THK OK ISO ON A KG US. , BY D. W. CHAIO. TKHMt-T A '" furnitkti at Tint Dillrl f'f'f Cl" f't nium,i aifttt, '?' tnkteriktrt Fkm Vollari It '' ' " mi, Xtki Ikt """J ' Fiur DtlUrt liH "' "' ' Mi'. " . , DtlUri ftr tit MMtkiNt mlncrip. imi ttttttti for ftrM. rW St f'f i"ttintd until til trrtmtgtt trtfH- tkttptianof Ikt fuMiker. fur Hit Argut. Drtltay. Blly ftom III hire tree, JJul it Mtl. u'vr. 8llr. rf C"lu' tttnA . ih(t of jremmwii rt to U, mI,i. llwt l'J f T"' Itliih U) Elerul,)'. Nluw bull lli rirrr flow , Onwtr.1, l Il hnnn, , Drli lh fom arclii (fro Slowly toward lit tkjf't IjIim dvmo; Bi lllio mn of en uo ol'mb lliglilo of (rrin. J " , Knatirf llinl ' ill li'lo of T.nm' Kf aclitih hi Knrnliy. Oiiuon CitV, DfQ. 18, IH.-.t. I. o. t. Jlnajf't Woolat. Ta winJ enroi' bUiig oul of tlio writ, Aui Jimmy mowrd lli hay Tho oani blowing Mit of l!io wtl llilirml tliogwp team nut of iht.rrrtt, AbJ KJ tlio bluo-tiiril iu h at, A Jimmy inuwJ die hay. Taoiwll" k'roinrJ a!.x tho RrouaJ, AJ Jimmy in eJ lb by ThowHw'nal :oik th Rrouiul, Aj r!lin b m'lr P "oJ, Lib obiWrra libbiiii all r..tiJ , A Jiiiany owJ ilie buy. HiKy en wiih her bucki l by, Aid Jimmy nmwrd lli hoy M:ily w.lb her bm-ket by. With hr I gill fot trim mid ily, AiJ funburlit chiek nl ! H ry AJ Jimmy inuwf J Ihu Ii 7- A nWe lluth la liney j -wa AuJ Jimtiiy in'l ilie hay A ruilio limli in I nrey ("Wn, It wjK-IicJ her -:i clmrko rluninj lirnwa, AaiHlirln,laik hh ilnl irriiibieJ Juau Vt litne'rr lie Ickril ill.., ..). Oil! HiS'j 'i litnrt f 0.1 is pilil An I J.iiiiny innwe.l llir hay Oh! Mill) ' heart w.. im psl gM v Hut' Jimmy tli.Higlil h.r oliy im) coM Aait nirr lie lit '"It'll tliun e'r ho to.il AoJimniy moweJ il. h..y. Tbt rain o-iiiio I'lUfiiiJ ll"i niin, Anil Jimmy movtf j ilie buy The rain enmr inDieting .lnuii mnii:n, Ami, uuilrr llm thatch uf lliv huh .1 Ualn, Jimmy anit Mi.lr, emin t tw a, 81 ahe'lei I by Ilie hay. The merry rain-drop ha rirJ In, 1'n.lerlh llmkh if buy; Th miity r u-lniji hurr.l in. Ami lauhe.l and pitirre.t in a 'I n, ' Over lli at which lli.-y anw wiihin, Uudrr Ilie llink h uf hay. Far M Ily aestlod t Jimmy'i breaat, Under the thatch nf Imy Fr MHy nestled to Jimmy 'a liia-ct, . l,;k a wild hird flutter.! if u ita neat, And then I'll iw.tr ah llie.l her Ut, Under the thatch of bay. And wheo the rain ranie l.ii:gliiiij out Over th ruined Iny And when die rain i'uniotn"Eh'iiI out, Milly had eo.ued ( et ninl p.iul, And twitterir.j hint hegm hi alinal, ;i An if fT a we ld u.' il .). Mytertou Wotnaa. Place her among (lotrers, foster her as a tender plant, and ahe is a tbing of fancy, waywardness, and sometimes folly annoyed by a ew-tlrnp, fretted by the touelf of u butterfly's wing, and rendy to faint at the rustle of a beetle the zephyrs arc too rougMonrd the showers too heavy, and site is overpow- ercd by the perfume of a rosebud. But let real calamity come rouse her affections enkindle the Ores of her heart, and mark her then; how her heart strengthens itself how strong is her purpose. Place her in the heat of battle give her a child, a bird anything she loves to protect and see her, as. in a relative instance, raising her white arms as a shicld.s her own blood crimsons her upturned forehead, praying for lifo to protect tho helpless'. Transplant f ocr m iuoaan places o. n-'J.ji. lMWt WM 110t qu:te half full, herenwgit to action, and her breath L I Vitl. tho exception ortwo ot comcs-a healing her presence a blwiug.ll . , . .,,,,.. She dis1mtes, inch by inch, the stride of 4 etillkinir nnst.i1inrf w inn man t in stiinr I ; o i, 1 " 1 -n and brave, shrinks away, pulo and affrighl ed. Misfortunes daunt her nof.; she wears away .a life of silent endurance, and goes forward with less timidity than to her bri dal. In prosperity she is full of odors, waiting but the winds of adversity to scat ter them abroad puro gold, valuable, but nailed in the furnace. In short woman is a miracle a mystery, tno center from Wiile'i radiates the great charm ofex'stcuce," Advice of Tuomas Carvle to Readers. Headers are gcnerally.not aware of the fact nevertheless it is a iiict and one of great magnitude, and of terrible importance -that their first grand necessity in rending "'. be vigilantly and conscientiously select. ':o.)ks ore, like human souls, divided into ind gOiits,Hor, compared to beasU, into " clean and uiu'leun.'' iHsH books should be j.hore, and the bea.n' ""-V,jr(.ii'g on the " upper-ten" ' " - etiysmihj-" -A Weekly New-paper, devoted to tlio Intents of the Laboring Clasps, and advocating Vol. V. f rruA,.t, .r d0Wlli nre M.rM;ll),1,ly Krt!tfn; A jr; , New W, NovcmW 4. 1S59. I.nrrouml.d ,y rtcl.c of cano. and hel My Lift letter ra dated, I btiiore. t.r...l fm, il.. ,,M i.. September 20. 0,. th. next day wenp- pronched .pun. which bee dis- . ..id towards evening An l.micne.rablo tnnglu oT chepp.n.l descended from the farthest h.lls quite to the ocean. I could distinguish no land, the rock, jutting out '""j" nKiiiiiM i no wniffl, 11 was a great relM from the burnt and bnld scenery of Cal.forni to see verdure again; ,f there had been a frw tree. I could have fun. fclcd myself n Oregon. Tne excitement on board wus intense, for it wua known k. , that on the follow,,, BlK,t w. ,!.ould read, our firt rtu.p-ph.ec-Ac.pnl. I tue oper and py glM(1, were in k.,.tnnt BW and ninny could fa, h, new l.edl ,ud or mouutuiu the long wished- (f.r liind inurk. A wo were off thecoust of .Mex co, our DemorruU ix.htifmm (we oftfrwardf., and our passage pronounced re had enough or then.) enjoyed thenelve n.arkal.ly cool, although before reaching l,ng-ly in r.ast,ng their longing eyes on tic Mmm i WM tgnin oIlnost illc ,,, the tii(iiliifA ii " full " h mi. nf lliom a..M ' r . """'I oi goiu, auu a;ivcr, ana Oram,- ami an- licijiating the good time when Uncle Sam would appropriate them to himstlf. liut n'ght came, when, after waiting a long time, I addressed myself to sleep as the .most ifLetmil way to '' kill' the next few hours. I I was nrouiwl by tho cries and excited ramiing of a thous.ind passengers. When I reached the deck we were creeping slowly over what appeared to be it little round ake, enclosed on all sides by mountains, There were a few lights glimmering in the distance, by which wu could distinguish a ..I.!.. .. . I . f .. . I..- 1 1 emier woe o, us, ,y,,ig i.kcmmuows ioso iiho .tore, a lew nurrieu commauus 1 l ... l a i mid our gun wakes Tlio eclnwi from thvir dens. .M ela, ruvky tnl.a uu I u'imih," Kuir anchor cots rattling and thunderim? into the water, and we are at rest. In half, Vn hour afterwards, a host of cano. s, filled with trop'cal fruits, s!nl!s, and various kinds of stlirnr and bread, were floatimr irouud us ill every direction. Their native! owners knew enough of English to cry their. articles with a soft Spanish accent. Tliey wcro not allowed to como on bourd, but when anything whs called for n long ropo holding a basket was thrown up, the money Ki'Maaetil In them, uud thv nrtitlu returned Iwitli scrupulous honesty. The warm, al- Inost sultry night, the gentlo cries ofthe nn- ;ives, echoed by the mocking lull-s.des, the jlare of torches everywhere, I shull never iorgct. Daylight came nt lust, and with it a jrarm of passenger boats, very m otlycush- A lew days of warm veatner linn Ae m (t) wt,uk tlUt X col,j 0lly Wl,lk ;cross tll0 drek liut tiermined to go on ,.., ,i ,,.c. .t,,, .r.-v nf wu-hnth. ...,,, .,,... t0 ,. boats in com-'' F -.i i .i 11,;1,ii; liany with several others, cncli captain r . ... L...... ti...l t.. .....itt.A ..f li:a tt,ii-t:in!iir miff. if . . , ', .... , . j..,l I...,,). n.l ..'nt Lot ir iiitlli d in Li.:, , rorAr ntto,;t:o We made!llIt,,0,,S,,.i P"'"1!' Irtish for the first boat that pnncntcd : .. . . . , (self. In an instant tin clamor censeo, and after repeated commands to " vamose," W'" captain" departed with a sad air, for owned by Americans, Acnpnlco !'(, ... , mM Mon of 'me stnrT ndol ' J . . , ... . .. . , . ,i iiiousm, mine ua.ii:.!, nm, .vw.vv , i . .i...t ..i..t- ri' ... thrown together with little reguiat nj . jm fadics of tho cily had collected on the beach, each one bearing a little stand full of delicacies to tempt our appetites as we landed; but I had been warned hy the obi- ccrs against an excessive indulgence in f"tJ imr. and mauaged to run the gauntlet with- out suffering much depletion ofthe pocket or distention of tlie abdomen. I passed don" tho streets if sucn mey may Ulh.H but thev wero ulmosi WerO Ulltl'IS' .Uteeiw;". j. ,i About an equal number of pigs and na- a, nl I nn ant a- nrcd to lo Lunging iu sleepy, blissful indolence iirnnnd lives, uu i''v -j, . i . 1 t .-c ni itirnii tioti to visit a me uuum. " v small Mexican fort ut the southern side of the town, but before completing my lath r the signid gun for our recall was Most pt the passengers were b- OREGON CITY, OREGON, DECEMBER 24, 1 ,,treiml ,)HTe wicrt, B fl.rlile tCMIlbo f(,uil(1. The great objection to It ...place of the extreme l.eut, greater here than at any other place on the const; tl.. .... i.iu..i -i ' wnt(.r at lIglt( 0 M10t wwk Indavt'me Tm i,, aflfr u vi A(t u.0 ffJ C01lll,,rcd nll0l,fr ,,,. mor'e Rma ,,. (mw)r W(.n , Mg g ww ,,rivill!r hlto M of rinV ...i. i t . i wi" ccnsioii!iiiv relieved 1,y . hnrrilde, Minding ,hnt of liKhtni. The ltwm ,iur(it ovcr , r" ...i w;,, ,, ,.,; rcain u UKtP) ,)Ul , r,w . nJcr. t,,ir the n:r delhrhtfull i!Mtt.,t .!. ... ,, ti,.. r r........ oi walKllur. p. j. Get 1'kE.vnr for tub " Cknsi-s Mas." Next year will occur the great decennial census of the United States, made by the General Government. Persons will bo up- pointed for every locality iu the States and Teri'itorii I to lnthcr stu'Jsties nl tlio inlmli. ilnuts, and of all the agricultural proiluc- tions, manufactures, etc. Every cultivator will be asked for a concise and ueurate state- ment of land occupied ny him, the number of acres and the amount of each crop raised by him during the year ending June, etc. T.iose who wcro culled upon in 1850 will . i .. .. . uounness remnuiier tlio Uillieully expt ri- at a. - enced in miiKiii'' tin an accurate report or tho crops. As the reports are required in June, it will be necessary to give iu the crops gathered this year, and the suggestion tlitit we now make is, that cultivators write 6 . down, while fresh in mind, tho number of acres under cultivation, including the wheat, etc.,' ulrendy gathered. Tho number of: acres of each kiinl Hia nnmnnt nrr n.Ti. and tho gross amount will bo required- The milk products also, and the amount of pork. beef. etc.. will also be asked for. Ex. Webster asd Crockett. 'o two char acters could be more dissimilar than those of Webster and Crockett . On. knd pene trated to the profoundest depths of law, , statesmanship and diplomacy. The other had penetrated to tho profoundest depths of the forest und was a passionate lover of its wild delights. Crockett paid Webster a compliment that both pleased and amused him. "It is related that when his celebra ted speech upon Foot's resolutions was published he sent a copy of it to Davy Crockett. Shortly afterwards Davy called upon him to make his acknowledgments for favor-remarking that it was the only speech that he had ever been nblo to rend t,T i llinn i in mil nf n H.ptinnnrv Mr IVnlv- without the aid of a dictionary. stcr. it is said, frequently remarked, that 'cr a compliment was not 1'!Un' noue, him that he va wus ever bestowed npon ver b hira thut he valued so highly j- Through the Paris papers wo learn that tho Abbe Vianay, whose name was known throughout France and tho Catholic ! world as the Cure of Ars. near Lyons, died tlio 4tli September, at seventy years of i ago. They say: " He had been forty-one . . ., yt,lirg , nlg punsa, ami kjil-iu. """'J ,,,B . . . . . . . . . w10jB 0f , tim(J , US conressional, tuKing gci,rc,.iy 0ny food or sleep. He gave all he m1 tQ tje .()0r s sool) ns it. wng known lmt le wus dyiiiff, the whole, population cl.ow.,ierj around his bonso and entered tlirongh doors and windows, and even on ,1(J roof t0 R(.e t,e clyinir suint. Hs atten- jultg wute(i to send them away; but his )ast wor(is were that he wished to die futbir in the midst of lu ciniurcu." jgy They had some fine ' St. Joseph, Mo., fair. offered a premju'- l.-u-k-kmle j v Ovj Tho l.ale nattte with Ike t'.hl.aae. The Albany Evening Journul states the case thus: The battle on Pciho seems to have been the result of a succession of blun ders on the part of the French and English Ambassadors. Thoso gentlemen, it ap pears, set forth for Pekin witli an obstinate determinat'on not to believe anything the Chinese told them, and not to do anything they advised. Consequently, when at Shanghai1, they wero Invited to go to Pekin by land, they curtly replied they would go by sea. Being directed to go up a certain, river, they went straight up another; and when told they were mistaken, assumed their informants were lying. They met a pnrcel of jagged country peopU on the hank of the river bank. These they took to bo Mandarins. The country peoplo told them the Mandarins were wait ing for them nt the mouth or the other river. This they took to be a falsehood. Pursuiug their blundering voyage, they enmo to some stukes, booms, and mud forts, intended to keep out smugglers and rebels.. They construed them as intcndid to keep out Ambassadors nod fleets. So without waiting to be attacked they began pouring shot into the forts. The forts, though doubtless amnzed, could do no less lhau de fend themselves. The battle was as full of blunders ns the voyage. They undertook to snil close to the forts without waiting to seu if there was water enough, uinl, iu consequence, rail' aground. Then they sent a, thousand men ashore, to march a quarter of a mile, tinder ! fire, tlironirli mud knee keen When these railed to achieve an impossibility they at- I " tribuled it to imaginary Russians with Min uie rifles, disguised ns Chinese with match lock! It was not till niter their disastrous defeat, thut cooler reflection suggested they had been too hasty, und that had they gone to the rtirlit nlacr-. tliev would nrobnblv mvo fuimd the Mandarins ready to receive ,!,,,, Y ha Uttered the Sentiment. There was one point qu.to worthy of mention, that was omitted in our report of tho lion. Abrnm Lincoln's speech, in this city. In regard to the sentiment expressed that the Union would sometime become all five or all slave that a house divided aa-ost iiai-lf couio .- stand tiiat there was an "irrepressible conflict'" between slavery and freedom Mr. Douglas charges Mr. Lincoln with its paternity Ho says that Reward should have given Lincoln credit for it. Now Lincoln says that the credit does not belong to hint or to hewartl. In 1855, tho Richmond Enquirer, then ed ited by Roger A. Pryor, rxpicssed the identicul idea. That venerable iVnioernt ic sheet, tho acknowledged orgtu of the Democracy of Virginia, was to ii: credited with the first direct expression' that the Union must become all free or ill slave, that there was an irrepressible eonlict, fcc. In Illinois Douglas plumed liimsctthat he bad squelched out the treasonable .nd fatal heresy, anil he iiitiuinted that if e could havo but spent a little time in Xrr York, that ho would have squelched out tls heresy there; but no one heard that Donrlus pro posed to squelch out the terrible an .deadly! treason in Virginia. Instead or tat, Ro ger A. Pryor, who first uttered it, was re moved from Richmond to Wsi:ngtoti, that he might edit the centr. l a;jiiii of Douglas. Cincinnati Commer :ifit, Pnirrn of the Jews. Tiiei al though scattered over the raw of h; earth, yel remain a secret, aim inviur.ui.i., j . tin on nuti ct union ami common interests. , r (.nirv thev are as it were tho V i " j - ,llt tie t;n,B , may come wlten the tually be the masters in at the present time are th" extent, tho arbiters of Maintaining, on t' tween the diff ous powe and 0' lif" thesidtfo 850. Deaths' Ue Oi-ltiaa m SWtla A Scotch paper con interesting history; " On Sunday afternoon' brought to Oulnshifls that i of weak mind, well known to Galashiels and Melrosn l.y var. mens as Black Us.", Bet Orum. l)uft Bess was ly'.ii'i in a i!y'" eo. on the road near Ellwand BimI.. -county police, with mclic.il aswistutce, wv to removo the stiff ring woman, who hit Iniu there all night; but she yielded up h.-r breath just as the medical man approached. Tho body was at once conveyed to the s;ik house here, and afterwards interred iu the strangers' p'ot at Lmlhope burying ground. Fifty years ago Kl zuhctli Graham was the rustic beauty, pride, and toast of Mclro'c and its neighborhood, respeetubly brought up, with health mantling on her cheek, and guileless innocence iu her heart. Return ing home one evening, she was set upon iu the gloomy sol.tude ol the Bogle burn, and there ruined. She returned home, or rath er she immediately forsook the ordinary huunts or man, having become a raving nmiiiiic, and lunccforth she dwelt apart, living alone among but not it responsible portion or Immunity. The outward form or what had once been a pay and Imppy girl took np Its dwelling place iu a rndu cave in the old Quarry II. II of Melrose. Here she slrpt ut night, iu summer and winter, wrapped up in a blanket, save when for some wild and woeful weeks after the birth of her dead child, when sho followed it to tho church-yard, and would nut be driven away, but slept nmon tho tomli stones to watcl it" grave. It was from ! this tiufort uuute wail' that Sir Walter S. ott l.t I.. .1, ........... ..r a. M.., .. U'.tw.. . iiiuiiu-iri ui i.i.uic ii iiuiue, in the Heart ol .Miu-Lotliiau." The par ticulars of the sad case were quite well known to him, rrf Wing iu the neighborhood; and the reader will oliservc that tlnTc is a striking coincidence between-the real facts ns wo have briefly detailed them, and the incidents iu the novel us pictured' by the pen of the uutho'f of Wuverly.1' The Cause or Earthquakes. A cor respondent of tho Snn Francisco Call puts forth tho following theory suggestively iu regard to the cause of the phenomena: " What can be the cause of tho phenom enon? My purpose is not so much to ad vance an opinion ns to provoke an inqn'ry. The violent winds which prevail ulong the const during the summer season nro drawn from the north to fill the vacuum caused by the rnrefnet on of Vio air produced in the interior by the great heat; our barren and treeless hills, whose arid sides casting the reflections iu the valleys, form a focus for tno concentrated Ynjs or the sun, and as soon ns tho grouiiiUircomcs moistened, and the titmosphere cooled by the ruins, the winds cease. NoW, it is well known that the heat and cold (Excuse my want of sci entific terms) come iu contact, and concus sion is the result. Heat is expansive cold contracting. Hot liquid poured into a cool glass will crack it, mid hard hot metal placed on a soft cool ono will produce vilirations similar, to the sound of the .Eolian harp. Now, what I would like to see proven is whether these shocks or tremblings aru cunsed by its too sudden cooling; for earthquakes are peculiar hot countries, und each one here has ' preceded by a hot spell followc cold ono. Ntule Somn liC Gov. Wise has' anr'' Brown is his prisoue- not have given h1 tletit had mad' traitor. No' Ohio linv petuall"' collif' if- I OoO. cruts, a 1S2, Don. l.t K. that the both blanch will be able to a tors. Parrot's said to be 3,000. The returns from V the election of the cntirx ticket, and a RcpuMicuu . Legislature. . Olden's mtij., Rep., In N Jerk ut least. The Legislature will st. ate. 12 n. innrr.itii 8 Iii'nnbliediia 1 icjn. House. 9 Democrats. ST IU licuua and 3 Amcricuns, McClcrnniid, democrut, has been clecte to Congress from Illinois by a majority ot 4,000. Tho Harper's Forry trials aro over for the present, and the excitement throughout the country pretty much subsided. The editor of the New York Herald s lys that he has seen a Utter from Gov. Wise, in' which he sajs he will neither par don nor respite Brown. It is believed that ho will be executed on tho day fixed by the Court. Some slaves have reported to tliejr ma ters, iu Culpepper, that they wcro ap. prouchrd by white men, who tried to pursuade them to run off, and in Campbell county tl.e books and papers of a negro bo nevolciit association have been seized. Tho greatest vigilance is exercised and several arrests have been made of suspicion char acters. Latest Intelligence rnou Hr mux, Texas. The New Orlca' publishes a letter dated C'oiT November 7th, which says tniu thut the town or Bioj into the hands of Coi" ican flag was flyinc' town. All com-' off. Tho cut' ' of tho Rio ititentior' rc-co1