THE HUNTINGDON GLOBE, A DEMOCRATIC FAMILY JOURNAL, DEVOTED TO LOCAL AND GENERAL NEWS. &C. THE GLOBE. Circulation—the largest in the county 125.1111VEIDOTI PA-.:. Wednesday, January 19 1859. LANKS ! BLANKS I BLANKS I CONSTABLE'S SALES, ATTACFCT EXECUTIONS, ATTACHMENTS, EXECUTIONS, SUMMONS, DEEDS, SUBNENAS, MORTGAGES, SCHOOL ORDERS, JUDGMENT NOTES, LEASES FOR HOUSES, ;NATURALIZATION WKS, COMMON BONDS, JUDGMENT BONDS, ARRANTS, 'FEE BILLS, NOTES, with a waiver of the $3OO Law. JUDGMENT NOTES, with a waiver of the $3OO Law. ARTICLES OF AGREEMENT, with Teachers. MARRIAGE CERTIFICATES, for Justices of the Peace and Ministers of the Gospel. COMPLAINT, WARRANT, and COMMITMENT, in case of Assault and Battery, and Affray. SCLERE FACIAS, to recover amount of Judgment. COLLECTORS' RECEIPTS, for State, County, School, Borough and Township Taxes. Printed on superior paper. and for sale at the Oflico of the HUNTINGDON GLOBE. BLANKS, of every description, printed to order, neatly, at short notice, and on good Paper. New A.d-vertisemeuts. .fir Stray bull, by John Robb. .la- Mt. "Vernon Ball, by the Managers „Rai' A Farm at public sale by, Andrew Smith. &Ir. A Catalogue of new and popular Songs, Schottisches, Waltzes, Airs, Sc., fur sale at Lewis' Book, Stationery and Music Store. Pennsylvania Legislature. [Correspondence of The Globe.] MONDAY, Jan. 10.—SENATE,—Met at 3 o'- clock. Petitions were presented as follow : to authorize the voters of Northampton coun ty to vote on the removal of the county seat from _Easton to Nazareth, for a law to regu late the height of fences in the county of Schuylkill ; and for a new county out of parts of Crawford, Warren and Venango. The House bill abolishing the Canal Board was under consideration and passed the commit tee of the whole. A resolution authorizing the appointment of an additional assistant Door-keeper was offered and indefinitely post poned. HOUSE.—A resolution was passed authorizing the pUrchase for each Member, Clerk and assistant Clerk of the two llouses, a copy of Purdon's Digest and Sutherland's Manual. A bill was passed abolishing the office of sealer of weights and measures in the counties'of Lancaster and Franklin. TUESDAY. — SENATE.—Petitions were pre sented, praying the erection of a new county out of parts of Clearfield, Cambria, Indiana and Jefferson, to be called Pine. The reso= lution requesting the clergymen of 'Harrisburg to open each morning session of the Senate with prayer was considered and after a long and interesting debate was adopted by a vote of :24 to 6. The tariff resolutions introduced by Mr. Lawrence of Washington were refer red to a special committee. The Speaker an nounced the standing committees. The name of Mr. Wigton, representative from Hunting: don, appears as a member of the committees on "Ways and Means and on Printing. A pe tition from citizens of Cambria county was read contesting the seat of Thomas 11. Por ter, Dem., the sitting member from Cambria. A petition contesting the seat of Oliver Evans, democrat, representative from Philadelphia, was presented. The use of the Hall was granted for the delivery of Parke Benjamin's lecture for the benefit of the Citizen Fire Company, on nest Tuesday evening. Mr. Nill read in place a bill to exempt parsona ges from taxation, and Mr. Miller one giving Justices of the Peace power, with a jury of six, to hear and finally determine certain cases. A committee was selected in the case of David R. McClain, now sitting as a member from Philadelphia, whose right to a seat is con- tested. WEIDNESDAY.—SENATE.—A Committee was appointed, who, in conjunction with a com mittee from the House, shall examine a man ual prepared by Jacob Zeigler, late Clerk of the House. HonsE.—A bill was read erect ing a new county to be called Pine, out of parts of Clearfield, Cambria, Indiana and Jefferson. Bills were also read, relating to the collection of taxes in the several counties, to prevent the destruction of fish, relating to marriages. Several veto messages sent in by Governor Packer were considered, and on the question shall the bills pass notwithstand ing the objections of the Governor ? The veto was on the first, yeas, none ; nays, 94 ; on the next, yeas, 5, nays 86 ; on the next, yea, 1, nays, 91 ; on the next yeas, 3, nays, 88 ; on the • next, yea, 1, nays, 86. Here may be perceived how hasty' and inconsider ate our Legislature are in rushing through, at locomotive speed, bills of great impor tance. TnuRSDAY.—SENATE.—The bill introduced by Mr. Schell, to prohibit the circulation of bank notes of aless denomination than twen ty dollars, was reported as committed. Mr. Schell offered a resolution to institute an examination into the use of the franking privilege. An ineffectual attempt was made to authorize the appointment of an addition al Assistant Door-keeper for the Senate.— HousE.—Petitions were presented praying the erection of a new county out of parts of Erie, Crawford and Warren. A bill was read to incorporate a bank at Lewistown. FRIDAY.—SENATE.—Nominations were made of candidates for State Treasurer. Mr. Schell nominated John Scott, of Huntingdon. Ad journed until Monday. House.—The vote on three veto messages was taken, when they were almost unanimously sustained. The committee on accounts was authorized to ex amine into the alleged abuse of the franking privilege. SATURDAY.—Senate not in session. Noth ing of particular importance to the readers of the Globe, before the House. Cone of the note-worthy incidents of this session, is, that the Senate is opened every morning with prayer. The reneontre between Messrs. Church and Donavan. excited some interest, but the transaction is condemned 'by the better thinking people. Eli Slifer of T_Tnion county was elected State Treasurer to day. STANDING COMMITTEES OF TEE SENATE The Speaker laid before the House the an nual report of the State Librarian ; which was read by the Clerk. The Speaker announced the following stand ing committees of the house; which were read by the Clerk, Ways and Mea,ns---Messrs. Chase, Law rence, (Washington,) Smith, (Berks,) Mc- Dowell, Green, Thorn, Wilcox, Walborn, Wigton. Judiciary—Messrs. M'Clure, Irish , Goepp, Nill, Thompson, Ketchum, Chase, Gritman, Gratz. Pensions and Gratuities—Messrs. Dodds, Rose, Brodhead, Durbaraw, Zuller, llottens tine, Wolf. Claims—Messrs. Williams, (Bucks,) Hard ing, Laird, Wagonseller, Abbott, Witberow, Wolf. Agricultural—Messrs. Fearon, Bryson, Ber tolet, Shaffer, Galley, Dismont, (Bedford.) Education—Messrs. Foster, Kinney, Nill, Pugh, Styer, 11i11, Zoller, Graham, Smith, (Philadelphia,) Laird. Domestic Manufactures—Messrs. Bayard, Dodds, Warden, Peirce, Good, Mann, Walk er, Accounts—Messrs. 'Pinkerton, Williston, Shields, Barlow, Woodring, Pennell, M'Cur dy. Vice and Immortality—Messrs. Abbott, Graham, Oaks, Buyer, (Schuylkill,) Evans, Wood ring, M'Curdv, Rouse, Campbell. Militia System—Messrs. Wilson, Rouse, Neall, Wiley, Good, Rohrer, Harding. Election Districts—Messrs. Keneagy, Bal liet, Galley, Shields, Jackson, Eckman, Barns ley. Banks—Messrs. Lawrence, (Washington,) M'Clure, Smith, (Philadelphia,) Barlow, Pat terson, Mehaffey, Glatz, (Bucks,) Estates and Escheats—Messrs. Taylor, Wil liston, Smead, Rohrer, Wilson, Thompson, Rose. Road and Bridges—Messrs. Pennell, Stuart, Durbaraw, flottenstine, Quigley, Campbell, Walker. Corporations—Messrs. llumersly, Elh - naker,Quigley,Acker,Glatz,Price,Church, Fisher. Local Appropriations—Messrs. Wiley. (Bedford,) Boyer, (Clearfield,) Wood, Porter, Sheppard, Stoneback. Lands—Messrs. Acker, Stephens, Whit man. Neall, Miller, Custer, Stuart. Divorces—Messrs. "Hamersly, roster, Gray, Witherov, Gritman, Smead, Gratz. New Counties and County Seats—Messrs. Burley, Boyer, (Clearfield,) Fleming, Palm, Shaffer, Dismont, Mehaffey, Compare Bills—Messrs. Barnsley, Gray, Sheppard, Stoneback. Peirce. Library—Messrs. Church, Goepp,,lrish. Canals and Inland Navigation—Messrs. Patterson, Ramsdell, Warden, Oaks, Kenea gy, El(maker, Bayard. Railroads—Messrs. Walborn, M'Dowell, Thorn, Smith, (Berks.) Church, Lawrence, (Washington,) Styer, Evans, Burley, Ketch um, Wilcox, Price, Patterson. Printing—Messrs. M'Dowell, Ramsdell, Wigton. Public Buildings—Messrs. Green, Wagon seller, Kinney. Mines and Minerals—Messrs. Pugh, Tay lor, Fearon, Porter, Pinkerton, .Brodhead, Bryson, Fisher, WVileos, Buyer, (Sehuylkill,) Neall, Hill, Whitman. STANDING COMMITTEES OF TILE fl USE The Speaker announced the Standing Com mittees of the Senate, as follows Finance—Messrs. Turney, Randall, Welsh, Coffey, Gregg. J udiciary—Messrs. Bell, Brewer, Miller, Scofield, Finney. Accounts- , —Messrs. 'Wright, Gazzam, Tur nev, Baldwin, Fetter. 'E , 4tates and Escheats—Messrs. Welsh, Schell, Penney, Shaeffer, Palmer. Pensions and Gratuities—Messrs. Finney, Blood, Harris, Keller, Frazer. Corporations—Messrs. "Wright, Steele, Schell, Shaeffer, Gazzam. Library—Messrs. Brewer, Francis, Schin del. Banks—Messrs. Marselis, Schell, Gazzam, Keller, Myer. CAnals and Inland Navigation—Messrs, Steele, Myer, Blood, Thompson, Miller. Railroads—Messrs. Randall, Craig, Steele, Coffey, Finney. Election Districts—Messrs. Scofield, Mar sells, Parker, Thompson, Myer. Retrenchment and Reform—Messrs. Gaz zam, Nunnemacher, Bell, Yardley, Parker. Education—Messrs. Miller, Welsh, Schin del, Penney, Yardley. Agriculture and Domestic Manufactures-- Messrs. Fetter, Rutherford, Nunnemacher, Baldwin, Schindel. Militia—Messrs. Brewer, Blood, Fetter, Harris, Shaeffer. Roads and Bridges—Messrs. Nunnemach er, Baldwin, Fetter, Rutherford, Thompson. Cumpare Bills—Messrs. Myer, Keller, Wright, Francis, Yardley. Vice and Immortality—Messrs. Schindel, Francis, Palmer, Wright, Harris. Private Claims and Damages—Messrs. Schell, Craig, Steele, Shaeffer, Rutherford. Public Printing—Messrs. Keller, Palmer, Marselis, Yardley, Craig. Public Buildings—Messrs. Craig, Schell, Turney. New Counties and County Seats—Messrs. Blood, Turner, Keller, Gregg, Schell January 17th. FROM UTAII.--The Valley Tan of the 10th ult., reports cold weather at Salt Lake. It says:—"Within the past week several persons have frozen to death in this valley and in the kanyon adjacent. Mr. Lever, while coming from Camp Field in the stage, got out to walk and perished on the road. Two men whose names we did not learn, were frozen to death in Cottonwood ; another was found dead in Emigration kanyon ; and we learn that the mail Carrier, north, between this and Box Elder, was also frozen. Every person that arrives, no matter from what direction, has suffered severely from the cold and frost—bit ten feet, hands and ears, are the prevailing marks for the last few days." See advertisement of _Dr. Sanford's Liverlnvigorato‘r in another column. ger- See *advertisement of Prof. Wood' Bair Restorative in another column. The linntingdon County Agricultural So ciety met pursuant. to previous notice, in the Court House, on Tuesday evening, 11th President Jno. C. Watson in the Chair. The minutes of the Association since the last annual meeting were read by the Secre tary and approved. The Committee of Arrangements for the last annual Agricultural Exhibition, having requested permission to make a statement of their proceedings, were, on motion, allowed the privilege of making a report of the same, which report was accepted and ordered for publication in the papers of the County, fa vorable to the cause of Agriculture, who will insert the same gratis. The Society then proceeded to the election of officers, when, on motion of A. W. Bene dict, Esq., the present officers were continued for the coming year, as follows : PRESIDENT, Jot= C. WATSON of Brady Township. VICE PRESIDENTS, Eli Wakefield, Brady tp. Hays Hamilton, Franklin tp. John Rhodes, Henderson tp. Perry Moore, Morris tp. John P. Stuart, Oneida, tp. F. H. Lane, Huntingdon bor. John Porter, Alexandria bor. S. Robb, Walker tp. Richard Chilcott, Union, tp. 11. Isenberg Esq., Juniata tp. Maj. W.m. Moore, West tp. John Long, Shirleysburg bor. Geo. W. Speer, Shirley tp. K. L. Green, Clay tp. Wm. Hutchison, Warriorsmark tp. John Cresswell, Petersburg bor. Jas. Cree, Dublin - tp. A. C. Blair, Tell tp. Geo. Jackson, Jackson tp. Jos. Cunningham, Barree tp. Jas. Entrekin, Hopewell tp. Jas. Clark, Birmingham bor. Robert Madden, Springfield tp. Wm. A. Whittaker, Porter tp. Ralph Crotsley, Cass tp. Andrew Neff, Cromwell tp. • J. E. Orbison, Orbisonia bor. The following Vice Presidents were also elected to fill vacancies: John Griffith, Toad tp. , Levi Evans, Carbon tp. Col. J. Cresswell, Cassville bor. RECORDING SECRETARIES, R. McDivitt, Huntingdon. J. F. Ramey, Huntingdon CORRESPONDING SECRETARY, Geo. W. Speer, Shirley tp. LIBRARIAN, T. H. Cremer. Esq., Huntingdon. TREASURER, Geo. Jackson, Iluntingdon. The Committee appointed to visit the Far mer's Iligh School reported. Report receiv ed and Committee discharged. Committee appointed at a previous meeting to attend the State Fair at Pittsburgh, not being present, was, on motion, continued. On motion of A. W. Benedict, the Vice Presidents be instructed to receive from the officers of the Society, annual and life mem bership tickets, and make an effort to dispose of as many of them as possible prior to the next meeting of the Society in April, and that the officers be directed to have some of these tickets printed. Some remarks were made by F. 11. Lane, Esq. in favor of the Farmer's High School, calling the attention of the Association to the need of assistance for the promotion of this Institution, and soliciting further funds and subscriptions for this purpose. Some very appropriate remarks were made by the President on the importance of 'Hor ticulture, and recommending the subject to the consideration of the Society. When, on motion, Society adjourned to meet on Tuesday evening of the first week of the April Court. JNO. C. WATSON, President. R. MeDivlrr, Secretaries. J. F. RAMEY, Speech of Vice President Breckinridge, Delivered in the Senate Chamber of the United States, January 4. 1859, on the oc casion of the Removal of the Senate to the Nezo Hall. SENATORS : I have been charged by the committee to whom you confided the arrange ments of this day, with the duty of expressing some of the reflections that naturally occur in taking final leave of a chamber which has so long been occupied by the Senate. In the progress of our country and the growth of the representation, this room has become too con tracted for the representatives of the States now existing and soon too exist; and, accord ingly, you are about to exchange it for a hall affording accommodations adequate to the present and the future. The occasion sug gests many interesting reminiscences, and it may be agreeable in the first place to occupy a few minutes with a short account of the various places at which Congress has assem bled, of the struggles which proceeded the permanent location of the seat of government, and of the circumstances under which it was finally established on the banks of the Potomac. JUNIA.TA The Congress of the Revolution was some times a fugitive, holding its sessions, as the chances of war required, at Philadelphia, Baltimore, Lancaster, Annapolis, and York. During the period between the conclusion of peace and the commencement of the present government., it met at Princeton, Annapolis, Trenton, and New York. After the idea of a permanent Union had been executed in part by the adoption of the Articles of Confederation, the question pre sented itself of fixing a seat of government, and this immediately called forth intense in terest and rivalry. That the place should he central, having re gard to the population and territory of the Confederacy, was the only point common to the contending parties. Propositions of all kinds were offered, debated, and rejected, sometimes with intemperate warmth. At length, on the 7th of October, 1783, the Con gress being at Princeton—whither they had been driven from Philadelphia, by the insults of a body of armed men—it was resolved that .Agricultural Society. a building for the use of Congress be erected near the falls of the Delaware. This was soon after modified, by requiring suitable buildings to be also erected near the falls of the Potomac, that the residence of Congress might alternate between those two places.— But the question was not allowed.to rest, and at length, after frequent and warm debates, it was resolved that the residence of Congress should continue at one place ; and commis sioners were appointed with full power to lay out a district for a federal town near the falls of the Delaware. And, in the meantime, Congress assembled alternately at Trenton, and Annapolis ; but the representatives of other States were unremitting in exertions for their respective localities. On the 23d of December, 1784, it was re solved to remove to the city of New York, and to remain there until the building on the Delaware should be completed ; and, accord ingly, on the 11th of January, 1785, the Con gress met at New York, where they contin ued to hold their session until the Confedra tion gave place to the Constitution. The commissioners to layout a federal town on the Delaware, reported their proceedings to Congress, but no further steps were taken to carry the revolution into effect. When the bonds of union were drawn closer by the organization of the new govern ment under the Constitution on the 3d of March, 1780, the subject was revived and dis cussed with greater warmth than before ; it was conceded on all sides that the residence of Congress should continue at one place, and the prospect of stability in the govern ment, invested the question with a deeper in terest. Some members proposed New York as be ing "superior to any place they knew for the orderly and decent behavior of its inhabi tants." To this it was answered that it was not desirable that the political capital should be in a commercial metropolis. Others rid iculed the idea of building palaces in the woods. Mr. Gerry, of Massachusetts, thought it highly unreasonable to fix the seat of gov ernment in such a position as to have nine States of the thirteen to the northward of the place ; while the South Carolinians objected to Philadelphia on account of the number of Quakers, who, they said, con tin ually annoyed the Southern members with schemes of eman cipation. In the midst of these disputes the House of Representatives resolved: " That the per manent seat of government ought to be at some convenient place on the banks of the Susquehanna." On the introduction of a bill to give effect to this resolution, much feeling was exhibited, especially by the South ern members. Mr. Madison thought if the proceedings of that day had been foreseen by Virginia, that State might not have be come a party to the Constitution. The ques tion was allowed by every member to be a matter of great importance. Mr. Scott said the future tranquility and - well-being of the United States depended as much on this as any question that ever had or could come be fore Congress. And Mr. Fisher Ames re marked that every principle of pride and honor, and even of patriotism, were engaged. For a time any agreement appeared impossi ble ; but the good genius of our system final ly . prevailed, and on the 16th of July, 1790, an act was passed containing the following clause: "That a district of territory not exceeding ten miles square, to be located as hereafter directed, on the river Potomac, at some place between the mouths of the Eastern Branch and Conogocheague, be, and the same is here by, accepted, for the permanent seat of the government of the United States." The same act provided that Congress should hold its sessions at Philadelphia until the first Monday in November, 1800, when the government should remove to the district se lected on the Potomac. Thus was settled a question which had produced much sectional feeling between the States. But all difficul ties were not yet surmounted ; fur Congress, either from indifference or the want of money, failed to make adequate appropriations for the erection of public buildings, and the com missioners were often reduced to great straits to maintain the progress of the work. Find ing it impossible to borrow money in Europe, or to obtain it from Congress, Washington, in December, 1706, made a personal appeal to the Legislature of Maryland, which was responded to by an advance of $lOO,OOO ; but in so deplorable a condition was the credit of the federal government, that the State required as a guaranty of payment the pledge of the private credit of the commis sioners. From the beginning Washington had ad vocated the present scat of government—its establishment here was due, in a -large mea sure, to his influence ; it was his wisdom and prudence that composed disputes, and settled conflicting_ titles, and it was chiefly through his personal influence that the funds were provided to prepare the buildings for the re ception of the President and Congress. The wings of the Capitol having been suf ficiently prepared, the government removed to this District on the 17th of November 1800. Or, as Mr. 'Walcott expressed it left the comforts of Philadelphia "to go to the Indian place with the long name, in the woods on the Potomac." I will not pause to describe the appearance at that day of the place where the city was to be. Cotempora ry accounts represent it as desolate in ex treme, with its long-unopened avenues and streets, its deep morasses, and its vast area covered with trees instead of houses. It is enough to say, that Washington projected the whole plan upon a scale of centuries, and that time enough remains to fill the measure of his great conception. The Senate continued to occupy the north wing, and the House of Representatives the south wing of the Capitol until the 24th of August, 1814, when the British army entered the city and burned the public buildings.— This occurred during the recess, and the Pres ident immediately convened the Congress.— Both Houses met in a brick building known as Blodget's Hotel, which occupied a part of the square now. covered by the General Post Office. But the accommodations in that house being quite insufficient, a number of public Spirited citizens erected a more commodious building on Capitol Hill, and tendered it to Congress : the offer was accepted, and both Houses continued to occupy it until the wings of the new Capitol were completed. This building yet stands on the street opposite to the north-eastern corner of the Capitol square, and has since been occasionally occupied by persons employed in different branches of the public service. On the 6th . of December, 1819, the Senate assembled for the first time in this charriber, which has been the theatre of their delibera tions for more than thirty-nine years. And now the strifes and uncertainties of the past are finished ; we see around us on every side tho proofs of stability and improve merit ; this Capitol is worthy of the• Repub lic ; noble public buildings meet the view on every hand ; treasures of science and the arts begin to accumulate. As this flourishing. city enlarges, it testifies to the wisdom and forecast that dictated the plan of it. Future generations will not be disturbed with ques tions concerning, the centre of population or of territory, since the steamboat, the rail road, and the telegraph have made communi cation almost instantaneous. The' spat is sa cred by a thousand memories, which are so many pledges that the city of Washington, foundedby him and bearing his revered name, with its beautiful site, bounded by picturesque eminences, and the broad Potomac, and ly ing within view of his home and his tomb, shall remain forever the political Capital of the United States. It would be interesting to note the gradu al changes which have occurred in the prac tical working of the government since the adoption of the Constitution ; and it may be appropriate to this occasion to remark one of the most striking of them. At the origin of i the government the Senate seemed to be re- i garded chiefly as an executive council. The I President often visited the chamber and con ferred personally with this body. Most of its business was transacted with closed doors, and it took comparatively little part in the legislative debates. ' The rising and vigorous intellects of the country sought the arena of the House of Representatives as the appropriate theatre for the display of their powers. Mr. Madison observed on some occasion that, being a young man, and desiring to increase his repu tation, ' 1 be could not afford to enter the Senate; and it will be remembered that, so late as 1842, the great debates which preceded the war, and aroused the country to the asser tion of its - rights, took place in the other branch of Congress. To such an extent was the idea of seclusion carried, that when this chamber was completed, no seats were prepa red for the accommodation of the public; and it was not until many years afterwards that the semi-circular gallery was erected which admits the people to be witnesses of your proceedings. But now the Senate, besides its peculiar relations to the executive depart ment of the government, assumes its full share of duty as a co-equal branch of the Legislature ; indeed from the limited num ber of its members, and for other obvious rea sons, the most important questions, especial ly of foreign policy, are apt to pass first -tin der discussion in this body, and to be a mem ber of it is justly regarded as one of the highest honors which can be conferred on an American statesman. • It is scarcely necessary to point out the causes of this change, or to say that it is a concession both to the importance and indi viduality of the States, and to the free and open character of the government. In connection to this easy but thorough transition, it is worthy of remark that it has been effected without a charge from any quar ter that the Senate has transcended its con stitutional sphere—a tribute at once to the moderation of the Senate, and another proof of thoughtful men of the comprehensive wisdom . with which the framers of the Con stitution secured essential principles without inconveniently embarrassing the action of the government. The progress of this popular movement, in one aspect of it, has been steadily and mark ed. At the origin of the government, no ar rangements in the Senate were made for t,spec tators ; in this chamber about one-third of .the space is allotted to the public, and in the new apartment in the galleries cover two thirds of its arena. In all free countries the admission of the people to witness legislative proceedings is an essential element of public confidence, and it is not to be anticipated that this wholesome principle will ever be abused by the substitution of partial and in terested demonstrations for the expression of a matured and enlightened public opinion.— Yet it should never be forgotton that not France, but the turbulent spectators within the ball, awed and controlled the French As sembly. With this lesson and its consequen ces before us, the time will never come when the deliberations of the Senate shall be sway ed by the blandishments or the thunders of the galleries. It is impossible to disconnect from an occa sion like this, a crowd of reflections on our own past history, and of speculations on the future. The most meagre account of the Senate involves a summary of the progress of our country. From year to year you have seen your representation enlarge ; time and again you have proudly Welcomed a new sis ter unto the Confederacy, and the occurren ces of this day are a material, and impressiVe proof of the growth and prosperity of the United States. Three periods in the history of the Senate mark in striking contrast three i epochs in the history of the Union. On the 3d of March, 1780, when the gov ernment was organized under the Constitu tion, the Senate was composed of the repre sentatives of eleven States, containing three millions of people. On the 6th of December, 1810, when the ,Senate met for the first time, in this room, it was composed of the representatives of twenty one States, containing nine millions of people. To-day, it is composed of the representa tives of thirty-two States, containing more than twenty-eight millions of people, pros perous, happy and still devoted to constitu tional liberty. Let these great facts, speak for themselves to all the world. The career of the United States cannot be measured by that of any people of whom his tory gives account; and the mind is almost appalled at the contemplation of the prodigi ous force which has marked their progress. Sixty-nine years ago, thirteen States, contain ing three millions inhabitants, burdened with debt, and exhausted by the long war of inde pendence, established for their common good a free constitution, on principles new to man kind, and began their experiment with the good wishes of a few doubting friends, and the derision of the world. Look at the result to-day : twenty-eight millions of people, in every way happier than an equal number• in any other part of the globe, the centre of population and political power descending the western slopes of the Allegheny moun tains, and the originalthirteen States, form ing but the eastern margin on the map of our vast possessions. See besides, christianity, civilization, and the arts given to a continent —the despised colonies grown into a power of the first class, representing and protecting ideas that involve the progress of the human race—a commerce greater than that of any other nation—every variety of climate, soil, and production to make a people powerful and happy—free interchange between the States—in a word, behold present greatness, and in the future an empire to which the an cient mistress of the world in the height of her glory could not be compared. Such is our country ; ay, and more than my mind' could conceive, or my tongue could utter. Is there an American who regrets the past ? Is there one who will deride his country's laws, pervert his Constitution, or alienate her people ?" If there be such a man, let his memory descend to posterity laden with the execrations of all mankind. SO happy is the• political and social conch--• tion of the United States, and so accustomed' are we to the secure enjoyment of a freedom elsewhere unknown, that we are apt to under value the treasures we possess, and to lose in' some degree the sense of obligation to our' forefathers. But when the strifes- of faction shake the government, and even threaten it, we may pause with advantage long enougfr to remember that we are reaping the reward , of other men's labors. This liberty we in-- herit—this admirable Constitution, which has survived peace and war, prosperity and ad versity—this double scheme of government,. State and Federal, so peculiar and so little understood by other- Powers, yet which pro tects the earnings of industry, and Makes the largest personal freedom compatible with , public order; these great results were not achieved without wisdom, and toil, and blood. , The touching and heroic record is before the' world ; but to all this we were born, and like' heirs upon whom has been cast a great hiller- - Lance, have only the high duty to preserve, to extend, and to adorn it. The grand pro ductions of the era in which the foundations of this government were laid, reveal the deep sense its founders had of their obligations to the whole family of man. Let us never for get that the responsibilities imposed on this generation are by so much the greater than those which rested on our revolutionary an cestors, as the population, extent and power of our country surpass the dawning promise of its origin. It would be a pleasing task to pursue many trains of thought, not wholly foreign to this occasion, but the temptation to enter the wide field must be rigorously curbed ; yet I may be pardoned, perhaps for one or two ad ditional reflections. The Senate is assembled for the last time in this chamber. Henceforth it will be con verted to other uses ; yet must remain forever connected with great events, and sacred to the memories of the departed orators and states men who have engaged in high debates, and shaped the policy of their country. Hereafter the American and the stranger, as they wan der through the Capitol, will turn with in stinctive reverence to view the spot on which so many and great materials have accumula ted for history. They will recall the images of the great and thc good, whose renown is the common property of the Union ; and chiefly, perhaps, they will linger around the seats once occupied by the mighty three, whose names and, fame—associated in life—death has not been able to sever; illustrious men, who, in their generation, sometimes divided, sometimes led, and sometimes resisted pub lic opinion--for they were of that higher class of statesmen who seek the right and follow their convictions. There sat Calhoun, the Senator—inflexible, austere, oppressed but not overwhelmed by his deep sense of the importance of his public functions—seeking the truth, then fearlessly following it ; a man whose unsparing intel lect compelled all his emotions to earmonize with the deductions of his rigorous logic, and whose noble cuontenance habitually wore the expression of one engaged in the performance of high public duties. This was Webster's seat. lle, too, was every inch a Senator. Conscious of his own vast powers, be reposed with confidence on himself, and scorning the contrivances of smaller men, he stood among his peers all the greater for the simple dignity of his senato rial demeanor. Type of his northern home, he rises before the imagination in the grand and granite outline of his form and intellect, like a great New England rock, repelling a New England wave. As a writer, his pro ductions will be cherished by statesmen and scholars while the English tongue is spoken. As a senatorial orator, his great :efforts are historically associated with this chamber, whose very air seems yet to vibrate beneath the strokes of his deep tones and his weighty words. - On the outer circle, sat floury Clay, with his impetuous and ardent nature untamed by age, and exhibiting in the Senate the same vehement patriotism and passionate eh iq uenco that, of yore, electrified the House of Repre sentatives and the country. His extraordina ry personal endowments, his courage—all his noble qualities, invested him with an in di t iduality and charm of character which, in any age, would hare made him a favorite of history. He loved his country above all earthly objects. fie loved liberty in all coun tries. Illustrious man !—orator, patriot, phi lanthropist—whose light, at its meridian, was seen and felt in the remotest part of the civ ilized world ; and whose declining sun, as it hastened down the West, threw back its levol beams in hues of mellow splendor to illumi nate and to cheer the land he loved and served so well. All the States may point with gratified pride to the services in the Senate of their patriotic sons. Crowding the memory come the names of Adams, llayne, Mason, Otis, Macon, Pinckney, and the rest—l cannot number them—who, in the record of their acts and utterances, appeal to their success ors to give the Un:t n a destiny nor unworthy of the past. What models were these to awa ken emulation, or to plunge in despair ! For tunate will be the American statesman who, in this age, or in succeeding times shall con tribute to invest the new hall to which we go with historic memories like those which clus ter here. And now, Senators, we leave this memora , ble chamber, bearing with us, unimpaired, the Constitution we received from our fore fathers. Let us cherish it with grateful ac knowledgement to the Divine Power, who controls the.destinies of empires, and whose goodness we adore, The structures reared by men, yield to the corroding tooth of time. These marble walls must moulder with ruin ; but the principles of constitutional liberty, guarded by wisdom and virtue, unlike mate rial elements, do not decay. Let us devout : edly trust thatanother Senate, in another age shall bear to a new. and larger chamber this Constitution vigorous and inviolate—and that the last generation. of posterity shall wit ness the deliberations , of the representatives of American States still united, prosperous and free. PtuANn rot?. THE GOSPEL.—The pews in Henry Ward • Beecher's church, Brooklyn, were rented at auction for the year, on Tues-. day, and brought $24,642 50, about $B,OO more than they were sold for last year.— Very many who were anxious to obtain pews were unable to procure them. The competi tion among the bidders was very spirited.— Mr. Beecher was present during the sale, and appeared to be delighted at the great interest manifested" by his congregation to obtain seats.