General Information About Oregon. We take the foliowiug interesting article from the East Portland Era : la 1858 Oregon was admitted aa a State in the Union, with a population of about 50,000. Since that time her career has been one of unusual prosperity. She has undergone none of the viccissitudes that usually happen to most new countries. Her progress has never been rapid at any time ; always slow, but at the same time always sure. Her future is one of un bounded promise. The majority of her people, trained in the school of adversity and trial, have tho economical and indus trious habits that go to build up nations to wealth and fame. G EOOtt APHICAL. ' Oregon lies between the 42d and 46th parallels of north latitude, and between the 117th meridian west from Greenwich - and the Pacific ocean. The State has an aveiage length, east and west, of 3Z0 miles ; and a breadth, north and south, of 275 miles. Its territorial area is 9Gr 250 square miles. The population by the census of 1870 is 90,776. Oregon has great and varied natural resources. Her valleys are highly pro ductive ; her mountains abound with the finest timber produced by any country in the world. Numerous beds and mines oi iron and coal exist in the coast range of mountains; and in tho mountain ranges of the interior are found gold, silver, cop per, iron, coal, and other mineials. . Her rivers yield, annually, very large returns to the fisherman for his labor: salmon from the Columbia and other rivers of Oregon are now being esteemed the finest of its species. The native wild grasses of the State are of excellent quality and very luxuriant in growth, fattening every year large herds of cattle ready for mar ket. The prospects for her to become a manufacturing State are uncommonly good. Raw material of every description, ' fuel, and water power, the three requi sites for manufacturing enterprise, are found well distributed throughout the State. About one-third of the entire area of tho State is adapted to agriculture, an other third to grazing purposes ; the re mainder is mountain and timber land. Of the grazing lands, but a small propor , tion has passed from the hands of the government into that of private parties. . lbe amount of land under cultivation does not exceed five per cent of the ag gregate quantity adapted to that purpose. The, umber lands still belong to the gov ernment, almost in an unbroken area. The Columbia river forms the northern boundary of the State. . The water-shed of this magnificent river embraces terri tory equal to half a continent. It drains the western slope of the Rocky mount- , ains for ten degrees of latitude. It is the natural gateway of this extensive territory the only outlet to the sea. The position that Oregon occupies on its waters gives the State the key to its outlet and the control of its euuimerce. The country about its head waters is as yet scarcely anything but a wilderness ; still very large exports and imports find their way up and down the Columbia river. The gorge of the Columbia offers the only pos sible route through the Cascade mount ains for the Northern Pacific railroad. : Its tributaries interlocking with those of the Missouri, 800 miles from the eca, form a natural highway for the passage of the road across the Rocky mountain 'chain. That a great commerce will at some time in the future make its high- : way through the valley of the Columbia " there is hardly any necessity of attempt ing to prove by argument. The proposi ioa is self evident. The mouth of the Columbia is five hundred miles nearer China than is San Francisco; and the entire route froca China to New York by way of the Co lumbia river and the route of the North era Pacific railroad is eight hundred miles shorter than that by way of San ' Francisco and the Central route across the eontinent. Of the forty millions of ," people who now inhabit the United States, two-thirds are nearer to the mouth of the Columbia river, by way of, the Columbia river valley and its proposed railway connections, than to any other point on the Pacific coast. . Vessels go ing from San . Francisco to Japan or -.. China sail upon what is called the "grand .circle" that is, they sail northward to -within one . hundred - miles of Paget , Sound before attempting to cross the ocean, instead of in a straight line. Any : one testing these facts by a string on a globe will be surprised at the result, if shey have not previously studied the ef fect of the earth's rotundity and its di minished protuberance as you go north- ward toward the pole. No argument could better illustrate the advantageous - position occupied by Oregon on the prin cipal international highway across the American continent. pnTSICAI. CHARACTERISTICS. -The physical characteristics ot a conn- try exert an important influence on its Wlnbabitants. Grand scenery, leaping wa ters, and a bracing atmosphere, produce men of a different cast from those who dwell where the land is on a dead level, and where the streams are all sluggards. - Physically, Oregon is a rugged, mount ainous country, with numerous valleys, large and small, lying deep within its 'mountain ranges. To say that the coun try is rough in its outward appearance does not convey a fair idea of it, however, as its valleys have much smooth, undu lating surface. That term would prop erly apply to the mountainous portions, and some portions of the high table lands. The valleys are remarkable for their great beauty and fertility. 7 V. t . - The principal mountain range is the Cascade. It is the great Andes chain of North America, known in Mexico as the Cordillera, in California as the Sierra Nevada, and in Oregon and Washington ss the Cascade. , Its general direction is rarallel with the coast line. ; Its altitude !eg the main ridge is from 6,000 to 8,000 feet above the level of the sea. It rs-ominent peaks ascend to the regions of perpetual snow. A tow range lying close to the shore of the Pacific ocean, called t? e Coast range, has aa al&ituda-of from SjCOO-'to-SOOO feet Between these two TsnsS. and separated, from each, other by liVspura of each of the two, ate the tUrta Takers- which; extending from the Columbia river to the California line, constitute the important part of the State in a political and commercial point of view. The Willamette Valley is the largest and most northerly of the series. The Umpqua lies next to it on the South, and Rogue River Valley lies close ta the California line. ; Eastern Oregon, embracing all that part of the State east of the Cascade mount ains, is a high, rolling table land, broken and rugged in many places, and inter sected by numerous etnall water courses which have a general northerly direction to the Columbia. All these streams have worn deep channels in the rolling table lands through which thev make their way to the Columbia, thus adding very much to the general unevennebs of sur face throughout this part of the State. The valleys of this section of the State are generally email The largest, Grand Ronde Valley and Powder River Valley, hare each of them sufficient territorial area for a large county. Harney Lake Vailey is a feature of Eastern- Oregon remarkable for its having no outlet. It is a basin in the high plateau of that part of the State, about forty miles in diame ter and nearly circular. The only drain age of the inner slope of the basin is into a small lake in the southeastern part,near the rim, the water of which is brackish and unwholesome. The valley, or basin, has no value except for gracing purposes: tho surface is broken and rocky, and the soil poor, except in the northern part, which contains a large area of good land The valleys and table lands of Eastern Oregon, comprising more : than two- thirds the entire area, are prairies. The mountains are heavily timbered. In Western Oregon the rallevs consist prio cipally of prairie lands, with groves and belts of timber at short intervals, while the mountain ranges' support an uncom monly heavy growth of timber. NAVIGABLE RIVERS The entrance to the Columbia River is amid sand bars and shoals that for a quar ter of a century were supposed to otter a very serious impediment to the naviga tion of the river, and to destroy in measure its usefulness as a channel for commerce. The earlier navigators found some difficulty in entering the river, and reported the cntiance to be dangerous, and the water on the bar too shallow to admit the passage of other than light draught vessels. During the period cx tending from 1S45 to 1860 a number of vessels were lost in endeavoring to cross the bar.' These things, taken together. led to the very general impression that navigation about the mouth of the Colum bia liiver was attended with an unusual risk, and that none but light draft ves sets could ascend the river. A few years ago the United btates government or dcred a survey of the bar and channel by officers of the coast survey. It was found that there was twenty-one feet ot water on the bar at the lowest stage, which is more water than there is on the bar at the mouth of the .Mississippi. The chan nel has been carefully marked by buoys A steam tug is constantly employed on the bar and pilot grounds,, under a con tract with and subsidy from the State. The government has erected a first-class light on tho headland north'of the en trance. The channel has become famil iar to navigators, so that the entrance may now be considered entirely safe, and its navigation attended with no greater risk or detention than is usually found at the entrance of any other navigable river. There have been no marine disasters at the entrance of the Columbia river since the year 1865. . Statistics from the books of the custom house at Astoria show that during the period between that date and the timeot the present writing the num ber of anivals and departures of vessels of all kinds was 629. The Columbia is the largest of any of the rivers having an outlet on the west ern coast of America. Amoog the rivers of the United States it ranks as third for its volume of water and for the area of territory drained by its tributaries. It is navigable for sea going vessels of large size as high as the mouth of the Willam ette, 100 milts from the sea. Above this point it is navigable to Wallula, 240 miles further, for first-class river steamers, by making two portages, one of six miles at the Cascades, the other of fourteen miles at the Dalles of the Columbia. Naviga tion on its upper waters is considerably Obstructed by the very many rapids and the rocky nature of the channel in many place.". These, however, have been very much improved by private enterprise. The portages around the two rapids which offer the most serious obstacles to naviga tion are made by railroads connecting the navigable sections of the river, so that the commerce of the river suffers no hindrance or interruption. Above Wallula the Columbia and one of its tributaries, the Snake river, is navigable during high water to Lew is ton, in Idaho, about 200 miles from the sea. The Willamette river is navigable to Portland, 12 miles above its confluence with the Columbia, for ocean steamers and other sea going craft.-Above Portland it is navigable for river steamers as high as Salem at all stages of water, aod to Corvallis for about nine or ten months of the year. - The first named place " is about 75 miles, the second 125 miles from its mouth. Navigation for this dis tance is not continuous. , The falls of the Willamette at Qregon City. 12 miles above Portland, 'necessitate a hauling of cargo and. transfer of passengers from boats below to boats above tho falls, and vie veneu The arrangements for effect ing the transfer are of the best kind. A charter has been granted by the State for the construction ot locks at the tails. This is an improvement which when com pleted will admit of the passage of boats up or down without transfer of cargo and without interruption or delay. ' The Umpqua river is navigable to Scottsburg, 2o miles from its mouth, for light draft vessels, a An experiment re cently made shows that with some im provements made in the channel the river micrnt Do navizatea some u cones nigu " "P- i A , RAILROADS... fl The first railroad in OregodasJmilt in 1862, by the; Oregon Steam Naviga tion Company, across the porlago at the Dalles of tho Columbia, to connect the river steamers plying below with those above the rapids. It is 14 miles long, and was built solely with reference to the river trade." It has no connection with the railroad system of the State. 1 he railroad system of Oregon is now beginning to be developed. It embraces in the hrst place a continuous line from Portland to Sacramento. California, with branch diverging at the head of the Willamette valley, or at some point near the southern boundary of the State, east ward, and connecting with the trunk line of the Central Pacific at the big bend of the Humboldt. Work on the Oregon end of this line was commenced at Port land late in the season of 1869. The first section, of twenty -miles, was completed that Tear, and during the year 1870 it was pushed on to Albany, 78 miles from the starting point. The present spring it has been completed to a point 100 miles south from Portland. The work is being prosecuted with vigor, and it will proba bly reach the head of the Willamette valley the present season. The California end ot the road has been completed to Tehama, about 140 miles north from Sac ramento. This road passes up the Wil lamette valley from Portland on the east side of the river. In Oregon it is being constructed by the Oregon aod California Railroad Company, and is known by that name. It will pass through the three great valleys of Western Oregon their entire length, and will give railroad fa- cilities to a very large section of South ern Oregon and Northern California, known as the vallevs of the Klamath and Goose Lake. The Oregon and California Railroad Company have received from the general government a grant of land equal to 12.800 acres per mile to aid in the construction ot the road. On the west side of the Willamette river the Oregon Central Railroad Com pany have commenced the construction of a road from Portland up the west side of the Willamette valley, with a branch to extend to Astoria, at the mouth o" the r. Columbia river. This company also have . LX received a grant of 12,800 acres of land twenty mile section is to be completed by May, 1872. V THE WILLAMETTE VALLEY The series of valleys lying between the Cascade mountains and the Coast Range of Oregon composes the most important port of the State. On account ot the great fertility of the soil, and the remark able mildness aod salubrity of rhe cli mate, those vallevs arc capable of sup "porting a population as large aa that of any country in the world of equal area. They arc neatly alike in soil and climate, except that the Willamette, the most northerly of the three, has the greatest rain fall ; Rogue river valley, the most souther ly.ot them all, has the dryest clt mate ; and Umpqua valley, lying between the other two, being more of a medium in that respect. The Willamette valley, the largest of the series, is not only the finest agricultural district ot the Pacific slope, but one of the best of North Amer ica. Its area is, not as great as that of the Sacramento valley, but at the same time it contains more arable land. It is remarkable as having little or no waste land. There is hardly an hundred acres of land in one body anywhere in the Wil lamette valley that is not susceptible of being put to some agricultural Use. It is about 125 miles long, counting from the valley proper to the Columbia river, with an average breadth ot about 4U miles, counting from the base of the mountains on each side, exclusive ot small lateral valleys diverging hero and there. 'Its entire area is about 5,000 square miles, or something larger than the State of Connecticut; or if we admit the eutire of the Willamette river in the estimate, the area would be about 12,000 square miles about the same as Connecticut and Massachusetts put together. The valley is politically divided into uiue counties, having an aggregate population of 61,147, or a little more than two-thirds the entire population of the State. It contains the eldest settlement m Oregon. In the early history of the country the iVilla- mette valley -was Oregon ; and even now the phrase "down in Oregon," as used by people drifting around through Idaho and other localities east of the mountains, is intended to refer particularly to the Wil lamette valley. - From the time when the colony of American settlers, clustering around the Mission, on the banks of the Willamette, came to outnumber the British traders north of the Columbia, to the present hour, the Willamette valley has been the center of political and commercial power on the northern coast. , Mankind has the same history in every country. It is on the rich alluvial lands that population in creases and wealth and power accumulate. The valley of the Nile and the plains of Italy in former times, and the valley of the Mississippi at the present day, serve as the most magnificent examples of the capacity of a people to attain to great wealth and power when located upon a wide extent of rich alluvial soil. Agri culture is the basis of all prosperity. The soil and climate that produces the great est number of bushels of wheat to the acre will support and will eventually attain the greatest population to the square mile. Of easy access from the sea by the channel of a large, navigable rivor, with a navigable stream in the middle and aline of railway-on each side, the commercial facilities of the Willamette Valley are unsurpassed in any part of the United States. It is adapted by soil and climate, and its geographical position, as well as its resources of timber, iron, coal and other raw material, fit it to become the center of large manufactures. It is suit ed to become the homes of men, and the seat of -; emniro. The surface of the Willamette Valley is undulating; in some nlaces onite hillv. in others there are tracts for miles in extent of quite level land. It consists of alternate stretches of timber and prairie. "V In the southern part of the valley there is a preponderance of prairie over timbered land, which gradual iy diminishes towards the north until the timbered country of the Columbia river is reached, where the timbered lands largely predominate. The valley is watered by numerous tributaries of the Willamette, large and small, coming from the moun tains on each side, affording an excellent supply of pure, soft water for farm and domestic purposes, and large water-power for man ulactu ring purposes. In nearly all parts of the valley springs and- small brooks abound. Good water is easily at tained, where these do not exist, by dig King. There are no . salt. Jtirackisn. or alkaline waters in the valley. . . The Willamette Valley being the most densely populated portion of the State, and containing as it does the oldest set tlement, is enabled to boast more and better educational facilities, more church es, more rennement and home com torts in society than the other settlements, which have been reclaimed from the band of the savage but a few years. In the principal towns there exist all the neatness aod home like appearance that render the vil lages of New England . so attractive. Society is firmly established. Traveling and mail facilities are equal to the wants of the people. .Land in the Willamette Valley is held in large tracts. That is the natural result of the policy adopted by the government toward the early set tlers, whereby every 7 man of a family was enabled to obtain 640 acres of land. This state of affairs has been a detriment to the country, a serious drawback to the settlement and cultivation of the soil. Time and the influx of.a new population, will, however, remedy this evil. Ihe population of the Willamette Valley is but about twelve persons to the square mile. If it was as densely populated as Massachusetts it would contain nearly one million people. That it is capable of supporting a vast population, in comfort and affluence, no one will hesitate to be lieve, when its great resources are com pared with those of the most thickly settled parts of the United States. The natural capacities in this respect, of the best of the Eastern States, will ..hardly compare with it: for it combines within itself every element essential to the pros- ecutiou of the various industries of man Anecdotes of Daniel Webster. Among the Websterians there is nothing of his better than the answer to the French Minister who asked him, while Secretary of State, whether the United States would recognize the ' new Govern ment of France. The Secretary assumed a very solemn tone and attitude, saying : "Why not? Tho United States has recognized the Bourbons, the Republic, the Directory, the Council of Five Hun dred, the rirst Uonsul, the Jiiinpemr, Louis XVIII, Charles X, Louis Phil lippe, th. " "Enough ! ' Enough 1" cried the French Minister, perfectly satisfied by such a formidable citation of consistent precedents. When Daniel Webster was a young man, about commencing . the study of law, he was advised not to enter the le gal profession, for it was already crowd, cd. His reply was, "There is room enough at the top." What but a suppressed sense of humor, in both speaker and auditors, could pos sibly have carried off such a speech as this, which is attributed to Webster : "Men of Rochester, 1 am glad to see you, and 1 am glad to see your noble city. Gentlemen, I saw your talis, which 1 am told are 150 ieet nigh ! I hat is a verv interesting fact. Gentlemen, Rome, had her Caesar, her Scipio, her Brutus : but Rome in her proudest days, had never a waterfall 150 feet high ! Gentle men, Greece had her Pericles, lu-r De mosthenes and her Socrates; but Greece, in her palmiest days, never had a water fall loO feet high 1 Men ot Rochester, go on. . iNo people ever lost tlieir liber ties who had a waterfall 150 feet high I" Tub Bramo Somaj. There is just now arising, in India, a most remarkable religious sect which bids fair to wield a vast influence over the teeming millions of the. East. The apostles of this new religion seem to bo permeated' with all the zeal and activity which characterize our best missionaries. Wherever they go the eyes of the more intelligent na tives of India seem to be opened to see that there is but one living and true God, and that idols are indeed no Gods at all. Last year sixteen churches were formed. The headquarters of the new religion i? Calcutta; but such an earnest spirit ot propagandism is manifested that already a thousand miles off, in the Valley of Cashmere, has a church of those believ ers been : formed. They have planted "churches of the one - God" throughout Bengal, throughout the northwest provin ces, the l'urtiaub, Bombay and Madras, in which they say "hundreds congregate week after week, to worship ' the Holy God in spirit and in truth." A correspondent at Schaffhausen, writ ing to the Journal tie Gencce, reports the following case of religious persecu tion in Switzerland : "A young man ad mitted to the Communion in 1860, and now aged 19, has been condemned, at the instance of the pastor of his parish, to 4 francs fine and 17 "francs costs -for not having attended catechizing. This young man is domiciledTat Zargen; he had been for the last five years left in charge of the works on the - property of the father, who is 72 years of age, and now under treatment by an oculist. " The ecclesiastical tribunal was wholly indiffer ent to these circumstances, and as soon as sentence was pronounced, ordered the delinquent to be apprehended and thrown into prison.-; . ..- -. . - -p. . .... S i J ' The great quickening and greatly . in creased culture of the better class . of people in . India are largely owing to the missionary schools,' where a free educa tion is proffered to India youths, but where students often come determined not to be converted to the Christian religion. ,It is very evident, however, should this new religious sect become as powerful as many predict it will become, and should the worship of idols be dis contenanced by the better and more in fluential classes of India, that a wondrous open door would be presented to the missionary. Indeed, the active prop agandists of this new religious sect may be looked upon in no other light than so many 'John the Baptists," acting as. forerunners of the missionary who fol lows closely after to proclaim . the . true Gospel. f ' It is stated that the practice of . brewT ing beer from rice is rapidly coming into use in Germany, This beer is said to bo of a very clear color, of an extremely mild taste, foaming strongly, and yet re taining well its carbonic acid." ' A Singular Duel. Major Buford, called by way of . emi nence, "me Major, was the most noieu dueliat of the day. A ; dead shot, a per feet maeter of fence, and in his enmities utterly relentless, his name had. become a terror to all who knew him. In the midst of a knot of admiring friends, one day, the Major was discus sing his last affair, and comnlacentlv ex plaining how it came that he mortally wounded his adversary, instead of killing him on the spot, when one of the two gentlemen standing within bearing, sud denly advanced and struck him in the face. The spectators stood 1 aghast. What could have tempted the stranger to rush thus madly on his fate ? He was an old man. Already, to armearance. had three-score and ten years passed over his head. He must, indeed, have been weary of life, whose brief remnant he was ready to cast away so recklessly. The Major was astonished. , The very audacity of the act struck him with amazement. , "Is the provoca'ion sufficient, or must I repeat it ?" inquired his assailant. The Major's first impulse was to return blow for blow. But fierce and violent as were his passions, he had schooled him self to corcpleto mastery over them, and a moment's reflection told him how boot less, under the circumstances, would be a public - brawl. The indignity be had received would admit of but one repara tion, aod that he determined to lose no time in seeking. f "The insult is sufficient," he answered, with forced calmness. "Oblige me by naming a friend for your own I care not to whom may I refer one of my own ?" "This gentleman," replied the other, resuming the arm of his companion, "will return here in an hour, to confer with any one you may designate." - And the two strangers took their leave together. At sunrise, on the following morning, the principals and their seconds' made their appearance on the ground selected. xso one else was present not even a surgeon. The major, in his own past experience, never had needed one; and his opponent, it was plain, was careless of the consequence. There was no necessity for delay. The preliminaries had been settled. The parties were to fight with pistols, at ten paces, the combat to continue until one or both had fallen. One condition had been insisted on by the stranger, which called an indignant blush to the Major's cheek, as it seemed to imply an imputa tion upon his honor, though he submitted to it with the best grace he could. It was, that before placing the combatants the bodies of both should be inspected, to sec that no secret protective device was employed by either. -." , ' 1 t The ground waa measured, and the men placed. There was a marked con trast between the two in more respects than that of years. The old man, erect and motionless as a statue, his whitened locks floating in the breeze, uever once looked at his antagonist, though his side was turned. Uis face was stern and determined, but had nothing malignant in it. The Major, on the other hand, glared fiercely at his foe, seeming even to grudge him the few moments of life yet eked out to him. "Were he my father, I would kill him !" he answered, audibly, to- some whispered expostulations of his second, who was evidently touched by the old man's venerable appearauce. -1 ; :,- The pistol were put in the hands of the principals, and the giving of the word explained. "Gentlemen, are you ready ?" "Ready," both answered. Still the old man moved not, nor did he direct a single glance at his adversary. U is eyes were fixed in front. His atti tude was one of rapt attention. He seemod like one listening attentively. The basement of the new penitentiary is completed and the walls are np about eight feet above the first floor. The building will require 1,600,000 bricks. s Without changing the direction of his gaze, or other movement than that of his arm, which rose With -the precision of a nicely adjusted machine, the old man brought his pistol to the level ol his enemiy's breast. ' For an instant he held it there. - Still no look in the direc tirn it pointed. Still the : same appear ance of eager listening. The Major was in no hurry. He could affrd to take his time with a man who held his pistol at random, without looking whitherward.. lie took deliber ate aim. lie was determined to make sure work. If his ball missed his adver sary's heart, even a fraction of an' inch he would never make any pretension to skill again. ' . The harp report of the stranger's pistol was followed by a convulsive jerk ot the Major's arm, causing the discbarge of his weapon far wide of its mark, while he, staggering a few paces backward, fell heavily to the ground. ? "Conduct me to him," said the old man to his friend. -r v 1 .The latter took the .' principal's arm, and led him to the prostrate form of tho j Major, whose second, kneeling by his side, had torn open his garments, expos ing to view the fatal wound in his breast, . made by the stranger's bullet. "Is your friend . seriously hurt?" in quired the latter, cooly. ; "You can see for yourself, sir," the second answered. .. '.. ": "There you're in error." replied the other ; "1 am totally Hind." The wounded man, who had by this time revived a little, and his second, looked at the : stranger in - astonishment. There was no visible defect in his organs of vision ; but there was a fixity of look that "bending of the eyes on vacancy" which - so unmistakably evinces the absenco of sight. "Who are you?" " and what was your motive in seeking this encounter ?" the Major faiotly murmured. - "First are you in condition to renew it?" inquired the stranger. "There is no need- I am dying." "When I have told you who I am," the stranger resumed, "yon will scarce require my motive for what X have done. No wonder ; yon jhave . forgotten James Merton," he continued, "for he is greatly changed no doubt." ' ; The dying man started, and" groaned bitterly. - ' - i jr; "But I have never forgotten you,' Rich ard.Buford, nor the injuries you have done me. A cherished daughter, the pride of my eyes, and the joy of her mother's heart, you enticed from her home, deceived by a sham marriage, and then abandoned her to die of a brok en heart. : My son, and only remaining child, in a rash attempt to avenge his sister's wrongs, fell a victim to your ac cursed skill. You even robbed him of the ordinary chances of combat, unequal as they would have been, by encasing your cowardly body in concealed armor. The loss of both our children unsettled my wife's reason and she died in a mad house. Could I have found you then, I would have given yon no chance for your life; but valiant as you have always pro fessed to be, aod coward as you are, you feared and evaded me. Yet I knew we should one day. meet; and I registered a vow, that when we did :I .would offer you a sacrifice to your own infernal art. To this end I studied to become an adept in it, and succeeded. And when at length, blindness cast its shadow upon me. and seemed to render hopeless the fulfillment of my Tvow, instead of aban doning it, I betook myself to a new species of practice. I sought to make Hearing take the place of sight. " Again I succeeded. I learned to take aim with ear instead of the eye. When I heard you answer 'ready,' to day, I knew the exact direction in which to point my pistol, as well as if I had seen yon. Be sides, I could hear you . breathing where you stood. You lost your chance in delaying your fire. You wished to-. make sure work, and overreached yourself." More than once the Major looked ap peal in gly at the speaker's face ; , but in those remorseless, : sightless eyes, there was no sympathy. And as tho labored breathing, grew fainter - and fainter, the old man resumed his listening - attitude. At last all was still. "He is dead !" he said ; and its wont ed expression of sober melancholy settled on the old man's face, as taking his com panion's arm. he turned and walked leisurely away. The Doublc-lleaded Saby. ' From the Boston Post, July 19th. We mentioned in our columns yester day the presence in Boston of a most re markable child, the offspring of Joseph and Ann L. Finley. ; It presented tl remarkable as well as unprecedented phenomenon of two beads, four arms and two legs, and all upon a single body The girls for such was its sex died last evening, at No. 6 Bowdoin street. The first half or head breathed its last at 5, and the second shortly after 8 o'clock. The many thousands iu the Middle and Western States who have seen this mar velous eccentricity of nature will learn of ," its early death with regret. ; The child or children, as it would seem prcper to allude to the phenomenon had enjoyed excellent health from its birth, nine months ago, until within two weeks, at which time one exhibited signs of illness. This, however, was but tem Dorarv. It recovered, and was bright and playful. Since reaching Boston, few days since, the other or the other half was taken sick, and died yesterday afternoon as already stated. Ihe two portions of the body were so intimately connected that the death of one rendered that of the other inevitable. TheKpecta- cle was equally novel, strange and uu paralelled. , Upon one end of tho body reposed the head of the dead infant ; upon the C'.her, that of the live one, with eyes still bright and curious, and its liinira in full Hi-am f ti ! n r nrflpr. All iht medical aid could accomplish was done, but it was found unavailing. The child died iu the presence of its parents. The corpse presents the appearance of two infants asleep. Apparently they escaped the ordinary : suffering incident to death, tor the countenances had the ex pression of repose. The disposition of the body is not determined upon. Several of our physicians were desirou last evening of having it opened for examina tion. They reside in Monroe county, Ohio, and live upon a farm. They have other children, but none have exhibited any unusual developments. Nor can this extraordinary departure from the laws of nature be accounted for. In Philadelphia, where all the medical Solons undertook to solve the problem, nothing whatever - was Jrought , to light. The child was looked on with amazemcot and interest, but all attempts to account for its existence were futile. Itia re garded as more of a curiosity than the Siamese twins, and most certainly th spectacle was more pleasurable ' to the eye. The child was shortly to have been-J exhibited to the public, and would doubt less here, as elsewhere, attracted throngs of visitors. ( The parents were especjal.lv devoted to the little marvel, and their sorrow is grievous. ; Obigin er thi PsaCH. Dr. Karl British Association, asserted the belief that the peach originally came from the almond; that cultivated cherry - trees all came from one parent stem; and that the green plum was from a different stem from the ordinary plum and damson., ( A few days ago a man named Sylvester Clark, in Chehalis county, W. T., was killed by a tree falling on him. tie leaves a wife at Brownsville, in this county.' NEW TO-DAY. W. IX. KCTMIY Sc. CO., i Haring just received a Large and well selected gtock of. . -:'i. ; ;.'' 7 II Alt!) WAKE, : V : - . - SUCH. AS : ,:- . -.' J . FARMER'S & MECHANIC'S TOOLS .:. .; codsisriifo or . '' ANVILS, VICES, BELLOWS, Hammers, Hammers, - sledges, biedges, Saws, Saws, Saws, . Jfianes, Planes, .rianes, Corss-Cut and Mill Saws, ' Together with a large assortment of IRON AND STEEL Nails, Nails, Nails, .. . springs, curings, springs, Axles, Thimble-Skeins, Bolts, cVc Vc. Also, a well Selected Stock -of Wagoix Tl TTtper, SPOKES, HUBS, BENT KIM8, ' SHAFTS, POLES, HICKORY AXLES. ETC., All of which we are now offering to tho pnblie at low rates. As we make the business a spec ialty, we can and will keep a better assortment at lower prices than any bouse in this city. " Receiving and opening a largo aad splendid assortment of WOOD AND WILLOW WARS, I Which wo offer at reduced rates. W. It. KUHN a CO. In the Monteith Fire-proof Brick, First-st. March 12.-70-27 B ILL-HEAD PAPER, all sixes, jnst received and for sale at this office, low for cash. r. h. McDonalds co.. WHOtEJlLE DRUGGISTS CAanArsxsco,CAiu, Call the Dttcntloo of Dealers to their larire awpi-r. mens or wewiy jhrrrrea umw,wiirpin iw pmrt or the fullowinic articles, tori-tner wltn er rr thi itr kept In i well supplied W11VU. SALE UKlli STORE. Fbksti Diiros. I Tii.ia's PaAATKa PiTIXT MEDICISZ9, I DjIlOSHU1 8tJWaiM, t, TBvasne 6vpponu I Soaiii Hiiuu, EuinnAL Oiu, iruFtinin, , '.. KlWSCNl Oifc, --, I PITS Oits, WWeh we offer at the lowest Cash Prices, aad arc determined not to be undersold. n. h. Mcdonald co., sa- raaxdreco, cv FOR SALS, Our Drug Business located in San Franw ciaco, Cal. After our beit wishes, aad express ing our thanks for the liberal patronage wo have received for more than twenty-one , years, during which period we have bees steadily engaged in the Drug business in California, we beg to say in consequence of the rapid growth of Dr. Walker's California Vinegar Bitters, now spread orcr the United States aod countries far beyond, wo aro necessitated to devote our entire , time to said business. ' We are the Oldest Drug firm . on tho Pacfae Coast and the only one. continuous under the same proprietors since 1849, and haye determined to sell our large, prosperous, and well established business on favorable terms. ' ; This is a rare opportunity for men with means, of entering into a profitable business with advan tages never before offered. . " - For particulars enquire of R. II. SlePOXALD A CO., R. n. McDosaLB, . Wholesale Druggi't. !. 0. Srsscen, ) San Francisco. Cal. B. Until a sale raate we snail continue our i'mportatiuBS and keep a larm stock of fresh Koods constantly on Uol, nd sell at prices to dofy competition. - j The Great Medical Dlscorery f Dr. WALKER'S OALXTOBHZA VINEGAR BITTERS, Bear testimony to their Wonder tsf 5"3 " iul Curative Effects. 113 1S WHAT ARE THEY? s 5 ; .'9s If . A gentleman in Canada gives a his to-, ry of a battle between two swarms of bees a few. days ago.' -One' swarm, .he sajs took ' forcible possession -6f rfreif neigh bor's liive, and, as tho attacked. d,cfe tided their rights, a. furious fight commenced, and the battle raged from 4:30 to 9 p. M. Next iuoroing, as the. son appeared, the battle, was. resumed, the marauders ap pearing not in .good .-copdition, yet show ing great pluck. The carnage continued without intermission till 10 A. M. when hundreds of dead bodies lay on the plain. At 11 o'clock the battle ended, when there was not one of the attacking party left to tell the tale. The Eureka Signal learns that two men lately found a bee ties (redwood) on Craig's ranch, Mad river, which was eleven feet in diameter, and from which they took seven hundred pounds of honey. - ' One of the business men of Rochester, Minn., being summoned to attend on a jury the other day his help being gone toohad to close up his shop, and to an nounce his whereabouts, he hung the following significant label on the door handle t "On a jury j wilt be back when we hang the cues." The London Time correspondent tolls -ff . .-v l - V 1" . ui a recent wuiriwina in xnaia mat car rioi trees and herds high ia the air, and dashing them to the ground a mile or so away, killed everything that possessed life. : -':' ' r1-;-Jl ' : Another seisure of 800,000 feet of saw logs has boen made at Paget 8ound, Ihe logs were cut on Government land 211 n y ?5 K.fii TBTfT ARK KftT A VTt.lt "isFANCY OR1N Uade of Poor Ram, - Whisker. Frewf Hplrlts a.nd Refaao Llejawra doctored, spiced and sweetened to please the taste, called "Ton. e,- Appetiser," " Bestorere c. that lead she tippler oa to drunkenness and rain, not are atrne Medicine, made from the Katlve Boots and Herbs of California, Oee Tram sill Aleahwll Stlmnlsipjta. Tbojrare UmUHEAT BLOOD riTHIFIBB aad LIPS GIVIXU 1KIM C I P L a perfect Eeaovator and Invlcorator ot the System, carrying off all poisonous matter and restorlna- the blood to a healthy condition. Hot person can take these Bitters aeoordlnf to dlrec tlon and remain Ion( aawelt. . Far Iaaeusmutorr nad Chronic Itken. mtlasa stnd Osst, Dyauvnalsv IsmII eatloe, Bllloaa, Roealttent Bad later-, anlttemt Vervara, Bteaaaea of ta BlaadV L-lver, Kidneys, aad Bladder, these Bit. tars hare been most eneeessfal. - Sack DIs. eases are caused by Vitiated Blsad. whtest la generally produced by derangement ot tha, Dlcestlve Oram as. DYSPKPAIA OR. INDIGESTION. Headache. Fain lathe Shoulders, Concha, TlgM em of the Chest, DUztness, Boar Ernetatloas or the Stomach, Bad teste la thn Month Billons 44. taeka. Palpitation ot the Heart, Inflammation of ' the Lanajs.Paln la thercaioas efthe Kldneya,aad ahnndred other natnlsl symptoms, an tha oS. springs of Dyspepsia. - They Inrlgorate the Stomach and stimulate th torpid Urer and bowels, which reader them of an. equalled efficacy ta cleansing fan blood of all Imparities, and Imparting new life and rigor to the whom system. TOE BK1N DISEASES, Krt tkma,TeUen Salt Baeam, Blotches. Spots, Pimples, rnstatea Bolls, narbnnelee. Rtog-Worms, Seald-Head. Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Itch, Scarfs, Dlscoloratloaa of . the Skin, Hanson and Places te oftbe Stem, of ' whatever name or aatare, are literally dag oa aad carried oat of the system in a sham list br toe nae of these Bitters. On bottle la sack eases will eeartoee the most incredulous of their ' ; eurmtlTe effect. -r . . -m .. , .... i .. , ' , Cleans the TlUated Blood wtMmerer you tad ' Its ImnnrlUea bBrsuna- throegh the skin la Pirn, plea, Eraptlose or Sores 1 eisanss It when yea End It obstrncted and !- la the reins; eleanM it wsea It is roe!, and yoar feeltnse wilt ss'.f yon whasv Keep th blood par and tha health orthetTStsai will follow. fiN. TAPS and other wo RES, IsrUair ta ' the system of so many thoaaaac-a, ere t aoraary SmU nyed aad remeasa. Forfttilairee aas.ravl earefnlly tike ctrealar aroaad each bo ..;, J. WaXKES, Proprietor. B. EC 1 -" s, CO., TJrwwIats aadGeu. Agents, t Oat. and hr and M Commerce B -", ' BOLP BV ALt, plftTOOfST A? J i