xce)t ibal it it not near so e-ere with llio genoral lonor of the slsvo codes of the different States. We learn by Bible tint God !i no respecter of persons thnt La ii pure, jut, humane, anj benevolent. Now, I ek, can eny man talis lLa defini tion of slavery tbovt given, and rccot'.cilo it with ibese idmltted Attributes oft right eoui and holy Cod f And if silvery be right, the means by which it hat 1 bo sus taincd art hecrsearily right. Then, are we not " respeolcr of persons" when we punish (lit slave for that for which another . would never receive evea lite mildest ro proof t when in fuel a hundred (hinge may be done lawfully nnd properly to the tlave which it would be criminal to do to any other; and eron hit life may be token necessary to preicrvt (not tho master's own life, but) hit authority. Tell me where the Dible mule ihis diflirenco be tween men. Next : lie it pure, and hasi aid, "Thou shall not commit adultery ; yot aluvo law recognizes no luch thing as marringo. " A tlave canuot coutracl mat Tlmony." Slroud'a Slave Laws, papa 01. ' Slaves art not entitled to the conditions of matrimony." Taylor s Civil Law, page 429. True, they may ge through the form, but the law gives it no vitality and allowt it no force. No slave woman can shield herself from the passions of her owner, for the law mukes him absolute, nod sho dsre not resist. Thus slavery up roots virtue and fidelity by refining to recognize tboni as merits to bo protected, and imbrutcd ignorance and LuuriJlcd li cense run without curb or restraint. Tell me, can a God of purity sanction such a system of harleiry and prostitution I Third : lie Is said to be just aud hu mane, hit just to keop a ilare iu igno rance of the simplest means of informing his mind, and then to puniali him ly a law he never saw, and could not read if ho had seen it I Keep him in ignorance of the laws, and then punish him for their trans gression. Is it just to afflict tho posterity because the mother was bl.uk instead of white ) Is it humane to tear these chil dren born in soirow from their parent and sell tbcin fur sordid gain to the merciless alavedriver, whose eye never kindles with pity for their sufferings, nnd whose cruel ties know no bounds but tho limits of hu man endurance t In tine, can a system be liumaue which solely rests upon force where tho scourge and the baud-cuff", the whipping-post and the bloodhound are the means by which it is sustained nnd perpet pot ua ted I Yet such a system is American slavery in principle, and when a God of hu manity smiles upon such cruellies, thcu will he approve thnt system. Lastly God is benevolent aud kind. Indeed, such has been his loving kindness that ho sent his only begotten Son into the world to sacrifice himself for all men to save tho bond as well as the free. Yet the slave code gives tho mnster power to keep his slaves in enliro Ignorance by prohibiting them tho benefits of education and the preaching of tho gospel thus keeping them in heathenish darkness and supersti tion. Can a God who mude this sacrifice for the elevation of man, approve a Eystrm which gives to a sinful, depraved, fallen .man tho power to thwart his noble nnd be nevolent designs and who says thnt nil men shall be judged by the deeds done in the body thus making every individual responsible for his own acts ? I ask, can he npproro n system which annihilates that responsibility, destroys the slave's capacity and right to choose between right and wrong, ignores the fact that he possesses an immertal soul, and turns him into a chattel . and a brute I I answer, Ho never can. Cut, Bays our friend who bslievcs this -system "a Bible principle," the abuses which slavery may have sulTered in tho hands of bad men is no argument against the existence of the institution. But it is folly to tulk about abuses when tho whole system is an abuso. One step in wrong begets the necessity for a hundred mors, And the recognition of the one falsa print')', pie thnt one human being can rightfully hold another ns property, brings inevitubly nnd necessarily tho long crimson catalogue -of crime that you denominnto the " abuses of slavery." If it is right to hold a man In bondage, the menus to support that right are also right. If a slave is property, he can have no legal marriage relations, for lhat would interfere with the master's pow er to sell his " property." Adultery is sot .then one of the " abuses" of slavery, but 2s absolutely necessary to its very exist-1 -ence. If a slave is " property," then tho light of the master to dispose of his prop. riy includos the means to enforce his au thority. Thus the whip, the gag, and the hand cuff become absolutely necessary, aud are therefore not "abuses," but instru ments without which it could not exist. If the slave is property, and tries to escape from his owner, then the use of the chain nnd the bloodhound to retain the refractory fugitive is not an "abuse of the system," however inhuman and cruel it may be, but a necessary concomitant of it. If a slave is property, then he is bound to ebey hit master; if he refuses, the master may flog him ; if tho slave, under the impression that he is about to receive tome great bod ily injury, should raise his hand te resist, ht may be killed on the spot. This is well settled law in the slave States. The right to take the life of the stare, then, is net an "abuse," but a nteessity of the system, and without which power insubordination and rebellion would destroy the system. Throw aside the whip, the gag, the chain, and the piitol turn tho bl'iodheund ooe to track the native beasts of the lores! aud twamp recognize the law of marriage among tlaves and let the law prohibit their use to perpetuate the sway of lbs matter, and how long without these abuses would the tytlem exist? The day thnt such Ihw was proclaimed would be tho knell of slavery. And yet "A Member of llio Christian Church" ays thnt such an inlilution " it no national, no moral evil. I can only tsv, if this bo true, that I envy not his code of moral principles! After all, he hat succeeded In showing if he showed anything at all that while mat could rightfully bo mado slaves fur he will hardly contend that the Hebrew slaves wero " niggers." Our Deduratien of Independence, according te the luost ultra pro-slavery interpretations, has set tled that all vhitc men have equal rights to liberty, and I presume even "A Mem ber of the Christian Church" would blush lo be compelled to maintain tho doc- trino that he couid enslave rightfully hit fellow citizens if he ceuld obtain the power. And yel the Biblo proves that right, er it proves nothing for him. Asking a caudid perusal by all who hId the doctrines of " A Member of the Chris tii.il Church," and begging pardon of tho printer for occupying so much space, I am, sir, jours, respectfully, te., Freedom. Lafayette, Nov. 7th, 1S.VT. Sljc rcgou Cirgus. W. L. MMI, ruiTOS AND rHarSIKTOI. 03XrOX7 CITY: SATURDAY, XOVKMHKll 21, 1857. (jf 1). W. Csaiu is aullinriwd to do any but liu-u connected with The Argus Office during my absence. AV. L. ADAMS. Tbt (tec lilf nisi as Ihe n lioosf1 Since the election, tho Occidental Mess cnger lakes the following true South Caro lina secession view of the goose : "We contend for an equality of rights between the Stales we contend that the territories, being common property, all have an equal right to citizenship upon them with such property as they may pes sos. We further contend that the people of a territory, in the formation of a state government have no power lo exclude slaveholders, because the exercise ef such a right would invalidate the common part ners In p would bo a declaration to the ef fect thnt the people of the nos-slavehold- ing states possessed superior rights ovor the territory to the people or the slaveholding states." This is tho only consistent, sound, and reliable black-democracy, and the nation al demagogues will occupy the Occidental's ground in less than Ion years. . In the snme article the Occidental pokes out the cloven foot of disuuionisin : " Asgreat an evil as disunion would be, we consider there is still a greater, and that i'.i submission to the unrestricted will of a reckless fanaticism, tehieh overrides the barriers erected by the constitution for the protection of the minority, and tramples, with ruthless, iron heel, upon the plainest principles of justice nml equality. Hero we are threatened with disunion as preferable to a 11 submission" to the will of the " reckless fanaticism" that has just decided lo " override Ihe barriers erected by the constitution for the protection of tho minority" who wish to deal in the bodies and touls of men on tho same terms that the? deal in baton. fVC 13. Pickett, the wandering Ish maelito from California, who has been so journing iu Oregon for a couple of months for tho purpose of advocating the intro duction ef elavery here, through tho Occi dental nnd Sentinel, publishes a letter in the last Occidental, which shows thnt he has " got his back up" nbM the recent vote on slavery. In addressing his fellow-worshipers at the woolly shrine, he suys: " Rut it is said you will acquiesce in the decision given a! the polls on yesterday. Can this bn true? Will you thus quietly nnd tamely submit and tit is, loo, in mere wantonness cf insult on the part of somo who oppose you to bp deprived of your hopes, wishes, expectations and rights! II so, tlien, you no longer deserve the name of men nnd freomcn." This talking about "not submitting'' to the wishes of an overwhelming majority of the people, comes with a rich grace from a source tunt bus rained lire and brim stone on republicans who have demurred at the political opinion ef the five southern members of the Supreme Court! It's a sad plight you're in, poer fellows. Wo would advise all these Ishnia'blites to emi grate to South Carolina, but we aro afraid that in their great desire to kick up a muss of some tort, they would commit some act that would cause them all to be hung aa " abolitionists." Cut poor l'ickolt consoles himself with tho idea of a better timo coming. Hear him: " The time is coming, nnd noi far dis tnnt, when a decision of far greater im portance than that of the Dred Seotl casft will be made by the Supreme Court of the United States ; and this decision will be that negroes are property, the tame at any other specira of personal or movaablo propeny, is to recognized by the federal constitution, at well as by the great un. written common law which covers all parts of ibis confederacy alike, and that the owner of a negre slave iu one State has a perfect right to remove such slave into any other Statt and there held him, as in the State from which he came, and that any State law centraveaiag such fight, u unconstitutional, null and void. " There spske the soul of a regular dyed It-the-weoi black-democrnt. The 'opinion' ef poor Tickett cannot, however, be called original, naose Deady, a pettifogger whom poor Tierce commissioned at ono of the supreme judges of Oregon, expressed the same opinion in a speech made at the Leckiug;latt school house in Douglass county last spring. It it whnt poor Pick ett, in llio language of Ruchannn In refer ence la squatter sovereignty, would call a " happy conception." Wbon Pickett's "sperm cori" decides that the constitution revives the slave trade, permits Toombs te call the roll of his slaves on Hunker hill, Wise to settle with his five hundred negroes along side of white luberers in Vermont, thereby reducing their wsges from one dol lar to fifty cents a day, besides requiring I base white laborers te leave their Work and hunt 'Wise's runaway niggen for nothing, we hope thnt poor Pickett and his Court will permit us te quote a sentence of his epistle, in addressing tho free laborers of tbo North" Will you thus rjuittly and tamely submit!" Wo think that when Pickett's "Supreme Court" knocks the underpinning from the pillars of State sovereignty, nud plants slavery in all tho States nolens fo(;n,llien bluck-democracy may lay some cluiiu to "nationality." Till then, however, we shall continue lo denominate it ns a "sec tional" party, and a miserable rotten one at that. tW Last week wn published an extract from Salem correspondence ef the N. Y. Tribune, giving a pretended history ef a border ruffian row in the Constitutional convention. The authorship ofthat letter, it was supposed would forever remain a mystery ; as no one belioved thnt tho creature who would de such an act would ho silly enough to " leak out" a syllable that would lend to implicate him in a ded that would brand him as a very dirty dog in nny civilized community. But it seems thai the lecherous blockhead who edits the Snlcm organ of black democracy, knows a II about the letter (having doubtless writ ten it himself), and ihinks it so smart and wilty a thing, last he allows his zeal for notoiiety in doing dirty things to blind his discretion, and he thus proceeds to open .the wallet aud iuvite the community to look at Ihe cut : " Philosopher Gbeelev 'Sold.' At the time of the organization of the con stitutional convention, a wag at this place got up a " blood, hair nud thunder" des cription of a row nnd -fight in that body, ns u ' sell" upon Greeley. Wo thought the "soli" was too transparent tedi-ceive anybody, nnd had not the slightest idea of ever seeing it in tho Tribune. Rut Gree ley, ever on lbs nlert for " border ruffian" laics, clutched at, nnd swallowed it with avidity. It seems from the extract we publish below from tho Tribnno of (he 7th, that the letter was published in the issue of the day previous. We have net the paper of lhat day, but the correspond ent here has furnished us a copy ef the letter which ha kept, nnd we would pub lish it from that, but we have not room this week. It will appear next week." Here we have a full acknowledgement that tho editor was a particeps cri minis in this foul transaction, er at least knew nil about it at tho time, nlihotigh he essays to fasten tho crime upon some other member of the " clique." The exhibition of such moral turpitude nnd brazen effrontery ns is contained in this extract from the Salem paper, shows the crying necessity for more thorough moral training and rigid discipline in tho family and in the school It is mainly for the want of this training and discipline thnt wn now nnd then see in community a sneaking slimy loafer, whose highest gratification consists in dis turbing public meetings, disfiguring post ers and handbills, writing smutty things on the tcalls of public buildings, dropping obscene anonymous communications in the post office directed to females, whittling picket fences and disfiguring other people's furniture, nnd other nets which mark the perpetrator as a slimy greaser. Tho au thorship of this letter to the Tribune would probably furnish n clue to the crra lure who last fall, crawled into a "neces sary" at Sulem, lor material with which te smear the whole front of n poor harm less negro's barber shop. During a long period of pretty success ful school teaching, we have generally managed, whenever we have had such a subject to deal with, to " bond the twig" aright by moral influence with nn occa sional mixture of tho hickory. Tho ouly half dozen or so cases that proved "too much for us," have either turned out lo stealing, or editing locofuco newspapers. A. Bush, the editor of the "Oregon States man" (Czapkay's organ), from which we make the above extract, is, of course, too much hardened in villainy and steeped in crime, to justify any hope of doing much for him. We think with the Messenger, however, that an argument might now and then be made to reach him through his hide. If he should ever bo put up at auction, and we think, upon "examining him," he has the mental qualifications for a Devil in The Argus office, we may buy him ; thinking that by sending him to Bro. Pearne's Sunday school and wearing eut a couple ef good hazle brush on him every Sunday before he starts, and aa many more upon his return, we can improve his manners to as to make him a passable devil. fctT Tne Astoria Report in favor of a railroad from Astoria te Eugene City, Beit week. 8L80TION B.2TU&NS. Clackamas. Bulow we give the official returns of Clackamas county : I 10 - u. Oregon City..., 1!)3 87 41 249 S3 313 t'piwr Mululls 41 33 19 56 4 C3 Young's 91 3 5 19 3 3D Lower Moltllt 39 33 11 41 0 43 Curry 19 9 3 19 (10 31 IU Creek 37 5 1 41 7 35 Timlslin 19 3 3 19 00 30 Matron's 37 13 S 30 6 S Hi-aver Crick 35 1 3 33 1 31 l.iun City SI 37 9 49 9 37 .Milwaukie 45 13 1 50 33 34 Muniumu's 43 10 4 50 1 44 Total 530 SIO 98 655 113 594 Clatsop. Ed, Argus: Below are the official returns of the election in Clatsop county : Yes. 62 25 25 No. 37 71 05 Constitution, Slavery, Free Negroes, Astoria, Nor. 12 W. W. Pahickr. UMrcjUA. Dear Sir: I send you the returns of this county : Yes. Constitution, 107 Slavery, 32 Fren Negroes, 19 Ne. 83 204 100 It is reported that Douglas county goes for the constitution 173 majority, nud against slavery 155 majority. Yoncalln, Nov. 13. E.L. Atplesatb. Yamhill Co. Mathenv's Precinct. Yes. No. Constitution, 28. 2 Slavery, 3 27 Free Negroes, 5 25 S. M. GlLMORK Polk Co Plcn Vallry Pseciwct. Yes. No. Constitution, , 45 27 Slavery, 26 40 Amos Harvey. Amity Precinct, Yambill County Yes. No Constitution, 30 2 st . Slaverv, IS 40 Free Negroes, 5 5; Jerome Willing. The returns from this precinct sent us by S. M. Gilmore, Esq., give 48 against sla- siUered a stronuhold or slavery indeed. . . ..... . we have often heard it said by pro-slavery men from Amity, "We are all sound on the goso in Amity." Fifteen votes for tho "goose" out of sixty-feur votes, looks like rather a "bad egg" for a "sound goose." Put her back on the nest again, boys, wiih the "Nebraska stone" under hor for an egg, and let's see what she will hatch, out next time. Below we give the result of the viwe by majorities for aud against the Constitution and ngaiust Slavery, in nil- the counties in the Territory. A part of them are official, while the rest are made up from the best information we had in the absence of elli cinl reports. The full official returns will not materially change the total, result. Many thanks are tendered to our friends in all parts of the Territory for their promptness in sending us in returns. , MAJORITIES. - counties. Clatsop, Columbia, Wasco, Multnomah, Tillamook, Washington, Clackamas, Marion, Yamhill, Polk, Benton, Linn, Lnne, Umpqun, Douglas, Jackson, Curry, Josephine, Total, For Con. Against. Against Sla. 23 40 73 27 C57 25 350 657 889 450 245 00 804 150 172 155 200 100 650 30 34 241 22 175 814 781 07 335 04 178 300 150 450 4555 70 5090 Remember It That Luckamiine pre. cinct in Polk county is the only precinct yet heard from in the Territory which gave a majority for slavery. The vote stood 38 for, to 29 against. The Terri lory ougl.l to buy a black goat and stake him out in the cenier of thai pre cinct for the natives to smell of. Scene. Dramatis Persons Landlord anil Editor. Editor rides up te landlord just before sunset, and finds him busily digging post holes. Editor Good evening, sir. Landlord (digging away How are you, sir f Editor My name is Mr. Pe.irne Ipre- sume you have heard of me ! Landlord Y-e-s. My name is Jim Barlow I presume you have heard of meL (Keeps on digging.) ( Editor looks at the frightened chickens a moment, scratches his head rather bewil dercd, and rides on. But, in the present condition of mailers, it we should catch a thief in the act of taking a horse from our stable, or committing an important robbery, we would shoot him upon the spot." Crop- Hay's organ. It is probable that about as valuable " horse" as any body will ever take from yeur stable, will be a shaving 'horse' and a borrowed one at that. 63T " If the doctrine of the tranamirra. tion of souls be true, Leland's spirit, after death, will be fouad playing snapping turtle in a swill-tub." Portland Times. Very likely ; bat nobody need be afraid of being bit" but you. t.-r" They Wells, Fargo & Co. r ceive from us a large package of papers weekly, but we seldom receive any from (hem, and when any, mosily valueless In terior pspers. We have not received a decent file for three months." Ciapkay't Organ, H' receive files of valuable papers from lliem.auch as the New Orleans True Delta, N. Y. Tribune, N. Y. Herald, N. Y. Times, Boslon Traveller, San Francisco Herald, and many others. The reason the Express Companies usually send you 1 he Banner of Liberty(riism), The Venus Mis cellany, Prophilactical Star, tnd Czapkay's nlmanaot for 18550, is, ihey know these papers are such as furnish suitable "clip pings" for your lying filthy sheet why you call them " valueless," we aroal a loss 10 determine. Instead of your not having " received a decent file for three months," most people here judge from the looks of your sheet lhat you haven't received a " decent file" since yon stole lhat editorial from the Albany Evening Journal. W Some lime since, Dr. Hutchins of Lafayette sent us a bottle' of his 11 Balsam of Wild Cherry," which, having no occa . . i . sion 10 use eurseii, we gave 10 .nrs. Stout of ibis city, who has been 'troubled for a long lime with a strioijs n flection of the lungs, producing severe cough and oilier symptom of Approaching consump lion. The medicine, we ire glad te say, has produced an almost immediate cure. Dr. Uiitchins' medicines, so far as we have heard of their being triad, have proved highly efficient. 0 " Our readers may regret ihe ne cessity which trots into requisbion this Coinjj down into llio cellarage. i'orr. land Times. The only ' regret" we have heard ex pressed up this way, is, lhat your moral respiratory organs were net so constructed that, instead of rruderini; it possible evel lo poke your head above your natural elemani, the same 44 necessity which trots into requi sition this going down into tho eellaregt," hadn't" trolled into requisition" your stay ing doun in the cellarage after, your first dive. jm vjr M rin. rRimMMiiUi. rical exhibition in this city liist Tuesday night lo a crowded house. II is persona tions of distinguished orators aud stage ac tors were generally good; nnd some of them felicitous. In our opinion, however, he appears the best as a regular built Yan kee, and ns an rrishmen from Cork. The exercises- n-ero much broken in upon by a new-comer set of California rowdies, w iih a sneaking hang-dog look that ram ki d them as exotics from the " Five Points." Their presence induced every man in the house to instinctively place his hand upon his pocket,' besides feeling the force of a .. . . - . : .. r f t - vi-ry Nirunr ttrumeiit iu lavur ui t 'g' Ihnce Comniitiees. Cc5"IIe Jo Lane was accompanied bv lion. Aaron Rose and family, of Dou glas Co., who go to tho stales on a visit. Our nest wishes trot along with Ihe com pany." Portland Times. How natural, nfter " trotting" out here behind Jo Lane, to make ' our best wishes' lake the form of a poodle " trotting" back after him en all fours I' f3T We notice in one of the Portland papers n statement by Marco Gassivadu, of San Francisco, thnt our old friend Samuel Simmons, of Howell Prairie, Has sold 1000 bushels of apples this fall, which brought from five to ten dollnrs more per hundred than nny other apples sent to the California Market. Friend Simmons used lo raise ex cellent apples, we know, but il is so long since we have seen any of them, thnt the way they tasted is not sufficiently vivid in our mind' to enable us to form a very dog matical opinion as to Gassivgdn's state ment. . OT James Gray, Esq., writes us from Albany, O. T-, that pork is selling there nt seven and nine dollars per hundred. It is telling at eight in this market. 03" The weaiher lias been beautiful for the last two weeks, resembling spring. Our farmers are improving the time in put ting in fall crops. 03 Thirty thousand bushels of wheat were recently sold at Joliel, Illinois, for 40 cents a bushel. Com was selling in the field near Springfield, at $5 per acre. 03" Bngham Young lately declared in a speech at Salt Lake city, that "hence forth Utah is independent of the United States." We look upon this ns only a fee ble outburst of Briiham's harmless gas. Bloninowlh Vnlvemllj. Jk RniTnn n, Tub Awmto Pin... x ,,,!, me to announce through your paper to the friends of Monmouth University abroad, and the public in general, lhat Professor W. T. Halet, a graduate of Bethany College, arrived here on ihe 14th inst., to take charge of the collegiate department of our school. We expect lo have other rooms fitted up in eight or ten days. Boarding in good families, from $2.50 10 S3. 00 per week. The neighborhood of Monmouth is pro. verbis! for morality, good order, and so briety. Send on your sons and daughters. J. E. MriRpnr. ' Moumouth, Nov. 16, 1857. KW ihe Washinirioa corresnondent ef ihe New York Herald, ssyt that Judge Curtis is considered there as the Dred Scott candidate for the presidency, since no resigned bis jue)g4smp. A Man or Dkstinv, Mr, John D Da menl of Oregon City O. T., on, t ' stved from the Central America, wb name has undergone a dozen Ulegrs.J! transportations, has experienced a ! ev.mful life kr owe t young, ft,,,, In the neighborhood of Wwhlnj, Q 1 where he was bom, he volunteered in B, Ride Regiment, composed principal, . the best blood of lhat region,.,,!, the service rendered In the Meiclr, w ' Ho fought in every battle from VertCm,' to the gates of the city tnd never recti, ed a scratch. During ihe occupailoa of' lhatCspiial he occupied a prominent r. sitlon in the Police Department, tnd escT ed many well laid plots against his lif,, 0t Ihe part of Ihe Greaser population, 'jj, wax the firsi man 10 vlunter on the call of General Scott for a certain number who should blow up the castle ef Cbepuhep at Ihe certain sacrifice of their lives. For hisgsllamry he was promoted t0 Lieutenancy in the regular armv, 1,, Ar. tillery-a double honor. His fir,t ordef was to the pol of Sicilacoom on Tugrt Sound, a waste howling wildorness, when) his ndventuros with the Indians, grialiM and other vtrmnnis, would form 1 meaii leresting bonk. One occasion he toak 1 small bom, of the sire of an oyster pm. , and with only four men, rescued from a' mosl tavago tribe of Indians, ocoupyiaj nn Island, soverul porta m including 1 yt nnd child, who had been wrecked and bar. ha rously treated. Persons familiar with I he adveoiure pronounce it one of the most heroic and dtriag,. requiring M ninnuut of- diplomacy rarely fnund-eN which Nnpelron might have delightd to honor wiih 'ho graud cross in ihe presence of a gmnd army. , Finding the soldier's life in time of petce too monoionoiiK, or obeying nn f rreaistibta impulse lo attivo life, he resigned Ins po. siilon whilb stationed nt tile pleasant post of Charleston, look to himself jft tnj returned' taOrgou to join his brother i buiiuess,. who it may be said by the wiy, had-crossed the Kwky Mountains iih ihe first train that ever wcnl to Oregon for lbs purpoe of settlement. Now comes the remarkable femurs of his travels on the sea. Lsst year in com ing 111 for goods he was in tho steamer Ill inois, which was so near being lost, and ar rived in Norfolk under such painful cir cumstances. This year he meets the ill fated Central America ami ho gels into Norfolk again. Pity it is that we are not in possession of his account of the caiaa trnpha While his cne may not have dif. fered essentially from others, we aro sure he knows as much as any who have made statements, and thst as in all the rest; of. his works, his modesiy would be equal 10' his ineril. AJI Imtl In ikon Inl.nl rioni.l I .11... MV , W.'l... 4 WV.... f".lit(t- friend of my early days I If yon arealwan good you cannot now fail 10 be a better man. I would net preach you a sermon, John, but would merely suggest inquiry as to how the prayers of that dear good eld mother of that sweet, amiable wife,., away across the big mountains, and oftbat ' little boy who doubtloss lisped your name,, as yen took the fearful plunge, may hare." performed the functions of the life preserver That you' nro born for a good esd ii al ready known that you are reserved fort better may be inferred, and if for nothing more agreeable, let it be for seeing uie once more''. Job. India. The New York Evening Toil, in. reviewing tbo latest news from India, saysr On the whole, the India news by the steamer yesterday is altogether gloomy. The prospect now ia that it will cost mora to recover the revolted provinces ef Ceo iral India than it eost originnlljt to con quer litem.; that when reconquered it will , take three limes as many men, and three times as muoh money, lo bold them at etirely r and lhat when thus reduced to sub jugation an event the occurrence of which grows more doubt till every day tney not be worth ono third as much to the con querors as 1 hey have been. The natives of lhat region " ill Imve become alienatM by this war, wlitcli is conducteo wiiu mercy on either side; seeds ol hate will bloom for half a century after a p lias been conquered, and no one can fore see the time when the people who have hitherto constituted more than filiB twentieths of the Anglo-Indian snny.caa again be confided in, or saWy tmyhjei to any considerable extent as seMier the revolted districts. - Improvement in Soap. The wife ef American agriculturist has been experi menting in soaps, and finds that the add" lion of three quarters of a pound of bo1 to a pound or soap, melted without boilingi makes a savins of one-half in the cost of ap, and of three-fourlbt the labor at washing, improves the whiteness 01 iw fabric; besides, the usual caustic effect thus removed, and the hands are led " a peculiar soft and silky feeling, leaving nothing more to be desired by the meat am bitious washerwoman. The Mam who Bbok the Tble8aM Cablb. The letter of Professor Morse, L'ives t nerfectly clear and understsndao'e explanation of the cause of bresjinj w Atlantic Telegraphic cable, ana u blame of the disaster where if pwp"J belongs. Mr. Bright, the head engines who had the laving of the cable under t sole direction appears to hsve e culprit. He had put the blame npo" ...... - ftl - taVI thai mechanic," but proiewor www he ordered one of hia aubereinaies -r ply ihe brakes, the - mechanic Mr. Bright repeated the f.ul ihe mischief waa done- M.1'" sarcastically remarks that Mr. Brtght erously" gave a certificalt exonerating