Mpmucan. nn nnim D E TO TED TO THE POLITICAL AND .GENERAL INTERESTS OP THE PEOPLE. VOL. II. EUGENE CITY, OKEGOjN MARCH 28, 186& NO. 11, STA IN I) 0 THE STATE REPUBLICAN. Published everr Saturday Of j. NEWTON GALE. Terms of SubicriptKm. Th. Rsroaucas will b.pnUtisheii at i SO a year in ad Vance ; ) 00 it' paid at'th. cud of six months ; or -l 00 St th close fcf tho year. Oue dollar additional will be oared far each .your payment i neglected. t y- paper discoutiaued uuul all arrearage, ar. 'paid, except at our option. Rate, of Advertising. On. square (ten line, or leu) on. montU, .Kach additional insertion, , -"Business Cards, one square or less, one year, " " " six months. Four squares aud upwards, one yea, pu wiuam ' six nioutba, perequare, " three months, " 'IdminUtrator's Notices, and all advertisements re lating to estates of deceased persons, which hare to be sworu to, one square, lour insertions, 3 00 60 13 00 8 0O 10 OO T 00 6 00 S 00 "To Advxrtissrs. Business men throughout Oregon and California will tind it greatly to their advautuge to aaver Ue in the Stats Kkpcbmcax. The Law ol Newspaper.. . Subscribers who do not give express notice to tho contrary, ar. considered as wishing to continue their sub scriptions. . 'i If subscribers order the discontinuance or their pa mpers, the publisher may continue 10 senu mem uu an ar rearages are paid. , t. If subscribers neglect or refuse to t,aVe their papers 'from the office tb which thevttr'e directed they "are held 'responsible till they have settled the bill and ordered the 'paper discontinued. . . . If subscribers remove to other places without 'in forming the publisher, and the paper is sent to the for mer direction, they are held responsible. 5. The coHrU have decided that refusing to take a paper from the office, or removing and leaving it uncalled for, is prima tacia evidence of intentional fraud. TO I.A ROSE (SALE. a tribute from a emend. Eternal progress Angels sny Mankind inherits as a right j Mother Earth, Father Ood is might. And ull Ilis creatitas must obey. Reason is Nature's brightest star, Omnipotence no more could give; Sin must perish 'that man may live Eternal. None this plan can mar. 'Goodness Supreme! child, adult, all Abm'e, progressively shall dwell, X'fke angel bands their praises tell, lEnchautingly to earth they call. Emms, thou loved one, thy spirit hath fled To the land of supmer's sweet bloom j AVe mourn not for thee, no, Oio art not dead, OKit will hasten back to us soon. Tis true our hearts are oft lonely and sad, For thy innocent prattle and glee, " " ilorn. noou and night fails to make our hearts glad. Nor thy sweet smiling face do we see. Yet we're sure thou art smiling the same, And with angels chanting thy song ; And Emma dearest Uose-Bcd, -still is thy name. Thou didst to the angel belong. Blest dispensation of Reason and light, 'That spiritually opens our eyes, And brings our loved ones back from night, From the far olt' Celestial skies. No more, beloved on. will father be sad, Or grief dim thy fond mother's eye. Returning thou'lt surely make rar hearts glad, And attract us home to the sky. (From the National (Knglish) Reformer. English Help to the Blare Power. We are compelled to confess with s wow,, in dignation and shame, that the infamous Slave Tower of America derives mucli ot us neip ana tiearlv all of its encouragement from England -and Englishmen alone. Nowhere else in Europe are the same sentiments so loadly expressed or the soma sympathies so unmistakably shown. In France the Emperor stands almost isolated in favor of the South ; in Russia even the officials are the friends of the North. The people which declares in its pride tlmt it stands first among the flee, is the people that extends the best aid to the most revolting despotism the world has -ever seen. It is quite impossible to account for, -as it is quite impossibble to understand, this most remarkable and deploruble perversion of feeling. It is a perversion so gross as almost to obliterate the memory and cancel the obligations which England's former efforts on behall of the slave ihave left to her honor and created to her credit. We have reache d, however, we hope, the climax of our mistortune aud our shame. The honest sentiments of our country men will soon rise above the delusions to which so many of them have been subjected. The friends of the slave power have always declined the public preference of its claims; they have been content to influence the public mind by the propagation of falsehoods through the press. Whenever they have ap peared on a free platform they have been signal ly defeated. They have indeed made an attempt .to aid the South by associative effort ; but the Attempt was made in a private drawing room, before an audience of forty people, by man who had such a reasonable dread of discussion that he not only prohibited opposition, but in voked the aid of the police to prevent it. The demoralized tone of a certain portion'jf tho press on this question has given rise to the suggestion that some underhand Agency must be at wore to -corrupt it. Whether that is so or not, it is cer tain that the depravity of tone is so gross and remarkable that surmises of the kind we have mentioned lose tlmt extravagance which in other matters would inevitably attach to them. If the aristocratic press alone look p:irt in this effort ol' delusion, tin. re would l.o much to humiliate lint less to surprise, lint the bit t rue of the an tocratic journals in this -jish is even surusst-d by that of their contemporaries ho nre liber il .. f. .-. . . . . Ti lexsion. ooiue oi uiose tin not long .nice were earnest in their denunciation if slavery. who, moreover, saw in the adventure of old Johu Uro n the beginning of the inevitable overthrow j of that organized atrocity, are now tho nndis guised friends of the very power that is seeking to perpetuate it in time and extend it in dimon sions. 'Is there not in all this suflkicnt reason 'to give rise to the discreditable rumors of cor ruption to which we have alluded It this sym pathy for the slave power were a question of mere sentiment, there would still be enough to cover our countrymen with confusion ; but un fortunately it is a question -of deliberate aid and encouragement to the South of aid which pro vides tho means and of encouragement which evokes the spirit to continue a contest which is eotidoinned even by its abettors. By disguising the real 'htsne of the war tmj denying the sincerity of the North in pursuing them, the pre, of England fosters a false senti ment in favor of tho slave power. Men are thus bro: ght to dispute tho existence of any moral obligations in regard to a conflict which they are told has nothing moral about if. They therefore, pursue, not only without approbi'ium, but actu ally with a certain degree of praise, those coin mercial efforts on behalf of the South which have justly provoked the anger of tho whole Northern people. An English port has been employed as a regular rendezvous of English vessels purpos ly despatched to break tho blockade. English rifles ot last year's make, "with the mark of her Majesty undbliterated," havo been carried by Engrish steamers to the blockaded ports o'f the: South. So extensive 'has been this traffic in arms arms whieh'could'only have been extracted from our-arsenals by theft orsupplied'from them by treachery that "a Northern General," says Professor Newman, "has penned the distinct avowal thai, had not English swift steamers, assembled at the English port of Nassau, carried in arms to the South, the war must ere now have terminated for want of weapons in the hands of the relief." English ships have been buiit and the English flag has been employed to carry on a piratical adventure ou behalf of slavery. The Alabama, which has even surpassed the 'Summer in the number and the enormity of lier crimes, is to ad intents mid purpose an 'Eii'dis shin. She has nev -r eitrled, never even endeavored to enter a Confederal!' p'frt. ?h. was limit in Eugiiii.d ; she is said to lie manned by English sailors, and ifrtaii-l'y carries tin- English ensign to cover her depredations. It was as an insult to the 'E z'.UU fi ig thai the conduct of Captain Wilkes whs resented, lint what greater jnsiili Could be offered to the fl igof England that thai ol eiiiploviiii; il lo covi-r the raids of a sea roll her? llie Lug isli II ig is thus used to aid th cause ol slavery, an long as that niMilt is not avenged, it is impossible to boast of the honor ol the English flag or the pride of the Eng'ish name. lint (hat insult is 'not only not resented, it is not even condemned. Neither fhu litntsl "CowWrrrice I llie ly iiitain, nor tile tieacili ry or Ha! menus he makes use of, excites the auger of the pcopli ir provokes Iho protest of tho 'Government. llii A'nn una, carrying tho colors 'of England, woopi down on tho unarmed vessels of Auieri can commerce, iho captured vessel is first rob- lied and then burned. The burning ship, always a sign ot distress at sea, is Used Ty the Alabama ns it decoy, Tho ship that comes to succor the distressed fills another prey into tho maw of the marauder. Jt is only ou vessels from which re sistance 'is not to be expected, that the Alabama ventures an attack. Siie takes c ire to avoid all those seas where a Federal ship of war is likely to be met with. Sh displays her prowes with the suddvtrtiess of a garoter, the treachery of u Malay, and the cowardice of a robber of women. She avoids the strong and tho capable, only to assail the weak and detenceless. Aud this au dacity is called daring, aud this cowardice courage because it is employed on behalf of a power which is at once without an equal in crime or n companion in cruelly. It was to commit these depredations that the Alabama was built, fitted out, and despatched by English hands. It was to take up the same business of piratical ndven tu re that other ships are said to be now bitilJiug. English capitalists lend their money and English traders advance their skill to build up in the West a monstrous and malignant slave empire. The help we give to slavery is more effectual than the help we have ever given to freedom. No English ship builder ever built, and no Eng lish capitalists ever encouraged him to build, a single vessel to help tho redemtion of Italy. These things, it is true, are done for the most part in Liverpool, where, owing to a long con nection with the slave trufttc and a close connec tion with the slave institution, the slavo senti meut is strongest. Ui.t they nevertheless dis honor the hole country, and bring down upon it the world's npprobriuin. And they aro done with greater readiness and carried out with greater alacrity because of the approval extend ed to them on the one hand by the declarations of the press, and on tho other by tho disgraceful inaction of the Government. The country is, of course, only indirectly com promised by the action or individuals ; but it is no less diroctty than dangerously compromised when members of the Government throw over the cause of the South the shield of approval. Mr. Gladstone did so at Newcastle more dis tinctly than any other of his colleagues has done; and though ho now, in a letter to Professor New man, denies that he ever expressed any sympa thy for the Southern cause, he yet so far forgot the words he has uttered as to speak of the efforts of the North as a " hopeless and destructive en t!rpris." It the cause of tho North merits thesf epithets, that of the South must merit the opposite ones j and so Mr. Gladstone has just m otlu-r words repeated that expression ot'svm luilhy which he writes to deny ever having used. Hat if the causp of the North it ' hopeless," it is Enulish gold that has h Iped to in ike it so Mr. G adstone, however, i right i.i his other epithet, though in ad-ffereiit 4'iis to the one he intended. The cause of the North i detruct ivs ;" but it is destructive to the most iniquitous sud revnltinir system evr craned hv men. Is it on that nccouut that Mr. Gladstone condemns Couldn't bk Ciikatkd. A dealer advertised jtj .eye glasses, by the aid of which a person could But Mr. Gladstone is not alone h his hatred easil r,eaJ tho finest print. A well dressed of tho free North. The whole Government u nian called at tho counter ono day to be filled tainted by the same deplorable hostility. .t ia ! to a pair of spectacles. Ashe remarked that notpossibloothert'iso toacC6untfJ'rtho"reiriiss.t'cll,,dneve'' wor" a,0r 8on,10 we handed to ness of its behavior in the matter of the ships at l,lln tllftt ;"g'id very little. He looked hard Liverpool. It allowed tho Alabama to escape, I through them on tho book set before In in, but though it had received the Complaint of the Amer dt'cla,'tid ho 001,1 J ",ako out notl"ng- Another iMntoi.,il n.,rl ti, n,i;i ,,f ,.,.,: U'ltir f stronger power were saddled upon his ing from its own law officers a declaration of illegality. Laws, we know, can be stretched or tightened at the will of those who are appointed to execute them. That they are stretched in this caso is apparent to all who remember 'tho case of Halt s roeiu'ts. Those Tuckets were being made to aid in tho liberation of Hungary ; they were therefore seized. . , The Alabama was being built to resist tho liberation of the slave-; sho was thereforo allowed to escape. There could bo no more evidence of illegality in the case of the rockets than in the case of the Alabama. Why, then, if the Government pretends to fairly exe cute the law, does it do in one caso what -it does not do in another ? This vat'iod action on its part admits of but ono interpretation that the Government now in ofliee is moro friendly to Austria bent on subduing Hungary, than it is to America determined to free the slave. It is natural to forgive lax execution of the law when moral considerations intervene. But in tho two cases mentioned all tho morality was, on the ono hand, on the side of 'the rockets, and on the other, on the side of law-; for it is m monstrous perversion of facts and malignant misinterpreta tion of events that the cause of tho North is any longer deprived of the prestigo of freedom and progress. There is, however, an opportunity iifl'orded the 'Government uow to redeem tho credit of tho country. Nine ships are building at Liverpool this moment such is tho common report, undisguised and tin denied" for the pur pose ;ot following tho criminal career of the Al abama. It tho (jroveriuiieut has any real friend ship lor America, any real sympathy for the honor of our country, it will take steps to pro- ei.t iho escape if these monstrous ntiuradersof ilio sea. It It does, it will help to re-establish die tViendlv relations of England wild her off spring. If it does not, it will jrtstify the rising animosity if tho iNortli towards us. This animosity wo might afford to despise ought, indeed, to despise if the cause which gave rise to it was approved of by our conscien ees or sanctioned l.y morality. Unless, however tho argument of those divines who seek a sanc tion tor slavery m religion is a righteous one, our efforts on behalf of the South can never be moral in themsuives or approved of by tho con science of our country. These efforts can have Iml onu ol jeet, and il successful but one end tlx ..TOnitieli t establishment in tho world of an empire based for the first timo ou slavery alone. is this uu object winch English, net), proud of their freedom aiul of their love of it, ought to cherish? Wo wiio havo welcomed Kossuth, who have sheltered Worcoll, who have applauded (iara La'i'i we who have sympathised with every eilbr; however desparat.;, over every victory small, ou behalf of human freedom shall we of all the peoples in the world rte the means of re uniting thek broken chains of the slavo 1 In the name of tho honor of our country, in tho name of the happiness of tho world, let our countryman protest against the crimu and the treason of English help to Slavery Negro Testimony. It seems, so far as we can learn, that the prin cipal objection to negro testimony, is the danger of making the negro equal to a white man. The people ot tho East, both in slave as well as free States, have not been afraid of such equality, and have only looked upon the privilege as an act of justice. A negro will not be thought any more of because his testimony is allowed in Court s neither will he be any nearer a white man in condition or color. A Court, or a jury can decide on the truthfulness of a negro's tisti mony, as well as that of a white, man, and admit or exclude. The watch dog's bark is evidence that burglars may be about, aud if the dog had human reason, many rascals would be brought to justice, so it is with the negro, who not only gains n position that will protect himself, but will prove a cheek, to some extent, where guil ty criminals have evaded the law and continued thoir outrages upon peaceable citizens. The ne gro should have some recourse for wrongs com mitted on him by white men, which is the main object of admission of his testimony. We be lieve every person, of uny color, is entitled to justice and when the negro who has industriously tolled for a pittance, becomes dispossessed by a whito villain, it is not humanity to deny the ne gro justice, for want of white evidence. As the negro is obliged to pay tuxes the same as white persons, the law should protect him in his right to preserve and recover property. We do not look upon this ns a political measure, but as an act of justice. Such laws in nearly all tho East ern States were adopted by Democratic Legis latures, and never were regarded as political issues by any party. We have no idea that white men will descend to the level of the African either in intellect or energy, by thu admission of such testimony in courts ot justice, and we think a man is of very little account, any how, who believes that a negro can crowd him nut of the good opinion of white men. If tho democrats can reason favorably against the example set by tho an uuren Democracy ol Acw lork, and other States, iu reference to this subject, we have no doubt that tho next Leirn'aturj will repeal (ho bill, and the dam ige t!f cted will not be soje,t i brother's love ; the dearest a man's love; enormous ns to ruin tho country. Political rap. nnj tno geetest, longest, strongest and dearest it'll Itinar lit. .iii... iii aiiiiii. U!1V nlul tfc-M h iVH I I . - ,.f l.....n yet to see any mcususre enacted by thu present Slate and National Administrations suitable to several Democratic newspapers of the country, Yrtl-ii Jonrnil. I nosi. but unsiiiH'assiii I v as before. frurthnV tri uls were made, 'until at length the almost dis cocraged dealer passod him a pair which magni lied more than all tho rest in his stock. The cus totner, 'quite as impatient as the merchant at having to try so many, put on the last pair and glowered through them at the printed pago with nil riis might. ' "Can you read that printing now 1 " inquired tho dealer, pretty certain that he had hit it right this time, ut any rate. "Sure, not a bit," was (ha reply. "Can you Tead at all ? " said tho merchant, unablo to conceal his vexation any longer. "Kadeat all, is it ?" cried tho customer. "There's not a singla word among them that 1 can identify tho features uv." " I say do you know how to read J " exclaim ed the dealer, impatiently. " Uut wid ye ! " shouted tho Irishman, throw ing down tho spectacles in a huff " If I could rade, what 'ud 1 bo afther buyin' a pair of spec tacles for ? Ye chato tho paple wid tho idea that yer glasses 'ud help 'em rado print aisy ; but it, as big lio, it is ! Ah, ye blackguard, ye thought I'd buy 'em without tryin 'em !' The Ccmmos Law os Surnames England. Great consternation fell ou tho snobs of Great Britain, not long ago, through a butcher named Smith, or something like that, determining to call himself Norfolk Howard. Tha Butcher as serted his right, by tho law of England, to change his surname whenever ho pleased, and to take any surname that pleased his ear. Presently ix Mr. Jones, a Welchmarf, determined to uso tho same privilege, and began to write himself Her bert a prettier natrio than Jones. Now Mr. Jones Herbert was not a butcher, but a gentle man of property ; so it was determined to make an example ot mm. lord IJanovcr-, in nis ca pacity as Lord Lieutenant of Monmonfhsliire, re. fused to call Mr. Jones any thing but Jones. Thereupon ensued much bitterness-and gtnshlng of teeth. The snobs declared that a man must not change his name without act of Parliament; the Joneses laughed and signed themselves Her bert, without saying a word to Parliament or Herald s College. Ono result of the controversy is the publication of a pamphlet on the rules of Lnglish law atlccting the change of surnames by uu able lawyer. From this wo learn that, according to all law aud precedent in England, "A man may assume what name and as many as he pleases," "and that the law recognizes the new name when assumed publicly and bona IJiJc." Lastly "that when any person has legal ly assumed a name by his own act, it is compul sory on courts of law to recognize the legal act." A coustTHY boy who had road ofsuilors lieav ing up anchors, wanted to know if it was sea sickness that made them do it. A Fat Girl. A fat girl has just turned up, in the person ofMiss liosina Delight Hiclnird son, of East Alsteadt N. II. Miss Uosim is nine teen years of age, five foot throo inches in hight, measuring five feet three and a quarter inches round the waist, and two feet ten inches in a strait line across the shoulders. Her weight is 478 pounds. For a full rigged dress on a Win ter's day sho requires 200 yards of three quar ters yard wide cloth. Two ladies, while Gen. MoClollan was at din ner at the Massasoit House, on his roccnt pas sage through this city, robbed a military cap which they supposed to bo tho General s, of both its buttons, tearing them out ruthlessly, to be preserved as mementoes, lhe inortilication of their foelings, and the redness of their faces can be imagined, when one ol the aids put on the mutilated cap, and tho dener.il put on his own, Which was intact. 1 hose buttons haven t been preserved, but tho story has, and is told oftener than two ltdies wish to hear it. Spring. field Republican. Going tub wrono Way. With many people this is synonymous with going a dfferent road to church. Not so much so now as in the past, w here heaven lay on one sido of tho church door and a world of torment on the other. Now men look through more liberal spectacles ; and that a good man chooses to worship his maker afler a form different from ours, does not neces sarily imply that he is to be excluded from futuro world of blessedness. How strange it would seem, in this day to meet with some Christians of that old way of thinking I We say "Christians," because, narrow as were their creeds, judged by their good deed, they were such. To meet such now seems liks closing tho shutters at glorious noonday to blink by tho one old tallow candle. And yet we listen to them kindly and forbcaringly, becauso they don't know if, their hearts are larger than their creeds; and because shortly, by heaven's own light, they will look back wondering upon the myriads of their fellow-beings whom they fudged not as Godjudgeth. Fasny Fkbx. Love. A young laly a sensible girl gives the f llowiiig cutiiloU'i of the dfferent kinds of love i " Th i sw,si.t t a mo.her's love ; the long There is no readier way for man t bring his own worth into question, than by et;d .savoring to detr.vt from tho worth of o'hrr non. A word about dress One of the greatest rrristukes 1n out dress Is the very thin covering of dur aVfns and legs. No physiologist can doubt that the extremities require as much covering as the body. A fruit, ful source of disease ; of congestion Iii the head, chest, and obdonten, is found in the nakedness of the arms and legs, which piovetrt a fair distribution of the blood. A young lady has jast asked what she can do for her very thiu arms. she says sho is ashamed ot them. 1 felt of them through tha thin lace covering, and fotrrtd them freezing cold. i iiskbu ncr wnat sno supposed would make moscles grow ? Exercise, she replied. Certain, ly, but exercise makes them grow only by giving them more blood. Six months of vigorous x erciso would do loss to give those naked, cold arms circulation, than would a single month were they warmly .clad. Tho valuo of ecTcise depends upon tho tern peratature of the muscles. A cold gymifarfium is unprofitable. Its temperature should be be tween sixty and soventy, or tho limbs should be warmly clothed. I know that our servant eirU 'and blacksmiths, by constant and vigorous ex. ercise, acquire luige, fine arms, in spite of their nakedness. And if young ladies will labor as hard from morning till night as do these useful classes, they may havo as lino orms ; but even then it is doubtful if they would get rid of their congestions in tho head, luncs and stomach. without mere dross upon their arms and legs. Perfect health depends pon perfect circula tion. Every living thing that has the latter has the former. Put your hand under your dross upon your body. Now put your hand urfon.your arm. It yon Arid tho body is warm er than tho arm, you havo lost the equilibrium of circulation. Tho head has to much blood-, producing heuduche or a sense of fullness : or the chest has to much blood, producing cough rap pid breathing, pain in tho side, or palpitation of tho heart ; or tho stomach has to much blood, pro ducing rtidigestion ; or tho liver has to much blood producing some disturbance ; or the bow els have to much blood, producing constipation or diarrhoea. Any or all of these difficulties are temporarily reliovcd by tho immersion of the feet or hands in hot Water, and they are perron, nently relieved by snch dress and exercise of the extremities as will make the perfect circtriation permanent. Again 1 say 'tho extremities rcqhiro as 'much clothing ns tho body. Women should dress thoir arms and legs with ono or two thicknesses of knit wollcn garments which fit thorn. Tho ab surdity ot loose flowing rleeves and wide-spread skins, I will not discuss. Do you osk why the arms and legs rnay not become accustomed to exposure like tho flico 1 I answer, God has provided the face With an im meso circulation, becauso it must be exposed. A distinguished physician of Paris, just before his death affirmed, " I believe that during the twenty-six years I havo practised my profession in this city, twenty thousand children have been borne to the cemeteries, a sacrifico to tho absurd custom of 'naked arms." When in 'Harvard, many years ago, I heard tho distinguished Dr. J. C. Warren say, "Uoston sacrifices five hun drcd babies every year, by not 'clothing their arms." Those little arms should have thick knit, warm wollen alcoves, extending from the shoul der to the hand. Dio Lewit, M. D. Last wohtm or tub Patriot Clay. In liis speech on the Compromise in 1850, tho last of his publlo efforts, the great Clay, while depre. eating and describing the terrible evils which Ha confidently prcdictod would follow, referred to the project then talked of by ultra Southerners of establishing a Southern Confederacy to own the Balize and conrol the mouth of the Missis sippi,, and expressed his views in the follwing energetic terms. In giving the quotation the Louisvillo Journal, in an article pointing out the utter impracticability of separating the mouth of the Mississippi from the West, Introduced it with theso remarks : And here let us mark what tho imthortal Clay, the best practical statesman that this Country ever produced, said in the last great effort of hie life, his speech on tho measures o'f compromise, delvcred in tho Senate on the 22d of July, 1850 1 " If this Union shall become separated, new Unions, new confederacies, will rise. And with respect to this, if there bo any I hope there is no one in the Senate before whoso imagination is flitting tho idea of a great Southern Confeder acy, to take possession of the Balize and tho mouth of the Mississippi, I say in my place, never I never ! nkvkr will we who occupy the broad waters of the Mississippi and its upper tributaries consent that any foreign flag shall float at the IJalize or upon tho turrets of the Crescent City never never I The above eloquent declaration of Henry Clay the Journal indorses In tho following forcible sentences : The high and deep resolve, thus forcibly ex. pressed by thu great modern statesman, unsur passed by any of the ancient times, should sink deep Into every heart. It has sunk into every heart. And it will be excented, in defiance, if need be, of the terrors and horrors of myriad wars. Short and Swext. The Newbury port Iter aid says the 1 resident s Proclamation has done at once, what the Gospel lias failed to do in eighteen hundred years or more. ntaxt asxino ror a DivorcI. Harriet A. McLaughlin, of Chicago, asks for a divorce front Henry H. her hnsbanand. She is only eleven years old, and has beon married for a tingle month. Raihiso tiii Prick. The San Fraucisco Calf and Evening Journal bit papers have raised the pri to fifteen cents per wceVi