k'okkgon akqus. nVis or sL'BscHipno.s. . j,.,,, mitt furnitheit at Thru Dollore . ' J"" ttUr'"t '' n.n. ,tf it cktirttifor liM mentkt : mttt iieentei until all vm arrturag'i Sif k npi"t""lyJiv,t"'" " ' Whit l Wtatur Htal Females r9 CttlleJ tLe wcekcr ,cx' ,,ut I j if thoy ure not strong, who U! Vt'hcn Di 'r"l' themselves in tl,!tk Kr pent, nl I'"-"110 11,0 'llole 1,1 ft"lout 0Tcr t (g shut out the cold, women in thin ,ilk drosses, with neck ond shoulders Lure, -rncarlr W.Mjthfy ore perfectly com- fnrublc! When men wear water-proof lU over woollc& hose, ond incase tho whole in india-rubber to keep them from freezing, women weur tlioir silk hose and cloth ihoc, and pretend not to feel the -old' When men cover their heads with fun, nd then compluin of the severity of die weather, women halt cover tncir Head with straw bonnets, and ride twenty miles io an open sleigh, facing a cold north-wester and pretend not to suflcrnt nil! They con sit too, by men who smell of rum and to-lucco-smoko sufficient to poisou tho whole lou.se, and not appeur more annoyed than though they were a bundle of roses. Year after yeur they cau bear abuses of all kinds from drunken husbands, as though their strength was made of iron. And theu is not women's meiitul strength greater than man's? Can sho not endure suffering that would bow the Wrongest man to the earth? fall not woman the weaker vessel; for hnd she not been stronger than man, the race would have long since been extinct. Hers is state of endurance that man could ncrcr bear. Maine Temperance Journal. The Father ok Waters. A writer re ferring to the vastness of tho Mississippi river, says: "It extends 2,100 miles from the frozen regions of tho North to the sun ny south, and with the Missouri river is 4,500 miles in length. It would reach from New York across the Atlantic Ocean, or from France to Turkey and tho Cuspiau Son. Its average depth is 50 feet, und its width half a mile. Tho floods are more than a n.outh tn.viliig fum its tource to iU delta. The tinp;crs can cx cliango the furs of nuSmuls caught hy them on the Upper Mississippi for the tropical fruits gathered on the bunks below. The total value of steamers afloat on l!ic river and its tributaries is more than $60,000, DUO, numbering 1,000 boats, witu more than twice tho steamboat tonunge of Er.g' laud. It drains an area of 1,200,000 sq miles, and washes the shores of twelve pow erful States. In one singlo reservoir ut Like lVpin, from Wisconsin nnd Minneso ta, 2,500 miles from the sea, tho imvies of of the world might safely ri Jo nt auchor, A Sensible Woman. The Taunton (Mass ) Gazette, of a late date, relates the following incident: " A few evenings ngo a pnrly of Spirit ualists were assembled at Taunton, Mass., for the puri)oe of witnessing the usual phe nomena, hirtctly opposite lived u lady who had recently lost her husband, nnd in the eoiirso of tho evening tho spirit of the Deceased made himself known through tho medium. Thinking the widow would like to hold intercourse with her late companion, a deputation was sent to her resiilenco to inform her of tho fact, und request her at tendance It was rather lute, und she had retired for tho night. On hearing the knocking at the door, sho arose and put her head out tho window, and inquired whnt was wanting. On being informed that the spirit of her Into husband was awaiting her cross the way, she replied that when living he had never been known to visit there, "ml as he had got so near, sho thought he might as well come to his own house nnd Visit her; but as ho did not desire to do so, iiio would leavo them to cntertuin him ns Uiey best could. With thut sho shut the window and left her visitors to return with out her." IIi'siax DKrnAviTv. Itcretlitary con ditions in parents cause depravity iu their children, by deranging tho body. It is what men cat and drink, it is how they live, ijcep, etc., it is their physiological condi tions and habits, that cause nine-tenths of human, depravity. Are uot both children and adults depraved when cross, and cross because sick; that is, rendered siuful by beiag unwell.' Who does not know that drinking engenders depravity makes the ihest of men bad? But why, and how? jly disordcrinff the borl v. And since bv alcohol, why not by tobacco, gluttony, or "y other wrong physical state? Are not oruukenness and debauchery concomitants? Are not dyspeptics always irrituble? The wWn is, that all abnormal physical action nse abnormal mental action, which is sin. To become good, aud answer tho e&d of weir being, men must Hue right must rrn to eat right, and sleep, exercise, 'Mtlis, breathe, etc., in accordance with stare's requisitions. And nine tenths of Tie evil in meu navc tDjg pUrey physicial origin andean becured by phvsicial means. -Scl-I,utruclor. Statistics or the Fight. Bell's Life PTes the statistic of the fight between Heenan and Sayers. According to the kble, Sayers was knocked down 2? times, l4 Heeuan not once; Sayers was thrown " times, and Hecnan owe; Sayers re ""ed 69 blows, and Heenan 19. Acsthu. Tlie London Times says: "It seems that the World is destined to be O Mppomud in all iu hopes ef Austria, d that we lure in ber a Power which cipericnce can teach tor calamity Uae." A Weekly Newnpapcr, devoted to tho IntorU of the Laboring Classes, aud advocating the Vol. VI. K v.ic frm tu.ai uo.a. Is this to hare an itei.ce In clvilir.e.1 roin hn. Abois Dear Sir: Iu my solitary munitien, and in th nineteenth ceuturv! dwelling amid these mountains near tho bnso of Mount Hood, I havo lived for many, many years, even till my head Is grown as white as the lofty summit of the hoary (riant that overshadows my lonely cabin, seldom visiting the settlements, and the scttlurs very seldom visiting me. lint of Into days there coma once in a while some visitors to sco " my old frieud," and they drop iu with me bctiuies to rest them- selves, and this is tho only means loft to me by which I can hold communication ....... ... . ... uu mo worm oeyo.iu my rcucn. .Many yean oi my soiiiuuu i never saw the ruce of a whito man, audi grew ss it were a thing opart from the world I had left. 1)111 a new PXKU'iirn twtnm in nnwn imnn ' . 7 " 1 ' iiic, and I can still fuel thut I have svmpu tliies iu unison with tho pale-faced dwellers of the cities, although I may say with truth that I belong to a generation that lias long passed away. In ninny of tho books and newspnpers that my visitors hnvo been kind enough to leave me, I find how much the world must i romc "om our "'"'"Ty. buckle on our have changed siucc I left it how loot to ttr,"or for 1,10 ' f "'0 war, and nil sense of honesty nnd Christian feeling, I u",n,,sk tI,e Wd,hfU F'l'hi of tho pro how entirely lost to view has become ltie "'"very propagandist party, whereby they object of our great Creator! It seems to ' ,,re ''"'"rously trying to delude, mislead, me, us I read these papers, that the sole! a,,d (1,a'ire fit portion of their pre aim of ilm tinm..n l,n.v ti. .n destroy one nnother. I cannot read with out a scuso of horror ut the awful depths to which man has descended in order to uequire a little of this world's goods. I i slL'ull"i 11 mans principles ana applying speak of the moral degradation of drunk-' tI,c, t0 ll,eir ow" Sfc'","cliicmeiit (where ciiness. and the vilo manufacturers thereof. ! bv you Ea! B nm' vote 111,(1 uso il nS,linst There is no age of tho world that has not suffered from this fearful scourge, ond still it goes on increasing till tho beautiful mid moral majesty of God's imago becomes a desolate and unsightly ruin. How huinil- luting it is to think that the godlike Intel-(or lect of ninn should be so stretched and tortured to invei.t a more siieody nitons of hurrying his fellow-being uwav from the stage of human existence. I find in one of, these papers an article purporting to be written by a Mr. Udolnhs Wolfe, of 'Sclici- dam Schnnps' notoriety. lie tells us that, while in the "ew York Custom Houso tho returns show an actual importation of 20,- 000 half c.if.ks of brandy, 35,000 qrs., and 23.000 eiithths. twenty or thirty times that' umiibcr are sold by mixers and jobbers to I retailers and country deulers as genuiue French brundv, ncwly-imported and of tbe j choicest brands. With one gallon of pure I brandy Will bo mixed twenty gallons of a spurious compound. Three fourths of all tho foreign brandies and gins aro imported for the express purpose of udultcrutiou by ' the mixers uud jobbers of the dny. Dut j very few of tho self-styled importers of fnr 1 he tlrrty pieces of silver, brandy nnd other liquors ure such in reali-j C'" I venture to say, let tho prcs ty; they may import enough to furnish a cmivnsfi he run under its true gnrb nnd cloak to cover their criminal practices, but ' essence of principle, s:iy free State and thut is all. One man who has sold tlious-! sluv State parlies and tho pro-slavery amis of trillions of a certain kind of 'for- eign licpior, has not imported fire pipes in j us many years. This is proved by the Custom Houso books. . . i i i w .i , Iu the work of adulteration, tho most subtile poisons, takeu from the vegetublei nnd mineral kingdoms, are recklessly em ployed. From the vegetable come opium, tobacco, hcubune, strychnine, coculus Indi- cus; from the earths, they become too nu merous to detail; from the acids, oil of vit riol, murintic acid, nnd many other medici nal poisons. These baneful ingredients, mixed with other articles, are sold to the credulous public under the names of Scotch, Irish, Bourbon, aud Monongahela whiskies, The rum. cm. wines, lajer oecr, xc. . i. . great bulk of ' Bourbdn whisky,' So called, was never in Kentucky. It is a Well- known fact that the Cincinnati whisky can j nltirntra mmmnnrl friim ftn to S7 a dozen ,. . j .,,,. .,.-. .itiiose rotten bands that now try to enslave There is uo doubt that a great majority of: . , , our foreign liquors, so termed, once left our 1 l ' . I l.np,. in ilm slmnn nf n liitkv. and. after i having been fixed np in Fruucc and stamp cd with a French brand, are returned to ,. . i it ..in- i tills pnnntrv anil sokl ns a tfulv Siinrtii nnro J: renc i or ic e, , p , th li d her own market tory more t an supp ic .. . 'crusciUraiitl aud her regulur tng i cua omewa yet there is no a more common everago ln the stocks or rctai.ers man Prl Wln ' j Of course it is made ut .borne, and amon ,U ingredients will be found spo. led dare , logwood, alum, reU saw-dust, beet too , , wln-y, gypsum, and bitter almonds. a- I I I .1 . a tUD MIIV UlIC HWIIUI.I, f uu iv. things, at the results it must inevitably have on its consumers crimes of every irrade. madness, suicides, assassinations, murders till in faat you. cannot walk in i r -. ... mn.1 nnii ui I nnrnnti nm r.ii i . . I .1 Lft I S.ley...,uu , - fTJTJt ic nous prcparauoug oi ieau Brecuiiiioji-u iu: - . i .' . ,r , . , . I ways have three votes to one pro-slaycry cive to inferior Madeira and Sherry wines ' ..,.. b, . . f . , , ivote; henco you aro headed off there. , the appearance and flavor of the best. I ' ' , 11 , . - a I Xow comes your last resort, namely, that , ment revolving pirtola, , reprecl:ttioa In Congress.- teT Oen. Jose de la Concha, l,te Cap slong shots, loaded sticks, iron hands, !,.;.n...l(rt,k. t,... Vitu,! in .m-orrf miim and b-.bv other tbimrs that I caauot mcct;c. What a stato of tfep! OREGON CITY, Oil Why should the rilo compounds be ullowed to mud on our shore why should tlrvlio manufactured in our very midst and why do you legulise those dispensers of death, which mudden, Impoverish, and infuriate your fellow-cltiieiis? But I am happy to see by the papers which I have, that you nro making great efforts to rid the land of this fearful evil. ! I cannot licit) vou tint with mv nravers . . j All my sympathies are with you. 'if one plan fails, try onollirr, aud another, and ,ti" Mother and bear In your memory ' J" il ls,.thc T rf " J"01 regeneration of your fellow-mim that you are ,wtlllJ forthut ,l4 miited )riiy(. r ! sum ring millions are with you thut the r's''t arm of tho Most High will nphold you ami earnest and fervent prayers for ! ..lit - . ..'II I - t . 1 ..ft . . .... . , tered l)V vours In all favor, Tut: Old Mas or .Mhi nt Hood. T lb Drmoerary of Ortsoa, Ed. A nics: Permit mo for the first time in my life to give publicity to some of my I , of ..., . , ' , , Iipii u-rt uliniil.l Mings through the columns per. The time has come when we should e" loiiowers, uirn who wouia no more be associated with such n band of wholesale und highway robbers than they would with : a ,,aml 01 "1S"-c'; lor 1 Imia that him wU1' dcadI)' vS ct) h 11,0 lo,vcst lcu""8 C0UI" e iiivenicu worse ,,,an stou,i"' tho ltt6t nc"rn fro,n a hli,,d ! Uut tl,ri' d;ira "ot nroach yon, l'ne balc Ueniocruts, in the proper gnrb lmT uyen-in-the-wool principles, but w'" sai' '" tho tM Stutw. " Wu are ', latter sovereignty men.'' " Uut ut what i ,imc do you wish to extend that priviicge?" M)'s ree-Stato IJemocrat. "O, well, 1 j do1'' precisely know." answer that (ll;C :t'on. 'hcucver they find they have a majority of ' sipiats,' and they arc ulwnys careful to select just such men for Repre sentatives as would vote to extend slavery over Oregon to-morrow if they had the l'ow,;r- Or, if tiny had not tho power, ""'t'" f'o principle. And, to provo the J011 mld tt IurSu Hority of the candidates of tho Lane party this year Minposed of men who voted Tor slavery at t,ie ,ime lLe Constitution of Oregon was "tbmitted to tho people, who hnvo been clandestinely bought over, uud who ure pledged to Jo Lnne and Congressional in- 'ervention ns liruily as Judas Iseariot was l"rty could not get u corporal's guard. "t that wou't do, says Pro-Slavery Party; ' must hold on to the old name; wo have hidden many n dirty trick by that old uamc, for yon know wo elected James Bu- , , , , , . ' . . ' , , '. . he answers our purposa as well as if thut had been coupled off. But you can no longer mask your principles under that old charm no longer gag the bold and self- thinking freemen of this county or Stato. Free labor, free State, free speech, and free press, is ns suro to triumph us tho earth rolls on in its course. But men who think the world has been standing on a piece of c'm" r 'ts ,cll0n' wcdScd ln 4 basin of mud tor its sills, will still continue to vote for the old name, nnd but few Others. For the time has come when American freemen will shake off the fetters und burst asunder them; for whenever you ensluve labor, you AnirriAn t anil wliiinf nl rnit ApirTnAn In. ' ' hoT dSrndc yur Dnt011- , , . "ut Lt '4 say .1, concUiSioi. it mj una CO uviciio l iuai vne sun uus auuuu niiuii " !. l...-f J... Clnfn u illiin th limlfi! nf nnr lUnion, unless a subdivision of some of the; Prcscnt sIttV0 States slsould take place; Tor 'top of which was a figure that always should Congressional intervention curry I pointed to the North, and thus the route j t discovercd Tfae tffw:t of 0destono was Bj. : jnt0 a Territory can legUlate so mentioned in their dictionary. We ur j it out T)e rule must work both ways, ! also probably indebted to tlie Chinese (W we are the Mariner's Compass; for it bad long been wj prohil!t u fr()I0 known tQ Mon h was ,o us, and jf ang m(h a ,0 B)d JQ . ... ,- m . u..llM Bil,im,i,f rnmmni,.,,t,.,l it from them to his' Jw.vn..i'i - ,11 DrgrOTH BIO COIIHIIUII jirujllj, llVb lUliUI I that the Dred Scott decision carries slavery : everywhere. This is your lust bulwark. Vou are like arowning man in iiiBiaui expiring struggles, catching at a straw;! 'for. establish tbt theory that negroes a r- - mon property, and you Io, thirty lso now 11 " W. B. Myalls Garden, Aprfl 30, I960. KG ON, MAY 2, 1800. Kruin th Argu Eln, Munday nirn'iig !! Later from Hit Cnlt xews nr ro.vy jixpmss xo xomixatiojTat charlks TON! t-aavcalloa lonrar la mrrl at aori aa tb lUlb ef Jaart BatU- i . n .i i .' tapis. When sho grows a little older she The PHinma arrived at Portland last tQ fcnmltor Kn,J0Ht nm,rimoy, and night bringing dates from tho Lust to 6th thinks moro intently on the all-important of Mar. Wo ure Indebted to Tracy & sulj'ct. It engross lur tliouglits bv day Co., and to F. J. Hollister, Esq., for full and lu r dreams by night and sho plctur.g tiles of Eastern papers. I''f f Wi we lded to ... . i .I . T t i the vouth for whom she cherishes a secret V o are under obligation! to J. M. Da- )Ut 'c0llMlln!l1ff fl:imc slt8 sul.v,ys ,H,,.sl.,f con, Esip, for a copy of the Alta Culifor- n,0 ,irrori und, us it generally tells a nia, from which we tukc tho following: i " fluttering tale," she turns from it witli the Tki l.bariutoa I'.saveaiUa. : pleasing conviction thut her beauty will en- April 30. Tho ipiestiou was taken on'ublc her to coiupicr tho heart of the moat adopting the minority report ns a substi- obdurate, and whoever else may die in a tuto Tor tho majority report, and it was state of "single blessedness," she is destined odopted by 1C5 ayes to 138 noes. I to become, eic many years roll by, a happy bt. Lons, May 0. ilie Convention rc-. jected tho majority report, which protected' all the rhhts of property against Congres-; sionnl or Territorial legislation, and wlicr-l ever Federal authority extends: whereupon ! ... . . ..... ' . ... ' I Alubanm, Mississ.ppi, l loriUil, ami Texus,"' uiuii ui any uimr, ami wunppvui withdrew entirely; and South Carolina, to our fair readers to say whether, ifiuclin Georgia, Arkansas, and Delaware, partial- "'o was alone consulted in tho business, Ir, forming a Southern Convention. j more marriages would not take place dur- ' Tho regulur Convention balloted on the ! this ticklish season than iu any iu which 1st and 2d of Mav, under rule of two-! it is preceded or followed? It is the grand thirds of all States,' lifty-scvcn bullots with- climax of love; und she who passes it with out choice, aud Douglas's highest vote, out entering Into the state of matrimony, 1321; his lowest, utter 23 ballots, 151 1 may chatico to pass several yeai-s of her life if ay 1. The first ballot stood as fol- ere sho is cntight in tho meshes of hymen. lows: Douglas 1451, Guthrie 30J, Dick- inson 7, Lune 6, Hunter 42, Davis 1, Tou-! ccy 2 J, Pierce 1, Johnson 1 Lust ballot, Douglas 1511, Guthrie 1, Lane 10, Hunter 20 J, Dickinson' Davis 1. the woman, tnvolity is succeeded hy On the 3d of Mav, the Convention nd-'reflection; nnd rensou reigns where passion jourucd to meet nt Bultimoro oil the 18th ' previously held undisputed sway. The care of June. j "'"I anxiety of life press thi'iuselves more The Southern Convention voted an nd- pulpubly they tend to weaken the effect ol dress, and resolutions Tor a Southern Con- fie sanguine anticipation of Unmingled ftlic vention at Washington, June 11th. ' i tho marriage state, which the mind Tho resolution to meet in llaltimore on i '""I formed in its youthful dream. In the 18th of June was adopted by n vote of , short, to use a commoti phrase, women, uf 195 to 55. iKT twenty, " look rrc they leap." The dispatch says that the adjournment , . , of tho Convention was effected by tho l,E MuJ-Exxic.-Pr. Cumming 1ms friends of Donglus, under orders from , Wnshington. nr. noi.Ttr.s' convention'. The Secedcrs' Convention was held on I..1! "C", "."J Jorily platform which was rejected in thei6-000 'eftril of tho world's history, and Convention before the split. from the earliest period onward it hnd been Bayard, of Delaware, wus choseu Prcs- tho almost uuiversial beli. f that tho six ident. . days of creation were typical of those 0,000 A proposition to take the nnino of Con- , .. , .. ... , stitutional Democracy, was, after long de- J""- "nd ,th:,t "'e seventh day of crent.on, bate, voted down, the delegates cluiming or tlio Subbuth, was typical of tho milieu to be the onlv National Convention. niul rest of 1,000 years. But they would Tho Pacific Railroad resolution was adopted, but not without considerable op position. The Democrats of Indiana fired fifty seven guns at Indianapolis, iu honor of the Indiana delegation who voted that number of times for Douglas. Hnr. Iinnrlrpil niul It ft v o-ima ivrrp fin-rl nt St. Louis, iu honor of tho votes given to! W of ' world, nnd that tile year 1S00 Douglas. of tho Christian era bignu not fnm the A nteeting has been called at New Or- year 4,001 of the world's history, but iu leans to protest against tho netion of the j "tlfi y(.lir 4 137) und thnt tl,0yeor of Christ's citizens of Louisiana, In committing the1,.,, . K , r , . X. , . ,. ,' . 0 i birth wus five years before that, in 4 32. Statu to disunion and secession. . ' . '. The Douglas papers dei-lure that the.re- If premises were just, then they were nt cess will benefit their candidate; but tile' thut moment within seven yours of the ex-rinti-Douglas organs claim that tlio tl- j haiistioii of 0,000 years; so that if iaiUS jonrumciit kills him ns deud us a door-nuil. They suy Douglas went to Charleston with all the strength he could possibly raise, uud that the recess will give time td the opposition to consolidate ugainst him. It is contended that the Democratic Senate will force Douglas to take position on tho wou(, di T, , , (inestions of the day thnt will ilamngo him . . , . , , . 1 in one section or the other. They will re- j mtJ d'J 8Uch BS tl,cy llttd J'1'1 vive the caucus slavc-codo resolutions, and jO European war was looming, more dread if ho votes against them, tho South will fiil tlliiri thut tlirougli which they had re disenrd him if for them, he is politically ccutu .)(lSS0( nnj nicll t)l(su lhhls i,,,.,. dead in the Xorth. The Administration , , d Le h , : uUn will unFB n. wi-r or exterm nation on 1 Lie fnitmvcrc n,,rl t,i,., fncs MiBrl thnt the Illinois Senator will liuve td succumb. The Chinese. It has been cririsidercd that the Chinese wcro not an inventive peo ple, but this wus a mistake. The art of printing was known in China nine hundred years before any knowledge of it prevailed iu England. Printing was first iutroducid into Europe eurly In tile fifteenth century. Tho Chiucse printers were generally itiner ants'. Til"? '-hovered the magnetic needle j this took place in tho traditionary jerlouj ..!... tl... V..IU t linvti.r. i.n e A 1 big way, a little enrringo was built, on the , :.,... ,i countrymen. Qunpowdcr was mventea . . i r b. there many centuries before it was known i . i i t a in England, but was only used for fire- ..w.. - . - b A tr nrva rt .av Annini.lit .Ul3, .liu, .it. v. """.vii. parts were nearly the same as the European 'mixture U6ff" A man in Bangor celebrated his thirteenth birthday recently being fifty- two years of age. Ho was born on the 9th February. ..:-! i.tA.i,. i.... vriu,i in! j UUI VfCUCIAI Ul VU'I WtlB UVGH l.lL M j i Spain !3 a iiA with the Mire's PaW;!a. J side of Truth iu every issue. No. 7. Vmra al Twly. When a young girl reaches the agi1 of ' littecu or sixteen, sho begins to think or the myueriojs subject of matrimony n st.it, the delights of which her youthful Imagina tion shadows forth In tlie'most captivating j forms. It is inudo tho topic of light uud i incidental conversation among her compan ions, and it is rcurrcd to with increasing ' interest every time it is brought upon the on"1- l 1" "' "RC ' eighteen to twenty is very witching tune" or miuulo lite. Diirlnjr that period the feinnlo heart is more susceptible to the soft and tender influence .f i .1 -. .i i t Jho truth is, that the majority of women hegin to move more thoughtfully wh. n they nave uirneii urn ago oi twenty, inegiu- Uiness of the girl gives place to the sotirh.'ly swll,lS "ls opinion at Leeds resprct- mg the great events which, according to his interpretation of the Lo.'kof Da i -l and tho Aiibealvi S". nro loominrr in tho ftitarr. ll!a the year 1607 seemed to end say, thnt, supposing this were so, tiny were at this moment near HO years short of the 6,000. It wus a reumrkablu fact, however, thut tho ablest chronologists, irre spective of all prophet theories, hud shown tlt a mhuku of upwards of 100 years ; had been ruaiio i'u culciihitiug tho chronol- Was to bo the termination of this economy they hud arrived nt the Saturday evening 'of the world's long nnd dreury weik. If this were so, it was n mngniliecut thought thut there some, in Llmt assembly who o had uttered Were not tho dreams of fanaticism, but tho words of soberness and truth. Mjhauon's Personal Art'EAUANcE. Mirnmon appears to be ubont twenty-eight or thirty years of age, five feet nino inches high, nnd of slender, genteel figure, which is well set off by his fine uniform. He has beautiful brown hair, wears moustache uud goatee n la Xnpoleon, and his complexion is uot dark but slightly muddy, bis eye- !rows ara finely peucil.'d, ond there is I. nd sinister 6X DrCcbioU uljOIlt his t VCS nnd mouth. Mini mon may le called a l; hand- some man, but his countenance, Lea 1, and entire bearing give no evidence or coiiniion- j;, intellect or traits of character such as we look for in a superior general or states- man. Miro.non is nothing or the kind; Ho Is a b.itoh,r at heart, nnd, like those around him, an exaggerated monkey iu suu,,;,;,,,!,;,,. He 0eS bis present posi- tion and fame siinnlv to the naueitv of anv- thing above the rank of mediocrity in Mexi . r . . co in these day s, nnd to the other fact that the c'.ergy seized npon him as a pliant tool. IxntAV HoeTii.rriKS seab Washoe. Pyramid Lake in Carson Valley has been the socue of barbarous Indiuu outrages lately, a fight having taken place thereat betvreen 103 whites and about 500 Indi ans. The whites were defatted with a loss 6f 35 killed. Great preparations are le iug made by the Governor of California tnwnd aid to the Americans, and toltw- ' tetr companies are alrtadr te'pj cryinitrf. lt.Ti:s iK AhVUtTlrflNiit Oho ujuurn (IwnKs liw-, ur Im, bi-cvitr iiwawr) line nix-riiuii , 9 a (HZ Ktch .u'.:K-;urnl inn nln..... I lljuLenkcmJiens yur SOW A lili9i.il .k-Jui.-tiou will bv tnti I liiuM win 4mrtitc lij- llirjn.r. IV Tin nnmVr uf iunwiioat tioiitJ be nolt u Ilm iiuiik'u uf r.n Ivrrliwnianl, otlierwia it Kill b published lilt forUU.Ua, tad vhargrd an eoidingly. CI'" Ubltuiry noilei-t Will be cliarpj half tU eb) rntrf of dMrriilpi. Vif 1"' rsiKTi.va cxccuitd with ntilnro nj dinpilch. ' i'aymtnt far Jut Printing mult be maJe en delinry uf tlie uotk. Lrdstallaa tiy Conur la IktTrtrKnrltni.' The National Intell gciiecr snmi! timu siuco published a series uf articles on the question of tho sovereignty of Congress over the Terrilones.- The following are' soun of the conclusions at which it arrived: From our citation, Hum, It appears 1. That In the first lelatitm of Coi - gress with regard to the Xorlhwist Ti rri torv, nnder tho old Confederation, no re striction was pl.ici-d on the extension uf slavery by tho net of April 23, UU. 2. llmt such n rtr.ct.On, atioinpan eil, hnwerer, with a chuiso for tho rendition nf fugitive slaves, was subsequently passed by Congress In the adoption of the ordiimncu or 1787, on tho lStli or July In that vcur. , that tins ordinance wus p.isiied unan imously by the Continental Congress, niuf that its engagements were known to the frainers or our present Constitution, which, by the fittt claue of its sixth article, fde. daring " all eugagemeiits entered into Im--foro the adoption of the Constitution us valid against tho United Slates under thu Confederation') has heeu commonly held to confirm thu articles of compact con tained in tho ordinance of 1781. 4. That the Constitution, by this clause, and by the general provision iu veiling Con gress with power to "dispose or and make' all need fill rules and regulations respecting the territory or Other properly belonging to the United States," was understood at the time of its formation to confer upon the Na tional Legislature a grunt of power ample' to meet tho requirements of tlie Territorial, i'g!.slutioii already adopted under the olj Confederation, which legislation could thu bo constitutionally reaffirmed under the ucw charter, even if it hnd been unconstitu tionally pnsscd under the Articles of Con' federation. 5. Thnt Congress nfcordingly proceeded by tho act of the 7th of August, 178U, to reaffirm the provisions of tho ordinance of 1737, u step which con!.) not have been legally taken without a grant of potter sup' posed to bo adequuto to tlio exigencies of tho case. . G. That the power of Congress to pro hibit slavery in the Territories of tho IV ion received by this act an endorsement under thu present Constitution in thu first Congress of tho United States, which counted uniong its members fourteen who1 had sat In the Convention at Ph ludelphin, Mr. Madison being of that number. 7. Thnt this snmo Centres., on tho 2d of April, 1700, accepted from North Caroli." n!i the deed of cession lit which it was stip ulated, with regard to the Territory south of the Ohio, " that no rtgumlfoh made or td be madii by Congress should tend td eiiiaiicipato sluves." 8. That by this stipulation on thu part of North Carolina tho power of Congress to enact tueh "regulations'' was plainly implied; und that by the acceptance of this stipulation Congress pledged itself to rec oguizu and sanction thu institution of slave ry in the ceded territory, which it could not haw lawfully douo unless its power hnd been plenary uud discretionary on this sub jeet. U. That tho power was so understood niul expounded by Madison In thu debates had in Congress iu 1707 On tho ndm'ssioii of Tennesseu into th?) Union ns a State. t 10. That by ilia netor April 7, 1 " 98; organizing thu Territdry of Mississippi; Cdngress volunteered to Sanction tlio insti tution of slavery n proposition for its' re strii'tiou nnd prohibition having obtained buttwulvo votes in the Housu of llpre-seututiv'-s. 11. That the debnto. had on the question1 raided in the caso of Mississippi, the power of Congress over slavery in that Territory was conceded dti nil hands to bo absolute; but that Congrcps yielded to the forco of representations by which it was sought to show that in exercising this absolute power respect should bo hnd to the different situ ations of different territorial rngions; ill soulu Of which slavery might bo properly prohibited und in others allowed on grounds of political propriety and expediency, sub ject to th il discretion of Congress. 12. Thut utthnt early period in' mir par liamentary history this discretionary pow er was exercised without intoh rudca or ex action on tlie part or either tlio North or the South. , . 13. Thut Iu the sumo, deit bf ili)8, sanc tioning slavery in the Mississippi .Territory, Congress "regulated1' tho iusi'lution by forbidding tho importation iutd Mississippi of any slaves from any portor place without tlie limits of the United States; nnd as this prohibition was luid upon the said Territo ry prior to 1808, it proceeded on tlie sup position that Congress had absolute Juris diction iu the premUes, uud could oxorci. e with regard td tho Territories a power which it was' forbidden to cxerciso at thut date with regard to such States us might desire to continue the Importation or slaves from Africa., 14. That the doctrine of popular sover eignty was cot only unknown at this early period, but was expressly repudiated by Congress ond by the General GovernmM with reference alike to the Territuifc or the North and of tlio South. 15. That on the acquisition uf Louisiana Congress proceeded to gwero, the new U-: ritory by virtue of tho 5iu? pV'nary an thorlty understood t'v. bo Mitiiil by the china.' empowering Cigrecs M ta diiposc of and make all needful rnks aad regulations, respecting tU territory cr other property bclor.giiity ta tho Uuil)d Sinks." 10. Ttit the modern Democratic theory which ictricts tlie intendment f this lan e to the territory belonging to the Vu'ou t the dale oT the formation of the Conslitc-i tion was expressly repudiated by the friends, of the Louisiana purchase. 17. That, in organizing the Territory or Orleans and to setting off the District of Louisiana, CongresH assumed at once to sanction and " regulatv" the institntion of lavery in tho new possessions acquired by th. treaty of 1803. ... 19. TUt tin jo-cr of CVijr-i o A?