'VOL. VIII ifflE P ,-.IOP LE'S JOURNAL Terlntl—in Advance Ole 'spy per annum, • Villzge subscribers, TERMS OF 'ADVERTISING 1 ware, of 1.2 lines or less, 1 insertion, $0.50 3 insertions, 1.50 every soh.equent insertion, t 1.5 lee and figure wore, per sq., 3 insertions, 3.00 Er ery snbsequen: insertion, .50 I column, one year, 25.00 1 column, six•months, . 15.00 Administrators' or Executors' Notice,, 2.c0 Sheriirs Sales, per tract, 1.50 Professional Cl,rds not exceeding eight lines boned for $..1.110 per annum. rr All letter+ on business, to secure at tention, should be addressed (poet paid) to tye Pdblisher. ]Original artvg.] [For the JOurn3l.] LIKES ADDRESSED TO COUDEESPORT ACADEMY I Would not paint thy time d irk scenes of yore, Or in dliant hopes that center'd round thee then not I would on the eve of thy awaking From a long an i restless slumber, wish for Thee, and sue the muses gentle power In thy beha:f, and look in nature's face For Omen. kayos for Omen, and I find it bright Portestious of a. brilliant fide. The lowring clouds that spr••ading o'er the Wide horizon, hid far off worlds in dark Of drearest night, have moved a pace and the Ethereal blue comes smiling in the east, The howling winds have ceadso their ontln- our MOlll Or sunk away in shams or natural death, And trailing stars are come, fit club:Gina Of thy yet triumphant course. And the gloom dark olouda, Have fled away, proving but a vap'rous fog, And their ihreatniag force b it a eindow phan- Thus may it be with threatrUng storms around Thee, thou beauteous tempie ou the green hill _ side, ILO of our own loved Potter and smiles of brilliant faith Be acne from tke true heart■ love, ♦nd frith which kuoweth not depart, rata round Thee, to ward tho blow of evil plot, or Envious prowliug of thy secret foes, ATe, yet, thy fate is bright, and fame bright as The star lit Heavens when myriad ■tara shine There, is thine ; and mind as brilliant as the Brightest star, shall chine in thy mnbr .ce. VIOLET Ss ow. • Coudersport, Deo, cud. Frotu the Louis intelligencer OUTBREAK n KIMAR. It appears from our dispatches that we are having a hot political stew in Kansas at last. The story, as it comes to us, is tins; Thi.t three Free Sellers went to a settler's house named Cole man, who is a Pro-slavery man, aml ordered him oft They were armed, and gyve the man only ten minutes to leave. He left for a short time, but returned well armed. He metone ofthe• three men, Who renewed his threats and attempted to shoot Coleman, but his gun missed fire. Coleman then shot his assailant, who died immedire ly. Coleman gave him-3elfup for trial. A mob of Abolitionists, armed with Sharpe's rifles, repaired to Coleman's house, driving his wife and children oft burned his bowie, and ordered oth er Pro-Slavery mon to leave and burn ed their houses. Deputy Marshal Jones arrested the leader of the mob, and obtained the names of 20 others, Jones is now at Lecompton with two prisoners and fifteen or twenty assis tants. The Abolitionists are gather ing at Lecompton, and demanding the release of their comrades and the sur-. render of Coleman. The Governor has issueda proclamation calling the . 011ie to the assistance of the offieera. . Now, we have a few remarks to of fer.on one feature of this case unly.- 7 We shall attempt no surmise as to the falttruth of the story as it comes to us. There are, however, it is well to le member, always two sides to a story; and one will do very well till the other cornea But we will rake it for granted, fur prasent, that we have received the full and veracious account of the origin of the violence and bloodshed that have just disgraced the soil of Kansas, and that will, from the peculiar ,stato Of the public feeling at this time, send a thrill of apprehension and honor throughout the country. The feature pf the case that we wish to comment on, is this : The first news of the af fair that reached Jefferson City, where the 21.11.,50uri Legislature is in session, . . „ i 1 JOUR N AL. _ COUDERSPORT POTTE • couNTY;.. DE CE M R 20,, was by a dispatch froin Mr. Bone, a citizen of Jackson County, MiiFouri Legislature.. That dispatch contained this sentence $l.OO its We want help: CornaLun;eate to the friends." Now, in the devil's name, who is it that " wants help ?" And what ti they : want that " help" • for? Do the citizens of Missouri want " help ?"—, Who or what is putting the citizens of Missouri in peril so great that the Leg islators and " the friends" at Jefferson trust " help 1" Is it not the Government of Kansas that wants help 1 If so, let them call President Pierce for assistance: - Kan sas is under the care of the Federal Government. Missouri has no duty to perform in the •premiies. If the National Government cannot take care of its own pets and appointees, its Reeders and Wilson Shannon 4, why let Pierce re.ign, and a new Govern ment come in. The poiyle of Mis souri are not the ones to ho called on to back up the miserable political pup pets that Frank Pierce shall send out from the Eastern States to play the fool and•iutroduce bloud.,lied and an archy in Km-mi. If the poor imbecile of the White House had possessed the good sense or the justice to put ovet Kansas, at the beginning, a Western man of high character, 'cot.raio and experience, there never w..uld .have been a },article of trouble in forming the community there into ay--quiet and thrifty State. But instead of that, w,: had Reeder and his Free Soili4m, then Shannon and his Pro-Slaveryilm—all wretched, time serving, place-seeking demagogues, who have played out their reckless games for political ag grandizement, and drawn upon poor Kansas the curse of lawlessness and blood Naw,let Pierce reap the flints of his imbecility: Let not the people of Missouri, by any urgent appeal or cunning device, be drawn into the in ternal feuds of Kansas. It looks very much as if there were it pre-conceited . efr•,rt to do this very thing. Oar dis patches from the Westsay that parties have already proceeded from Inde pendence into Kansas, and that "meet ings have be to held at Weston and St. Joseph - , and companies funned to go to Kansas." • Thero it is ! N w, iS not this con- duct most fatal to Missouri interests and honor I In. heaven's name, let Pierc3 and his political pets—his Kan-, sas officials—take care of themselves. Have we not been told, time and again, the Pro-Slavery party were the people of Kansas—that four-firths of the actu al settlers of Kansas were supporters of the Territorial officers t.nd the Ter ritorial Legislature, and that the Free Sailers ware an insignificant squid out about Lawrence, who were as .de void of courage, and fit only to be laughed at ? And now, forsooth, the United States officiali in Kansas, and the all prevailing Pro-Slavery people or Kau- sas, are in deadly petit, and " dispatches froM We-ton and St. Joseph, tte that large meetings of the citizens have been held and companies frined to go to. Kansas." All to protect that country from the " paupers and • hire line lately shipped to Kansas, like so:many cattle, we were informed, at . the expense of Emigrant Aid Societies. It does seem to us that one of the devil's own choicest humbugs is ex ploding in this call on Nlissouri for help." HOW TO TREAT FRIENDS. True, reliable friends, are . not so common in this selfish world, that we can afford to estrange and to alienate them from us for slight and insufficient causes. And yet i how often is this done? Some people have a happy faculty of making friends, and a most unhappy manner of cooling their at tachment, and not unfrequently of driv ing them into open and avowed hostil ity. A word fitly spoken is like ap ples of g old. in pictures of silver ; but an unguarded,- unkind word, drives the iron into the goal: and often sepa- DEVOTED TO TILE PRINCIPLES-OF DEMOCRACY, AND TIIE , 'OISSBIIIINATION OF MORALITY, LITERATURE;IAND:NFeWS - rates chief 'friends. Few rippOciiite the full import of the divine injunc lion,. •• be, courteous." C. , u:tesy plies more than external.afrability it : includes kind word•, kind actions, I prompted -bv a kind heart, as well as I , a becomie g deportment. ELIE' the jars in tiro domestic . circle, and half the cm loess and estrangement lietween friend 4.ari.se from those ebullitions of passion, which may and ought to be checked and • supressed. Uniform courtesy and -kindoeis in our inter course with friends cement the bond of attachment, and give t•i life lasting. ettim , . A fretftti,-irra •ciblo temper is th e . h tns• of friend ,hip, and the poisc;- nor of datuc,tic bliss. A harsh word spoken cannot be recalled: It may be apologized flu.; it may be repented of; but still it rem:rios upon the' tablet of the mein o'y, aol giviis pain in the remembrance. A person possessing a hasty, ungovana le temper, cannot too anxiously and carne-thy set about a reform. It will not do for him flo say that is my infirmity, and niy friends mu 'overlook it. They will not overlook it, nor will they endure it unles the evidence is plain and Falpable that you are striv lug to . col rest it. You mty have other good qualities its no stinted measure. but. if you exhibit a petulant irrascihle temper, your redeeming traits will not render you a pleasant or an tigreeable friend. Some errone suppoie. that they have position, or talentA, or wealth en nigh. to hear them up and to curry them through, in spite of those unamiable moods in which they are wont to indulge. But it is A gt . i.troui mi-talte. No man has standing (ii• capital enough to warrant him in the issUreptioti that he can violate, with iiimu:iity,thoie duties - of friendship which are universally bind- Sun. The Pursuit of Wealth. One of the most crying. evils in this . , country, is, the inordinate greed * of gain of its inhabitants. Like other evils. it is productive of great matetial good—it fells foreo:ts, it constructs railroads, it builds up givittic cities, it links t' ether ocean with ocean, it anitihilates space, it outstrips the wings ' of the wind. But how much happiness is wrecked in. this war ship of mammon! It is estimated that out of every hundred men engaged in the lottery of mercantile fife, ninety fail. Of the successful few, how many have the taste to enjoy their accumu lath) is-o--or. having the taste, find the health of mind and hody at the end - of their successful career requisite to employ and enjoy their acquisitions ? To strive fon competence,' s• a praise worthy effont ; to strive for more, is unphilostophical and unwise. The end which Pyrrhus" proposed after con, yocring Italy, Asia, and Africa, which comprised the then known world, was to sit down and enjoy himself. " But why," was the reply of his philosophic Prime minister, not " now sit doVn . . and enjoy yourself?" Wealth, after all, has but a fictitious value—its existence Is only in. corn pat ison. Stephen Girard is reported to have said, " A nun is as well off with half a million, as if he were a rich man." It.ithschild, on readily , - that Louis Philippe's income, at the zenith of his pro s perity, was fifty dol lars a minute, burst ba i t, tears, and de clared that he was never before aware of the exigence of filch destitution. Tr ue wealth exists in the mind and heart—the rust is but dross—strips of paper, and bits of white or yellow metal. These are consolatory reflec tions to men who are compelled to 'refrain from California—and some of those who , have gone, are aware, by this time, that heaps of yellow dust are a poor cornpcnsation for health, comfort, and dcimestic endearMents. Money. is dirt; but as it is a dirt we have washed our hands of, we shall phrsue the subject no further. WASTE What a little word, this is; but what a big meaning it has l It seems to he in .some way inseparably con nected every..transaction . and every: act of our live's. Even life itself is one continual : waste—animals and plants, from .maturity to death; but that is natural waste nature obeying nature's laws. The waste that we commit is unnatural and contrary to the laws of propriety• and common- EIZE] Leek into every kitchen; not only at the fat in the fire, but at-the waste ful manlier in which all of our cook ing is dune ; beside Ale . waste of food at the table. See how that delicate appetitemade delicate by waste— picks out a few choice morsels and carelessly dusts the rest aside, to ga to waste. It Li safe to say that more . food is wasted every day in this city than is eaten ; not alone in the kitchen, or at the table, but in our mat kets and store houses, where whoie cargoes of grain, meal, flour, 'meat, fish, fruits, and vegetables, are continually being wasted through bad packing or bad management. What a waite, too, are -all of our retail puichuses; and because it is fashionable, buying 'food that wastes the nto!:t. Is it any wonder that the poor suf fer fur fojd after 'committing such ex travagant waste 'I Look at that man paying a dollar and a- half—the price of a whole day's work--4,r a rib-roast of bvef, to he cooked in the most waste ful way, when one half the. money ex pended in a cheaper piece of meat, cooked in a different manner, with vegetables, bread, and gravy, would serve his family twice as iOng. But not so fashionable, and genteel. Nu, and not so wasteful. Almost the whole system of Atherican cookery is based upon a btate of things that existed when we had such a surplus of food that the idea of Waste. was not taken into account. There was a time, within but a few }win; past, at the West, when wheat could he purchased for twenty-five or f. ! ;lty cents a-bushel—corn" for ten or fifteen cents—pork for one to two cents a pound—and other things in propor tion. • It would be idle to talk to peo ple about saving every iota of such cheap food. To some extent the same cheapness has prevailed all over America, until the people have fallen into wastefult habits,' both in keeping, cooking, and eating their food, that need reform.. It is - probable that one half of the cooking in the kitchens of private families, in this city ; is done by Irish servanti, who possessed no higher art when they landed upOn our shores than in required fo boil and roast pota toes, or make an oatmeal cake or mess of porridge. The only art of saving they have a knowledge of, .is -not'to have anything to save. All that should be saved is hurried out Of sight in the basket of some of their own country men at the basement door, thereby encouraging another great waste—the waste of time of these lazy beggars. We should like to know the percent age of waste of coal, updn all that is burnt in priVate houses in this city, where grates seem to have been con structed with apparently little or no object in view except waste,. both of heat sent up the chimney, and unburnt coal sent to the ash liarrel; The latter su. great as' to afford constant employment to•some thousand ' pm sons who are constantly going about gathering the fragMents of coal from the ashes ; and still thousands of tons every year are carried off in the ash carts to fill up and build • out some wharf whereupon to land more coal. The waste of beat in our consumption of fuel is, to say the least, full one-half. In fact if all the wasted heat of all :our coal burning fires in the city, was saved and properly distributed, it is likely that the consumption would be reduced to one fourth . the present •quantity ; because it has been demon iti.ated in. the beating of large build.;, ings, that :heat could be carried any required distance in pipes, .as wallas ME=llEim!le! , gas or water, aid by surrounding the pipes in,the ground with suitable non conducting substances,yery little heat would be lost.: Food and fuel: are the two most im portant items Of waste in our economy of life, and of these we haie only hint ed, without. touching a host. of others. ,We will only notice one other waste now, and only, do thatito save a waste of time in another place.' SoMe men waste 'their lives in find ing out cunning inventions, which they hide under a bushel, or in some other wasteful place, where their light never can shine out upOn the world. We have a case point:* A. short time since we gave notice to the world that some man had invented d window balance, •to supersede weights and pulleys, and that the invention was a useful ; one. Now, .a -correspondent - writes that he. is very anxious to know more about it, and says: "Can you send -me a - picture, or -drawing, or description, or the cost; or whose I can write the inventor, agent, or inanufactuter, or anybody, -concerning it?" No, Sir ; wo can't do any thing for you. We are not disposed, in notic ing new inventions, to make the notice an advertisement—We cannot afford to waste our time and money fin• that purpose. The inventor wastes both time and money in not letting tile world know where ho keeps his wares for sale. Neglecting to advertise-is a .waste of common-sense, and of that there is a greater waste than of all other commodities in this great corn munity:—City Items of the Tribune., From Corre;poodmico . of the •Tribune 8417ATTER SOVEREIGNTY-HOW IT WOBSS LAWRENCE, K. T., Nov. 26, 1855; Monday, before daylight. Late last night I arrived at this place. and learned that there really was cause to apprehend serious trou ble here. The scene of the late tragic occur rence, was Hickory Point, a settleMent some twelve miles south from - Law rence, near - theVaukarusa river. In that settlement there • are several fami lies of Missourians, pro -slavery men. One of these, a Mr.. Coleman, "jumped the claim" he now holds, and built the house ho has been k occupying,. from Materials fur the house of another man. Lately • there has been some difficulty between this Coleman . and,a young man 'named . Chas. W. Dow, who had a claim near the same place. It seems that Coleman and one or two of" his neighbors and friends have burned a limekiln on Dow's land; cut ting the timber therefrom. This, of course gave offense, and Do* prohib ited them repeating the trespass. It 'appears, however, that they had made up their minds to do so. On last Thursday Mr. Dow had gone to the bfatitsmith's shop which is near Coleman's residence, and while there met with Coleman. It appears that they left the blacksmith's shop togeth er, and came alert - the' road in com pany, wrangling about tile subject in dispute. While close to his house Coleman left Do*, and the latter, af ter going a few steps, heard a cap burst on a . gup. Instantly turning around, he saw Coleman with a piece presenting at him He raised his hand and said " Don't shoot ;" but' at that instant Colemanoviro bad, put another cap on his gun, fired—the contents, a heavy charge of buck-shot, lodging in the breast of the unfortunate Dow, and killing him. Two of the balls had pierced his heart. Several other persons were present, friends of Cole man, and settlers from Missouri. The . names of these men are Hargus, Kirk ', ley, Moody, and Wagoner. Two of ' them had participated in the lime burning, and were doubtless accesso ries to this niust atrocious murder which had evidently boon coolly pre meditated. Coleman fled, and the body of his unfortunate . victim lay where it had fallen in the wheel-track of the Santa Fe road. The friends, of Coleman al- lowed• him thus to lie, and never in- terfered nor apprised any one: ' • Yesterday a meeting was held -aC ilickery•Nint, and nearly a hundred persons assembled. The body vas examined, together with all the testi reony•that could be elicited.. All the evidencenbtained, was from the friends of Coleman, as given to the neighbors who had first found the body. The meeting: passed resolutions, and ad journed about dark last night, having determined on means to secure the murderer and bring hira to justice. Now came the second act in the drama. It appears that Coleman had fled to Gov. Shannon at the Shawnee Mission. What there transpired I know not, further than 'that , the mut., darer returned to Lecompton, where .Court is to be held next week. Fear ing. thc.testimony of a Mr. Brauson, the pelsou , with whom. the murdered man had boarded, a warrant was placed in the hands of ShetiflJones, an officer elected by the Legislature of the Shaw nee Mission, for the arrest of Branson, under the pretense that he had used threats. The real object was to rail* his tostimenj with a Jury, as he was one of tha t most important witnesses in the case, next to the pto-31avery . men. The Sheriff summoned a passer of fourteen then, who armed them selves, and .proceeded to the house of Branson, where they arrived. about 9 o'clock last night. :Tones neither read nor produced his warrant, but in a. profane amid domineering way - -told Branson he must come with them, ur they would "blow him to hell." There being no other alternative, that g en tlentan complied:. Scarcely had they gone when, with a speed most necessary, a Free State man near, who was apprised by Bran son's- family, galloped for neighbors, and soon a company of fifteen men. eleven of • whom - were armed wit' Sharp's rifles and one with a double - barreled gun, were in pursuit. By rapid detour they contrived to howl Jones's party, and planted themselve t in the road near Blunton's Bridge cot the Waukarusa. Jones's party ap proached the spot they wete boasting of what they would do, saying they wished they had got there when th meeting assembled and they woul:t have done so and.so to the hundred." men congregated there thatday. Whea they approached . the rescuers the 111- ter, drawn across the road, - -ordered thernto stop. The numbers were ex actly equal, only Jones's fifteen me.t wore all armed to the teeth and tit." Free State men in the hurry tiad not procured arms; but the Sheriff's pose seemed to have no inclination to,figh: - . One of the rescuing party requeste , i. Mr. Branson to step out; a voice from the other crowd told him they woul.l shoot him if he did, but Branson join ed his friends and there was no show ing,. Jones here swore and tht:oatene L terribly; said the Governor had prom istscl they shodld have 10,000 men t.p enforce the laws of the Legislature 01 - the Mission, and that they should immediately hear of it. The two par ties .then separated. Early this morning s long before dal - . the drum beat in Lawrence, and sally ing out we encountered a party well armed, the long, dangling sword of . their leader gleaming In the cola moonbeams., The war spirit was up_ The people here are most: peaceable. but as they look for Gov. Shannon and some 2,000 or 3,000 . Missourians to morrow or next day, you may est:tont) the sentiment that prevails- A -taiet ing will be held at daylight. LAWRENCE, N0v.27, 1855--Noim I wrote by the mail this morning at daylight and gave you an account of the. murder committed at Hickory Point last week, and the rescue made last night, of Mr. Branson who had been taken in a very irregular Manner 14 one Joues, Sheriff elect of the Shawnes Legislature for this county, but who at present is Postmaster at Westport A meeting was called Here tk Mil I= = ME ' NO. '3l.