ft. V f G m o O G TOL. 5. 'OREGON iT, OBEGOiT, FBIDAY, FEBRUARY- 34, NO. MS. ? iiii in i h la m ti 13 si a 'ill .AdbBdi HW Basra rMeliaM da SdSfeS O o o O O. 0 e G 0 The Weekly Enterprise -4 DEMOCRATIC PAPER, FOR TIIE OudlnessMan, the Farmer! 'And the FAMILY CUtCI.E. HSUEU EVERY FRIDAY EY A. ftOLTMER, 'editor and publisher. fVFFICEla Dr.Thcssiug's Eiick Building. o TERMS of SUBSCRIPTION. 'Vmjle Copy one year, in advance, TER MS cf A I) YE R TISIX G "ipnaiAnt n.tvertlMe'ments, including all vi!;, h n insertion:::.: 7 J oo One Column, one year A wl c . i . A , i'iiuvu Hair " Ou.irter " . CO 40 12 Tiusiuess Card, 1 square one year. 3- Remittances to be made ot the risk o Subtcribers, and at the expanse of ' Agents. BOOK AXD JOB pfilXTIXV. , 43- The Enterprise office id supplied with era MACHINE I'Kii.SES. witieh will eiiable beautiful, approved styles oi type, anu mu (the Proprietor tu do Jub Piinting at all times Neat, Quick and Cheap ! Sir Work solicited. AH Buiiness transactions upon a Specie basis. o BUSIaYBSS CARDS. - CHARLES K. WARISEJV, Attorney at Law, Oregon City, Oregon, Sept.l6:lr. JOHN FLEMING, lfj9 DEALER IN BOOKS AND STATIONERY5 . IX MYERS' FIUE-1'ROOF BRICK, MA.IV STREET, ORKfiON' CITY, OREGON'. O MACK & WELCH, 'ri:xT2STS. OFFICE -in Odd Ftll-w.' Ten-pie, Vomer of First and Alder Streets I'osthuid. The putrfnapci; of tho-e -lesirinjr superior . operatioi s is in special ieqvie.-t. Nitrousox ivie tor the j.ainless extraction of teeth. 27" A it iiici.il teeth "better than the best," ai)d an cheap as the cht-jy.te-i. "oc . 25:tf Dr. J, H. HATCH, 't E N T I ST, The patronage of those desiring first Ciaa '0. nrr3i'i'is. is resDeet in! ! v solicited. Satisfaction in all cases gnaii anteed. stered for the N. 1J. Xitr'vu Oj-jl-i .idrniii! Painless Extraction of Teeth. OVfick 1ft Weiant's new building, west Side ot First stree'r, tetu-eeu Alder and Jiur risoh streets, I'citland, Oregon. JJ AV. liOSS, m. D., Physician and Surgeon, r2T"OTi?e on Maui Street, opposite Mason Hc llail, Oregon City. l11 "Live and Let Live." "piKLDS & STTilCKLEr., DEALERS IN" PROVISIONS, GROCERIES, COUNTRY PRODUCE, &c, CIIOICI- AV1XKS AND LIQUORS. At the oil stand of Wort man & Fields 'Oicgon Cit. , Oteg n. 12f" W, 1T- W ATKINS, M. i)-, SURGEON". rortri.Axn, On:-:a(n. OFFICE Odd Fellows' Temple, corner First and lder streets-Residence corner of 'Miu and Seventh streets. ALAFJ3CKJ SI11TH, -Attorney and . Counselor at Law, rilOCTOll AMi SOLICITOU. 0 AVOGAT. Practices iu State and U. S. Courts. Ojlse Xo. 108 Front Street. PoriktnJ, Oregon, Onwite McCormic'i's Book Stoa.r W. F. HIGHPIELD, Established since 1849, at tlic old stand, Miin Street, Oregon Ci'j;, Oregon. An Assortment of Watches, Jew elry. anl Seth Thomas' weight Clicks, all of which are warranted to le a represented. Reoaiiintrs Uoae on snort notice, Uid thankful for p ist Cavers. CLAUS GSEENHAK, OH EG OX CITY. tt3u All orders for the delivery of merchan fiise or p veka jes and freight of whatever des criptioti. to any p irt of the city, v ill be exe cs ited promptly and with cave. JEW YORK HOTEL, (Destfches GafthausO io. IT Front Street, opposite the Mail steam ship landing, Portland, Oregon. -H. H0THF03, J. J. YILSENS, P ROPRIETO R S . o Foard per Week " " " with Lodin. . . " " Pay 00 6 00 1 00 A. NOLTNER, NOTARY rCBLTC, FNTERPRISE OFFICE Oregon City, Jan. 13:tf Bt.axks.-A11 kinds of blank? enn he had at this .office Job Printing of every description neatly executed, at short notice. o o V Eestorationists vs. re:tnictionists. Public debts and standing armies ! are regarded by the common sense of mankind as the two main causes Ot the Oppression ami ninety 01 me masses in modern times, and the once free, intelligent, brave and manly American people have, at this moment, the biggest debt and the biggest standing army expenses in Chri.-tendom. What an astound t . ing thing to realize, that now, in the teeth of the loud bragging of fools and knaves of the "progress" of the country, the railroads and common schools, the forging of keys to unlock mountains of gold, and ll ( III II ( ll'll If ('i I H fOLlllirV IS , , , i. l- f . .1 . . . . . . richer than ever, alter the annihila tion of half of the entire property accumulated since its iJrst settle ment, here stand the two awful foundationotS, that we have the biggest debt and are taxed to support the bin-crest army in the -world, and therejovc there are causes at work to enslave, degrade and brutalize the millions, more po tent and positive than in the worst governed and most outraged peo ple in Christendom! AVIiy, it" the American -people could have one clear, exact glimpse, for live min utes, of the. real "'situation," a mil lion of men would march to Wash ington, and annihilate their "gov ernment" from the face of the earth,, and then give no rest to their feet or sleep to their eyelids until they found some path of safety or road to restoration out of a condition of tilings so horrible and unparelelled. liut let us go into detail, ami con template the distinct and isolated $tcts that now stare ns in the lace. It is a fart that a Northern sec tianal party, of barely one-third of the people, got possession of the government ten years ago, and within these years have sacrificed a million of lives and wasted half of the entire property of the coun try. It is a(? t that for five years past the e iple have been taxed more lie:, vil to support standing armies thru have those of imperial France, ai.d to pa 3" the interest on a public debt greater than that whic h, in England, has ground out two millions of paupers within a century. It is a that our commerce, which, ten years ago,, was second only to that of England, has so ut terly disappeared, that in 1870 there were fewer ships built than in 1770, and, save in "pleasure yachts," ship building in this coun try is likely to become one of Wen dell Phillips's lost arts. It s:jact that standing armies, for five years past, have been kept in the South to abolish the natural supremecy of the white people, and thus to abolish negro labor, for, left to his own volition, the negro not only is not but cairnot be a pro ducer. It is a fact ' that this sectional party of barely one-third of the' peo ple, has been kept in power, and is now in power solely by the bayo nets ot staiuhmjr armies m the South. Finally, it is n fact that this sec tional party of barely one"-third of the people claim to have totally overthrown the American systim, and instead of self-governing States, composed of a homogeneous citizenship, to have set tip a "New Nation," including negroes, In dians, mulattoes, Chinese and all the lower races in oar midst, and that gives Congress the power to oaf re its p:i; c'ples everywhere by standing armies, if needs be. Such are the fact that stare us in the face, and that, leaving out of view the tremendous ruin wrought, present the most ast .tin ding revo lution of human society the world ever saw, and that not only may, but ttiftst end, sooner or later, in universal ehaos, horror, blood and misery without parallel save where the same thing is "tried" on in Mexico and South America. What, then, is to be done to save tha t o mtry, our children, the luna tics themselves, from these inevit able horrors? What, in a word, can be done to save our liepubli can institutions and society itself from chaos? Why, we must re store the work of the fathers the lnty Republic of 1SG0 that nlo rious nnd beneficent Union wl'Tich lunatics, fools and traitors have overthrown, under the mask of de fending it. Tins is the work t 1 done, and the Democrtie press must do it. The "Democratic party " as it stands to-day, is an incumber ance. Its assumed lon.lov most of them as blind and ignorant as the Abolitionists themselves without consignee or moral sense of any kind, and for the sake of of fice, a seat with niggers in the Mon grel Congress, would barter their souls, or what is left of that once respectable article. The straight out, intelligent and unpurchaseable Democratic press, that- understands th;- fhincrprs niirl IiaI.-H,. -.1 .uvuuiai Jcauers m ! , - , -M'"- : " l" -ooue uie people, j and restore our Republican system, j There are, in fact, but ti?o classes of ) men in the counin Restoration ists'and JJcstructionhts, and all icho fail to xcorkfor the former belong to the category of the latter, no mat ter what they call themselves, ami if John T. Hoffman or William M. Tweed assent to the Mongrel amendments, the) are equally trai tors with Greeley and Garrison, and fools, to boot. Day Book. Dignity of Labor. It would seem that employment, from the morning of creation, when God Himself worked and rested, and when Adam was commanded to till the soil and subdue the animal, implies peculiar dignity and honor. It is apostolie, it is Christ-like, it is God like to work. No system of education is complete that does not harden the hand and toughen the muscle, while it developes the in telect and enlarges the heart. The religion that shows nothing but pale cheeks and lily-white fingers is not the religion of the Bible. Highways and hedges are better sanctuaries for an acceptable ser vice than studies and cloisters and cells. Scars and knots on the hands are more honorable than rings and gloves. Bronze out of the sun beams is more beautiful on the face than rouge out of shops. Only a worker attains the true symetiy, strength and glory of manhood or womanhood. Genius itself falters in a conflict with labor. Industry has the long end of the lever that moves public opinion, parties, Con gresses and thrones. It was men with brown faces and sine we" arms that built the pyramids in Egypt, reared the temple on Mount Mo riah, and walled the Holy city with adamant, circled an Asiatic em pire with impenetrable granite, put arm in arm the old and new world as whispering mother and daugh ter, spanned the American conti nent with a thoroughfare of iron from sea to sea, cut a canal for steamers across the desert sands where the Israelites wandered for forty years ; "it is men with sun burnt features and nerves of steel that to-day whiten the world's whit e waters with the toils of com merce, navigate all rivers, explore all lands, and subdue the earth as God at first, commanded. Tnr.Y Concur. Governor Geary, of Pennsylvania, joins Governor Hoffman, of New York, in rebuk ing the impudent attempt of Pres ident Grant' to trample upon the reserved sovereignty of those two States. We are glad to see this significant concurence, not only of a Hepublican and Democratic Gov ernor, but of the Executives of the two most potential States in the Union the "Empire" and the "Keystone" in a warm and ear nest and distinct reprobation of an exercise of Federal power in the States, which, if not manfully re sisted must inevitably grow in au dacity and watonness, until State independence and authority are ef fectually destroyed and a consoli dated government, with undefined and unbounded powers, shall be es tablished on their ruins. IWiladd ph la JTercicry. o 'Governor of Utah. The San Francisco Chronicle, in speaking of the appointment of Geo. L. Woods, to the position of Gover nor of Utah says, that " his admin istration of, a flairs, while Governor of Oregon, was both able and dig nified." Yes, Ceorge and his friends were aide to steal all they could possibly lay their hands on. This is about all the ability he displayed while occupying that position. An exchange-remarks that George has an eye to the main chance. Brigham has succeeded in hoard ing untold wealth, and a conflict between the Mormon authorities and Federal officials is not desira ble. Money is all-powerful in di plomacy. Brigham has too much and Woods not ei.oagh. 117 IE Statesman: "A White Man's Goyerx mext." We care not what may be said of this Federal Govern ment, but there is one thing cer tain, and that is, tins will be, it shall be, "A White Man's Gov ernment." Intelligence and wealth must have, and shall have the as cendency in this country. Hadi cal fanaticism may yell and howl as it pleases, but "Democracy is sworn to rescue the country fiom the rule of Mongrelism, and all isms, introduced here by the Puri tan crew of the Mayflower, which unfortunately landed on Plymouth Hock. Ignorance and pauperism shall not rule instead of intelli gence and wealth. Let the Mon grels put this in their pipe and smoke it. Shingle Weddings. Iowa be ing too youthful to hope for Golden or Silver weddings propose to inaugurate " Shingle Weddings" as a fashionable entertainment. They are to occur when the " first fruit" is old enough to jurtify an application of the article which gives the title to the occasion. The Cause of Lee's Death. Dr. B. L. Madison and II. T. Barton, attending physicians of General Lee, have contributed to the Richmond and Louisville Med ical Journal a detailed account of his last sickness, and the treatment pursued. They sum up the case as follows : We had long been painfully im pressed with the conviction that de pressing moral causes were slowly but steadily undermining General Lee's health, in a ratio far exceed ing the inroads of mere physical disease. Indeed, how could it be otherwise ! The terrible strains upon him during the momentous campaigns of 1803 and 18G4, the agony of mind endured at Appo mattox, the wail that went up from widows and orphans all over the desolated and ruined South, the bankrupt condition of his native State, the mute and eloquent woe appeal i 1 ig to him on all sides, were enough, and more than enough, to bow his mighty spirit, and to crush o'.it, with fatal tread, the energies of his life! And more than this, with all this mighty sorrow weigh ing him down, he ever preserved a calm, serene, and even cheerful ex terior. Few, even, of his most in timate friends, knew the depths of his anguish, rendered all the keener and the more poiirnant. by the very efforts to suppress it. lie felt it his duty to conceal it, even while conscious that, like the Prom- einean vuuures it was tearing away his heart. No man less he roic than himself, no man le-c-s sus tained by great Christian faith and Christian principles could have borne his burden lor an hour. 1 et, even with him, it was only a ques tion of time. General Lee died of a broken heart, and its strings were napped at Appomattox ! In ref erence to the proximate cause of his death, we. were of the opinion that it was due to passive conges tion of the brain, not proceeding far enough to produce apoplexy or elusion. 1 here was positive evi dence of acute softenin'-T, of eere- britis, or of embolism. There was no paralysis of motion or sensation, but marked debility from the lirst. His svmntoms, in many respects, resembled concussion, without its attendant syncope. The treatment was based upon the above diagno sis. The Outrage Committee. Since the appointment of the Out rage Committee by the Senate, the Kadicals have found out that its baek-aelionary effects are likely to prove more injurious to them than its direct force to the parties in tended to be hurt. Governors Holden and Scott, of North and. South Carolina, have been sum moned to give testimony, but we are told it is probable that the North Carolina Conservatives will submit some evidence rather dam aging to Holden and showing, be yond all doubt, that bands ot pil lagers and barn-burners in that Slate, who have lately been arrest ed and taken before the civil au thorities for trial, have confessed that they belonged to the Union League. The effort to fasten these outrages on the Conservatives will be pretty effectually negatived. Free Trade. The Democratic journals throughout the West are all in favor of the free trade doc trine. So are we. We believe in the principle of buying what we need where we can get it the cheap est, and selling what wc have to dispose of where we can get the most for it. This is the true secret of national as well as individual prosperity, and by-and-by it will he the acknowledged doctrine all over the country. The old cry of "protection" is played out ; inas much ffs the only ones who. are "protected" are the wealthiest men in the land. Did anybody ever hear of tariff for the protection of the poor man? We guess net. The manufacturers are about the only cla;s that are "protected," but the men who work for them get none of the benefits of such protec tion. Free trade is the panacea for all the ills of the tariff. Let the pto lp beg'n to open their eyes to their own interests. The "protec tion" humbug has veiled them long enough. Wake up! It is retting daylight, and the mists and shades of the tarifr-nisdit are rapidly dis appearing. IE IV. Statesman. Some hard-up editor gets off the following: "Wc love to see the blooming rose in all its beauty dressed ; we love to hear our friends disclose the emotions of the breast. We love to see the cars arrive, all laden at our door; we love to see our neighbor thrive and love to bless the poor. We love all these, yet far above all that we ever said wedovc what overy printer loves to have subscriptions paid." Different. It is successful to love that laughs at loefcsmith's disappointed "love is of a different key. . C0URT3SY OF BANCROFT LIBRARY, UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, Es-Presi&ent Johnson on President Grant- A correspondent of the Cincin nati Commercial has visited ex- President Johnson at his house in Greenville, Tetm., and elicited from him the following very candid re marks concerning Gen. Grant: The intelligent men of the party don't know what to do with Grant. It would gratify them much if he would resign, but he won't. So far from resigning, he's working and intriguing for a second term. He will never get it. lie is no more lit for a President than a goose. He has got no ability nothing but a little low cunning. His cunning is of a poor sort; it is mean cunning. He never had an original idea in his life. lie is an insignificant little fellow, a bun dle of personal piques, petty spites and . prejudice. He is as selhsh as the days are long. He used the highest office in the gift of the people to advance private ends and those of his family, and intrigue for a second term. He knows a little something about horses, but has not brains enough to make a first-class horse jockey if turned out to the business, although that is about all he is fit for. If we are to have a horse jockey for the highest office in the land we had ought to have a good o:;e. Giant's coming to the surface is the result of an accident; nay, it is an accident of an accident. You may search history from the foundation of the world to the present, and you will not find a case like his a man wdio rose solely by the power ot accident. In the boiling cauldron of war, the scum rises to the top. In the bubbling off he came up from the bottom, and run off, as scum al ways will, or we should never have heard of him. By a series of accidents he roe to the command of the anoy. He was the creature of a peculiar combination of 'cir cumstances. He rose to the top in the general turmoil and throwing up. The re bellion would have been suppressed without him. He was an . incident to the strgugle like a baggage wagon, for example. A baggage wagon had a part to perform, but without the war sentiment and patriotism iu the North, it could have done nothing. Neither could Grant. Everything was furnished him that he wanted. His armies outnumbered those of the rebels. Every engine of war was placed at his disposal. The lebellion went down while he was in command. If any one else had been in com mand at the time it would have been the same, although the result would have been brought about with less loss of life. His Wilder ness campaign was a perfect mas sacre. 11 is iv ad was paved with skulls and washed with blood. His conduct in regard to the ex ehunge of prisoners was inexcusa ble. In his correspondence on the subject he let one sentence drop which illustrates his character. A ray of liirht passing through a crevice will often light up a whole room. So it is with the character of a man We fequently get a clear insight into his heart, as it were, by a single sentence that he may write or st teak. He is utterly remorsless; objecting to exchange prisoners with the rebels because our men iu their hands were weak and emanci pated, while the rebel prisoners were strong and able to go right, into the army and light us. Grant, sir, is a small man ; he is little every way you take him. He is a bundle of small, contempti ble prejudices. He does not rise to the dignitv of a man. He lacks courage as well as discrimination, lie thinks he is making tools of certain politicians, when in truth, they are making a tool of him. But he dees not know it ; he is to be pitied. Before I would go into Grant's Cabinet, either in 1872 or any other time, I would get me a situ ation as assistant hog driver, or, as an old man in the country used to say, I would tie a rope around my neck ami then round a tree, and then walk off. The editor of the Huntington (Pa.) Globe is a man of sense. Hear the genious talk: Love Her.- Have you got a sister ? Then love and cherish her with a holy friendship, says an exchange, to which we add, if you haven't got any sister of your own, take some other feller's sister" and love her. The effect is just as good and sometimes better. Suppose that other feller had no sister, would a pretty little cousin do just as well ? A Peeler. A Colorado lover thus describes his sweetheart; " She's a peeler, she is. She killed a bear when she was fifteen, and a Digger Indian when she was eighteen, and now she'll whip her weight in wildcats whoop?" A First-Hate Temuerance Talk- A Captain .of a packet vessel sailing from New. York to Liver pool, says he never heard but one temperence talk that was worth any thing, but that was "first-rate." He once went to a temperence meeting at Livepool, to oblige a friend, and a good looking, well dressed man was called upon to ad dress the meeting. He now stood up before the meeting, ami he said he iicvr had made a speech in his life and did not believe lie ever should, for it was not in him. How ever, he would tell wliat temper ence had done for him. When he used to -drink, somehow he never was well, could never pay his quarter's rent, nor his weekly bills, nor clothe himself nor his family decently; but now that he had left oft drinking, his rent -was punctu ally paid to the day, he had no weekly accounts for he had ready money. They all saw how he ap peared and was dressed. And, fak ing a nice looking woman by the arm, ami four children by the hand, he said: "You see how my wife and children look, in health and ap pearance. Well their food and dress is all paid for, and if you want to see how my house is furn ished, come and see me at home any evening except church 'night', which is Tuesday, and this meeting which is Thursday, and you wiil find me in as well furnished a room as any one needs, Besides this, I have a hundred pounds in the sav ings' bank. This is all I can say to-night." And he sat down. He had said enough. In .New York Mrs. Jane F. Ilal stead, aged 70 years, has sued for a divorce from her husband, David P. Ilalstead, aged 75 years; adul tery is the offense alleged against the young rascal. But David counter charges upon the frisky damsel by alleging that she. had been doing the " same dings," and thereby had attempted to palm off upon him a child of which he was not the actual parent. And then, as a further reason why he should not 4jdve the juvenile Jane the ad ditional alimony she demanded, the young David averred that he had a child out of tlfe regular order to support and even worse than this that a woman and live other of his children depended on him for maintenance. If such things can be done in tlie dry bush, what may not be done in the green? -- A Detroit man went out shoot ing pigeons, and took a flask of brandy with him. On returning he struck a racing track in the sub urbs of the city and walked around it all night, wondering why he did not get to Detroit. At dayfght the matter was made plain to" him, and he has sworn off. That night on-a mile track was the best tem perance lecture he ever heard. Mixed. There is a family in one of the towns of Southern Berk shire, Mass., in which four own sisters are lawfully called "mother" by two individuals. A husband and wife are cousins, their mothers being sisters. The husband's mothers died, and a few years later a third sister married his father. Later still the - wife's mother died, and a fourth sister married her father. A young woman delegate in the recent Ohio convention of woman suffragists, plumply said: " For my own part, I love a man, indi vidually and collectively, better than woman; ami so, 1 am sure, does every one of my sex, if they, like me, would utter their real sen timents. I 'am more anxious for man's elevation ami improvement than for woman's, and so is every true woman. . In the present house of Repre sentatives there have been thirty cases of contested seat, and in sal aries and expenses there has been paid to the unsuccessful contestants the sum of 8100,000. In addition to this, as mum more has been paid for printing the testimony in the contested cases. Her Hefuge. Woman says an exchange, has her refuge in strong epithets and round phrases which answer all the purposes of profan ity in conversation that is, to give emphasis to sentences rather weak.. " Gracious," " good gra cious," " gracious me," " goodness" words iu "g" seem to be the favorites these : s a Ices aim laws" wide tre examnies of a range of a light swearing artillery Their Demands. The Stanton wing of the womauites demand: Firs!, the ballot: second, partici pation in all the educational advan tages of the country; third, tne riht to labor in any caduig; fourth, perfect equality in thcmai riage relation. "Why is the hen immortal? Be cause her son never sets. Good Doctrine. Have you enemies? Go . straight on and mind them not. If they block your path, w alk around them. A man who has no enemies is seldom good for anything he is made of that kind of material which is so easily, worked that every one has a hand iti it. A sterling character one who thinks for himself, 'and speaks what he thinks is always sure to have enemie. They aro as necessary to him as fresh air, they keep him alive and active. A celebrated character -who was sur rounded by enemies, used to re mark, "they are sparks whfc'hQif you do not blow will go out of themselves." Let this also be your feeling, while endeavoring to livj down the scandall of those who are bitter enemies against yoU. If you stop to dispute, you do but a they desire, and open the way for al use. Let the p,o r fellows talk there will be a reaction if you perform but your duty, and hun dreds who were once alienated from you will Hock to you and ac knowledge their error. IIo'.v to Quit Swearixg! A story is told of a citizen of Dan bury, who was cured of the wretch ed habit of swearing, in a novel manner. He was an inveterate curser and grumbler. At meals he neglected a blessing, "and swore at everything, from the gravy to the teapot. His oath's discolored the napkins, soared the bread, and cur dled the milk. His wife, who evi dently beliveed the hair of a dog would cure the hire, stood this un seemly conduct "until forbearance ceased so be a virtue." One morn ing lie was unusually cross and pro fane, and was about to take a fresh start at something else, when his wife -suddenly broke out with a series of oaths that made the old gentleman get up and leave his chair as though some one "had in troduced a -pin between the canes'. As soon as she ceased, he breath lessly remarked, "Well, I swear, if it has got so you can swea it is time I quit. And he did. MOUCNFUL- -N e g ro- w o rsh i pc rs, from Sumner down to the lowest of the disreputable gang, piepare to weep ! If you have tears to shed let 'em shed ! It is very melaiv? choly,- but the term of Senator Kevels expires on the 4-th of March next, and then the Southern States will be without a negro Senator, for Gen. Alcorn, who takes Revel's seat, is a white-man, who was a rebel, and is a Radical, but still he is a white man in color at hast, and that is something now-a-days, when darkies seem to grille . thib roost. We venture, just here the predic tion that no other negro ever warms a seat iu the United States Senate unless San Domingo is an nexed while white men hold po litical supremacy in the United Q States. JjJxch angc. The Cadiz (Ohio) Sentinel thus fires a forty-pounder in among a lot of ducks : 0 Lying around loose in the pock ets of subscribers are a good many dollars that belong to printers. The same paper says : "Wherever a Democratic county paper is well supported", there the party and its principles grow and flourish. The most efficient aid a'3 Democrat can give to his cause is to extend and increase the circula tion and "usefulness of his county paper. Truer words were never spoken". Money expended for Democratic newspapers does more for the good of the people than when expended for bayonets, uniforms for a stand iiig army, or transportation lor A marauding one. - , A gentleman speaking of the happiness of the married state be-' fore his daughter, despairingly said! "She who marries does well, but she who does not ma,-ry does bet ter." "Well, then" said the young lady, "I will do well; let those who choose do betteiv- An Atlanta paper of last week says: "A lady in this city lied her hubby's hands and feet the other day, "just for fun, and thei went through his pockets for a certain billet-doux. JJis physicians say that his face won't he badly scarred, though he may remain permanently bahh" " -"- - Q A Pkolifzo Woman-. A Nor wegian lady has arrived in Milwau kee" with some twenty of her chil- 1 fci... l-.i rc tlir !ivi mi tn;inv accidents she lidn l. think it Mien. -,"-: .- - ... ......j safe to brinr them on one boat, as m case of wreck she wouldn't have any heart to commence life in new country. She expects th9 rest of them early in January. An individual who was puzzled to know where all the Smiths came from has at last found out. At Waterbtirv, Conn., on a long brick factory, appears a sign iicribed. "Saiith Manufacturing Com nan jr," CD o o r0 9 e9