Clii'':lliiiiijiri -,:.uoi(itc'.,! Pl/14454 . D ZYFAT TIii.ILLSIIA,T,MOILNIJ:G, DI • DOW* , BOYD. • • (Office ottithe west side of the. Public. Avenuis.) TERMS.-HDNE DOLLAR, it year in Avance. Oho DoThir FiftT Centel if iiht,paid within three months, anAFif delayed:until after the capitation of th e year two dollars will be exuded ,„ Dtscontiniumees with the less arrearages are paiti., Letters - VI the Piiblisliers on brisine4Ayitb ithe lice mudt bii post-paid . to in. atteatiOn; , Pottrt!. „ - . For the4 l 6 - ple's Athiocate TO HELEN: • `. • • y ou t v oeen the cloud at cltfse orday—. . A datk, forboding, shapeless thing, 1 . t hlged by sunset's glowing ray, I 1 .4 thObsaud beauties on it spring. But spoil those varied tints r ine gone— A moment lingering, brightiir grows, And thCh forever they have flown, To leave the cloud in dark repose. Even sohas been my stream of life, As dak and gloomy as that cloud : A busy t.hain of turmoil, strife, And Avery link with pain endowed But He'en, dear, the pencil took, And &Lipt it in.refulgent Both pain and sorrow I could brook, If shit the darkened edges dyed Christ in the Tempest; 1 7 : BT J. G, WHITTIER. Storm on the heaving craters'—The vast sky Is stoopitik with its thornier. Cloud on cicind, Rolls heniily in the darkness, like a shroud Shaken by Otidnight's Angels from nn high. Through tQ thick ses , nrist faintly and afar, Chorazin's t-atch-light glimmers like a star, And, momeitly, the gh'astly cloadAres play On the d 4 seamsll of CaPernatures bay, • And tower 9nd nowt into light spring forth Like spectris starting fornti'the storm-swept earth;, And vast an) awfnl, Tabor's mountain form, Its Titan forthead naked to the storm, Towers for Ole instant, full and dear, and: then Blends witlAhe blackness and the Cloud again. • And it is very terrible !—The roar . Aseendethiunto heaven, and thunders back, Like the T: sponse of demons,. from the black, Rifts of the Banging tempest—yawning o'er - ' • The wild wives in their torment- Hark-!—the Of stmng 4ten in peril, piercing 'through The uproar 4I the waters and the sky,' As the rettn barkque one moment rides to vie*, On the tall with the thundercloud Closing aroi,a, above her, like a shroud! He stood npn the reeling deck—llis form Made visigle by the lightning, and His brow Pale, and ut i tcovered to the rushing storm, Told of a nninpli man may never know— Power made and rnighty—allEscc--nn srair The wav heard Him, and the storms loud tone Went moaning into silence at His will : And the thlck clouds,wh ere yet the lightning shone, And slept t 4 latent thunder, rolled away, Until no iace of tempest lurked behind Changing upon the.pinions of the wind . To stormlesf wanderers, beautiful and gay. Dread -ruuu uelme . Who ptsence bovvetli the uprisen storm, To To whom the waves do haulage round the shore - or'many fin Wand empire the form . Of the frail dust beneath Thine eye, may claint Thy infiluic regard—oh, breathe uPon The storm we darkness of man's soul the same Quiet, and &ice, and humbleness, which came O'er the 'paged waters, where thy voice had gone A minisier citpoWer , —to conquer in Thy name. mous. ' •• Fror&the Public Lecigef. Curiosities at Washington. WASHINGTON', Aug. 19., 1846. I -examined to-day a -single case in the National (gallery, over' the Patent Office....L.; But befornj proceeded to do.so, the models of statuarA which. ‘ strike the eye as you en ter this magnificent -Hall, engaged my at tention. 'the statue of . Wa s hington, by Pettrich, 4 the first object-of attraction as you enter.: Being merely-a model, it is of course in.tilaster, but is not the less interest tag for that. It is in Military costume, and cloak, gratefully thrown from the shoulders, and right land, with:scroll., extended. Ott the right itland of this statue is an admirable bust of Jaijkson, and on dieJeft another of Van Burka. Equally admirable busts of Forsyth, qlay, J. C. Spencer and Poinsett, arealso ptsced in the same company. Stat ues-of Wisdom and Justice, Morality and Liberty, tire tbe, presiding deities of the group- c " Sleeping Innocence ," by Pettrich, i e 1 s ia beautiful timdel, occupyino• b a case directly' in front it the statue of Washington, in company With a " Sleeping Child," by' the same scuiiitor.,These, as Well as"those above reAii.cd to, are all the original Mo'd: els. " $1 . 4.‘ ping liinticence," a full len gtl female figure, wits executed in Rothe in 1838.. it epos.eti on a coda), the 'right 'side of the faceigraeetally resting on ilie liosom, and the stight drapery : thus high ) coyering the whole person. The,Jeft ~.Ind, rests on the breasth and the right :init. encircles a young lati?' b. The model of the, sleeping child is ILtetfect,. 4rui was ,executed; in Phila delphia in 4841. Every married lad who visits the ti-a ll ery has at home a chi ld ' ex actly like 4! Blists . 9f Pettrieb, wife; mud eight chikken;arie'4 l .l-liaiii ; 0 4 zeelle*• "DisaPlVOne4 Love," which'•*i* diefi have voteivut of,the hall, is. ntoop - H clutite and iteauoful desiga-ra_ iicielifti9g4gge., restin g on ithe right arm and elPnP4lA,Atrfig. eery parti a lly "thrown over the person,. cov. ering the ift arm', r ight . wrist-awl ha!idAeft leg and-fot - it, anti thence-th' °sin - 1071eeittlly, over the kfiver part of the right- , Tlui : isstOr el ; in everksespeet,. is petfeet...,-i.i; ih`_,:-1 ,: , 111&.. The i , Ishermun's- Daughter," f bit fet., web, i. ataita ..adinired. Reclininglxw tunc, re.st . . on , theleft hand, fishing, fed 'II! tight, ivitOfishes laird shells by zit* **Kea ii with dra ry gracefully arrayed'. , - .Arbi. " Young , miter,'" by JhePaine. §itting peeture,le t iiiiikiiul hand testiiii:oaAeft knee,' lxitOitt - Lind,' .tirvir4tuil gaiiteibi side, ilti `'diarfry - Lkviskin;--iieldl artllivaiin right hatali*overingthelirialitrto the ihrOat, et -whiEVlthe:haridilt, sis;4l"4hti dovnisigird land rightleg4itltdoLitTlkoptis'it taiviSiikeedingly graeeftA.b M 5 ' .l .'t r`- , -11 . Of t lie4tiutnerableinritntittettinllits hall; arrayed iti cuse* of statief'fiftenn 'feet: in i: ME O. , VOL. 'l. • s - length, by eh in height nd -five in' breadth, I was ebbe to examine 'at one during the two hours-Which I passe, to-day in the 'gal lerv. If WO case isle. 2 , , and contains the . eelebrafed gtild Snuff Box, presented by the Emperoi - Alq.tander to Levert Harris, E4q. 1 wheaCtoarge' d'Affaire at St: Petersburg. This ho -contains, in th letter Aon its lid, 100 smalli4liamonds. his diamond letter is encircleofiriso by 35 1 ge diamonds, and, about•so 04 the siz ornament the e4g es of the lid;oaltagether bout 215 valuable 2:1, ,,ii! diamonds. i The b is eautifully- chasd, is of the highest fin' and is valued at $6000.; Itt4disv contains he two large pearls Mentioned 'below, preset dby the Imaum of Muscat to President 'an'Buren. The sania case contai s a S\vortl, with', a scabbard of gold, presented by tha Viceroy 1. 1 of Peril to Commodoreiddle ; a gehlmed al struck IL)t' order of th Senate of 'Ham burg, et th 'third cente vial commemora tion of thq establishdie t of their constitti tion and the Lutheran !religion, presented Eby, order q the Senate! to Mr. Cuthbert, 'Consul of the United' States at Hamburg; 'a silver Medal, a duplicate of the foregoing, rand presented as above ;! a gold Medal, coin merative of the deriverylfrom assassination ref the Lib 'orator, General Boliver, President !of,Colombia, presented by him to Presidant :Jackson; „len statues i 'resented by Ali Fla !:cha, Hey Of tgypt, to Capt. Perry and eta er officers if the United States ship Con ,cord, whet' at Alexander, in -1832; a mad-, el of the Kixlg ,of Sweden, Bernadotte, ,in; cast iron ; j rnld Medals struck in Peru in! 1821 and 828 ; a gold Xedal of Napoleon Buonaparte ; four silver litedals of Napole on Boonaintrte ; two Rio de la Plata Dul -1 oars, dater! 1813 ; a Turkish Sword di a Damascus blade; a Gun ornamented with G ':gold; a G u ornamented • with silver and :coral, all resented to i President Jeffergon by the E peror of Merocco; seven old :coins of mon Emperors; a pair of Pis rtols, of Mahogany or Walnut stocks, 'and barrels of anteorie rock]; a fowling-piece in a maboo - rany case ; two Medals in cast iron, presented by the Society of Beneficence. of Cracrow, ;to -the President of the United States, Mr Monroe; a shawl, _presented' to the wife of Lieut. A. H.Yoote, U. S. N. by the Imauni of Muscat ; la scimetar, present ed to Conti Elliot, during his command in the Mediteranean ; five! shawls, ode sword, one string:of pearls, valued at $3500, three dernijohnsiof rose-watee, one Persian car pet two horse-covers, tWo large pearls, and 'one bottle obf arta of rose, all presented by the Imaurd of Muscat, - to the President,' of the United States, Mr. Van Buren, (this at tit of rose is of the puregt quality, in quatiti ty about if pint, and itit value - three tittles that of gol6 z) one case of coins of 1!,1 , :o----- , (Th0..,a..-..- 31..t..i i .' irt.,-,,a..kn, aelge,lB3o;" the originnl Declaration of the thirteen . U. States of America ; the !orininal commission as Commander-in-Chief of Gen. Ceorge Washington ; treaties(Corin a inal) between the United States and Great Britain, George Prince Reprit, 1814 ; U.States and France Louis 16th, 1778; U. States and Beetle parte, Ist Consul, '1803; U. States and Louis 18ti ,• 1822 ; U: States and Louis Philippe ,1831 ; U. tates and Charles John, Rink of Sweden United States and Russia, Alexander; U. States and Austria, Prancis Iqt.; U. States and Spain, Ferdin and ; United States and Brazil, Don Pedio ; ,U. States and Russia, rederick Wilbet' ; U. States ' and Turkey • together with nu , merons standard and w igbts and measures, ;English, French, and American, and Med ; ,als of Johd Q. Adams, !Horatio Gates, 11`a -1 thaniel Greene, and Daniel Morgan, three t ,gold and fine silver Pe uvian medals, and 'one •Turkish sabre. have noticed this 'case thus articularly,because it is consid lered one ofthe most interesting in the eol '7„ lection. hese articles were deposited un !tier a resol tion of Con ress, by Mr. Web ster, then i Seretary of State, 18-11. The !ease contains, in add tion to the articles ;above - eut)merated, 1 ashington's Camp Chest, containing 6 tin plates, 3 tin dishes, 3 'tin saucq-pans with hit:idles, 1 tin coffee ,boiler With handles, 1 t . cannister, for Ma, and 1 for sugar, 1 tin andlestick and tin der Nix, 11 iron gridiron (a curiosity,) 2 !glass quart bottles, (on containing salt,,) 2 glass pint bottles, (one containing :honey,) '5 -,glass bottles for p.pper, &c. 1 brdwn earthern te r a pot, 1 ,glas tumbler, 2 knives and forksi—leaving fi e empty spaces; in the chest. 1 Also, the co , t, vest, ankbreech ies;worn 11 1 Washingto,• when he resigned l iis commission at Ann o • ohs, 1783: The cOat-is a hlue broadel , E, - facings .of buff with, plain. crass: button vest and breeches of.buff,Also with plain Imes buttons. The IsWorfl worm by Washin_ In at Braddock's Ideitt, and throughout t e Revolution, with green hilt tind silver-rao nted, occupies the, ,tae ease;,as -does , a ~ the cnibb talking staff; with gold head; i resented in his last will by .V kiln to. ' . hington, and Part lqf the ran r or, sleepi tent of Washing itna, tens ble and suer :11 as the canopy that ;sheltered the Father of lis , Country in pie' ',day of hisl Ountry's , , • ' ~and_ as having !formed withioits cam' s walls the princi -40 place to whiet the. I bier retired to corn pose the rrAst itirpoilitati despatches, ant: of--, Fier tip hi: ' -- '' - - " . " 1 "1 dbatttpli JOU; • 1 613# - the i -, , ' 4, , - , ~,,•.: i, T! - .--4 : iiiii er ' g`rres'sottic' .._ EMI SINLAD life of •thi. Ibr his b thdugli not I leaden3. - I' tt c~Tse ireei win and the Ithn of pe Itied;outle; 1,i44514ec es in tisnwr ,Aohn..eifSl : • , • ' • ; •; , •ti't . ;•- , . ...• . _ . ~,‘ i : . , , ! . • , ; • . • 4 ••' I• . . ... ' " ' Terms Afirerusin i...• .-4.1 - * : 4 ) i i . . • . IT . ... . . , A • . ; • I .:1 1 - I - : 1 .. .... , '. . 3. 1 . .7 -ti lctstrjy . .. , .ettli;:titittl , ~ ! 2 .- ! : .. ! 1 ' ;',- •i-- , 1 • - • ••• 1 [• ; _' • 4 •4 7 •5' . ' . !! . ~ 7 • 2 1 1 . - 0 C,..E.-i nl•istes Of Firit. sina squnre for ! . •Twiter — r-ctii Citt s aartlietal fofeac - h ATh fi ie r lne til lt : , i . , • .'',, • I • 4, .; 'i • •';'' s - --•• • -.' 7 insertion. .• i ' . —ti . ' ' ' . 0•1 4 ,c: • Yearly, Advertis melts ; iNlittre t4ii,p ' • ege . , of .411 . i •• teration , not to exc .ed. 1 ! , - ._. -,. . t*. •' ; ' • . • Quarter- toltuxua,m th the paper, per" ye: , _s'.i'•'•Oii,. , . " ' ' " EVER ,!! Y - DIFFERENCE OF _OPINION IS ,NOT . A DIFFERENCE OF PRINC,IPLE.7—JEPARsci N . - I ' i e 1 tier Coliiind", • .!! ' do" -= ; -• o• •!! , 41%00! i , . i. , H 1 1 - One Oolutte4 ,V, do 1- • 4o- :•• ,; .. 15 -.00„1 __ _. 1, - - , 41 , : t '-- ( lards, • - • -.!a•i00, ' '• . I , • I . =1 ONTR,OW, PA. THURSDAY SEPT.. 3, : 1846. \.l-, 1 _ _ opportunities for knowing many details' con perning the close of his' miserable carebr.— subsotitient to the termination of the Revo-• lutionary war', and after the perpetration of Various atrocities against his countrymen, Arnold went to England and received :a ommission-in the British army. Het: was 'rowned- upon by the officers; and every- Svhere received with contempt, if not ihdig- Option' Various public insults were:offered o hint, and•in private life he was the Object Of perpetual scorn. • t . Soon after, Arnold threw up his commis on in the army in,disgust, and removed to -1 ISt. Johns: He there engaged in the Nest ).ndia trade, becoming as notorious far his I Pepravity in business as he had before been false to his country; Ins integrity was sus- wected At various times ,, and on one occasion ut;ing his absence, his store was consumed, Opon which had been effected an enormous : , littsurance. The ,Company suspected foul riplay, and a legal contest was the result.— 'Paring the trial pupular odium against Ar .'nokl increased, and maniti?sted itself Eby a iuct.eQsion of mobs and the .burning oft him., t : an effiq. During this painful scene • his , !family , . were greatly distressed, and - the lady kto whom allusion has been made, and who (resided near Arnold's houses was requested i l 'to,go and pass that trying interval of time liwith them. That request, in the fair hand liwriting of Mrs. Arnold, until recently was Lin: my possession, as well as a copy of n sa iirical handbill describing Arnold's life, I]hundreds of which were circulated among 'the populace during his , trial. Mrs. Arnold tin her note says, , " the General is himself i k to-dav," meaning that he bore the insults =with his usual firmness; but she was alarm- ,ted herself, and wished for the presence of some female friend during the painful scene, .. Oat followed., The proof was not enough to condemn iArnold, but there was enough detected of IKoul play to vitiate his policy. From; that :time the situation of -Arnold, at St. Johns, =became even more uncomfortable, and that of his family distressing-. Mrs. A. was treat ed With great respect and kindness, but he ;was both shunned and despised. Sim was. lady of great delicacy and refinement, iwith a mind cultivated with more than or-. idinary care, and of .course, her sufferings were rendered acute by the 'imputations ;against her husband's integrity, aside from Ibis treasan. They shortly left St. Johns ;and went to England, where Arnold became ;lost to the public eye, and died in degrada- Otion and obscurity.- : 1 There is a moral connected with the his horj, of Benedict Arneld which should be , deeply impressed- upon the youth of this ,'countrv. He was headstrong, disobedient ~..o vihdietwe in early me, anu ltai putn :fully wounded a fond mother's heart. In s'mature years, the same characteristics were visible, strengthened by power and rendered perilous by the absence of moral principle, ituid 1 - elf-control. He died as he lived, a i hnau of ungovernable passions, destitute of .integrity, deeply depraved and without ever 'having openly repented of his heinous of- Oences. The great question of the northern boun dary of Oregon being now settled by the '?treaty with Great Britain, the occupation of ;that territory by an American population twill probably go on with rapidity and stead tineSs. It is manifestly the duty of the friends rot' christian institutions, to see that this germ Hof a new empire is supplied from the begin iing with a healthful moral influence ; and determination ofthe American Home Missionary Society to send two pioneer mis i..:ionaries beyond the Rocky Mountains, as his soon as-practicable, will by no one be re karded as premature. i- The present general desire for autheatic nformation respecting Oregon, induces us t t olt republish the folfcrwing article froin the 'New York Journal of Commerce. h was ffritten . by Rev. Mr. Hines, who for several ,s , ears resided in Oregon as h missiompy of 4he Methodist Episcopal chureb.—libme Wiksionary. tl Mr. Hines describes the Oregon Territory. ias bounded northerly 120 miles by Puget .and froin, the eastern termination of that Inlet by a ridge of mountains whibli di tvides the waters of Frazer's river froni'those which flow into the Columbia,—said !ridge ,Pextending in a direction East-North-East to he Rocky Moutitains. ~- • • i The Pacific coast which falls to u; Untler ithe Treaty, is about 450 miles in length, itextekding from lit, 42 deg, to Cape Flattery W the entrance of Puget Inlet. /long the Inlet, we have a 4 ' water front" of 120 miles ; 'poking a total of near 600 miles of past, without including the gulf which projects from the east end of Puget Inlet, farthe ',Southward, commonly called Admiral y In let. These two `4lets--the latter of vhich is ;wholly ours-contain a, plenty of good Admiral Nabors, , and_ they are,the only good harbors Twe,possess on that coast. South of Cape flattery, the only harbor which a slip can tinter, is'the math of Columbia rivet, and pill, as all our readers know, is diffi ult of ,recess, and often extremely dangerous. a ,T l be,... area of , surface embraced • ilrithin 1 4meticor Oregon as defined by the Treaty, its more-than six times that of 'Ole silate of piew,Nork.Faun ' ' 31r. ,Hines' • description Of it , we now, koceed to quote. in hiS own !words. ,' The, reader will observe that the pcntutry about Paget Sound, which halt been 4enerally,dcscribaLair an sexcellent a leaf= 4ural district, is, iepresented t by Mr, Hi es as '-A . stretilell, bßip:4„ althou g h ....level a d ex #egla_gly):,i*tifal.".Strictly.spe • g, he , ! At,-,lliFie,o,-10_1-2,101•_:_, The Prairies are cur e Fee iltl4i, ATP F4,etc ur , satal4, stones,' with OC, Itr ) ,V;4 4 r Rt4Plattra,-,ef.eartb. Indeed Oa , altrintt - 44Plarks places... , this somewhat leitiiiiira ;tract, attY•Thiag cr b e• :raised. . And this, he it _ observed, is th tract, 'P.. r.-04 1 44ett.= abt.44 4 , wAijc.k , two, nations Wife beek4isputing., these ••t years, and for thii,p,osoefeisik - of,Nhicb thelibave at I time& ;peen an'inpriliaeat.4inger ~ .er iscurr • 1g the aireit Calamities. , , 1 Illadium Ara: Wake ig :to dou r 10(18; ca. of•daste trea t son, ally e- ..„i. i; ; •;•ii! min, 44, tqc.4oo IP. 44,18t,' peqpiar OREGON. The face of this country (says Mr: HineS) is wonderfully diversified,and presents every variety of scenery, froM the most nwfylly grand and sublime tote most beautiful and picturesque in nature.; -In the vicinity of Puget's Sound the country is level and ex ceedingly beautiful, and consists mostly of prairie land, with but a, small portion of timber; but, with this, exception, all along the coast it is broken and mountainous. On approaching the coast at the mouth of the Columbia river, ridges of high lands appear on either-hand Lts: far,aS the eye can mobil, and the more elevated points serve as land marks to guide the mariner through the in tricate channel across the fearful '" Bar of the Columbia." One high mountain called by the Indians " Swalalahoost," front an In dian tradition, and from its appearance, is supposed to have' once been an active volca no.. With -hot little variation the country from thirty to fifty miles back from the coast present a rough, wild and mountainous as pect, arid is covered with dense fOrests, fir, spruce and cedar trees. Passing over this broken border of the country, you descend on the north side of the Columbia into the valley of the Cnwilitz, and on the south into that of the Wallamette river. These valleys extend eastward to that': range of' mountains which, crossing the Celumbia river, firms tho Cascades, and is 'therefore called the " Cascade Mountains.:' • Comprised in these rallies are many 'extensive prairies, bciauti ful woodlands, numberlesi hillocks, iising grounds and majestic hills, from the thp of some of which, scenery as enchantinmai was ever presented to the eye, delights! and charms the lover of nature who takesttitne to visit their conical sunimits. That pitrt of Oregon extending from the Cascade goon tains to the Pacific Ocean, is calk/ the "Lower Country," and is•about one !hun dred and thirty miles wide. The Cascade Mountains extend it one continuous range; parallel with the Boast, quite to Calfornia, and have therefore ;onto times been called-the "'California Reap." Those whose mountain observationsi,have not been extensive, can , . form no ,just !con ceptions of the grandeurand magnificence of this stupendous range. The it ighestpealis are covered' with eternal snows, and presehting their, round peaks to the heavens, appear like so many magnificent domes to adorn the great temple of nature. Some-of them are inure than fifteen thousand feet above the level of the sea. I'rotn one elevation, uear the Wallamette river, and from !sixty to orie.hundred and fifty miles distant, the writer counted eight ofi these snow capped mountains 'without moving from his trhcks. Surely no sight can be more enchantiag.--- ()tie of , these mountains, viz : St. lielen, requires a more puilie.glaz phenomenon which it presented three years ago. in the month of 'October, IS.I - 24; this mountain was discovernd all at once, io he covered with a dense chilli of smoke, Which continued to enlarge and move off in dense masses-to the eastward, and filling the heavens in that directiou, presented al ap pearance very much like that of a tre mendous conflagration, viewed at a vast dis tance. When the smoke had passed away, it could be distinctly seen, fr m various parts of the country, that an ion had taken place on the north side; f St. Helen ;i and from the smoke that continued to issue ?rom the chasm or crater, it, was -pronounopd to be a volcano in active operation. When the explosion took place vast quantities of :dust or ashes were thrown d-om the ehasmi and fell 'in showers for many miles distant. ;This mountain is the most regular in its form°, and most beautiful in its appearance! of. all the snow clad mountains or:Oregon, and thimg,h on the north side of the Columbia, it belongs to the Cascade Range.: Mount Hooi, on the south side of the Columbia, is mor4 ele- voted than St. Helen, and presents a inag nifioent object on which the eye can gaze Without weariness, froM innumerable tioints more than one hundredi and fifty miles:frork its ',base. By any description of •thesu gi gantic piles of Basalt and snow must fall far below the reality; and it is only necessi:iryto gaze for one moment upon the majestif gla zieds, to-he impressed with the insignificance of the works of art, when comOred with the works of nature. ' Passing over the Cacad - t Range 43 the eastward, you come into another extt'msive valley, which reaches to the foot of anther range which from its azure like appearhnce, is culled the "Blue Mohntains." Thip val ley is about two hundred miles broad and is called the " middle country." A number of beautiful rivers flow through this +ley, and it is also intersected by broken rlges, which divide the numerOus streams by *lnch it ?s watered. - This Part of the country abounds in extensive plains and " Riairic hills," but timber is so very scarce, that the eye of the traveler is seldom delightec with l the appearance of a 1 tree. The ' Blue MOuntains" are steep, rocky and volcanic, and some of them are covered with piwpet unit snow. They run nearly parallel with th 4 Cas cade Range, tbough,l far to the South, braiiches Of them intersect with'the ;latter mike. They nre abeht midway betwixt the Pacific Ocean an the , Rotky Moan tahis. The country e of the ‘f Blue 4,4 Mountains," is the thir ; or upper t+gion, and extends to the east via boundary of the Territory of Oregon. - . he face of it 111 more varied if possible; than it is 'in that part of the country lying west Of the " Blue Igcniii. tains," the southern pbeing dititingtiished by its steep and rug d mountains} deep and dismal values, cal ed " Holes," fiy the mountaineers, and - wid • gravelly plaiiis.-' c l " The 'northern • part is,less objectiondblein its features ;'the plains being more execiiiiive the mountains less preipitous, and the•vill lies hot . ttO gloomy. M nx,iirtii ef portions this upper region' arejvolcam ic,,and , Soe 4f • the ti l roleinoes'are' ipfOns nt action . :Mtuiybr tbelilainii of ,thuifregio aref - covered: With ; carbonate Ohioda, wit dh;' , iti'' Mille place's;' any be gathered in S'l2 : - quantities, mid ren derobthe soil . 'generall .unproductive.-.19n the eastern limits of till region, rise iceaw ; NI 12. • . , NI grandeur t - towering sumiiits of the Becky Mountait s, whi6h are veSy proper ly called the " beck botientof Nohh Amer ica. •The highest landin North America is in thi)i• range, attil is near the 53d parallel • of north latitud . It is Called I' Brown's Mountain." ' I Near this, and in a trem l endot4 gorge or the mountains, o e of tli , e principal branches of the Columbi' takesnts 'rise.- In this re gion the count, presenter the v"ildest and t , .. most ;terrific app amime. i," Stupendous lacier.% and cha 4 ic masses an rocks, ice snow,present themselves , /ou every side, a d der; the poifer of lan guage fully 'to d scribeithem. i Socifar us the face ofthis entirOcomnryis concined, perhaPs no other in the ilvorld pre sents,ta more vaiied on a - :more interesting appOirance. 'rife climate of OrtionNaries materially as yen proceed from the coast imp the inte rior. i To a prettier understandings of the cli . mote i is necesiary to consider the winter and Ammer separately. The wi ts which - -i. prevail in the winter are from . the oath and EasqsoinetimeOlv; j eering to. the Southwest. They usually co memie about thb first of Novelnber, and continued till tbe first of May‘ : I i ScOnetimes ditty comb on gradually,.but at seine seasons, they burst upor4the coun try at once, and-pith the violenceiof a thun der storm. The are always attended with continued falls (Train and the perind of their continuance is • dierefere called the .rainy seasn. Darn*: the rainy season - there are'' intervals of warm`pleasant weatlier, which i are#enerally followed ,by cold ` hilly rains froini , the South; and 'West. L ithe latter part !if winter there and senerallA lig ht falls a of snnw throughput the country, ithough in the rallies - , and particularly the Wallamette relief-, it seldoni falls more than n t s fro or three ittelo„is deep. flowerer, in the; winter , of 1841 and '42,1e snow fe ll in thin valley 12 inches deep, bu eight days afterwards it had tl all d4appeared. , ' 1 . 'Though the, winters are distreeble on account of the c' eltillipess -of the, southeast wiiia, and the iextreine Irumiditi of the at-, mosPliere, yet the cold is'Very moderate, the therzhometer seom falling beltio freezing l' point. As a m lttter of coarse ill groundis seldttn frozen, nd therefore plotlghing Can be dtme a grea portion. of the winter. Oc casiOnally, ho ver, thernis an eiception to this.. A few d ys before` the teat fall of snort already mentioned, the meitury fell in soma parts of die country,' to fifteen degrees belo* zero ; and it continued excessively cold ,c'or several 3 days. ' The !Ails were 411 frorttn so that battle 4nd horses'ibould pass over them on die ice, and the C amble tiv -,- si (lir drt i " thel aw.newith of ti e Walk n mette , , was bridged witti Ice tor - }n...l—.a .c fifteen days. A similar 'circumstance oc curred in the_winter of 1845. 1 Li Ivithe middhl region the rains ,are not so abundant as i • e lower country; the weather is cold , and there is c t lisequently more. snow. I that Portion of Jes-on east of th'f " Blue 1% oantai'ns,"' calle 4 th% upper f region, it seldo rainstexcept in Ole Spring, and then the miffs are not protraled. Vast quantities of snw falliin this regain, partic ularly in the m 1 untains. This part ,of the,', territory is distinguished 'for tltlh extreme dryness of its atmosphere,' which witk the vast Oifference in theftemperatuie betwixt day Lind night, fprrns ifs most peculiar trait, so rat as climate is cOnerned. From sun `rise till noon, tie merie'bry frequntly rises fromEforty to degrees. ' It ihould be ofserve&that none of the win ters Of Oregon 'laic either so stOrmy or so cold,but that antic, litises,sheepi &c., find amplp supplieslof proVender orq the wide spread prairies, I whither they aril driven to i roans at large. / l . If the winters/of Oregon are rattier stormy and Unpleasant,the stUnmers are iuffieiently, delightful to coOnterbalance all tQat is disa grecolle in the 4 { vintgri:. . Inc the mond' of March the 4atlier be comes', sufficien tl y warm to start legetation, so that thus earl ,the prairies bee:Time beau tifully green al d many of Florals choicest 1 7 gifts iippear to berald the approap of sum-, incr.! The sulimer winds are from the West and Nortll, and , there is sildom any pleasant Weathe,r except When thdae prevail. Afte4 a lonrrai iy winter, the and exhilarating of this country look for .11e. hesilthy, and eilhilarating breeie from the'bosoin of, the Pleific, with, solic4ude‘ At ,ength the wished or chan g e take 4 place. Tile hoWinf the itorm, lind roar ti : ' f the southern minds, are hushed to si !cacti; the lid's/ and valleys are ently. fan ned V the western Zephyr, an the sun, : pour mg his floc s of light and 4at from a cloudless sky, c uses nature, as by enchant men ) to enrobel herself in all thi glories of sumiper. The rdelightfut Weathet thus tish ered ?in, cOntin . es duiough .the_qhtire slitp mer,iwith but de deviation, a the tem peratitre of the! attnOsnliCro, - part cularly in the yallainette Valley, ,is . agree: tily warm nt and Oniforrn. A. noonjia l the wii est days_ the tbertinimete rangstilet about 2' ded. nt ), it the sbade, but t _ e evenino are copsidertibly- 1 cooler. The c . inessOftheevenittgi, doubt- les§ does far to entrislize the efr. OS_ of the, mias , athat iii exlitilbdl, 7 , tbrotigli die iuflu-. elide: 'Of the i fi, ' . l7toin '#el;!iwpmiiii, mid: ni,.ty places, i whielii i Ore,Ai. un . in some; parts'of the cod try.. i gOnu pe nal' Cape rienc% and cite sive oliseivation i Weienee . to tliii particul . , the writer is *Paled t o expr4ss the opi ion, that ilic clinitge of Ore sgqn decided favoilihin 'to hetilth. . And tiy, why ihould it, t. , be -The . te+perature, partiiularly in i lowerbouturr i pi remark .ably fiiifortn.' -he etutitry,iii* th er e f o r e ! subjact :to the evils. - torkfrooddetl'i changes froint extreme eat to Iqxtierifiy . iiild: . The . exhilnrating o . n liMeze',. will* sets -,..4i, itg. most every da Burin iptr,sum ' er; coati- bate grellt l .l'', .fPuFilF4hei- a - . Phailu ; " = " / 1 I The eircum enema "eof - tnecteil: with 'the I fact, hat the, . •butiii*deca ' tiegetii bk.! iitte, in ie couttii, - :ind all 0,`,„ few: dea - o*qmps , a:ml'o63=AD iendqortli thei poiseqOu4; litiaol4'toint .' theiur; , firoun i g regia s, itie Isiifficient: . silo* that i - D Business Cat ti: do , An : a tli r r adyertisenieuts inserled - Adveitis6inent s firer of insertions rewired. Oregon :must be the abode of It :althilinot that•human life is likely to beli otraceedil andluen to die of old it4e in this ethintry : as in any other portion of the world: 1 . , Indeed sue!' is the healthiness -of the climate ofthi* country,:that. but very-few . white persons have sickened and died since its occupancy. hy such, more than thirty years sigo.;; Net, with these-, facts before them„ there are perA 'ons .who are willing to: publish, fim and .neat. that the: climate of Pregon, and particulatly, of the lower country lis "decidedly,tum. healthy. That ilid . niosi malignatl Mid fatati fever& •pre,vail," than which no represent*/ Lion could be more erroileouS. is Truethe ague and fever in' it very -inodi! fled form, 'sometimes prevails • lin the loiter country; but it is easilylcontrolled hyinopi.; er retnediel, and finally leaves the pet** with a vigorous and an unimpaired eonstittbh don', and •seldom returns the Second seasonk. These persons who hail!, lived•lon'Oest die. country, are generally the most healthranit • vigorous; which is of 'itself a paid :of Litt; friendlineSs of the climate to the promotintit of health. • If there is any difference he. tween the-different portions of-Oregon in rel. gard to the healthiness of its climate, the: middle region and that, immediately Along).- the coast, are the most salubrious.{ mate of the valleys of the Wallamette„COwl; ilitz, Umpqua,, and Clameth rivers isikelt calculated for wheat, barley, bats,ipeas,qtp ples, peaches, pototoes, turnps, and: otheti vegetables usually cultivated in the temper.. ate latitudes, • while horses,'. cattle, sheep,. hogs, &c., tiourish•and- tnultiply beyond 01 parallel ;• but in the middle, and sOme,Parts, of the upper region, the climate is well adapted to all the pursuits of a pastoral- . • With a uniform, salubrious, and delight: - ful.climate, as well adapted to purposes-4 agriculture as any within the same. degree*: of latititude in any part of thevorld, Ore=. gon loses much of its inwortance, if the:fer=• tililJ.cof the soil does not correspond withi the nature of the climate. • . The soil of Oregon has been variously re., presented by persons who have visited:the, country. Some have viewed it in altogether. too favorable a light, wlfile others have great-, ly underrated it. Some have placed it amongs the first in the world; While othershaye con siderea it loundless'i desert, fit only the habitation of wild beasts and ,savage• men. -These-, conflieting repreirentatitins doubtless have arisen from a superficial ac. quintance with the country by the author*. of them.. They have {either not 1 stityed itt . the country a sufficient' length of time to be-: come acquainted with ' its real productive- , , ness, or they have relild upon that inforniv turnwhich has been t' artfully desiOned t o . prevent the country frrim being known. _ .-.4,- Columbia river; are subject to an an nual in-' ' - I , undation which is occaiioned by the Melting of the vastiquantities of snow whichlfalkon its upper. branches, among the tool ntain&l This flood continues through the month eff June and into July,. so! that whaterr may be the richness of the land thus overflown;- but small portions of it will be' brought contribute to the support of man. There ire hOwever some portions•which lie above high ' water, are rematkably ,Tertile, and produce in abundance the grains and Vegetables.: common to the best parts of the country.—a' Fort Vancouver-is situated on one of these= higher parts•of the Columbia' valley, end here a farm of tiro thousand . acris is cuiti• vated, and produees annually sev6ral thew. , Sand bushels oflgrain.,l -Here alge apples, pears, and peaches Are cultivated success fully, and grapesl are bMught to aklegmeof! perfection:' . ' - I - Though but few attempts - have as yeti been made tr the - 43. __ made to etlvate the uplancts, or tim bered lands, yet safficieht has been done tot prove that the soil of these portionimustbel of a superior quality. !And indeed ,this is! attested by the ithmense growth o: the titre-'•! ber itself. No iriferionsoil could bend forth - those enormous tt.unks,,. which int their 'up=: ward `progress "spread their magnificent -branehes• to the t skiesii and often gear that'; heads to the am zing height of three httn-' l ' dred feet.' Clatsati Plain , on the south ide of the . Columbitcriver, near its mouth,embracing an area of abo sixty square iiiiles, are' , amazingly fertil , being'compose of a richo alluvial deposit, and producingl kinds 'of vegetables in - the greatest abunda cc- Tho: 1 country around Puget'S Sound on the north'i side of theliver, is altogether of a differintt character.' The prairies are eitensiie - and';. L e beautiful.' The Isceneri mostdeli htful;'but: strictlir' speaking, there is no 'a i t to , ,thel Country. : The prairie! Are' cov er ed with shingle•Or- , ,small stones, with sc arc ely an) 4 , mixture• of earth. ,, Indeed there i - butftirt places on u this - s omew h at exten..veAttacte where any thin gcan be raised; 'AiteilPtal have beetiiiade't o redeeinit fro.. its 'native baliennestr, but as yet. they have . :fidied r t'll l The ma tioice t Bay Compan "t rtiti*e4t' some 'oft , their ' ttrplui! ',popuht .. i' - ' -l ittlte . ir river to this region, bilt,in . cmisqii ":ce:tiftliii' i sterility ,Oftlitr' uittry'itheystaat' i l'eifiiie'aii."'l . cciftrage();?'and, though con,tie `.. 'to '.' thi wiShes'afibee tigian.T they : ilfidiaiiiii. l ed the - PUCCI:in laveAettledr=el ' iilleie. And, - -yee,thia 'region liatiicti - seated - 4i distinguished - abbe foit'ithe' Isiihi .riti,'of Its' . elitaite. - had:' the ' fertill4';of its oil.''''Tliti(l eliainte - Viddied, ' deli ghtful; ad_ the Weil ii . ifi r l d exceedingly Aii dOingand'eati' :icier peslF'' iiiil4' l,L :reecivit: 'froth' its extre" ,, ii beirreirif»! rises: i- ' i = l` , .. S, - ~. i!' ' .+- ' ` ` 71 .-- ' 'Prldii*'diffeiviit parts of Q 4 1, 4 10gi% *11'6 . 0 , 1)3 - F*le Ceiviliti' and ' . : iiiiithifid Ora' On2theirioriffiiide of the Cal' iiibil?iiiir . '. L I those, 41-Ifiiii ios %I thipnViiiiie , taitlfrapr lati!ettefivith , i numerous trib iskiiiiiiiir. qiegiittgua: - .an `:Clikanotli rive' 'fio'fipiti e pinpiefititniably' 'a - 1626k feriile. he.ifOet '-: eltheliriillitutefe,wltteli itiibra.'4**g.. 0r25,000 ±utPar - mdcil;l B 'im# . ~ litetilY 7 tW ittl, titled tojihei. tip - llatioa Pf the'l''''. . i*:. 4 C.IF. , ':- g . 'otti - '..lllier'lle , l ' '..' 2 4,l4:*r.:`'ia . ...it'ail 4- - though , :thIC ' er will 'Alacii iti - kef , Te 4 kinds 4IP-. - . soi l. all: -- theiiiiiiii, •• ': *ll BO !CAC pla'eetrui-lritindy'sok itt. - ot ' a - ' 1:01ymuil:oltit the nut&