- ' i " K . -... . i..-- ' T Q TT1-kjJJjJo CjI i 1 Hi VOL. G. OREGON CITY, OREGON, FRIDAY, JANUARY 2G, 1872. NO, 13. S!)c iUjciiln idJutevpvisc. .4 DEMOCRATIC J'APER, KOR THE Du3jn333 frlan, tho Farmer JJ 4c f-I.U-!' CIRCLE. 14iVlV EVEItY KUIDAY RY A- fJOLTHSH, EDI TO!! AN D lMUil.ISlI VAX. OFFICII V. Dr. Th.'-s iki k Building TERMS of .SL'IiSCRIFTIOX: Single Copy one year, in advance, $2 50 vv;i v of .1 1 ve r rrsi.xa "Tnnsient ,il vcrti.M-nit.MiT-, including all legil iii.ti.-es, j. of 12 l.ne.-, I w . S 2 50 r. r e.i -h sn!)cii i -iit i nsei tn n 1 ; One OuIiiMiii, one year $120(:0 Miif " '' ;o Q ixrter " " 40 U'lsiness Card, I sij itirc one year 12 fctf" Ri' nit.t tnr ( be nw.tle ett I'm risk o Sii'MCriber, and at the erpenm of Agents. JSOOff A.XD JOB I'lifXTEXG. I'.er The Ent'rprie "Hi c is supplied with b"i ri tifni . fipnr vt-d r-tyh-s of type, and mod ern M VCill.Vt-; I'll .-"SSI-"--, whi-ii will enable t'je Proprietor t d .1 b lVmting nt all times Xat, Q tick a,nl Vh ap .' tnr Work -solicited. A 'I !l tin'i.i tr t ;i-i u lions upon a Specie basis. B U SIX ESS OA RD S. CUAi. E WAulthV. F. A. FOiUlKS. war n em & Foness OFKICK Cfl.UUl AN'S UUICK, MAIN" STUEU.T, oiif.:;ox err v, oiiegox. "Yov. in, 17 1 :tf J. M. THOMPSON", ( V. FITCH. th jmson a fstch, Atfosriatty sat L'l, AND Rea! Estate Agents, E"JQJ C S T Y, O S? E G O K , OFFICE TWO HOU'lS NORTH OF THK I'OSTOFFICK. ItlCAL ESTATE BOITCIIT AXD SOLD. LOAN'S X!:(;oiIATED, AMI A H S fit ACT OF TITLES FL'ILXLSIIED. TE 51 AVE A CO.MI'LETE A1LSTM ACT V of Title o! all propertv in Eugene City, and peidVot plats of t'ie same, prejiaiud vyitli Hi-ant c-irp. 'e will practice in t'ie. rti:r rent Courts of the Stat -. Special at tention given to the e ill. ction ;f all claims that may be placed in cur hands. Lciral Tenders bought utiil s dd. .sei.su TOIIN y. BACOX, Importer and Dealer in -:J-'i'f STATIOXEIIY, DEUFUM EE.Y, &c, &c, Orfgnn City, Oregon. At Ch'tntt'ft JJ '-'..' old sf.tinl, lakly or copied by Ack r)nint M.t'ui sz'vtt. lu tf JOHN FLEMING, Lil-t DEA LEI! IN BQ0:3 A!!D STATIOHEBY, JX ,M VEILS' FIIiE-I'IlOOF DUICK, M v i v stukkt, o;t::(;oN" citv, cin'cnv. . J. WELCH, DENTIST. JO. ' 1 OFFICE -In Odd fVlirw' Ten pie, cor of First and ALUt Streets, J'uitlai d. T'ie putrona-re of those desiring sup-rior operatm s is in special request. Xitronsox i d to'- the painless extraction of teeth. "Ai tt'ieial t.-ctii '-bet', r than the best,' and tt t hdl , tlx t.i i'Jit: )et. Will bt? i:i Oregon City on Saturdays. Nov. 3:tf Dr. J, H. HATCH, DENTIST. The patronage of tnose desiring first Class ip i-iitlini, is respectfully solicited. Satisfaction in all eases guaranteed. X. C. Y',v,. I administered for the I'am'.ess Extraction of Teeth. Of kick In Weigant's now bidding, west ide o( First street, l.eiween Alder and Mor ison streets, Portland, Oregon. "Y II. W ATKINS, M. D., SUiKlEDX. r,):vri.Axr, Okkcc n. OFFIt E Odd Fellows' Temple, corner y-'irst and M der -tieets Uesidence corner of ii iiy atd Seventh streets. W. F. I1XGHFIELD, fsta'blislid since !S4?.nt the old stand, .Yfiirt Strerf, Oregon- Vitij, Ort jon. tAn A.s.)rtinent of Watches, Jew elry, and S. th Thomas' weight Clock, ali of which are warranted Co be a represented. Repairing done on short notice, md thankful for past favors. CLARK GREENHAK, ity Drayman, Oil EG OX CITY. AD orders for the delivery of merchan dise or packages and freisrht of whatever des criition. to any pirt of the city, will beese u f e 1 promptly and with care. I." r VAUT.' TIATrT (Dcntfehes Gafthans,) No. 17 Front Street, oppos:te the Mail steam ship landing, poi ttad. Oregon. H. ROTHFOS, J. J. WILKENS, P R O P RIETORS. o Board per Week ft" 00 " with LodgYv.'z. 6 oo " " : t oo The Great Game. prom Ponietov's Democrat. Have the people eyes and yet cannot see? Have they ears ami cannot hear? Have they tongues ami cannot speak ? Let theni fix then-eyes upon the Senate Chamber at Washington, ami give their ears to what is g.)su; on in that assemblage of the misrepresenta tives of sovereign States; and when they see all, and hear all, let their tongues give utterance to their indignation. Some few days before the holidays, Air. Senator Trumbull o lie red his now famous resolution to investigate into the manner in which the all'iirs of Government have been and are conducted. This proposition em braces the entire operation of the Federal system of office, appoint ment" to ofiice, merit of officials, manner of discharge of duties, amount of salary, mode of obtain ing oilice, Ac. As a sequence to this widely extended range of en quiry, the character of Air. Grant's administration is involved. No one will deny for a moment the right and duty of 3lr. Trum bull to bring forward his proposed examination into these all-important subjects. Every Congress that has held its sessions, since the ad vent of the Republican party in to power, has spent a great portion of its tittle in the creation of com missions to examine into matters appertaining to public a Hairs ; but as a general rule they were created to go .South and concoct excuses for military usurpations and inter ference in the hapless States "lately in revolt." The JJutlers and the Einghams, and all of that pernicious crew, have been indulged with commis sions, and out of them naught has accrued to the general welfare; but, on the contrary, a system of imposture has been substituted for wise legislation ; and as is well known, the despotism of the bay onet has supplanted the benign in lluence of ttie civil law. In fact, the Republicans have had their own way in all things, and such was their idea of prerogative and justice, that they had reached the conclusion that nothing could pos sibly be wrong except in the South ern States. The resolution of Mr. Trumbull, a Republican, seems to have broken in upon this state of one-sided in quisition, and his proposal to look into the ways and doings of the Republicans has created a terrible commotion among the Senatorial vassals of the President. 3Iorun, the unscrupulous advocate of every measure leading to a despotic form of government, and the defender of every outrage upon public right and liberty, will not hear of such a thing as Mr. Trumbull proposes. Mr. Nye, the infamously cor rupt misrepresentative of his dis tant Stale, rises in fury and re sists the attempt to probe the well understood crimes of the Grant ad ministration. Conkling, of this State, ever ready to prevent the truth ami cover up the tracks of political and official robbers and corruptionists, stands boldly in the breach which divides his party from the vision of the people and the unnumbered crimes of his friends. Grant must not be ex posed and his re-election inter fered with. The plunderers, from President down to tide-waiter, must be left untouched of justice. Eu,t those whom the gods would destroy they first make mad, and these bold, bad men have overshot the mark and are in that category. This is not a nation of fools, and even Republican papers, such as the Ec niitj Post, of this city, the Euli'alo Coimutreia!, the Eoston Transcript, the Eoston Advertiser, the Worcester Gazette, the Provi dence Press, the Chicago Tribune t the Springfield JipttMtutn. the Cincinnati Comercial, the Roch ester Democrat, the Cincinnati Gazette, the Cleveland Ihrald, the Xe-w Haven Pdl odium, the Eccn'ooj Wisconsin, are all hiohlv excited and alarmed at the at tempt on the part of their party Senators, to oppose the investiga tion of Mr. Trumbull. However much they may dread the result of such a search, they are more alarmed at the course of their par ty leaders in opposino- it. iil in. sun snmes on a summer day, the time is approach ing when Mr. Grant and hismvr mulons will be powerless before the grand rage of the people. The mere tact d any opposition to an investigation by the people's rep resentatives into the condition of the people's government, has ab ready aroused the fears of the leaders of the Republicans outside .i1 i i - . , ui v.ungres, ami in tnat propor tion will the long-cowed down masses pluck up courage. Great events are dimly prefigured by all these signs, and a great nation will be righted in the end, IIovv to prevent your wife from scolding vou Don't get married. Our Rich Men. LABORIOUS HABITS OF THE XKW YORK MILHOXAIRES. The New York correspondent of the Troy Times says : Having referred to industry as the chief necessity to sweeten ex istence, let me add something upon the laborious habits of our leading business men. Many young men look forward to the time when they shall be released from labor, aud they have a notion that the rich men of this city lead what is called an "easy life," This idea is very erroneous. Our successful men not only have been but continue to be hard workers, It is true there are persons who have inherited wealth, ami therefore yield themselves to indolence and dissipation, but their experiences quickly prove the truth of the old saying, that the fool and his money are soon parted. Our rich business men work because habit has become second nature, and they would bo miserable if they were idle. V e have no rich drones, for a drone would never become rich. Let us look at the industry of a few of our self-made men. Here is MOSES TAYLOR, who is about three score and ten, and is estimated at five millions. Surely such a man, one might say, ought to rest. So far from this, however, he is almost as busy as ever, lie was noted as an active dealer and far-sighted merchant, and since he retired from trade he has enough to do in the vast field of finance. Mr. Taylor is Presi dent of the City Bank, which is one or the heaviest of our all street institutions. He would be extremely miserable if he did not visit that bank every day, and spend an hour in overlooking its operations in a manner which some men would call laborious. After this is done one may meet in the Wall street crowd that form, little and erect, and that penetrating countenance, which seems as much -on the alert as when he was a poor cieric. 1' our o clock finds him at his home, with a racked brain and weary body, but a fine dinner re stores his tone, and after an hour of social small talk and a drive to the Park, he retires to his private office and enters into a deep and vexatious calculation which con tinues until bed time. Do you in quire what can it be which thus drives a rich man so intensely ? 1 reply, he has a large number of va cant lots, which should be covered with houses, and the architect's plans and the builder's contracts are to be examined, lie has shares in banks, in gas companies, and in other stocks, all of which must be looked after. And if he does not finish his work as rapidly as each day brings it before liim, it would soon accumulate in a very burden some maimer. Such, then, is the life of a five million man. Til E COMMODORE. He has worked hard more than sixty years. Of late he has abated the intensity of his application, but still labors from five to six hours a day in a very close manner. He has just completed the greatest railway depot for travelers in this city, and this is a mate to the great freight depot in St. John's Park. The Commodore must work to save himself from sheer misery. Idleness would be to him the great' est of misfortunes, He is also de termined that his children shall be working men. The largest part of his property will come into their hands, and he knows that it is only industrious habits that can keep them in possession. To such a man as the Commodore the idea of re tirement is repulsive. Activity is his life, and business is an elysiijni. Each day brings its excitements, either of Iqss or of gain, and at its close he feels the pleasure resulting from exercise of the faculties both of body and mind. STEWART. It is well known that this man is a marvel of industry. Like Van derbilt, he is about seventy-five, but ho looks much younger than the former. Vanderbilt may have felt the impelling consciousness of a family to sharpen his application, but Stewart lias "neither chick nor child." He works in simple obe dience to his nature, which de mands it. Stewart and Vanderbilt are the great exponents of two de partments of business, tlje one be ing a merchant prince and the othr era railroad king. I do not know that they have ever met, and the greatness of this city is shown by containing two such men without collision of interests. It is the oninion of crood judges of charac- I ter, that if Stewart had been bred to military life he would have been I the greatest general of the age. j What would liot have been accom- plished by such method and such i industry? Having reached old j age, and with a property estimated I at from thirty to forty millions, he j must still do his day's work. The Nathan House- New York Cor. of the Troy Times. The Xathan House in New York, has afforded a frequent theme for paragraphs, and many interesting stories concerning it have been put into circulation. It has been said the the house was sold at a reduc ed price because of the horror con nected with the tragedy which oc curred within its walls. Another statement informs the public that it has been rented by a noted rame ster for a faro bank, while it. is said on the other hand that such is the taint connected with that no ten ant will take it at any price. The stories are -all equally false. The facts are these. The family aban doned the house immediately after the dreadful affair which has given them such painful publicity. They did not, however, remove the fur niture, which still remains in its former condition, and a trusty servant with his family has charge of the establishment. The house has never been in market, either for purchase or tenant, and will not in all probability be offered very soon. The family has hired a very stylish mansion ii: Fith av enue, for which they pay about 610,000 per annum, this rent in eluding that of furniture. The Nathan mansion has been correct ly described as being of elegant finish, and was built under the in spection of its late owner. He took great delight in this mansion; and, having made his property by assiduous attention to business, he he was the better prepared to en joy it. lie frequently mentioned to an acquaintance of mine that he could get $225,000 for the proper ty. This price is now out of the question, but it would readily bring 8175,000. Mr X'athan's es tate has been rated from 500,000 to $1,000,000, but its precise amount is only known to the little circle of heirs. The mystery of the murder remains as impenetra ble as ever ; but I have been told by a person, who lives near by, that many if not most of the neigh bors, discard the sneak thief theury. A Good one on Governor Seward. Hon. James Brooks, in his latest China letter, says: They tell a good story in Pekin of Governor Seward when here doubtless a 1h, but too good a sto ry to be lost for all that. The ex pectations of the ex Governor were doubtless great when he en tered thv great Capital of this Em pire; with which he had made a great treaty, and he therefore in dulged in these great expectations of a great welcome. As he euteiv ed the gates of Pekin, a great fun eral procession was going out with music, catafalque, etc., all as impos ing as a grand procession of some great dead man could well be made. The Governor was entering with the marine band of the Colorado, mounted on donkies, as this grand j procession was going out. 1 ne great living and the great dead thus met. The Governor natural ly enough, concluded this was in honor of his grand entree, and he rose, and rose, in his open sedan chair, and bowed and bowed, and then ordered a hall, and got out and bowed, and bowed, and bow ed again to the catafalque and the dead. The Chinese think all for eigners are rather mad, and hence did not marvel over it as much as they might ; but when Goveror Seward found out what he had done, the story is that he was more mad than pleased. The Origin of Spiritualism. A Vermont exchange says that among the latest to throw away Christianity and embrace Spirit ualism, was Elder , wllQ lives not a thousand miles from water ford, in that State. The elder had a daughter who struggled hard agaist the influence, but finally gave up, and became a writng me dium. One day, while wrestling hard with the spirit, she prayed that if Spiritualism was God's work it might be manifested ; if not, that the name of the author might be given. Imagine her sur prise on recovering from her trance, to find written out in brief, "The Devil." A j'oiing Englishman of twenty two, son of a general in the Brit ish army, has come before the Court of Bankruptcy with a list of debts amounting to a total of 24, 000. One of the creditors presents a bill of 353 for cut flowers sup plied in the course of six months, and among the items in the bill such entries are to be found as "early lilies of the valley, 10 10s;" "a moss rose, 10s 6d." In order that the daughters of British Post masters may be made thoroughly conversant with the use of telegraphic instruments, apartments have been fitted up in the general telegraph office, Lon don, where they will be instructed. The Stolen Pas. An editor in Hanisburg lost his pass on the railroad, and requested the officers of the road to secure the arrest of any man who should present it. The next day lie found the pass in the pocket of his Sun day trowsers, ami proceeded to take a trip upon it. As soon as he offered it to the conductor, that faithful officer knocked him on the head with his lantern, called in three bra Icemen and the baggage master; dragged him, despite his desperate struggles, along the floor into the baggage car, where a brakeman sat on him while the conductor battered him up a lot to keep him quiet; and then they searched him to ascertain what other thefts he had been perpe trating. With the exception of a ticket to the circus, that man had upon his person absolutely nothing but railroad passes ! He had passes over all the main roads and branch lines and feeders and sidings in the State of Pennsyl vania, IJc had free tickets over all the railroads in the Eastern, Southern, Middle and Western States. He had a pass over a railroad from Yeddo to Yokohama and another from Calcutta to Ben gal. He had a letter promising him one on the new road which is proposed in Terre Del Fuego, and a manuscript puff' which he had written for a man who had as sured him he should have a pass over the road, which the man said he was about to run under the Mediterranean from Africa to Italy, as soon as it was built. The conductor concluded that he had caught the greatest pass klepto maniac that the world ever saw. But when he got back to Harris burg the affair was explained. And now, if there is any one editor in the State wdio is completely' sick of "gentlemanly conductors," that editor resides in the State capital. Secretary Boutwell, in the coolest, calmest, most deliberate way, assures us that while its bur then has not been light exactly, yet "our system of taxation has not been oppressive to individuals, nor has it in any sensible degree embarrassed the business of the country !" And this is said in the very lace of the fact that while two-thirds of the foreign commerce of the country was carried iti American bottoms in 1801, our own ships now carry less than one third : that the grass is growing in the shipyards from Maine to Tex as ; that the once prosperous copper-smelting works of our seaboard are idle and closed up ; that the great machine works in iron of the country, once so prosperous and important, now employ less than one-fifth their former force, and that only upon inferior work ; that much of the shoe trade of Massa chusetts is flitting to Canada, and the book business of Xcw York being absorbed by London ; that there is not a man, woman, and child in the country hut is 4 'op pressed" by the burthens which have been imposed upon the neces saries and comforts of life, and that these burthens have not been laid on so much as to create reve nue for the Government as to pro tect monopolies and enrich indi viduals at the expense of the com mon country, while at the same time the wages of operatives have not increased. James Gordon Bennett. We understand that old Mr. Bennett, the founder of the Herald, has so greatly failed in health and strength that he now takes almost no interest in anything, and is glid ing into helplessness and second childhood. For months past we have noticed an unusual reticence concerning him by the press at large, lie has ceased to be sneer ed lit and abused. His name still stands at the head of the great newspaper which he called into life and power, but his cotempora ries, who for so many years gave him a daily blow, now refrain from kicking the sick lion. Old age and weakness thus come not unat tended with compensation after all Golden Aye. At a social party, where humor ous definitions was one of the games of the evening, the ques tion was put, "What is religion ?" "Religion,", replied one of the party, more famous as a man of business than of wit, "is an insur ance against fire in the next world, for which honesty is the best pol- 1C' " A five-year-old city boy told his mother how to make butter : "You just take a long stick, with a cross at the end of it ; then you get a big tub ; and then you borrow a cow. " The "strongest propensity in a woman's nature," savs a careful I student of the sex, " is to want to j know what is going on, ancl the j next is to boss the job." Roujh on Een Butler. Brooklyn Eale, Dec. 11. J A Xew York paper declares that Gen. Butler was never considered a jackass or an idiot. XTo, he was never so considered. What Butler considers himself cau be gathered from his satisfaction at not " being called a d n fool ; no matter if they do call me a d n scoundrel." It ought to be added, that Butler never considered it important as to wdiose initials were on spoons, and such. Apropos to this geni:d confiscator of the contents of dis loyal sideboards, the following story will be found both new and true : While Ben. bossed Xew Orleans, he informed a waggish, but very ill Confederate officer, then sick at his home in the city, that he must take the oath, or clear out. This order was peremptory, The Confederate demurred as much as possible, alleging that he was used up, anyhow ; that he didn't believe in the old Government, and that the odds were that he would soon die, and secede permanently. It was no use, so he got Ben. to administer the dose to him himself. Ben. complied, holding the book behind the back of his neck, so as to bring it within range of his ser viceable orb. The officer swallow ed the oath, with severe and sug gestive grimace. At its close he seemed rejuvenated, and he asked Butler, " Ain't I as good a Union man as you, now General ? " " Yes, if you live up to your oath," re plied Ben. " And I can abuse the South as loud as the worst of you, can I," inquired the officer. "To your heart's content," replied the Beauty. " Well, then. General," added the sick man, rising in bed, and " fixing " Butler's one eye with his two, " if you and I had that d d old rebel, Lee, in our hands, wouldn't we steal his watch?" The oath-laker got four days in the guard-house, but he said he was satisfied with the price he paid for the punishment. How to Acquire a Goon Mem ory. We read too much and think about what we read too lit tie ; the consequence is that most of the people we meet know some thing, in a superficial way, about almost everything. Xot a tenth part of what is read is remember ed for a month after the book or newspaper is la-id aside. Daniel Webster, who had a rich store of information on almost every sub ject of general interest, said that it had been his habit for years to re flect for a short time on whatever he read, and so fix the thought and ideas worth remembering in his mind. Any one who does this will be surprised to find how retentive his memory will become, or how long after reading an interesting article the best portions of it will remain with him. The Houston county (Minnesota) Democrat confirms the statement that a man at Spring Grove, in that county, is turning into stone. His name is Harmon Silverson. lie is completely petrified in all his limbs and bouv tne only exception oo " . i i i .i mg a portion aoout tne mourn, throat and C3res. He has a good appetite, eats, and prays day and night for the Lord to deliver him from liis terrible affliction. He is perfectly helpless. The process of petrifaction commenced sometime last spring in his feet and knees, since which time it has gradually increased. The anecdote often told by Dr. Chapman, in regard to himself, when called to visit a little boy who had swallowed a silver twenty five cent piece, is not bad. "Mad am," said thcrenouned joker, in all solemnity, "was the piece good ?" "Indeed it was, sir," replied the surprised but excited lady ; "I got it from the mint." "Then, my dear madam," he replied, "if the money was good give yourself no further- uneasiness, for it will cer tainly pass." "How is your wife to-day?" said a friend to a French gentle man. " Oh, moche de sem," said he ; " she is no better, and I 'fraid ver little wass. If slip is gon to die, I vish she vould do it soon. I feel so unhappy my mind is so moche unsettled. When she die, I shall not be so moche dissatified." It is common to speak of those whom a flirt has jilted as her vic tims. I his is a grave error, ller real victim is the man whom she accepts. A happy simile runs thus: A coquette is a rose from whom every lover plucks a leaf the thorns remaining for her future husband. A barber of a statistical turn of mind asserts that there are 300 dif ferent hair dyes in circulation. Duluth is two years old, and is building its ninth church and is not over pious, either. Fact and Fancy. New York proposes lady ushers at weddings. The choir at an Iowa church wedding sang "Ham Fat.' A man in Cincinnati is organiz ing a brass band of twenty women, "Hope I don't intrude" ancl "Hell up a limb" are northwestern siloons. o The Czar of Russia ljjscr-mitn ted the Sisters of Mercy to practice medicine. o There are no chimney sweeps to be found in Paris siupe thp clays of the Commune. Of the ten thousand English miners, one in every thirty is killed by accident yearly. O A candy cannon, weiging two hundred pounds, was presented to Krupp on his birthday. A lighthouse, costing 5,0Q0, is to be erected at the entrance to the harbor of Cleveland, Ohio. Xext to busy bees, bootduiacks furnish the brightest example of improving the " shining hour." The latest magazine venture in London is the I'ro and Con, pub lished monthly by Mr. IJardwieke. . Those who could not get admisr sion to the Russian Duke's ball are indignant in Czarcastic lan guage. When Horace Greely is asked, what kind of music he prfers, ho answers "the song of the harvest, three beats to the measure." Mr.IIadden, a Xew York inebrb ate, thought he would stop a run away horse by tripping him up," and now wishes that he hadn't. If any one speak ill of thee, con-. sider whether he hath truth on his side ; and if so, reform thyself that his censures may not affect thee. A helping word to one in troub le is often like a watch on a raib road track but one inch between wreck and a smooth rolling pros-: perity. As I approve of a youth that has something of the old man in him, so I am no less pleased with an old man that has something of the youth, William Warren, the comedian, of Boston, lost a house in the Chit eago fire. "My House is gone," he said, "and I am now bewailing my unhappj'" lot" A little four year old boy being asked by his mother if he would not like to have wings and be an angel, replied, "Xo, ma, I'd rather be a hawk and live on chicken." Emerson says, "life is hardly re spectable if it has no generous task, no duties or affections that constitute a necessity of existing? Every man's task is his life pre? server." "My dear" said an anxious mat ron to her daughter, 'it is wrong for young people to be throwing kisses at one another." "Wrhy so, mamma ? I am sure they dont hurt, even it they Int. A resolution of expulsion didn't work well in the case of a Good Templar who went into an Oswego, js. 1., lodge with a bottle of wins? ky. He picked up a chair and ex? pelled the whole meeting. A man who lately shot and killed a boy in his melon patch, when call ed to account for the deed, said he did it in memory to the boy, who, otherwise might have died a pain ful death from cholera morbus. A minister in Indiana became mixed up in land speculations, and announced to his congregation that his text would be found in "St. Paul's Epistle to the Coring thians, section four, range three west !" He that gives good advice, builds with one hand ; he that gives good counsel and example, builds with both ; but he that gives good admonition and bad ex? ample, buids with -one hand and pulls down with the other. George Fracis Train, as everyt body knows, was born with a loose.? ness in his head ; but we w'ere not prepared for the information given us by the correspondent of an Al bany paper that he is an obapodri da of sesquipedalian verbage. Twenty years ago Leland Stan? ford arrived in California with "only one shirt to his back. Since then, by managing always to re tain a situation, and close attenr tion to business, he has contrived . to accumulate a trifle of $10,000,: 000. Tarr, who died at Meadysville, Pa., last week, was one of the oil princes. He was offered 2,000,000 for his farm, but refused it. The yield in four years was C46,00Q barrels. Mr. Tarr tarred his pock? ets and an immense fortune stuck in them