D. I'. SLOAN, Editor. VOLITIig 20. Btitrrei A Wain WITH A SOlll., AND A SOULLESS WI/10.p— Wo place the two following extracts on record to show the ditrereuce between a 11)14 with a soul and °soulless irhig. The first is froM the proclamation of Cat,xir'S. Wommum., the Whig Mayor of New York, who notwith standing his conduct in the Actor place riot was any thing but commendable, we aro forced to boliovo lest heart - a good man, and in practice a gentleman: - "lit ovary poition, Ai - ether Ise governor of his native ,state, as speaker of tho house of national representatives, or as chief magistrate of the American people, ho lies displayed abilities of no common order; and by the firer, of Ma talents, the purity of his life, nod the siuct,ortiy of his natrivtism, commando(' the highosrestioin and confidence of his fellow citizens. The evonts in Which he has barna a prominent part . will form ono of the most brilliant chapters in the annals of our country, And Will transmit his name Co posterity as one of the most illyStri elia of our presidents." In painful contrast with the above manly tribute CJ de parted worth, is the following from the eltarn6se4burg n paper published, wo aro sorry to say, in:tho'ci silizod wee° of Pounsylvanitt. Swirr fizznintrriox.—Oit Tuesday last the "Green spot" was made dutch:ll by the tolling of bells for the death of James K. l'olk, late President of the L.icofoco party. 'foe news of his t3C13113 was] roccivod by Telegraph. The disoasc under which ho labored was chronic dim-- livo I, not cliolora,,no stated in our last. Taus has this ambiliens and wicked malt boon callod early to tbu final sottlo.nont of his , dro - aliful account. Wo would, in char- Ihivo wished him a lifetime of ten thou i3tlJ irs in to "hring, forth fruits meet. fur rep:lLl:tee." We are taught in the Hook of nooks that fur Nation al ).ins there shall be National afllictiMis. Docs it not, how ever, seem a bale singular. just con to in porauentri with tho dcath of the author of the most shameful iniquities in which our country over cifgaged, that the consequences of those Miquitica should he so full 111)011 ma—that lbn reoar , e of 1.11413Aiq should lit sweeping 01) lei gilt and breadth of our laa I! Verily the %yap, of Piovidonee are i iscrutiable. Eii'ou this outrage upon the stem try of the illustrious dead and the decencies of political and private, life, the Pktladriphia Ledger administers the following withering rebuke: This, sets that paper, is the first notice of the late President's decease, which has vet reached us, in which hn was mentioned disrespectfully; and for the honor of .Imerican journalism, we hope it will be the last. Even in journals which, during Mr. Polk's l'residency, never permitted a day to pass without stricture upon his official character acid conduct. we have seen respectable, becoming notices of his decease, and candid acknowl: edzement of virtues which they hod never before discov ered in hint. As a get era! rule, American politics ore fire from i.eathunious rancors. To all well constituted blinds the grave is invested with sanctities which cannot he disturbed without infamy oath , : disturbers Partisans in the midst of their eKeitements,' and while the object .d their usa tuft is capable of self-defence, may mis pro le od, misrepresent, libel and traduce. But upon a .call in the last acconnt, when 'all the worldly tics aro levered interest terminate, justice resumes'its asgen (teary, and enjoins silence, if it cannot admit commenda t We proceed not to far in pronouncing tbis assault an osult to American public opinion. That public opinion is va, chastened, too refined, too ex kited; to tel'ervio viola iloll4 of the grave, even when hull' is spoken. And it iv taa •i-rtily just to endure bitch outrages when cOthiteal in falsbood and slander. lu pronouncing Mr. Polk an "ambitious and wicked man," this journal utters a sltsmeless 'Mel: and in insinuating tlyt he has be en • call; ed early to the final settlement of his dreadful neeount," it nudaciously enters the field of profanity. I , Vo admit that Mr. Polk was ambitious, as every American citi zen should servo his country faithfully. But Mien partisan rancor pronounCeß we chal lenge proof of Iris having ever violated a single engage ment, ' , oldie or private, or of ever having acted from a. corrupt motive. And ho has ‘on "called early," cut ofprestaturety, to setde a "dreadful account!" Ileiv dares this blasphemer step between tho deceased and the Jud g e of Alf, to set up his own blind judpnent upon the character of the account, or the prcinatmity of the call! Ile a ptil,e of men in the Almighty Presence? And his charity would have asked a longer life, to bring forth repentance! lloty beautiful is that chanty which, to gratify partisan rancor, violates OM grave and blas phemes the Almighty! • And still more audaciously, the libeller refers to - the Bible upon flaZionai sine, and says that the people are now settler/rig under the scourge of pestilerice, in retribti tieti for the crimes 'of Mr. l'ullt's o charity we must think this libeller mad.' •If Ito Inc ration al. we find language inadequate to cltar;ctsa ice such nicked atiducitv'i I las (ho cholera come in punishment of national suns?, Then what national sins induced its termer visitation? If it ever comes without such errand dares lie deny that if his come so now? And tifier this ebullition of blasphemy, he says. "Verily, the , wads of Providence aro inserutiable." Then how dare you un dertake to explain them? But since ho - refers to the lli tile, uo Would * remind him of the t njnnction, "Judge not. least y o be judged; " and of the rebuke, .Carrot thou find out the Almighty to perfection?"' And of the prohibition, "Thou shult not Into the nanio of the I. d rd, thy God, in ENE This is the first limo within ou i r recone . ction. in which, a partisan hyena 11.. s insulted the American people, by violating the newly made grave of out, Kltom they had honered with their chief magistracy. I f or_tlio credit of our country. we hope it will be the lust TT Pawned Itiidshippman Pollock,, •lio it toleral4 well known hereabouts fur bin attempt to elfoot Mr. Jew - ett, of Om Buffalo Commercial Advertiser, his Ileqn Jppointird Acting llaster of the 1.1. S. Sloop-of- war John Adam., now lying ei'Boston, bound for t 9 sell in a day or two. Pkatrist:se AND VOStOn fost says it Fi:otns Gun. Taylor has disocted copies of Weiialington'Sii farewell addre - ss to be printed, and sent to every diplO untie and consular ropiesOntativo of Otis govenismont in Europe and in all other portions of the world. This is n good plan, as the legacy is probablyquito a new thing to many of the persons who t havo been appointed to consu lar i ollices by its administration. "No Puodcntrrtox."—Nearly every Demod!st in Mode IslatulhaVbeen swept out of office. The' Wor. tester Palladium saes there is ono little moil Agent left. and that there is a hot chaso after him. I - ITh° London Times expresses the apprehension that oil the better class farmers in Ireland aro about eidigrating to this country, leaving behind only ohs impoverished land Garners and the pauper inhabitants of the various work houses, 1.1- The Albany Argue verry aptly says that Franca itand a alone in the infamy of her course towards repub• bean home. Even England declines any participation In or responsibility for it. LORD Paterensrort, in reply to Mr. fit:my. ou thepH;th, whether "England wee implicaled,in the atrocious proceedings now going on at Rome." paid that "the Drltirth' Government had no P a tliciPilliQn of any hind in any proceedings which had taken place on the part of any power whatever." Thiel manly declaration wee greeted with loud cheers. I' I - It i 9 said Capt. Ryndere will have a plea in the Now York custom house, having advocated Gen. Tay. ler'm election Ile has recently given hail to appear la''' . I , a? dtt Astor place rioter. THE ERIE OBSERVER Ittert par, rIVENING SY J. R. TIARRICH. F.Yettillg shades RTC gently fall O'er the silent seenes, of gar Evening stars are beeming brie In their newly wakened bin 'Tie an hour, when kindred spi i'Valk in pensiveness abroad When the weary sad Inherits Peace that dwells alone with Now, while nature teems with 'North a woven roof of now We,will kiln our hearts in dut While the psalm of life is on While the woods and fields arc With rich Musings from on We will cease from idle dream And Unite in stic , ed tie. While our souls with hope use xoding 'Mount on silver wings orlig t, We will long fur life unenqlng Free from shades of mortal ni Arid our spirits shrinking neve . Khali await the welehme mu Ft. When from all of earth we semi., From its fading beauty shorn And in groves that never wither. Where the flowers immortal bloom, 'Where no wintry wind will ga her. O'er the dark and silent tomb, tVe will rise from sin and sorr. w. Rise midst imetios of bass un old, And our hearts the weiconle un rro w, await with harps of gold, r) Time :rid slnr'3e are etc - di:l3o war I, o:r.vard to the ow nine grave. y l / 4. Yeti n death era C if ill Sky wa ii, Shall arise like c am// bravt•; And the crown of It ". receivin , Frcen tile hand o?God aboi'e, We n ill live and reign unceaeing, .ln tile little and smiles of love. • ftlat 311 i 5a A CRUISE ON TH DI WM. M. WOOD, M. D., From lattett's Living A Ri.ADER, have you over been on t you havo not your mind will scarcely all their Wonders;—their vast expects tor—their profound clear depths—th and steam navies gliding and foand face—the elegant cities and thriving shores. On ono point, you aie amid and busy bus:le of the COlaillOrCe - of in a few hours, you may b 0 where ci ed in full-grown vigor upon the wild gling for a settlement. has planted its lout-haired and painted savage has li, from the brick avenuos encroaebin•. home; and, e rapped in their blanket ft big :.dditions or g; nen . and red paint iptil's and feathers in their hair, we walking the tiewl made sti cots and to the mew people. L. ,, Eren though you are accustomed I. the Atlantis cities, and liavo 'elidea some idea of the busines, and activity reality will still cause astonishment, the wharees of Buffalo—piled, loade with incrchandisd, and see its bar steamers and sail vessels, some of wit going and corning. Stopping but t things, to wonder and admire, We tali the newer regiOns beyond, in a (loath extent. Its machinery is elegantly o i t great and destructive power hidden bS , igi, and finish of art. We tread a sa Brussels, furnished with a rosewood p i velvet ch sirs, sofws, end lounges, and glass in gilded mouldings, while fore air (1 . :, some picturesque scene in the pain We ship on French mahogany bedste l thing in our state-room is in 'similar r mantis of refinement and luxury. The tourist, in such a boat as this, k I.in'ted States shore of Lake Erie, will at the town of Erie, formerly Presque ma, distant about 041 C hundred milesl ,J place, with a population of about live t most secure and capacious harbor on 11J ed by:ts nurrow peninsula, which; leaH curves round in the shape of a horse-sh bay of Presque Isle from Lake Erie. out upon the lake from a commanding banked itself by a succession of elevate es, so Oath.) scenery from the sea is commanding. Historical associatioJ, est linger. arontul the spot. Here was 1 1 vessels of Ferry's victorious squadron. I day, repose,botteath the waters, tho bat his flag ship,•ihe "Lawrence : " Its'bl i soaked timbers are, however, fast dintpi boxes, &c., for the curious itt relief. I now regulates tho movements of ,he t. borough, from the belfry of the old lash luokitig court-house, once struck` the 1 the watches on board the flag-ship of modore. . ,- ' Thi‘r having been the lino of old Fro ing to unchain the British possessions, old fort are still to he seen a little to th town; and not far from these ruins, on ing the horhor,etands a block-house, lost_war witliEngland. Erie was also of Gondol Anthony Wayne, and Whet towardN, his body was disinterred ; it:-11; a state of perfect preservation. _ Erie is old-fashioned looking place, and seem quity, and be reluctant to tie on to the progress, and to bo dragged in the dust tle and improvement. For some yeas. Its natural advantages. Some say that hie monument on its principal street i. which records the death of its prosperi meet is a Greciap structure, a branc States Bank; its vaults are, of course, doors closed, and its stops grass-grown Leaving Erie, our next stopping pia e will be at the beautiful town of Cleveland. and as we approach it from the east, it alien.' well on the elevated) plain above us. and gives a promise i which ie fully kept y closer acqiiain tette°. Sixteen or eighteen thousand people, daily in creasing. hit;re here placed their tents i t n the Cuyahoga river. This narrow river has hie mo th restricted by proper bounds, and symmetrically carried out into tho lake by stone piers; and we run up this river, nearly a mile, between rows of veasets end atearnists. The right bank of The river rises to at elevation of eighty feet, and then spreads out into a plain, or table land. Wharves. warehouses..and shops line the immed f iate edge of the stream et the foot of this bill, but the cit proper is ou the plain above: and when we have wen sd to its /eve) It la cheering to look upon the handsome c ity which expands before us. The principal business stree. Superior, has a width of one hundred and twenty feet and is well built with brick houses of bUsinses, three, four and five stories high. The streets of private, residences also have an imposing width, and somo l of them are like ornamental walks through a succestiiott of country residences, the buildings being in various styles of architecture, from axpuisito cottages to cnionnaded palaces, and are surrounded by grounds handsomely laid out into gardens of flowers and ornamental shrubbery. la VDIN. From tho leke•side of the city the eye sweeps over the blue waters to tpo distant, horizon,! end , from the , hill brink, on the opposite side, the rivdr seen winding a serpentine course through meadows end around the base of forest clad bills. =I Leaving Clevoland, as we proceed to the weaward, the bold bluffof the lake shore sinks to a low beach, and nu-- 1 mefous green islands appear above the watery expanse• Anioug these islands was fought the battle of Lake Erie. ft is a beautiful region with whicli this proud historleal achievement is associated. The wooden islets riser by preMpitous limestone banks. from ,the blue waters. Rounding a rocky fortress-like promontory of ono of these islands called wo found ourselves in ••Put in-Bay," a secluded and beautiful sheet of water enclos ed by "Gibraltar," 'and two other islands. From the simmit of the rocky point of "Gibraltar," the look-out of Commodore Perry first discoveri3d rho British fleet, under Captain Barclay; from "Put•in•Boy't ho sailed Rath to his victory, and to it ho returned to bury his dead; and hero are still to be' seen the remains of some of their graves. Iteemin ,4141), From "Put-in-Bay," the next point of destination was Detroit. We entered the Detroit river through the elmn nel on the BIWA side of Bnis Blanc island, or, as it is vulgarly called, ••Bobtoio." Entering this river by this chlitneh with the British flag in view, the rather un- pleasant idea presented itself of entering our own coun tryihrough a foreign gateway. Act presume is the case with most of my countrymen not living on the border, I have been accustomed to as sociate the - British flag with the remote nationality 'Oils seat of empire, and when seen flying on a shore tepera ted only by a narrow : river from onr own territory. it seemed out of place, as though it ought not to be there. Although at the time !conscious of the impropriety and injustice of such feelings, from the ready and involunta ry manner in which they arose in my mind, I could.,im nine how strong might be the national feeling that' the cross of St. Goorgo sh'etild'not float co near the United States. int. LAKES. U. s; Detroit comas upon us at once' ike an elegant pity. Its site makes a gentle rise from the river, which /pro flows rapid, bold, and clear, The densely, ,built pari'of the city extends fur a Mile along the river, which is lined wait docks,- wharves, warehouses, vessels, and steam. boats, whilst back, numerous spires and titmice .nre seen rising from the &Mee mass of houses. From Da.. troit river we enter the shoal lake of St. Clair, end, , crossing this, stirring up the mud on its finis, we pass into the beautiful river of St. Clair. The waters of this river, so clear that tho bottom can bo seen at the depth of thirty feet, flow through sloaphig banks,.ott which aro farm-houses, villages,'and groan fields, and dark forests. Where the St. Clair forms its junction with Lake Huron, it narrows very much, the opposite points of the mouth being not more that a quarter of a mile apart. and hors the hanks oink into tt low gravelly beach, which, stretch ing, away suddenly on either hand, Naves Huron, hori zon-bound and ocean like, before us. Its world of wa ters rush with a tremendous current into this narrow strait. It is u wild and lonely spat. without people fir settlement, except that on the American side Fort Cita tiot frowns upon hustilo invasion, and a lighthouse locums its'weicouto to tho commerce which comes over the blue waters of the lake. r e great lakes? If be able to realize of cold freelt vva commorciul sail g over their sur- nations on their ho crowded masts 1 an old state, and, lilization has leap , mass, and, sti-ug cams before the ad time to escape upon his forest 'with the beauti on their faces, and have Sean them aliiag thuir wures all dia huide of ''orod to conceive of lalic tow/).9. the I s Con walk along and cunthered . or crowded witW i 'eh are continually Entering Lake Iluron, wo arelnow fairly at sea upon a fresh water ocean, as geographers tell us. six hundred feet above the Atlantic. with a depth of throe hundred feet below the level of that ocean, and washing the shores of thirty-two thousand islands. It was early in the mor ning following that on which we entered Lake Huron; before we had passed over its nearly three hundred miles of length. and found ourselves approaching the island of Mackinac. -This little island, situated off the northern point of the peninsula of Michigan, at the junction of Lakes Huron and Michigan, rises to a height of between three and four hundred feiet above the surface of the wa ter. It presents ebropt sides, thickly clothed with vines and slnubbery, presenting hero and there a naked while cliff projecting through tho gfeon moss. On the edge of ono of those cliffs stands the fort, all its buildings and en• closures being snowy white. !la'''the morning of our approach, n heavy fog had huitg over the hike, but with the rising of the sow it disappeared, except where it hung around the mountain cliffs. \Thu island of Mackinac was for a time completely 'envoloped from base to rimirtit in a heavy cloud of this fog, while above this misty cloud. 'and apparently supported upon it. like a castle in the air', the white buildings of the fort gleamed in the snit's rays. It seemed almost a substantial represents' tion of Cole's beautiful conception of the air floating cas tle in his serial paintings of the voyage of life. Front a distance, the white buildings of the town or vit. loge have rather a neat appearance, nestling on the nar row beach at the foot of the cliffs; but a nearer inspec tion shows them to be only a collection of small houses, shops, groggeries, and stores for the sale of Indian curl osities. glance at tl u our passage, fur g palace of vast anicn.tal, and its lc the graceful Jo ao!) carpeted with alio, rich mirrors, lighted by stained d aft wa can etu• of the panels. while every - lation to tho de- eking along , the nobAhly stop first AO, in Pommylva limn 80 . frilo. This hotasand, has the lakes. It is furtn• 010 I11:1111 shore, no, separating. the The tows. looks lult and is over forest clad ridg sr from the shore of no little inter- MU the principal lid hero, at this torod romaine, of , 1 1cogiod and water- easing in canes. The bell which publicans of the ,oned and elspby tours and called the British CO-1111- The time of our visit war near that at which the In-_ dian payments are made, and the red meelvere gather ing in for the occasion. Their conical huts, or wigwams, made of poles fastened together at the , top, and covered with coarse rush of as, were scattered Meal the beach, and many of the Indians were paddling their large birch bark canoes about the bay. It may hero not be .out of place to say a word relative to an annoyance to which these poor creatures are exposed, and as they can be relieved from it without doing more than has to be dime sooner or later, it is to be hoped some consideration will ho had for them. They aro called from their homes to this rendezvous for the purpose of receiving the very trif ling sum allotted to each individual, and which really scarcely seems worth coming fur, but so irregular is the time at which the appropriation is placed at the disposi tion of the department, that the Indians are sometimes kept waiting weeks before the money arrives, to an in convenience and loss to themselves of more than the amount alhitted them. Punctuality in the appropriation and payment of their annuities would save the Indians much loss. , eit posts att'opt ' thO ruins f the eastward of the a bluff; overlook `l%tilt ,during the tie burying place I, many veers ar. found to bo in I , ltogetiler a quiet to IDVO its anti whirling axis of and mire of bus h it far behind a splendid mar- tho grave-atono This mono of the United now empty, its Mackinaw is nine miles in circumference, rising, by abrupt terraces on the south side, to an oval tableland on the summit, and falling from this on the norik.side grad ually to the lake. On the southeast edge of the table land elevation are to bo seen the ruins of Fort Relines, the British work which during the war of 1812 overlook. ed, commanded. and took ours. situated on the edge of the terrace below it. About the centre of the island n freak of nature is to be seen in the shape of a rock called the "Sugar Loaf." but, naked and black, it spritgs up 80 or 100 feet more abruptly and needle-like than its name would indicate. On the lake shore is another eia. rlosity,,being a well-formed Gothic arch) of about ene hundred feet elevation, springing over a chasm in the cliff; a narrow path crosses the arch, and is passed over by visitors at sufficient risk to invite the achievement. From Machinate we enter Lake Michigan. and run ning down its beautiful western shore; our next stopping place was at the town of Milwaultie. This Is one of those nourishing western towns which have sprung loud• SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 14, 1849. fR*ONVTARD.int denly from the wild forest into populous cities. 'Fourteen years ago it was laid out as a village. and now has a pop. ulation ofsixteen thousand inhabitants. ; It is built on both aides of the Miiwaukie river, which here Bows par allel to the lake, and separated from it by* table-land bank. Both banks of the river rise in gradutt? slopes, at. fording fido building sites, and the elevated plain between the river and the lake affords an extensivesnd command. ing view. hlilwaukie has a clean, lig ht, and.airy ap pearance, from the peculiar color and beaLty of the bricks used in its buildings. Though burned, they aro of Back rich cream color, lend are of cloae and cornpaetstrueture. Leaving Nlilwaukie at eight o'clock in the morning. we continued our course down Lake MiChigan, close to its shore, and passingseveral towns prettily situated on the bank—Racine, Southport, Little Fort—early in the afternoon we reached Chicago. Chicago has balm the theatre of the wildest excitement of speculation, in which, anticipation, intoxicated by A l e full , etreem of real prosperity, has indulged visions be yond the bounds l ot prooabiiity. Nevertheless, although , individuals have duffered from their attempts to reap in the present the knits of futurity, Chicago, by its rapid growth,- almost f ulfils the unbounded exptctations oyl town-lot smoculators. Its prosperity erimes from the. fact that. it is the only good harbor down in this southern extremity of Lake Michigan, and internal improvements have made it the depot of a widely extended and immensely fertile region. The handsome street and residences along the lake shore give Chicago quite a pleasant appearance when approached from lake, but its site is it'nt ono caletde ted to win admiration. A low, flat, swampy prairie. and a sluggish stream wind - through the bleqk muddy soil, have nothing pietaresque to charm the °Ye. The river originally opened into the lake sense dis tance to the lout ward of its present mouth, winding along the beach, with a narrow sandspit separating It from the lake. Piers have been erected cutting oil this turn, and Carrying the stream directly out into the lake. Just where these piers commence toward the town, stand, within an enclosure, the bsrracks and quarters of F ort Dearborn. This little fort, ott the river bank, was in 1812 the only settlement, and was surrounded by wild India Ms. After the surrender of. General full the gar rigout left this fort. and soon after tellies with a largo body of savages. A co l nflict.ensued, in which the whites de fended thereselveS courageously, but finally surrendered upon conchae r tis l at their lives should ha spared The condition was 04 observed, and a general massacre commenced. A !Vbs. Hoard saved her life by exclaim ing to the savage who approached her with uplifted tom ahawk, "You woUld siot:kill a squaw!" This was thirty ' seven years ago. In 1823 a small village of ten- or twelve houses and sixty or seventy inhabitants had grown up around the foi l :. 'Chicago hiss now a population of 20.000; the steeples of many churches overlook the wide spreading prairiol handsome dwellings have converted the m;rels into 'showy streets; blocks of brick houses; border the ;Avenues of business, along which bustles a busy cow l s). Fora min, along the river, acontinuous forest of Maisie indicates the ex tent of its co mmerce, and continuing further along this stream beyond the density of the city, piles of lumber from Green gay have con verted its banks iUto one vast lumber-yard, and in this neighborhood the puffing of various steam factories adds to the busy activitY of the scone. , The enormous and splendid lake steamers daily enter and leavo the Heck, crowded with passengers and enli vened by bands of t !Pile; end while wo are looking at the moving palacc with its multitudinous population, and listening to its 'untie, we wonder at tho skill and adroit ness with Which it is inencouvered through tho narrow stream, and tonid the crowd of vessels. Although for tunes have been Mado in Chicago by the rise in real es tate, labor' has alsa had its just reward, for among the most shoWy and comfortable dwellings urn those owned by mechanics. The population ( of Chicago is made ; up, not only of immigrants from parts of our own widespread 'eosin try, but from all ports of Europe—English, Irish, Dutch, Scotch, Oonelt, Swedes, Norwegians, &c. Notices, newspapers and p l oliticul spocches are promulgated in thu Gerrnan as Well as in the English language, To those who feel any npproheusion from the character of the inffuenco of these European invasions, consolation will be afforded by l a visit to the public schools. Chicago is divided by its river and its branches into three districts. and in each division a large, commodious, and handsome britt , t building is cradled for the public schools. Tho for, ign pnpile come _to these schools fil thy, ragged, and erittlid, speaking a babel of languages. to a short time they,learn English from their native asso ciates; and strict attention being paid to their habits and costume by their preceptors, not- a long time is required ' to metamorphose the: y oung foreivicr into a cleanly, respectable American boy; and thus our institutions at ford a physical an moral ablution to the soiled humanity of Europe. . Tho reniainder of our glance si the lakes is out of the tra4 of the larger boats, or indeed any boats, except at i one main intervals. From Chicago our destination was to wilder regions, upon whose quiet solitudes the din and hustle of com merce and spectdation had nut yet broken, but to which they are to reach if the fur -seeing sagacity of John Ja cob Astor is to be taken in evidence. EMly on a Sunday morning wo wore passing the "Door of Death," a pass Igo between a Cape of Wisconsin and a neighboring lisland, communicating Lake Michi gan with its important branch "Gruen Bay." and on the same afternoon we were entering the Neenah or Fox river. Nine or ten miles from the mouth of the river, the bay shore, riseS iq a broad groan slope, dotted over with comfortable looking farms and farm-houses, and giving the idea of an old and well -settled country. The entree° to the Neenah is so tortuous that although the village or port of our destination' is close to us on• the left hand, eight miles of a winding course WV necessary to reach it. Tim settlement or town of green Bay is formed of two villages, Astor and Navarino, seprtr l i - uted from each Other by a small • brook; and still, quiet, inactive places they aro, and by no moans keeping up to what its geographical position would promise for it. A glance at the map will show that this must be the port for en important section pf country, which is raPidly fill- , ing in. Mr. Astor, looking to the importance of the posi- I Lion. purchased lands hero, the town of Astor being prin cipally held by his estate. Navarino also is or hes been chiefly in the hands of en individual, and this individu al proprietorship is Itssig,•ned as a reason far the want of prosperity In the place. As long ago as 1670 the French had their settlements in this region, and the spare population around the town of .Green Bay consists now of French. Indians, and half-breeds, and • th e philosophy of life seems to be to pass it as easily as possible, and not to agitate thernservez by any of the 'ye-ahead" and progressive principle.— The country abounds In game, and the agreeable activity of hunting is found l a sufficient alternation with the more quiet pursuits of their lives. Groups of Indians, dirty. drunken, and wort h less, are seen lounging about the town or camped Mi l ks vicinity; these, are the Mencius nees; but the Oneidas, neatly and picturesquely dressed. visit it to sell their products and wares. These latter are said to be the best ferment of the country; and it will be one of the strangest romeaies of history.if it shell prove to be the (44 that O Bourbon, a legitimate sovereign of France. bai brought them to this civilisation and tether. habits. The Rev. Mr. Wililame, their pastor, end to whom they are greatly indebted for their improved con dition, is now said to be the lost dauphin, the son, of Louis the XVI. If so. he hes done more for the human ftimily, perhaps. and led a more peaceful and quiet life, than if he had sat upon the throne of his ancestors. This, however. is not the only romance of this region of coun try. A town bearing the Indian name of Aztalan is sit uated between the Neenah and Lake Michigan, and from this ideality it is surmised went forth the Aztec race to, overrun Mexico, and funnel the empire of Monte zuma. At one.point the Neenah is within a mile and n half of the Wisconsin, and this barrier being removed an Immense circle of water communication is established from the Gulf of Mexico to the Atlantic through the St. Lawrence. ' Tho Neenah needs much the . sid of art to render it an avaibable stream, being. in its present condition, much richer to the tourist in search of the pictereagne than in facilities for commerce. Flom Lake Winnebago. thro' which the river passes, to its mouth, a distance of only thirty-nine miles, it has a fall of one hundred and sixty feet, and in this course tumbles over seven different ra pids. I. Winnebago Rapids, 2. 'Grand Chute, 3. Little Chute, 4. Grand .5. Repides des Creches, ' G. Little kukalin, 7. Rapider des Petro. Tho Brothortorvn and Stockbridge Indians aro selaed on Lake Witinehtg,o, and have relinqukhedt heir Inchon habits and government for nn agricultural life and the privileges of citizens of the United States, and are rep resented in the 'legislature by ono of their own number. The Drothertowns, it is said, hare entirely lost their lan guage. Having 'understood that the scenery and rapids of Grand Kadin, distant twenty miles, were Nett worth a visit, procured a horse, arid early on a fogy morning started on the journey. The fog soon rolled away and uncovered a bright and beautiful day. My road was tut obscure bridle-path or trail on the left bank of the rivers winding sometimes along the river-bench, then through the forest, up end down ravines, across narrow but deep sloughs. in places the path was so overgroivn with bushes as to require great care in keeping it, and several times I, for a short time, lost my way. With tho excep tion of ode or two farm; at the beginning and end of my journey, - I passed only here rind there the solitary cabin of a French settler, or the crumbliiip; chimney and turn • tiling legs of the cabin of some squatter who had disap 2 pearcd before the first approaches of settlement and civ ilization. Once, when out of my path. I came upon an Indian wigwam on the edge of a brook in a sinall valley. Smoke was ascending tlitougli the pinnacle of the coni cal dwelling, but none of its inhabitants were present.— The last five miles of my road Were through a clean open forest on the summit of a lofty ridge. Frent this ridge the road descended to a smooth, green plain were the fields, houses, and barns of two large farms, b all of tlie proprietors bring wealthy rind gentlemanly half breeds. This was ••Grand Kukalin," pronouliced I.ticike low, and meaning the stoppinvplace of the pickerel.— This locality merited all that had been said of its beauty. The river. ut this poi tit very brand, went dashing and foaming in a roaring tor rent over an inclined plane of flat limestone roejcs. Several beautiful wooded islands, iibis largest of thorn containing tivesity•seven acres, di vided the river indict malty rushing streams, which again united in to one broad current before dashing down the greatest inclination of its rocky bed. The opposite shore rose in a fine slope, covered with forest-trees standing , open and distinct, like those of a park, without any on dergrowth littering the greensward from which they ' sprung. From the top of the bank the river is seen for a mile curving among the hills before it roaches the break of the islands and with/. and again it is seen to the bOlllO extent after it has returned to its placidly below, From the proprlutOr of ono of the fine farms on 'the plain, I received in a gentlemanly and hospitable mon itor the entertainment which my long and uarxccuitamed ride rendered very desirable, and about the middle of the afternoon started on my return to Green Bay, which I reached at nine o'clock. Wo have now glanced around the lAbes in a running tour, following in the main the general lino of travel, but, of course, our rapid movements havo kit much of iriti4est unobserved and unnoticed. ro:ieSr for Tonns 'Ladies. It is said there is pnliry in taking advantage of circum stances, and turning then to the accomplishment of these objects one wishes to secure. Policy is, theroforit, neces sary for those young ladies who wish to secure good bus bands. But the policy which most of them pursue is ex ceedingly erroneus—they scorn to think that it is degra ding to them to be seen in any ordinary dress about their lmusohold allure. .But this is the very condition which every young man, who is worth securing, would prefer to find them if he were seeking a wife. A foolish, sim pering fop; who is more indebted to his tailor and barber, for importance, than to his brains, may wish to find young ladies dressed in silk and shut up in the parlor, lilt 3 dolls in a show case. But a sensible man wirfn.s a wife that knows something and can make hei - self useful. A judicimis writer advises all young men to seek their corn. pardons fordifo from tho class who are willing to be found in the kitchen, without making apologies for it. This is sego advice, and if young ladies were aware that those young men who are worth their seeking generally act upon it, and had rather find 'thorn at the washtub than weeping over the "last now novel;" ahoy would not run away from their work and hide when a young man is approaching the house, as they often do. They would lot hint know they are worth more than mere play thingt—that they are not butterflies, very pretty to look upon, bunt if handled, perish. with the touch. Nothing recommends a young lady like industry. To understand labor and to perform it well, is one of the finest qualifications. Ladies should never be ashrned of being caught at work.-91ire Brunch. Church Dells. There is something beautiful in the church boll.— Beautiful end hopeful! They talk to high and low, rich and poor, in the satne voice; there is a sound in them that should scare pride and envy, and meanness of ail sorts, from the heart 'of man—that should make him look on the world with kind forgiving eyes: that should make the earth itself seem to him, et least for a time, a holy place. Yes, there is a whole sermon in the sound of the church bells. if we had only the cars to uthlerstand it.— There is a preacher in every belfry, that cries. "Poor, weary, struggling, fighting creatures, poor human thine: take rest, he quiet. Forget your vanities, your follies, your week day craft, your heart burning! And you. ye human vessels, gilt and palmed, believe the iron tongue that tells ye for all gildiug.all your colors, yo are same Adam's earth with the beggar at your gates. Come away, come. cries, the church bell, me learn to be hum ble: - learn that. however daubed and stained, and stuck about with jewels, you are but grave clay: come Dives. coma. and he taught that all your glory. as you wear it. is not half so benign' in the eye of Heaven, as the sorts of cmcompfaining Lazarus: And ye. poor creatures.. livid and taint—stained and crushed by the, pride end hardness of the world—come, come, cries the bell, with the voiee of an angel4—tome nod learn what is laid up for ye. And teaming, take heart. and walk Am:maid the wiekodoesi, the cruelties of the well. calmly as Daniel walked among the ?long.—Douglas .krroll. $l5O A IMAM, in lidvona•. ileavy Maris and Light Marts. - What's the nee of it? Trouble, trouble, trouble—what a , world of it eve have! "Man is born to trouble," and in vanity and vexation Of spirit" thus and thus it Is written. There are the troubles of infancy. of youth, of manhood, of old age! The troubles of poverty, and the troubles of riches! The trouble of living, and the trouble of dying! Who _has not his troubles?—who claims exemption from, who saes the end ethane? And yet, after all, what's the ass of it? This fretting and re pining—this sorrowing and sighing—this moping and mourning—making misery more miserable—in the name of common sense, I say, what's Me use of it? Does it - soothe pals, soften affliction, or ward of misfortuaet— Will it cal{ back deceased friends, or prevent ethers from dying? or deliver us from pOverty, or make us healthy, or meliorate in one particular our condition? Then flossy, for the very sake of saduess, what's blouse of it? Suppose the times are tight and pinching; , that trade is doll; that you have not money enough to live es welt as you wish, and are obliged to labor harder, even fur the little you obtain, than is agreeable; do you grieve about it? do you abandon hope, end wish yourself dead? User! what's the use of it? You get along, you will always get along, if you are industrious and frugal; and the most fortunate do no more. Besides, a light heart will not break your fortuae, nor a heavy ono mike it, Is it you misfortune to hive one of those pasts of sm. eiety, a slanderous neighbor, who apeake ill of you, and delights to do you every secret, back handed injury he can; who never fails secretly to traduce your character, misrepresent your conduct and motives, and, even tries to excite prejudice against you? And does this discern , pose and trouble you? What's Me use of it? Keep the ' windward of the follow—let your actions give the lie to his eccumt;ons, and you need not employ words for the purpose. Nail the issue, and You will see the maxim verified in his case, that ho who "spltteth against the wind spitteth in his own face," And here, too, it may be remembered that a-heavy heart is no answer to an • accusation, though it may bo a false one, and that a light heart is not the heart that pleads guilty before men; you had better, therefore, have the last than the lint, - on all • accounts. Are men dishonest? Wall a long face and a sad heart reform them? Aro you sometimes deceived, wronged. cheated? IV.Ii being discouraged mend the matter, or melancholy make you sharper in your future dealings? Nut a whit. 'Losses are lessons; all men buy their expo• rience at the same market, thorigh all may not pay the same price for the commodity. The only way is to tuAke much of what - cotnes dear; and yen can do this with a'l:ght heart better than with a heavy oue. -A heavy heart—to/tars/Ad use of it 7 Will it make your fortune? No; it will mzir it. That's Vuo vso of it. Tc.sms.—ln the neighborhood of and. in fact, through the wholo of Bohemia. we saw Bi . llllo of the strangest trams that could well be imagined. I thought the Frankfort milkwomen, with their donkeys and hurse•liko carts, were comical objects. enough: but they bear no cornParisim with these Bohemia turnouts. Dogs—for economy's sake, porhaps—generally supply the place of oxen or horseir, and it is no uncommon thing to see three largo mastiffs abreast, harnessed ,to a country cart. it Inikey and a cow together. are somotimes . rnat with; and ono men, going to the festival at lglau, had his wife and chldren in a•little wagon, drawn by a dog and donkey. These two, however, did not work well together;, the dog would bite his laiy companion and the man's time was constantly employed in whipping the don key away from the side of the road:, Once I saw a Wagon thaws' by a dog, with a woman pushing Whim). while a man, doubtless her lord and master, cat comfortably within, snioking his pipo with the greatest complacency: The very climax of all, was a 'woman and a dog her: nesqed together, taking a load of country produce to mar ket! I hope, for the honor of the country, it was not emblematic of woman's condition thore. But as we saw hundreds of them breaking stono along the road, and oc cupied at other, laborious and not less tr+tial labor, thero s too much reason to fear that it is sl.—Baylrd Toylo 's "Views A foot." rm Men3turt.—The Boston Transcript tells a sto poor man who stepped iato the second class cats train going into Boston OD Saturday. and who was d by the conductor because he had not a quarter of r to pay his fare, and was left to pursue his way . As he trudged along he revolved harsh thoughts nind at what seemed the disfavor of Providence o cruelty and injustice of his felloW•men, until! on gan angle in tho track, he saw the cant at a stand Id hurrying to the spot he, beheld the car from 1 'he had been thrust, dashed to pieces, and the mu and disfigured bodies of his fellow-passengers don the ground. The poor man's heart ceased !inuring, and he could have taken the conductor's 'it'd blessed him eh the instrument of Providence in •I l titit from a frightful death. Ito left the scene "a wiser s I nd better man." n of f the rejec( It doll OR foo, in Ids and tt !prim) still, which tilatcd MEE its mu hand CM Fir,NtLE COURTzMIP IN RUM:.—The Wattle(' of Rome know nothing of those restraints which delicacy, mod esty and vit tue Impose upon the sex in northern Europe. Allontan lady who takes a liking to a foreigner. does not cost ) her eyes down when he looks at her. but fixes them upon him long and with evident pleasure; nay. she ga4cs at him alone whenever She meets him in Cote - patty, qt church, at the theatre, or in her walks. Sho will saa ithout ceremony, to a friend-of the young man. "Tell Out gentleman I like him." If the man of her choice feels the like sentiment, and asks. "Are you fond oil me l" she replies with the utmost frankness, "Yes, my dean' , The happy medium between Amer ican and Roman courtship appears to us the best.' We hate excessive coyness, but do not like too much familiari ty. • THE SCIRRn. MISTRESS AT 1101111:.-4.4y dear boy," said a kind-hearted country school mistress to an unusu ally promising scholar, whose quarter was about up— "My dear boy, does your father design that you should thread the intricate end thorny path of the professions, the straight and narrow way of the ministry, or revel amid the flowery field of literature?" "No,.marm," re plied the juvenile prodigy-. "dad says he's going to sot me to work in the tater patch." A Howse Ft.v.—An English paper tells the following ludicrous story: Two gets dernan. angling in the Thames at Newborn. lately, could not agree upon the appearance of one of their baits, the hOrtm-fly. and, they agreed to refer tho question to a rustic. whom they saw ploughing at & hole distance, and accosted him Ana: ••Boy did you ever bee a horse-fly?" 4 .llthoy. l !'Said the fellow. with some astonishment, 'mos, dent it I never seed a horse fly but I once seed a cow fall down a pree.iiiice." Fartatx MODY.STT.—Modesty in a piling female is the flower of a tender shrub, which is the4iromise of an ex cellent fruit. To destroy it. ikto destroy-11m , germ of a thousand virtues, to destroy the hope of socitityo,o'com mit an outrage against , nature. The air of the worldja a burning breath that every day blasts this precious Bow ler. Viarrat.a min CLortia --Sem e ono looking at a rich man said, "Poor man. ho toiled day and night until he war forty. to gain his wealth. and he has boon watching it day and night ever since. for hie victuals and clothe.' QT “Do you under/had snot" thundered out one of our couuppardwegotie to an urchin. et Rhone head he 'threw an ChVgigeal - "I've, got an ink ling of rrhat vett mean,' raitt,the •~=:~~ Y'{~., NUMBER 9.