1 El , F , CJ AI4LES F. READ H. FRAZIER, ADITORS: , , r. II oets' MIR • A CCONTE4ST. , • " • 'We have; rarely read,lsays late English writer, • e 7 anything more simple and touching than,,the follow ing contrasted poems: ; LOrs.! - . When woman's eye grows dull, [And her cheek Oirleth, When fades the beairtiful,' • ;Then man's - love farleth 4He sits not beside her chair, • Clasps riot her, fingers; Twiata not the , damp hair • . .4:, F Thitt 'o'er her brow lingers. • lie comes but a moment, in, i Though her eye bghte.ns, • 'Though her.cheek,lale and thin, ' • 1 Feveri,firly brightens • ; He stays but a moment near,, When that flush fadeth,„ Though true affection's tear • Her soft eyelid sliadeth.• Me goes from her chambertihnight -;• : Into life's j_ostle-:.• € ,- • Ile meets at the very gate - • ; . Business and butte., thinki not of hei ithin, - Silently ge forgets in that riolsy din That site is dying! in. And when her heart is still, •", • ••1 Whit though he mourneth, Soon from his sorrow- 1 a chill Wearied he sturneth,;- 1 , Boon o'er her buried head . = ' Memory's light setteth, • !And the true-heartCd dead, Thits man fc!rget•tedit. • • ,WOmAN s LoVE. • Nihau man is waxing frail, ' . Mid his hind is thin and weak, ! . And his lips are parched and pale( f. And wan and white his cheek,' ;„ toh, then doth . wonian prove .iller constancy and l love t t• • Slic sitteth by his chair ' And holds his feeble hand; She watches e,yer there; • His wants to understand; His yet unspoken will IShe hastened" to flail, • t • • o She leads him, when the noon t Is bright o'er dale and hill, ' And all things, save the tune -Of the honey-2 es,'•are still, ; Into the garden'i beers, To sit mid.herbs atitl-flOs4rs. And when he goei not there, To feed on 'breath and bloom, She brings the flo* ers rani' • Into his darkened room C f And 'neath his Weary head , The pillow smooth, loth spread. • „ ' 1, Until thehour -when death t His lamp of life ',ion" dim, I She never wearieth, • Site never 'eaven" him ; 'till near him, night and day,- • She mecteth his eye alwav And when his •'trial's o'er; f And the turf is on his breast, Deep in her bosoin'i core r - Dic sotrirws,i.thexpreased;" !i Bei fear i' her siihs are weak, lier settled . 4, , rief f. 4.), speak. ~1 • ; C . .t.rid though there, may arise , • - for her sr4rit's pain : And though her quiet eyes , . May &otuttimel smile again— ; Still, 5ti11 . ..41e mmit "regret ; She.never can forget ■ "Ales aril •; •• , . • , Fros Reedladle'', of Ta4le talk of Samuel ?ogcra •• 'WITTY AND. AMUSING ANECDOTES..' 1 . -WELLINGTON. ' Skeaking to me orßonapar.te,,the Duke of Wellipgtou remarked that in oneirespect he . was superior to all, the Generals who-had ev er existed. "'Was it,"? . l asked, 'in the man. agement and arrangement of,ti's `-,,,trocipsr answ,red the Duke, lit was , in ms power of concentrating such vast mas . ses!'pf men—a Most important p?int . In the art of war.' - hare found,' said, the Duke\ that raw tr4ps, however inferiOr to the old . troops in- Inahce,uvring, are fatf superior to them in doi'mright hard fighting with the 4 enerny.. ,At!Waterloo: the 'young ensigns aid lieuten. ah#3, who had never before seen a battle,insh ' ed to meet death as if they had been playing at. Cricket. The Duke 'thinks very highly of Napier's lih.;tory ; •its only full., lie says, is that_ Nay l ! pier is sometimes apt to convince himself that a thing must be true, because he wishes to believe it. Of Southey's History he merely said: \'l don't think much of it.' • • • tOt the Duke's perfect coolness on the most thing occasions; Colonel Giarwood gave me -this instance : He was in great 'danger of b'eing drowned at sea.- It was bed-time when the captain of the, tressel came to-him, and said : -, It Will soon:be all otter with, us.':+-• t Very well,' answered the bute,‘thed-I 'will. oPt take off ny boc6.' li -4 STD Er-SMITH.' • • He said that—`t-vvas so fond of oontradic tjon that-he 'would ;throw up tbie window in the middle of the night and contradict the Watchmen who was Calling the hom - e • . When hi phystelan advised hirn x. 'to ' take a walk upon an empty stomach,' Smith ask •ed, 'Upon whose'? - ' Lady Cork,' , said Smith,l l -• was once, so Moved ; by a chariti f sermon, that She begged fne to lend her a - guinea for her contribution. I did's*. She never' repaid me, and spent it On herself.' !: . - . He said that 'his idea of heaven was eat , • tug foie gras to the sound of trumpeta.' j 4 1 had a vO,l odd dream last night,' said Ile ;'‘ I drited that there were thirty-nine !twat and nine! Articles; and my hea d; is still .. quit confused abqut them.' . . = 1 • . lERSKINE. : ' err Lord Erakine heard that somebody had worth tWO hundred` thousand pounds, f• ' he a r ed.: .' Well, that's a pretty sum to , 1 been e next world with.' ' :: ' Atiend of mine,' said Erskine, ' rude suf ferinMs a continual wakefulness, and y.a- T rious ethods sere tried •to send hint to sleep tin vainil At last his'physieian re soan experiment, which , succeeded ,- Perf ; they 4resseci him in a watchman's coat,' a lantern into his hand, placed ini In a -box, arid, he-was ksleep in tenmin uttut.' f ' • ' - - ~' To etters soliciting his ' subscription ' to .au g, Enikine had a regular form of . I.teP ,tr, • ' Sir, F feel much honored by i .Pur ication to me, Mid I beg to subscribe' rtel y ... . .- - t , 7 L I . ' 1 • - . . • • . .. . -..-- •-.l9wk----- . , ~.... - , ..--.:-- . .-:• , -- 4i - 5 : - .. - - - .'.. - -= ' - ` l- . .;: - "Zi-..;••••:.' -- :- • .LT ---- ft - -;•17;....- - ,.. - •' '.''''- i`-'' - l-L'; - , • , - . • -..,',?,-.. .- - .- -. , - - •.. L ~.. , _• 1.: • ' - „.."4 '..' -,' - :..k_ -. ": .4: i' .:' ' . , LA. _ : :, '.,', - - . . . , . . . ~( 1., .) . 4 ~..., ..... ,,.....,.:...,,.. : .. ,t, ~.i. ..: .. .. • ... _ • . • lA''. ~ . 4,- ... i. -- .......:: . " • • ...... , . t , i . , • ..- . . ' .. .. . it _", . ~ ~ j ir i •. / 1 :. CZ. L • • . . . ~_ . . . .- • . . ~ • ' ; : - _ . •.- . i • . ~_ , . _ _ . • . . , , 1 OM here the reader -hid to turn over the leaf \-- 1 . myself your very- obedient serrt,' &e.' Erskine used to say that when the hour came that all secrets should be revealed, we shOuld ,know the re,ason, Why—shoes are al ways Made too tight. , When-le had a house at Hampstead, he entertained the' very hest pompany. i have dined there with the PrinCe of Wales—the only time 1 ever had `,,arty conversation with his Royal Highness. On that occasion,, the I. Prince: was very agreeable =aid 'familiar.— Among other anecdotes, which he told us of Lord Thurlow, 1 remember these two. The first v.as - Thurlow Once said to the .Prince, 'Sir; your father Wilt 4Sontititte to be a popu- • lar king as lung as he continues to go to church_ every Sunday, and to be &Wifel to that.ugly woman, your mother ; but you, sir,- will never be popular.' l The other was this :I', While his servants were carrying:Thurlow up stairs to his bedroom, lust before his dea; 1 they happened to let his legs strike against. the bannisters, upon' which he uttered the last ivords he ever spoke—A frightful imprecation 'on All their souls.' Er l skine said that thei Prince of Wales was quite a cosmegany man,' (alluding to the Vicar of Wakefield,) 'for he had only two classiCal quotations—one from Homer 'and one from Virgil, which he never failed to sport when there was any 6pportunity for introdu cing them. • Latterly, Erskine was very poor;. and no, wor,der, for he always contrived to sell out ot the funds when they were very low, and to buy in when tin were very high. By Iheaven,' he would say,L I am a perfect kite, all paper.; the boys might fly me. • •Yet poor ' as he was, he kept the, hest society ; 1 have met him at the Duke a York's, &c. • _ Fox,'(in his. earlier. days, I mean,) Fitipatriek, led such a life! lord Tanlerville assured me that he has played cards with Fizpatrick at Brooks's from ten o'clix,As at night till nearly six o'clock the next afternoon, a waiter standing by to tell.them whose deal it was,' they. being too= sleepy to know,. Oil ■ Ini ME 1 I FOX. . . . . . After losing large sums- at hazard; Fox would go. home. 7 -not •to destroy birnAelf as his friends -sOmetinies., feared, hut—to, sit down quietly and read Greek.. . . . :ne once won-about eight thousand. pounds, and one off' his bond-creditor., who soon heard , . of his good inek, Presented himself, and ask: ed for pAyment_ qinpossilile, sir,' replied Fox; `l , lnnst first diselisrge my debts of hon or,' The b pd-ereditohretnonstrated. 'AVell, sii.give..fnyour bond.' - It was delivered t, F. x; whO ore it in pieces and threw' theth in lb ! fire.: : : ‘iNo.W, sir, .said Istix,.‘ my:debt to you i's . a . det of honer," anditninediately paid .him.. i ~,- 1 saw Ltinardi - - . nialse the first asern A . •A ballo'oti which had been witnessed in F.4land: Ii Was from tiie Arti4ry ground.. Fix wa.;• there ivith his brinher,•Gen.,F. The'srord teas immense. F'tii.‘,happenipg toi put Otis hand'down to his watxh, found another' hand • upon. it„Whit:h .iaMediately seized: friend,' . said be .to the, owner of-the . sti:mge hand, you 'have chosen an (lecupation . - whieh , ,Will 'be- your . i ton at- •` Oh, Mr. Erx, Was the :reply, ‘. forgi'veine; and let me go!-- I have been driven to,:this . conrse by neee , si.. ty alone; mv. wife at d ; children are starviwr it home.' Fox, alWays tender hearted, , slily lied a guinea into the hand; and then relea,:t.d' it. On the coneldsfOnOf the show, Ita . was proceeding to . kok . *hat O'ci'ciek it was.—' Good_ God,' . cried, he; my watch; is gime !; Yes,',. answered Geoi 'I know it is; saw your friend take:ii. him take it!, ;and you made no. attempt: to stop him I'-- `' ;‘ Really, you with to be , on such good terms with edeb" other, that. .I did not choose to interfere.' Ile'permitted—raty,wished—his daughters to go to evening parties ;- but insisted that One, of them shimldlilways remain at home, to .give her.assistan* if needed, by rubbing him, &c:, in case of as attack of the rheumat ic pains, to which Was subject. This,' he said,`taught qiirmaitural affection.' • . Vernon was the ' terson who invented - the story about the 1ad...- - "ei l ng pulverited, in ;In dia by a coup de ~, lea. i When he was din-; • ing there witha . : - .71 dob, one of his h 9s e s wives was 'sudde 'I. educed Lo ashes; , upon which . the 'Hindoo rg 4 bell, and'said to the ~ attendant who answ) erect it : ‘Bring fresh 'glasses, and sweep' your mistress.' Another of his stories; was.this ; He hap pened .to be shooting hyenas near Carthage, when he-sturnbled:Snd fell down 1411 abyss 'of many fathoms depth. iHe was surprised, however, to find hiinself unhurt ; 'for he light ed as if on a feathr Nur:. . - .,Presently he per ceived that he was . ; gently, :moving upward; and, having by de'gres's reached the mouth of the abyss, he again4,tood safe on terra firma. He had fallen upctn su immense mass ofbats,- which, disturbgit , from" 'their slumbers, had risen out of the' aby ss and . brought 'him t t ip s with them. :,./. LAiornamiLp4sx.. ' There was something very charming 4 liainilton's opetlne.ss of manner. She showed toe the tieck:cioth' which: Nelson bad; on when he died ;lof course I effuld not ,heiri 1r It it withlextre- interest ; ana the looking a. •extreme _ 4hreV her-arms aronnd My neck and. kisied met She was latterly .in great wart, and Lord - Stowell never 'restA till he procured for her a small pension from government! LITERATURE Ili' AMERlCA.—liie.number of American publi4tions, original and reprint— e.d, issued' in 1.855 was 996 original and 322 reprintstotal, 1228: nevi editions, 93. These publications proceeded front 191 dif ferent publishers, of whom New 'York Ifur. nished 71, P,hiladelphia 29, and Boston 27. In. 1855 there were, 424 newspapers issued in the New Englimcl:States), 876 in the Middle States, 716 in the Southern States, and ;784 in the Western 'States. The aieragecireula tion of papers in this „country is about 1785, and there is one-publication for every .7,161 free inhabitants in the States and Territciries. There are iu the United States , 694 libraries, exclusive of those in thepublie 8600191 cos tairiing an liggregßlE of 2,261 4 632 ;vilumes. Of public school libratOes there are ° 9,6os, 'oomprising 1,552,332 vcifurnes. itgr A Convention to be held; this Spring to form a State GiOvernment for Utah. It is estimated that thw rin,pulation la . , Ow -100000. If Utah should apply for admiss ion, the next gisad exeitet4ent will be on the subject of Monnottisimv =OMB l'lF.Qi.gboa: . Amtp. 2atm4, aaa[i'4 IN P34.EY. AN ADVENTURE IN- THE vrpr, • About three or four years ago—more or less---I was practicing law in- Illinois, on a pr4ty large circuit. I was called on in my office one day in the town - of by a very pretty woman, who, not without tears; told me that her husband had been arrested for horse stealing. She wished to retain me 'on the defence. asked her why she -didn't go to Judge ,an ex-senator of the United States, whb'se office was it the' same town. Told her I was a young hand at the bar, &e. - 1 She mournfully said that lie asked a retain inglee beyond her means,- and besides' did • not want to touch the case; •ller husband was suspected of belonging to an extensive band of horse thieves' and' counterfeiters whose head quarters were on Moore's 'prai rie. I asked her to tell matter and if it was tri to such a gang. Ah, sir,' 'said she, ;r man at heart than my George ,never ; but .he liked cards and drink, and I ,y've made him do what he never woul .done if he had not drank. I'm afraid be proved that he had the horse, bpt •he didn't. steal it ; an other did and passed it to -him: didn't like - the ease. I; knew that there. was a great dislike to the gang 'located v.:here she nam‘d, aria feared to risk the case _before a jury:, She seemed to observe nay intention to' re fuse-the case, and burst into tears. I never' could see a woman weep without. feeling like a weak- fool myself. .If it hadn't been for eyes brightened With < pearly tears' —blast - the poet that tnade 'cm come in 1a.4 ion—l'd have never been caught in the'nooSe of matrimony. '..aVnd 7 my would-be client vas pretty. The handkerchief that hid her stream ing eyes, didn't hide her -red, ripe lips, and her snowy bosom rose and fell like a white gull in a gale of . Wind.at sea. . I couldn't stand it. - - I agreed .to take the case.- She gave me, all the particulars. The gang of -which he was:a member, had persuaded him to take the horse. He knew the horse Was 7 stolen, and, - like a fool, knowl t edged it when he was arrested. -Worse 1 -still—had trimn a the horse's tail and 'mane to alter: his appearance, and the prosecution could prove it. . The trial came on• worked hard to get •• a jury of ignorant men, who had more heart than brains, who,_ if they cOuld not fath,otf , the depths of an argument; to follow - Abe laba rynthine.tnitzes of the law ; could feet fyr :young fellow in a bad scrape,who hadtvt'veep ing, pretty wife. nearly broken-hearted and quite distressed. •• Knowing the-use of e,ffect, I told her to dress in deep mourning . , turd bring her little Cherub of it boy. curlv . ; headed, and only three years olkintree. , nrt, and to sit as near her ht,iband as the•offieers would let her. I tried that game once in a murder case, -and a weeping wife ill sister made :a, jury.. :render a Verdict against law, evidence, and • the jydge'S charge, and saved ttat ought to have brio Haman.. The prosecution opened very, bitterly, •veighed against the 'thieves and .counterfeit- ers who, had made the land aterror to strang er: and traveler', and hal robbed every far mer in the region of their finest horses.. It introduOeti witnesses who prOved all and cgore than I feared they .• The•tinte canoe for me tO rise for the de fense. . W ttne.sse—l had none! But I - was determined to make one effort, only hoping so to interest the judge and jury as to secure a universal' recoinmt-ndation to gubernatori al clemency and a light 'sentence. So I paint ed this picture. A young Arian entering into life;'.Wedd'ed"-, to an angel beautiful in person, p,Jssessing every Virtue, Overy gentle and .noble attri bute. . .Temptation was around, him. He kept a tavern.! Guests, there were many ;it was not 'for him to 'enquire into their basi nessi they .were•well-dressed, mane large bills, and paid promptly. At an unguarded hour, When he was insane:with liqudr which they had urged upon him, he had deviated from. the: path ofrectitude. He was :not himself at the time. The demon of alcohol reigned in his brain. And it was his.first offence.—. Mercy' pleaded for ' another chance: to save him froM ruin., justic;*. did •.not require a sacrifice. Nor did it require that his sweet wife should go dawn sorrowing to the grave, and that, the'shadow of' disease, or• the taunt of a fallen father should fall acrossthe sunny . .pathlay of that sleet O, how earn estly did I plead for them The woman wept = her 'husband did the 'same. The judge fidgetted.and rubbed his eyes—the jury look ed melting:. If I could have closed, he would have been cleared, , but the.:prosecution had cloSe, and threw ice on the pre I had kind led. But they did:not put it quite but. .The judge charged . according to law and evidence, but evidently leaned on the side cif merey' The ;jury . found a verdict of guilty, but unanimously commended the .prisoner to the clemency of the court: My - .client was • sentenced to the shortest imprisonment - the :court Was empowered to give, And both jury and court signed a petition to the governor for' an unecinditiOnal-'pardOn, which has since , been granted, but not before the :following incident occurred : . _Solite three months after this, I received an account fur collection from. a wholesale house' in New York. The parties to , colleCt from were ' hard ones,' 'gilt they had proper ty, and - before they had an idea 'ef the trap laid, Chad the property, whicly they were about assign before they broke, under at-' tachment,'. Finding mat u was neck ahead, and bound. to win, they caved, and paid. over: three thou seven hundred land ninety-tiros. dollar's and eighteen cents in current money. :They , lived:in Shawnee town, about twenty , five or thirty miles southeast-of ,Moor's prai • roe..; treceived the funds just after bank open , ing; hut other business detained me until -af ter dinner, I then started fOr intend ing to on as far as the village of Mount Vernbn.that night. . , I had . got along at a fair pace for ten or twelve miles, when l i noticed . a double Ulan), of splendid horses coming up behind me, at Cached to a light, wagon, it, which wereTseated four men, 'evidently of the high-strung order. They swept past me as if to Show how easy they contd. do it,. then shortened 112 and al -lowed me to cone up. They hailed me and asked me to' wet,' or in other words dimin• ish the contents of a jug of old rye-they had iii:4lrd; butt excused myself,9o. the plea `that . l - had plenty : aboard, They -asked me ilhosi far i was going ; I toldlficat 83 i • . . ATONTRQSE,:THURS ruth about the he did belong •-• . : Mount Vernon, if. my h! . ' didn't , lire.— They mentioned a plea-a , . Vern' ten or twelve miles ahead asa - nici 5 - opping _place,: and then drove on:. • . 1 - 1 - . ~ . I did not like the lee fellOws,nOr their- actions, bin l'' was bon to - go 'ahead. I . had a brace of revolvers; afliee Itnife,' , and my money was not in the .04selin my sulk. ey, but.,in a belt anion(' iny i tiody.. I drdve slow, in hopes they would g Oniandl should see' them no more: It was kat.' dArk when I saw :a tavern sign ahead.. At the Same time 1 Saw their wagon stood befqe _ l he..door. - I wOuld have passed on, but 'nn horie needed I rest.- I hauled up,' and awo an came to the dOor. She turned as pale as a eau A r ent when she saw me • she did not :is k, but' with .a rncaning look she . Rut her fiy . cr to her lips add beckoned me in. The 4onian - Was. the wife of My late client:. When I entered, the par htti.led me as an old tray asked me to drink.' I. respi 4' declined to do so.' 'By G 7 --d you shall drin the noisiest of the party. `,Just - as you please ;.. dri . (,purposely showing the but , kicks six times in rapid -sit sion. The :others interfered an y4y easily quel• led my opponent.. 'One o 04- me a cigar, which I would have-refuied lath, a glance of -entreaty froth the Woman i .gybed me to f ie. eept It. She advaneed to bilyr Me a light, but and in doing. so,.sllpped a 1 etnto my hand' :which she must have writ 4. in, pencil but the moment before.. Ne e ; ;.,iliall I forget the words; they were ! ' re, they, are members of the gang. i (mean to rob 11 , 314, and murder you! ! Leave •4on; I will try to detain them.' ! ! 1 I didn't feel cornfortabl ist - then, but tried ; to look so. ' - ' I I . • ' Have you robmto put asked the -woman. I • - . ' What, are you not gi asked one °fate men. '1 ' ' Nil, I shall stitV here.' ' We'll all stay,' I react] of it,,' siiiii- another: ' 4 You'll have, to put up sir• ' here's a lantern,' said 'l'm used to that,' said cuse/nie a moinent ; I'll when I come in.'. ! ! / 4 Good on your head ; . ~,. . gal V shouted they. . I - went out and glance , It was OldziaShiOlied neels. To cut with a from .the ore' and hind w, an instant.: Lthrew then darkness as I could: T& dash off'was.the work of I The road lay,dtiwn tern lighted , poj:.-463,33,0 I had alr•: • .. 0 0 , 1**Iway when, ,• 1, heardyelC Party left so un cereM A iorse.— - rue ` - "iitarted I;threw my lighi - liWay, andlet my horse to pick`his way. A roomntl later I heard a crash--a horrible shriek.l lbe. wheels were off. Then came the ruht ofthe horses, tear ing along after me with the lcreek of a vag 7 . on. -Fitollvthey_seemedl4,,feath uP in the woods One or *WO' Artek:s I heard, ssweptng- .16 m h . -tar behind, ; For ; some time .I hurried my'.laiirse—you:. bitter.; think Hid. • airtti after. InidtHit -1 , when I . got to Aluitit VernOn: The next day heard! that a Moor's team; had run antic l awny, a that two luim out of four had been so badly hiirt that their lives were despaired of.. I didn't cry. My cli but I didn't travel that COL FREMONT. John Charles Fre,moht, the " Pathfinder if the Rocky' Mountains,' a iiian who has ope ed to America the gate,s- of her Pacific en pire, was born in South t afolina, lanir4, ISIS. 'His father was and einigrant,'gente• man from France, tindlhisAmother a lady'ot Virginia. He receiVed - it good educrtbn, though lett an orphan f l,t four years of ige; and when at the age o seventeen he gridua ted at-Charleston College, he still cOntrihated to the support of his rhother, and her ':.hil dren. From teaching mathematics he tuned his attention to civil e ginhering, -in ii whits he. made so great profiel e cyl that he wasirec oininended•to the goyere i ment for employ ment on the Mississippi s urvey. -- He wts of' terwards employed a Washington inleow structing maps ofthat region. HaviaL re ceived the commission °fa lieutenant of en gineers he-proposed to the Secretary of War. to penetrate the RoCky Mountains. Hisplan was approved, and in. 1842, with a hatdful of men, ho reached and explored the Seith Pass. He not only fixed the locality olthat great pass through.whieh f myriads now press their way to California, but he, defined; the astronomy, geography,botany, geology„ and meteorology of the t,anitry, and desetibed the route since followed and the points!4-om which the flag of the Uninn is now flying.rrom a chain of wildernessi lorresses. His Mort was printed by' the !Senate, translated i into foreign languages, and Fremont was lobiced on as 'one of the benefaCtoro of his couttry. Impatient of other and- bioader fields,he Ilan tied a new expeilition to the distant territory of Oregon. Ho approached the Rocky *un tairis by a new line,_ scald the summit_ spud' of the South Pass, dtflected to the dreatSalt Lake, and pushed hi examinations right and left along Lis entire ,course. He Bonne led his survey with that of Wilkes' Exploring Expedition, and his orders were fulfillet But he, had Opened one route to the Worn ba and he wished I to 'find another. Tiere was a vast _region FOlltil ot this line invetted with a fabulous intee--t, to which he losgad to apply the test ofLexact science. • It-was the beginning of winter.. Without resources,' adequate supplies, or so much as a guide, and with oi ly twenty-five compan ions/ he turned his ace shd made toward the Rocky MOUTitaihsd Then began that won derful expedition; fi lled with romance, daring and suffering, in i-vich he was lost to , the world nine months ' traversing-3500 miles in sight Of eternal sno w s, In which he revealed the grand features.of Alta California, its great basin the Sierra Nevada, the valleys of San Joaquin, and' Sacramento, revealed the real El Dorado, and established the geography of the Western portion of the continent: In August, 1844, he Was again in Washington, and his fame was sled. Be - was planning a thiid expedition while -writing the hislorY of the seed, and before, its publication In 1845; was again Ani his way, to theßscific,col• .' - i. ': - '.@.Ll'Oim•l7 A0pi..r40.-Apil AY, MAY 15,1856. lecting his mountain -eiiinrad'a ,•tO eiamine detail the Asiatic slope Ciftheccaitilient.*hiclt - Testilted, in! giVing it new volume , of,seienee,(O the ;world,. and California to the United :StateS. After the conquest of California . , in which he bore's part,he was made the victim of ret between two Amen'oan commanders, and stripped of his commission by court-martial. The President reinstated him,_ but _Fremorft would not accept Mercy, but demanded.. jus— tice. His 'connection with the government now ended. • He *as a private citizen and', (a poor. man. He •had been brought a prison ,r from California, where he had been explorer, conqueror,. peacemaker, and governor. He determined to retrieve his tiotibr on the field .where he had. been robbed of it. One line more would Complete his survey, the roue for a great road. from the Mississippi to San Francisco, Again he appeared in the• far • west. Iris Old - mountaineers flocked nbobt hirn, and•with thirty-three, rnen and one kin dred and. thirty-three mules he Started for the 'Pacific. -On the Sierra San Jean all his . mules and more than one-third of his men perished in •a mom than • Russian. Cold and Fremont arrived on foot at• Santa, Fe, strip ped 'of all but life. The men of the wilder ness knew Fremon t; they. refitted. his ezPe - diiion ; he started again ; - pierced the cotf n try of the fierce and remorseleSe Apaches ; met, awed or.defeated savage tribes; „and in a hundred'days'froin Santa Fe, stood..on,the banks.of the Sacramento.. The men of Cali- . fornia reversed . the judgment of . the coOrt martial; and Fremont was made first Sena ' tor, of the Golden State. recognized me, ng friend, and fully but firm- 0 fight !' ,said . , not,' said colt,' which ~ - . . • i tar Kind-hearted, angeli cJENNY, . LIND comes to the !aid of hitr former patro n , Sir. BAstium, ,and says :--"He", nor! his, shall nev er know want, while I have it in my poWer 1 (which, owin - to the gooduesS of 'Heavedl have now) to keep it away:" She also . says Many good t ings about him, which rn - us be true if JENN says so. Though Crushed 'to earth, - Itaßrond will 'rise again with such! 0,7 sistance:. But the latter says he - doubtS whether JENNY ever said so much. ttl i my, horse V I tini on to.night V I 'eVr.' 1 , an4ake a night I yOu iown horse; till'e MM. 11. ° Gr4rtlemen, ex -101111 yo in a drink • • i . to& Iniskey, old , Esvir.—The boy upon foot cannot bear tb see the boy who is riding. And so it is With envy of a larger growth. We .are always crying out i Whip behind!" in the miserable hope of seeing some hangenon more fortunate ourselvt-s, knocked off his pereh. - ;', - -4 Philonpherin the Stmts. at the? wagon. cured the '7 OTIC . zro onl MN as far off in a - au gale rn.y . hori • • ents get ' their motley, )ac4 any triore. t==l The; next Annual-State.; Fair: of the Pennsylvania -Agricultural Society is tO be held at Pittsburg, tommenciug. , on the 30th • tember, ?Oriite4 I 1: OF -WILLIAK ENTARTS üblican ifeeting iri. New York il29th. SPEE .Al the Ref City, !SIDENT AND . GENTLEMEN - : In mov- M. PR I now do, the acceptance by this the resort of the Pittsburgh Con ieh as been so impressively in- ing, Sir, as meeting rention, our attention, I shall consult the troduced e proprieties of the occasion, and my own dis position, no less than that of this audienCe, by making a- 'hrief suggestion as to some of the principal flatures of the call, the occasion, and 1 . , thecause t at has brought us together. [Your call suppo es, Sir, that the' present -Adminis tration of ederal power has adopted a poli cy, and is iirsuing,a . measure .for the Cxten • sion of S! very over TerritorieS once, secured to Freed° — that ;the first step in this aggres sive move ent was a - disturbance of a solemn arrangem nt, which had . been entered into be tween the , wo oppo?ing interests ; a•sentiment which div ded the 'country, and a violation of the good aith in .Which 'that arrangeinent was cemen,ted. / and - with , which it has been. liither to observed and defended. It Supposes that this course of federal politics is a departure from the sensible, necessary, and primary principle on which our Government is; found ed, and the purposes for which it virs organ-. lied; inid has hitherto been maintained; and It shows us that the public Welfare requires that this evil• legislation should be recOnsider-.' ed ; that this violbted faith should be recon structed, and that the principles and practice of the Federal Government should 'be restor- ed tin thoseof Washington and Jefferson, which are alone compatible-with our honor, our dig- . nity, and our safety as'a people. [toad ap. plause.] Not, Mr. President, let tis consid er what the three great steps of the !'ederal. Government by federal legislation have been on this subject of Slavery. At the very out set-of our Governinent.the common territory, unoccupied I.)y. any State jurisdiction; was all devoted by a• solemn ordinance to ,frcedom forever. That was the sentiment—that was the action of the founders of the Republic in 1787,, and re-enacted in 1799. All was not too little then _to give to Freedom and all agreed that all was not to little for Freedom., [Loud cheers.]' Now, at that time, Mr. Mad ison thus expressed himself,.in reference to the Federal 'Constitution in. this aspect. He said that.fie took it that the Constitution was; formed in order that the Government might' pave herself from the reproaches, and her pos. terity from the imbecilities which are always attendant Upon a country filled with slaves. [Applause.] Gen. Lee of Virginiii;says that the Constitution ! has done as much as it ought to, but he:lamented that it had not 'contained some provision for the gradual abolition of Slavery, This, was the action, this ;the send inent then. [Loud cheers.] Justl one third of a century passes away, just one generation of men is withdrawn from the scent); and pre. ckelythe ramie question•is presented to the American people as to the future 'fate of ,its new territory 'then coming up -for occupation by .eivilized men. And then, - gentlemen,' in order to obtain one - half of that territory for - Freedom, there must be paid out of that half a region large enough for, a linkdom as a ransom for the.re.st. - [Cheers.) Mark how the American statesmen and American, poli ticians have changetfin thirty.three years !7—• MIL, Mr. President, thirty-three !years tiOw roll,over again. That generation of states men has passed ofr the stage. • In the 'year 1854 the question is again presented to the Atnerican people, • the American! statesmen, and the Anterioun Congress--" What shall we do between Slavery and Freedom Then the ransom paid for the halt of the territciry is forgotten, and then, by direct Federaljeg islation,- it is deterinined that the half that was.given in . the generation, ago 'shall ta ken b4ek 14: our generation_Bo:in, our 4 app [Chem.) Us the secondßEET. 'Noir,let - 2 • -- • - • FRA.ZIER & SMITH, Pll33 l, l§.ll.ERS—r--Vtotc. 2, me imagine_ 'that another •third_ o ' a century his paMed array—that - 41ft generation is With-, drawn . frOnr the stage - -and when we come to . the-yerit 'B7, the death of 'the :- orditianeeif Freedotn, and the Year . ,"89 . ,• the,deali °lithe first free•republie of modern timed, how shall . we . .show our progress, heist:shall we mark our statesmanship, if t hei same 'Path - be Our-! sq.ii, bin Sy . a solemn declaration that hence fe4h, in all the Territories of 'the United States,' Slivery and' involuntat''• servitude - shall be forever by law abollshed 7 [ Cheers.] i• -There is .nothing else' for tilted°. We• gave • once all to Freedom.. W gav e . text half to Slavery. • We take awayext tire half given . ), to Freedoin, and there is ething leftfor us:: Wherever Freedom - dwells - 4111/er our . •flag' Slavery follows close after her. ?[Applause. - P Thereis this great and solemn lisson tai ht by this review, end that iir that n.l suceeedThg generation has corrected. the error, or retrac ed the•step of its predecessors, and the sol emn monition is put to us thawe should follOwi.quiekly, this action hy re etien. , It is .. for you nqw who, have seen this thing done to undo it. ;It is for you to protestL • [Cheers.] • Now, we suppose that this silbject of the ex tension of Slavery to Territories,'• 'Which If they have any government are governed by the federal power, is a 'legitimate subject of federal polities„ and we intend le aefaccord inglY;„ We suppose that it is amote irapor -1 taut aubject of federal. politics han any oth• ers, and we intend to a 4. accordingly. We have 'called you together, and you have re sponded to the' call in one of those - eclitie:s - whichare heard from one quarter•of the land to the other... This Is a practical question. It is a qoestion of making this entiment felt' in the way - th'at politicians ulderstand, ;by votes, by influence, by conde 'nation of - the had tied by the support of the good. ,ICheers.l, We do,not intend tobe misledinto any irroui ry- or Sympathy, however -aggravatingl the wrong Of the Slave may -be. We 414, not _in tend te , be drawn into any disc ssiort of mere etti"+. ; or of mere philantliroP for the '" in ler* race," as they are Called by our south, ern•hretliren.. - We do• not. intend to unsettle \ .any ;social relation, but we.,intendte exereiael the ; clear right' of Freedom in determining; that upon the one hand, and t the exeluaion of §lavery upon the other [loild cheers.] . In determining this principle, we have:no occa-. sioii to quarrel with . any of-, th e donnas that are assumed or argued' by thoe who have an interest in Slavery.' It is said by. them 'that Slavery in this ,country has .een productive ,of unmixed good .to the degro So be:it, if they eau prove it. But it is our opinion it has; bee n productive of unmi ed evil to the White man.. They say that SI very i s- the on -ly relation which is ilossibl in . a society which is composed of blacks a d :whites. and mixed .races: ; SO he•it, if- the , can ; prove it.' But that 0,1413 . 7 adds to the txtitude of 'our. opinion that no new territory should he occir pied by-mixed races. [Cheers.] Now there is another argument with *hi li the ilavehold- In; interest treats the 'efforts f the freemen of Ithe orth to eot possessio er ....- - 1 ,.....t... , .- - ' e territories. .lt is sill that they have ..., I peen won .by our common,' lood and treas ure. Well, now, if. this were an argument to show that the black race oug t to be allowed 1 ,tij go into, a new Territoryy--Lif it was paten-, ded that they had been ,won'ly the, common Wood and treasure of the blieksof the South and the white. men of the North, I could un derstand the force of the argument. , • .[Aii plause.] . It has been won. by the come on blood and tasure of the White• men of the ' United. Sta gs, and if- God. lassist the efforts that we-comwoes to-night .t shall be - occu pied by the Vhite Men•of t 6 whole country.' ii [Cheers.] Well, it is said t at; it is - the part Of brethren to occupy their mmon heritage la peace and luiet,,and that the white man of the South and 'the -white m 'of the North should go together and possess the land; hilt there is , one difficulty aboutlthis business. 'lt ; does not depend upon the IjiW of Congress or the law of any State, but it is Written in• , the If hearts of the free laborers . ° our ethintry that • they will. not work side by 'side with:slaves. [Cheers.] ..Labor, - gentlemen,' - ive neknowl: edge to . be the source and .basis of all our Wealth, of all our progress, of all our dignity 'rind value; tint it is thei labir of the free man: .' [Cheers.] Carry through his campaign the principle that the lan4 of theXriited States is not inclosed withiNtraight s lines belonging 'to the whole citizens of the United' States.- - There is nothing revolutionary I take it in, i that... Slavery, iis-a special interest, does nOt, • ' stand-different from otherlinterests. In my j judgment the slave interest is no. more enti-(I .tied to the control and piotection of thiScotie;.!; try, than the financial or the tariff intcrests.=-- [Applause.] The people l lihOuld govern the; 'country, or the people shoirld desert the-coun try,one thing or the other. Another.,thite ,: in Our Republican organization' is, that ite are comprehensive in our politics, and not Sec, tional. Now, White, men, .live all over the country, but black men are geogtaphically situated. ! [Laughter.] ihe patty of Slavery is ,necessarily a geOgrapliCal party — it' is a' geographical party in fact and it is a geog raph-, ical party by the lines of industry, whi ch-can make, that institution liveionly, in the climate Of the South. But free labor can live every: - w,hete. , [Applause.] • Pars, then,is.the com prehensive party—theirs ;is the geographical ' party." [Cheers.] But there is; Gentlemen, a much more. serious ettif , in •our politics than 'this I have alluded to-- . 1. mean that -control ing division, called by the odious. names of North and Sonth. ' Why,' Our country :has„ :grown very much since ; these names originat ed. • When the Constitution 'was forthed, the whole population of the United Slates resided . on . .a Strip of ' territory along . -., the-. Atlantic Roast ;- and then the country :Wel necessarily diVided into a *Ndith anti South, for it-was all East. and - no West. j. But I ahead& think ar . .. • •, • . that, with the growot Our institutions and . population until' they new .cieeupy :the' Conti- ,:k ent and look out upon the I.i.:.•Pacifte, it mighe.be conceded' that fthere:Tra: something besides} a' North and Solith-rthat there was an East, aCeritreand a Weit.. '[l4 - ond applause.] Now ' we' cinew• that We, stand, ,tiot - 1:4 -the North, not by the South; but by the labor of freemen;' Wherever- i tiky. -are; and against Slivery• and the lovers-jet Slavery,- wherever they are. ACheers.l We expect to find b0y..., ers of Freedom in , Maryland, in Virginia,- in igissourVin itentuelty, in Tennessee. in Tex as. anchn every Southern State. - - We , knoi we shalt find • lovers' of Slavery - in. Massaeha. 'setts, in Newlfampshire, in:Nevi-York, in 'New Jerseyiviti-,Peniniylvania,. and in every. Free State; and if be anythingget3igrqdt: teal in that' diabriniiiiiitien ci t,' [kitties WO.' tigi geography of the United: Stater" ttiVitir,' 11111 stm .4_ t 1 arid applause':y Thertil‘ h e r ,very _gnat '-.4ifficOltY which.'-the NOqh+-1:Nal 10tAglY., 1 INorth,': . ' for I-have eliminated' tiAt i tg. ' fro m , ft: • b 1. hieh OW Proo i our, pa 1, les ~ u..w ~ , ~,,,,, L . ..., „.. r of this eountrytreatlY 'stiffer: P freiri. Itkcik_aw the degradation of polities; -- Wis . hliVii::hitd. 1 leftnmon,giis,:till recently, great . ;strititinti *, great orators ,: great Piablieimertic!inttifine gentlemen had ccm imeneed =their teed.* der the impulses and •influen&snt,the;iiew government, and the general .Prineipli*p freedoin and equality with - Which. the; 1 ... ." Goverinnent started: When, li . wever,Ve;, ry came to control theGOVern• ent, OFR*. - States, and by that meanslto titrol - theFfid i eral Government and the, pi)litica, Of the Fr-. • States through its patronage, ;or_ . .tei feed am bition ;1 can tell ,-you that; so far ha r krul. the people, the freemen .- of -the NOrth—th: educated ; intelligent,. public.spirited - yam' • men of the North- . -have atudied.land w 1 study :aiLything but polities whioh _teach'- them - their degradation. [Cheers.] Bath; I back the tide; let it be understood that *.= stead of your accomplished diplomatists be - interrogated before they cunt receive ad sion at Washington as tialiWhat they. thi about Slavery, that it may be'n .if th .are acceptable to the.South—ch a n e the of the questibn-:-encourage a free l expressi -o f opinion oat:that as on other: subects— you will haVe your polities puri fied.-; ' O duty has'a higher consideration than alLth [Cheers.] Let me ask your attention.for moment to an incident of the last - Winter,. The unwonted. rigor of- the'scasOn ad brill' last - Winter,. the Ohio with a, free bridge. - A. " `vela mother, with all the treasure thit.l i alwhat: the world-_-_-her children,r_from,a growing - town infanEnpon her breast—had passaitu that free bridge; withont lit:Or hindrance, was on the free soil of Ohio: , [APplause. The power of the.FederifOciernfnetityun a law of which! have no leornplaintio! m pursued that slave mothei.to stmdher servitude ; and not able! to' relit's° :. he she let out-the spirit_of her child r:ito the light of Heaven, even' through the dark tat of death. [Loud applause.] If it w ble and brave in the stern Ca& to taunt Roman ,Senate with , their :long delay. which of the two they would choose, Stu or sleuth, who shall say it was iglu:mini°, 'that poor sla_ye Mother, Illy a irlek d and flashing execution, to determine that - I lion for her posterity. [Prolonged chee AM - gentlemen, one touch of nature make whole world kin ; and there arel manyio who feel a greater pride in sharin(;; the b red blood that ran through a heart bOu for freedom, -under the dark besord of poor slave-mother—far greater than - thi share in common. with-the pale faces of of the statesmen of the Nortle• [Cheers laughter.] Thus much for illustratio what is the lessen . that I would, teach:. ,infant State of Kansas - now reprises lifloi bosom of the A that swore she sh 4 violated‘; thii'eha, t - rtA. -- :e - 1 - 1: f' 4 4 - tivial ed that infant Staff meat is. new &st their protection admire the spiril Kentucky that, 4 to Save them fn. _to you to induce Kansas, and her that slavery ,frOi men rescued h, slaves of Kentin freemen of Nevi "NOP] But, Union must am ter,' and that is the - principal object speech' to-night. [Renew,ed laugh ihould suppose that eighteen hundr . without-a new experiment had furnish iMtion enough of the shOutS which put forth in defense of the :"stirine ".Great Diana of the Eptiestans,":w real interest of the shouters was non. the businesS of" Alexander the CoPpe [Laughter:] And for all that_elass er's fbr the preservation of the Unit" no respect._-.[Cheers.] Tticl!' occupa Governinent of the country, through terest, is their "business of Alex= Coppersmith," and they whist save shrine,, in order to support that biz 'Cheers and laughter.] But therei . larke class of most worthy and patr iz.en-=, who are justly sensitive upon ject which looks askance ottv good , good feeling . ;.thongh how they ea eently look on. and recognize' gr i! 'good feeling:in the had faith and' ba practiced upon the other side ofthi do not know. [Cheers.] Now, has found an eloquent voice in the a letter of an accomplished orator of land,._ in ' which helelosea 1)y, espy, " ' sentiment that he he cannot unite band which - does nOt, follosi the flag_ step to. the 'mush) of the tro i 0 n." r. my sentittients precisely.. ;.[Cheers. becomes important to know w.hattl what the music of the Union is.' I myself sensible of nny strange trati of the American people,. which,' in seventy years, should.change the n of American FreedoM from belogi of the . Union into' ,a singsong. Chin of African Slavery. [Ap - plause: , the " .flag of the Union," I would elegant orator, that the greatest a New England, When, in possessio -reasoning peers ,and, overwheltni 'he stood up to-support the Unio stitution,-could give him a descrip flag. 'lt is the gorgeous ensign or lie, honored throughout the earth with not a single ,stripe. sullied or not a single istari obscured—sluid Want light over that Sentitnent d..; :cart--" Liberty,' and , imon,:uow: i - -..cirie and inseparable ":“ 'That- ' i the UniOn which You and alLof us and keep step to the..einnlio. of, t freemen thatattendik, [anus.] we find that. flag id the . hinds standard bearers—Whether thest honored frame iii the Demoenit any Athena-and ' notice that it iiku every stripe,polluted, iha ever, ed=--all its floating glories, darken ennobling sentiMent giving place' ink motto of "Slavery and Unica -forever--one - and .inseparabla" .trample- that flag in the dust:iind that standard-beereri as a 0 0010 the,publie freedon",,,and_atraito or arid- - freedoni of the;,tiniPiL apritsuse• Ing MI Fl - 1.~ ~-,;, ~. - ,__;;:.' ISI ElEl ME NM y • d r Mil ~~ no- lery. = OS- t the UJ ight ing that Tit; and ' .9f The the. of me tr.] 1 .y4rs of the enl the rued in , stuiut- I hirc on and ave In dirJ.he Diana's ,iness.-- a very otic ny sub- ;with and :►ith or Union; - hand . ow Eng• • litix th c ' Iwith• anv and keep esu art But it e fiag and, - 2 Tam_ .not :formation le course -, Ihble- hyrnu the InuSie in praise - - And is to of to that, /lemon of of his best lig o ratory,— Ftiitsi Can: iirthatt h4•Reppb - nforell; ppliated--; itO At I>tiL• to every - .. forever thti . flag of ill/oliow; shoots of. But whet, if Whatever aims the' o parti, furiedi Fiat. aka*: .; 110 its r —now ' then will we strl)6) down tOvsgainst to the hoa irm19.4,4 N N v 8 MEE