Image provided by: Yamhill County Historical Society; McMinnville, OR
About The Telephone=register. (McMinnville, Or.) 1889-1953 | View Entire Issue (July 26, 1887)
«ENl-UEliltLY j WEST TELEPHONE VOL. II. M£M INN VILLE, OREGON, JULY 26. 1887. WEST SIDE TELEPHONE/ ---- Issued---- —IM— Garrison's Bniliini, MtMiuillIe, Oregon, - BY - Publisher« aid Proprietor». ................... .......... ...... ....................... — SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One year......................................................... ao 00 Six month».................................................... 1 2A Three month»............................................... 75 Entered lu the Postofflce at McMinnville Or. as second-class matter. BANKING. IIow the People of That Territory Stand by Their Friend». I I ■I I ran across a New York man the other day who is largely interested in the banking business of Dakota. The conversation drifted into a discussion of the character of tho people out there. “They may be rough in their manners,” said he, "and uncouth in their ways, but they stand by a man when he is in trouble and tliey never forget a friend. I had an opportuni ty," he went on, “to test this trait not many years ago. The bank of the towu where I was staying found it self greatly embarrassed one fine day by the failure of its principal corres pondent in the Territory. This fact became known late in the afternoon of the day that the news of tlie failure readied the town. A ran on the bank the following morning was inevitable. To meet it there was but six thousand dollars in the vaults. The remainder of the assets could not immediately be turned into ready cash. Tlie president I of the bank was at his wits’ ends. He didn’t know what to do. Morning came and he decided to close the bank. He was about to give the necessary or ders when in walked a committee of the leading merchants of the place. They asked for an explanation of the situation. It was given to them and likewise an opportunity to look at the books. A short examination sufficed to show that, the bank was only tem porarily embarrassed. They said to tlie president: ‘You open the doors at ten o’clock ns usual and pay tlie-de- pcasitors; we’ll sec you through this thing.’ 'But how are you going to do it?’ said the president; ‘I have but six thousand dollars here and there are at least thirty thousand dollars in deposits to lx- met. Half of that sum is clam oring on the sidewalk now.’ ‘Never mind, you open the bank and go ahead,’ said tlie committee, ‘and we will sec you through.' "Well, tlie bank was opened and in rushed the depositors and out went the money. The pile of greenback» on tlie cashier’s desk grew smaller and ► mailer and the crowd of depositors continued to increase with every minute. Still the paying nt the teller's window went on. Ou the side walk tlie people who had drawn their money were met by some of the mer chants who had promised to see the bank through. ‘What are you going to do witli your money?’ they would ask. •1 don’t know,’ came the answer. 'Stip- jsise you leave it with us; you know" our house and know that we are responsi ble. We will give you a note and so much interest’ To the farmers (for the majority of depositors were farmers) the money in their pockets where it drew no interest was of little use; they preferred, of course, the notes and were without difficulty per suaded to part with their money. As soon as they had received the money the merchant« would deposit it in the bank. The same money was paid over the counter three times or oftener in the course of the day, and when the bank closed nt three o’clock in the afternoon it had in its vaults as much money as it had started with in the morning, and with $6.000 it had paid over $2o,000 of deposits. The prompt ness with which it met the demands of the depositors staid the panic and the nejrt morning there was not tho slight est indication of a run. This is an ab solutely true story,” said my inform ant in conclusion, “for I was myself the president of that bank. Now can you match that by any thing in the East?”— Washington Letter. An Adventurous Journey. Three young Englishmen, one an officer in the jrroy, another a member of the British consular service, and the third a member of the Indian civil service, have just succeeded in accom plishing an adventurous journey on the Ruso-Chinese frontier to the north of Corea, and in obtaining information about a region which seems likely to • bo even now of great political import ance. They visited the farthest Rus sian stations, and thence crossed the frontier to the Chinese posts, traveling down the Corenn frontier through Manchuria, reaching Mukden, the cap ital of this great province, towards he , nd of December. With th. exceptfon of Russians, these gentlemen are the first Europeans who have visited tins district, and their journey, which was kept secret, has causml much d£ pleasure to the Russian f.uthorities m Eastern Siberis- CONTROL OF THE EYES. Something That Is Particularly Necee* •ary in the City of New York. The greatest secret of enjoyiug existence in New York is that one mu>>t txs absolutely the master of his own eyes. Hungry Jot», the arch confidence operator, used to say that he could distinguish a stranger by his hat or shoes. Tho idea that these betray men is so deep rooted that many strangers always buy New York hats and shoes as soon as they ar rive, while others who expect to come often to town order these wearables from city shops. But you can get correct hats and shoes in any large city, akd off styles in the Bowery. But whatever one looks like he must con trol his eye« or life will be a perpetual tor ment to him. Our dudes and Anglomaniac society carry the thing too far. They go about forever looking over every one’s head, or else staring with a dead and live glassy look, insulting alike to whomsoever they glance at and to their own intelligence. This they think “the grand air” and their admirers dub it aristocratic. A ward politician the other day said to me that the leader of a cer tain political faction was “gitting ’nstocratic.” I asked him how he was showing this. “Oh,” said the heeler, “he has a tired look, and he don’t seem to see you ’less he wants.” But by eye control I mean the seeing of everything without being seen to do so. This necessity is bred by the horde of street bandits that prey upon every man out of doors. Their number is legion and their ways are the ways of brigands. If a man lets his eyes fall on a boy who utters a peculiar street cry he Is apt to have from two to six newsboys leap for him like so many human catapults. As he steps from a hotel, theatro, depot or club, if he allows his eyes to wander an instant he will be at once surrounded and hemmed in by cabmen, each seeking his custom, even by violence. If he turns his head to look at the mendicant who addresses him he may not be able to get rid of the fellow for a block. Resting the eye for an instant on a group of well dressed men (who may be interested in a “quiet game”), or on a boisterous drunkard or a vol uble crank, may prove to have very annoy ing results. 1 was talking the other day to a lady whose receptions are very popular, and I remarked that people commented very curi ously on the difference between her manner in doors and her carriage on the street. In doors she was all affability and unconscious ease, and out of doors she was a poker. “It’s all put on out of doors,” she said; “it goes on with my bonnet and wrap. I was in endless trouble as long as I yielded to my in clination to be natural and cureless. Some adventures that I had were quite alarming, I can tell you. But now I am on my guard as long as I am out of doors.—Minneapolis Tri bune. NO. 117. say about 05 degrees. I had good re COAST CULLINGS. sults of curing in a day eellar at 65 degrees. They cure slowly, but are Devoted to the Interests of Farmen the better cheese for it. One good Devoted Principally to Washington and Stockmen. Territory and California. cheese is worth three poor ones. AGRICULTURAL. C'heeae-Making. The United Mtaten Ahead. An unknown ntan was drowned in The following is from the pen of Agriculture is regarded as the solid Frank 1). Holmes, of Owatonna, foundation of a nation. The tillers of the bay at Heattie. The Fire Department of San Fran Minn., one of the most successful the soil are industrious, healthy, dairymen of that State: sober-minded, reliable in time of dan cisco costs about <30,000 a month. Joseph Swarter, of Yreka, was fa To make good cheese it is necessary ger, simple and honest in their news to have good milk to l>egin with, and of political questions. But it is prob tally shot by the accidental discharge good milk cannot be had from poor, able that it is because they feed the of a gun. MARRIAGE OF UNtQUALS. A failure to vaccinate is punished at half-fed cows. Then it is necessary to world that they are regarded as the feed the cows liberally, have plenty of rock upon which the great nations Phoenix, A. T., by $300 fine or six Women More Likely Than Men to Marr? good water aud good usage. Cows rest. Food in war or in days of peace months in jail. Beneath Their Intellectual Station. should never be run and worried by is the first thing essential to existence The genius of Milton never found a sweeter Wages of deep water sailors at San dogs. This injures milk for cheese and success, and the steady, industri Francisco have been advanced from theme than the ideal marriage of our first parents in Eden, yet he who wrote so beauti making. One had mess of ntilk may ous class that is engaged in agricul $20 to $30 per month. fully of the married state was himself the spoil a whole vat of cheese. Care and ture is therefore regarded as the most A young man named George Ahrens victim of an unhappy marriage. Indeed, cleanliness, if the cows are healthy and useful and valuable in the nation. was drowned while bathing in Hang men of genius have, perhaps, been more un have proper food, will insure good The United States leads the world man creek, near Spokane Falls. fortunate in this respect tnan ordinary mor milk always. It is unreasonable to in the amount that it produces in tals. because, living on a higher plane of Flood <t Mackay contributed $5,000 expect a good cheese-maker to turn a agriculture. thought, it was more difficult for them to find to the relief fund of the Virginia mi prime article of cheese out from poor Not only in the aggregate of all in a helpmate equal to themselves. The same ii milk. If a patron carries sour or dustries is the United States far in ad ners. This swells the fund to $25,000. true, although not to the same extent, of A. J. Knott and Millard O. Lowns- women of genius who have married men in tainted milk to the factory, he niUBt vance, but in this single industry, that ferior to themselves in mind, because a wo expect bad, sour cheese. Set the is looked upon as the most important dale have purchased the Arlington sil man’s nature has not only more endurance, night's milk in the vats or cans and in any nation, it far outranks all coun ver mine, in the Cœur d’Alene region, but more adaptability in it than a man’s. cool to 60 degrees, then mix with the tries. In the comparatively brief for $40,000. The man soon grows impatient of the con Dayton, W. T„ will build another morning’s ntilk in the morning, but space of one hundred years such vast versation of a frivolous wife, especially if she don’t use the little skimmer. Leave areas in this country have been woolen mill. Enough money has disturbs his mental occupations, but the wo the creant all in. After the milk is all brought under the plow that our har been subscribed. The old mill burned man often feels a pleasure in the homage of a commonplace husband, if only he be an hon in the vats, the heat ntay be started at vest is now the greatest in the world. down three years ago. est and considerate fellow, and with her more once, and raised to about 82 or 84 de And what tremendous effort and labor Mrs. H. G. Brainard committed sui than with man “pity is akin to love.” Hence grees, as to the condition of the cheese it has cost to bring virgin prairies cide at her residence in Pleasant Val it is that there are probably tnore clever and room. If we set the milk below 82 the under cultivation, to fell the forests ley, Idaho, by shooting herself through highly gifted women who throw themselves rennet works too slow ; if set above 82 for the plow, to fence, to put up barns, the head with a revolver. away, as the phrase is, upon a good Matured it works too fast, while the tempera to put up dwellings, to sow and to simpleton, than of talented men who fall in A Press Association is to be organ ture is being raised. It should receive reap. It represents the work of three ised in Idaho, and a meeting for that love with women who ore not in intellectual sympathy with them. frequent stirrings to keep the cream generations of as laborious, as bold purpose in called for the 10th of Au The world “marries and is given in mar front rising, and thus becoming par and as determined a class as ever gust, at Great Shoshone Falls. riage,” and the wedding bells ring on from tially wasted or drawn off from the lived. Much of the work was done in Win. Gaby shot his wife at Alturas, age to age unceasingly, and yet bow few who whey. The rennet should next be the face of great personal danger. Cal., witness the life contract of brides and bride then shot himself. Mrs. Gaby added until tho temperature stops The pioneers had not only to face hard will probably grooms stop to consider the tremendous im while ths would- rising ; then enough rennet should be work, but a sleepiest and merciless >>e murderer is recover, portance of so brief a ceremony. Upon the expected to die. stirreil in and should be agitated at savage. Against sudden massacre, mental, moral and physical qualities of the Catalina Island, two miles distant least fifteen minutes, and coagulation against ambushed rifles, against the man and of th? woman may depend the ac tions and results of actions of a succession of should begin tn about twenty minutes midnight torch, the pioneer farmers front San Pedro, Cal., has been pur human beings in generations yet to come. —the stirring after the rennet is tn to built their log cabins, put up their chased by a syndicate for $176,000. It The ungoverned will descends from sire tc prevent the cream from rising and fences and furrowed the soil and will be made uu immense summer re •on, and the secretiveness or aquisitiveness waste. In a cool nsim, when the sur achieved a result that puts the United sort. uncontrolled by other qualities in the father Whitman county, W. T., has the face cools quickly and there is a fall States far in advance of every other or the mother muy make the thief, the liar ing of the temperature of the milk, country in the world in regard to the smallest woman living. Site resides or the miser, who, a few decades hence, will three miles from Pine City, is 27 years there will be a thin cream on the sur amount it produces from the soil. be the black sheep of the family fold. An old. 29 inches high, and weighs 33 ungovernable temper married to an ungov face; this will form a soft curd, which Potato Culture. pounds. ernable temper may beget the murderer will stick to the vat and be very annoy After careful study of the causes of whom society is forced to hang for its own A ntan named Harvey Langdon, a ing. If you want a quick-curing potato rot nnd means of prevention,, civil engineer, lately in the employ of protection, but who may be as irresponsible cheese, more rennet should ,be added before the tribunal of supreme justice as the than one to be cured slowly and kept | Ontario Agricultural College sets forth the Seattle A West Coast Railway, lunatic is now held to be before our earthly committed suicide at Seattle by taking Eloper» Sure Enongli. some lime. As a rule the more rennet | , the following rules : courts. “ There had been nn account of an elope used the lower the temperature should ' 1. As soon as discovered, dig the po- morphine. It has been said, coarsely, perhaps, in the Two children of Thomas Waymock, ears of modern refinement, but with perfect ment in the morning pa[>eiw,” said tho com be at which the milk is set and the I tatoes. Delay will allow it to spread truth, that while we tako every precaution to mercial traveler, “and I was thinking of it curd worked. After the milk begins to the stems and thence to the tubers. of Thompson’s Falls, Montana, aged insure high qualities in the higher types of dogs when a couple drove up to the country hotel to thicken, a cloth should be spread If it reaches these and dump weather respectively 3 years and 20 months, and horses, wc seem to think it a matter of and registered, ‘Mr. and Mrs. So-aiul-So? I over the vat to keep the surface warm. comes, rot will certainly appear. were burned to death while the house no consequence to insure a noble nature to winked at the boys and said: 'Here's for a 2. After digging, the potatoes should was destroyed. There should be no raising of the tem- joke.’ The old hotel keeper was a very dear our own offspring.—Brooklyn Magazine. be put in a cool, dry place, thus sur Une thousand tin boxes, containing friend of mine and took my word for gospel |>erature after the rennet is added and rounding them with conditions unfa the bones of dead Chinamen, all ready truth, so when I said : ‘ Look out for'em! I the milk comes to a standstill until the She Fixed His Blouse. vorable for the growth of the fungus, for shipment to the Flowery Kingdom, We had gone into winter quarto’s at think I know ’em, and they are eloping and j curd is cut line. The curd should be if any happens to be upon them. were found in a house in Chinatown, Charleston, W. Va. Some new recruits had they are not married,’ ate., you ought to 1 cut as soon as it will break clean 3. Growing early varieties is worthy San Francisco. arrived for the Thirty-sixth Ohio, and one of have seen the old fellow. Ho scowled and ! across the finger when placed in it and them was finding fault with t he government lifted his chin, and wagged it up and down I raised gently upward ; the early cut- of consideration, so that they may ma John McPloin has sued the Oregon for not putting more pockets in his blouse. half a dozen time, sort of as though he was ■ ting is very necessary ; tlie clearest ture before the season arrives when Development Company for $50,000 thinking it over, and then he walked off. All It happened that the wife of Gen. R. B. whey is always obtained by cutting this parasite is likely to affect the crop. damages for injuries sustained in fall Hayes was on a visit to the general and was the ether boys In tho house were put on to 4. All potato stalks in affected lands, ing down the hatchway of the steamer stopping at headquarters. Some of the boys the joke and we agreed to watch the old man early ; the whey runs from the curd should be gathered and burned, so as Yaquina at Han Francisco. much more readily when it is young told the grumbler that he could get a pocket and see what be did. "Supper rang, and tho |>arty of traveling and tender. This is the object ef cut to destroy the millions of spores which put in his blouse; that Gen. Hayes kept a The war cruiser Caroline lias sailed lie upon them. may man took seats at one table and left the new ting the curd to get out the whey ; the seamstress at headquarters on purpose to from Victoria. Her mission is to pro arrivals to the sole occupancy of another. 5. Use none but good seed. If at patch their do-hes and sew on buttons. curd should be cut with both a hori tect British settlers from any un “Yea,” said one, “the general is always ou The hotel proprietor, who helped serve at the zontal and per|>endicular knife. Never all affected, reject them ; and plant in friendly acts on the part of the Amer table, took his station as much as possible lie well drained land. If the potatoes to the lookout for the welfare of his men. Only let the curd get tough and leathery the other day he hail a man arrested for sew hind tho young couple, bis eye all the time cutting, as there is always more waste be used for seed have been taken from ican authorities in Behring sea. On Joseph Hathaway’s ranch, near ing on some buttons. The idea of a soldier watching their every movement. “‘Will you have some sugar in yourteafiat and not as fine a curd. Cut the ctird cellars where affected ones were kept, patching his clothes when the general has a they are likely to have the microscopic Beckwith, Cal., an artesian well at a length said the young man to his companion, very fine, the finer tlie better, as it sx- woman forthat purpose! If you want an depth of 350 feet .struck water which |iels the whey easier and more thor-1 spores on them and escape notice. 4t flows 180 gallons per minute, hot other pocket in your blouse tako it to the as he passed the saccharine for her use. “ ‘No, thank you; I never use sugar in my ! would lie best to gel seed from unaf general; you will find the lady there. Tell ouglily and cooks more evenly, and enough to cook an egg in eight min tea,’ was the sweet response. fected districts. them what you want and you will soon “We were watching the old man as he stood gets an easier action of tlie rennet. utes. 6. It is scarcely necessary to remark get it.” After the cutting is done and the near them and beard this answer. He grew The United States Assay Office at He was soon on his way to headquarters, about a foot in a second. ‘He's got a clew,’ i cu.-d commences to settle, the heat that it would be injudicious to plant while we watched to see the fun. The said I to myself. And it wns a clew such as potatoes in the same field the following Boise City, received for assay, and pur , may be started at once, but not rapidly. chased, during the fiscal year ending recruit marched up and the general returned would make the eye of a Pinkerton detective If the action of the rennet is slow, it year, after a visitation of the “rot,” in his salute and said : sparkle. The idea of a husband not knowing is better to wait a few minutes for the asmuch as the ground may retain the June 30, 1887, 33,289 ounces of gold “Well, my good man, what can I do for whether his wife used sugar in her tea or not! bullion, valued at $457,388 29. Dur curd to harden a little. After tlie heat germs of disease. you?” ing the same period of 1886 the re The old mon didn't linger long about coming 7. Avoid planting upon heavy clay “General, the boys told me there was n to a decision. He leaned aver and said: is turned on, gently stir the mass to ceipts were 7,910 ounces, valued at soil, but prefer a light and dry roil. woman here to sew for the soldiers, and I ‘Young man, you leave the table. That keep the curd from packing together $122,230 85, showing an increase in wanted to get a pocket put in this blouse. n and to keep a more even temperature This presents the fewest conditions the business of the office this year woman is not your wedded wife? Before the general could answer Mrs. “The couple never whimpered. They called through the vat; as tlie heat rises the suitable for the growth of the fungus. over last of nearly 300 per cent. Hayes spoke up and said: 8. Plant the varieties least affected. for their team and drove on. The most sur harder the crust gets and the les» lia “Certainly, certainly; leave your blouse for prised party in the affair was ours. We an hour or so and you shall have a pocket in hadn't dreamed that we were so near the ble to injure the curd ; but keep up The practice of putting milk warm this stirring till the curd is heated up from it.” truth. The next day the same pair the cow directly into tight can« When the soldier returned with the pocket were arrested in a neighboring town and car- to 98 degree» or blood heat, where it in his blouse, and the boys told him who the ri'gl back to their homes. If I should tell should take at least one hour after the and subjecting it to a warm atmos SIMMONS lady was, we realized that we had carried the tha* landlord now that tho Methodist minis heat is turned on. This temperature phere is reprehended by a medical au thority. Poisonous properties suffi joke too far and had imposed on one of the ter that boards with him was Jesse James in should be kept until the curd is cooked, to cause unpleasant symptom» best and truest women in the world.— disguise tie would believe me.”—Isiwiston because the action of the rennet is cient National Tribune. are said to be liable to arise from so (Me.) Journal. more perfect than at any other degree. doing. the milk before canning, Before the curd is done cooking some and keep Cool Christian Converts from Buddhism. at a cool temperature after Teapot and Punch Bowl. of the whey may be drawn of, as it is I met a gentleman a few days ago who lias Afternoon tea» are filling up the remaining more easy to handle the balance in the ward. but recently returned from a resident« of several years in India. Ho is well educated, days of the season at Washington and the i vat. After the curd is cooked—which Give the pig what you feed the and during bis long residence in the land of teapot and punch bowl still “draw," as I every cheese-maker is able to tell—the worthless cur—the necessary append Buddhism lie turned bis attention especially theatrical people put it. A lackadaisical whey should lie drawn off before the age to no many farms. If the pigs are | to the effects of Christianity upon the fol- i youth who was making eyes ami saying ! acid cornea on. Many curds, by re fed what he consumes, there will be a lowers of Gautama. At first he was deeply ; soulful things in a languid way to a pretty impressed by the devotion shown by tho na assistant at a reception was banded a glass of maining in the whey too long, make a gain on the farm in many ways. There tives who professed to have embraced the punch to change the conversation. Tasting soggy, hard, aour cheese. This kind will be one more fat hog for the family religion of the western world. He found ( the compound, he rolled his eyes up, and ' of cheese is not desirable, but is the supply or for market. There will lie ' them faithful in their attendance at the ser said, “This punch is a symphony." Ho was kind of cheese we get if tlie acid cornea peace, where with his presence there i vices held by the missionaries and very care- 1 only equal«! by a Kansas man who was taken on while in the whey. The acid takes are often wry tempers. The stock on ful in following out the instructions given 1 to one of M ik Cockrell’s receptions, and being I off with the whey the finest part of the the farm is quieter and more eaaily them by their teacher* In fact, they were, given her famous punch did not know whether cheese. Then I would have the curd controlled. Hubwtitute a pig lor the as a rule, far more devout than tlie members it was a symphony or not In fact, he cooked before the acid comes on, and pup, and place yourself on a sure basis did not know wliat the stuff was that be was of the European colonies. After studying them for some time, bow- drinking, as he was a rigid total abstinence be sure and dip the curd sweet, and if for profit. ever, my friend became convinced that a man. He was shy as well, end seeing that you have a curd sink to drain on, so Home little interest has been excited j very large percentage of the apparently con- , every one else had a little glass cup of the ■ much the better, and if you do not by the announcement of the discovery ' bannleaa looking liquid ha took one too. The verted natives were far from being sincere in have a Ard mill, would sail «11 at their protestations While parading before , poor man thought it was soino kind of tea, once, as this keeps the curd from pack- ot a new and remarkable variety of as and the bowl seemed more innocent to him paragus on tlte steeps of Akhal-Tekix j the Europeans as devoted Christians they 1 I ing. If you have a curd mill let it lie were se retly as faithful followers of Buddha than a bottle. He remarked to a friend i unfil acid comer on, only stir once in It has not been botanically identified, afterward that it was very nice, Isit that be but it is represented as growing per tut even the most punctilious member of the Exalted Order of the Star of India could believed that it made him feel very queerly. a while to let the whole expose to the! fectly wild, the stalks being nearly as wish them to be. My friend found that the One bostrsa has introduced this w inter the air; after the acid comes on, grind I thisk as a man's arm and attaining a i fashion so common in Paris of bating Lot native of Indi*. !*• ,he hcathni Chin»«, bail punch. She is an original woman all around, and »alt, ami put to preaa at alxiut 80 Iteight of five or six feet, so that one of ■ great deal that was -artful and bland’ degrees, as at this heat you will get a i them is said to suffice ten Russian : about his character, and simply pulled the though, and caps the climax by giving her , good face, and pre»» wcH together; let hot punch at her Kumlav evening i ceeptioua ■oldien for a meal. It the preference wool over the missionaries’ ejea in ord«- to this stand twelve hours in the pre»», of experts for wild ssparagus finds I keep in the good graces of the European* ’■ —“Rubamah" in Globe-Democrat. then remove to the curing room. in this variety, and its He explain«! that a native who was known i First-el**» cheese may be spoiled by justification td bare embraced the religion ot the west en- flavor is described ss equal to that I ate» angaras I?S'ltaort iffbVrr whirl, ’ having a poor room to cure it in, too loved a great many more advantage among lira any at snnri*-. nooo and sunset, in lioiaoe of the beet European kinds, asparagus thi Europeans redding in India than the oo. of t!>e incarnation. The bell rung to an 1‘ cold or too hot. Heventy degrees to lovers may have a good time before ’ •tart with ia about tiie right tempera who failed to renou-we Buddhism —“Ram nounce the 1»ur of the pi; er is ale-» called them. ture, then after ten days a little cooler, bier” to Brooklyn Eagle. the aw'~ Bravely the ships in the tempest tossed. Buffet the waves till the sea be crossed; Not in despair of the haven fair, Though winds blow backward and leagues be lost O weary hearts that yearn for sleep, Look and learu from the ships of the deep! —F. W. Bourdillon. 'Ta.lmngre & Heath, DAKOTA OUTWARD OR HOMEWARD. Still are the ships that in haven ride, Walling fair winds or a turn of the tide; Nothing but fret, though they do not get Out on the ocean wide. O wild hearts that yearn to be free, Ux>k and learu from the ships of the sea! EVERY TUESDAY AND FRIDAY — 4 LIVER REGULATOR