BY DAVID OVER. I f [ r r {• jhi r t r t]. IJCR DimnMAM'S PHILO^IPII) SU UST NEAR MAC KAY. HT JOHASSES CRASS vos p. KUOCPI.ES. I've a tu'l.ir vot I spend, Bat I've nothing for to lend, For I nefer borrows noting, don't you so®, Yobn Scii raid t; I've a pretty lid ile frow, Unl've vrien is in plenty now, (in ,i Ired ly c'ml Iron at talne knee, Yohn Schmidt; 1 haf noting to desire, V*n 1 sit peside mine vire, I'D f s-'hmoke tuineaelf into a sleeping state, Yohn Schmidt; f love der lager bier, Yen its good, un isn't dear, L can triuk 'bout sixty glasses in a day, Ynfm Schmidt; But bate der liquor law. (Soocb a ding I nefer saw,) Vat would (like cur schnapps un 1 iger a'.l a ray, Yobn Schmidt; 1 love a Dcutshcii fong, 'l'out a hundred v.-rses long, Mit agb r'H fir a tousand voices, to, Yobn Schmidt; But I bate del snuffle psalm, Vot isnt't rort a kroutscr , 1' r to sing it makes your vace grow long un pine, Yobn Sc! midt, 1 lovo some Dentschen food, Yawl I likes it butty goo 1, lUr spccli un samkrout, un salat slaugh, Yohn Schmidt; But I hate der milk of sctrwiil, Und der meat dey nefer bill, r it dies Ictore dey've time to hit a knock, Yohn Schmidt; 1 love (K r brctty ff mors, Vot grows in garten bowers, Der cab. age, un der radtcah, un der beet, Yohn Sci.miat: Un i hates der toad un frogs. Un der sausage made of dogs, L" efvn liing vt isn't good to eat, Yohn Schmidt; Now I've got a littl • nhtore, Un I sit peToFe der door, Ua I sells der prartdjr schnapps tin pretzel cake, Yohn Schmidt, Un I dinks I'll putty soon liaf a lager bier saloon, Un den vot plenty money 1 will mike, Yohn Schmidt; TJn von enough I've got, I viii buy (-a h>o* • un lot." Una •'Con.-.-r grocery" I "i have beside, Yo'm Schmidt; Pen so happy I vill be, Mit minesehil iron lv mine knee, Mit wine money, und mine firovr, but mid uO priie, YolioSchmidt. Cannin-The Eaithly and the Heivemy. Am—-'O Canaan, bright Canaan." Thou art "the glory <>f all lands," Tix-u pleasant earthly Canaan ; But there's "a house not m ide with hands.'" .More "glorious" far than Canaan. O Caiman, bright Canaan, The pleasant *arthly Canaan— Its regions 1 lest are tyjoes of rest, In Heaven, the Christian's Canaan.' litre tigs and wheat and oil about! 1, Here milk and honey flaw; While ancient huts with vines are crown'd, Where palm and cedar grow, O Canaan. h.c. But winter o'er her glory glides. And strips the earthly Caanan, While "everlasting spring abides" Throughout the heavenly Cinoan. O Canaan, bright Canaan, Wcre bound for the land of Canaan; From soriow free we'll rest in thee. Oh Heaven, the Christian's Canaan. Blessed be Tliy Xante Forever. Bless* d be Thy name forever. Thou ol life the guard and giver: Thou canst guard Thy creatures sleeping: Heal the heart long broke with weeping. God of stillness and of motion, Of the desert and the ocean. Of the mountain, rock and river. Blessed be Thy name forever. Thou wko aluuiberest not nor sleep est.. Biess'd are they Thou kindly keepest; God of evening's parting ray, Of midnight's gloom and dawning day. That rises from the azure sea, I.ike breathings of eternity; God of life! that fade shall never, Blessed be Thy name forever. , - THE >IAN IN LOVE. —Thackery says that "Vt hen a man is in love with any woiuau in a family, it is astonishing how fond he becomes of every person connected with it. He ingra tiates himself with the maids; he is blaod with the butler, he interests himself with the foot man; he runs on errands for the daughter he gives and lends money to the yonrig g >n at col lege; he pats little dogs which he would kick otherwise; he smiles at old stories which would make bim break out in yawus were they uttered by any one but papa; be bears with the old maiden aunt; he beats time when darling little Fanny perforins her piece on the piano, and smiles when wicked, lively lit'le Bobby upsets the coff o over his shirt." (JENUINK FOOLS.—Ho who wipes his nose on a nutmeg grater, atii picks bis teeth with a razor. She who says "no" to the proposal of a gen tleman when she has reached the age of thirty. tie who gets so drank at night, that he puts hi* clothes to bed and hangs himself on the back of a chair. She who rubs her cheeks with brickbats in ortl-r to give theui a color. He who puts on his hat, takes up bis cane, and starts out iu pursuit of an honest and dis interested politician. Hue wuo pinch'-s and slaps a child to make it quit bawliog. - . . * ' ' \ - '* ' " A Weekly Paper, Devote! to Literature, Politics, the Arts, Sciences, Agriculture, &c., So—Terms: One Dollar and Fifty Cents in Advance. AGRICULTURAL. jtHE POTtTe-ROT—HOW IT Hit BE PRETESTED. The general prevalence, all over the country, of the disease known as the potato rot, has greatly impaired the value of the crop, and prevented many fanners from cultivating to the sauie extent as wis formerly dona. B<> serious has been the evil to the agricultural interest that both rnca of science and the practical far mers batro given much attention to investi_-ititi-' the cause of the potato disease, and to the dis c irery of a remedy. A day, or two since,,we received a letter from Irwin Sampson* E-q., a very intelligent farmer who has tilled the soil all the days of his life, in the rich country near New Wilmington, in Lawrence county, in which he gives us what he claims as a simple, and cite

uiude the disc very three years ago, iu ;t clear ing, j ist made and planted with potatoes. lie observed that where the roots of tLe potato came irt contact with ashes, the hill was entire ly rotten, but that it adj doing hills where the roots came iu contact with the old rotten ~A wood of the clearing, every potato v, is hour:J and dry. in hills where thpre was neither ashes nor decayed oak wd, the potatoes w re about one-half rotten. Taking the hint fnuo these observations, Mr. Sampson has tested flu discovery for three )■a;, n-t !<- T-r-r-r found a diseased potato in the hi!is where the pulverised oak wood has been applied, and in patches where there were no decayed potatoes, the roo*s were fouud to grow larger and heal thier, and of a better flavor where the oak wood wis uved, th .n where it was not. Mr 8. is. but a plain practical farmer, and does not at tempt to give a scientlfi • reason for this result but simply announces the fact, and the result of his experiments. It is well known that the oak possesses high antiseptic as 1 other peculiar qualities, as tannin enters largely into its com* position It i.- for sc*icntisa men to ascertain what is the peculiar principle which produces this result. The farmer can av 11 iitnelf of the knowledge of the fact that it does prevent the rot, for Mr. Sampson's statements are ful ly it liable. Every one who cultivates the soil in this pirt of the c untry at least, can readily obtain rotten oak wood in sufficient quantities to make the experiment for himself with all she potatoes be may plant. The discovery i> t.n important one, and we hope our readers in the country districts wiil try the experiment this seas persoos who do not understand the use of them. Tbey are best put on with loops at the corners, and pins; and with a little ex perience in handling, the ordinary force upou a farm in haying time will be able to secure a morning's mowing against all showers that give any notice of their coming. It is very little work to make them, they need no painting and they do protect the bay. Get them in .season ibat ycu may not have to sulfur the upbraid ings of conscience, when you find yourself BEDFORD, PA., FRIDAY, JUNE 18, 1858. -•aught with -ix t ns of hay down, all wet and j mouldering, for the want of a few dollars' | I worth of cotton cloth, which is now sold at an j unusually low price — Jhmericin vlgricultur- \ TOMATOES. A correspondent of the Geo- i nessee Farmer, gives his mode of growing to- j : matoes. He forwards bis plants in a hot bed j or green house and grows them in pots until a foot or a foot and a half high, turning them out about :Le third week iu May, and plants j thetn three feet apart in rows When planted, j he drives down a few stakes, to mako a trellis. I The ground should be dug deep and made rich j with manure, and a spooful of guano mixed | with the suil around cash root. We quote: hen they have grown sufficiently l°ng to tie . to the trellis, I select two or throe of the lou | gest shoots and tie them loosely to the trellis i onttirf|> away all other sat ill literals which may grow ou the main branchs.s. I let these : main bran -bes grow until they Lave come in flower, thenl piuch out the top,one joint above the fruit, leaving the leaf entile I then allow it to go on again until it has flowered, and set Mother Lunch of fru:t, when this is pinched out one loaf a Give the bunch, the same as the ! first, and so on of all the rest, taking care to jjj cut all the la tends which may grow oa the ii main branches down to the axels of of the : leaves entire. If any one will take this little extra trouble, he will be amply repaid, and absolutely astonished at the imuieuse cluster of fine large tomatoes he will have. If planted in a favorable sisuitton, they wiil ripen atleart as early as th:>*e grown in any other way out of doors, and frequently three days or a week earlier. When ripe they will hang longer on • the vines without decaying. The situation can hardly be 100 sunny. Deep, light loamy soils I suits theui best. PAF.PAKK rocn TKEES AGAINST MICK Ihe mice made sad havoc with fruit trees last wiuter, and will probably*be at their old tricks agtin next, if no preventive is adopted. We iw mtu: nHiaiu 'united •mtwre ! *. jt'Cf, and again give she e'baw a j-->g in r< garJ to it. Put some protection around them, such as cloth, bitch bark, tea chest lead, aud the like. One man says that even old newspapers tied mound, will keep them. We don't know how that is, but we have uo doubt that strips of tarred paper, such as Is used on roofs, would be effectual aud last for many vests. We pte sutne, also, that a wooldiog of oakum around the trunk, would protect the trees. This might be suffered 'o remain during the summer, as the fibers would give way so as to allow the trees to expand by growth — Alaine Farmer. HOJli: WITHOUT I MOTHER. BY WHABNCLIFF. "Mother, mother, mother !" sobbed a sweet voice, in agonizing tones. ' It was dark and i cold in the low, dismal attic; but close pressed | to the frosted windows lay the face of Sammy ! Hauurz. His soft hair hong over his tearful face, and his thin hands clasped the rough window-sill, and his whole frame shook, as the keen blast found its. way through the ereviccs around tLe stone chimney. Ii was it sound you would never forge!; those half-sobbed, half toomod words—"Mother, mother, mother!"— You would have felt thai the lit tie heart was ready to burst with its unutterahh weight of sorrow, and that grief might be the companion of childhood as v.ell as of old age. Below stairs the fire leaped and spaikled, and crept gaily over toe logs in tho fire-place, for you tray fin l lire-places iu iuglchook even now. Everything, was in order, and Mrs. Haunts, j the stepmother of Sammy, was sitting placidly , before the fire, smoothing the folds of a clean j apron, and in a self-satisfied manner stroking ! a tabby cat which ly in her :ap. lier three children were sitting cosily in lit- I tie chairs by the fireside, aud Mr. Huuntz was talking with a brother who had just arrived to j spend Thanksgiving with them. The wind blew fiercely without, aud once when an unusual tempest seemed to shake the j tonudation of the house, the father turned sud- j denly to his wife, aud said "Whore is Sammy ?" "Gone tj bed," said she, tardily. "What made him go so early 1" asked Mr. I | liauntz. Ar.d iu a tone which precluded far- j ! thcr inquiry, his wife answered : "Because he was too lazy to sit up, I sup- ' jpose." For a few moments Mr. liauntz looked off vacantly into a corner of tha room, and then I offering a pipe to his brother, seemed to forget ! that Sammy had been mentioned. Eight years before, Mr. liauntz had beeu sitting by tha same fire side with his first wife, gentle Sarah Lee. Sammy was upon his fath er's lap, and Sarah, with her head upon her husband's shoulder," was talking of what they would do, when Sammy would bo old enough tc have a Thanksgiving cf his own. Perhaps Mr. Huuntz's tneiuory was bringing out those old pictures in a fresh light; and he may bavo' paused to wonder if he had changed since that ; wife of his first choice and purest love sat be- j side him. However it was, no one know. Men are often asbauied of their best and noblest j thoughts, and hide them for fear they be called unmanly. i | \\ bother the old adage may be true or not. ] that "A mother's the same, all the days of her! j life, but a father chauges when he gets a uew | wife," we do not pretend to say;, but it was a i fact that the second Mrs. llauntz and her ebil j dren wore apparently first ia the thoughts and j affections of Mr. Ilaunti. The morrow was Thanksgiving, and from ! early morn had Mrs. Hauntz been busy prepa ring for the big dinner of the coming "day. * More than two months before, she hud partly promised Sammy, that "if he was a good boy, and behaved himself," be" might go to bis grandfather L°e s to spend Thanksgiving.— And the motherless child had planned and"ho .pod, and beeu happy upon the events of that day. He had many times gone to bed supper lev*, and never cried at all, because he felt asleep thinking of the dinner lie should get at his grandfather's. Although but two miles away, his stepmoth er seldom allowed htm to go there, because as she averred, " They set him up against her, and end® bim uglier than ever." But once in a while, she was obliged to allow liitn to go, for fear that "people would talk about it." Hhe jjvut a first class member of the church iu lo flekook, and her praise for charitable deeds, and kindness to the poor, was in all the neigh- t yor hood. Bhc was one of those christians whose -'right hand knows what the left hand •dootb, and whose religion was for the praise •c? m.n, rather than the approval of God: I fr.d whose judgment 1 leave for a just Judge! > pronounce at a coming day. f|- Many a time had poor Bau:my bad a box vd i while the minister looked out of the win >w, and been ecut supperlcss to bed. while #e trld 'Be visitors that "he was sick," and ' he slept shiveang under a few old bl un . Jets >0 the garret, she displayed a snug warm i bedroom below, as "Sammy's room." Thro' ?U luglcbcok she was proverbial as a "modal step-mother," and none but he who watches |ver motherless children knew of all tint poor g/.uiaiy suffered. No human friend knew of wrongs done to his chiidish nature: of the tersh repressing of ail ezuberar.ee and jov And of the biuerues.*_ which grew up in bit j icart tuvraid all but his giaudf .thcr: 110 was a-c his m iiner; and upon her father's ' Uc b ; ;eu t,)IJ by the old man how gentle aud lovely she was, and that she wa* ! With the angels now, and be a motherless boy. | S.> thc- joung child's heart clung to th old |an who was kind to him, and the great bolli '■*** Roc. Varar was that upon which he could i got wwayTr"'ra trie ** u .-, a &to ?. Ci ,4Ss voire, and the fear of her hand—when be could leave the chili fireside at home, where lie" always sal behind the new family group, and would climb upon the lap of old Mr. Lee, and with Lis soft curls lying close to the white hair of the old man, listen to the stones told of his mother, and then have a ufce supper upon the round table drawu close to the fire. This year he had anxiously waited for the dr-, leaves t > drift through the woods in October, an J for the first November so >w to come, because at Thanksgiving he should vi-it his grandfather. And ;bc day before had coaae at List. 110 was up before ihe stars were out of sight, an 1 had a blazing fire upon the h-:arth; tea kettle boiling, and the potatoes in. All day long his little feei had pattered busily here and there—to the barn, to 'the well, down cellir, up stairs, in the pautry, and there surely never was a housewife who needed m>re waiting upon thao Mrs.fi.untz, and Simmy did it at| C His Sogers smarted w i;h cold, when he picked up great baskets of chips; his b:ck ached when ho lugged in armful after armful of great hard wood sticks fur the kitchen and "spare rooui" fire place: his hungry stomach craved a piece oi the smoking pics, which be had to drag frou the brick oven, in i he longed for one doughnut from (lie heaping panful ho h id to earrv away. His little feet and sleuder arms were verv tired, but he never complained a word, ani to"all his mother's provoking taunts, and needless fault finding, be was silent; but when all was done —and it was nine o'clock—he coulJ not help Asking her if he was to g> to his grandfather's to-morrow; and when ho hoard her say, "No ! 1 want you at home," ho could hardly totter up stairs. When there he dropped intr- an old chair, and nieaned, oh, so sadly ! "Mother, mother, mother I" llow miny childish hearts moan mother, mother! How nnuy hearts ache and break for lack of a mother's love? All over the world orpb&ued children send up a wail for Mother! Love! aud Heaven! Bitter indeed is the cry, but does uot God hear it, and shall he not at last justly reward the oppressors of little children ? Thanksgiving ruorniug dawned clearly aud i brightly upon luglehook, but Mrs. Liauntz j 'waited on herself that day, after calling tho j boy many times, she went upstairs, and foun i him sitting, white arid chill, by the window, with tears frozen upon his cheeks, aud his soft hair woven with the frozen work on the glass. Little Sammy had gone to hold his Thanks giving with the angels. From the Philadelphia Daily -Veicj. A Slate Convention for the People— Withdrawal of Mr. Todd's Caii. It will be seen by tho correspondence published in another part of to-day's paper, that tho sugges tions made in the News of Tuesday last, in regard to the "basis of union" for a State Convention in opposition to tlie corruptions and misrule of the ! Locofocos, arc practically .adopted iu every essen- i tial feature, and that tho chairmen of the differ- j ent State Organizations composing tho opposition ' to the present National Administration, have adopt- ! eti the recommendation of the consolidated Com-; miners of this city, calling a general State Con i vent ion on the 14th of July next, at ILurisburg. j That the action of Mr. Swocpe iu this matter, j will be cordially endorsed by the Americans of the State, we have no doubt. Indued, we know that it was at the solicitation of a number of the most prominent members of our party tbat he has thus acted, as well as by tho directions ol the mem bers of the Committee of which he is Chairman.— Any other course would have been suicidal, re;; .It ing inevitably in the defeat of the great cardinal' principles which every member of the American 1 r Organization has at heart. Mr. Swoop a has zod ously guarded the distinctive interests of the Ame rican Party, refusing, as wo know, to go into the I movement on any basis that woutl not recognize I th Cardinal features of Americanism, and m iking the withdrawal of Mi. To it's Call, a condition i precedent to hit action iu the premises. We have now a basis of union and a programme on which, as we rem irive i a few days since, th; en tire people, as opp esed to the Buchinin dynasty, eun rally, and which every American in the State caii heartily and cor.liiify embrace as the means which is to rid us of the te rt ible incubus which ha* been fastened upon us by the blind adoration of Loco Focoism. We shall go into this contest upon a platfottn embodying the principle of the Crittcnden-Mout gornery amendment, an 1 the two prominent fea tures ot Americanism, viz: Opposition to foreign la ™Ci i ICe i tb*: protection of American industry. With such issues before us, with such raiivingj cr:,-i as these* and with the cordial an I hearty sup*"- j port of the entire opposition of the State for tha j candidates who may receive the nomin ition of this ; Convention, there can he no fear of the result. The time lias come when Ihe people have deter- j mined to take into their own inu la the cure of the j evils with which they hive been curse J throughout j the adaiinistr.iti.in ot Franklin Pierce, and thus? far dming the term of Mr. Buchanan. Let our | friends then buckle on their attnor for a new con- j test, and when the time arrives to elect delegates j to this Convention, which will, of course, have the j confidence of every man in the State, unless he be j a Loco toco; let them select their best men to ! represent them in it. if we do this, ar. I are actu- ] ated by the same spirit which governed the opposi- j tion in Philadelphia in the late eitv canvass, we ' shall bur! from power and place in October next, ! tho unfaithful Congressmen who have tnisrepresen-! ted Pennsylvania, whilst wo shall at tho same lime I purify our State Administration, and pave the i way<4or a great success of truly American princi- i pies in 1860. WHY WE UNITE. The Americans of Philadelphia have on sev | eral occasions shown ari invincible detenuiua ; lion to refuse to unite with other parties, when : I here was any danger of a sacrifice of the great principles for which they have sa long and so pertinaciously contended. Uuder the most discouraging circumstance*, fjr tw > yea:> past, they have preserved their organization, when there was no immediate prospect of cs tablishing the measures far which they conten ded. Without the nanus to carry on a politi cal warfare, with every advantage on the part of their opponents, they refused to be coaxed, wheedled, or scolded from tho advocacy of measures which they deemed essential to the* preservation of the insti'.urioßs of our country, and necessary to the prosperity, improvement any! iu dependence of ihs l vple. i tic policy VOi'.TI iacy 0.^0nn.T0r.,,,, they wiii contend for still The political, com- j mereial, financial an 1 industrial independence < of our ccuutry is a.* d-ar to the American poo- pie tow 33 it has ever yet beet; and they ate as much determined to struggle for it now as they have been heretofore. The union of the people, which Ins now b:ea fonn J, iuvoire? no sacrifice of principle u;x>n the part of Ameri cans, arri will not require them to abandon their organization. The events of the pas! year have shown, more forcibly than ever, the . necessity for the establishment of an Atueri ■ can nationality, and the adoption of an Ameri can iudeslriial and commercial policy, to pro tect us from tho iutetfcrcucc and competition • of the nations of Euror>c. The great principle, that "the people shall have the right to form their own institutions," Americans- have ever been willing to support, and are glad to have all who desire the estab lishment of right and justice to uuite with (hem. The right of Americans to rule our country, and to protect it against foreign inter ference of every hind, and against the intro duction of immoral elements into our commu nity, we have not abandoned. The difference which the American party in I*so, was, in a great measure, one concerning the relative : importance of measures. We opposed the re ■ peal of the "Missouri Compromise" as much as any others, but we considered "Protection to American interests and resistance to foreign influence" as of primary importance. Others, carried away by the Sectional fever which spread over the land, were willing to yield ; everything else to oppose the outrages of the | ■ Democratic party. Americans were unwilling to adopt the sec- I j tloual platform of the Republicans, believing it; jtoto be injurious and unwise. Time has shown | that the conservative policy of the American . ! party was right; and when others are willing to f acknowledge it, and to unite in a common ef- j fort to resist the tyranny despotic Prcsi- j dent, we are not so unwise as to repulse them, j Time, we believe, will shew the necessity for I i adopting all our mensuiefs, and every day j brings fre*h, though sad proof to the people j that they cannot prosper under the unwise ! : system which now curses the country aud des- j troys the hopes of the people. The first duty of an American citizeu is to guard the liberties of his country with a jeal ous eye, and when the manifest evidence of a determination to pervert the powers conferred upon those who ad minister the government ap pear before his eyes, he caunot hesitate to adopt 1 practicable measures to resist such encroach- I mcnts. The despotic measures of .Mr. Bucb- j ansa are too palpablo to admit of dUpute, and no American who cherishes the free institutions of his country, oan hesitate as to his duty in such an emergency. The call for a "People's j Convention" in Pennsylvania rings ;he death ; knell in the ears of LocofocoLto. It has been ■ weighed in the balauce aud found wanting.— | Whatever errors men may have committed heretofore, it will surely be tegarded as tneri- I torious now, that they are ready to come up to i the work of rebuking the iniquities of Mr. Buchanan and his servant?.. Americans should be active and vigorous in rhir -Torts to strengthen their organization. No nsettious to arouse and encourage Ameri cans to renew their efforts for the establish ment of their principles should bonegleotel. i The time is propitious. The foieigu cohorts of ' Loco Focoktii hold possession of the Govero- VOL. 31, Mont, by dividing and distracting its oppo* Bents. Let "Amori ;an Nationality" be the watch word, an-J let us show that the spirit of the American people is as lively and as active now as it has ever bean The principles re advocate have passed I the ordeal of adversity, and are established in , the hearts of the people more firmly than ever. Fits common danger whieh impends over us, and threatens the very existence of free insti tutions, c ills in tones of thunder to every one who loves his country to take part in her de liverance—to restqre the H< public to its for mer gtory—to rid the Government of the Ym- Jals who are preying upon its vitals; and to se c-are thi prosperity and independence or* the nbhest and industrious men of America, is a work worthy of the best efforts of an eaergeiic and intelligent people. There are proud days in store for the "Great Kvoublia," if Ameri cans do their duty.— Philadelphia Daily A ewi. Wilson and Phiuaey are the leading mem bers of the Washington county bar. Sitting opposite OHO another at the dinner table—they are always opposite in practice at the bar iu the hotel—M ilaou was describing, the effects ot a speech he made a few eights before in the village where Puinuoy resides. "Indeed," said be, "I never saw the,peopb so filled with enthusiasm." "Filled with what f cried i'hinnev. "With enthusiasm." '•Oh, ah said Puinney, 4 'l .understand; but I never heard it called by jhat name be fore; we e a trade and democracy arc now one and the same thing. As for protecting and encouraging American labor, American enterprise, Ameri can commerce, agriculture a::d manufactures, the Democracy, which includes the Adminis tration, had rasher see every forge fire extin guished, every manufactory spindle and loom standing idle, every ship lying rotting at our wharves and every Lardy American thrown out of employment, as thej all are tore, and nude to give place to new recruits, especially if they are believers in the holy church and de mocracy; what a humiliating condition cur government bus come too. 1 have endeavored I'o introduce a measure having for its object home valuation, cash duties and requiring that they be made specific on iron end such o f Ler articles as would be practicable, so ss to prc vcut the enormous frauds that are perpetrated upon our revenue a; the same time injuring our own manufactures, and notwithstanding it was evidently necessary to do this to protect the revenue against frauds, this measure was objected to by the leading member of the Com mittee of Ways and Means, Mr. Letcher. — But, may I not as welt say at once that we can not expect any p. rmauent relief to our indus trial interests so long as the Democracy (i. e.) :bo slave interests, control the government. When ike people think proper to place a party in power, which is committed to the pro tective policy, that paity which passed the Tariff of '42, winch the Democracy wiped cut as soon as they could, though not until it had given life, animation and successful activity to the great industrial interests of the country, and covered our State with benefits and hits sings, I say, when the people will da this, then we may expect a period of prosperity to fal low, such as followed the passage of that T.u iff, and not until thou. The echoes of the rejoicings here and else where over the accomplishment ot ♦he English swiudle and attempted bribe, are coming back from the people, and nuking Buchanan and his paid flatterers tremble as did the Babylo nian King when he saw the handwriting on the wall. York has spoken, Indiuuapolis has spo ken, and Philadelphia has spoken, and neither of them in an uncertain voice. Philadelphia speaks in tones of thunder. The opposition to this ceutrai despotism here at Washington ate in excellent spirits, and manifest a most con ciliatory disposition. Tkcy- have noble leaders, gallant, able and patriotic. There is our true hearted, steadfast old friend Crittenden, who placed himself so high before the nation by his amendment to the Lecomptou Kansas Bill; and there, too, is Belt, who is so volt kuowu to the wholo nation, and ,Siuim:s, the friend and champion of the working-men, be being one himself, a working farmer; and the able and powerful Seward, the able defender of the rights and interests of free men and free labor " But 1 cannot uieotiou ali who have distinguish ed themselves in the Senate, such as Ilale, Wilson, Collauier, Foot, Fesseuden, Wade, Hamlin, &\ In the House we Lave also a host, but to name one and not another, would be invidious. Six Southern Americans stood with us through the trying fclruggle, as well m twelve of the Douglas Demoa.-ts, the number ot the apostles. O* those thai leturued to to. flesh pots in the day of trial, and f.he- Northern r dough-laces who basely abandoned their con stituents and the cause and interests of Free men to worship at the shriuo of p.over, ) m must excuse tae for not naming; the country knows tbetn, and it is to b) hop? i will reward