Long after it was supposed that the last dog had gone out, yellow dogs, of different degrees of yellowishness, and moving in irregular orbits, would be thrown from the secretary's room with great force. Some of them were killed, while others were painfully injured. It is said that there are fewer yellow dogs in Cheyenne now than there used to be, and those that are there are more subdued, and reserved, and taciturn, and skinned on the back, than they used to be; while the secretary has a far-away look in his eye, like a man who has trusted humanity once too often, and been everlastingly and unanimously left.
WHAT WOMAN'S SUFFRAGE HAS DONE FOR WYOMING.
SOME TESTIMONIALS, AND ONE THING AND ANOTHER.
The managing editor of a Boston paper, is getting material together relative to the practical workings of Woman's Suffrage, and as Wyoming is at present working a scheme of that kind, he wants an answer to the following questions:
1. —Has it been of real benefit to the Territory?
2. —If so, what has it accomplished?
3. —How does it affect education, morals, courts, &c.?
4. —What proportion of the women vote?