JL 0 0" o 0 O o o o o 0 o o o i o o o o A OL. G. l)c lUcchin 03ntcrpvi5C. A DEMOCRATIC PAVER, FOit TIIK Business r1ari, tho Farmer And tht FAMILY CI 11C I.E. JOSHED KVKKV FKIDAY CY A. NOLT&ER, KDfTOIt AND I'UBLISUEU. OF'CVi In Dr. Thesing'd Brick BuilJuifr TERMS of Sl'BSCRIPTIOX; Siaglc Co;y one year, in advance, $2 50 TERMS of ADVERTISING : Transient advertisement. mclu.linr all not.ir.es, t' s-. 12 l""' ". 2 o Fur each nahMa insertion 1 Oae Cola nu, one year I- W Hilf " " . Viartcr " " U nine-.s Car., 1 s.pare one year U e, g" R-nniH 'in est t) l" made at the t is, o Sn'HCribr.r, and at the expense of Agents. IiOOk' AXD JOB 1'UIXTIXG. US" Tlie Enterprise offhe H supplied with l mlifnl. approved tylen of type, and mod ern M CII INK IMIKSSKS. which will enable t'te Proprietor t 1. .Lb IMntinjr at all times Xrat, Quirk and Cluap ! ftS" Work solicited. AH liifin i'-lxnx upon a Specie hnxis. JJUSIXJ'JSS CARDS. til AS K WAKUKN". F. A. KOIUIKS. WARREN & FORBES Attorneys at Lav, OFFICE CIIAHM.VX'S I'aUCK, MAIN STUtET, oiii: ,;on cri'Y.o.iV.uow Nov. In, 1 -s 7 1 : 1 1" J. M. TlIOMl'SON, C w- FITCH. TH-filSON &. FITCH, Attorneys 5i t JLsiw, AND Rea! Estate Agents, EUCEWi CITY, OREGON, OFFICKTWO UOOKS XOKTIt OF THE I'OSTOFFICK. KKAL ESTATE BOC0I1T AND SOLD, LOANS NEOOTIATLD, AND AB 8 TRACT OF TITLES FURNISHED. VT7E II AVE A COM 1'LETE AILSTUACT of Title of all property in Eugene 'ity, an.l perfect platsut the same, prepaied with rjreat care. We will practice in the diltVrent Courts of ihe Stat -. Special at tention given o the c dkctioti of all claims that mav be placed in our hands. Legal Tenders bought and s.dd. scptt JOHN M. IiACON, Importer aud Dealer in .12 53 CLS COS IUCv. .3 STATIONERY, IMiin-TMETlY. &.C., Ac, Oregon CHy, Oregon, At Charm-1 ' Warn- rx old -'atd, lrtf!yc-CHj-u-l by S. Ackrnia, Main trtet. in tf JOHN FLEMING, j?JJ!j DEALER IN BOOKS AMD STATIONERY. IN MYERS" FIHE -PROOF BRICK, MAIN STREET, OUKfJOX CITY, OREGON. DR. J. WELCH, DENTIST. OFFICR-Iu Odd Fellow' Temple, cor of First and Aider Streets, Portland. The patronagi' of tho-e desiring superior operations is in special request. Nitrousox ij'." for the painless extraction of teeth. ;'-?f"Arti!ieial teeth '"better than the best,' and ( cheap a the che-ipeH. NV i 1 1 be in Oregon City on Saturdays. Nov. 3;tf Dr. J, H. HATCH, dentist, tiggg The patronage of those desiring tint Class Operation, is respectfully solicited. Satisfaction in all cases guaranteed. N. B. Sit rou a O.ry-le, administered for the I'ainless Extraction of Teeth. Officf. In Weigant's new building, west ide ot First street, between Alder and .Mor isou streets, Portland, Oregon. -yy 11. W ATKINS, M. D., SURGEON. PouTi.Axn, Okeck n. OFFICE Odd Fellows' Temple, corner First and lder streets Residence corner of Main and Seventh streets. W. F. HIGHFIELD, Established :nce 1849, at the old stand, Main Street, Oregon, City, Oregon. An Assortment of Watches, Jew elry, and Seth Thomas' weight Clocks, all of which are warranted to be a represented. Repairing done on snort notice, 1 ind thankful tor past tavors. CLARK GREENHA2T, City Drayman, 0 BEG OX CITY. All orders for the delivery of merchan dise or packages and freight of whatever des cription, to any part of the city, willbeexe cited promptly and with care. SEW YORK HOTEL, (Deutfehes Gafthaus,') No. 17 Front Street, opposite the Mail steam ship landing, Portland, Oregon. H. K0THF0S. J. J. "WILKENS, PROPRIETORS, o Board per Week $5 00 " " with Lodging.. V.fi '' " " Pay 1 vo CHICAGO. rY John i. m-iuttiki:. Men said at veppors. All is well ! In one wild night the city fell; Fell fbtines of prayer and marts of gain, Before the llefy hurricane. On three score spires had silnst't i-hono. Where ghastly sunrise looked on none; .Men clasped each o'her's hands and said! The City of the West is dead. Ilrave hearts who fosight. in .slow relreut. The. fiends of fire, from street to street. Timed, powerless, to the blinding glare, 'te dumb dciiaic? of despair. A sudden impulse thrilled each wire That signalled round the sea of (Ire Switt words of cheer, warm heart-throbs came; fn tears of pity died the flame! From Ivist, from West, frotn South, from North. The messengers (Jf Hope shot forth. And underneath tin? severing wave. The world, full-handed, reached to save. Fair seemed the old ; but fairer still The new the dreary void shall (ill Willi dearer homes than those overthrown, For Love shall lay each corner stone. Rise, stricken ciiy ! fiom Ihe throe The K.-hon sackcloth of thy woe: And build, as Thebes to Amphion's strain The song of cheer, thy walls again ! How shriveled in thy hot distress The primal sin of selfishness! How instant rose, to take thy part, The Angel in tho human heart. Ah ! not in vaia the flames that tossed Above thy dreadful holocaust; The Christ again has preached through thee The Gospel of Humanity ' Then lift once more thy towers on high. And fret with spin's the Western sky, To tell that God is yet with us. And Love is still miraculous ! Two Bricks to Eesrin With. in n city in Western Xew York, ivhowihhI for its crowded churches on Sundays, there was one called, by way of eminence, the " Ihick Church,''' It was the first church built of brick if) the city. Its con-rco-ation had increased so that the church could not well accommodate the crowd. It was old-fashioned, atid behind the times. At length it was resolved to build a new one. .Meeting after meeting was held, but the prospects for a new church grew more and more discouraging, until the most hopeful grew dis heartened, and were readv to give it up. One morning, after a dis couraging mcetino- had been held, the pastor's door-bell rang, very early. On opening the door, the servant fonixl a. small boy, -I10 in- q i i i red fo r J ) r. S , Tl e servant told him he had not come down, and demanded Avhat he wanted. " I want to see Dr. S ," an swered the boy. Presently 1 )r. S came to the door, and found a small boy, with a wheelbarrow three times as large as himself, holding two bricks, which he said he had ' brought to build the new church with ! " The Doctor put on his hat, and walked out into tho street, saying to every man lie met : "The church will be built ; the first load of bricks is already on the ground." And it was built a large church, a beautiful church. Vho shall despise the day of small things ? A Great Loss to Science. -The destruction of the museum of the Chicago Academy of Science was not the least among the important losses by the great lire. The build ing was supposed to be fire proof, but, like other "hre-proot build ing, collapsed like a bubble in the intense heat. The museum con tained the largest collection of Crustacea in the world, filling more than ten thousand jars; the speci mens and species gathered by I rot. J. D. Dana, in the Wilkes Explor ing Expedition, in the Atlantic oceans ; and also the large collec tions made by Dr. Stimpson in his cruise in the Jiingold expedition to the Xorth Pacific, besides his recent collections from the Gulf of Mexico, and specimens from var ious other sources. There were also in the museum, unfortunately, the Crustacea dreged up by Mr. De Pourtales in his late dredging expeditions, these having been sent there for description and a final report. Yaia-arle Maki-.m: Quarries. Many of the marble quarries in the State of Vermont are extreme ly valuable. Some of the mills in which the marble is sawed are val ued at 6100,000 ; they are operated by both steam and water power, and more than one thousand men find employment in developing these quarries. Some of the mines are two hundred feet below the sur face, and from thence the marble is transported by rail to all parts of the country, at prices ranging from 81 50 to $14 per cubic foot. A German letter writer says : "frreligion is in Germany oftener alloc ted than genuine, and pro ceeds more frequently from dissat isfaction with existing institutions, the ritual abuses in the adminis tration, especially in the State su pervision, with practical abuses in fact, than with speculative belief." OREGON CITY, OREGON, FRIDAY, A Night on Vesuvius- A mEARA.NT PLACE TO SPfeND TDK KVEJXIXU. 1 he Louisville Jowkr-JHrnd has a N aples correspondent who writes: I spent the night with some lneuds on the top Vesuvius freezing on one side and boilin on' the other. We kept oursehes awake by the amusement of dod- ing the falling stones. About one" 111 ten minutes the old mountain would ?ive a shiverthen a burst like 40,000 mullied cannon, if ever there was such a thing. At each burst, a cloud of black smoke, in the shape- of an inverted haystack. and thirteen times the size of the Gait house, was driven into the air, followed by a mass of lived ilame that lighted the country for leagues around. lhen look out for stones; millions of tons are thrown hun dreds of feet high into the air, most of them falling back into the crater, but many, varying in size from a pigeon's egg to a tobacco hog shead, landed outside, and vou must dodge; generally easy enough as they are of a white heat, and show as plain as a rocket star. They tumble down the steep cone, hissing and screaming in the snow the big ones breaking into frag ments, and living like a bursting shell. Xow is the time ten min utes interval. We rush up to the edge of the abyss and look down; for further particulars see "Dante's Inferno;" but you spoil your boots; I did; you singe your mustache; I did. And wish 3011 were safely out of it; I did. You turn away sneezing as it you had accidentally ignited a box of locofocos under your nose; for a moment all is dark; then the long, twinkl"ng row of gaslamps in the streets of Na ples seem to spring out of the ground under your feet, though miles away; then you see lights in towns above the base of the mountain, in all save one, and that one the largest. Pompeii with its great old temples, magnificent theaters, close built streets, and vast ruins, is dark; the giim skele tons lying in their ashen beds alone keep their vigil there; their eyeless sockets need no light. No sight that ever I witnessed can equal a clear sunrise from Vesuvius. No one can imagine its grandeur; but you must try to, for I dare not at tempt a description. As we stood gazing down upon the rootless hous es of Pompeii, the sun lighting its gay-colored wall-Torre del Greeeo, with its earthquake shaken walls I said: 'Tin glad of it." Says one of the party, "It's awful shab by ; dont think it pays." That young man was from Henry county, Indiana. With a pretty general destruction of boots and clothing and the aforesaid loss of one of the handsomest mustaches in Naples by your humble servant, we got down safely. Not so with another party who ascended from the Nola side. One of them had an arm broken by a falling stone; another a leg, in getting down. -o- - Sr. Paul's Sarcophagus. The Navv-vard at Philadelphia was the scene of considerable commotion one dar lately, occasioned by the removal of a veritable sarcophagus from the hold of the United States steamer Richmond, just arrived from Maderia. The receptacle is said to contain the dust and bones ot the Apostle St. Paul. Its weight is about six tons; eight feet in length, two feet in width and four feet in bight. The lid weighs about two tons. On the front tab let is a representation of a trio of angels extending a wreath of lau rels and llowers to a figure whose general outline is indistinct. The chiseling and carving are generally excellent. The foot of the tomb contains no inscription or device. In fact, there is nothing about it calculated to lead to the supposi tion that it is sanctified by holding the dust and bones of the Apostles. The sarcophagus is said to have been discovered at Mycene, and it. was purchased by one of our Consuls for the Metropolitan Anti quarian Society of New York city, whence it will be sent in a few days. A dry goods firm in Philadelphia recently sued a man for the amount of a bill run up by his wife. Judge Thayer, in his charge to the jury, said : " It is a false and foolish no tion for trades-people to entertain, that a husband is bound to pay all bills contracted by his wife. No such monstrous doctrine is allowed in the law. Trades-men must as certain the facts and the true rela tions ot man and wife before al lowing the latter to run up bills which he is to be looked to to pay," Large Order. It is stated on good authority that one of our largest Philadelphia- manufacturing establishments has entered into a contract to supply theliussian gov ernment with five hundred locomotives. The Power cf Woman- Gail Hamilton has never written more truly than when s'le penned the following : The subtile and mysterious at traction that everywhere draws men to women is a sacred trust committed to women by the crea tor. It is not only a power irre sistible, but a possession inaliena ble. ly no misuse or disuse can it be forfeited.lt is not beauty nor wit nor goodness ; for the attrac tion exists independent of all these. It is simply womanhood. Man pays deference to woman instinct ively, involuntarily, not because she is beautiful, or truthful, or wise, or foolish, or proper ; but because she is a woman. He cannot repel it. If she descends, he will lower to her level ; if she rises, he will rise to her hight. This is the real danger not that she will drive him from her. She cannot help being his blessing or his ban?. She cannot make her self into a being he will not love. If she is insipid, ignorant, mascu line, coarse then he will love in sipidity, ignorance, masculineness, coarseness, and be himself deterio rated. So much the more ought woman by virtue of this mysteri ous and inalienable power, to rise to the height of wise and worthy exercise. Instead of making it merely the minister of her own in dolence and vanity it should be made to minister to all human grace and succor. Instead of re garding it as a reason why she may dispense with all prudence and wisdom, it is the reason of all reasons why she should concen trate within herself every resource of prudence and wisdom. Death of an Aged Man. The Chico Review has the fol lowing regarding the death of the oldest man in the United States : Died, at the residence of his son, Harvey Thacker, in Shasta county, Hiram Thacker, supposed to be. the oldest man in the United States, aged about 12S years. He was born in Buncombe county, North Carolina, about 17 "?, and served under Jackson at the battle of New Orleans. He was .also at the battle of Tippecanoe, under Harri son, and also in the Black Hawk war, in Illinois. He immigrated to California in the year It 61. He was son-in-law of Daniel Boon, of Kentucky. Tranquarry, of this town, informs us that the above is substantially correct, as he knows the family well, and had often con versed with the old man, who in formed him that he had lost the register of his birth, it having been burned up in his house. His sou Harvev, in whose house he died, is an old man nearly seventy years of age. The old man was fond of a joke, and could tell some strange old yarns. m. . Fire-Pi:oof Dresses. A chem ist of Vienna, it is reported, has succeeded in discovering a compo sition which will make even the slight material of ballet dancers' dresses lire-proof. The Prince of Lichcnstein has given this compo sition a first trial on the stage in his own palace in the presence of a numerous company. The rise pf the curtain discovered two life-sized dolls, dressed as ballet girls, to both of which a light was applied. One of the dolls was rapidly re duced to ashes, while the other, saturated with the protective com position, escaped with a small hole burned in the dress. Another trial will be made of this material, and, il satisfactory, then the inventor will receive an order to make the scenery in the Vienna City Theatre inflammable. Barbarism. The Saucelito JL r Aisays: We are said to be civ ilized ; but there is a custom among us which ranks us with the sav ages. We refer to the clothing of girls of tender years from infancy upward, say to ten or eleven years of age, in cold mornings, a strong man, with thick pants and boots, feels rather chill' around his lower members ; and yet we have little, tender girls with no other covering from their knees downward than thin stockings and shoes. How the poor creatures get along, the Lord only knows. V'e havcToften won dered, but never having been a girl, we can't tell from experience. There is a society fi,r the preven tion of cruelty to animals, but none for the protection of little girls. Let us have one, and, for punish ment,let the mothers be compelled to attire themselves in as scant ap parel as their children's. Piety. Josh Billings knows ' lots of folks who ar pins just be daus tha wus born so. Tha kan't tell when tha got religun, and if tha shuld lose it tha wuldn't know it." Too true. Well Named. A Pittsbm-r paper has a department for ladies' i headed " The Suppressed." ' JANUARY 5, 1872. A Beautiful Incident Bc-- Dr. Adams, in his beauti ful book of "Thanksgiving Mem ories," gives us the following in cident : "In the Cathedral ot 'Lim erick there hangs a chime of bells, lieh were cast in Italy by an Italian, an enthusiast in his trade, who fixed his home near the mon astery where they were first hung, that he might daily enjoy their sweet and solemn music. In some political revolution the bells were taken away to some distant land, and their maker himself became a refugee and exile. His wander ings brought him, after many years, to Ireland. On a calm and beautiful evening as the vessel which bore him floated on the placid bosom of the Shannon, sud denly the evening chimes pealed from the cathedral towers. His surprised ear caught the sweet sound, and he knew that his lost treasures were found His early home, his old friends, his beloved native land, all the best associa tions of his life were in those sounds. He laid himself back in the boat, crossed his arms upon his breast, and listened to the music. The boat reached the wharf, but still he lay there, silent and mo tionless. They spoke to him, but he did not answer. They went to him, but his spirit had tied. The tide of memories that came vibrat ing through his heart at that well known chime had snapped its strings !" It was this incident that sug gested to Moore his song of "The Evening bells. " As Moore is not so much read as lie used to be a quarter of a century ago, we reprint the lines, as they may not be familiar to some of our younger readers: Those evening bells! Those eveningbella' How many a tale llieir music tells. Of youth, and home, and that sweet time When last I heard their soothing chime. Those joyous hours have passed away, And many a heart that then was gay. Within the tomb now darkly dwells. And hears no more those evening bells! And thus't shall be when I am gone. That tuneful peal shall still ring on. And other bards shall walk these dells. And sing thy praise, sweet evening bolls!" Qualities of a Good Collector- Columbus Index. J Is on time to a minute when the debtor says "come to-morrow at nine o'clock." Sits 011 the steps and wails for his return when he says, "I am just going to dinner." Insists on slopping out to make change when the man "has nothing less than a twenty." Will go to an "old stager" every day for a month with a cheerful countenance "about that little ac count." Doesn't mind edging into a crowd to ask a fellow. Will take a dollar m part if he can' get ten in whole, and credit it with thankful alacrity. Always suggests a check when the money is not at hand, as he can get it cashed to-morrow. Always has that account "on top"so the man can make no ex cuse for putting him off. Don't mind asking for it imme diately after being "treated" or pleasantly entertained. Is never in a hurry, "can wait till you get through." Cuts off the retreat of the dodg er by crossing over to meet him, or follows him into a store where he goes to hide. Can cough or salute when a "hard case" wants to pass without seeing him. In fine, is patient as a post, cheer ful as a duck, sociable as a flea, bold as a lion, weather-proof as a rubber, cunning as a fox, and watch ful as a sparrow-hawk. -a i A learned professor has demon strated before the British Associa tion that no thickness less than 2,000 to 2,500 miles would enable the crust of the earth to resist the tide-generating force of the sun and " moon. A thinner crust, he says, would be bulged out by a tide within the molten mass, like the tide of the ocean. In Connecticut lived two broth ers, one with a family of ten the other with only his wife. The for mer asked the latter to spend thanksgiving with him. and the lat ter, whose, family consisted of two persons, invited his brother and family to spend Fastday with him ! Neat. A paper puts the mat ter which it wishes to enforce in the following neat manner: " You might as well try to shampoon an elephant with a thimble-full of soapsuds, as to attempt to do bus iness without advertising." Josh Billings says : " I will state for the information of those who haven't had a chance to lay in their vermin wisdom, as freely as I have, that one single hornet, who feels well well, will brake ud a whole cainp-m ainV Didn't Know It. Job Higgings was a rare speci men so rare that he outlived what would have killed almost any oth er man. People who had occasion, ten years ago, to stop in Tarn worth, N. II., must have heard of hint. One day Job was at Tam worth, and he applied to Peter Hinea for passage on his stage coach. Peter saw that Job was, as usual, very drunk, and he was doubtful about taking him. There were ladies to ride inside, and of course he could not go in there ; but at length, by consent of two gentlemen who wore to ride upon the driver's box, Job was allowed a berth on the upper seat outside. The stage started, and for a time all went well. Job was very unsteady in his seat, and essayed to sing; but he wobbled, and "his sense of tune was entirely obfusti cated. At length came the long stretch of hill 'in Moultoborough, going up which Job lost his seat and fell overboard. Peter hauled up and got down, and one of the passengers got down with him. They found Job upon the sward by the roadside, trying to get upon his feet. " Tob, are ye much hurt ? " asked Peter, as they lifted him from the grass. "Hurt"? r course not. But say ole Pete, wha'n thuudcr'd ye tip over for (hie), eh ? " " Why, bless your soul, I didn't tip over," replied Peter. " Didn't (hie) tip over, eh ? " " Not a bit of it." " But (hie) 'e stage inxxfr tipped over." " But I tell you it over," asserted Peter did not tip Job shook himself, and tried to fix his eye on Peter's rotund, ruddy face : " Did'nt (hie) tip over? Wal ef I'1 'a (hie) know'd that I (hie) wouldn't t got off " Leavi.yg Home. The genera tion that is now rising to industri al pursuits in the rural districts of the united States, ought to be im pressed with the idea that they cannot better their condition by hastening away from their homes, and trying their fortunes in a great town. In nine cases out of ten, as proved by actual statistics, they are better off as they are now. In dependence, knowledge culture, character, and the good opinion of others, arc all as easily acquired in the country as in a great majority of instances, is wealth, that attain ment which is prized above all oth ers. How many who have made the change have rgrcttod it all their lives, and their children after them. There is nothing in our so cial condition more to bo deplored than the haste to be rich that has taken such a hold of the American people, and now prompts this fond ness for cities. It has been won derfully stimulated by a morbid desire for display, and it can now be controlled only by moral agen cies of the most effectual kind. There are many things more desir able and more respectable than wealth. The Scolds Vocabulary. The copiousness of the English lan guage, perhaps, was never more apparent than in the following char acter, by a lady, of her husband: "He is," she says, "an abhorred, barbarous, capricious, detestable, envious, hard-hearted, illiberal, ill natured, jealous, keen, loathsome, malevolent, naseous, obstinate, quarrelsome, vexatious, abomina ble, bitter, captious, disagreeable, execrable, grating, fierce, gross, hasty, malicious, nefarious, obstrep erous, peevish, restless, savage, tart, unpleasant, violent, warpish, worrying, acrimonious, blustering, careless, discontented, fretful, growling, hateful, inattentive, ma lignant, noisy, odious, perverse, rig id, severe, teasing, unsuitable, bois terous, angry, choleric, disgusting ollensive. sneaking, awkward, boorish, brutal, crabbed, churlish, outrageous, stupid, sulky, sullen, treacherous, tyranical, virulent, yelpm g uog in a manger. Six Nabobs. About the six wealthiest property owners in the city of New York are those whose names are given below. In a tab ular form we show the gross amount of the reputed wealth of each, and the number of years' labor it re quired to accumulate such vast sums ; XAMKS. AMolXT. YEA US. Cornelijs YanderbiU . . S2o.000.0 );) CO Alexander T. Stewart. . 20,ihKUI!H 4) William 15. Astor 1 G.OOO.OOi) 4 ) William M. Tweed 12.000.0o0 G Goorire Law o.uOO.n'!') 10 Daniel Drew n.OOo.OUa) 30 -i Bad, ii' True. A gentleman " whose scientific attainments have made his name a household word in all lands," has been investigat ing the social evil in Boston, and finds that a large proportion of the "soiled doves" trace their fall to inilueuces which have, met them in I the public schools of that city. NO. 10. Tact and Fancy. Inyo county, Cal., raised a sweet potato weighing nine jounds. Some of the most trusted light house keepers on the Atlantic are women. The only way to treat tho Chinese question is to treat it Coolie. Wise sayings often fall tothe earth, but a kind word is never thrown away. The trip round the world can now be made in eighty days fare, $1,145. Y'oung ladies suffering from a pane in the side may relieve it by wearing a sash. Q Seventy-eight women are now regularly ordained preachers in the O United States. Compulsory education has been ordered in Alsace and Lorraine by the German Government. O A London letter states that at least 50,000 Frenchmen will imi- 0 grate to the United States in the next two years. The higher you rise, the higher is your horizon ; so, the more you know, the more you will see to be known. A South Carolina paper disre spectfully calls its paragraphs of North Carolina news "tax drops." The bed and matress on which President Lincoln died were sold at auction last week for eihtv in in m uo nars. Paymaster Hodge who is serv ing a term in the Albany peniten tiary, it has been ascertained, only stole 445,020. Mrs. Julia Holmes, of Washing ton, has established a printing office in Federal block, in which all the work is done by women. Precious stones, including the topaz, amethys, agate, opal, jasper, chalcedony and garnet, are among the productions of Wyoming Ter ritory. The average salary of teachers in the primary schools in the city ol Berlin is only &150, and throughout Prussia but 6200 per annum. Narrow paths divide farms in France, Germany and Holland. Illinois is said to have ten times as much fence as Germany, and Duchess county, X. Y., more than all France. How many of our lady readers ever dreamed that we send to Great Britain, annually, fifteen million dollars in gold for the sin gle article of spool cotton. The Sultan of Turkey is said to have such a passion for billiards that he frequently rises at two o'clock in the morning and insists on finishing some game he has in his mind, A. C. Bid well, an old and well known resident of Sacramento, o committed suicide recently at his residence, while in a fit of tempo rary insanity. A Plymouth, (England,) paper, in a recent issue, mentions that tho prominent candidates for the Pres idency of the United States, in 1802 arc Horace Grant and U. S. Greeley. Chicago within the next three years wdl want for building pur poses alone, 800,000 tons of iron. She Avill need, during the same time 83,000,000 worth lumber. The English people desire a sil ver currency which can be reckon ed with equal facility in shillings, dollars and francs. It is said that the Jewish rabbi of the great synagogue at Berlin receives the highest salary yolun tarily paid to any living preacher. It is 20,000 a year. A Bostonian has purchased tho collection of Egyptian curiosities formerly in the Crystal Palace, near London, and they are to re main, permanently, in Boston. It is said that Mir. Jarnette, who has lately been to England to ex amine as to the true boundaries of Virginia, is confident that Virginia owns the whole of the Potomao I iiver. The night police force of Augus ta, Me., has been reduced to two individuals, on account of the dan ger of exceeding the annual ap propriation to pay the expenses of the department, Much interest is beginning to be o manifested in the scientific World, in regard to the transit of Venus, O which takes place in 1874. Ger many and Hussia are to unite in sending out Commissioners to ota serve the transit. Success rides on every hour grapple it and you may win, but without a grapple it will never go with you. Work is the weapon of honor, and he who lacks tha weapon will never triumph, o O o 0 o .0 o o o o o o o o o o o o o G 0 o o o 0 o J- . , .ir.w.x. '. ' -'"l-t-'fa " "J- 'M'Mj..waCT V- ".-' 7 r