w,iiMawMMgwBMaMKwWBMWWWM"'l,B"" i. jjui mini i in1" "J""1 i jmi I, ii ' -vmmHii,.UMHL3vujLlMMt-rui-i.-nmKfij ioataBKKC'" - SBB':'ia':BBB&BBMxmamBstsa&mmmmmmKmmmim m mi mini 'i " "'"aaaBaagaa wis g ' o O O OEEGOI CITY, SATIiBBAX, AUGUST ST, ISO! 1 0. SO 1 o PUSINDSS CARDS. "1. c c, ir;iin Logan, snatiucn . TT0RXE1'S AT LAW, 00 Front Street, Up StiUrS, PORTLAND OREGON. ' pAiSKJbTHAYEK, . J aTtounEys at LAW. f rrTrF in Cree'g Building, corner of J 7771 j. c. mokelastoT 'O ' CAPLES & MOKELAND i ATTORHES AT LAW, ; 1RUVTandiVA!IIlXGTOXSls.t I rouTLAND, OREGON. W.c.JMii.N-O - Notary Public. OyrgOH City, Oregon. ti- Will attend to all business entrusted to n.ir'cue in any of the Courts of the State, hJIert money .Negotiate loans, sell real estate ttP. i'aiticular attention given to contested l,a:id ca?eHi , ' Ml. MITCIIEMj. 3. X. DOLrn. A. SMITH o Tvr.'4.l,rtH Tln1v,Ti r Smith ax j - "'r" - J Attorneys and Counsellors at ,aiv, Solicitors ill CTiZtt'cty, and Proc ters in Admiralty. .-;r Office o'-cr (he old l'cst Office, Front strVi-'t, Portland. Oregon. A. C. GIUE--'- c. w. r.:u:r,itt Rotary Public and (Join, of Dculs, GIBB5 & PARKISH, . Attorneys and Counselors at Laic, "Portland, Oregon. OFFTCEOn Alder street, in Carter's Itrick lilock. Tj. WELCH, n 51 XT IS' Pitimnchtbj Located at Crcjon City, Oregon HOOltS With Dr. Saffarran3, on Main ft. L) K, r. BAH CLAY, r jrLo &zzm jslJ 9 rPniiiriv Pnrrpon to the Hon. II. is. Lo. (iri'ii'K At Residence, Main street Ore - cm 'it.v", Orcntt. T If. W ATKINS, M. D., SLJa J.O. i'ouTi.Axn, UKEGn. OFFICJ'-'j: Front street Residence cor ner ot Main and .Seventh streets. A. I !'i:U.. K. A. TAKKEK. BELL Su PARKER. DRUGGISTS, AN"D PKAtKKS IN Chemicals, Patent Medicines, Paints, Perfu may, 0 its, . Ya rn ink cs, . . And every, article kept in a Drug Store. Main JStrcet, Oregi'ii City. LOG U S & Ali JUUOlIT, EXCELSIOR MARKE ? Comer of Fourth and Mai?i streets. OltEGOS CITV. , -F- Keep constantly on. band all kinds of Tri-di ,-md salt meats, such as mutton, ,aveal; . . -corned beef, iiams, , , tick e led pork, lard, Aed' everything cl;:e to b3 found in their line 'f hiisincs-!. JOHN II. SCIIRAM. .. Jliinrfac'turcr and Denier in .... SADDLES, HARNESS, etc. etc. ., IWaiii SJ-,V(, Oregon City, . Wishes to represent that he is now as well prepared to furnish any article in his line n the, largest .estblisrftont in the State. He iwrlicuiarly reV'te:1tsi that an examination of stock be made before buying elsewhere. VMiKKW WILLIS. , . . . WSr. BKOUUIITON, . WILLIS Ef BROU&HTON. ..naving purchased tho interest cf S. Cram. in the.well known ' . LIVERr STABLE. One door west of Eicelsior.iinrRct. Oregon J'ity; announce that tbey, .will at, all times VeP good.. horses nrd, , carriages to let, at . reasonabie rates. Horses bought and hole! ; jr kq t by t!ie day or week. i lvTdere saloon. ( JAi7j Street, Oregon City. ,.V'. rdiOWN,' Proprietor, thankful for past - ysvors, si)!ic.ts a continuance of the same. t ; P11F.KHUXVU DAILY, AnJ tlio tory bc.-t qualities of Wines, Liquors trCkars. t,.r ; : . . . f .Feci, Trip?, Herring, Oysters fri s-.ard'iies constantly on hand. AD Carriago Manufactory ! 'O The undersigned, havinc; increased the di , hKMisionsnf bis pmniscsat the eld st.nd Corner of Main and Third streets, uregon ity Orco-on Takes this method tn inf,-,i-, v rons, ana as many now ----- 4 us OKI pat- pleased to call, that he is now rrpvrrrt -;ti, ample room, good materials, and the' very best of mechanic?, to build anew, recon- cmiuh, iuum," junui,, nun ii.m Him OUt all complete ay sort of a vehicle from a com mon cart to a concord coach. Try me. Hiacksmithing, Horse or Ox-shoeing, and general jobbing ucatlv. qnieklv and cheap ly done. DAVID SMITH. Opposite Excelsior Market. 0SIILAND BROTHERS, PORTLAND AUCTION STOEE, 9t First si., Portland. Mr Importers and Jobbers of Staple and i fry cooiis. v.. ram hags, Uarlaps, furn jn Coo.is. We pay the highest casL nce tor Wool, Furs, and Hides. n THE SONG OP THE RAIN. Lo ! the long slender spears how they quiver and flash, Where the clouds sent their cavalry down ; llank and file by the million the rain-laliees dash Over mountain, and river, and town ; Thick the battle drops fall but they drip not in blood; . , The trophy of war is the green fresh bud ; O, the rain, the plentiful rain ! The pastures lie baked, and the furrow is bare, The wells they yawn empty htid dry ; But a rushing of waters is heard in the air, And a rainbow leaps out in the sky ; ilark! the heavy drops pelting the sycamorb leaves, Plow they wash the wide pavement and sweep from the eaves ! O, the rain, the plentiful rain ! J3ee, the weaver throws wide his ono swinging pane, The kind drops dance in on the floor ; And his wife brings her fiowcr-pots to drink the sweet rain On the step by her half open door, At the tunc on the skylight, far over his head; Smiles their poor crippled laid on his hospitable bed; O, the rain, the plentiful rain I And away, far from men, where high mount-Sins tower, The little green mosses rejoice, And the bud-beaded heather nods to the shower, And the hill torrents lift up their Voice ; And the ikmjIs in the hollows mimic the fight Of the rain, as their thousand points dart trn in light ; O, the rain, the plentiful rain ! And deep in the fir wood below, near the plain, , A s'ngle thrush pipes full and sweet, How days of clear shining will come after rain, Waving meadows and thick-growing wheat; So the voice of Hope sings, at the heart of our , , fenrs, Of the harvest that firings from a great nation's tears ; O, the rain, the plentiful rain I A vovmo; German merchant in oston lately asked a young lady in Austria a very interesting question, and received tliti " hap)y yes"" hy the Atlantic calde. .A Vienna, paper, in. chronicling the fact-; - says :.( "Perhnjis . the bride and bridegroom may exchange in the? same way their first kisses, which. Would bo electrifying in deedr' - Juarez sent two thousand let ters found in the apartments of the late Archduke Maximilian to a French ex-deputy, in order that they might be published at Brus sels in French and Spanish. The book has been printed, but there is a delay about its circulation. . -- Venice is built on IT 7 islands. The grand canal cues the city into two equal parts, and is serpentine in it's course..., From these start out a great raimber of smaller ca nals, which correspond to. streets inmalles cities' ; There arc, 150 small canals; add to these the small roads or streets of the city, and the whole amount to 2,480. The canals arc crossed by 400 bridges. Fifty 3'cars ago the standard price of horses : was very low, -nTOO being considered as much as a first-class animal was worth, unless in exceptional cases, not withstanding we had very much the same quality of horso then as now. . The cultivation of flax is daily increasing in importance as a pro duct Of "Western soil. Its value hitherto has been greatly under estimated, inasmuch as it was rais ed .for the , ced ; only,; while thij ibrc w5.s allowed1 to go to waste; bnt within the last few Years ma chinery , has -been -coprtnictcd to work up that article to advantage and the product is now extensively used for covering bales of cotton. To cover a crop of 3,000,000 bales of cotton, 20,000,000 yards of bag ging are required, at a cost of about ft.5,000j000. Major W. II. Smith, of Lex ington (Ivy.,) says that it might benefit farmers to be informed of the plan which he has used with success ibr ringing hogs. It is as follows: Put , a running noose around their tipper jaws arid draw them to a ost 1 it w CTTITliln j fj y 111 ; i. means tire lai i hogs can be handled without the difficulty ex perienced in the old modes. A writer in the Mark Lane (Eng.) depress strongly advocates working bulls.'- In his own case he uses bridle, collar, and cart saddle. He says it is remarkable how soon a surly bull may be taught obedi ence by a man of good common sense, courage, and firmness. The Maine Board of Agricul ture lias directed the several agri cultural societies of the Stateto offer in premiums for the encour agement of wheat culture a sum equal to one-fourth of the bounty so received during the years 1SG0, 3S70, and 1871. w Another Successful Cable- .dying; On the 13th the French cabie was successfully' landed at St. Pierre, and connections were made with the main land. The Great Eastern, which bore the third Atlantic Cable as she had bdrne the first, left Brest June 21st, with 2,72 G miles of cable in her hold. The distance from Brest to St. Pierre is only 2,325 miles, showing an 'excess of cable over actual distance of 400 miles, most of which has probably been paid out. St. Pierre, where the cable was landcd on this side of the At lantic, is a rocky islet off the coast of Newfoundland, and the proper ty of France. The line connecting with the United States will be laid along the Nova Scotian and Xew England coast to Boston. This additional distance, 722 mile, will be laid by the steniners ScamJeria and Vhittern: The total length of the Franco-American cable will thus be 3,407 miles. The charter for this hew cable was granted by the French Gov ernment, in 1808, to Erlanger of Paris; and Router of London the former notorious as the Confede rate Bond operator, and the latter known fb'r his connection Avith European telegraphy and news despatches. Their franchise en dures for 20 years; their capital stock is fixed "at $0,000,000, and they are restricted m their charges to a limit of $20 for twenty words, which is the same rate now charg ed on the old cable. It is a citti ous fact that the charge of 5 for 20 words Avas originally proposed for the first cable, although much more was finally demanded, and two successive reductions Avere made beforo the present schedule Avas reached. The. French cable may effect a further reduction in n little Arhile, to the advantpgc cf ail concerned, . It has been laid Avith more economy of time and money than its predecessors al though much longer," the Anglo American cables being each 1,804 miles long, or 801 miles less than the French line to St. Pierre. A short cable of S5 miles connects the English lines Avith Cape. Bre ton, on the main land, Avhjle the French line Avill be connected with Boston by a cable 722 miles long, the charter requiring that it shall touch only French and American soil, and thus obliging it to pass British America. . The success of the cable from jlrcst to St. Pierre shows that avc. did rl6t. reach', tho limits between which E cablo .could be .stretched when the -Anglo-American , line was laid. . We have now f work ing cable more than .en 6-third longer than either of the old cnet'. There is no limit to the length of a cable but the capacity of a ship to carry it, and even that is no limit, for Avhen avc remember that the new cable Avas taken up and cut during a gale, buoyed through the storm, and aftenvards spliced, it would seem that under favorable circumstances a longer cable might be carried by sections in two or three different vessels, and the splic ing and laying be done hi" opposite directions. But the. Great PJastern, by reason of her great lergth, rides easier and pays out" more smoothly, and there Avould be more economy and less risk in. employing such a vessel,. with stOAvage capacity of 3,000 milcs,"of cable, than in using several smaller vessels.' Ilowcwer this may be, there are no unavoid able difficulties in the Avay of law ing a cable under the Pacific from San Francisco to the Japanese and Chinese coasts. . A great portion of the Pacific bottom, like the At lantic, is believed to be tolerably CA en, if not an actual plateau. Then the distance from one land point to another is considerably less than that from Brest to St." Pierre. From San Francisco to Honolulu, on the SandAviclf Islands,., it is 2,100 : miles ; and from Brooke's Island to Yokohama, Japan, it is 2,100 miles further; making a to tal of 5,G00, in three lengths one shorter than the old Atlantic cable by 4Gt miicv and-, two shorter than the French cable by 025 miles eacln The Pacific cables would of course be logger than the statute distances given, but the figures used Avill do for purposes of com parison. The steamship route from San Francisco to Yokohama is 300 miles shorter than that marked for the cable, because it avoids the deflection to Honolulu ; but this difference is immaterial. The steamship distance from Yokohama to Hongkong, China, is 1,600 miles. But the cable will liml a shorter route to the China coast by either COURTESY OF BANCROFT LIBRARY, crossing the Corcan channel, at a point not over 150 miles wide, and thence connecting by land lines through Piissiftn Temtorj with the coast cables of the Oriental Company, or by crossing the mouth of the Yellow Sea to Shanghae, a distance, of perhaps not more than GOO miles. Hongkong is nearly 1.00D milc fuf ther doAA'n the China coast, as a ship sails; .than Shang hae. . The Pacific cable project is certainly one of more . magnitude than the Atlantic projects, and there may be more uncertainty about its profitableness ; but it is sure to be undertaken, and that a day not very distant BniLLiAXTS. Who discerns what is infinitely small? Only one. The Infinitely Great. . . If one docs not hold still when stung by a bee or by fate, the sting remains behind in the wound. Tlie odor of floAvers is never so SAveet and strong ns before a storm. Beautiful soul ! When the storm draAvs nigh thee, be a lloAver. Scatter flowers on the young maiden's coffin, A'c blooming friends! Ye used to bring il o Av ers on her birthday feasts. She is now celebrating the greatest of them, for the bier is the cradle of heaA'en. Many flowers open to the sun, but only one folloAvs him in his course; Heart, be thou the sun flower; be not only open to thy God, but Obey him too. Alan endures opposition and re proof more readiljr than, we sup pose, only he Avill not endure them when A'iolent, even though they are deserved. Our hearts are fioAvbrs, they continue open to the gently tall ig deAV, but close against tlie storm, In India, a correspondent Avrites, the ornaments Avorn by the native women are something avou d erf id; The hair is. handsomely dressed and nlled with fill .kinds of silver arrows and gold dartr; and bound with bands of goms and precious stones. The ears are pierced for not only one set of car- rings, fut lor scA-eral, the usual custom being seAcn holes in the right ear and six in the left, Avhich, in a full dressed belle, are all filled with rings. The nose is usuall' pierced in the left side, and a ring Avith pendant jeAvels hangs around the mouth, dangling upon the chin. The neck is heavily laden Avith necklaces of metal, precious stones, coral or pearls. The brace lets on the arms are of sihcr or geld, according to tho means . of the wearer, some .of the. lair sex Avearing as many as tAvcnty-fivc to thirty bracelets on cHlier ami. The fingers are coA'ered Avith rings hi the f ame profusion, Avith the additicr: of a seal ring on . each thumb,' . wdiich is generally the finest arid mo ornamental. The anklets of the higher classes are of solid gold set Avith precious stones, and are extremely beautiful. Little bells are attached, so that in walk ing or dancing time is kept to the motion. The toes are frequently covered Avith rings, the seal being Avorn on top. An India bell in full costume may Avear several pounds of jcAvelry and not to be over dressed. - . Sigks. It is a good sign" to sec a man do an act of charity a bad sign to hear him boast of it. It is a good sign to see a man Avipe the perspiration from his broAv bad to see him Avipe his lips as lie comes out of a cellar. It is a good sign to see a man advertise in the pa pers bad to see the sheriff adver tise for him. It is a good sign to see a Avoman dressed AA'ith taste and neatness bad to sco her hus band sued for finery. . An Irishman Avas going along a road, Avhen an angry bull rushed unon mm, and aviui ms norns tossed him OA'cr the fence. The Irishman, recovering from his fall, upon looking up saw the bull paAV ing . and tearing up the ground, whereupon Pat," .smiling, at him, said : ".If it Avas not for your bow ing and scraping your apologies, von brute 'faix I should think vou had thrown me OA'er this fence on purpose. 55 Josh Billings says that the cockroach is born on the fust oa' May and the fust of November semi-annually,' and is ready for use in fifteen days from date. They are born from an egg four from egg and consequently they are all of them tAAdns. There is no such, thing in the annals ov na ture as a single cockroach. 1, , ii , - ' ' ' m mm m What debt is that for Avhich you can not be sued? The debt of nature. A JAPANESE DLAXEIt. 1. .Bitter Green Tea, (Avhippcd.) 2. SAvectiiicats. (Band arrives, and tobacco is brought on to fill up time between. the courses.) ' . 3. Fish,Soup, and Raw Fish,with hot Saki (a spirit, not unlike whisky extracted from rice.) 4. -Soup of Mu$hrborii, Green Vegetable, and Fish.-Efai.Band; to the great relief of guests.) 5. Lih of prawns and sea-is ecu. G. Soup of sea-Avccd, A'cgetables, etc. , 7. Hard-boiled eggs, jmd sliced pears. 8. Soup, of Lobster and Mush rooms, with A'ery diminutive lob sters. . . 9. Cold Fried Lamprey?. . j0. Souj of Loochoo Pork Fat and various vegetables. 11. Fish, with salted plums and A'cgetables. 12. ; Soup of wild boar and young bamboo. 13. Cold fowl, and pickled shoots of bamboo. 14. Soup of fish and sea-weed. 15. Cake of fish, eggs, and rice, Avith green beans and fungus. 1G. Soup of white berries and sprats. 17. Small fried trout. IS. Soup Avith acorns, etc. 10. Raw cuttle fish. 20. Soup of foAvl and fruit. 21. Green ginger, fish in batter, cucumber and bamboo. 22. Beclie du 3Ier, in batter. 23. Small bones of chicken, and unlaid eggs. 24. Soup of fish and roe, with ginger leaA'Cs. , 25. Soup of cockles (Avith their shells.) 20. -Raw benita, rice, apple and Chili leaves. 2 7. Soup of A-ermicclltj with "Say" and red berries. 28. Sweetmeats. 2 fj. Sea .- Avced Jelly, preserved beans, bonbons. , . 30-. A tray Avltii rice,- thick soup, and pickles; . 31.; Another tray containing "daimio fish1' and various soup cons. j31. A third tray with fish " cong lomerate ; followed by saki." 33. Hot Avater in the rice boAvl (as an appetizer.) 34. Gelatine sweetmeat (like stcAved india rubber), a chestnut, and pickled tripe. 35. Bitter green tea. 30. Large dish of elaborate sweet meats. 37. Bitter green tea again. 38. Imitation peaches, made of sugar and SAArcet jelly. , ; 30. Red berry sirup, slices of tur nip, salt, etc. 40. Dried fish (very small), Avith thick soup and hot, strong saki. Harper s Jletfazinc for L?ffi'.st, & A Cheap Ciitckex Coop, A correspondent of the YTesteru lreir mcr describes his method oT mak ing. a coop or house for the pro tection ot early emckens, or a tcav choice foAvls. He puts a windoAv sash in the front of a large dry goods box, leaving. a spaoc. aboA o the sash for ventilation, slopes the roof slightkv, makes d partition so as to leaA'e a feeding space about a foot wide at the back, puts the en trance at the side, and has no fur ther trouble, except to keep the coop clean,' An aged colored auntie was doing the Avashing for a family oc cupying a part of the house AA'ith me, Avhen as I stepped into the yard sec AA'as drawing a pail of Ava tcr from the avcII by a Avhecl bal anced Avith a large stone. " Ugh ! pooty Ayay dese -folks has for gettin' AV.ater; and dis ere horrid Avheel f ami she spluttered away as she .tugged at the chain. " But it's pure when you get it," said I. " But auntie, do you draw AA'atcr from the well of salvation?" " Xo sah," replied she, indig nantly, "No, sab, Ave has pumps!" So sore, are the Wisconsin hop-raisers over the failure of that interest, that a local paper says that any one avIio should offer to sell hoproots to a Sauk county man would get his eye punched for the result. . The Hon. Theodore M. Porne roy is now a partner in the Au burn banking firm of W. II. Scav- Avard, Jr., & Co. In the Swiss A'illage of Gur brue numlering about 300 inhabi-ta-rrts, no one died from February, 1858 to February, 1S6G. John G. Saxe, the representa tive humorous poet of America contemplates a visit to California. He Avill probably arrive here early in September. F.LECTRICITV, Man knoAA'S iclictt electricity is ; vet by an attentive observance of its effects, he aA-ails himself of the power existing in an unknoAvn source,- and produces, marvelous results. .When the Grecian phil osopher Thale, at rubbing a piece of amber, and watching the at traction of small particles of matter to its surface, he little kncAV of the mighty pow er that Aas then Avhispcrin to him its offer to servo. , mankiud. And when F ranklin, with the aid of a boys plaything, drew doAvn the electric current from the cloud?. and caught a spark uncii the knuckles of his baud, even he lit tle conjectured that tho time AA'as so near Avhen the strange cle ment, Avhicli sent its niessengei to him along the string of a kite, would become one of man's most submissive servants. So many great results have sprung from the careful obsciwa tion of the simplest phenomena, that avc would newer pass OA'er inattentively theinost trilling thing that oilers itself to Cur examina tion. Nature in her ..revelations, never seeks to startle mankind. The formation , of a rock, and the elaboration of a truth, are alike the Avork of ages. It was the sim pie blackening of shyer by the sun's rays Avhich led to the discov ery of the chemical agency of light. It A'vas the falling of an apple that pointed XcAvtou id the discovery of the laics of gravitation. It Avas the force of steam, observed as it issued from beneath the lid of a kettle, that led to the hrvention of the steam engine. And it is said of Jacquard, that he invent ed the loom, Avhich so materially aided the commerce of nations, Avhile AA'at.ching hiB wife"sf nijc)'s, a3 she plied her knitting. As great discoveries spring from such email beginnings, avIio among us may not be the herald of some great truth the founder of some world at id? benefaction ? . That the area of discovery lias not perceptibly narroAved its lim its, is evident from the fact that the greatest elements in nature arc still mysteries to man. And though it may not be within the pOAA'er of a finite being to un ravel the chain of wonders that enfold the Avorks of an infinite God, still it is evident from the prog ress Avhich discovery has made, and from the good Avhich all dis coveries lias done, that God docs invito and encourage the human mind to contemplate the: vrork ifigsof Divine poAvcrV: and to pur sue its manifestations in every elc mcrttj and in every direction. . - The wenderfui force of electric ity astonishes us all the more when avc AieAv it in contrast Avith that equally wonderful .element, light. We have seen thr t light tra'cls Avith a A'oloeity of 192,000 miles in a second, but that it falls upon a delicate balance so gently, that it produces no perceptible effect. As far as we knoAv the nature . cfj electricity, it is CA'cn more cthereed than light yet, while the ether of light falls , harmlessly and imper ceptibly even with the- moment um of a flight of ninety five mil lions of miles, tho ether of clec tr icily, bursting from a cloud only five hundred yards . . distant , will split massive stones ; leA'cl tall tow ers" AA'ith the dust, strike majestic trees to the ground, and instantly extinguish the life of man ! Why does the one ether come divested of all mechanical fc"rce? Avhile that Avhicli seems to be even more ethereal than it, is capa ble of exerting the mightiest force over material things? Docs it not appear that the Creator of the uni- A'crse nas cstaimsneu these para doxes of poAvcr to testify his Om nipotence to -show, to man that Avith Him all things are possible; and that, in the grand cosmicism of the universe, every attribute of Omnipotence has been fulfilled? . Let us uoav consider man's rela tions to this Omnipotence. lie sees that electricity smites the tall edifice, and observes that in doing so, it displays a choice of a certain substance through- Avhich it passes harmlessly, and that its violence is manifested only Avhen its path is interrupted. ,; Man, tak ing advantage of this preference of electricity for a particular con ductor, stretches out an arm of that substance, and points it upwards to the clouds: electricity accepts the invitation,' and passes harm lessly to the earth. But this is not all: man learns by observation, that electricity resides in all mat ter; that it may be collected -or dis persed; that it traA cls along a good conductor at the rate of hatf-a- million miles in a secojidof time? he constructs a battery, Xk kind of. scientific fortress, in which he en campes the great warrior of na-. tare, and tb'.ou laying doAvn a con-, ducting wire, he liberates the mighty force, but its flight must, be on the path which man has de fined, and its journey must cease at the terminus which man has de-. creed, where, by a simple.. contri ance of his ingenuity (the . move ments of a magnetic needle), tho electric current is ihade to deliA'er whatever message of important ho. desires to convey. Thus, the cle-. ment which in an instant might de prive man of life, is subdued by. him, and made the obedient mes senger of his will. How Tor Liove a. Lawyer Turned Ne gro ItXinistrel. 9 His name is Lew. Benedict. His father was a well knOAvn New. York lawyer, AA'ho died when the oldest child Avas fifteen years old... The property left by the father the boy turned' OA'er to his mother and sisters and determined to strike out for hilrself. Ai scA'entecn years of age he entered a krw office, and at twenty-one he completed ,, his studies, and was pronounced a young laywer Avith a bright future before him. - . ..... . About this time the young law-., cr fell in loA'e Avith the daugh ter of a wealthy Ncav York merchant, and the Ioa'C being re ciprocated, he asked Pa for his daughter's hand. ... Pa was indig-.. nant, and, to foreA'er kill the young laAvycr's ambition, he told him that when he had 850,000 in. pash, his OAvn, he might ask for the .young lady's hand with a hope of success. This was all very nice, but to , tho voting laAvyer just putting tut his shingle, 850,000 Avas a, great deal of money, at least the young laAV yer thought so as he figured Tioav many briefs lie must haA'e to mako that amount. .. . y ?-.i-.!--:.ms .. .The result of his, deliberations . was tho. conclusion that if he wait ed to mako this sarri v tifa bar lie could do so, but by the - time he had done it he Avould be so old that the romance of love would be all gone. For a long ten daA's the young laAvyer bemourncd his fate, and then, after obtaining a promise from the young lady that she Avould Avait, he disappeared from Ncav York. In earby life the young laAvyer had quick wit, and ono day meeting a negro minstrel man ager named Duprez, the latter told him he had a talent AA'hich would make him 850,000 in Awe years. Iii the:, young., iaAvyer,s frame of mind it -did riot take long to con vince him,- and, dropping Coke and Blackstonc, he took up burnt Cork under the assumed name 6f Lew. Benedict. .... .. ; For a time the now. business -was harder than the young laAA'yer bargained for, but he made money so fast that his prejudice AA'as soon OA'crcome. At the end of the first . year he had laid up 85,000, at tho 0 end of tho second year 810,000, " and noAAr it is said he has nearly reached the figure of 850,000, in bonds. : . - All the time he has been in the; burnt cork trade he has .improved his spare moments by a study of. law books, - and in another year he. Avill go back to Ncav York with 850,-: 000 in hi3 pocket, claim tle hand.,, of her he so fondly loves, and who' has been so devoted - to him, and " at the same time again embark in -the practice of bow. National Chronicle. A Cuke for the Gout. An, alderman once called on a well- knoAvn physician, 'Avhen the folloAV-... ing diaologuc took place: "Doc- tor, I haA'e a strong tendency to", the gout. What shall I do to ar- .. rest it ? " Take a bucket of -water', and a ton of anthracite three times." -" How ?" . " Drink the former; and carry the latter up three pair of stairs." We haA'e not heard that ' he needed advice afterwards. A Chicago reporter, avIio at tended a spring opening of a fash ionable millinery, says of it : "A cabbage leaf trimmed - with three , red peppers and a dried cherry sells . for-. 835. It is called a. jockey ; has one great advantage can be eaten as a salad. when the season changes. One compos, ed of three sigh's and a bit of pink f colored fog AA'as considered " cheap at 8-55. i ' , - A lady Avcnt cut with her little o-irl and bov, and purchased the. halter a rubber balloon, which es caped him, and went up into tho air The girl, seeing the tears in his eyes, said : " Never mind, Ned die, when you die and go 'to Hcav- en you'll d'it it." o G O O 0 G z ; y