7V O . ! DEVOTED TO NEWS, LITERATURE, AND THE BEST INTERESTS OF OREGON. VOL. 11. OREGON CITY, OREGON, THURSDAY, JUNE 14, 1S77. NO. 34. I : i OTir rfP rrrA a 0 THE ENTERPRISE, A LOCAL NEWSPAPER FOB THE Farmer. It iiii- Mim anil Family f.'ii-le ISSUED EVERY THURSDAY. FIIOFRIETOR AND PUBLISHER. Ofhcial Paper for Clackamas County. O.'Iioe: In i:teririC Ruil.liii,;, Ou. dour Smith of Masonic Building, Maia Street. Tenia or Kulwrripiion i hiugle Copy, one year, in advance $2 50 Singlu Copy, Hix months, in advance 1 SO Ti run, ti Ad vertioiusr s Trni"il lf-J;-.'nient. iii'-ludi"" all It tl O notices, per square of twelve lints, one week $ 2 50 For earn subsequent insertion. .. 1 00 120 00 00 00 40 00 One Column, one year Half Column, one year Ouarter Column, one year liusinc-s Card, one square, t uc year.. . .. 12 00 SOCIETY NOTICES OREGON LODGE, No. 3, I. O. O. F. Meets every Thursday Evening. Evening, at svsr:: h lows- Hall.1 ,,3f-T .f the Order Jo-i; A- T4 o'clock, in O ld Fell Main Street. Members of ar invited to alt n i By order of X. G. REBECCA DEGREE LODGE, No. 2, i. . w. r.. meets on tue secona ami i X Fourth Tuesday Eveuini! of each month, """I at 7 o'clock, in the Odd Fellows' Hall.." I ' Members of the Decree are invited t at to n lj FALLS ENCAMPMENT, No. 4, I. O. O. F.. meet at Odd Fellows' Hall on 22 the First and Third Tuesday of ea-h month. Ojj. I'ntriarchs in good standing are invited tor attend. MULTNOMAH LODGE, No. 1. A. F. A A. M.. holds it- regular rotmni.nt. r.H.Mn An VI.. t .....1 MM.;.. 1 U .. . 1 lt '"'i" v.m wi-j l lir, UU'I Add: 11IUllll)n in each month, at 7 o'clock from the ait ho of September to the 2ith of March; and 7 H o'i lock from the 2oth of Mar.-h to the ' 20th of September. Brethren in vood standing are invited to attend. Uy order of W. M. BUSINESS GAUDS. J. W. MORRIS, S'hysic'iaii iiml ttiirgt'OH. OFFICE AND IIESIDEXCE : On Fourth Slruct, at foot of Cliff Stairway. tf CHARLES KNIGHT, CAN BY, OREGON, j si'i:ua iiml Druggist. Byrrcserlptions carefully filled at short notice. ja7-tt' PAUL BOYCE, IVf. D., S'lsjl sioiasi an9 Surgeon, Oregon Cfty, Orkohx. Cironii Pisea..K an 1 Diseases of Women and Children a specialty. Office Hours day and night ; always ready when duty calls. " aux-2ri,"'7itf DR. JOHN WELCH, 1) E X T T S T . OFFICE IN OREGON CITY OREGON. Highf st cash price paid for County Orders. JOHNSON & McCOWN, ATTORNEYS and COUNSELORS AT LAW OREGON CIrY. OREGON. Will practice in all the Courts of the Slate. Special atteuti m gUen t. chs-s in the United States Land 0;Bce at Oregon City. 3apr'72 tf L. T. DARIN, ATTOKXKY AT LAW, OREGON CITY, OREGON. Will practice iu all th- Courts of the Stati-. ui.vl, '7")-tf W. H. HICHFIELD, I'n t ulillHhod slnttc One door N.irth of Pope's Hall, M !! MT.. OltKUUX CITV, OKKdOV. An assoitment of Wntobes, Jewelrv. and Seth Thomas' Wright Clocks, all of which j are warranted to be as represented. fc'jti ttyitepairint; done on short notice; and thaukiul for past patronage. '!) 1'uiil lor i'oimty r;Iors. JOHN M. BACON, DF.ALKR IN BOOaKS, STATI0NERY,i3 PICTURE FRAMES. MOULDINGS AND MISCEI, O I.ANEOUS GOODS. t' it a ytv.H Mtnt: t oitnric. Oreoox Citv, Oregov. "At the Pofct Oillce, Main Street, west side. Iiuvl, '75-tf J. R. GOLDSMITH, C'ollootor anI Solicitor, POUTLAND, OREGON. CT7"Kt st of references j;Lven. dci23-'77 HARDWARE, IRON AND STEEL, EIiiIik, SpoUcN, Itims, OAK, ASH AND HICKORY PLANK. OltTIIItri A- THOMPSON, mar31,'7C-tf Tortland, On gon. J. H. SHEPARD, HOOT AXJ S1IOEKTOUE, One door North of Ackerman Bros. avjf'liiHit and Shoes made and repaired as cheap as the cheapest. novl, '73-tf MILLER, CHURCH & CO. PAY THE HIGHEST PRICE FOR WHEAT. At all times. t the OREGON CITY MILLS, And have on band FEED and FLOUR to sell, at market rates. Parties desiring Feed must furnish sacks. novl J. if A. G. WALLING'S dPionecr ISoolc ISimlery Pittock's Building, cor. of Stark and Front Sts.. POKTLAM), OREOO. BLANK BOOKS RULED AND BOUND TO ANY desired pattern. Music Bo. ks. Magazines, wspipers. etc.. K.nnd in every variety of styl knowu to the trade. Orders from the country promptly attended to. . novl, 75-tf OREGON CITY BREWERY. HUMIJKI, fc MADDEU, Having purchased the above Brewerr, wishes to inform tao public that they areUiSSj "nam''"111 tjUJDU,l--ur a No. 1 UsSg! OF LAGER BEER, o"rJ ll,nV'0bUine,i y nere in the State. orur aollciua and promptly filled. WITH THEE. BY W. VT. ELLSWOBTH. I'd rather walk through shower with thee. Than with another when the air la soft with summer, and as fair The heavens above us as a sea Of dim, ivnfathomed sapphire, where. Slow drifting oj a liquid aky. The white sailed ships of Gcd float by. Sweeter is storm to be with thee. Dark waters 'round us, and the roar Of breakers on an unseen hhore ltesouuding louder on the lie, Than with another, hailing o'er A rippling lake, where angry gale May never rend the silken sail. Scribner for Jane. VI! K. I.i:JE.l OF THE AUKS. lit V iCA ua, iLU. I had a dream ; the Wall of the Ages unto me Appeared of live flesh and rough granite built. An immobility made of restlessness. An editice with the sound of multitudes. Black loop hol-s starred with lierce, out-peering eyes. And evolutions of all monstrous groups In uiant frescoes and vast bus reliefs. Opened the wall at times, and showed the halls, Yaults where tho happy sat, the powerful, Couquerors by crime iuibruted, incense-drunk. Interiors of jasper, porphyry, gold ; Or crowned with towers or wheat-ears, every age Was there, and sphinx o'er its enigma bent ; Each stage with some vague animation snowed. Far rising into shadow as an armed host. Where, with its leader, suddenly petrified. In act to storm liy t-acalada the Night. The mass thus floated as a cloud tlint rolls; A wail it was, and then a multitude ; The marble held the sceptre and the sword. The (lut-t lamented and the dull clay bled. The stout s that fell disclosed the human form. Man, with the unknown spirit leading him. Eve undulating, Adam floating, one And diverse, bciirg universe, beat there, Aud destiny, black thread the tomb winds off. Sometimes the lightnings on this livid plane Flashing, made million faces suddenly gleam. I saw the Nought there which we call the All The kings, the gods, the glory and the law. Aud geueiations uown the age stream borne ; Aud, as I looked, continued without end The plague, woo, hunger, ignorance, The hu;jt rtition, scieuce, hiscory : As a black colonade is lost to view. This wall, composed of all that crumbles down. Ruse gloomy, scarped and formless. Where it was I knew not ; somewhere in the darksome place. THE YOUNG CUBAN. One evening-, just after the 8 o'clock gua had fired, I was seated in the Cafe Fernando, in the Calle do Santa Maria, Havana, smoking a Spanish cigaritte, and watching tho crowd of persons passing in and ont, or pacing up and down tho hall, in that earnest, conversa tional manner which characterizes the Spaniard. I sat quietly smoking, when a young Spaniard whom I had seen in the Uni ted States passed my table. I at once pronouueed his name. Ho stopped, and, after regarding me for an instant, a bright, warm smile of recognition lighted up his tine countenance, and he sprang forward and elasjjed me in his hands, while he expressed, most cor diilly, hi pleasure at again meeting me. He took a seat by me, and after I had told him how loug I had been in Cuba, and here I was living, he answered my inquiries bv informing mo that he lived within half a league of the walls with his mother, and that his house was at my service as much as if it were my own. Having thanked him for his hos pitable oiler, we talked of our former schoolmates; for wo had been at school together near Uoston. Young Carlos de Armas had been popular with us. He was of a slight figure, but perfectly symmetrical, with the most elegantly shaped hand and foot I ever beheld. His hair was as glossy black as tho raven's wing, and flowed with silvery beauty about his neck. His features were delicately chiseled, and full of expression and energetic beauty. "You will go out with ino to-mor row?" lie asked. "I reruaiu in to-night to attend the opera, where you must go with me. I will take no refusal, mi umigo Americano," he added, with his captivating smile, as he laid his jewel ed, olive-colored hand upon my arm. I was about to consent, for I had come to Havana for ay health, which, having been entirely restored in that delicious clime, I had some days' leisure beforo I contemplated returning to the States. Hut as I was in the act of replying, a richly dressed officer of middle ago and haughty air came in, attended by sev eral young oilicers, glittering in gold and plumes. There was no vacant ta ble, and as the officer was looking to seo where ho could find a seat for himself and party, his eye fell on me, whose complexion and blue eyes (and national air, doubtless) , stamped me as an American. "Here is a table, gentlemen!" he said, striking his hand on my table by way of taking possession of it. "This is an American, and ought to be in prison instead of being permitted to go at largo here!" This was all "spoken in Spanish, and so grossly that I felt my eye flash and my blood boil. I had half risen, pre viously, in order to leave with Carlos, but I now resumed my seat, quietly re solved that I would not resign to rude ness what I might have yielded to cour tesy, and bad he properly approached me. "It is tho General ! I beg of you, do not resent, for he is capable of doing yon mischief. Yield quietly, my friend. Havana is not Boston." This was said to me very rapidly, in an undertone, by Carlos, whose natur ally brave soul was intimidated by the tyrannical power which crushes every thing noble in Cuba. "is the Yankee going to move?" de manded the officer, fiercely. Several Spaniards, who were seo ted at the little tables about, snranerto their feet and servilely offered him the places iney naa occupied. Hut he bowed neg atively to their obsequious troffers. and fixed his glance on me, as if expecting inai i wouiu cringe before him, likethe Cubans. I quietly sat smoking, and tried to induce Carlos to reseat himself. But he was disposed to conceal his ac quaintance with me, and withdrew from the table, losing himself m the crowd that was gathering around. Finding that I remained seated, the general ordered one of his aides to re move me. As he extended his hand to fasten his grasp upon niy collar, I drew a revolver and deliberately aimed at his heart. There was a general retrograde motion of the party. Some one behind me wounded me with the point of a sword. I turned and fired, and then making a circular sweep with my pistol around me, I took advantage of the space which I had thus cleared to walk through it and quit the coffee-house, leaving behind me the fiercest uproar. I had no sooner reached the street than Don Carlos hurried past me, saying, aj he did so, in my ear: "Fly! Conceal yourself! Ho has sent for a file of soldiers to arrest you. Follow me, and I will show you a pJace of safety." I placed myself under the protection of my friend Carlos, who led the way across tho plaza to a narrow street, w&ich we entered and traversed for some distance through the darkness. At length wc came to a small shop, over the low door of which was a cigar-box for a sign. The shutters wer closed, but a faint thread of light streamed through the crevices of the shutters. "Here is tho shop of Pedro Alva," said my friend; "he is a cigar-roller, whom I have befriended when sick, and who is attached to me. You will be safe here, as he may be trusted." Ho knocked on the shutter, and re peated the name of tho occupant of the humble tenement. "Quien la? Quien esta?" responded a hoai so voice within. "It is I, de Armas," was tho reply. We heard an exclamation of satisfac tion, and the half leaf of a door was pushed cautiously outward. The light from within showed him the face of de Amas, and he quickly threw the door wide and admitted us. "Now shut, bar, and lock, good Pe dro," said de Amas, aiding him. Pedro, who was a short, dark visaged Spaniard, with an enormous gray mus tache, iron speclacles, and a bald head, soon secured the door. "I am glad to seo your honor," he said, respectfully, "and your lordship's friend," bowing to me; "but I hope there is nothing wrong, senors." "My friend, here, has been so unfor tunate as to make an enemy of General , and I wish you to conceal him." "If lie has mado such an enemy, he had better leave the island as soon as he can, senor," said Pedro. "And until he can do so, I wish j-ou to keep him securely here. To-morrow I will try and arrange for his departure. Now, my friend," he added, addressing mo, and taking my hand, "I beg you to keep close, and suffer no one to see you until you hear from me again. If the person you shot is killed, your life is at stake." "Tho gentleman is wounded, Senor Carlos!" suddenly exclaimed the cigar rollcr, examining the floor with his light. "Here is blood ho is standing in!" "You did not tell me so," he said, re proachfully. "I forgot it, and did not feel it, until now reminded of it," I answered; but now that I thought of it, I suffered pain. De Armas made me take off my coat, and upon examination, he found that tho sword passed through tho flesh of my left shoulder, making two orifices of the breadth of two inches, and that the wound bled freely. It was soon bound by the skillful Pedro, who had been in the wars, and had experience in such matter., which it seemed to afford him great delight to have to do with again. De Armas, having seen me safely to bed, in a small closet, half hidden by a pile of tobacco bals took leave of me, prom ising to come and see me tho next day. and report how affairs stood. lhe soporific influence of the tobacco soon overpowered my senses, and when I awoke it was ten o clock in tho fore noon. Pedro had locked me iu, and tnrougu tne cninKs ot tne ttoor l saw him at his work, in the front shop. I softly rapped, and ho camo to me. aud pretended to bo assorting cigars on a shelf over the door. "What news from Carlos?" Tasked, eagerlv. "Nothing, senor. He is, no doubt. acting for 3'our safety. Pedro passed me a cup of fragrant coffee aud a light roll, and I ate a hearty breakfast. He closed the door between the two rooms, and thus enabled me to come out of my confined lodging place. We had a consultation, and I resolved to quit the refuge of his shop, unwilling to expose him to danger. He warmly insisted upon my remaining. Finally I made known to him my plan, which was to dress in a suit of his clothes, and with half a dozen bales of tobacco on mv shoulders, 6ally forth iuto the streets, and try and get beyond the Tacon Paseo, into the country, where, three miles fromthecitv,dweltan English merchant whom I well knew, and where I felt I should be in safety. The change in my wardrobe was soon completed, or rather, instead of changing my dress, I put on Pedro s coarse habiliments over my own He stained my face with tobacco juice, and then piled upon my shoulders several parcels of tho broad leaved tobacco, which flapped over and about my shoulders and face, completely con cealinc it. I then told him to inform Senor de Armas where I was going, that he might, if he wished, come and seo me, and grasping his hand, I went out of the door. At last I reached the last sentry of the rir.v cutnost. Here I felt that 1 should be most in danger, since I learned from Pedro that strict orders had been given to watch carefully every avenue out of thA citv. Bv the time I reached the gate, I was nearly overcome with weakness and fatigue. The flesh wound in my shoulder, heated and rubbed by the tobacco pressing upon it, had caused it afresh, and I conld feel the Idond trickling down, even to my feet. I. therefore, determined to sit in tho shade of a tree, near tho gate, upon a stone bench, till I in some measure re covered my strength, and get a little restored. T lial rnr. lwrm seated ten minutes during -which time I had seen the guard rpliAvftd -when one of the soldiers ounged up, and took hi seat on the bench where I sat. Without ceremony. he pulled a leaf from my bundles of tobacco, and smelling it, liKe an epicure, he seemed satisfied with its quality, and deliberately began rolling it up in the shape of a cigar. When uo had com pleted it and ho made it very neatly he licrhted it by a match, and commenced smoking. "Burn ciqnrro, hombre, he at length said, without deigning a glanco at me. 'Where is your shop? I will send for --. li t ! somo. lou nave goon xouacco uere. "Mv shop, .tenor soliado?" I answer ed, "is in Calle de Sau Juan, No. IS." "Buen! And where do you take to bacco out of the citv? People bring it in usually." "We have a large order to fall, and 1 take it out, to get this made up by a friend, who sometimes helps us." "When you come back, leave mo a dozen," he said, "and I will be your customer." "As v-ou make cigars so well, senor, I will give you a half a score of leaves, as a present, if you are going to be my cus tomer, J said; and suiting the action to the word, I pulled the leaves from the bundle, and handed them to him, to his evident satisfaction. I then passed on, and was soon be yond the gate, and traveling on tho dusty road, between gardens fragrant with orange trees and tropical flowers. 1 at length reached the villa of Mr. W., who was in the citv; but I mado mysolf known to Mrs. W.. who at once eladlv welcomed me, and offered mo the refuge I so much needed. When Mr. W. re turned in the evening, he found mo in bed, with a high fever, brought on by the inflammation of my wound. I was tenderly nursed for twelve days, and at the end of three weeks, I was entirely recovered. From Mr. W. I learned tho excitement which had followed the scene in the coffee house, and of tho search made for me, by orders of Gen eral , who represented mo as a spv of tire Americans. "If yon had not been an American," said Mr. W., "ho would not have insult ed you as he did in tho coffee house. Tho search for you is now over, as it is supposed you have left tho island; and you will be able to get off in the next steamer without difficulty. It sails day after to-morrow." But I did not wish to leave until I had seen or heard from Don Armas. I pro posed for my supiscions were pain fully rouod that we should send to his mother's villa in order to ascertain if he were there or not. Mr. W. advis ed me not to appear abroad, openly, and rode to her residence, three miles dis tant, himself. Upon his return, the ex pression of his face showed that he brought ill-tidings. " lie is iu prison J" he answered the inquiring look I gave him , as he alighted. "In prison? I repeated with a sink ing heart. "Yes. His mother is in great dis tress. She says that three weeks ago last night" " The very night I last saw him," I said. "A Spanish officer, with a filo of mounted soidiers, rode ont to the villa, and entering it, searched for tho papers of Carlos, and carried off every l-tter and scrap of piper they could find, and every letter he had written to his moth er from the United States, when he was at the university there. Upon her inquiries why this was done, the only reply she got was that Carlos was a state prisoner, and arrested on suspicion of sympathizing with tho American in vaders." "Do vou know what prison he is in?" I asked of Pedro. "In the government prison, near the port side." "This is a strong place." "As tho Moro itself, senor," answered Pedro, shaking his head. "I know all about it, for I was once in the guard, and have done my duty in it many a month." "Then you must go to prison, and chat with your old comrades. Yrou must make them presents of fine cigars. You must not be without a flask of wine under your jacket. You must make friends with all in the guard-honso. It will take two or three days, twice a day, to accomplish this till you make them familiar with your presence. Throw out hints that you think of enlisting again." "I will do it, senor," answered Pedro. "If you will, I will afterward plan some way ot liberating him," I ans wered. After about four hours absence he returned. He informed me that his success had been far better than he an ticipated, that he had not only been let into prison by one of his old cronies, now a sergeant, but had seen Carlos and spoken to him, by tho sergeant's permission. This relation of Tedro filled mo with joy and hope. I at once directed him to procure a stout rope, and half a dozen files, and convey them to the cell of Don Carlos. The next day at ten o'clock, when we knew that ho should find the sergeant at his post, he went to the prison, and conveyed these articles. He placed them through tho iron win dow, in the hands of Carlos, who said it would take him two nights to file off the bars, which were thick. He said that if a boat could be brought under the window at midnight, on the sec ond night, ho would be ready to de scend into it. This was good news to my heart. I now sent Pedro out to purchase a whale boat, or some light, safe boat that it would bo possible to cross to Key West in, if necessary. This boat he pulled round to a place near the prison, and moored it by an obscure pier. It was a starlight night. Fortunate ly, we met no patrols, and reached our boat in safety. Here, to my surprise, 1 found that Pedro determined to embark with me. He said he would not remain, for the escape of Carlos known, suspi cion would light upon him, who had been so rgcently in the prison. I was giad enough to get him to aid me fur COURTESY OF BANCROFT LIBRARY ther in my entetprise; and, pushing off our boat, we were soon rowing with noiseless dip under tho walls of the prison. As the clock tolled midnight, we came beneath the window. I look ed up, but could see nothing save the obscure darkness of the window. "Hark!" whispered Pedro, "he isstill filing." 1 listened, and distinctly heard the grating of the coarse file on the heavy bars. "You are right; ho ha3 not done all his work," I said, with misgiving. As I spoke, there was a humming in the air, and, with a splash, a piece of the iron bar fell into the water. We held our breaths. We believed it would be impossible for the sound not to attract the sentries. We expected to be hailed or fired into. While thvts expect ant, the rope fell from the height upon my head. I caught it gladly and drew it tight. I tried my weight upon it and found it secure. The next mo ment Carlos was in the boat, and his arms about my neck. Pedro took the oars and I tho helm, and we pulled noiselessly out from under the frowning walls. The guardianship sentry hailed us with the sharp "Quien ?"' but we answered him as we had done others, by calliug ourselves the boat of an Eng lish vessel of war, that we knew lay out side, and to and from which the town boats plied at all hours. When we had reached the Moro we breathed freely, ami as there was a wind outside, we stepped our mast and hoist ed our leg-of-mutton sail. By sunrise we were eight miles north and west of Moro Castle, aud steering for Key West, as near as we could guess. We ate a hearty breakfast of rolls and fish, aud lighted our cigars. At noon we dined after tho same fashion. See ing in tho west a large ship, I bore to ward it, and soon found, from her bright sides that she was a Yankee mer chantman. As we approached her they discover ed us, and watched us through a glass. We were at length received on board; and as I had tho good fortune to bo know to two of the passengers, we were at once at home. Carlos, whoae property had been con fiscated after his flight, is now an active loader in the army; and the day may not bo far distant when ho himself shall be tho instrument of freeing Cuba from the yoke of Spain. The Synonyms of Power anil the Coal Supply. Dr. Siemens, tho great metallurgist, recently delivered an address before the English Iron and Steel Institute, in which he made a startling suggestion as to tho utilization of water power. He said that all tho coal actually mined in tlie world would only create a power equal to that annually wasted by the Falls of Niagara. If this power were applied to a powerful dynamo-electrical machine, an electrical current could be produced of great intensity. "A copper rod of three inches in diameter would be capable of transmitting 1000 horse-power a distance of say thirty miles, an amount sufficient to supply one quarter of a million candle-power, which would suffice to liyht a moder ately sized town." Who knows but what here is the true solution of the il lumination question. Of course Niag ar Falls is not necessary, or even falls of any kind. Every running river is a great waste of power. The city of May ence has all its gristmills operated by the placid stream of the Ilhine, anchor ing them off tho city and compelling the current to turn tho wheels. Dr. Siemens gave Niagara as an instance of tho vast natural forces as yet unutilized, and to show how the economy of forces may yet greatly diminish the use of coal. He says that the constant improvements in the methods of heating tend to check the consumption of coal. In twenty years the average increase in the Eng lish coal production has been 3,500,000 tons a year, while tho power gained from the consumption of it has increas ed much more rapidly. A ton of steel rails can now be made with 5000 pounds of coal, against 10,000 twenty years ago. At tho present rate of increase, the coal supply of England would be exhausted in two hundred and fifty years, but Dr. Siemens relies on the increasing econ omy of use to greatly retard this period. Nevek Knock Under. No, never! Always rally your forces for a more des perate assault upon adversity. If ca lumny assails you, and the world as it is apt to do in such cases takes part with your traducers, don't turn moody or misanthropic, or worse still, seek to drown your uuhappiness in dissipation. Bide your time. Disprove tho slander if you can; if not, liveitdown. If jjov erty comes upon you like a thief at night, what then? Let it rouse you, as the presence of the real thief would do, to energetic action. No matter how deeply you may hive gone into hot water always provided you did not help the father of lies to heat it your case, if you are of the right kind of stuff, is not dsperate, nor 13 it iu accord with the divine order and sweep of things that life should have any difficulties which an honest, determined man, w ith Heaven's help, cannot surmount. Silver Mines of Peru. The famous silver mines of Cerro del Pasco, in Pe ru, have, since their first discovery, yielded silver estimated at So00,000,000 in value. The working of the mine 'was always conducted in a crude and un faithful manner, and nothing like the amount the ore was capable of yielding was produced. Mr. Henry Meiggs, the famous American railway builder of Peru, proposes to construct a tunnel by means of which the mines can be drain ed, and a vast amount of rich ore be reached. The proposed undertaking will be equal to the Sutro Tunnel in cost and extent, but it is thought that it can be made to pay. A recently published notice of a marriage iu Philadelphia, ended with the announcement: "No cards; no flow era; nobody's business." Confidence of Farmers in Each Other. One of the most useful features of the Grange movement is its tendency to produce confidence among farmers that is, confidence of farmers in each other. The average farmer is too apt to look upon his neighbor farmer in the light of a competitor as a sort of busi ness enemy who wants an opportunity to take advantage of him. This state of feeling probably grows out of the isolated life led on thfl farm and the in frequency of social or business rela tions between farmers. Farmers very seldom have business with each other, and hence there has naturally grownup a sort of distrust of one another. The Grange movement brings the farmers, as a class, together, and by interchange of ideas concerning their agricultural operations and calculations by a rela tion of their successes and failures, by a moro thorough understanding of each other's feelings, their hopes and fears a mutual sympathy grows ui aud mutual confidence is cultivated. Members of the Grange are led by degrees to regard each other more in the light of brothers, as they call each other in the Grange language, and the old notion that each farmer is a sort of competitor in busi ness wears away. When these changes have taken place, the road is open to that co-operation so desirable among farmers, not only in the cultivation of their lands and the improvement of their agricultural knowledge and prac tices, but in the sale of their produce and purchase of supplies. The Grange furnishes the machinery to bring farm ers together, but mutual confidence in each other must furnish the clue to co operative success. When farmers can be brought to see more fully their mu tual interests and mutual dependence, and tho similarity of their relations to all other classes, that confidence will naturally grow and be strengthened. If a sort of farmer's exchange were to bo established in each Grange, where each farmer were to state, either in writing or on a sort of bulletin board, or orally, what ho has for sale and what ho wants to buy in tho way of stock and other produce of the farm, it might in many cases lead to advantageous business transactions between the members. It frequently happens that one neighbor has an animal or animals for sale that another one is looking for, and neither being awaro of the other's wants both undergo many incouveuiencies, and per haps spend ccnsiderable time unneces sarily, the ono in looking up a buyer and tho other in looking up the thing or animal wanted. I he Jbxchange sug gested would frequently obviate all this iuconvenienco and los3 of time, and re sult in material advantage. As a precedent necessary to success in this direction, farmers should always be willing to sell anything they have to a brother farmer at the lowest figure they are willing to accept for it, and not ask a larger price tlian they would take of a dealer. We have reason to know that this rule is not always adopt ed where farmers attempt to deal with each other. If one farmer has hay 10 sell, or any other article of produce, we know it to be a custom to ask his neigh bor farmer nil ho could get for it in town, allowing nothing for hauling to market and other incidental expenses in marketing it. A little practical co operation among farmers in the way we have suggested will most likely cure this custom and lead to beneficial re sults. Let farmers cultivate confidence and good feeling among themselves. HOW TO liAISE AND FEED Y'OUNG TUR- keys. Turkeys should not be bred in-and-in longer than two or three years, when a change of males is necessary. Hens about a year old are best for breed ing, but they often lay forty or fifty eggs before sitting. Older hens lay less. Remove the eggs daily, leaving a china egg in the nest. All that are to be al lowed to sit should hatch by the first of Juno. Every young turkey under four weeks old should be gathered toils fold before sundown and shut in. Teach them to be gentle, so that you can pick them up and put them under their mother's wings, if necessary. "When hatching, says a writer on turkeys, "remove the shells from the nest and allow them to remain twenty-four hours after hatching before feeding. For the first two or three days I keep them on the oli I nest, as it is all warm through' out, and feed on thick custard, with a proportion of one part egg and the other new milk. I keep them Un this feed for nearly a week, and allow little or no run for them, and then only in the warmer portion of the day. Keep them clean, dry and warm (and they will bear a goodly amount of heat), well fed, and they will keep ouiet and repav vou for this extra care, that at the first out look may appear liko foolishness, but it is not. When they are about a week om l begin to wean them away from custard and introduce whole buckwheat. 1 " ana allow more run. When eommenc ing to feed buckwheat, do not forget to furnish water for beveraere. or thick. sour milk, and clam or oyster shells uroKen nne. lhe old-fashioned idea of raisiug turkeys on curd alone and al lot ing them to range from one end of the farm to tho other is exploded. Farmer's Friend. Kaiser Wilhelm owns so many hon orary medals and marks of decoration that when ho wants to wear them all at one time he has to put some of them on another man, his own coat not having acreage enough to contain them all, and he will not stick them to his trowpers for fear they will get under him when he goes to sit down. This news comes over by cable, and if it is not true it is not our fault. I am willing to rock the baby while women folks are biling soap; Iamreddy to kut rags to work into rag carpets; they kan keep me hunting hen's eggs, or picking green kurrants; or I will even dip kandles or kore apples for sass, but I won't churn. Josh Billings. Rce-barb fences are becoming very popular in New Jersey. Happy Homes. It should bo tho chief aim of every man and woman to multiply the num ber of happy homes, for the home is the seed-plant of a noble and flourishing commonwealth, and all tendencies are to be avoided which increase the diffi culty of diffusing through every rank of life the refined and holy influences whioh are nourished by the domestic affections. Eeckless speculation among capital ists, disturbing the steady and uniform course of employment, "and its sure counterpart, drunkenness, and improv idence among workmen, are tho sharp est wer.pons which are brought to bear against the happiness of the home cir cle; for the elements of man's truest happiness lie in a very small compass, and if society were only conducted in a moro rational and moderate spirit, and its members of every class, were re strained from viscious indulgences of their appetites and passions, and from the pursuit of phantoms which fade away in their grasp, how much greater happiness would be found in t'to home circle, and what burdens of sorrow and grief would be lifted from the hearts of women. A marriage entered intowi'Ti thought ful care, and cemented by a faithfully pure love, when a fixed position has been gained, and a small fund accumu lated; with hard work and frugal habits at the commencement of the new life, so as to meet in time the demands of tho future; a home comfortably ar ranged, clean, healthful and bright, with a small collection of good books, a few well selected engravings, some blooming plants in the window, with a canary bird to awaken sweet echoes in the room, or it may be a piano and flute to accompany the voice; the evenings made pleasant by cheerful occupations, tending to mutual improvement, with the exchange of visits with neighbors and friends of congenial tastes and pur suits these are conditions of life which can bo attained by every husband and wife who will carefully seek for them, but are lost to thousands because they do not seek them in the right direction, but go abroad in search of the enjoy ment and happiness which they might create at home if they possessed the de sire to obtain them. This is not a visionary picture, but a sober possibility, which even now, un der the pressute of adverse times, is to be found in the homes of many working men and women," who have learned the secret of being therewith content. Mutual aiffeetion bhoul t be preserved by mutual endeavors to amuse, and to at tend to the wishes of each other: but when there is a total neglect and indif ference either to a-nnse and oblige, can it be wondered at that affection bciomes indifferent, and sinks into mere civility? ExcJidnge. Seeking a Comet. It was with anx ious feeleng that Mrs. Partington, hav ing smoked her S2)ecs. directed her gaze toward the western sky in quest of tho tailless comet of 1830. "I can't see it," said she; and a shado of vexation was perceptible in the tone of her voice. "I don't think much of this explanation system." continued she. "that they praise so, whera the stars are mixed uj so that I can't tell Jew- Peter from Satan, nor the consterna tion of the Great Bear from tho Man in the Moon. 'Tis all darkness to me. I don't believe there is any comet at all. Who ever heard of a comet without a tail, I should like to know? It isn't natural; but the printers will make a tale for it fast enough, for they're al ways getting up comical stories." NVith a complaint about the falling dew, and a slight murmur of disap pointment, the dame disappeared be hind a deal door, like the moon behind a cloud. The True Code of Honor. A man cannot afford to be unfaithful under any circumstances; a man cannot afford to be mean at any time; a man cannot af ford to do less than his best at all times, and under all circumstances. However unjustly you are treated, you cannot, for your own sake, afford to use any thing but your better self, nor render anything but jour better services. You cannot afford to lie to a liar; you can not afford to be mean to a mean man; you cannot afford to do other than up rightly with any man, no matter what exigencies may exist between him and you. No man cau afford to be any but a true man, living in his higher nature, and acting with the highest considera tion. Buttonhole Boquets. Buttonhole boquets, now almost indispensable to gentlemen, are made in two ways, of a single flower, such as a rosebud or tube rose, with a leaf as a background, and also of several varieties of small flowers. To keep them in place, and fresh, the lower part or stem is sometimes wound with tin foil, and fastened to the coat or dress with pins. A better way, how ever, is to use the neat little buttonbole boquet holders, made of glass of all colors, and attached to the dress, or coat by the pin which belongs to the hofcler. These holders contain water, and keep the little boquets fresh for several days, while the stems fit so tight to the mouth that no water can escape. An officer who commanded artillery during the late war informs us of the following simple remedy for colic in horses, which he Las tried with perfect success in hundreds of cases; rub the horse well between the fore legs and around tho girth with spirits of turpen tine. Immediate relief follows. At lanta Constitution. Brino up your children to joy. Give them just as much as they can take without intoxication and without reac tion. If you take too much of any one essential you cheat some other. Equi poise of the various elements of our being is what we want. T.ie evasive Boston man carries his gold watch in his boot leg about this season, and the assessor sees it not. f 11