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About Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1871-188? | View Entire Issue (April 10, 1874)
jr. VOL. 8. OREGON CITY, OREGON, FRIDAY,, APIRL 10, 1874. NO. 24.1 rim A4 irFSS nrTfii frfiYi rfT l(u ft! 'ini' ii i i i NA.tr e G THE ENTERPRISE. A LOCAL DEMOCRATIC NEWSPAPER ; F O 11 THE Earner, Business Man, t Family Circle. ISSUED EVERY FRIDAY. NOLTNER, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER. OFFICIAL PAPEE FOR CLACKAMAS CO. j OFFICE In Dr. Thessing's Rrick, next oorto John .Myers swru, uir.a. A, Terms of Subscription I Sle Copy One Year, In Advance., .$2.50 . 1.50 Six Months " Term of Aflvertlli t Transient advert isements, including all legal not ic-s. i square ot twelve lliii.-s one week - 2.50 pWeach subsequent insertion... O le Column, one year Hilf " " " Quarter - Business Card. 1 square, one year. 4D.DU 12.00 It US I XXS S CARDS. .T. AV. NO It HIS. M. D., PHYSICIAN AND Sl'KKKO.V, o n it a o y city, o rhgo x. 'trOtVicr Up-Stairs in Charman's Rrick, Main Street. auglitf. W. H. WATK1NS, Mm D. iireon. PORT LAND i - - OREGON. )dd Fellow's Temple.corner First and Alder slreets. Kesideuo Of .Main and Seventh streets. Drs. Welch A: Thompson, .DENTISTS, r5) OK KICK IN" tSlODCi 0 1) D F E LLOirS T E M I L E, Corner of First and Alder Streets. PUIM'UXI) - - OlttOOX. Uir Will be in Oregon City on Saturdays. .Nov. o :tl S. II V EI. at. CIIAS. K. WARREN. I! U EL AT & WARREN Attorneys-at-Law. OREGON CITY, - OREGON. fcTOKFICE-Charman's brick. Main st. omarlST-' :tf. o JOHNSON & WIcCOWN ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELORS AT-LAW. Oregon City, Oregon. ttWill practice in all the Courts or the Star Special attention given to cases in the U. S. Uiud OlMce at Oregon City. 5aprlS72-tf. ' 5 L. T. BARIN, . ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, OREGON CITr, : : OREGON. OFFICE Over itreft. Rope's Tin Store, Main 2Unar::J-tf. J. T. APPERSON, OFFICE IN POSTOFFICE RUILDING. --i Trnilrr, Clarliama Conitty ""der. atnl Ore ri City Orl-r Or- BOUGHT AND SOLD. NOTARY iuisrrc. IRns negotiated. Collections attended to, ind a General Rrokeage business carried on. : t L. N O r is r n NOTARY PUBLIC i ENTE3PRIS OFFICE. OHEGON CITY. AY. H. 1IIGHFIELI). EstuihlUhel since 9. ntthe olI gtnntl. Sain Street, Oregon fity, Oregon. An assortment of Wat hes, Jewel- i .. . i 'i-i ll,-t..l.. I MwL-; (i-i - .."ii ot which are warranted to be as L'0 represented. Repairing done on short notice, and hartfcful for past patronage. "A. C. W A L LING'S PIONEER BOOK B1HDERY. Pit fork's Ilulldinjr Corner of Stark nml Front Street. PORTLAND, - - - OREGON. BLANK ROOKS RULED AND ROUND to any desired pattern. Music books, laiizines, NewspajHTS, etc., bound in ev cry variety of sr vie known to the trrade. Orders from the o.untry promptly at tended to. OREGON CITY BREWERY, tar IJUenry llumbel, t i;vin ruRCiiAS- ll ed the above Rrew- rTT1 erv wishes to inform the public that he is now prepared to manufacture a No. 1 qual ity ot LA 0 BR B KRR, as fl-ood as can be obtained anywhere in the -tate. Orders solicited and promptly filled. NEW YORK HOTEL. (Deutfehes Gafthaus.) No. 17 Front Street. Opposite the JIall Steamship Landing, PORTLAND, OREOOX. H-ROTHFOS, J. J. WILKENS, Proprietors. Board Week . $-5.00 "oar-i Week with Lodging 6.00 Board Day l... 1.00 sw- "I An Important Conclusion. In a recent speech Mr. Charles Francis Adams, the younger, said that more than two hundred years ago, in the days, perhaps, of the great, great grandfather of Adam Smith; there sat on the throne of England a monarch known in his time as the English Solomon, but of whose wisdom posterity has not formed a very lofty opinion. As with the Presidents of more recent times it was the custom for the sov ereign to impart to the assembled representatives of the land at the beginning of each Parliamentary session his views on the important topics of the day. On one of these occasions, in the year 1G20 that very year in which the Mayflower accomplished her fortuitous voyage this British Solomon, known in history as King James the First of hpppy memory, was. even as our excellent President is now, sorely perplexed by the unsatisfactory con dition of the finances of his realm, lie, too, doubtless, deeply pondered the matter in his capacious mind, and at last delivered himself to his lieges as follows: "It's strange that my mint hath not gone this eight or nine years, but I think the fault of the want of money is the uneven balancing of trade." Two centuries and a half later, in the year of 1873 after Adam Smith had been in his grave eigty-three years the president of this great and enlightened republic addressed himself to the same problem of de ficiency of money. His mint had stepped thirteen years before. In due time ho delivered himself as follows: "A specie basis cannot be reached and maintained until our exports, interest due abroad, and other specie obligations, or so nearly as to leave an appreciable accumula tion of the precious metals in the country from the products of our mines.5' From a comparison of these two passages it would seem to be fairlv inferrable that the sovereign of two hundred and fifty years since knew quite as much of the subject about which lie undertook to speak as the ruler of the present day, and expressed himself a great deal more tersely and clearly. Adam Smith did not live and ponder and write in vain. There was a time when in America we thought we had changed all this, outgrown it as a child out grows its clothes; though, indeed, these were never the clothes of American childhood. Our infancy was not corseted by auy such gov ernment pap as is implied in the word " protection." Edmund Burke understood this, and rigidly attri buted our robust youth to the fact that our ancestors had been left alone to work out their own salvation in their own way. Mr. Adams said he could not keep from asking him self what Burke would say if he saw the descendants of this people "then " in the growth and not vet harden ed into the bone of manhood," now j applying themselves to the herculean task of " moving the crops" by the aid of Secretary Richardson and the ' greenback reserve. - Was there ever in the history of the world such a bathos? "We began, be it remembered, on the principle that tiie world was governed too much ; that that government vras best which governed least ; that in dividuals and localities were quite as competent as governments to find o.it what they wanted, and ought to be left to get or miss it through their own devices. We were never tired of repeating these and other wise saws ami modern instances, and didn't hesitate to say, that with us a new dispensation had dawned upon the poor old earth. And lo ! all our boasting results in this lame and impotent conclusion our worthy President gravely reports the explod ed fallacies uttered by the monarchs of the seventeenth century, and our Secretary of the Treasury systemat ically debases our currency to enable us to meet the current expenses of our Government in a time of pro found peace. An extraordinary circumstance in the history of the country occurs on the death of Mr. Fillmore. Never before since the administration of Jefferson has it happened that only one person was alive, except the in cumbent, who had filled the Presi dential office. Andrew Johnson is now the only ex-President living ; and even he was not elected to that office, but came to it as Vice-President on the assassination of Mr. Lincoln. While the younger Adams was President, the elder Adams, Jef ferson, Madison and Monroe were living. When Buchanan was elect ed. Van Buren, Tyler, Pierce, Fill more, and Buchanan were living. Within the past thirtv-seven years seven Presidents have been elected besides Grant. It is an extraordina ry fact that not one of the seven is now alive. A Good Education. To read the English language well, to write with dispatch a neat and legible hand, and be master of tne first four rules of arithmetic, so to dispose of at once, with accuracy, every question of figures which comes up in prac- VC6.J cal1 tlli3 a Good, education. And if you add the ability to write pure grammatical English, I regard it as an excellent education. These are the tools You can do much with them, but you are helpless without them. They are the foun dation ; and unless you begin with these, all your flashy attainments, a little geology, and all the other other ologies and osophies, are ostenta- tious rubbish. Everett. Just the Place. Waynesborough Pa., boasts of a haunted distillery, wmcu is just tne place where one would naturally look for spirits. 9w ijnujyn IJeck ou Expenditures. Mr. Beck's speech on expenditures, made in the House on the 7th, con tained a great many rugged facts which the Republican leaders wonld rather not have the people know, but which they are entitled to know, nevertheless. He charged and the charge was not denied that the war department had sold Sl.3'2 000 000 worth of useless material, and, in- bieuu ui icimuiug me monev to tne treasury, where it -operly belong ed, had spent every dollar of it in addition to the regular appropria tion voted to it by Congress; that the postmaster-general had spent the present year 8500,000 of appropri ations made three years ago, in defi ance of the law winch requires all unexpended balances of appropria tions to be returned to the treasury; tluit the secretary of the treasury has issued a fund of $3,000,000 a year in organizing bureaus in his department, giving salaries of 3,000 a vear to seven clerks who are enti tled to only $1,)0, and $2,000 to assistants who are entitled to only $1,400 ; that there are in the treasu ry department 1,500 chiefs of staff and employes, who are not provided for in the appropriations ; that the head of the department had assum ed authority to pay out $25,000,000 of what is called the greenback " re serve," without any warrant of law ; aud that the secretary of the navy had made use of the excitement about the Virginius seizure to enlist 1,500 men and spend $4,000,000, without the warrant ol law, as a preparation for a war which the gov ernment never had thought of mak ing although exhibiting a reckless and lawless use of the public moneys by the officers of the government that has no parallel or precedent in the history of the country. On the subject of revenues and expenditures, Mr. Beck shows that so far from the treasury neeuing $12,000,000 of additional taxes, it ought not to need a dollar of addi tional revenue, and would not, if it made an economical use of what it has received. Thus on the 1st of July there was a surplus of $00, 000,000; from that day to the 1st of February last it received $110,000, 000 ; and from the 1st of February to the 1st of July next it will receive an estimated sum of $110,000,000. To these amounts must be added the reserve of $44,000,000 which the secretary claims the right to use, if he has need for it making, a total $387,000,000 of revenue for the present fiscal year at the disposal of the secretary of the treasury. Mr. Garfield had stated that the total ap propriat'ons for the present .year were $310,000,000, to which should be added the $4,000,000 spent by the navy department during the Virgin ius excitementrand subsequently le galized by congress making $423, (K0,000, showing an excess of re ceipts of $03,000,000 for the year. In other words, according to the official statements of the treasury department and the semi-official statements of Mr. Dawes and Mr. Garfield there ought to be a surplus of $02,01)0,000 in the treasury on the 1st of nextJulv, instead of the de ficiency of $42,000,000, which the secretary of the treasury intimate. How there is to be a deficiency in the face of this officially -demonstrated surplus is a question which Mr. Beck would like to have answered, but which noneof the Republican leaders at Washington have answer ed. Mr. Garfield and the adminis tration demand a levy of new taxes ; but it is sufficiently evident that the people will not quietly submit to such a measure, aud that they are justified in not submitting to it. till the administration tells wnere tne squandered money of the past five years has gone to. Republican. Amusixo Anecdote. Mr. Thomp son, an American, was visiting Mr. Herbert, an Englishman, aud the latter, being interested in the study of Phrenology, ordered his Irish man. Pat. to show Mr. Thomson his collection of skulls. Pat accordingly led Mr. T. into a large apartment; where, taking up a lar?e skull, lie said: "Would ye mind this, sir; there is the skull of Africanus of Home, sir; a great man, sir, a gineral, aud me own particular friend." ' "And this one, sir," he exclaimed, picking np another, "is the skull of Coriolanus. Ah, sir, he was a great man. I didn t know him, meselt, in div'dually, personally, but he was me father s confidential clerk. Ah, s'r," he went on, "but here is tne skull of them all. It is the skull of Wm. Shakespeare, a great poet. Ah me, but he was fond of me brother.'" And so 1 at continued, braggiu and lying at every step; when, after an interval of a half hour, he picked up an exceedingly small skull, and cried out: "Mr. Thomson, look ve here Here is the smallest skull in the world. It is the skull of William Shakespeare " "Hold on, Pat," sa:d Thomson. "Vrm told me the bio- skull over there was William Shakespeare's. Ha ha! I've caught you m a lie! "indeed not. ver honor," said Pat, quicklv. "The big skull over there is the skull of Shakespeare when he was an old man. and this is the skull of Shakespeare when he was a baby. Not Oftener The Mississippi lature is talking of providing for biennial sessions. To the unpre- indicwl observer, says the Courier Joarnal, the Mississippi Legislatu-e very closely resembles a uoay mat ougtatn t to meet oltener inau cemeu nially. ' A mabVions rerson says that cot ton Khaat nml newspaper sheets i are alike in the respect that a grea 1 iT.. nioujf ijeopie lie iti tuciui (Janiing in tVashingtou. After Ash Wednesday the males of Society abandon the ladies and dine at We'lcker's or the club, and the draw poker is a fearful sight that is flourished in those cloisters. Ben Holladay, who is now here living in widowed quarters, and looking after his railroads, is said to have raised the largest hands at poker known among gambling capitalists. "He Avon $3,000 from roe," said William Sharon, "but I was sick that 1 1 rt tot liilYi fnln I TTrt oay, aiio iiim iu n. mm iunc. it. uc can't beat me when I am feeling well." It is very easy to corrupt public men at the poker tablej for a large percentage of them play nearly, as manv, I should judge, as in the old days of slavery. Poker has arisen with the Northwestern domination, and the ease with which it is learned the reckless chances it invites, and the rapid popularity it attains ii every circle, makes it an especial game for large operators who loiter on the threshhold of politics. Make a public man poor and replace the money as a gift, or permit him to win and suppose he has wronged von, and he will try to work off the obligation with a might which lie almost imputes to righteousness. These great, brawy operators know such things, and honor in the chief places is no barrier to their circum venting. The table, t he fine and rap id woman, worldly talk with brillian cy in its delusiveness, the confidence that follows the wine cup, and the cool studv of a man over five cards when he bets beyond his measure, these are the steps by which hard men capture better ones. Bribery is seldom direct, neither wounding the pride or the feelings of the recipi ent. It is extended like the love that precedes ruin. It says: "Aly Iriend, X admire you. iu see ou poor, with your talents, is a re- roach to our country that you illns rate. I never v-et met a man I onld get so close to. If you ever feel the wolf too close totlie door, i nope you ill not wrong vour friend by si- ence. I l".s7 i nylon Correspondence of ilie Graphic. -- - "He Bi s' He Gut." A Southern laper tells tlie loiiowing on a low country darkey:" "An old lady of our acquaintance tad hired one to work on her farm. One day her eldest son, a youth of eighteen, was about riding to town a kittish mule. His old mother was u constand dread that something would happen to her darling boy whenever he mounted that mule. On the day in question, while the old lady was quietly reading her fa vorite book, this "low country dar key rushed in, with his eyes rolling ike two saucers m lus head, and ex humed: 'Law, Miss, de mule done frow Mas' Bob.' 'How? When? Where?' exclaimed the old lady, excitedly. 'He bus' he gut.' 'Then why, in the name of God, are von standing there like an idiot? Why don't yon go for a doctor?' re plied the half frantic mother. '2s o, Miss, he bus de gut ol de saddle.' "The reaction was so crreat that the old lady dropped in her chair and laughed till her back hair fell dowr, while the darkey, with open mouth, crazed at her as if she were crazy." The Drunkard's Will,. "Know all men by these presents, that I of the county of Mecklenburg, and State of lrginia, being of sound and deposing memory, in view of the uncertainty of life, and thecertaintv of death, do make this last will and testament, to-wit : I die a wretched sinner; and I leave to the world a worthless reputation, a wicked example and memory that is fit to perish. I leave to my brother and sisters shame and grief, and the reproach of their acquaintances. I leave my widow and broken hearted wife a life of lonely struggle with want and suffering. Heave my children a tainted name, a reviled position, a pitiful icrnorance and the mortifying recollection of a father, who, by his life, disgraced humanity; and at his premature death, joined the great company of those who are never to enter the kingdom of God. I pray God that those who are yet living may take warning and profit by the above.' m Senator Sumner's Coffin. The Philadelphia Record gives the fol lowing description of the coinn lor warded to Washington from that citv, for the reception of the remains of the late Senator Sumner: "It is nearly square and made of a species of wood said to be more durable than any metal. The side panels are covered with black cloth. The eight handles are of solid silver. They represent two hands grasping a rod about eighteen inches long. The lid is of two parts or panels, and made of French crystal plate-glass. Two iv.ml of loth are made so as to cover the glass when required. The entire casket is surrounded by a mas sive molding -of silver. The inside is upholstered with white satin, silk, and Venetian lace, heavy silken tas sels dropping from each corner. The rasVt. is six feet four inches in length, A Brooklyn man who sat down to meditate in" his sweetheart's lap, had occasion to caution her about loop ing up her skirts with pins. He found that the consequences had a tendancy to disturb his mental poise. The Best Wat. One who wants the world to know what he knows about farming, says that the best way to raise strawberries is "with a spoon. . COURTESY' "OF BANCROFT LIBRARY, UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, The Curse of Drink. From the San Francisco Examiner. A great work rests upon the clergy of the land in rooting out the curse intemperance. We have no faith, as we have often remarked, in women's unwomanly crusades and ludicrous praying parades iu and through the gin-mills of large towns ; but we have abundant faith in the efficacy of prayer in the proper way and in the exhortations and personal entrea ties and appeals of the ordinary ser vants of Christ. No greater charge is laid upon the ministers of the Gospel than that of preaching and practicing the doctrine of the text, " Be sober in all tilings." The Cath olics seem to apprehend the solem nity and importance of this duty, and are making throughout the i Union an enormous headway against King Alcohol. They are doing the work in an energetic, systematic manner, with that organized force and concentrated method which dis tinguishes them in all their opera tions, when the interest of their Church and their souls are concern ed. They proceed with deliberate, steady steps, making no blunders, creating no confusion, but marching onward against the foe with a fixed determination to achieve enduring victory : and their progress is mar velous. Although that Church has always been a bitter and unrelenting enemy of the vice of intemperance, it is of late only that it has sanction ed sneli si powerful auxilarv engine of reform "as the Catholic Total Ab stinence Union of America, which has branches in almost every State of the Union, and is converting thou sands monthly from addiction to strong drink, reclaiming drunkards and preventing moderate drinkers from becoming sots. One of the clergy of that church in an excellent sermon lately delivered in the city of New York, said that the Almighty had created three distinct races of beings, the angelic, or those beings which are altogether spiritual ; ami as the direct antipodes, a race en dowed with animal life, but without reasonable facilities, known as the beasts of the field. Between these two, the purely spiritual and the purely animal, lay a great valley a void to be filled. This vacancy God had filled by a creature possess ed of both attributed partly spirit ual, partly animal and this is called Man. There is but one step up be tween the human and the celestial ; so, also, is there but one step in the downward direction, between the man and the brute. No sooner does a man debauch himself than he falls into the worst kind of ruin, temporal and spiritual. He becomes a victim of disease, which destroys his body, or dies from the knife of his boon companions, to meet with a future fate in the company of worse repro bates than those he has left behind. By drunkenness man removes from himself that grace which God has given him, ami the blessing which God bestowed on all men when He took upon himself humanity at the incarnation. By the vice of intem perance man does a violent wrong to his family, and he becomes unjust to his neighbor through incurring indebtedness which he is never able to pay. Even if a person is rich, and is intemperate, he becomes un just. There is always something due to his family, something to his country, and most of all, something due to the poor and needy, which he fails to perform. The brute creation perform ail the duties mat are as signed to them, and the horse and cow will always seek their stable ; and when man is besotted, he is in sensible to the August sun or the December cold, and this masterpiece of God's creation can scarcely dis tinguish the feather pillow Jrom the cobble pavement. He will be in the gutter, with a total disregard oi ins fellow-man, and when his besotted tongue gives utterances to words, they are generally blasphemies to wards his God and curses upon his fellow-man. It is this sin of intemperance which has caused the existence of many rival factions that have caused the earth with the bloo.i of its vic tims; and many a man, who might have had his character written in historical letters of fire, has. through this vice, dwindled down into abso lute obscurity if not into actual darkness, lost to country, lost to home, and lost to heaven. The drunkard is responsible to all society but more especially to his family, where his responsibilities are of aw ful importance. There is nothing so beautiful to contemplate as a sober and loving father. There is no star in the heavens so bright as the light of the home to which the sober father is wending his way for the purpose of superintending the spiritual and temporal welfare of his family. Make a resolution of tem perance at once. No matter how strong the habit, it can be conquer ed bv resolution. The habit cannot be necessary to nature when it is de- cirnMivo to it. Temperance brings honor, not only to the temperate man but to his family and his re latives. The glorv of the Christian family will never fade while the cnlwr" son reflects the image of the sober father. Be sober, then for temperance produces a happy life and a glorious death, and forms one of the brightest jewels in the crown of glory, which is the inheri tance of. every true Christian. Wood-Sawixo. Since it has been discovered that good whisky can be manufactured from sawdust, wood sawing has become a fashionable amusement. A Western editor recently said of a new novel : " Its incidents follow each other like a shovelfull of hot coal." r The Alaskan Autocrats. We revert once more to the ter rible condition of the Aleuts brought about by the infamous favoritism of the federal Government in accord ing a franchise to a private company, which places our fellow-citizens of Alaska campletely in the power of a grasping and grinding monopoly. A gentleman of this citv has just received a letter in the Russian language from the natives of Ungr, Alaska, which, translated, reads as follows : " On the 12th of January, 1874, the natives of the Island called a meeting to send a petition to the Government in Washington, saying that they sutler great poverty and misery that their schools have been closed since the annexa tion of the Territory to the Unit ed States. The cause of all this misfortune is that the General Gov ernment favors only the Alaska Com mercial Company, and their agents tyrannize over and oppress us in every way. The Government, in giving them the unconstitutional lease of the fur-seal Islands, enables them to control the entire commerce and the inhabitants throughout the entire Territory. They pray the Government to allow the natives of other Islands to catch fur-seals. They state that they are willing to pay $2.G2 tax for each skin ; that they will receive $20 in the London market per skin, and from the pro ceeds they will be able to support themselves and establish schools in the whole territory for their children. Signed by Tayoun Ivan Thomin, and twenty others." Of course the prayer of these poor people will fall upon heedless ears at Washington, for the autocrats of the Alaska Commercial Company are in high favor with Grant and his corrupt Radical crew. rExntnlner. Pop Goes tfie Weasel. " Pop Goes the Weasel" has become the chorus of a thousand snatches of song, but not one of a thousand who sing it ever heard of its origin. But its parentage is as easily traced as that of an English baronet. A fa mous .Methodist preacher by the name of Craven was once preaching in the heart of Virginia, and spoke as follows: " Here are a great many professors of religion to-day. You iire sleek, fat, good-looking, vet something is the matter with you. Now, you have seen wheat which was plump, round and good-looking to the eye ; but when -ou weigh it, you found that it only came to forty- five or perhaps forty-eight pounds to the bushel, when it should be sixtv or sixty-three pounds. Take a ker nel of wheat between the thumb and fore-finger, hold it up, sqeeze it, aud pop goes the weevil! Now, you good- ooking professors of religion you are plump and round, but you only weigh some forty-live or forty -six to the bushel. What is the matter? Ah! when you are taken between the thumb of the law and the finger ot the Gospel, held np to the light and squeezed, out pops the whisky bot tle! 1 rom pop goes the weevil to pop goes the weasel, the trnsition is easy. Pruning Fruit Tkees. W. II. Nash, in an article lately read before the xsapa (Cal.) Grange, set forth the following as the principles to govern in pruning fruit trees: 1. The vigor of a tree subjected to pruning depends in a great measure on the equal distribution of sap in all of its branches. 2. Prune the branches of the most vigorous parts very short, and those of the weak parts long. 3. Leave a large quantity of fruit on the strong part, and remove the whole or greater part of the feeble. 4. Bend the strong parts and keep the weak erect. 5. Remove from the vigorous the superfluous shoots as early in the season as possible, and from the fee ble parts as late as possible. 0. Pinch earn- the soit extremities of the shoots on the vigorous parts, and as late as possible on the feeble parts, excepting any shoots which may be too vigorous lor their posi tfon. 7. The sap acts with greater force and produces more vigorous growth on a branch or shoot pruned short than on one pruned long. 8. The sap tending almost to the extremities of shoots causes terminals to push with greater vigor than the laterals. 0. The more the sap is obstructed in its circulation the more likely it will be to produce fruit buds. 10. I he leaves serve to - prepare the sap absorbed by the roots for the nourishmens of the tree, and aid the formation of buds on the shoots. All trees, therefore, deprived of their leaves are liable to perish. The word lady is a compound of two Saxon words leaf, or Inf, signi fying a loaf of bread, and d'utn, to give, or serve. In olden times it was customary for those families whom God had blessed with afflu ence to give away regularly a por tion ot bread or other food to poor families in their respective parishes and neighborhoods, and on such oc casions the "lady" or mistress of the household distributed the daily or weekly dole. Hence sue was called the " laf-dy" or "bread-giver," and it is probably from this hospi table custom that to this day English ladies carve and serve the meat at their own tables. There is a minister near Boone ville, Ind., who has been married three times, his first two wives being sisters, and his third wife step-mother to his first two wives. Anticipation of evil is the death of happiness. The New Hampshire Election. The election in New Hampshire. which resulted in such a glorious triumph for the Democracy, was preceded by unexpected signs of mutiny in Secretary Robeson's vote tactory at the Portsmouth Navv Yard. It is estimated that the Navy Department exi .ended at least $250.- 000 at this yard in order to seerira voters for the Administration ticket, and the most violent indignation was excited among the Federal ofliee- holders when it became known that there was danger that so profuse an expenditure of the public funds might fail of yielding the desired re sult. It appears that the men who have been employed since January, receiving from two to five dollars per day for the votes they were ex pected to cast, knew from the expe rience of former years that the most of them would probably be discharg ed within a few days after the elec tion, and came to a secret under standing among themselves that they would vote as thev pleased. The idea that American citizens who were receiving pay from the Govern ment should presume to vote in op position to the will of their official superiors struck the othce-holders Ring as a little less than ra.nk treason ; and every variety of coax ing and intimidation was resorted to for the purpose of checking the dan gerous spirit of insubordination. According to the correspondent of the Boston Post, the most tremend ous efforts were made to convince the navy yard men that if they would only vote right they should'be con tinued on the roll's and draw pay whether there is any work for them, to do or not. A good deal of remark not entirely coinplimentory to Rob eson's character for varacitv has been caused in New Hampshire bv the receipt of letters from Congressmen Randall and Parker, who wrote that, having waited on the Secretary of the Navy and remonstrated with him against the outrageous ard disgrace ful prostitution, of the civil service in the Portsmouth Navy Yard, thev had been informed by that official that not over 000 men were employed there, and no more than the necessi ties of the service required? It is confidently asserted by the corres pondent of the Post that from 1,500 to 2,000 men have been on the pay rolls there since the first of January, at least 1,000 of whom were ot needed in any of the departments of the yard. Exchange. Avoiding- a Middleman. A lodge of our G.-ange friends, in Clayton county, had need of a barrel of good whisky for domestic and medicinal purposes, and were rightfully deter mined to avoid the monopoly prices of middlemen in purchasing. So a committee was delegated to comi' to Dubuque and purchase it of one of our wholesale houses, which they did on reasonable terms, and took it home on the cars. On the day of its arrival the memlers of the Grange repaired with their stone jugs to the house of the head Gran ger, where the barrel was stored. and the liquor was distributed among them, each paying for his share at the wholesale rate at w hich it was purchased. This was well enough as far as it went, but the next day a Collector of Internal Revenue, who had been scenting the flavor of the good spirits from afar, pounced upon the head Granger for retailing whis ky without, a license, and threatened to place him under arrest unless he complied with the requirements of the internal revenue law in this re gard, and he was comiielled to pay so or friu to get rid ol the gentle man and his unpleasant exposition ot what Uncle Sam provides. I)u- biiqite Herald. Q The Gilroy Advocate, in stirring up its delinquent subscribers, poet izes as follows: "Delinquents on the printers' books an never go to J leaven. If this be true we are sadlv afraid that "'tother place" will be densely peopled, for the race of delinquents is large indeed. We hardly believe it, for many a good fellow is behind with the printer, let it may be so. and common prudence would sug gest to all such to square up the old scoreand get a receipt for ad vance payment. It would be terri ble to be cast into outer darkness, where there is weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth, when the p. yment of a small score due the printer would have been a sure pass port to8 regions of eternal light. Our heart aches at the mere thought of the dangerous position of many of the patrons of the Enterprise! Some of the Beauties of Protec tion. The tariff protective tax on axes is 40 per cent, in gold; on bags it is 40 per cent.; on feather beds 20 per cent.; books 22 per cent.; plain Chinaware 45, and orna mental 50 per cent.; dress goods 5 to 7 cents per square yard, and 31 to. 30 per cent ad velorem ; drugs 20 to 40 per cent.; flaunels 13 to 45 cents per pound, and 31 per cent, ad ve lorem; brown and bleached linens 30 to 40 per cent.; railroad iron 63 cents per 100 pounds; salt, in bulk, 8 cents per 100 pounds, in bags, 12 cents; silk, dress and piece, GO per cent.; iron 32 per cent.; leather 31 per cent steel 40 percent.; glass 35 per cent., and so on through some 2,000 articles. Generally the tax is more than half the original cost. What do the industrial classes tnink of such rates of taxation on their nec essary supplies? A verdict has leen rendered against E. C- Barnes, formerly Collector of Internal Revenue for the nmtn nen. tuckv district, for $100,000, amount due the Govesnment. the o o o o G O O O o c