a, a- t . VOL. 8. NO. 39. SALEM, OREGON, TUESDAY, DECEftlBEIl 7, 1858. WHOLE NO. 403. f'liiiir (it ii) fl ii utIt fllT 3tl)e rcgon Statesman. AI1HEL BrSII, Proprietor and Editor. Tms. PnMWhrd wwkl v.at five dollar per annum. If no paid within is monttw; four dnlUra per annum. If paid within nix month; three dollar per annum. If paid in advance. One dollar additional will be charged for earh year payment Is nefdrcted. No paper will be discontinued. nnle at the option f the publisher, nntil all arrearaftrs are paid. ikrurwisa. One square, (.twelve lines or less) three Insertion. A0n ; for every additional insertion, $1 00. A liberal deduction will be made to yearly, half and vaarter yearly advertiser. Transient advertisement most be pre-paid to in var insertion. livorce aotire will not be published walil paid for. Administrators notice, and all adver tiaementt relating to estates, of deceased persons, must he pre-paid, unless erdered published by the Probate Judge .and gna ran teed to be paid by him. Notice to par ties litigant, heirs, attachment, and all other legal no tices, moat be pre-paid . unless aome responsible attor ney raarantee payment. All advertising not psM within one year from the time when contracted, will be charged twenty-five per xsnt additional, each year payment is neglected there after. All jobbing must be paid for when taken from the oflce. Announcements of marriage and deaths will be pub lished free: but all obituary or biographical notices, resolution of societies, orders, Ac, and poetry append ed to marriage announcement, must be paid lor before pwbHeatioB, at the rate of 10 cent per line. All eeimnBicaUons,of only personal interest.mnat be paid for. la advance, at the same rate. la this paper are published the laws, resolutions and treaties of the United States, and the laws and resolu tions of the Territory of Oregon, by authority. A Fairy Wong. BT MART ASS BROWS. From the abler buhes. From the daisies' home. From the bending rashes. Come, come, come! I Am spirit-weary. Weary of the earth ; I would be a fairy. Joining in yonr mirth t From the mossy hollow. From the lily's dome. Follow, follow, follow. Come, come, come ! Shall we to the river T Shall we to the mead. Where the dewdrops quiver. Where the rainbows feed! la your airy palace I will Ughtliest trip. From the acorn chalice lVepest will I sip! Bring me to the waters By the brisk wind fann'd ; Let me see the daughters Of yonr happy land. Or where the monster wallow 'Neath the white sea foam. Follow, follow, follow. Come, come, come ! Neath the glistening laurel, In the moon' pale light. Or midst the branching coral. Where bones are white. In earth, air or oeeaa. Stars, or flowers, or dew ; Any where for motion. Any where with you. So shall come forgetting . Of the days pone by ; So a never-setting San shall mount onf sky ! Skim we like the swallow, Wberesceer we roam ; Follow, follow, follow. Come, come, come ! Ar XSlHluirm, Foa. Sosae poor editor, whose exchanges, daring lat winter, sel dom came to baud, got off the folIoirig lines: I wish I were an oyster. And never had to think. And that the sea I fed from Were not a sea of ink. Shut in my shell securely. How blest a lot 'twould be. And those who call for " copy" . Would nerer call on me. Oh ! blessed clams and oysters. Dews by the salt sea sands. Ton hare no call for " paragraphs, No " proof" your care demands. Ye nappy little quahogs and shrimps, Ye knew no rnental pains Ye've not a score of black-ball imps A feeding on our brains. If I were but an oyster. And never had to think. How blest would be the salt, salt sea, Far from the sea of ink. A foolish wish after ail; for oysters are 4jreu more apt to "get into a stew" than editors. Mooerx IxTExnoxs. The strongest wit aes the present age has to superiority orer the past, is the number and quality of its - inventions. The classic Greek, surrounded by muse-haunted groves and monuments of incomparable art, had not the simple con venience of a cooking store; and the luxuri ous Roman, lounging oa the silks of Persia, amid marble baths and orange-scented villas, -was compelled to barn a floating wick in an .open censer of oil, to light and smoke his .-splendid palaces. The spirit lamp, safety .lamp, rotary stove, kitchen range, and ten .' i thousand appliances that go to make op onr .labor-earing -machine system, and in which -Ihere are more usefulness and luxury than In all the purple of Tyre or gold of Ophir, ,the haughty conqucrcrs of old knew nothing : about. . We may not have chiselled the marble eqoal to Phidias, nor touched the can canvass so tenderly as Ape'.ies; bat we have moulded marble granite into far more nscfal , -shapes for the time being, and turned onr bfashes to protect and beautify onr houses M the ancients nerer though f. We may oever have developed the arts so sublimely, v 'twt we have turned them to more universal, practical account. The mystery of Ltrus caa rases we unriddle in onr commonest pot tery, and the poorest farmer in the land Jiaa more means of domestic comfort and in dependeoce than a Greek Philosopher or &omaa Senator enjoyed. It is hardly pos sible, in these days, td keep pace with useful -autd canning invention. By artificial proc sMses nature is mocked, and we are present - -d with fax. timilts of almost everything in creation. Wouderfnl are modern art and ' iareation framing iron horses for steam spirits, anil cross-wiring the earth that man -nay sead the lightning of heaven on Lis -erranda. Blackwood. 19 An editor in Iowa has been fined 200 for hugging a young girl in church. j Daily Argus. Cheap enough. We once hogged a girl da church, some ten years ago, and the scrape has cost us a thousand a year erer rer since. Chicago American. We once hugged an old girl pretty bad oat of church, the cash value of which in -consequences was "right peart." Mariposa Gaz. . ay. He who is passionate and hasty, is : generally honest. It is your mean, soar jlum, dissembling hypocrite of whom you should beware. There is no deception in a ball-dog; it is only the cor that sneaks up ad bites job when your back is turned. Prohtvitoiy Mawor Lim. Report of the Committee on the Judiciary ltdative to the Kile of Intoxicating JJ- qnors. State of Maine. iConclndrd. Ik Sexatk, February 20th, 185(1. There are many persons whose religious convictions upon this subject assume the milder form of a benevolent sens cf duty. Iiiteuiperauce, they Fay, is the source of crime and suffering; it (ills our jails; it Gils our alms-houses; it destroys the peaca of families; it wastes the substance of house holds; therefore we should enact laws to prevent all drinking, by prohibiting all sale for drink, in order that there may be no in temperance. Other persons, looking at the same class of facts and hazards, defend the prohibitory laws on the ground of public economy aud preventive police. lint both these motives of benevolence and regard for public economy, must be con sistent with the first principles of the gov ernment. The actual inconsistency of these laws which go to prohibit the rights of the multitude, for the sake of repressing the misconduct of the few, has before been pointed out. If it were true, indeed, that the idea of beuevolence and economy to wards the endangered class, could not be practically and reasonably carried out, with out a general prohibitory law against drink ing if there were no other means of pre venting the tendency to pauperism and crime, we migut concede something to me necessity of the case. But the history of many well-regulated States, aud the facts of human nature it self, refute the idea of any such necessity. It may be stated as a proposition of wide general accuracy, that wherever, throughout the world, there is the greatest amount of regulated freedom, there is the least amount of pauperism: where there is the greatest number of restraints upon individual liber ty, there is the greatest number of paupers and criminals. Constitutional freedom, we bare been accustomed to hold as the central dignity, support and glory of our institu tions and our polity. It has achieved for us all our political success, and has secured to the inhabitauts of Maiue an amount of geu eral improvement and happiness, which no people, not self-governing, could ever attain. Add to this instrumentality, the attendant influences of education and of christian truth, which do their work best, in harmony with individual aud public freedom, regulated by just laws, and then, if pauperism and crime grow and multiply aud spread in our ruidft, we may well suspect ourselves to be igno rant of the true power of onr instruments, or heedless ami sluggish in the use of them. If we cannot wotk this machine of govern ment, having the three fold motive power of liberty, intelligence and christian truth, so as to save our people from pauperism aud crime, without calling in the aid of statutes which d ry natural lilxrty, and falsify the distinctions of morality, we had better con sign ourselves to the care of some- enlight ened aud benevolent despot, and make an end of our experiment. Undoubtedly we have among us, as io ev ery State, a class of persons peculiarly ex posed to intemperance. It is common to say of them, "they are poor and vicious be cause they drink." If we would deal hon estly with the facte, the statement should be the other way, in multitudes of esses. They drink because they are in abject condition; because through mi fortune or perrerscness, of themselves or others, they hare not been reached by the elevating influences of edu cation, religion and freedom; because their low condition awakens but low desires. Many of them resort to sensual gratification because they bare no knowledge of intellec tual pleasure, or of the happiness of moral parity. They drink, because they know of nothing better than drinking. They resort to the drinking house, because their homes are places of discord, ill temper aud nuhap piness. It may be that the unexposed class of our people they who because they can govern themselves are able to govern the State bare not taken bold of this matter at the right end. We have a cherished system of public instruction yet, there arc great num bers of our people who. never get so much educatiou as to be of any inilucuce in puri fying and derating their lives; we appear to hare a widely diffused religious system throughout the State; there is an indefinite plurality of churches in every considerable town yet, there are large Dumbers who nerer enter the churches, who are not ex pected to enter them, who are under no di rect influence of christian truth, from any source, and who are wholly destitute of all that safe-guard against a vicious life. It may be that the gorerning classes of the State are reposing npon the general freedom, instead of wisely and skillfully making that freedom a rigorous and effect ire instrument to derate the lowest of our people; it may be that the public provision for education is yet too stinted and ineffi cient; it may be that christian influences are too much encumbered with formalities, or distracted with sectarianism, to permit that benevolent aud united activity which would rescue the most abject from his low condi tion, and thereby lift him out of its perils. The suppression of intemperance, and the prcrention cf intemperance, will be best ac complished nndcr all conditions, by setting in action those moral causes which tend to the promotion of temperance. The true theory of laws cn the subject of the sale of liquors, would seem to be not, that drinking and selling for drink are, un der all conditions, immoral and wrong, or that gorernment has the right to take away all individual liberty on. the subject, but simply that the nature of the article in ques tion reqaires the sale to be limited aud reg- ulated as a measure oi puouc saieiy. x ne fact is notorious, that the unlimited sale of alcoholic liquors leads to drunkenness, dissi pation, vice and porerty. For hundreds of years, tuereiore, me owib uu. iuijjuscu checks ana nmiiauous upuu iuc iioiut us a hazardous trade. The laws for this purpose atand noon the same footing as the gunpow der laws, with the important difference that the unlawful keeping of ganpowaer exposes the lives of the most innocent, without any power on their part to protect themselves. Bat the sale of liquors can do no harm, to a rational person, unless the buyer volunta rily commits a wrong, after the sale, by ex cessive drinking. Because there are " many persons in the ! community, who are required to be nndcr disabilities, being admitted to be incapable or entire sell government, or required by special circumstances of public policy, to be tor a time without the liberty which belongs to the general mass of the citizens, the State, for the purpose of affording statutory protection tb these persons, and protection to the public against their errors, has the power to limit the number of persons, who moy sell liquors, and to control the sales by them made, bo as to reach the desired object of protection aud safety. The State has the right to forbid the sale of liquors to soldiers iu the public service; to jurors engaged iu the trial of causes; aud to others in like public employment, because they are under statutory contract with the government, which, for the time-being, sus pends a part of their individual freedom. It has the right, also, to forbid the rale to mi nors, to Indians, to paupers, to drunkards, to prisoner in the prisons, to patients iu the hospitals, and other like classes, because these persons are under conceded disabilities, and subject to the governing power iu a wholly different relation from that of the free, adult, well behaved, self-supporting cit izen. To the last named class, the State has also the right to prescribe that they shall not drink at places established as common resorts for drinking, and to prescribe that 6uch places may be suppressed, because ex perience shows that they tend to excess, and increase the exposure of the classes requir ing protection. The State has also the right to reqnire that the manufacture of alcoholic liquors shall be confined to a limited number of pet sons; that it be carried on only at permitted places, and under such regulation and con trol that it shall not have a teudency to aid the uulaaful sale. The State having, In such manner, con fined and restrained the action of its people upon this subject, but forbearing to prohibit drinking, and allowing its well-behaved citi zens to choose for themselves whether to drink or not, the plain and just distinction is presented between limitation and prohi bition between restrictive laws ou the one band, and prohibitory laws on the other, as applied to the natural rights of the people. The governing power may limit or abridge the natural right of the virtuous nan; it cannot take it away altogether. The one system, as applied to the driuking of atco holie liquors, permits the self gorerning man to drink, if he chooses, but uot ererywhere, nor to obtain the article at all places. As to the place where he shall procure liquors, or the place where lie shall drink, his natu ral right may justly be restricted and abridg ed to that extent. The other system denies any natural right to drink at all, and there fore seeks to prohibit driuking, manufacture and selling for drink altogether. The administration of these two systems presents widely different distinctions. The limitation policy bciii consistent with fun damental and natural laws, and in harmony with the principles of the constitution, ta t be administered by the methods and rubs of the ordidary eual code, as laid down in the constitution and the standing laws. The prohibitory policy, being iu conilict with "retained"' natural right, and therefore un warranted by the rcasou of meu or the con stitution of the State, requires for its en forcement a resort to strange and doubtful procedure, to new and arbitrary rules of ev idence, to excessive forfeitures and penalties, and to such a constant invention of new de vices as the ingenuity cf despotism relics upon to keep dowu the teudeucics of natural sud rational freedom. The penalties required for the enforcement of the limitation laws are to be measured not merely by the supposed immorality of the different lorms of violation, but by re gard to the primary object of the system the public safety and they are to be en forced also with all tbo strictness and sever ity which that object may require, and no more. There is a deeper and more important dis tinction than any which has yet been point ed out, in the practical operation of the two systems. It is the appeal which they make, or do not make, respectively, to the moral sense of the people, both with refer ence to the promotiou of virtuous habits in the individual man, and to the gcticral ad vancement of tempcrauce in the community. Under the one system, the individual be ing left, in a proper degree, to his liberty, remains subject to moral influence, and to motives addressed to his reason aud moral sense. To deny that such influences and motives are sufficient to keep temperate men tempe rate, is to falsify the history of the race, and contradict the nature of things. Under the other system, the attempt is t cccomplish all, Ly absolute interdiction and prohibition, having no reference to the moral perceptions, convictions or aspirations ot the virtuously disposed man, and there fore doing nothing, except by mere force, to uphold his habit of virtue. If this were successful, it would be fatal. Having noth ing t3 do iu the gorernment of himself, he would soon lose the power of gorerning himself, r.nd thereby lose all his worth and merit a j a man. If by change of place, or the casual relaxation of the authorities in enforcing prohibition, he should be brought within the reach of temptation, he would fall like a child, because nothing had been done to cultivate in him the moral strength of a man. In strict accordance with this view of the case, as regards individuals, has been the course of things among us. with reference to general influence upon the community What was properly called the temperance reformation, had free course in the State of Maine, and was glorified. We had made most effectual and fruitful trial of the power of voluntary association, of combined sym pathy, of the self-determined aud fraternal pledge of abstinence. The seed that was sown iu this way for twenty years prior to 1846, had borne a noble fruit, and was tend ing to its own perpetual reproduction. No commuuity in tho world stood better than our own people in this cause. The great middling class in Maine, being the immense majority of our number, were actively per vaded with sound views and purposes upon this great social interest. Every village had its temperance society; every depart ment of life among us recoguized the value of this virtue. The ignorant received a friendly light;, the young, a cheerful encour agement; the exposed, a helping hand. j Whether it was a necessary coarse of things or not, it is undeniably trne, that since the introduction of the prohibitory laws, this form of action and influence upon the subject of temperance has nearly or quite ceased to exist. Why should it uot? The prohibitory laws discard the power of moral iufiuenee why then cease to exert it, or to appeal to the moral sense? If the best work which the "friends of temperance" can do, is to work the machinery of a pro hibitory law, to compel men to be absti ncnts, why attempt to aid their virtue, or awaken virtuous impulse, by exhortation, argumeut and appeal? Actually, therefore, the former methods of proceeding in this cause, are displaced, while the admitted want of thorough efficiency io the prohibi tory system, together vtith the hostile feel ing which those laws have aroused, is rap idly bringing us to a condition ot more ex posure and danger thau we were ever in be- tore, multitudes or men or ondeuiauie rir- tue refuse to co-operate with the new sys tem of compulsion; the young are uot at tracted by anything suited to their natures, and the exposed classes are constantly in flamed and exasperated by the exactions and indignities that the law seeks to fasten upon them. We have come very nearly to the poiut and the fact, of haring no general and combined influence against intemperance among us, except the terrors of a severe criminal law, aud that sustained, chiefly, by the dangerous cupidity of mere political partizanship. It is commonly said by the advocates of the prohibitory laws, that the liceuse laws were a failure. If the fact were so, the reason is pJalo. Paring the last several years, befsre the &ual repeal of those laws by the new policy, th most ardent opposers of drinking in this State, were gradually adopting the doctrine that liquor drinking was an immorality in itself; ad that therefore the licenst laws, which permitted tho 6ale for drink, were morally wrong, and that magistrates ought not, as conscieutious men, to grant licenses. This idea prevailed extensively. It led to an entire refusal to license, in mauy cities and towns, so that, for a series of years, throughout a large proportion of the State, it was quite impossible to buy liquors, law fully, for any purposes wnatsoever. It was uot therefore a failure of the li cense laws, but their willful transformation into prohibitory laws, of the most sweeping tenor. This was against the judgment of a large part of the community, and in conflict with the necessities of all. A whollj unli censed sale, therefore, sprung up, in luany quarters, and led to excesses. The persons who had caused this condition of things, of course found themselves wholly powerless to enforce a law which they bad nullified aud denounced as wicked, and thereupon availed themselves of the abuses and excesses which grew out of their own action, as a pretext for demaudiug a law to prohibit the sale for Tk r b-oII Tra mo. I i;nu liis ' - . - .2 . I should be: Does it, when administered hon estly and carefully, according to iu own in tent, accomplish to a reasonable degree, toe object of public safety, for which it was made? Other objects, which lie before and around and beyond, such as the reformation of the intemperate, the prevention of injurious ap petite not yet rormcii, tue conarmation oi virtuous habits uot yet impaired, the pro motion of temperance gcuerally these are to be effected by influences ouUido of the civil law. To inouire whether the recent and exist ing prohibitory laws in this State have been successful, might lead only to a conilict oi interested judgments, home Hide, howev er, are obvious to all. The prohibitory law consists of two parts thai wnn is declar atory, showing what may and what may not be done, and that which embraces the modes and penalties for enforcing it. The methods and apparatus of the law, are, of course, as essential as what is called its principle, be- . t 1 : l 4- cause it macninery caunov ue ucvidl-u iu work out the principle, steadily and success fully the principle has no practical ralue. Within four years, from 1851 to 1855, we had three several statutes of this kiud, each one professing, as to the part of principal importance, to be complete in useu, ana each successive one repealing its predeces sor. What is called the priuaiple remained substantially tho same in all of them, but the apparatus was regularly euangea in ma terial parts. Tbe law of 1851 lasted one vear and eleven months. The law of 1853 ' . ... . i rri. remained in lorce lor an equai penou. ms law of 1835 had not stood npon the statute book sixty days, when the Supreme Court hod occasion to point out a defect in its pro visions, which its friends may perhaps claim was a mere oversight, but which very mate rially weakened its efficiency. These rupid chauges have usually been accounted for by the friends of the system, on the ground of their intention to make the law continnously more and more strin gent. It is known, however, from tho re cords of the courts, and of tho legislature, aud from imspection of the successivo trans formations, that eacu ono was, in lact, in tended to supdIv a defect, or remove an ex crescence in its predecessor. The work was successivelv ill done, add has not yet been well done. The mere practicability of the whola thine, therefore, remains a problem. nnlcsa we dctermiue, as we should in ordi- nnrv PAfiPK. that, where three statutes of this magnitude have been required in four vears. unou ono subject, and the last one so largely inoperative, there is an inherent weakness and impracticability in the whole thnr nroposcd. As no statute of this kind was ever be fore euacted in tho annals of time, it may be that the projectors of these measures hare not yet gone deep enougu to bud sound principle to stand upon or, it may be, that these rapid mutations and alteriugs of the plan are an involuntary confession and demonstration that the system is in di rect conflict with some first principles of le- cal and moral truth. That a large body of our citizens hare been committed in lavor ot tneso measures is evident: many have taken this position with honest and well-meant purposes; it is notorious, also, that a political party, bar ing tbe ordinary stakes of partizanship at risk, has assumed the champiouship of these laws. We are plainly, therefore, in tho midst of a struggle, which may be exceed in-rtv unfavorable to the investigation of trne principles, and for a time most hazard ous to the cause of temperance among us, but which mnst result, sooner or later, in the general acquiescence upon that which is sonnd and trne. There are many men, who prefer to reach a demonstration by experi ment, rather than by reason. If the pro hibitory laws have not yet shown to their partizau supporters that the system is im practicable as well as unwarrantable, the people of the State will hare to endure fur ther conflicts upon this issue. If, by possi bility, the persons who have adopted the prohibitorr law as an article of the partizen creed of au ordiuary political party, could be induced to waire that dangerous preten sion, and allow the question to stand as an open question before the people, we might sooner and more easily reach a true solution of the case, resting upon admitted princi ples, and satisfactory to all honest men. liut this may be too much to exiiect, and the case may have to be woiked out iu the fartrof ttafs irrcat disadvantage. It mav in deed lead to au ultimate advantage aud beu efit, for, the sharper the conflict, the more clear may be the results of the trial. As in a thousand cases before, between the princi ples of popular right aud the principles of arbitrary power, the violeuce of the struggle may briug a deeper aud firmer setllemeut upou the questions of natural right, of con stitutional limitation, of the moral power of self-government, aud of the exleut of popu lar privilege iu a free State. In accordance with the views entertained by a majority of tho committee on the gen eral subject referred to them, they Lave agreed to report a bill, under the title of An act to restrain and regulate the sale of iutoxicating liquors aud to prohibit and sup press driuking houses and tippliug-shops," which is herewith submitted. In behalf of the committee, 1. BAUXKS, Chairman. Tcalatim Plains, Washington Co., Nov. 20, 1858. J Mr. Bcsh SicVuess in my family, severe and protracted, and which has resulted in the loss of one of my children, will, I trust, be a sufficient apology for rot writing to you sooner. Un tbe 201 Ii or August, our company of twenty-seven men started from Kugene City, to explore aud prospect a por tiou of the country east of the Cascade mountains. Our road lay up the middle fork of tbe Willamette, crossing it about twenty-one times. It then leares the river aud ascends the mountains, eucouutericg but one hill of any difficulty, in all the dis tance from the settlements to the summit. There is some beautiful country about thirty miles above tbe settlements. It is abont twenty firo miles from the settlements to the summit of the mountains. We had no instruments with us, by which we could take the altitude of the pass, but there was plen ty of snow there when we passed over it, the 21 ih of August. We stayed all night oa the summit, and suffered iu couscauence I of the cold. The descent on the east is . r.-i :t r cnri. it mwui iuunctu uiun uuu me suiumit to the Des Chutes, and the road is good all the way. The source of tbe Des Chutes is in a large, beautiful lake, which lira euibocomed in the mountains, a few miles south of the road. Auothcr similar lake north of the road, is the source of an other branch, which unites with the branch first mentioned, and forms the main river. We traveled down the rirer about seventy- five miles, a cousiderable part of this dis tance, (say oue third) through a3 beautiful, and rich a country as I ever saw. The soil is richer about tbe forks of the Des Chutes, cast of the three sisters, than any I bare seeu in the Willamette alley. e camped on the East Des Chutes, Angsst 29th. 1 was much disappointed when 1 saw this stream. Instead of a bold, twist running stream, it quite sluggish, aud is considerably im pregnated with a'.kali. Its banks are gene rally corcrod with small willows. It may n truth be said of it, tliat iroia its moulu, to uear its source, at uows itirougn a cauon. The bluffs are high and precipitous, and it is generally a troublesome and difficult job, either to get to, or away from the rirer when you desire it. The couutry on the west side of the stream, and between it and tbe main rirer is a large dry plain, corcred with w ild sago and Juniper trees. I saw sage elcren or twelre leet uign, and as large near tue ground as a man's body. On the Last and North of this river, the plain is very gene rally covered with the finest quality of bunch grass. This is an excellcut grazing district. As wo ascended tlie river, tue country oc eanic mountainous, and by this time we were making our way throHgh a bed of very bro ken, rugged mountains, luese extend some thirty-five or forty miles. After leaving the mouutains we again encountered suge plains, and having made one day's travel, the majority of the coinpuoy got discour aged, and voted to return home. Ou our return, we struck the Des Chutes at the mouth of the Taih, about a X. W. course from tho place where we turned back, aud distant from it about one hundred aud forty or fifty miles. Iu tho mountains on tne jjcs uuutes, there are many iudicaiious of gold. li e found some here at tiro or three different points, lint wnctner it exists in sunicieni quantities to justuy any one to go inert io dig for it, I cauuot tell. The country is a hard ono to prospect. Ine oed rocK lies docp, and we did uot reach it, at any place where we dug. lut H is but just to state that there waa uo digging doue, except in three or four places. Tho bearers hare built so many dams, that we could uot dig near the creeks, in fact tuis wuoie country seems to bo the paradise of cayotas, beav ers aud rattle snakes. Now, what are we to think when such meu as Mr. Ilerrcu, of Marion county, Mr. James McNairy, of Clackamas county, and others, equally as good meu as iuey, cei- taioly did Bud gold tuere iu mo year isi For one, I must say that I do uot doubt thpir wnrd. I fullr believe that they did find, either gold, or something else which they believe to be gold. And yet we weut to the place described to us by Mr. Herreo. But he told us the water was ranuiug south; we found it runuing north. In every other particular wo found crery thing as he de scribed it to us. My opinion is, that Mr. Herreu is him self mistaken, as to the locality of the place where he found gold. Mr. McNairy, as I am informed, says that the place where he saw gold is beyond the waters of the Des Chutes, and, indeed, several others hare told me the same thing. From all the premises before me, I am myself fully persuaded that there is plenty of gold somewhere in that country, and if I can raise a company of ten or twelve men next summer, to go with me, I will go again. I would like to start about the 1st of June, aud take provisions for ten or twelve weeks. I have written this while Betting up at night, watching my sick chil dren, and huve not time to transcribe it; therefore I will thank you to correct any error you m-.iy see iu it. II. II. IIENDRIX. A SHsrt Patent Vera BT DOW, 1. My text for to day is contained in these words: "Mysterious elnmnnt, oh, water! tlion Art part and parcel of mvself, and all That appertains to earth." Mr Hearers: For the last two minutes I hare been away from mrsdf, on an important mission. I hare been npon an interesting wild goose chase after a fugitive idea. Perhaps some of you hare, more thau once, tried to coax home a truant thought or idea hare had it just pop its head into your memory, and then be off for good. It's very aggravating not that the thing is of much consequence in itself, but because you have made up your mind to its capture. Let it go; I can proceed without it, or any relations. Words ten thousand thanks to their iuvenior I can still command by pla toons, companies, reginieuts, brigades and divisions. My carnaqneous brethren: Water is a singular element. Like the air, it 13 in real ity both invisible and intangible, and yet pos sessed of most marvelous power. Like the air, you think you see it, but you do not; you imagine you feel it, but you don't, only oy its iorce or pressure, it is periectiy transparent, and therefore, you can see through its mystery just as well as I can- luis neat little earth which we hare the honor end happiness of peopling, is terra queous composed of land and water and we two legged mortals, are the biped terra piaa that crawl npon its surface. About three-fourths of it is nothing but water: the other fourth matter what kind of matter it matters not. Now, my friends, there is a great mystery about water, as you raar per ceive when you happen to get two much of t mixed witu your punch. Where there 15 so much water and so little land, voa would naturally suppose that a very poshy mess would be the result; but suck wouldn't be the case. Your own bodies are also three- quarters water and yet they are considerably urmer ttiau new made mush. Herein lies the great mystery of the tultile fluid. As water, my brctLren, is the principle ingredient in tie human system, we ere led to inquire as to what constitutes the minor portion. That depends altogether upon cir cumstances. An Englishman is principally mntton and water. The Irishman is made np of potatoes, po theen and water. The Scotchman consists cf oatmeal and water. The Frenchman is egg omglette, frog and water. The Spanish and Portuguese are olive oil, vinegar and water. Tbe Dutchman is head cheese, sour krout and water. The Down Easters all pork and beans and eider. The Greenlander is w hale blubber, seal fat and water. The drunkard is whiskey and water. All the charming sisterhood especially the young portion are sugar and water. And, lastly, tbe whole of fopdom is no thing but soft-sawder, milk aod water. So you see, my living sponges, that how ever much your components parts may vary, the water pure water is thar, and always prevails. Newborn babe?, however, don't become aqneons until they have been long enough iu the world to absorb some of its moisture; and that is the reason why their earliest infant squalls are unaccompanied by tears. Tery old people also become Tery dry nuts for the Death to crack. My friends, I believe in baptism by both immersion and spriukling. A good all-over wash carries off an equal amount'of discom fort, dirt and siu. It lsareligousduty to look after the welfare of the bodv to keep it well saturated, and thereby make it a com fortable residence for the amphibious soul. A vast amount of water is daily evaporating from your perishable bodies; and if you don t see that tliey bare fresh and frequent sup plies, to -keep up the proportion (three to one. you will repent in dirt and ashes be fore the dry season is over. O, ye of little hydrostatic faith! how often must you be re minded that, for the salvation of your corpo real systems, a great deal more water is re quired than hog and hominy. Water, my brethren, has its antipathies It disdains to associate with oil; yet when they meet no fuss is raised, but a cold and solemn silence is maintained. But water and fire are sworn euemies. When they clash together, what a terrific struggle en sues! Sometimes fire gains the mastery, and then water has to mizzle evaporate and leave not even a mist behind, llien asrain water comes off triuniphaut and where is the fire? Emphatically "extra guished." But I tell you, my friends, what I am ready to do. I am willing to stake a year's salary against- a wind-broken mule that, let the fire companies of San Francisco proceed to Tophet with their machines, and that fire which has been burning from the beginning of eternity would be got under in an amazing short space of time'. . Let ns pray that they may go.there, sooner or laterl And then let us siug pea'nsiu praise of water. Water, .brethren, sprinkling from the fountain, is the emblem of 'Purity, when it comes in the form of rain, it is emblematical of Justice; and when descending as dew, it is the prettiest picture cf Gentleness to be fvuud iu the gilt-edged rolume of Nature. But as a general cleauser, there is nothing equalto.it iu tho world. The man who takes a bath every day, and imbibes an abundance of pure water, must be both phys ically and morally cleansed iu epite"bf him self. I don't see" how it is possible for him to remain long either foul-skinned, foul mouthed, or foal-hearted. The world once became so foul as to offend in the nostrils of Heaven, and nothing but a ccld bath saTed it from a mortal gangrene. I sometimes now think that another uuiversal ablution will be necessary to its final salvation. God speed the water companies 1 Speaking of the great freshet, my friends, reminds me that that was tbe first rain that erer fell upon the earth. It must have been so, for if it had ever rained before a rainbow wonld have been seen at some time or other. The philosophy of the thing is this: that when the earth was made, it con tened all tbe water in itself the heavens were as dry ns a baker's oven. Well, of course evaporation naturally took place; but it required some hnndreds of year?, by this slow process, to fill the celestial ocean to overflowing. Now, something happened to give way during the filling -ap of the cloud ocean above; and, consequently, when it did rain, it came down Kersieathl and mightily astonishing to everybody who happened t be a little too late for the Ark now mind, I tellyoul But 1. 1 us stop philosophizing, and think upon our latter ends; so that when the final cata!ysi3 takes place, and three quarters of our mortal bodies shall have evaporated to heaveu, we may hope that the immortal spirit has kept it company. So mote it bel ;u1upr flame irltta m Ulrt tie First Time. We were between 1G and 17 years of age when the ereot about to be related trans pired, aud as a description of our personal appearance at that time is absolutely essen tial to the point of our story, we will give it as concisely as the subject will allow. la reference then to that period, to say that we were green iu the nsual acceptance of that term, would gire the reader but a poor idea of the figure we displayed. Ilatber imagine a tall, lean, cadarerous, 6warthy looking chap, with legs like a pair of tongs, a coun tenance about a9 expressire as a plate of Dutch cheese, a mouth that came Tery near making an island of all the bead above it, a face covered with furze that looked very much like the down on a newly hatched gos ling, with a gait that wonld lead a beholder to suppose that we designed to travel down both sides of the 6treet at the same time. aud you have a correct daguerreotype of Jeems io tbe seventeenth year of his a?e. One dark gloomy night 111 the month of December, we chanced to be at a "spelling school"' not a thousand miles from Baldswin- ville, while our eyes fell on a "fairy form" that immediately set our susceptible heart iu a blaze. She was sixteen, or thereabouts. with bright eyes, red cheeks, and cherry lips, while the auburn ringlets clustered in a wealth of profusion around her beautiful head, and her person, to our ravished imagi nation, was more perfect in form and outline than the most faultless statue ever chiseled by the sculptor's art. As we gazed, oar feeliDgs, which had never aspired girlward before, were fully aroused, and we determin ed to go home with her that night or perish in the attempt. As sooa as school was dismissed, and our "lady-lore" suitably bonneted and cloaked. we approached to offer our serrices as con templated, and we then learned an import- nut lesson, viz: the difference between re solving aoJ doicg. As we neared her, we were seized with a partial chbdncss green, red, tiuc aai Tettow lights flashed npoa onr VISiUI!, UU HI I T TTI I f 1 1 - - I JJ"t. o.-:t!.ps in a nhantasmagoria--our knees smote, together like Belsbazzar's when he discovered the handwriting cpon the wall. while our heart thumped with apparently as much force as if it were dnviug tenpensy nails into our ribs. We, in the meantime, taauaged to mumble over something, which is perhaps known to the Recording Acgel, but certamiy is not to ns, at tne same urns poking out our elbow as nearly at right an gles with our body, as our physical confor mation would admit. Tue night air blew keenly, which serrcd in oae sort to revive us, and as our senses relumed, what were onr emotions on finding the cherished object of oar first lore clinging to our arm with all the tenacity a drowuing man is said to clutch aistraw. Talk of ely sium, or sliding down greased rainbows, or feeding ou German flutes, what are snch "phcliuks" in comparison with those that swelied oar bosom uigh unto the bursting of our waistcoat buttons I Oar happiness was sublime sublimity sublimely sublimated, aud every person who has felt tbe divine throbbing of a fledged lore principle, fully understands the world of bliss coached iu the fourth, fifth, sixth and ssvecth words at the comaicccemcnt of this sentence. Weil, we passed on pleasantly towards our Sally's home, talking of lore and dove, aud "dart and hart," until so courageous . had we become, that we actually proposed to go iu and sit awhile, to which our Dalci nea very graciously assented. Alas for us! how s kid we were to be reminded that "the course of true lore nerer did run smooth." Sally had a brother cf some ten summers who accompanied us all along the way, and who was in wonderful high spirits at the idea of his sister's having a bean, and would walk around us frequently, giggling in the height of "his glee, cd eyeing us as closely as if oarself and Sally were tbe world-renowned Siamese twins, aud be was takiccj his first look. Bill, by the way, was a chubbed, stubble headed boy, whose habiliments would hare made the fortune of aDy two dealers iu mop rags. At length we reached the bars, and while we were letting them down, Bill shot past us, aud tore for the house, a3 if pursued by a thousand bulls of Bashan. He flur-g oiea the door with a bang, and exclaimed at the top of his voice: "Mother! mo.her! Jim Clark is comin' hum withtSallI" "Is heP screamed the old woman in re ply; "wal, I declare! 1 didn't thu;k the sap head knew enough P HaidwinsvUle Gaz. iSS- There appears to be an increasing demand for divorces in San Francisco aad iu fact throughout the State. The fault is with the women, to a great extent. They passed for more than they were worth, ia most iastaaces, when they were married that is married above their positions, as they were able to do, owing to the demand for the article. The cheat ascertained, dis satisfactiou ensues at the close cf a short honeymoon, and divorce is the remed. An other reasoa "suckers" are produced alarmingly too soon after marriage, to suit the tastes of captious and phar&saxal socie ty. This is probably owing to the fecundity of the climate, but orer-partical iUsoaodi hare been known to find fauU thereat, aud petitioi to be divorced, whicj is somsuoie granted. These little affairs seem to have occurred oftener this year than before, he oca it may be argued that a winter is to occur, prehapa. 1