The Weekly enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1868-1871, May 12, 1871, Image 1

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THE W'KiliL i EIMT fiHPBIScS
" ' " " ' ' 9 ' ' ''''' S
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YOIi. 5
ORISGOX CITY, OISE&OX, FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1871,
IV O. 27.
o
o
o
I .
& l)c-iUccklij ventcvprisc.
A DEMO
'2 PAVER,
business fr.i, the farmer
An l the FAMILY CMJE.
1S
.r-v.r CA'EIIV Kill"
EY
A. NOLTMERi
EDITOR AND PUBLISHER.
FFICFln Dr. Theng' Bii-.k luildinpr.
o
c TERMS of SUBSCRIPTION:
Single Cony one year, in advance,
2 .:o
T i i MS of A I) I F ft TSIXG :
i'rinsifMit advertisement., including aI
F.ir c i !a sii'ii-e'i'ieiitii'.seitiou
2
1 co
Oiivi CjIumiii, ci..e year $120 CO
iidf " " V!
Q'-trter " f
Basiness Card, 1 sotare one year
tB" H'mUtina to me dp -J ft e risk o
Sub-icribeni, and at the c.rptnse of Agents.
rook axd .on pfixtixg.
e,s- I'he FriU-rprise ofil e is supplied with
bci'Uit'ul. ;i!j)r.ve.l tv!"s of tyc,knd mod
era Si iCillN'E lKKS:KS. which will enable
(!te Proprietor l 1. J h Punting at all times
Xeuf, Quick and C'uop .'
Work solicited.
A'l lliini ti-in.u-ti upon a Speck btti.
B US1XESS C 1 II D S
CIlAltLCS V AEiESKN,
Attorney at Law,
Ore
;on City, Oregon.
Sept.K-.ly.
JOHN 31. BACON,
Importer and Dealer in ..
'si'
S2ZZ Z.12 CI 13
STATION KliV, ridlFlT.MKIiV. Ac., ic,
Orrgon City, Oregon.
At Charm-m S,- ltrn rx old --tn nd , lot, hj oc
cupied bij S. Acknihtn, Main strut.
lit 1 1
JOHN FLEMING,
DKAI.KU IN
BOOKS AMD
SI
in m yeus' riui: rnooF brick,
mtn st::kkt, oR''i;nv ctty. ore': on.
'OFFTilK -In O.Id Ft-lh.w
of Firs! atid A1U r Str
' Te'i'ple, pnniiT
ct-, l'ultl.Hid.
i'.qr:iii,' Mip rior
' Tin tatr-nai'
OPer.it lo: s i.- i n
ot l!io-e
: ..! ......
id-
tin- t hi- i ;;i uless ext i.ut o:i n t teeth.
;t i i mil
Z-?;. i ti;i rial toftli 'VI'.it tliau the Uesx,
find as rJi'iii, a A tai. C.'f -ip'.tt.
Dee. 2-'.:tf .
The patron a jc of tnoe dcs'i rinse ft n't Clan 3
'Ot'-r.t'hiii, is rerrpecttnlly solicited.
''Satisfaction in all cases guaranteed.
X. II. Xitn"t O.rydv administered for the
painless Extraction of Teeth.
' Of i-u;k In WeiiratiFs new Vviildit.g:, west
"side of First street, lictween Aider and Jor
"risou streets, i'urtland, Oregon.
"Live and Lot Live."
FIELDS & TkTcKLKK,
DEVLFUS IN
PROVISiOMS, GROCERIES,
COL'NTRV FROliUcE, Sc.,
cnoiri- -winks and i.irois.
'.rAt. the ol 1 stand of Wottinan & F.elds
Ofvjron C'it. , Oregon.
i;;tf
TV
7 IT. YV ATKINS, 31. !.,
SUIUTEON. roiiTi.YND. Ok!-:uti.
OFFICF Odd Fellows' Temple, corner
First and Mdor
greets Residence corner oi
:h stretts.
ata and Seven
ALANSOf SMITH,
attorney and Counselor at Law,
lUOCTvi. AM) SOLICITOR.
AVOCAT.
Practices in State and U. P. Ccurts.
X). IdS Front S'reet. Portland. Ok-j
0t.p.site MeCor nick's Book Stoaj-
VI. F. HIGHFIELD,
TNtahlished since lSIO.at the old stand,
Miin Street. Oregon Cttr, Ore-yon.
n Aortment of Watehes, Jew
elry, and Scth Thomas' weight
Clocks, all of which are warranted
t, lit as reoresec.ted.
i;.-.iiiin"-s done on snori nonce.
uid thankful for pist favor-.
CLAUK GHEENHAIT,
Pw City Draman
OREGON CITY
tr All orders for the delivery of merchan
t&'we or p i-kaies and, freight of whatever de
triptio a. to anv pm o' the city, will be exe
C ivel promptly and with care.
-JSEW YORK HOTEL,
(DcHtfehes Gaft'-avt-O
No. IT Front Street, '"M,p,-s:te th Mail steam
ship landing, Portland. Orison.
H. R0THF03, J. J. WILKENS,
PROPRIETORS.
Board per Week
sr on
'c on
1 00
with Lodin. .
Dav..
A. POLTNER,
SOTARVPCBMC. EVTERP
Oregon C.ty, Jar.T3:tt
I OFFICE
1
Dr. J, H. HATCH,
m V'-T.-
D i:N I lb 1 s
Empire or EepubHc.
-what iji.aiu thinks about the
riFIKKNTII AM K N D M K XT AXD XEUliO
SUFFRAGE.
fFrom th" Montgomery (Ala.) Mail.
A short time since (3Iareh llili)
one of the editors ol the JSLtil
wrote to Hon. Frank 1. IJIair, ask
ing his views of the political situa
tion, ''either for private use or for
publication, as he rnh;ht lesio-nai e."
3Ir. lilair rejdied at length ; but
without sayiiiL? wlu ther we should
publish or not. however. But in
rsniuch as the views of leading
men are, in a measure, the rightful
property of their followers the
people we take the liberty of ex
tracting from the letter before tis
the following paraurrajlis on the
subject of the amendments hereto
fore assailed by the Mull :
Wasmixgtox, 3Iarch 8. 1ST1.
Dear Sir: Yours of the 11th in
stant lias just been received. I
am rlatttred by your request that
I should endeavor to compose the
''dead issue'" controversy amontx
our friends in the South, and I
miu;ht be tempted to proffer my
advice to them if I thought it
'vonld be effective. lut our eo
i!e don't like to be advised. They
prefer discussion, and to form their
opinions on public, questions by
that process. I have contributed
in that wav, and shall continue to
do so to the utmost ot rav abil
ity. . W
In mv judgement the actual is
sue of the Campaign is the broad
one. whether we have, or are to
have, a federal Union on a consti
tutional basis, or an absolute Gov
ernment, with power in the hands
of those who possess it to pro
long its own existence indefinitely.
This draws in review the past and
continuing process by which the
arbitrary (ioverrfmeut of to-day
had been established and is to be
maintained, and the reconstruction
Acts and the amendments must
necessarily figure in this review ;
but the question whether they went
through the forms that entitle
them to be put on the statute book
is really an immaterial one. It
does not change the argument a
particle whether the forms were
complied with or not, and it does
not effect our ability to put the
Government in the hands of the
people if we carry the election,
whether they are valid or invalid.
The manner in which these
amendments were adopted, and
the still more significant 'measures
passed and proposed for their en
forcement, otiidit to satisfy men of
all sections and parties that liberty
itself is at stake in the coming con
flict. No thoughtful observer of
the present aspect of public -affairs,
who does not from timidity will
fully shut his eyes to the conclu
sions of his reason, can doubt that
tl
lose
who, to
U'i'asp power, have
subverted the organic law in de
fiance of the known will of the peo
ple, will fail to adopt any other
measures of fraud cr violence
which may be found necessary to
maintain them in the possession of
it, and that our only security
auainst new rind rreater violence
than has heretofore been practiced,
is by the timely awakening of the
people to the real dangers which
surround them so that a spirit
will be aroustd which will over-
iwe and disarm those daring
nemies. Not to set-, or to effect
o see this danger, and to engage
the public mind m the discussion
f economic and civil service meas
ures; ami to belittle the iron man
who so lately brought that Senate
o his feet which had his predeces
r pleading at their bar, is to crv
i " i ...... :. .. ....?
'neace wnen mere is no peace
tnd so contribute to betray the
ountrv. If our friends would
unite in an earnest eitort to arouse
the country, all w ill be well. And
to this end it is only necessary to
let the people see what the real is-
sue is. Nor have I any fears that
they will fail to see it. Thev al
ready see it, in spite of the mistaken
efforts of some of our friends who
counsel what thev think is policy.
as if it was a matter of convention
among public nun what the issues
should be and not a matter of fact,
which they cannot control any
more than they can the advent of
the seasons. Thev may not see it
so plainly, either because they do
not observe with sutlieient atten
tion, or because they shrink back
from it from feebleness and appre-
!....: t . . . . . l . .
neusiou. i.ci u to uie people
laitiv and ootiu, aim mvoKClheir
judgement upon the record radical
ism has made for itself. All the
contrivances by which the radi
cals have sought to trammel tin
people ami tortity themselves in
power can thus be eiu-ctuallv swept
1 1 r j .1
away.
rn. i : it
j.ne uuieieuces amoncr our
friends, to which you refer, are not
serious. Ihey arise. I believe
chiefly from a mistaken idea that
i nose who coiiiniue to assail recon
struction and the amendments in
tend to abolish negro suffrao-
This is not the object, and it is a
Very inadequate view of the sub
ject. This suffrage really depends
very little on the amendments,
because, amonir other things, it has
not accomplished the object of
those who imposed it (which was
to irive them the control of the
South), and they have beun,
themselves, already to dispense
with it in the District of Columbia,
where it was first started. But the
States which have adopted it do
not propose to revoke it, and will
not, I am confident, unless, after a
fair trial, it is shown to be neeees- i
sary for a rod jrovernmenl. The j
Fifteenth Amendment will, in this
event, be easily disposed of, for the ; no1". OM
Badicals, who'have already ceased j among prominent publican
to have a motive to maintain it, ! politicians here upon the question
will have ceased to cant on the of who is to be t he nominee of the
subject. party next year fur t he Presidency.
It is not, therefore, to pet rid of : J.ast December, when Congress
iieLrro suffrage that we continue to L met, there was but one opinion
assail and refuse to acquiesce in i upon the subject, and that was that
usurpations by which the iover::- j Gen. Grant was sine of re-nomina-ments
of the people have been and tion, and more sure of election
will continue to be wrested from than any other man that could be
them. The contest is not to take j named. Since then, and especially
away suffrage from the negroes, within the last few weeks, a
but to pi serve that wise distribu-j marked change has taken place,
tion of the powers of the Govern- i and it is now apparent that a
ment, without which all suffrage is j strong opposition to Gen. Grant
but a mockery, and to prevent that I exists, which includes a laro iiimii
control by the national functiona- ber of Senators and llepresenta-
l ies, which is sure to create imperi
alism, and which will inevitably
degrade, impoverish and enslave
the toiling masses.
Yours, truly,
Frank P. Be a in.
A Man with six Wives.
traveling and voluble m. d.
he marries six ladies.
A
The Erie (Penn.) "IMsptftch"
shows up the matrimonial adven
tures of a travelling 31. D., w hose
pompous manner and volubility of
tongue have given him the name
of Dr. "YVhistlew ind," but w hose
real name is Lyman I. Taylor who
is
THE HUSBAND OF SIX AVIVE3
ami the lather of children innumer
able. .Among his victims is a
woman in Troy. Tin Dr. is a
shoemaker by trade, and his first
matrimonial venture was with an
actress in a circus. Tito charms
of a. pretty Quakeress induced him
to desert his wife ami their two
children, and he married the. form
er, living with her until her death,
which was caused by the explosion
of a kerosine lamp. The Doctor
next married his servant girl, lie
then eloped with
a patient from
Syracuse, a 3Irs. Dusenbury, for
whom lie seemed to have a gi-nuine
affection, living with her for the
long period of fifteen years. The
doctor next turned up at Lansing
burg, where he represented him
self to be a widower. He was
poorly clad and seemed to have
suffered hard times. He there
opened a medical oilice, and be
came acquainted with Mrs. Frances
j 31., who became his filth wife, and
i who since learning his true charac
ter, is likely either to bring him
to justice or make
THE COUNTRY TOO HOT TO HOLD
HIM.
He married her in Troy four years
ago, one of his sons and a 31 rs.
King being the witnesses. She
was worth -b,ooo, ami gave him
81,000 as a wedding present to set
up a country shoe store in North
Corinth, but he ran through it,
aid around drunk, and m three
months had only n few dollars left.
ore leaving North Corinth,
however, an omcer came wnn a
warrant, for obtaining goods under
Hlse pretences. He appealed to
lis wife, and she paid 8175 to
;ave him fiom punishment. While
getting ready to emigrate to p.rie.
wife No. 4, Mrs. Dusenbury, made
ler appearance and demanded
that he should come and live with
ier and her three children. He
denied in presence of wife No. 5
that he had been married to No. -f.
;he said she could bring proof
enough, but if he would do some
thing for the support of the chil
dren she would not prosecute.
HE HAD SWINDLED A SHOE MANU
FACTURER
this citv out of over a hundred
ollars worth of goods, and these
1h. oncked in a box and told his
. i - . . .i. .i .. i
late companion to iaue mem mm
ell them for the benefit ot herself
and children. He then started Tor
Erie with wife No. 5, but alter a
short time married a sixth wife in
that place and put for parts un
known. The last time he was
heard from he was in South Bend,
I u. liana. The Troy lady and wife
No. 4 are both after him, and he
can hardly hope to escape at
'.east from the clutches of the form
er. Cannot Be. Husbands have
their rights, says the X. Y. Com
mercial, but hauling a wife out of
bed in the middle of the night and
beating her cannot be included
---.
Often. A bachelor compares a
shirt buuon to life, because it so
often hangs by a thread.
Grant's C'rianocS.
THE GTIKAT AMERICAN BROTIIEU-IN-LAW
ABOUT TO BE KE-NOMIXATED.
From the World. J
The statements made in the fol
lowing extracts from a telegram in
the Tribune tally with our informa
tion. Of course, the Tribune
would not have published such a
dispatch if its editor did not look
with complacency on the attempts
to circumvent and unhorse General
G rant :
" Vasiiin(;ton, 3Tarch 22. A
threat deal of quiet discussion is
tives oi laru'o mlliience and na
tional reputation. This opposition
is no doubt caused in some part
by recent political events, but its
result, also, to a lare extent, from
the manifestation of the latent
hostility that has been accumulat
ing durinu" the past two years of
the present administration, and
which naturally shows itself about,
a year befirre the time for holding
the nominal inj convention.
THE CHIEF ARGUMENT
of those who oppose the re-nomination
of General Grant is that de
feat would be certain if he should
be the nominee. They maintain
that the dissensions that exist in
the Bopublieun party can only be
healed by the nomination of a new
man, against whom no portion of
the party entertain feelings of
coldness or animosity, and that,
in view oi the increased strength,
vigor, and confidence of the Dem
ocrats, any other course would be
suiridal.
Democrats look upon these
symptoms with almost as much
regret as pleasure, for they think
Gen. Grant could be
MORE EASILY BEATEN
any other candidate
than
the
IJepublieau party would
to bring into the Held,
not yet abandon our
J 1 I V 1 I 1 1
be likely
We do
lope that
Viehcral virant will he re-nominated.
His numerous enemies in
the Hepublican party probably
underrate his strength and the iu
tluence he can exert by means of
the Federal patronage in packing
their National Convention. This
influence is most, potent in States
that are certain to vote against,
him in t he elect ion. Take 31 issotiri
for example. A politician must
be demented or insane who sup
poses there is a possible chance
for the electorial votes of Missouri
to be given to Grant, and yet he
will easily secure the delegates
fiom that State. The more hope
less the prospects of the Republi
can party in any State, the more
subservient it will prove to the
wishes ot the man who bestows
ollices and plunder. Foi other ex
amples TAKE THE SOUTHERN STASES. ;
There is no Republican party iu
those States except the camp-followers
of the administration. The
President, with crafty tricksters
like Cameron to manage for him,
will probably get all those States
to vote for him in the nominating
convention, whereas not two of
them at most, will give him their
electorial votes. Every State
that is certain to vote against him
in the election will probably sup
port his nomination. The smaller
the Republican minority in any
State, and the more dependent it
is on Federal patronage, the more
easily it will yield to the wishes of
the President in the selection ol
delegates to the National Conven
tion. If the nomination of Gen.
Grant depended upon the strong
Radical States, there is no reasona
ble doubt that he would be sup
planted. 3Iassachusetts with Stun
ner, 3IotIev and, very likely, Bout-
well to avenge, will give
A SOLID VOTE AGAINST GRANT
the convention. L,ven sutler,
i - .... i
who a
pi res to oe odu-mioi, aim
cannot, ex pec
ct to succeed against
Sumner's opposition, will probablv
find a prvtext for renewing his old
quarrel with General Grunt; The
Illinois delegates will also be
opposed to Grant. Both of the
Illinois Senators, Trumbull and
Logan, dislike him and do not af
fLct to conceal their
disli
Ke.
In
Ohio, ex-Secretary Cox, who is
much respected and has many
friends in that State, would "sooner
st e his dearest foe in heaven" than
General Grant re-elected to the
Presidency. But Grant has, never-
COURTESY OF BANCROFT LIBRARY,
TTOTVmSTTy OF CALIFORNIA.
theless, a pretty rood chance to be
re-nominated by the aid of States
that cannot irive him their electo
ral votes. He has an even chance
for getting the delegates from
New York, although the Fenton
wing of the party may possibly
prevent it ; but he certain! v will
not get the electorial votes from
this State. We are very willing
that the Radical party should
have a candidate it does not want,
and in w horn it has no confidence,
thur.-t upon it by cliques of Fed
eral office-holders in States that
can do nothing for the candidate
after he is nominated.
Exatfr in His Pulpit
The Rev. Benjamin Eaton, first
and only rector of Trinity Episco
pal Church, Galveston, was strick
en with death while standing in
his pulpit, April 2d. The Galves
ton SYeics thus describes the af
fecting scene :
He ascended the pulpit. An
nouncing his text, "There is yet
room," all trembling beneath the
weight of his last message, he re
ferred to one alter another of the
friends of his youth and the com
municants of his church that had
gone before. Then, as if the thin
veil that hides the spiritual from
mortal vision had been rent, mid
his eye could see such scenes as
none can see and live, his fine de
scriptive powers bent themselves
to their task. He painted death
entering the church door, passing
up the broad aisle, laving his bony
hand to the right and to the left;
breathing his cold, clammy breath
on the cheek of beauty, and wait
ing the silver hairs of age now
touching the father, then the son,
here the mother, there the daugh
ter. As the spectre so plain to his
entranced vision advanced to the
chancel rail, and as he saw that
his time had come his words strug
gled for utterance. He faltered.
His weakening limbs staggered.
A gentleman who advanced, to his
assistance was wafted back. For
ten minutes more he spoke, his
words only audible to those near
him. The excitement of the au
dience was fearful. The silence ol
death was only broken by the
words he strove to speak. Three
times "he struggled to continue,
saving : "I am very sick, but I
rmist say." Again he staggered.
He fell into the arms of .Air. C. R.
Hughes, as he raised his hands to
pronounce the ascription. Like
3Ioses, that other sevant of God,
he was too weak to. hold up his
hands, which was done by 31 r.
Hughes, as he said his last pulpit
words, '-To God the Father." The
hand of death that lay on his
shoulder was too he'tivy for him
self, for his friends. His tongue
refused to speak; his hand drop
ped. He was carried to his rec
tory, where he died.
Senator 3Iorton made a speech
from the balcony of a hotel in
Washington, the other day, in
which he renominated Grant for the
Presidency in 1872. The Senator
spoke at length, eulogistic ot the
President, who, with Colfax, sat
on the balcony through it all, and
listened to his own praises. No
doubt it made him feel good to
hear himself so well spoken of, and
to see in the future himself presi
dential gift receiver for a second
term. But other people have some
thing to say about that, as well as
3Iorton. And we guess they will
say it in a different way too. Let
Grant imagine himself what he
pleases now, but there are stern
realities for him hereafter. He has
been weighed in the balance and
found wanting, and his kingdom
given to the democracy. After
the 4th of 3Iarch, a different indi
vidual will occupy the White
House.- Ucmocratie Vntctruai.
A son of the late President
Tyler, only twenty-one years old.
is a Uh'an in the Twelfth Army
Corps of Saxony, ind served
throughout the Franco-Prussian
war. He had been for live years
a mining student in Freiberg, but
when the clash of arms came he
laid aside his books and sought
admission to the service. By an
especial favor of the 3Iinister ot
War this foreigner was p rmittcd
to enter the ranks of the King of
Saxony. Being a fine looking,
gallant young man, he made an
excellant soldier, and his record as
son of an American President was
enough to cause every officer to
seek his companionship. During
the latter part of the war young
lyleris said to have carried his
cavalry lance into several hot en
gagements. A lady of 3Iattoon, Illinois, was
recently married to her eighth
hus
1. Nos. five.
can"
six
and
seven are reported alive and well,
but divorced.
n
A Hint to Buckwheat-cake
3Iakers. One good turn deserves
another.
Abou" G . Is
HOW THEY DRESS PADDING GAR
TERS LACING AND VARIOUS
OTHER THINGS.
Dr. Dio Lewis has always been
deeply interesied in the girls.
When young, nothing fascinated
him so much, and even now he ad
mires them as much as ever.
THE CHIEF TOPIC
on which he writes for their benefit
is health, and he begins by giving
them good advice about their boots
and shoes. As a ' ule their soles are
too narrow. A young lady whose
foot is four inches wide wears a
shoe with a sole only two inches
and a half.. The consequence is
that in walking the step of the
girls is unsteady and vibrates side
ways. Besides, t he pressure of the
upper leather check's t he circulid ion
in the foot and makes it cold. This
sort of shoes, with an elastic garter
worn obout the leg just below the
knee, is the cause why the great
majority of girls have cold feet.
If the soles of the shoes were made
broad, this diiliculty would not
only be obviated, but the foot it
self would look smaller and hand
somer. Moreover, such shoes keep
in shape much longer than narrow
ones. Neither should they have
high heels. The high, small heels
lately in fashions are absurd. They
tjiid to weaken the ankle, jam the
toes into the sharp points of the
boots and cripple the feet.
ONE OF THE RAREST THINGS
in the world is to meet with a wo
man who walks well. 3 Irs. Charles
Ivcaii Ellen Tree was an admir
able walker. But how can this be
done if a girl goes about, perking
her chin up, sticking out her shoul
der blades and wriggling herself
along iu a very stubby, stumbling
way. For fine walking, low, wide
heels and broad soles, especially
about the toes, are necessary. The
body must be at perfect liberty
about the waist. The corset is a
deadly enemy to liiie walking.
Next, the direction is to carry the
t he chin close to 1 he neck. Sl range
to say the chin is the pivot on
which the whole body turns in
walking. If the chin is wrong, the
shoulders are wrong, the hips are
wrong the w hole gait is wrong.
A most important rule of health is
to stand up straight. Walk erect,
sit erect, and even when you are in
bed at night do not put three pil
lows under your head and
watch your toes all night, but keep
yourself straight. If you do this
your iungs, heart, stomach and all
the. other organs of the body will
have room to work. It is impos
sible even to have a good voice
unless you stand erect.
THE FULL DRESS
of low neck and short sleeves is as
immodest as it is unhealthy. The
mania for extravagant trimmings
of women's dress has become in
sufferable. Ear-rings are barba-
rious; linger-riugs are vulgar; th
wearing of false hair is an atrocity.
Preparations for the complexion
ire among the most objectionable
outrages which woman perpetrates
upon herself. 1 he habit ol padding
the bust of dresses, so universal
among dressmakers, destroys the
natural functions of the breasts.
Lacing produces a hideous dis
tortion. The enormous paddings
worn below the waist heat and in-
jure the spine. Vjaricrs seriousiv
influence the circulation of the
blood. It is not wrong to wish to
keep the stocking smoothe, and il
the calf of the leg be very large,
the knee small and the circulation
vigorous, an elastic garter may be
used without serious injury. "But,"
says Dr. Lewis, "as most Amcrica i
girls have slender legs"- this we
are as'sured is not true "as then1
is but little enlargement of t he cal !'
the pressure of the garter requind
to keep the stocking in position is
is very injurious. It produces ab
sorption of the most, important
muscles, and therefore a weakness
of the feet." He recommends, in
stead of garters, that the stockings
should be fastened by straps to
the waist.
THE IDLENESS OF OUR GIRLS
is deplorable. A friend has th"ee
daughters ami two sons, all grown
up. He was a shop-keeper, and
one of these sons was employed in
the shop, while the three girls did
nothing but dress, p!av a little,
tit i "
maKc calls, receive calls, go shop
ping, and, (lining the summer, vis
it t lie country lor t heir lu ait h. The
business wait on badly-, until filial
ly the father called his daughters
together and told them that he was
in debt and that the only chance
for the family was that the girls
should abandon their idle life and
help him to carry on the business.
This they did. "The clerks were
discharged; the daughters became
industrious and useful and the fam
ily were saved from poverty and
distress.
ALL "WOMEN LONG TO BURY
their uncertainties am! anxieties in
in the love of a husband, Men, on
their part, are thinking of the samp
thin ; but oi ly the rich can afford
to marry; it costs to much. Be
sides women maketh.emselves ugly.
Look at one of them. A big hump
three big lumps in a Wilderness
of crimps and trills, a hauling up of
the dress hen and there, and enor
mous, hid eus mass 'of false hair or
bark planted on the top ot the head,
and on "the very top that a little
nondescript thing, .. ornameired
with bits of lace, bird's tails, ami
ribbons, while shop windows tell
us all day long of the paddings,
whale-bones and springs which oc
cupy .most of the space within that
outside ring. How can any man
of sense who knows that life is
made up of use and woik, take
such a partner? Re must be des
perate to unite himself for life with
M.ch a d fo rrud, fettered, half
bivathing arrangement. Such wo-
! tnen have no power or magnetism.
i They i-'h' field V- oml n.n
words, such as -splendid" and
"awful;" but this des not deceive
us; we see through it all.
Til E FACT IS THEY ARE SUPERFICIAL,
affected, silly. They have become
m child sh that they refuse to wear
decent names Instead of Helen,
Margaret, Elizabeth, they affect
Nellie, Maggie and Lizzie. A wo
man twenty-five years of age,
whose real name is Cat herine," in
sists on being called Katie. How
can a sensible man propose a life
partnership to such a silly goose?
But if mer could see that girls ajv
industrious and eo momical, with
habits that secuie health and
strength, that their life is earnest
and real, they are willing to 1 egin
at the beginning in iife, with the
man they consent, to mairy, thin
marriage would become the rule,
and not lie. as now, among a cer
tain class, the exception.
A Radical Witness. The Chi-G
chago Triliunc publishes the fol
lowing: "An officer of the army,
who has also had large experience
as administrator of the Govern
ment umle.r the reconstruct ion acts,
has leceiitly made a journey
through the whole South, from
Virginia to Texas, his route lying
t h rough the dist nets most dis in bed
during the late war and since its
conclusion, . and his report, when
interrogated concerning the Ivil
Klux (lenient which is under?
stood to be the generic name for
a.ll those who resort io iolenee
again s, negroes and loyal men is
that he personally saw or heard of
no manifestations of Ku-Kluxisni
t h ronghout t .he vv hole count ry t ra v
ersed by him. Having also trav
eled through the South before the
war, he is of opinion that there afo
no more, but rat her fewer, violent
deaths now than then. Nor is the
number great'-r, apparently, than
in the new Slates ami Territories
on our Western frontiers, where
the state of society and means of
intercourse with the centers of civ
ilization resemble those of the o
South."
An Instructive Scene.; As
Senator Sunine'' was emerging;
from the capitol the other morn
ing, he was confronted by an aged
Fifteenth Amendment, .who, hat iii
hand, and bowing and scraping,
remarked :
" I believe dis 3fassa Sumner?"
" No sir ! there are no masters
in this laud
I am Senator Si
urn
tier.
51
This nearly sqnenched the old
darkey, but he rallied with the re
mark " You's done a heap for de
cull r'd race."
" I am proud to hear von say
so," responde I the magnificent
Chawles.
" De niggers all sp'-ak of you hi
de highest elevation."
Sumner bowed and smiled his
acknowledgements.
" What. I was coning at, boss,
is dat de winter's hard, ami de
times pretty rough n de ohl
woman an 1 I, and f you could
-pare de old darkey ha.f a dollar
" .
Sumner stopped no further, but
with a majestic, wave of disap
proval from the Senatorial hand',
he moved on while the Venerable
brothel muttered something about
"don't appear to keer much for
the niggers Yept to vote and git
ler names up. . usi i m n
uii, Cox came along and
he poor old darkey a dollar.
t . . l
Hon;
g;i ve
Co.t
is called a eopi
perhea
d.
In ca.se ol
kerosene fires,
don't
witli
try to eximguis.'i
h the flame
water: thai win st
t.
ill
read the tire.
!vt..M,l use blankets,, or woolen
t.
cloths, quilts, shawls, or whatever
mav be at hand that can be used
to smother the flames. Don't use
water; the oil floats upon it and
burns as rapid ly as ever. Remem
ber that smothering is the only
successful way of stopping the firei
Disposed To. A clergyman ofi
f rs up prayers for the Legi. latu);
of his state, which; he says "
posed to repeal fevt-f f lS iU
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