THE OREGON AK 0 U S. . Of SUBSCRIPTION. 1 cL.Jr.-W A""" ' Tk' DMml JultfP'' . . las P"' a,',N",f' yr It. lit '' v " K Srt a. .ay ' JL n,Urs wiU W ekurgtdor tia mmI-. M. V ditrfli' until til rrr.f pannenbaura & Ackerman, Opposiltlht Moitt St. IIoum, II AVE ON IIASB ''..fin ffiATM nf all tlMcriDtiftiii. and , ins flueel lt ' brought U tint marktl) rlB Ciiinf Col, Black fror.k alotu Jo., ItsglsnS, " Caaimtrr Pantt, Saliuel do, rj Vests, of " dwc''pHui VbiitShim, Woollen and Merino under do., INn fc Caps, lloele Shoes, Wbiit and blu blankets, m,n. other eriiolce too numerous to mention, "bicli will bt oHirtd lowest oiuh price. .all kinds of. .. ..j J ........ l.:.L.. BieWlMUWin, Ulencnru iiihwii, mtnvijr strips, saliuels, Kentucky jeans, Iwillrd mil plain lUtsfls; elici, furniture pruts, nil culico.de a,UM, cselimrrv mil wool, French meriuoe, and a JVVie ilyle of Poplin, BwiMt Ribbons, md lot of detirsble trim, p. Ortttoii City, Sept (H, I BOO. FLEMING, MT TUB POST-OFFICE BUILDING,) OREGON CITY, HAS oa band and Tor (ale, a well-seltcted as ' aortmriit of ' Books and Stationery, comprising, In pert, the following: Fsmly I''"1' "d Cl', '"'" "J tnnenis, , ' I!'' , ,, Dawning'' frail" and Pens & lii-leildi ra, Fruit Trees of Anwr- Sand At sand buses, ka rerissd rd.lioii, Tissue psper, perforated flew Masouie Treelle- boar J a. dra tins paper l,r,, Mitchell'! ami Olncy't MaMiilo Manual, Geographic! aud At- INd Kellos' Manual, kieee, (Juiuby's Mysteries ef Mason's Farrier, Met. keeping. Padd's Catlle & Hone jini.lnne's Travels in Uuvtur, houih Africa, . Kiine'e Arctic Expire Cuiia'e Uoia. Medicine, tii.n. ttaiiHtia' Old and New Iilauk Book li. Dill Pa Snnllrra ft Keadere, nor, Ti'iwnwn'a Anili iut;ca, Gillepic' It Daviei' Fulton t Eartinau'a 8urvi')'iiiK. Ilook kirpiug, with Slatce and llp p-ncila, bluiike, Pr. Ilollick'a Worka, Mi blue, A. blk Inke, &.e., tic, ill of winch will be retailed at privei corrmpondiug tub Ike limee. , - ALSO, FOR SALE, Dr. Moftatt's Pills and Phoenix Bitters, and tha Graeftmberg Medicines, h'eh are recommended In tlioee h lio iah In live lillllirydie. My 14, 18.i9. GEN (JINK Lawton Blackberry Plauts, .. raoM Tin GLEN RUN NURSERY. , ,wr' 4 . I WILT, liave after tlie let of Mv. Lawton Dlackbi-rry and aeveral vrieLe of Itu'pberry ptrnil, m aate at Ilia fullowinj placea : Orrj.ia tlity. Fureat Grove. .... . McMinill, ' ' Dayton, and at any other po'nl in Orenn. I wurrant all Blackberry plania tu live that are art be!oe llie U Jan.. i all genuine, aal have nwer Mined the kUnU from Ilia aecil. There arc cullu' if.llin(.' iu thai Stale and Culifornia. L'k nut f .r them! 1 , ! t . ? PHILIP KITZ. (ilen Uun Nuracry, Sept. 29, It6u-29w4 Valuable Property For Sale. THB CHAMPOEO FLOUR MILL. THIS MILL, situated about three fourth of a mile ftom Cliampocg in the midit "f Hie great raiu-growiug country in Oregon, ia afl'ored for eale. During high water in winter, flour, Arc, unbealiipped direct from the Mill.' Atlachrd to the mill la a granary fur receiving and daring wheat, a dwvlling houae and garden fur the iim ef the prrtou iu charge. The whole property rmliracea aliotil rivr. acres. The miicliiuery of the mill ia of rcry mnerior eniliiy, hnving been imported from l! h. airr, N. Y. Tluro are two runa of the beat French Hurra, and au extra patent run of smaller Burrs far ehoppil feed, iu1. . The frame-work, for strength, die, cannot be surpassed in Uregnn, and tin null in all respects it lh best in the Mate. For particulars, application ahould be made to GEO. T. ALLAN, ) r ,.., A. McKINLA Y, rkamTe. or to AMOIIY IIOLUIIOOK, Cbampneg.Jan 10, IS60 4lif OrtganCity- Land for Hale. TWO or three land claims of 160 and 320 acrea, twelves miles ou a goo I road, no stream to truss, in a south east direction fmm Oregon City. The improvements costing nearly as much the price arkrd lor the land. The land it adapted to railing fruit, grain, or grata, Nad has as t"! a range for stock as there is in I 'lackninat csuaty. Will b told on favorable terms. Bn ouire ef N. W. RANDALL. Otrn City, Sept SO. IHtSOwS LEGAL NOTICE. A.F. Hedges, PlamliU, tt. ' David McLouirhlin. Defendant 'PO DAVID McLOUGHLIN, a non-resident X defendaut: You are hereby notified that un Ive yoo appear in the circuit Court of the Slate of (Iregag fw , county of Clackamas, to be held in OresotiCiivonlharirstMoud.lv in March, a. D. 186l,and theuand there answer the complaint of ""plaintiff" hied in ihcabove-enlillid case aga.nst Jnt, fitr ttt recovery e the anm of nineteen hun- 'red dollars and interest thereon from the lt of oeptember, 1659, at Ibe rale of two per cent per nth, opnn a prttniaeery note f .ven by you It) d piaimuT on Uieaa.d I tieptemlter, 1859, the will be taken f.ir con 6 wed, and the prayer tktrtof granted by tht court. JAMES K. KELLT, "ov.24, 1860m3 . : , , Art'y fcr Plff ' IN JUSTICE'S COURT. St ft a Ortjrta, Coaaty Claektmai. TO ALLEN SMITU : YOU art hereby aoliiied that awrit ef aUaeh ' aaat kat bean iaaoed aminat rou. and your PJny atiaohed to satisfy the oVaaaa.1 nT Joha F. "ilktr. amoanUag la fifty -five dollars, and inters from the 27th f s-mrmber. 1860; bow. anlrts T shall appear before W. P. Barn, a .1 entice of 7 reNi and for said coanty, at hit om , oa bt fid day af Drtjamber, I8fttl, jodgaMnl will be .-"to aarataal TOU-. and Teur property aum io ra;uWe.Wt. ' Oattd Ulia h dav ef Nrrv-rahev. I860. JOHN F. MILLKK, Jtai. OREGON HOSPITAL, PORTLAND, OREGON. tavrcua). i frserta. - mat A Weekly Newspaper, devoted to the Interests of the Laboring Classes, and advocating the Vol. VI. Cn a xci rnp. a Ukt. Mr. Clmrlca Rewle, in liin nvw wurk, " The Eijrlith Comiiniiiilinc'iitln irnioiaj N liternrj wuiriT ill tliu followriitf tiTinx; " The initiiiiis that in muttiTs of ttiiyriht havf Im-cii the nm4 miistiinlly nrctiwd of tlilioinlj liy the Rtijilisli prrxx nr lleljxiuin ond thn United Stain. Very will. I, Churl. Keaile, of 0 Bolton Knur, Mnjfnir, Luinlim, tin, 1 17 thexp ircsi iitii, offer u let to the firttt conir-r of wliuti'ver tuition. I Iwt him or Iter seventy (rtiiiii'a to forty (riiim-im thttt ht- or he doe. not to the mtisfitrtinn of nIhV 11m piri, to be l.j tut approved, uncewrl in provinjr thitt rilht-r tin kinirilntn of Bel (rinm or lite Ami-riom Ri'pnlilic lum ever, in treating or refining to tn-ut with anntli it Stitte for inlerimtionul copyright, been guilty of any net at dishonest, tislnyn, and donlile-faced 111 Qreut Hrituin tin com mitted, by trMtinjf with Frnnee for inter national copyright; and cmitiiviiig, tinder cover of thut trt'tity, to sltnl the, main in tellectual export of tltnt empire, and that 1 will prove the contrary." Cbinomss. Few pero. imngino the extent of trnde in crinoline wire. For about three yearn past, the consumption of wire by the crinoline worker in thl. conn- try has not been fur from otio hundred tons per week. The wire i of steel, and the price has ranged from fifteen to thirty cents per pound. At the average twenty-two cents the yearly consumption amounts, to $3,464,000. A few months since, the or ders to first hands greatly diminished, and fears, were apprehended by the wiremakers thut the harvest was over. But the lull whs caused by an overstock in the hands of crinoline-milkers, who hud ordered too freely. At present, the demand Is as uc tive as ever, and price are advancing. The Indies will bo surprised to know how much this part of their dress costs iu the aggregate, aud think what a weight they carry. A Committeeman in School. We have the following good one front an authentic source: A aitlvcommilteeofa School Board, not a thousand miles from the city of Lynn, were rxwnining a class in a primary school. One of thi- cnminittoc nndertnok to Nliuriien up their wits by propounding I lie following question: " If I hurl a nunce pic, nun should give two-twelfths In John, two- twelfths to Tsnnc. Iwo-lweirths to Hurry, and should keep hair of the pie for tnyseir, what would there be left?" There was a profound study among the scholars but finally one hid held up his hand as a Rignul that he was ready to an swer. " Well. sir. what would th're be left? Speak tip loud, so that all can hear," said the eotnmittre-mnn. " The nlntel" shouted the hopeful fellow. The committee-man turned red in the face. while the other members roared aloud. That boy was excised from answering any more questions. liouon Journal, Sands' Sarsaparilla, Tor Purifying the Blood, AND FOR THK CURE OP Scrofula, Mercurial DiseHxes. Rheumatism. Cutaneuua l,ru'ti''n, Snil.bnra ulcers, Liver conipla'tit. Dvpepia. Hroiithiii", Sail Klieiini. Lumbago, White Swell, ingd, Hip Diseane. Eulaif"meiit of ill Bones and J 'liits, Fever Sores, Remain Coin plaints, Krysipelas, L" of Appetite, Pimple. Biles, UuhthI Debil. ity, ii, Ac. It hit long been a most important deaiderstum in the pract.ee of medicine. 10 obtain a remedy similar to t lis, and accordingly wj find it retried to almost un vursally in all those tormenting dis eases of the i-kin wirying to the patience, and in jurious to the health. Ii is a ionic, oncrieut, and disinfectant 11 acts simunanrounjr u-u n.r stomach, the craectATiuN, and tho towaia, and thus three processes, which are ordinarily the re sult of TiiRBS dilferent kindanf medicine, are car ried on at the same l.me through ills instrumen tality of this on remedial agent, lit jrreat merit is that it meets aud neutrality the active principle or disease itself, and when that is gone, the eyinptomt necessarily disappear. The ra pidity wan which the pilient recovers health and strength muter this triple influence it surprising. IEMARKABLE CURE. Linn Codntv, Oregon Ter., ) Mrch II.1S..3. Mesttt. A. B. 4 D. S.NDS. New York : Gen tlemen. In the spriug of 18.3, while ou our way from Indiana to thit place, our eld -st boy was seized with a swelling and severe pama in the legs which day by day grew worse, until Ins legs con tracted and became so painful teat he could n t walk, and wt had to carry him about like an in fant Wa reached Albany 00 the 3d of Ootooer, completely Worn out by fatigue. By this time, he was reduced U. a perfect skeleton. Here wt were enabled to consult a physician (lr. Mill) who honestly roufewd he Ooul I not cure hun. al though he could give him medicine that would re lieve the pain. Iu Ibis eimency something must bt done, death was inev.l.bl.. Being recom mended lolnr your Sarsaparilla, I procured a bot tle. Alter liikieg eome. he tppeared worse; but persevering with it. 1 obia lied a second bottle, which seemed to grapple with the disease, and reused, a marked .moroveoie.il: tht swelling and pain in Ihe legs were reduced, his .ppet'' " proved, aud Ins color begin to return. Thut en couraged. I purchased . third bottle s while tak ing it Ibe swetl.ugs ia hit legs broke, and towt pieces of bone oe eigh.h f an inch long ea.ue out. after which his legs aire glib ned aud healed no. lit it now perfectly rrcvered haeaoap- pearaocto being a cr.p,, -m r- most kin.lt of eommoo lai. as all OUT MO f hfcft certify. "K-kbdavw Prepared and eo a by A. B. D SANDS, WhrJI. . Df W F-l-'-t, "'"''ittended tllffaera, of M,j. Tj.S.A.t W&Xl- ir H. JullN-ON . O. '-! from which he retorned but to go forth to tisos: RICK turri-'. - j --- McDONALI) .V CO. Sotratatt; and by ISbBLb!1 A,. ... Or.,.. C 1143 TUST rseerr-d. lt latert efjif af mix a , sat xtm it OUEGON CITY, ORKGON, DKCKMBEK 29. Uty or Uamaseat-llt Ureal Aalltally. Djiiiukmis wag an important place at least as early 111 the time of Abraham, so that it is nut less than four thousand years old. Etymologist dispute about the meaning of the numo. It was the ancient capital of Syria, aud was thus tho quin tessence of the quickwitted race it repre sented. It is called by some the most an cient city in tho world. This is, no doubt, eastern t-xnggcrution, but the fact that ev erything suj, by the orientalists about this famous capital ia exaggerated, only shows how strongly its real attractions had tuken effect upon their vivid imagination. A celebrated epislle of an ancient writer calls it " the great and sacred city of Damascus, surpassing every city, botlt it; the beauty of its temples and the magnitude of its shrines, as well as the timeliness of -its sea sons, the limpidncss ef its fountains, the volume of its waters, and the richness of its sod." lis people call it " a pearl sur rounded by emeralds." The description of Buckingham are not considered entirely reliable. But there ha seldom anything been written with human ! pen more beautiful than hi picture of the j plain of Damascus. He compares it to an English scut in the country, surrounded by an immense park. The visitor inquires for the family, and G::d thut they have been for a year in Italy. Meanwhile the place hus been delightfully niikept. Its rich cul tivation is everywhere partially grown tip; the trees mitrimmcd aud dipping their branches iu the 'purkling rivulet; the roses grown utmost into trees and covered witii innumerable blossom. Everywhere i seen rich verdure, luxuriant growth, with but such a touch of wilduess us to give the finishing grace to the landscape. Such, he Buys, is Damascus in the bloom of the year. Damascus was conquered by Duvid, who made it tributary. After being held by Solomon, it rerolted, ami afterward was at the head ol thirty-und-two kings. It wu subsequently taken by Assyria and Persia. Alter tho battle of Iasus, It fell into the hands of Alexander the Great, and Pompey annexed it to the Roman Em pire. A iter hetng celebratetl for lis weultli and splendor under the Greek Emperors, it was conquered by the Saracens, and be came for a time the capital of the Moham medan world. Tiie scepter of Inlum passed over to Bagdad, but Damascus is still fa mous in the history of S.dadin. It was besieged by the Crusader In the twelfth century, but they faded to take it. Later still, it was captured, with circumstances of great barbarity, by Tamerlane, and finally fell into the hands of the Turk un der Seliin I. It possesses, too, a high moral interest, lor on that beuutif.il plain it was that St. Paul " became obedient to the heuviuly vis'nn." Among the points of interest connected with this famous city are the Damascus blades, so malleable that they might be bent to a right angle without losing tlie'r elasticity, and so keen that they could sever down or gauze floating In the uir, or divide iron, without destroying their edge. For ages tho secret ol their manufacture was unknown. Gen. Anossoff, in the Ural mountains, however, succeeded, in quite recent times, in rank n a sword which seemed to equal the best Damascus, " with blade of reticulated lines such as al ways appeared on the finest Damascus blades in broad stripes, aud showing a bright, gilded reflection. He cut through a gauze handkerchief in the air, and cleft hones and nails, feats which cannot be per formed with the best English steel." An derson, in his recent travels in Siberia, states, however, that the secret died with Aiiossotr, as these swords are not now made at Damascus. Another point of interest is the famous Damask stuffs, They are properly silk, though sometimes made of other fabrics. Large quantities of silk are still manufac tured, and the Damask rosea have lost nothing of their immemorial beanty. There is at Damascus a considerable trade both with India and Europe. From India are brought by the Persian Gulf, Bassora, Bagdad, and Aleppo, spices, cot ton goods, coarse and fine muslins, and gold stuffs. English goods come through B 'yrout and Tripoli. The pple are Mohammedans, Druses, Oriental Chris tians, Jews, Ac. The population is about one hundred thousand. !& Gen. Joshua P. Haven, of San FruncUcn, died lately. Wlwrever he was known, he was not only respected for hi noble qualities, but loved for the genial kindness of his heart. He dime to Cali fornia at an early day, and wa long a con spicuous actor in the public iff or of the Stat. Tiie day previous to his death be bis own funeral, uant trjsipelas. Hia disease waa malig 10- Scandal, Tike the Kile,-1a fed by innumerable stream!-; but it if extretaeJy f.n)t to trio It to ha were r Aleaala on Darwla. Mr. Darwin ha i.ient twenty years in elaboration of a theorj, according to which the oyster, the elephant, the eagle, and man in a word, all animals, vertebrate ami invertebrate, spring from the same or iginal parent! Professor Agassix has so bn yed thi theory in a mortar with a pestle, that it author will have some trouble te Out! iu fragments. In his "Contribu tion to the Natural History of the United States," from advanced sheet of which ex tracts are given in the July number of the Atnnictin Journal of Seienn and Artt, he says, among other things: " The argument presented bj Darwin have not made the-slightent Impression on my mind nor modified in any way the views I have already prnKundcd." " Had Mr. Darwiu or hi follawers fur nished a single fact to show that individu als change iu tho course of time in such a manner as to produce, at last, specie dif ferent from those, known before, the state ef the case might be diff -relit." " The origin of a II the diversity among living being remains a mystery ns totally Unexplained as if the book of Mr. Darwin had never been written, for no theory, un supported by fact, however plaus.ble it may appear, can bo admitted iu science." " Sumce it to say that lie ( Darwin) Das lost sight of the most slr.king of the fea tures, and the one which pervades the whole, namely, that there runs throughout m.ture unmistakable evitleace of thought corres pondent to the mental operations of our own minds, and therefore intelligible to us thinkinr beings, and unaccountable on any other basis than that they owe their exis tence to the working ol intelligence." " There are naturalists who seem to look upon the idea of creation, that is, a manifes tation of an intelhi'tnal power by material means, a a k iid of bigotry, forgetting, no doubt, that whenever they carry out a thought of their own they do something akin to creating, miles they look upon their lucubrations as something in which their own individuality i not concerned, but arising without an intervention of their mind in consequence of the working of some ' bundle or forces' about winch they know nothing themselves. And yet such men are willing to admit that matter is nmti'pntent, and consider a disbelief in the omnipotence of mutter ns tantamount to imbecility: for what is the assumed power of matter to produce all finite being but omnipotence?" Machinery and Waoes. When steam power first began to supersede hand labor, the forebodings ef the working men of Eng land wcro awful, and they fought against the introduction of machinery with the ardor of men fighting to maintain their foot hold upon the earth. Iu the last number of the London Quarterly Rerriui, is an article which shows how short-sighted and. unfound ed were those apprehensions, and which conclusively proves that hand in hand with the progress of machinery ha been the ad vance also in the laborer's compensation. The writer directs attention to the great manufacturing districts of England, nnd shows the continually Increasing rate of lompensution which has been going on for ninny years, and which has now brought up the rate of the operator's wages until it equals, in its average, tho income of the professional men and tradesmen throughout the Empire. It is mentioned iu the same article that a great increase is at present going on in the manufacturing capacity of England. New factories are going up in every directian, nnd twenty thousand ope ratives are now wanted in the factories ol Lancashire. Jty M. PoiiRsin, of Paris, announces that he has succeeded in fixing the colors on a daguerreotype plate. His principal agents are the essential oil of gilly flowers and tho chlornret of gold. The recent tiblication of Lord Bronghan.'s mathema tical and physical tracts brings to light the fact that he came " within one" of dis covering photography fifty years ago. One of the papers contained remarks on the effect of exposing a plate of ivory stained with nitrate of silver to the rays of the spectrum, and also on the result of submit ting the plate to the rays passing through a small aperture into a dark room. These suggestions were considered by Sir C. Blag den to relate more to art than to pure sci ence, and were accordingly omitted from the published cepy. Had they appeared, it is morally certain that tbey would have led to the immediate discovery of photog. raphy fifty years earlier than its actual introduction. CO ' I suy, 'squire, wlmt'll yeon take for that 'ere dog o' yonrnf said a Yankee peddler to au old Dutch farmer. ' He ain't a very good-looking dog, but what you canatin mar be he d fetch; Taw,' responded the Dutchman, 'dat dog ain't wort' not'iug Dioit; he isbu't wort too to bay 'urn.' ' Gu'-ss tew dollars alscoot would get him, wouldu't It? I'll give joa tlutt for him.' ' Tas; he isn't wort' dat.1 ' Wall, I'll take him,' said the peddler. 'Shtnpf said the Dutchman; 'dere't one ting about dat do? I gnn't sell.' ' Oh, take off his collar; 1 dou't want that.' suggested the eddh r. ' "Taint dat,' replied Mynheer; 'he's a boor dog, but 1 gan't set do wa; of bis tail wies I eotaea hoo" eitle of Truth iu every issue. 18C0. No. 88. New Weetea Vaelary. ' At meeting held at the Brownsville M il, Nor. 21th, 1800, for the purpose of tnk'tig into consideration the propriety of building a Woolen Factory at tome point iu L nn county, Dr. It. U. Crawford was called to Ihe Chair, and T. A. Riggt chosen Secretary. After the object of the meeting had beeo stated by the Chair, Dr. Lister was called upon and addressed the meeting. On motion, a committee of live was chosen to solicit subscriptions In Linn and adjoining counties, for the purpose of build ing said Factory at the Brownsville Mill. On motion, it was agreed that $100 should constitute a share, with the privilege to any person to take at many shares as he maj wish. The Mill-wright stated that there Is water plenty aad that the location ia en tirely safe. Win. T. Templeton, T. A. Rigpr, W. It. Kirk, Dr. E. H. Griffin and Joseph Hamilton were chosen a committee to so licit subscriptions. On motion, the Committed were au thorized to call a meeting of the share holders ot any time they may think proper. The Secretary was requested to furnish the Oregon Farmer and other paper In the State with copies of the proceedings of this meeting. Ou motiou the meeting adjourned. It. n. Crawford, Ch'n. T. A. Itiooa, Secretary. 19 Editors, like other shrewd men, must live with their eyes and ears open. A good story Ia told of one who started a paper in a western village. The town was infested with gambler, whose presence was a source of annoyance to the citizens, who told the editor that if he did not came out against them they would not patronize hi paper. He replied that he would give them a " smasher" the next day. Sure enough, his next Issue contained the prom ised " smasher," and 011 the following morn ing the redoubtable editor, with scissors iu hand, wa seated hi his sanctum cutting out hews, when in walked a largo man with a club hi hi hand, and demuuded to know if the editor wa in. " No, sir," was the reply, "he has stepped out. Tnko a sent and read the papers; he will return In a minute." Down ant the indignant man of cards, crossed his legs, with his club between them, nnd commenced roading a paper. In tho meaut.mu the editor quietly vamos ed down stairs, and at the lauding below he met another excited mau with a cudgel iu his hand, who asked if the editor was in. Yes, sir," was the prompt response; " yon will find him seated up stairs reading a newspaper. ' Tho latter, on entering the room, with u furious oath commenced a violent assault upon the former, which wu resisted with equal ferocity. The fight wa continued until they had both rolled to the foot of the stairs, and pounded each other to their heart's content. Paris, tiis Matf.rial Historian or Lona Napoleon's Deeps. But, altogeth er, the liui ue Boulogne is a charming creation; and one is lost in admiration of a man whose intellect Is so comprehensive and so universal, thut while It controls kingdoms, conquers nations, commands armies, and (more than all) governs France, can also recreate itself in laying out streets, planting forests, digging lakes, and making waterfalls. Heaven grant that this may be the only sort of fall he ever makes I For France is so prosperous and so glori ous under his reign, that any change would surely he for the worse. Louis Napoleon ha probably done more for the improve ment of Paris, it adornment, its prosperi ty, than any other monarch, in the same short space of time; but whether for the good of his people, or for his own glorifi cation, future ages must decide. One thing is certain, and that Is, he is earnestly engaged, every day of his life, in linking himself by some new tie to the memory of his Uncle and the gratitude of his people, in recording himself, and his deeds, and the name of his family, all over Paris, in monuments more lasting than brass In widening iu streets, enlarging its borders, and building whole miles of magnificent edi fice, along whole miles of broad boulevards in fortifications and fountains, in parks ami forest. Thus Paris shall become his historian, and interweave his name so inti mutely with all its modern glories, that nothing can ever divide them no future dynasty ever separate them or blot oat bis memory from the people of France. ' 0" Sir Charle Napier; who has had nine soterelgna surrender their swords to his hand, and had honors enough heaped upon him fur his late triumphs in India to satisfy lha most ardent seeker for human priory, sigh for his borne, .and. wishes bie government would let him go back to hia wife and girl, saying that honor and ricbei cannot repay bJa . lV ia abaenc from tbem. .. RATH Of. inVERTRlNai s'T; Oae ttjoara (twelve kaaa, Of lost, krtvftr sweaasirs) out iiitertita $ J 09 Etch subsequent istrftioa I 00 liosinosteirdt oat year t '' ilOOO A liberal dtduetiea will ee aiadt to tbeto who adrtriawby the year. ." 3T Tht somber of lattrutni theuM bo ntted. oa tbo margia at aa advarutessonl, otherwise it will be published till forbidden, aud tbarged to eord.ngly. tV Obituary notices will bt tliargtj hah llio abott rsteo of tdisrlislnf. OT Jut Psistiso titculed a lib ntstiitao it J disiMlvh. ' i'a ysiswr jar M Priming mult ( tea's a d'lirrrti ef fsri. K Very Uaau Taoaihl. An Enjlish Journalist say: "I there arybody above n idiot, who has not, at some time or other, thought, with a Kronen internal thrill, while contemp.. ing a crowd, 'How will all these people dicf The thought comes when the Queen is opening Parliament, amidst the most gorgeous a sembluge that this country can show. It comet in the midst of the Tillage fair, when the drnmt and the trompets, and the rhout of the showmen, and the great laughs of the rustics, are loudest. It comes when, in war time, the troop march forth through thronged streets, and climb Into the trans ports on the crowded sea. It coraci when, in time of peace, the first tod of a greet railway is tnrned, or the first stone laid of a great building which will be a benefit to successive generations for a thousand jears. We know how something very like it oc curred to the poet Graj and Mrs. Heroans at evening prayer in a girls' school; and few of ni can have been present at any celebration in any one of our public school without being visited bj that speculation 'In seveutj, or, ssj eighty years from this day, every individual ofthiigrett crowd will be dead.' One would like to know how each one will die; bj accident on land,' some of them no doubt; by a gun going off in getting through a hedge their own gun or some comrade's who will never be happy again; some bj drowulng In bathing at home, or by foundering at sea; some by fire ia the dressing room, or In the ship, or in their beds; one or two by suicide in disease of brain or agony of mind; some of the youths, yenrs hence, by apoplexy, brought on by intemperance of some kind or anoth- rr; some of the young women In tho most pathetic possible moment mothers for an hour or two a day, but prevented from' rallying by previous violations of the law of nature; some few, very few, from mere old age, when they will remember this da j, but nothing of a then receut date; a large proportion from the ordinnry diseases affect ing tho three great departments of the head; more from the various diseases of the abdomen, nnd most from those of the chest. The deaths in the streets from brain seizure are a common item ef news in the papers. We need but to refer to ' liver complaint, cholera, the gout of tho olden time, still surviving, and the misera ble stomach complaints of our own day. But all this last class together will not car-' ry off as many as consumption, if we are to judge the next half centnry by the past. ' Within fifteen or twenty years a largo propnrtion of the young people who lo-duy ' look so full of life and spirits, will have i died of the slow strangulation ond torment ing fever ofconsumption." ; Religious Progress in Italy. The . American Messenger well illustrates the ; progress of religious liberty in Italy by contrasting the present state of religious freedom thcro with that which existed sev- . cn years ago, when Francisco and Rosa Madiai wero serving out their long ten mouths of imprisonment in the gloomiest ; of Italian dungeons, for the crime of simply reading the word of God. Even as lute as 1 RS7 the same riersiTiilii.fr nnirit nre. vailed in Florence, the scene of the Ma- -diui's imprisonment. But the Messenger Ml VS ! " Were we to revisit Florence to day, what should we behold? The Grand Duke in exilo, and the Madiai aud their co-religionists in honor; the Bible in the huud of thousand of the people, and un restricted liberty to profess the faith of Savanarolu and of Luther; an ample measure of civil liberty under the benign sway of Victor Emmanuel; the dream of ages, of a united Italy, substantially real- izedl ' " We know not how better to sum up the marvelous change wrought there than by alluding to the circum.tuuces of the transier of the Waldensinn Theological Seminary from La Tour, a little Vaudois village near Turin, to Florence! The Madia! in prison for Bible-reading in 1853; the biblical school of the Waldenscs set op in the same city in 1 SCO! If Galileo wero alive, and in his old observatory still overhanging Florence, he might assert, with fuller meaning than when condemned for hit demonstration of the motion ef the earth, ' After all, the world does move!' " In the 'Memoirs of Garibaldi, written by Alexander Dumas, and pub lished some time past in the Paris Siecle, Garibaldi relates that so far back as the year 1833, when mate ef a ship which was then at Marseille, he saved from drowning a schoolboy named Ram hand, who, while playing in a barge In the port, had accidentally fallen into the water, and that he bad to plunge three timet be fore be rescued th lad. " As I had jut before been condemned to death," tayt Garibaldi, " I had assumed the name of Pane, and it is probable that the person I saved never knew my real name." Tbo Siecln now publishes a letter, signed by ' J. Rambaud, No. 9 Roe de l'Ecloe, the Batignolle,' io which the writer tayi that it was he who wat saved in 1833, and that it i " with great emotion and Jy thut he had learned the real oame of kuo to whom he owed but life." tsaTTJe that borrow, bine5i aHeaaelf with a neighbor rope.