MI MI6 SONG' FOR FREIKAINTIMS O'er the country; east and'wesi;• • TllClV'Sfinmetliing curious brewing, , folks. re, gathered everywhere, • .2.'heir country's troubles viewing; , • Then cannot,keep.froin talking out ; _ Just what the 'And when they 100 l sbearnest ' •lt is dre:Olfulpif dio doubt, 'em. . • Cnonns...ll:lntt'Tflioinatter, Yani;oe boys? the matter lienclWond Ininilslogether now, FretiCan of all partiesl_ "Tho , like•nf this wiwev er siiwr They say with py tt•blazitig “The soui h is riazy for us all • To go CO n raising. ` She smals lier ugly Iturn To bully', Luse, end 410(4 118, , Aud swear by ell the woolly pates, She surely Shell hove Kansas? The. fedlis that Jive a' little North, Are opt to take - the Pallets, . And just, as like n i itot'lltey've 'fear(' Oi Nmne tremendous capers. And s hi6V;lt;tol - . ttitcfoollfdrirosS tt Lied of notion sure-us gUIIS, ho ' l alit folks, hey'ro all hr. gl eat: e!Atitiali4T They sent six hundred men or so, TO Sit in I . ( i.IIV-ttlltititt And evely man uas. eyes and :111 attention. : /Led ft -Li And listoning thou:qids gairvd in.. l'l.noi looming cannon rettryil llie Ui JOHN FII.EMONT fnr captain.' 11TFI7Filioerals are hly antriliffT" Ant.i'vrawl about half•hearlAil: They bra . g.-aynf 'yet they , lOok-as -if Their Mends had: all departed. Their plmforin is.tb villainous - To Nita mortal man 'on. • And yet •t, y'aS 110110 too dart: or steep Fur .ttir.:Jint.,lluchanatt.: -The 't,,therrtlip;s-1 don't know wintt. I tsa . ri‘atlylt,4oliall '611r 1. 7 5.. " .ono name iygltt, if k l l4 , loNr.tsß9,‘ n • • Tit, We-that taus4 , tofid Hintore though alticky man, \Val tied linngt•lf forsaken, _‘ I'Vitti not. n Otigle state at all ' Tv Indi)Mint i;nve - Itis bacon. Jut YAnkeo'D eMnen Wel their 1.10,3 d 15'ith noble ardor burning; And mean to hay scword'or so; Their conntry'§' fate concerning= And ishen•they come to `etc, I gueh.4 • If nit repulsvd-by'diatan,— • They'll send Pierce home and In his place, Elect Fremont and Dayton. So, brothers, rally for the strife And get your votes In order; • Let not a nuiu be lost or left In all your Ain& border. ' Unfurl your bannerA to the kreeze, To P.oat o'er land and river, And thousand wind; shall catchihefolds Of freedom's flag forever. .. oliti~al: EXTRACTS_FROM --lUDGE--IC-ELLTS-akEAT-SPEE . Cli, IN PHILADELPHIA. By . what is called the Democratic rule it said that .the South will be injured if she can not take her Mayes into all our vast territory Who 'and' what is ,the South ?' The South i six millions of free • people, living in - . State which embrace over nine hundred Omani) square miles of territory; and they have wit them over three millions of 51a‘46% . . What i the North? • ..•They , htve not nine; bitadre -thousand' miles of territory ; they have tn.. 450:000 miles, on which there are dwellin.., this day thirteen millions of free people.. New, 1 say the South has. forced, this itame . upon . us, and suppose we accept it as an issue,in which one or the other must be 'injured,:, shall. ;he injured party be the 6 uiiilione.who have 900, 000 square miles of territory to dwell in, or the thirteen millions who have. but 450,00(1 miles. Shall slavery be hemmed in, or OW; °the freedom of the North be unshed into the little space ? That is the question, my fellow, ..citizens, for you to decide, and as you vote at, the cowing Presidential election, so, perhaps, Will You in Philadelphia . decide it. But, say you, slavery ie in thb States, and we have nothing to do with it: So say l l. The Coistitution, you say, protects it in the States. So says every ittepuVliaT - tn; and •we agtee that it is our duty, as citizens loyal to the Constitution, to - protect _Slavery in . , the States ; but the question for ue ,th decide is;, shall it. go there in the territories? Shall the-White laboring man be 4• orusbed. out ?" Shall we he pint up in these fifteen States 00 that the; populationshall become so abundant . and land pi• high that wages will fall and- the white man be -little better. than a slave ? , Nirben t ,"vy friend 9,. will Albs European- mat ' ,grant - fit ' i - rafrooting, " When New York and all4.l l aelon,.and_Baltintere,aid 7 Cincinnati have their :over-Crowded atreets t __and lanes and alleys; and - when there shall bb --;; no cheaP land in' the far Westto maim . te I' . What will bo the condition of . American A laborer? Will - not ,twenty or thirty Years aim to bring us to 2 4 .4.:Buchanan'S standard of wadei—the Buroyean standard—Ahat which ilrivis the- Irishman, and , the 'German, and every other EurciPeari. from' his• land Y. • IS there ,not every day a.7ti:de-,-nf-iniiigi•ation7ll-o-w--t -ing froin .tbe westward—taking 'up new latal.arid settling there, opening 4-w.field, of laberTantl-thrirs-lteeping-uwageirl-'—NOWF-.-leti .savery, which now shuts , us „opt froth. the' South; shut us Dirt from the' North, and q *-are penOn, arid , inn littlOvhile•,our lion will,be 'like that of .1121 Ope,: ' . 011.1 my-. fellow citizens, what woeldli! the condition - ef the South - then! There is there - a - servile . .race, tyrannized over by their masters, bat held in bondage 'hy'the great free North. We tp --- and fetch them back.; it'is khJwii .We have ‘ poWer to crush them if they attempt•tc - armape. But reduce the laboring Masses of the .North to ‘ten cents day, c 'or ta-,twenty--fiVe cents a day, or-'the Europetin Standard of •WageS' quete . Mr: Vichanan's precise language) . and there cOmdiinn affinity between the- op - pressedof the,Northand the oppressed- of the South:L.' We wetlrd make a fearful day of reckoning to those . who had dope the•wrong • • But,' say some, it is .only' a wrong to the itegro—it does not touch the white man ; it is anly:a wrong to the farm-laborer—it:does .not touch the man of the workshop, and- the. mechanic."' Let me-tell you you make a.niisH lake there. • Let me roadie yOuiti advertise ment front the Itichmon.d (4a:)'' Dispatch' of Janniii7:lBil6; . • • - 'HIRING) RIC 11111010; servants, 'both male and female . are.. common. ding higher prices thitf.,yeor than the past . ,_ Farth hands bring from $l3O to $163„ and women from $4O - ta $75 per , year. Factory iindsMive advanced .about ls t ier cent. on 7 - 1 - iorytrar, -- timl - firsfTate - funnie - cooksof ,-- good. character, ,•and without encumbrance, have advanced even - above -that ratio." • - • !factory hands.,.. sort of factorie4?-- 'IV friends, all the tobacco of, Richmond, -- the --grea),---tobacco. city..oEithis_country, made by slaves. 'lf yob go into their tobacco faciories, - yon find no white working .men, or WUrking. Women, there:=-. ma q imstake . ;. I mean you find no free ones; they are, all . , slaves, tnough some are as white as- any of ..you,' G into Tennessee • at, tai iron works • there,' and yim shod find mine .obot_slaves• la --boring them; in-tfie.ore banks:or the 1111 • . - • - I What is the law of the South upon this question ? I quote it as given •by the same paper, the Richmond Inquirer: • 4'he-laWs-t)f-all-the-Boutherzt-Statos,justi fy the holding of white men in slavery, pro vided, thicifig,h the Mother,. they are descend ed however remoOly from a negro slave.' The first cross is a 'half breed ;! the second cross is a quadroon. Trace it in geometrical progression. In the next' there is but one eighth of negro blood in the next only the fourth cross there is one-sixteenth of negro blood; and where , the taint is so slight as , that, who shall trace it? Who shall discover it?— ' 'thee reached that point. for many of their slaves have lees than one sixteenth—bay bat ene,thirtyliihth Tart African blood .their veins ; bu so long es the mother is a slave • though she have but one thirty-sixth part of African blood aid the father have . none, the child is still's slave, 'his condition , folloiring that of his mother; one ;the principle,. 'partite Trequilur 'venoms.' The doctrine of 'white 'alto very is no Mere abstract theory of the - Soull?: - it is becoming* necessity.. , They must either' = _operations; or in the 'manufacture and WOI k ing ofiron : !I appeal tiCariy : colonliattcnist that is hrre to say. whether during the last Tihree-years-a-prominetit - gentleman of Tenn . esseq. , —l belie 4 it is Hon Slr, Bell—has nut setiLto . Liberia' 120 excellent iron-wtakers.. men and women, from his iron works l,de velop the iroe'rosources of Africa ? W. Ave the slave labor of 'Virginia comp in ^ .h • free labor in the inanufacttive of tobnic - n ,_.; , Tenneesee slave labor is competing he free labor of Pennsylvania in the man, of iron. Go to Georgia and yen ii 4 , boasting that Georgia itt • ibe: - Slaseenusetts of the South.' They take you to their cot - ton factories and through their 'various ,work .. shops, and you find.slaves performing all the `labor jp every establishment ; and I challenge you 49, study the freight-lists of the line of steailiers•Plying between this city and Sayan:- 'FICah - , - Georgitr, - 7 - and - yetr --- wi 11-4 ntl-1 hat,4lle-y -carry stendilY.to Philadelphia coarse cotton fabrics manufactured by slaves near the cotton' fields.in the neighborhoodof Stteannah; andl they mndersell the Philadelphia mechanic. in his own city, - because - their labor is labor • witlniut wages—labor .at the 'hands of the people who beget children and whose children are counted as cattle by their owners. . - Not only do they. Interfere with labor of this kind ; hut I tell yuu, my . friends, the question. ~- is pi ! •rsed upon us by the South l for the : cstab-, fish»tent of_whitt slavery.'. This' ii;:-' tte idle talk. ..They sisy the inetitutton is no Intigereafe if it dependi upon the sluctrine of African slavery.. This is a -necessity. :, of the' South. 'Let, me .''read to you an.advertisetaent taken from the Richmond InqUirer. of -Slay 27th, 1856: A runaway 'Phil' is advertised-se belonging to .the estate ofVni. Gooch and is spoken :of as . follows: 1.,..., • The said negro Le 'nearly.white, with eyes blue, hair a little our is almost 0 feet I 0 inches high, not more tha 20 years old. It. is believed he will endeavor to make - his way to kfree State as he cab anywhere pass for a white man.' (foible .:itjetatb. emancipate their most ,valuable Sla ves;; bec a use -•they'•are-WhiW, or th6,..iMUSt--fitsiie-upen_tbz_ Nortiftitirrendering all our eittensive , territory to their tiMouliar institutien:' - :' • . -- '..1 . beek-:at-it; my. fellow-cit'r.enstram4-exagge .- - rating. .('No.') .Am I wandering one httir's.! 'breath from the real state of the' case*? I ask you, Oh 1 .• workingmen' of Pennsylvania, to go to your pillows to night and ponder as you in - i - v - ei - p - Oaderecl heftne; upoulliejitliiit'is ) before.youin :this election. If ydu ar the Meads of treedom-,,if you love llie contitn 7 tion_of_Ybur-coun yt - r - f - - - - -- if y ti ------- ii ---- names of its great pettiots---•if you believe in a su perintending and avenging - Providence-7U you believe in . Ohristianq which teaches you. that 'in 118 much as ye have done it, unto the iinst one of these,' . (the 'suffering. ones. of earth',) 'ye have &Me itiintro yrinr•G; . eitt Master'-'--Oh! think, atid"think - that nil 'these mastere are connected with your vote in.the coming presi... dentin' cleotibu—tli by your , vote you May either say that i itutiiia whieWthtis degYildes humanity,. sh he hemmed into the. South of that line of 30 .degrees, 30 minutes; or that it shall stalk with unbanished fruit ,ail:.over the, great territarie* --- ofThe Yan shalt-vs:ay wheth er the laborer shall. Walk erect,a freeman; putting his Wages in his packet and Spending', them at'his will, or whether :in the Sciuth , white or "ilia; he shell be the mere creature of his owner, and in the nortlr: he reduted by the-competition of unpaid labor.to a conditioh. scarcely more happy Abair that of th'e Slave. Is not•the issue a portentous' one? Is.'it WO one demanding reflection ?- Is it -not one 'demanding vigorous action ? Oh !my fellow . •oh couniquitin, let not' party !matey mil;lad:y - 6V, - . Be not, deluded bilk° cry . of 4 7AinericattieiVr if it 7 woUld lend ,fetarotn "the'fr,de' aide of this issite. Americanism is to stand up for free deni and Critinlity of min. _ VmManse np tilliuse.) A - Merlcanisuris.-to-goVern-Atnerica , by satin+ AnteriCan apiiit wbieh will maintain the equality of 'freedom of . rhan.' (Loud 'chests.) Be not humbugged either by the cry ot"depacracy.':': :There - was a time wincri the Democracy of our country _Claimed to be; and I at least believed them to_tholeet to the lioe'—whett , l ti were the friends offreelloto,:egaal 7 ity tied education—When I believed that they strove to give to ulna the freest and fullest chances to develop-himself "gild provide for the prosperity of his posterity. . coaling But what is-the-so-called-ADemocracy-Lot-ti day? I spurn the Democratic party of to day. (A perfect storm of applause,`which did not subside fur several minutes). I° spurn it, be cause it tramples and spits upon the graves of, the great nit;n who Organized it, and libels their greet names. (Cheering) I spurn • it, because, as I have eboWn you from these vol umes, it has proved recreant to all the great principles that led it on to victory; (Ap plause.) 1 spurn it, because, instead of he ing,the friend dirtlibr and the laboring man, it is attempted to degrade the freemen of the Nprtb to a level with a slave of the South.— (Cheers.) I spurn and I scorn the sham De moorreay-of to.riday, , -beeause-zit-is- attempting to extend allover our country n system which which.makes tho child_of a woman descended from a slave, a slave, be hens white - as' white' :be :be, , -though his he Caucassian and his spirit as free as that of Jefferson or of Wash ington'. (Loud applause.), I scorn the Dem ocrat() party, because it has silenced Its own lenders, or expelled them from its ranks, and placed itself in charge of s i bs Disunion orators of the South. ~ I scorn it ,because it has in the cabinet of its President, Jeff Davis, a Dip : unionist of Mississippi,' and it bas Bent thrpugh the 'whole North, stumping in its cause, Ben-. ator Benjamin, of Louisiana, a Distminnigt, Senator Toombs, of Georgia, a Dis Unionist, Alexander H. Stephens, of Georgia, Dieunionist—because its columns are led on `by meti who are Pledged to dissolve the Union and sanritice the constitution of • the country. (Applause.) I scorn the ao-called Democrat io party of Pennsylvania especially,- because; z :having silenced its former leaders, or it expel!- . ed them from its bosom, has taken those as its champions and" it leaders with whom I hive bad a life-long political bailie. =EI Why, what is this Democracy t It puts me in mind of a knife which a French gentleman of my acquaintance had, of which he used to .oss a great ea . ' Tr - a a goo. e ow, a little thick - beaded at times, but very kind hearted. ," Thelo n " said he, "Mr. ti., is one very good knife vich I tirought from France wiz me. I values him very much, both be cause I brought him from - France wiz me,.and because he Ina wiz some accidents and I giq i hien repaired, and he just as good as ever. Fret, soon 'after' emu to- - this-eountry- I brae - se blade, and I take'kfm to Mr. Shivei= ley Cheseut street, and - he put in BL - new, blade, - just as " geod as the old one ; den; a good vile after dat, I broke ze handle; -icoi dentally; And I go' to Mr.' Shively again, but Mr;Shively move away, and'l go around in . Seundstreati Mildr ! Iliebardsonotnd,- put s new handle ei—so I have m:y lame old knife just sis good as new." (Laughter.) The pettworatiolparty have got a nevi-blade and a new -- handle , to-their - knife (great-laughter) but it is, they say, just u good as new. friends, don't believe .Ilitsen-L-doiii 7 t b • .1i eve_th enl..,__LoolLfor_yourselieis,Ahluk.Joy yourselveS,, inquire for' yourseives.:4f you have thOugbt of voting'.e.ither for Mr Do ifol take my assertion.. •Do not take the assertion of and 'partizan lender, God. knobs I do not propose voluntarily to . becnine Your' letich;r: ' I did:not seek the poSition:in which •bac, - tiltd far distant when I first beittat : --1.-bad-lieetr answer... was, I cannot accept—l cannot serve ; and nothioi but a sense.of duty has brouihttne-to , the-mind.-to, serve. 'But I Usk you while you listen to•.'rtic .to think- 2 -when you leave me to examine the queistion Which I have put before you, 'and to look to the-'authorities. If I have' Made, a misstatement .1 have made =- it - unconsciously: - If I have made a misstatdment, I have been Misled by the law books-that I have studied— by the..antliorities Which 1: bring here [Ben ton's Thirty. Years' View,) by the various ones yrhicli my library furnishes, : by, Which I test it. I have present of the went hithers of !livisinti of Tityrty; - witli an you to stand Well," say some, ry, you are right in' dc thejiniou! save the in ribout oe much muuntaioS. (Lau#i t i as easy at this moment mountains,- Union.' Our-paity,-4;the:constilutional - party; (I,oudOheerintlee strind 'Where the fath e troto - ti - r - oViiire'stood—we-atand-w-itere-the ;Whig party anti the piqnocratic arty- agreed in, standing, down ti-14--trovrrseni administra tion. [Appirittsed Anrthere ean'he no die solution of the 'Union -for adhering to.'tbat • .13Utr.sny sane, .voli.•have — taken up- two . candidates from the north—molt:m . li one see • tion—aml Mr. Fillmore sags tha- the South ought-not to stand that. They stood itwhen J ane townsman, .Richard Rush, 'cm ran as a can& ' __Write for the Vice I residency, with John Adams, of Massaclitisettfi,.forTres Went; _They-sioott it when Gen. Williarn ry Ifriirisan,-.of Ohio, rat; with Granger of •NeW_ York. We stood 'it when . Andrew Jack son, of Tennes4e; witlnJohn C. Calhoun, of,South Caroline. It bas been stood i so oftin,• that there is no danger of dissolution on that MEM But, our position is this: if wetsre beaten, we ncquiese.c:--o,ol‘ 'our flint., and fire ugaiu [applause] and if we are viotorious„ we w4ll see, who will dissolve the Union, [Vociferous cheers. A, voice—• That's it!'] Why, there is-as-much of Andrew Jackson in John -C. Fremont as there - Could be if be were 'a chip of the old block,' as there is in any human being that lives. [Great applause] ''Old Hickory' him self lived upon acorns, and Fremont had tee• ted a little dog's meat—just , us Caleb Cushing has, though Coshing did it-by mistake. When.l on his Chinese mission, be was dining with a Chi lamen-cf. rank,...antLaccortling_ to e_rules_ of Chinese - etiquette, bad to taste of every dish One he tasted which pleased his palate ex ceedingly Well. WiShing to It.quiie whit it was, 'and being unable to speak the language, said he supposing it to he , a duck,.'' Quack, quack V 'No, no,' replied the Chinaman, very promptly ; 'bow, wow,—wow r • [Shouts of laughter] But when Col. Fiemont tirint to the Indian council, and they sat before him, roast dog meat, he knew he had to show him self-able to, do anythifg -and eyerythitig ; at; he went at it.with is- much '.alacrity as the hungriestlndian'present : Isay" he didnot like it much', but he was in the service, of his country, and must not shrink ; so he ate it. Again see the bearing of COlonel Fremont; in that terrible expedition whiebheiindertook at his Own expense, to explore the Rooky Mountains. ins guide had misled on one of the highest peaks, three thousand feet above our level; they, were almost blinded by a drift of bard frozen sinew, throughwthich they bad to walk waste deep. They gathered their little forces together he and tie thirty three men, and sheltered themselves for the 'night. It was the 24th of December.• In Ike morning they made their way bank over the peak to get its shelter against the wind.— , riT)Trbud - dled tr by , mui num— together as, by not to keep themselves warm, and fell one after another, making the nucleus. of a snowbenk,*: Their implements were , lost, and suck tines panted dangers and difficulties had enecul,Pat' sad them that despair seemed to be overtaking the men. lie rallied their spirits, and he spent that,Chriettnas in reading li4ekitteste, to - show - thetn t that - be-glad - not disteneerted - and that be did not feel disheartened by danger.---, Wien cut off tram all resew:eta, misled by his guide, deceived by one in - whoni be trusted; with the hearts of his, nien.. curdling in their bosoms, .'and the dutn brutes who t:ould not be inspired by , lila brenry,' oinking around him he Oalmlylooltup a iiilot7e . of 'Blackstone; and by that dealslon , of chant:ter, that appar ent kidiferenco to the . oiroumitances that suireenaded kbn, be assured his men that their detention was after all bra , a mere Christmas . halt. When they had' sufficicptly' reed' lie dispatched a detatObment on the 'backward track fornaaistance, and whenilay_d_ turn in tituo.-ho-himielf, , with • knotpalci on 1014 back,' soqght abd found pooi . . inen-nindderied-with-bunger-nnd—the-elrents-nf----- the cold. Ile hurriod ; on, and on, and on, til he found relief.and saved thelreat . hody of that company, of men. .IYe have in hini• a mau who has exhibited the character of Napoloon forletiergy==the ctittrhor - of - 4nciteon:for firm tins never been preaideit; it is true, but who has neyeT9Meil,ltalteiF to perform' any duty ; ' civil or military., ino,wL oti be has not shown himself .up to the 10010--[long continued en thusinstio epplaßs443 7 -A man born South ar the •Sloth, but who his served his whole ? country—a man' familiar -with ali*ilstory, arid 'especially familiar with all Aniericatr history--the first 'enlightened , magi that traversed this region of Eansas 7 -the man•whe gave not only to America,but to the world theknowledge -- the complete knowledge, I might say—of the. Rocky • mountain's: their .. • passes, their various scientific disclosures . ; ho ,revealed therunliaild:with wonderful rapidity: _the_ntati who-gave-4, who represented. that btate" with marked nbili ty for it.short,timeinthe councils- ofthe na 7 ti,n—the man [and mark it ] wiled the lea.. I • dere of the bemocratic party one year ago sought to make the candidate of that party-fof _ the presidedgy. The proof is clear, and un- . .do - abled,--thatrather more than - e'year ago,. Governor FluyJ;-ot' Virginia, -and other die tinguished.Dentucrats-sought to make Mr. Fre- . - count the candidate of the Peuiocratic party. He listened to theiii, and when be found -that OMM they would ask him to . appro've of the repeal,. of the Missouri - Compromise line, he said . to .to them ';ever;'- that he had been a Demo crat.; that he owed to the Democratic party all the political preferinent be had-ever had ; 7ibit he liiiine political aspirations; .hutwere the Dresideacy.of the United ; States tWent,y times that P,resideneY; Ise - never would consent to see bb laIT ry extended by the abolition or: abrogation of. the_Mi-sours Compromise floe, '''' Grout a; Manse.] Ile is:a man fit for any , and tor in v eery the r ), nerged o cy ; , and a : • ikon behind . .._ osidentlitl Chair, will *.L .,...„\ 1 / 4.. stand. one of.the,yoUngest and ablest ,jurist of z New Jersey—a man who : has distinguished - himself - upon the:liench,. : •as:a- 'lawyer and a • chancelor,,,nnd who has rendered, himself emi nent in the councils oithe nation—a safe man —a cautions roan—a - firm Man.. s : They are both the friends of freedattil and 1 . .ask, you, , let • your party predilections hitherto have been what they may; 'to 'Unite with: ckne_eom- mon consent. and vote for your'own . old, doe. - trines--vote for the doctrines of Washington and Jefferson, and • Polk, and Harrison and 'Taylor—vote for the freedom of the North— for the eufranchiseinent or labor a, id the pres ervation of its freedom—vote for man, as man : —vote for . Fremont and Dayton, and . leave' other issues to. take,care of themselves, here after. Americans cannot 'govern America! until we have a free America to be governed. [Rapturous applanse: which contint4id some _... —.:_. - • The MaripOia Claim. So much has been said about Col. Fremont's ..,. Mariposa lands, and so many contradictory - stories have been put afloat in. public `prints as to their extent and value and the nature of hi., title to them, that a's a matter of curiosity for, our readers we copy from a recent publi cation the annexed extract of a letter from Col. F. himself, authentically giving the per-, ticulars:-- • - 4. 7 " The Mariposa claim is a tract of lend ten leagues in extent, lying on, e: creek of the same name in the San quin .valley. It :was - purchased for me by Mr Larkin in .tbe , beginning of . 1847, and during my absenco with the battalion in the South, from 1). Juan D. Aly.arada. to whom It bad.been granted in ' consideration of his public services. Mr. Lar- kin paid for it $3, - 000. I had river seen the place and knew nothing ot-Ite character' or ‘ value. The purchase•was made before Cali fornia was ceded to I:kb - United States, and long before any gold hid been diecovered. I visited the place in company with Dr. Corrie, Mr. Reed, 'and several other gentlemen, and for the ; fiFst time saw the laud. Two thirds only are adapted-4,0', farming; on the other Mr.. go was .imiliered, anir we went .to , work to.dig it 00. So soon as it was known that we were there. hundreds—e n becoming thousands.-Crowdedto the ame place, and, to this day, from two' to th!,e,e i houeand per ich sons have been regulirly einployed. They have woilteirthem freely . ; no one b e e ever of fered theni the slightest impedintentr,. nor -have - 3 myself - eyer - esprisied to any one -or - - entertained en intention of - interfering.' with thelree working of the mineilit ;this. place. I regard the calm to the!quip:4 in' the sem light as any, otiterifisted right. It War s pit : ribose fairly made, ax d' . hire; iilwaYa supposed that sit semi future.. tittle ; the tali dity orthe-elsios , would,be settled by the pro. per; Goole., 'i out S*6olo to sweit ; that do oleion,itbether it be &Torah, -or otherwise, and la Meanest titse to leave the: gold, as is now, lies; to all itho bare the- itidatis clitleot it. , M 8 Li E £ LI E