tins. A. J. DCXIWAT, Kflltor ani Proprietor. OFFIC E Cor. Front t "Washington Streets A Journal for the People. Devoted to the Interests of Humanity. Independent in Politics and Religion. AJIve to all Live Issues, and Thoroughly Radical inOpposlngandEsposIng the WronB of the Masses. TERMS, IN ADVANCE: One year....- Six months Three months.. -J3 00 175 1 00 Free Speech, Free Press, Free People. Correspondents wrltlngover assnmed slgnn tures must make known their names to tho Edltor.or no attention will be given to the'i communications. ADVERTISEMENTS Inserted on Reasonable VOLUME VI. PO-&TTuJLNX, OREGON, FB1DAY, MA.Y SC, XSW. NUMBER ST. Terms. EDNA AND JOHN: A Romance of Idaho Flat. Br Mrs. A. J. DUNIWAY, author qt "juurrn beid," "kllen dowd,' "AMIS AND HKNBY LEE," "THE HAPPY HOME," "ONE WOMAN'S SPHERE," "MADGE MORRISON," KTC, ETC., ETC Entered, according to Act of Congress, In the year 1876, by Mrs. A. J. Dnnlway, in the office of the Librarian of Congress at Washington City. "Woman's degraded, helpless position is the weak point of onr institutions to-day a dis turbing force everywhere, severing family ties, filling our asylums with the deal, the dumb, the blind, our prisons with criminals, our cit ies with drunkenness and prostitution, our homes with disease and death. National Cen tennial Equal Rights Protest. CHAPTER XXIIL The Territory of Idaho bad recently been judicially districted, and Circuit Court was now to bold its opening ses sion in Idaho Flat. Several young lawyers who bad strug gled long with legal technicalities in their, at last, successful endeavor to be admitted to the bar in the States, and who had struggled longer with less suc cessful effort to obtain clients in their native haunts, had recently come to dispute possession with Mr. Brief, while older lawyers, broken-down politicians, ex-judges badly out of date, governmen tal employes, and not a few men of more than ordinary ability, as brains go, but badly deficient In purse and public appreciation, flocked hither and thither in the Territory to prey upon the cupidity and credulity of those who might have needed justice, but they seldom got it wben appealing to the law. "Be composed," said a lawyer once to a client on trial for grand larceny. "No doubt you will be treated justly." "Faith, sir, and justice Is the very thing I'm afraid of," returned the Hi bernian, who, bad he been a native American, would have felt little fear on that score. Several of the new Territorial officials brought their families to Idaho Flat, and society began to assume some of the phases of older civilization, though there was yet one sad drawback to mor ality among the majority of men, and that was nothing less than the soarclty of good women. Nature always seeks an equilibrium. When humanity interferes with the equalization of masculine and feminine forces by removing the restraining in fluence of one sex from the other in any of the departments of life, from the do mestic to the educational, social or re ligious to the legal and governmeutal, the channels of life become vitiated, and nature, in the only effort left her to restore the equilibrium thus disturbed, will send bad women where the good are not plenty, and the feet of her whose "steps take hold on hell" will too often lead the unwary into pitfalls of his own creating, to hold him captive ever after at her will. Idaho Flat became the rendezvous of abandoned women who were bent upon spoils. Money was plenty, for gold abounded in the river beds, and gold and silver was in the gorges and on the very mountain tops. Mrs. Kutneriord, wholly unaccus tomed to the vice and immorality that flourished before her eyes, was thor oughly horrified with what transpired daily. "Women whom older and more settled society would have sent to jail for lewdness, flaunted tbeir silks and jewels before her face and seated them selves at table to be fed like queens. "I wouldn't stand it, Edna!" she ex claimed In indignation, as these people multiplied In tbeir midst. "I make the bread and clothing and shelter for all of us by feeding the men who support them, mother. They are just as good as any man who visits them." "But I will order the very next bad woman out of doors who comes here to get her dinner. I'll have no such bag' gage arouna." "Then I will order every man away who is seen in tbeir company, mother. Bid you notice the costly diamond ring that one of them sported this morning? That was presented her by a govern ment official who pays me a round price for board his board and hers. That man is feasted and feted in the best Washington society every winter. He has a big salary with perquisites, and leaves bis poor dupe of a wife at some obscure country Tillage every summer, while he comes home to bis constitu ents, to lobby for re-appointment and run with fast women, who are as good as himself, bad as they are. You turn the woman out and I will dismiss the man, and then, if this thing is carried out, we'll see where our bread and but ter comes from." But mother and daughter were spared the necessity of putting their design into execution. It was autumn now, and the Circuit Court was in session, giving many lawyer an opportunity to turn an hon est hundred or two by attending to the disputed claims, real and imaginary, of opposing miners, who, now that chances for going to law abounded, were not low in taking legal steps to overreach r underreach their neighbors in any ray that was legally possible. Edna, was busy to her Tery eyes in the kitchen, dining-room, and everywhere. Her Mongolian help had found the work too bard for him wben Court met, and, wben increasing crowds of men mate rially increased the kitchen efforts, had taken French leave and no other help was to be had. The harvest that Circuit Court brings is never to be despised by the inn or boarding-bouse keeper of a country town, and those engaged in that busi ness in Idaho Flat were no exception to the general rule. "We have heavy bills to meet, mother, and I am depending upon this harvest season to pay for our winter's wood and lights, and many other necessaries that must come. I wantto build an addition to the bouse, also, and I oan't afford to turn away a single boarder, so we must make bay while the sun shines. Every body's money will help us along, so don't be squeamish, but just help me out this month and we'll get several hundreds ahead." Mrs. Rutherford and Sue Randolph each heeded the advice thus freely given, and the hotel became a place of gaiety and noise and money changing, which Edna would never have con sented for it to become had she been permitted by her legal bead, or even ad vised by her minister, to keep up legiti mate and wholesome amusements of the intellectual character that she had at first inaugurated. But, as we have said, she was busy to her eyes in work. In all the married years of her life she had not felt so free and happy. Business was unusually brisk, even for a mining town. There were many intellectual legal gentlemen in attendance at the Court, and though her time was all taken up with her cull nary cares, she managed to keep herself and children tidy and apparently com fortable, so that she was ready at any moment for a brilliant sally of wit or a brief dissertation upon legal technicali ties, mining stocks, theology, philoso phy, or recipes for cooking. The county sheriff was a very import ant personage in Idaho Flat. He was short and obese, with a thick neck and fleshy jaws set squarelj upon shoulders slightly rounded, and he carried a pair of flabby fat bauds with the digits in bis pantaloons pockets and the stubby thumbs protruding awkwardly. From the day that Edna bad first met him he bad been her pet aversion. True, bis habits were more correct and his con duct more circumspect than that of her boarders in general, but there was an air of selfishness, and a want of fine sensibility about bim that was particu larly offensive to her feelings. He had a habit of making broad as sertions that were generally as wide of the truth as they were broad in utter ance, and clinching the same by a coarse guffaw that would silence, though It al ways failed to convince, those holding a different opinion. "I have a document in my possession that particularly concerns you, Mrs. Smith," he exclaimed, as, thrusting his burly figure Inside the kitcnen, he broke into a loud ha ! ha 2 ha I "A document concerning me.'" cried Edna, rubbing the flour from her bands, and reaching to take the paper from his pudgy digits and pudgier thumb. "I wonderif John isn't applying fora divorce?" she asked herself, and then came the pleasing reflection that di vorces were easy to obtain iu Idaho Flat. But Edna did not comprehend the import of the mysterious document. It was loaded down with the ambiguous technicalities that usually overshadow papers of its ilk, and after a moment's reflection she looked enquiringly at the officer for an explanation, while a dark foreboding, as undefined as dismal, crept into her heart. "It's a writ of ejection from these premises by old Sol, the saloon-keeper. Hal hal ha!" said the legal protector of women, "I don't see how that can be," replied JMina, turning deathly pale. "I never owed him a dime in my life." "But, madam, John Smith and Mr. Brief have been boarding at bis chebang all summer on the strength of John's claim upon this business. You'll have to liquidate. Ha! ha! ha!" "But I shan't" exclaimed Edna, "So there."' The guffaw that followed was so exas perating that Edna refrained with dlffl culty from belaying the officer with her rolling-pin. But she felt instinctively that she was at the mercy of the law, and wisely held herself in restraint, "You see," he continued, "John had to have some place to stay, and when you turned mm out be went over to Sol's, and as be had no money, he gave bis note. Mr. Brief has been his coun selor all along, and John gave bim bis note of band also. Ha ! ba ! ha 1" "Stop that guffawing, or I'll dash your brains out!" cried Ednak in frenzy of Indignation that made th sheriff fairly tremble, "Brief sold the note to Sol," he con tinued, sobering down, "and Sol got judgment on this property, and the cheapest thing you can do is to get out." "But John bas never raised a finger to earn a dollar here. Everything i the house and about it belongs to me. "That's the very reason you don'town it, madam. If you weren't a wife now ! But you are, you see, and everything you own Isn't yours at all, but your husband's. If you'd been sh up, you1 have let everything be held in the name of Sue Randolph, or your mother, for both of them are without husbands, and they cau hold property, you see. Ha ! a! ha!" "My mother has often said that wom an's degraded, helpless position is the weak point in our institutions to-day. She says it is a disturbing force every where, severing family ties, filling our sylums with victims, our prisons with criminals, our towns and cities with prostitution, our homes with disease and death. I never saw the force of this abominable truth as I see it now. I have tolled like a galley slave to build up and sustain this business and main tain myself and children. It bas not occurred to me once this summer that my being a wife by a fiction of law, un der which I have found no protection, would render it necessary for me to put my earnings into other hands than my own for safe keeping, else I would have done it and defied the law. As It Is, I am powerless. But what am I to do?" "Just what this writ advises, madam. You are to vacate the premises at once, to satisfy the judgment." "Leave my house this minute, sir!" said Edna, folding the paper and resum ing her rolling-pin. "You can't put me out under a writ of ejectment under thirty days after having given ten days' notice. I know a few things about law when I stop to think of them, if I am a woman." "Sol'll be madder'n thunder!" solilo quized the sheriff, as be waddled away to carry the news to him and Mr. Brief and John. "How strange that I should have been so blind!" thought Edna. "I knew, or might have known, that John Smith, as my husband, could commit no recog nized or punishable crirue by robbing me of my earnings; but here I have been toiling and accumulating for months as though unconscious of exist ing facts. Luckily I have a few hun dred dollars hidden away. I intended to use that money toward liquidatingbills; but Sol, or whoever gets the house, may do that. I'll save all I can during the next thirty days." Her resolve thus taken was followed for a week, and then came a legal in junction forbidding the boarders to pay tbeir bills to Edna, and there was no al ternative but to lose the result of her summer's toil and begin preparinganew n the autumn for the near approach of rigorous winter. "When the Lord loveth He chasten- th," said Mr. Handel, with a sancti monious air, as soon as he learned the facts. 'I should say that whom the devil despiseth he destroyeth," was Edna's prompt rejoinder. I am sorry, my dear madam, that ou do not accept your trials In a meek and quiet spirit," observed the preacher. "And I am surprised that you are such consummate fool!" was the impulsive retort. "Whatt" Mr. Handel would have been scarcely less surprised had the heavens fallen. He had long felt it his pastoral duty to call upon Edna once or twice in every week, and had never failed to share her hospitable board. She had always be fore been passably courteous, despite some of her betrodox vagaries, of which he constantly warned her. "I've done what I could to keep you iu the straight and narrow path, Mrs, Smith, but I find you constantly drift ing upon the breakers. You know what the Scripture saith. He that, being of ten reproved, bardeneth his neck, shall suddenly be distroyed, and that without mercy." "Leave the house this minute with your mocking cant!" exclaimed Edna. Indeed, she was nearly crazed, and no wonder. Let any reader of these pages who would chide her put himself in her place and see if bis human nature would not instantly rebel. It is very easy, always, to bear other people's troubles with for titude. It is our own that come to us to stay. "Awful as a divorce is, Edna, you will be compelled to get one, or starve," said Mrs. Rutherford, while the thought that her beloved daughter, in whom she had so long indulged more pride and antici pation than in all else in the world, would be that loathsome thing, a "grass widow," was enough of itself to pros trate her on a bed of sickness. Another week elapsed, and Edna, with her mother, Sue Randolph, and three little children, was again en sconced in the diminutive cabin where she had begun her struggle for bread when she had first settled with Aunt Judy in Idaho Flat. "Men are constantly placing a pre mium upon crime," said Edna, bitterly, "See how much better off a fallen worn is than tbe wife of a bad man, Those courtesans you were complaining of, mother, are safely housed and fed In the very hotel from which I, though tolling sixteen hours out of twenty-four, to keep it going, have been driven as a criminal. Bo you wonder that I de spise men?" "That's wicked, daughter. Pray do not talk like that. Your father was man, and you have brothers and a son." "Don't quote my father to me, mother You know I would not own bim for years before he died." "Which was very unfilial of you, my child. The girl that fails to honor her father or mother need not expect pros perity or happiness. Your father did what the laws and customs of men em powered bim to do, and be thought it was all right. True, It was not right, but his intentions were good. I cannot bear to have you blame him." "Well, mother, one thing is certain, and that is that I shall sue for a divorce at this sitting of the court. If I wait till spring, John will have another chance to rob me, for no man can be punished for impoverishing his wife." "And so you are to be a grass widow O, Edna!" "Don't reproach me, mother. I can not bear It. I would rather be a dead carcass than a grass widow, if I could have my choice, but men do my choos ing, and I cannot help myself." Edna's application for a divorce upon the ground of tbe habitual drunkenness of her husband was followed tbe next day by an application for a like decree from John, tbe alleged cause being im proper association with Mr. Handel, the conscientious Christian missionary. Each complainant prayed for tbe cus tody of the children, and the lawyers looked for a good harvest, and the pub lic for an attractive arid disgraceful scene in court. To bo continued. The "Blue Laws." The famous "Blue Laws of Connecti cut" have been brought to tbe light of tbe boasted nineteenth century, and a true copy of the same may be seen by the curious at the office of tbe County Clerk of Multnomah county. Tbe fol lowing are some of the sections thereof: Sec. 9. No food or lodging shall be given to a Quaker, Adamite, or other heretic. Sec. 10. No one shall cross a river without an authorized ferryman. Sec. 11. No one shall run of a Sab bath day, or walk in his garden, or elsewhere, except reverently to and from hurcli. Sec. 12. No one shall travel, cook victuals, make beds, sweep houses, cut hair, or shave ou tbe Sabbath day. Sec. 13. JSo woman shall kiss her child ou tbe Sabbath or fasting day. sec. 16. Whoever publishes a lie to the prejudice of his neighbor, shall sit in the stocks, or be whipped fifteen tripes. Sec. 17. Whoever wears clothes trimmed with silver or bone lace, above two shillings per yard, shall be pre sented by the grand jurors, and the se lectmen shall tax the offender at tbe rate of 300 estate. Sec. 18. Whoever brings cards or dice nto this dominion, shall pay a fine of 5. Sec 19. No one shall read common prayer, keep Christmas or Saint Day, make mince pies, dance, play cards, or play on any other instrument of music except tbe drum, trumpet, and the Jew's barp. See. 21. The selectmen, on- finding children ignorant, may take tbem away from tbe parents, aud put tbem Into better nanus, at the expense of tbe parents. Sec. 22. A man that strikes his wife shall pay a fine of 10. A woman that strikes tier husband snail be punished as the court directs. Sec. 22. Married persons must live to gether or be imprisoned. Bee. 24. .Every male shall nave his hair cut round according to a cap. Good Axioms. Self-reliance Is the main-spring of thrift and enterprise Instead of waiting as Micawber did for something to turn up, exert your own energies, ana turn up something your self. If self-denial cost us nothing, it would teach us little. A caustic writer says: "The poweror seir-delusion is heaven's blessing to fools." It needs a long bead to control a long tongue. If you pride yourself on saying wbat you like, you will often bear wbat you do not like. How many thoughts we waste: how much care aud anxiety we expend in forming plans to meet emergencies that never occur. It is better to buy good counsel cheap than repentance dear. .Never be behind time, "l have no ticed," said Napoleon, "that it was the quarters of hours that decided the fates of battles." People may tell you of your being un fit for some peculiar occupation in life, but heed it not; whatsoever honest oc cupation you follow with perseverance and assiduity will be found lor you, and will be your support in youth ana com fort in old acre. A good word is an easy oblation: but not to speak ill requires only our silenoe which costs us notning. In the worldly struggle, passive en durance Is no less useful than active en ergy. No bad aualitv or vice carries its ap propriate punishment along with it more surely than heartlessuess. The critics have been attacking Anna Dickinson attain, and she has been fir ing back. We see no reason for giving more weight to the judgment of a critic than the opinion of one man, for that is all it is, and amusement is entirely a matter of taste, in which one person is no more authorized to decide wbat will please other auditors than he is to de cide with what kind of a dinner they should ha most pleased. It is entirely absurd that the question of the merits of Miss Dickinson as an actor should be settled bv tbe newspaper critics, be cause tbey constitute so insignificant a proportion of the theater-going public. We can conceive, however, that there is one thing standing in the way of her success. She goes on the stage, not as an artist, but with asBerious and earnest a purpose as sne carried to ine piatiorm and public amusement, according to thi prevailing taste, is not a thing of mor als, as wltuess tbe Soldene. If she could educate a new school of taste, in sympathy with her own alms, she might secure-wider approbation. -New Age. An oTpliantro rpnnrts that n. lad v "rons drowned iu a previous edition of that paper." 0TIE "WASHINGTON LETTEE. To the Editor of the New Northwest : We are still speculating upon tbe ex tra session under tbe prolonged delay of its call. The Senators bere are divided in opinion as to its length, yet all con cede Its shortness, should general legis lation be avoided. Tbe debate on tbe army bill need not necessarily be pro longed, and yet the proposition to re duce the army some 10,000 will meet with bitter opposition, mueh as all propositions to reduce have in tbe past. When we came down to our present small army, we were told in the most pathetic tones that we would be swal lowed up by somebody, the Mexicans, the Indians, the English, and dear knows who else, by means of our im mense frontier and coast lines, putting us at the mercy of every attacking party, internal as well as external. But "we still live," and our success in that line leads some of our law-makers here to say that tbe army must still further be reduced, and especially so, since its presence is no longer needed to preserve the peace in tbe Southern States. Again, some of the hot heads are insisting that the Navy Department must again be Investigated, in order to show where the Philadelphia navy yard sales and other moneys went. If these two prop ositions get drawn into general debate, your readers may expect a session run- ing into August, as it is an impossi bility for tbe forthcoming assemblage of our nation's orators to fully ventilate the issues inside of three months. In- estlgation accomplished so little dur ing the last two years and promises so much less this summer, since there is no important election to be controlled by exposures of a defunct administra tion, that we can conceive of no reason for incurring the vast expense of another Navy Department ventilation, but it will give the Irrepressible politician an pportunity to let off his buncombe peecbes which he hires some penny a liner to write for him, and which costs Uncle Sam" ten cents a line to insert in tbe Congressional Record. We have grown so impatient over the huge hum bug called "Congressional speeches," that really we are somewhat exercised in mind at the great probability of hav ing to endure a series of them during the approaching warm weather, and we cau but hope we may be spared the af fliction, say from after July 1st. THE WASHINGTON MONUMENT. Akin to the heavy subject of speech- making is that weighty matter called the Washington monument. This weighty structure has long been a dis grace to our nation, so that we regret tbe diversity of opinion which continues among exports as to the unsuitability of tbe foundations for bearing tbe addi tional weight. The government engi neers have recently reported adversely, notwithstanding other army and civil engineers reported and believe to the contrary, hence we are as much at sea in regard to what should be done with tbe monument as we are in mind, after listening to a three days' debate in Con gress upon some political questlou. The President very sensibly believes that it is a matter which civil engineers can determine much more intelligently and correctly than these West Pointers, whose knowledge of dirt is about on a par with what they know of concrete poultice pavements as they are laying on our Pennsylvania Avenue. I eon- cede that McCIellan studied the art of handling dirt, its powers of resistance, etc., while digging before an imaginary foe of 150,000 muskets when there were but 10,000. But his theories do not ap ply to tbe foundations of the Washington monument any more than they did to the rail fence and a gopher hole bank, behind which the volunteer soldier had an ugly habit of hurtiug somebody. The monument ought to be finished at once. Its plain shaft will be one of the most attractive features of the Capital, and as it Is a national and not a city duty to finish it, we hope prompt action will be had for its completion. THE GOVERNMENT PRINTER. John D. Defrees, the new appointee, bears his honors meekly. But be already has experienced some of the afflictions which render his office like that of the executive departments, a burdensome one Indeed. Scores of women call on him daily, pleading with tears in their eyes and most pitiful stories of their poverty aud sufferings, for appointment as folders, feeders, anything which would give them bread. But as be is powerless to aid, because his force must also be reduced, he can do no more than listen and rebuff. The recent discharges from the Treasury furnished these un fortunates to Mr. Defrees, and not until tbe great sea of life shall have absorbed them in some other channel, will they cease to importune for government po sltious. THE JEWS. The outrages upon the Jews in Ro'u- manla greet President Hayes as they did General Grant upon his assumption of the exeoutive, and afford cause for delegations of that sect to plead for our interference. We need at the seat of the Turkish war a minister like Wash burne, who can care for the neutrals as intelligently and successfully as be did for tbe Germans in Paris, in tbe war of 1870, and for whioh Germany now ten ders a $50,000 testimonial as a mark of her gratitude to him for his labors in behalf of her citizens. The Jews form a large portiou of our community, and having among them many men of high est intellectual ability, they are quite an element of strength. One of them, Simon Wolf, Is our recorder of deeds, and who went into the political field last summer to stump for Mr. Hayes. His lectures upon general and social matters have given him a national rep utation amougbis brethren, and stamped him as a man of great intellectuality. He is but one of several here, and tbey are accomplishing more towards remov ing prejudice from the minds of Gen tiles than the whole mass of "old Clo" men, who, by confining themselves to petty shop-keeping, lead tbeunreflectlve to think the Jew Is Incapable of eleva tion. Felix. Washington, D. C, May 4, 1877. Superfluous Men. I claim no originality for mv cantion. It was suggested, of course, by Mrs. Livermore's "Superfluous Women," but aside from the qualifyinsr adjective. her "Superfluous Women" and my "Su- peruuous Men" have nothing in com mon. Tbe world would be the loser if those superfluous women, mostly earnest, belpml workers In tbe quiet walks of life, should suddenly drop out of it, while tbe men I have in mind are su perfluous, not on account of their num ber, but their character; they are super fluous in the sense that tbey are useless, a hindrance rather than a help to so ciety, and the world would be better off without tbem. 1. Of these I will mention first the loafers. This is a large class compris ing many grades, from the tramp to the genteel loafer, who belongs to a club and smokes tho best Jdavanas, but they all have the same general characteristics. They are lazy, they have no visible means or support, and like the man who, being brought before the police court and interrogated as to his busi ness, replied that bis wife was a dress maker, a large number are dependent on hard-working, self-sacrifieiug wives, mothers and sisters. Tbey twirl their canes and their mustaches, they gossip, tuey nirt, iney expectorate, tuey staud on tbe street corners, they frequent drinking saloons, and all places of hieh and low resort, they gamble, they bet, uiey taiK pontics, iney vote oti, yes, early and often), but their one distin guishing characteristic is, tbeir aver sion to any kind of honest industry. According to all rules of political econ omy, this large class of non-producers are entirely superfluous. Tbev add nothing to tbe wealth or well-being of tue nation, duc stand outside all its great needs and interests. II. Habitual liquor-drinkers and con firmed drunkards. While there is life there is.hope, is doubtless true of drunk ards as of invalids, but it seems to re quire almost a miracle to eradicate tbe appetite for strong drink when ouce nrmly established. Think of the de moralizing influence of this loathsome mass of humanity, the misery of wives and families, the poverty, tbe destitu tion, the crime, tbe little children con tinually brought into being by these wretched fathers to inheret their mor bid appetites and diseased constitutions. 3. Closely allied to these are tbe li centious, the debauchees, the moral lepers of community, whoso touch Is pollution, whose breath is pestilential. and who, besides their every day perni cious infiueuce, are entailiuc upon fu ture generations the horrible results of their vicious lives. If the first class mentioned are super fluous, these are far worse. The first may be compared to barnacles on the ship of state the last two are leeches drawing the life-blood from the social body aud poisoning tbe whole circula tion; taken together, they are tbe drags and dregs of our civilization. Could tbey all be suddenly blotted out of ex istence by a series of dlscrimlnatimr earthquakes or accidents, what an in cubus would be removed from society. how would the atmosphere be purified. and progress and reform make eiant strides towards a millennial age! 4. Again, there Is a multitude of blatant pot-house politicians, dema gogues and office-seekers, filibusters and tbe like who are a superllulty in the body politic. Could we be rid of them also, we should speedily have a united and prosperous people, an unexceptional civil service, a model Republic, and a moaern Utopia with all the modern improvements, iucludine Impartial Suffrage! Cor. Woman's Journal. URUEITY TO UHILDREN. 1? riday a teacher In one of the district schools in this city was before Judge Pyper to an swer for beating a pupil, a little boy ten or twelve years of age. The evidence was conclusive that tbe child bad been cruelly flogged, his body exhibiting several wens ana oruises mulcted by the defendant. Tbe Justice fined the teacher $25. The day for severe Hogging in schools Is past, and fortunately for the youth of the country, tbe Professor Squeerses are seldom to be found in the school-room. A few years ago a teacher was considered by many parents as of little account unless he exercised a good deal of brutality in bis school; but hap pily tne guaraians oi children, as a rule. have learned that it is not necessary to flog intelligence into a child. Salt Lake Herald. The stream of Mrs. A. T. Stewart's benefactions, says the Church Union, instead of ceasing to flow, goes onward, and with increasing volume. Already she bas made donations to fifty-two of our local charities, ranging from $5UO to 2.500 and making an aggregate of 574.- ouu, aud the intimation comes from Judge Hilton that other charitable in stitutions, if found deserving, will be made recipients of her bounty, bince the death of her husband Mrs. Stewart's donations those of which the public have been Informed have reached an aggregate of about four hundred thous and dollars. A young man who mistook a bottle of varnish for a oottie oi nair on, conciuaeu that dancing was a frivolous amuse ment, and kept away from a masquer ade ball. But wbeu inquisitive friends asked why he stayed away, be told an unvarnished tale. From tbe moment a man desires to find the truth on one side rather than another, it is all over with him as philosopher. Harriet Martineau. Ladies of the White House. DOLT.T PAYNE MADISON. Dolly Coles Payne, brought up in tho strict tenets of the Society of Friends, and married at 19 to Mr. John Todd, a member of the same sect, in less than a year after his death, and at the age of 23, married James Madison, and stepped from poverty and Insignificance to wealth and station. In ber luxurious home in Virginia she learned how to exercise generous hospitality and be nevolence, and an indulgent husband allowed her the means of gratifying most of the flue instincts .of a noble nature. Wben Mr. Madison was appointed in Mr. Jefferson's Cabinet, he removed with his wife to Washington, and she fre quently and kindly played the part of lady of tbe White House before it be came her own home; and, on ber hus band's election to the Presidency, his wife's presence in the White House was hailed by the social world as a benefac tion, and there probably never was a person more generally loved, if some times smiled at by the fastidious or su percilious, withiu its walls. With a little more elegance, there would have been nothing more to desire in Mrs. Madison. She had a certain amount of tact, infinite good nature, ready wit, and an unfailing memory of names and faces, which, with her warmth of heart, supplied many ele ments of popularity, aud ber reign was a joyous one. She filled the White House with young people, putting all at ease by her own ease, and kept up a round of gayety, relaxing many of the ceremoulous observances hitherto in force there, and making some innova tions. Very fond of dress, yet never ex travagant in it, wearing usually a tur ban and a gown of simple material, and repairing time's losses with rogue, she was rather a handsome woman, with sparkling eyes, and a tall, although, perhaps, too reduudant figure. She was always a happy woman; aud when adversity came she proved herself a most noble one. When tbe British ap proached the capital, she was one of the last to leave tbe city, having lingered to secure certain State papers and other valuable articles of public property, to the sacrifice of her own. She was re fused admission at an inn where she re quested shelter, with her suite, at the instigation of those already sheltered there people who bad, one and all, shared her hospitality, but now chose to hold her husband responsible for the war and punish her; and, for a short season, she was subjected to great hard ship; but, after tbe British had finished theirdastardly and disgraceful outrages, she was one of the first to return. At the conclusion of Mr. Madison's term, she retired with him to their mountain home iu Virginia, and there was the comfort of his declining years. After bis death she returned to Washington, a place she loved, and there spent tbe last twelve years of her life. Congress had paid her a goodly sum of money as copy wrlght on certain of her husbaud'3 pa pers, aud voted her a seat on the floor of tbe Senate; but she died In poverty, al though honored to the last; and while always to be seen with her splendid green shawl, her turban, and her snuff box, never forgetting her dignity or her great-hearted cordiality. Chicago jueager. The Senses of Bees. The senses of bees were the next sub- ect of investigation, and we will givo in brief tbe results which Huberreached. The lenses of tlifi bees' eyes are not ad- ustable; and, though they can see ac curately to great distances, they seem blind to objects close by. Jiee3 dart down to the door of their hives with a precision which is generally unerring; but If, from any cause, they miss the opening, they are obliged to rise in the air, in order to take anotner ooserva- tlou. If bees hear which is a doubtfuL question, the old-fashioned "tanging" to the contrary tuey certainty near only what affects tbeir welfare. Their sense of taste is also far from perfect, foul ditch water being often preferred by tbem to limpid streams, or even dew, and ill-smelling plants having quite as much attraction as sweet ones; it is the quantity, rattier tuan tne qual ity of their food, for which tbey care. They are also foud of the secretions of tbe amphiaes, the much cattle and tne ants. Their sense of smell is very keen; tho presence of honey they detect even in tbe most carefully-concealed places. Honey bees often, in scarce seasons, at tack bumble bees ou their return from fields laden with honey, and force them to disgorge all they have collected. Its presence in the honey bag must have been detected by the sense of smell. The seat of this smell is in the mouth; this Huber determined by presenting suc cessively to all parts of the body, on camel's-balr pencils, odors especially repugnant to them. When held near the mouth, the bee started back as if annoyed. On one occasion he mixed honey with camphor, which they es pecially dislike; they managed to sep arate and remove all the honey, leaving the camphor untouched. The sense which seems to oe most per fect in these little creatures is that of touch, and that seems to reside wholly in the antennce. Greetings, caresses, and tbe communication of intentions are always effected by one bee toward another by crossing their antennce. It must be remembered that no ngnc en ters a hive under ordiuary circumstan ces, ine oee, ' Bays.ri.uuer, cuuoiiuuw its comb iu darkness; it pours its uoney intn tho magazines, feeds its young, iudees of tbeir ages and necessities, rec- ognlzes us queeu, an ujr uiu ui iu an tennce, Whicn are mucu less uuaineu ior becoming acquainted with objects than nur nanus, iuereiure, buuii wo uuu irrant to this sense modifications and perfections udbuowu iu uiu iuucu man V Popular Science Monthly. of A Missouri aspirant to matrimony ad vertises that he will give three mules to any maiden who will wed him; which gives rise to the question, "What re spectable woman would want such a four-iu-hand?" The Boston papers tell of a love-sick girl who married against her father's wishes and went home after the first conjugal tiff. "Kill the prodigal," ex claimed the old gent; "the calf has re turned." A parliamentary fowl the hen that made a motion to lay ou the table. Puck,