o -1 i aw 111 ii i i'i1 mi i1 1 i n 1 1 i ESS o o O o o o YOL. 7. OREGON CITY, OREGON, FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 187; NO. 26. o Th .it llf If '11 fif i kII MP D 1 Hp It O O O A LOCAL DEMOCRATIC NEWSPAPER V O It THE lirmir, Business Mm, & Family Circle. ISSUEI) EVKHY FIU1AV. EDITOR A XI) P VI' LIS II HI' J OFFICIAL PAPER FOE CLACEAKA3 CO. OrTICK In Dr. Tliessing's Trick, next door to Joh?i Myers' store, uj-.vtairs. Term of Siilxioripfion SlBjlo Copy n Year, In Advance.. ..S2JjO ... l."0 " Six Mont lis Tormi of Advertising: Transient nit vf-rtis -m.nts, inHudinjr all legal notif-s, -j siuan- ot twelve lines oiirt wf'k - ' Foresch siilis-nnent iiis rtnm Ono Column, one year -'..'. " :: ::::::::::::::::::::: Luiiii'iM Car.!, 1 s-uare, one year 2."i l.Oil l-Jt(.IH) 4D.00 F. BARCLAY, M. C. S. Formerly Sanson to the Hon. II. V. Co. Thlrty-Jlve Your' KxperiMi--, PtiCTUlNS PHYSICIAN AM) iLU.t. Main Str -et. Or--;on 'ity. J. Y. NORR3S, ftl.D., (l.ATK OF ILLINOIS.) PIIYSKIU AM) sn;r,no o k e a o x v i r v, Ji r. ; o x. e:7"Will roiponil promptly to calls duritip: :tbr dav or'ninlit. Offlci at Ward's 1 ru store. a:i ik numd at tlii Cliff House at niht. n-bHiii"'- V. II. WATKSrSS, k i m D., PORTLAIiD, B7-i)I'I"If K dd Kfoow'T.-M!ii l-'.'-orre r First And Aidr sir. ts. K-sidi-nc cor a r of Maiuatii S-vonth str-rts. Velch & Thompson, DSN T 3 37G, varoncln odd I-Vllows' Tempi corner of First and Ald--r st r t s, Tor; land. Th patrons; r tlios" a-s.rtns s-j;" op-ra!iom tH in special r -ni'-st . N it r r:"r oxid.f tor th paml -ss exi r:i i m Artifiriat t. tti " lMt-r tlian tli - 1j :,' a cliap :v th-i clieap -st. Will be iu Or.- n City on Saturday. Nov. :;:tf B. HCTII.AT. ciias. wai:::k: Attorneyo-a' 0RE50N CITY, 7-OI'KICIv -Cliaraian's brick. Main st. .r)iiinrlTJ :tf. ATT0RZVS AND COI aSILLtJ liS AT-LAW. Orason GUy, Orc.cn. -Vill practic; in nil th" Ci;ri "f I li" Ktat. Sp?eial alt'-nt mil LCiveii t o eases ill th U. S. Iiad o il. it r. on City. .jarls7-'-tt'. ATTORNGY-AT'LAVrf, OKEUUX CITY, : : OIUXIUX. OKFICK treet. -Over Tope Tin S; JlniarT'I iai.1 -t i. A. F. 1 i J I ATTO I? N i: V A T 1. V V D kma's r.uil;5iii-, V Tinari.s7.J-ti. .rt- tod, Oregon. J. T. APPSRSOW, OFF1CK IX rosToFFICK IU'II-DIXf;. Xgml TpmltTH, ( lnrkamn-t C'otitjly Or dttrs, nud Ori-un t ity Orilcn BOUGHT AND SOLD. NOTASY PUBLIC. ) Iimii u-;;-ti.-t"d, Coll--t ions attended to, and a Ui-n r.il Uroln-a.c tjuin'-s c:irri-d on. jatnitf. " W. II. HIGIiriKLl). Jat ablUltrd itnrt- ' !', al the old .stnml. Jlaia Stri'rt, Orcon City, Crnon. An assort m nt of :it!e s, .Iwl- ry.and s t Ii Tliomas" Wi iht 'ioc's T- S2 all nt which are warranti-d to l- as V-LLA3 rpr -snt -il. "Kpiinair dun" on sliort notice, and bantful for past patronage. JOUX 31. IJAl'OX, IMIDRTKK ANDDKAT F.lt fn llooks. St.-it ioncry, l't-miiu- - TTfSVy' ery, etc., et c. Orrjron City. Ort'j;oii, BV.Vt Charaian A Wnrn-T's old stand ltly iM-cupi -d ty S. Aekrman. Main ft. A. NOLTMER X OTAR Y r U li L I (.-. ENTERPRISE OFFICE. OUEKOX CITV. For the vory host photographs, jroto Trnd "y A Itulofsnirs (laliry without STAIRS tier ml in the Klevatnr, 11 MontoniPry Sfr.Tt, a:i Frm.-lv.o, California. O o O I) IS. ;ru -wm v mi f nl"n , . YVhv do I love imv darling so? (loo'.l faith, my In-art, I hardly know, I liavi' such a store of reasons; 'Twould take me all a summer day Nav. saving half that I could say Yoiild till the circling seasons. Because her eyes are softly brown. Mv dove, who quietly hath tlown To me as to her haven? Ileeause her hair is soft, and laid Madonna-wise, in simple I raid, At id jetty as the raven ! I lwr lilivi cu-(if tit toneh. ot eiiill. nor licry over niueh, Rut soltlv warm as roses. Dear lips that chasten whilethey move, Lips tli.st a man may d;ire to love, Till earthly love-time closes. Because her hand is soft and white, Of toneh so tender and so liirht, That where her slender tinker Dotli fall or move, t tie man t whom The ;j;u:trd of ildi n wlii- pere l ' Comel" Leneath its si-ell iiiuiht linger! liee uise Iier heart is woman soft, St true, so tender, that I oft Do marvel that a treasure. So rie!i, so rare, to 1110 should fall. Whose sole desert so small, so small, Is loving past all measure! Deeause she has sin h store of moods, So arelily smiles, so staidly broods, So lovingly earesses; So that my love may never tire Of monotone, or more desire Than she, my love, possesses! Ah me! what know or what care I? Or what hath lo e to do it h "why'?" How simple is the reason? I 1- ve her for she is inv love. And shall while stars shall shis a hove And season follow season. CAPTAIN JACK'S CASU1STKY. I'm Captain Jack of the Mi loe tril e ; It 's 'jTovi-rnment wnisky that I mitiiPi And 1 like soim-timcs ly way ot a uihe, A quiet assassination. Tut I make a tr atv whenever I ean I'm- 1 'm Captain Jack and I know my plan : I'm a Credit Mohili. r Injun nnn. Ati-1 open tospcculation. ! i e talk of the rr-sorvat ion. hoth : 'Of course, to that 1 am not nnvj: h alii, And I make my little Injun oath To el se till' stipulation. ' Vi's." '-reserv i! J-n 1 1 's lixeil as a pair of e!i partv savs : iialani-es. And I ehe.t kle now mv res Mv meiit 1 think of ervatii m. 1 r -1 1 d if ol:l. To hrsian.T the truth one mmt live it. ( loOwlK is hoautv in its ih-si, e: i. To love is th only thing that can iil! ui etoruiiy. Art is tli ni iuif.'station of the in liaite in the inlinitf. DeTout is ,i s.'hool in wliieli truth alwavs grows stro:ig. ilithooit sl'ov th man as moi-ri- in j;ws l!a-tlay. nth i.; rieiicr than imaglnatioii; Ti she ovi-vsteps it on all sales. Nothing is lovelier or move holy than a thorough wifely woman. H is in learning music that. m;my votiI Id'-.il liearis h-arn Jove. is the mt, wli who s v. ar ha)j;est he he king or ; linds x-a -t'- in his lionie. ers( elites ;i g :ui l.tan a''a:n.st h.'mselt a.nl a 1 .eas; 1l l:iak. mankiiivl. The active man cares hiniseli. whether the ri need not tronhh- him. Tlie truest mark of with groat qualities, i to do ii-.il t ght haiiprr.s heing horn s heimr horn without envv. l'hvsie. for he most ):; ing else hut the suhstituh t. is IHitll- fov oxer- ei-i? or teieper.lliee. A great fault That a man thinks himself more than he is, and esti mate ; himself iess than he is worth. Life is a constant sunshine, which loath cannot interrupt any more than nielit can swallow the sun. Insults are like counterfeit monov; wo cannot hin;h hut wo are not t he i r he i n g o !!' -reil , ciini el!el to tuko them. Certain hook:-, appear to have hoon written not to give instruction hut to indicate that the author know something. 1i:avf. Yv'onns. A oi tion of the letter addressed hv (iovoi'nor Dix' of New York, to Kov. Dr. Tyng, de clining to inteifero wilh the judg ment of the Court in .Foster's case leservos to ho impressed on the memory ot every einet executive ' j , f rill Ml oTiicer in ti;o country. liiev win prove tin utterance of terror to tio lesperado -s of ew ork, who have too often committed crime in move wantonness, believing it to bo an oasv mat! or to elVect an os'-apo from punislnnp.t. Ciovernor ix says: I am a ke.l in disregard of the ev idence and the judgment of the high est jud.eial tribunal in the State on the law, to set aside the penalty awarded to the most atrocious of crimes. It seems to me that the in evi table effect of such a proceeding on my p ut, under the cirennvstances of this case, would bo to impair the force if judicial decisions, and to breakdown the barriers which the law has set up for the protection of human life. To this aet of social disorganization I cannot h-ml the ex ecutive authority confided to mo bv the people of the State. I deem it due to the good order of soeiet v to sav that, so far as depends on me. the supremacy of the law will be in llexibly maintained, and that overy man who strikes a murderous kli.ii- nt the life of hi e I., ... f el low must be made 10 icei mat ins wo cannot by own is in peril. If Tinnmss of liurnose attain tins end. we mav soon bo ioreei i to acknowledge the disheart ening truth that there is nothing so cheap or ill-protected as human fife. "The manufacturer of wine from grapes is coming into favor in Yir ginia." They used to make it out of crab-apples and copperas, but the cemeteries got to tilling up too rap idly. ' ' The rock upon which the English Cabinet failed to split Glad-stone. The C.'arrotted Siate. AN Al l'EAL, mOM THE TIUUlVF. TO TTITl NATION. Gov. r.rcEncry has issued the fol lowing address to the l.ooido of Louisiana and the Union. It xvill be transmitted to the Governors of States, mombers of the various State Legislatures, and otherhhd, officials! New Okleaxs, March i:, 1N7:5. 3)t:.vit Sin: I have the honor here with to enclose to von an address to the people of Louisiana and th Union, issued by authority of a joint resolution of the general" assembly. Permit me to ask your serious atten tion to its allegations, and also re quest that you lay it officially before the Legislature of your groat State. 1 he people of this State, without distinction of past sectional feeling. present party diileronoes, or of birth, race or color, fool that an issue has boon made in our case bv the illegal ami monstrous usurpations of certain oilieials, Avhieh. if suffered to be de cided against us, cither bv non-action or adverse action of Congress, in volves most certainly and gravely the liberties and the rights of every other State. The President has said in his mes sage: " Xo r.rer H;ri; control it c.rcr risi'il !u (tit if one of litem (t'tti Soiitln t'n Snt'.-i) thitt irijiihl ttol he f.rrrt i.tml in on' of t'te Si tics tinder UI.c rifctt in i ' " St llHU'X. Yv hat has been the action referred to? A United States district Judge sitting on the bench of the Circuit Court, lias seized a State Capitol, bv the use of the United States army created a Legislature by an interlo cutory order of the nature of an in junction, and installed that legisla ture in power bv a limiting them into the eanifol. past the1 guard of the United States Marshals, ".hos orders wore obeyed by those troops and excluding all others claiming seats, until that Legislature had keen seated and sworn. Senator Carpen ter characterizes this action thus: "I don't want to go before the Dooi.ile of "Wisconsin with tin testi mony of the Louisiana llepublicans themselves, admitting their frauds in setting up this Kellogg government and "with our voles here sustaining this acknowledgement, fraud and usurpation iinally executed and ac complislicd by the military force o the government of the United States.1 J no maiontv ot the renato com mittee ray of this: "The testimony doe- not show that voters were ilisi ra'.iehise.t m many instances on account of race, color or previous condition of servi tude, and therefore the law of tin General Government was not violat ed suiiicieiitly to authorize the inter f' ro?ice of Durell. The injunction placed by the Kiglh District Court of the Stale upon the counting of the returns by the 'Lynch b; avd1 was legal and should have been re spect -d. "The whole intorferror.ee by the United States court in the organiza tion of the legislature is a gross usurpation. The constitution ex pressly gives to each State the or ganization of its own legislature. A member has no right to contest for his :vat be fore a court of the United States. 'Jt is therefore cvih-nt that such a court has no authority to seat a hundred men at, the instance of the Lioutonan t-Govornoi-. Jn this con nection it becomes the painful duty of the committee to express their opinion of the action of Judg ell. A proceeding so inanife: legal has never come bef.re C. for its consideration in Dnr tly il- igre-ss con- nection United fail to with a court of tho Stites, and the oommittot tind words with which to ex press their of Durell.' abhorrence of the action Senator iks it as fol- lows: "A Federal judge is applied to for interference. Overstepping his jurisdiction, he does not interfere; ho restrains all other returning olli cers but those recognized and desig nated by him from returning the vote. y an act of usurpation still more palpable and flagrant, ho or ders that the State-house bo taken possession of by the troops, he vir tually orders who shall be members of the Legislaturt nay, I think it is not an inexcusable exaggeration when I say he virtually vnth cs or cre ttfes lint I,i'filittnre. In executing those gross and llagrant usurpations, he is supported by the military force of the Federal Government. The usurpation is consummated under the protection of Federal court, con venes. Thus the usurpation was consummated a usurpation without a shadow of law as an ex cuse, with nothing but fraud and force to stand upon a usurpation palpable, gross, shameless, and ut terly subversive of all principles of re -publican government a usurpation such as this country has never seen, and 7robably no citizen of the Uni ted States has over dreamed of. The offspring of this Legislature i., the Kellogg government.11 And even Senator Morton cannot avoid in his extreme partisanship showing his honest opinion of itsvil lainv in these words: "The conduct of judge Durell. sitting in the Cir cuit Court of the United States, can not be justified or defended. He grossly exceeded his jurisdiction and assumed the exorcise of powers to which he could lay no claim. In the Antoine case Judge Durell not only assumed to deter mine who constituted the legal return ing board, but to prescribe who should be permitted to take part in the organization of the Legislature, find to enjoin all persons from taking Dart in the organization trio trrrc not irefnrned Lif the Lineh hoard as elected, and this assumption of jurisdiction was made in the face of the express COURTESY OF UNIVERSITY provisions in the act of 1870 that its benefits should not extend to eandi- lates for Electors for Congress, or for mombers of the State Legislature. " His order issued m the Kellogg disc to the United States Marshal, to take possession ot the State house for the purpose of preventing unlawful assemblages, umier v-uu-ii the mar shal called to his aid a portion of the army of the Unnited States as a oo.sc com itnt it, can only be characterized as a gross usurpation. Upon these facts our citizens, m one of the largest mass meetings ever held in New Orleans, appointed a committee of two hundred of the most worthy and respected people in the citv, to wait upon the President and request the withdrawal of Fed eral interference. v In reply to the notice ot their coming, Attorney General Williams sent me the follow ing dispatch, Avhieh I quote without comment: Wasitixotox, I). C, Doc. Your visit with a hundred citizens will be unavailing no for as t!n I'rcs i lent it concerned. His decision is untile "nil trill not he clutiifed ', and the sooner it is acquiesced in, the sooner good order and peace will be restor ed. (Signed) Geo. II. YsTeetams, Attorney-General. In the extremity of our distress business being paralyzed, commerce f r igl i t on od aw ay , t rad o st oppod , c red i t destroyed, confidence lost, and, with al, taxes increased we a; peal to our brethren of sister States to consider our situation. Wo f.n-1 that what is our sad condition to-day may bo theirs some other day through the same moansand that therefore they should, and doubtless will, f,-oi interested in seeing that their Senators and ltep resentativos in Congress take stops to right those Avrongs. Our only hope is in the interposition of the States of the Union through Con gress; because if we seek to right ourselves, our enemies will revive against us the unhappy cries of the late civil war, and falsely represent us as seeking to reopen its dead is sues. As to this question, we point to the record of the last political canvass in the State to demonstrate to yen what is the truth, that our people have honestly and squarely accepted all the results of the war; the measures of reconstruction, the enfranchisement, sufi'raganship and right to oilice of the colored people, and all the constitutional amend ments. In the last canvass the I'eo p!o"s or ihision ticket had upon it llepublicans and Democrats, white and colored, Southern and Northern men, diers. ral and eon federate koI- In our platform we ignored last differences. Y"e sor.i-ht a 11 soi( lv to obtain a Government of the wliole people, llial saoui'l oe lie re- t se'..tatie economical and just. This Goornmont we obtained by the hon est votes of the people at the late election. It has been wrested from us :y t.us graee not describe lo despair of our p unless their can-' usurpation. I can yon the gloom and oolo. We feel that -e i s made a common one by the people of other States, elections, so far as we are concerned, are a mockery, and free Government ended. Hoping that this appeal may re ceive your mat ure and deliberate at t: i tion, and will be by you m.ido known to the people of your S'ah and that it may enure to the benefit of fn e and just government through out the Union, and cai nestly inviting yon to join in the appeal now being made by the pe plo of this State to the President for an extra session of Congress, in order that necessary and legal measures may be inaug urated by that honorable body which will give to the people, of Louisiana a just, free ami l'epubliean govern ment, I remain, sir, with groat con sideration, your obedient servant, .Tons McExEity, Governor of Louisiana. Domestic; Si.kvants. A Santa Cruz (('al.) paper states that an ef fort is about to be made in that town to secure a better olass of domestic servants than the Heathen Chinee aliords. A joint stock association is to be formed for the purpose of in troducing live hundred German girls. The oapit.il stock is to be .2.",oo:, of which .20. ()(! is already subs -ribed. When all the stock is taken an ;gout will be sent to the ru ral districts of Germany to hire the girls and secure their transportation to this country, where they will be hired out to farmers and others re quiring help, for a stated term, a 1 orcentage of their wages being de ducted to pay expenses. J'.r. Tin: Pakponino AnrsE. The ad vocates of abolishing the death pen alty for murder are mot with an op posing argument of much force in the record of several of the Ihistern prisons. In the Auburn (N. Y.) Prison, from LSl-" to 1K;.S there were convicts condemned for life, of which 101 received pardons. In Massachusetts, o" l"'1' ('c'nt of t.10 life prisoners are pardoned; in Ghio. 40 per cent; and in Wisconsin, :-' per cent. In several of the other States, the pardons bear a corre sponding average percentage. After the circunistnces of the trial and Here is another one of those de lightful facts of science: Feeling is a much slower sense than sight. If a man had an arm long enough to reach to the sun, and were to touch that bodv with the tip of his linger he would never lind out whether it was hot or cold, as ho would be dead before the sensation arrived at head quarters vears. which would require 100 A discontented wife in Buffalo al leges that her husband is noit coiijos mi litis, and offers in proof the cir cumstance that he has been accepted as a juryman in two murder trials. BANCROFT LIBRARY, OF CALIFORNIA, I ii fa muiis l'o vt y ec o n 1 Congress. The Forty-second Congress expir ed at noon Tuesday, March 4th. Within the last one hundred and fifty years there have been more famous legislative bodies than this, hut we do not remember one more infamous. There "wore conscientious gentlemen in the Senate and the House; but jirimn facie the case; is against the whole of them, and till the ' close of the present century membership in that Congress will, in the estimation of the general public, throw upon the incumbent the bur den of proving that he was not a dishonest man. The entire term of this Congress has been characterized by a series of disreputable transactions which have no parallel in our history. Wv wont through all the temptations of the war without seeing anything so out rageous as the doing of the two Houses over which Schuyler Colfax and James G. Plain have now presided.- Amid the seething mass of those transactions perhaps the two which will hereafter loom up the most conspicuously and bo the long est remembered are, first and chiefly, that though some twenty members of the two Houses wore proven before lenient committees of the one House or the other to have boon guilty of fraud, bribery, and corruption, and of double dealing and rank perjury in vain efforts to explain their offen ces, not one of them was expelled, omy two, and they on false pretenses, were mildly rebuked, while the rest wore whitened over till their reputa tions shone again; and secondly, that after this scandalous betrayal of their trusts, the two Houses filled utj the measure of their iniquity by voting themselves a large iuereV.se" of their salaries, not excepting the disgraced members whom even Pen Pntlor thought so infamous that they ought to be indicted by the Grand Jury and sent by the petit jury to thopoii itentiary. The Forty-second Congress! As its members sneak home with the money of the people lining their pockets, even boys at their marbles in the streets will point to them, one saying to his comrade, "There goes a member of the I'ortv-Seeond Con- grc int. :s!"' and the comrade, not deign to raise his eves, will respond. '.nl i.f can rwn i i!ti..fO This has boon Seor Itobeson's Congress. This his boon brother-in-law Casey's Congress. This has boon brazen-browed Pinch 1. lack's Congress. This has been drunken Judge I)u roll's Congress. Tin's has been the Congress of the French arms swindle. This has boon the Congress of (5 rant's Now York Custom Hons-o whitewashing. Tiiis is the Congress which looked approvingly upon Harlan's accept ance of 3 u rant's chocks for SI(l,IHlfl to aid him in purchasn. g his St-na- ! torial seat. This is the Congress which saw Pen Potior overawe one of its com mittees because it allowed to bo proven that Pen took J?10,f);)0 from the Union Pacific Pailroad for draw ing up a contract. This is the Congress which has condoned Colfax's perjury. This is the Congress which lot Ponierov out at the back door of the Indcpon tence bank lodge. This is the Congress which furn ished Professor Patterson with a coating of whitewash to go home; in but Aery thin though. This is the Congress, which in the face of the damning proofs of Sena tor Clayton's frauds, said to that shameless scoundrel, "Well done, good and faithful servant!" This is the Congress which dared not turn out Caldwell for buying his seat in the Senate because the Senate feared that in response to nearly evory vote in the afiirmative the enl prit wuld rise up and say "you're another!" This is the Congress which bound the sins and iniquities of Colfax, Patterson, Allison, Lo-an, Willson, Kellov. Dawes, Bingham, Garfield, Seoiield, and we know not how many other tainted Senators and Repre sentatives, upon the shoulders of Oakes Amos and James Brooks, with intent to send them as scape-goats into the wilderness, but failed to do so because it turned out that there wore not enough virtuous members in. the House to expel the corrupt ones. This is the Congress which groat railway corporations owned and used as their needs required, and which a venal lobby bought and sold day by day. This is the Congress which some Macaulay of the next century will describe as more infamous than that Parliament which originated Law's celebrated Mississippi scheme, and more corrupt than those Parliaments which Walpole used to purchase as he bought Merino shoo) and Flan ders mares to stock his estates in Sussex. In fact this is the Congress which the American people on Tuesday, as the clock struck twelve, hooted out of the Capitol! Dead. The New York Herald be lieves the great Credit Mobil ier partv is in articulis mortis, and knows that it not only deserves to die, but ought to bo also irretrievably damned. It says: "With the -expiration of the debauched and degraded Congress passes away the Republican party. No continued 2rofessions of virtue and reform can save the political or ganization whose loading members, with a large majority in both Houses of Congress, having shielded corrui tionists and 2erjurers and thus made themselves ros2onsible as a 2artv for the offences they were too cowardly or too base to condemn," Ihul of the W ho is a CJcntleman. An exchange copies the following correct and comprehensive answer to the above question, and urges every child as well as grown persons to commit it to memory, to be recited as often as practicable: A gentleman is not merely a per son acquainted with ceitain forms of the etiquette of life, easy and self possessed in society, able to speak and act and move in the world w ith out awkwardness, and free from hab its which are vulgar and in bad taste. A gentleman is something beyond this; that which lies at the root of all his pleasing is the same spirit which lies at the root of every Chris tian virtue. It is the thoughtful de sire of doing in every instance to others as lie would that others should do unto him. He is constantly think ing not indeed how he may give pleasure to others for the mere sense of pleasing, but how he can show- respect to others how he may avoid hurting their feelings. When he is in society, he scrupulously ascertains the position and relations of every one with whom he ovmies in contact that he mav give to each his due honor, his proper position. He stud ios now no may avoid touching in conversation upon any subject w hich may needlessly hurt their feelings how he may abstain from any illu sions which may call up a disagreea ble or offensive association. A gen A 1 . 111 1 iieiiian never amnios to never een appears conscious of anv person's de fect, bodily deformity, inferiority of talent, of reputation in the erson in whose society he is placed. He never assumes any superiority to himself, never ridicules, m-ver sneer never boasts, never makes a display of his own power, or rank, or advan tages such as implied in ridicule, or sarcasm, or abuse as lie never in dulges in habits, or tricks, or inclina tions which may be offensive to others. Information For (aim tlicwcrs. OIMME A C HAW. "Chewing gum," said the store keeper; " why, we sell more of that than of candy, though the sale isn't quite so good as it was a little while 1 ago." "Is it good to cat?" "Oh no; only to chew," said the man; "tin-re's a spicy sort of taste to it; and then folks get in the habit of chewing, and feel uneasy without something in their months. Some folks think it makes the teeth white." "Ah! I'll ask the doctor about that ;" and so I did. "All nonsense!" said the doctor, " folks say the same thing about to bacco. The fact is that the habit of chewing excite the salivary glands, causing an unnatural flow of saliva glands, injuring the mouth and teeth, and cheating the stomach. So far as the mouth is concerned, it is just as bad to chew gum as tobacco, and in fact it actually leads to it." "But gum is clean, doctor; it has a pleasant, spicy taste, and tobacco is dirty stuff." "What do you suppose gum is made of?" said the doctor, with a dreadful smile. "1 know," said I, triumphantly; " the manufacturers told me. Gum tragacaiith, gum arabic rosin and fat!" "Just so," said the doctor; "now read this," and he gave me news paper slip, and went away while I read: "The fat used in the manu facture of gum is almost wholly ob tained from dead animals, cats and dogs picked up about the streets and alloys, old omnibus horses, iu fact, any kind of re fuse fat." My dear ruminating animals, there is something to add interest to the pleasant, spicy taste of your cud, as you muse and meditate over it! I hope you will medftate to such good purpose that the trade in chewing gum may be ruined forever. Little Corjioral. Condition of the South. The London Xeirs has a valuable and in structive letter from a tourist in the Southern States of this country, w hose Views may be regarded as im 2artial, an. I certainly boar the im- 2rcss of intelligent observation. He reports that the whole South is suf fering for want of money to repair its deserted plantations and broken commerce, that the taxes are every where in arrears, and that they are so exorbitant as to ruin the small landholders. " But," he adds, " cap italists will not carry their money into communities where rascally legislators seize so much and give so little in return." Herein he touches the vital spot of the whole difficulty. He describes the negroes as working, after their fashion, just enough to keep starvation from the door, in isolated settlements. He 2ictures a well known weakness of the 2lantation hands when he says that " whore they have no 2''gs r poultry themselves, they 2robahly livo very near somebody who has, nnd that answers just as well." The Southern Legislatures are described as ' a daily burlesque upon govern ment monstrous than the extrava gances of Christy's Minstrels." He speaks of the situation as deplorable and melancholy, but thinks it onlv a natural result of the great social rev olution, and believes that it will be righted "as soon as the government improves." The question is, how soon the government will ini2rove at the present rate? Vide Louisiana. A Chicago Alderman made a speech half an hour long in sii2qort of the question of koeiing oen beer shojis on Sunday. "Whisky," said the great man "is a thing which can be keit over from Saturday till Monday but lager beer cannot." Is the future French monarchy hid beneath the veil of T(h)eirs? l'uii and Fact. O Newark, N. J., proposes So run a 'horse-railroad" by steam. To keep the Indians oniet remitm considerable Ingin-annuitv. Kerosene averaged one victim ra. week last year in Madison Wi The Dead-Letter Office in Washing ton is called the "Literary Morgue." o lhe newly elected Senator from Massachusetts came out of the Bout well. G An Illinois Senatorial committee lias reported in favor of abolishing Grand juries. The Iowa State Woman's Suffrage Association has a surplus of $1 G3 in its treasury. Since the marriage of Pere Hya1 cinthe, it takes himself and wife to make a pair. Tobacco is not only a slow poison but is said to lie the slowest poison in the world. O Although O. F. is called3 "a crazy Train," it is evident he has lucid trains of thought. The public receives the. resignation of Senator Caldwell with a gla J spirit of resignation. O A confirmed corruptionist Collec tor Casey's confirmation by the Unit ed States Senate. q Auburn, Maine, produced 2,018 cases of shoes and several cases of small-pox last week. Florida's gold mine is reported by experts to be almost big enough to, till a tooth with. A Western musical editor says Mile. Ormeny "has a magnificent voice for a fog-whistle." Gold is at a premium of only thir ty thousand per cent, as compared, with 2-aper currency in Hayti. A Pennsylvania woman challenges any man in her county to8 a wrestling match for the championship. The Supreme Court of Vermont has set aside a verdict which the jury reached by means of a raflle. The young man who boasted thftt he could marry any girl he pleased found that he couldn't please any. Millions of robbins are roosting near Murfreesboro, Tonn., and all the in? habitants are robbin' the roosts. A young lady "took a horn" the other day in church and nobody was shocked. His first name war Wiiiiam. A traveling agent from Cincinnati is going through the west soliciting orders for whiskey and tombstones. There is nothing singular in the fact that a boy makes a wry face when he takes his first "nip" of old Bour bon. Having a Young Men's Christian Association, Brazil is beginning to keo2 a shari look-out in its custom houses. A female student of medicine wants ir-0 "to buy a man to cut iq-" Most Avomeu can cut 1121 a man chcaier than that. Thousands of 2ersons die eAery year from drinking hot water, ami their deaths are attributed to drink ing tea and coffee. Members of the last Congress who sign recei2ts for the wages voted to themselves by themselves, are said to do it with a t-leal 2en. An ordnance manufacturer, haA'lng heard that the Yellowstone region is full of conons, is organ izingan ex2 dition to dig them out. O A rise in the? 2n""ce f strychnine is riqiorted in Alabama as the result of a recent act of Legislature exemp ting widows from taxation. The Salt Lake girls are on a matri monial strike. They have formed an agreement not to marry unless tho husband Avill be content with, one wife. o The beneficial result of enforcing temperance by legislation is shown O in Vermont by an official re2ort that there are 10,000 habitual drunkards there. An Iowa man now languishes in O prison because his Avife to whom he deeded all his real estate refuse I to become his surety for 1,C00 ball in a criminal suit. What is the difference betAveen a wave Avashing over a ship or the same vessel being attached bv the Sheriff? Answer one shijqied a sea, and thoo other seized a ship. 1 O The Y. M. C. A. of Chicago pro poses to furnish all the railways in that neighborhood with bibles, re- O gardless of the circumstance that the coni2anies make their own scrip sure. Rhode Islanders are multitudin-ousl- signing petitions for the reto- q ration to the death 2'enalty, the Stato not being large enough to isolate its murderers from the rest of the com munity. Kansas is proud oT the preeosity of a new town called Sargent, Avhieh thongR barely a fortnight old, has sent to market more than 8,000 buf- O falo hides, and had three murders committed Avithin its limits. California ceases the centenarian records cf humanity Avith a live frog lately set free from the centre of a stratum of sandstone which, accord ing to sir William Thomisons chro nologA", must be .4e-ersil millioityears old. A felonions Oregonian was lately caught in the act of purloining two grindstones. When rebuked by the magistrate for his folly in stealing such heaA-y articles he promptly re plied that he only wanted to try th'heft of 'em. Q O O O