. 4 v 1 iti M 11 tl I III f I iJtm.HEi I mmmmmmmmmMmm jinMM Ji iOJll iL .JlOJJL 9 3 i YOL. 5 l)t lUccklij 0;ntcvprisc. A D EMO CRA TIC PA PER, F0UT1IE fausinos3lVlan, the Farmer 'And the FAMILY CIRCLE. 1SSIED FA ERY PUIDVY EY A. NOLTFJERi EDITOR AND PUI'.LISULR. OFFICE In Dr.Thcssing's?ikk Bu Iding. o TERMS of & UBSCIUPTIOX jingle Copy one year, in advauce, n 50 TERMS of ADVERTISING tNraneht advertisements, ir.cltnling nil 'ieiral notice. pusn,. of 12 hues, 1 w.$ 1 50 l m - For each subsequent insertion "One Column, fcue year Half " " 'Quarter " . " business Card, 1 square one year. .$120 oo . t;o . 12 trsr Remlttoinrfs to be mnrfe tt the risk o 'Subscribers, and at the expend of Agtnts. BOOK ASH JOB PRIXTIXG. ! The Enterprise office is supplied with 'beautiful, approved styles of type, and itio.i 'ern MACHINE PRI-'SSK-, which will enable Hhe Proprietor U do Job Pouting at all Uuics Neat, Quirk and Clu-ap ! R i Work solicited. 'AH llu'iifi trint'iction vpmi a Sperm bi. .. 11 - DUSIXESS CARDS. CUAKLKS IL WAE1ISJJX, Attorney at Law, Oregon City, Oregon. Sept.lO:ly. .JOHN M. BACON, :cas csx sid isssl fs-s STATIONEIIV. rEUFUMHiiV. c, Ac. Orpon Cihf, Oregon. W Charm a HVrnerV oJ la' h oc cupied by S. Ackrriixrn, Maui stm-t. r J 10 tf vlOHN FLEMING, rf' DEALER IN 'BOOKS AMD STATIONER IN MYERS' FIltE -PROOF BRICK, MVIK STREET, ORfiOX CITY. OUKCON. mack a WELCH, I" 'OFFICE -In Oild Fellows' Ton.ph corner of First and Alder Street s Poithwid. The patronage of tho-e deslrinir superior $ 'operations is in' special request. Nilrmisox- Ide for the painless t xt rai t ton of trt th. ? 3-Artilicial teeth "b-.-tter thauthe best, , :aiM ai chrup a. Iec.2:3:tf (he eh i, 1 1 (-'.-, Dr. J, II . HATCH, DENTIST, The patronage of tnose desiring rri Ciax Op"ratio- is respectfully solicited. Satisfaction in all cases srnaranteed. jfCfj X'drou Ojc'J-1'- administered for the Tainless Extraction of Teeth. )r-icK In Weiiiaut's new h nhlii.tr. west "Side of First street, let ween Alder ai.d Mor rison streets, Portland, Oregon. "Live and Let Live. piELDSX- STUICKLEIi, DEALERS IN PROVISIONS, GROCERIES, COUNTRY PRODUCE, &c, CHOICE AVIXES AND LIQUORS. it tli ni l -find of Worttnan & Fields Oiegou Citj , Oregon. i:5tf - Tn- W ATKINS, M. D , SURGEON. loRTLxn, Or"C( n. OFFICE Odd Fellows' Temple, corner r First and lder streets Residence corner ot Main and Seventh streets. ; ALAN SON ST.1ITH, Attorney and Counselor at Lav, PIlOCTOll AM) SOiatlTOK. AV0CAT. Practices in State and U. S. Ccwrts. Office -Yu. 108 Front SlretLPoribtrL Oregon, O.iptsite McCor.nick's Book Sto."u- W. F. HIGHriELD, Established since lS4l),at the old stand, JU-n'u Strett, Oregon Clf;i, Orojon. An Assortment of Watehe? . Jew elrv. and Seth Thomas wel-rii Clocks, all of whi -ii are warrantei to be as represented. RenairttiS! done on sliort notice. and thankful for past favors. CLAHK GSE.ENHAIT, City Orayisnan, OR EG 0 X CI T 1". Alt orders for the delivery of merchan dise or packages and freight of whatever f cription. to any part of the city, w ill he cxe ited promptly and with care. JEW YOUK IP3TET (Dentfehes Gaft1 ans.N No. 17 Front Street, opposite th Mail steam ship landing, Portland. Oregon. h! R0THF03. J. J. WILKENS, PROPRIETORS. o Board per Week o " with Lodging t ih " ' Pay 1 o0 A. NOLTflER, NOTARY PUBLIC, ENTERPRISE OFFICE Oregon City, Jan. 13:tt ,4 i Dr. Kevsrman on Official Honesty. I'l. NEM'JfAX OX OFFICIAL II OXESTY THE COUItUlTIOX OF LEGISLA TIVE AND ri'I'.LIC OFFICES ikiises fi;om loi;l;yists axd at 2lectjoxs ilsiiox k s t y 1 x TRADE AND .srECL LATlOX. WAsiirX(;rox, F el). 12, 1S 1. Tflic Iiov. Dr. Newman preached tliis morning on t he subject of offi cial honest v. President and Mrs. (jrnit, Vice President Colfax, Sec retiry Delano and several Senators and llepresentatives were among the. congregation. Dr. Newman took occasion to rebuke dishones ty i: high places, wliile he com mended those who "withstood the bribes and temjitations incidental to official life, lie took his text from IJomaus, twelfth chapter, seventeenth verse "Provide things honest in the s'ght of all men." The duties of Christianity are two fold ethical and devotional. The former include all those relations which exist between man and man, and relate to liberty, justice, prop erty, character, veracity, TA liKIAlii: AXl) CIVIL ( O V E KX M EXT. The latter include those relations which exist between the creature and the Creator. A grievous mis take has been made by many men in attempting to divorce morality from piety. Christianity is a re ligion of protect ion. Seven of the ten commandments are protective in their character. It is not re markable, therefore, that Paul should take up this idea arid in an emphatic manner imnose anew up on us the ureal obligation of hon esty. Dr. Newman spent a short t hue man in considering the ground ol right to property and the source o our ideas oi Honesty ana dishonesty, it is founded in nature. Iv-erv man has a right to himself, to the faculties and capabilities with which he has been end owe and if he have a right to himself he has an epual right to that which may result from the innocent use ot his powers. Society accords this right; and divine and human law throw their awful sanctions about it. "tmou SHALT xot steal" is Clod's verdict on the subject. Having laid the foundations of this right, lr. Newman passed to con sider how it may be violated. It may be done by violence, as by theft or robberv, by deception, by abuse of trust. A broker on 'Change may cause ialse informa tion to In; circulated for the pur pose of raising or depis-ing the juice of stocks and he profit by the ra-callit v. (l.)d savs to such a man. "Thou shalt not steal." A speculator may monopolize an ar ticle; to create artificial scarcity and raise its price. He may tit r -cause the poor man io pay fo.r dollars more per barrel for Hour for his family. To that man Clod thunders out the law, "Thou shalt not steal." There are relative right and duties on the part of tlie buyer and seller. The seller in a certain sense is a benefactor to soe'etv, and, as such, should be esteemed, but he has no right to mirepresent the quality of his wares. Neither lias the buyer any right to underr.-.tethem. Solomon had this creatine to mind when he said. "'Tis naught, 'tis naught, saith the buyer, but Avhen he "one he boasteth." Abuse is of trust is another violation of this law. Society is held together by the the golden bands of mutual confidence. High honor is no less necessary to command life than it is a moral duty. 1 here are times when a person is in such circum stances as compels him to- entrust lis property to another; tor that party to IMPERIL THAT PROPERTY IX SPECU- LATIOX is a "wanton oeirayai oi mat hum and a dishonest trail -act Km. Put the highest form of trust and hon or is displayed on the part of soci ety in selecting c'ti.ens to admin ister the atfairs of civil government, and when that trust is betrayed for purposes of personal rain and mat. nonor tarnished by omcial corruption the offenses 'assume a deeper d " and the criminality a deeper tupitude. What can be a sadder spectacle than to see a man sitting in God's stead at the tribu nal of justice to receive a bribe to blind his eyes and pervert his judg ment, or legislators chosen to make laws for a peop.e to enrich them selves by corrupt legislation at the expense of the public welfare, or of AN EXEi tTIVi: OR CLKK AI. OVTIi'Ki: to appropriate to himself that which a too confiding people have entrut ed to honesty and honor. As we rise on the scale of moral responi hilitv from the midnight bandar, the murderous highwayman, the shrewd trickery of the merchant and bluer, the crafty speculator, to him who fills olfieial positions in the minitratiou of government, we are bound to attach greater guilt to the dishonest acas oi the latter, To dishonesty he adds hypocrisy, OKEQON CITY, OREGON, FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1871. He is not what he assumes to be the faithf ul steward of the people's wealth. Under the robes of office there is a duplicity which merits public exercation. lie moves through society with the apostohc exterior of Judas, but upon his soul are tlie cankered spots ot the THIRTY PIECES OF SILVER. To his duplicity he adds treach ery, to his deceit he has added perjury. I lis solemn oath before God has been degraded ; and to all these lie has added his example to public immorality. An example in history is the case of Paeon. Pope wrote of him, "The wisest, brightest, meanest of mankind." After laying with his mighty intel lect the foundations of modern sci ence, he had sought political pre ferment, and under dames I, was made High Chancellor, but his love of display and thirst of gold brought on his ruin. lie accepted bribes, betrayed his trust and dis honored his great name. He was tried ami sentenced to pay a fine of two hundred thousand dollars ami to imprisonment in the Tower during the King's pleasure. The speaker then referred to the preva lent causes of the violation of the rights of property. These he de signated as extravagance, CORRUPT PI IU.IC S FX XI MET and an inordinate love of wealth. The love of pomp and show is as excessive as it is pernicious. Fash ionable society remorsely rejects all butterflies which have lost their brilliant colors. To gratify a natu ral desire to mingle in fashionable society many a man cheats his bus iness by transferring his means to THEATRES, RACE COURSES AXD EX-PE.N.-IVi: 1 'ARTIES. Closley allied with all this is a corrupt public sentiment. The man who steals a loaf of bread to feed his starving family is sent to jail, but the man who is successful in bold, dishonorable speculations is caressed by society. Why is it that official dishonesty is less dis reputable than dishonesty in a pri vate citizen ': is it not because the public concicnce is depraved? In all ages and countries and in all forms of government olfieial cor- ruption has prevailed, uur own nation is no exception to the rule. Men have taken advantage of their places of trust and power for per sonal gain and brought guilt upon themselves and dishonor upon the State, and to-day THE CltV OF lU'RI.TC COXDEMXATION resounds through the nations. Put to what extent this official corrup tion is due to a corrupt public sen timent is a question which the peo ple are bound to answer. hen those who are called the foremost citizen beleaguer halls of State and national legislation for the passage of bill, and oiler a consideration to induce legislators to vote for their mesures, the temper is worse than the tempted. Nay more, when citizen anxious to obtain office will deliberately offer a consideration to others for their influence the man who makes the offer, is the greater offender. Nay more; when a people, rolling in wealth accu mulating thousands and hundreds of thousands a year will require men of more brains, of more ability to servo, them as public officers for a pittance so small that a first class clerk in commercial circles would despise it is no marvel that, the cupidity of such a people should work CORRUPTION" IX OFFICIAL LIFE. Let the fountain purify itself and the stream will be pure. Let the people raise the standard, of moral ity and the public men will follow their example. While language is too weak to express our deep ab horrence of the treachery, the; per jury, blighting effect of official cor ruption, yet let us rejoice that in every municipal government, in every State legislation, in depart ment of the national government, there aie men whom gold cannot corrupt, whose official honor can not be impeached. The day of reform has come. Let good men everywhere be-stir themselves to tighten the now relaxed reigns of honesty and intone the public con science to a severer morality. It they do not THE MIOXICIIT OV OUR UNION" ic h-T.1,1 Yoe to a people who enioy wealth saved by injustice -. - . ii. i oe to a generation mat ieeis uu the bread f fraud ! W oe to citizenship w ho prefer gold to Clod! -O Oregon fir is said to be astron er wood tlein white oak. iests made at the California navy yard, fully proved the matter. The du rability of the same wood, used in .-hip building is also noticed as ; something remarkable. - -te- "A Poston lady's pins, when she is dressed, number 300. V e pity the man who keeps her m "pm money Jie 1 T needs to be j presiiknt ot a National Rank, or a j member of the Grant's family. "Answers to Letters- From the Walla WaP.a Real 5'U'e Record The usual number of letters making inquiries concerning this country are before us. As we can not answer ...:n each seperately, we j rpj,is time it comes from the Car all together; or, at ; i;sie zv Mtrcurtf : jn .ui;nci all lugctnti , v., least,' we will try to answer some of the questions" that are asked in nearly all of them : GOVERNMENT LAND Is plenty along the proposed route of the Northern Pacific Pailroad. It is subject to homestead or pre emption; That which the settler takes within the limits of the Rail road grant, if he pre-empts it. he must pay 2 50 per acre: f -he homesteads, he can only take 80 acres, unless he has served in the Union Army during the late rebel lion in case he has, he can home stead 100 acres. All of the Gov ernment lands which lie more than, from 20 to 30 miles away from the line of the road can be purchased at 2o per acre, and the home steader can take 100 acres. There are large quantities of the very finest quality all through this country, and if a person cannot suit himself with a farm he must be hard to pleasej indeed. THE PRICE OF FARMS Vary so greatly that it is impos sible to give a very correct answer to inquiries of. this kind. They vary all t lie way from Government price to 30 per acre, according to improvements. THE PRICE OF COMMON" LABOR May be set at from l 50 to 2 00 per" day with board, and from 2 -50 to 3 00 without and from 35 to -SuO per month with board,. For skilled labor, carpenters, black smiths, brickmasons, and the like, command iroui 4- 00 to 5 00 per day. These estimates are about an average, and are on a coin ba- sis. There is plenty of work for those here, and is a good opening for all those who will probably come. The demand is rapidly in creasing, and during the commg season there seems a probability that all kinds of labor will be m good demand, especially that of mechanics. WHERE THE RAILROAD AVI EL RUN Is a question we cannot answer, as its route does not seem to have been finally settled upon further East than Wallnla. Pat the map published by the Company lays its line right at the southern side of of oar c.ty, and then there seems something of a probability that it will be so built. Pat as we have already slated, the route is only located to Wallula, on the Colum bia river, thirty miles West from here. STOCK EAISINd Is one of the best branches a per son can possibly enter into here. The range is the most extensive ami best on this coast. Cows with calves are worth from 10 to 50 per head; cows without calves from 30 to 40 per head ; beef from 7 to 8 cent per pound on foot; American horses are worth trom 100 to 200 per head ; Indian ponies whatever you can get for tli em, THI-: MARKET Can be judged of by looking elsewhere'in this paper. We will say, however, that there is no diffi culty in disposing of everything you" have to sell at the market orices. With regard to whether or not it will pay to bring stock to this country, we can only reier those making this inquiry to the .rices quoted in this article and lsewhere in this paper; compare the prices here with those where y live, and then estimate tiie t of driving and you can an- CO- swer the question yourself. Above we have answered a tew ot the .1....1 .,-l.L.l, t n ,L with UUCSllOllS asivCU, mii v, iw pleasure, and shall be happy to answer others to the best of our ability when theY shall be pro pounded. We invite those wish in r to know more about our coun try to communicate with us. The Weather. The weathei for the month of hebruary has I been very mild. The ground has ; been whitened with snow twice, and then it w as only whitened, the snow either not being an inch deep at time. Yet the snows of February have been as deep as at any other time during the Winter. The ice has not been to exceed half an inch in thickness, and there has been but very few mornings that there was any to be found. It has been a very pleasant month, and not so cold as December and Jan uary, during which, for a few days, we had ice sufneientiy strong to bear the weight of a man. it is now reasonable to expect that Soring will soon open, as we seldom have any hard weather alter this time of "year. 1U 1U Statesman. "No home! no home!" What unrest in those words, what terror to the confiding and loving! God pitv the houseless and homeless! , j i i iui'jujijMti-na Solution of a Mystery. About a dozen times a year we find ourselves confronted with a question which we suppose we may as well answer as anybody. Last Saturday, Mr. Jonas Cul ver, living three miles north of this placement down a soft maple tree. Within three inches of the center, and ten inches from the bark of the tree, he found, wrapped in a piece of white paper, a lock of beautiful, soft brown hair. It was evidently the hair of a child, Tr some very young person. It had been in its place of deposit tifty t wo years as indicated by the annual growth of the tree. Now, how did it get there ? Scattered through the United States there nre doubtless several thousand trees containing locks ot hair in or near the center. In one neighborhood in Western New York there are a dozen ot them. A hundred years ago, when there was more ignorance, and (regard ing some matters) more supersti tion than there now is, strange no tions were prevalent with reference to consumption. When the disease had once fastened upon its victim, physicians were vain and medicines useless. Put there was a mystic charm, carefully cherished among the gray-headed grandmothers, by which :i cure could be wrought. The recipe was this : Select a live and growing tree; cut or (better yet) bore a hole in it near to the heart ; place in the hole a lock of hair cut from the head of the sick person ; j'hig up the hole to prevent the hair from becoming displaced ; and by the time the wound in the tree had healed over, the health of the invalid would be restored. A fast growing tree, like the soft maple or poplar, was usually selected, because they would the sooner grow over the wound. Cue of the writers earli est exploits with an augur was to bore a hole in a soft maple tree, in obedience to the instructions of a gray-haired octogenarian aunt, and placed in the augur-hole a lock of hair cut from the head of a cousin who was " going into a decline." She soon began to recover; and by the time the wound in the tree had healed, the girl was hcalthy and robust. The charm at once achieved an enviable reputation, and every consumptive girl in the neighborhood left a lock of hair in an augur-hole in some tree or other. It was further asserted that great care must be taken ot the tree used for this rnirpose. For this reason the augur-hole was not bored quite to the heart of the tree, as there was a prevailing idea that this would injure or kill the tree. If the tree by oversight was per mitted to be cut down, the life of the person whose lock of hair was contained therein was endangered ; if the hair was burned, the orig inal wearer would go into a fever incurable by medicine; if it were left out in the open field, he or she would take the ague and gradually wilt away. One ease At least we know where an almost consum mated bargain for the sale of a homestead was broken up, because the purchaser would not accept a title deed one of whose conditions was that a huge willow tree in the garden should not be cut down during the life of the grantor of the deed. These latter notions how- ever, were less ri idly hold to than the original one on which they were built. This superstition, m- some modification thereof, is undoubtedly at the root of all the hair (no pun intended!) found in the center of old trees. We have written this much, not simply as an explanation, but to place "upon the record an old and curious superstition, at one time widely current, but which we have never" seen in print, and which seems to have entirely died out from the memory of those now living. At least We judge so, from the fact that the paragraph like that we have quoted at the commencement are constantly going the rounds, while, as yet, we have never seen an explanation. Dn'rjici Tribune. "William, thee knows I never call anybody names; but William, If the mayor of the city were to come to me and say, u John I want thee to find me the biggest liar in Philadelphia," I would come to thee and out niv hand on thy shoulder; and say to thee, "Wil liam, the mayor wants to see thee." - Tho Sacramento Union says that a great outrage on honesty and decency was perpetrated in the appointment of Geo. L. Woods as Governor of Utah. The Union is very loil. Be ye not afraid of the storms of life; for know that God holds the moral as well as the physical ocean in the hollow of His hand. An Important Letter- We" give, place to the following letter from Governor G rover, says the Jloiuitain .Democrat, to the Register of the La Grande'Distriet, feeling assured that anything per taining to State Land matters will prove interesting to those of our readers residing in the District: SiATfc of Oiiegox. ExEcrriVE Office, Sai.km, Feb. 22, I ST I . E. S. McComas, Esq. Dear Sir: I "write this letter fearing lest you may not have apprehended from conversation had with the Board of Commissioners here or from the written instructions heretofore for warded to you, the importance which the Board attaches to the enforcement by you of the equita ble lights of the fir;-t settlers upon lands belonging to the State in Eastern Oregon. It has not been the fault of the settler that titles to lands in your district have fallen into confusion. As far as lies in the power ol those administering the land laws of the State the rights of every citizen claiming land as a bona fide settler, or as a bona tide claimant under the clauses of law not re quiring settlement thereon, should be secured and protected. In all cases mere technicalities of the statute should be made to give way to real rights, though heretofore defectively asserted. As to the period in which first claimants are to be allowed to com plete their applications and to com ply with the law, ample time and every privilege, within the most liberal discretion should be allowed, always enlarging the letter of your instructions to enable you to reach a jast conclusion, rather than by strict construction, to grant what in good concience ought to be de nied. You will perceive by this, that we hold the Board and your office, as a branch of its work, to be pos sessed of an equitable jurisdiction. There will be no conflict with occupants of farming lauds grow ing out of the Swamj) Land act late ly passed by the Legislature, as the Board has d c'de I to instruct the deputies aj p i.ited to locate swamp lands to omit from their selections all such swamp lands as are actu ally occupied or claimed as swamp lands. But the State authorities will ascertain the quality 'of swamp lands so occupied or claimed in order to recover indemnity for the same in mountain or other lands of the United States, as has been done .1 . - l!t . .. m other states, in iikc caves. Yours Very Truly, L. F. G ROVER. Too Much Wife. Bo wen, a radical Congressman, who was ar rested on the charge of bigomy, had his trial in Washington on the 10th inst. After having been out for a considerable length of time, the jury came in and stated that they Iiad not agreed, some one suggest ed that they be sent back. Judge Wylie replied that if a man should get upon a jury with improper mo tives, such a juror would be more than a match for the eleven others, lie did not, however, desire to be understood as making any imputa tion on the jury. The foreman said that one juror, who was for acquittal, had stood out against all the others. The jury was dis charged, and the Court adjourned until the March term, when an- other trial place. of Bowen will take Souxo Sense. Men may be more liberal and just than women, but they very rarely take a women for a wife unless they believe her to be "as chaste as ice and as pure as snow." Their sense of purity in respect to the woman they marry is exquisitely delicate. They are not satisfied with the natural puri ty and goodness of the woman, but her good name must be above re proach. If the women were as careful in choosing their husbands, we think there would be fewer marriages, or else a wonderful ref- - ITI 1 T . ormation would, oe oegun. it is presumed that the coming woman will order these things differently a I The i-adieal party is becoming disgusted witn Grant. A radical paper says it can stand five or six hundred relatives, but when it comes to thatmany thousand it thinks that is more than any party can conveniently swallow. Don't get excited, they are not all pro vided lor yet; we know ot severa nan oreeos wno near a striking re semblance to Grant, that are yet to receive an ofiice. II. . States man. What She Carries. A write in Good Health says that the aver age weight, all the year round, of that portion of a woman's clothing which is supported from the waist is between ten and fifteen pounds and that if a woman were sen tenced to carry such a weight about in this way for a number ot year for some great crime, the sentence would be pronounced inhuman. Himj i in 1 1 inn warumj Thievery in Gen. Gr ant's Cabinet- The exposition made by Messrs. Dawes and Beck in the House of Representatives on Monday of fraudulent action of the Post Office department in the great Chorpen ning s vindle, in which the Post master General is implicated must, it would seem, result in the itn poachment and retirement of that officer. The offense is too rank to be overlooked. The fact that Mr. o Cresswell brought his former law Q partner, Mr. Earle, with him t6 Washington, and immediately after his own appointment installed hini as First Assistant Postmaster Gen-Q eral, and that soon afterward Mr. Earle left that place and openedsa law office as solicitor of claims against the Post Olfice Department, has long been felt in Washington to be a reproach and a public scan dal. But howeer wanting in pro pi iety such a connection between the judge and the advocate was deemed and seen to be, it was dif ficult to emphasize the fact in the absence of knowledge respecting special cases. It H as easy to see how readily corrupt relations could be established, am. how easily the public treasure could be robbed by collusion, even wheh it was impos sible to fix the charge of guilt. We called public attention to this extraordinary arrangement of the new law firm from Mainland im mediately after it was established in Washington. Bi t .it that time no scandalous practices resulting from it had yet been revealed. Un til now the busines 6 'Messrs. Cress well and Earle has been quietly go- q ing on, the one acting as attorney and the other as judge, without any public exposure. All at once an astounding piece of thievery is arrested just at the pcint'of its con sumation, in w hich those two gen tlemen appear as the chief actors. Y nat other transactions or the same general character have been hitherto completed, or what others are meditated, we are left to con- Enough is disclosed in the ex position of Messrs. Dawes & Beck o to settle the case ot the Postmaster General and his partner in the most peremtory manner. We cannot suppose that it admits of any other solution than that, having inflicted this additional disgrace upon Gen. Grant's administi atioii and tho Republican party, they must early retire to the places whence they came. AT. Y. &ot Played cut. G For years past some of the most inexcusable crimes committed by passionate, or naturally depraved, membe.sofour fellow race Jiave failed to bringdown upon the heads of their perpetrators the punish ment justly due such wickedness,, on the plea put in on the trial of the offenders, that the apparent criminal was momentarily, insane at the time of the commission of the deed. But, fortunately for the. cause of justice, such a source ot defense of murderers et id fenus onne has received a backset by th recent action of Judge Paine of Cleveland, Ohio, who refused in his O barge to a jury, in a murder tnaL to recognize the plea of momentary insanity". hereupon the follow ing sensible letter was written to urn (the Judge) by General Gar field of the same State : The whole Country owes you a lebt of gratimde for brushing iway the wicked absurdity which las lat.lv been palmed off on the country as a law on the subject ot insanity. It the thing had gone on much further all that a man would need to secure himself from murder would be to tear his hair and rave a little, and then kill his man. I hope you will print your opinion m pamphlet form, and send it broadcast to all the Judges of the land. mi - Georgia. For the first time ii? ten years Georgia has been rep resented in the United States Sen ate. Joshua Hill, who was the last member of the old Georgia delegation to leave the house, was the first to enter the Senate as a Senator.. lie was admitted onQtIid 1st bv a large vote His colleague, Mr. Miller, who is a Democrat, was wf nnitf. so fortunate, out wi ii probably be admitted. An exchange says : "Gen. Hook er is for war with England-war to the knife." So is Gen. Butli? with the simple difference that he is for war, not to the knife, but to the spoon. .-- A temperance editor, in draw ing attention to an article against ardent spirits in his paper, says: "For the effects of intemperance see our inside!" . -- Do daily and hourly your near est duty. Never mind whether it be known or acknowledged; in the blithsome "sometime," it will have its reward. o G o G 0 O G O 5 G O C0URTBSI OF BANCROFT LIBRARY, imrVTRSTTf OF CALTFORNTA .