. . • . . . . ...• 7. : ..-_- -- a -.,..,. 1:01.1;:,,,i'7a,:.b i fl . •:' ' . . '.; ) 7 ._ ,OL. ,( :ir.: , 7,130i0 ACV -7..; ilii.:::::Ti I ..: 19;7 '..il •! . 5 , 7'.'/1 .. , 1_ A :. .. tit ' • i • '' '''' .. . ... " :1; 77i r T . • ~, : ..:, it..,1 `sic :.,n‘. .: !:: • .10: : :: :1 -' ' ', ..; : l . 4 ' 13 'f ; :—&1 1..i: - . 1 :--, ''''''''::..:::: ' 1 ' 1. .' '• u . . - -,..• - P:: ,, :v. , /.I ,f 7 :: I, ,-!!. . / ,11. 1 :.. - 1, •:1 , ,r... 3:) —ll ;•:•". • ill ' . ~.. •, i,• ... ,•O'. •-• - _;H•'' 7) • : 7 " ' uld 4 1 .. .- i l '. : 1) . . ' ' ---- • • - - ."' ' ..,.;.,:., ..-.; : -,,...,-,..:. - , `J i .... 1•I ..I.t ..;" ...,,..:,:', ~,,,..; 1 0 , ~.;: ,_ ~., I . ; 1, ,: ~.. ~,,,., 2-1 . e, - ..- - ,r'!',o it. s ,t , ..t".:0ri1.y". „ .:, ~.. 1 I s: :q O MW=I El =1 GEE VOLTTNE 6 THE PEOPLE'S .301TRNAL. PUBLISHED EVERVFRIDAit MORNING 'AT IUSKELI, & Terms: iditi'eoprpir annum, :CAW Villageanbscribersperannum,inadvanoe, l . 2s • : Air E : s.fop o "twoly Ainee or less, will b;..ooerted, the times for 'one dollar; for every subiegiten insertion, 1. - weary-five' CelltlV will be charged Rule, and figure work - 'will invariablyAe charged double them) rates. • hese terms will be strictly- adhered to. LINCLE: Torti, Written for, and apolten by Wir.r.tr: at•tho_rrospoct School EAl4ibitipu.-.s. •• The fire burned dimly on the grate,' Park ebudows danced upon the floor,' The midnight hour had m funtsedyaway, Whose chimes I never heart! lichore; et still r stood with OCepless When one and 'two' it'eloel.: had come, Peeide the elutir of•one who rend , _The touching tale of "Undo Tom." - DM ',Nolo Toni has "gone to 010, • '• , I , lot i v ? - i. f .. in .pence Char gouthild A ctranicr • Ao , s t et , l y s 12 , 1 •,:::. , ! sandy' n'noll. Pour ,• Aunty Chloe ~Ari;: boara, and thsli her skill for bin) more,' Not; If9lie;'nor' rete, nor babe, . ISil,l gambol on bib floor. flack! holr you nuta plainti7e.wail How wearied and sad; how fur. ?.I , Y OOI borhe'upon the gale that sWeetti Across tho Gulf of Lille...tic°. r .They say that utouraing millions die Beneath a dark and hopeless dOout; Poor sons of toil, who feel the wrongs That broke the heart.Of "thief° Torn."' • , I 'vo heard it sung in songs of jny, I've hoard it road in wows of pride,- That equal rights and Christian laws O'er all my native laud preside. Then teldsno why, ye elders Edge, Why•breal: the bands that God ,ordaius, 'Why buy and sell immortal souls' . While boaited law the wrong sustains? Did,equal rights and Christian taus • Bid Tom from wife and childrett part, And heedless roll afft etion's tide ' Bark, Utak,. upon the bursting heart? .Did Christiundaws withhold the light Front Topsy'a.aark, untutoir4 maul I Was Eva wrong. who tultl the slave That,Ged, alike to all, is kind ? On life's bright threshold now 1 stan d,' And on creation feebly gaze. Yet Arial to know, and Oh ! I long To solve this dark, bewildering maze 1 can but hope, when life is o'er, . T o find in heaven an equal home, And in that laud Nv herr awes are freq. know' I'll meet ° Ohl Uncle Toni.!' WHOM DOES IT CONCERN I UT PANST FERN "STITCH - stitch—stitch ! will this never end ?" said a young girl, leaning her head wearily against the casement, end dropping her small hands hopelessly in her lap. 4. Stitch—stitch-46:61 from dawn till dark, and yet I 'scarce keep soul and body together;" and she drew her thin,shawl more closely over her shivering shoulders. Jler eye fell upon the great house opposite. There was comfort there, and luxury, too ; for the rich satin curtains were looped gracefully away from the large windows': a black 'Servant opens the hall door ; see, there are statues, and vases, and pictures there : now, two young girls trip lightly out upon the paverne.nt, with their lustrous silks, and nodding plumes, and jewelled bracelets glistening, and quiveiing, andsparklirg in the bright sunlight. Now poising their silver-netted purses upon their daintily gloved angers, they leap lightly into the carriage_ in waiting. and are phirled rapidly away. That little seamstress is as fair as they ; her eyes are as soft and blue ; her.limbs Are as tithe and graceful; her rich, brown hair folds as gottly away over as fair a brow ; her heart leaps. like theirs, to all. that is bright and joyous; it craves love, end sympathy, and companionship as „much, and yet she must stuch—atitch— end droop under summer's heat, and shiver under winter's cold, and walk the .e4rth with the si,teleton starvation ever at her side, that costly pictures, and velvet carpets. ,and massive chandeliers, and gay tapestry, and gold and silver vessels, may fill the house . of her cm ployer—that his flaunting 'equipage may , roll admired along the . highway, and 6dia's fairest fabrics .deck his purser 'proud wife and daughters. Ty, was a busy scene, the ware-room of Simon Skinflint & Co. ,Garments of every hue, size, and pattern were there '4ficeed forsale. Piles of coarse clothing -ray >upon the counter, ready to . 'l,e given isu i tio the' destitute; browbeaten appli. ffho. would make :hem •for the .sinalivie passible remuneration;, piles of tiiments lay there 'such Victims 'lllr F tolyn toiled .in the leng night to licketsctia bring 'l2grixtilus,finfits =I PP:I.7OTPi.79I,I4.,I:I,IINRIPLES OF DEiIOCRAP,i, ~ • C • into,, {}fie :locket, \ cif, their , employer ; groups pf dapper clerks ' .stow behind the counter, disbussing, in a,whisper; the pedestals of the last ; new demsc4se-3-- ogling the half-staryed young girlswho were crowding irk for employment, and raising a blush on the cheek of .humbled innocence by the coarse joke and . free libidinous gaze ; while theirmaster,l4r. Simon Skinflint,'.; sat, , very rosy and rotund, before. a bright Lehigh , fire, rubbing his fat hands, building imagin ary hotises-,'inii'lelleiiatingiilifiself,gen erally: on bis financial , forehight. ` . "if you could but "allow me 'a trills more . fOr 'My"- faboij,"' l inniiii 3 Sie i d slow ioite at his' side . ; " rhive. toiled hard - t ..-.. all the . week, and `yet—•" ' , i,• '." Yonnewontan;''''alicl Mr. Skinflint, pushing 'his - chair` severdf feet' : bnctir, elevathrg hiS specianles to his: fcicelieed, anddrdwirig':his Akin' vest down 'overi. , . • his ., ardermanic ''proportions,;---4 , young 1- • . woman, do yoril'obseiVe that crowd of i persons be.seighig my door :forernploy went ? Perhaps you are not aware that iwe turn aWay Scores of theideverY day ; perhapi you" do n't Irnot - v thk'the farm ers' daughters, who are at a lossWiliaCto do long winter ' eveningsosiel want to earn a little doivri, will do our werltfor less than we pay . you. But you fenarn ine operatives dO,,n't seem to,have the least idea of trade. Competition -is the .soul of .business, you. aeb,".'-said .Mr. Skinflint, rubbing his hands in re con gratulatory manner. ' " Tut, to 1, young Women ! do n't quarrel with ~l;' our_bread ' -Clad butter ; however, it is a thing that don't concern me •at all'; if you won't , work,lhere aiellenty ivho wilt;'-Land 1 Mr. Skinflint drew out his gold repeater , and glanced at the door._ - ~ • , , : , - A look of lopeless misery settled over rte 'young girl's -face, and she turned .s'owly away in' the direetion of ,horne., :aline, 4id,l .say ? ~ The. Word was a bitter.mockery •te our poor Mary: She had .a home once, where 'she and the i little birds sang the live-long day : where the flowers blosiomecl, and the;"tall trees waved, and . merry voices floated out upon the fragrant air; and the golden sun went gorgeously down behind the 1 far-off hills ; where a mother's loving breast, was her pillow, and a father's good-night blessing. wooed. her .to rosy slumbers. It was pest now. They are all gone--father, mother, sisier,.brother. some with 'the blue sea fOr - rt shifting monument; some. Sleeping dreamlessly `in thelittle Church-yarj, wher.e her in rant footsteps strayed: Ranllrgraes had overgrown the cottage' gravel-Wallit ; weeds choked the flowers, whinla dust-. covered hands had planted.*he brown 1 moss had thatched over the entitle eaves,' ;and still the - little birds 'sang on 'as 1h •OA blithely ,as if Mary's cube e l. gods, had ,not been shivered. 1 1 Poor Mary I 'The 'world was dark . . and weary to her; the very.. , stars, with their serene beauty, seemed;pi mock her I misery. She reached her little room. Its • narrow walls seemed to ,close .about her like a tomb. She leaned-her heed wearily against the little''Ondow, and looked again at the zreat hoUse opposite. How brightly, how cheerfully the lights glanced' from the windows l•-• How like fairies glided the young girls over the softly-carpeted floors I How' 'swiftly the. .citrriages whirled to:the,doorowith their gay visitors! • Life lallf such a •rotry dream to theta:--such a brooding night -1 mare to her ! 'Despair laid Its icy hand , . I on her heart. Mustshe weep' and sigh her youth aw while griping avarice ay, trampled on her ..heart-sLrings; . Must ..she always drink, unmixed; the cup of sarrottr T "She. could ' hot),±veep--;•:nrty, worse—she could not, pray. Dark shad ows came bet Ween her soul end heaven. The little room is emptynnow. :. Mary ~, toils there no longer. Youmill find her in the great•house opposite e her dainty limbs clad.in flowing silk';: her slender fingers and dimpled arms glittering with gems; and swung nllithat. merry group, Mary's laugh' sings: out -'the Merriest. Surely_—surily this irbeffer than - to toil weeping through long tear y „days ,in :the,tio.le l darkerted room. ', •-• j • Is it Mary 3. •. . • •:' - '• There , is . it ring ntthe loot -or the ;great hoyisV. ',V Viil44ie'de'iih6cfeiiify -; , ~, 2 20 Jai. Z'N. mil• I••••••••••••••-,,.., - co:tp37l3s79.4;_i!pxlTp. cpu#,T7, x'4,4*.i.,rmitcrignr..2,4„41354,7 7 in,; by, her„dress, she is a. widow. She .13ag.ppened u small school in the neigh btwhood, and in the search for , scholars has. wondered in here?. ,liihe looks shout her. , Her quick, womanly in.stinct soyalls tf;e alarm ._ ~She is_ not among the, good Ood pure of ; 11.1.rDPVC!'• ~.But she •4 0 c4 scorn there. No; khec)PPica upon, their bligh4lcl l heaOty with.wChrist-like pity, ; .sho,says,to,horself, Some word of mine i9llclo4e.il hearts.. . Sa, , 4140 gently, "Pardon me, ;Indin3, _but 1 ad hoped .to,..fuid scholars here ; yo- wjll forgiv4o,hp intrusion,l.know ; for though .you ore not mothers,-you hav,a • all had olPthe.ro..7 O.. . • . . . Why is-MA:rY's lip ao, , aohen white ? , ; % 1 1,hy,tiqoszsbaMerOlg-froxil•.hea4,44 oo t. as if,stnipen by the hand of God 1,, : Why 00, the ',hot tears ' : stream ,through: her ,3ewl3lle4,:fingrej '4l l sqy • ,:That Halo darlsloop, w4h it§ glpom, 1# 0 11 9cFnce , %ITN I aayares own bright ne.ss now, to_yotAT Krtufect,spixit,, !, i Pitiless,the slitrat mitt rattled .sgaiTt • • the. window panes ;-, awnings creaked ,and flapped, and the Arest,,lamps Rick. : erect in, the i strong blast;; full-freighted ,omnibusses rolled, over ,the.atuddy pave ' -ingots; ,stray:: pedestrians turned- up their cont,G4Ars.grnsped - their umbrellas mote tightly, and made for the .nearest port. A woman half blinded by the long hair which . the .fury, of the wind liad t driven across her face, drencbod ' to ... , the skin, with the pouring rain—shoe ? .less, bon etless,•,horneless, leans tinstead- Ily agar st a lamppost, and in the maudlin, accents of intoxication, curses tlaepassers-.by. A policeman's!, strong ' hanit.is •lald t u port -her arm, and-she is latirried,struggiing,:through the dripping streets and pdshed ,into ~ the. neaarest " station house." Morning downs upon. -the . ' wretched,' fOrsaken outcast. "She sees tit not; 'upon those weary eyes the resurrection-morn oitly shalt dawn. No n more.shall the stony-hearted shht in her imploring face the door.of .hope; no more • shed . gilded Sin, Willi Judas striae, say," Eat, drink, and be nferry ;" no more shall the prbfessed follwers of Him who said, "Neither do I condemn thee," say to the guilt.stricken one, "Stand aside, for am holier thou thou." No, none maytempt, 'none' may scorn, none may taunt her more. A 'planer's grave shall hide poor-:Mary and her shame. , . •- _ God speed the 'day when the higger• naut wheels of Avarice ( shall no longer roll over woman's dearest hopes ;. when thousands of doors, now 'closed; shall be opened for starving iYkrtut i i to earn her honest bread; when lie who. would coin her tears arid groans to Neil his palaces, 'shall become a hissing byword wherever the sacred :name Of 'mother 'shall '4 . honored. , ' ' The Free Soilers have been bu sily engazt for the , last few years in 'stealing men, in the freest country upon cartb, and - running thern . into t'iranny'l and legaVoppression, where• no ray of 1 hapeishines for the -king and. priest rid den slatte.- 7 ,Raeini•(Wis.) Democrat. TO help the skives to freedom, in the , judgment of the • Racine Hunker, is stealing. To' keep them in bondage, that is, to practice perpetual rrian-steal .is Democracy and- patriotism. What a terrible reproach to Democratic institutions is the fact, that nearly one -sixth of our population is kept in an "oppression, one hour of which," ac cording to Jefferson, "is fraught with ,more misery than ages of that-which our fathers rose up in rebellion to oppose ;" and their only hope of relief is in fleeing from n Republic- which enslaves them, to a monarchy which restores to them ; their ilialierfabla :rights I—N. Y. rri. butte. , • Wutttn Bncriecors intlExeir ?L...We shall Itivait, with some'l anxiety, the action of Mr. Becumattres friends in Pennsylvania, Avon the prop osition to repeal the Nlis,souri Compro mise. Is Pennsylvania's "Favorite Son" isb;overihiugheti' the: (li-' ant '1" la--the Berke. County Harvest , Home letter 64 • soon- forgotten? We I .have not room for,itihis, week, but we cannat.refrain rfoin ptiblishing the sett tiinent'appentled to it; “T-he Wissoirti Coin - promise :—=fte adoption in 1820, sated. the Union from threatened convulsion. „Its extension-in 1840, to, Any new territory . which we - May iitqiiire, win ,secure the'likehapiiy 'results." " 1 .- • ,--That letter isiche-olthe stronge - st tr guments against Mr. DOUGLAS' scheme, end ip,tbe .i caurse ,of.thp captrp!erq we shall triFati timp . , his qtainildin Minas - .ileiert hiin, or will jheylutnd With•iis in dereffee' of Il3r. Bueharkan'a .favorite •lihel—Bradfoid t r . For dig Journal: tiecter Rogtdalor , l4dgo 'of Good •fit:nipjars. ' •, 'This litit:utiOn was' organized on the grid' .:4: of last November under lute unfavorable circuinsiancesi there being Many w ho were to some appear ' ance, conscientiously opposed, to a move of that kind 'But' a fire:l;il''alreitly ireen kindled in s the:breast o many, pi . 1 f he friends of TeMperance in this sc cludedang- peaceful valley, which could not be' extinguished by the storms and chilling hlasts of 'the.votaries, of rum. Neither could they he -,persuaded. hy, those temperance men who hayti,roqe than their, shate of conscience, that the result of, their assembling themselves together in private .eonsnitation.to talk of Temperance and reform wouki_ be dancre rous. 'Therefore, seventeen of trio 0. sons and' daughters of Freedom had their nulnes"enrolled ,as soldieci enlisted t• during the war tha; is now ben fought by the friends of Freedom nnd klumnn• on the one_ side, .und the friends : pf rum, misery add crime on the other. For a month or more after the organ ization, opposition was exhibited.in al most every form which -human sagacity could invent.. But by an . unflitiching • • perseverance and a determination that' could not be shaken, manifested on the part of the members of the Lodge, they hive succeeded in nearly if' not quite satisfying their opponents that they did not enlist to surrender, but to.gain - victory. Accordingly .one after another have deserted the ranks of our opponents, , sued for peace ,and enlisted _under our . banner, . unto our numhers_court up: to forty,'Whai'are - all without an eirCOptien, in good standing in outiraiiliiV Last Saturday night D. G. W..C. T. H. Rice was present ,; with several mem beds of Neal Dow Lodge, to install, our • Officers for the current quarter, `at which. time out' Worthy•'-friend •-and• neighbor P. Kilborn, who has: served' us , as W. C. t. l for the past quarter with hbn or to_ hitnielf and credit to the Lodge, left the chair, which was filled by the installation of Cyrus Sunderland, Esq. After Our Officers were duly installed, Brothers Rice; Slade, Bowman, Dickin son and others made some very appro priate - remarks. A. .m q ra interesting meeting was never 'beton:: held in this - r tace., Yours truly, - • M. Ei. A 1311 . 1:T. • / Hector, Feb. 6th; 1854, EMI The President against the Teeple. - The Washington, correspondent of the Baltirpore Sup► says of the ; Nebraska bill:— '•There is no dbubt that the Senate will sustain the bill.' The House would also :pass the bill could the question'be taken at once, but 'the agitation.• of`.. the question at' the North will not improve its prospects. yhe Southern' members 'wilt of course support the bill, nod the nower of the Administration ought to be good, under: any circumstances, for fifty Northern Democratic votesi-th Ll 4 form ing a majority. Adhesion, - to the 'was- Ore is made-a "test of democratic °raid , dii - xy," rid& 'fete members «•ish, thus to,be thrown , outside of the party." Here is the honest this that the people are against this infamous project, and thrit the only chance ,fo - r the bitj,to pass is in hurrying it through befOre the RepresernatOires can be reached. by ;an aroused public sentiment. Thet Power of the Administration, which this .cor respondent says ought to be goof for fifty Northern . Democrrtic votes, can lie immediately applied.to corrupt the peo ple's representatiies; but it Italres'time. lor the people .to - Muse , and apply their power upon their servants in Congress who are contemplating treachery 'to freedom. Hi.nce it ts that DoUglas is so anxious topnsh 'his hitt through - in hot haste, before the 'people ht;ve tithe to speak." . When will the people rouse them selves to correct this monstrous central ized 'power of the', general government! There is norsingle Congressional dis trictlin any Northern•Stale;'which is'not decidedly opposed , to tho Nebraska bill; yet this ,cerrespontient . Pl : 4 .Southern pa per boasts that the.power of the Atinairt istration cAliht"te be sufficient tl corrupt 'fifty Rept i eseritatiies to" . voto opposi tion to the knoWn wishes.of their con stituents. Atfthings go tiow, Northern Representatives..go to Congress, not.to carry out the views of their constituents, but to 'execute the - dimitiriinds'of the Ir.es ident. The Prehident nn autocrat; and. the flunkey-rnemberi'of Cpnvess .itterejy,. register !his, edicts. This wig net glways be so. ; TAle . Awe kiiftlooti when ihe ,people - WPI seeifint , they. haiii -iepr'eseniirtiai• in Zoo grent:444.B6itoti: Coirintonuieatiki ;MD econeilie New York evehindl i ost , - he liedirPierritched info L in l ai en T . A Word on the Nebraska Bill from " Mr. Douglas, sir," said the Colofeel t te:. te . imeritifidaetee e. - 4.' ee'j ieAh, he reminds me of a story. ' A man , ;The folloWing tommunititruemcames I hn tr i n g ‘n riacti ls u s 6 ," 11 1 and desiring, to E kill him, was 01301% to reach him fob's Ao.us fromqWestern Nirginia. :The , -1 .of 1. - d I ' ,the prancin,g an . eapinge L AT) 61d nem sentence • 31 9te's t,h.e tru .9 na PY --. '--- i standing by used t. his master why' be einiirvlriy ,now agitating the , country,l ,• Wit s s`so ° anxious ici u kill 'the Imil. ri1,41. lii'verY'apt l Aitd. Omer' terms: - P him tilone, Meese, and by-atid-by'Ae ' —:lrn.;FAruriry 10.'185'1. ~ - ',pulp see high-be break hid own nec k t ie -To•theEditiWoplie•.Eveninz Poll: - i, de full: , . • , ql , ly patience •is .exhausted by seeing •.; , _ vim._-., ~,,, ....- . e , and -bcaring,the',-Rpeill of the Mtssourt ' ..., gdcaprogtiv, • aid„o;her questions con -1 SO Say We All. necteervill negro sla.:Yery, spol4ti of as i The Elk e bitty!' .qtivaeate of R.lB. 4, a ciantest!!)etween th . N o r t h and South ' vives an' account of a'l emperance meet- - —meaming•the - slave and•horeslavehold. 7 ' , 'nee L :it: that :pldce r , r . em , d in the &terse of ing.sleteit—when in truth and:fact, the otest ie s betweekehe men_ evbre and AnP' rum seiltrain ' , the . etude cbedemni the ' C oiled. by the labor of sieves these ', theibllcaingepoiiited and truthful Ma , who maintaiethtroOlves 'and . families 'Vier - . 'ire adopt . this ' lang,tiage - Avirm Ib f their: 6 / 1 1' l ablln v re P trititt ' s c ' f ' th ` ;ir ' h'e'artily, ancl'nierejoiced at the una' &Tit elocatinn. Dimly ownnpidion, tiro negro , , , • ~,. • . • e a wad whip temperance . mill bon- - slave's thernetives•nre not as deeply , rn- ,rte il b' 11 ., • thepoor laboring ' bran the' tra ffi c' in intoeicating'dti l dßs. en,re . Y,4 tres3stgrn'as of states, i ~ . • ;, whites in - the states, or ,parts iwhere slaves are ntemerotis entiugh - to After the Professor' had •conCluded ererideeethe'rielieland.and ter slave' °riers his address, our townsman,. U. Souther, inilePendEmt , .'ofithbor of their poor: Esq., was called upoe, who'regfionded in white t peigt4reeW the white popula- one of hhi happiest" efforts. Mr.: S; bit tion e eoo' sperse Are 'support common L the nail , en the head every •tirne. ;He scheols, the • children of the rich being , ( A ce utrai3 pictured the deva statine l el . - taught` by private' tutors in 'tieir mil I' r ects oh intoxicating drinks upon;all w ho housesT- I .br -sent 'to semindries nbrond: 1 indulge in .thern; and those effects" are Ilene; deep driwn in the wildernesi of , . not' Only tionfined to those whoelrinke but slayery.e.al !large 'proportion or the Weir- 1 nista their innecentfamilie, who are.de. treg i white s,.fle e s to .abject poverty and pendunt upon, them, are brought to deg hopeleis'ignorance, many of them riot radatioa,teflering arid shame.., llesqn knowiegeven.The fetters of the alphabet. demned in unmeasured terms, the irbf- These; unfortunite rn'enehave not suffi- ticker in the einelenn ehing—tliolie 9 Ao ciente intelligence:. to: nodetstald their l for paltry gninewill barter the Peace Mid own interests, -or ambition to improve happiness of their neighbors.. In Oils, their own condition, But the border we fully agree with him. Ife look,uppn counties of rielawafe; Itlaryland,,Virgin- the traflieker as the one who is mora',ly in; Kentucky' and Missouri, conedn a responsible, for all the miseries entailed very different class of .non-slavdholders. t upon the race 'by drunkenness. •- The 'Strong in .numberse prosperous ' cir " 'seller is.snne, and frilly conscious of cumstaricesovell if not , highly educated, what he is doing. and aware ,of the evil they appreciate the dignity of honestla- consequences that must ensue. The bor," arid' are 'as.`much interes ted in the drinker is the pcor, miserable vitelin of m' ProlectiOn -or Nibraska fro the bliget la vitiated, appetite, the indulgence .of of slavery as their brethren on thenther l which has deprived him of his reeve ; side of; that, mysterious. parallel' of, lati- , who has become debased, and lost to all' tude. Reared where they could see at t. sen•se of daq•to himself and his family ; thii same time .the b e nefits of liberty and , who has no aim in life; but to drink and the 'tivA of 'slavery, they 'desire that., get' bsastly•drunk, when he will commit ewhen'they remoile Westward ir,esearch crimes from which he would .sbrieik , 'ofehroaddr and:more' fertileposeessions,, with horror in his sober moments. But that e deeelav_e, s dein neighboring propri- public Justice tales a different ,view •of etor may degrade, that, labor by which the matter. It allows the real ciiailital they hope that' till.ngelves and their , in escape, while 'the helpless instrument children l intict liVe and thrive. • ' • ~ °retie crime, must expiate his guilt upon - 1 Its the•most , eirliculons nonsense, to the scaffold, if the crime be of a nattire pretend that General Pierce was:elected requiring such punishment. Thanks to in e,onseckuence of hi e s devotion to elave• theeelfeets tell the people, rind the intel ry•'' , , li c ence • of the courts, our town is now I'voted'for him, as I ',voted 'for lIIr. ' free from the unholy' trUffic, and' it' is Van Baren in 1840, fiii: Mr. Polk in : our sincere hope and belief that it may 1844,'and for General Crain 1848. be- ever remain free from the curse. •1 cause in so ruing I was Voting against -------- ~, the Bulk of the United States, against ' .. a protective tariff, and other measures oft , ,The School of Poverty. the whin . party,' being 'all the time, as . You may talk ever •so eloquently now, a ra dical JEFFERSONIAN DESIOdRAT• about your colleges, your Uiliveroicits. . 1 your institutions of science and the arts, ', Sale of the 'Rohn° Works. hat after all, what would become of tin- Hon. Henry S. Evans, Chairman of , tions without that more useful, though less inviting school of poverty? ' • the Committee to which was ref,erred -1 T. that the world is indebted foi_its that part of the Governor',e,Merage ref - . alive to 1 the Sale of the Pieblic W or k s, ~.masters. • Statesgten upon whose very t . ~ , breath the fate of millions hang, were' read the' report of the Committee , in the . ' herd students in that same old-school. Senate on Friday. It, is a very lenethy I document, and maafests great ability,',_General Jackson's father was a hod thorough acquaintance With l e e • tu h - juct , i carrier, but the son of his father mount sad the ,mos q t delicate reiearcl gevery ed the ladder of fame, bearing upon,his I . point involved in this 'nrat iniPOrt?ere i shoulders, instead of iles hod, mill'on ot i S, In_ , free people. The old iron general qUestion to the tax payers of Ppnnsy uated from the school of poverty, and grad ma. The report will soon be printed, and if we can find The room we , w ei i n _, Warned to be thankful for hard knocles, ' football with Ihim., sett it in our columns, as we wish it to since `in Pill'i n g' at be read by every voter in Pennsylvania.' Poverty gave hire i•lew telling blow ' s It completely e, n d s „e s e eetori l y proves, that sent him flying into Washington, fr , m o .actual calculation, 'that v: , se ll t h e ; and sat him plump down into the I'res- I Public Wrirks - at 5,000,000 the State dential Chair., • debt wine paid in ten ve'ars and leave Many an old veteran can Show on his a•belance in. the Treasury, while if they bronzed temples, and underneeffi •the are retained, .the hope of •being relieved crown of laurels, that, their deeds hive from our' present fast increasing debt is won unmistakeable marks cof the qid fiS4ver cut MI. Mr. , Evans has furnished Poverty schoolmaster's knuckles. , a document which reflects great credit They are proud to show them now. upon his abilities and will furnish the , They look back and tell yeu how thier . old teacher used ne if in mere eportete tae•payers with a statement sufficient to convince them at once that their .only leap coals of difficulty , upon their curly ehtipe is hi a sale of, the Public' Works. • pees, and- Weil hinder:them with might We will refer to it soon .agaire, and prom- ( rtee main' frotregetting uieueider them— ise our readers the repolt in , full as • ,bet ,ho l y they d isle ie spit; of the itet!olieg early as'practicable.—Pa. Telegraph. ,in , t) arneed."--Once pyanch. ' . I • -- • ' ~ • ' ' . From the Syracuse "Evening Chronicle. ntE , BRITISH BRIG MIAMIAN tvaa •; Tue 11 , 11G . HTY FALiEN.—Thb blind i lalt , lY wrecked..on: an islind on the Pa pet into ',which senator tioutlal fleW.in i cit.c ocean which had t'it4iefore.beenA the Senate when assailing '. Senalor i di.covered. The !l akes tool` the cap. dliase'sjadependent Democratic address 1 twin and. crew, and tlistribute,d .among iiifi its !author (see our miscellaneous , 1 themselvei, where they ..tia.sseii ‘ the - eight columns to day) indicates file' direetnessl in constant dread•of.be.ing killed ;" but the Emil force with which that shaft had'i ne - xt indriikg:spelia nzere put into Iliair been driven home,_ it is'a fine illusirk(ion I hands, nod they.iir'e'ri tharched',lii inilt:l - the strength'ot weikness when ill the er part of the Island, iii Sere e mununory right. !, We are ,-but trio,'.' said Mr, was perfertried over them. This eras °base L. out of sixtY:tvia':: T ' Vc`o;bilillis. rePated each ,day far three'daya" end a is cause in iv tch ~ otte , Otall . Chaie a. then the 'nglishmen ,thscovereci hat thousand, and two put ten iliouband 'to: the natiies regarded if6m a's' iii4eljor flight.'' 17 1 .110 coolness with which the. beings'atid' Were wives ttiena. ei little ginin"iiiii laid' out; is bui' a pre-" ~ tiii tsar ;of ttie?ttiiiiiierlyand',lneretiess ilia:, liention tiltitif 11:44.arne" hantl, - iiihrifi : We , l ieu pi .eibt li7 l ye t. i 6 ilfdre hi fifth; 'The' 1410dAittiriepeOndeWtIelitlielJiwing le 6 t A abl i v i,..;ls , ... to .L.I ' 1..11 •., ~. , -,-,. . , Scitnethlitoislieil Col: tlelitinflo 'fray! si,illy =1 E.,taxior,:(l aHT e ' a U 1 : I T 111; 41.1 L , y,Thojitt,tp .44r119g, he didn't strike baby.a. purpose Aki) ilOVl4L4*re'acciaenl, : was tekit , mgc,it voitti,ttftb.,t,E).lo Aon't be,havo ihirdpelfll,',ll,:4o4k. him • 0; - . • t ...... 1 ; L IE3 WWI