O o o r JJo t M T1 TP "R IP U 11 A JJ JL lb J VOL. G. l)c tUccfcln vEntcrprisc. .J DEMOCRATIC PAPER, FOB. THE Ousiness Wan, the Farmer itJ ifce FAMILY CIRCLE. ISSUED EVERY FRIDAY BY A. NOLTNER. EDITOR AND PUIiUSHKR. OFFICE la- Dr. Thessing's Brick BuilJiug O TERMS of SUBSCRIPTIOX: Single Copy one year, in advance, $2 50 TERMS of ADVERTISING : Transient advertisements, including all lejjal notices, 4 of 12 lines, 1 w.$ 2 50 For each -sulj.-ieiUfiitin.sertion 1 00 One Column, one year $120 00 Half " " 0 Quarter " " 40 Business Card, 1 sqnare one year 12 UTS' Remittance to be mode at the risk o Subscribers, and at the erpenae of Agents. book: and job printing. CTB The Enterprise office is supplied with beautiful, approved styles of type, and mod ern JI.VCH1XH PlllS.SSKS. which will enable l'ie Proprietor tj do Job Piiutiug at all times Neat, Qriict: and Cheap ! Bf3 Work solicited. AH Binines'i tra:ixietim vpon a Specie basi. li USIXJJS. OA RD s. F. BARCLAY, m. R. C. 6. l'orraerly Surgeon to the lion, II. 15, Co, 35 Years Expcrlciice. rEACTICIXG PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Zlliiin Slreit, Oregon City, JOHNSON & BlcCOWN ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELORS AT-LAW, OREGON CITY, OREGON. WHX PRACTICE IX ALL THE COURTS of the State. '"Special attention given to cases in the U.S. Land Oi'.ice at Oregon City. April 187J:tf J. M. THOMPSON', C W. FITCII. Ti3 JKlQQH & FSTCH, AND Real Estate Agents, EUCEH CITY, OREGON, OFFICE TWO DOORS NORTH OF TIIK 1'OSTOlFICE. REAL ESTATE HOUOIIT AND SOLD, LOANS X EC OTI AT ED, AND AB STRACT OF TITLES FUR XI Ml ED. JE HAVE A COMPLETE ABSTRACT VV of Title of all property in Eugene City, and perfect pi its.. t the same, prepared with great cure. We will practice in the li!i'ereut Courts of the Stat-. Special at tention given to the collection of all claims that may he placed in our Lauds. Legal Tenders bought and sold. sepstt JOHN M. BACON", i 111 I'U. II 1 IJtAhL i T' W t i tv. .,i C2I2 J3& SaS 9 STATIONERY, PERFUMERY, Ac, Ac, Oregon City, Oregon, At VhnrmaihSr Il'irn-r' old ittind, lately oc cupied by Acki i iiin, Mait, street. 10 tf JOHN FLEMING, DEALER IN surra? BOOKS AND STATIONERY IN MYERS' FIRE-PROOF BRICK, MUX STIIBET, ORKGOS C1TT, OREGON. DR. J. WELCH, DENTIST. UXCJLl OFFICE In Odd Fellows Ten pie, cor of First and Alder Streets, Portland. The patronag of those desiring superior oper itioas is in special request. Xitrousox idj for the painless extraction of teeth. ;fAi ti;icial teeth '-better than the best,' tin 1 'i rht rp fs the cheipett. Will be in Oregon City on Saturdays, Nov. 3:tf "7 It- WATKINS, M. D., SURfJKOX. Poutuxo, OuKum. OFFIfKOU Fellows' Temple, corner Kir-stand ller streets Residence corner of Main and Seventh streets. W. F. HICxHFIELD EsUhlished since IS 10, at the old stand, J-" Street, Oregon, City, Oregon. Aa Assortment of Watches, Jew elry, and Seth Thomas' weijht Clocks, all of which are warranted to be a represented. Repainnrrs done on short notice. 4rlirul thankful for past favors. clahs greenman, City Drayman, Oil EG OX CITY. J3 All orders for the delivery of merchan dise or paokazes and freight of whatever de criptioa, to any part of the fit y, wilibeexe oi.el promptly and with care. jew YORK iiotp:l, f Dutfehes GafthauiO No. 17 Front Street, opposite the Mail steam s'np landing, Portland. Oregon. IL R0THF0S. J. J. WILXENS, PROPRIETORS. Boiir-T tier Week o- . . on . . . . f Ort . . . '. 1 00 " " witli Lod'-'tr! ' " Par " SB 1 1 J. ILJUU -USL-UHJ The Lord's Prajxr. The following acrostical paraphrase of me .Lord s Prayer was written, upwards o! a half century ago by Thomas Sturtevant - t,Li: - C I rii - ,J1 Ui- i wtnry-sixtii Regiment oi thi T"iiiit r..r...,, i vi.titra iinuiitry, wueii a Tinson- er of war ia the Province of Upper Car:- a.Ia : Our Lord ami King, who sits enlLroned on high ! Father of Light! mysterious Deity! who ait ttie great I Am the last : the II 1 31 , Art righeous. holy, morcifnl and j.i?. In realms of glory, scent's w here angels ping. Heaven the dwelling place of God our Hallowed thy name, which doth all names transcend ; Be Thou adrred, our great, Almighty Friend, Th' glory shines beyond Creation's space. X'iim in the Book of Justice and of CJrace. lhy kingdom towers beyond the starry pkies; Kingdoms eatanic fal!, bufc Thine thall rise. Come, wi;h thine empire. O thou Holv One, Thy great and everlasting will be done! Will Cod make kiiowu hiy will, his power display '! Be it the work of mortals to obey; Done in the great, the wondrous work of ve. Ou Calvary's Cross be died, but reigns above; Earth bea:s the record in thy Holy World. As Heaven adoies thy name, let Earth. O Lord! It shines transcendent in the eternal skies: Is praised in Heaven, for mau the Savior dies. In songs immortal land his name ! Heaven shouts with joy, and saints his love proclaim. Cive us. ( Lord, our food, nor cease to give Ls that, food ia which our souls must live! Onr needy souls supply from day to day, Duih- assist and aid us when we pray. J 3 rend though we ask, yet, Lord, thy bless ing lend. And make us grateful when thy gifts de scend. Forgive our .sins, which in destruction place Us the vil children of a rebel race. Onr follies, laulis and trespasses torgive Debts whicii we new can pay. uor thou ! receive. j As we. ) Lord, our neighbors' faults o'er- look. We beg thou wouldst blot ours from mem ory's book. Forgive oar enemies ; extend thy grace Our souls to save e'en Adam's cuiltv race. Debtors to Thee in gratitude and love, And in that duty paid hy saints -above. Lead us from sin, and i:i thy mercy raire Lfs from the tempter' and his hellish ways. Not in our own, but in h':s name w ho bled, Into tuine ear we pour our every need. Temptation's fatal charms help us to shun. Cut may 'we conquer through lhy conquer ing Son ! Deliver us from all which can annoy Us in this world and may our souls de stroy; From all calamities which' men betide, Evil ;nd death. O turn our feet aside, For we are mortal worms aud cleave to clay; Thine lis to rule and mortals to obey. Is not mercy. Lord, forever live? The whole Creation knows no God but Thee; Kingdom aud empire in thy presence fall, The Eternal reigns ihe King o( all. Tower is with Thee to Thee be glory given. And be thy Name adore by Earth and Heaven ; The praise of saints and angels is thine own, Glory to Thee, the Everlasting One. Forever be thy glorious name adored. Amen! Ilosanuah! Blessed be the Lord! Practical Ideas. To 1)0 a ool li ousel-cooper re quires education anl practice; but if a woman's heart is in the work she will soon learn, it necessity places the duty before her. The help of a good, careful, pru dent housekeeper, enables a man to advance his business prospects more than anything else a woman can do. The superficial accomplishments of a boarding school 31iss are noth ing compared to a practical educa tion in all that pertains to making home attractive. It is very imposing to witness the majestic sweep of yards upon yards of expensive silk flounces and and laces into a parlor, but it re quires a large income to support so much style. It is deliijjhifid to talk with a young lady who knows French aud all the latest novels, and to have a divine creature dispense her best skirmishes of flirting with her eyes, smiles and fan but there oft is 'but little heart or sincerity in such practical charms, A girl who lias only a common school education and the accomplishments, taught her by a loving mother, of cooking and all other domestic duties, wifl be more likely to make a good wife. " Slie may not have the most pol ished address, she mav not be able to entangle with battalions of arts and wiles with which a petted fash ionable belle surrounds aud cap tures beans, but she will prize the love of an honest heart more, and in truth and sincerity devote her life to requiting the love and kind ness given her. I'oultorets say that chickens wili be very "poor"' this spring. They attribute it to the backward ness of the season ; but it is natu ral that the little birds should al ways be poor, since, from the force of gravitation, their parents never can lay anything up fur them. OREGON CITY, OREGON, FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1872. The Effect of the New Apportionment. From the Washington Futiiot There appears to be some misap prehension in the public mind, in regard to the effect of the recent apportionment for tiie House of Representatives niton the Presiden tial election. That is to sav, whether the electoral college will be constituted on the basis of the existing representation or the new distribution. Apportionments are made every twenty yearn, und the electoral college is graduated by them, because the elections for the new Congress and the Presidency take place at the same time. The act of February 2d fixes the ag gregate number of the House of Representatives at 2S3 members. Iy adding 74 for the Senatorial representation of 37 States, the next electoral college will necessar ily consist of o.j7 members. In the present confusion of par ties it is diiiicult to estimate, with any degree of accuracy, the proba ble result of the Presidential elec tion in several States, which are now closely balanced, and the com plexion of which may be deter mined by causes which have yet to assume definite shape. Hut there are certain data, which may be accepted as furnishing a general basis of calculation, aud are not seriously disputed by either the Republican or Democratic side, to which they apply at this time ex clusively. Let us look at these figures camly, and with no disposi tion to deceive ourselves or to mis lead the public. They form an in teresting study : Total F.h-orora! College 3".7 .ii:t.uT to i) ehoio ot rresident 1711 Democratic 1 l'rmb".iia-i J Doul.tiul Xt v York.. 3 1 'faine ! X. llanirwhire 4 Xew Jersey 9 Vermont -! 'oiinoetifiit... ( I e!awue... Z .I .i-. -..-!.'.: u-et ts. H ' I i viva ilia. 2S Man-L.nl.. 8 Klio-hi IsUu-1. -i;Mi.-s.i-e i.i.... 8 Virginia 11 S. I'aioliua.... i ! n I i.inu. . . ..11 ..21 , . ') so X. ':.r. .li iii i 10 Ohio 221 JHiiiols.... Oeorv.ia.. . .11 .lieh!-";ui 11, kausos., A iiii.ama . .. Iowa il Louisiana .. 7 ; Wis. r.nsiii . . . .pi Kentucky. .12 Oiilifoi-jiia. Tennessee. . 1 1 ' Miim.ot a Missouri. ...li Xevvuiu.. .. Ail.-':;. 1 iori'Li .... -i 10. Tcxa ; S. Oi.wm 3 VV. Virina. 5 Xclaa-Ua... . 31 Upon this basis and a distinct issue between the two parties as they now stand, the Democrats would require eleven votes to elect their candidates aud the Republi cans seventy-six, to be obtained from among the f.even States which are assigned for argument, and illustration' to the "doubtful" category. Hence, they become of much importance, and must be ex amined with care, in order to roach aii)r prudent conclusion. The powerful influences of men and money, which the Administration was able to throw into Xew Hampshire and Connecticut recent ly, could not be employed in a Presidential contest, when the elec tions in all States occur on the same day. With the people free to vote independent of this intrusion, there is hardly any doubt that both these States would go Democratic. The Pepubliean defection in Penn sylvania is large and growing, and the expose of the atrocious frauds in Philadelphia, which are demon strated by the admision of Col. McClure to the seat in thc'Senatc from which he was excluded by corrupting the ballot-box and "re peating," will only tend to ir.t.on sifv the fetid between the White ami Red Roses ol'Curtin and Cam eron. Superadded to this fact is the Labor Hcl'orm movement, now organizing all over the State, ami likely to "detach at least 20,000 working-men from the Radical side. .Mississippi will probably be decid ed by the events of the next two mouths. About Indiana there is no real apprehension among Dem ocrats, and, in a certain contingen cy, it will be surely carried by 10,000 majority. Illinois is serious ly affected by the revolt against Grant, which extends among class es that cannot be reached b- pow er. The laud robberies in Kansas and the bribery used to elect the present Senators have combined with a -general discontent to theat en a complete revolution in that State. It is thus seen that, the vote of Indiana alone, which is almost certian, would be more than suffi cient to give the Democrats a clear majority in the electoral college. With Pennsylvania, assurance would be made doubly sure. Xow, if the elements of opposition, which sympathise in principle, and seek to attain the same practical results, should harmonize cordially, then every one of these so-called doubtful States could not onlv be carried largely, but several others would as inevitably be dcta.-hed from the Grant column. These elements are now separated by names only, and not tilings. There ' is no reason why they should not ! come together, and stand upon the j common ground of lieform, which J they all alike desire to achieve.and ! which each separately professes as j a cardinal principle. Like great I divisions of one army, led y diiler ent commanders, they have the same enemy to confront, and aim at a common victory. The moral spectacle of such a union, ignoring past records aud burying old griefs, would of itself give an im pulsion to the contest worth tens ot thousands of votes. A great triumph- is thus clearlv within reach of a united Opposition. Let this signal of ..concert once be given, and the country would rise up with an enthusiasm, which would sweep over it like a prairie fire, and recall the scenes of 1840. Neither narrow praiisanship, nor personal ambition, nor designing intrigue, will be allowed to inter pose obstacles to the success of this patriotic purpose. Whoever ventur es to stand in the way of its march or to turn it from a triumphal course to serve mere peisonal ambition, will be crushed and left by the wuvsido, and execrated as a warn ing to selfish schemers. Union is the watchword, and union means victory. The .'.lorals of Odd fellowship. They are of the highest order. As a fraternity it requires strict morality of its members. Thev are 10 be upright in their dealings with each other ana with every body else. This fact is told in the strict administration of discipline in every well regulated Lodge. And that discipline is administered and thereby a hoaiihy state of morals secured and preserved as is told in the number of suspensions and expulsions as reported at the various sessions of our Grand Lodges. It is our duty and we claim the privilege ot watching over each other's conduct not only in the Lodge room but in "their inter course with the world at large" and if a Rrother is unfortunately so far led away from the paths of right and the principles of the Order, as to indulge in any viola tions of his obligations such as cheating, lying, stealing, profanity or indulging ia the use habitually of intoxicating liquors, then hehas forfeited his light to a place in the deep feelings of Ib-other. He has blotted a line upon "the page of the history of Odd Fellowship. Il' he is habitual in the use of these or any other immoralities practiced by the vicious and immoral he is not a good Odd Fellow for the first lesson that is inculcated is that we war against vice in all its forms. Friendship towards many prompts the contest, the gentle in fluence of love supply tin? weapons, j truth , consecrates the effort aud leads to an easy victory. And if a reformation cannot be clieeted he must atone to the offended law. The good Odd Fellow shrinks all these vices and endeavors to prac tice upon our principles and be a moral beacon in the world a true worker in the cause of God and humanity. Allow me to enlarge a little. Suppose a number of any Lodge be 'immoral habitually so what is it to the world but a" blot on our fair name. The observing world is not ignorant of our prin ciple and objects and indeed of our practical workings as an Order because our principles are an nounced, our objects are proclaim ed aud much of our practical workings are seen and admired. We knew them before we were a member of the order and it was a knowledge of these things that led us to a favorable opinion of the Order and' led us to ask to be ad mitted. The present membership of the Order was not coaxed or over persuaded by ardent votaries of Odd Fello wship but having con ceived that favorable opinion from reading and observation sought admission and gained it. As an immoral member would be an in fection up.n our escutheeon a stain on our history that would be hard to obliterate, such a one is a stum bling block in the way of those who wotdd otherwise seek a home with us and it and refresh him self under the covering of our "tent." S The Legislature of Illinois has passed an act granting to all per sons "freedom in the selection of an occupation, profession, or em ployment," and intended chiefly to c nfer upon the fair sex the ines timable right of holding ofiice and practising law, the only pursuits from which females have been hitherto debarred. Henceforth woman's power to please the com mon shall be manifested in the Common Pleas. However reluct ant to keep her own peace, she may judicially bind others to keep the peace; instead of her "attach ments" being unrequited they will i be legal summons to suitors to ,; court. Her social position will be j correspondingly elevated, for she will become familiar with "counts' and have numerous "retainers" in "livery of seisin" and all of as- j size, "Natural Protection." Mr. Kerr, in his groat speech on the tarifl gave some figures to il lustrate the "Natural Protection" extended to American maufactures that must have caused a sinking of soul to the selfish advocates of artificial protection. A ton of Scotch pig iron, costing -S20.S0 in Glasglow, cannot be laid down in New York or other seaboard city for less than ;uf7, and if ship ped to Indiana, to compete with the pig to be made in the famous block coal regions of that "State, would cost s-.5o.45. Thus the "Natural Protection" of American pig iron amoutns to $15.77 at the seaboard, and 20.05 on the prairies, equiva lent to 75 per cent, and 144 per cent, for the ... respective cases. A ton of Welsh railroad iron, cost ing s:J7 in Card ill cannot be laid down in New York for less than SS4.10. In this case the Natural Protection wotdd be for the respect ive localities -s:30.;H,$17.1G, and the percentage 82 and 220 per cent. As the difference in the cost of American iron and Pritish iron is not oven claimed to be other than the difference in the cost of labor, for which "protection" is alone de manded, and as the total labor employed in making pig iron is less than ten per cent, of the whole cost, and of railroad iron less than 30 per cent., a natural pioteetion ranging from 75 to 225 per cent, should certainly seem to cover all possible demands in the case, no matter how cxhorbitant they may be. I low different is the case of the farmer from that of the inan faeturer! Our agriculturalists are 41 per cent.of the whole popu lation; they do not receive, nor do they ask, any form of artificial pro tection; and at the same time their productions were farced to com pete in the markets of Europe with the products of "pauper labor" there, tinder all the disadvantages of a distant market, a disordered home currency,exhorbitant freights ami enhanced cost of production. i et, even while thus struggling, the monopolists and manufactur ers demand to be allowed to sad dle upon their shoulders the addi tional enormous burdens of a tar iff such as the woild never saw be fore, and, as an equivalent for this sort of taxation, oiler to give them a "free breaktast-table!" " Doctor Iineiaon (iifts, It may surprise the gentlemen with imperial and imperious in stincts at present at the head of our affairs, to learn that there have been dictators who disdained the indirect advantages of position, so i.ir at least as personal emoluments are concerned. There was Doctor Francia, supreme ruler of Para guay, and as indubitable a dictator as ever ret constitutions at naught, and patronized monopolies ; yet this Francia lived poor, and sternly forbade his relations to pension J themselves, their men-servants and maid-servants, their oxen and asses, upon the State. A traveller, de parting from Paraguay, left be liiiid him a print of Napoleon, whom Francia greatly admired, and ivhose portrait he had long wanted to have. Francia sent an express after the man, demanding to know the picture's price. An swer was returned that the travel ler did not deal in such ware ; and could not sell pi hits; the thing was worth nothing to him, unless his Excellency needed it ; would his Excellency be kind enough to accept the tritle ? Post-haste the express went after the man, taking the picture. His Excellency would have none of it,ouanr such terms. On another occasion, his Excel lencv's sister, the sole housekeeper he had, chanced to employ one of his grenadiers, one of the public Government's servants, to do some trilling errand of her own. Francia incontinently dismissed her, banish ed her from his house, would have no more to do with her at all, be cause in his strict eyc5, this was an example of malversation, which, unrehuked, would open the door to those very peculations, incompe tencies, ami divarications of the public service which he thought it his chief mission to repress, and JiJ repress, altogether. There are times when examples are pregnant and this is one of these times. If we must have a dictator, let us seek for one like Francia. K.r, Going to Emi-jkati:. Stephen S. Foster says he "has registered a vow" that he will pay no taxes to the United States until "Woman SulVrag? is conceded. This indi cates that lie is going to some oth er country to reside; for if he eats, drinks, wears clothing, or rides on rail, stage or wheelbarrow, in this country, he will be taxed. A jilted Arkansas lover being much "cut up" by his reject iorf, literally cut out his successful rival with a broad-axe last week, and then went and axed the lady again. The Soaped Horn, Our readers may remember the story of the "soaping" of the sig nal horn. The story runs, that when a certain revivalist celebrity took up the horn to summon the worshipers to services, after din ner, one day, lie blew a strong blast of soft soap all over the as tonished brethren. It is also said by the chronicler of this "item" that the brother was so wroth at this joke, that he cried out, aloud : "Brethren, I have passed through many trials and tribulations, but nothing like this. I have served in tin; ministry for thirty years, and in that time never.uttered a profane word; but I'll cursed if I can't whip the man that soaped that horn." Well, this is a strong story; but we have from reliable authority, something a little stronger, in the sequel to the same story. This is given to us as follows: Some two days after the horn soaping, a tall, swarthy villainous looking desperado strolled on the grounds, and leaned against a tree listening to the eloquent exhorta tion to repent which was made by the preacher. After a while he be came interested, finally affected, and then taking a position on the anxious seat, commenced groaning "in the very bitterness of hu sor row." The clergyman walked down and endeavored to console him. No consolation he was to great a sinner, be said. Oh, no; there is pardon for the vilest. No; he was too wicked, there was no mercy for him. "Why, what great crime have you committed?" said the preach er; "have you stolen?" "Oh! worse than that !" "What! have vou bv violence robbed female innocence of its vir tue?" "Worse than that oh, worse than that!" "Murder, is it?" gasped the horrified preacher. "Worse than that!" groaned the smitten sinner. The excited preacher commenc ed "peeling off" his outer garments. "Here, 'Brother Cole!" shouted he; "hold mv coat I've found the fellow that soaped that horn!" Educating Girls. Educating girls for household duties ought to be considered as necessary as instruction in reading, writing, and arithmetic, and quite as universal. "We are in our house hold surroundings which affect most largely the happiness or mis ery of domestic life. If the wife knows how to keep house," if she understand how to"set a table," if she learned how things ought to be cooked, how beds should be made, how carpets should be swept, how furniture should be dusted, how the clothes should be repaired, and turned, and altered, and renovated; if she knows how purchases can be made to the best advantage, and understands the laying in of pro visions, how to make them go fur thest and last longest; if she ap preciates the importance of system, order, tidiness, and the quiet man agement of children and servants, then she knows how to make a lit tle heaven of home how to win her children from the street; how to keep her husband from the club house, the gaming-table and the wine-cup. Such a family will be trained to social respectability, to business success, and to efficacy and usefulness in whatever posi tion may be alloted to them. It may be safe to say that not one girl in ten in our large towns and cities enters into married life who has learned to bake a loaf of bread, to purchase a roast, to dust a painting to sweep a carpet, or to cut and lit her own dress. How much the perfect knowledge of these things bears upon the thrift, the comfort and health of families, mav be conjectured, but not calculated by figures. It would be an immeasurable advantage to make a beginning by attaching a kitchen to every girl's school in the nation, and have lessons given daily in the preparation of all the ordinary articles of food and drink for the table; and how to purchase them in the market to the best ad vantage, with the result of a large saving of money, an increase of comfort, and higher health in every family in tho land. IlaWs Jour nal. DrsousTrax A New Yorker wrote to Gen. Spinner, asking for his autograph and a "sentiment," whereupon tho veteran Treasurer wrote in reply: " You ask for my autograph aud sentiment. 3Iy sentiment is this: When a gentle man writes another on his own business he should enclose a post age stamp." Safe. Alluding to the danger of catching the small-pox noia handling greenbacks, a rural editor j remarket hat he is safe enough. j NO. 27. Fact and Fancy. An air of importance One?g own breath. Siam is becoming civilized, and. its king lias learned - to wear shirts and swear. : A Wisconsin editor speaks of a wind which "just sat on its hind legs and howled," , A Avestern paper talks about a certain occasion as one of calm, unimpassioned profanity I Buenos Ay res monkeys suffer from the genuine yellow iever, and Darwinists are delighted. A cctemporary says of a prorai nent General that "his sword was never drawn but once, and then ia a raffle." ' The Scandinavian settlers in Illi nois fully approve the new liquor law. They don't take Swedeuiu'ia theirn. A Southern editor oracularly af firms that the ladies of that lati' tude have done nothing to deserve the imputation of indolence. A belle of Richmond, Va., im ports her stockings from Paris at S42 a pair, and crowds flock to seo them whenever she goes Avalkinsr. A brain-working gentlemen re siding at a comer of the great thoroughfare complains that his bread is jepardized by the roll of Broadway. Ritualism a folly of the fashion able few ? Oh, dear ! no. On the contrary, the Ritualists are doing all in their power to adapt their services to the masses. Another organ of Avoman's rights has been established in Chi-O cago, under the title of the JJaU aice ; perhaps to indicate that where there's a will there's wcih. An incongruous person says that he considers the glass cabs, or "crystals," legitimate" objects foe the attention of Mr. Bergh,. since they inflict so much pane on, the horses. . u Women are still to be debarred from studying medicine in tho G German universities, the Cultus 0 Minister decided that there is no ilwnaiul lor lady i3octnr, .fiiul 1 hilt- female physic would be a mere drug in the market. General Brownlow (ominous name) telegraphs from India to the "paternal"- British government that twenty villages have been de stroyed by him, and all the South ern llowlongs subjugated. "How long, oh, Lord, Howlong? Yalensian law student named Newton has had the temerity'to accept Mrs. Beecher Hookers' chal lenge to a public debate on wo man's rights. He doesn't yet know that Newton's laws are quite inapplicable to femiuino matters. G A new religious sect lias sprung up in Virginia under the title of "Soul Sleepers." Saint (Susan B.) Anthony will probably be canon ized as their great gun, since her famous 'pistle against double beds clearly defines her position as a 'sole sleeper. Newly-devised nosebags for tho accommodation of work-horses when at lunch have small air-holes in them covered with Avire netting. This plan, according to a mad wag who jests even in his sleep, was devised with a view to im proving the breathe of horses. Two men having arranged to fight a duel in Rhode Island, the Governor issued a proclamation forbidding it, whereupon one of the parties sent him a note saying that one of them Avould stand in Connecticut and the other in Mass achusetts, and shoot over his mis erable little State, o A Vermont belle recently died from taking arsenic. It Avasn't disappointment in love, but disap pointment in complexion that caused the deed, Avhich was done Avithout suicidal intent, She might have learned from Shakespeare that she would have come to tho same complexion in time without the arsenic. A Kentucky paper gives an ac count ot a $3,000 hog-pen built by a woman-farmer in Scott county. It states that it is painted and grained, furnished with hot and 'cold water, heated with steam, and lighted with gas. The troughs mahogany, inlaid with ivory. Plans" of" the pen have been for warded to Greeley, and receive hia warm approbation. Its Cause. In Sweden the de crease of drunkenness during tho last six years is one of the most re markable features in the great im provement of the general moral and social bearing and character of the people. This improvement is attributed in large measure. to tho substitution of Friday for Saturday a3 pay day. o o o