T1IE OREGON ARGUS. BY D. W. CRAIO. TKRMSTkt A out villi, furnUtii it i r unuart sad ImIi er annum, in imiki, l sins-l Aeri6rf rAr Dullart ttik It tMt tf tin ( n tjieiin tdvanet Whin Iki wuney it ml paid in tdvanei, Four Vtiurl will bt mar get ij paid wUhin lij steal, in ni dollari at Ike tnd of ihi year. ty Tut Dtllartfor it mtnlktNt tubierip- in m rieeiveajur tin period. 3f St paper diieonlinutd unlit all tmnraget art pain, unlttt it tit tptitn of the publieher. Hammer LaalBt, Ah ! my heart Is ever waiting, Waiiinf fur the May Wailing for lha pteaaant rambles, Whara tha pleasant hawthorn bramble, ' With Ilia wucxlb ne alternating, Stent lha dewy May.' Ah t my benit u weary waiting, Wailing fur Ilia May. Ah ! my heart k tick with longing, Longing for the May Longing to escape from tuly, To tl e young faoa fair and ruddy, ' Anrf tha thousand charm belonging To ilia summer dayj ' All I my heart ia aii-k with longing, t Longing for tha May. , Ah ! my heart ia anre with iighing, Sighing for the May ' ftighiog ( the eure returning, . When Ibe auimner beam are burning, flop anil fluwera that, dead or dying, All the winter by. Ah I my heart i "ore with iighing, Sighing for ibe May. Ah I my heart ie pained with throbbing, Thrubbiug fur the May Throbbing fur the era-aide billow, Or the watere-wooing willows, Whi-ro in laughing and in aubbing Glidei the etreain away. Ah! my heart, my heart i throbbing, Throbbing fur the May. Dublin Unirttliiy Mag nine. t'trtkt Argm, Mr. Legem. Mil. Editor: Tho nomination of Mr, Logan whs not declared unanimous by the Republican convention, 81 per Statement of the minutes published. My vote to the contrary was perhaps mistaken for the ' no' of iome ' outsider ns I was iu the bank part of the room. I correct the error for the reason which appear: 1st. If votes re good for anything, they should be cor- rcctly counted, whether given judiciously or n 9,1 kt i, I not. zu. At tunes, nominatioiiN are, no doubt, declared unanimous In consequence pt the reluctant silence of some, and the hearty approbation of others, who vote with a view to olicy and personal advance ment by the same means. Believing this to be so, I will the more promptly vote my sentiments on such occasions. I voted gniiiRt Mr. Logan's nomination becauso I thought his Republicanism doubtful, and his acceptance of the platform dictated by the prosjKJct of office. Under these impress ions I also decided to vote against him at ' the coming election, or stay at home, where my vote would not stand recorded against , my tense of duty. If any one thinks such a thought treasonable to Republicanism, the answer is, I owe nothing to the Re- publican party; the party owes nothing to me We all owe service to the rnnntrv me. e an owe sirwee to me couniry. Party should bo used as a iran. and not riHranlerl n .., J 5?n lnno- a. nnnenn. I 1 tion keeps within the limit judgment pro ' scribes as the proper range of duty, so long , will I abide tho decision of tho same, whether I havo my choice or not. Rut I differ slightly from a friend who said to some of the delegates ou the 20th, ' What- ever you fellows do to-morrow, I will agree to.' Such a pledge is rather know-nothing ; in its character, becauso given to support platform and candidate about which he v could have said ' I know nothing, except by inference.' 3d. Mr. Coffin of Portland and Dr. McBride inform me that Mr. Logan is a titan of decided political character that he is too much of a man to deceive connnu- nity by taking a false position for the sake of office. Others, personally acquainted with him, say as much. As I now have before me a Mr. Logan more nearly allied to the lofty character of Logan the Mingo Chief, who would not turn upon his heel to save his life, it becomes my duty to support liira to make bim strong, and ' Stout' weak. $ 4 th. I suggest to the State committee and the several county committees that they invite, ill Vwhnlf nf TlpnnblicAna nil t.hnse persons who are known to be sound and ennahle In rnnenu tho Rrnr or nr-h nnrtji ' 'I' of it and at noh tim n. Lv rontrilmte most to forwardimr the Reoublican cause, There are numbers of persons, no doubt, v i who would willingly assist in calling out the minds of the people, were they properly invited to do so; as few modest persons wish to be accused of working to attain political notoriety. Let none be invited for mere courtesy: that spoils the practical ; value or any measure, i suggest a Tew (names: Pengra, Ilolbrook, Adams, Stark- weather, W. C. Johnson, Applcgatc, Dr. . M'Bride, Hare, Curry, Denny, Davenport, J. R. M'Bride. Respectfully, C IIoEL I ' I T C CAma tkaaa mAntlta aftol" tVlO I election, I intend to offer a better way of nominating candidates one that will more a . u. owuevi im iu..", i. clearly indicate the wishes of the whole t . ,i. l .t. people or any party, than by the common method. C. H. Salem, April 37, 1359 X3T " Plain." "V Tun!!, ia the atrongert liuka. Soma th.nk it ro l l, but it ia powrrfuliy though de.icately exprawv. That h h ia pia.a hiconapwooaa It means, therefore, remarkably vi j. A lady never ealla a bull-dog plain, or a baboon. Tbat would be V nut." worn in HIV leiiimiuv iiw.wumi j w umi ii, jy Wend erf al thing are d. me Bow-a-day' aaid Mr. Timmioe. " Tb doe:or ha gin 1- kk boy a aaw lip taken frm h eberk !'' Ah !" aaid the old lady, - many'a th time I it known a pair taken from nrne, and no very ft tfil dperatvn either. A Weekly Newspaper, devoted to the Interests of the Laboring Classes, and advocating the Vol. V. Hr. BolUi New Yark IISrek. The very elaborate and able epeeeh of Hon. John Minor nolle, of Virg nia, in New York a few dy aco, i dewrvedly attracting the attention of Hiiiwil cirvlre throughout the North and Eait. aicvta tar gafv.a w III VUltllUUSJ UUU pUwIllOIIB from the fact that it b understood that lie ie the mouih puce of the able and intluential. if nt nu- meroue, parly to which he belong the Whiff- American parly of the South and SmUhwe.1. He btuppoeed to re-echo the vieweof euch man ae nh hardly loe powerful leader in the onrnniuitioiia of the punt, nu well n the viewaof journal like the mnrfi wnrika :.. tonp Militnrv nrennrn. Iticlimoiid XVh-g. the Loui.vil!. journal, and the m0n wnrllKe 1,1 tone- .Military prepare- St. Lou e Even ng New influential exponent of tions were continued in Italy, the politic! opinion, of the dev. The ,..ech i. to parjg correspondent,, of the London jour be treated a an overture of the minority party of , the South the oppoaition, no mailer how rleaiena- nals write as if war wns almost certain. ted-io the majority fr a union by which the Jiemoorncy may be die- pociened of the power in the nntion which it lia o audaciously abueed. The pivot upon which Air. Unit turn toward lit would-be Northern alliee, i hi iuextineuieliable hatred of the Hluim Democracy, which blaice out in every paragraph of hit lengthy harangue. With thai, and with the convict ou winch mot enlichtened men hare with hm, that there mu.i be a (Kdy change in the our ailempt at aelf-government, he come before a ftorthern audience, and indirectly, though not in termi, aike their co-operation in the work of na- tionnl regeneration wh eh he propone to cent' mrnce. Mr. Bolt, with lee obuurilv on that veied (uhject which dividee the North from the South that everlaiting elarerv queition might make hi way enay and hi triumph certain. The North will demand of him and hi co-laborer, if we understand the poaition of Northern Republi can, the following: I slavery in the Territoriee. I. An 'lm wiun of the power of Consrrei over 11. A enncenion of the rirrht of the majority in Congraae, when fairly comtituted, ie eaercine ite piw. r in any way not incontinent with the comti- lutouul riglinof the Iorth or bouth. III. A den al or the Ured woU doema. that there n, by virtue of the Constitution, and in defi - ance or lack of local law, prorty iu man. lltete point conceded, the union which Mr. 1 1""""1 lw- :'""U""m i person nit Bolt deire i eay. They embody all the prin ' principal body of the army: this is one of c l)lw w w,,io ths anti-lavery, ami-Uemucratio feeling of the Nona hae, aii.ee the uhe dence of the wild excitement rawed by the reiieal of the MiouriComprom.e, fallen back. They earry u kick to the day in which the North mid South, lug and Democrat, were utwuntiaiiy united in their vU w of the proper polit cal tnatment of mi iavery ouemon io a uuio anieiior 10 me a rite of the pcruicioua horeaieo by winch the North and Suuth have been drawn otujider, and the in tegrity ut me lie public aeriouxly ihr. aienert. Ihe principle which unce commanded the devotion of Virginia and Kentucky, and which have given re nown to their moat eminent eiilcsmeii and pitri- ou, rnay o re.eii.ou.nco. in mow ami., ine fine kind led bv .l.tlemon and t'av mav be made to bum up a ew and g ve light to the path and hope .otlie h..n. of ten. of thou-nd. who now,' dtacouruged, g;i e their w.iy in Ihe daik. Mr. Hon witi tin I ihat ni the North concrvn- th-mia Ihe center of the U. publican or?anii,io... e du not miarepieaem Ihe principle of our p irty friend of tho NurJiweet when we my they will ' n h m in lit birnilv ntiai mitmit n uvmpiI hi u h th he upprouche the Republican of the Kuet. They will it ve him ii nd the world aaauruneea, I. That they will uol be parliet to any attempt to depr.ve Hie bouih or any oonititulioual right wl,i;l1 "lie "'"y P08""- J1 VM "." .0,a. fur. 1,er be,,cr,t ,n obi gation winch the Comtitution impoee. I gatioi III. That they will not oppoae the admiaion of . .. ,nl n'" oi", ii oeir I'uumnuiiuni ue lepulilican in form, and fairly and legally made, I no matter what provision iu relation to slavery they may contain. ltepuhlicauitm will demand no more, concede no muro, than what we have indicated above, for u n, on and victory. If Mr. Botta and thoee who think with him are content with the term, hi jouruey North will not be fruitlee. But if he and they indulge Ihe hope that lupublicant are pre- nured to foreiro ihcie nher'tMlieil convietioiia on a qmeiion which in importance transcend all mere m-mn nrf Ptch,uP1 b"S'"n " commercial or muiiffinrv nniirB. nir. nam whhu n a ,1 nrfnin. 1 he nation commence it not to be weighed down by either a Tarili' or a Hunk, or both. Chicago Priti and Tribune. Spkcific for Removing tiieTape Worm. The Roston Journal says: We have been requested to publish tho following specific for eradicating the tape worm, which is one of the worst ills that the human system is subjected to. The names, residences, te., of a numbar of persons who have been cured by its use have been communicated to us, together with the peculiar circumstances of each case, but we do not deem it essential to publish them. There can be no reason able doubt, with the evidence before us, that the remedy has proved efficacious in many cases, not only Iu this, but other coun tries. The recipe was published in the Bos- ton Medical and Surgical Jonrnal when that, nerindieal was Under the control of Dr. 1 r t J. V. C. Smith, who repeatedly commended ! it ; tji the attention of the factiltT and rrave ! rf.l.lieitv to instances where the aner-idc had produced the desired effect. In all the cases commuuicated to us but a stogie ap- a i.nir Ar .in unM ii.- i plication of the remedy appears to have been necessary, although some remarkable cures were effected. Tho recipe ia u fol- j jowg- Procure sufficient seed of the pumpkin 1 (those iu the West Indies are the best) to make two ounces after removing the outside shell of the seed; put them into a mortar ana aaa nan a pint oi w.ter; pounu mm unwell and make a liquid orgeat of them, which strain through a cloth. Drink this m.xture in the morning on a lasting stomacn. . uw uui, uptiure iu tuc wiuk w u linni - anil half InL'A an Atirtro tt oaatrtT nil t ' ... . ! uuv . uiuwu u, vw. " - as the stomach can bear or contain ; that is, drench yourself with water. Aftertaking .. i it iL . . . . 1, i . j imnit an tne tune as mucn rresn. cool water1 the orgeat, if the stomach is well rubbed with ether, and an injection of about sixty dropg istakeIli yon WjU fini it M aggjgtaiit m th onreat. but this mar not be necessa- to the orgeat, but this may not be necessa- ry. buouiaiuenrsi application oi toe rem- edy not answer, repeat it the next morning J aI ." . An AAmi.lniiit av,ll ana mere u. uu ; . "-r-" be removed. The worm will leave the pa- ip..t ll at once, and Drobably entire. This can be ascertained by finding the small end or head of it, which tapers off almost to a point." It has been found that the seeds of the marrow squash answer the purpose nearly well a those of the DumDkin. Therwtre used in a recent case at Plymouth, Mast., with entire success. . OREGON CITY, OREGON, MAY 7, 1859. Eur,B- We have dates from Liverpool to the 5th of March. The war question remains Ull altered in aspect. The French government ... a aft . a , orS8"8 are ettln& roore belligerent, but warlike nrcnarntion. at Marseille! aro i. . i j v , omewhBl relax- 'OH Austria it IS an- nounced that the Emperor had become dc- terminedly warlike, and embittered against France. The Vienna iournals are also Preparations were being made for the ar- ,. ' rival in Franco of some distinguished per- ' m Bnfl if j. hinted that it miirht lie tlio . ' Ope. KUSSIO IS Said to DC Concentrating fin nnn lmn nn tl, Pmih .J o.,.rn,mf- '. , r, 1, . . '"8 ,lcr aTmJ m ucorgta. 1 lie laniuci ni Vienna havo ogrced to maiutain 150,000 men ln LiOinbarUy, and Will erect Tortllica- tions iu all directions. The lower classes . . . , ,. . , vi v icuna uie utxuiuiug cAtvLuuigiy lavur- able to war. The Austrian army in Italy hoi been placed on a war footing. War PnosrEcrs. The Paris correspon dent of the New York Courrier des Etats Unis recently wrote to that journal as fol lows: ' Three days ago n gentleman who fills a high oflice in tho Palace of the Tuilcries said to me: ' The resolution of the Empc- rnr iu irmrivnl.lv i.,hn. -...I n-;il i.l. 1 i. . .... i . x- " ur l" " ,l T hi nspirutions, the oldest and most ardent. vr h ,,. ... ; ., . , , . , , e gent is oi ins uncie as a poituciun; lie WlsllCH also to SllOW that he has inherited his military iretiius. A lionanarte ouirht to bo a soldier. The determination of the Emperor is well known, and matters are so far advanced that all opposition is hence forth abandoned ns useless and dangerous. Jio one wanted war yesterduy, everybody will wish it to-morrow.' " tr.VTrrv P, .... TI. nnnncilln. ,.,.w.,.... State convention, held at Louisville on the 2,d Fe)ruary adopte(1 a addrc8g nd res. ' r olutions, very spirited, but very fair and .udi(.i0H!, rj, fc nmpliOes tho fol- ' lowing charges against the modern Demo- crutic party: " 1, It is essentially a Disun- ion Party; 2, It is a Disorganizing, De structive Party; 3, It is a Doublc-fiiced 1 '""v- "avm8 on0 nsPect at tl,c ortl1 anJ another at the South; 4, It is a party with ,. . , U. .. I no common loucy or ttxca irmcipics; It IS a fceCtlOHUl 1'artV; 0, it IS a COP rupt Party; 1, It is an Extravagant, Wasteful Party." The address tukes strong ground against tho Cuba scheme and the rc-opening of the African slavo trade, and does not indulge in any rcflectious upon the opposition party at the North. Tro-Slaveby Progress. Tho Albany Journal thus gives the essence of the politi cal advance of slavery iu this country: "Seventy years ago the Democrats drew a line around the States, and said to the slavctrader, 'Thus far you may go, but no farther.' This was the JefTersouian Proviso. Thirty years ago they rubbed out part of the line and said to him, ' You may go into lands south, but not into lands north.' This was the Missouri Compro mise. Five years ago, they rubbed out the rest of the line, and said to him, " We will leave it to the settlers to decide whether you shall come in or not.' This was the Ne braska Rill. Now they turn humbly to him, hat in hand, and say, ' Go where you plea.se; the land is all yours; the notional flag shall protect you, and the national troops shoot down whoever resists you.' This is the Dred Scott Decision." California. According to tho Govern or's Message, the State of California has a population of 538,000 persons. There are N - . ton. 1 1 1 ..l.r 'JO',. ' """J 811(1 m 1,19,813 acres. The sheeP in the StatC nUmbcr 650,000; horses 43'000' "ttlo 120,000. The export of. . I. i i. if - :it .l it it.. um" "u v'" " - P881 ?car- A"e V 01 w"eat ,or ",e 1 - -.'. - "m" "oai" ' 1 ' UU8,,lls- l"m w zis.tys more Dusiieis oi Darley than the amonn? raise1 m tne wno,e u n,on I8J0' according to tne census, inrce nunurea and eighty -five thousand gallons of wine an(j ten thousand gallons of brandy were man,iractured in the State last year. The .... ., Kom y,e,a 'f08 WM .".w". wu me iouh yieiu amce iue uiscuvery, ouu,- uuu,uuu. Arte oiaie ut'ui is $ ,i)u,uuu. T ft T !t.. T . . Company of New York insured the life of a wife for the benefit or her husband, and 1 ' , oisullab iirun. a uuciwuioiin; contiDned for five years to receive the tu. u ' ' mmm therefor. When the wife died, the money was claimed, it was refused pre and the money was claimed, it was refused, on the ground tbat a husband could nave no insnrahe properly interest in the life of it bis wife tnd that such a policy, therefore, ' , JT ' a mere bet a gambling transaction, and as such illegal and void. The company evidently did not believe that gambling dehu were jgta of honor. Per The low in fruit trees ia Illinois within the last three years if estimated at about $3,000,000. The retentive nature of! d7 vty is euprv?d to be the cause. ! Hoops. Every now and then we notice a paragraph going the rounds of the press, announcing on the authority of some pud ding-headed corrcsjwudent, who avers that he gets his information from the best and most authentic sourco, that Eugenie, the Empress of the French, and consequently the head and front of tho fushionublo world, from whose prolific and Ingenious brain emanate the edicts by which woman Is gov erned, has officially and formally discarded the wearing of hoops, and that as a natural result, the kingdom of crinoline is about to collapse. Now, we do not propose to discuss tho right of the piquant Eugenio to issue her mandate, commanding women to abolish the habit which she herself has ap propriated the glory of originating, If she desires its disappearance, but we do ques tion very much whether she would venture her reputation for good taste In the experi ment. And it is doubtful, too, whether our fair countrywomen would not exercise their national privilege of disputing the au thority, and rebel against the proceeding, and it is doubtful whether the redoubtable consort of the Empress, backed by his half million of gen d armei could reduce the re volted divinities to their primitive skeleton dimensions. If Eugenie has done anything so rash she will be met at the threshold with a whoop of defiance. Crinoline fairly established. It is one of the few really commendable fashions with which the presiding goddess can be accused. That neatness and rotundity of figure, so pleas ing to the eye and so univcrsully popular withal to say nothing of the convenience, under numerous circumstances, which the institution of criuoline affords cannot be abolished without shocking the feelings of every man and woman of taste in the civil ized world. The result of such an order from headquarters, so momcutous in its con sequences, and so dubious in its results, can not be anticipated without a shudder. We hope those gentlemen who write from Paris will say no more about the abomination of hoops. Crinoline, like truth and cheese, is mighty and will prevail. In the words of a distingnished Western orator, in clipping the wings of the everlasting ' 'Merican ea gie,' we must say "Gentlemen, it can't be did I" Turkish Female Schools. Quito progressive step has been taken by the Sultan of Turkey, lie has ordered a rcor ganizution of the Turkish schools, and that provision be made for the education of girls. The Minister of Public Instruction, some time back, presented to the Sultan a com plete system of education for males, in which were introduced a number of ameliorations adopted from European establishments, At prcseut, the Minister's attention has been directed to tho education of girls, and he has proposed to extend very considerably the range of instruction given to females in Turkey, as a preparatory step towards the intellectual emancipation of the Mussulman women. Tho Sultan has given orders to have the proposed plan carried into execu tion with as little delay as possible, so that henceforward Turkish girls will not only learn all the works executed with tho nee dle, but reading, writing, arithmetic, gcog' rnphy, and history. In each of tho 13 sec tions of the Turkish capital, six primary schools aro to be established at once; and at a later period, ono superior establishment in each section, to complete the education of the inferior schools. Responsibility of Public Mew Mr. an Burcn, formerly President of the United States, was at one time visiting Hon. Silas Wright at his house in Canton, New York, and had made up his mind to leave on the Sabbath. Mr. Wriirht. al- though not a professor of relicion. nrrred him to stay over the Sabbath and attend , , ... .... cuurcn wun mm, auuing, " Men in your situation ought to set a better example than to travel on the Sabbath." Hoy. John Bell. This distinguished citizen of Tennessee was sixty-three years of age on the 18th of February last. The Leiruilature of Illinois Las made a law that no person shall serve oft ener than once a year upon a jury. XW In Italy, a lereral a ball plaeaatwo finjer on bu mouth, which ignifir to tha lady ' Yu an- terjr handonw, and I wiah to aprak to yon.' If ah touch her cheek with bar fm, and let it gently drop, that ignif, ' I corneal'; but if (ha turn her head, it ia a denial. At a ball in Paria, lurn ner neaa, it ia a aemal. At a 011 in raria, to tak a lady out to dau-a with her, ia only - f' - ff'f '' P1 J001' w her, i. , bill lo follow bur with VAtip vm in ihm I Int. X3T A man heart i a nitir aa that of a woiiian perhap mora ao, brcau it i wA to quickly beating and eiaMio and iia amotion . hould be treated with du reepect. Y.mnff Udi. ! I w 1" win. vvw ICWIKTCl. 1 IFUIlK anwia am tamper wita n any more than men with their. True nor woold they, if man did Bwt 6r aei the example. Tha ao much th faelm id lha day, and deorptoa ae much abroad, that the tea hardly know whom to trust. tW Bill Tetnnkin aava that "a wi,Mr ia . married aomao a baa cot no hueUnd. kui he a drat- a widower is a roan aa rune after the! wid.lera." VW A young maa kiaainf a pretty g rl, dowa 8ouih.a.ked her. J, J? h,- - m father vngar planter." ' aide of Truth iu every issue, No. 4 Oi r Foreign Trade. According to the New York Courier and Enquirer, the tr ports from that city for the first eight months of the present fiscal year, exclusive of specie, were f 35,000,000, while the im porta were $129,000,000 an excess of uinety-four millions tt one port In eight months. Well docs tho editor ask: " If wo do have good crops, cun such an enormous expenditure of the ' vitals' of the country, namely, capital and raw material at low prices, be continually made for the l.:l. f...j r- -r ' v iiifu iui-i-u uiBiiuim-'iurtn ui iwujkt fturvpri The total exports of agricultural product last year from Ohio, the richest agricultural State in fhe Union, was lesa than twenty- live dollars Tor each inhabitant, and not one-third of this, or five dollars for each person, ever floated on salt water or paid debt abroad, ami yet we are now importing at the rate or fifteen dollars lor each person in the whole country; In rich silks, higli priced cotton goods, and luxurinot one sort and another, including iron railt for our rail roads. We have examined returns from different parts of the country, and will admit that there never was as much land pnt in cultivation, and, with good weather, there never hare been such crops as will he raised. Hut never had we as many idle nonproduccrs, never before did it take the profit of as many bushels of wheat to pay lor one yard or high priced cotton goods, made in Europe from the raw material raised here. Not for twenty years have there been, proportionably to our size and numbers, as few new cotton mills, iron furnaces, and coal companies, to make a home market, as in this very year. American Locomotives Triumphant. Two years ago two splendid locomotives called the " Cairo" and " Suez" were man ufactured at the works of Messrs. William Mason & Co., In this town, for the Alcxan. dria and Suez Railroad, in Egypt. The Pasha, who is President, Director, Stock holder, and something else of his own road, also ordered two engines of English coil' strtiction, and Yankee and English engin ccrs went out to run their respective ma chines. The rivalry has not been trifling, but the result is another triumph for Jon athan. The English engineers, through their Consul, undertook to flatter their patrons, and to disparage Yankee work manship, and tried every method to get rid of their competitors. At first they were siut cess ful. The Americans were told by the railroad company that their engines were not going to be used, and that their services would not 1)0 needed. The cause for hauling them up was that they were not strong enough to haul the heavy trains. One of the American engineers, getting an opportunity to speak with the Pasha, told him he could haul as many loaded cars as would reach from one end of the road to the other. Ac cordingly, seventy-five heavily loaded cars, which was all they could muster, were put in a train, the Pasha's own car attached, and the whole taken through to Suez distance of two hundred miles in twelve hours, mnking stoppages for fuel and wuter, Tho Pasha exclaimed in Egyptian" God at. but a Yankee is very near pcrfc& tion!" On his return he discharged the English engine drivers, and now uses Taun ton engines altogether. Taunton Qatrtte JST Out of one hundred and twenty- three thousand, five hundred and forty-seven children between the ages of five and fifteen years, in the city of New York, forty-one thousand eight hundred and ninety-eight, more than one-third of the whole number, go to no school, public or private, and re ceive no sort of education hut that received in tho streets. VST Tho Courier de Lyont says that a few days ago people crowded to the railroad station to see two enormous wagons belong ing to Mr. Lees Wilson, of New York, and containing a complete assortment of ancient and modern instruments of execution. which this American has taken it into his head to collect in his travels, and among the rest, the first guilotiue that appeared iu Paris in the year 1703. Divorces. Judge Davies, of New York. has decided that Indiana divorces, in which the wife had no opportunity to be heard, are not to be regarded as legal in other States. The court in Indiana never had jurisdiction of the wife in New York, and its proceedings in regard to her were deem ed to be void. We think this ia quite right, and we hope it will put a check npon the shameful proceedings constantly taking place In regard to divorces obtained in distant States. Vermont. A Vermont paper says; " There is but one city in the State, and not a soldier. We have no police, and no murder has been committed within the State during the past ten years. We have . ' , ... no museums or crystal palaces, but we have homes, for which the father works, votes and talks where the mother rears men, scholars, and patriot." Socnd Ji'domekt. Lord Borleieh. a (Treat English statesman of the time of Queen Elizabeth, naed to ut I never win trust any man whose religious princi- P' re "Ot sound; for he that ia false to uoa can never ne true to man." kV True warth, like a rote, will blush at to own iwiNrtne. mmm mmm ut. nr- r A-.fc '-ee ay ADVKRTIHINO RATKS. Oat (antra (13 line or Iraa, brevier maura) on insertion, 3JD0 two innertions, Kaeh (ubaequtnt inaerlion, U0 Reaauntble dtduetione to UiuM alio advert hj th year. JOB PRINTING. Tui raoraiiToa or vaa ARGUS ia aurrr to inform lha public that lis haa just received a lrg stork of JOB TV PR and othar nw print ing mnu rnl, and will ba in tha speedy receipt addition suited lo all th rrejuiremrntt of lha If. onlity. 1IAMIHII.IX, rOhTKHH, HI.ANKS, CAUDS, CIRCl'LAKB, I'AMI III.KT.WOItK and iriher kinds, dune ta order, nn thou nolr. NHWTON AND Till Fa I.LI NO OfTIIC AfPLI, Uiot, the French scientific writer, In bit Melange, lately published In Paris, gives countenance to this story, which Ilrewster rejects. A writer in Blackwood, for De cember, reviewing Ciot, thus notices tot evidence: " Except as biographical anecdote, it b utterly indifferent whether the story ba true or mythical; for it ia quite clear that the full of ten thousand apples could have led to no tliscoverv of srravitation. unless observed by a mind already so prepared to make tho discovery, that any lulling body would have served as a starting point. But is it true? Dr. Rrewntcr declared that the circanwtuiu'c was not mentioned by Dr. Stukeley nor by Conduit, and that 'no au thority could be found for it.' Id hit re view of this work, M. Diot replied that Pcmbcrton positively suid it was in this very garden, where tho apple tree stood, that the idea occurred to Newton, and that Conduit expressly says tho idea of gravita tion ' was bit npon by observing an apple fulling from a tree.' One would Imagine this was authenticity euough, especially aa Dr. Brewster claims Conduit's silence among- his chief reasons for denying the storv; yet, after Conduit bad been cited by M. 'Biot expressly iu favor of this story. Sir David, in his recent biography, sticks to his incredulity, and furnishes this very equiv ocal evidence: 'Neither Temlierton nor Whiston, who received from Newton him self the history of his first ideas of gravity, records the story of tho fulling apple.' Perhnrw not: he miirht hove thought it be neath hit gravity to mention such a detail. But his niece told the story, and Conduit told it. We think, on such testimony, it may be accepted, and rhetoricians may still refer without misgiving, if also without much eloquent effect, to ' Newton and tht falling applo.' " "And Yet tne Earth Does Movi!" or Galileo. Tho same reviewer, discuss ing Biot's critical account of Galileo's ca reer, says: " If the lovers of rhetoric have had their commonplace about Newton and the appls restored to them by ii. btot, tney lose ior- ever the still more fumous t pur u muove ' and vet the earth dors move, of the si lenced but not persuaded heretic; snd they lose all pretext for considering Galileo among the martyrs of science. The epi cram. pur ti mu"re, is one of those tnoti de tircomtim, invented after the occasion, winch tradition eagerly adopts because it so admirably expresses the general sentiment; but as M. Biot remarks, not only is this epigram mentioned by none of the best in formed contemporaries, it is also in flagrant coutradiction to tho wliolo demeanor of Galileo on his trial. Never was a martyr less disposed for martyrdom. He denied everything with impatient alacrity. lie abjured whatever lie was called upon to ao iure. He offered to prove that he had nev er held tho doctrino of tho mobility of the earth, and declared himself ready to show, by fresh arguments, the error of that doc trine. In the final examination, when asked if ho now held, or hud ever bold, the doc trine, ho replied, ' Formerly, before the de cision of tho Church, I remained iudifferent between tho two doctrines of Lopcruicua and Ptolemy, both seeming disputable, be cause both might bo true; but since the Church has decided, all ambiguity has dis appeared from my mind, and I have main tained, as I now nmintitin, the doctrine of Ptolemy respecting tho immobility of tha earth and tho mobility of the sun to bo true and indisputable.' We may pity Galileo, and find ample excuses for him. When a man oged seventy is in the presence of the Inquisition, knowing that a Jormal retrac tion is ull that is demanded or him, and that his refusal will be punished by torture, he mny bo excused for descending even to such transparent falshood to escape so odious aod tcrriblo an enemy, but ho cannot be made a hero; a martyr showing uch reluctance to martyrdom is surely a strange spectacle. Abolition of the Grand Jlbt in Mich- wan, The ttroii free rress soys mo act providing for the trial of criminals by information goes into effect sixty days after Feb. 12, at which timo It became a law. This law virtually abolishes the Grand Jury, which has so long exercised its In quisitoriul functions, rcserviug for the Cir cuit Judge power to call it into session whenever special cases need its aid. AH cases are to be examined before a justice of the peace, and by him committed directly to the higher courts, instead of for indict ment as has previously been dons. 10 Iron, nearly pure, haa been discov ered in Texas, about twenty miles west ef McKinney. It admits of a fine polish, and it is supposed will yield about 90 par cent, of pure metal. t&- The fact that the name of Franklin Pierce is suggested as a probable nominee or the Charleston Convention is the severe comment on Buchanans administration. that could be imagined, says Prentice. A Lono Courtship. Married, ia Ire-v. i.ll rnnntv. N. C by Jacob Fralev, Esq.. on the 20th of January last, aftel a closa courtship of 23 years, Mr. Real Bas-. hour and Miss Sarah Thompson,, bvt.i sgedj aliout CO years asv Socrates, beinir silent in company,. was requested to join in the conversation. He replied, "What I know, would be Im proper here; and what would be proper here, oi tuai i am ignorant. r He who knows how to stody aod be silent, to harden himacir against ma faults and kw to all events, to believS l heart and distrust hi eyes, know! OOw to live and die.