The Weekly enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1868-1871, June 09, 1871, Image 1

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OltEGOX CITY, OSEGOy, 1?J3IIAY, JUXE , 5.871
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fc-i hi I J t-4 M IA H f TetH 4 1 .
Ei)c iDcckln (Enterprise.
A DEMOCRAT": PAVER,
roll TI!E
business IVlan, the Farmer
FAMILY CIRCLE.
ViM KI) KVKKY F3iI-VY DY
a. noLTsr?,
editou a.vi ruiiLisni:r-
1 1
TERMS of A" cnsCMP TIOX:
'Single Copy one year, in advance, i'i 50
y'Ave -i v -i r-.' tisixg
'Transient .1 1 vert i-em-u. itn lLidsiig a!l
notices. (4 - . l I.' i lies, 1 w . S 2 ."('
'o r e i ;ii - i 'J --''l i -"t 1 !' -'' tinii I
':)ne C )Iu n'l, o.ie year $120 00
Half " '
nrter
'liu-iiitess Canl, 1 sri'inre out1 ye.ir.
. 4.)
. 12
.3- !l-vn'tt inrr t be m.-'ile at Ve risk o
' Subs: ribens , and
ROOK A. XI) JOB I' HEX TLX (!.
t?BT l'!ie ivit-Tpri-sc! !!i: e i.s Mjjii;icd with
'h.:jtir,il. ii jr-vt?J tyl-.- of type. siimI u.oi-
"tiie I'ropi iftir t d ) .1 h Piiutin at ail times
Seat, Quick and Cficaji !
W "Ar iv'.i -i il.e.ie.l.
'All llnin'i tr 1. -if icf ions upon a Spicie 6.s-x.
B U SIX ESS C 1 1UJ S
Altorney at Lav,
Ortgon Ciaj-, Origon.
Septl'tdy.
, 'TOIIX y. liACOX,
n-K ,f -if
Importer and Dealer ju f i(f
STATION Ell V, rEUEEMEJlV. JLc, At..
O'-poon C'tii, Oregon.
At Charw.iofy IV.tnu-r ohl st.n.d, !ofAy oc
cupied lJ . Ac.': fri.'tn, Main s-tittd.
in tf
JOHN FLEMING,
'J-jp' iEAi.r.n in
U0DXSAID STATIONTRYi
IN -MYEIiS" FlftE-PKOOF EtlK'K,
M 1 V STttK KT . OR
v ("ty, enr.'-eN'.
fACK & WELCH,
OFFICK In Old Ftll-w' Te-.ple, corner
iU' Fir.-t ami Abb r Stiv. t-, Fottiand.
Tiie pafi enai:" of line destr !i2 supi-ruir
.operatm s i in -pec'eal reioic-t. Nitrousox-id,-
bo- the aiales exttaeiioe f t.-.th.
rS"Arti 'cia! teeth "'net'- r than tiia best,"
'and a a )" p U. t!(t c.'ti- tpe-yt.
Dee. 21:tf
Dr. J, II . HATCH,
DENTIST.
The patronage of triose der-uiu2 rir-si Cia ,14
Operation, is respect tutly solicited.
...Satisfaction in ait ca.-es guai anteed.
X. . 'Xrtrorn Or j I- aduiiiii-terea for the
il'ainless Kxtraetion of Teeth.
Os't'iCK- In Wei pant's new bail. jit:. 2, "est
aide yf Firt street, l.ciwi-eu Aider and Aear
orison t,-eets, Portland, Oregon.
"Livs and Let Live.'
JIELDSS X- STiJiCKLEK,
DEAl.r.ILS 1?,
COc'.sTUY 1'ROiiUiE,
CHOI CI WINI.S AND LItU(,r-
U. the old ,-t 1:1,1 of A'oitm. II & F (Ids
Otegon Cit , 0rc2
tf
T II. W ATKINS, M. D ,
SURGEON'. PotiTi.vNt). Ota:o( n.
OFFICE -OA 1-Miows" Temple, corner
'ir5t and Mdir -treets tte.-idcuce corner ot
.Main and Seventh streets.
V. F. HIGHriELD,
q Established ime lsi'.).at tlu- "H stand,
M tin Street, Oregon City, Cre-jon.
An Assortment ot ate tic . -ie -plrv.
ati 1 S. t' fin mi is' weight
ad;s, all of wit't -h are warranted
t.n he a- renre-eated.
lie iiritir- d io oa short noilcc.
n l t1! Ci't il for p st (avers.
CLZVRX GREEITMAN,
Tt - 1 I - - ,i
on EG OX CI TV.
tfcjL, VII anlers fir t hp -tel tverv of merchan
tis ? oi' pi -kazes and freight ot" whatever les
ycripti a. to in v ) trt o the eity, willbeexc
C".ttel promptly and with care."
JEW YOllK HOTEL
(Deutfehes raft'-ansA
"II 0. IT Front, Street, ...r.r.vte th- Mail steam
ship laading. I'ertland. )r?2'n.
H. IIOTHFOS, J. J. VTTLKENS,
p n o p 11 1 f. t o 11 s .
Eoard ret" Week
f 5 00
. fi 00
. l on
with I.od gi n 2-
Dav
A. G. WALLING'S
Pioneer Boole Bsndery-
O II EGO MAX IJUILDINii,
Corner of Krtml nml Al 'ir Street,
PORTLAND, OREGON.
"BLANK P.00K.S RULED and ROUND to
an v desired pattern.
MUSIC BOOKS, MAGAZINES. NEWS
TAPERS. Etc., bound m every variety ot
-6tvle known to the trade.
Orders from tli countrv promptly at
tcniii fc.
That Liberty-
mi . 1 5icneiOis
The Orojotn'in p;ys that we were in the j
bit u-n v.:,rs a 20 ofdHcSarinjr that our Dr. Hall in his health nrtiel.-s.
i.oenif's were neir.pc laicen away Irmn 11s.
That js so. and osie by one ihey tiavebecti
s'la'ched from the jieeple. nniil tiiev -are
now clt wi;h a dictator tlu powers cen
terei in one man, and State.- IJiirirs. 1111-
less it be fur the benefit of Jiiilical officials-
have been totally obliterated
What we can'ianed the people ;iun-a ten
years a 20. has c-me to pas. and to d v
every State in the Union is como'ete! y a1
the mercy of the Executive. When these
Radical editors say the recent outrajre''
bill is an act to protect the Southern peo
ple from tie ravages ot the Ku-KIux.
ihey either lie n- d.) not nnder.-iand the ! cliamher or iioiise being so ttliin
lueinin ot the act. That bill is absolute vitinif, the baciielor is inclined to
p uwer .0 the President to declare uiarti il seek diversion outside, ill suppers
law in any State of the Utiin. wle-ther with friends, in clubs which arc
Nu-ili or S.ach. and it iNo ives his f,d
loweisan opporaiiiity tocieate;i di'iiili
anee on eiecnon day. and by t!)' mean.
place the commune v iii liost.Iitv to the
-.utra-e act. and subject them to its
penal lies, and lleis have the people de
oiveil of a liniit to vote (a enj-y any
o ' tn-r L'naraiaeed rijih' of a ci izen. Yes.
the I. bellies of the people are taken, and
now. wane loin nniii.uijs of mrues have
become apparently !!;'. ! !uj '.vl.iie men
hivel'is: their freedom and to-tiay are
alijeci slaves to a tle-p.iL an 1 ab
s lute I rant, with greater pu-.ver thati
a ty one man ever pos-essed in any couu
try, who.-e will is tije supieu'e law of the
laid. While we dec! all d tea years ay
ihat our liberties weie bein wre.-ted
iioiu us. events since then have proved
that we were correct, and lo,:ly the
Ameiican people are. while yet nominabv
live, the yit.st abject sub;
ec.s d' any n a
lion on the fat
chains are ijein
ot the earth, and the
.bound tighter and tighter
as cilcililir tances win admit. Let not the
lite piaipie tie deceived b those paia
sci ib.eis. w hose only object is to serve
their master and aid him :u dostro ii'g iln
last vi.-tae-e et on- n ice tree yovenuiient.
let the e'.s of the people be opened and
.-ei- v.heiicev.'e al'e t i J t i i 1 jjt . Tile liiiitl'e
-.access el ilie traitors in power wiil be
the hist of tree government, and we a-k
in all sincei ii s . thai the people look
am aid ihem ami save 'he pneeie.-s. heri
i;i.2(- leh. theia by a pu'rioac at ices in .
a
nit b.i.ni pariisan leeiin.2 lead you
iid the place Iroui where there is im
Oevo
reairinr.2-
Ti.lt: - A Ke iiibiieau e.vehaieze ti nt'i
fnlly says ; The (.jovertemmt .ctmld
betur ai.eld to brin.2 home every Carpet
b;i22er now enuaed in Soudieru politics,
and 't him up in a re.-jiectabie liu-iness
or e'ue htm a pension, liian to pe.r.-tie tin
fa'al policy of continual lVderii in'o'
meddiing uith jan'eiy local a)';'ii's. Th
precedents already est ab'is'ie.J . op aboni
to lie under the new Ku-Kbtx bill
tire (d the most mi-c!d"voits kind and
will almost inevitably fe-ai ptaoific crops
of evil hereafter. Thiies of lhat Soft
tire invariably double ed-red. and il fe
cut (Tuiileston aiai .Mobile today. Ihev
may ne.X' year be turned with equal effect
ami -1st ihiSiott and liai''W."
An t'.xciiatiu' e says ttiu Join ;r. issioner
I lea-coon -on Sa'ttrdiy made an import
aat leei-"("iii concerning bequests to re
ligions association-, which in his opinion
are not exempt from ! ixiti n."?
Ot coin.'e nothing is exempt from tax i
tion. The Radical- would tax ; man tor
tlie privilege ol' d via 2 if they could. A'
they cannot, they make the administrator
pay a tax on settiin;; his estate.
Congress voted Nicholas i'. Tii.-t 310
Oiia tit ihe late .-e-sion for fits services in
Mexico in our a..w long ao vvai and
peace. Eut wllen he went to get his
nionev at the Tre.i-ury Depa 1 ' men t he
found Central ihcler bad itojipe-d lite
juivinetit on ;i claim of 2." per cent, for
attoruevs fees! (.'an nothing get i!tron2h
(eutirress that does not pay loll to ll:i
man ".' - Spri 'injlh ' R -pattiUyin.
('.I'taitdv iiodiing e n pa-s from whieh
oil ' mav be ex:ef e(
1 that he d-.es ma
demand it. lb' resisted amnesty. Cut re
peated ami Voluntary pledj.es to proon-e
ji 'in.j.nii i.c.il" could no, be levied in
r. movittg' d;sabia;ies : and it is notorious
here dtat hi- exttetiops ttfe j l-t as un
scrupulous as thev were at New Orleans
, u li.-n pinmb-r was the only recognise.-
tneans of purioasni. ami loyan'y coti--isted
in enlivening cotton, pla'e and
spoon's itro pefsonal wealth. (bmera!
(en don li is jnst hramlod him in lioston.
as he is upprecia'ed in Coiilo ts ;! n
p.f I'eno-nt of his. r llee-iug upon the the
cii irac't r of any ir.m in the community .
is. unless otherwise endorsed, entitled I"
DO Coll-id.erat lots " - P.tlf'nit.
YYoon's Hoi sKaoia) M.v- z.si:. Mos
hearti'v do we ve'e nie die May number
of Wood's Ilouseho'd Mag i.ine. We
hardly lecogni.ed i: a- it entered our
etbee in its new spring clothes ; but w.'tiV
ailnerittg the foior and quality of i s
dress, we were delighted to discover lit n
it adoined our old Irii nd. 1 be improve
ujents wltich have bdiowed tbii k nid
fas' in this Magazine show the ettterpt s -and
success of i s pnhlis'iers. The he ivy
naper is a great addi iu as we'd as die
cover, and i's typographical appearance is
unsurpassed.
- content.- are unexceptionable, and
jtniniisr i's list of con'ribteors are some ot
the most noted writers of the day. W e
do not understand how Mr. Woo I is able to
do so much for so li'tle money never !m
b'ss we are veiy e-t...H t 1 aeknowfedg his
UCii'.eVem.en'S. "Tile M iglSU'te is fnilli-tied
tor lie sin ill sum of one dollar. Seeet
men c-pv free. Addtess S. S. V oed
i & Co.. Ne-aburg. N. Y.
B.u.t.oi s J!.viiA7.ixt: kok Ji nk. D illon's
M igazine lor June has appeared with a
list of contents which will tempt the most
irdifferent f li erarv epicures. There are
s uae t u enty-six diffei eut articles in the
lane number, some of dtem hand-nmely
iiius'ra'ed. Terms. SI 50 per yea'-, or
it: 1... X.' ..-!.. .",'1
b,e country?' Address Thomes Ta.bot,
J3 OoagneB Street, Dosto?.
I Rta:ons vhy Married lltn Outlive
jives the toilovvi:!- reasons m ny
'married neison live lotiuer t hai!
tliose who remain Millie
. -
JJa.-h
t'lors are alwavs m :i siaie 01 mi-
n-st ; thev i'e'el tmsettled. It' m-
floors arter sin'er ineie i .1
then
sei,c 01 sohtarmes, m-mu-r .1
sa.iuess, ir not sellieu mei.ne muv ,
with all its depressing initueuees ;
ami many hours in the coarse or
the year are spent in uloomy inac
tivity, which is adverse to a good
ei'uv-non and a igorous and
healthy circulation. His own
la t foi I net ories t tnteni pcrance and
licentiousness, or to tuoso more tin
blnhini; associations: which, under
the cover of ('arkness, lead t(
sl '-'l ' ' i oi'Iuaitii ami morals,
.and when tiiese .are gone, the way
tlownwtiid to an untimely grave
is rapid and certain. On theother
hand, marriage haigthens a man's
life by its making home inviting;
bv t lie softeniii'jf influences wiiifh
it has upon the character ami the
dt'ecti
bv the cultivation (
the better feelings of our nature,
and in that proportion saving from
vit e and crime. There can he no
healt hful development of the physi
cal functions of our nature without
marriage; it is necessary to the
perfect man for Divinity has an
nounced that it was "not good for t
man to be alone."
Marriage eaves a laudible ami j
happy object m life, the provision j
for wife ami children, their pres-
cut comfort and iuture welfare, j
the enjovment in witnessing t he! r j
IMDllIIIOSS :m Tile ( :M V lOlll'-
v participation m aRetdionate m-1
lie
leiaiiaiige 01 inougiit ami sentiment j
..1 t.i. 1. i t : :
and sympathy ; tlieseare the con
siderations which antagonize sor
row ami lighten the burdens of
life-; 'has strewing flowers and
cast in" sunshine all along its path
wnv. Voltaire said: "The more mar
ried men you have, the fewer
crimes there will be. Marriage
renders a man more virtuous and
more wise. An unmarried man
is but half a perfect being, and it
requires the other halt to make
t hings right. ; and it caunot be ex
pected that, in this i.mnerfecr state,
lie can keep the straight path of
rectitude, any more than a boat
with one oar can keep a straight
course. In nine cases out of ten,
where married men become drunk
ards, or where they commit crimes
against the peace of the communi
ty, the foundation of these aids
was laid while in a single state, or
where the wife is, as is sometimes
the case, an unsuitable match.
Marriage! changes the current of a
man's feelings, and gives him a
centre for his thoughts, his affec
tions, ami his acts. Here is a home
-or the entire man, and the counsel,
the affections, tin- example, and the
interest .of his better half keep him
from erratic course;-, ;:ml from fail
ing into a thousand temptations
to which he would otherwise be
exposed. Therefore, the fiiend to
marriage is the friend to society
and to his count rvr
Some Years ag
i"o Hon. Horace
Gree e- in a bcture Oeioieai 1
.1
Club.ivmai ked: "It is strange how
close the people read the papers.
We never sav auvthing that no
body (hurt like out Avnat we soon 1
hear of it, and everybody Jells us
about it. Hut if once in a while
we happen to sav a good thing" we
never hear that nobody stems to
notice that. We may pay some
man a hundred compliments and
give him a dozen puffs, ami he
takes it as a tribute Io hi great nes
and never thinks anything about
it, ivj t't' -things it does him any
good. Put if we happen to say
something that be don't like, or
sosm t hiug t hat he imagines reflects
on him or his character, see how
quick he flies up and gats mad
about it. All our evil is duly
charged to us. Teat we never, ap
parently, get any credit for what
good we do. Every editor ot a
year's giowth knows the truth of
what Horace speaks.
A pupil of the Abbe Sicord gave
the following; extraordinary an
swers ;
"What is gratitude?"
"Gratiude is the memory of the
heart,"
'What is hope ?"
"Hope is the besom ofhajipiness.1'
"What is the differ nee between
hope and desire S
" Desire is a tree in leaf, hope is
a tree in flower, and enjoyment is a
tree in fruit.
Never attempt to do anything
that is not right. Just as sure as
vim do, von will get into trouble.
If vou even suspect that .anything I
is wrong, do it not until you are
j VOIU' suspicions are ground
! less.
Tii3 Han vio Drinks
Tin' ni.ni who lrinl:s is never, in
the i iui, "the man who lanirhv
1 iir ls .m-ra. 1 y t he- man w ho w(t,,
or for w j(;r;1 hers mast shed hit -
I .
ter tear
He i, alas ! a me
it n !...
n! no nartienlar elas ot soriclv.
Y
on meet iiitn everywhere trotn
rne imv.'st to the niti'iiest t aces of
, tis world, anu always h,ni
not, otilv his own wor.-t enemv hat
j the unconeious enemy ot all wl
10
trust m him.
11 uinoim .1 o.ui t a nara-work-
ing ineehaiii.-s, voa lind on- who,
on wages oth; s, d yem suiucieut for
decent ciotii.'s, tldv roo.ais ma
comfortaole d.'iiiiers, is alwavs at.
100"t
lie;
ads nl:i his landlord,
;ual always complaining of hard
titnes, ten to one he is the man who
'li'oixs.
If on the Julg-e's bench you
meet a man w no deals unjustly,
who judges unrighteously, who is i Daniel i-b.-ter, who held that
lacetious in t he presence ijf mierv, j grt'at portfolio under most of the
and makes crime a jest, and t he ad ministration of John Tyler, but
sct'lence of some poor wretcii an : there were manv loubters. I re-ex-aise
for stupid puns and vulgar; member being present at a dinner
witticisms, there you may know j given at the National Hotel by
the man who drinks in his own j Commodore Stockton. of New
snug little room, u- rhai.s, not ;
j openly, but sill the same, a drunk-
ard.
If von see a woman worn and
pale and wretched for some un- j of Kentuckv ; George lianeroft, of
known cause, fear in her eye and j N"W York; Robert J. Walker, of
anxiety in he oice, youth gone I Misb-ippi, and John ll. Tliomp
too early, and her daily 1 uties san, of New Jersey all since dea l,
mere sad burdt .11s, ten to one her j but. Bancroft , no w at Berlin. Com
husbaml is the man who drinks; I modore Stockton was evceediiedv
for who evet
that man to j
keep his vow, and love, cherish and
protect his wif-V
The beggar child ren in the gut
tors, ignorant, vile and wretched!
beyond description, are his o li
spring. 1 m
gahows sometimes
oi,l
(.aids his Inc.
i Ue lean u in i roiks is not
The man who drinks
t i-
a.iways an lulot, rts one
might
I li!
g 1 en 1
st statesmen nave
ceased to be great; the best writers
111 the w o 1
1,
aive
dropped their
pens wneu thev were most useful
and most brilliant splendid fol-
!, . 1 !...:.. 1
low
whom men uutun
e t
and
Wiiom women loved have
. , 1
alien in
their heyday, half the world is a
fail'. ire, its hopes all wrecked, its
love : t i i i 1 off -ring on ;t ruined shrine
its schemes dead fail tires, its crimes
legion, its prisons and its charua'-ho:i-e
full because of the man who
drinks.
How t:i;cy i:i: ;:ivi- It. The
Augusta (Ga.) special correspond
ent of the A' Y. lie writing
under date of April 1Q savs;
"A quiet grin is about all the re
sponse this part of the vineyard
makes to the ivu-Klux bill. Some
thing like a year ago there was an
organization in many counties of
this Suite wipe)) might have an
swered pretty we'd the idea id' the
mysterious riders, but for months
past nothing of this kind has been
in existence. The Ivu-Klux is
merely t he old vigilance commit tec,
and as the State litis settled down
into a conditio!! of calm that is al
most sleepiness, -there are no rapes
or arsons ami cohscqmdillv 110 Kit
Ivlux. The best witch finder could
hardiv scare up a ;.::eir.o orevdops
in a month's ':e;av!i, and partly
frem this knowledge and partly
b-.cau-e it has fallen into rather a
contemptuous opm:on of the efii
eaoy of Congressional legislation
the South hardly stirred at the
Ku-KIux biii. The t rut h is, all t he
fine law-work of Congress in re
gard to this section is thrown away.
1 remember in one of Scott's nov
els that he speaks of a servant
maid whose temper had grown
callous at the daily exacerbation
received from the tongue of her
mistress, and the idea fits very
well here. The South don't care
for Congress. It has been badg
ered into i tid die ren co, and seen so
many acUs thafTer-ti' to have con
sumed the whole earth dissolve
awav into impotence, that noth
ing less than an ear! hquako could
now shake its equanimity.
Prigham Young's delegate in
Congress is evidently sharp enough
to meet his nn-aintly associates m
that bo
half wav. it) any
litih
encounter of wits they mav choo-e
to seek,
you nov
"How many wives have
'"' one of them asked him
file oilier tlav. Jaiougii to keep
1
me from running after other peo
ple's," he promptly r
re u ico.,
1 ! 1
The
questioner forth with telired to the
lobby "to see a man."
A Quaker 'naden of GO in In
diana accepted an offer from a
Presbyterian deacon, and on being
remonstrated with by a delegation
of Friends appointed to wait upon
her, tor ts: arret rig out of the meet- tlls t), squaw went among bet
ing, replied "Look here! I've, been j j;l!r. The girl don't want any
w aiting just sixtv years for tin- ! -urtre Indian, if she knows her own
meeting to marrv me, and if t 'ne i
meeting don't want me to marry
out of it, why don't the meeting
bring on its bov?" The delgation
departed in silence.
II o -a- to MaivK a Hot Bed.
! Set the matti-os- oa tiro.
COURTESY OF BANCROFT LIBRARY,
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA,
Kow Euc'ianan could keep a Secret.
j Colonel Fo-nev jor
itintK'S his m-
; to
rsi t i ix j)erso:!;U ;.'.(.'(. I irvtiotis ill
1.
! , :c V.-iIii n-K .:. SuixIr v Cnronide,
: f,-, . t.,,.. .,,,,.,!...,. ..V ,,.1.;..!.
! i.in ,i HIV" imilKH 1 VJl U lilt. 11 V.
-1 i" tl
('.-l,;,,,,! ;,,, ,:,- b.,-o minr
secrets eonH',-,1 la thorn, and
..,.-. ,:, ; 1
: cue them from dan-erous revela-
I th.i. Tl, ..r.t ,l.,u;i.,n- .,,
oiljeial secret I ever knew was
j ames l;i( hanan. i his mav have;
; resulted trom Ins cold and unim -
passioned nature. Certain it is, i.e
! never betraved what took phiec
either in th.. Senate or in t leC.aOi -
net.
lhe manner m wltudi he pre-
served and kept from public viev
! the fact of his lumiiuatiou as See-
j retary of State under President
I Polk, twenty-seven years ago, is a
; good illust rat ion. lie was ?vgarl-
ed as the probable successor or
A ei sev. a fe w davs lieiore the 111-
angura'?in of President Polk, in
j Pcbruarv LS1.". Among t he guest s
were (General William O. Putler,
anxious to discover the material of!
the incoming Cabinet, and he of-
fered a wager that he could name
a majority of the men who were
to compost.
it. i ne wager was
taken by Mr. 'Cuchanan, without
un ailu-i.m to liis contingent con
nection with the new Administra
tion, lie w as st careful and cau
t'ous that up to the time of his
nomination bv President Polk, no
1
friend not. even the one nearest
to him could positively assert
that, he would be associated, with
it in any wav.
T:ir. FaiiiTuial. The Oakland
t: ." .s
in speaking of the result of
this triad
the
following
sensible
reman-'s on tne su'eect :
, 1
'"Til" lesson to h" learned from all
this fearful history, will, we earnest
ly trust, not be lost upon society,
espoeiutiv upon the young men
and women who are to be the
fathers and mothers of the next
generation. In Mrs. Fair and Mr.
( d ii i taoieii both they have verifi
cation of the sacred truism, 'The
wages of sin is death ;' for though
she escape the hangman, the world
henceforth will be to her as voice
less and dreary as the grave. In
her they have a type of abandoned
womanhood, living without, God
aid scorning all His law"., hating
moral restraint, seolling at all
things pure, womanly and good,
and living only fer 'elfish greed
and degrading passions. How
horribly has love been travestied
in this ! La-t fathers of faaiilieo re
member Crittenden as one whose
iiigh career aid noble qualities
were vitiated .and poisoned by 'his
besej t ieg --in, and be contented
it ii those
ml y bonds which (io 1
. 1 '
estabnsne
m soeiet y ; let
l hem be v, are of d he strange woman
that liaUereth with her lip-, know
ing bv such histories as this that
"her fee' go down to hell and hay
hold on the chambers of death.1"
. - -f -
Goethe was in company with a
mother ami daughter, when the lat
ter, b"iug reproved for something,
Ida -lied and burst into tears. lie
:-aid to the mother: "How beauti
uil your reproach has made your
brighter. That, crimson hue and
those silvery tears become her
tiu"h better than any ornament of
gold or pearls; those mav be hung
on the la ck of atiy woman ; the-e
are ever seen connected with moral
ritv. A lull-blown flower
1
sprinkled with the purest hue is
not so beautiful as this child blush
ing beneath her patent's diplea
tir -, and shedding tears of sorrow
'br her fault. A blush is the sign
wr lieu nature, hangs out to show
where chastity and hotter dwells.'"
No Moi::: Ivpiax. An Iowa
girl, who rend Cooper's novels un
til she-'became impressed with the
idea that she could never be happy
unless as the bride of a "red man
of the forest," found one last week,
married liim, and went to the batiks
of the Sylvan stream where; he
trapped for rnukrats She onlv
s aved one n;ghf, and came home
with a black eve, and had to send
for a bottle of hair restorative. It
seems the noble savage got drunk
an 1 punched her in the eye, while
heart
Eve was the only woman that
never threatened to go and live
with mama. And Adam was the
1 ui! v
man that never tantalized his
wife about the "way mother used
t9 ccoi.1
Few readers can be aware, until
thev have had occasion to test the
tact, how much labor and "research
is oft ei! saved by Mich hs ''the fol
lowing, the work ol'iMH' now in itis
grae. If "history is poetry5 then
here is poetry personified:
1 GOT Virginia settled by the
English.
1GU Xew York settled bv the
! Dutch
10:20 Massachusetts settled bv
1 ju, Puritans.
t?-l v,,,,. T,,..,- cm1-1 h..t.n
; Datcli.
'1 027 Delaware settled by the
Swedes :md Fim:.
l 1 n-i Vm-vfiM,! .tthwl 1.,- ft...
Irish.
; img Connecticut settled bv
the ruritans.
j icfii) Rhode Island settled by
j Uo.,- Williams.
1F.50 North Carolina settled bv
J the English.
1670 South Carolina settled bv
the Ilugeonots.
IGSJ Pennsyvania settled by
William Peuu.
17;2 Georgia settled by Gener
al Oglethorpe.
1701 Vermont admitted into
the Union.
1 702 Kentucky admitted into
the Union.
1 700 Tennessee admittted into
the "Union.
IHO'JOhio admitted into the
Union.
18N Louisiana admitted into
the Union.
IS 6 Indiana admitted into the
Union.
1817 Mississippi admitted into
the Union.
1810 Alabama admitted into
the Union.
1820 Maine admitted into the
Union.
1821 Missouri admitted into
the U nioii.
1 -dd .Michigan admitted into
the Union.
ISdJ Arkansas admitted into
the Union.
18 L3 Florida admitted into the
Union.
lS i-6 Texas admitted into the
Union.
18 17 Iowa admitted into the
Union.
1818 Wisconsin admitted into
the Union.
18"0 California admitted into
the Udon.
18.30 Oregon admitted into the
Union.
Chant's Kkmanoj-:. "The ox
knoweth his own r, and the ass
his master's crib." p is on this
principle that. Gen. Grant hopes
lor a reuommat ion.
As the ji.'o-
pie draw away irom mm, ne
tans
oaek lor support upon his ofnee
holdors. Those who stand tire he
retains. Those who show signs of
defection he turns out. lie has
already out off the heads cd' ;-r;me
ot 'the friends of Sumner, Ti urnhull,
and Sehurz, and he is now bring
ing to the block those of Pent on
and Greeley.
In his speech at. Washington last
week. Senator Morton, who is to
lie Secretary of State on the retire
ment of Fish, laid down the pro
gramme by v, hich t he beneficiaries
of the Administration are to regu
late, thtir con bud, Grant being
? u'esent. an 1 assisting, and greedily
drinking in the fulsome flattery
which .Morton, in violation of all
taste and propriety, poured out
upon him, while poor Colfax was
compelled to stand by ami smile
as lie saw his ambitious hopes for
a nominal ion dashed to the ground.
If .Morton and Grant, had a grain
of shrewdness, they would know
that of' till possible agencies for se
curing a Presidential nomination,
a reliance upon officeholders is the
most inefficient, unstable, and
worthless, because it is peculi arly
o lions to the great body o'" the
people. They regard recipients of
Executive patronage, who plan and
palaver for the renomiuation of the
man that feeds them, as being in
fluenced by no higher motives
than those which impel the ox to
recognize lhe herdsman that fills
ais stall with fodder, and the ass
to greet with a friendly bray the
muster that, leads him" up ti) the
well-filled crib. 2cw York Sun.
A kind-hearted little spouse, bon
neted and shawled, very recent ly
appeared at the door of a room
where her good-nat nred liege-lord
was about, to indulge in a comfort
able 8UOOZC.
"My dear, I am going shopping-.
What shall I bring vou to comfort
you.
"I don't know, love ; I don't
think of anything I want particu
larly just now. Come and ki-'s
ni". I will tell yon, however,
what I don't want "you to bring
me
"What is it pray ?
"Pray don't bring mo in debt."
Conscience is a sleeping giant;
we mav lull him into a longer or
shorter slumber; but his stmts nro
frightful, arid terrible is the hour
when he a-wakee, .
What the Dem-cracy w.ll do.
Under the head of " What the
Demoeiutic party will do wheTi in
power," the Xew York IVorld of
April 27th states some o&the re
sults that will foSloa Democratic
triumph in the next Presidential
election. It says :
I. It will limit the annual taxes
to 500,000,000 and out ofcthis
moderate revenue wi-'l apply $25,-
OuOjOOO toward the extinction
the public debt ; whereas, the Fed
eral taxes tor the last fiscal year
annum led to the enormous sum of
i tUl t. 25 3.44 7. '
II. It will revise ami reform the
system ot taxation so that this di
minished annual burden of 250,
000,000 will be equally distributed,
ihe present system not only over
loads the faithful horse, but ties
some of the load to his legs, Cuts
a part upon his head, makes hitn
drag a portion bv his tail, obstruct
ing his freedom of movement, and
causing him great annoyance.
The Democratic party wiil with- O
draw' every pound of the loafl
from his limbs and extremity's and
collect it upon his back where lie
can carry it wit h greatest ease. It
will, moreover, take good care thrtt
the taxes find their way into tho
public treasury, and not into the
pocket's of the greedy, grasping
monopolists.
III. The Democratic party will
rectify the abuses ot the present
banking system : extinguishing
monopoly by making the business
free Ui ail who comply withHhe
conditions; stopping the interest
on Government bonds while ill
pledge to secure bank circulation,
and guarding against a redundant
currency by cempelliu!? the bauktf)
to redeem their notes in .specie.
IV. It will revive our prostrate
shipping interest and restore to
rvinerican citizens their ioijrper
large share in the inleresU'- of na&
igatien, by free trade in ships and
the re-peal of the d-uties on articles
used in their const ruction.
Y. It will extend and 5mplete
the system of universal suffrage by
abolishing the term of icsidcnce
now required for lUdmSlization,
and give intelligent whit emi
grants the same advantages en
joyed by our colored population.
I'here is no reason why a thrifty
German who emigrates to Texas
and buys a farm, should not at
once be as favored a citizen as the
South Carolina negro wfto emi
grates to Texas in the same year
aid is employed by the German as
a label c'r. - o. ;
YI. The Democratic party will
faithfully fulfill all the obligations
created by the public debt in their
letter and spirit, and will secure to
disabled soldiers the full amount of
their pensions, without allowing a
dollar to be deducted for the fees
of agents.
YH. It will repeal all laws
which permit the. Federal Govern
ment or any 'of its oiiieers to in
terfere with elec tions in the Spates.
Vilf. It will make it a high
misdemeanor, punishable, by dis
missed from tlie 'service, for any
officer of the army or9iavy to aid
in the suppression of donesti(j)
violence in a State unless the State
authorities have made a previous
application to the President for
it c 1 assistance, 111 conformity to
tne Constitution; or to mteifeie
for enforcing any Federal law un
less a Federal Jud e shall have
previously certified that tlie execu
tion of the laws is resisted by a
combination too powerful t?) be
overcome by the Marshal and his
1HJSC r. .
IX. The Democratic pnrty will
remove all the political disabilities
ami disqualifications imposed (for
pai t icipation in the late civil war.
Here are no flourishes, no bun
come, no vague, cloudy theories
which cannot be reduced t prac
tice. Ii' there is any Southern
citizen who does not think this ltet
of measures would bring relief
from and redress of present evils
and grievances, we eantfot respect
his judgment. And if, cm ' the
other hand, any Pepublit-.n insists
that the policy lu re sketched is ao
bundle of negations and dead
issues, he forfeits all claim to be
considered a candid opponent.
A photographer in one of tho
country towi s of Massachusetts
was recently visited by a young
woman, who with sweet simplicity,
asked, '" How long does it take to
o-et your photograph after jou
JiaVC ICil Unit iuc.i.-ui e; .
. I ..IV V" V
A good conscience is better tlrati
two witnesses it will consume
your grief as the sun dissolves ice.o
It is a spring when you arehirsty t
a staff when you are weary a
screen when the sun burns a pil
low in death.
A lady in London got the idea
into her head that the devil was in
her, and hung herself. If women
go to hanging themselves for a lit
tle thing like that, they are going
to be migbtv scarce, that's s!l,
o
o
0
O
0
O
o
o
o
o
O
O '9
O
o
o
o
o
G
O
0
o