Vol XXXV -Whole I\o- 1845. Rates of Advertising. One square, 18 lines, 2 squares, 6 mos. $5.00 1 time 50 " 1 year 8.00 " 2 times 75 column, 3 mos. 6.00 3 " 1.00 " 6 " 10.00 " 1 mo. 1.25 " l year 15.00 " 3 " 2.50 1 column, 3 mos. 10.00 " 6 " 4.00 " 6 " 15.00 " 1 year 6.00 " 1 year 25.00 2 squares, 3 times 2.00 Notices before mar " 3 mos. 3.50 riages, &c. sl2. Communications recommending persons for office, must be paid in advance at the rate of 25 cents per square. CftoCce isjrtuacts- From the .Vet c York Tribune. LOVE ALL. Y C. D. STEW ART. Love all .' There is no living thing Which God has not created ; Love all! There is no living thing Which God has ever hated ; His love sustains the meanest life, Whate'er does live or perish— And man may not disdain to love What God has loved to cherish. Love all! For hate begetteth hate, And love through love inereaseth ; Love all! For hate shall faint and fall j While love like God ne'er ceaseth : Love is the law, the life supreme. The goal where all are tending ; The hate shall die, the strife shall cease, But love is never ending. The Better Choice* BY REV. I)R. CUMMING, LONDON. Never forget that if you set out to gain the world, it is but a chance, a peradven ture if you succeed. Nay. for one that succeeds, who does not know that nine fail ? But if you set out to seek the world, and let the world absorb your heart, and con centrate upon that world the best, your holiest affections, the certainty is that while you may lose the world you will lose your soul. Yet man, when he thu9 loses God and feels miserable, goes and joins him self to anything and everything that will promise to remove his misery and restore his lost happiness. The prodigal joined himself to a citizen of the strange coun try; so does the natural man join himself to trade, devoting to it every energy, or to pleasure, or ambition, or political duties, or he joins himself to gayety. to brilliant circles, shining fetes, great parties if per adventure amid this world's splendor, that he may extinguish every beam of light that leans to solemn inquiry. He joins himself to the strange citizen of a strange country. When a man loses God he does not cease to have a God. The prodigal had no sooner heft his father, than his grow ing sense of separation made him join himself to the citizen of a strange country. Man no sooner leaves God, than betakes something else in his room. There is no such animal as an atheist; evtin the brutes are not so; for in their ministry, and their instincts, they indicate a recognition of a superior to themselves. There are plenty of atheists—men opposed to the true God —but there is no such thing as a man with out a God ; if they leave the true God, they ! take the strange god in His stead. Man's ! soul was made to be a temple, and when it is not the lemple of the living God, it becomes the temple of an idol. Man's heart was made to be an altar, and Incense will rise from it either to Jehovah or to Jupiter; whosoever it be that absorbs all v >t do justice to the 117,000 yet proscribed YY'higs, he would i indeed belte all his 'solemn pledges.' New Series— Vol. 3—l\o. *3- i FROM CALIFORNIA. The steamer Falcon arrived at New Or leans from Chatrres on the 4th instant. ISlie brought $160,085 in specie and gold dust, fifty-three passengers, ami a large i mail. She made the passage from here to Chug-res in seven days, and remained there a week, during which time it rained inces j sandy. The Isthmus is generally healthy, I though at Chagres there was much sick ness. In an American population at that town of thirty-five, thirty were ill or just recovering from fever. The disease is of malignant intermittent character. The steamship Oregon left San Francis jco on the 2d of July and arrived at Panama on the 21st of lite same month.— On the 4th ult. at half past 12 o'clock A. M. she struck three times on a rock at Port Conception. The shock was very, ; great, and the vessel so much injured that she leaked during the whole passage. At the last accounts she was at Tobago Island repairing damages, and will not be ready | to resume her trips before the 20th inst. j She brought down about seventy passen gers, most of whom took passage on the Falcon for New Orleans and New Yoik. Capt. Crowningshield, 13. S. A., died of apoplexy on the passage, on board the Oregon. At Panama there were about five hun dred Americans awaiting transportation. One half of them were to leave on the 28th ult. on the barque Tasso to sail on the Ist inst., and the barque Ella Francis : to depart soon. From a gentleman who came a passen ger on the Falcon, and who is direct from I San Francisco, we learn the following in ! teresting particulars: The stories of Gen. Smith having to go | on board a vessel of war, in consequence j of a trouble with the residents, is all false. Gen. Smith wa9 well, universally respecf jed and very popular. He had moved his headquarters from San Francisco to Sono ra, which 19 about seventy miles from the former place. The health of San Francis ! co was good, and ihe inhabitants of the town much more orderly and quiet than could be anticipated. The gamblinghous e9 are all closed on Sundays, and the work I of all kinds suspended, although labor is worth $lO to sls per day. i Theie were four churches already built, j and another was expected soon to arrive ihere. There were about two thousand cloth tents about the town. The Ameri cans residing in the city were mostly highly respectable. Occasionally there | wa9 some slight difficulty between the Americans and the Malays. The market wa9 overstocked with goods—dry goods ; and clothing selling for leSs than in the | States. Houses and lumber were very high, and sold readily. A house that in ! the States cost S4OO, end was forty by twenty feet, would sell for 52500, and would cost S7OO to put it up. There ! were fifty or sixty cargoes of goods; re j maining unsold at San Francisco. Gold was plenty; large quantities of it were coming in every day. It was selling for sls per ounce cash, or sl6 in goods.— The quantity of gold was considered in exhaustible. There were no troops in San Francisco, and none were needed. It is announced that JOHN B. iVuLtER, of Ohio, has been superceded as commis sioner to run the Boundary June with Mex ico, by the appointment of the late Col. JOHN C. FREMONT to take charge of the Commission. Subsequent to Mr. Weller's appointment, an appropriation of $50,000 was made by Congress for the operation of the fiscal year, in adjusting this Bounda ry Line between the United Slates and Mexico, and Mr. Weller, it seems, drew upon the Department for more than $60,- 000 of ibis amount before he reached Pan ama, and had actually received more than $20,000. 1113 last drafts for ten or elev en thousand dollars were respectfully de clined by the Department, on ihe ground that no satisfactory account had been re ceived of the previous expenditure, and the Department did not choose to exhaust all the resources provided forthe year, before discovering some practical pplica fion of the means to the object contempla ted by the law; PLEASURES or A CALIFORNIA TRIP.—A correspondent of the JV. 1". writ ing from Chihuahua, under date of the 4 th May says : Since I started we have been near starving three times —once for pro. visions, and twice for water. Once wo were live days wilhout water nr.d once three ; we were six days without anything to eat except a few snakes and hawks which we found on the road and shot. Moreover, we have had two hard fights with the In dians—had two of our men killed and eight wopnded. My bed is made nightly on ihe ground ; that is, I sleep on one blan ket and c iver with another. I live on dried beef and venison, with coffee and bread of my own making. I work hard, drive mules, kill and butcher deer, physic the company, fight the Indians, and trade with the Mexicans for corn, fiour and beef. * * * My spirits are low and my hopes are flagging. Beware of little expenses; a small leak will sink a