Juu6Jim! i)mn,jHi,iii,. o o o o o -!'-.--Aiuijijgj "w. -.ja. .jjnj 'a.t .ir-yjggmiiiL-Mi.':i.. .-.j.,,i gmiLLjJU o o. o o" o o O 0 o o o J o ; O O O VOL. 4. i ii i i i ii ' n ii'dinm Will 'I'M 1 i'n ! jn " uri 1 1 ' n in i mr n hthi- n ., o Ike W eekly Enterprise. A DEMOCRATIC PAPER, ran rut Business r?1an, the Farmer And the FAMILY WROTE. Q JSSIED i EIIY SATUJSDAIi" CY EDITOR AXI PUBLISH ER. CJl- FVCA.'- Corner of Fiftu a.'id Main tiCt-? Oregon City. Oregon. o TERMS of S UBSCRIP TIGN: GriiDS Copy one year, in advance, $3 00 o TJiR MS cf A I) YE R TISING t 'out adVertHewi-nt, meiidin? a!! "xn" . V of 12 hue.-, 1 w.$ 2 50 lJC-i. , "uuhi insertion . . 1 to i-or ei::n - r vcar One C jlu-nu, . iU!f " " "' (,) iirter " ' jUaiae-ts Can!, I siare o.ne yea. .$1.0 00 . 12 jf?' Rmitl mc- t be mcjt at Ti,, e rixk o Sa'jiSribfrtt, and at the ctpenxe of Agents. BOOK' AX I) JOB I'PINTING. ti" The Enterprise office is supplied with hp.-itiful. unproved styles of type, and mod ern MAC MIX 12 I'RKSSiCS. which will enable the J'i opi -ictor t do .T-.-b lMnting i't all times Q Neat, Quirk and Cheap ! tiiT Work solicited. A'i lJaieiit 1r in-iet'um upon a Specie bn-is. n usixxss a. i rd J. H. SITCHEL, I X. DOLl'H. r?l ITCH ELL & DOLFH, Altof?icys aiiff Counsellors at Law, q Solicitors in Chancery, and Proc tors in A it mi rally 0lTiceOd 1 Fellows' Temple, corner of l-'ir.st &ud Alder btieta, l'ortluud, Oregon. 1 AW PARTNERSHIP. J AS. K. X1UXY, Itesi Jeii'M', ('obajibia s:t bet. 2 1 and 3d sts. j. ii. iir.r.n, ItesMenee corner of Columbia and 7th strt. Jas. K. Kelly and J. M. Heed, under the firm name of K1CLLY fc I:Ki:n, Will practice law in the C ants of Orognn Orlie on First .street, near Alder, over the new IVst office room, Port. and. (4utf T AX SIX G STOUT. JL j . . Attorney and Counciir at'Law, PORTLAND, OLIFdON. Oaicc Undr the United States District Court U iom. Front street. 4'Otf pAGE & TIIAYi:n, ATTt)TiXI2YS AT LAW. OFFTTF In Cr e'.s lbii!dinr. corner of Kiont and Stai k treets, I'. rthin J. F. CAPI.E-'. J. C. MOKE LAND. CAiM.ES K ?ori:EANi, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Cr. rtlOS T a:iL IV A Si II?- G TUN ft"., roiCi'LANf), OKEGOX. 1 7U(iEXK A. CKOXIX, VI. TTORXKY A T LA IT, I'ilihIU; 7 and S Carter's Pdoek, i. I'OllTI.ANU, OUECON . FliyEician and urscsn, J0!ltce on Main Stieet, opposite Mason ic Had, Orego Cnv. ICtf JJ SAFFAliUAXS, Physician and Suireon, o I3f" oruC. at his Dvuz Store, near Post 0!i e, Oregon City, Oregon. FJtl J. o O D EXT 1ST. I'ern t neatly L-tcate-t at Oregon City-, Oregon ROOMS With Pr. S.iHarrans, on Main 3W. T II. WATKINS, M. D snnfrEON". Portland, Orkg il. OFFICE Odd Ft bows' Temple, corner Fir -it and Vbier streets Reside te.-e. comer of M tin and Seventh streets. ALAi3SQ?J SfrliTH, Attorney and Counselor at Law, PilUCTOIl A5I) SOLICIT)!?. AV0CAT. Practices in Sta'.e and U. P. Ccr.rt? Office Xo. IDS Front S-'-i. Portland, Oregon. Opposite MeCorn.ick's l?oo Store. "Barnum Saloon." TT ENT & PLUMEY, 1)1 PEXSEliS OF Choice Wines, Liquors & Cigars, Main st., Oregon City. ST" Call, and Robert Potter will show you jfbrou.h the establishm.-nt. litt W. F. HIGHFIELD, Established sine ls49,at the old stand, Vl tin St ret?., Oregon City, Orcjon. o An Assortment or w atches. Jew elry, a-id S th Thomas' weight Clocks, all of whi.'h are warranted n be as represented. Repairing: done on snort nouce, uid thankful for past favors. . (Liv3 and Let Live." 7IELDS & StTiICKLER, ' O DEALERS IX PROVISIONS, GROCERIES, COtW'TUY PRODUCE, Ac, CHOICE WINES AND LIQUORS. r t the ol 1 stuid of Wort man & F a Ids. O.' oa Cit , OresjoE. 13tf An Inlerfstlrg Leter We take !l;c following extracts from a San Francisco letter to Pomeroy's X. Y. Democrat, dated San Francisco, and sisn ed "Woi kin-ma:)." It will be found to con tain much tnnh. and plainly shows the downward tendency of this coast. The wriier says : Everything for (he last two or three monUis is tending to drive the laboring men front these shore;?. There are one thousand idle men in the street"; ef San yraneisco to-day, tosay nothing ol Woinei. ana h. rumoied that certain ladies' shoe (i, 'Hi ufa "'''!'' i'l linrf oily, who eitiploy nnm.. ro" voung women, with sewing machine.'. t -'' ,!u huing and stitching of . ., , 1 t l , .!.. i -i : Iuie Uppers. ut- . ikjuuj. uiua- men to do this work. If this should turn j out to be true it u',Li i'ore to our j alreadv ninnerous ia ponnlation. It is also reported that six Chile '-se innters. capable of reading English manuscript, and who have been working ml -English papers in China, arrived here b 'he last steamer : they are engaged to woi'k' on a religious pUpvr i?i this city, and il the vC- is Mii-aMiii, uie couniiy win hi a, gj,,,, time be flooded w'iih them. Thus lljis A?k','c horde is making inroads day i, j., nn kinds of businesrj. and il it .,r k 'opj'ed there is no ic! line what the result w -ill I e. o nave now a Democratic 1 agis!a,'ir sitting at Sacra mento, but taken alt. 'her it is very weak-kneed, and enti. e..v vfllX- of back bone. Several anti-cco. liave betn introduced, but at the i'as.' niomenf the boasted courage of the me:uJ' rs ot both houses oozed out at thiei lingei' Oi. 's We hope that our citizens will have Ho cause lor a similar complaint. En. The "China trad"r-' is talked of here as a big thing, when it is plainly apparent to everyone that the Chinamen individually take four times the amount ot money out of the Sttit-i per month than the boasted Chinese trade brings in. I believe there was a statement made here some months ago. facts and figures shown, that within a certain number of months I don't now remember the number the Chinamen leaving here lo return to their own coun try took away sixteen million dollars, while the amount realized from the China trade within the same period amounted to four million. And. again, the Pacific Mail Company do not find the China trade profitable enough to enable them to run more than otie steamer per month, but capitalists here are urging tie m to run two steamers per mouth (the object being. I suppose, to bring the coolies in faster), and they have petitioned Coi gn r-s to grant them a subsidy, to pay tl: expenses of ninuing the extra steamers, if Con gress grams the. prayer this country v.'i'd be ruined beyond r demption. unless the people get up another Vigilance Commit tee and burn Chinatown and drive the Asiatic horde into the bay. It would be a very harsh measure, no doubt, but, why snow any more m diansV They are rev to th 1 1 ;:in to n- uuiso than Indian, tor Eavard Tavlor. '.ii- u l.a '-.ne-r.k-s from netua obseivation says: '-They are guilty of crimes against nature, the nature of which are so appalling as to make one's liesh creep and the blood turn cold."' I am nt sure this is the exact language, but you will understand it. These crimes are "cmtmitted in this city every day ,iye. evety hour. The disease known as leprosy h is also appeared among the Chinese pop ulation lnuo. an 1 no d:ubt. in co ;rse of time it will be among the white popula tion. The city is also Hooded wi'h Chin ese prostitutes, brought here every month by the six Chinese companies, for specu lation, and horrible as it may appear, their dens are frequented by great numbers rd' white boys 'ranging from ten to sixteen years of age. as none sech are admitted into the houses of ill-repute kept by white women. White umn also frequent these Chinese dens in great, numbers. No Doenr ok it. The L'o ;iih papers entertain the impression that the continued clof g'ei; of the industrial progress of this country bv Lijrh protective tariffs, re- ilonnds more lo the commercial advantage j of Iaiii'and than 'vouhl a resort to free trade. There Can be no doubt about this Ever since the adoption of the ruinous policy of protection. American commerce has boon declining rr.d that of England has been in the ascendancy. There is not a single American steamer plying between England and the United States. The pas senger business between the two countries alone amounts to some twenty five millions of dollars annually, none of v.hich the Americans get. Two-thirds of all our carrying trade is done in English vessels. During the fiscal ending 18a!) the foreign shipping bringing freights to and carrying frei.hts .rom America amounted 10.813 -COW tons, while the whole of the American shipping only amounted to 5.787.-131 tons. This disgraceful state of things is attribu table to nothing but the blightning eflects of protection. -o o The Oregon Il'pubocaa says ; The apple crop in this neighborhooc, will be l'ight this fall. Many farmers who have had a large surplus heretofore assuvo us that they will have barely fruit enough for home consumption. This scarcity is occasioned by heavy frosts that came in May. and by the ravages of the cattapil lars that destroyed the trees later. On Wednesday last. Mr. John Medscr.r drove a band of about 1.0U0 sheep through town. He is on his way to Goosj Lake, and will cross the Cascade Mountains by the Oregon Central Military Wagon lio d. Mr. John Fills, of this county, will, etart on Monday in-xt with GO head of cattle for the same destination. Several families passed through oa Thursday, bound the same way. Some weeks since we mentioned a coal hank discovered in the Coast Rane jvionnrains uy .ur Liuameiu. ,ir. L. is prospecting his discovery, and finds it. to be more vaotable than at first supposed The St. Louis Fanes thinks the passage by Congress of the enforcement bill v: a party triumph which will prove no less deailv than il was easi.y won. it was un tier the shadow of this bill that Xew York was sweot bv a Deaiocraiic majority ot ninetv thousand. OREGON CITY, OHEtfSOiV, SATUBDAY, JUiLilT S, 1870. mli.mf. .ami ismrumLsivikLLL.: jl rsiLa Vulgar Prrc:'c;-5, Notwithstanding the adoption and promulgation of the fifteenth amendment, and the announcement of the great event of the colored ace by a special message to Con gress, it is faintly whisjx'red that Mrs. Grant objects to having negroes at her drawing room re ceptions. '"This is the most unkiud est cut of all,'1 especially since it is universally admitted that Wash ington society lias, of late j-ears, been very much mixed. XTegroes black spirits and white; red -spirits" have mingled in the social gatlferfngs at Wash ington ; have occupied private boxes and the dress circle at the theatres; were present at Col. For ney's ball, and enjoyed the mazes of the dance, the quadrilles and polkas, with the utmost harmony and eclat. It is unbecoming m 3i';-s. Grant to have such unbecom ing and vulgar prejudice. St. The positi on here assigned to Mrs, Grant is the position really of nine-tenths of tho wealthier liadi eals, male and female. In their elforts to promote the negro and degrade, the whites, the radicals have never for a moment intecdeu ;o make the negro the equal of j tlie rich white man, or to force the rich to recognise him as either politk'al'v, socially, or otherwise their asoc'te and equal. The object at wiic1' the Radicals have been aiming for the past ten years vs to make the iu;':ro the equal, and the rich negroes t.l,c superior, of the poor whites. There h nrobably not a white man who votes the Radical ticket, who ;vill admit that the negro is the politi cal or social equal of the rich while man, and not a Radical who will not toll you that the negro is, and in .all respects should be, the equal of the poor white man. In the position that Mrs. Grant has taken, she is sustained and endorsed by her husband, the President, and. all other rich Radicals. They feel that the negroes are not fit to be socially entertained by them, but insist that poor white people have no right to refuse to recognize the negroes as their equals socially and in "all respects, are I that the poor whiles have no right to refu-e t entertain negroes upon terms of perfect epuahty at any and all their social gatherings. Such is Radi calism, and such have been the purpose of the leaders of that party for the past ten years. TcolSiilsr "Wanted. The Pittsburg Gazette gives an account of waltzing match which recently took place at a ball in that city: After general dancing until midnight, twelve couples took the floor to contest; for a prize, a gold ring, to be' given to the "lady1 who should out-waltz ail competitors. After four hours steady dancing, only two couples remained on the floor. The '- f acount closes as follows: After live hours and three minutes had 'elapsed, one of the ladies fainted, her partner quickly followed her example, and, amid cheers, the prize was awarded to ibo r-rmnln 'thnt, kent the floor. Then came a summing up of the damages. The two contertnig giils were nigher death than hie, raid lmd to be conveyed to their homes together with their part ners, who were as badly used up in carriages, and all have boon in a precarious condition and under medical treatment; The girls had to have their shoes cut oil their feet, and their limbs wore swollen next day to an enormous size. The young men will hardlv recover, and the musicians suffered tern mo, ind will never again play at a te r psicl 1 o rea n eon t est . , -w Three brothers, bearing a remark able resemblance to each other, recently went into the same bar ber's shop on the same day, to get shaved tone going in the morning. the other at noon, and the third at night. When the last one appeared, I lie barber, who was a German, dropped Ins razor m astonishment, and exclaimed, "Veil, dat man has do fastest beard I never saw; I shaves him dis morning, shaves htm at dinner time, and he comes back now mit his beard as long as it never vash."' Referriug to the Fenian invasion the T.nndnn 77ro?s thinks Grant "is actings with loyalty and honor. i a .i y um -; bis iuVnini-.trati.in has succeeded m p. - j ' than be has! r . d...,!nn. 1 " Ij "1 1 ill i. ' OU UV the United States. A large force of men are no on the railroad beyond Aurora. w at work: n-u nieiuau, will run directly through that place. Th3 Saialts cf Oregon. i At the late session of the Acade my of Sciencce at Washington the most interesting feature of the last day's proceeding was a graphic lecture on the Basalts of Oregon Wastington and Idaho, "by K.V. Kavmond. After speaking of the Dailes themselves, he said that on the road from the Dailes to Canvon City, along the San lee river, was a tremendous thickness of basaltic overthrows two thousand feet, high': The river has taken its way through the chasm of the original upheaval and worn it deeper. lie explored the singular phenomena of the caves north of the Dalles. There was no ice in Portland last summer when he visited the place, but a few miles further it was abundant, and, on inquiry, he U ant ed that it was mined from the ice caves forty miles up the Salmon river, near the foot of Mt. Adams. An expedition set out for the caves. They with not large, but beautiful .and filled with the purest ice in mid summer. Here was a possible hint of the lost rivers which puzzle the discoverer. This was a volcano country, and the centers of lines of eruptions could be trac ed by the terraces. The ground im- der the horses feet sounded hollow 1,'om the falling in of the roofs of old caverns frorti one to four miles in length, which were old ducts of the lava. He had st'ii the same thing on Vesuvius in the eruption of ISoO-'CO, which was not from the crater, but at the sides as from a bleeding wound. 1 he stream of lava cools at the sides and top, protecting the hot stream beneatlf. Finally the orifice becomes choked with stones and cooling lava at the eruptive point, and the lava Hows away, leaving the duct empty, end ing at some elevation of the surface which tore up the duct. In the ice caves, the roof hrM fallen at the corners, but on the sides and floors the smears of lava could be soon in fibrous masses, spirting on the roof-like door. In these caves the wafer trickles from thawing snow, in winter freezing as it falls, form ing bergs of tons of ice reaching nearly to the top of the cave. This is much colder than common ice, and lasts all summer. Just below the lower line of Mt. Adams was to be found a mhilature paradise, s hore all the flora of the Pacific Coast grew luxuriantly, attended by myriads of humming birds which disappear for other regions w ith t lie itowers, 1 ic great Sno- shone Fall second ontv to .Niag ara, carver! their way through ba saltic rooks, remarkably distinct in their hexagonal and columnar form. Geological surveyors here can make no mistake in reading the text, lie stood at out time over a cleft ten inches wide and five hundred feet deep. The river had eaten out below the basalt, which by gravity and clearagehad settled into a broken line, di lie rent columns separated by tufa settling sometimes without breaking. Four hundred feet .the river has cut through the basalt, and there are two hundred feet of porphyry be low the basalt; The Lost River is found on entering the canyon of the Snake River, whore, from a per pendicular face of porphyry mid way of the clid a cascade jssues from the rock in a furious large stream. Xo water is to be found on the surface, but the settlers pro tend to identify it with a river ore hmi.li'ixl mitos: in 1 he Vort In This was probably a volcanic drift from which the tufa had been wrought out of the way, and formed a chan nel underground for the water. The speaker wishes to see this in teresting region thoroughly sur veyed by the Government. A Despotism. A Radical con temporary, speaking of England's standing army, says; "With all her boasted constitutional freedom England is in some sort a military j despotism, and her people are ground to the dust with taxation to support her army." We should like to know wherein we have any advantage of England in this re spect? Have not the people of the South been groaning beneath as cruel a despotism as ever oppressed mankind, and are not the people robbed in the name of taxation out of hundreds of millions year for the benefit of a lew Eastern capitalists V The Radicals in Congress re "oeted the proposition to send a Kome, but send one to 1 . . ' Liberia, ami raised hissal'.ary from 3 ' four thousand dollars to seven thousand five hundred dollars. In " . , r.... ,1,,, .i one mace unite men ue, ui 1 other Jplack. - - ; i ' The "Bead E.af Presidtnt. The most disgraceful occurrence which has ever taken place in the life of any President, while in othce, happened with Grant, Robe - son. and a number others formino- the 1 residential party on its way to attend the funeral of Gi n Thomas, at Tray. Grant has been in the habit of receiving passes irom which t IK' (liiierent railroads on he traveled and while on tiie way from Xew l ork to Trov on the Hudson River Uailroad the 1 makes any such statement, he conductor came around as usual j simply says that which is unquali and politely asked Grant and his! fully false. Any one in Congres", party for their tickets. Grant or out of it, who knows as well as himself replied that they were on j he does of the monster petitions government business and that they j which have come dir. ctly from the should pay no fare. The conductor ; people to their rulers inWashing tohl him that ins! ructions must be j ton, asking for a repeal of this obeyed, that the fare must be paid j abominable tax, and who in the or he would uncouple the car and j face of these appeals declares that leave them behind. The illustrious President replied, "If you will insist on it, I tell you I am good : ior xne amount. i lie company can send in its bill." The conductor replied that the company was not in die habit of doing business in that way, and that the fare must be paid or the car would be lelt behind. More parleying ensued and at last a telegram was sent to J. XT. Tousey, Snpertendent of the Road, who directed the conductor to 'Met Grant and his party pass, ami he would collect the fare him self.' This is the way the President of the United States traveled from Xew York to Troy, to attend the funeral of General Thomas. These facts are vouched for by gentlemen of good authority and" if any lion est R-obublican doubts this state ment, let him address a note to Mr. Tousey. Supreintondent ol the Hudson River Railroad. Grant has been guilty heretofore of many acts but this is the vorl of itli, He was convicted of ii''j liy two members of V resir lent lob onnson cabinet, but traveling like a "bummer"' or a "dead beat" on a Railroad, refusing to pay his j If then neither among the well to fiire like a gentleman is e idenee j do who are comparatively few in of his low depraved character, and j number, nor yet .among the labor miserly instincts, classes, the farmers, artisans Such a thin as Grant, for Pr: si-: tiOilt, IS ioweverv in keeping with the tunes we live in. lie was elected by a party resolved on overthrowing all that was decent in morals or good in government. They have converte'd the once honored Halls of Congress info "negro quarters," made the Treasury Department a National house of ill frame, chosen niggers to be their partners in crushing white men and it is till that one could expect when their dead-beat President bullies the conductor of a railroad, and refuses to pay Ins faro like a gentleman. Copper head. -O- - Loxo Coi'KTsiiips. A corres pondent says: if there is anyone thing more disheartening to a woman than a long courtship, I have yet to discover it. From the woman who marries for a home, to the fair creature who marries for love, there are thousands who are kept in suspense for years not knowing whether the man whom they expect to marry is really go ing to marry them or not. It is very certain that long courtships seldom result in matrimony. It generally happens that the faults of both parties .are made evident, and the desire for separation i mu tual. Rut no voting (or old) man has any right to monopolize the attentions of a lady for years und then probably not marry her. By doing so lie more than likely prevents her from marrying some one who would be glad to have her, and acts a part which no gentleman will. So, then, when you have decided the lady is wor thy of your choice (and don't be too long about it), either marrry her or give some one else a chance to. The nigger Senator Revels has a I sister in the Colored Home in New j York city. She is very poor, but ! u1(n the C S Senator was in the! citv to lecture to the Filth Avenue! bon ton rads, he could only spare her a few - shillings, his exposes were so heavy he said, "lmck" Pomeroy is rafsiuir a purse for the poor wench, and intends setting her up as a 'washwoman near the Capitol, Washington. D. C. Wisconsin ha d a law pro hibiting quacks from practicing in the State. Its extension to other States is a matter to be wished tor; bv every on j mfn -Q- W liat proot have we that there 1 . T . 1 was sew mg m i ne time oi mwa: .1 . lm J : TT . t ,-i 1 lie Wits neniueju in on every side, Thb . rem. Ta: The income tax law is to he con tinued in force. For it the eountry is mainly indebted to the olforts of ! Mr. Schenck. lie savs the law is - iomi ar with the neonle. Where he finds a warrant for the assertion we are at a loss to sa v. While we don't pretend to know the senti j ments of his immediate constituency : when ho assumes to sieal in this of too- ! matter for the great mass ! outside of his own State, mid a. it is po mlar, is an unmitigated ass. Ti sere is not a feature of the ab m- ma ion that is popular or can I e rendered so. i he publication of the names of income tax-pavers is a nuisance which has lu come par ticularly odious among the busi ness classes, who have persist, ntly objected to such an exposure of their private affairs, and loudly clamored for -a repeal of the law. Has the ear of Mr. Schenck been leaf to this? Or, disregarding t he" 'sentiment ol' the business and wealth of the country, does he look to find the popularity which he claims for the law among the classes, those who have deprived their wives and children of the necessities of life in order to meet the tax upon their income? Here certainly he should find it if any where, for out of the 27'2,8d: individuals who pay the tax, 107, 000 pay let-s than 620. Those who pay between $!0 and -i-50, number 70,000. And so the number steadily increases the wealthier c'assess. Those who are able to pay between -$50 and -Si 00, foot it) only 4 1.000, and those who pay over '.'200 are less than 10,000. a:;d clerks, whose incomes barelv o.vceer 1 the exempt of -M.000, ihe t - uv is popular, we are curious indeed to ascertain I lint class who the gentleman from Ohio has chosen to designate "the people," and among whom he asserts with assurance that such popularity is to be found. SprhaJuld Leader. Tin: Srrr.KioR I Cage. Under Radical teachings the negroes are fast coming to regard themselves as the "superior race." This feel ing crops out in their devotions, as witness the following which jut now is a favorite hymn at the ne gro camp-meelings in the Southern States : We's nearer to the Lord Dan le white folks, and they know it. See de glory gate unbarred Walk in. darkeys, past de guard! Hot a dollar he won't close It! ' Walk in. darkeys, froo de gate ; Hark, de kullered angels boiler ; (Jo 'way. white folks, yon's too lata! We's de winuin' kuller : Wait ! Till de trumpet iounds to loiter! llai'.elooj ,h tanks and praise! Long eniiiT we s borne our crosses ; Now- we's de sooperior race. And v.-id Gorramigiity "s prace. We's goin" lo hebbeti afore de bosses." Something to Think of. Our Radical rulers refuse to send a Min ister to Rome, where thousands of our fellow citizens are to be found, attracted there either by religion or curiosity. This is done On the plea oi' economy ; but the very ame Radicals send a free nigger to epresent us at Libc-iia, at an nnual outlay of o00. homes ho home of white men, and t.tere tit we are not represented ; Liberia is the home of the nigger, and there we are represented without regard, to cost. IF IF. Statesman. -t- -V The Fenians must tiot curse Grant too hard ior issuing lr.s proclamation. He begins it, in a way which ought to satisfy them, by murdering the Queen's English. 1 ; oicmuly to au mandumd the ; President de clares that with her .Majesty the vjueon oi irent j Britain ami Ireland the United j States t3 at Peace I" Is they, really? And Ohi the Alabama claims set - tied? nd are the President really about to set forth on a visit - to Ids roval sister at Windsor Castle? True love is eternal, infinite, ai id Uv5iv lUn horse t it is n i arwl i.nro u'ltlinit VUMOnT , ....... - - lemon- ' strations: it is seen wit white in the 7,;tf, r. - .... hairs and IS always , heart, KO. 31. Alexander il. t e:;res. o A correspondent of the P.ieli niond Dispatch under date of May 16th, writes thus "concerning the j ex-Y ice 1 resident cf the Confed- erev: I found Mr. Stephens looking very pale and emaciated, reclining in his invalid chair, and intently discussing some law points in a murder case with a legal friend. Though extremely feeble, when interested or excited lie would sit up erect and, his remarkable eye would sparkle with its old fire and he would address hB; hcarer.-oin an animated and always convincing strain. It is his custom, when thV weather is fine, toQsit in his easy chair in his verandah, and as lie converses wheels himself gentlyb back and forth by a convenient arrangement whicli- costs him Fart little effort, and, as he saj'S, exer cises and strengthens his arms and chest. When the sun gets low he calls for his crutches and hobbles slowly over the lawn and througli his well kept garden, in which ne seems much interested. IfSving but partial use of his legs, Mr. Stephens walks with difficulty on l is ericc'K s. lie sys his hip is dis located, and thiirks he will nevei be able to lay his crutches aside Mr. S. has just put his finishing touches to his second volume of "The War between the States" and some copies are now in the hands of the agents. This work is an invaluable addition to pjur literature,- giving what has never yet been attained an impartial history of our late troftbles. The author manifests great interest in the fate of his work. lie told me0when the fust volume appcard. closely f lowed by a lengthy criticism in Bledoes Review, he read the whole fifty-one pages before he put it down, which he did with a sence of relief; "his hipohad weathered that gale mid not a plank was sprung, amine felt that she was seaworthy." O Put I may be tiring your readers with this panegyric, as it might be called, for I have also been pos sessed with tl.ie strong sentiment of love, respect andhnost venera tion, with which every Georgian regards the givatand good mam u Truly is he embalmed in i-he hearts -f" 1 ! oiwl Lis rrorul lnr.li will livo r (in, .- . i i ,, ... ... after him. Many now in statins of alnuence and honor in church, in State, and in the private walks of life, look up to him as a father and a bent factor, w ho found them in poverty, gave them an incen tive, encourage with kind and. hopeful wore s, and then furnished the means to enable them to rise .and become useful, and, in some instances, eminent citizens. o JefL Eavis' cat7 A correspondent in Mississippi asks: o "Is it true, as some of the Northern papers continue to assert that the negro Revels occupies Mr. Davis' old seat in the Senate?" Xo ; it is not true. There Avas an effort made to secure it for him, but failed. It was intended that the history of the time should re ford, "as the grandest provi dence of the nineteenth century," that the humble negro Hiram Rev els occupied in the United States Seriate the seat in which once sat the arch-traitor Jefferson Davis. And in order to brinr it about Sumner, Wilson, and half a dozen other negro-worshipers approached Senator Ross of Kansas, and said to him, "Arise, exchange seats with the man and broker, Revels, that history may tell, to the per- j ooul-islonof Southern chFv- ', lhaU despised n4ro occcu? tjo thJ tl,utoio Jef '1)av5s Mn 1Joss lookod from p from the sheet of paper upon which he was writing. "So this," said, lie, "is the seat in which Davis used to sit ?' " Yes," replied Sufn ner, 'it is. " And you and the ne gro you've got here want me to get out of it, and let the negro get i-into it, do von; e i, - swered Sumner. 0"Thcn," said Ross, tak'ntr up Ins pui, "Pvc only to say that I'll sic you and the r,ej r,ro ;i d first." And thus it - i w . j cam0 to pass 11 a i providence" fg whi j ,n!JSO of history stoo ! ed to take place" L pass tl at the "grand vbicti the jiauicai ood waiting, faiF ouisvUle Cour ier. O ' Sue Robinson, the actress, re- con fbr obtained a divorce irotn Cha.I Gezler, in Virginia City. That was but a left-handed t i; W 'V "J 7, -v in r)n 1 ii liui in v en i v z iwn. date tor ouice, tnai miring me war ' . es his friend had received wounds , r.rt7irrl-i tn "trill ""inv nrdinanr mn!f . nrt,wh tntill inr ordinary mn !p. vv j "j 6 O O o ( 0 G