Among the cheap furniture projects, is a tempting offer to supply everything necessary for a barrister’s chambers for five pounds. We have made a rough calculation in our minds of the meubles; and the following, we should say, is about the estimate that the advertisers form of

EVERYTHING NECESSARY FOR A BARRISTER’S CHAMBERS.

£s.d.
A mahogany chair, stuffed with hay, for the learned barrister0100
A japan chair, for the learned barrister’s clerk030
A table to hold a plate and a mug, for the learned barrister080
A foot-and-a-half wide by five-feet-six long French bedstead0130
A hay mattress for ditto050
A superior feather-bed, warranted best damaged quills150
Two blankets in one070
A superior brown quilt030
Six yards of calico, to fold into a pair of sheets050
A yard of matting for the learned barrister’s sitting-room040
A pint tea-kettle006
A wig-box, the wig to be hired when wanted040
Two yards of black stuff, to hang up to look like a gown030
A pair of endorsed dummies, as briefs016
A blue bag and white stock020
A fender and one fire-iron040
A coal-scoop010
A set of backs of old books, labelled “Reports”010
Sundries006
——————
£500

Motto for the Long Firm.—“Order is heaven’s first law.”


LESSONS IN JUSTICE

(IN TWO TONGUES)

The French Method, reported in a Paris Paper. Close of the Thirteenth Day.