. ' J 5 1 " m , f - - f DEVOTED TO NEWS, LITERATURE, AND THE BEST INTERESTS OF OREGON. VOL. XII. OREGON CITY, OREGON, THURSDAY. AUGUST 15, 1878. NO. 43. Mi - .. ' (inn ) I f I I i i i M THE ENTERPRISE. A LOCAL NEWSPAPER TOR T H rriar,BalHH nan aud Family Circle ISSUED EVERY THURSDAY. rilOFBlKTUB AND FUBUSUait. Official Paper for Clackamas County. Office: lu Kuterjtrivo Ituililius', Ob iuvr South of Masonic Building, Main Street. Ttrmi of KubMription Single Copy, oue ytar. lu adyauce $J 50 Slagle Copy, nil months, iu advance 1 50 Term, of Adivrlltine: Transient advertisements, including all legal notices, pr square of twelve lines, una k $ 2 50 Tor each subseijuont insertion 1 00 Oue Column, one year 120 00 Half Column, one year CO 00 Vurtr Column, oue year 40 00 Business Card, on. square, one year 11 00 SOCIETY NOTICES; OREGON LODGE, No. 3, I. O. O. F. alsets eery Thursday Evening, at . 1 " o'clock. In Odd 11owh' Hall, I h.ju onuvi. jiumutrH oi Uiv i jnn r VV. By order of N. G REBECCA DEGREE LODGE, No. 2, . j. j. r ., meet on the Second and Jfourth Tuesday Evenings of each month, at 1H o'clock, in the Odd Fellows' Hall Member of the Deyrte are InviUd to aii.ua. FALLS ENCAMPMENT, No. 4, v. o. jr., meow at Odd iillowa' Hall on the Flret and Thii Tuesday of saeh mouth. Patriarchs in gooU standing am invited to attend. MULTNOMAH LODGE, No. 1, ' at., nom its regular cuuuuuut aUoua on the First aud Third buturdays ' .cu uiuuiu, ai i o clock troiu the i!0tU bepteiuber to the liotb. of March- and . viuva aum iu i"iu oi aiarcn to tue T 3uth of September. Brethren iu iiood stamlln are BUSINESS CARDS. WARREN N. DAVIS. M. D., Kieian and burgeon, Graduate of the University of Pennsylvania. Orrica at Cliff Uovkb. CHARLES KNIGHT, CANBY. OREOON, l'liykiviaii and Druggist. KPreucrlptiona carefully filled at abort notice. ja7-tr DR. JOHN WELCH, 3 DEXTIS T. rriCH IN OREGON CITT OREGON. Highest cash price paid for County Orders. E.L. EASTHAM, ATT O U Y- AT - L A Y , OREGON CITY, OREGON. Special attention given to butineea in the U. S. Land Office, office in llyer's Brick. JOHNSON & McCOWN, ATTORNEYS and COUNSELORS AT LAW OREGON CITY, OREGON. Trill practice in all the Courts of the State. Special att.ution given to casi-s in the United Btalva Land Onice at Or.-ou City. Capr'7'J-tf BLANKS OP EVERY DESCRIPTION FOR Mule at thlitotHce. Justice of the P.eaoe can get anytning in their line. GEO. A. HARDING, 1st T''EEP3 CONSTANTLY ON HAND A GENERAL. lru;H and Cliemical, I'.rfomrri, Koapa, .' mfai Jtrii.laea. Irnia, Suiiort, Btauller Brarr k'unry and Xollct ArtlelcH. ALSO Keroarne Oil, I,auin ilia nrva. !". t'utty, I'aini, oil.. Tavrui.Uea and le aiuUk POKE WISES AND LIQUORS FOR MEDICINAL PURPOSES. PATENT MEDICINES, ETC., ETC te. Phyaiciana' Prescription carefully com peauded, aud all ordera correctly auawred. tiMa. Open at all houra of the night. All account, must be paid monthly. l,la:otf WARD & HARDINO. W. H. HIGHFIELD. talillwltert Hlnoe '4U, One door North of Pope's Hall, MAIN JT., OKKUOX ( ITV. OKCiiOX. An assortment of Watches, Jewelry, aud Vl Ihomas- Weight Clocks, all of which VV are warranted to bo as represented. " SBaifi , "Repairiiig done on short notice: andthaufciui ter past patronage. 4 AIU Iwr County Orders. JOHN M. BACON. CALEB lf BOOKS, STATIONERY PICTUBB FRAMES. MOULDINGS AND MISCEL LANEOUS GOODS. rBII n tUE TO ORDEK. Obbqom Crrr, Oregon. aWAt the Post Office, Main Street, west side. novl, "75-tf A. G. WALLING'S Pioneer ISoolc ISindery Pittoek'e Building, cor. of Stark and Front St., POKTLAXD, OliEUO.V. BLANK BOOKS RULED AND BOUND TO ANY d.sised pattern. Music Bocks, Magazines, k.wspap.rs, etc.. bound in every Tariety of atyle knowu to the trade. Orders front the country frompUy attended to. dotI, '75-tf OREGON CITY BREWERY. naving purehased the above Brewery,; wishes to inform the publio that they are! iu mauuiacture a o. i. OF LAGER BEER. As geod as eaa be obtained anywhe the State. Ore.is selieitea aad premptly ftlle Dm anil Apttaiy Words of Strength. BI SCUILLEB. TLere are three lessons I would write Three works as with a burning pen. In tracings of eternal light, Upon the hearts of men. Have hope. Though clouds environ now, And gladness hides her face in scorn, Put thou the shadow from thy brow No night but hath its morn. Have faith. Where'er thy bark is driven The calm's disport, the tempest's mirth Know this God rates tho Heaven, The inhabitants of earth. Have lovo. Not lovo alone for one, But man as man thy brother call, And scatter like the circling sun Thy charities on all. Thus grave these lesson on thy sonl Hope, Faith and Lovo and thou shalt find Strength when life's surges rudest roll, Light when thou else were blind. Drouth on the Pampas. The writer of this sketch recently made the acquaintance of a youn man named arthur Mooers, who came all the way from the Argentine IJepublic to re ceive the advantages of a Ne England ed ucation. My young friend has been great ly interested in the sketches of hack woods life which have appeared in the Companion for the last two years. Iu return he desires to communicate some incidents of life on the Ptmpas, where his father, Mr. Preston Mooers, owns an extensive e&tancia, or cattle range, aud where Arthur's boyhood was passed up to his thirteenth year. The etuncias,or cattle-farms of the Pam pas, are of vast extent, comprising from a hundred to eight or ten hundred square leagues. That of Mr. Movers, in the Southern country, embraced some seven hundred leagues. An Argentine stock farmer not un fre quently owns a hundred thousand head of cat'le. Mr. Mooer's stock varied, year by year, from seventy to eighty-five thou sand. This vast herd wa3 divided into minor heids of about three thousand head each, aud eacli of these smaller herds was un der the care of two mounted half breed herdsmen, called vaqueros. It is the business of the herdsmen to keep the herd together, aud prevent them from straying too lar beyond the land marks of the owner's territory. Every night the herds are driven into some cen tral location and yarded. The year lbl was a year of drouth on the Pampas, and thousands of cattle per ished for want of water. Even before January which is the tecond summer rnonth in that far southern country, cor responding to July in our northern hem isphere all the streams were dry, aud the grass haJ become so parched and crisp that it crumbled under the feet like tinder. ! "All our cattle," said Arthur, "were dependent for water on three wells which my lather had sunk, lhe hrst of these whs at a place called Grande Ilodes, the second twenty miles from that, at Asado ( corral, aud the last thirty miles farther, at a yard called El Capitaz. To one or other of these wells all the cattle were driven. "The wells were each two hundred feet deep. The old way of drawing water was by what is terineu horse-buckets. A pair ot horses, or a yoke ot oxen, drew up the water in a great sack made of hides, by a long chain that ran through a pulley suspended from a high Iramework over the well. It was a slow and tedi ous process, and my father improved on it by importing three Pteam-engines for his wells. It was those engines that saved out stock tht year. "Drouth on the Pampas is a fearful tiling. Never shall I forget the frightful scenes at the Grande Hades well iu Feb ruary of that year! "About the well there was a strong corral of timber, eight feet high, enclos ing a quarter of au acre or more. The watering trough, which was made of heavy planks, rau round the outside of this fence, being pinned hrmly to it There was near four hundred feet of trough in one range, so that the spout from the well ruled the whole ot it when the thirsty cattle gave the water time to flow so far. "We were troubled, however, to get fuel for the engines, and lor lack of bet ter we used the stalks of the Pampa thistles. These thistles shoot up during December and January to the height ot ten and twelve feet, and form miniature forests. The stalks, being two or three inches thick, make a moderately hot fire if well tended. -"The pumping began during the last days of January, and soon had to be kept up night and day. As the more distant springs and 'runs' failed, the herds came to the well. "Bj the 10th of February no less than fifteen thousand head of cattle drank at the trough daily. Two days after, the guaclios in charge of the well reported that the number had so increased that the weaker ones could not get up to the trough at all. "The next night my father went down tot'-.e pump, taking my brother and me with him. It was with the greatest diffi culty that the herdsmen opened a pas sage with their lances for us to enter the stockade. "All around the corral for a quarter of a mile on every side the cattle were crowded together, all pressing in to get to the water. "Inside the fenca all was hurry and noise, the tire flared and flashed under the cloud of dark smoke, while the quick, gurgling strokes of the pump mingled with the shouts of the guaehos on the cor ral, trying fo drive away the cattle that bad drank to make room for those be hind; for even after drinking the poor creatures would not leave the trough. "The guaclws thrust their steel-pointed lances without mercy, and blood followed every thrust. It seemed cruel, but it would have been still more cruel to let them linger, with others choking behind. "The quantity of water one of those bullocks would drink, if allowed to take all he wanted, was amazing! Ten buck ets would hardly have satisfied one. "lhey drank with frenzied haste. Above all the tumult inside the corral roue the loud 6ucking noise of their eager mouths iu the trough, and the constant, intoned, plaintive looing. "More terrible still was the deep earth quake rumble of the myriads of restless hoofs, which fairly shook the plain. And the clatter of the thronging horns, with now and then a deep "distressful bellow, as some poor weakened brute was borne down and trodden under foot, added to the wild confusion. On every side were thousands of eager, staring eyes. "Morning showed no abatement in the thirsty throng; and from all quarters of the plain, near aud far, fresh droves could be seen pouring in. Some came slowly, in long liues that faded out of view in the distance, while others rushed forward in a wild stampede, all drawn by the far borne scent of water. ''That day animals from other estates began to appear among ours. Bullocks of all brands came crowding up. "It was Impossible to drive them off, and no effort was made. We could tell by the branded marks that some of the strangers had come a hundred and, fifty miles. "The next day at noon my father esti mated that there were seventy thousand head of cattle in sight upon the plain around us. 'Now, as owing to the great depth of the wells the engines would not raise more than fifty or sixty gallons of water per minute, it will be seen that we could scarcely pump a gallon apiece for this great herd in the whole twenty-four hours. Of course those who got to the trough would drink ten and llfteen gal lons each before they could be goaded away. "And it grew worse instead of better. On the second day we could not get away from the stockade. There was no way of getting out but by running over the backs of the crowded herd. "The guaehos alone dared to attempt such a feat, for to fall under the cattle would have been certain death. And it was almost as perilous to remain inside; for at times the press to the trough was so strong that the stockade, though made of heavy timber and securely braced, would crack and give way. "The burning sun, too, made it still worse. Only the guachoi could endure to fire the engine and guard the stockade; and even these inured fellows were some times ready to drop, and were only saved from sunstroke by constantly ducking their heads in the water-spout. "And as those fearful hours and days dragged by, there was ever that low, dis tressed looing going up, like one great long-suffering prayer, to the flaming sky lor respite Iroin its cruel heat. "At noon of the 26th day of February there came sudden signs of a change of weather. Towards evening a terrific torna do of wind and hail, followed by rain, with thunder and lightning, swept across the plains Ironi the south. " "When the rain struck the struggling herd it jrrew quiet in a moment. Livery animal stood with its neck craned out, seeming to absorb the shower like a parched-up plant. "For two or three hours the storm lashed and drenched them. We could not discern a movement anywhere in the herd. The engine stopped, the water ceased to gusli through the spout, yet there stood the cattle as if turned to stone till the rain ceased to fall. Then, for tho first time in three weeks, it fell back from the troughs and dispersed over the plain. "But the falling biclswjf the Fierd re vealed a ghastly sight,- a pavement of bones, horns and matted hair. My father estimated that not less than ten thousand cattle had perished around that fatal in closure. "The scenes at the other wells were said to have been much the same; yet de spite the loss, the drouth left us with more stock than we had had before, for the cattle that had flocked to us in their time of need remained in our herds, aud not one-half were ever reclaimed by their owners. Youths Companion. Ithaca, N. Y., is scandalized over the charges of profane swearing preferred against a minister of that town. But un der the circumstances, as the Journal of that city publishes them, there is certain ly some excuse for him. lie attempted to make his way in the dark through the sitting-room to the pantry, to deposit a bunch of ihubard presented him by a parishioner, forgetting that the house cleaning had commenced. The wretched girl had left a pail of soft soap near the door, over which he accidentally stum bled. Making a herculean effjrt to save himself he grabbed for something with both hands, and as he alighted firmly on his stomach he pulled down on top of him a table full of crockery. Bising promptly to his feet he made a push for the match safe, but happening to plant his foot in a puddle of the soft soap he promptly sat down in a tub of preserved fruits. His poor, tired wife, who had retired early, was roused from her slum bers, and thinking that burglars were abroad, shrieked for help,. to which the hired girl responded, rushing into the room and tumbling headlong over the man in the wash tub. At this point, as might be expected, he swore, as alleged. Of Lord BeaconsGeld innumerable mots are just now current. Llere is one: "A Conservative peer was expressing to the Premier the anxiety with which he looked forward to his prolonged absence from England. 4It won't be a long business,' waa the reassuring reply; and, after a pause, Lord Beaconsfield added, 'We mean to carry the position by a koo di niang' (coup-de-main). The peerin ques tion moved away, muttering aa he -went, Thir mnv air what tkcv like about his about his character be ing un-English; but, at any rate, there is one thing that is nnmistaKaoiy uruisn, and that is his D rencn. 1 COURTESY OF BANCROFT LIBRARY, I . v -r -r- " TT . Soft Soap. In the good old times with what fear and trembling did the young housewife essay making soap for the first time after marriage. The old wives' fable had turned the soap barrel' into a horoscope wherin the bride might read her fate. If the soap were good, peace and plenty would follow through all her days, but woe unto her if ill luck befell her, for so would poverty aud trials beset her path way. We wonder how many sorrowing women have looked back to that first trial and failure as the fate which turned their fortunes! Let; the present house keeper rejoice that, she lives iu the light of to-day, when all ti: world knows that nothing comes by tjy.jf. nt even soap, but according to m.uiote laws certain effects will ever follow certain causes. So may she pluck up courage, for if the soap be a failure it need not follow that a cloud is forever to hang over her life, and if good, let her not rest upon that laurel, but know that success in all the walks of life only crowns continuous ef fort, and if failing once she must try again, writing upon the border of her garments, ''Patience and perseverance conquer all things." To those who have ash-houses, leaches built in the most ap proved style, with mighty cauldrons for boiling the soap, this homily is scarcely addressed, but to tho village housewife who, if she have any soft soap at all, must make it herself, and with such ma terials as she may happen to have. We will suppose that since the cool days in the fall she has been saving the scraps aud grease she could not otherwise use, and saving the ashes when cold in bar rels at a safe distance from the house, for if a live coal 6hould happen to get into the barrels and fire them, unlucky soap it 'would be indeed, before ever it was made to burn up her house. The leach can be prepared wherever con venient. JLay some blocks of wood on the ground in Buch a way that the top may incline a little; oo this lay some thing trom which the lye can run; if the side of au old stove can be found it an swers the purpose well, and on this struc ture stand a barrel, boring some holes in the bottom of it. Into this pile loosely some corn-cobs and straw, and till the barrel with ashes packing them down, a very little water added accelerates this. Hard wood ashes, oak or maple, should be used. Three or four days before wishing to make the soap commence pouring on the water, a little warm at first, a Bmall pailful every three or four hours, covering the leach at night and during the day if it looks like rain. When the lye commences to run place an old pail or bucket of some sort under the piece of iron. If the soap is wanted for use as soon as possible, then nil a kettle half full of crease, pour on enough lye to cover (pouring water on the leach as fast as the lye is withdrawn from the bottom), plac on the stove and cook un til it boils well, watching it closely that it doesn't boil over, and pour into the barrel ready to receive it. Tho barrel should be of pine, half-barrels such as are used for nsh, or cleansed molasses barrels; lye warps oak so that barrels made of it can bo used but one season. See that all the bungs are in tight, with no danger of coming out when the soap is stirred. The lye in which the grease is cooked should be strong and very dark- colored, aud when the grease is all cooked the barrel can be filled up with weaker lye, but not too weak. When the lye grows ligbt in color remove the ashes trom the leach, till up with new, and draw off as before. Three barrels of ashes should make a large barrel of soap. But by far the easier way is to make cold soap. It is not bo soon, ready for use, but is really nicer, and saves carrying a heavy kettle back and forth with the attendant danger of being scalded when the boil ing mass is being poured into the barrel, and last, but not least, is void ol that "offense that smells to heaven." Simply put all the grease at once into the barrel, pouring the lye on to it and stirring fre quently. If the lye is strong the soap willsoon come; if too thick, dilute with weak lye or rain-water. We have said nothing of straining the soap, the ordi nary scraps saved from cooking need nothing of the sort. Lye can be put into a second barrel, and the grease through the summer can be put into it, making soap of itself. A good barrel of soap is a "beauty and a joy" to the housekeeper, appealing both to her esthetic and re ligious sense; to the first, as it breaks into a quivering mass of imprisoned golden hues; to the second, as "cleanliness is next to godliness," and in scrubbing and cleaning, in the washing of all but colored prints, what can be nicer than soft soap? Pioneer Press. Bites and Stings. Apply instantly, with a soft rag, most freely, spirits of harts horn. The venom of stings being an acid, the alkali nullifies them. Fresh wood ashes, moistened with water, and made into a poultice, frequently renewed, is an excellent substitute, or soda or sal eratus, all being alkalies. To be on the safe side, in case of snake or mad-dog bites, drink brandy, whisky, rum or other spirits, as free as water a teacup ful, or a pint or more, according to the aggravation of the circumstances. Remedy for Obesity. Fucus Vesi culoaus, a marine plant commonly known as "bladder wrack," a kind of sea-weed, has been found to be an effectual remedy in the treatment of morbid corpulence, without suffering or disturbance of the general health. A fluid extract of this article has beeu prepared, and can be obtained from druggists. The usual strength of one grain to the minim is followed, and the dose for an adult is one -half to two teaspoonfuls, taken before each meal. For Catarrh. One teaspoonful of mustard dissolved in a tumblerful of cold water; gargle night and morning, or of- tener if convenient. Or, take equal quantities of pulverized alum and loaf sugar use as a snuff. Nettlb Rash. Mix equal parts of sulphur and cream of tartar; take a spoon ful three mornings, and omit three. The same ia also an excellent remcdr for hives. Try it, ye afflicted. A Gypsy Princess' Wedding. The daughter of the "queen of the gypsies" is to be married at Fall Creek, N. Y., to-day, and there is much local in terest in the affair. The Ithaca Journal says: The ladies of our village are par ticularly delighted over the approaching nuptials of the Bjhemiam subject with a princess royal. The gathering of the tribes Kt this point is to commence next week, and a large assembling is assured. From the few faithful already here a few facts have been gleaned. These people represent the remainder of the real no mandic race of gypsies now existing in this state and a portion of Pennsylvania. Two-thirds of the people called gypsies are "poor white trash," scum of this and foreign lands, with no amb'tion above a full clothes-line and a dark night, and no comfort not purely animal. The genuine people who "tell you of the future," if their palms be crossed witH silver, are loud in their condemnation of the "Irish tramps on wheels" who, going before them, prejudiced townspeople against all oftheirilkby impositions in the shape of lace and outrageous steals in horse trades or any other way possible. So none but the simon-pure will be tolerated at the coming wedding. They are a most curious people, and many of the most ancient and mystic of their traditionary customs and rules will be displayed in solemnizing this union. More than ordinary stress is laid by them upon the coming matrimonial event, because it is not only a royal'weddiug, but the first that has occurred among them in twenty-three years. The queen of the gypsies and mother of the bride has almost absolute power over her sub jects, and is more feared than admired by them. Her directions to the tribes are enforced by secret and sure, but not always scrupulous or commendable measures, bhe is reputed to have ac cumulated considerable means, but no one but herself knows the amount of her wealth or the manaer of its investment. Her horses and wagons and appointments therein are pronounced to be very grand. The daughter and bride is described as an only child, and the heiress to the throne of the Gypsies beyond the power of the queen to prevent provided she lives. She is said to be a beautiful girl of true Oriental type, over which poets have raved from time immemorial, a tall, lithe. and perfectly rounded figure, small hands and feet, 'the blackest of hair and eyes, the blush of health breaking through the dusky cheek giving a glori ous contrast to the whitest of teeth. Of the happy groom but little can be learned, except that he is a young and powerful man of "many horses." The ceremony is to occur In the open air under a gorgeous canopy, and in the presence of all the loyal ot the race that can be gathered at this point. The date is now fixed fr the 2d of June, one week from next Sunday, and doubtles it the day proves fair hun dreds of people from this community will witness the strange union in addition to the invited guests. Home Life a Hundred Years Ago. One hundred years ago not a pound of coal or cubic toot ot illuminating gas had been burned in the country. Jso iron stoves were used, and no contrivances for economizing heat were employed until Dr. franklin invented the iron-framed tire-place, which still bears his name. All the cooking and warming- in town and country were done by the aid of fire kindled upon the brick hearth or in the brick oven. Pine knots or tallow candles furnished the light for the long winter nights, and sanded floors supplied the place of rugs and carpets. The water used lor household purposes was drawn from deep wells by the creaking "sweep." No form of pump was used in tins country, so far as we can learn, until after the present century. There were no fric tion matches in those early days, by the aid of which a fire could be speedily kindled; and if the "fire went out" upon the hearth over night, and the timber was damp so that the spark would not catch, the alternative remained of wading through the snow a mile or so, to borrow a brand of a neighbor. Only one room in any house was warm unless some one of the family was ill; in all the rest the temperature was at zero during many nights in the winter. The men aud wemen of a hundred years ago undressed and went to their beds in a temperature colder than our modern barns and wood-sheds, and they never complained. Home Journal. Legal Actions Aoaikst Animals. Proceedings against animals by regular suit in a court law for trespass, damage or murder were a strange feature of the Middle Ages. Capital punishment was inflicted by the executioner on swine for killing children, or oxen for goring peo ple to death. In France up to the year 17-40 there were nearly 100 cases of act ions against animals on record. In one case an action was brought against cer tain rats for damages. They were sum moned into court and an advocate was appointed to conduct their defence. The lawyer at first contended that all the rats in the diocese where the damage was dene ought to appear. As a matter of course, every clergyman in the diocese was directed to summon the rats. On thir non appearance, their advocate pleaded ag and infirmity, sickness or youth, as a reason for an extension of time. On the second cititation a plea of intimidation by certain cats was put in and the rats demanded full protection from their feline foes on their way to and on their return from court. This led to the non-suiting of the plaintiffs, who were not prepared to guarantee the necessary protection, which the court regarded as a reasonable objection on the part of the defendants' attorney; and it was in such a case, it is said, that one of the most emi nent French lawyers first attracted pub lic attention before he rso to fame and fortune 1 I he Cobden club of London has passed resolutions of regret on the death of Jtsryant, one of its oldest honorary mem- Den. Turkish Kevolutienists. A Constantinople correspondent of The Philadelphia Press writes: Should it become necessary to depose Abdul Ha mid, it will be done silently and sudden ly by the cabinet, as in the caseot Abdul Aziz. The lrealth and nervous system of the present sultan are badly shattered, and it may be advisable to get him out of tho way ero long, and the more so, as he is disposed to lean on foreign support for his own protection. His legal suc cessors are his two brothers, but neither of them is fit to reign. They will have to be set aside, aud the sou of Abdul Aziz, Prince Izzeddin, raised to the throne. He is now in his majority. His father contemplated setting aside his nephews, and having the law changed so that the succession might be direct in the lineal line, and not to the eldest male. This was a cherished object of his ambi tion, aud had he lived, it would have been accomplished. ' Although Izzeddin is not educated up to the staudard of a Chris tian royal prince, he received a more than average amount of instruction iu the principal branches of knowledge. He was not shut up in the harem; he was sent to the military school, taught mili tary exercises, attended reviews with his father, was enrolled in the imperial guard, and finally became commander of it. He was presented to the members of the diplomatic corps, and made ac quainted with government routine and court ceremonies. He is the only one of the princes living who has led an open air life,, mingled with the troops and the people, and taken an interest in public affairs, lie has had a training which his cousins have not. He possesses all the harsher traits of his father, and a culti vated intelligence which his father was wanting in. He is severe, reserved, firm, and determined, rough and imperious in manner, with a will of his own. He has lived in troublous times, lie knows well the men of the day, their value, and how far they are to he trusted, and he knows the perils to which the empire is exposed, and what efforts must be made to save it from ruin. If he becomes sultan he will not be a puppet in the hands of the min isters, lie is said to bear a strong hatred to Midhat Pasha, aud to others connected with the dethronement and death of his father. Were it not for the knowledge of thi3 fact, it is highly prob able that he would have already been proclaimed sultan. What hope there is left for the country in the character and personal qualities of the sultan is con centrated in Izzeddin. In the early part of this correspondence I predicted his elevation to the throne, and I still hold to the opinion that he is the coming man. Demagogues in Literature. As a great writer has truly said, "the writings by which one can live are not the writings by which they themselves live. To inluse into a book deep thought that will strain the attention of the reader; to defend unpopular opinions or open new veins of thought; to condense into a small space the reflections and researches of a life-time; to grapple with subjects that involve subtle distinctions or close and complicated reasoning, is a course plainly contrary to the pecuniary interest of an author. ... A skillful writer who looks only to the market, will speed ily perceive that the taste of the great majority of readers is an uncultivated one, and that if he desires to be popular he must labor deliberately to gratify it. If his talent take the form of books, he will expand his thoughts into many brilliaut, gaudy, and superficial volumes, rapidly written aud easily read; and, re membering that most men read only for amusement he will avoid any subject tnat can latigue attention or shock preju dices, and especially every form of pro- lound, minute, and laborious investiga tion. There are demagogues in literature as well a3 in politics. There is a degra dation of style springing from a thirst for popularity which is at least as bad as the pedantry of scholars; and a desire to conform to middle class prejudices may produce quite as real a servility as the patronage of aristocracies or of courts. . . Very few of those men whose genius has irradiated nations, and whose writings have become the eternal heritao-e of mankind, obtained for their works the income of a successful village doctor or provincial attorney. Lecky, The Later His tory of England. Men Living- in Trees. In his recent work of travels Around the World, Dr. Field made reference to a race of human beings, inhabit ants , of Malasia, who live in trees, roosting on the branches like the sloth, monkey and wild-cat. Captain Codman of this city has been to Malasia; but he has not seen any such men, and, unaware that others bad seen them notably 3Ir. Wallace in nis visit to the Malay archi pelago and that the fact was fully es tablished, he plumply denied the exist ence of such people. Quite a contro versy has since been carried on in the press on the subject; 8nd now Professor James D. Dana being applied to, sets the matter at rest. He says "there is no doubt in regard to the existence of the small degraded race in the Malay archipel ago, tneir living in trees, without fixed d wellings, their going naked, leading the uie ot a brute, and that of the most dis gusting kind." He himself saw one of them when at manilia in the Wilkes Ex ploring Expedition. Dr. S. Wells Wil liams, whe has lived more than forty years in Eastern Asia, also says that the French found such people in the interior f Cambodia, a full account of which is given in the Jievue des Deux Mondes. They lived in trees, to be out of the way of tigers and other wild beasts. Chris tian at Work. An Englishman was boasting to a Yankee that they had a book in the British Museum which was once owned by Cicero. "Oh, that ain't nothin" re torted the Yankee; "in the museum in Boston they've got the lead-pencil that Noah used to check off the animala that went into the ark.". In Front of Constantinople. A Constantinople letter thus describes the positions now occupied by the two armies near that city : The military positions of the Russians and Turks are admirably arranged for of fensive and defensive purposes. The Turkish line begins at Macrikeny, on the Sea of Marmora, stretches thence to the height of Daoue Pacha, in the rear of Constantinpole, and continuing to the Black Sea, not far from Buynkdere. The strongest part of the line is from Maslak, on the high road to the Black Sea. The entrenchments, forts and outworks along this part of the works are as strong as can well be made. They do the Turkish engineers great credit. .It would be difficult for the Russians to break through them in order to get possession of the Upper Bosphorus and control its navigation. The works in the immediate vicinity of the city are rather weak. The Russians occupy two paral lel lines, one from San Stefano, on the Sea of Marmora, to Bourgas, on the Black Sea, mounted with gnns of the heaviest calibre and pointed in the direc tion of the Turkish fortifications. About three miles and a half in the rear is an other line, beginning at the Tchekmedje lake, near the Marmora, and terminating at Azatli and the Black Sea. All the high ground near the line is covered with immense encampments of soldiers and war material. In case of an attack from the Turkish side, and a disaster to the first chain of fortifications, the Russians could fall back and rally behind the strong parallel lines in the rear. In case of an assault on their part against the Turkish position they would have a heavy reverse to sup port them in case of need of reinforce ments. If the Turks should be beaten they would have no support to fall back on, and would be obliged to surrender or escape to Asia. 'Looking to contingen cies, the Turks 'ave been bringing all their available force to Constantinople, until now they have at least 120,000 men in arms before and around the city. The Russians have 200,000. Both parties are ready for another trial of strength at any moment. Eskimo Dogs. The horrible savagery of these poor wretches can hardly be wondered at; they live in a country where there is hard ly a chance for tbem in any independent foraging expedition; they are half starved by their masters, being chiefly fed on frozen walrus bides in the winter, and allowed to shift for themselves in the summer when their services are not re quired, and are in so perennial and acute a state of hunger that they are ready at any time to eat their own harness if al lowed to do so. It is generally Btated that they are perfectly insensible to kind ness, and are only to be kept in order by a liberal application of the lash, or even a more formidable weapon ; for the Eski mo, if their dogs are refactory, do not scruple to beat them about the head with a hammer, or anything else of sufficient hardness which happens to be at hand. They will even beat the poor brutes in this manner until they are actually stunned. .Nothwithstanding the abso lute dependence of the Eskimo on their dogs, little or no care is taken ef them; they receive nothing in any degree ap proaching petting, aud spend all their time in the open air. The chief use of the Eskimo dog is to draw the sledges, which are the only possible conveyance in that frozen land.' In all the Artie ex peditions which have been sent out at various times, a good supply of sledge dogs has been one of the greatest desi derata, as without them it would be ab solutely impossible to proceed far. No other animal would answer the purpose, both horses and cattle being quite useless in journeys over ice and snow, amongst which the pack of light, active dogs, make their way with wonderful ease aud safety. CuniosmES op Earth. At the city of Medina, in Italy, and about four miles around it, wherever the earth is dug, when the workmen arrive at a distance of 63 feet, they come to a bed of chalk, which they bore with an auger, 5 feet deep. They then withdraw from the pit before the auger is removed, and upon its extraction the water bursts up through the aperture with great violence, and quickly fills the newly made well, which continues full and is affected neither by rains nor drought. But what is the most remarkable in this operation is the layers of earth as we descend. At the depth of 14 feet are found the ruins ef an ancient city, paved streets, houses, floors, and dif ferent pieces of mason work. Under this is found a soft, oozy earth, made up of vegetable, and at 26 feet large trees entire, such as walnut trees, with the walnuts still sticking to the stem, and the leaves and branches in a perfect state of preservation. At 28 feet deep a soft chalk is found, mixed with a vast quan tity of shells, and the bed is 11 feet thick. Under this vegetables are found again. A Remarkable Tramp. A young man, aged 19, who has been on the road for seven years, after, so he says, being turned out of his Philadelphia home for some trivial offense by his father, a de vout church member, has recently strayed into Maiden, Mass., and found a home with a charity inclined man. His story is a remarkable one. He has been in the South and West, and visited nearly every village and city in this State. Once he rode fifty miles on a Pullman palace car truck, and while tramping in Missouri on a bitter wintry night he was chased by wolves and only escaped by climbing to the top of a timber bridge and remain ing there till dawn. While sick and foot sore he visited an aunt at Decatur, 111., but was turned away from her door, and when he could travel no longer, he dug a hole in the snow-bank and remained there over night. With all hia roving ex perience he does not drink, smoke or chew. . There are pastures in Western Texas two hundred miles in length. Hi 1 1 J?