-. - fc, , - , i . - ' 1 , ' r o o O o o o o 0 O o o ; O ii ii hi ii i ii i hi hi o r3 VOL. 7. OREGON CITY, OREGON, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1873. NO. 46. drift ,vO irrfo irfifi ((' si'' ft WW vjr aw o awiV : r O r h c O c f CAK( XOM- in katk Hir-LAun. Hold tli" sf a-shcll to thine ear. And the niunniir of the wave From its n-sv de pths mayst hear, bike a ! from out the grave Calling t!ir the night to thee! Ivnv foul soft :iil far-away. From a silent, distant shore. Where is m ither night nor day. Nor the sound of plying oar ; For all sleep In-side that sea! Low- and soft. l)tit constant still, Km-it murmurs evermore With a steady, pulsing thrill. Of the waves ii:hm the shore, And it 'tells nought e lse to thee. H M iiiv ! ti t up to thy ear, nd till' 'IC i loved name Sinning through its depth An.? the son.: is still the Tia murmur from the si may: sai nl.', ;t hear. From the great sea of my love, i'.ir-rr. citing, ealm ami wide. Where nur .-tonus nor tempests move, Nor i dl s the eonstant tid'. And the waves still sing of thee! Fs-im Kcnttnrf'x for Stjti-iittrr. At rs the Ocean. Cholera i increasing in Germany. A Bra.iiHan eomes to the front aucd 17o. Kiivr Charles, of Wurtemberg, is at Vienna. Countess Molina, wife of "the in fant" Don ( arlos, is at Gratz. Rradlangh has lieen denounced by a faction of the London republicans. The Khedive 1ms declined Prosi deiit McMahon's imitation to visit raris. There have Leon numerous rail dand during the W iie.-idelits. in En; pat w a vs. r.vnis. s 4. The last instal will lie paii t in--'lit of war indemnity to Germany to-morrow. Mr. ( iciir;'i' 15: h succeeded John Pope llennessy as Governor of the West Afj-ieau settlement. Mrs. Hough, the oldest European inhabitant of Bombay, India, lately ili" 1, a --.'.I eighty-eight years. The London journal contradict the report th.i: Prince A rthu r is betroth ed to !';iv,i'i s 'i'!ivi-.i of Denmark. ie Kin: vi -it ti m l )a i-n of en I'm peror of Au-t win Vie; ti .n 4. . W.l a : ta at I.il.i- ,:;a bi-roic t! close of the i e f - -i e l he:' di the IV-inec ( f O : 'e;l in P.i;-is v cssiuakr. ss Jl. T 1 ... ) sati: : iln s;,- of L . S'ii! i.-k P S ."d ill ' I ' : ' . - Yv'.tl h:ts be rh-.v. I ord M-: n ci ( a'.i 11. ..i-.-.i "t . -r- !.'s T:i:, .-hi. s Sh.i W :i:nl i lhtc v.d Th i s.ih1, f .v ;ate of the bagpipes not visit in a. fa-.o-ab'e tor iieari: ! II il:u the for Hi land r.'ii s, cake 'i won hi Tim I'l incc Imperial of France 1cm reiitriied to !ii ; .stililies at Vi'niil v. : -h, where he was advanced in stu b ut L'rade j-;st before he went to A:vu( !doi":r. '. 7nI f .r I Patob: AVard .Ta.-kson. M. P. -it i-ii ; !e oi x -l as SHeit His leliow in ;uh"r York, 3Ir. Leenian, si ta.hr and lias lieen si warded for C-) d :".ii i-'es. Tt is o'.lh-iaViV ar.nov,n-ed that the D ike f Ilavi' takes thn French la ion Au-tria. and lh.it the D:i! K.e lie 1 a-.cs w hi laue. uie iiiissmu to K:r viand. A aide dis ateli says it is reort ha will return at once i account of the msnr- Mat t iie r t o Ti heran. o rectiou which has broken out within his dominions. A London dispatch says: The fin '(' announces that the Queen has given her consent to the marriaue of Prince Alfred and the Grand Duch ess Marie Alexandrovna. Sir Sidney Waterlow, Lord Mayor of London, is to be given a banquet by the Mayors of a number of the principal cities, in tlie Guildhall at orl. He baaqnetted the Sha; now who jvill give the . other Mayors a dinner? Switzerland showed itself to be a sensible little republic by not "mak ing any bone-." over the Sha. He came and w entb and not a Swiss stop ped hoeing his potatoes or turned his head as the bejew eled blackamoor went by. The Cortes, by a vote of IS I yeas to 1 nay, have passed a bill granting constitutional guarantees to Porto llieo. A deputy from that colony in the course of the debate declared unit tue island wouia always remain, faithful to Spain. Y hether or not Premier Gladstone is a Jesuit, was the subject of a sharp debate ln-twecn Mr. Johnson. M. P., and a Dr. Potter, in a late Orange convention in Glascow. . I)r. Potter revived the charge and Mr. John son denied its truth. The Sha. according to the raris lifls several diamonds, which besides the other qualities of erfect gems, possesses the attribute of emit ting a pungent and pleasing perfume m crowded places. Their like is unknown in Europe, and they are only found in r remote part of PVr i i. in a soil of ferruginous and car boniferous strata. Queen Victoria is said to be annov J'd at the Slias rather too demons tra jedisphty of admiration and arl'ee '"n fur horstlf. At the Windsor t- , no iviseu uer nor- hu'.. .!".,,iTO alUli poople, and it is ci-oVse 1 : t1u-Xt t, A ma.v have 1-piiT nnd of annexing Eng- 1 V nnpttal alliance. ullVilV St:ltt... 1.- 1 1 O o .Important t School Districts. The followidg notice from the Siijer intendent of Public Instruction is of imjK)i tan-e to the various districts: OlIHi: OF sri'KlilNTKNDKNT Of ri lll.lc Ixsi urn mv Svi.r.M Oregon, Auir. l.", 17:. To A. Noi.tnki:. i:stJ. SlTKItlNTKMiKN I' OF ScHOOl.S for Clackamas County, Oreiron. Sin : As has already I K'cn announced through the new spajwis of the State, tin- follow in.ir named Looks have lieen duly selected as tin- authorized text books in the luanehes mentioned, in the Public Schools of Orejron. for the four years commencing OcIoIkt 1st, 1S7:) : . Arithmeti Thompson's New- Jral ed Series; 1 hooks' ' Normal Mental; Kohinson's Higher. iJramiiiar -Clark's Primary (Xow Edition) ; Clark's Advanced. I Jcoj;ra ihv M onti i, Ii 's. History liarns' J Sric t' II istorv of the I'nite.l States; Peter Parley's 'Univer sal : Anderson's Ceneral History. Al-ehra lhooks. i comet ry lr inks'. l'ciiinaiislii j Sj .enecrian. Natural Philosophy Steel's Pour teen Weeks C in sc. Phisioloiry Steel's 14 Weeks Course. Chemistry Steel's 14 Weeks Course. Ponk-Keepin.v? Hryaiit A Stratton's. Composition 1 1 art's. r.otany Wood's. The readers and spc llrrs will lio so leelcd al.out the middle ef next month. The law remiires that the books se lected shall be introduced into all the Public Schools of t he Slate. ' on or be fore the fust day of October, 17:!." Put the aet, (owiicj: to ;ui ;nad vei ta lit emis sion iii framing; it.) did not .uo into ef fect until t line months alter the close of the session, and as there has been some unavoidable delay from other causes, the te.t-bo.ks have been adop ted at so late a day that it w ouhl U a hardship upen the patrons of the schools to insist upon havimr tin in-lioilu'-lioii of the-authorized " series -i)in li it'll oy llie iiay iiameti m tlie law. Under tlie.se circumstances the St-ite I ' ail on-Mtie: ti n hasconclud. d to take the responsiliilitv of extending tlie time so as lt seem e the i;r;:du.d in troduction of tlie books that haviHieen adopted. Hence, liiou.'ii it will be ex pected and required that all the Public S -hoi 1 s of the St.ite siirill bcuin in rood faith "on or b-V.re October N, l-7:'.," ( if the hooks ir.n i.i- pro. nred by t!iat time.) to in'iiodilci' tin- lit hoi ized sc ries." they will iieal lowed, imti! Mureli Ut. is7t, to complete t'.ic ilit rod net i"ii. In the meantime. County Siiperin tendents, Iistri.-t I ircctors, Tc-iehers and all others liavimr authority in 1 he pivmises. will sec to it that the hooks that have been s, l.-eted are introduced as rapidly as posii:le. The purchase oi' any other books than those, for use in t:ie puldie schools, ii the studies a!ioe ii tmed must bi strictly forbid ilcn a;'b"r O toiH-r 1-t. W henever n w books arc teachers, that or.ly rcipiired in tlose studies, nd directors will take ea re hose of the authorized kind d. In t his way all tlie hooks are proci: can Ik procured ion.; before M; u any serious ditiicultv. I 111 i 1st, v itiioill N district (except such as may not have !i id school lauirht in the mean time. l!ia !'iil; to retioi i lc-close o.' ! h ': : h 1 yea :-, lie com 'lete i.ilr;;-du--iion of the authorized text books will be permitted to draw pu! lie money for tin'' year following. And after M irch I.-l. Is7t. tlie use of those books will i rei i m I ei I I ii an on i i ic seuo i Vo.i are pi rl i- d nl - !--oii: tcd and nj iiiieii to do ail in your power to ; !-! ,-. c ,(e t h;' speedy iul .d ucl i u of i he aut horiz d books in thesehoi Is of your oiiuiv, with as little troul K' and c.-ati-.n to pat ions as possihle. Ai'tci:dl, the cnfore-'iii'. lit of this as well as all other n-'piireiiicnts of t he school law, dep ;ids mainly unon t he County Su- pe intcniietit. lie is nit! r;niil arm ot oi ! r seln d system . Please notify the : your county at once, these hooks, if nil ral di trie's of t l.he ai lo; l it m of have not already done s . and ot tin Hoard. rcipi'n cments of the I am. Sir. Very li 'soect f.dly. Your O'ledient Servant, Syi.. C. Simsims, S.iiierintcndciit l'ul.lic Instruction iSaker City Wt cklv Herald. A paper bv thi n ame is soon to be started as the prospectus will show, by II. II. M. F.oyd. Yv'e wish Mr. loyd success in his undertaking. The price of the paper will be Si a vear or S-.."l per six months. We give the prospectus: On or about October 1st, 17:, we begin the publication of the If rnff, a seven-column newspaper, at ISaker City, Pxihcr County, Oregon. ISe lieving that the enterprising citizens of ISaker Citv, and the surrounding country, will aid us in our arduous task, we pledge ourself to publish a paper, not in the interests of any man or clique, but in the interests of the whole people of this beautiful valley. We propose to devote our time wholly to the further development of the vast resources of ISaker Coun ty. Its educational, Agricultural, Mechanical, and Mining interests, will receive our undivided attention. We will give the Local Xews of the City and County each week, and spare no pains nor money to make t he lh'i nhl a first -class local paper. We will not lend our support to any man aspiring to public favor, who is not honest and true to the best inter ests of ISaker County and Eastern Oregon. We believe in voting for honest men for office, and shall advocate the election of none other, neither for County or State. Our principles are Democratic, in tne strictest sense, granting "honor unto whom honor is due," and to keep pace with the rapid progress of the times, in which we live. We cannot be bought, and shall adhere strictly to our motto, and in every instance where dishonesty and cor ruption in oilice are detected, the Ur,ihl will be fearless in the battle for right. We shall publish a paper that will be worth the subscription price, and we hope to be able to put the 11,-nihl in the house of every man in the County before the beginning of the New Year. Got Angry. A Bangor woman got angry with a directory canvasser because that young gentleman Would not take the name of her six-months' TI 1-1 i old oaov. j ! California is doing well in olives. ! One orchard at San Diego produces 1 9,750 gallons of oil. ' Railway Insolence. From the S. F. Kxaminor. Lately we have stcn an account of a case at law- in Louisiana, where it was decided that when a railroad company sells a ticket to a passenger it is with the understanding thatthe passenger will l.e provided with a seat. Ihe action -rew out of the fact that a passenger refused to sur render his ticket until he was fur nished with a seat, and for this re fusal, persisted in l,y him. he was immediately ejected with his ln-a.e-e from the train. He brought' suit thereupon and recovered from a jury an award of damages against the railway com .any in the sum cf two thousand dollars' This was si righteous and exem plary verdict. It is time, in this country, that the traveler should he protected in his rights, and that the wealthy railway coriiorations should be taught that passengers are not to be treated and transported like cat tle. Mr. Casserly, in his Union Hall speech, last Saturday night, gave an account of what he had observed on the Pacific ltailro.nl, where poor immigrants hither bound were treat ed with less consideration than dumb cattle, which enjoyed accommoda tions, under the protection of a law of Congress, superior to those afford ed to the poor European immigrant. It is high time these arrogant cor porations were brought tip with a round turn, and it is gratifying to see that people all over the country are beginning to assert their rights and demand what is just, and when those rights are denied to seek the redress which is theirs. When a man purchases a ticket to a certain point on a railway it is his right to be conveyed there w ith some degree of comfort, not as if he were a bullock on his way to be slaughter ed. He has paid for a seat and should have one; but how often is this right insolently denied to the unfortunate wayfarer by rail! Gen erally the modest traveler, knowing that he must not dareto ask anything from the great corporation, humbly puts up with his standing place, very grateful that he is not worst' oil'. nun, ii tins were the only inconve nience travelers were obliged to sub mit to, there would n.it be so much cause f ir cnuplair.t; but there are oilier great evils. For instance, a railway corporation prints upon its tickets the legend, " (iood for this day and trip only," so that if we should purchase a ticket to-day and by some unforeseen event we are prevented from using it, to-niorrow we must pr-a-ure a new ll.-ke'.. be cause the railway company claims, we have forfeited our right to use the lirst by reason of failure to use it on the day for which it was issued. That condition is the law created by the corporation, but, fortunately for the citizen, courts have decided that if Jones buys a ticket from one point to another, he may use at his con venience, no matter what day is in dicated thereon; and so that arbitra ry law of the railroad is annulled, and but few companies have the au duifv to attempt to put it in force. Then; is another beautiful and benignant distinction made by the corporations, somewhat like this: If i person liurcnase a ticket to go from New York to New Haven hi could not go from the latter to the former point, because, perhaps, it is considered the distance is greater one way than it is another. One gentleman tried it, however, and was put off the train by the employees and severely injured. Our readers may remember something of this case which we recounted several months ago. He sought redress from the courts. Tlie company told him if he wanted law, he should have a sufficiency of that costly commodity. He was desirous of testing their ability to subvert law and justice, and the courts to their purpose, and so at.it he went and fought the New York and New Haven Co. with a wonderful pertinacity through all the courts, when they, finding resis tance longer futile, paid the judg ment of thirty-rive hundred dollars, thrice rendered against them, for ejecting him unlawfully from the train. It is seldom that we rind a single individual with the courage requisite to the task of fighting sin gle handed a large corporation, as this man did. It should be unnecessiu-y to state so obvious a truth, but railroads are constructed primarily forpubliecon venience and future development of our resources and commerce. The secondary consideration should be the obtainment of large dividends noon the capital invested. There fore corporations should instead of cultivating insolence and arrogance from the highest official to the lowest, insist upon havingpassengers treated as human beings; but of course when one road has the monopoly, they may say, as they do with the utmost brutali'tv, jf you are not satisfied with us'construct your own railroad. t we have reached the day, in this State at least, when the inso lent arrogance and brutal benavior of the railway monopolies have received a salutary heck. bi.lv writing from Loudon about Joaonin Miller .says she has lodgings iii tl.o Minn house with him, and is much pleased with his daily labor and way of life. He denies him .a ,-.,..-iovirr hut, the mere nec- essnnVs of life, bestowing the rest 111 charity. He is the frequent guest of th nohi litv everv dav bringing invitations for dinners, parties, fcc but he savs that fashionable society is like the Sierras the higher the colder; impossible to receive from it a single idea. T-r Wyoming female lawyer lately argued for the plaintiff - . T - a case w herein her husband was uc- fendant, and carried it against aim 1 The Separation of Parents and Chil dren. We sometimes hear it said that the American people are different from Europeans; that they are a home loving race; whereas'the Europeans, especially the French, have no homes, have no word for " home " in their language, and are forever gadding about: whereas the Amer icans do not care for pleasures that are only to be had in public; hence, for them, no need of squares, " pi azzas," "places," public gardens, parks, etc., etc., etc.- We will not discuss here the question whether the French are as domestic a people as the English arc. In the strict sense of that word they probably are not, for their climate does not make it necessary that they should hug the hearth as their island neighbors do; but that the love of the family is as much developed in France as it is anywhere in the world that, in fact, to speak the truth and fear not, it is rather stronger in France than it is anywhere else in the world we do most powerfully and potently believe, and stand ready to give good reasons for so believing. Yet it is certainly true that they spend little of their leisure time in-doors, and the middle term that reconciles the two statements, is, that when they go abroad, the family as a rule, goes all together. Now we see no reason for doubting that Americans, if the proper means were provided, would come in time to take as much open air exercise as the French enjoy tak ing the air father and mother and children, all together. We think it in the highest degree desirable that this should be. One of the most prolillc sources of misery ami crime, in this civilized world ot ours, is found in the separation of the in terests of parents and children. In this respect we have much to learn from the French and Germans, and much to unlearn from the English. Our immediate subject has to do with only one form that this separa tion takes, but. it ought to be se riously reflected on, how many are its forms. In England it begins in the nursery, and it is f ir from un common for it to begin as early with us. Then there comes the Sunday school, an institution with which there would be no fault to rind if it were not to be suspected that it is coming to take the place of home in struction in religion a lamentable thing, if we only knew it. That children should go awav from to be taught their secular studies has be come so universal, and is a custom so old-established, that there is no use in asking whether it be wise or no; hut here in America it is only one in the long list of separations between parents and their children. Perhaps it is more conspicuous in our anp-.sements than it is in the serious work of every day; but a for eigner accustomed to seeing mothers sharing with nurses the supervision of their children in the parks and gardens; fathers, mothers, children, and nurses, all together at the fairs, and abroad on fete-days, and all the family, even, (as in the case of work ing people) to the baby, enjoying the the theater together how must the foreigner in question be puzzled when he observes the marked sepa ration that exists among us between the elder people and the younger in their amusements! From " Central I'ltri'," in Scrilmers for September. Poor Crops in Europe. Among the New York dispatches of August .sth we find this: The Tribute this morning has an article on the crops abroad and at home. It deduces the fact from ex tracts from European papers that the harvests in Europe this season are generally deficient, especially on wheat and rye, of which there is a prospect of a poor yield. From the present aspect in Europe, low prices for the crop of next season seem al most impossible. The Tribune says the w heat crop being safely gathered Europe demands our breadstuff's. We have plenty to supply them, and we can. rue surplus oi last years crop will be needed to supply the deficiency of the present crop, ami there w ill not be this season the dead weight of low priced corn to drag down the general market. At the same time the prospects of the money market are assuring. The -country has made a gain of at least fifty mil lion dollars on the adverse balance of imports as compared with last year. The cotton crop has improved in condition since July. Poor Citors in France. The New York lhtUeiin, a leading commercial authority, says: " The accounts of the harvest in France show that the yield in decidedly mediocre. In the north the yield was below what was expected, not only as regards quan tity, but also quality. In the South ern departnents the wheat is very high in price on account of its good quality. The stock on hand is lie coming scarce, and the cultivators are scarcely bringing anything to the markets'. The millers are oblig ed to have recourse to foreign wheat, and will soon have difficulties in working the mills, consequent upon the low state of the water, should the present dry weather continue. No decline in 'price appears to be possible, and a fresh rise is announ- Shipwrecks. A dispatch from Boston. Angnst 29th, says: It is ascertained that thirty-two Gloucester vessels went ashore at Magdalen Islands in the gale of Sun day. His Determination. Tim Brady savs: " If ever it's my fortune to live till I die and God knows whether I will or no I'll visit ould Ireland before I lave England." COURTESY OF BANCROFT LIBRARY, tntTtrfBSTTY OF CALIFORNIA, llaltle iu the Air. A TEItlllULiE COMIJAT BETWEEN TWO liOCKY MOUNTAIN EAGLES. Tlie most terrific battle between two birds, says the irgima JIt tttman of August 14th, occurred be tween two monster brown eagles in the vicinity of the lakes above Vir ginia on Wednesday evening. When first noticed, the birds were soaring, one above the other, at an altitude of perhaps three-fourths of a mile, and seemed on a sail for pleasure. Presently the uppermost bird, clos ing its broad wings, shot downward like a meteor from for two or tla-ee hundred feet, and with a wild, pierc ing scream, lit fairly upon the back of the other bird. Turning with the rapidity of lightning the victim clutched its advasary with talons and beak, AND A FIERCE STRUOfSEE ENSUED. The savage yells, the striking of huge wings, and showers of falling feathers, gave unmistakable eviden ces of the ferocity with w hich the con test was waged. As they fought they fell earthwards, and when with in live hundren feet of the ground they disentangled and each swooped upwards again. Now followed an interesting trial as to which should lirst gain a sufficient altitude to make another plunge. The circling of the smaller was rapid and close while that of his antagonist was made with greater limits, and the ascension was quickest accomplished. The largest eagle was soon fully one-half mile high, and some hundreds of feet above his victim. Hovering in mid air for a moment, as if making sure of his aim, he again darted down up on his enemv, striking him as before with a force that seemed sufficient to kill of itself. Again they grappled and I-OT-OHT LIKE WINCED DEMONS, whirling, falling and striking fu riously for the space of two or three miuuti-s. They were now near the largest of the lakes, and gradually deeeiiding to the water. The strug gles of the smaller became less and less fierce; he was getting weak and was evidently nearly vanquished, while his more powerful aggressor seemed to wage the battle with in creased vigor. Another moment and the conquering monarch loosed his hold, and with an exultant shout of victory soared upward the battle was ended; his prisoner, limp and lifeless, fell into the water of the lake with a splash and floated on the sur face without a struggle. We, with our companion, tried to get the dead eagle, but were unable to do so w ith out swimming for it. Loth birds were f very large size, the largest moa-airing, wh think, fully twelve feet from tip to tip. The spectacle was exciting in the extreme, and the victory tragically complete. The battle 'had likely commenced before we discovered them, as it does not seem possible for one to kill the oth er in so short a time, although the righting was terrific. A Xciv Kobiiison Crusoe. In 1871 the schooner Fmnllot, Captain Holmes, took in a crew and sailed for the seal fishery among the South Shetland Islands, situated 61 degrees south in the Antartic regions. On arriving there the captain dis patched a boat with provisions for a week to Winden Island, under the charge of the steersman, James A. King, with instructions to kill all the seals they could until the return of the ship." The crew of the boat suc ceeded with their clubs in killing and skinning 1,000 seals in five days, after which they set out for St. George's Island ' to procure more, leaving chalked upon a board "we have gone to St. George's Island; call for us there." The Franklin re turned from a successful cruise to Livingstone's Island, at the end of a week, and seeing that the notice proceeded to St. George's Island in search of the men. The ship tacked oft" and on, for several days, and fired rockets and guns, lint nothing was seen of the boat, and the ship at last set sail for home. Here then were five sailors abandoned on a desert island to a cold, icy Winter among the Antartic snows, In the month of August of the next year the sealing ships returned, one of w hich, the Xile, anchored off St. George's Island, and the captain with a num ber of his crew went to look for the lost men. not expecting to find any of them alive. The party walked along the shore and came to a small hut. On pushing open the door man with a red beard and long matted hair was found asleep. He was cloth ed in seal-skins, and his feet were covered with the skins of penguins instead of shoes. On lieing awaken ed up he was found to be King, the seaman of the boat that was left In- hind, and sole survivor of the party. It seems that they found the hut and stove on the island, and lived for some time on pelican flesh, burning seal blubber in the stove. One had died of cold; three others attenvpted to get back to Winden Island, and are supposed to have perished: and King alone returned in the Nile. Such at least is the story we are told about the new Bobinson Cruso.e The Bed Rock Democrnt: "The girls in this valley are not so fastid ious as the girls of other places. They do not require their lover to have the .wisdom of Solomon, the beauty of Apollo, or the riches oi Crcesus. A Baker City maiden savs ' Adolphus has a watch and chain and plug hat; when he can raise moustache I shall be perfectly hap- -----. Advertises Him. An affectionate Virginia woman advertises her hus band under the head of " Straved or Stolen " in a Richmond paper. Xow is tlie Time. The telegraph yesterday told us; that the Washington Jiejtnlltaru con fined a large number of contribu tions in favor of the election of Gen eral Grant to the Presidency for a third term. This Statement 'is very significant, for the paper mentioned is the personal organ of Grant, and its utterances are understood to be dictated in his interest. Its publica tions, therefore of the communica tions in favor of a third term show mat me intention 01 the present in- cumnent is to maintain his hold on 1 n't" x resiitency indcnniteiy. lliere is little doubt' that he wiil look for a third Presidential term if the peo ple do not, at the intervening elec tions between now and 1.S7G, show their disapprobation of such a pro ceeding bv giving Democratic ma jorities in the diif'erent States. He has already been nominated bv his T- . -11... - 1 . ... I 1 personal and particular friends, those who are known to speak his senti ments. In his letter of acceptance in LS72, he took special care not to intimate that he would retire upon the expiration of a second term. This is the more significant, because from the time he was first a candi date, men like Frank Blair, Jr., have always declared that Grant intended to be President for life, if not to make himself Emperor. Knowing the suspicion which exists, the Cin cinnati Enquirer says (J rant will en deavor to dispel it if he did not know it was just. The way to liecome President for life is in the first instance to obtain two or three re-elections by the peo ple, who, under his previous long term of service, would become ac customed to him. The first Napole- an began his mana-uvers for the Em pire by an election as Consul for ten years. Ihis was soon followed bv lis election for life, and then, anil not until then, he was made Empe ror. Louis Nanolean pursued a in-e- isely similar course. In that wav France was gradually broken dowii to accept his will. Nobody in this country was ever elected or nominat ed for the Presidency for a third term. The length of precedent has been so great that it now almost has the force of a Constitutional urohi- tition. It is the unwritten law of ll . .. 1 1 . . 1 .' .. V 1 11c mini as omaing in conscience as any written law. j.ei noiwiuisiauding this prece - j. ......"ii 1 I ... dent, sacred as it it was embodied 111 me constitution, m so many words, the present President of the United States proposes to enter for another race. If he should succeed in breaking through the custom, we shall see that at the expiration of his third term, if lie should live, when the old usage shall have been destov- ed, it w ill be far easier to secure re- lections for the fourth and fifth terms than it was for the third. Then would come the proposition to make the election for life. Everything is tending that wav. Grant already af- ects almost the state of a monarch. His salary has lieen doubled. He has his Summer palace after the fashion of European crow ned heads. In violation of the Constitution he has surrounded himself with a start' of military officers under the pre text of their being his private secre taries. He has used the bayonets to crush out the liberties of the jieoplc of three States, an earnest of what he may be expected to do in all of them. Corruption unparalleled has been allowed to run riot in order to disgust the people with republican institutions, of which they are said to be the product. An alliance, such as exists in Great Britain, has been made with the great monetary and public debt iuterests. They clamor for some strong, permanent, and more responsible form of govern ment. They stand ready to sanction auy usurpation, however atrocious, that will result in the strengthening of their securities. Many persons expect to see this Republic overturned by a violent coup (i viat. jut such is not the man ner in which free people usually lose their liberties. It is done as Grant is doing it slowly and gradually. The Roman people were deprived of their capacity for self-government before Ca sar crossed the Rubicon. Tlie rule of the Directory and the excesses of the Convention, to which the people had submitted, prepared them for the iron rule of Bonaparte. Everthing, which has been done un der the Administration of Grant has beeoi an attack upon the principles and traditions of tlie liepuhlie. Its honesty and simplicity arc gone. We are becoming accustomed to seeing the Government in the hands of one man, and he a despot ical sol dier, who disregards the Constitu tion, through a long term of years. As in hereditary monarchies, we see the Government run in the interests of the family of the ruler. Nepotism permeates every hranch of the pub l : .. : 'i 1 -,1 . - 11c stiure, wxuie tne executive is increasing his power; while he is re modeling and packing the Supreme iourt lilting it with his creatures "V... il. . 1 1 vyuiigitss, iuu legislative power, is sinking deeper and deeper in popu lar contempt. A standing army twice as large as we had before the war is maintained under the orders of a General-in-Chief who does not disguise Ins preference for an Em pire. There is not a single states man in the Cabinet. All the Secre taries are weak and obscure men entirely devoted to the fortunes of Grant, ready to obey him in every behest. Grant's government is every whit as personal as was that of Na polean the Third, in his last days. It is under these circumstances that he is a candidate for a third term, and if unfortunately so chosen, he might as well be elected for life, for we shall never rid -ourselves of him during the rest of his natural exist ence. Is there then no further use of the Democratic party? nas that organ ization no distinct affirmative issuo to go before the country? Is not the preservation of the Government, the continued existence of a pnre re public, an affirmative idea? If men cannot speak warmly in behalf of that, for w hat can they speak? We? are drifting rapidly tmvards despot ism and all who' are not willfully blind can perceive this as in a strong light. Now is the opportune mo ments, at the ensuing State elections to chooso Legislatures and TTnit..! States Senators, who w ill resist cor- porate r-' rressioiis, and oppose the further aspirations of him w ho would in his sordid ambition rise upon the ruins of the greatest and best jrovern ment of modern times. Examiwr. Fun, Fact anI Fancy. The Farmer Feels the world Best size for a man Exercise. The blacksmith's game-Old sledge. A standing nuisance Corner loaf ers. To late' for- the fair an old bache lor. Belle Mettle A young lady's tem per. Water is an expensive luxury in Paris. A dull season Boarding-house peper. Liberality ought always to be com mended. Quakers call intimate aquaintances q "cousin." q Anna Dickinson is visiting friend Kansas. in The Late Oakes Ames died worth j?5,7rlrono. The Central Pacific Railroad owe ;?10S,61S,Ooo. Corn dolgers - Sensible folks who wear big boots. What word is always pronounced wrong? 1 1 'romjl The largest farm in England con tains .J.ono acres. A thousand acre pari- is being- surveyed near A est Point. Ifow fo keep square with the world Don't be round too much. A bad marriage is like an electrial O machine, you have to dance and yoti can't let go. 0 Why is the man who does not bet as bad as the man who does? Because he is no bettor. It is claimed that the average yield of wheat throughout bushels to the acre. Kansas is 25 America has received 100 prizes out of the o0,00t) awarded at tho Vienna Exposition. Why is a lover's heart like a whale? Because it is a secreter (sea creatnr'jof great sighs. A clergyman lately said that mod ern young ladies are not the daugh ters of Shein and Ham, but cf hem and sham. The gain in population, by all routes of travel for the last six months, is 21,lluineluding 12,000 from China and Japan. What is the difference letween a pen-knife and a Congressman? One has a steel back and the other ':a back steal." According to Mr. Foster, his bio grapher, Charles Dickens lived ami worked at high pressure, and died of over work. Two little girls were compairing progress in catechism study. JL have got to "original sin, said one; "how far have you got?" "Me? Oh. I'm away beyond 'redemption,'" said the other. Wonperi x e Stories from Sornr America. New Y'ork, Sept. 3. The steamer Rising Star, from Panama, has has arrived. The South Ameri can news fainounces various mining discoveries in Eqnador. A quick silver mire has been discovered not far from G nay mil. In Chile a bed of coal, it is said, has been discovered on the Island of Chiloe. It is forty yards deep, exceeding in richness anyin England. A great discovery has been made of silver deposits in the deserts of Atacma. at a distance of 1.1 leagues from Chanaval. The ore is said to yield from tight hundred to one thousand marks per cajon. At Copi apo the excitement rose to an ex traordinary pitch, and all the towns in that region were likely to be near ly deserted of their inhabitants. ' Later advices announce tho dis covery of five more mines of great richness. O True. Tho New Y'ork Herald says that the remedy against Cscsarism is to be found in a general discussion of the question. This is true, says an exchange, and public clamor against this new scheme for the destruction of the Repnblc should be constant ly kept before the people, despite tho sneers and wriggle of the interested Radicals. Unconstitutional. The supreme Court of Georgia has decided that the law forbidding the validity of of judgements for notes whoso con sideration was slaves, is unconstitu tional, and that unless barrel by tho statute of limitations, such J'Ji'ff ments can be made operative. The Court was divided, Judge McCoy dissenting. The Popular Name. The hus bands' train" is the popular name for the line of cars that takes fathers to their families visiting the Summer resorts. o o o o o 0 o . : i o o o o o o o o o CD o o o o i o o 4 ' I 7 r ' i -