t ? nn 1 J The Weekly Enterprise. , A DEMOCRATIC PAPER, FOR THE Business man, tho Farmer And ti FAMILY rtULISHED EVERY SATURDAY AT TUB OFFICE Corner of Fiftii and Main streets Oregon Citj, Orcson. TERMS of SUBSCRIPTION: ginde Copy ore year, in advance, $3 00 TERMS of A 1) YER TISING : Trident advertisement, including all ip.Tal notices, l sm. of 12 lines, 1 vr.$ 2 50 For ea''h subset ueut insertion. . . , ()M0 Column, one year . ll-A.l ....... ourter " l-usiness Card, 1 qnare one.year. 1 00 4120 00 . ;o . 40 . 12 US- Remittances to be made at the risk of S Cjtcribsrs, and at the expense of Agents. ROOK An JOB PRINTING. 3 Tlie Enterprise office is supplied with .crniftil, approved styled of type, and mod ern MACHINE L'KESSES, which will enable t:';e 1'iopi ietor to do Job Panting at all times Neat, Quick and Cheap ! ti- Work solicited. Jil Jlusi i tj'un'icfir,n upon a Specie basis. ,, JOIIX MYERS, Financial Agent. i.i i BUSINESS' CARDS. I )A(iE & TJLYYEK, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. OFFICE In Cree's P.r.ilding, corner of Front and Stark streets, Portland. 32: tf Logan, Shattuck & Killin, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, So. 1K Front Street, Uji Slairs, PORTLAND, OREGON. fl5 j. n MITCHEM,. j. x. poi.rn. A. SMITH Mitchell, Dolph & Smith, Attorneys and Counsellors at Law, Solicitors in Chancery, and Proc ters in Admiralty . , ;:?TOlficc o-er the old Post Office, Fronti street, Portland, Oregon. A. C. CI BBS. C. W. PARRISn, Notary Public and Com. of Deeds. GIBBS & PAEEISH, Attorneys and Counselors at. Law, Portland, Okf.g'. nrril'E-On.i Alder street, in Carter's liriik block. I) M h KEXNEY, ATTORNEY AT LAW, O lip GOX CITY, OHEG ON. AXSIXG STOUT. Attorney and Counselor at Law, PORTLAND, OREGON. (Mure Under the United States District ('.mt li xnii. Front street. & 40tf j aw pai rrxEi isi i n .'As. K. KELLY, J. II. REED, r.c-ii.li-iis Columbia, st Residence corner of lust. 2d anil 3J st.s. (Columbia and 7th sts. Jus. K. Kelly and J. II. Reed, under the firm name of KELLY A- REED, Will pracfit law in the Courts of Oregon. Office on First street, near Alder, over tlie new Post office room, Port.and. (4etf JUGKXE A. CI J ON IX, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Rooms 7 and 8 Carter's Block, . PORTLAND, OREGON. i. r. caim.es. J. c. mokelaxd. CAPLES Jtc MOUELAND, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Cor. FRG.XT and WASHINGTON Sts., PORTLAND, OREGON. J. WELCH, DENTIST. P tnn&nently Located at Oregon City, Oregon ROOMS With Dr. Safiarrans, on Main t. YII. W ATKINS, M. D. SURGEON", Pohtlaxd, OnEGtn. OFFICE?') Front street Residence cor Rerof Main and Seventh streets. k. n. bell. K. A. i'AKKKR. BELL & PARKER. 41 -i AVn DEALERS IX Chemicals, Patent Medicines, Paints, Perfumery, Oils, Varnishes, -And every article kept in a Drug Store. Main Street, Oregon City. J Q II X II. SCIIRAM. " Manufacturer and Dealer in feW SADDLES, HARNESS, etc., etc., Main Street, Oregbn City, Wishes to represent that he is now as ell prepared to furnish anj' article in his line a! -ie 1;lrest establishment in tlie State. He j'rticulaily requests that an examination of h stock be made before baying elsewhere. "yM. BIIOUGIITOX. Contracor and Builder, Main st., OREGOX CITY. -y Will attend to all work in his line, cot -tiujj in part of Carpenter and Joiner woik jraming. building, etc. Jobbing promptly "HPiiiitffi . SXEATII, WHOLESALE GROCER, 32 Pront Street, Portland. OODS BY THE PACKAGE, FOR CASH, AT AN FRA.N CISCO PRICES, and Freight. -Orders Promptly filled in San Francis U'desiied. fs U'-'.tf -4- THE ULi'EDELL. There is mie spot in a' the world, Sae bonnie and sac fair, As wbere the modest Blnebell grows, And scents the balmy air. It blooms in every mfeadow green, In Scotia's woods and dells "f ?Tis O I the sweptest, bonniest flower, Amang the Heather Bells. O, monyra time, an" mony a day, ? In other climes I've strayed, And seen the flowers that blossom there. In sunshine and in sha le. But, ah ! benealh auld Scotia's skies, And in my native dells, The Blnebell is the sweetest flower Amaug the Heather Bells. - ! The winds may blaw across the moor, The tree bend to the blast : The birdies cease their winsome san. And skies be overcast ; But, oil ! where'er my feet may roam, My heart with rapture swells ; For there my favorite flower 1 see, The queen of Heather Bells. STATISTICS OF OREGON. BY A. J. DU FUR. .V NO. o. CIACICAMAS COUNTY, This county is situated on the navigable waters of the lowe Wil lamette river, and probably holds out greater inducements to thq cap italist who wishes to make success ful investment in the various man ufacturing enterprises or to the in dustrious mechanic with limited means, than any otlfer locality of equal size on the Pacific coast, or even in the United States. Tlie following information rela live to the present resources and natural advantages of this county, was furnished the Committee by I). C. Ireland, Esq., editor of the Oregon City Enterprise, a gentle man who has taken great pains to obtain and circulate valuable in formation through the columns of his paper, relative to tlie mineral, mechanical, and agricultural wealth of this State. First There are no public build ings in Clackamas county worthy of note, if we except the Seminary at Oregon City. Tlie County Jail is a miserable structure, but Ave have very little use for a jail in this region. Second The average price of farming land, improved and unim proved, is from three to five dol lars per acre. "Wild land is abund ant at from one dollar and twenty five cents to two dollars per acre. Third The assessed value of property in Clackajnas count, and the tax levied, is as follows, for the four years past : Years. Valuation. Jl fills Tax 1SG . .$1.238. 8J7 1865 1.G05.394 18r,( 1.02-t.75; 5 1So7. 1,648 S7fi Oh The last levy was for extraordi nary expenses in purchasing bridges, etc., by which, all of our bridges were made free from toll. The figures under the head of valu ation, show a healthy increase in the development of the resources of the county since the damage by floods of the winter of 1SG1-G2. Fourth The general nature of the soil for farming purposes is srood. Grain, "vegetables, and the various kinds of fruit grow m abundance here, even on our poor est lands. Stock raising and dairv ing could be gone into at a small expense. There ns no better coun try for timothy grass than this; its growth on our highest hills is luxu riant, and it serves to kill out feVn. "We have all the varieties of tim ber common to Oregon, in Clacka mas county. Oak and ash, suitable for wagon timber and the wood work of agricultural implements, is said to be morB abundant and of better quality in this than in any othercounty, and has been worked out by parties Lji years ast with profit to themselves, and the op portunity still remains. The amount of material for building, fencing, etc., is inexhaustible in this county, and a general lumbering business is now being carried on by ten or a dozen companies, with available space for a hundred more. ith The quality of water for family use m Clackamas county cannot be excelled pure living springs and mountain streams course through every section. The amount of water available for power, is far in excess of any other single county in the world, per haps. The falls of the "Willamette, at this cit provide man with more than one million horse-poAVjer. The factories ot Lowell and Lawrence, were they here, would consume but a portion of the water adapted by naturedto milling and mechanical purposes in this town. Oswego ORJGGOI? CITY, - OKE can be made to furnish one-quarter of that amount, while Milwaukic has significant value in this respect, and tlie Clackamas, 3Iolalla, Butte creek, IMill creek, Tualitin, and many, other streams which we might mention, furnish valuable locations for mill sites and water power. & Seventh The temperature of this locality is even. Excessive heat and excessive cold is very rate. The general health of the county is good. Billions affections are but little known among our people. Eighth Nc can offer better in ducements to mechanics and trades men, who can bring capital with them, than other counties of the State generall v. "We could do better by them had our citizens capital' themselves to develop our resources. Professional men and teachers Ave have but little use for at present. Such 'places are now ably filled. "We want blood, and muscle, and money. Ninth Immigrants can obtain anything in this county they desire at reasonable cost. Tenth Opportunities for school ing and meetings for religious wor ship are good in Clackamas county. In this city alone there are five churches Methodist, Episcopal, Catholic, Congregational, and Baptist- "We' have also in this city three private- select schools, ami one excellent public school capable of teaching the higher branches. ElcA'cnth Tlie facilities for mar keting and means of transportation in this county are equal to any on the Pacific coast. This is a com munity of consumers, chiefly oper atives Q,and laborers. The same may be said of Oswego, Avlicre miners, choppers, 'teamsters, coal burners, furnace-men, etc., form the bulk of population. "We have three steamers running daily (Sundays excepted)betwcen Oregon City and Portland, to Avhich Avill soon be r: i i 1 ro a 1 c o m n i u n i c at io n c o 1 1 n ec t i n g us with the present sea-port of Oregon, only ten miles distant. Twelfth We have two woolen factories in Clackamas count v. The leading one, located in Oregon City, is about 100 by GO feet, four stories, built of stone and brick, and contains twelve sets of the latest improAcd machinery. -The Oswego iron smelting Avorks were erected in 1SG7, at a cost of about 8100,000. There are several lum bering mills in the county. The celebrated Imperial flouring mills are located at Oregon City, and the famous Standard flour is made at Milwaukie. The only iron made on the coast is made at Oswego ; it is equal to the best Scotch pig, and is sought for by California foundrymcn. Wc have a large" tannery at Milwaukie, Avhich turns out leather that sells in San Fran cisco along side the best Santa Cruz. We hare a paper mill doing a flourishing business. We have gold and silver cfuartz mines in tin's county of value. We have coal and lime, and copper has re cently been discovered in consid erable quantities. The OsAvego Milling Company export lumber, and all other mills manufacture for domestic uses. At this city salmon fishing is carried onto considerable extent. Seven nets have been run this season. Thirteenth There is Govern ment land in this county available for settlement, and avc are told that much of it would be of value for agricultural purposes. Mechanical or lumbering pursuits cannot be gone amiss of. The Government Land Office is located at Oregon City, $t Avhich Mr. Owen Wade officiates as Kegister; and Mr. Henry Warren, lieceiver. Among the duels Avhich de serA'e to. be recorded is that be tween the celebrated Irish barris risteny John Philpot Curran and John Eagan, nicknamed i' Bully l0Eagan." The latter was a man of immense size, while Curran Avas slim and short. The chances of being hit Avere, therefore, in favor of the former, for (as Curran said) it Avas like firing at a haystack. Curran, therefore, proposed to equalize the chances by chalking lines on Eagairs body, so as to mark out hs (Curran's) size there on, and by 'agreeing that no shot shmild count which tooJc effect out side these lines. It is said that a man in Loaac11, Massaehusetts,has invented a scare croAV that is so hideous that cioavs all around there are carrying back the corn they stole last summer. Ncav Orleans'has found it out, and is anxiously waiting to see if it won't frighten Butler into carrying back those spoons. - GOE, SATURDAY, A ROTED DUEL.IST. .3 From an article ori " Duel Fight ing," in All the Year- Eoundy WQ take the following account of the deatli of the notorious F rench duel ist, knoAvn as the Cunt de Laril- Here, Avho had fbugfit 'upwards of forty duels, and killed eleven indi viduals, before the death of one 0fjm"m(d i nis opinion that he had ins victims Avas avenged m the man ner described below : On the CAening of a masked ball at the grand theatre at Bordeaux, Larilliere Avas seated in an adjoin ing cafe, which he was in the habit of frequenting Avith the members of his own particular" set; It Avas eleven o'clock, and our duelist, who had been for the -moment aban doned by his ordinary compan ions, feeling in no particularly quar relsome humor, aam.s iiiibiomg peace fully a glass of panels Suddenly a tall young man," wearing a black domino, and with -his face con cealed 1 ehind a black velvet mask, entered the cafe and strode up to the table at Avhich Larilliere avs,s seated. 'It None of the ordinary fiabitucs of the cafe took any h articular no- tice ot tlie new comer on ins en trance, as the masked ball Avhielr was to take place that night suffi ciently explained hisjeostume; but, no sooner was the mysterious, visi tor observed in thevJcinitA of Lar-L illiere s table than all eyes Avere turned toward him. " "Without a single observation ho seized hold of LariHicreV glass, threw away the punch it contained,and ordered the Avaiter in loud voice to bring a small bottle of orgeat in its plaec. Witnesses of the scene say that at this moment, for the first time in their lives, they observed Laril liere turn pale. It aws the belief in Bordeaux that during the fifteen years this man had been applying himself to tlie task of; destruction, he had never allowed his counte nance to emotion. betray the slightest " Scoundrel !" he exclaimed to his masked, adversary, " yon do not know who I am,? making, at the same moment, a 'vigorous but unsuccessful effort to remove the mask from the stranger's face. "I knoy who you are perfectly Avell," coolly replied the unknown, forcing Larilliere violently back v?ith one hand. All present started to their feet, and though no one among them A ciiiured to approach the disputants, they contemplated none the less anxiously the issue of this strange provocation. " Waiter ! " again exclaimed the unkoAvn, " be quick with that bot tle of orgeat." At this second command the bottle Avas brought, Avhereupon the masked man still standing immcdi-" atcly in front of Larilliere, Avho Avas foaming at the mouth Avith rage, proceeded to draw a pistol from his right hand pocket. Then addressing his adversary, he said : "If in the presence of this com pany, and for lay own personal satisfaction, you do too !" iinr or nirr swalloAV this glass of orgeat. I will bloAA out your brains Avith as little compunction as I Avould those of a dog. Should you, hoAVever, do my bidding, I will then do you the honor of fighting Avith you to morroAV morning." "With a sabre?", asked Laril liere, in a paroxysm of rage. 5. With ..whatever weapons you please," replied the stranger, dis dainfully." Whereupon. Larilliere swallowed the orgeat Avith au ex pression of countenance as though it were to him the dregs of a bit ter cup indeed, Avhile every one death-like. present preserved ; a silence. The masked man, satisfied AvitJi the effect produced by his proA O cation, no ay retired, saying to Lar illiere as he did o, in a tone of A oicc loud enough the lookers-on : to be heard' bv "To-day I ha'e "humbled you sufficiently ; to-morrow I intend to take your life. My seconds ay ill wait on you at eight in the morn ing. We will fight on the spot Avlicre you killed the A'dung Cher alier de C." This was the name of the Count's eleventh victim. The following morning Larilliere found himself in the presence of a man no longer Avearing a mask, and Avho appeared to be some twenty-five years old. j The seconds by Avhom he Avas accompanied Avere tAvo common soldiers, be longing to one of the regiments stationed in the citadel of Blaye. The bearing of the unknoYvn Avas collected and dignified, and singu larly resolute. His seconds had brought Aveapons to the ground, but Lariliiere's seconds took ex ception to them, at which a scarcely pcrceptible smile passed over the o .DECEMBER, 18,1869 strangcr,s face. On taking liis position, Lariiiicie turned tOAvard tho second nearest to him and said in an undertone, "For once, I believe, I have found my equal." The combat commenced. At urst passes the Count was con TO Ueal.WJtll a Skillful Irnrrr However his courage did not fail him, though there were times when he setmcd to lose his composure. Lunges and parryings succeeded each other with rapidity on both sides. Lari!licre,dcsirous of bring i ng th e; atfai r to a clow, had - tried Ins finishing stroke tAvo or three times, only to find his sword turned aside, by his adversary's blade. Harassed at finding his efforts un availing he insolently remarked to his opponent, " Well, sir, at Avhat hour do you intend to kill me ?" There Avas a momentary silence, broken only by the clash of the two swords. Then the stranger, av!i seemed to have profited by that slight in terval do assure himself that the advantages of the encounter lay decidedly with him, quietly said to Lariiiierc's last-question : "Im mediately.''.? Saving which he thrust the point of his sword be tween the ribs of his adversary. who sprang backAvard, tottered, and sam-mix) tnearms ot ins near est second. Putting his right hand to the Avomhd, he said, Avitlrdiffi- cultv That; sir, is not a sabre cut it is a tlwust with the Avith tlie sa-bre I feared no one In a feAV minutes he fell back dead. The stranger nor advanced po litely toward the seconds of his victim, and inquired if he Avas at liberty to depart. "You Avill at least tell us your name?"' asked they in reply. Larilliere's opponent proved to be one of the younsr officers of the garrison at Blaye. IL nir. Scott, in his autobiog raphy, tells a story against himself, illustrating his early perception of personal peculiarities. One boy Avas always above Jiinf in his class and, do Ahat he Avould, till, obsei'Y' ing him always fumbling at a low er button of his Ava-istcoat as4ie an swered a question, it occured to oum to cut it oil on the si a. He Avatchcd Avith some anxiety for the result. The ruse ansYvered only too Avell. When the boy Yvas again questioned, his fingers sought for the button ; missing it, in his distress he looked down for it in vain. "He stood confounded," says the penitent aggressor. "I took his place, nor did9 he CY cr re cover it, or suspect the anther of his YVi'ong." This story, howevcr, tells tAY'o AY'ays. Doubtless some bodily habits establish associations favorable to the memory, and qui eting to irritability; the mischief is that the mind becomes dependent, and is stranded Yvhcn cut off from the old moorings. -v- -y- Charge to a Jura. df the jury believe from the evidence. that the plaintiff and defendant were part ners in the grocery, and that the plaintiff bought out the defendant, and that the defendant paid the note by delivering to the plaintiff a coyy', Avhich he Avarranted not to be breech y ; and the warranty was broken by reason of the breachi uess of the cow, and he droY'e the coYV back and tendered her to the defendant, but he refused to re ceive her, and the plaintiff took her home again and put a heaAy yoke on her to prevent her from jump ing the fences, and by reason of the yoke she broke her neck and died ; and if tlie jury beiioac that the defendant's interest in the grocery avp.s Avorth anything, the plaintiff's note Avas Avorthless and the coav good for nothing, cither for beef or milk, fihen the jury must find out themselves Iioy they will decide the case ; for the court- if she understands herself, and she thinks she does don't knoYV Iioyv such a case should be decided. A. few days since Capt. Joseph W. Coppage, Yvhile ploughing in a field near Naples, 111., turned up a )Oi of gold coin. He stopped his tchinjxamined the glittering metal closely, counted it, and found it amounted to 8 1,000. IIoYYever, a doubt "depressed his soul. He feared the metal might possibly have been deposited thereby coun terfeiters, and might proAe Avorth less. He took it to Winchester, and sold it to one of the banks for $5,000 in greenbacks.. The proprietor of a Boston bone mill advertises that " persons send ing their oavii bones to be ground Avill be attended to with punctu- ality and dispatch." .... . i ' J. HOW A PISH SWIMS. From ITarper's Magazine, December 1869. So much, then," for the manner and the means of overcoming the attraction of gravitation in the fish. Noay-, Iioyv docs it SYY'im? We have found that the successive or simul taneous removal of the dorsal, anal, pectoral, and ventral fins only ren dered the fish's position unsteady ; but he could SYvim as Avell as before! But if the end of the caudal fin be snipped off, its speed is diminished; if the entire fin is removed, it moves still slower, and with evident exer tion, but bravely keep it up until the tail itself has been cut off up to or beyond the anal fin ; then at last the poor victim to science suc cumbs, rolls over and over like a loo upon the water, gasps convulsively, makes a few desperate but ineffect ual struggles with its abbreviated tail and dies. Mr. Bcrgh would probably ob ject. But the sight appears "more cruel than it is, i'or the successive cuts seem to disturb the fish very little ; and as the whole is over much sooner than the dying strug gles of a hooked fish, we m.ay claim the right to make the sacrifice for our intellectual l inner -especially as it occurs , by no means even T1 i & J h rid ay. , "We have learned that a fish can not .'swim williout its tail. Lotus now inquire how it swims with it. Very much as you scull a boat with an oar ; but with the difference that in this case the- oar is a jart of the boat, and is flexible both in its length and in its height. Let us suppose our fish floating at rest in the water. Its tail is cx tended straight behind the body; suddenly it is bent to one side; this of course turns the head toward the same side, and perhaps carries the fish a little backward;-bnt iioyv comes a more forcible backward stroke of the tail, which turns the head tljp other way and propels the nsn lorwaru. ihciyiaving reached the middle line, it is gently bent to the other side, and again forcibly extended. The result of these alter- ii.-ity u:u emenis oi tne tan in 0V posite directions is, as in the scull ing of a boat, to propel the fish for- y an i, not in a straight but a zigzag direction. But the successive movements are so rapid that Ave notice only the resultant forward motion, Yvhich is in some species, as in the salmon, at the rate of tYYcnty or-twenty-five miles an hour, and so powerful that the sword-fish has been known to thrust his" sword through copper sheathing, a layer of felt, four inches of deal,and four teen inches of oak. But it may iioyv be asked, " Why does the backward stroke of the tail carry the fish forward any more than its forward stroke carries it backward? for they must pass through the same space." There are four different reasons: First, The forYvard stroke is much less forcible and rapid than the backward. Second, The water is already moving; for the previous backward stroke of the tail from the ether side to the middle line has forced the water in- all directions out of its Yvay, so that the further stroke foiYY-ard meets compara tively little resistance ; but the backYvard stroke meets all the more, and is'thereforc the more effective in sending the fish forward. Third, This and the Fourth reason depend upon the form of the tail, or upon the will oft the fish. There are some tails, such as those of the sharks and of the sea snakes, which arc long and narroYv and stiff from edge to edge; and these arc " feathered" like an oar. Biit the tail of an ordinary fish is not only much wider, but flexible in e Very direction, and capable of being spread out or narroYVed by the action of little muscle's attached to the bony rays which support it. Noyv sucji a tad may be feathered, and probably is, when the fish is moving slowly ; but for more rapid movements it is probable that the whole tail is spread out and hol loAved backward for the backward stroke; but that upon reaching the middle line it is narrowed and made convex for the forward stroke, so as to offer the least re sistance to the water. Those fishes Avhich have scales overlapping each other are aided in still a fifth way ; for in tire for- Avarcl stroke the scales upon that side of the tail would be flattened closely together so as to present a plane surface ; but in the backYYard stroke the edges of the scales would be raised a little from the bending of the tail, and Avould offer a roughened surface to the water. General Logan has joined a tem perance society. - . . - .. -ftfc fa,..li.lLJ JUiJf II OR1GIM OF THE SPICES. Children, come learn something about the various kinds of spices,so 1 that when yon arc in tho kitchen helping somebody to make cakes, J" sauces, puddings, or pies, you can take an intelligent interest. It is Avell to know what you are grind- ing in the mill. or, grating on the nutmeg-grater; so here are the facts. Be careful, though, that you do not let your knowledge fall in ; the dough and make it heavy.'- r Nutmeg is the kernel of a small, smooth, pear-shaped fruit thatjv grows on a tree '.m thc Molucca" Islands and other partsofthc East. The trees " commence bearing in their, seventh year, and continue , fruitful until, they are , seventy or eighty years old. Around the nutmeg or kernel is a bright brown shell. - This shell , lias a soft scarlet covering, which when flattened but and dried is-known as mace. The best- nutmegs are solid, and emit oil when pricked with a pin. Ginger is the root of a shrub first knoYvn in Asia, and noYYculti vated in the West Indies and Sierra three Leone. The stem groAY's or four feet high, and dies every year. There are two varie ties of ginger, the white and black caused by taking more or less care in selecting and preparing the roots, which are always dug in the Avintcr, when the stems are with ered. The white is the best. Cinnamon is the inner bark of a beautiful tree, a native of Ceylon, that grows from tAYenty to thirty feet in height, and lives to be cen turies old. The United States has imported nearly $10,000 worth of cinnamon in a single year. Cloves native to the Molucca Islands, and so called from their resemblance to a nail (clavis.) The East Indians call them changlcch, from the Chinese tcheng-kia (fra grant nails.) They grow on a straight, smooth-barked tree about forty feet high. Cloves are not fruits, but blossoms gathered be- s fore they are quite unfolded. Allspice a berry, so called be- '; cause-it combines tlie odor of pca--cral spices grows abundantly on the beautiful allspice or bayberry tree, native of South America and the West Indies. A single tree has been known to produce one hundred and fifty pounds of ber ries. They are purple when ripe. Black pepper is made by grind ing the dried berry of a climbing vine native to the East Indies. White pepper is obtained from the same berries freed from their husk or rind. Hcd or Cayenne pepper is obtained by grinding the scarlet pod or seed vessel of a tropical plant that is now cultivated in al- 6 most all parts of the world. Hearth and llomc. Uxskasoxahle. A matter-of-fact old gentleman in neAv England whose Avife was a thorough "De struction ist," Aras aYvakencd out of his sleep by his possessed rib one stormy night, with the words: Husband ! did you hear that noise? It's Gabriel n comming! It's the sound of the chariot-wheels f "O, pshaw you old fool 1" replied the good old man, "do you s'pose" Gabriel is such an ass as to come on wheels in such good slcighin'g this ? I tell you it's not hini- -turn ...... . I 4 , T,, " Josh Billings has turned editor, and, in "answer to correspond ents," he perpetrates the folloYY ing, which Avill answer remarkably ay'cII as an epitome on Horace Greeley's ucyv book on Political Economy -so called : " Gertrude Your inquiry stumps me. 'The more I think about it, the more I can't tell. As near as I can recolleck iioyv, I think I don't knoYY. Much -might be scd both ways, neither may be rite. Upon the hole I think I wood or woodn't, jist as I think best or otherwise. , c . Thos. E. Hogg is called the "Texas Poet." Who'd ever thought that poetry could be found in a hog ? Exchange. We ncA'er knew a hog who could write poetry, but we haAe read the productions of Bacon, which were replete with good sense Ave have also seen bacon which was full of bad scents.- NTews Letter. You are denying a fact to get off a joke. One of the sweetest English poets of the present age is Hogg, and wc assure you we navo nerused some delightful effusions from that Hogg's pen.- Galves- ton DispatcJu Have you a sister? Then 1oao and cherish her. If you have not a sister of your oayii, then love somebody else's sister. f 't ' i t' Ft f s