L P Fiihir VOLUME VI. ALBANY, OREGON,' APRIL 18, 187. ' ' '" -..; no. w.; . I've Been, Thinking, I've been thiuklng, I've been thinking, What a glorious world were this Did folk? mind their own business more. And mind their neighbor's less. For instance, you and I. my friend, Are sadly prone to talk Of matters that concern us not, Ami others' follies mock. I've been thinking, if we'd begin To mind our own fitl'alrs. That possibly our neighbors might Contrive to nianacy theirs. We've faults enougfi at home to mend, Tt may be so with others ; Twould he strange, if it were not, Since all mankind are brothers. Oh I would that wo had charity. For every man and woman ; Forgiveness is the mark of those Who know "to err is human." Then let us banish jealousy Let's lift onr fallen brother. And as we iourney down life's road, "Do good to one another." im The Story of the Naiad King. Among the refugees who, at the time of the first French revolution, sought an asylum in foreign coun tries, there was a young nobleman from the South of France, named Ileori d Albignac, lie had been left at) orphan at an early age, and his only inheritance was a little do main that, under the most favorable circumstances, yielded him a yearly income of perhaps two thousand francs, which was little more than he required for his current expenses. When, therefore, one dark, rainy day, he arrived at London, the sum total of his ready money, amounted to little more than five thousand francs. With this sum, small as it was, had he any knowledge of trade, or a thorough education, he might have earned at least a modest live lihood ; but he had received only a common-shool education, and as for his knowledge of agriculture, it was very inferior to the English farmer of the time. Besides, he was ac customed to lead an easy life, and had luxurious habits; it was no wonder, therefore, that before the end of the year, liis funds were ex. bfusted. One morning, as he sat in no pleasant frame of mind, thinking over tiis condition, his landlord, an avaricious huckster, who even sur passed the majority of his uncultur ed countrymen in incivility, entered the room. At first he glanced in quisitively about the apartment, and then he fixed his eye upon his lodg er with a disdainful smile, nodding three or tour times significantly as ho said : "It's plain enough to be seen, M. ' d'Albignac, that your affairs are in a pretty bad fix, and, if I might be allowed a word concerning them, I should say they will not be better rtUI mm make up your oi"d to put your shoulder earnestly to the wheel." "I doubt whether that would im prove them much," replied the young Frenchman; "I know of nothing that would materially bet tar my-' condition but one or two hundred pounds sterling." "Just so. Money is what you iked. That I know wy well," returned the huckster, "and as for working, you feel yourself above it, while you have not wit enough to make money in your own way." "Jitr," cried the young nobleman, Tuive you come here to insult me?" "''ome, cope," replied Cornhill, 'there is no need of crying ut so oud It will not help matters any. Do you know that you already ewe TOflfiv pounds?" "You will get y"r money," re plied Henri ; "I have thus fer in life Jii?liSid think .uSJS " "I shall be very glad ; but when does your honor thhk I can touch the money? m: "As soon as my affairs are in a better condition," said d'Albignac, modestly. "And till then you propose to continue oh increasing your debt, I suppose r replied tne huckster. "No, no, to that I cannot consent." "I think the best thing I can do is to leave your house at once," d'Albignac, springing to his feet and seizins his hat: "there are other people in the world besides yon, and better ones, too, I trust." "Tut! tut! 6itdpwri again and let us talk like two sensible remonstrated the huckster. men,' "Vou shall see tbat I mean well you." 1 with Carious to know in what way his landlord s interest in him', would manifest itself, Henri sat down and looked him full in the face. "I need a trustworthy man to drive round and serve niy customers with vegetables," Cornhill began. 'Will you be that man ?" "Will I what ! are you mad f cried d'Albignac, iu doubt whether he beard aright. "What else can you do ? Noth ing, that I can see," replied the huckster, shrtigging his shoulders. "Think it over I will stive you till to-morrow evening to consider. If you refuse you need expect nothing more from me. And what will yon do then, in this big city, without friends and without means. Heav en only knows! Besides 1 shall expect yon to pay me before you leave my house." With these words he left the room. Henri remained for a while, seated at the window, considering what course to pursue in his extrem ity : then he rose and went to a res taurant, where he was in the habit of getting his dinner, Arrived there he took a seat at a table at which two elegantly dressed gentlemen were already seated, and ordered some roast beef and a salad, which was all that the few small coins which still remained to him would pay for. The beef he found entirely to his liking; the salad, on the con trary, he pushed aside as absolutely unfit to be eaten. Meautime, three more fashionable young men of the world had seated themselves at the table. 'fhey smiled as he pushed tbe salad aside, and nodded aside as he said : "What an abominable mess they give you here under the name of salad ! n it h us, in Jb ranee, a salad is a very different sort of thing." "Then, you are a Frenchman, sir?" asked one of the gentlemen, in a Courtly tone. "la it tr,ue that your countrymen are . the adepts I have heard they are in the dressing of salads?" "That is one of the arte in which they are certainly proficient," re plied tho. Frenchman. "But the secret is, of course, not known to everyone ; it is probably only in, tbe bands of professional cooks and epicures,?" , "Not at .0,11," replied Henri; "every child with us, knows how to dress a salad fit for a king. True, our petit crepe, is, a pery different sort of vegetable from the bitter let tuce that grows, in, England." "l! tear you do our gardeners in justice; the lettuce they .raise, is good enousm, jt oniy requires, ip pe properly dressed," , Tlie discussion was continued at some length, when one pf the En glishmen turned to d Albignac, aid asked if he would not undertake to prepare a salad then and there after the Freiich manner. "Certainly! why not?" replied Henri 1 whereapoa the waiter was called, and all the necessary warm. dtente vera immediately ordered fer the dressing salad ate Fraaoaifae. Then the young iotHnteafl' to work, answering, meantime, the questions of the Englishmen w'th regard to his country and his im pressions of theirs, And thus it came that he told his interlocutors his own story that he was an emigre, had exhausted all h means, and was at a Joss to know what to do or which way to turn. In duetime the safyd was dressed, histxl oiid Tirnnoun'eed SUlicrb. pronou TiwWd. one of the VOUnfT ftllglish men was so well nleased fiat he in , 4 W sisted on testifying hi? appreciation of the Frenchman's art by present ing him with a five pound bank note. Henri very naturally objected at first to accept it, but the English man would listen to no exenses, and he was finally" compelled to yield. At parting they took his address, And assured him that lie would hear from them again. D'Albignao returned bis lodgings in a much better frame, of mind than he had been for awny days. His first step -was to sstisfy his im Doitunato landlord with the five pouuds that had so fortunately fal len into his band; his second was to look tor other quarters. The huckster was aotajittk chagrined to see Iris tenant leave bin?, but he made no effort to induce him to re main. "We shall see," he, thought, "you will be glad to come back to me and accept my offer- f not to day or to-morrow, then liter. Ire turn you are sure to, for What can you, friendless aud moneyless, do in London?" Henri found, in the sanfe street, in the house of a wearer, t modest apartment that answered 'iris pur pose. He now began to bok dili gently about fbr some means of earning a livelihood, and thought no more of the salad adventure until he was reminded of it in a manner that, in his impoverished condition, was most agreeable. hour or five days 'had elapsed, when one morning! he received a note in which he was politely re quested to do the writer the favor to come, on a certain day, at a spec ified hour, to one of the handsomest mansions in Grosvenor Square, in order that the guests at a large din ner party might profit by his skill in a!ad dressing. Grosvenor Square in those days was the most fashionable part of London. Once favorably known in that neighborhood, and his feme could not tail to extend throughout the city. The' young Frenchman had sufficient sagacity to see that his Rkill in dressing salads might lie made to retrieve bis fortunes ; he therefore spent the time that inter vened betwecu the receipt oi the note and ttie day on which he was to visit..Sqqare jp njakjng some experiments, which finally resulted to his entire satisfaction. 1 He was punctual, arid found the principal ingredients for 'the dish he was called in to prepare awaiting bis arrival In a little box which he carried with Him he brought vari ous condiments he deemed necessary to enable him to acquit himself in the best possible maimer. He was entirely successful, aud won the highest: praise; but what gratified him most was the liberal recompense ho received tor his trouble, which strengthened his determination to reap whatever pecuniary advantage from his art he could- Henri's hopes and expectations were more than realised. His sec ond so-called Italian salad did much more toward making him known than heaiitidpated. In a very few days he received another invitation, oi rather order; soon afterward an other, and within a month it was not considered "the thing" at a gItfdtoaer offer ne guests a thoywBhiwbJwn. eVttliim flay, not fengafter this turn in his affairs, d'Albignac paid a visit to his former fanaibrd, who, as soon as be recovered from, the surprise the young unjs triumph ant mien occasioned, asked in his brusque manner : "Well, have you corao to,, your seiifCBw W?, Have you decided to accept m pi posal and peddle my vegetaqles foj n w 'No, 1 have not decided (o ped die your vegetables for you, but to buy tflem, replied d Albignac. "Eh, what ? have you lost your wits ?" replied the astonished huck ster. "A trtadman would hardly come to' von with so rational a proposi tion," returned the Frenchman, smiling. "Then you are really in earnest?" ""Ay, really in earnest. True, I have no use tor all that grows in the gardens that supply you, but I will take a very considerable portion that is used in preparing the various kinds of salads provided we can agree as to prices." "Well, I have no objections," replied Cornhill. "A fair price and. prompt payment is all: I ask." A few. days later, tbe young no bleman provided himself with a light wagon in which in tube, bas kets and boxes, he could take with him a supply of the various ingre dients that enter into the com position of the various kinds of salads. Tims provided, it was an easy matter for him to serve his patrons, and it was no wonder, that in time, he came to be known throughout London as the "Salad king." After some months he took a shop and dealt in everything used in his specialty, and by close at tention to business, and taking advantage of every opportunity that offered, he acquired in a com paratively short time, a little for tune amounting to eighty thousand francs, with which he determined toretnrn to France. Arrived in Paris, he invested sixty thousand francs in State sororities, which at that time were selling considerably below par, and consequently paid hint a handsome iuterest With his remaining twenty thousand francs he purchased a small landed estate iu Limousin, which still re mains in possession of his family. The story of D'Albignac is vouched for by the famous French epicure, Brillat Savarin, who tells it in his "Physiology of Taste," and says he knew the "Salad-king" personally. Translated for Ap pktoih Journal. lover-Pro verb. Koses and maidens soon lose their bloom. Red is love's color, said the wooer to his fox-colored charmer, Singers, lovers, and poets are privileged liars. For lo ve the wolf eats the sheep. When there is no love all faults are seen. , Where love is there is great pain. Italian. Where love is, there the eye is. Where there is not equality, there never can be perfect love. A cat pent up becomes a lion. It is better to have a husband without love than jealous. In the war of love who flies conquers. There is no love without jealousy. Handsome is not what is hand some, but what pleases. Love levels all inequalities. Every man has a good wife and a bad trade. As is the lover so is tbe beloved. A lover's anger is short-lived. It is all one whether yon die of sickness or 6f love.Jfoiaji, A bring man, a jealous man. Faint heart never wo fair lady. Man. laves bat once. German. Praising is w loving ji Jealousy is pain which eagerly seeks what causes pain. One hair of a woman draws more than a belhrope. A woman strong in flounces is weak in the head German. Gluck und die Weiber halwn die Navren lies, Yedes weib. wilLlih m v Cold hand, a warm heart. Maidens say no and mean yef, ' Man without woman is head without body. Woman without man is body without a head. Revenge converts a little right into a great wrong. Hot love is soon cold. Love of lads and tine of chips are soon out. Lovers live by love. Follow love and it will flee; dee love and it will fellow th.ee,. , lj The love of a woman and a bottle of wine are sweet tor a sea son, but last for a time. All's fair in love or war. Whom we love best, to them we caq say least. Old pottage is sooner heated than newmade. Love, money, and wipe ba'yje their virtue and their bane. Aime et savoir n'out pas le mcme maniere. To love aiid to be wise are two different thiigs. In men every mortal sin is ve nial ; in woman every venial sin is mortal. True bve never grows old.- Italian. Absence is a foe to love. Out of sight, out of mind. A beautiful woman, smiling, bespeaks a purse weeping. He loves well who does not forget- ! Beatta collei che di vecchio pazzos' iunaraora. Who loves, believes. Who loves the tree loves the hraneh. Who loves well chastises Well. Who Ioyes, fears. She wl;o is born a beauty is born betrothed. He who cannot revenge himself is weak ; he who will not .is con temptible. lie who takes a Woman at her word may say he holds nothing." Counsel is nothing against love. He that hath love in his breast hath spurs in his sides. Love, a cough, smoke, and money cannot long be hid. , Love aud poverty are hard to conceal. Love and faith are seen in works. Love aiid' lbrdshrp like no fel lowship. Love begins at home, , Love me, love ray dog. Love demands faith, and faith firmness. ' ', Love does trtuch and money everything.- English. Love does wonders, but money makes marriage--Jfymcfk. Love expels jealousy. Love, grief, aud money, caitaoif be kept secret 8T Love is an excuse fbr its own faults. :..".r' Love is blrnd.k Love is blind, but 'sees afar Italian, 1 safe Love knows not labor. 1 Love ismasterofallarts; mt" Love is the true price at whic love is bought Yd .... W-WF William Wheelright, late of to be Newburyport, Massiv numbered among the good New Englandera who in lifetime were thoughtful for the good of those & come after thenn Tw-mntba of his estate he devised for the purpose of founding a scientific college lb Newburype-rtv It tolerably re. tain that about Jlfil.OOa Mil be ' realized irtbatl tdMWy mora ra v