geoRK,, PUBLISHERS. NE 28. L.EnurIErIRIS_ 111411 CM 1111101111111 from ulut, r • it faint, ssr.l it* had M stress, Urod Amu r isuitteta ot i „ • ith thiao tli• hope A 4004, . . (.Hr rt hsra to krev. ~ur'r a.O ,u.l eaten el chalice la , ,•1 lile are StraLlire n , • tier•vi 111 e. Speak game— ' 311. v, 11114 bulk Jtp th ey p., 111=1113 sboul.l tis•T lard • r rva.l tiletu b) irk ;mtt, rr r.tII gird our kla%. • I:rtnuor ewe rh.blato paport allui lbOtillOg M., boon troasuriti up for rear* M..ttP.l ith I,raSy Uarq .at J r.vo• rra3 ? natl.! frith Ansof • roo . 0 of AM Yor - , vlf baud • rt• rod of brortwh rby MP— goo.' edwie•— dLy ”Il tiM) Lot' it MD time - g • g y gold I.4tteft 1.4.1 4. . Lead le rim gnu, ,„ , re•t• El r 11. /L 0 1./. 111 what allometAkap, booms and whonod, :a-t and 441.5111: AGE OF 001IVE1IRNCIL lIME=I 'ter 113. what ii ealled• s tensible, limn She had managed for bertieff :; , 1* hrr young fierily afterward, wa . minaging - for her daughtrra is excellent train The inatri he,n artfulty set at alttiturts ..1 I. Doti t length her finest frali-- .Ithieli .hr had witched with long moth.*, hl.l teen allowed to bite Jangling at the end of her Hoe; rich Mr had at length pm . dett laughter pa at thtv very moment—the .mph—mn.tt a most exa.p6rating 'rntu a mQ•tt unexpeetel quarter 0.• ntu4t n0..41, het seizeditth a tit r tv.rvrr-ity, and &el el that .%e , voul tot, r 'itty ham •11„n in h.n„ • u wt. nto-4t Ir% , In. 1/3. 1 up .1 b,,tl r 'nor rough', .4 It Ibe perveive hor r rrarurai heart hmg,sl ter t. rpm: , In r daughter .rtiumlly ftr -1.• I • tJ ruenri. yirldett 1.1 this n„ 'lt, rary, , she lOoptitl the I. • f II , N 1 . , let talk this twitter •_ r as,,rrildc ont let us itt ''r,rt•inve be trwayed by prejutliaeo, tell me candidly, dear, hare i,”rtnut, objeetirms to urge , spirit nssu nf strict tumor auri dr.agrr per.,mally in any 'cry 1 , 1, .4 properly, and what inure ym I can't imagine Surely, net iti , eti.us are not pre-engaged " :1.1113 Iben. my Tier' •iit•nt She knew from cape 11,. lip bat mg the mat ter with her ;hi- 2rniol had been gone ort4inften H‘to• t :damp' found herself oui wy ilesr," contiuw•d Mrs h ab air of (stenos, "I should be your view+, unirloy rpwstmable tio-ir weight with me la' .um Charlotte .leae Dill I understand you to ) F l y 3ft am b• m..re than thirty-tive and rut ) 11, my seems old-to ynti be try yitnif That d,ifieulty will de ev..ry do , you live You would not ',mho "I thirty ill mated with a man •r ull gnu.' That, my 'dear, I • :It ~t tibjet lion ' 'uni, if I were you, sister," peril 'it this point Miss Mums, the who inherited het' mother's pe 411.0 t, and bad been listening to with keen interest Em, if you felt to I dor istly "You do Litt know bow led iympatby —sod to give op all I have mid- um sure, nth tut love is something wiek. lnulfnl I esonot--eannot eon " 1 .1' 4 •..ailment and ease back, if wetien. o ...cis*, and real objeetinee -tt then• are any," Cried Mrs ofiarply .eTtie only oblation I that Mr -----is eze4sitively 51e Anything else, toylearr Omit *.meth lug new to urge. t•'irtrl gt l llll.l veer .1.1 ground ' itke hto otw•,' 146 remarked, otter iteration i*tet. etelhitlied pert MISS Ran, ‘‘ l delightful .00,4." r n;I awn, warry htw nod bin •tmae if j.O ot, thew— I don't like either of nu d-LOOO., ipitefully, for Ale w* Iht •1•:, r lots forces with her itiat,ly br d.)11.t. Willi we, or I would repithl that Norited and watt•rnf "Ju,t think, modor! you will Int hoils,, awl plenty of money to lad la f..w ve:trs I dare. Fray or eirriaer fnr holits•ab R O4 ' , 1 , .1.11 I,atte, coldly t...uid Hoke the girls &tad me •uggoAte I Emma, Al , .. lit • th ' 4 lol I It hn,e to inlerfere. clolif there IA no talk, or 11°11bl BA YOU mil it. ml 114 - ai.iut this nom 'l4l fith.o io i uk at things a•hey 16 ( "k'ng a contract of tdarriage , t 1 ", 'II a t . ..tnt"riallile petilement fur 1, r 4"? and way tarely be con • -tt.ittetant s of mercenary 4r. !'"'r , a- ) 1 .4 well know; and 1111) 1.1 pr • ~, fir, and t lirt-i• " I ' 1 " I sta awn-ally dis.p. thu uuuerems.r, 4 16. *3 ) "fa marriage in evrry way I hoptA for, for you ---• 11 1 , 1 ) Mlle girls 11 15 1 )" 111 l'••••1", ..iii.r:i.liinri.a KW I ku", '"'hic• ilio, anti :1 1.11 '7 , • pr.• ir.r% tome “Hr' Mlldll . 1' V sr. rirh, or iNiNs4 101 nplrf tri m eonitt.l. ).•tyw' Ilan my &tar, ),'" t i al: ..f int , ier4 ..r '' 'W n,-3rl, hiorleolt, 1114 ..t.i - nari tr t • . • 1. , 14., , , am , al r I . 1 ~ !a 1 e A. e t t I t. •i .t 1 'e•-• . ... .. ' V •• . 1:71:. 1 . v i , .7 11 1 ' • 1 — S e ... I 4 ' 1-14.1 i t ,. .. ‘ r .. 1 ... .%.... ". . 4 . 4..1 . 1 I) ;1 4 . 4 ~. k • : t 4 • “ ,! • I '.••• . 4, ' I t - ... • . . . 1 . . .-.. I: . ' . . . 0 . . • 4. Yes, wawa/ta t " chispe4 in tbst.nyew "ea* young person. " Ana ~with ths yor . girls coining ou—a, certainly would be,fp! 7kaityai . atago that yea shoall be tettled.out . , " dear laminas! are you . aita . iiiey so sav our to p 4 rid of Mg " :00 43 4 . / 4 0414 ter 0 341, filling_ with lean. " Not at slippy destv,".,returne 4 tkic moth r. do not call it getting r ill settled comfcgtahly right close by . us. • .461.1 bas,paid Ilfififflt, it * Pe.a.ffaarY to look It t i bia *gag ) 11 a ( 0131 4ukop# frio% tical potnt of view. YOlf know your father's Wag 10 0 1 ; 1 40. only by Veit R*ffigaiiierit. are we able to stake boil) , gods 1111614. With great difficulty we have brought you up—given you . a good eduction, and a4owild you , see somethiug of the wor ld, expecting , of course,. that when okporpuity o ffered !gala marry, sod so provide for yourself Thus, my, child, we have dime our duty by d you and can do no more. Your sisters have equal rights, aud now come in for their daises, 'Therefore, if you choose wilfully and fooliiiblyi to reject this ad centavos. offer, for ac .. *tier . reason than that you * shape of the man's noes, I t.ll . 3ll.npiVnie it uty,4lo V! seek . some situation for you as.governi•pasir epLupp,itioa, and ,expect you henceforth to support yourself." This coup cretat,' .. whielf petrified Emma, was wucti less effective Jo Loftus tbsu Mrs Clever hop, Still it was not ,tirithout its weight.— 'rho ide of going aloue,ainong strangers as a ilepontlaut,was anything but alluring ; mho be • 100 to consider whether it wigtit nut be even wore disagreeable tbwP to be mistress 1 4 a sPleo did establishineut, even if .he were not in love with the wastor of it. In abort the affair ended, as the realer might h ave gur , seil from the find Lottie, young, pretty, full of eentiineut, as well r, feeling, consented to make a "marriage of youveuiruce During the courtship, which Mrs. Clever took care should IK short, her mind aiiiignve her of t.‘n, but the wary mother watched her carefully t and was always at hand to say just the right thing, at the right moment; au4aushe was kept, up to the work till the wedding day came, and she was aotually married -Then Mn.. Clever took a lung breath. The first she had enjoyed for two months tier troubles were ores, those of ;sex Lottie ;lust begun. I doubt if a more unhappy creature °elated on the *bole face of the creation, than Lottie during tht!-lirst year of her marriage. ••• She was, a.. I have remarked, a girl of feeling awl—not sentimentality—but seutimeut. She t. deeply, cruelly disappointed in the realir.a tem 01 all those tender, youthful loegtas, which It. in a woman's heart, like the perfume in the cup of a flower. She felt alone utterly She rould not complain of her husband—he was kind to her—loved her. But he was fifteen years her senior, anti had been married before— th.it is to say, the bloom was gone from his son, ttee et—the fresbuess from Lis heart. "Love's young dream," which surely eowes once to all, LuJ lifted but caw:, he hail already dressed our, and she had not been itsAect. • l'w•ide that Mr was deeply immersed iu business, and Lottie found herself in her 'plea d, I hou-e more lonely than Robinson Crusoe on his islitel Tie exeitetut et which was afforded th. tatter 1U the ft ar the easinil al, was sup her in the shape. of the nervous Arend she felt of her hush aid. She tretubltsl and true d pule at bin 14.)latepa and in.tny a time ..nd r yieilded to the tetupta. tiou to fly aud hide hi rrelf from Lim. M,:aUlltuu, sue augmented the distress of her sitii.iitou by to a userbul way of dwel ling upon it FAr from trying to look on the brightest sideof things and make the best of ie, she fouti•l a metal/.:holy pleasure iu mak tug the most of her trouhies It e a ...uot till after the birth of her first ebibi that shin began to regard things differently It was impossible bid that this event should L fleet a r. volution in Ler state of mind The heart which ball lain like a cold and avail thing in her brtutst, was now alive and active It was besting and throbbing with such a force of warcrnal love, obit its :muse vitality fevivis fled Ler whole being Hitherto she bad coldly 'laid to herself, "Mr is the pan to •hoto I owe alle;.liatice—but not love—which I Isaac new r !warn:se 1," but it. was impossible to regard !t i er of her child in that light. Ou one peat AL 11'34 they now sympathized deeply and strongly together . It touched her -to see the father'a tendertees sad kedge. fl* Met little ose Sbe soiled with pleasure. as she watched with what °tunny gentleness Leadapted his rude forces to the fragile claimant for bir care. She declared that to sew him earryiag the baby, made her this'll of a loootnotire tayiug to adapt itself to the task of drawing a betterly—it was im-' resibte to pat ori little etiongh power In short, for the first time, her heart pulsated health's - 11y sad stormily toward him. It was but a thimble fall of leaven—=is' the first _phsee, but, leaven is s wonderful thing, and is this, as in many othtr eases, it sufficed to leaven the whole 'map. She was saved. The germ of eineera affection then pleated grew aed throve, for it had a rieb soil in Louie's really warm sad loving begirt, sad the bed the itimense advantage of a well.fosnlded esteem for her [toehold to start from. Alrolled on, sped her diesppolotswout in regardhe r the nen-fal fitment of a eertaie youtbfor misgivings grew )144/1 keen, phi same at last from little to little to tbiok her husband the first and best of men, sod w,* sot have exebsoged him for Geo. Wash. i,.eou himself But thatis 'always tip way with women, they never know modenttion. I em afraid from the way my moral seems to point, that the reader may think I am an Wyo• cite for marriages of eotertiliiklCO. Not at all I give my vole° deeidely against them. I think my heroine ran a terrible ride--nee I should by nu means advise you to run, fair readerl—that at hum, if yogi know yourself to bon woman of Cooling. If eonstituted like Miss Kama and th.meallis of other'', dos% distress with say sox i.ties ibotat yourself. They are snealled for.— ,I will warrant you not to die el • broken heart tinier soy eiremmatasees whatever . ; I assure you that you inty safely riek even the trials of a marriage of coo venienco, without fear of tragical •oonsequeoces. How TO Serra AN ACCOVNT.—To settle coffee with an egg is in tiara y matter; but it is not exactly so easy to settle Ito old seeount, as a racy writer is Otsego coon% New YbrY, shows in this letter: " Seldom have I been more amused than when, some two years ago,. spots the North Fork ike Salmon river, in Calgornia, I overheard a conversation between an bones' miser, named Riley, asd ork&lihe Donsuilo.trader. to whom it seemed _Rile was indebte d some $4O for peo, 'Woos. Said Donnelly to Riley— " You °Nilo a pay bill, for you know I trusted yon "heti ooothq trader on the r ver posh!.. Cowl, rarf,i'lrow off half, if yoU'll pti t h e " 4 Wei k, 144. e," ssld4ilex t L • aril he kiwi if ['lt gime you to be Els liberal Outs I am It you Lbrdw . oil one hsC4ll throw off the of her!'_ • • " ' But that Joa ' t settle ell secoirt• " ' Theo break so egg into it l" said flash and (molly walked off. / I a.: I:s'al. VIM 1110 •M.l E IMil c lad ittitory of a Tome Female. We bevy some painful facts to narrate about mamas who was lately found. in this city, in a Most ,wretehed awl dersdedeondition A simple aketobsof her antecedents will show how rapid is soe'e Ong downwird, after the first step is taken, and bow mercilessly retribution follows after wrong tioips and crime, The woman in question was, a few years since, a Itstrug 'lady in the Seminary of Prr,fet.mor Crittitt4es, in Broaklio, N. Y. She was then a profit:le of Henry Ward Beecher, lived with his family,' and was being educated by hits. Of bourse, she Mas placed under the moat favorable Circumstances, and had her every want, that was reasonable, gratified She was surrounded by the very beat associations, apd had been adopted by Mr Beecher, because of ber natural bright nest or 'disposition and intellect to the school, though she was regarded as an eccentric and wayward being, yet she was admired by all of her companious for her superior quality of mind. • No young lady in Prof Crittenden's .ehool, (one of; the best iii the Est,) could write so brilliant and beautiful a composition as she, and all Wad to yield tolei in intellectual superiority. We bave thk from one who was a schoolmate of hers, tat all her compositions were gems of thought . and language, and she promised to be conie prominent as a female writer Now comes the first circumstanee that poisoned her happy heirt It is the old story of love She became a passionate admirer of one who reciprocated her affections, but who was forbidden to tender his hand in marriage Ile was already married to another. This first disappointment occasioned a violent braiefever, which completely prostrated her,. and iu the course of her recovery she was advised to resort to stimulants, by which she ac quired a taste for what has since plunged her in to the depths of degradation Afterwards, she went to Boston, and became a teacher in the [louse of Refuge. It was an advantageous station for a lady of education and diameter, and she is said to have filled it, at first, with great promise of usefulness. Soon, however, she yielded to thy appetite which she platted within herself, when recovering from her previous illness, and she was picked up in the streets of Boston ouc night in a state of in toxieation. Facilii deseettrus Arerni Efforts were made to effectually redeem her, but it is almost impossible 14 reclaim a woman once dis graced She sor.a married, and, as we have been informed, married against the wishes of those who bad been her foymer friends and protector• Front this time she - sinks rapidly, and whether by means of au avenging Deity, or from the natural laws of cause and effect, others way de. cido for themselves. Three or four years elapsed, and she came with her hursband to Chicago last year lle found employment there, but in the great fire of last Fall his situation was lost to him Pretty much all Winter long he remained destitute of work, pawning away his household goods and clothing meanwhile, and, when Spring came, they deter. mined to come to Milwaukee. They bad one child, and on their way here that was taken away from them, at Kenosha. Their proverty 11 , *1 now become lamentable, indeed; but, undoubted ly, their situation might have been much better, but for the accursed article of runt, to which they bad both now become addicated Having buried their chid at Konosha, they came on here, and hired a miserable room iu the Third Ward of Oki. cit .' , A few lay passed, and the wet w roan who. e.0...r we have been sketele ing, was foroo.l to g o out and beg fr..in door to door In 111• emus, '.f her atnan seeking •11.• chanced upon ..iwoivlP , had been h. r sehoo:tu it.. iu Brook!) n, upon *other who had k 111... I/ her in liw.toti FeariW IL. worst, but ill ignorant of khan a veretelied creature she had I, • e.. '0 1114„-r11•411 a 1.. r.• •Ite awl 1.. t I,ll•l.and were freezing and starving :Sh.• e..tif. • .d (kit sln. Ihtti r., 4• 4 5 f..r ilitee lug •.n] n tii.•ir riek. ty iil,l there NI..S bat a -ing'e A. et t•, protect them fr.,n, the odd Th. re was a single chair, with but three leg., to it, in the room, atpl scarpely any other' article. of furniture cumbered the These 164.4*(14 at once began to exert t in her behalf, R e t others intereted to aid her anti hi r husband, gave them clothes and food, eol.ed them both plenty of work, and it s..,etti ed now destiny was taking a favorable turn. The vromati wept over her poverty, manifested touching take us of a reauituation, but hero too the fire was only being snantbered a few days, to break out again the first favorable opportunity The money that was given her to buy food and clothing w;tb, wis spent in the rum hobi, and when she was next visited she was found all but demented by intoxication From that tine she turned her back Upon all friendly offers of assis• tance, abandoned her first quarters, was after. wards found by the authorities in low houses of prostitution, and has now stain left the city, in conatany with her husbandli She has almost reached the lowSst round of misery, and this once gifted young lady, an adopted child of ifeury Ward Belcher, will soon find that peace in death, which she has been unable to find itt t h e cu p, sm a s h, the corruption of licentionsne.n Mil trato6e, ( ) Daily jos„, The follorting good ooe is told of a "mu no,' who was in the habit of coming home bun gry, after his evening potation : One night besides the usual dish of cabbage and pork, his wife left a wash bowl filled with caps and starch. The lamp had long been ex. tinguished wheal the staggering sot returned home apd by mi'take, when proceeding to sat. isfy his 'hunger,e stuck his fork into the wrong dish.' He work edaway at his mouthful of caps for some time, liut being unable to masticate them, he sang °aft to his wife : 'Old woman, There did you get your cab• bagis.i? They are so stringy that I can't chew them." 6 1ify gracious r replied i tbe gaud old lady, "if the,attiptd felloof hasn't been and eat up my eapitOlat I put starch over night !" PERSONAL INDstsitinon.—A western editor lately offered his: bat as a prise for the best essay on indepedenee The •• following obtained We "National Independence is easisr imagined than described PerMnal independenoe consists emphatically in being suited to a clean shirt, drawers, socks, and a nicely blackened pilt of boots with at least a dollar and a clean cambric is your pocket, and 'on Sunday mining with your wife on one aria, and your baby on the other, taking your : ctiOn course towards your own meeker, in the blissful ezpeotatiti of doing your awn snoozing, in your own pew. wherein no one dare to venture to nudge you with his elbow, or tiekle your nose with a straw " A INCISPULATZ CHAILACTiI Bturr.—Captain CHARLIpi LINHAILT, a notorious Free State des perado itt Kansas. and one artist ugliest eusto.a, era in Ow Territury,4aas shot, and, it is supposed, mortally wounded, in a fight at Geary City on the 18th inst. Ile interfered at a gambling rabbi, where sumo other reams were playing, whet/ owe nl th4la k allot him It is out generally known, it is wring, MIA LICRBART is the maa who shot Sherif Joats to Lawrenee, irt the lonising of the Kansas trouble Ile was a printer:, VAO A YEAR IN ADVANCE. ERIE, SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL . 170858. An Adventure in a Railway Carriage After I had taken au) seat one morning at Paddington in au empty carriage, I was joined, just us the train was moving et?, by a s t range , looking youtig man, with remarkably long flow. lug hair Ile was, of course, a little hurried, but he seemed beside to he disturbed and so that I was quite-alarmed fur fear o f k id not being right in his mind, user did his subsequent conduct at all to assure me... Our train was au express, and he acquired eagerly, at once, which was the first station whereat we were advertisi ed to atop. I consulted my Ilfadshaw, and furnished him with the required information.— It was lteadiug The young 111311 looked at his watch "Madam," said he, "I have but half art hour between Ore and, it may be anus EXellie, therefore, my abruptnes, You have ; I pereeive, a pair, 01' in your workba g . Oblige we, if you please, by tttin g ! illy +flair " "Sir," raid 1, "it it Impossible "Madam," he urged, and a look severe tie termination dressed his features, "I am a despe rate man 'Sewers how you refuse what I ask. Cut my hair off—short, ()Ipso to the roots—itn tuediutely ; and here is a Itelet;Aap•r to hold the ambrosial cure. ' I' thought he was mad, of course, and, believing that it would be dangerous to thw Lim, I cut off ail his hair to the : 3 , 4 1 lock "Now, madam," said he, unit eking a small portutanteaU, ")OLI will :urilier oblige me by looking out of the window, as I am about to chauge my clothes " Of course 1 looked out of the window for a very considerable time, and when he ohserv.d, ",Madam, I need 110 longer put you to any Inconvenience." I eta not re. cognize the young man in the leas*. lustead of his former ,guy costume, he was attired in black, and wore a grey wig and silver spectacles ; be looked like a respeetable divine of the Church of England, of about 1;1 years of age ; to complete that character, he had a v‘,lutue 'orations in Iris hand, which--they hive app. are.l 71., to ab. sorb 11111J—IllIght have been his own "1 do not wish to threaten you, young lady," he resumed, "and I think, besides, that [ can trust your kind face. Will you promise me not to reveal this memmorpetesin until your journey's end ?" "I will," said I, "must certainly." At heading the guard and a person in ptniu clothes looked into our carriage "Y 'la have the ticketa, my love," said the young man, blandly, and looking at we as though he were my father. "Never mind, sir ; we don't want tihem,•" taut the official, as M withdpiroy Lis companion "I shall now leave you, niaticm," nMerved my fel low-traveller, as soon as the meat was clear; by your kind and courageous conduct you have saved my life, and perhaps even your own."— In anotlier minute be was gone and the train we., in motion. Nut till the next morning did I learn from the 7'intrai newspaper that the gentle uwu whom 1 had operated as hair cutter had committed a forgery to an enormous amount in lAmidon a few hours before I met him, anti that he had been tracked into an express train from Paddington, but that--although the telegraph had b:i•ti loot 1.1 111.)11013 and ,lesert by I him SOeU• rarely—at Ih'aiiug, when the train was search cd, ho . was !nowhere 10 I e fo to l — /L.e..b•.1.l "on', if we W..n• ar H. tl for an oiwtAion as to what por tiro th. teiritory of the ilratt /1 States will make the great. ,t r. I,live in population, arta th. .leveloionent in:lit...trial re. the next ten ye tr , , we ..Could not Ir sit c•• • reph ityiut The r • i• with awl V:111111.1 , I, r Time ell. /11:1.1.• ;1111.4r, n.. 1 healthy, hearing a Brea: - I .4 r ir. torn woe., ..1 e .11; gol.l 1, fouiol 111 mail, t ....• reali;•• , hale country ;trent r I I • 1., It I) t hoo.tr. I aryl abound+ with excellent deep enough for the largr,t aliaat T;11-1 bay, named Ail miralty Inlet at it. month, awl l'ugat Saun.l u. it, heti, t cony. to. f.r ut ternal (rad.. proletbly by any oil, r bay worl.l 'Nero In re) t. IT at the mouth, and v....el- van 10.1— way in all ktu.l. of w. artier, while un idr the depth of water in the el,Alittel t. ut n.. place les-1 than fifty fort S 5..1111.1 th, re 1,•%,•1 tract of ill, Lind, ~r tr %filch a r.ttli,Lti I Wright. eA.-11) tua.l,; rib or, a ot-t.ttn.e,,,.t.tx.t.) au , i the ositr,Llll,4l.iut.Ln, wipe th,it if tit ti,rool rho) w:11 ;!, ,Sail it. .1 trgi• mliar.• „f th, .I , y; ~f the (` durtilm -fra,l•• wittei now pa... 0., through , fifftenit and . dariger, , u4 , -ntratte , • of the Col the mteauter It public Watt not long ago detttu,,l for ,•i,:1,1 thy , hifore ,he iould get oar The l'il;zet Souuil .untry 114 d just made a start in the development f t n•,.ntrees when the Indian war broke out, drove away the familiee, ruined many of tho ,ettiers. tn.l phi! a Stop to most ..1 their improvement, The 11,1111- age from the Indians is now effectually and final ly removed, and Washington Territi*y will thiA year take a new start I'h.• !inland aln uiy h t. a considerable truly f..r its small population There are on its banks sixteen sawmills, eapalii- ,if turning nut ltt•t, 000,000 feet of sawn lumber annually It, straight and tall timber is valuable fur ,Or,, and cargoes of them arc sent to Y•ew York, Engtionl and Australia. The farw:•rs ..n the sound Lave sent 600 barrels of flour of List year's crop to San Francisco, and this year they will send tar more There arc several flourishing towns in the Territory, of which the principal are Ulym pia rind Steilacoom. —Alta Calt:linlaia. IT IS EAST TO SPOIL A Swv —There are hut very few that can bear the hand of indulgence without injury In our country, in most instan• ces, those who arc to he great and ugrful, tnuct make themselves sn, by their own exertions and often by vigorous effort Nine cases out of ten, the young fellow who is provided for—that his "father ii rich"—will relax his exertions, and become a poor fool, whatever may be his oceupa tion There is nothing so destructive to the morals and, we may add, to the peace of the cominnni ty, as the neglect of parents, rich or poor, to teach their sons the importance of being early engaged in some active employment. Too many of the citizens of every place, under the influence of false pride, suffer their sons, after quitting their schools, to lounge about the public offices and taverna of their places of residence, rather than engage in grime important branch of -the mechanical arts; or force them by dint of their own industry and energies, to seek their fortune in other pursuits. Nothing is more detestable, in our eye, than to see a healthy good looking youth breaking loose frim the restraints of hon arable industry, returning to his fkther's rile for support, and loafin..; it about, rather than pursuing some necitpation which will not only support himself, but give gratification to his worthy parents We would say to every father who has ouch a son, hi' he rich or poor—rather drive him to "cut his curd of wood a day," than suffer him to spend Itistime in idleness. "Au idle head is th e de v it' A workallop,"—auil we may add, that idle hands are the implirments he employs to rx• °cute his dark designs -- --- - The Puget Sound Country KANSAS-U.OOM PTON CONSTITUTION SPEECH OF HON. WM. BIGLER, Of Pennsylvania, In upi...tt inn t" tI Itt.mtrunery-Crtttenden Amendment ?were., in the Smoak. of Me raked Sidle., April 3, 1 9 541 Ma. MILER—Mr. President, I sm not pre: pared to vote on this question without first sub mitting a row remarks explanatory of the views which 1 entertain Ido wit intend to delay the Sent. I.y an attempt at an argument, at length, ag.tai, this House amcuduttut; I shall be coo , 1.111 Lu state, very briefly, some of the points which I think involve concluAive objections to he measure. la the first place`, this amendment involves an atter and violent abandonment of the doctrine of nou-interventiou It presents. the broad ques • lion, whether a dockrine•whicri the party to which I beloug have cherished, a doctrine which is found in the organic law of Kansas, and which was enunciated in the Democratic platform at Cincinnati, is to be abandoned' and we are to look for some other system of legislation with regard to the Territories had hoped, sir, that when the wise men of rip , country, with Clay and Webster and Cass in the lead, presented and adopted this new mode of settling the slavery question—the enlarged and liberal doctrite that when thet people of the Territories were prepared for admission as States they should come in, with or without slavery, as the Constitution presented by them might provide at the time—it would have praven_a finality on this question In the liberal doctrines main. Leine(' by the Democratic party, that the peopl e of the several States may geinto the Territories with whatsoever property they possess, including slaves, and when there, and when about to or ganize a government,, preparatory to admission as a State, 1r terms of perfect equality with the other States, and that they shall be left perfectly free, not only as to the kind of Government they will have, but as to the mode and mann e r of making it, I had hoped wo were to find a simple and satisfactory solution of this unhappy dila+ culty whieh seems to arise on the application of each cl'erritory fur admission. When this doctrine was proclaimed iLwae at variance with and saperceedod the former prac tice of the Government; but it Was one *blob commended itself to the judgement and patriot ism of the people. It was a proposition to settle the c.iutrovcrsy about slavery ou high principle —sacred principle ; a principle that was co-ex tensive in its operation with the entire country, with all the territories we possessed then, or ever can possess, and as imperishable as the Govern ment itself,- equal to every emergency that may.- arise. Au essential element in that doctrine is, that Congress will not interfere with the domestic afTnirs of the Territories; that as to the mode and manner of making a government, the people ut the Territories should be unrestrained; that Congress would decide only upon th e question of adtaimion under the obligations of the Constitn• tion, and that would he on the single _point whether the government presented was Republi can in its form, and not as to the mode of mak ing Constitution—leaving that work with the pt - .plc. I hal hoped that we were about to eriuTess a ii' uttfut illus•rati , u of the wiitd nu ..1 this d , •- .. tit, , the admission of two States; the ouc. S!aVi . , the other free, under its principles Thui its lt...iuties would he illustrated and illumi• e tt( d; 1 teli )ou, l'ret•ideut, that In my !tumid.. judgment, uo act of C 'tigress would go further toward restoring those relations of frater nal feelings which in the younger and purer days of the R publie existed between the p , ople of it- extremities, than the consummation of such a work Nothing, in my humble judgment, would lend more to give peace to this c.kuutry; to pro it.4 future progress and prosperity; to give r.q.pority and peas.• to ibis ['MOOe of the Torino.' rrit inc.' Sir, that is the-doctrine ofthe mneratie party, held by them because it is e.itNkten t with the Constitution—cOnsistent ' With time true interests of this great country, and"' with the rights of all elas.e- of the-people, and all seetiohs id the Union Now, sir s I regard the House proposition as direct and violent inn rvention; because it pro. p.ises to discard %hat the people have dotee awl to iustitute r ucw mode of proceeding It preposcs to -et aside what tlii• people of Kansas have dune rn lII.' WI) of thanging their Government from a Terfeill.li to a State form, end to prescribe to th..m tw they shall procord hereafter in mak• t liweruevoit . I wish to mark the distine, ti In ween a ease where the people of a T, tore hays. not :toted at all, and especially where , a I'. rritory oily not posses the usu II population for a State; where their powers have rested iti abeyance, :mil where Congress volunteers to offer to these -twit an invitation to COMe into the Union That we did ill 1556 to the people of under the Toombs hill They could hardly presume, with the population which they the possessed, that they would be admitted as a State. Congress extended an invitation to them, they It icing taken no proper legal actien ou the subject It in different nowt. They have letedi they have presented themselves here with a republican form of government, which has c itue up to us through legal channels and regu. lar steps. They have exercised the power which yen gave them in the organic law, when you sail their legislative power should extend, over. all the rightful subjects of legislation, And that the people should be left perfectly free to farm and regulate their domestic institutions in their own way But, Mr President, if itArere allowable on principle for Congress to remand to the people this government which they have sent here, and insist upon a revision of what they have done, I could not agree Co the mode and manner pres' eribed in the House bill. The objections I make ought to be more specially unpleasant to those who have opposed the admission of Kansas under the Leeompton Constitution than to those who have favored it; and why so? Because the peo yle of Kansas are required to vote on thiti Con stitntion in a form which does not give them an opportunity of making a free State. Li the early part of this discussion, much was made out of the form of voting presented by the Le- Compton Convention. It was said to be unfair. It was said that the elector, in order to vote for or against slavery, was bound to vote for or against the Constitutionrthat those, therefore, who were not for that Constitution, had no op portunity of voting on the slavery question. I do not care now to inquire whether thst4 view was a correct and an allowable one or not; but I do say that the presentation of the question, as proposed in this amendment, would be liable to quite as conclusive objections as the mode of voting prescribed by the Lecompton Convention., What is the form? It reads thus : " At the said election the vote sball be by ballot, spa by endorsing on Ms ballot, as eaeli voter may please, 'for tho Constitution,' or 'against the Ooastitatios.'" That form you pereive, sir, would not present to the people of Kansas the great question at iv sue there; the question which has agitated the country from ono extremity to the other, to wits' whethet K 51214111 shall be i free or shire State.— Slavery is in the Constitution as it stands, and the question thus presented would be, whether they would have slave State or no Slate at AL Those who desire it to be a free State would have no fair opportunity of carrying out their will.— They . are be disTrincbiattit on ail a vets.. They can have no voiee. Now, sir, if this .nature: ie to ho adopted, the form of voting *tight Jo be raell o ali.winild give &hetet People the o*ortanit,j of dehiding, unem the gwestion of sta. very whitch has harassed the* from the first hoar of their organisation,. Look at thei practical workings , of proposition. A. sleets, pre. soots himself at the polls who is la favor of slit. very. lie sees that , bin ballot must be for or against the Constitution. He desires to vote for slavery, but be dislikes many-featuret of tbe Con stitution; and he is driven from the polls. If Froe State man, on the other band, makes his sppetiranee, he eneounterssimilar dilieulties.— II o_ likes the Constitution and all its festores,"ett• eept that of slavery. He desires to adopt the Constitution, bat he cannot do that without agreeing that Kansas shall be a slave state; sad be i*distranchised. Now, sir, if this proposition is to prevail, why pit it in this shape? le it that there will be no alternative left to the Free-State party but to rote the Coastitatioo down and to secure au indorsement of the opinions of those who have held that a majority were against this Constitution? Is it to assure a rejection of the President's policy. If I were for this measure, I should not agree to present it in this shape.— I certainly could not, if had stood so peculiarly and tenaciously up to the rights' of the Free State party in Kansas. The ballot should be "for the Constitution and No-Slavery, or "for the Con stitution with Slavery," or against the Constitu tion Is this form all classes would have a bar opportunity to carry out their will. But, sir, there are other features 'to which I wish to call attention. The first clause roads as follows: " That the State of Kansas be and Is hereby admitted into the ratan on an squad footing with the original &stop, in all respects whatever; but inaansueb as it, I. greatly dis puted whether the Constitution framed at Leoompton. oa the ith da ' y of November last, and now pending before Congrera, was fairly made,"&e. - It is a question whether the Constiution was fairly mode. What is the deduction? It must be that in some way or other the obligation rests upon-Congress to know that the Constitution is fairly, wide—that fraud and violence shall not prevail. Now, sir, I do not care to raise or debate chat question of fact at present. Wbatver might have been held heretoforaunder the former policy of the Government, I cannot see bow those who subscribe to the doctrine that the people should be left perfectly free to form and regulate their instituttons in their own way, can investigitu this question of fairness and form. It is maintained that wo sanction the Constitution by voting for the admission? That is not my understanding. The government which the people send here we must take or reject. Ido not speak now of mere matters of form, bat the vital features of the goy ernnient. These we cannot touch. Is it other wise held anywhere? I have not heard a Senator allege that by voting for the admission of Kansas he oeeetstarily sanctioned the Constitution, or vi ce reran. Now, sir, the itoint which I wish to make is thi s: if Congress has no right to- touch the work of the people of Kansas—the government which they have sent bein—what does it conoern us that weinquire bow that , work was done? Here is a prope:•it ion simply to inquire how it was done; conceding that we have no power over the pro duction Itself N.o - ottly that; but while this Constitution IS to be sent batik on the sesump. tion that it was not fairly made, what is proposed in addition? Why, sir, in case this Constitution tic voted down, the people of Kansas are anther ized to (lett delegates to constitute a now Con vention; 01.1 are to vote on that Constitution, and then, if it be adopted, they become a State by the proclamation of the President. • Where is the guarantee that the new governs meet will be made fairly? Where is the protec tion atctiost fraud in that process? Who supers vises that action? If it is the duty of Congress iu tho ease of the Leeomption Constitution, to see that it is fairly made, it is the duty of Congress in every other ease. If it is the duty of Con gress to inquire whether this Constitution hes been fairly made, it is an equal obligation not to give the opportunity of making any constitution unfairly. Here is a proposition to allow the peo: pie to wake a government, put it 1/11 operation, and admit it into the Uuioo, without its over making its appearance before Congress at all.- 1 do not endermand how alleged frauds can be clatuted an reas..us for returning this Constituti on, if we at the same time authorise the making of a `tats with..ut any guarantee whatever as to how that ,power may be abused, without any pro. tvet ioo against fraud, violence and usurpation.— Then, sir, there is another point, and that is the extraordinary proposition which makes the Presidout. of the United States perform functions which the Couetitution, in express words, vests iu Ceugress. Ido not speak.now as to the gott en:meet of Kansas that is before us; that we have seen; that constitution we have read; that COQ• grow knows to .be republican; that we may, on certain conditions, allow the President to an nounce admitted, and hold that the State Is in the Union; but it is to the other alternarive— the right to mile a constitution and State gov ernment, and put it in operation, and put-it into the Union by a prailamation of the President, without ever having it before Chngresa at all.— to that I object Who knows that it will be a Re publican government? Who can guaranty that it will be admissable in form? And if Republi can, may it not contain other features, making it entirely unacceptable? Sir,l have not the mea sure of confidence in the men who would be like ly to get. hold of this government in Kansas just now. Who is satisfied that Gen. Lane would exercise power with moderation? Who believes that if he controlled a Convention, he would not indulge the excesses of his feelings of prejudice against the southern States? Sir, I should not be surprised if a Constitution made in that way would emancipate the slaves that are in the Ter ritory and confiscate the property value in them. I should not be surprised if a Constitution made in that wry, without consulting Congress, should attempt to interdict or embarass the execution of the fugitive slave law, or would set up other la sues with the Federal authority; and, yet whilst Congress might not seriously entertain the ides of admitibg such a State, the President would be obliged to twilit It by proolinuition: You will discover that it gives the President no discretion. The duty is imperative on him. When the fasts are properly certified, be must announce that the State is in the Union, no matter bow objection able the Constitution May be. Here is State making with . a vengeance. Any measure of fraud' may be- practised; any extent of tioitmodi and usurpation in making the Constitution; sad no matter how badly made; sad yet the State must come in. Theproposkties is mosetrona. Now, air, the ambient matter of the bill is etw. geitive ; at presents a wide field for dissuade*. I do not intend, to pursue it this morning, bat. I could not persuade myself to estaquistlywa this question.. I know that there ere certain vary insiduocat features about Akin- seassmes....4satarse whieh eau, be used with groat - sleet berme the pepolsec hussy be 'dieted that we have voted airiest a bill which-war to give the people the right to vote On their Coustitutiou. That would be true tki some extent.; but I answer, that I hold still moreliberal j deetrier to th e 1•005 of Kansas ; hold thakihoy can *eke a tution lei any away they please; vatalitg .it *G eordies tolaw and in regular' fovea. .1 would give to the • people of Kumasi t h at ammo of right whieh those wham I represent here exec: oised ; they made a Constitutioa twin through their delegates ; they have revised aad aateemled 111:1 F. SLOAN EOM)Li/ NUMBER 49. that Constitution through the agency of a whir ratification. It was ootopeteet.ftw dela pie of &ages tado the salbefthiatir if - in Kansas, who claim to be adverse to this she very article, who object most to this etraitiMi- Sion, had ozonize' ed their high pieveisairo ps freemen, probably we should have 40 le 'items' on this- omelets. Bak sir, 04 not perforgt that duty. pe 'woe, when .041,. might have decided the question of, Own bj. electing delegates, they would sot; voted, 4h "bogus laws" were in their way. 0001 1 11, whoa the question of slavery nu not isvaked, bat when offices were *Leta., they did vote., Is December following, when they a dime. vote oa the gentian of makia flee or a slave State, they would not goes—it would woe do to recognise the "bogus bare," and the mho. gee Oeuvention." Bat, a few days aftweemda, • when it was a question of gaining the teed aims, they rushed to the polls sad elected the Akin under what they termed the "Leooetpten swia• die." There is the source of the trouble;' sad as this issue stands, the most that those net tkd' other side can make out of it would be (tabs' their own ground) an issue between these Ike, through the forms of law, bad abused, to some extent, the right of suffrage, sod those who lad set themselves up , against the are of that right; who had preferred other means; who bad not exercised the high functions of freemen under our laws, and under our policy of government. They avowed that determination, and they ad hered to it. There may have been fraud, and there may have been usurpation, to some extent, on' the one hand. The best that cast be said for the other was that it presented maittred, waist ent, and stupendous insubordination to the taws, if not rebellion to the Qovensment. Which of these alternatives shall we take ? I shall not, for my part, cast a vote that will give success' to those who have stood out persistantly against., the laws. It may be said, and it is said, that, this Con.. stitution is not agreeable to the 'majority of the people. Well, sir, [ have searched in leis is the oomplicated history of logislation on this subjeet for the instance in which that question was distinctly raised and discussed, where it was .elaitned as a duty on the part of Cosgrove, to know that a majority of the people were for the form of goveretnent which they sent up to Con grass. No such question could have arisen in the ease of the State of my venerable friend from Kentucky,. for that was declared in thellnion State before the form ofwent was made, not by a proclamation, FT:l l ileve, but by sot of Congress. That could not have been an se pertained fact in regard to Florida. No member of Congress, as I understand the history of that ease, could have known whether the people pre. (erred the Constitution of Florida or not. Why not? I shall show. In 1838, the peopl e of Florida held a Convention and made a • tution. They submitted it, it is trze, to the ridi illeetion of the people, and as I learn the hiMory of it, t majority was only found by throwing out pertain districts on the ground of infortnality. 7 — That Constitution-was sent up here. It was filed away in' the archives of the LeOlative . 'depirt• meat. There it lay, cobwebbed and dusted over, for six longyears. When it 'became necessary to bring in lowa as a State, these musty papers were drawn from their solitude, and on Mei' Florida was made a State. Who would say that the people who held that Convention, and voted on that Constitution, still remained in Florida Who would say, that in the six years which In tervened, there was not a large accession of relation to the Territory of Florida ? There eogld have been no satisfactory evidence that the rea ple of Florida approved that Constitution ; no man could have known that it embodied their will. I only present these historical facts for the purpose of showing that the doctrine that Congress must know that a Constitution embed. des the will of a majority of the leople belbW we have the right to admit the State, is a new' doctrine. But, Mr. President, I have spoken already much longer than I intended to do. I rose for the purpose of confining myself to a very few points. I trust we are near the close of this angry debate. For one, lam free to say to the Senate acid to the country that Ism tired of Alb topic of Kansas. lam tired of it is every sense. Eipecially am I weary of it, because I can see in it an element of growing mischief to this grftt, peaceful, and happy country of oars. Why it is, I know not • but it would seem to be a din. pensation P rovidence that we are to have very plague among us in the shape of this ,slav, cry question, living and growing es the wiles advances spreading out yearly, , overshadowing the whole country like some fatal ups", whom poisonous branches shade the very estremitko and deal poison and death as the seesaw roll by., I say, sir, that we are near" theclose of this tie. bate, and with it, I trust this fend will be pet at rest forever—this strife which is so certainly and so constantly poisoning the very channels of in tercourse between great divisions of this Union. severing the relations of the people. who Nit to be fraternal and affectionate, and. abiding is a common faith. Sir, J have my owe notions of this measure, Ido not cherish them with the tenacity that some do. I desires how ever, to make the admission of Kunio sad Min nations an exemplification of the truthfithiess df the equity and wisdom of the Democratic polley that Congress shall no longer Ideal with tits vexed question ; , but that it shall be left to the people of the Territories to settle for themselves; and they shall quietly become Stales, with or without slavery, u their rvernasest may pro. vide at the time of admission. VIZ can or &Mfg BY YOUNG WOMMIX.—.. Timothy Titecenb . has the following sensible ra. marks on that subject: Young women are very apt to imbibe /metier bad habit, nanteyl, the use of slang. I sae in the stree4_the other da when I met an elegantly drafted lady and gent leman, oaths sidewalk My attention was the more attnieted to them be acne they were evidently stranger.. Abs. rate, they inuine- sod me as being very therm u . ly refined people. As I eame within hearing et their voices—they were chatting along theArey —I heard these words from the weasial " You may bet your life on that." I wsurdb- I could almost have boxed her I remember ease being in the oompas_yrelba heft —one who bad a winter's reign in %ANN*: Some kind of erne was in . rms, 01106, is moment of inwpnee, she 'DO gyararmar —Now you may regard MI as it lisanbiat no tion' but I tell you that woman fell as flatly in my esteem as if she had uttered au oath. A Fus-arAn Hums Partuar..--Ln.. Gaa. Urn, the Indelible Republican Stale flesatect from Mania% node anduerity report seams§ last' week, is *Mob hogeoted the etumwbutilue G. W. /Deilaier, Speaker of the Klinsienclueul Repreinetathes, made subs wilownewant egad body.. The Doctor ealled the arreag eeilasseme behalf of Wolin Saaraa, for Cei. Swatshoe knew anewahestDeitri let Chas the poster liked to hear. The 0114 store aadinatetthat this Niftier fonserly - Neil la Schuylkill meaty; that he Teetered *twee* Beimigh%Liferke may; that he beano lliChabg lag Peatemeter at Berard* sad roithedvalr tie feet alai ass away, muslin a bereeti sails hasty jeareey. He lea Ream lbws SW Patriot sow. theist Tea for ficedest ikt Pit! sylvan* be dais well to shriek ilarfkaciliclu Sanaa.— Chatabersbary Valley 41eiritr. =MI 1.),;01