THE WEEKLY ENTERPRISE -SUPPLEMENT.- -FRIDAY DECEMBER 15, 1871. o o BY THE GRKAT FIRE IN CHICAGO, The most important of the Government buildings in that city were consumed. Those burnt had already became inade quate to the wants of the Government in that growing city, and looking to the near future were totally inadequate. I recom mend, therefore, that an appropriation be made immediately to purcha.se the remain der ot the square on which the burned 1 buildings stood, provided it can be purchas ed at a fair valuution and the Legislature of Illinois will pass a Jaw authorizing its condemnation for Government purposes, and also an appropriation of as much money as can be properly expended to ward the erection of Government buildings. PROTECTION FOR EMIGRANTS. During this fiscal year the number of emigrants, ignorant of our laws and habits, and coming into our country annually, has become so great and the impositions practised upon them so numerous and fla grant, that I suggest Congressional action for their protection. It seems to me a fair subject of legislation by Congress. I can not now state as fully as I desire, the na ture of the complaints made by emigrants of the treatment they receive, but will en deavor to do so during the session of Con gress, particularly if the subject should re ceive your attention. It has been the aim of tho Administra tion to enforce honesty and efficiency in all public servants. Those who have violated the trust placed in them have been pro ceeded against with all the rigor of the law. If bad men have secured places, it has been the fault of the system established by law and custom for making appoint ments, or the fault of those who recom mend for Government positions persons not sufficiently well known to them per sonally, or who give letters endorsing the character of ofiice-seekers without a proper sense of the grave responsibility which such a course devolves upon them. A CIVIL SERVICE REFORM, Which can in a measure correct this abuse, is much desired. In mercantile pursuits, -the business man who gives a letter of rec ommendation to a friend to enable him to obtain credit from a stranger, is regarded as morally responsible for the integrity of his friend and his ability to meet his obli gations. This principle carried out would insure great caution in making recom mendations. RECREANT runLIC SERVANTS PUNISHED. A salutary lesson lias been taught the careless and the dishonest servants, in the great number of prosecutions and convic tions of the last two years. It is gratifying to notice the favorable ehamre which is taking . place throughout the country, in bringing to punishment those who have proved recreant to the trusts confided to them. In elevating to public office none but those who possess tho confidence of the honest and virtuous, it will bo always found to comprise tho majority of the com munity in which they live. A BOARD TO DEVISE RULES FOR CIVIL SERVICE REFORM. In my last message to Congress, one year ago, I urgently recommended a reform in the Civil Service of the country, and ia conformity with that recommendation Con gress, in the ninth (9th) section of an Act making appropriations for sundry Civil expenses of the Government, and for other purposes, (approved March 3, 1871), gave the necessary authority to the Executive to inaugurate a Civil Service reform, and placed upon him the responsibility of do ing so, under the authority of said Act. I convened a Board of gentlemen, eminent ly qualified for the work, to devise rules and regulations toeuectuie needed reform. Their labors are not yet completed, but it is believed they will succeed in devising a plan which can be adopted, to the great re lief ot the Executive, ot Heads ol Depart ments and Members of Congress, and which will redound to the true interest of the public service. At all events, the ex- periment snail nave a lair trial. CONCLUSION. I have thus hastily summed up the op erations of tho Government during tho last year and made such suggestions as occur to me to be proper for your consideration. I suomit them with a confidence that your combined actions will be wise, statesman like and in the best interest ot the whole country. (Signed), U. S. Grant, President. Executive Mansion, Dec. 4, 1871. Men's iliglals. A correspondent of the Cincinnati Gazette thus writes in bohalt ot his sex: "I am," he says, "a bachelor, thirty-one years of age, in sound health, and in re ceipt of 1,500 per year, and ftherefore a good match for any woman, no matter whom she may be; yet I remain unmar ried from principle, and will remain single until the laws are so altered as to make me master of my own homo. I am the owner of real estate acquired by my own labor. I do not allow any woman to control me in my disposal of that property, simply be cause sho happens to be my wife. She would have done nothing toward earning that property, therefore, has no moral right in its sale. 'Any law giving her a dower third is simply a fraud on me, the more so as the law does not give me any dower third in her property. And then the cere monv, nowadaj's called marriage, does not give mo a wife it merely gives me a woman who can leave me whenever she pleases. 1 cannot keep her against her wishes. She may go back to her father or elsewhere, and I cannot compel her to come back; but should I leave her, for any reas on, sho can have mo arrested and compel me to support her. Such a thing is one sided and unfair. A woman held by such a loose tie is not, in my opinion, a wife in tho holv way a decent man has shrined in his thoughts. The laws have degraded her into a concubine." - While visiting Mountain City last week, says tho Elko independent of October 2, Ailen Fisher presented us with a skin of a singular animal called man-eater, from its singular proclivity for human flesh. They are quite small, compactly made, with a bull-dog shaped head and coarse hair, re sembling somewhat in color the brown bear of the Pacific coast. They travel in largo bands in tho winter season, and any unfortunate traveler who chances to be caught out by storms is liable to be attack ed and torn to pieces by them. The skin presented us is unlike that of any other animal wo have ever seen. An exchange well remarks that one may insert a thousand excellent things in a newspaper and never hear a word ot them from its readers. But let a line or two not suited to their taste creep in, by accident or otherwise, and one hears of it from every quarter. Nine citizens of Jessamine county, Kty., wero placed on trial in the United States District Court at Louisville last week, for tho alleged "Ku Kiuxing" of Richard Lily, a negro. The jury disagreed. There are now over three hundred women at the Broadway (X. Y.) theatres who can kick a man's hat off though he be six feet high. Who says art has not an upward tendency? A Question or Veracity. From the Albany Democrat. As a general rule "one good turn de serves another," and when the Oregonian a few days ago took occasion to allude to the State Rights Democrat as a paper of the highest respectability truthful, dignified, courteous, and all that we hoped to be able to puff our cosmopolitan neighbor in the same way in fact, we expected to im mediately propose to associate the two pa peisinto a "mutual admiration society;" but we find that journal so persistently departing from all of our preconceived ideas of "fairness and respectability" that wo have abandoned the hope of a high toned coalition with it. and have concluded to let it remain in the common gutter of aeoaucned journalism. While it is expected that that paper, in the interests of its own party will resort to all means, however questionable in pro priety or fairness, to secure a partisan ad vantage, yet we were hardly prepared to see it fulminate so glaring, palpable and inexcusable a falsehood as "that in its issue of last Monday, wherein it states that Gov ernor G rover, from IS:31-2, never came squarely to the front and identified him self with the Democratic party or partici pated in its councils till ISiO. IS'ow, we personally know nothing of Oregon politics previous to 18Go, but we recollect that during the campaign of that year Governor G rover was an active cham pion of of the Democratic cause, and made speeches in various places during the pro gress of the struggle. The Oregonian can certainly not have forgotten Governor G rover's speeches before the Oro Fino Democratic Club in Portland, or his con test with Dave Logan, at a "Yamhill town, on the eve of tho election of IS6, nor how he met other Radical speakers during that campaign. The Oregonian surely has not forgotten that Grover was Chairman of the Democratic State Central Committee con tinuously during the past six or eight years, and by virtue of that position has been at the head of tho Democratic coun cils during tho whole of that time. But it is difficult to shame a journal into truth which would so glaringly misrepresent facts that are of such public record as those of which wo speak, hence to further dis cuss the subject would be to dignify false hoods which are known as such through out our whole commonwealth. Georgia Finances. At last the people of Georgia are begin ning to understand in what condition Gov ernor Bullock and his guilty confederates have left the finances of that Slate. It is the old story of carpet-bag rule, plunder, robbery and flight. The first reminder of the troubles into hich their culprit Gov ernor has brougut them is the filing of claims by the New York banking firm of Henry Clews Sz Co., agents of the State, to tho amount ot .'77,22,"for money advanced to pay notes and drafts of Foster Blodgett, superintendent of the Western and Atlan tic Railroad many of those notes having the approval of Governor Bullock. It is said that Clews A Co. have additional claims that will swell the amount to 1, 200,000. As long as a Radical Legislature existed in Georgia, Bullock could hide the frauds and corruptions of his administra tion, and defy the people; but when a Leg islature, composed of Democrats and Con servatives, came in, the Governor thought it time for him to abandon his office and run. This he did, and is now in New York, the pet of the Radicals in that city, as Hol den is of the same class in Washington. To make tho parallel complete, Bullock should be put on the stall' of tho Times, or some other Grant organ. Our Tccfli. They decay. Hence bad breaths, un seemly mouths, imperfect mastication. Everybody regrets it. What is the cause? 1 reply the want ot cleanliness. A clean tooth never decays. The mouth is a warm place :s degrees. Particles of meat be tween the teeth soon decompose. Gums and teeth must .sutler. Perfect cleanliness will preserve the teeth to old age. How shall it be done? Use a quill pick and rinse the mouth after eating. Brush and Castile soap every morning; the brush with simple waler on going to bod. Bestow this trilling care upon your precious teeth, and you will keep them and ruin the dentists. Neglect it, and you will be sorry all your lives. Children forget. Watch them. Tho first teeth determine the char acter of the second set. Give them equal care. Sugar, acids, saleratus and hot things are nothing when compared with food decomposing between tho teeth. Mer curialization may loosen the teeth, long use may wear them out, but keep them clean and they will never deca.y. This advice is worth more than thousands of dollars to every boy and girl. Books have been written on tho subject. This brief article contains all that is essential. Dio Leu-is. An Affecting Scene. The Jacksonville Sentinel, of last Satur day, says that Miss Hannah Ralls, upon the trial of her father for assaulting J. D. Fay with a dangerous weapon, gave a full statement, under oath, of her seduction, her flight from the house, and her extreme suffering in the cold from early in the morning until lound late in the afternoon. She gave her evidence slowly and calmly, without snowing the least vmdictiveness or anger. Iter statement brougnt moisture to the eyes of many in the crowded Court House, and carried'eonviction of the truth fulness of what she stated to every unpre judiced mind. This evidence was admit ted for the purpose of showing what an overwhelming weight of mental suffering the defendant's mind must have been un der, upon hearing of the ruin of his family by the prosecuting witness. Too Drunk. It has been observed that in a certain class of cases, in England, a maiontv ot persons sisnniff the marnasre register of the parish make their marks. It would be unsafe to set this down as evi dence of inability to write, for the Rev. B. W. Wilson, curate of Liverpool, informs a newspaper that one in five of the persons signing tho register in his parish made tlifiir 'marks for the simple reason that they were too drunk to sign. "To obtain sweet milk." savs the veteran farmer Greeley, laying down his pen and gazing placidly into the face of his inquirer, "To obtain sweet iiiuk, ieeu your cows twice a day on sugar cane, and be sure to keen the call away irom tne moiuer wnne teething." a Viro-inin. editor has come to the con clusion that a man might as well under take to hold himself at arm's length and turn a double somersault over a meeting house steeple as to attempt to publish a newspaper that will suit every bodr. Carl Benson well says : Throw women into the political arena, and some of the fairest features of their moral superiority will be exposed to a rude and perilous test." It is understood that Mr. Greeley, if in vited to do so, will soon deliver before the Royal Society an address on "cryptogamic pailngeneses." A TVild H'oman in Pennsylvania j Gebhartsville, Somerset county, Pa., claims the sensation of the week. It has a genuine Simon Pure wild woman, almost as nude as was Eve after the fall, for she wears only an apron of leaves, sandals of bark and a necklace of teaberrios. Swift as a doe, people have rarely been aide to see her features distinctly in her visits to the neighboring farmhouses and outskirts of the village; yet those who have seen her, declare that she is far from uncomely in person and countenance. Her oval face is set with keen black eyes and framed in long masses of flowing black hair, and with her tall, slender figure she has the air of the queen of the forests. Like most women, sho has a great dread of men, and bounds away over fences and fields when over one attempts to approach her, 'et she is consistent, and avoids in like manner too great lamiliarity with women. For children, however, she seems to have great fondness, as was exemplified only a few days past. While passing near the house of a farmer she espied a little girl three or four years old playing in the road. Crouch ing, sho crawled behind a fence until with in a short distance of the child, then, with a bound, cleared the fence, in the next mo ment seized the screaming child, and was away at the top of her speed. The mother, hearing the screams of her child, pursued, screaming yet more loudly. Her husband, attracted by the cries of both, hastened to the chase. The wild woman, finding her self encumbered by the weight of the child, dropped it and escaped. The latter was uninjured, with the exception of some scratches, which, no doubt, are attributable to the long nails of the strange denizen of the fields and the forest. Weep ISreatning-. If wo desire to see a generation of men with enlarged brains, and if we look in our colleges, churches, courts, editors' chairs, legislative halls, Wall street and Wbnle House, all will admit we need them; we must have women with enlarged lungs and opportunities for thought and action. Deep breathing has much to do with deep think ing. Napoleon once said: "You cau't make a soldier out of a sick man." Neither can you make a race of heroes and philosophers, saints and scholars, out of a nation of sick women. The New York World, in a recent article on dress, says: "The average weight all the year round, of women's clothing, which is supported from the waist, is be tween ten and fifteen pounds. Are weak backs a wonder? Let physicians stop talk ing of the natural weakness and disabilities of women; there is no such thing; they are all artificial the result, in all cases, of vio lated law. Maternity is not a weakness but an added strength; making a woman in her creative power second only to God him self. A well organized woman, who un derstands and obeys physical and moral law, may enjoy a life of as uninterrupted health and happiness as the man by her side. You might as well call tobacco chewing, spittoons, delirium tremens, keno banks and panel-houses the natural weak ness and disabilities of men as to attribute .all the long train of evils that flow from the dress and sedentary habits of our girls to the natural weakness and disabilities of women." Dio Lewis. It is stated that a "Ring" of men have been discovered in Washington, "who, as office brokers, claim to be able by certain secret and mysterious powers to obtain employment tor both nialo and lemale ap plicants, for a consideration. Some of the heads of Departments and Bureaus, whose names have been used by theso scamps, without authority, have determined to break up tho nefarious practice, and have set their olheers to work to ferret out the blackmailers." A few scape-goats are needed, and they will be found among the small thieves, the men who "prig the vipes." Nothing will be said about the big operators who button-hole Senators on tho San Domingo job, or Seneca stone con tracts. No attempt will be made to "break up these nefarious practices." During the heat of the battle in the neigh borhood of Aleershot, the small -pox hos pital was besieged by a number of troops who were ignorant of the character of the building. In vain the nurses remonstra ted; the order had been given, and the first duty of a soldier was to obey. The doors wore closed, and persuasion Avas about to bo succeeded by force, when one of the nurses happened to remark incident al, and for the first time, that the object ot attack was a "small-pox hospital." iiie expression produced a magical effect; the order to secure possession of such an ad vantageous position it not countermanded was instantly forgotten, and the invaders beat a hasty retreat. The English papers, though very anxious to know the details f the Chicago fire, can't make up their minds to pay the cable com pany for telling them. They deplore the paucitv of dispatches, and declare the ex cessive tariff a public misfortune. If half ot Liverpool were to burn to-morrow, how long would American newspapers count the cost before they learned the whole story? Our journals may fall below the English in literal excellencies, but they far outstrip them in the race for news. Count Otto, Bismarck's son and heir, is described as a tall young fellow, resemb ling an Englishman. Ho passed two years in England studying the English army organization, and then took lessons in diplomacy in Paris, where he was a fre quent guest at General Dix's receptions. He speaks fluently five modern languages, and is an accomplished sportsman. No Faith. The Nathan mansion in New York, which has been under the ban of the great tragedy for over a year, has at last been purchased by courageous John Mor rissey, who will fit it up in the highest style of club-house art, having no faith in tho power of ghosts to injure the gamblers' profits. The convicts in the Moabit Penitentiary, at Berlin, have sent to the Prussian Minis ter of Justice a petition, in which they solicit permission to have once a week an hour's conversation with somebody besides the clergyman. A southwestern editor remarks: "If in our school days the rule of three is pro verbially trying, how much harder, in af ter life, do we find the rule of one." He has been married only fourteen months. Mr. Fields, iu his lecture on cheerful ness, describes a man so shut in with dig nity and exclusiveness that when you shake hands with him you always feel as if you were doing it through a knot-hole. A Peruvian correspondent states, as a peculiarity of cundurango, that it cures tumors, etc., but that patients invariably die in a short lime after of sore throat. A New Yorker has dined at Delmonico's and occupied the same seat daily for eight een years. What a record ot good dinners he must have made by this time. One hundred and fifty-one -members of the German Parliament have pledged themselves to vote for a bill making civil marriage obligatory iu Europe. A Texan Ancliorite. The New York hermit is matched by an other of the genus recluse in Western Tex as. The New- Orleans Picayune says he excludes even tho ordinary domestic ani mals from his household. He, at one time, raised chickens; but as, w henever a wo man, at very long intervals and by chance, happened in his vicinity the chickens got frightened, ran headlong into the brush, and remained hidden there as long as a petticoat was in sight, the hermit conclud ed to do without such uncivilized crea tures. ' He amuses himself in taming birds; but his favorites are a pair of snakes, of a pe culiar kind, that he uses as mousers, and which, ho asserts, are far superior to cats, lie lives by the produce of sixty bee hives, selling from twelve to fifteen thousand pounds of honey every year. The hermit's name is Baylock. He was for many years a trapper in the Rocky Mountains; is 03 years of age; is cheerful and talkative; and, by a traveller who re cently saw and conversed with him, is spoken of as a man of more than common natural ability, with a fair portion of gen eral information. lassoing a Grizzly The Ventura Signal of the 18th instant says: We forgot to note a little incident that took place here some time ago that was well worthy of record, illustrating California youth and life. Two boys, aged respectively twelve and fourteen years, sons of E. W. Foster of the Monticello, and R. B. Hall of tho Ojal ranch, wero out in the mountains on horseback looking for their cows, when they discovered a young grizzly bear toddling along ia the trail. They had been long enough here to know the danger of tr3ring to catch the little fel low, the ferocious dam rarely being beyond tho cries of her young. But tho temptation was too strong for j'outhful discretion, and keeping an eye on the varmint, they began hallooing, and finally being convinced that the old one was not near, they rode up to him, and with the dexterity of old vaque ros, quickly succeeded in fastening the lariat around his neck and took him safely home. It was a feat as dangerous as daring, and a sport that old hunters would not care to indulge in, unless exceedingly well mounted. C. W. Dilke, a Liberal member of the British Parliament, has lately discussed the cost of royalty in an English lecture room. He finds that the salaries, annui ties, etc., of the royal family, pay and pen sions to their servants, and expenses, of palaces, dwellings and grounds, amount to 3,530,000 annually. The extra expenso of the Life Guards and Foot Guards, who are kept to add splendor by their toggery to royal display, is $500,000 more than would bejrequired for an equal number of soldiers of the line employed for ordinary garrison service. The total expense of the nryal family appears to be about ? 1,000,000 annually. In return for this, the Queen signs her name to certain papers, in ac cordance with the recommendation of the Ministry, and lends her august name for use in public documents. Amoig Fanny Ellsler's suitors in the beaux jours of her prime was, it is said, the then Prince Louis Napoleon Bonaparte, now ex-Emperor of France. He proposed marriage to lier in London, but 1-anny having been secretly married to somebody else a year or two previously, rejected his proposals, and thus eseaped the penalty of being ex-Empress ot France instead ot ex queen of thoTerpsichorean stage. A sister of Fanny Ellsler's, also a celebrated dan seuse, is the morganatic wife of Prince Albert of Prussia. Mixed. The Paris correspondent of the Iribune read, tho other morning, a para graph in one of the most widely-circulated Paris papers, of which the following is a faithful translation: "Echo of American news: On the 15th courant, Mr. Jerome Bonaparte, grandson to tho Prince Jerome, was married to the grand-daughter of the celebrated American humorist, Daniel Webster.77 The Yreka Union sajrs that the waters of tne upper lake m surprise v alley have the property of removing from clothing all grease, pitch or dirt of whatever kind, without the application of soap or any washing material. What is the property of the water which gives it the decompos ing power? The opinion is expressed that it is strongly impregnated with borax. Tho Onondaga Indians of New York still live as a distinct tribe, on a reservation of twelve thousand acres, in a beautiful val ley, near Syracuse. This tribe never had more than five hundred members, and it is now nearly four hundred strong. The Indians are considerably advanced in mor als and civilization, and support two flour ishing churches. The Grass Valley Republican of the 20th ult. says: Tho Digger Indians in the vi cinity of Nevada are complaining that the white people are robbing them of their usual crop of manzanita berries. Tho Dig gers have not taken any scalps yet, but the squaws are said to have painted up, and threaten mischief to the intruders who are plucking their indigenous hereditary fruit. Sign of Honesty. "Mr. Brown, you said th defendant was honest and intelli gent. What makes you think so? Are you aoquainted with him?" "No, sir, I have aever seen him." vhy, then, do you come to such a conclusion?" "Be cause he takes ten newspapers, and pays for them in advance." A erdictfor defend ant. Mr. Gladstone is a pedestrian of no mean powers. It is stated that when returning from his recent official residence, at Bal moral Castle, ho walked the distance from the Castle to Clova, twenty-six miles, rest ing lor the night at the village inn, and proceeding to Kirriempir next day, still in pedestrian fashion. Colorado Territory has now in operation 420 miles of railroad, and the Union Pacific runs just north of her line, through the southern part of Wyoming. In 18G9 Colo rado did not have a mile of railroad, and certainly if she keeps on at the rate she has for the past two years she will soon be completely girdled with iron tracks. A census of the Canadian Dominion, or rather that part of it east of the Rocky Mountains lor Jintisu Columbia now be longs to it was taken a few months ago and shows that the population is 3.4S4J24, an increase of 400,000, or thirteen per cent., since 1MI. The Evening Mail savs: "One of our belles is confined to her residence just at E resent 'seriously indisposed.' She has een trying to bleach her hair, and we are grieved to sav the experiment has not been quite so successful as might be desired." Junction City. Mr. N. Gilmore, form erly landlord of the City Hotel at Harris- burg, has erected a new hotel at J unction City and is already running it successfully. He is said to be the "right man in tne right place." All Sorts. Not half the usual number of letters are written in France since the high postage law has gone into operation. Several people have been recently drown ed in the streets of Pekin, so deep are the sloughs of mud and water iu them. Russell, of the London limes, lias begun the publication of his personal diary ot'.tho late war between France ainl Pnissia. A Catholic mission has boon established in this country, with special reference to missionary labors among tho colored peo ple. Rumors with reference to the Pope's leaving Rome arc stil 1 current in Kuropo, but they have no well ascertained founda tion. The Northwestern fires have destro'ed immense numbers of valuable fur-bearers. It would have been better for these fur an imals if they had been further. 'At a Philadelphia party there is. more talking than dancing, more music than fun, more eating than drinking, and more flirting than anything else dining the evening. Strikes among tho workmen oi Eastern Prussia are becoming so wide-spread as to cause alarm among business men. All steps taken to prevent them havo proved abortive. A young man in the street being charged with laziness, was asked if ho took ii from his father. "I think not," said the disre spectful sou; "father's got all the laziness he ever had." A Danbur3', Conn., schoolbo3' disturbed the S3rmmetr3' of a family heirloom by sawing off the tops of his great grandfath er's bed-posts for a set of croquet balls. And the night he did it he slept very warm. The French Revue Critique, which was suspended iu 1870, has reappeared. Tho new number is four times as large as it was in the old time, before M. Paul Mayer, its chief editor, took his place in the Na tional Guard. A good story is told of a bootblack whose energies were taxed by the huge shoes of a private just returned from tho war. The little fellow, kneeling down, looked over his shoulder to a comrade and exclaimed, "Lend me a spit, Jim; I've got an army contract." Alexander II. Stephens, Vice President of the "so-called," in reply to an invitation to lecture in Little Rock, writes: "I have, been confined with rheumatism for nearly three years, unable to stand or walk with out aid of some sort. I do not expect to bo able ever again to leave home." The hobby of the Crown Prince of Prus sia is agriculture. His farm near Bradew burg costs him every year fifty thousand dollars; but he has, at all events, the pleas ure of telling his guests at the dinner table that he himself raised all the vegetables which are placed on the table. A commission has just been dispatched to America by the Iron and Steel Institute of Great Britain, with the object ot testing the practical value of the revolving pud dling furnaces, by the operation of which the labor of the hand puddler in the iron works of the United States is to a large ex tent superseded. At a recent meeting of the Board of Trade of Boston, resolutions were adopted favoring the resumption of specie pay ments; a revision of the tariff on imports, and that the construction of ships and steamers should be promoted, and the for eign commorce of the country fostered by tho abatement of taxes. The New York Tribune vindicates the action of Governor Palmer, of Illinois, in rebuking the military usurpations of Gen eral Sheridan at Chicago. The Tribune says: "When the vindication of the law for its own sake is called transcendental ism, it does not indicate a sound state of public opinion." A Louisville wife, wishing to get rid of her husband at short notice, sent him into the cellar with a keroscno lamp to get a pitcher of cider. She gave him just time to get the cider in one hand and the lamp in the other, and then shouted "murder!" Sho had calculated well. Tho doomed man sprang up the steps, the lamp fell, and the woman was free. A countryman on his wedding tour halt ed recently at a Boston hotel. Tho day was chilly, and after vain efforts to extract heat from the steam radiator, according to the directions of the waiter, he rang' tho bell and indignantly requested the attend ant to "take out that darned steam gladia tor and bring in a stove." newly-married couple having occasion to economize by moving to a poor-house in Kentucky are deeply indignant becauso the keeper thereof assigned them separate wards of tho establishment, and havo brought suit against him for violating the marriage ceremony by putting asunder those whom God had joined. The Milan (Texas) Telegram says: "We have been asked why we stopped publish ing the list of marriage licenses issued by the Clerk. Because a great big stand-up-in-the-mud, out there in the sand-hills, said we published his daughter as married when she wern't, and that he would hit us on the head hard enough to knock our ankles out of joint for it. Is the explana tion satisiactory?" The Hon. Mrs. Norton accused Mrs. Henry Wood with stealing the plot and characters of her novel, "East Lynno," from a brief story which she, Mrs. Norton, had published many years ago. To this Mrs. Wood replies': .'"Nothing can be more false; nothing more unjustifiable. There is not a shadow of foundation for it. Mrs. Norton may have written the brief story, but I never saw or heard of it." A Vermont girl who sued a false lover for breach of promise laid the damages at 40. In Court, in answer to the inquiry why that particular sum had been claimed, sho answered that counting the time she had spent " sitting up " with him as worth at the rate of nine shillings per week, she had figured up the nine hours past in his company, and adding the value of wood consumed, she had found that the amount due. There was no doubt in the mind of the Judge that her claim was an honest one, and a verdict was rendered accord ingly. Something to mend with that is tho great need of us all, especially of those who live in the country, and whose traps are sometimes called "rattle-traps," and have a way of breaking at inconv enient times. An old officer ol the Coast Survey, who had spent thirty years in field service, once told us that ho never went from camp in uie morning wunoui naving a spool ot cop per wire in his wagon, and that, as a con sequence, he never had a break-down that he could not repair on the road, or in tho woods, or wherever he might be. Harness, wagon, tools, everything, almost, that is subject to breakage, may be stoutly mend ed with copper wire, which is flexible and tough. e o q o o o o o o o. o Q O e