ione in a workmanlike manner .A-t very reasonable prices. :' Xliiw department of our . Office is equipped for noat work. Printing Tone , Quickly. The Lebanon Exprews. M. L. Forster, PROPRIETOR OF The Tangent TANGENT, - - ' OREGON. ' o FRUIT THEES FOB HALE. I have a very fine Btock of fruit trees vet for sale. A good assortment of Apple best winter varieties; fine Btock of one and two yoar Cherry trees; fine one and two year Pear; a few (1000) Prune; also a good stock of Ilaspberries, Blackberries, Lucretia Dewberry, Gooseberries, Currants and Btrawberries. I will take in exchange for trees 300 bushels of good oats, 1000 pounds dressed pork; also will trade for one good young cow. For particulars address me at Tangent, Or., or Andrews & Peterson, Lebanon, Or. M. Albany Furniture Co. (INCORPORATED) BALTIMORE BLOCK, Albany, Oregon. Furniture, Carpets, Linoleums, matting, etc. Pictures and Picture molding,, Undertaing a Specialty. RIP ONE GIVES LIOHT, 3TR0NQ, 9rBDY, HANDSOHB. , Four Hodeis-$85 and 8100. (VERY MACHINE FULLY GUARANTEED. Pactoiy and Main OHIoi Lak Prune Nursery, JLti. POBSTEH. R E LIE F. Kin? of Bicycles. FINEST MATERIAL. SCIENTIFIC - WORKMANSHIP. SENG t-CENT STAMP FOR CATAL00UI and Hoisted 6t CmCAQO, ILt,