ONE MLLAR PER ANN'JM, INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. likiiiforii ilcjjortcr. K. (>. GOODRICH, EDITOR. TOW A N D.A. : SatnrDan ftlarninn, 3iuu 21, ISolj. i!eirn of Terror in Kansas! We make some extracts below to show the ■omlition of Kansas under the rule of the pre .mini •" law and order" men, who are murder lu r inoffensive citizens, burning houses, steal - ~_r cattle and committing depredations " by nithority " of the territorial laws. The first article is from the fYorth American, i Philadelphia paper, of decidedly conservative H-arings. which has not sympathized with the riends of Freedom, but which is now awakeu :il and alarmed at the dangerous inroads of - iverv upon our free institutions, and at the iionstrous outrages perpetrated upon the Free Settlers in Kansas. [Ui 'ira tin- Nin th American of the fith June.] FIS'M KANSAS. —We have conversed with Mr. statements we are satisfied that the litters of the newspaper correspondents, so far in exaggerating the troubles, scarcely do •; in justice. All the roads leading from the Missouri border to the principal towns of the MTitory. arc covered by roving bands, clothed u:th the authority ot the national government, •a jo allow no Free State man to pass. They k? arrests without cause, and without war • They search whom they choose, break -:i private letters and trunks, and it is now -t impossible for any supplies or comniu .ss'iis to reach the Free State men by anv : tlie regular means. Resistance to these .maulers is immediately heralded to every • of the Union as insurrection against the - and authority of the nation Even the mkt affray is thus magnified. The Free -Miemen have from the first lieen loth to op : 'iy one chit bed with national authority. ' •-e roving bands rob them, cut off their -■■■>- and communications, steal their horses i'-attle, and do not hesitate to commit mur is assaults without provocation, i' frequently asked why the Free State uo not retaliate. We have already given .'of i rca-oii. Another is that the ontra never committed when there is the . test chance of an even conflict. The as i .Mr. Sumner is a faithful type of all ■ iragroiis deeds of the pro-slavery men in N -us A lieu one or two Frec-soilers are -lit by a band of tLoir opponents, or when :m be taken unawares, or when a solita ry farmer can be found afar from help, then Mi-ourians are terrible fellows. This is xphmation of their success. Lawrence was known by them to lie in an utterly lenoolos ' ondition, for the want of supplies, 'arrest or absence of leaders, and other ■ auics. The roving bands lose no opportuni st driving (lie Free State men from tlieir r: \wlicntlicvcando so without peri! to | ''Reives Hut tlicy will only attack solitary "-MIS. and when there is a danger of help i sin .moiH'd to resist them, tlicv are quite Mr Jolui S. Howen, of West Chester, a i'-p| i table and intelligent gentleman, j '■rings the latest accounts from the terri fy. represent- its condition as truly deplora- Tk'audacity and recklessness of thebor • ' ruffians have increased to such an extent as oi'pail the settlers in a continual ferment -anxiety. They now deem it fatal to lose -"it of their arms. 'br readers complete as it is possible for it 31 "• -\o opportunity of arresting orin - Irc(->tate man i< neglected, either in 3 or Kansas. Unless help of some kind T" iiiy extended to the sufferers, it is , • r, 'i that the control of the Territory ■ "j"-u—ly abandoned to the despera i y Shannon, Atchison and Hufnrd. ' 1 States authority there is now open- I- hi the outrages. The leaders are all t with it whenever they undertake to " 3 !c an enormity. M ""lements in the Territory extend " "lav-live miles beyond the Missouri h i< only those nearest the latter "!• visited In* the mobs. The others, suffer from the cutting off of their Mr I.owry says that there arc not '"iglit hundred bona fide pro-slavery Ihe Free-State party outnumber "" '-'rcatly that no one pretends to doubt "lien! pre|)ouderaiicc. Notwithstand ' troubles heretofore, the population 3 o increase up to the commencement • ' t and worst interference. That has and threatens to put an end to all ;' "th. A number of the southern r "d' eribed as very worthy persons, • " tt.'d on laud and gone to work to I hit the rnassof them appear to - 1 l ii without means, who, on arriving V or >'. were destitute, and had to be r ,/ '"Mlibations from their friends. .. ' I' 0 *''-"g slaves, they arc not able ; ;! by the Free-State men on their , ifir workshops. Others subsist r they obtain on the roads, in the i and " picket guards.'' Were it c, " | l! "' "hole body would undoubted !'" fwe of circumstances, mciu ' " s tate party, a number " 3 -' "lone already. '" "''w.-pajH-rs have censured - idly do they rise ; hence it is, that in the most miasmatic regions of tiie tropics, the traveler can with safety pursue his journey ut midday, but to do so in the cool of the evening, or morning, or midnight, would be certain death. Hence, also, the popular but too sweeping dread of "night air." To apply this scientific tiuth to practical life in reference to the cel lars under our dwellings, is the object of this article. The ceilings of cellars should be well plas tered, in order most effectually to prevent the ascent of dampness and noisome odors through the joints of the flooring. The bottom of the cellar should be well pav ed with stone, cobble stones are jairhaps best ; over this should be poured, to the extent of several inches in thickness, water lime cement, or such other material as is known to acquire in time almost the hardness of stone ; this keeps out the dampness of the earth below. If additional dryness is desired for special purposes, in parts of the cellar, let common scantling be laid down, at convenient distan ces, and loose boards be laid across tliern for convenience of removal and sweeping under, when cleaning time of the year comes. The walls should be plastered, in order to prevent the dust from settling on the innume rable projections of a common stone wall. Shelves should be arranged in the centre of the cellar, not in the corners, or against the walls ; these shelves should be hung from the ceiling by wooden arms, attached firmly be fore plastering ; thus you make all safe from rats. To those who are so fortunate as to own the house in which they live, we recommend the month of June, but to renters, the great mov ing month of May, in New York, at least, as the most appropriate time for the following recommendations : Let every tiling not absolutely nailed fast be removed into the yard, and exposed to the sun, and if yon please, remain for a week or two, so as to afford opportunity for a thorough drying. Let the walls and floors be swept thorough ly, on four or five different days, and letaeoat of good whitewashing be laid on. These things should be done onee a year, and one day in the week at least, except in midwinter, every opening in the cellar, for se veral hours, about noon, should be thrown wide, so as to allow as complete a ventilation as possible. Scientific men have forced on the common mind, by slow degrees, the importance of a daily ventilation of our sleeping apart ments, so now none but the careless or most obtuse neglect it ; but few think of ventilat ing their cellars, it is apparent that the noi some dampness is constantly rising upwards and pervading the whole dwelling. Fmanatians from cellars do not kill in a night; if they did, universal attention would be forced to their proper management, but it is certain, from the very nature of things, that unclean, damp and mouldy cellars, with their sepulchral fumes, do undermine the health of multidudes of families, and send many of their members to an untimely grave. CIIAUACTEKISTICS OF A FRKXCII IJAPY.—THE French lady's characteristics are generally that she is unexceptionably shod—that she wears inimitable gloves—that she has a toilet of two colors only, with a distracting way of wearing a shawl—that her manners arc bewitching, full of small graces and delicately shaped coquet ries, but never wanting in the nicest apprecia tion of external propriety, to which her flirta tions are always subordinate—that she has a marvelous facility of walking unsoilcd through the dirty streets of Paris, and as marvelous a knack of holding up her skirts with one hand over her left hip ; and that she has a super natural preservation of youth, and a bewilder ing habit of mistaking her friend's husband for her ou n. ftir "A man discovered America, but a woman equipped the voyage." So everywhere; man executes the performances, but woman trains the man. Every effectual person, leav ing his mark on the world, is but another Co lumbus, for whose furnishing some Isabella, in the form of his mother, or his wife, lays down her jewels, her vanities and her comfort. Let you be ever so pure, yon cannot associate with bad companions without falling into bad odor. Evil company is like tobacco smoke—you cannot be long in its presence with out carrying away a taint of it. BsJ?" \\ c cannot always judge of a man's feelings by his outward appearance ; his con science may torture hint like a burning coal within, while his outside is as smooth as polish ed ivorv VOL. XVII. NO. I. The Dykes of Holland. r l lie dykes, at first strike the beholder as no extraordinary work ; and it is not until we find that a considerable part of the country of Holland lies some twenty-four feet lietieath the level of the sea at high tide, and that it has merely a fence of mud banks to fortify the land against the terrors of invasion from the host of waters about it, that the mind becomes awakened to the vastness and importance of the structures. Nor is it in summer time, when the surrounding rivers are half dried up' and the ocean without is placid and beautiful as some vast lake, that we ore able to arrive at a sense of the protection afforded by the belt of sea-walls to the people within them : but only during the tempests of winter, when the terrible wates are towering to the skv, like liquid mountains, and the tide has risen many feet above its usual height, owing to the immense body of water from the Atlantic hav ing been driven by the gales across the Ger man ocean towards the narrow straits of Do ver, and there being dammed up as it were, so that the vut flood is forced back upon the Dutch coast, and leans all its stupendous weight against the ridge of dykes around the Neth er-country. It is at such times, indeed, that we learn how much property and how rnanv lives depend upon the strength of these same oeean bulwarks. It is fearfully interesting then to walk at the foot of one "of the great dykes, and to hear the heavy waves beating like so many battering-rams against the outer side of the mud-wall, and to know by the noise that the ocean is already some twenty feet above the head. The dykes are sometimes forty feet high, and the foundation, which is generally of clay—if not entirely, at least, on the outside ; and the interior is filled with a mixture of earth, clay and sand. The face of the dyke is thatched, as it were, with willow twigs, interlaced into a kind of wicker-work, the intersections of which arc filled with pud dled clay. The wicker-work lasts but a few years : so that as it requires to be repeatedly renewed, a number of willows have to be grow n in Holland for the purpose. The base of the dyke is generally protected by masonry, and strengthened by large heaps of stones, and rows of piles ; while the sum mit is mostly planted with trees, because their roots are found to bind the soil firmly togeth er.—3ly the I clerk. The man advanced to the judge's desk and said : "Judge, I should like to he excused." "It is impossible," said the Judge dccided- Iv. " Hut, Judge, if you knew my reasons." " Well, sir, what are they ?" " Why the fact is," —and the man paused. " Well sir, proceed," continued the judge. " Well judge, if I must say it, I have got the itch." The judge, who was a very sober man, sol emnly and impressively exclaimed, " Clerk scraicJi that man out !" " Never go to bed," said a father to his son, " without knowing something you did not know in the morning." " Yes, sir," replied the youth, " I went to bed slewed last night—didn't dreaiu of such a thing in the morning." " Father,', said a cobbler's lad, as he was pegging away at on old shoe, "they say that trout bite good now." "Well, well," re plied the old gentleman, "you stick to your work, and they trout bite you !" Jgy A man with small intellect and large self-esteem is a bore to society. "While he with large intellect and small self-esteem is fearful of being one. $-27" because a man is silent it does not ne cessarily follow that lie thinks a great deal—• lie may have no thoughts to express, and is therefore silent from nccossitv.