1 "X ". r- I BY S. B. ROW. CLEARFIELD, , WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 18-50. VOL. 3.-KO.10. flLf LJ IB III V5tf J ITJ fcrl THK BLOODY LAWS OF KANSAS. Freedom of speech and freedom of the Press re guaranteed by the Constitution. The Lo cofoco leaders claim that they wish to sustain the Constitution. Below we give one of the acts of "the bloody code of Kansas." It in fringes upon both the above constitutional rights. And yet Mr. Buchanan and the De mocracy are bound to uphold these laws, which the National Intelligencer says "arc a disgrace to the country and its free institutions, and a greater invasion of public liberty than were the acts which brought the head of Charles I. to the block." The Administration have or dered the entire disposable force of the Army there, to aid the Border Rufhans and Slavery propagandists to enforce these laws at the point of the bayonet, and never to cease until the Free State Settlers are exterminated by the employment at once of all the power anil vigor of the military and the Southern marau ders in that, region. The following law was passed by the Border Ruffian Legislature, and is now being enforced upon the doomed people of Kansas at the point of the bayonet by the United States troops. Head it thoroughly. .indict to punish Offences against Slave Properly : Sec. 1. Be it enacted by the Governor'and Legislative Assembly of the Territory of Kan as, That every person, Iwmd or free, who shall be convicted of actually raising a rebellion or Insurrection of slates, free negroes orinulat toes in this Territory Suall SiFFtn DEATH. Sec. 2. Every free person who shall aid and assist in any rebellion orinsurrcctioc of slaves, free negroes or mulattocs, or shall furnish arms, cr!i any overt act in furtherance of bucH rebellion or insurrection, Suall Siffek DEATH. Sec. 3. If any free person shall, by speak ixo, writixg or rm.NTi.vG, advise, persuade or induce any slaves to rebel or conspire against any citizen of this Territory, or shall bring in to, print, write, publish or circulate, or cause to be brought into, printed, written, published or circulated, or shall knowingly aid or assist in the bringing into, printing, "writing, pub lishing or circulating in this territory any book, paper, Magazine, pamphlet or circular, for the purpose of exciting insurrection on tho part of the slaves, free negroes or mulat toes, against the citizens of the Territory, or any part of them, such person shall be guilty or FKLOXT AXD SUFFER DEATH. Sec. 4. If any person shall entice, decoy or carry away out of this Territory, any slaves belonging to another, with the intent to de prive the owner thereof of the services of such slave, oi with intent to effect or procure tho freedom of such slave, he shall be adjudged guilty of grand larceny, and on conviction thereof shall si-tfer DEATH, or be impris oned at hard labor for not less than ten yeurs. - Sec. 5. If any person aids or assists in enti cing, decoying, or persuading, or carrying u way or sending out of (his Territory any slave belonging to another, with intent to procure or effed the freedom of such slave, or with intent to deprive the owner thereof of the services ' of such slave, he shail bo adjudged guilty of grand larceny, and ou conviction thereof suall ilffei DEATH, or be imprisoned at hard la tor for not less than ten years. Sec. C. If any person shall entice, decoy, or carry away out of any State or Territory of the United Stotes, any .slave belonging to an other, villi intent lo prccure or effect the freedom of inch stare, or to deprive the owner thereof of the services of such slave, in this Tcrrrto- : ry, lie shall bj adjudged guilty of grand lar- ! .ceny, in the same manner as if such slave had j been enticed, decoyed or carried a way out of j the Territory, and in such case the larceny j may be charged to have been committed in any county of this Territory, into or through ' which such slave shall have been brought by I such person, and on conviction thereof, the person ofiending shall si fter DEATH, or be j imprisoned at hard labor for not less than ten I years. ! Sec. 7. If any person shall entice, persuade j or Induce any slave to escape from the ser- j vice of bi master or owner in this Territory, ! or shall aid or assist any slave escaping from j the service of his master or owner, or shall as sist, harbor or conceal any slave who may have ! escaped from the service of his master or own- j er, lie shall be deemed guilty of felony, and punished by imprionmcut at hard labor for not It than fire yeas. Sec. 8. If any person in this Territory shall aid or assist, harbor or conceal any slave who has escaped from the service of his master or owner in another State or Territory, such per son Shall be punished in like manner as if such slave had escaped from the service of his mas ter or owner in this Territor-. Sec. 0. If any person shall resist any officer whilst attempting to arrest any slave that may have escaped from the service of bis master or owner, or shall rescue such slave when in custody of such officer or other person who may have such Slave in custody, whether such Slave has escaped from the service of bis mas ter or owner in this territory or in any other State or Territory, the person so offending thall be guilty of felony and punished by impris .ontnent at hard labor for a term not less than two year. Sec. 10. If any marshal, sheriff", or consta ble, or the deputy of any such olEcer, shall, when required by any person, refuse to aid or assist n the arrest and capture of any stare that may have escaped from the service of his mas ter or owner, whether Mich Slave shall have scaped from his master or owner iu this Ter ritory or any other State or Territory, such of ficer shall be fined in a sum of no: less than one hundred nor more than five hundred dol lars. Sec. 11. If any person print, write, introduce into, publish or circulate, or cause to be brought into, printed, vri'ten, published or circulated, or shall knowingly aid or assist in bringing info, Vrintihg, publishing or circulating within this Territory, any loo!c, paper, pamphlet, maga zine, handbill or circular, containing any TA.TIMEXT, ARGfMEXT, OPINION, SEKTIMEXT, fcocraisr., advice or intexdo, calculated to produce a dissatisfaction among the slaves in this Territory, or to induce such Slaves to escape from the service of their masters, or resist thir authority, he shall be euiltti of fel ony, and be punished by imprisonment at hard LA"0R; term not less than five years. j C I AST FREE TERSOX, BY SPEAKING OR WRITISO, ASSERT OR MAINTAIN THAT PERSONS j HAVE NOT THE RIGHT TO HOLD SLAVES IN TniS ! wr"0"' r shaU "dioduce into this Terri- I lory, PBIXT, PUBLISH, wmxp riprri.Tir. OR ! LArT BE WRtTTES, VRIXTED, rCBLISUED OR irotlatbd n thu tsrritort, any book, pa- f per, magazine, pamphlet, or circular, contain ISO AKY DENIAL OF THE 4 RIGHT OF PERSONS TO HOLD SLAVES IN THIS TERRITORY, such DC! sons shall be deemed euil'u of felony, and tmuithed by imprisonment at hard labor for a term not I . I J less man two years. Sec. 13. nerson who is conscipntinnsTv opposed to holding of Slaves, or vho does not aamii ine ngm 10 noia staves tn litis territory, shall sit as a Juror on the trial of anv uroseiMi. tion for the violation of any of the sections of this act. This act to take effect and be in force from and after the 18th dav of Sent. A. I). 18.".. Signed J. II. Stringfellow, Speaker of tho House. Attest, J. I.I. Lyle, Clerk. Thomas Johnson. President of the Council. Attest, j. uaiaerman, Clerk. BUCHANAN AND LOW WAGES. On the 22nd January 1840, Mr. Buchanan made a speech in the United States Senate, (vide Congressional Globe, for Jan. 1840, pp 13-3-6, or Niles' Register vols. G7 and C8,) in which the following passages occur: "In German)-, w here the currency is purely metalic, and the cost of everything is kedic. ed to a hard money standard, "It piece of broad cloth can be manufactured for fifty dollars.the manufacture of which, in our country from the expansion of paper currency would cost one hundred dollars. What is the consequence? The foreign French and Geiman manufacturer imports this cloth into our country and sells it for a hundred. Does not every person per ceive that the redundancy of our currency is equal to a premium of one hundred per cent in favor of the manufacturer. "Xo tariff of protection, unless it amounted to prohibition, could counteract these advan tages in favor of foreign manufactures. . would to heaven that I could arouse the atten tion of every manufacturer of the nation to tins important subject. "What is the reason that, with all these ad vantages and with the protective duties which our laws afford to the domestic manufacture of cotton, we cannot obtain exclusive possession of the home market, and successfully contend lor tlio markets of tuc world ? It is simnlv because wc manufacture at the nominal prices oi our own nutated currency, and are compel led to sell at the real prices of other nations Rsruce ora nominal to the real standard of rnicEs throughout the world, and rou cov er ora country with blessings and renefits. 'The comparative low prices of France and Germany have afforded such a stiniulous to their mannfactaj-es.that ther are now rapid ly extending themselves, and would obtain possession, in no small degree, even of the English home market, if it were not for their protective hcties. While British man ufactures are now languishing, those of the continent are springing into a healthy and iigoroui existence." Having thus given Mr. Buchanan's own smooth and polished language, let us see what is Hie meaning of it in plain English, when he says '-'reduce our nominal standard of prices throughout the whole world, and you cover t'ie country with blessings and benefits." Now, what did Mr. Buchanan mean by this language, if he meant anything, but that our standard of prices should be reduced to that of the hard money currency of Europe 1 And what is the European standard then, to which he desired our own to be reduced ? Accord ing to t'ie best authorities on that subject, Porter's Progress and Wade's History of the Middle and Woiking Classes, two recent pub lication's, containing statistics collected by the British Government, the standard of pri ces for labor iu Europe, is as follows : 15'ugej in France. Calais common laborers 7 Jd, per day, with board, and without dwel ling ; Boulogne, 5d. per day, do. do. ; Nantes, 8d, per day, without board and without dwel ling ; Marseilles. 4d. to 7d. per day,with board and " itlioiit dwelling. The food in some dis tricts "consists in rye bread, s up made of millet, cakes made of Indian corn, 7io;e and then some salt provisions and vegetables, rare ly, if evcr.butcher's meat." In others,"wheat ;n -jread, soup made with vegetables, and a little grease or lard twice a-day, potatoes, or other vegetables, but seldom butcher's meat." Sweden. "The daily wages of a skilled ag riculturist are 7d. or 8d. ; while the unskilled obtain io more than 3d. or 4d. and board themselves. Agriculturists iu the southern provinces live upon salt fish and potatoes ; in the northern provinces, porridge and rye bread form their food." Bavaria. "Laborers arc paid at the rate of 8d. per day, in the country," without board.. Belgium. "A skilled artizan mav earn, in Summer, Is. 2. to Is. 5d. ; in Winter, from lOd. to Is. 2-1. ; unskilled, half as much,with out board ; live upon rye bread, potatoes, and milk." Agricultural laborers have less. Germany. "Dantzig. laborers, 4Jd. to 7d. per day, without board ; Muhlburg, 7d. per day, without board; Ilolstein, 7d. per day, w.thout board." Netherlands. South Holland laborers, 3d. to 4J. per day, with bonrd ; North Holland, 20d. per day, without board ; Antwerp fid. per day, do. ; West Flanders, 06s, to lt4s. per per year, with board." Italy. "Trieste laborers, 12d. per lay,w"rth out board ; do. Cd. per day,with board ;"lstr;a, 8d. to lOd. per diy, without board ; do. 4d. to 5d. per day, with board ; Lombardy, id. to 8d a day, do ; Genoa, rnl. to 8d. per day, do, and without lodgings; Tuscany, Gd. per" day,with out either." Saxony. "In 18G7 a man employed in his own loom working very diligently from Mon day morning to Saturday night, from 5 o'clock in the morning until dusk, and even at times with a lamp, his wife assisting him in finishing and taking him the work, could not possibly earn more than 20 groschen (about GO cents) per week. Nor could one w ho had 3 children aged 12 years and upwards, all working at the loom as well as himself, with bis wife employ- I ed doing up the work, earn in the w hole more than SI weekly." . t j These arc facts which speak for themselves, i This is the doctrine of James Buchanan, in IS 10. Ten cents is about the( average stand- j ard of European labor. Ancl it is to this standard he wished ours to be reduced. How do you like it, ve honest laboring men of Pennsylvania? HEAD AND PONDER ! THE W"W ' SE2I0CSATIC" DOCTBIW E. Slavery not to be Confined to the Kero Eace, out io oe inaae me universal uonaition oz the Laboring Classes of Society. Tho people of the Free States have so long yielded to the arrogant demands of the Slave Oligarchy in the South,that tho latter has come to think it can carry, any measure it sees fit, no matter how degrading it may be to the char acter of the free while men of the North. Not many years ago, the Southern slave holders were content to have their "human chattels" protected in the States where they held them. Next, they demanded and secured fire Slave States from acquired territory, (Louisiana, Flo rida, Arkansas, Missouri, and Texas,) while the Free States have ouly'iTieured two, Iowa and California. Next, the Slave power demanded all the ter ritories, and broke down the Missouri Com promise, which secured a part of those terri tories to free labor. Next, they demanded the right to come into therce States with their slaves whenever they choose, and stay as long as they please ; and the United States Courts seem about to vield to them, and grant this outrageous demand. But the last, the crowning, the diabolical as sumption is, that Slavery is not to be confined to tho NEGRO RACE, but must be made to include laboring WHITE MEN also. This doctrine, which is so monstrous and shocking as almost to seem incredible, is now openly a- vowed and defended by very many of the news papers and of the public men of the South that support James Buchanan. .The doctrine is also proclaimed by some Northern newspa pers of the so-called Democratic party, but not generally with such boldness as in the South. To show the exact extent and nature of the doctrine of enslaving WHITE MEN, the following extracts from Buchanan papers, and from the speeches of Buchanan men, are given : The Richmond Hxaminer ona of the leading Democratic papers m Virginia, ardently sup porting Mr. Buchanan, holds tho following lan guage in a late issue : "Until recently, the defence of Slavery has labored under great ditllculties, because "its a pologists (for they were mere apologists) took half-way grounds. They confined the defence of Slavery to mere negro Slavery ; thereby giving up the Slavery principle, admitting oth er forms of Slavery to Iks uvea?. "The line of defence, however.is now chang ed. The South now raaiiitains.that Slarery is right, natural and necessary, cud does not de pend upon difference of complexion ! The laws of the btave Mates justify the holding of WHITE MEN in bondage." The CharlestoniSrrcury, the leading Buchan an paper in South Carolina, says : "Slavery is the natural and normal condi tion of the laboring man, whether WHITE or black. The great evil of Northei nfrec socie ty is. that it is burdened with a servile class of MECHANICS and LABORERS, unfit for set f- goeerutnenf, awd yet clothed with the attributes and powers of citizens. Master and slave is a relation in society as necessary as that of pa rent and child ; and the Northern States will yet have to introduce it. Their theory of free government is a delusion." There's "Democratic" doctrine foryou,with a vengeance ; "our theory of free government a delusion," "laboring men, w hetber white or black, to be slaves ?" Verily, matters are com ing to a pretty pass with us. The Richmond (Va.) Enquirer, Mr. Buchan an's confidential organ, and considered by the "Democratic" party as its ablest paper in the South, speaks as follows in a recent number : 'Repeatedly have wc asked the North, 'has not the experiment of universal liberty FAIL ED I Are not the evils of FREE SOCIETY INSUFFERABLE ? And do not most think ing men among you propose to subvert and re construct it V Still no answer. This gloomv silence is another conclusive proof, added to many other conclusive evidences we have fur nished, that free society, in tho long run, is an impracticable form of society ; it is every where starving, demoralized, and insurrcciion ary. "We repeat, thes, that policy and humanity alike forbid the extension of the evils of free socie'y to new people and coming generations. "1 wo opposite and conflicting forms of so ciety cannot, among civilized men, co-exist and.endure. The one must give way and cease to exist. The other become universal. "If free society be unnatural, immoral, un christian, it must fall, and give way to a slave society a social system old as the world, uni versal as man." And the South Side Pemocrat, another pro minent Buchanan paper, in Virginia, whose editor was supported for Clerk of the House of Representatives, by the Democratic mem bers of the present Congress T. J. D. Fuller, of Maine, among them abuses everything FREE after this stvle : "We have got to hating everything with the prefix FREE, from free negroes down and up through the whole catalogue FREE farms. FREE labor. FREE society, FREE will, FREE thinking, FREE children, and FREE schools all belonging to the same bnnod of damna ble isms. But the worst of all these abomina tions is the modern svstem of FREE Schools. The New England system of free schools has been the prolific cause and source of the infi delities and treasons that have turned her ci ties into Sodoms and Gomorrahs, and her land into the common nestling-places of howling bedlamites. We abominate the system because the SCHOOLS ARE FREE." Tho Washington Union, the National Organ of the "Democratic" party, says that the hon est and heioic FREE LABORING MEN of Kansas . . ... "Are tMISERABLE, BLEAK-EYED BAB BLE, who have been transferred like SO MA- N V CATTLE to that country." The New York Day Book, one of the two papers In New York City that support James Buchanan, proposes to enslave poor AMERI CANS, Germans and Irish, who may fall into poverty and be unable to support their fami lies. Hero are the Day Book's exact words in speaking of the POOR WHITE PEOPLE : "Stdl the parents of these children into SLAVERY. Let our Legislature pass a law that whoever will take these parents and take care of them and their OFFSPRING, in sick ness and in health clothe them, feed them, and house them: shall be legally entitled to their services ; and let the same Legislature de cree that whoever receives these parents and their CHILDREN, and obtains their services, shall OWN THEM AS LONG AS THEY LIVE." The Richmond Enquirer, of a very recent date, contains the following very 'high' opin ion of the people of the North : "AVe can bring the capital 6mployed in manufactures, and most of it employed in com merce, South, when we please. We can trans fer Manchester, and Birmingham and Lowell to the South, and thus in a single year, quad ruple the wealth of the South. But we would not have your rich, vulgar, licentious bosses, and your brlal,ignoruut and insubordinate fac tory hands in our midst, for all the wealth of "Ormus and of Ind." We are as rich as we care to be. We would not exchange our situ ation for the vulgar sensuality and brutality of the "iwiiceaux riches," the coarse parvetiues, the millionaire cotton factors and grocers of thu North or of England, much less for tho countless millions of paupers and criminals, who lift up and sustain the cowardly, selfish, sensual, licentious, infidel, agrarian, and revolutionary edifice of fee society." The Muscogee, Alabama, Herald, an enthu siastic Buchanan paper, delivers itself as fol lows : "Free society ! we sicken at the name. What is it but a conglomeration or GREASY MECHANICS, FILTHY OPERATIVES, SMALL FISTED FARMERSand moon struck theorists? All the Northern and especially the New England States are devoid of society fitted for well-bred gentlemen. The prevail ing class one meets with is that of mechanics struggling to be genteel, and small farmers do ing their own drudgery ; ind who are not fit for association with a Southern gentleman's (nigger) body-servant. This Is your free so ciety which the Northern hounds are endeav oring to extend into Kansas." So much for extructs from "Democratic" newspapers. Now for a lew from Democratic speeches : S. W. Downs, late Democratic Senator from Louisiana, in an elaborate and carefully pre pared speech, published in the Waslington Globe, says : "I call upon the opponents of Slavery to prove that the WHITE LABORERS of the Nirth are as happy, as contented, or as com fortable, as the Slaves of the South. In the South the slaves do not sutler one-tenth the evils endured by the white laborers of the North. Poverty is unknown to the Southern slave ; for as soon as the master of slaves be comes too poor to provide for them, he SELLS them to others, who can take care of them. This, sir, is one of the excellencies of the sys tem of slavery, and this the superior condi tion of the Southern slave over the Northern WHITE laborer." According to Mr. Downs, then, (good Dem ocratic authority,) all that the Northern white laborer requires is somebody to sell hint when be falls into poverty. Admirable philanthro py ! Beautiful democracy ! ! Senator Clemens, of Alabama, declared in a speech in the U. S. Senate,- that "The operatives of New England were not as well situated nor as comfortably off as I tie slaves that cultivate the rice and cotton fields of the South." In a recent speech by Mr. Reynolds, Piercc- Buchanan-Dcmocratic candidate for Congress from Missouri, that gentleman distinctly as serted that "The same construction of the power of Congress to exclude Slavery from a United States Territory, would Justify the Govern ment in excluding foreign-born citizens Ger man and Irish as well as niggers. Here a Missouri Democrat classes German and Irish indiscriminately with Negro slaves. Mr. L. II. Goode, another Atchison Demo crat of Missouri, in a recent speech against the Free State men of Kansas, denounced the la boring men as "WHITE SLAVES !" Senator Butler, (the uncle of "Assassin" Brooks,) a shining light in the Democratic ga laxy, declared in a speech in the UnitedStatcs Senate this session "That men have NO RIGHT TO VOTE un less they are possessed of property, as required by the Constitution of South Carolina. There no man can VOTE unless he owns TEN NE GROES, or real estate to the value of Ten Thousand Dollars. And this is the doctrine "Democracy," so called, would introduce into Pennsylvania. JAMES BUCH ANAN,the Presidential can didate of the men and of the party who hold these odious views, advocated the doctrine of reducing the WAGES of AMERICAN OPE RATIVES and LABORERS to the Euiopean standard, which is known to be about TEN CENTS A DAY. What a fit candidate Mr. Bu chanan is for those who would make WHITE MEN slaves! JAMES BUCHANAN is the Representa tive and Advocate of the extension of SLAVE LABOR. FREEMEN OF PENNSYLVANIA ! . Are you prepared to cast your votes for a man who entertains such doctrines 7 Thebe aee two eventful periods in the life of women : one, when she wonders who she will have the other who will have her. The first occurs at sixteen, the second at forty. LIFE. I wnlkcd tlio earth in life's spring time,' With guiltless trusting heart. And dee mod its towers would never f ado,' . Their sweetness? ne'er depart ; . . I quaffed tho cup of pleasure deep, With many dangers rile, And with a childish faith exclaimed How beautiful id life Aronnd I saw but nature's wealth In. rich profusion lio. My soul drank in the brantiful Of earth, and air, nnd fkr, And gentle words nnd pleasant smiles I met with everywhere; Tho world w-omcd full of liviDg heorU, And life, indeed, wua fair. And then came love, with fervent vows, To add one pleasure more My heart with joy o'crflowing was, It had been full before. And oh, it came with dove-liko wing. And nestled fondly there I welcomed it hope sweetly smiled, And life was very fair. But time passed on and youth's promised joys, Atuiy approaching tied, Life's fairest flowers, their sweetness gone, Lay withered 'ncath my tread. I suw their sad stems droop And blacken one by or.c, y As roses fado and piue cway When suaded from the sun. .' I ; Tho love I gave was returned awhile With a pulsion wild and deep, Until a careless lip betrayed tho change, And I ALONE urn left to weep. Oh. now I see earth's beauty marred And foel that bitter slrifj Tho charm is broken now I sigh Then, this id earnest life. In gentle tones I've said, May I thy pathway cheer ? Thou art my life my guidir.g stsr My world my pleasure here. Xo. I must battle on, ai.onk, Life's never ending strife. The dove haj flown, alone I WEEP At weary, aimless life. TIIE STAR SPANGLED BANNER. If the French hymn of Liberty, the Marsel laise, was composed under exciting circum stances, the Star Spangled Banner was inspir ed by events no less patriotic by our distin guished countryman; Mr. Francis Scott Key, an able and eloquent lawyer, an accomplished gentleman, a man of noble and generous im pulses. During the war with the British in 1814, Mr. F. Scott Key was residing in Balti more, and hearing of the detention of a dear and intimate friend he started to obtain his re lease. He went as far as the mouth of the Patapsco river, which enters the Chesapeake Bay, and is about eighty-five miles north of the Potomac river. Here he was arrested and carried on board a British man of war belong ing to the British fleet stationed at Fort Mc Henry, the bombardment of which be was compelled to witness. The English Admiral boasted before Mr. Key that lie would take the Fort in a few hours, and the city of Balti more within the two succeeding days. The bombardment continued dnring the whole day and following night, without making an impression either on the strength of the works or the spirit of the garrison. Our patriotic countryman stood on the deck watching, through the smoke that sometimes obscured it, the bauuer offrecdom waving over the fort. At length night came and he could see it no more. Still he watched, until at length dawn began to bring objects around into distinctness. With a beating heatt he turned towards the fort, and there, waving in the morning breeze, high and uninjured, was the banner, with its stars and stripes, the ban ner of freedom ancl independence, then in its early days. It was at this moment of joy and triumph that Francis Scott Key, under the in fluence of patriot excitement, composed the Star Spangled Banner. After Mr. Key had been liberated, and the British had retired from Fort McIIenry, without attempting the attack on the city of Baltimore, he completed his patriotic hymn, which wa enthusiastically received then, and has ever been considered as one of the national songs of our country. Ax Error. English travellers generally re present the Americans as a debilitated, degen erate and sickly race, and the nonsense is reit cratod in this country by those who ought to know better. It is a little singular Uiat such an enfeebled race should have accomplished more physical labor in subduing an entire con tinent in less than two centuries than all the nations of Europe have effected for their own countries in the same time. Physically, mor ally and mentally there is no more vigorous race than the Americans on tho face of the globe. They live as long, areas hardy .and well developed, can endure as great an amount of fatigue, and accomplish as much labor,men- tally and physically, as any other people They have peopled a continent and cultivated it till it produces abundance, have traversed it with railroads and telegraphs, built up a com mercial marine equal to the largest, and estab lished the best constitutional government that was ever devised by man. We want no better evidences than these of the vigor of their phy sical, or of their mental constitution. Womas. An exchange says that "God in tended all women to be beautiful as much as he did the roses and morning glories ; and that he intended they should obey his laws, and cut indolence and corset strings, and indulge in freedom and fresh air. For a girl to expect to be handsome with the action of her lungs dependant upon the expansive natnre of a cent's worth of tape, is as absurd as to look for tulips in a snow bade, or a ftill grown oak fa a littla floT pot, THE DRUNKARD'S DAUOnTER. That night I was out late. I returned by Lee's cabin a'wut 11 o'clock. As I approach ed I saw a strange looking object cowering under the low caves. A cold rain was falling. It was late in autumn. I drew riear and there' was Millie wet to the skin. Her father had driven her out some hours before ; . she had laid down to listen to the heavy snoring of Ids drunken slnmbers, so that she might "creep back to her bed. But before she heard it, na ture seemed cxhaused and she fell into a trou bled sleep w ith the rain drop pattering upon' her. I tried to take her home with me j but no, true as martyr to his faith, she struggled from my arms and returned to the no dark and silent cabin. Things went on so for weeks and months. But at length Lee grew less vie- lent, even in his drunken fits, to his self-de nying child ; and one day when he awoke from a heavy slumber after debauch, and saw her' preparing breakfast for him, and singing a childish song, he turned to her, and with a tone almost fender, said : "Millie, what makes you stay with me V "Because you arc my father, and I love yon.', "You love me!" repeated the wretched man ; "love me .'" ne looked at his bloated limbs, bis soiled and ragged clothes ; "love me," he still murmured "Millie, what makes you Jove me ? I am poof drunkard, every body despises me. Why don't you ?" "Dear father," said Millie, with swimming eyes, "mother taught me to love you and cv- ( cry night site comes from heaven and stand- by my little' bed and says, 'Millie, don't leave your father ; Millie love your father ; he will get away from that rum fiend one of thesa days, and then how happy you will be.' " A TtERiBLE Evest. Bussian journals are filled with details of the catastrophe at Sche maka, in the Caucasus. On the morning of the' 11th July, the weather was very sultry.- and a general feeling of suffocation waS felt At length, a heavy rumbling noise was beard, followed by a very violent shock of an earth quake. Although the shock lasted only about thirty seconds, 300 houses and more than 1C0 shops were completely thrown down, and a great many others seriously dafnagoa. Only one person was killed ; five were wounded. The loss is estimated at upwards of 400,000 francs. Mixxesota. It is estimated that at the pre sent time the territory of Minnesota contains a population of one hundred and forty thou sand souls. This is probabfy an under esti mate, as last winter an official reckoningmade the total one hundred and twenty thousand. It is calculated, however, that by the close of the emigration season of tho year the ag gregate will be three hundred thonsand. " If this be so, Minnesota will enter the circle of States with three members of the lower house of Congress. She is now entitled to two. "Say, Joe, kt us stop and read this bed stone." "Yes, Pat." The 'hed stone' was a mile stono on which was engraved SO miles to Pittsburg. Pat spelled a while, and then exclaimed : "Arrahj Joe, spake softly and thrad lightly, here lies the dead Mr. Miles, 30 years old, and he died in Pittsburgh. It's a grate comfort to know how to rade such things." A Gascos officer, demanding his salary from the Minister of War, declaring that he was ia danger of dying with hunger, the Minister, who saw that bis visage was full and ruddy, told him that his face contradicted his state ment. "Ah, sir," said he, "don't trust to that ; this lace is not mine ; it belongs to my landlord, who has given me credit for a long time past!" When young men have nothing to live upon but love, they commonly fall in love and get married just as if hugging and kissing were a substitute for mutton chops, or as if terms of endearment wonld supply the place of mashed tatersand fricassed mackerel. Tho philosopher who said that love was a beauti ful madness, was not far from the mark. Wk learn from the proceedings of a Teach ers' Convention at Benicia California, com mencing August 12th, published in the Sacra mento Union, that the educational interests are well attended to. There are in the State 300 schools and 3S0 teachers actively engaged in their profession. . . i Is consequence of the failure of the apple) crop in Europe, there is a large demand in New York for expoi tation. One firm ther has already contracted to send 6,000 barrels to England, ind at least 10,000 barrels ot New ton pippins are in course of preparation for shipment. A waggish spendthrift said "Five yeara ago I was not worth a cent in the world ; now see w-here I am through my own exertions." "Well, where are you 1" "Why I owe more than three thousand dollars." In one year New York city eats 185,000 ox en, 12,000 cows, 550,000 sheep and lambs, 40, 000 calves, and 2S0.OO0 swine. If ranged seT en abreast, tbf wroki sake a psooMsio tvo Mtleftea;, " 4 Hi t 1 1 i 1 1 1 i