jaiMaajghJ-' m .innmi mug! o G o o o Co o o 0 1 O o o o 71 JJ o o npy WEEKLY ! if ! 4 i t3 i : - ar 8. i i: T' 5 0. J rt t. t : t 3 r on 1 1 f aaMnHMmnoBaa Theo Weekly Enterprise. 0 A DEMOCRATIC PAPER, FOR THE Business Man, the Farmer tr FAMILY CIRCLE. PUBLISFIED EVERY SATURDAY AT THE OFFICE Corner of Fifth and Main streets .Oregon City, Oregon. TERMS of S UB SCRIP TIOX: Single Copy oue year, in advance, 3 00 TERMS wf ADVERTISING : ' Transient advertisement, including all Ii'iCilJTytiee:;, 4 so,, of 12 lines, I v.$ 2 50 For each subsequent insertion l (;n One Ooliw.in, one year $120 00 JU!f " CO V-jiir?er " " 40 liu-niess Card, 1 square one year 2 &3 R.;mlltince to made at the risk o Subscriber, and at the expense of Agents. I BOOK' AND JOB PRINTING. ' The Enterprise office is supplied with i htaiitvinl. approved stales of type, and mod- S, em M ACHIXE I'HEsKS, wltic! will enable i lie Proprietor to do Job Piinting at all times i Neat, Quick and Cheap ! I T u orlv sol, cited. ; AH Ra.nine.au ti'.iHXtict'wns upon a Specie bai. JOHN MYERS, Finttiwiul Agent. JJ (JSXA'SS CA III) s7 JW.POSS, ML D., o Physician and Surgeon, Ofiice on Maui Street, opposite Mason ic 11 all, Oregon Citv. 13tf - II. SAFFAPPANS. Physician and Ssreos, o t-f Ofli'ce at las Drttjg Store, near Tost ()tf.:e, Oregon Citv, Oitl'mii. i:jtl o 0 J. WELCH, DENTIST. I'ertinnriUly Located at Oregon, City, Oregon ROOMS With Dr. Saltan ans, on Main st. yjI.W ATKINS, M. D , SUKOEON". I'ouri.iNi), Ohkoc n. OFFICE Front street Residence cor ner nf Main and SeveutU streets. ALEEUT H. K ALLEIJBEHG, CJa?isiisi and Druggist, A. 7 J FIRS T STREET, He!. Stark and Va;hinqtnn . J' OR TLA Sb, ' OR EG ON. o I B Physicians " Prescriptions Carefully 1 prepared, at re hiced Price. A complete I assortment jf Patent Medicines, Pen'umcr- I ie, iunri prunes, r uncy. s ap, etc., on nana ana tor sale at lowest prices. Ilf.tf A. H. UKl.h. E. A. r.lKKElt. BELL 8l PARKER. I RUG GISTS, I AND DEALFRS IV ; Chemicals, Patent Medicines, Paints, O Perfumery, 07., Varnishes, I And wery artrcbkept in a Drug Store. Main rj Ktreet, Oreson Citv. V. F. HIGHFIELD, & Established since lS49,at the old stnnd, jMiin Street, Oregon City, Orejon. An Assortment of Watches, Jew elry, ar.id Stth Thomas' weight Clocks, all of which are warranted to be as represented. Tiepairinirs done on short notice, :nd thatikful for past favors. "Liv3 and Let Live." JTIKLDS & STKiCKLKI?, JEALEKS IN n PROVISIONS, ORGOEREES, COC.NTUY PRODUCE, Ac, CHOI OK WINKS AND LIQL'ORS. ' 1 t ?Vf" At the oil st.iud of Wortman & Fields Oregon Cit. , Oregon. 13tf i3 "Barnum S ad o o n ." JENT & 1LUIEV, DI PENSEUS OF j Choice Wines, Liquors & Cigars, I Main st., Oregon City. I lf Call, and Robert Potter will show you 4 through the establishment. l'Jtt tl Bamam Restaurant." JKOX DeLOUKV, PRorBiETou OF TI1IS ESTABLISH .ff X T , Main st.," Oregon City, Knows how to erve liis customers with Ov-ters. Pirs' Feet, a good cupofCotf-e or a SQUARE MEAL. IStf . T" II QYV TTT WHOLESALE GROCER, 32 Front Street, Portland. GOODSY THE PACKAGE, FOR CASH ' s AT SAX FRAXCISCO TRICES, and Freight. fFOrilers Promptly tilled in San Francis co, if desirtd. C4 .tf I CLARK GREENHAN-, I .CUy Dmyman' 1 OREGON CITY. I fli t2" "Ul ,or,ler! for delivery of merchan i, P "-a.are and freight of whatever de-- ! cu M' an,y pirt F the cit7 w beexe I ca.e 1 promptly aui with care. DRUGS . . WEATHERFORD & 09, PEALEIIS IN DRUGS, OILS, PALMS, &C, T ESPECTFULLY INVITE THE ATTEN 1V tion ot tlie trade and consumers to their ritock of Goods, cousLtmg of AND DRUGGISTS SUNDRIES. An assorted etock of PAINTS AND PAINTERS" MATERIALS, PATENT M EI ) I C I X HS, C 1 1 EM I C a LS AND DYE STUFFS, WINDOW GLASS, BRUSHES, &c, Ac, &c. Yith a selected assortment of Fancy Goods and Perfumery, Constantly receiving FRESH SUPPLIES And offer goods in their line at GREATLY REDUCED RITES, WHOLESALE OK RETAIL. AV. WEATHERFORO &')., Druggists, 23!) Front Street, l'ortland, O.errou. . March 19, lS70:tf WAG OX Carriage Manufactory ! The undersigned, having increased the di mensions of his premise.?, at the o'd stand Corner of Main and Third streets. Oregon City Oregon. Takes this method to inform his old pat rons, and as many new ones as "may be pleased to call, that he is now prepared, with ample room , good materials, and the very best of mechanics, to build anew, recon struct, make, paint, iron ami turn out all complete any sort ol a vehicle from a com mon cart to a concord coach. Trv me. Jilackstnithing, Horse or Ox shoeing, and sreneral jobbing ncatJv, quick! v and cheap ly done.' DAVID SMI i ll. Opposite Excelsior Market LIKCCLNJjAKERYi B ABLE Y, HARDING & CO., Successors of L. Dii.lek in the Lincoln IJakery, T EG LEAVE TO INFORM THE CITI XJ zens of Oregon City and surrounding country, that thev keep constantly on hand and for sale, all kinds of DREAD, Cll VCKERS, CAKES, PASTRY, CANDIES AND NUTS. Also, a good and general assortment of FAMILY GROCERIES. Orders promptly filled, and goods deliver ed at the residence of the purchaser when desired. The highest prices paid for Butter, Eggs and Vegetables. A liberal share of public patronage is re spectfully solicited. April 23. 'ls7o:ly ALASOM STJjITH, Attorney and Counselor at Law, I'KOCTOll AXD SOLICITOR. AV0CAT.' Practices in Sta'.e and U. S. Ccurts. OJice Xo. 108 Front Street. Portland, Orejon, Opposite McCormick's I'ook Store. Savings ! Savings ! FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF PORTLAND. O Savings De artrrent ! This Bank has established, in connection with its general Banking business, a savings department, and will allow interest on coin deposits, made in accordance with the condi tions adopted by this Hank. In establishing a Savings Department, this Banking Associ "tion has in view the benefits to accrue to a class of peisons having small suns to loan, by providing a safe place ot deposit, ample security, and fair rate of in terest, as w 11 as to aggregate and bring into use idle capital. For the safety of deposits in this Bank, are pledged its entire capital and resources, and also the personal liability f its Directors and Stockholders, as provid ed by Section 12 of the National Currency Act, approved Jure 3, 1S04, a greater spcu rity than that given by ordinary Savings IJ.inks. Printed copies of the conditions up on which deposits are received, may be had upon application to the Board. HEXllY FAILING President JAMES STEEL Cashier DIRECTORS: IIENKT t ATLINfi, IlEXEV W. CoRBETT. L. 11. Walefiklh, J auks Steel, .-2.,.. . J . AX5SCUCYVER. noii Oregon L.olSe JVo. 3, I. O. or O. P.-- o-h? Meets ever' Thursday even SS?3i ing at 7 o'clock, in Odd Fellow's -X' Hall, LMain s eet. Members of the Order are invited to attend By order. x. o." Physician & Accoucheuse. DR. MARY P. SAWTELLE, OFFERS HER PROFESSIONAL SER vices t the people of Oregon City and vicinity. Residence in the country, ten miles east ol Oregon City. My U:tf Willamette L.olj;e x0. 13 I. O, T Meets every Saturday evening, at the, roonis S.E. corner of Main and Fifth streets, at 7 1-2 o'clock. Visiting members are invited to utteud. By order of C. T. ORJGGOff- CITY, OREGON, SATUBMY, JUNE 11, 1870. The Men who Succeed in the World Take twenty loys of sixteen, in our or in any city in the State, and let them go to work, three or four in a dry goods store, boot and shoe or blacksmith estab lishment and printing offices. In ten 3-ears thev- will have become men of tvent-si.v, and the majori ty' cf them will then be aboht as far along in the business as ther ever will be. One or two only in each of the above brandies will be established in business for them selves or connected with some firm doing a good business, living and growling about their poor luck. ' Now we assert that there is ood reason for their poor success, and that luck has but little, if any thing .it all, to do with it. If we take the trouble to ascertain the real facts in their several cases, we shall find that those 3'oung men who became masters in t heir trades or leading men m their pursuits, were not afraid to work, and were determined to succeed. Thev looked beyond the da" and week. They made themselves valuable and useful to their employers, bT being faithful, reliable, and willing to do what they could for the interest of those for whom thev worked. When a press of business came, they were ready and willing to work extra hours, without sulk ing or grumbling, well knowing that business must be attended to when it-came, and that there were plenty of dull times during the year which would more than coun terbalance any extra business of the bu season. To sum it all up, these young men indentified them selves with the establishment where they were empkn-ed became use ful to their empIo"ers, in fact, fixtures, who could be illy spared, and in due course of time, havin'g gained experience, were invited to take a hand with already establish ed house, or else boblly struck out for themselves. Here, then, is the lesson, which is, if 3-011 wish to become successful masters, learn first to become faithful serv ants. PlccJtaixje. There is so much good sence in the above that we cannot resist transferring it to the columns of tie Copperhead. If the 3'oung men who are now engaged as mechanics in manufactories, clerks in stores, or labors on farms would act in the spirit of the advice given, it would be not onl3' better for their emp!ocrs, but it would train their own minds to habits which would be of lasting benefit to them. When cniploj-ee works for the interest of the unph-cr he is work ing for his own temporary ail vant age and is la ing out a future course of action for himself which he will find of advantage in eveiy hour of his intercourse with the business world. Glimpse of the other Life- AVc notice in one of our ex changes the following item which we eopr, and will add one or two others of a similar nature: A few da3s ago a little girl Itha ca just before she died exclaimed: "Papa, take hold of m3r hand and help me across." Her father died two months ago. In the JVorthtccstem Christian Advocate a few 3'ears ago perhaps seventeen there was a notice of the death of a little child of 3Ir. Piglow, of sainted memoiy" who hail apparent- passed into a sleep prior to death, when all at once she aroused opened her C3es, raised her arms, and rapturoush', exclaimed, "I sei. j'oupapa! I do," and immediately' passed from life before her. Another, and one of the most beautiful incidents of death, was de a theme for a poem, Mrs. S. S. Smith, of Xew York. A child, on the confines of death and life, whil3 partially awake asked his mother who would take him over the mountains? Saying "I can not go over them." 1 1 is mot her told him that he would be taken care of by the Good Shepherd, lie was still troubled, but presently his face illumined, and with feel ings of joy he exclaimed, "I can go, now, mamma, a strong man has come, who will carry me safe over the mountains." J-lc. The report that the widow of Stonewall Jackson was going to many a Boston man turns out to be a base libel on a veiy estimable lad-. Some people take delight in starting such damaging stories about respectable ladies. If all the land bills now before Congress should pass, it would plunder the countiy of one hund red millions of acres. - .z - A Protest against Woman Suffrage- One hundred ana iorty women of Loraine countr, Ohio, all intelli gent and highly educated, have suit to the Legislature the follow ins: memorial : "We acknowledge no inferiority to men. We claim to have no less ability to perform the duties which God has imposed upon us, than the have to perform those imposed upon them. We believe that God has wisely and well adapted each sex to the proper performance of the duties 01 each. e believe our trusts to be as important and sacred as any that exist. We feel that our duties fill up the whole measure of our time and abilities; and that the are such as none but ourselves can perforin. Their im portance requires tis to protest against all efforts to compel us to assume those obligations which cannot be separated from suffrage; but which cannot be performed br us without the sacrifice of the highest interests of our families and 01 society. 11 is our lathers, brothers, husbands, and sons, who represent us at the ballot-box. Our fathers and brothers love ns. Our husbands are our choice, and one with us. Our sons are what we make them. We are content that they represent us in the corn-field, the battle-field, and at the ballot box, and we them in the school room, at the fire-side, and at the cradle; believing our representa tion, even at the ballot-box, to be thus more full and impartial than itVould possibly be were all women allowed to vote. Wedo, there fore, respectifully protest against any legislation to establish 'woman suffrage' in part of it." our land. or m any The Wife. Only let a woman be sure she is precious to her husband- that -not useful, not valuable, not convenient simply, but lovely and beloved ; let her be the recipient of his hearty attentions, let her fec i that her cares and love are noticed, and appreciated and returned ; let her opinion be asked, her approval sought, and her judgement respect ed in matters of which she is cog nizant ; in short, let her only" be loved, honored and cherished in the fulfillment of the marriage vow, and she will be to her hus band, her children and society, a well-spring of happiness. She will bear pain, and toil, and anxiety, for her husband's love to her in a tower and a fortress. Shielded and sheltered therein, adversit will have lost its sting. She may suffer, but sympathy will dull the edge of sdrrow. A house with love in it and b- love I mean love ex pressed by words and looks and deeds, for I have not a spark of faith in love that never crops out is to a house without love as a person to a machine; the one is life, the other is mechanism the unloved woman may have bread just as t i cl y as the other, but the latter has a spring of bcautj" about her, a jo3'ousness a penetrating kindness to which the former is an entire stranger. The deep hap piness of her heart shines out of her face. She gleams over. It is aity and graceful and warm, and welcoming with her presence; she is full of devices and plots, and sweet surprises for Iter husband and family. She. has never done with the poetiy and romance of life. She herself is a l3Tric poem, setting herself to all pure and graceful melodoies. Humble house hold wa3s and duties have for her a golden significance. The prize makes her calling high ; and the end sanctifies the means. "Love is heaven and heaven is love.' Ploomington, 111., is excited over the finding of the following note, picked up in the street, and Air. C. is looked for with interest : Dearest C. Your boots are in side the garden fence, at the south east corner, under a pcice of old carpet. Don't come any more, for Heaven's sake. The old man swears he'll blow the top of -our head off. Your affectionate P. Peecher accepted a present of a cat from an Indiana bo', and pub lished the boy's letter to him. This was the. most reckless thing Henry ever did for now there are, in dif ferent parts of the countiy, over eight thousand boys preparing to send cats to Peecher, to get their names in the papers. A fiddle string factory in the basement of Plymouth Church will probablv' be the next "dead thing" the cele brated divine will have on his hands. zri W BANCROFT LIBRAE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY, CALIFORNIA. Pleasant Reading. HOW THE PHILADELPHIA DESSECT- IXG KOOMS LOOK WHAT IS DONE . THERE A BEAUTIFUL SUBJECT. From the Philadelphia Press. Dissecting rooms are paradoxes. They are places where, with but few exceptions, all would like to visit, and 3-et nine out of ten are to nervous to approach. .And in truth there is something horrible attend ing the cutting up, coollr, of the "human form divine," even if im mediately, human life be prolonged 13" it. Xor is it a nice pleasant; thing either to be a witness or a party to the cutting up; but fori courage to approach these "schools of the dismembered dead," we serve up a oeiectabie disn m delectable dish in the sure knowledge that it will bt swal lowed with avidity. There are some .ozen dissecting rooms in Philadelphia, attached to college buildings and in other places. To describe one is to describe all. The' are, as eveiy one knows, places where the stud)r of the human being who may have died from disease, or in health both intcrnall and externally, his bony and lleshy structure, is pursued. There has been alwas something devilish connected with these apart ments a kind of rebelling or shrinking horror surrounding them. As far back as the palmy days of the Egyptian kingdom, the embal mers of the dead though a neces sary class of men at the time, had to ilee for their lives at the end of each embalming. Although a na tional practice, the fact that they had taken a man's stomach out and stuffed him full of spices, and had pulled his brains through his nos trils and crammed his head with aromatic drugs filled the Eg3ptians with a holy horror. Put use makes horrible things even pleasant in time and the 'oung gentlemen pf the present day have no such fears. Going up stairs in one of these places (for these rooms are alva S on the top stoiy of a building,) and entering the room, the first thing a man experiences is a pceul- nirl unpleasant smell, . sicki"ish, indescribable. On looking about he sees twenty tables that look like ice cream tables ranged round the room, and a d ead body of a man. woman or child, black or white, male or female, in whole or in part, lying upon each. These lar with their heads upon wooden blocks for pillows; and, except where the students were engaged in dissect ing were covered with coarse cloths for decency's sake. A woman a fine fresh subject--lay on one. "Doctor," said one student, "isn't she a beautiful subject?" "Was she ever buried ?" said another. "How old is she?" "How long has she been detd ?" "Plump." "That's so." "Was she ever good looking?" "Isn't she English?" tc, S:c. On the wall of the room hung pictures of parts of bodies, which seemed to be suffering from incurable diseases, and some of these were undergoing terri ble surgical operations. From a gibbett, suspended in the middle of the room, hung low t lie skeleton of a youth. It seems the suspen si on was a screw, which was worked into the skull. As the students walked about, their shoul ders strike the dry bones, and the would swing backward and for ward and rattle again. Past doctors, called "demonstra tors," dressed in long, red aprons fastened round their necks, walked up and down the room, to reply to questions propounded by the stu dents who were engaged in the nrt of dissecting, when "Gray 's Anat omy," did not make matters clear enough. These "anatomies" lay open upon the dead bodies, at the page referring to the particular spot on which ihcr were at work. As they cut, layer after laver of skin was peeling off, .and nerve and sinew and fiber and ligamert and mucle and bone and membrane were here and there exhibited at one view. Here lay a black man, his thigh laid open and the white flesh beneath looking whiter, and the black looking blacker, because of the contrast. There lay a little girl, and here a womam with her arm in shreds. On some flat part of the bodies la- the little boxes of instruments, and ever and anon, as the student wanted to turn over a new leaf of "Gray," or scratch his head, or do an-thing which required more that two hands, he would put his knife between his lips till the hands were again disen gaged. It is customary, before a bod' is dissected, to draw lots among five, that being the number of parts into which a body is divid-j ed. This accounted for the peculiar question, put in a loud tone from the other end of the room : "Who wants a leg ?" some subject having Here is' an accurate description one leg yet undrawn, and the four of a class of men who infest every could ' not be cut up till he was community. The most miserable, entireh' monopolized. Around one j hopeless scrape of humanity is an table at the end of the room ajidle inan a man whose chief aim crowd of students was collected, ! of lifejs to loaf to waste in quieth- looking upon the dead i listless longing, and mental . and body "of a beautiful girl, about j lhysieal inaction the j-ears of this eighteen years of aire. Approach- i short life. There are scores of such ing the table trom the lower end we noticed the high Arabian in- step curved 1 1 T - niGTh enough lor a stream of water to without wetting the run beneath, foot risinir gently to the well developed calf and tliiixh showing in life, a firm and resolute tread; then the full , ' , asam UW noVk j ,lkc a column set upon a mountain, ,'UiW "tau,1""1 . u:iu' V11 uie neau ana painu lace, Ivm amid a mass of dark brown hair diich hung knotted and tangled all aruond. Her nose was finely shaped, straight and squarish at tfie end; purety Caucasian, Hogarth's line of grace and beaut 3r was in the mouth, and the whole face illustrated finelr the Grecian rule of the exact triple division from the forehead to the chin. In the bandage-room there were about a dozen stuffed dummies, all brothers, from there likeness to one another, with that leather', can't-help-nn'self kind of a look, and stuck upon iron rods run up in the region of each dummy's o.s casejeis. Students were here engaged in applying straps to the toes, fingers, iegs, nccKs, neeis, etc., 01 these gentlemen, it iookco as it there had been a terrible railroad smash up in the neighborhood and these unfortunates had been pulled out from among t lie debris. -1 Tl IT A Poston clergyman, while preaching the other day, suddenly exclaimed : " Awake ! awake ! the best part of my sermon is 3-et to come." Pooiicsboro, Iowa, claims to have started Pevels for the Senate by scaring him out of town in the night, because he seduced a colored neighbor's wife. The Senator once ran a baber shop there. The neighbor is on the way to Wash ington to confront the Senate, but we suppose it will be hushed up for the good of the part'. A pious old lady in Connecticut, who is down on actors and theater goers, has on her mantel shelf a bust of Edwin Pooth, which some lively nephew has palmed off on the poor old lady for Christ. It answers every purpose; but if she finds out the deception, that neph ew needn't expect anything in her will. A Mississippi writer is discussing the "incompatibilities of timbers," asserting that certain timbers of great durability, when framed together, act upon each other so as to nroduce mutual destruction, and that consequently, when such have been immediately divorced. A reverend gentleman named Fary, of Chicago, proposed to give the coup de race to the city by establishing in Arkansas a colo 113' of peisons who will be guided by "principles of temperance, morality, and religion." His en thusiasm leads him to the jvrepos terous hope that "00 or -100 families could be -found for such a purpose. A Doctor of Divinity, in Alle ghany Penn., a widower, is accused of violating his promise to marry a young lady, daughter of a poor and respectable widow in his con gregation, that he may wed an heiress in an Eastern State. She shows ninety-six notes and letters he has written her, but he excul pates himself on the ground of her "mental weakness." The Deadest. We learn from an exchange that Susan Prown, of New Hampshire, died last Thurs day at the advance weight of five hundred pounds. It took her two whole days and a half of a morning besides to die all over and char through ; but when she did die she' was the very deadest woman in the State, Susan was. The clergyman was obliged to read the funeral service over her twice, she was so large. A Pennsylvania man claims to have invented or improved a rail road that is superior to any 'ct brought before the public. He says that it can run entirely safe at the rate of GO miles an hour, thus completely revolutionizing com merce and travel. His plan is four instead of t wo rails, the cars to be 17 feet wide, which can be fitted up with all the mouem ""i';" f o first class hotel The new method will soon be brought to a test. 11 .njCLsa ( The Loafer, o o i beings 111 every town and city miserable loafirs, whose soleOoccu pation is to avoid employment of J any kind whose lives can scarcely I be called lives who die one after i another and leave behind them I what ? A vacancy to be mourned Ao, lor thev vacancies, not men. ToQ these atoms society owes nothing. The history of the world's progress ignores their names and existence ; and being dead, the grave contains no more inert, worthless earth than it did before. The' become chronic nuisances as regards their worth or value, and from day to day in the haunts of busy1 n?en, they pass as uncurrent funds at so much discount that they can not even bu-themselves. Such are loafers-miserable, worthless beings, who die only when they geVtoo lazy and indolent to use o their organs. Thing's I Hate. o I hate the man who makes love to his wife before folks, and makes the house too hot to hold her when o the' are gone, who says dear, and vnfey in public and" abuses her when he gets her hotiie. o I hate a woman who, when her 0 husband comes home at night tired, and discouraged perhaps with his day's labor and glials, insists upon uiaggmg him out to a party or opera, when the lounge or "bed appears the only comVort to the exhausted man; "and I hate him if he is simpleton enough to dress and accompany her because she cries. I hate the man who spends money without stint among men and denies his wife a 'decent 'ward robe ; and I hate the woman who doesn't make a fuss about it. I hate the man who is always ready to do a good turn for a neighbor, and obstinately refuses to do any thing at home ; whoQ gives freeh- of his time and money to outsiders, and neglects to pro vide for his wife and children. T T . , x nctiu me woman who is so bent mimi ''imnmvinrt Ly mat she allows her little ones to go ragged and dirty, and her hus band's clothes tattered and button less ; and I hate the man who don't put a stop to such nonsense. How HE MADE ins Moxet.-q The following conversation is re ported to have taken place in the barber shop of one of our princi pal hotels the other day, says an exchange: Cj First man and brother (readings a newspaper) I see dis Mr. Ifoss child, what jest died, was wof fo' hundred millions dollars! Second man and brother (strop pi n g a ra zo r) W ho? First man and brother Mr. Posschiids. Second man and brother Hor much was he wof, did 3-011 say? First fo' hundred mlion dol lars. Second Goshamity ! He must a had a good districk. First Good districk ! What do you mean ? Second I mean good districk ; dat's what I mean. I s'pose he was a whisky inspector! else how could he make so much 11101103-? A Fowl Joke. "Dennis, dar o ling, what fs it you're doing?" hist, Piddy, Pse try in o 1 rr an experiment." "Muthcr ! what is it ?" m 'What is it, did you say?? Why, it's giving hot water to the"chickens, I am, so that they'll bQE after lay ing boiled eg'T-s."" In the charter elections, lately held iii Peru, Columbus, Madison, and other towns of Indiana, the negroes voted solidly for the Pe publican ticket, but the Democracy triumphed nev ertheless. The white men of Indiana are repudiating thorj fraud by which that state was mado to ratify the Fifteenth Amend ment. Two wealthy citizens of WiP. mington, Del., have just built fine residences, and have found that the' are on another man's lots. The other man says he will show them where he has got some more lots, if they want to build some more. He will not sell th lots, but gives them a week to take away their confounded houses. 3 G 1 V i ? v: I 1 i o 1 o o o I . 0 0 Q O 1 : O . 1 '. 1 O fi- o ( o O 1 X