1. 1 '■ '"T ________ < TELEGRAPHIC. COAST CUL > AUKILUL TUBAL ÖR.SPIN The Oregon Resister. ■ -■■■-■ PUBLISHED - f' ■» ----------------------- -r---- EVKKY FRIDAY 1* Spinney * —aw— LAFAYETTE. - - OREGON A man named Cleveland Kinne was drowned while bathing injhe surf osar Two hundred bakers of St. Louis San Diego, Cal. ____ t , B oyalty has its drawbacks. Prin­ are on a strike. A Chinaman was found dead tn bed A fire destroyed two blocks in the at Anab< uu, Cal. He had been poi­ cess Louise of Lome is just 40, and oan’t pass herself of as 30, for the fact heart ot the city of BrainSrd, Minn.. soned. The losses aggregate $50,000. is recorded in all the English almanacs. Robert And-rson, while out driving George Wilsotj was hanged at At at Banta Cruz, C.l, was thrown out bion, N Y , f- r strangling bis wife in W ebster was in college at fifteen, and killed. gave earnest of his great future before January, 1887. Train Dispatcher W. P. Rudd, of Fire at Elmora, Colo., destroyed the Sonora railroad, shot Jumself at he wm twenty-five, and at thirty was half the bnWnees portion U tbe town. Nogales, A.' T. ' ~ * the peer of tbe ablest men in congress Lose, $15,000; insurance, $6 000. The garrison building at M alia Joeenh Stafford, of New York, bell Walla, W. T„ was burned. Loss about W hen workmen were sinking the I boy, shot and killed Rosie Sheridan, *1 4- /MM) . well for the sugar works at Douglas, cook in a boarding hones, and then - — A drunken man niAn who • e name is un- un* J A Kan., a stratum of live frogs was shot and killed himself. Wm. Moore, the colored man who drowned at Seattle, W. T., ■truck at a depth of 50 feet. _ _________ - 1_ ““‘I suited Mary Bingardiner at Mat Frank Gallagher Q ceen E mma of Holland is a bru­ toon, 111., was taken from the county •>-»-<« .„ u- was drowned at San Rafael, Cal., while in bathing. nette, whose eyes would be pretty, ¡.did jail and lynched by masked mep. Tbe body has not been recovered. abe not continually wink when speak­ George Arnold shot abd killed Henry A. Caulfield was run over ing, thus giving you the impression of George Burton al Minatore, Neb., man al Sacramento, Cal.,and instantly O nly 6ne civillian out of the Presi­ shot one dead, fatally wounded an­ j killed him. The pilot and a portion dents of this country gained his first other, and thinks he hit the third, who I of the running gear of the engine were splattered1 with large pieces of election after he was sixty, and that | escaped. P. ter Broneck wag^ hanged at S’. man 8 brains. one was J^mes Buchanan. The Ed. Brouse, who had been over­ Joseph, Mo., for th- murder of hie ” ' ” chance for presidency after sixty is wife two years ago. The prisoner has , hauling machinery in a sawmill at small and growing less. borne up bravely, and denied any in-1 Visalia, Cal., set the engine going to U nt to commit the cr me. He claimed | try its speed, when the great drive S pencer , M ass ., has public-spirited th.,t he was drunk when be did it, wheel burst, and a fragment struck citizens. The other day one of them though at the time he declared he Brouse in the head, fracturing his skull. ♦ gave 14 acres of land for a public killed her because rhe was untrue. While a train was moving up hill i Charles Barks, a 13-year-old boy, park, another gave $30,000 for a high from Butte, Mont., the car» became ' was sitting on a doorstep at San Fran­ school, and another guve $25,000 for a uncoupled fr m ibe'eugine and dashed . cisco, when a boy named Hoppe or­ public library. down rine T. Tripp.. ged 105, and her canted on its side up against a rand Gamon bank. The seats were overturned and which employ girls to crack antj pick Hide niece Katie T. Tripp. nuts, the kernels of which are sold to when taken from the water was alive. all of the windows broken. The occu­ Tbe body of Mr». Tripp was found pants were badly shaken up and some confectioners. The shells are sold to near the yacht The tady of her lit­ of them cut by broken glass and be ground up and used in the manu­ tle niece is supposed to be still in the bruised. There were none seriously facture of spices. cabin of tbe overturned boat. injured, however. ■■■■««■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■a"""" Ì f ■■ *y « t F V i A succesaiul grow.-r of this berry tells his plan oi ac ion as follows: To grow atra wherries .Well he puts land in good order in advance (1) by planting it to ronie crop the year previous that has to be highly manured and well cultivated. (2) He seta in rows so a- to cultivate them both ways, and runs til® cultivator close to the plantB. (3) Never allows weeds-to get a start and be over half an inch high. (4) He mulches old plants With cheap hay and does nothing to the plants until after fruiting, letting them grow up through the mulch. By following this simple plan of cultivation he has no trouble, and grows sttawberries as cheaply to the bushel as corn or potatoes. Of coMse they are more profitable. Straw be beds shotfld be set three feet apart in the roW aud plowed tioth ways , an.l kept in the beat possible order. The crop is early and furnishes means at a season wbeu farmers need money and would else have to borrow it. It there are young people in the family to pick them and pack them it will furnish them pleasant occupation and it will also pay them well for the time in­ vested. Where a pasture is overrun with weeds turn in the sheep, and they will keep down the young weeds. Sheep eat «lose to the ground and diligently search for all the young and tender heroage. Every blossom left on the young strawberry plant will enfeeble it to a certain extent. If the plants be ex­ pected.Jo. throw out rdnnera and thicken in the row they must under no circumstances be allowed to blos- tom and fruit. frequently The lawns that are mowed will soon die out unie«« some kind of fertilizer be applied. Every time the lawn-mower is used a certain proportion of the elements bi the soil are removed, as it is really cropping the ground. No delay should occur in going to work in the apple trees to destroy the caterpillars, as they will quickly fes- 10011 the tree« with, their webs. The be " sooner ‘ they, shall “ * removed tbe easier the work, aa the young worms can now be caught in the webs. ’ The ordinary liitle hand-weeder is | 1 tbe best implement to use for eradicat­ ing weeds among thickly growing plants, especially where the hoe may be detrimental. Ou heavy, hard soil ' its use is not profitable, but on light soils it permits of effeqtive work, and at a lpw cost. j The persimmon tree does not de­ prive thq s°ii a large amount of fertilizing elements, aud for that rea son makes the best of Bhade trees for stock. In the South, even on ab«n- dpued.fieldti,. the persimmon is allowed to grow. Its growth is alow« however, but its fruit is highly valued by some, White clover ia the best pasture grass that caii be grown for sheep. As white clover is a short grass, it is more desirable than -red clover for grazing, as sheep detest long grass, preferring to crop close to the ground . Ou a mixture ef grasses in a pasture, Cattle and sheep may be grazed to­ gether, as the grasses that may be objectionable to the cattle will b* ap­ propriated by the sheep. It fruits ef say kind are to be set out, see that the supply be purchased and the ground picked out and pre­ pared, the slakes set, so that when the lime shall come for transplanting there need be no delay. With many spring is considered the beat tupe for setting out fruit, and if this plan be intended, so far as possible, the work should be done early, so that the trees or plants will be able te make a good start to grow betore hot, dry weather shall sot in. Many people suppose that artificial incubatiou1 is a modern invention. Such is not the case. The Copts oi Egypt have been engaged tn artificial egg hatching for centuries. _ Tnere are 700 establishments for that' industry within a short distance ot Cairo, and the production of chickens from the ovens reaches 12,000,000 annually. The season -for incub >ting lasts through three months in the early summer. The country p ople take fresh eggs to the owners of the ovens and give two for each newly hatched chick. In olden times sowing land with salt was a symbol of its desolation. In large enough quantities it will destroy every trace of végétas ion. Even those plants which, like aspara­ gus, are natural lovers of salt, san have too much of a dose, but after a time heavily salted land recovers its fertility, and may even be the better for this treatment. We have heard of farmers who, by mistake, applied too mqch salt to wheat ; but they seeded the following spring, and for several years thereafter the field that had been over-salted produced enormous crops of hay. The tendency of salt is to make the soil moist and oooL It is, therefore, excellent for crops that require these conditions. A äs «ih®r s rîend or auMÏu? y} 4^5“ • - M. riMK, to. and returns mad« "'•Mi ARMENIAN WOMEN. They Are Not Allow«! to Whlapor la Th.l, B,T*' It would appear that soX. patriarchal system carried to™, extent than among the Are! During the lifetime of th« t^ the sons and their descendMuj? gether in one common dwelljL thus houses may, be found wfoA the number of their inheKu? •enable bee-hives, often «LJ three or four generations a property is held in common •Cendant« of the head of th. Brothers and sisters inherit M but until the death of the headi ean .possess any thing all the others. Until marriage f menian girl goes about as ih, she is unveiled, and enjoys u freedom as she could do in Kar countries.—fiirtW, Jove main, marrying to please herself, uh ciwilized lands But once manit all is changed. From that tini she beoomes a mother, th speaks to any one except her ka, and then only in private. Alls becomes a mother, she may her mother-in-law first, and ifa lapse of certain periods to he mother, her sisters-in-law and hr sisters. She is always veiled,« hqr own house; she never m male strangers, and she seldi never leaves the house. Herl jewelry and ornaments oaahei only to those __pf her on and in every way her Helm as complete aa that of the T woman. On the other hand the 1 ian women seldom do any hud they remain at home while tbs bands labor in the fields, and th joy, probably on • account of th quaintance prior to marriage, more respect and confident, ,their husbands than falls to the of the Turkish wife, wh« has to divide with two or three « the little affection or respect whid husband deigns to bestow on her. the Armenian woman can only til her own house belew her brntk, none of her male relative, mijl what ehd says, it follow« that tin ’equence which usually multi k Die residence of so many womenin house, incessant quarreling, b f avoided. Custom, the strongatrf laws, forbidding them to sped 4 a w hisper, a war of words conk < be carried on under great diked and as yet at least speaking on lb gers, which would also reqi knowledge of spelling, an seco« ment very few of them poses* i introduced to facilitate tie intern ot hostilities between those inch emies, mothers and daughters Yet it is not easy to realize the i- a large family circle in which iB ladies sit mute, only convene u themselves in whispers—lb Standard ’ ------— South American MosquilMS Some ludicrous stories are told I adventures with the mosquitoes I been solemnly assured that oftee they have "attacked a boat and! its captain and crew below they broken the windows of the can plunging in swarms againsttins have attempted to burst in the I Although this may be something' exaggeration, it is nererlhetos that frequently horses and cattie.i the most frightful sufferings. h»n from mosquito bites on board lb seis. Not long ago a herd of nil cattle were being taken W United States to a ranch upon lb dalena river, and became •’ under the attacks of the mosquito they broke from their stalls s were drowned. Passengers Inti to make the voyage usually p themselves with protection in*, of mosquito bars, head nets » gloves, and when on deck «* pelled to tie their sleeves «row* wrists and their pantaloons u their ankles.—Amer can —The latest medical theory scribes only two meals a day^* the beginning and quest ** day. If people adopt this carefully avoid working bet»«« life would bo much easier, ing so much between m»“ “ life so hard.—Noruuo* ****