o VOL. 6. OREGON CITY, OREGON, FRIDAY, JULY 19, 1872. NO .38. .' 0 sssss'' ''!"'"" '''i-.TJ1, . in-Tit n-iw- i--r - if p r'-mL-.uL-.ju .,.1. . in-ill. r. M JJa ,J,,iMt, .ltl,l.w,,WiLI,1 , , rrillff1w n , ,,aWJ.M.w.A.. -. x j .xiiBwMHi' jrfg-gaawa o . - - ! ' ' ' " ' ' ' " o jje iUccIiln (enterprise. .4 DEMOCRATIC PAPER, FOR THE Businessman, the Farmer A nd the FA MIL Y CIR CLE. J SUED EATJIY FRIDAY DY A. FOLTfiER, EDITOR AND rilRLISIIER. OFFICE l Dr. Thessing's Click Building a TERMS of SURSCRTPTIOX: Single Copy one year, in advance, 52 CO TERMS of ADVERTISING : Transient advertisement, including all legal notices, i - . of 12 lines, 1 w.$ 2 50 For each subsequent i nsertiun 1 (if) One Column, oue year $120 00 II il f " 00 Qiarter " " 40 Business Card, 1 .square one year 12 H'W Remittances to be made at the risk o Subscribers, and at lite expend of Agents. BOOK AND JOB PRINTING. er The Enterprise office is supplied with beautiful, approved styles of type, and mod ern M.VCfllNE IMtKSS. which wiil enable tVe Proprietor to do Job Pi kiting at all times Neat, Quick arid Cheap ! tf3 WovU solicited. All li.ninf.t-i tr.-ms -iciumi vpon a Specie basi-- B U SI NESS CA RD S. 7 IT. W ATKINS, M. D , SURGEON'. PoRTi.Axn. Oiu-xun. OFFICE 0 1-1 IYllows' Temple, comer First .md Vlder streets Residence coiner of Main and Seventh streets. s. iu:t;uT. cu.vs. e. warren. HUSLAT a, WARRED Attorneys at Law, OFFICE eU.VRtAN'S r.UICK, MAIN STREET, oiif.:-.on city.o hx.on. March 1T-J:ti" F. BAHCLAY, Ell. n, G. 8. Formerly Surg -on to the Hon. II. B. Co. 35 Veins Expciiesico. rR.vcTici.xa trysictan and surgeon, r.Iniii Stsfit, Ovrsflii Ci'y, ATTORNEYS AND rOOffiLORS IT-LAW, WILL 'UACTIC; IX ALL THE CO CUTS of the .-sun'. -'"Spix'ial attention given to cases in the U."s. Laid Or'i?" at Oregon City. April is:-':tf Et tldished since BR,at the old stand, Miin Slrttt, Otu-;;nn C'-:1, Oregon. TV An Assort meat of Watehes.Jew- t-;a e'ry. a:i 1 S-.:Ht Thomas' weight ; . -v ( a iji );;;;s, ;ui oi wiiio.i are warraioeu ::r f to be as representee!. n 1 fi cikf-:! for past favor: rrx. . x C?5tv Dm rrnnu. it 0 REG OX CITY. All orders for the delivery of merchan dise or p i.:kares and freight of whatever des cription. to any part of tiie city, willbecxe cute 1 promptly and with care. A. G. WALLIX'G'S Pioneer Book Bindery- Corner of Front anil A liter Street, PORTLAND, OREGON. CLANK COOKS RULED and COLXD to anv desired pattern. ML'src HOOKS, MAGAZINES, SEW? PAPERS, Etc., bound m every variety of style known to the trade. Orders from the country promptly at tended to. TOIIX M. 13 AC ox, Importer and Dealer in T-"v EE CCS CCE :0 S5 STATIONERY, PERFUMERY. Ac, ic, Oregon CHy, Oregon. At Chnrm-it't-fy Warner' old tthd, lately oc cupied by S. Ack'-nnan, Main atrtct. lo tf DR. JB WELCH, DENTIST. OFFICE In Odd Fill. ' Tcrjle, en of First siml Aid. r Strrc ts, Co- ' ls i . The patronise of thoe destrins superior ope-Atio is is in special reqnet. Nitmusox id - 'o- th n iin'ess extraction of teeth, "5fA' ti icial teeth -better than the best,' lid ''';: -1 p as t'tr ?htltft. Will tie in Oregon City on Saturdays. Nov. 5:'f J. M. Til " FSON, C W. FITCH. TH 3SOr & FITCH, AND Real Estate Agents, EUGSK I CiTY, OREGON, OFFICE TWO DOORS NORTH OF THE POSTOFFICE. REAL ESTATE BOUGHT AND SOLD. LOANS NEGOTIATED, AND AB STRACT OF TITLES FURNI5IIED. WE II AYE A COMPLETE A DETRACT of Title of all property in Eugene City, an 1 perfect plats of the same, prepared witb reat care. We will practice in the different Courts of the Stat-. Special -attention eiven to the collection of all claims that niav be placed in our hands. Leeal Tenders by-rH i;d ,.Id. GAZETTED, The type setter stands before hi.s case 1 1n- gas burns low and the night is deep: And over the slavering chimney stacks Darkness and shadows creen." And the city is lost in sleep'.' Tha type-setter standa there gaunt and lib dim old eyes and a weary brain ; Ami he sighs -d cadence solemn and low. To the beat of bitter rain On the rattling casement and pane. Tiemble the rafters, roof, and Moors. As he fingers the tvoes (in his desolate v-iy); And he hears tli? music faintly Lome From the Iheatroovei the. way. At some strange old tragedy play. The old man sings, and tremble the floors Willi the bellowing engine down below. And the crash oi the whirling axle bars. And the thunders that from them grow, Echoing to and fro. As he fingers the types (in his detolate way) He ?e:s them tip wtih a heavy lead ; And a marge of black encircles his work The niime of the man just dead : A soul in the battle sped. And he sihs as he thinks, this man so "Winking and blinking before his case, How. out in the dark and desolate night, home loim oi womanly grace Is weeping upon her lace. Lower and lower the gas lights burn, And grow the shadows duUy and gray; And the storm is hushed and the music's swell And the theatre over the way, And fi fished the tragedy play. And the type-setter wipes his dim old eyes ; The types no more wilh Lis fingers move ; And he smiies that while setting the name below. The angels, in tender love. Were setting it up above. Grroit's familiars-. It is a painfully interesting p;roup of familiars that surround and con trol Gen. Grant. Look at them, as they are set out by the Xew York Sun : There is brother-in-law Dent, who tends the door of the White House, and peddles patronage on d u e e o n s i d e t a t i o 1 1 . There is brother-in-law Casey, who runs the Custom House at Xew Orleans, and tried to break up the State Government of Louis iaua because he could not control 1 1 , There is brother-in-law Corbin. the central figure of the Black Fri day goid conspiracy, who contrived to make 25,000 out of it for one of the members of the White House family, and who would have made all of them rich, perhaps, it another of the family had not got frightened at Washington and backed out and leit poor Corbin in the lurch. There is the fattier of this inter esting group, cunning old Jesse himself, who bargained with Stoms for 500 to keep the latter in the enjoyment of a gaugersbip in the Cincinnati Custom House. There is Gen. Babcoek, who un dertook to engineer the San Do mingo job in contravention of in ternational law, .and dailv violates a law of Congress by acting as Grant's private secret a 1-3-. There is young Col. Leet, who with Gen. Grant's letter in his pocket, made a good thing out of the order business, and still linger in that rich pie, and a warm place in the affections and the interests of his great patron. There is Hobeson, Grant's right bower ii the Cabinet who thinks it a small consideration to pa a con tractor 08,000 in violation of the law, provided the contractor knows how to make Christmas presents in a graceful way to the right person. There is Choi-penning Creswell, who thinks a half million or so not too much for a mail contractor, provided lie appreciates addition, division and silence. There is Bancroft Davis, who made out out "case" for Geneva, and concerning whom it would be interesting to know precisely how much lie personally is to get out of the Alabama claims. " There is the whole carpet-bag throng, who have run the Southern States in debt to the amount oi' nearly three hundred millions of dollars, and have not a shadow of doubt that the preservation of the three amendments depends upon keeping the patron saint of these cormorants in power for another four 3-ears. There is W. II. Kcmble, a lead ing member of Grant's National Lommittee, who wrote that now notorious Addition, Division, and Silence letter. We might extend this catalogue of Grant's friends. But this will suuice lor the present. Rough ov -LtTTt.B Ruonr." T!;- Louisville JonrnaK referring to the fa that a party is to build a hotel in Rhode Island 92 feet long, by CO feet wide. Jx presses astonishnu-nt that the authorities would '-permit anybody to put the S;ate all under one roof in that way" Tt j expected to be finished in September. Rob says : "Horace Greeley will have an opporti::..:;. ui auurcssin 01 auurcssincr the u-tiAta i,1 .c ;;i tne Cin:;g ro-sm, o- e t:!f-?f!or." A Contrast. DAVIS AND LEE AND THE GREAT UNITED STATES GIFT-TAKER. As a specimen of the differeut stuff that public men may be made of, we copy the following pointed contrast. It is from the Richmond correspondence of the Cincinnati Commercial. It leaves no little room for the reader, as the letter writer suggests, to draw the con trast for himself. Through every line about the refusal of Lee and Davis to take gifts, stands out the base contrast of the Seneca-Gift-Enterpriser : Back of the Capital, on Marshal street, stands a large residence, one of the finest in Virginia,. It oc cupies a commanding position, known as President hill. This house was built man' years ago y a wealth' gentleman named Brockenbrough. He aspired to have the most costly and beautiful residence and surroundings in Richmond, and to that end spared neither money nor pains. The grounds were laid out in beaut ful style, traversed by gravel walks and adorned by statuary and foun tains. When the capital of the Confed eracy was removed from Mont gomery to Richmond, the City Council here proposed to do some thing handsome for "President Davis;" so they bought the Brock enbrough residence, with the in tention of presenting it to him. When he arrived here from Mont gomery the city authorities had gone so far as to pay for the prop erty, and had the title vested in Mr. Davis. A formal presentation of the property was then made by the City Council, when much to their surprise and mortiiication, he respectfully 'et firmly refused lh. present. He warml thanked the city authorities in this behalf, yet he could not, consistent with his own self-respect and the digni ty of his office, accept the gift. The city, however, refused to take the property back, and for a time there was a quandary. Mr. Davis, however, held out lirmly, and. at last the matter was compromised by an agreement onthepartof the city to become the owner oi' the property, and an agreement by Davis to live on it during his term of oliice. His term was cut off by the operations of the Federal army, and has never been f iled out. The property now belongs to the city, and is used for school purposes. I don't wish to draw any con trast between the canducl of Jeif. Davis and Grant in the matter of acce pting houses and lots .as gifts, but the reader can do so tor him s If. .Alter trazma: tne rect: ar. turee stoned, stuccoed pile be lore mentioned, thinking of the hopes ami ears, disappointments, sor rows, and joys that must have suc cessively inhabited the breast of the rebel president while he inhab ited the city's three story house. I passed on to take a look at the residence occupied by General Lee during the war, and yet known as the "Lee house." It is a plain un pretending three story brick build ing. Xo. 707 Franklin street and is now occupied by Mrs. George Davis. Whether it was the prop erty of Lee or not, I don't know, but at all events he occupied it. At the beginning of the war a number of wealth' citizens of Richmond made up a handsome sum of money to buy General Lee a house suited to his station and raid-;. But he refused to accept the proffered present, and the mon ey was refunded to the subscribers. Here we have two instances of the most prominent men in the late Confederacy. In the light of our President's conduct, these two old Confederates were great fools. The Cotton Crop of IS 72. The. report of the Department of Agriculture on the cotton crop of this year is encouraging. The av erage increase of the area in acres planted throughout the cotton States over that of last vear amounts to about thirteen p:r cent. The condition of the plant isabout as favorable as at the correspond ing period of last year. If there fore, nothing unusual occurs to damage the crop between this time and the time of gathering the yield will be probably thirteen per cent greater than last year. This increase is not likely to affect the market price much, for the increas ed demand keeps fully up to the augmented supply. When the Sotitii recovers entirely from the war, its labor becomes well organ ized again, and a flow of immigra tion sets in there, we shall have a greater cotton product and cheap er cotton This is what happened to the man who refused to buy his wife a Dolly Varden : His wife, she k-ft a note behind. V tiich read. "I bej; your pardon. Cut I'v run away wilh a nice vouhsr man Who bough; m? a Dol'y Vsr'lei.-'" Corpses in Hum. A IIORniDLE RUMOR. N. Y. Sun, June 2oth. Pale consternation was seated on the face of every Brooklyn poli tician yesterday. The saloons were deserted, and the barkeepers employed themselves in chasing flies from the counter, and boot blacks from the doors. " Every thing looked melancholy. A Sihi reporter heard a "gentleman" in vite an Alderman, a Supervisor, a Commissioner, and a prominent heeler to take su'thin'- They all refused except the heeler, who said: "Now dei e's notion' in dem bottles what's got de seal on, 'case yer can't get notion' in after the wax is 1 mt on." The others however, persisted in their refusal. Unable to account for this strange phenomenon, which the reporter saw three different times during the afternoon, lie in terviewed a barkeeper. "I don't know what's der mat ter," said the barkeeper. "Some bloke is injuring business, and if der Board don't take action dere's no protection. Xow, as far as I'se concerned, all our liquors are gen uine, and have been in the house long before that dam vessel came to port. Outside of sasparilly and sich we haven't taken liquors in since last Wednesday, and der boat only come in Friday night." "Ah !" said the reporter, as he finished drinking the small bottle of soda he had ordered, "then you are all right." "Why, uv corse I is, but will you believe me, de Alderman and do rest won't believe a word I say. Dey think dat we've got some of de "spirits which dose fellers were in dat were fetched from Cubv on de vessel." At this point a couple of strang ers entered and interrupted the talkative barkeeper. They called tor whisky. As they drank it the barkeeper whispered, "This is the iirst glass of hard stuff I've sold to-dav, and I wouldn't hev sold that if these fellers weren't country men. ' Still mystified, yet having a slight idea of the trouble from what he had heard, the reporter made father inquiry, ami learned that last Friday a vessel arrived from Cuba or some of the islands contiguous thereto. On Saturday eight large casks were removed from her hold. Each of those casks contained a dead body, and the liquor which preserved them on the voyage was sold to a whole sale dealer, and by him it is said was distributed all over the city. All attempts to discover what par ticular kind of liquor it was that filled those eight ca-ks proved un successful. The few who tire aware of the fact are sedulously endeav oring to keep the matter secret. One of the politicians said: "If they would tell us whether it was rum or gin, why we could shake that particular drink until we knew the d n stuff was till consumed, but as we don't know anything about it, why we got to sheer clear of everything until we are worn out. I understand," he continued, as he looked wistfully toward a neighboring bar-room, "that the Board are to send a com munication to the Common Coun cil of New York, and I wish them luck." At the meeting of the Board a resolution was ordered to be sent to the Xew York Board that the shed around Fulton Market in Ful ton street, from Front to Water and from Beckman to Burling Slip in South street be removed. It is hoped that the Xew York Com mon Council will take immediate action, if this will re-establish confidence .and good feeling, al though the reporter was unable to understand what connection the streets in Xew York have with the eight casks containing an unknown brand of liquor and the dead bodies. A London, Ontario, paper has the following among its "scientific discoveries:" A new fashioned buste was found in the cricket field yesterday, which consisted of several newspapers, three pairs of hose, two "quilted" petticoats (nearly worn out), two old slouch hats, a pair of top boots, a bunch of hay. a piece of stair carpet, and a cord about three feet long. . A Louisville man, says the In dianapolis Ecenimj Journal, very drunk, fooled a rattlesnake, winch he found on the common, by letting it bite him fifty times. A snake is fooling away its time in bitting a Louisville man. They are not afraid of snakes down theie until they get into their boots. They have a precise young man in the office of the Worcester Ga zette who never goes to bed or gets up. ' He "retires" to the arms of Morpheus, and ttarisesM when the br'n-'ht aurora gilds the eastern hor izon. An ! heV a printer. Carl cliurz. The following letter from Carl Schurz, to Governor Palmer, of Ill inois, in reply to an invitation to attend the Liberal Republican Con vention of that State, will explain his position in regard to the ap proaching Presidential contest : St. Louis, June 25th. 31 y Dear Sir: I regret to say that it will be impossible for me to attend the Convention of Liber als of Illinois to-morrow. I arrived here last nigh from the East, and find an accumulation of business which demands my immediate at tention, besides I desire to address my constituents here before taking part in the campaign elsewhere. You have my earnest wishes in your endeavors to rally for united action all the elements in opposi tion to that system of policy which is now controlling the Government and the people of this Republic, and which has not inappropriately been called Grant ism. It is time that the people of the Xortli and South be once more bound togeth er by inspiring consciousness of. common nationality, common rights, common duties ; and to this end it is necessary that the tradi tional barriers be broken down and that the policy of force by which the embers of civil strife are assid uously fanned, and bitter feelings of the past are kept alive for parti san advantages, give way in those moral agencies to conciliation and fraternal intercourse,withotit which our Republican system cannot long endure. It is time that despotism of party spirit be broken, which rules our national legislation. The past organization of office-holders, debauched with corruption, demor alizes and subjugates public opin ion, and stands in the way of every true, and thorough reform, and to this end it is necessary that the embodiment of that despotism, the present administration, be defeated in its efforts to continue in power, and that thus a free field be opened for the reformatory movement, nn trammeled by selfish partisan con trol, whether we be able to accom plish till we desire or not. We certainly can accomplish this if for that purpose we unite in an energetic effort, and our success will be a great step in the right direction. Although I cannot be with you to-morrow, I hope to be able to co-operate with you to that end in the cause of the Liberal movement. Very respectfully, etc., Oak 1. Sciiurz. Gov. Yarmouth on Grant. Governor War.moutii, of Lou isiana, has declined a nomination for the Governorship, for the rea son that the Convention nominat ing him was favorable to the re election of Grant In his letter of declination he says : "The success of Gen. Grant at the ensuing Presidential election would be a calamity such as can not be contemplated without alarm. It would be the perpetua tion, perhaps the permanent estab lishment of personal government in its worst form. It would be the commencement of imperialism in politics, and the utter and hopeless degredalion of political morality. It would be the coutinuence of an odious executive and legislative tyranny which tramples with equal indifference upon the rights of per sons and communities; which over turns all the inanities of public lib erty, and drags thousands of peace able citizens to the common jail on the false pretense of secret conspir acy; which uses the bayonets of its'soldiery to overawe a conven tion of the people, and prostitutes the courts of the country and the officers of the law to the service of an audacious attempt to overthrow the government of a State. "It was in order to avert these evils and to join in the general pro test against these infamous acts, as well as to save this State from the further depredations of the ring of Federal ofiicials who have persistently used their per sonal and political power to suborn and corrupt the Legislature, that I went to Cincinnati and partici pated in the nomination of Gree ley and Brown. It is with the view of assisting to prevent the triumph in this State, of a party whose success would fill the Leg islature with the representatives of organized ignorance and unblush ing venality, would cause irrepara ble injury to our commerce, would irretrievably ruin our credit, and bring contempt and scorn upon even the beneficial results of Re publican policy, and upon the whole scheme of Republican re construction, that I have resolved to devote all my energies to the service of the Liberal Republican party. and the allies who may act with it in this contest. Sub-cribe for the EsTzrp.iSE. Changing Front Without Cause. The Xew York 3Tation, an able Republican journal and one of the leading spirits of the Liberal move ment, now seems determined to support Grant. It has a bitter feeling against Greeley and without the slightest cause for its political change. It would have been satis fied with Adams, but cannot sup port the white-hatted philosopher. The JSation is an advocate of Free Trade, and with the two platforms before it that of Cincinnati and the office-holders' declaration at Philadelphia it declares its prefer ence for Grant over Greeley. The tariff question as agreed upon at Cincinnati was left to be decided by Congressional action, and must be regarded by those m favor of a pure revenue tariff as far superior to the declarations made at 1 niiadelphia. liio iccniny lost, also a i'ree lraue organ which favored the Liberal Repub lican movementjis not satisfied with Horace Greeley, but it does not quite agree with the Kaftan in its views. It cherishes the hope that hope that Grant's Administration may be improved by the riddance of the Senate from corrupt advisers who have directed the President's policy. These are slight chances and too desperate to be taken in an election to secure a chief magis tral". The probabilities of Grant's re-election producing an amend ment of conduct in respect to his public or private life are very re mote. His re-election would con firm him in the ways and practices which have excited so muca just censure ot his conduct. Even while the approaching his intimacy with the vicious characters who visit Lon Bianch while he is there is very unseemingly in a man in his exalted position. Greeley would have no such sur roundings in public or private life His knowledge of men must be - j very extensive, for his long career as iournalist has afforded hint the best school for learing human na ture. Even the faults alleged against him are. virtues in the sta tion to which he aspires, compared with the notorious rival. It is bet ter to be economical than sordid: better abstemious than intemperate; better be homely in attire, than gorgeous and magnificent by parad- ing tne gins received irom present makers. In every moral respect the sage will be better than the soldier. " Iead Letters.' Tiro Million Dollars Risked in Misdirected and Unraa'd 'o--e Envelopes. The aggregate carelessness of the American people is strikingly shown by a statistical statement in the lstal Record of 'the number of letters sent to the Dead Letter Of fice during a single year. It ap pears that during last year nearly three millions of letters were re ceived at that office, of which sixty- j eight could not be forwarded for the reason that the county and State were left off the direction; four hundred thousand were un stamped, and more than three thousand were mailed with" no di rection at all. Some of the unstamped letters may have lost their miniature por traits of American statesmen through the non-adhesiveness of Uncle Samuel's mucilage, but how three thousand persons could mail simply blank envelopes passes our comprehension. It must be that they were bound to write a letter mi to some disagreeable acquaintance, to fulfill the letter of the law of correspondence, and thus deliver themselves from the burden of "ow a letter" a letter without the cor responding obligation of receiving an answer, or else the American people are wonderfully careless. The strangest part of this state ment is that there were found in these letters money orders to the amount of two millions of dollars. That a tired lover or a cold friend should write a tender epistle and trust it to the hands of a post-office clerk, in an envelope innocent of even a single line of direction, is perhaps possible; but that old John Casiidown should send off letters to his business correspond ents in the same fashion is hard to be believed. An amusing story is told of an old lady, who having been seen to study a dictionary for a very con siderable time, was asked what she thought of it, when, with great simplicity, she answered that she thought it would be very nice reading if it were divided into chapters. Anything. A waiter at a res turant going over this formula, "What will you have, sir, roast beef, roast mutton, roast veal, roast chicken," was interrupt ed by the hungry Democrat saying, "I don't care, hurry up; anything to beat Grant." Facts and Fancies. A rare flower liteness. The pink of po- o Cash advances Attention to a rich widow. What goes most against a farm er's grain? His mowing machine. When is a lady's hair like news ? When it is found in the morning papers. A rattlesnake informally adjourn ed a colored Radical meeting at Mobile, recently. There is not one Democratic newspaper in the State of Mississip pi that opposes Greeley. Some of the largest steamships burn eight hundred tons of coal crossing the Atlantic Ocean. One of the candidates for the llawaiinan Legislature is in favor of the repeal of the kanawaihook- amakama. Prisoners in the David county, Florida, jail, are farmed out to any responsible person who will pay heir lines. o There is a man in Illinois Judge Treat who pretends that he b.as read the Alabama claims corrrko pondence. Yvhen a young lady offers to hem a cambric handkerchief for a rich bachelor she rnean to sew in order that she may reap. An Iceland judge, we are told, asked it all the jury were united "Yes, judge," was the reply, "we'r re an irozen together' Ilenan, who has been lecturing in Paris on the "Book oi Job," is advised to come to Washington and lecture on the "book of jobs." Some one says that a strongr gument against suicide is, that it is the height of impoliteness to go anywhere until you arc sent for. A man who has traveled through Xew Jersey says he saw some land t n ere so poor that you couldn't raise a disturbance on it. The name "grass widovv' is,of French origin. It is derived from th French grace, and originally meant a widow by courtesy. The way of the World When the world has once got hold of an untruth, it is astonishing how hard it is to tret it out of the world. 1 tiere are but three farms in Massachusetts having over 1,000 acres of land one of them is in Bristol, one in Dukes and one in Xorfolk countv. The duty on strychnine has re cently been reduced to 30 cents, Tii is places this popular mode of exit from this mundane sphere within the reach of all. An Iowa nper says the grass hoppers and potatoe bugs met in joint convention at Council BJuffs the other day. They decided to reject the one term principle. The Japanese girls at Washing- 0 ton are getting along finely in their English. They have already mastered " Dolly Varden" and "How is that for High ?" A Xew Orleans thief lately sent back the stolen clothes of an under sized citizen, with a note saying that he would wait for his victim lo grow. The oldest Postmaster in the country is John Seiberling,ot Lynn ville, Pa.; he has held his office continuously for fifty-two and a quarter years. Xew Jersey, which does more hanging and has more hanging to do than any other State in the Union, will hang a woman on the 10th of July. In 1702 was built the first Epis copal church in Xorth Carolina. In 1700 the first Episcopalclergy man, the Rev. Daniel BretT, went to the province. "The whole thing has gone to the devil," said a gentleman of some unfortunate speculation. "X'ever mind," said Jerrold, "you'll get all back when you die." An attorney observed to a broth er in Court that he thought whis kers very unprofessional. "You are right," replied his friend, "a lawyer cannot be too barefaced!" One reason why the Philadelphia Inquirer, (Rep.) is opposed to Greeley is because he has but two brothers-in-law. That paper thinks that the idea of running this great? government with but two brothers-in-law is absurd. "Why is dat hat like the United States?" said Pompey to Sqaush, holding up his delapidated beaver. "Cos cos dunno, niggar." "Well, cos t's not subject to a crown." The Woman's Club in Boston are to form a preparatory class of girls, fit them for college, and then make a formal demand for the ad mission to the colleges of the conn- try. 0 0 0 O 0 G O O e o o 0 o O o o