fX 'V., ' ; . ! . 1 VOL 8 NO. 21, SALEM, OREGON, TUESDAY, AUGUST 3, 1858. WHOLE NO. 385. T IIS III Ct)t 0 1 1 g o n 3 1 a t com an. ' ASAHbU. BITCH, Proprietor and Editor. jm PnMUhed wrdtly.at Sr dnllxn per annum, lf aot paid within six nvtth; four dollar prr annum, IfnaM withiaaix month - three dollars Pr annum. IT paid ta advance. IX- dollar additional will be ekargad for aacti rear parturtit ia neglected. ' H paprr will be dUcoatiti ed, anli ante at the option rra are mid. f ttn pablbtT , ami) all aneantrea are paid iImumm. ftnlfc litiM or lm) three reive laseruoaa, S3 ! Jor every additional inarnton, 11 uu. A liberal defection will be made to yearly, half and a, earter yearly adrrrtiarr. Tranaiant adrertlaementa mast be r re-paid toin- vre insertion. Divorce notirea will not be rmbtiilieiW im pal a ror. Aaauomninn nnuces. ami an innr tiaemeata relating to eatatea.of drceaaed person, most be are paid, ualcaa ordered published ijr the l'rubate daeF.aad (roannteedto be paid by him. Jioticeto par llea lrurant. hrir. attachment, and all other Irfral no tteaa, ! be pre-mlj, nnlna atwne repotuiUe attor ney iraaraatrea payment. All adrcrtiaiua; not paid within one V? frnra the Unte wben contracted, will be rhanred twenty-live per eat. additional, each year payment is neglected there after. All jobbing must be paid for when taken from the office. AmvKincententaof msrrUre and death will be pub lished free: but all obituary or biographical nntiree, I wlatioaa of societies, orders, Ac., and poetry append ed to marriage announcement, must be paid for before publication, at the rate of 10 cents per line. All comtnaaications.of only personal interest.muat be paid for. In advance, at the same rate. Ia this paper sre poMiahed the laws, resolutions and treaties of the United States, and the laws knd resolu tions of the State of Oregon, by authority. A Sans; to Knajlandl Vet again, O, Enp-land ! insnlt t Yet again thy hanghty hand Smiting wrong upon the banner Of thy growing Daughter's Land T In the jeep of parted eras Was it not enough for then T resound thy march of empire O'er the billow of onr seat England ! eana't thou not remember How thy Lion fled the fires Lit on Freedom's holy altar By the great Republic's sires T O, it is too strange, too dreadful For us to believe that thou. Mid the old world nations foremost, With a progress on thy brow. Would repeat the dastard insult On a Land with flag unfurled For the truest march of Mandood In the new and ancient world. No ! oh no ! we'll not believe it ; Not for this were lit the fires Of our Karth's majestie progress By the great Republic's sires. Yes, Americans ! .yes, surely Some mistake at bottom lies ; Soon some explanation quenches Anger's lightning in our eyes ; Sooa a Washing-ton and Hampden Shall behold their climes apuin Speaking through the tramp of Honor Words of friendship o'er the main Words of progress, words of glory. Sounding mid the fadeless fires Lit of Aid on Freedom's altar By the great Republic's sires. Yet, if insult is intended. England ! know one thrill shall dart. Like a thunder's spasm through mountains. Through a banded nation's heart; Warren's blood is on that banner; Jackson's Shade is with it still; And it cannot, shall not rower On the billow or the hill ; Tea, O England ! for Earth's manhood. We must fadeless keep the fires Lit on Freedom's holy altar By the great Republic's sires. EnglUo, Grammar. The Comic Grammar says: Bnt remember, though box In the plural makes boxes, The plural of ox Should be ores, not oxes. To which an exchange adds: And remember, though fleece In the plural is fleeces. That the plural of goose Arn'teoses nor genes. "We may also be permitted to add: And remember, thongrh bouse In the plural is houses, The plural of moose Should be mice, and not'mouses. rkilm. Gazette. AH of which goes to prove That Grammar a farce is; for where is the plural Of rum and molasses. .V. II Gazette. The plural Gazette Of rum, don't ns trouble ; Take one glass too much yVnd you're sure to see Joahlr. Brooklyn Advertiser. Jl pair of blue eyes; Just to vary the train f5ra the plural of kiss Is "do it again !" Ilmrard Co. Sen'l. Bexkftts of a Good Hearty Lircn. If people teiil believe tough stories with rood moral, we think the following, from an English paper, can be recommended as one of the very best of Its class: "While on a picnic excursion with a party of yoang people, discerning a crow's nest on a rocky precipice, they started in great glee Xo see who could reach it first. Their haste beiog greater than prudence, some lost their hold, and were seen rolling and tumbling down the hill side, bonnets smashed, clothes torn. Dostares ridiculous, but no one hart. ; Then commenced a scene of most violent i nd lonir-continned laughter, which beine all ! young people, wen acquainica wun eacn other, and in the woods, they indulged to a perfect surfeit. They roared out with merry ipeal oo peal of spontaneous laughter; they expressed it by hallooing when ordinary laughter became insufficient to express the jnerriment they felt at their own ridiculous situation and those of their mates; and ever afterwards the bare mention of the crow's aiest scene occasioned renewed and irresisti ble laughter. Years after, one of their nnm ter fell sick.bccarce so low that she could mot speak, and was about breathing bcr last. Oar informant called to see her, gave i aame, and tried to make himself recog nized, bat failed till he mentioned the crow's ssest, at which she recognized him and began to laugh, aud continued every little while renewing it; from that time she began to inend, recovered, and still lives, a memento of the laugh cure." The Evecreek. At Masonic burials each brother deposits a sprig of evergreen, saying as ne does it: ''ThisI deposit in remembrance of my -deceased brother, and in token of my firm fcelief ia his glorious resurrection and im fflortality." "lathe grave all fallacies are detected, 1I ranks are levelled, and all distinctions r done away." What a cheerful philosophy is this, and how beautifully expressed both in the words ad ia the symbolic evergreen." A Virginia paper records the Mar riage of Miss Jane Lemon to Mr. Ebenzer Sweet; whereupon an exchange moralizes sb follows: "Bow happy the extremes do meet In Jane and Ebenezer; She's no longer sour, but Sweet, An $ he's a Lemon squeezer'" Memorial. W BEIIALF OF TRE PEOPLE OF OREGOX AND WASHINGTON. TERRITORIES. To the Hon. Senate and Hottse of llcprtsen tre of the United States of America: Your memorialist, being a citizen of the United States, Is in honor bound to respect Impartially the rights and interests of his fellow-citizens. And whereas his testimony as published in a work entitled "A plea for the Indians, with Facts and Features of the late war in Oregon," . seems to place the people of that and the adjacent Territory in such a reprehensible position as may excite unjust opposition against their claims for six millions of dollars as indemnity for loss es and expeusea of the late Indian war: It is but jus( th&t jour memorialist shonld affirm in connection with this testi mony, that although the war was (as he. believes) unnecessary ami cruel, being wa ged and carried on for months against a people who only desired protection and jus tice; yet your memorialist would respect fully submit the following considerations of palliation, if not in Vindication of the peo ple of those Territories, and for their claims upon the National Treasury for the expen ses thus incurred. I. The war, however wrong, was only a natural and practical expression of the eommou seutiment, wincn declares mat "the Indian is desliucd to perish before the march of civilization," and implies that those who first settle upou his lands must be the exterminators of the race; aud therefore the people of those lands must be the extermin ators of the race; and therefore the people of those Territories have only perpetrated what has been common to the settlement of every State (Pennsylvania and Rhode Is land excepted) siuce the lanUiug of the Pil grims on the American shore. . Moreover, the eople ot tnose .territories have not only the sanctions of precedents, but of the President, who iu his late Annu al Message asserts that "the Indians are hostile, aud require expensive military ex peditions to overawe aud chastise them." 2. A statement like this, without quali fication, from the highest functionary in the land, seems to endorse in the most authori tive and public manner all the numerous wars and spoliations, which from time to time have bveti inflicted upon these people, and particularly the late destruction of Ink-' pudata and his tribe at Spirit Lake, and the slaughter and robbery by Government troops ia the Gila Valley, where a village was consumed, most of the people put to death, six hundred acres of corn destroyed, and a thousand head of sheep, beside tattle and hones, taken as spoils; also the mas sacre at Ash Hollow lj order of Geu. Har ney, where it is said that one hundred men, women and children, actually sneing for pence, wer shot dowu or driven into Piatt Hirer and drowned; aud alio the long con tinued war, aided with bloodhounds, against tbe Seminoles in Florida. H. In addition to all this positive sanc tion by tLe Government, the people of those Territories have also the passive yet potent approval of all the churches in the country; for it is manifest that transactions which have not been done in a corner, involving so unch misery aud waste of life and prop erty, and have been regarded either as una voidable or right; hence no tract has b?cn issued in protest by the American Tract Society, and no remonstrance from any ec clesiastical body in the States has been put forth, so that onr border settlers in their aggressive proceedings have been left to i-oppose that all was proticr, aud as the rights of the red mn have never been an item in the creed of any political party, it is but natural that, however abhorrent the transactions are in the review of sober sec ond thought, the people of those Territories should believe themselves sanctioned by the popular will, and that they have only prose cuted what their fellow-citizens in the States wonld have done had they been in their place, and therefore that tbey arc as much entitled to indemnity for loss of property, and for services reudeicd, as is the Presidcut for his salary, or Gen. Harney for his pay. 4. Your memorialist is profoundly con vinced that this claim for six million dollars is not based, as some suppose, in an error for which the people of those Territories are especially chargeable, but obviously iu a cause operative throughouUonr country at large, which was transmitted by our fathers from the darker oges, and was in former times manifest iu the putting to death of pagans and witches, and the persecution of Baptists ana uaaKcrs; ana tuougu puonc charity is becoming more comprehensive, it vet excludes the American lnaian in me wilds, and calls him a savage to be stroved." And until, as a nation, we 'de act out the principle of love and wisdom, and demonstrate goodness as well as power, the future will be as the past wars will be re peated, and indemnities called for. 5. Two distinguished Senators have lately expressed themselves to the effect that the Indians were only known in tradi tion; their history and wrongs have never been told: tbey are not understood, .and therefore not appreciated; and because, as men. thev assert their rights, and fight for existence, they are denounced as hostile. dealt with as aggressors, and punished ou their own soil as though tbey wero rebels and traitors. The official reports of Gen. Wool, while commandant of the Pacific forces, also of Joel Palmer. Superintendent of the Indian Department of tbe Pacific, aud the tcstimo- ny of many others, anoru paiuiui uciuns cor roborative of the above. 6. Your memorialist respectfully submit (that an entire change of policy is imperious ly demand alike by national honor ana tne humanities and eulightenment 01 the age and that to, continue the present system so fraught with disaster, is only to perpetuate the imperfections of the past, as though we preferred tbe slow coach to the car, or the post-horse to the telegraph. Your memorialist having been -called by circumstances to witness the wrongs and the rights involved in the premises, would respectfully submit, that many of our fellow-citizens participated in the war from motives of duty and patriotism, many oth ers from dire necessity, and some are now suffering extreme embarrassment and depri vations, in consequence of losses sustaiuedj and moreover, that the people of those Ter ritories are our brothers and sisters our sons aud daughters. Their interest is our J interest; their honor is the honor of nation. Therefore, every consideration of humanity, of natural justice and fraternal law. calls for a prompt adjustment by the payment of the white man's loss, and tbe re dress of the red man's wrong. And your memorialist will, as heretofore, pray that peace may reign in all our borders. JOHN BEESON. A Pictvrb True to Nature. The follow ing graphic description of a ."good fellow" "on a bender," Is so true to nature, that wej canuot refrain from giving it a place in our columns. Who has not seen many a simi lar 'amusing, or rather lamentable exhibi fioTif" We make the extract from the l'hil- awif.bia EteTirfr-aTraTTOrr"-" The TcceTi friciTles-feftrrargTrdeF-TBI." 'We saw ye"stWr3nT antirKvfrin'41' who Nffiynlwfrylrrtirg wteTnplininmmTTjnhrfadtr 4 .1 r t. - " r--:- 3 r-r-f --r' i 1 - I uo- waa -preparing tor me uouuar, aim ioj use tuts wurua oi s certain cmeiiipurarj, was on a grand sublime bust. Fearful were tbe efforts of Thomas Alaize to enjoy him self. Ever and anon, over his illustrious head, did he flourish a bog of gold, a small bag, and theu he asked everybody np to drink, which everybody did, aud fell back to allow everybody else to come up and do likewise. Everybody else invited their friend, and Thomas Maize, Esq., whirled the little bag of gold and produced the "tin," aud paid the expense in the most cheerful manner. Every voice proclaimed hjm a good fel low, and so of course he was, for at 10 o'clock, P. M., we saw hitn generously and munificently spilling himself miscellaneously about the streets and alters, and we are perfectly satisfied that, if he bad not been a very 'good fellow," he would not have doue so. We saw him at 1 1 o'clock, P. M., and somebody bad stolen his new boots and giv en him an old pair of pumps. Uuder the nfluence of two glasses of soda he had slightly recovered. At 12 o'clock he hod a relapse he wag on a sublime drunk. K ve ry body was present, iu company with every body else, an 1 a number of invited guests. Tlios. Maize, Eq., still flourished his bag now considerably reduced and every now and then the whole crowd walked up aud took sugar in tlieir'n. We saw linn alter that, . lie had a kinky het On his head His pnntps were worn away And bis pockets seemed to say "Nary red." Gen. IIorsTox's Northers Mexicax Re- rcBi.ic. 1 lie rsew lors correspondent of the Philadelphia Ledger writes: Gen. Snm Houston's intimation that if Congress did not thiuk well of his Mexican j PrattMitorate sclteme, America us would take. beJob jikto-ehelr own hands or something of.that-ort was not an empty-threat:-. Jiely uponoliati - And rely upon- this, also; i that .Ue-pavee -firm which -shipped off -three thousand muskets the other dav, on account of General Yidaurri and the Sierra Madre Republic, are now flllinr, a similar order for a bouse iu Galveston, Texas. The muskets must be landed there, according to contract, by the 1st of Angust. Whether the Sena tor from Texas has anything to do with this transaction, of course it would bo pre sumption to say, but there are persons who profess to know all about what is going on, willing to prophesy that in less than sixty days the star Fpanglcd banner, will be float ing ' or authority, as it once betore Boat ed in triumph over the ramparts of Mon terey. Cut this paragraph out Tor refer ence, say about the middle of August. Calling Senatorial Absentees. Very funny stories are told of the process of serv ing a call of the U. S. Senate, an hour or two after midnight, on the Senators who had gone home to bed, on occasion of a re- ccut call of the House: - 'The Sergeant-at-arms, accompanied by carriages, rode around the city and collect ed the deserters, peaceably if he could, but torcibiy if he must. fam Houston was cap tured at Kirkwood House, taken from the bed, and carried growling to the capitol. When called upon for an excuso for his ab sence, he gravely requested the senate to inform him what excuse it had to offer for the outrage it had committed on his person al rights, by dragging him from his bed tit that untimely Jiour. lie protested that be would'not be .pacified untjl theSenatefapol- ogizeu to mm. ocnaiur viay, oi aiuuuiuj, 1: rT 1 1t r-r t.i .lx "r -i-.ii - c? p.ept ins uoors locaetr, onu ,ucueu tuo ocr gcant at arms flatly rcfusing""td obey the raandaterejerajly, howejer, the aUSCflt- eess surrendered themselves witn a goou grace", and quorum i was bbtainecT"ut" i o'clock ia tbe morning." Wife Taming. The Boston Gazette ar- PTTolincesIr-a4IertyTirao--asR teacher of llll'Vl HI" Wife uiwgrUtue-low price of $50" bP? llau. Here are--eouia--of his certificates: This is to certify that Mr. Taiil Pretty man has succeeded in subduing my wife. He took ber when in ber moat restless con dition and in ore hour she was cooking a beef steak with the placidity of an angel. .New York, May 8, 1858. Jas. P. Horner Mr Prcttyman has full liberty to report to me. His art I consider tbe great desider atum of married life. He quieted Mrs. Simp kins who was alway ugly in double harness, and accomnlished wonders. Not a shirt button has been missing "since the date of his trial. P. Simpkins, Newark, A.J. Westeskisvs. Tbe dialect of the west is rather strong, and slightly, hyberbolical. 'One Brown who has lately been travelling in tbe Occident, as far as Arkansas, says that when a man in that region desires to say be would like a drink, he declares that if he had a class of whisky be wouia mrow himself outside of it, almighty quick!" A man enumerating his family, goes a point beyond tbe conclusion of the John Rogers list and says mere is uui, ana ouu, uuu Sam and Dave, ana jonn, ana niary Ann ml th babv. and the prospect!" That will do. . ; fL aa We have a new chronicle from Chi- rarn through a eotetBDorarv. which shows it to be miseraoiy poor piace ior x an . .. I XT kee; Tbe climate elves him the ague fever. The water brigs ou diarrhea. The food as cook ed by tbe "Suckers," produces dyspepsia. Tbe whisky, tiuctured with strychnine, makes him crazy, while three per cent, a ) month is fare to bring on the blues. A Hew Religion. - Hon. Gerritt Smith, of New York, on the 21st, or February Iar delivered a dis course to the people of Petocboro, the place of his residence, ou the subject of a " A New Religion." We give .a synopsis of it. Creeds. Every man should have one. -But a Vkurck creed is improper. . Chcrch. "In His Jesus' eye, the Christians of a place are the Church of that place; and this too, whether they know jt or not. will it or not. Thev are snch bv Tbrce of their character, and vote! can nei tbernake or unmake the fact" . An organ ized Church he calls a "sectarUri Church, " which Jesus no mora thougTit f providing for, than for a political party. " Every true Church of Christ is a simple democra cy. Its oidinary assemblies should be more conferences, iu which all persons, male or female, are to feel entirely free to speak as the spirit moves them." The Clerical Order. "Such an order is wholly unauthorized and exceedingly per nicious." . . Itinerant Preachers. He says, in ad dition to encb member speaking his mind freely In the ordinary assemblies "the col lective Churches should have, and should liberally support, a powerful itinerant min istry." Falle.v Nature " Owing to ancestral violations of moral as well as physical ami intellectual laws, we Inherit a constitntion morally as well as physically and intellect ually impaired. This is all I mean by a fallen nature, adding thereto what we may ourselves have done to degrade it." Faith is Christ. " What then is it to believe in Christ? I answer, that such be lief, in its very highest sense, is faith io justice, sincerity, mercy, love, and other moral qualities of which man, be he iu Christendom or heathendom, has instinctive knowledge, and for his growth in which, be he in Christendom or heathendom, he is responsible." Inspiration or the Bible. "The Bible is really the best book in the world, though the present use of it make it practically the worst. All other books put together are, not so much as the Bible is, the occo sion of obstructing the progress of civiliza tion, and of filling the world with igno rance and superstition. The cler gy make the Bible supreme authority; but our reason is, under God, the final judge of all questions. Reason must sit judgement on the Bible as well as on all things else. Reason, poor guide though we may make it, is our legitimate guide. ' It may lead us to ruin; still we are not at liberty to give it up for any other leader, no, not for Church, nor pope, nor Bible." Poi.TGAiir Y roxc. " W ho too but such man i. e. a very wicked or a very 6tuiml men, will ever feci it uecessary to go to the Bible to put polygamy on trail? High er authority and more certalu evidence than the Bible have we ou this point, as well as ou the point of rum drinking. The census tables iu all ages aud in all nations dispose of the question of polygamy. They prove the qual numbers of the sexes, and confirm the declaration of Jesus that God made ns male and female' only one woman for one, nian, and only one man for one woman Whoever therefore gets a plurality of hus bands robs her sister; and whoever gets a plurality of wives robs his brother; jsut as the people who get two or three farms apiece have made themselves guilty of rob bing the landless." His vies of Denominations. " God hasten the day when here, and elsewhere there shall no longer be Christians who shall not be deeply ashamed to be called Methodist, Baptist, Presbyterians, or., to pass under any other religious party name." J.HB Death of Christ. It is said his mission was to die for the world. I answer that his death was incidental to his faithful pvliilkition of Ilia Kiitlior'a rhftrantpr Tbe one thing else for which I blamed our clergymen was their making faith iu the doctrine of attonemeut essential to salva tiou. But are they not also blameworthy for makiug themselves so perfectly and stub bornly certain of the truth of the doc trine? Fcture Life. " I confess, perhaps to my shame and condemnation that I do not feel a deep and abiding interest in our next stage of being. Jbar less concerned am I to know what is the future state than to kuow, aud determine the duties of the preseut." i ctcre Pcmshment. " r believe in fu-v ture punishment. Every man on dying must eo to his own place to the place for which his character fits him. Judge teaches that persons cau fall from heaveu. Why then may they not rise from bell? For aught we can certainly know, there may be room in the life to come for repentanco as well as apostacy. 1 now arraign them I the clergy for their undonbting faith in it i. e. in everlasting punishment. ISo warrant have they cither to preach or to eutertain a faith in it. which is free from all doubt," A Goon WniTEWASH. Take half a bush el of fresh-burned white lime, and slack it cither with hot or cold water, iu a tub or barrel. When thoroughly slacked, dissolve in the water required to thin the lime, two two quarts of common salt, stir it thorough ly, add one quart of sweet milk, , and it is ready for use to put on with a brush." This wash is for tbe ontside of buildings. fences, Ac, aud is very durable. Some put glue in whitewash, and others flour and rice paste, but these render it liable to scale off in very dry weather. The above wasn may be made a cream color, by the addition of ocher. The above whitewash is all that can be desired for the interior of houses, excepting the salt, which must be omitted, as it tends to imbibe moisture. French white is su perior to lime washes for the ceilings of rooms, as it is not so liable to turn yellow ish in color, but it rubs off so easy it can uot be used for side walks. Jti5A Chinese theologian informs the Trinity Journal that the little tapers left on graves by the Chinese are for tbe conve nience of the devil. After three hundred years that personage comes to the grave, and if arriving iu the night might stumble about among the tombs until provoked to do mischief. Hurry is the mark of a weak mind. 4 despatch, is fb.e jevidence qf a strong one. Poor and Content. As I stood in a hardware store, one of the late very cold days, hovering over tbe store as 1 talked icicles to tbe master, a boy opened the door and inquired the price of a pair of skates, which hung out to tempt the adventurous. I looked at the urchin and my eyes descen ded from a pair of linen trousers to a pair of baret feet. The poor fellow wanted skates, and did not seem to feel tbe waut of shoes! You doubtless remember the story of Louis la Grand passing one cold morning over one of the bridges which cross tbe Seine, aud seeing with admiration a man dressed in a nankin coat and breeches, (pantaloons enruo hi as the monarch went out.) with vest and stockings equally as thin, who leaned ith perfect noncbalence over trie bains- trade to gaze at the skaters below. Stop tbe coach, said the kiucr. "Call that man in nankin to me," ' The window was let down, and the furred and shivering monarch thus questioned his nappy subject; Jlon ami, pray tell me how is it that you are warm though clad so thin, while I am freezing ic peltries?" 1 lease your maiestv. was the reilv of the bowing mid smilinir Frenchman, " I can tell, you how you may be as comforta- blv warm as I am." "Let us hear, my friend." "Do as I do, sir; put ou all your ward robe." " I might have known the fellow was a wit," said the kinir, laughing: "give him a purse of louis d'ors." I will not say that my barefooted boy was a wit; bnt I could wager ten pounds to a penny that his father was either a genius or a drunkard. English Pajer. ' Acquittal or a Murderer in Kentucky Sl.S'UUFAR LANGUAGE FROM A JUDGE. The young man Hardesty, who shot and killed Orubb, in Burlington, Boone County, Ken tucky, was tried atid acquitted lost Thurs day. The case was an interesting one. Grubb bod sednced a sister of Hardesty, and the latter on discovering the fact, told the seducer that if he did not marry her in six mouths, lie would shoot linn, lhe six months having expired without Grubb's com pliance, Hardesty met him en the street and shot him dead. Grubb was armed for de- feuce, but was pierced by tbe bullet of his antagonist while iu the net of drawing his pjstol. On the rendition of the verdict. Judge Nutall delivered the following ad dress. It has more of tinman nature than of Judicial propriety in it: Sir: You have been indicted by a grand jury of your country npou a most heijous charge, lou have put yourself nph your country and your God for deliverance. You have bad a fair and impartial trial before them, and they have both pronounced you not guilty, and so say I. It may not be proper in me ta express my sentiments, ytt 1 will do it. Joung mau Had 1 been wrouged as you have been, I would have speut every dollar I had ou earth, and all that 1 could have begged and borrowed, aud then starved upon the track of the vil lain, but I would have imbrued my bands in his blood. Go beuce withoutdelay. You are acquitted I I Both the verdict and this judgment were received with shouts of applause. . ii The Citt cf Jeddo, the Capital of Ja- rAN. The city of Jeddo is said to be, with out exception, the largest city in the world. It contains 1,500,000 dwellings, aud the unparalleled number of 5,000,000 of people. Some of its streets are 16 Japauese ri'a iu length, which is equal to 32 English miles. lhe commerce of Japan is iiunieuse, and tbe sea ail alonr their coast is covered with their ships. Their vessels are laden in the Sontheru portion of the empire with rice, tea, sea-coal, tobacco, silk, cotton and trop ical fruits, all of which find a market iu the North, and then return freighted with corn, salt, oil, isinglass and other productions of the North, which find a ready market in the South. The Chicken and Feathers. At break fast one morning, in that quiet and comfort- ablo old inn, the White Swan, in old lork, a foreigner made quick dispatch with the eggs. Thrusting his spoon into the middle, he drew out the yolk, devoured it and pass ed on to the next. When he had got to his seventh egg, an old fanner, who had already been prejudiced against Monsieur by his moustaches, could brook the extravagance no lonsrer, and speaking np, said: 'Why, sir. vou leave nil tbe white! How is Mrs. Lockwood to allord to provide breaklast at that rate?" 'Vi,' replied the outside barbarian, 'you vouldn't have me to eat de vile? De yolk is de shicken; de vite de fedders. Am I to make von bolster of miue belly?' The farmer was dumb-founded. Avoid the Briars. The Gazeta tie la Haban, vouches for the following; Some fourteen years ago a woman, supposed to have died in a fit, was being taken to the grave for interment, when the bearers stum bled and dropped the corpse. On picking it up and removing the briers which stuck to it, she recovered from the trance she was in.- " She finally died in truth," nnd when about to be removed to the place of interment, her husband exclaimed; "For God's sake, my friends do not carry the corpse of my wife where there are briars." t&- An indigeut boy applied for alms at the house of an avaricious rector, and recciv cd a dry mouldy crust. Tho rector inquired of the boy if he could say the Lord's prayer and was answered in tbe negative. llicn, said the rector, 'I will teach you that now Our Father!' 'Our Father!' said the boy, 'is he my father as well as yours? 'Yes, certainly.' 'Then,' asked the boy, 'how could you give your brother this mouldy crust of bread?" Mr. P.'a daughter came running to her autt one day saying, "Aunt Kate, little Mai tie has swallowed a button.77 beein her terror, her aunt calmly replied, "Well what good will that do her?" Said the child very seriously. "Not any good, as cau see, unless she swallows a button hole!" A negro passing uuder a scaffold where some repairs were going on, a brick fell from above his head, and was broken by the fall. Sambo very coolly raised his head and exclaimed: "Hallo, you white man np Anr if voa don't want your bricks broke just keep 'em off toy head." MY AUTHORITY LAWS OF THE UNITED STATES. AN ACT to provide for the Collection and safe keeping of Public Archives in the State of California. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of lupresentairet oj the Untied States of Amer ica in Congress Assembled, That it shall be the duty of the duty of the Secretary of the Interior to cause to be collected and depos ited in tbe Surveyor General's Office in Cal ifornia, all official books, papers, instruments of writingTdocuments, archives, official seals, stamps or dies, that may be found in tbe unauthorized possession of any Individual, relating to and used in the administration of Government and public affairs tn the Dcpar tment of Upper California, and which be longed to the Government during thexist ence of Spanish 'or Mexican authority iu Tppcr California; and the same, when de posited in his office, shall be safely and se curely kept by the Surveyor General in the archives of his office: And copies thereof, authenticated by the Surveyor General under the 6eal of his office, shall be evidence in all cases where the originals would be evidence Provided, That at the time of depositing said books, papers, writings and documents in said archives, a schedule and accurate description thereof shall be made, by the Surveyor General, with a statement of the time and place where the same were found, and when they were deposited in the arch ives, which shall be certified under the seal of the Surveyor General and filed in his of fice; aud a certified copy of said schedule shall be transmitted to the Commissioner of tbe General Land Office, and also to the Attorney General. Section 2. And he it further enacted, That if the Surveyor General shall have cause to suspect a concealment of any such official books, papers, writings, documents, archives, or official seal, stamps or dies aforesaid, in any particular dwelling bouse, building or place, any Judge or Commissioner of the United States may, on affidavit showing the facts and circumstances upon which such suspicions are fouuded, grant to the Survey or General, or to and Marshal of the United States a warrant to enter snch house, build ing or place, and there to search for such official books, papers, writings, documents, archives, seals, stamps or dies, and to take possession thereof and deposite them in the archives of the Surveyor Geueral's office as aforesaid. Sechon 3. And be it further enacted. That if any person shall without lawful authority illully take from the archives of tbe said Surveyor General's office any espediente, map, diseno, book, paper, writing, record, ocument, seal, stamp or die; or shall wil fully alter, deface, mutilate, injure, or de- trcy any espediente, book, paper, map, diseno, instrument of writing, document, record, seal, stamp or die deposited la said archives; or shall conceal or unlawfully withhold from tbe possession of the Survey or General, or on demaud refuse to deliver to him any espediente, map, diseno, official book, pnicr, ' writiiijT. document, archive, record, seal, stamp or die, relating to or used in the administration of Gove-innieut in the Department of Upper California, and belonging to the Government during the existence of Spanish or Mexican authority in said department; or shall wilfully alter, deface, mutilate, make away with or destroy any such official book", espediente, map, diseno, paper, writing, document, archive, record, seal, stamp or die, the persoa so of fending shall be deemed guilty of a misde meanor, aud on conviction thereof in any court of competent jurisdiction, shall forfeit and pay a fine, not exceeding ten thousand dollars, at the discretion of the Court, and be imprisoned for a term uot exceeding ten years, at the use accretion. Section 4. And be u Jurther enadea, lnat f any person shall wilfully, secretly and fraudulently place or cause to be placed in or among the archives of the Surveyor General's Office, any expedients, book, paper, diseno, map, draught, record, or auy instru ment of writing purporting to be a petition, decree, order, report, concession, grant, con firmation, map, diseno, espediente, or part of an espediente, denouncement, title, paper, or evidence of right, title, or claim to any land, mine or mineral, or any book, writing. paper, or document whatever, the person so offeuding shall bo deemed and adjudged guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon convic tion thereof by any uourt ot conieieni ju risdiction shall forfeit and pay a fine not exceeding five thousand dollars, and be im prisoned for a term uot exceeding three . . . i i ? r years; or oe uom qneu anu impnsoucu ithiu said limits us me aiscreuou oi iue Court. Approved 18th May, 1S5S. AN ACT for the prevention and punish- mnnt of frauds in laud titles in California. He it enacitd in the Senate and House of Representatives of the United Stales cf Amer ica in Congress assemoiea, i nai ii any per son shall falsely make, alter, forge or coun terfeit." or causa or procure ' to be falsely made, altered, forged or connterieitea; or ... . willingly aid and assist in the false making, altering, forging or counterfeiting any peti tion, certificate, order, report, decree, con cession, denouncement, dewl, putcut, confir mation, diseno, map, espediente, or part oi pjsnodiente. or and title paper, or evideuce of r ir it. title or Claim IO lauu. tunics ur ui- - -O - . 7 - rnU in Culiforuia. or anr instrument ot writing whatever iu relation to lands or mines or minerals in the State of California; for the purpose of setting up or establishing against the United States any claim, right or title to tanas, mines or miiiumis wituiu the State of California, or for the purpose of enabling any person to set np or establish any such claim; or if any person for the purpose aforesaid, or cither of them, shall utter or publish as true and genuine auy such false, forged, altered or counterfeited petition, certificate, order, report, 'deeree. concession, denouncement, deed; patent, con firmation, disen, map, espediente, or part of an espediente. title-paper, evideuce oi ngni, title or claim to lauds or mines or minerals in the State of Coliforuia, or any instrument of writing whatever in relation to lands or mines or minerals in the State of California, the penon so offending shall be deemed and arlin.led iruiltT of a misdemeanor; and be ing thereof duly convicted shall be sentenced to be imprisoned and kept at hard labor for a period not Jess than three years, aud not more than ten years, and shall be fined not exceeding tea thousand dollars. Section 2 And be it further enacted, That if any person shall make or cause or procure to be made, or shall willinply aid and assht in making any falsely dated petition, certifi cate, - order, report, decree, concession, de nouncement, deed, - patent, confirmation, diseno, map, espediente or part of an espe diente, or any title-paper or written evidence of right,, title or claim, under Mexican au thority to any lands, mt or minerals in tbe State of California, oi -uSj instrument of writing is relation to lands orpes or minerals in the State of Cy ifornia. baVrav a false date, or falsely purporting to L znade by any Mexican officerjr authority prfdr to tbe seventh day rfjuly, A. D. eighteen hundred aud forty-six, for the purpose of setting ap or establi-'j-jg ,asy !aiat against the United States to muds or mines er Bin-, erals" within the State of California, or of enabling any person to set op or establish any such claim ; or if any person shall sign his name as governor, secretary or other public officer acting under Mexican nnthori' ty, to any instrument of writing falsely pur porting to be a grant, concession, or de-7 nouncemeut under Mexican authority, and during its existence iu California, of lands, ; mines or minerals, or falsely purporting to be an inform, report, record, confirmation or other proceeding on an application for a grant, concession or denouncement under Mexican authority, during its existence ia California, of lands, mines or minerals, the person offending shall be deemed and ad judged guilty of a misdemeanor, and being thereof duly convicted, shall be sentenced to be imprisoned and kept at bard labor for a period not less than three years, nor more than ten years, and shall be fined not exceed ing ten thousaud dollars. Sectjo.i. 8. And be it further enacted, , That if any persoa for the purpose of set ting np or establishing any claim against the United States to lands, mines or miner als within the State of California, shall pre sent, or cause or procure to be presented be fore any Coart, Judge, Commission or Com missioner, or other officer of the United States, any false, forged, altered or counter feited petition, certificate, order, report de-: cree, concession, denouncement, deed, patent diseno, map, espediente or part of an espe diente, title-paper or written evidence of right, title or claim to land?, minerals or mines in the State of California, knowing tbe same to be false, forged, altered or coun terfeit, or any falsely dated petition, certif icate, order, report, decree, concession, de nouncement, deed, patent, confirmation, diseno, map, espediente or part of espedi ente, title paper, or written evidence of right title or claim to laud., mines or minerals, in California, knowing the same to be false ly dated; or if any person shall prosecute in any Court of the United States, by ap peal or otherwise any claim against the Uni ted States for lands, mines or minerals in California, or shall, after the passage of this act, continue to prosecute any.- claim now pending in said courts against tbe Uni ted States for lands, mines or minerals in California, which claim is founded upon or evidenced by any petition, certificate, order, report, decree, concession, . denouncement, deed, patent, confirmation, diseno, maps. espediente, or part of au espediente, title paper, or written evidence of right, title or claim, which has been forged, altered, coun terfeited or falsely dated, knowing the same to be forged, altered or counterfeited or falser ly dated, the person bo offending shall be deemed and adjudged gnilty of a misdemean or, aud on conviction thereof shall be sen tenced to be imprisoned and kept at bard labor, for a period not less than three years, nor more than ten years, acd shall be fined not exceeding ten thousand dollars. Approved 18 May, 185S.. AX ACT to authorize the vestry of Wash ington parish to take and enclose certain parts of streets in the city qf Washing ton for the purpose of extending tbe Washington Cemetery; and for other pur poses. Be ii enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United Stales of Amer ica tn Uaneress assembled, I oat the vestry of Washington parish shall be, and are here by authorized, with the consent of the cor poration of the city of Washington, to take, enclose and use forever, those parts of the Eighteenth and Nineteenth streets east. which lie between the north side of G street sonth aud the north side ef Water street; and also those parts of south G and south II streets which he between beventeeuth and Twentieth stceets east, for the purpose of enlarging the Washington Cemetery; Proruled, That the power hereby conferred shall not be exercised as regards such par ticular portion of either of the aforesaid streets as may pass in front of any lot of ground: And provided further, That the said vestry shall not sell for any purpose whatever any of the aforesaid parts of streets, bnt the United btates shall retain and hold snch parts thereof as may be laid out for burial purposes for the interment of members of Congress or such officers of the government as may die in Washington. Sec. a. .And oe it furiuer enacted, jriiat no canal, railroad, street or alley shall ever he laid out or opened into or through thd Washington Cemetery, except such avenues or walks as may be laid out by the vestry of Washington parish, for the use and pur poses of the said cemetery. Sec. 3. And be U t urvtcr enacua mas the Washington Cemetery shall forever be free front taxation. Approved IS May 18o3. AN ACT to amend an act entitled "An act to authorize the President of the b m ted States to cause to be surveyed the tract of land, iu the Territory of Minne sota, belonging to the half-breeds or mix ed bloods of tbe Pacotah or Sionx nation of Indians, and for other, purposes," ap 1 proved seventeenth July, eighteen hun dred and fifty four. Be U enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United State of Amer ica in Congress assembled, That, the act ap proved seventeenth Jaly, eighteen hundred and fifty-four, above referred to, ehapter eighty-three, be, aad the sama is hereby, amended, so that the body of land kuowa as the bal5breed tract, lying on the west side of Lake Pepin aad the Mississippi riv er ia the Territory of Minnesota, and which is' authorized to be surveyed by the said act of eighteen hundred and fifty-four, shall be subject to the operation of the laws reg See fourth page. . 4