Kansi's Correspondence of the N. Y. News. fetter time coming—nontgoutery's ~ LITTLE OSAG EC, Bali:BON con rrrv, K. T., - v - June 27th, 1858.. The detestable.falsehoods published in the Estern papers, and especially the, New Y• . • • Tribune; about Kansas Affairs has long been a subject of. note, but the Attempt to white wsh the character oC James Montgomery, 0. yial. Bayne,. and their oonfrerees, is most as s redly the coolest piece of impudence ever tempted even by them. Permit me to give it a `awn and `hasty synopsis of affairs as they have been in' the smithern portion t4this -Territory fo u r the last six month. L The troubles_ growing ont_of the slavery question were all ,settled, and have been so for some time. _No sane man now expects, or even hopes. that slavery - will over will be es:. - tablished here, and entire peace existea through-the northern portion of 'die Territory and for fifty miles to the south of Kansas .Ricer. . There, was no reason why it should not haye existed there savet his: ThecOunties of Bour bon and Linn, hothlyinglsn dr, herder, had ' been settled very early , fokm Missouri, and-the original settlers had. good ferns, good horses, " good cattle and plenty of monet and provis ions. These a portion of men calling them selves Free . State men had. !Mt; and they Came ,to the sage conclusion that if they could bring about • - "That good• old plan, That they should take who have the powet and .. they should keep who can,"_ it would be hater foi their priiate interests than to have peace, quiet and industry pre vail. With this view a body of them from LinnADounty, about the first of January last, went - doin on to little (Nate and-commenced . • ordeiino—off men whom they choose to call pro-slavery men. Several of this band were arrested, but - hoping that - they would end the matter,:. the Officers were not very stringent and they escaped. But now the wiseacres of the Legislature attempted to pass a law rnaking,that arch demagogue Ind murderer, •J. H. Lane, commander of the Kansas militia. He immediately commissioned James Mont- gomery-of Lynn - County-and O. P. Bayne of 1 • Osage is: Captains, both, of whom had' bean engaged in the abiive named, foray. • They irpmediately gathered-their men on Little Osage and a regular system ofilealing horses and ordering off -men, women an.. children as they fit was commeuced. The Marshal, with his posse .went•out toendeavor to arrest them-; they forted themselves in a •timber house impervious to ball, and fired on the Marshal and his men, wounding several and. killing their horses, and obliged him to desist from the attempt to take them. United States troops were then called for. In the -.meantime they bad ordered .off a man•by the name of Tumult. Ile did •not . leave, and in the night some fifty;of than surrounded his ho,nse disguised, ktfocl:ed at the Aoor, and as it was openedlshot him through ihe—body and left him for dead. The nest night two-'of the men who tad been en gaged in this` murder were killed - by the - fiends rn ds of Tuult.• This increased the ex citement. _An old man 70 rears old, by the ,name of Travis, was-arrested by Bruin's party, accused by them of knowing Something about the affair, was tried and cleared and dis charged by them. lle was followed by a portion of them, who overtook him 'at, the house oftwo brotkers by the name of -Was son, shot him dead on are spot and despe rately. wounded the \Vassons, ' leaving them for dead, robbed _them of over two7'tbousand dollars worth of property, and have taken pos session- of their farm. They' now commenced robbing by Wit Ole sale; about fifty of them - fully armed riding round the country "cleaning oat" - every man they saw - fit to call -a pro-shivery man, no . matter whether he was so or not. A detactr _ ment.of United States - troops were sent after ! therm, and they fired on the troops, killing one soldier - and woundrivr several others and 4n:taking their escape. At this time the-wviter passed through these distlicts. -As he went down'he.met over one hundred families,Vmen, women and children, bare - -footed 41•1:- half, clethed, Without money orprovisions r ativing from the hell-hound, Montgomery, and bis gang Me i n were robbed, women subjected 'to the lust and ()mire, and children turned out naked in the cold, and in some cases tor tured with fire to'make them inforin where / their parents were concealed, and all in-the • name .of 'freedom, and wiTbOut even a show ' of resistance from t he terror-stricken people who rma for eighteen months been at peace and were entirely unprepared. These were the noble deeds of the than the Tribune calls the "Hero of the Marmiton and Little Osage:", . Among the men driven out from Linn. County was'Captain Charles parnilton, who, nito that time, had an envitable reputation as.a.gentlernan and- a Christian. It would seem that hiS wrongs and those of his neigh bors must have .driven him frantic. He Bath ` ered a band-of about twenty men, driven out like himself, and came back into the Marais Dealygnes, and arrested ten men whom be accused _of being concerned with Mont gomery, 'and shot theni in cold blood '• fire of them - were killed and five wounded. Most of them were undoubtedly innocent men, Mad the, effect was to create an impression through 'the country that Montgomery must be main tained to fight.Efamiltcm. Hamilton Was de . trounced by all, and without support he fled for his life. • • Montgomery was abashed, and _seemed to &entbat be_mtist do- something that would exceed the atrocity of the slaughter by Hamil ton, and was not long in ueciding on the. manner. -He and his supporters had been in,thesbahit of denouncing a _portion of the people at Fort Scott, and that point was se lected by him. In the middle of the night, _while we were all hurried in slumber. he, with his band of absut thirty, entered .the place, piled: bundles of hay against one of • the houses, set it on ftre,;.and then going back about two hundred and fifty yards to a tim bered ravine, where he could easily lide or run away, rained into the town some two hundred Sbarpe's rifle balls, - firing indiscrim inately among/friends and' foes, women and 'children, and as soon as the people,. alarmed by - the firing, turned-out to resist, bravely running away. , • Forytuately,:very wonderfullyno one was -- hurt, though many houses had from ten to twenty balls shot: -- through them. This is the last grand outrage, for'robbing homes, ssteal , iug horses and insulting the unprotected, are but Minor every-day affairs. Since this, Gov- ernor Denver has been down, and has roused the better portion of the people to assert their rights and the majesty of the law, and though 14ontgoinery is still at large, public opinion denounces him, and be will yet meet with ' punishment. This is the "'hero" of_ the Tri bune,.and it is to such men as this, headed by the murderer Laue t that the . greater part - of our troubles- are to be assigned._ lam a Free,State man born and raised:--but I do, not hesitate to say that more crimes have been : committed in Kansas difder the name of Freedom by these men, headed by - Lane and Conway—(l do not inoluile Dr. Robinson)---• and their set, than by slaveholders in half the slave Statesin- "the Union kith Kansas tbrowwin. It is not slavery they are _now fighting, but - Democracy, and the attempt to kelp up the Old issues is whitthrings about these atroci• ties andsfills the Tribune with "heroes." God may forgive Horace Greeley, but 'the American people, and especially the people of Kansas, ought not to do so; and if he ever does leceiVe punishment hereafter, the most 'that could be -wished for him would be, that he might lei lef; in the company of his friends Lane and Montgomery. - It is amusing to, note _the, easiness,with which the_Tribune correspondents lie. In their description, for instance, of Montgomery, they give him jet' black beard and hair, piercing ble6k eyes, a high forehead, and de .seritra him as tgll and largenot one word even of that description is true. Ile is about five, feet ten in bight, never relies his-eyes to your face, has a stoop, beard Jight brown, eyes light gray and almost alwavi castl down. In fact they can't possibly tell the truth even on such trivial matters as this. OS kG E. From - the Washinion Union The ,Sub-31arislie Telegraph. Anxiety is• on. the tip-toe of expectationi yet, up to the moment ir,of this writing, noth-. ing has been heard from a ileet.of vessels en gamed in -laying down--the sub-marine cable. The general opinion now is that it has been a failure—that new and unforseen difficulties have ptesented themselves, rendering the ac cOmplishment of thilgreat work an impoos'si bility. Yet we continue to hope for the best. In the meantime ] we append hereto a note from Tal. P. Shaffner, Esq., on. the subject, addressed to us some weeks since, - predicting a failure. We -placelli. Shaffner 's note be fore the public at this time, without any con sultation with.him, merely as a matter a public interest: • . WASHINGTON, June 18, 1858. To TIIE EDITOR , 0F TILE :—lt is use less to enter into a discussion upon this sub-, ject at present. • There is no probability that the contract will ever be made, for two rea sons : First, the'cable can never be worked if laid i • second, there are reasons--some of which have been made known , to the qovern ment—which will prevent the execution of any-contract with th:tt company. " I have some pretensions to a knowledge of the, science and art of telegraphing. Four years ago I. published to the world in Anted : nd Europe that my studies .and experi ments on both.continents satisfied me that a currrent of electricity of any known form or mode of generation could not be transmitted for telegraph service from Ireland to New foundland. Since that time there have been. no new discoverieS in galvanic or other elec trieJeveloping powers changing-the state of science, then calculated upon, in the demon stratiori of the impracticability of the pro posed telegraph. - It has been stated, that a current of elec tricity! has been transmitted through the whole 3,000 'miles of the Atlantic: - cable in the ships,-and therefore there than be no doubt •bUt what the climax has been attained.— This imposition has been fully exposed in-my memorial to Con g ress. When the cable is laid in the water, ate element of retardation then commences its fUnctions. " The further, they lay,out the cable the feebler will-be the current," until it cease to traverse the wire. - I, predict—not as a matter of prophecy, but as a certain result springing from the fixed laws in electric science—that the cable will be laid perhaps 1,000 or more miles, and it will be found unavailable for telegraphing. In this dilemma the company will haves the cable broke again, and the =Wait will be charged lo Providence! This will be the, finale,, Very respectfully, &c. &-c. , TAL. P. SIIAFFNER. „ PORTER, inc gi•NDAY SCIIOOL I.I.EFAL - I,TER. :—A correspondent -of the Boston Journal . says Mr. Fred. W. Porter, ,the defaulting I agent • c American Sunday School Union, wh• fall made such-a sensation a shot t time :nee, hay at length made a full and complete confession of the great wrong he has done.. He stood very high in the Society and in the Church, and'he was almost the last man who would have beeti suspected to be guilty of a • foul a deed. In a letter recently laid before the Board of .the Sunday School Union, he has made a complete cCinfession. He began his wrong-doing nineteen years ago I The plan was the same that he pursued to the last. His temptation began with the inn!. berry and silk-worm speculation nineteen years ago,-and under the garb of religion he has fur that long time carried on his dishon est .plans.. He allows that at the ,start he knew it was wrong, but he hoped to be able to meet the notes as they matured. But as he was unable to do so, be was compelled to renew his notes and pay•a. heavy bonus.— Thus for nineteen years, he had been treading the thorny path of sin, praised for virtues that he . knew be did not possess, and taking of the sacrament; which according to his own pro fessed faith was adding damnation-to himself with each unworthi reception. Ile defrauded i-tbe -society out of over $80,000: but the- Philadelphia broker who aided him to the dishonest gain, promptly Paid all the notes that - hismanre was on; nud the loss was les stened nearly $40,000. Mr. Porter confesses that in the nineteen years of fraud, be has used the name ofthe society to the large amount of $500,000, by renewals and re-is 'sues. No wonder he is a sick man—one whom, if the law does not reach, the grave will soon cover up. Nineteen years of fraud and crime, and perpetrated in the name of religion—with'despaii /looking him in the z . posure waiting for him it the cor hers of each street—with remorse gnawing at his heart—and the worm that dies not hasten ing to his repastb.,,Mr. Porter's confession will soon be made public.” • Tics JIIS LANE TRIAL—The. manner in which the notorious free State leader and murderer, Jim Lane, iA being examined for the killing of Jenkins, - is thus described.by a correspondent of the Cinennati Gazette, free Stale paper : LAWRENCE, K. T., June 22. The= Examining Court in Lane's casgls still engaged in bearing testimony for the de fence. -Yesterday while Gates—Line's hired man--was'undelexamination, he Was called upon to point out on a plot made:by Sear!, the Surveyor, the spot where lie stood at the time. of the firing, and other "'points. Lane stepped' up-to the table with - the witness— stood close to him, and when a question was Rated about any spot on the , plot, put his fingers on the place, and the witness then re plied," there's the piaee.P . • Lane quite lionizes over the affair. The Court adjournd to a partiOular hour, but this is a mere matter cf form. It' orens -whet . ; Gen Lane comes. He sometimes keeps them waiting an, hour, but nobody dares grumble at the great- Gengral Lane- While the Court is in session, \belrequent ly . paces the floor back and. forth with an air of great self-importance--recaires -the con gratulations of his frfendkand converses with them without anv restraint or regard for the business of the Court, and occasionally in terferes in the examination of aswitness. Tbe.wbole thing is a , farce. Line has 'warm political friends here, who will sustain, him is anything. I doubt if be will be held even' for trial; but if 'beis, there are too many Lane men here to render a conviction. possible. Votttrit peinotni. r Y 0.;177.0g3E, Thuirsilliy. July 15. ISSN. DEHO'CRiffIC NOMINATIONS *UIIa:MI.; JUDGE: , WILLIAM A. 'PORTER, , PIMA DELVIIIA CA .or'A COMMISSIONER WESLEY FROST, I E OYETTE: Spicial Notice. AL L persons !indebted to thelate firm of McCollum is Gerritson for subscription to the Montrose Democrat 100 hereby forbid den settling witl J. B. McCollate, or nny person in whose I hands he may, placellteac counts. Said aocounts lave not yet been a+- signed -toirini, in -consequence of his having refused to rend‘r value for them as agreed upon before the firm was dissolved; any col lections which be may make will be frriudu lerit, and his recipts void, until further notice be given.A..l. GIIRBITSON. Montrose, Apti i, l Ist, 1858. Notice .J b wolkr trausiatt advertising, and ALL orders frtun a distance, or from strangers —cask. Papers sent out of the county must be paid Tor ila(2ltc:. Itf. jar Doctor 0. V. Thayer of the Bing hamton Water Cure, will be in Montrose, Thursday, Augikt sth. See advertisement. Or Reports from Kansas state that Jim Lane, thkcold-blooded murderer of Jenkins; has been set at 'iberty ,If so, the gallows bas been cheate' —for a lime. shower of rainoiccompanied lightning, passed over—our afternoon last. The light telegraph somewhere in the depot, ran into the borough 'tatking several posii on its ended its career in the tele •uring the apparatus. slightly, ustotned to receive such 1)&4- ef the fluid. Fortunately, the Or A heav by thunder an' town on Sundai ning struck th direction of the upon ':he wire, way, and final! graph office, i it not being ac' erful quantities operator•wasn't, ,t resent to receive the dispatch. KILI.ED BY L G lITNING. — Wo have received a letter from Horse Race Dam, Wyoming Co., stating tt on Sunday last, twe young men of 17 yea . ' s, named Wm. B. Idelhuish and Henry A. Palmer, were bitting under sapling by theaide of the road, when a,sh v aft of lightning. a ruck and killed tec4ormer, and — slightly injured the latterVrhe sun was shining at tP time / although a cloud was passing to the north of them. "Old Indian Doctors," " Mis who sport filenames of Roach, nd Burns, who have honored 1 - pective circulars and• orders, Zer If the sionaries," Uncas Brant, : us with their will be'so kind! as to send us copies of the re ceipts, direcqoils, &c., with which they wi4l. to render the public so• great A benefit, to gether With good city references as to their respectability nod responsibility, and funds to pay us forlwhat they 'wish us to do for them, Oct will Ihe glad to attend to their bu siness, otherw4e we advise them to save post zsge uy ceasing to uotner..us. itig - We lirk.e received circulars from the agent of a self-Styled "Land Company," which proposes to sOl frumk . for $5, but thinking that the myltery of affording farms at that low prie'n wasl l too deep for us to solve this hot weatha r ie paid no attention to it. The New YorMws of Saturday notices, it and remarks that, " Any person wishing to .be swindled out cf e,5 can have no more effectual way of effectiifg that result than •by sending the amount 0 "Mr. Thomas J. Neary, Secre tary of the Ariserican Homestead Land Com: pang, at Nlishington, D. C," and for 'the same you ma:11 have his distinguished guaran•- • i i tee of getting rt - tract of land in Wisconsin, varying from orty to me thousand acres, at "their last dis ribution," which will take place " as soon as the balance of the :shares are sold." This person, in his circulars, assures the public " that there are no blanks in this distribution, and that the Ilands are good farming lands;" and by way .f a additional inducement, he throws in fo each subscriber a copy for a spress, Tribune, Times, News, • Journal and other city papers. ny have the impudence, to refer dozen ex Governors of Wiscon- year of 'the Ledger, Horn The Comp • to some half to the quality and value of the ith the utmost coolness thrust ,ars tow, of Janesville, Wis., and aulding, Eq., of Jauncey Court, New York, into the office of Friday morning, Officer Ilan, sin, " retake land," and • ex-Governor Alexander S Wall street, Trnatees. 0 of the Mayor i ts.squad, called upon Mr. Spauld ing at his Otte and was informed by that gentleman tlttt he had nothing whatever to do with the concern, and could state the same as regards Goriernor Barstow, whom he had quite recentl4 seen. The attention of the Post Office ,authorites at Washington will be at once called k a the correspondence addressed to "The Amdrican notnestesdLand Company at Washingtim, D. C.," and as it is a swind ling concern their letters will be sent to the Dead Letter -.Eke • , • 1 For the Montrose Democrat. Letter from Prof. Stoddard. OrratwA, June 22d, 1858. To MY YoF No FRIENDS :--Yrom 4 gingston, a ride by railway of about sixiy miles, brought us to Prescott, and from Prescott a ride of fifty miles brought as to Ottawa City: .That" anada which is drained by the and it numerous tributaries, has portion of river rYttrvsve een little vi .ited by people from - the United' her countrila, and, indeed, byi States or o ttnselv'es Canadians t valley of basin of the Ottawa be eater of Canada, the river itsef The-greats is the very dividing U oMding neali tent. That er from-Lbwer Canada sod ii /ly one-fourth of its territoriatist i part of. the Ottawa called tte ' f ake, is about thirty miles in ting Southward towards its upper lon3 one to• two miles in breadh ; 16.11%ov:big, the Ottawa fiegits to 'the stream . to become rapid and jrhe interruption of the Hata es for upwards of five mils, in d three short but distinct ipida, ne, the Resumoko r and the Little Chaudiere I length wide? end and is fr i i gxad ttalty ni close in and turbulent. don elastic which we fi the\ De Ch. Chaudiere. These rapids, together, fall a dis tance of about sitty feet over'a bed of dark limestone, until.at length, the mighty stream passes in thunder over the rocks which arrest its progress, (pgr'eaps I should say hasten instead of arrest,).at the city of Ottawa, form lug the well knovn Chaudiere Falls. To oue who has seen the Niagara, these appear but Editor. secondary, and yd. they are distinct and dif ferent,—of arnsUer compass and depth, yet magnificent in v4ume, power, and variety of ifferent cascade; forming one roaring, tuna- Wing, and seethisg mass. - Our view ivan taken mainly from the Sus pension bridge, irhich crosses a few feet be low the Falls, a. is supported by eight wire cables about tltip cites in diameter each. From the Bridg: and its surrounding points of observation, w: °old see the seething mass anti risings ray- r) the " rot," an e.notruous hole, tonne from wearing the rocksinto that shape, and wherq they say, ,tbe water falls but to pass off in , some underground lunsege to come distant and tinkn'ourn Donal. , The shape of the Fall is very near that of the let ter S, and the flat limestone over which the water passes, has been worn into almostevery conceivable shape; forming as many different varieties of waterfall and cascades as. can be imagined, each in itself worth a journey to see: The river at the present.time is very high, and consequently the view of the Falls is the finest. It is *sorted that during the Spring, when the Ottawa is at its highest, such is the volume of water passing over the Cbaudiere Falls.Trom the Lakes shoo), that the mass almost, if not quite, equals that pas sing over the (treat Niagara The fall of the Rideau, og the eastern boun dary of the city, is well worth' a visit. The river Rideau is about one hundred and six- teen miles long, is deep, rapid, and not very wide, and empties itself into the Ottawa' , short distance helot, the city, falling inztwo heavy sheets over a smooth and rine-ptlrpen - - tlicular bed of blue limestone, frynt a height of fifty feet. We vere verpf6rtunate in our view of these falls at9/Many other of the beauties of Ottawa rough the kindness of Mr. John Durie y alrorninent merchant and an old setflei- hen: Taking his beautiful light roalioat, m 3 friend, Mr. Durie, - and myself z startcd dovn the river. It was a charming trip . ;—absve us the high banks of the river covered with a velvet of 'green, and trees of moderate growth, with' here and there fine residence:; around us raft's innu merable, composed cf square pine timber from 30 to 80 feet long, freighted with jolly rafts men ; below us the smooth -dark brown wai ters of the Ottawa moving at the rate of five miles an hour, in its majestic might, to join those of - the St. Lawrence. The eastern bank of the river extending for a long distance is quite abisnpt, being some sixty or seventy feet in height; and what added more beauty to the scene and surprised us much was, as we glided swiftly and gently rand a corner in the river, by the aid of enrrent and oars, to come suddenly upon a huge mass of water pouring directly over the bank and seeming to form a part of it. We rowed very near, ;.,,„ t he spray, and thus upward view of the Falls. They resemble very much the American Falls of the Niagara. These falls are divided into two, nearly equal in width, by a jutting spur of the bank, pro bibly two, hundred -feet long. , .one-lalf, however, was nearly hid front our view, es we descended the river, by a saw mill and piles `if boar'ds and lumber, that seemed to stand quite oat in the river. From this.point, striking across the river, we shot tip into one of those chartuirg quiet little Bays, the banks cf which Ilattne in her kindliest mood has decorated with all imaginable loveliness. ' My friend thinks this Bay is just suited for moonlight sails, with music, Or better .4111, for pic-tic parties on summer afternootiS, with plenty of ice team; sweet girl:, Away we went up the river into the rapids formed by the Chaudiere „Falls, and landing, saw the "cribs" go through the "slicibts" formed to carry the timber around the Palls. These "cribs' when they get into moderately still water we formed into rafts of enormous size and : prcced down the river to Quebec for shipment to almost all parts of the world. The Pi:thau Canal forms its northern ter minus hero. This canal costing the Ecglisli Government neatly five million of dollar?, ex tends front Kingston to this place, a distance of 120 mles,—the difference oflevel, (458 ft.,) between hke Ontario and Ottawa being over come by 47 locks, each 134 feet long and 33 feet with, eight of which, riking one above the otter, lie within thirty or forty rods "of Ottaiva river. The masonary of these locks is very - massive And beautiful, there being no work cf the kind equal to it in the States, so far as I know ; and the arrangement for emp. tying and filling the locks is certtinly very fine. 'Boats traverse this eanal by steam, and not by horse-power. s Barrack fill,' in. the center of the city, affords a magnificent view,.. This hill rises to a great height above the strike of the river, which it immediately overhangs. Standing on it_ we have, in front, the broad expanse of the noble river bearing on its bosom huge rafts, like &rating islands; aches the r(Ver, the richly wooded land, with' hire and there fields of waving grain, backed by a chain of huge mountains from which Pennsylvania gets her beat iron ore;- on the tight, (bank,) the lower, and the left, the tipper Citty is spread out before us stretching away is strangling fashion ; to the left, farth er up the firer, on either side,- "cribs" hot; a hundred to two hundred feet in-slength and about forty feet in 'width darting out front the "shoots" into the bounding rapids and hurry ing down the river, the 'raftsmen working with all possible diligence to direct them out of the rapids intct smooth water where they. can be joined together; and still farther up,- the Suspension Bridge, the mitt and spray of the Great Cataract;- and still farther be yond the broad expanse of the river studded with its many green and 'wooded islets. The city of Ottawa has- been designated as the future capital of Canada, by-the Qireerr, and -the Parliament Buildings are to be erected on Barrack Hill. At some futhrelime r will endeavor to give you a brief` account of our trip down the Rapids of the St:Lawrence.; orrour visit at Montreal, the largest city in Canada, con taining from sixty to seventy. thouparrq in habitants; of Quebec, the Gibraltar of Amer ica ; of the Falls of Montmorenci, about two hundred and fifty feet in height, tlpwards of sixty feet higher than the Niagark Falls, tkc., _&c. The letter on the Normal Schools of Canada, and elencentary instruction will be included in the second "&t..‘" ' I have just been, down to the River to see some four, or five hundred soldiers of the "100th" Regiment, rait.ed in Canada; go on board t he - steam ship "Novascotian," which will sail for England to-morrow morning, about the time we leave by the steam ship "Lady head" for Nova Scotia. These soldiers are a hard appearing set,— the Province, fpresume, will deem them no loss;—many of them were so drunk. when they went on board, that it took two others to hold some of them 'up. The officers of the army here are men and. beardless boys that belong to the Aristocracy of Es.glancl,— a meager, crooked set,—to all appearances, hot orte intelligent, energetic man among them. The majority of the b , ,oy officers are fretb 16 to 23. years of age, and appear like goslings that have been brought up on `vinegar-planar' and seem to possess about enough energy And latent Co direct the energiesof a regiment of sickly calm. While passing through Canada, I have oc casionslly, been questioned in relation to the "religious, awakening" in the States. Many seenito feel deeply interested in the work , and _ . . - build QUEBEC, Tulp 2;--18.58' -- vi the peopk. denominations, the Methodist Conference, (be it said-to its credit) acting upon the gener ally received opinion, that drunkenness and gambling cannot well be carried on, at. least, to any great extent., without the aid of the use of tobacco, has gone so far as to forbid,or at least to Itrongly condemn, the use of this pernicious weed by its Ministers. As yeti .therp is no eery perceptible improvement, owing, probably, to the fact that the stock of the charming mircotie -they bad on hand at the time of the passage of . the condem natory resolutions refered to, has not yet. been converted _into smoke or dissolved in salina, and of course it would be a' pity to waste it. The Americans do not compare'favorably with the people of Canada in the filthy use of this filthy narcotic. I think, however, our people" are not as well instructed in their youth, in this department. Mill, I must hear testimony fayetble to the commendable zeal manifested by very many of the able Principals, Presidents, and Professors of our Academies and Colleges in this particular. Their efforts, I believe, as a general rule, are crowned with admirable success, as but very few. young men here been known tosattend, for any great length of time, any of the Insti- tutions that. give favorable attention to this important subject, btit who on their return home have not been able to smoke or chew (and perhaps .loth) tolerably well, and in many instances have become well skilled in their usually attendant accomplishtnents of-a still higher order. I do not wish to convey ".. idea that the class of our worthy educa tors to whom3,4...nn rP has been tirade are' willfully derelict in ' impirtiux to their Students a practical knowledge ot'thes.t. .elementary accomplishments. They feeling the force of the sentiment, "Men must be taught as though you taught them not," &c., and believing this it applies with equal force to - boys and young men, hale, in this depart ment, adopted the generally .approved and 'more efficient method of instrac tion,--namely, more by example and less by precept: _ Hence if they fail to compete successfully with the most noted of our Canadian brethren, it must be attributed t rror of the head and not of the heart. , I will mention for enefit - of some who, perhaps, are, desiring information on this subject, that in Quebec, I found the "Model Institution" in this department. It is sup ported by Government, the endowment being sufficient to procure all the requisite appa=. Friths for carrying on this department with out burdening the students with, expense. Three times a day the Priests (who are Pro fessors of the tChool,j- in their long black gowns and College 'caps, seat themselves on Me steps and benches outside of the bitilding, each with a -good large, old failioned pipe, instead of cigar, and -then, by the aid of a large number of students, seated . urcund and similarly equipt, the exercise begins. They soon manufacture a dense smoke, in the midst of which they jabber French. Per haps, however, there are conversational Lec tureron the specific gravity of air and smoke s and the comparative effects and adtansages of the use of tobacco - and rum. Still, I am not able, to say in regard to these points, as I do not understand the French language. One thing, hbwever, is very, obvious, they were all delighted with the lesson, which speaks well for the Professors. Let me assure you,l hate met with schools very different from this, of which I will write soon.—lo haste, • Yours respectfully, arThe opposition . have been very busy repOrting that Mr. Montgomery of this State has received the re-nomination of his party for Congress as an opponent or Jamei Buchanan. The following letter from him, if it means anything, shows thatilelected he is pledged fa the usages and doctrines of the party without referent'e to his course on the Kansas bill. It will be noticed that he an: , iluiesces in the English bill : MY DEAR SIR :—Your kind letter,. inform ing he that my enemies were industriously circulating a report that I in•end; if ram not nominated, to be an independent candi date, bas Been received and read whir some sUrpfise. I am sure that none but the Most reckless would give currency to such a statement. have no such intentron, and I afttbotiize' you fo give the report a most qualified denial. 1 have invariably, in all parts of the district; said to the people, that I was not a "Lecomp• ton" candidate,nor an"Anti-Lecompton" can didate; but simply an old fashioned Lrenfo erotic candidate, subject to the customs and usages-of the party. We had some differences of opinion amongst ti's on the itansal ques tion, but now that -controversy is terminated by a bill which, if it is not all we could ask, is yet a compromise which we,as good citizens, should faithfully carry out. The cbUrse Of true ‘viisdom denitards, of every IYeinOcrat tlietert his whole influence to harmonize and unite the - party. Ifecause wt: . dAred, on the &tr ans question, must we never agree' again' Yotik citizens have often differed on other que,s,tions ;—yet, when the controversy was ended, you all came baraioniOusly together, as though you never had been ,on opposite sides. :Now that the Kansas question has been comiirOinised, 'will we be, so silly as ttfrefuse to forget, Mat 'we differed about the details of : the bill to terminate the question. 'B* cause we differed about the iidniissia of Kansas, are we never again tO be united 'I I am the earnest advocate- of union and har mony. Let Lecompton and Anti+ecomptoo men forget that-such divisions ever existed in our ranks, and remember only tl-avehav are Democrats. 0. = " 1 These are my sentiments, and these sire the doctrines I teach wherever I go aitiongst the ,people. I have ne've'r tselonged to any other party than the old Democracy, and never in tend to. To that party Lam indebted for all my political honors,and the liveliest gratitbde r ? of my heart is the remembrance of their d votion to me -in the struggles of the st, The principles of that party ale_ my ", ncip !es, and my destiny, is insepara united with its fortunes. : Should not 'ii earnest; unfaltering :devotions of m life convince the most incredulous of y fidelity to my party, • • When a man a ounces his name as . a candidate ft;r h ' ination by. any party, I , Olsider 'tiro oborably bound to submit to the result difhe is not notainated_he owes to it. hi sepport and in fl uence, When the .nom . _atiobs are fairly made at all honest •liction, if the unsuccessful candidate is an i honorable man, and a true Democrat, be I will submit . to .the decision without a murmur. • I ask from the Dettiocratic party 'a second term—mot honor which for .fifirsix years has not been denied to any Democratic ttepresen- Ore. *To dewy it to me-is to pronounce me unworthy what has been conceded to all my iiredece=sors, and would disgrace me forever. With my coinpetitOrthe nomination is. a mere matter of office—with me it is a question of honor and disgrace. The Steasight-out Platform; The Philadelphia arlaily News," says the Patriot atut Ufiion, as the organ of the straight out American party dutibg the Pt esi dential canvass,' when -it supported Fillmore in opposition ,to Fremont; and in the late election for Governor lampooned Wilmot and his supporters with even more hearty energy than the Democratic press. Well, this true blue Know Nothing organ has not changed its colors, but by the tepid ttatisforreaticiti of the Republican patty has become one of the leading artificers of the new craft which is soon be launched upon the political sea, under the name of the "People's Party." Al though wetave no very warm friendship .for the motley crew that is to man the new Yes• set, it will certainly be a happy and refresh ing sight to see this' straight out liod ; which was one year ago denobbeed by all the Re publican papers in the,State as a very_treach erous beast, offensive and repulsive ib the ex treme, lying down with •Ahe Republican lambs. Who bould'have dreamed that with in a twelvemonth this audacious., monster would be found grow'ing put laws to the whole herd of Repablidan putsuers, and - that they'would bear it all with penitent fotbear rine°. Yet so it is. The following article of the "News," of the 9th inst.. we affeetionatbly commend to the careful petu-al of the Re publicans. They need tarniutand nothing can be better calculated to put them ,in propet frame of rtiind for working zealously id the janks of the "People's Party" Ot4eosEn TO U:CION.—SOMO of our Re: publican contemporaries oppose the union which has been agreed upon by the different divisions of the oppo-i ion to Bac!tattan's Af.t. ministration i and refuse to adopt the proposed basis of action, to wit t "ProteCtion to American Ind ust ry,and Popular Sovereignty," nrinciples were not recoittiied in the Republican issd . A union county Convention was hem 1.. Nonistown, on the 24th tilt:, which adopted a series of resolutions,_ath6ng which was the following "Resotcell, That we recognise the, sacred right cf the people of a Territory, when making ap plication for admission as a State, to form and; ?egoist° their awn Constitution and laws with out any interference try Congress whatsoever ; and any attempt to force upon Both a people a Constitution and laws, in—opposition to their lawfully expressed wishes, deserves and should receive the severest condemnation." A similar resolution was passed at a union meeting of the opposition of Cite:her cotaitf, and commenting upon this, the Norristown Republican devotes two columns to Wow. that the - Republicans of 1856 opposed this principle.. Two - lines would have \ been sufficient, foi no one has any doubt upon that subject ; or will pretend to dispute what the "Republican" asserts. . But the lie: •publican leaders of 1856 abandoned their op position to popular sovereignty ; and when they did so, right-thinking men of the Other parties united with .them. This union upon a principle so obviously right was hailed with delight by the people of all partti of the Union. The. Americans gladly agreed to slich a basis of union,benanse they bad never opposed the right - of aciciowledged citizens to vote itr dielormation• of theft own'Consti• Union, and consequently they abondoned - no principle in accepting it. It was manifest to. every intelligent person that the Reptibfican party have gained nothing by insisting apon the right of Congress to coerce the action of the people of a territory in fOrMine a Consti, tution, and that a great national party cotdd not be formed upon a sectional basis. The attenapt of a few newspapers to revise this exploded doctrine, can only tend to divide those Who would otherwise heattily unite. In '56 and in '57, the Americans who refused to unite with the Republicans, because union -then would have inVolved the sacrifice of their principles and organization, were most bitterly retiled and tradUced by the very papers which now refuse to support a union which has been agreed to by the leaders of their own party. Should this corrturtnicy rer suit in benefit to-the Buctratrarr putty; who will our:Repliblicran eoternsporaty soy "were sold to the Eferriontats f" .1. P. S I=l INDIAN BEAUTIES IN, li : ANESS.—CIUiDdAtO is on the . Wyandotte Indian lands, and there are Indiarr Beauties around here in every di rection- 't he names of scurre of them aro pe culiar: Among thenti, I met Polly Bigfoot,- Idary Mudzeater, Susan . .lolmnycake, Polly Between - the-logs , -- and Sally Spate. The Wyandotte Belle'lives two miles below here —a bright-eyed; round-faced, übby-clreeked girl of some 225 ears, but afflicted with- that bled: sickness so common to white girls-- melancholy. I imagined at fast that bet sombre' mood proceeded from a consciousness that her Indistr, blood precluded her from white society; btet found it only tYnteituited love. Indian girls bere-of any ambition will not Marry Indians ; for Most of the tribe have become drunken anti worthless. 'they there foie . tore their eyes to white alliances, and. to be distippoOpesl it) - it white . love is doubly painful.— Corresiounienee of Cincinnati Gaz. IYEAtir WATIRANII3.—Gov. Packer, on thursday issued the death warrants of tbe folloWing persons :—John Lutz t Allegheny county, to be executed October Ist. Wm John Clarke, Montour county, to be executed' September 24th. Mary Tvriggs, Montour county, to be executed October 201. 1:iME:11 or We clip itik following from i Gen. Ctribing'soration before the Tammany Oocie ty of New York, on the occasion of tb4 cele- bration of our National Anniversary : I do, i ndeed , sometimes hear men4lk of the dhs.s.Olufion 6f the Union. A set ofj noisy kid, half eramy agitators here in ,the Nor tell utN that the Union ought to be disqolved, because they say the Constitution 4f the United States-is a iitinvenant with_death and an agreement with bell ; and therenpOn the echo of their outcries occasionally retu'rns to Us in a declaration upon the,South; that the Union must be dissolved because of the fact that so many ofthese wild theorists ofNegro. ' philism, - and/ Free Love, and Woman's Rights, a. f• Irreligion, and Socialiina, and - pine to a Spiritualism are altowKl to get at lay . in the North. ' 'oh persons, it's true, do exist amilong 'lts; denaturalized women, unhappy that they are not men, and denationalized men, nnlworthy even to he women.. They, alma, will assemble somewhero to-day, not as Americans, 'lbut las libellers - and vituperators of Americ4ns—to desecrate some',venerable ' church,, or , defile some sylvan shade—to say boy yluc,h they love ali.black men, and how : meek tney. de test ail white ones—and in theYprofaned name of Liberty to toronla t im their unappeas able 'enmity; to the Union;to the Constitution, to the I3ible, to their Country. Well, be it so. What then-2 aril ‘Lere not Americans enough—in heart 'as !well as name—to preserve the integlity of th Union in spite of all these ravinß of unloo d Bed lamOfl ? Aye, ten, twenty millions. such— Amerienne devoted to the Union,.a d who, if' need were, could and would, occasion te quiring, devour and swallow up this artlful of negrophilistUnion-haters, as_Alie boiling whirlpool of Niagara overwhelins the slight skiff of. seine intoxicated Indian:- .'et, moire art strong enough, in the light of our reedom and in the vigor of our Country, to !tolerate *hd to pity alt such impotent foe s of the Uniott. I say, to tolerate and to,pity them ; for, when I witness their ebullitioujof wild wrath as they speak of the American Union, I become sure that their heads are Writhing with distracted and 'troubled thoughts' of the Fallen Spirit. Each one of thern,as le gazes at the ,daystar of the' Union, seeMs with desperate passion to say : ' 0 thou that with surpassing glory croitned. Look'at from thy solo dominion,like th God - ' Of this New World * * * to thee I call, 'But with no friendly voice,and add thylname; 0 Stitt, to tell thee how.hate thy beacns' ,Is it not so I Is it not a true picture I Well,' them hate and rave. They are, indeed, to us in the North,- where they hold their annual convention orgies; the drunken !blots or the Common'wealth—weful to show fOrth tke ugliness of infidelity and of treason; for the edification and admonition of the ingenious - youth of our 4:aced:l:mon North. Dissolution of the Union by such influences? I-scorn the'very idea. t Alluding to that class, of which Senator . I' Wilson is a leader,those who shriek for `flee dom,' Mr. Cushing said t—Theit incessant cry is the 'slave power.' If, perchance, new realms are to be added to the magnificent 'domain of the Union, though such addition be for the desire ;Ind superior benefit of the" population and commerce bf tire North, they cry out on the-Slave power. If the r,-venue of the Union is to be modified, though it be • done with their own hands, and fur the al rantage of the manufaeptrers of the North, Azain they cry out on the SI tve-powt t knew Territorial Governments are; to-be orgatii , Led in the West, though such. organization be in the interest and to the gain of the Nortb; : -till they try not on the Stave-power. It the dignity and, honor of the Union are to he I vindicated fq war, though the g iev..n •es to ! -- be redressed, and the seeiritie, to h e e on . Tiered, are sit tiro North , altsays ti out on the Slave power. Shaine on the par.... cry ! Never, in the corns An s 4. of thn worst factions of Greece or Prom; of England or France, was there a More great' effort to inflame the popular passions by falsl3 appeals "to prejudices—never a more wanton abd-e of the freedom of republican speech—never more abominable attempt to gratify personal ambition itt the etrittrise of a ctruntry's wet fare and peace. Slave power i .It is thecry of `stop thief' on the part of the burglarliee- Mg from the purstlit the oflicers oflustice. TEREIELE ET:PLOSION AT SMITIIF/ELIL R. 1: The Pawtucket (It. 1.) Gale:le, gives the following particulars of the fatal tinder ex , plosion at Smithfield, B. I.; on Thursday : At about 10 o'clock yesterday forenoon,ftwo boilers at the Manchester Print Works; in Smithfield,-, R. 1., owned, by Joseph Smith; of this place ; and operated by trctwrt, Veen & M'Cready, exploded, killing. two men and scalding and wounding many others. ' David Stewart, fireman, was killed. His body was eomplet ly 'cut in two, and the loWer part blown at least four hundred feet from the' place where he was standing at the time, of explosion. Patrick Clark, aamer for Joseph Smith, was killed. Edmund Clark was watk• ing across the yard, and was struck by . a flying brick, And had one ear nearly cut oft. Michael Cavenagh, was at_ . work in the drying Mom; and was terribly scalded and burned. It is doubtftil whether he can recover. James Pollard was injured about the face, but not seriously. Jas. Duerr had his •forearm frac' tared: A boy had a foot badly injured: 'two men are missing,* of whom. we could leant nothing definite. It was feared that they were buried under the rainß:llle honer house was entirely destroyed,. the dye house and dye room badly darnaged,and the bleach house somewhat injured : One of the steam chimneys is so badly injured that it will have to be taken down. These print. works seem doomed to disaster. Tbis is the fourth time they have been 'blown up by explosions or destroyed by fre.. These works had been recently put in operation after lyin idle s hoat two years. - . LAvoirrEn.—Laugliter is not altogether foolish thing. Sometimes there is even wit; dom in it. Solomon says there is - a . time to' burgh, as well as A titne to tYioutri.• Man only laughs—man, the highest orgatiteci being and -hence the deenitioe been proposed of "man, a laughing aniinal/" Certainly, it de- fines him as well as a "cooking animal," a` "tool-,baking aninittri" A " Money-making animal," a , " political animal," or such like.' liaughter very Often' shows the bright Fide of e man. .it btings Out his happier nature, and shoWs of what sort of stuff he is really Made: Semehol We feel as if , we never thoroughly know a an until we hear him. laugh. , Wa . do not feel at home with''him till then. We do not mean a mere snigger,- beta good, round, bearty , laugh.,The Olemn, sober vis age, like a Sunday's dress, tells nothing of 'the real man. Ile may be very silly or very profound ; very cross, or very jolly. Let us hear him lade', and we can decipher him , at 'once, and tell hbw bears beats. We are disposed to• smpect the man who inter' laughs: At all events,- there is a repulsion about him whieb we cannot get over. tsv stet' sayS.:;" Shun- that man Who_never laUghS.. Who dislikes limbic or the glad fai3ifolt iv - child." This is what everybody feels,-and' none more than children, who are quiek at-reading char-. miters ;- and their strong, instinct rarely dew ceives them.—Black-w004,-