h P Fubtr i.ii...'i,,WtMMUW "" OB VOLOIE vi. The reason why tlie Portland sorehead clique, the chief of which was Deady, J., were so bitterly op posed to the confirmation of Will iams as Chief Justice, is now ex plained in the fact, that Deady was a candidate tor the posisli himself! Nobody ever thought of Deady in conned ion with the office; but I )eady is an ambitious boy, parts his hair in theniiddle,and wasfully prepared to swa'hnv the plum. The peace of Europe is again threatened. The renewal of war between France and Germany is only a question Ot tune. 1 he Church question foreshadows blood. France long ago took upon herself the championship of the Pope, and Germany is making war upon papal claims. The feeling in Germany is antagonistic to the authority of the Cltramontanes, or those who ad here to and support tiie claims of the Roman Church proper, while the foe'ing in France is directly op t isite to this. Therefore is it that the French Pishops have issued many pastoral letters containing sentiments of extreme hostility to Germany. Germany complajnt of this, insisting that France, through her Pishops, shall not interfere in the controversy now waging be tween that Empire and Home, but attend to her own business. Ger man papers say that 'if the moral influence of France shall continue to be exerted against Germany in favor ot Pome, the peace, of Europe will lie compromised. In Ohio the women have taken the qaestionof teropereticor intem perance in t heir own hands, and bid fair, for a time at least, to almost eradicate, the evils growing out of the selling of liquor from saloons. They have organized prayer meetings in the saloons, on the side walk, and patrols are kept up through all kinds of weather. The ladies ofvGreemield have inaugura ted evening visits to Saloons, at any hour from C to 10 o'clock, and when they appear saloons are soon emptied by rear doors. At New llollard 25 ladies have volunteered for the crusade, and they vi.-it each saloon daily. At Washington, .Fayette county, where the move ment was inaugurated, the liquor traffic has been entirely suspended. At Callepolis, Gaillia county, the ladies brigade of active workers number ninety-one. In "Inajoiity of the counties their success is marked. The "no-fence." law has passed ' the California Legislature. Cattle j owners will now be compelled to I I ' i.vu.c, i that ,,, euemg wHi be required .or ; grain tie.iK ; TheDe Young brothers, of thei San Francisco Chronicle, have boon naving a row w.tn apntaiy j Fitzgerald, ot'the Sun. l. parties: are under bonds. j"iidge Bennett, in Brooklyn, N. T., on the 4th, held Vauderworkcn, Hawley and Sanborn to ball in $15,000 eath, for alleged frauds up oo toe Revenue Departmeut. From the correspondent of the Portland BuHi-thi the astounding fact reaches us that Hon. M. P. Deady, Judge, was an aspirant for the Chief Justiceship. The corres pondent asserts thai Deady wrote a letter to a friend in Washington, enclosing several nice, photographs of himself, requesting said friend to present the letter and one of the photographs to President Grant, in case Williams was withdrawn or rejected, with the suggestion that the writer ol the letter and the sub ject of the "picter" was the "most ' suitable man in the world to lie appointed Thief Justice!" And yet, although Williams' name was withdrawn and the letter and "pic ter" of Deady presented to Grant, poor Deady failed to get a. nom ination probably a thought of him in that direction never entered the President's head. Poor old Deady! Chopfallen Judge! Cha grined Deady, J.! This stroke of genius on the part ot the Judge ought to have met with some sort of response. His great talents legal acumen his excellence at "sell out" tor the beer, or "pool" for the cigars, all, all demanded, and more, that he should have liecn spared the mortification, after seek ing the seconil office in the Govern ment, in so unique and stytl'p a man ner as he did, of receiving no at tention whatever! It is an unblush ing outrage on the Deac y family on the escutcheon of the of the well, of Deady himself, as well as the read-headed representative ot the Judicial Chair of the V. S. Dis trict Court for Oregon. The Judge no more parts his fiery locks in the middle he hates curling irons the s.nell ot bears grease turns his "stom- mik," -m fact he's altogether an al tered man sjneethisgreat disappoint ment. Ah ! what a tcrril!e sinner is Grant, and how will he ever answer for this last unheard of as. sumption of power! And yet the people of Oregon are not thrown mio convulsions, auu no noi uncut .. . .. n ...,-,.,., i Deadly for Chief Justice, ah ! ' I From the latest election returns j from England, it would seem that j the Conservatives were getting Hie ! "under holts." POLITICAL NEWN. Fx-Governor James II. Harvey ! has been elected Senator from Kan- sas. One dispatch claims '.his as a J straight out Pepublican victory, while another claims him as a lie former of the RdbtH order. Thff Democratic State Conven . I tion of Connecticut, on the 8d, ! ;m,iJ,r ,nm;.iJ 1 1, t;Pn I llllllllll,'U.II1 I. il.illll,.,, II ,1. VIHII. ... , ,t. iom at fy ; i tIl0 3() electe(1 H LAimce (color. Lr s for the long term, aild 1L R v laU) Slll)eri,ltend. ... c i.;dU(.ot,;., fr the short term. Both are Ilepublicans. James B. Groom was elected Cuveruor uf Maryland, by the Leg islature, to till out the unexpired term of Pinkney, who was elected U. S. Senator, on the 4th instant. ALBANY, OREGON, FEBRUARY tiiaCTW-wr.-jgBiraiu.uuuijMuiare Senator Mitchell is not in favor of the proposition of the annexa tion of Walla Walla county, W, T.. to Oregon. Sheep husbandry in Australia has grown to be a big thing. She annually exports 100,000,000 pounds ot wool. CURRENT NEWS. The body of an unknown man was found in Rogue river on the 4th. It is supposed to be the body of a German named Speidell, who mysteriously disappeared from Jack sonville in September last. On the 5th, a German named Herman Windleinan suicided, at Genoa, Nevada. He was worth 1820,000. lie leaves a little girl less than two years old. lie hung himself in his own barn. The recent eleetkv s in England have witnessed riots in almost every borough. Ii the accounts are true, the United States never witnessed such scenes. The Cubans are in a tight place and need men and money to carry on the war, and the insurgents are correspondingly liappy. The seventh annual session of the National Grange met in St. Louis, Mo., on the 4th meetings entirely secret. On the 4th, the residence of Isaac Whareot', at Guilford, Majue, btuu ed. Whereof, wife and boy, were burned with the dwelling. Boston wool market quotes Ohio and Pennsylvania extra and double extra fleeces at 53($56o; treble ex tra and picked, G0(It;Mc. Michigan fleeces, 5162c, California wool ranges from 2-'c to 35c $ lb. for Fall and Spring. Prof. Anderson, the great Wiz ard, is dead. The relations between France and Germany are again in an un- satisfactory state. , difficulty between the miners , Valley, Utah, at a band of Navajo Indians, resulted in three i of the latter being wiped out. ,a t. At, . , , , On the 4th a snow-storm had h,, ragiMg at u,,reka, Nevada, for thirty-sLv hours with no signs of abatement. The President has intimated that he will nominate James Coey for postmaster of San Francisco, on the expiration of Stone's term of .otfice. The strike on the New York, Oswego &. Midland railroad, for. seveial months' back pay, continues. A locomotive and tender, with mails only, is allowed to pass over the road. The strikers have burned wo water tames, ami tnre.iten to burn bridges. The Sheriff is out ..1 l.i . Wltl a XSSe. but IS powerless to act i against so large a body of men. j,-jve iu,iclred men are thrown out of employment by the burning . "I of the Memphis & Louisville rail- road machine shops. Joss $130,-! f . 000. On the night ot the 2d all the , a churches of Hamilton were set on tiw and thi Catholic church almnst. j i e .u c j- I ruined before tne nre was discover. I ed. The incendiary also attempted J 1 I to bum the office of Wm. Kourke, lumber merchant 7, 1874. - NO. 22. ;i,its. The Bible mentions, several races of giants, lis the Rcphaim. Ainakim. Eluim, Zonznnims anil others, 1V f'me historians alo mention giants; they gave seven feet of height to Her cules, theii first hero, and in onrdavs we have seen men eisrht feet, hisrli. The giant who wn shown in Rouen In 17:15 measured eight feet, some inch is. Tiie Kuiperor Maximin. was of that size; Kkenkius and Phderu. physicians of the last century, saw seveial ofthat stature; and Goroplus saw a girl who was ten feet high. The body of Oeesfes, according to the Greeks, was eleven feet and a-lialf; ami the giimt Galhnrm brought frmi Arabia to I tome under Claudius Ocar. was near ten feet; and the bones of Seenndilla and I'llio. keepers uf the gardens of Ballast, were but six inches shorter. Fnnnotn, a Scotchman, who lived In ihe time of Eugene iie Second, King of Scotland, measured eh-ven feet and a hall; and Jacob le Maire. in hi- voyage to the Strait of Magel lan, reports that on the 17th of Dec, 1615, they found at Port Desire sev eral graves covered with stones; and having the curiosity to remove the stofre?, they discovered human skele tons of ten ftfld eleven feet long. The Chevalier Scnrv, in Jhis voyage to the I'eak of TeiierlfVe, says that they found in a sepulchral cavern of .that mountain the head of a Gauiiulie, whlcji had eighty teeth, and the 1 ody was not iess than ten feet long.. The giant Ferragu. slain by Orlan do, nephew of Charlemagne, was eighteen feet high. Rioland. a celebrated anatomist who wrote in M14. says that, some years before, there was to be seen in the Miliums oi rw. Germain me toiun oi i.n n.UU iaUiccitiw icui,,t usri mgn. In Itnuen, in 1509, in digging in the liiiclie near the Dominican, they found a stone tomb containing a skel eton, whose skull held a bushel of corn, and whose shin-bone reached up to the girdle of the tallest man there, being about four feet long, and consequently the body must have been seventeen or eighteen feet high, 'pontile tomb was a plate of copper, whereon was en graved: "In (hi tomb lie the noble and puissant lord the Chevalier Eicon de Valieiuont, and hi bone." Pl iteru. a famous physician, de clares that he saw at Lucerne the true human hone of a subject that nftist have beVtl at leat nineteen feet high. Valence in Daupheuo boast of pos sessing the bone of the giant Uncart, tyrant of the Vivarals, who was lain by an arrow by the Count de Cablllou, bis vassal. The Dominicans had a part, ot the shin-bone, with the articu lation of the knee, and hi figure painted in fresco, with an inscription showing that this giant wa twenty two feet and a half high, and that hi holies were found In .1705, m ar the bank of the Motile 11. a little river at the foot of the mountain of Criissol, iiiiiin which I i-ndition silfo. the (riant dwelt. January nth, lul.s, some masons digging near the ruins of a castle in Daiuihhie, In a field, which tradition had long been tailed the Giant's Field, at the depth of eighteen feet, discov ered a brick tomb thirty feet long, and twelve feet wide, and eight feet high, on which was a t'rav stone, witli the words Theiitobochn ilex cut thereon. When the tomb was opened they found a human skeleton entire twen ty five feet long, ten feet wide aero the shoulders, and five feet deep trom the breast bone to the back. His teeth were about the size of an Ox's toot, and his shin-bone measured over four feet. Near Mezarino. in Sscllr, In 181(1, was found a giant thirty feet high; hi head was tne size of a hogshead, and each of his teeth weighed five ounces. Near Palermo, in the valley of Ma- zain, in Sicily, a skeleton ot a giant I tniriy ieeciong was lomuimiiie year 1"4S," and another of thirtv-three 'feet long in 1550; and many curious per mi have n..-ve.l several of the..' Skus near their chv two famous skeletons, one of thlrtv-tour, ami the other of tlurtv-ix feet high, At Totu. in Bohemia. 75s?. was r,,ml 11 skeleton, the head of which could scarce be encomiiassed by the anus of two men together, and whose ' W still keep in thecjistle nt that elfv WRm tlleiUvrfl V feet fl length. The skull of a giant found m .Mace- douia. September. K!H, held 200 polII)ds of com. The celebrated Sir Hans Sloame. ...kL., .....1 n,l,tK.,u.t. I.......... 1 I.. does not doubt these facts, but thinks the bones were those of ehjpbants, whales or other enormous animals. Elephants' hones m:iy be. shown for tho-'e of giant, but they can never Im pose on connoisseur, Whales, which by their immen-e bulk are more proper to be substituted for the Ihrger giants, have neither arms nor lcg; and the head of that animal ha not the leat reeiiihlance to that of a man. If it be true, therefore, (hat a groat number of the gigantic bone which we have mentioned have, been seen by anatomists, and have by them been reputed real human bone, the existence ot giants is proved. 1'OB HOI si;5U;!:ii:iLS. EVKKVDAY Pl'WMWi I'Ut illtO fl basil) one pound ot tlonr, one of chop ped suet, half a pound of mixed fruit, a little spice, giafed lemon peel, three ounces of sugar, two eggs, half a pint of milk, or enough to make it a proper thickne; tie it in a cloth, boil four hours, turn it out and serve with butter or sweet sauce; bread crnms instead of Hour is good, or half ot each. Am i: ami Paste I'liuuxa in Ba sin. Make one pound ot paste, roll it itqiiarter of an inch thick, lay some in a bowl, till it with apple- cut in quar ter, add two clove and two ounces of sugar a little butter, put another piece uf paste on the top, and join the edge nicely; tie il in a cloth and boll. It can be served up 'either in the, basin or turned out. Do not open the top to put more sugar in. as it, spoils the fla vor and make it heavy. All fruit pudding may be done tin; same way. Fuittkks. Make any plain batter for flap-jack, by dropping a small quantity into the pan; put pared apples sliced .'ind cored, into the batter, and fry some of it with each slice. Cur rant, or sliced lemon, thin a paper, make an agreeable change. Any sort , sweetmeat, or ripe fruit, iirnv be i niade into fritters Rich Bi:xs. Mix one pound and a half of dried flour with half a pound of sugar; melt ii' pound and livoouuee of butter ill a Utile warm water; add six Spoonfuls of roe water, and knead tne above into a light dough, with Halt a piiitof yeiut, Plain Mixce Pik. Neat's tongue and feet make the best tnUiee pie. The shank is good. Uoil the meat till very tender, I ike it up, clean it from bone and gristle, chop it fine, mix it with an eipial weight of tart apple chopped line. Moisten the whole with cider; new. if you have good; sweeten to taste with sugar ana a little molas ses seasoning with suit, eluumou, clove and mace. Make the pies in flat plate, with hole in the upK'r crust, and bake from thirty to forty five minutes. Kick OlHCKKN Pik. (.'over the bo' torn ot a pudding dish with slice of broiled ham; cut up a broiled chicken and fill the dih: add chopped onio:i, if you like, or a little curry powder, which i better; then add boiled rioe to till all interstice and to cover the top thick, llakn it for one-half or three-quarters of an hour. DiiniiiNiTs. Three pounds of sirr ed flour, a pound ot aowdeivd sugar, three-quarters of a pound of butter, tour egg, half a large teticupflll of best brewer's yeast, a pint, and a half of milk; cut the butter in the flour, add the sugar; beat the eggs very light a ltd pour them in; add the yeast, and then stir in the mi! by degrees so asto make it a soft dough; cover and set to rise; when light, cut It into diamonds, ami fry in lard. Ci.kam Fui TTKiis. Mix a pint and a half of flour with a pint ot milk; stir in six well beaten egg; add half a nutmeg; then two teaSpoonfnls of salt, a pint of cream; stir the whole n-t enougn to intermix (lie cream. then fry in small cakes; the addition of a few tender apples chopped fine I Improeers the fritters. New Ewi.ani) Pancakes. Mi a 1 pint of milk, five spoonfuls of thus tlonr. seven voik and four whites of L'g, mid a very littic -alt; fry tbem very thin in fresh butter, and between each strew sugar and einamon. Send up six or eight at oiue. Ckka-m Bisctjts, Break six eggs separate the yolk r.nd whites, heat the former with 1. ounct'S of pow. der-sugar, and the same of flour, whi-k the whites and then mix them together, add to it whipped cream in proportion to the Jugar and flour, stir it cAreftdlyj iwur this into inokls or paiier ca.e. and bake. Bxsks. Beat seven eggs well, and mix with half a pint of new milk, in which have been melted four ounces of butter; add to it a gill of ywist, and three ounces of sugar, and put them, by degrees, into a much flowr as will make a very light paste, rather like a batter, and let It rfst befbre the tiro lutlt an hour: then add more floor, and bake.