its®*, JSplTOtt.:-:-1 bo p*RB*W,&C?P ill'll.; llbe &w'L'og r .qupition, .wbiqh ap r Jrt.jho jiit-t issmi of ypiir paper, has. [qifio ipe.'ihe idea ei'..pile ring to the *jil»rpygh the same., medium, sc.tuo _ . jf. tli@ subject which’p/ay pot be und v. hicl) nmy lend adjustrnonf, in a legal manner, .of the difficulties and injuries, so graphically in \he article alluded to. " y ( tff.iiy no means provable; (hot i|)o presept.legislatu ro cuu : be induced to en- a BilV us would bo requisite to flgoVf'fldequnte prot cctlon t 0 l| io lumber our ppunty. The, passage of u dcgcripUoi), haying for its end of Uie so-cajled rights o| the jggojjp&ers, vyould meet .tfctP. •PdS* atrenu f imposition pf what ,|iqs been lurcibly igjjytedihb Third House Assem , jOnd it is unfortunately for the credit /qf t Ottr State, but too notorious* that a well, organized and well-paid mnjo r ‘ i y of the 7«iid .Third Hoyse, can prevent tho pas eage ofuny Bill which may bp.brought be fore the legijipiate branches of jbo by.v> ftwkiog pbwer. i LitiJe hope of » lion.of our rights, or of redress for our iivwngs, from any such source, can bo roa-, flpjjably .indulged. •nAflOther method which has boenattempt- Jld*.flOJ>template6 the arrest of those enga ged ip the.business of floating loose logs, the.ground of their being perpetrators £lf ,'ft .common nuisance. As this phase of the subject will no doubt bo submitted d&Jhfe decision of tlio proper tribunal, I jsMlnqt'vehtu’ro, to express an opipion up 4)ndt, further than merely to udvert id the that no decision which maybe tprdQOuncedin a.case of nuisance, founded yipod. the floating of Jogsj can bo consider ed a? n termipation of the difficulty. Each taonvictioQ would meet only' the cirdum i Ataddes of the particular oasaon trial, and! dh# parties engaged in 'the traffics might ea ■mjy <£uke such' arrangementii as would enaiHe them to avoid tho risk ofconviCtion jliftder the precedents, while carrying on offensivepursuit as* briskly as before. Ifdnsji be doubled, too, from what has oT ■rtedy Occurred, whether this mode of re dress might not bo rendered ineffectual, •by r Uwr’tiplbvdrabte disposition of certain ofahepublic officers. «! "JlJie dbject of this cdmmnhication is to to the notico of thoso interested, tho *wo*ial«oi«f the act of Assembly of 1912 in regferd-to lumber found floating in the SdstjUßtatnin apd its branches ; and to of ffer Some reasons for believing that under bMuNtCtya complete and perfect remedy for the evils under which our trading pop- SHion now suffers, is afforded. Ido not ppOW,that the expediency of acting uri cdsr thia' law has not been presented fro tjtftotly, to tho miads of those affected by •thMpjOTilsy but So far as I ani informed, Sit {fruiftirefl to determine the question in iSifltode, have ever been taken. An ex ndfpiQOtiOn' of the law, and of'the decisions .Upon it, will show that its provisions are -jwffidenily extensive and well-defined, to lAlbtetfibse concerned to give a final blow bf the floaters, ‘ • s '* r TßS»acrflfiei2 gives to any or! vpergons, the r igjfit' to „lnkp up **afiylogs, *shingle-bolts, boards or lumber of 'wy liind, 'which dtay jfcip? been, or may 'os put pilQ tlie tiyer 'Susquehanna, or ei- • thtrdf its'branches.'' ' ,;*Tbis authority fs to,be exercised under ,/hefpl|owing conditions : Tho person so ft up, sfialjwithin thirty days tliero rJP%i>°dgea list of the lumber so taken! ,HRby.hjm. describing the number,quality. the lumber, with the marks imatlie same,. with the nearest justice of ffwptaee, .who is therefore required.to en ter the said list upon his docket, and to -‘isniMst 'cbpy.tif it to be published for three in a weekly pnpor of the county I ijWbercin such lumber wus taken up; and if within three months after such publcin iJipOVthelumber so described slinll not bo tyapiaimed by the owner, or same person by him, it slmll- become forfeit to, and the property of, tho person who ojwmtdken it up. f; the .owner of sail lumber shall desire ‘!to reclaim It, bo shall, before regaining thereof, pay to the person who ■Wayhave taken it uo, the sum of six cents cior every fog, one cent for every shingle tolt, -provided the number so taken up •utou exceed fifty, the sum of fifteen cts. every hundred feet of boards, as also .ItbCtasts of advertising the same, and the Kite#* 16 be filmrged by the justice ; upon •ijftjlllipllatice with the terms, it is made the iho person who has taken up the '•'tCntber to re-deliver it to the proper ow •ilpeil. - ■ - - ■ -v. aro provisions contained in ‘itHfiJthk and second sections of the act of I8l2; : Tiio third section enacts certain pCnftltibifbgajhst' thoso who shall take up ■' lumber, without pursuing tho directions of ‘-the'pfecedin^-sections. ‘■ -This Statute has never been repealed. • vThe'Charters'of the several Boom compa nies do not, explicitly, or by Implication, •interfere 'with it. The supposition- that ‘ |b6V do limit its operation ; can only arise from* aft inference, for there- is no'word or phrase in-ahy of those acts ‘ which can >; ‘hto the argument, tnnt they ?$?• Aqd the-inference ?“•* fail, for there is no rule C l earl y >culed, than that which powers of corporations, strict am tefms qf tjie statute coaling r-leaviog.out of sight what u r p term, of corporations, which can jS9 ?!*'« Present ques-1 I)®accorded. to the Bupm] 9.K XPry.puture, ifjeh-'. tojM.iW l Ml 8 T.'ChJs conferred upon nlj fljSJfPft? W;*W i§l2,with; thp ox- thatdor the purpose'qf facilitating —v lo companies are nllow . apd mairitajn,piprs, and boptp 9 - ““tegpjwjlifi insthpir.purr fi.tld-.th9 nets of in-. corpon»iiQn,9f t|tese. companies, are ,c<)n» df Bimilar effect, both being Heating in the liver is in dungerof dest ruc tion, und-tliui it is expedient to it .from risk. K . ivj ■ 1 I an impression prevails, ! that I lie'•charters of/theso compf(nies,;im*’ ipai.r.tlib authority 19 take op lumber, yust ,ed’‘by tho uut of 1812, but l believe such an impression tq be founded upon un erro neous construction of the law. To enter inio uii elaborate discussion of this point woujii: occupy'top rnu6h;,qf [ yppr g|iace, uml 1 shall udduco but one laci, ip support of tlio positionT have assumed. | In a caso reported in th 6 4th voluqje of VVatt’s Report, jt was decided.: That lum ber, whieli had gone udrift, anil lodged up on tifl island in thb'Susquehunna river, was not subject to the provisions of iho act of 18*12; iliut act being hold only to apply to luinbor taken up' while floating in the river. But by an act passed so late as April 20,1853, it is provided, that lumber lodging upon ,un island in ihe Susquona.n ha\mdy lie taken up in the same mannerj and upder tho same terrps as it directed by the act of tho 20ilV March, 1812, to which the act of 1853 is declared to be a supple, meat. Here, then, is a legislative enact ment, subsequent to tho' incorporation of | the Boom companies, which established | tho fact,—-not perhaps by express words, but by an inference >vhicf> must bo dqem-l led cunclusivo—tliut the act oflBl2 is re- J garded, by tho body winch passed it, ns, still in full life, force, uud vigor. j I Now, Mr. fcjditor, if tho pf this j (.county; iptere§te having; losteVorboata lifdutv .Mathews-andfoiirteen of her crew in a ' typhbon.^n^hirilhe-Bonin islands,' - ,v '""''•) '') ‘ i i i' : ! Vo Fob., After all that has been said by'the cori respondents of tho northern papers to the ■< contrary, the Gadsden treaty with Mexico wad submitted to tho Sennto yesterday"-i- r Where its truo character shall bo made known, it will bo found to be, as I bofore ' stated to you, highly advantageous to our country-—not only because itadds largely to our present boundaries; many privileges which wo could not well do without, but because wo thus setdo a dispute with Mexico which might others wiso lead to another war with that cOut>.' try—and, although a war might bring more territory—indeed might leave noth--- ing of Mexico in tho end;—erery body knows that a war would cost perhaps . times (lie price stipulated in thisi treaty.*!,’ And besides, we assert all the evils ttatt.. war necessarily engenders to a nation,-.: Its fate in the Senate, however* is unccti | tain. There is a powerful interest agttiitit i(s' , confinnation in all parts of the |and[ not the least powerful and influentuff is that class who think we aro paying tog much for what will come under the shad ow of our eagle’s wings in tho course of* [very few years on the progressive princ£ pie of the age, and thut then for tho polioy of “masterly inactivity” is the wisest couratt: for our country to pursue. There can bi no question, however, that the President and cabinet have acted wisely in submit ting it to the consideration of the Senate.' Tho discussion still continues in thd Senate on the'Nebraska and Kauzns bilk Both the Ohio abolition Senators have made ihcir speeches against ft, as have ah so Everett of Massachusetts, and Smith of Connecticut, in reply to Dixon (Whig) of Kentucky. Gen. Cas3 will reply to Ev< erett, and then perhaps tho country will heur from Sumner, the great aboliliooia from Massachusetts, who, by the way, is a man who has but few superiors in our country. After that, Seward of New York and several others will address the Sen. utc, (or rather the oountry, for these spee. ches are made to be -read, rather than to heard) when Doug)as3 will close the de- < bate in one of his best efforts, and thenlt will pass the Senate by at least three to one. It will also pass the House bv a de* cided vote, and at perhaps an early day, for members of Congress are just about as well surfeited wirh the State arguments of abolitionists as the people are. Tho moot, lings held in tho northern cities, and the i remonstrances sent here against the pas sage of this measure, are nothiug like as formidable as the demonstrations made against the adoption of the peace mea se res in 1850. ..They shown weakness ieven for.abolitionism ; and as for their showing the true feeling of the great non** of the northern people, it is all gammon, The freemen of the north are loyal to the Constitution, and only ask thut its provis ions may not bo departed from. In the House, on Thursday, the defi ciency bill wns accidentally laid on the table—accidentally, because the mam bees had practised the log-rolling system until ] they had erected a monster of such largo 1 dimensions that each political party was ashamed of it, and when it came up for final passage it was voted down, and then a motion to reconsider, it was laid upon the table. It embraced many meritorious items, for the wantof some of which much public inconvenience and individual suf fering is endured. ButJhen,again, there were lurge sums appropriated for the I building of custom houses, &c., by various citizens, which more properly belong to the regular appropriation bill. The legit imate end of the deficiency dull will no doubt be effected without much longer delay. Theater-visiting people at Washington have been richly entertained the past week by the great American tragedian,,Edwin Forrest, who has been performing at the National in some of his favorite charac ters. This is one of the largest theatres in tho country, and it is crowded to ex cess every night. Mr. Forrest is certain ly at the very head qf his profession; and is idolized hy tho common people—by whom aro meant ail except the aristocrat cy. As often as he appears jtpon the 6tage, this partiality is exhibited; Much of this is doubtless attributable to the ef fort made a few years ago'by his enemies • to drivo him from the stage, by lauding an English rival of scarcely half pis' real mer its, - which hud n directly contrary effect, us it created a deep national feeling in his favor. But on, or off tho staged Forrest is a fair specimen of a true American fc, publican, and wherever you find a man possessing his personal acquaintances—l sjieuk df tiie industrial class—you find a ipan' ready to throw off his coat and /oil up his sleoycs fprlhegreat American actor, ' Your readers have often heard of tho profligacy and debauchery—ihedisregard of public and private morals practised at this metropol is, Thele is no doubt a gteat ttbuhdahcC'bf all aorta of vice 'practised here; but there is one thing certain; and that is; that the police regulation's are of the stricteat kind, and are os'strictly en forced as they are in any other city ; and if vice' does abbund, it is well hid fromthe public and the civil authorities. Drunken’ ness, however; cannot be hid, and is prac tised here to on alarming extent. ' Many of the brighest intellects of our cot/ntry have gone down to : a drunkdrd> grave here, ; that.’ might : have beoiV 'saved else where; and at this timbtherOare numer ous instances of men of capacity of tho best order fdr usefulness to the country fast travelling in the same direction.' B was only thid week 'thdt'tweiheh of thi* Character, one of whom is a Pennsylvani an, Ond at one fimo'held 'oiieiof the most hoiiaraWe sibilohs - j of talents of the very first order— bpevfecU gentleman in .every sense—vrai • to hands by the aent [ to the workhouse as common Such facts sfieak volumes tWs leg alization ofthe traflje tbiS ; destroying monateV/l&'oAa/, ■ -v.-.iM'.vjaf: