4ntelligencer, St , Jaunt-al. Lancaster, February 24,11852. GEO. SANDERSON, EDITOR. FOR P RESIDENT: BtcII . ININ (su„hea.,o the decision of the National Contrtion.) PUBLIC DOCITMINTS.-Our thanks- are due to Hon. James Cooper, Hon. A. Fetch, Hon. R. Brod. heEUI, Hon. James X. M'Lanahan, for public docu ments; also to Messrs. Kinzer, Hunsecker,;Schaef fer and Pownal, of the State Legislature, for simi lar l favors. The Slavery Qtastion, &c In another part of this paper will be fclund the first of a series of letters, (three in number,) from a gentleman residing in Mississippi to his friend in . this city, on the subject of Slavery, Abo4onism, &c. They are written with great force and ability, and cannot fail to have a happy effect in enlighten ing, public opinion in the North in referende to the real condition of things as growing outrof these questions. It will be seen that he takes uphe sub ject in all its bearings—moral, political and finan cial—and places it in such a way before the peOple that every body can read and understand for them selves. We therefore, commend these essays to the attention of all our readers. Or Mr. SPRECRER offers great attractions in the Hardware line, at his store in North Queen Street. See advertisement. AURORA BOREALIS.—An unusually grand Aurora Borealis was visible on Thursday evening last, about 10 o'clock. The corruscations were of a brilliant hue, at times becoming quite. a deep rose color. They occupied nearly, one-third of the heavens, extending at intervals to the very zenith. The School Journal. The first number of a neat , monthly periodical, containing sixteen large octavo pages, with hand some cover, has just been issued from the press— THOMAS H. Boanowas, Esq., Editor, and M. D. Homstioox, Esq., Printer. The Journal' will be issued on the first Saturday of each month, and the subscription price is $1 per annum, payable in advance. The number before us gives evidence of the abil ity of the Editor, whose attention to the I interests of popular education for many years has made him familiar with our Common School SyStem, and will enable him to make the Journal a useful aux iliary in the great work to which it is to be devo ted. We wish Mr. BURROWSB abundant success in his undertaking. It is a work that should be encouraged by every friend of the Common School System in the Commonwealth. LONDON QUARTERLY REYIEW.-WE have re ceived from the American Publishers, Leonard Scott &Co., New York, the January number of the London Quarterly, which is considerejl among the leading periodicals of Great Britain. ItS literary character is of the highest order—and although of the Tory school, its political articles can be read with great profit by all. The January number con tains 152 pages, and amongst other able produc tions has a long and interesting essay cOhe auth orship of the celebrated Junius Letters, who is sup posed by the editor to be Lord Lyttleton, instead o, Sir Philip Francis, as has been generally supposed, and strong reasons are given for this opinion. A Mammoth Eagle Shot On the 13th inst., our young Democratic friend, Mr. Henry D. Stehman, of Conestoga township, shot a Grey Eagle, on the farm of his father, which measured 7 feet and 1 inch from the tip of one wing to the other! Since last fall, Mr. Stehman has also shot twenty - three Chicken Hawks, besides game in abundance of various kinds. He is a first-rate rn!arksman, and any thing that comes within the range of his rifle is a "gone coon and no mistake." California News. The Legislature of California met at 'Vallejo on the sth of January, and organized by the election of Democratic officers in both houses. Hon. TQIIN BIGLER, brother to the Executive of Pennsylvania, was inaugurated Governor, and Ssrausi. PCTD7, Esq., Lieutenant Goveruor,—both on the next day. Governor Broxan's inaugural address is a . very able and sensible state paper , he goes for the, Compro mise Measures and the Union, and speaks with confidence of the prospective greatness Of Califor. nia. The retiring Governor, 31Dougall; two days after he vacated the office fought a duel: with the Editor of the San Francisco Picayune, J for some attack upon him in the paper, and inflicted a flesh wound upon his antagonist. The Legislature an journed on the 9th to meet again on the 16th at Sacramento City, whets a U. S. Senator would be chosen. Politics appear to be running high in the new State, and the Presidential question was begin ning to be agitated. G. Washington Baker, Esq. By the following article, which we copy from the Alto California of the 16th of January, it will be seen that our friend, G. WASIIINOTpN BAKER, Esq., formerly of this city, has been elected Recor der of the city of San Francisco, an office of great responsibility and profit. He was eleCted in Sep teinber last, but owing to some difficulty, about the rights of the old and new City officers, he has been kept out of the office until now: RECORDER WALLER:This gentleman with the singleness of purpose which has characterized him throughout his official career, has signified to G. W. Baker, Esq., that he is prepared to give up his office whenever it sh}sll be claimed by that gentleman. Mr. Baker, it will be remembered, was elected in September last, as one of the new city gbvernment. This conduct on the part of Recorder Waller is highly, praiseworthy ; and is a befitting final act to a laborious, faithful, and able discharge of the pub lic duties which have devolved upon him for the last six months. An Agricultural Bureau. A strong memorial, signed by the President and Secretary on behalf of the Pennsylvanih State Ag ricultural Society, has been presented to Congress in favor of the establishment of an Agricultural Bureau, as recommended by the President in his last message. After showing that while Congress has been legislating from the beginning of our Government, in behalf of every other', branch of the industry of the country, that of Agriculture,in which three-fifths of the population are directly employed, has been totally overlooked. In view of this, the memorial prays "that the present Congress Will establish a distinct Department, whose office it ahall be to gather/ and disseminate seeds, to collect, examine and encourage the use of valuable im plements, and, above all, to difilise knowledge of that art and science in which threeJohrths of the whole world are actually engaged, and!in the profit able success of which all are so deeply interested." The Monthlies. "Gonv,v's LADE 'S BOOK," for March is at hand, and a rare number it is, filled with the best of every thing. The engravings are the—" The Cottagers Sunday morning." The Soldier's Dream of Home." The Model Cottage" and the Fashion Plate, entitled —"lt is a Secret." GRAHAM'S. MAGAZINE," we admire with its fine tales and still finer engravings—the latter of which are "Beauty's Retreat," "A Dacotah Indian Court ing," "Oh Share my Cottage" and "Stars of the Summer Night," both of the latter having poetry attached. " The Lima's KEEPSAKE " for February is as neat as ever, Containing the portrait of "Martha Washington" and a short sketch of 'her life, with other reading matter, among which we notice par ticularly, a •tale entitled " Light and Darkness," Mr. Clay and the Democracy. The Whig journals denounce, as hypocritical, the kind words spoken of Mr. Clay by some of the Democratic papers, on the eve of his final ietire ment froni the stage of life. ;They reason that they are far from being a sufficient atonement for "the vile and monstrous calumriies and wrongs that they (the Demoiratic papers) and their party have been heaping upon him for the last quarter of a century." They ungener4usly refer it to the fact that he is no longer in the 'way of the prilitical and personal ambition of Democratic leaders, and, that "his name, so long a tower of strengthito his friends and of terror to his enemies, is now hallow ed by the advancing shadows of the graye."l Now, while we utterly dissent from and abhor the wild and extravagant construction of the constitution by Mr. Clay, which would lead to an overshadowing centralization of power in the federal head, we have always looked with respect upon the bold and frank bearing of Mr. Clay, who, unlike the insid ious Taylorites that struck him down, always won his white plume in full feather, and scorned to re sort to the trickery which defeated his nomination, humbugged the whole country and involved the confederacy in the turmoils and danger from which it has just escaped. With Clay as the lender of the Whig party, we always knew what enemy we had to fight, what principles to assail. We honored the man for his boldness and manliness, while we deprecated the mischievous principles he avowed. Such has been the Democratic policy and bearing towards' Mr. Clay. How has it been with the Whig party, whose leaders. now sneer at the De mocracy for doing justice to the bold frankness of Mr. Clay? It is well known that, in the farcical and ridiculous era of Taylorism, the selfish ledders of the Whig party, the former eulogists and idolators of Mr. Clay, looking alone to "availability" and the spoils of office, threw out:hints against the clear ness and vigor of his faculties. Their ambition for victory, under a "military chieftain," induced them to insinuate that age and infirmity had greatly im paired the intellectual power of Mr. Clay. But, now that he may be regarded as no longer a living actor on the political stage—having in influence become as it were historical—they whistle him down the wind as unworthy of note. How else can we explain the following circumstances narrated by the New Orleans Delta? Mr. Clay wrote a warm letter in favor of General Downs, his col league in the Compromise, advising his. Whig friends in that State to vote for him for Senator, declaring if-die was a Louisianian he would do so. This letter fell still-born—it did not gain General 'Downs a single vote. The voice which was once omnipotent with the Whig party, could nOt now stir up a single sensation of gratitude and iconces . sion in that party. To the same effect, speaks the Whig New Orleans Crescent in trumpet tones, as follows: "The whig party may talk [or prate?] Of what it has done for Henry Clay. The future historian will fairly settle the debit and credit of that account. Henry Clay has been the soul, the life, of the whig party; and paltry recreants have alone stolen off from the:dying lion. He made the whig party. It is his creation ; and the-child which foFgets its parent is accursed in all generations. He 'has up held it through half of a century; and in the pal triest and most selfish ingratitude, when his strength ebbed away and his eye-sight waxed dim, it has stolen off into Taylorism, and we will not say what. Was there ever so gallant la leader for such a re creant host? Was ever a Roland so deserted in the pass 'of Roncesvalles " But the country has taken him up, ere yet dead, as one of its chief historical glories ; and parasites crowd around with eulogy for the great old man, who is passing from earth. Well; be it so. We are glad of it. Better late than never; and the gravest punishment of his cowardly and'rresolute supporters, is in their position, quivering in uncertain equivocation." Let no Whig paper hereafter, dare to tsneer at the Democratic journals for what they say of Mr. Clay t—Richmond Enquirer. The New Court House. We understand the County Commissioners have selected as the site of the new Court House, the ground known as "Breneman's Lot," at the corner of Orange, and Lime streets, in the norti-eastern section of the City. This, although a handsome location in some respects, is, according to our no sion of things, quite too far removed from the bu siness part of town to be either convenient or desi rable. The lot in question is three squares from the present Court House, and, consequently, will be a serious drawback to people from the country attending Court, and especially to those who may have business in the County Offices—to •:say noth ing of the inconvenience 'that Attornie.4 (and, of course, their clients,) will be put to frony:the great distance intervening between their office's and the public buildings. Our idea always has been—and we so 'expressed ourself several weeks ago—that the new County Building ought to be as near the centre of the City as possible, so as to suit the convenience of all, whether .in town or country; and'eo viewing it, we were in favor of locating it in Market Square —or, at farthest, within one square of the old Court House, where the population, convenience, &c., would have best been consulted. But the Com missioners, it appears, have decided otherwise; and as they are, by law, constituted the gu'ardians of the county, we suppose that they conside}ed the in terests and convenience of the people would be best promoted by locating the building is near the suburbs of the City as possible. Of course, we nrilist submit to their superior judgment in the mat ter—but, nevertheless, we hear a great deal of complaint, since the site has been determined on, especially by citizens from - the country.; 1:13 The Legislature of Mississippi have elected Walter Brooke, (Whig,) U. S. Senatoi to supply the vacancy caused by General Foote's tesignation. This result was brought about by a colition be tween the Whigs and (so called) Union Uemncrats, and is the first fruits of the third party sorted in that State by Gen. Foote. The Legislature subsequently elected Stephen Adams (Union Dem.) for the unexpired term of Gen. Davis, now filled by Mr. Mcßae. FORREST'S Prtorzwry.—ln the progress of the ForrestAivorce trial at New York, a I)4r. Whitely was examined in relation to the value,of Mr. For rest's estate. He said—“ From my knowledge of up town property, I should suppose them worth $6,000 or $7,000 each; his residence in Twenty second street, I suppose to be worth $lB,OOO or $20,000 ; the estate on Font Hill about $55,000; the Covington estate, near Cincinnati, the most beautiful site in the neighborhooll,l shOuld suppose to be worth $25,000; he also owns some .property at the corner of Main and Seventh streets, Cincin . nati, which I should think worth $15,000 or $2O - A MODEL SIIBSOMBEIL—The WOTCElier (Mass.) Spy, states that a person called at thei office a few days ago, for two or three missing numbers of the Spy, who had been a subscriber for sixty years, and now possesses the entire paper during all that [late, substantially bound in volumes! This is not only a fine example, but it seems to go fat. to establish the axiom so often advanced, that good,old, prompt ly-paying subscribers live to a great age! 1u The Conferees of the Senatorial district , composed of the counties of Butler, Beaver and Lawrence, met fit ,Zelienople on the 31st ult., and elected Hugh M'Kee, Esq., of Butler,'as the Sena torial delegate to the Fourth of March Convention with instructiops to support the nomination of Mr ' . Bnca►sas for the Presidency. . ; 113-The steamer El Dorada, from :Chagres, ar rived at New York on Tuesday lash, with 250 passengers and $1,1.00,000 gold dust. The time made was the quickest on record—the passengers being only twenty-three and a half days from San Francisco. Wooi has written a letterin o'ppoeition to Kosiuth'e doctrine of intervention, Correspondence. Mr. Bucaarras, on his recent trip to the South, extended his visit to Richmonk l Va., to see his friend and former colleague in Mr. Polk's Cabinet, the Hon. Joan Y. Mason'. Whilst theta he was treated with great courtesy and respect—and a public dinner was tendered him by the Democratic members of the Legislature and a number of the citizens, which he declined. Tlie following is the correspondence, which we find in the Richmond Enquirer ! RICHMOND Feb. 11. 1852 To the Hon. Janus Buchanan: Sur We have heard with pleasure that you are expected in this city to-day, and ( desire to seize the opportunity to testify, in some suitable way, our high appreciation of your private worth and public services, and especially of that elevated patriotism, so consistent with the previous history of your life, with which you lately employed' your great talents and influence at home in defence of the federal constitution and laws. We therefore tender to you a hearty welcome to the metropolis of the Old Dominion, and request that you will accept a pub lic dinner, to be given on any day that will suit your convenience. With sentiments of profound esteem and admi- ration, we are, sir. your obedient servants, S. F. Leake, President J. H. Poindexter of the Senate. ' Hiram B. Dickinson J. B. Stovall WI A. Patterson Arthur R. Smith Geo. W. Toler William B. Shandy John M. Patton T. Carrington R. H. Glass E. M. Braxton James Dove George W. Brent D. Truehart J. T. Martin P. Claiborne Gooch J. W. H. Parker Chastian White B. B. Douglas D. H. London Arch. Stuart Thoinas H. Ellis James H. Paxton C. B. Hill P. Pitman ' Alex. Craig A. G. Reger R. 0. Haskins W. H. Edwards Jeremiah Wellman Wm. Hevener . John Goode, jr. Wm. G. Stevens Wm. M. Howerton 1 N. Bare C. S. Lewis Hiram Martz Wm. L. Jackson Thomas Wallace Morris D. Newman Z. E. Cheatham , B. W. Jackson W. P. Bocock W. H. Browne • . W. 0. Goode. Isaac B. Dunn Z. Kidwell, jr. Walter D. Leake Geo. W. Munlord ThOmas B. Hamlin H. B. Tomlin Wm. B. Power S. Wheeler E. D. Talbott Robert G. Scott A. S. Brooks John Womble S. Decatur Whittle A. Wade, jr. GO. E. Sadler Wm. A. Moncur N. B. Hill M. S. Granthan R. M. Nimmo W. M. Ambler ° C. S. Morgan Charles Mason V. Bargamin Wm. F.:Thompson Samuel D. Denoon S. T. Brown N. M. Martin Douglas B. Layne Roscoe B. Heath Thomas H. Daniel John A. Selden Thomas E. Bottom C. B. Luck , Samuel Downing .1. Y. Mason Wm. B. Taliaferro W. F. Ritchie William Old. jr. . George Taylor James Barbour Geo ff l W. Randolph. R. G. Rives RICHMOND, Feb. 12, 1952 GENTLEMEN: On my arrival in this city last evening I received your very kind letter, welcom ing me to the metropolis of the Old Dominion and tendering me the honor of a public dinner. I re gmt—deeply regret—that my Visit to Richmond will necessarily be so brief I cannot enjoy the pleasure and the privilege of meeting you all at the festive board. Intending Merely to pass a day with my valued friend, Judge Mason, my previous arrangements are of such a character that 1 must leave here to-morrow, or, at the latest, on Saturday morning. • But whilst I cannot accept, the dinner, I shall ever esteem the invitation from so many of Vir ginia's most distinguished and estimable sons as one of the proudest honors of Imy life. Your an cient and renowned Commonwealth has ever been the peculiar guardian of State rights and the firm supporter of constitutional liberty, of law, and of order. When, therefore, she endorses with her ap probation any of my poor efforts to serve the coun try, her commendation is a sure guarantee that these have been devoted to a righteous cause. You are pleased to refer in favorable terms to my recent conduct "at home in defence of the federal constitution unit laws." This was an easy and agreable task, bee :.se the people of Pennsylvania l i have ever been as loyal and faithful to the consti tution, the Union, the rights of the sovereign States of which it is composed, as the people of the an cient Dominion themselves. To have pursued a different course in my native State would therefore, have been to resist the strong current of enlight enee public opinion. I purposely retrain from d i cussing the original merit of the Compromise, bedause I consider it, to employ the expressive languiige of the day, as a "finality"—a fixed fact—a Most important enact ment of law, the agitation or disturbance of which could do no possible good, but might produce much positive evil. Our noble vessel of State, freighted with the hopes of mankind, both for the present and future generations, has passed through the most dangerous breakers which she has ever en countered: and has triumphantly ridden out the storm. Both those who supported the measures of the Compromise as just and necessary, and those who, regarding them in a different light, yet acqui esce in them for the sake of the Union, have arri ved at the same conclusionthat it must and shall be executed. They have thug, for every practical purpose, adopted the same platform, and have re solved to sustain it against the common enemy.— Why, then, should they wrangle and divide and waste their energies, not respecting the main ques tion, which has already beed definitely settled, but in regard to the process whiCh has brought them, though from different directions, to the same con- elution? Above all, why should the strength of the democratic party of the 'country be impaired and its ascendency jeoparde d' for any such cause? We who believe that the t4iumph of democratic principles is essential not only to the prosperity of the Union, but even to the preservation of the con stitution, ought reciprocally', to forget, and, if need be, to forgive the past, and cordially unite with our political brethren in sustaining for the future the good old cause of democracy,. It must be a source of deep and lasting pleasure to every patriotic heart that our beloved country has so-happily pas sed through the late trying[and dangerous crisis. The volcano has been extinguished, I trust, for ever ; and the man who would apply a firebrand, at the present moment, to the combustible materi als which still remain may Produce an eruption to overwhelm both the constitution and the Union. With sentiments of high and grateful respect, I remain your fellow citizen,, JAMES JAMES BUCHANAN. ==l Mr. Editor—lt is with sorrow I would pass some remarks on the fate of Mr.j Gorsuch, in this State. When I view the result of the trial of the murderers, I am lost in astonishment{ that, an honored and respected citizen 01 a neighboring State is shot down and murdered, without provOcation, and the perpe trators of the brutal outrage permitted to go scot free! What sensitive mind can remain silent when such thins are permitted in a peaceful and law abiding community? The, murder of Mr. Gorsuch has brought shame and diSgrace upon our State— has tarnished her escutchedn, and inflicted a wound which can never be healed. My heart bleeds when I think of thearansactions of that fatal morning at the Brick Mill, which left • fond wife a widow, and a family of children fatherless. As Pennsylvanians we never can forget our sis ter State of Maryland, whose noble sons fought side by side with us in the great Revulutionary struggle. And as brethrefi of the same household we should love them and cherish them, and not permit their rights to be trampled under foot by fanatics and traitors-to our common country. We should all—North and South—cling to the Union .., as the ark of our political safety, as the only hope of freedom throughout the world. Let us hold fast to it, and it will prove str ng enough to crush ty ranny in every shape and form. Let us be united as a Nation, and we can bid defiance to the combi ned despotisms of the world. Such is the wish— such is the determination of the Democracy of LANCASTER COUNTY. Feb. 11,1852. Hoar. GEORGE W. RorioN.—lt is now rendered pretty certain that Judge BARTON, formerly a res. ident of this city, was drbwned in the bay at San Francisco on last Christmhs night. A letter writ ten to a gentleman in Philadelphia, dated San Fran cisco, January 'l4, 1852; says: There are no tidings of Judge BARTON, and all hopes of his return are yielded. His death is re garded with so much certainty, that they have ad ministered, I learn, upon his effects. Thus has run to waste, with fitful glare, this lamp of genius." lErThe Senatorial delegate to the State Conven tion from Union, Mifflin and Juniata, is instruct ed for Mr. BUce►x►x. lET A fire occurred at Pittsburg, on Friday night last, which destroyed property to the amount o $75,000. LETTERS ON SLAVERY, I ABOLL , TIONISM, BY A GENTLEMAN OF MISSISSIPPI, TO HIS FRIEND IN THIS. CITY. NO. I. NEAR NATCHZZ (Miss.,) November 1, 051. My Dear Friend—l send you a disci:lame written by the Rev. Dr. Wheaton, of New England, upon a subject which, for some years past, has agitated our whole land, North and South.. No man among you who professes to take the Bible for his guide, and will carefully read the able, independent arid manly exposition of this gentleman, but must be convinced what his duties are to his brethren of the South in regard to the return of fugitives from labor. Dr. Wheaton does not stand alone; among the northern clergy, is his views upon this question. It has been cheering to the South to see that your ablest divines, especially in the large cities, have, pointed out as clearly as Dr. Wheaton his done, the course which patriotism, and wisdom, and the laws alike of God and our country z enjoin upon all your citizens in regard to the enforcement of the Fugitive Law. But these sermons do notreach the masses, and for this reason I hope you will have this discourse of Dr. Wheaton printed in such, one of your local papers, as will give it a large publicity. Is it not time then that you, and I, and all men who appreciate theblessings of this glorious Union, should rouse ourselves to counteract the efforts of fanatics who are aiming at its overthrow. Putting aside, however, the plain injunctions of the Bible, let us look to the teachings of the Con stitution of our country, which alone ought to quiet, the whole people of the North in relation to this matter. I quote you the language of one of its ablest expounders: " Historically ksays Judge Story,) it is well known that the object of this. clause (the fugitive bill) was to secure to the citi zens of the slave-holding States, the complete right and title Of ownership in their slaves, as property, in every State of the Union into which they might escape from the State in which they were held in servitude. The full recognition of this right and title was indispensible to the security of this species of property in all the slave-holding States, and in deed was so vital to the preservation of their ia terests and institutions, that it cannot be doubted that it constituted a fundamental article without which the Union would not have been formed.— The clause was therefore of the last importance to the security and safety of the Southern States, and could not be surrendered by them, without endang ering the whole property in slaves. The clause was accordingly adopted in the Constitution by the unanimous consent of the framers of it." Another distinguished judge of the. same court, (Judge Baldwin,) in refering to this same clause of the Constitution, says : " Thus you see the foun dations of 'the Government are laid, and rest upon the right of property in slaves. The whole structure must fall by disturbing the corner stone." Here then is the opinion of two of the most distinguished jurists of their age, upon the Constitutional rights' of the South as regards slavery, and fugitives from labor. And has this plain provision of the Consti tution been carried out in good faith by all our northern brethren 7 Why, since this' abolition agi tation began, the legislatures of some of the north ern States, instead of co-operation, have given aid and comfort to the fugitive, and have even panned laws to render the fugitive law a nullity. I could instance States wherein Governors, Judges, Sheriffs and Magistrates, have palpably violated their oaths to support the Constitution of their country, by' conniving at the escape of fugitive slaves by sham legal and other proceedings; and when this re source failed, mobs of black and white have rescued them by force. The ashes of a murdered Kennedy are scarcely cold, befo we hear of another victim in the person of the venerable Gorsuch, offered up to the bloody Moloch of fanaticism. Need I call your attention where even murder 'and rape have been committed by slaves in the South, and who escaping to free soil States, have set their - pursuers at defiance. Aie not such cases as these calculated to keep up in the breasts of a high-iipirited people, conscious of their rights under the Constitution, a deep sense of intolerable insult, and or a broken covenant. Look too at the character generally of these runaway slaves. We are told that the Gor such runaways had committed theft—and in a more recent case, at Syracuse, New York, (where also the fugitive was rescued) the papersassert that this negro had been four times in the penitentiary of that State. Now we do not envy the abolitionists the possession and companionship of the black thieves, murderers and rakes, they are taking to their bosoms; but will your honest and reflecting citizens permit such a class to become domiciled in their midst 7 Mark my prediction! If this state of things should continue much longer, Penn sylvania will be forced to pass laws as Indiana has already done, expelling the negroes from your borders. Let me now call your attention io the condition of our country, when our fore-fatliers established this Union, and see what this much abused Consti tution has done for us. As you well know, we came out of the war of the Revolution with an immense debt, and with little or no commerce. Industry was paralyzed, rebellion against the laws a not unfrequelit occurrence, and all was,chaos j and confusion, until our present Constitution was adopted. Under its benign rule see what we have effected. WheXe is the country upon the face of this globe, so blessed with plenty and strength, and beauty and grandeur? And has slavery had nothing to do in bringipg about these sublime results ? Look at the vast superstructure' of wealth and power which has been reared upon the foundation of slave labor in this country. The exports of the great southern Staples of cotton, tobacco, rice and hemp alone, amount annually to over one hundred millions of dollars ; while the exports of the north do not generally equal one third of that amount. To be more exact, I will give you the exports of North and South for several years past, drawn from the reports of the Commissioner or Patents : 1846. Northern exports, - 27 millions. 1846. Southern 4 4 - - 74 44 1847. Northern " - - 48 44 1847. Southern " - - 102 44 1848. • Northern " - - 34 44 1848. Southern 44 - - 98 " 1849. Northern 44 - - .32 1849. Southern 44 - - • 99 1850. Northern ' 4 - - 34 4 4 1850. Southern 44 - - 100 44 For the lotelligencer. Thus you see in a period of five years, there has been but one year in which the exports of the North have approximated to one half of that of the South ; 'and this is explained by the unusual demand for bread stuffs for Europe caused by the loss of the potatoe crop. I would also mention that a hirge ; item in your exports is for manufactured articles out of southern staples. Now ae the imports of a country are paid for by its exports, is it not plain that seventy-five per cent. of the entire importa tions of our country are annually paid for by.the product of slave labor ? Again, Look at the millions we annually spend'at the north in travelling expenses, (and which is underrated at fifteen mil lions) as well as for purchases of food and Clothing, for our three millions of slaves = , as also for horses, and mules, and cattle, and ploughs, and wagons,. and other implements for carrying on our planta tion operations: For the iron and stone coal, and steam engines, and cotton gins, not to mention the thousand articles of luxury and comfort for the white race, and for all which the South is annually pouring millions upon millions into the lap of the North, either in money or in exchange for her pro ductions. See again the industry called into life and, activity among you, for the transportation of our great staples upon the ocean. Your lumbermen who float down the giants of the forest to the ocean, your shipwrights, blacksmiths, sheathers, caulkers and others who convert them , into ships. Your sailors, stevedores, cartmen, clerks and merchants, all, all, are mainly dependent upon the great carry ing trade which our southern istaples, has devel oped. Need I point you furthei to the vast amount of capital invested in commercial houses, in cotton factories, in rail roads, in machine making, and all the trades and occupations connected with these great interests, a capital which may be safely es timated to exceed Three hundred millions of dollars, all of it dependent upon slave labor, aed which the abolition of slavery would demolish at a blow. And there too is our great internal marine, the thousand steamers which ply out- magnificent rivers —an internal trade which eclipses that 01 any other nation, and which the interchange of our produc tions hie built up in less than thirty years. What American heart does not swell with patriotic pride at the contemplation of such a picture of industry and grandeur ? and yet we - have Fanatics among us who say, let our industry become annihilated—let Commerce disapper—let the spindle's of the north cease to run, and silence reign over the deserted streets of our cities, and famine rage round our habitations. Let contending armies riot over our fields, and the earth drink in the blood of brothers. Let wild beasts come from the mountains of the north and the cane brakes of the south and occupy the land. Let even the temples of our holy reli gion disappear, and mourning, and desolation, and woe, cover the earth, rather than have slavery ! I now purpose to look at some of the objections made by ,these people against the 'institution of slavery, and which have so 'bleared and perverted their judgment and conscience as to cause them to combine (in laboring for its overthrow) to bring upon their country the appaling calamities I have above depicted. And first: The foundation of their warfare against slavery rests upon the quick sands of error and falsehood. They assert ihat slavery is a sin and a crime. We contend that slavery was established by divine authority, and among God's own chosen people, tre Hebrews.— Caa the following plain wofds of the Bible be mis understood ? " Both thy bondmen, and thy hand maids which thou shalt have, shall be from the heathen that.are roundabout you, of them shall ye buy bondmen and bondmaidens. Moreover of the children of the strangers that sojourn among you, of them shall ye buy, and of their families that are with you, which they begat in your land : and they shall be your possession—and ye shall take them for an inheritance for your. children slier you, to inherit them for a possession : They shall be your liondmenforever."—Ley. xxv, 44-46. ' In reference espe'cially to negro slavery, we point / to the fulfilment of the curse pronounced upon the descendants of Ham: Cursed be Canaan, a servant of servants shall he be to his brethren." And again Japheth shall dwell in the tents of Shem, and Ham shall be their servant." Has not this prediction been most literally fulfilled 9 Have not our North American Indians, our Creeks, and Cherokees, and Choctaws, and Seminoles, at this very day, thousands or the none of Ham, held as' slaves, among them I But I have no desire is waste words upon the Bible argument for slivery.. In relation to this matter, the Rev. Dr. Hodge, one of the giants of the Chitral, says "If we are wiser, better, more courageous than Christ and ' his Apostles, let us say so ; but it will do no good, under a paroxysm of benevolence, to attempt to tear the Bible to pieces, or to extort by violent exegesis, a meaning foreign to its obvious sense. Let God be true, but every man a liar." Again. Do they tell us that slavery is a moral and political evil, and ought-for this cause to be at once abolished 9 We answer, that we do not deny that slavery may be considered an evil ; but we further 'say that the evil was not of our choosing in its origin. That old England, and New England fastened these slaves upon us, against our repeated protests, and that they shall not now dictate to us the time or manner ih which we shall get , rid of them. If slavery then is in evil from the power it confers upon the master, may not in the same sense the marriage relation, as well as the parental rela tion, be considered an evil 7 Civil government even is an evil, since it is an ahridgement of our lib ties, but who does not prefer the evil of government to thegreater evil of anarchy 7 And so may the slave prefer the evil of slavery; to the greater evils of want, and barbarism, and crime, which attend upon his race when out of that relation. Need I adduce , proof in confirmation of this assertion 7 Look then at Africa. That noble missionary, the lion hearted Ashmun, in writing from Western Africa, tells us that "children seldom receive parental correction, or are restrained in any course to which their passions and propensities incline them. Lying, petty thefts, and the entire catalogue of childish vices and follies, when seen in children only excite merriment as long as the consequences are not seriously injurious to themselves or others: The adult is commonly devoid of moral principle alto- gether. Polygamy is universal; and a licentiousness of practice which none, not the worst part of any civilized community on earth can parallel, give a hellish consummation to the frightful deformity imparted by sin, to the ritriral aspect of the negro tribes. They are degraded to the condition nearly of the better sort of brutes." Another missionary, speaking of their kings, says : " They are them selves poor, ignorant, naked savages, living in huts but a single grade above the burrows which the lower animals prepare for themselves, and there indulge in reckless indolence, or wallowing in beastly sensuality, regardless alike of their own good, or that of ,there, they make scarce an effort beyond what is necessary for. the supply of their wants, or the gratification of their animal ap. petites." The Landers, when in western Africa, insert in their journal as follows : " The " rainy,riason is fast approaching, and what makes us still more de-. sirous of leaving this abominable place, is the fact that a sacrifice of no less than three hundred human beings is shortly to take place. We often hear the cries of many of these poor wretches, and the heart sickens with horror at the bare contemplation of such a scene as awaits us, should we rsmain here much longer." Or, need I point you to Hayti, where the black I race left to themselves, have relapsed into more than African barbarism. Her exports which, during the existence of slavery`; amounted to more than twenty-five millions annually, are now reduced to a cypher. Her beautiful hills and vallies become , a desolation, and her population given up a prey to anarchy anddeepotisM, and, if travellers reports I are correct, even to Cannibalism. Had the abolitionists expended their philanthro phy for the slave, in discreet and honest efforts to ameliorate the slave laws of the South, they would have met with the most respectful consideration on the part of many' slaveholders. But ! even these laws, obnoxious to blame as I admit some of them e to be, have been magnified and perverted by the abolitionists, to keep up an angry feeling between ' the North and South. Harsh these laws may seem to all your peopld, but I can safely assert that pub lic sentiment in tfie... South is against their general ! enforcement, and most of them remain a dead let ! ter upon our statute books. If slavery however is so clearly sanctioned liy the Bible, and recognized I by the Constitution of our country, can !the South ! he condemned for passing laws, which they deemed necessary for sustaining it ? Now we do not com plain at all, at being told that these laws are afflic tive to the slave, and ought to he modified or ex • punged ; but we do with justice complain of the unmerited calumnies that too often, for political or interested purposes, are heaped upon the South and her institutions. It is a fashionable: outcry, for in stance, among demagogues and abolitionists at the North, in order to make slavery odious .to the popular mind, that wahold three millions of slaves in a state of the grossest concubinage. There is some truth, but' a greater degree of falsehood in this siveeping assertion. Throughout the! entire southern States there are tens of thousands of slaveholders, embracing all the religious denomina tions of Christian' sects, who employelergymen not only to preach and gxpound the scriptures to their slaves, but also to administer to them all the rights of the church. Marriag4 and religious services at the grave being ministered alike to-white and black. Concubinage to a certain extent I admit may exist, but should the large class of slaveholders be in sulted who disapprove and labor to suppress it Might not the slaveholder with as much justice denounce theyeople of the North for countenancing vice and sensuality, because many instances occur among you of parents prostituting their children, and because brothels are permitted an all your towns and cities. Again. There is another matter in respect to which.the slaveholder has been mis represented and calumniated—and that is, the modes of punishment we adopt for the s uppression of vice and crime and idleness among our slavert. You degrade them, nays the abolitionist, by the punishment of the lash. The lash I will not deny' may be abused by slavhholders, just as it may be by parents, but this does not constitute a valid ob jection either against slavery, or against this par ticular method of punishment. We all know that the labor of the negro in the production - of the great tropical staples (a production which has ex erted the most powerful influence in the civiliza tion of the white race) must necessarily be compul sory. Their refusal to .work in the West India Islands, where this. mode of punishment has been abandoned, has set7this question forever at rest. But the nse of the lash is not often called for to compel the slave to labor—the fear of its applica tion being generally a suffiMent stimulus to the idle; though for the.orrection and prevention of crime, we hold it up' as a terror to evil doers, just as you do your jails and penitentiaries at the North. In connection with this subject let me refer you to the laws of England, where, if "a man steals a pig, perhaps to keep himself and family from down right starvation, he is torn from his wife and chil dren and parents, and transported to the antipodes. If he break into his neighbor's cottage he is hung for burglary." Now if our- slaves commit like offences we punish them with the lash. Which punishment, I ask, is the most revolting to human ity ? Again. Might we not ask the British abolitionist if the lash is never heard in England ? Hear the sworn , testimony of a factory overseer before a committee of the House of Parliament: "I was obliged to chastise them (the factory children] when they were almost fainting, and it hurt my feelings—then they would spring up and work pretty well for another hour ; but the last two or three hours was my hardest work, for they then got sci exhausted." And in her armies and navies, num berless instances are upon record where the lash has been applied with such severity and continued application, that the' subject has died under the hands of the person who inflicted it ; and yet these people have sent over their members of Parliament, and Cockney novelists, and sentimental old maids, to teach us lessons of humanity ! Although such cruelty in the use of the lash as P have depicted, would not be tolerated among slave-holders, yet they have found a judicious application of it to be the most prompt and certain corrective against the vices and crimes among slaves; and although they will not tolerate cruelty, yet their feelings' of humanity in respect to its use have not yet exhaled in sickly sentimentalism. Again. There are but few of us who in our younger days have not felt that potent stimulus., to lazy school-boys, the birch ethe pedagogue; but do we deem ourselves to have been debase by it ? ' Or did Solomon suppose he was requiring parents to debase their children, when he exhorted them nut to epoil the child by sparing the rod. I now conic to the most important consideration of all, in regard to this crusade against American slavery. You will agree with me that Abolitionism, like Socialism, and Communism, and Fourierism, are all exotics, and the offspring of a hot bed of atheism and infidelity. Who ever heard of an abolitionist among us until England began to agitate the emancipation of her slaves in her West India colonies I And what enlightened man in her do minions, who does not see that her commercial greatness is paleing before the giant strides of her offspring; and that she well may fear the adult Hercules, if even in his cradle, his strength has been so vast? Yes, my friend! her statesmen see and know that the foundation of our wealth and industry, and commercial prosperity, springs from our tropical productions, the results of slave labor. If she can distract and divide us, and induce the North to keep up an agitation against slavery that would eventuate finally in the emancipation orour slaves, she knows that she will at once -enjoy a monopoly of the tropical productions in her East India colonies; a trade which would give her the control of the commerce of the world, and bring hundreds of millions annually into the hands of her subjects. Well could England afford to eman cipate her thousands of slaves in her West India colonies, at the cost even of a hundred millions to their owners, if by so doing she could destroy the .labor of millions of slaves in this country. If it was motives of philanthrophy (as-the aboli tionists contend) which actuated her, why then, I ask, has she done nothing to raise up the starving millions of the white race at her own doors ? Where was her philanthrophy when she ground down her suffering people to support a twenty years war for the "divine right of Kings?" Where her philan throphy when she drove out the native princes of Hisodstan from their fair dominions, and plundered their millions of treasure? Where her philantbro phy, when more recently she sent her armies and navies to burn down the cities and slaughter the unwarlike Chinese, because these people had dared to expel from their ports a poisonous drug, which was bringing thousands of them annually to a mis erable death ? , scHer philanthrophy ! my friend, twist you and me, Is all just tweedle-dum and tweedle-dee." Presidential Washington County has unanimously instructed for Mr. BocuArrarr. Bucks County has gone for . Gen. Cass. Clinton County instructs for Gen. CASS . There are, we believe, but four more delegates to elect in the State, all of whom will be for Mr. BUCHANAN. Distressing Accident. A singular and painful accident occurred on Wednesday morning last, at Huling's Mills, on Mosquito creek, about six miles from this place, the particulars of which, as near as we can glean, ate as follows: Two men were employed in the mill at which the accident occurred to superintend the sawing during the night: Mr. John Henry ta king his turn at work, from 12 o'clock until day light. Having been awakened at midnight, as usu al, he went underneath the mill for the purpose of arranging some of the gearing preparatory to pur suing his night's task, when, unfortunately slipping, his light was dashed from his hand, and in his en deavors to grasp at something to support himself and prevent a fall, his fingers were caught in the tneshes of a cog-wheel which was slowly revolving above him. The wheel gradually drew in his arm crushing his strong, muscular hand like a wafer, entirely severing the bone above the wrist, and mangling him in a most horrible manner—until he was drawn up so tight he had harely a loothold upon the points of his toes. In this position, his own weight and the entering wedge formed by his ' arm stopped the revolution of the machinery.— The poor fellow, who must have been suffering the most excruciating agony, screamed frantically for help, but the noise of the rushing water drowned his voice, and his fellow laborer, who had immedi ately dropped asleep, in the mill, above him, ac customed to noise and clatter, did not awaken nor hear him. There was none other likely to hear him. What an awful position for a strong, athletic man, full of life and vigor! He screamed unheed ed, until his voice failed him. For fire hours he remained in that position—his right arm wedged between the impinging wheels, in a winter night, the warm blood trickling over him from his wounds! His wife awakening from a frightful dream, and seeing no light in the mill, surmised that something had happened, ran from the house to the mill, heard him moan and discovered him, and arousing the neighbors, at ii o'clock, alter Con siderable difficulty, he was released from his fright ful captivity. His arm was amputated on Wed nesday by Dr. Thomas Lyon, from whom we gath er these particulars, and who now has the mangled limb at his office. As late as yesterday we learn that Mr. Henry is in a fair way of recovery from the terrible accident and exposure to which he was subjected.—Lyconring Gazette. ARRIVAL OF THE FALCON NEW . Yonx, Feb. 17.—The Falcon from Chagres and Havana arrived at 12 o'clock. She brings fifty passengers, but no gold. There was considerable indignation felt at Ha vana in consequence of rumors of a new invasion. The Cumberland line of battle ship Vice Admi ral George Seymour, and the steamship Devasta. [ion, had arrived at Havana, from Jamaica. The U. S, steamer Saranac arrived at Navy Bay soon after the Falcon. Senor Manuel Diaz would assujne the Governor ship of New Grenada. • The ship Superb, which lett New York more than a year since, with stores for the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, had arrived at Panama. The steamer Bolivia reached Panama on the 19th, with late and important intelligence from South America. The movement of Gen. Cruz in Chili against the Government of President Montt, has been entirely suppressed. One of the bloodiest battles that ever occurred in Chili took place on the plains of Lou gomillk on the Bth December. The Government troops, alter a hot engagement of seven hours, came off victorious, leaving '2OOO dead and wounded on the field. A treaty was after wards concluded, which will secure peace to the Republic for years. A treaty of peace, commerce and navigation has also been concluded between the Chilian and and 'Peruvian Governments. Terrible & Fatal Accident on the New York and Erie Railroad. The most terrible acccident which has yet oc curred upon the Erie Railroad, befel the train corn ing to New York yesterday morning. The writer of this account was an eye witness and participant in the thrilling scene, and will briefly sketch what came under his note. When the engine, with a baggage car and four passenger cars attached, had come to a sharp curve in the road, about two miles west of . Equinunk, those of - us who were in the next to the last car, were suddenly startled from our seats, thrown hither and thither by that peculiar jolting motion, which is well known to the experienced in indica ting that the car is off from the track. We were drawn over the sleepers for the distance of forty rods, expecting every instant that the car would fall to pieces. The stove was at once upset, and the coals scattered in every direction, blinding our eyes with smoke and ashes. When the engine was stopped, upon rushing to the door, the first sight that met our view was the Delaware river rushing by, directly beneath, at the foot of a walled precipice, of at least thirty feet in height. The next moment the conductor of the train came drifting by upon a cake of ice, calling for help, assuring us that he had already fallen through the crumbling foothold two or three times. A short distance behind him was a passenger in a similar situation. The ice was drifting at the rate of five miles an hour, and it required fast running to keep in a line with them. Ropes were procured from the engine, and after some minutes of fearful susprnse, with the aid of a skiff and a board thrown to one of them, to be used as a paddle, they were both rescued in a helpless condition. By this time we learned that the passenger car behind us, the last of the train, was just the other side of the curve, thrown entirely into the Dela Ware river, with all who were in it. We hastened to the spot, and lo! thirty feet be low us was the car, almost buried under the water, and the poor creatures within were thrusting their arms out of the windows calling for help. Two or three of them had crawled upon the root and were beseeching us to save them. The scene at first seemed to strike every one dumb with horror. The smooth walled precipice could not be decended.— We were obliged to go a little further up the river, where there is no wall, but only a gravel bank, and there slide down to the water's edge. The car, at its nearest end, was about 23 feet from the shore; the water was deep and running very swift ly. Boards were found upon the beach, but none of them were long enough. After half an hour's hard work a dead trunk of a hemlock tree was shoved into the last window, and the other end resting upon the shore: With the aid of this a bridge was built, upon which those able to walk were led, and these too much frozen to move were carried. An axe was procured and holes cut thro' the roof, and one after another the unfortunate pas sengers were lifted out. A young girl was drawn up, and at once began to plead that her mother might be saved; as hus band begged for his wife's rescue—friend struggled to save friend. An old lady - of seventy years was drawn out of the water insensiblut she afterward revived. Upon getting the sufferers ashore, the only way to get them to a place of relief was to put ropes around their bodies, under the arms, and draw them directly up the precipice. The severe cold incapacitated them for raising hardly a finger to aid themselves. The hair and garments of the ladies were frozen stiff as soon as they were drawn out of the water in the car. One man by the name of Hyatt, was quite dead when taken from the ice. The sufferers (wounded dreadfully some of them, and all more or less bruised,) were taken into the two' remaining uninjured cars and there made as comfortable as they could be, chilled through with di ipping garments. Though two 'fir three persons were said to be missing, it was thought best to come on with the wounded, and they were left some of them at points upon the route, and those able and willing to do so continued their journey to New York. There is every reason to believe that four persons have been killed, and the number of wounded must be twenty or thirty. The energy of two or three gentlemen, who were themselves injured, in getting out the sufferers, was most praiseworthy. It is only a proper tribute to the self-sacrificing endeavors, to mention the names of Mr. John E. Tollree, of Ith aca, N. Y., and Mr. J. W. Armstrong, an agent of the firm of Stone & Starr, No. 41 Broadway. The latter had received a severe wound behind the right ear, but was indefatigable in devising means of re lief; cutting through the roof; breaking out the windows, and with his own band, extricating one after another. The immediate cause of the acci dent was the breaking of a rail at the curve. It is the general opinion of passengers that the cars were not moving faster than twenty miles an hour. Whether that was a prudent rate of speed at a sharp curve upon the edge of such a precipice, the public can judge. . . But what can be said in extenuation of the fact,- that the signal rope connecting with the engine did not run through the-last two cars? When the ac cident began, a dozen men made a rush for the bell cord and it was not to be found. Judge of our dis appointment, our horror, when it was known, in an instant, that we had nomeans of preventing the ruin that seemed inevitable. Several have since said that they remarked before the occurrence that there was this neglect. Let there then be a thor ough investigation, and let us know who was thus culpable. The conductor was in the last car himself, and could instantaneously have rung the bell at the engine, and those in the next car could have done so. This carelessness is deeply felt by the passengers as a most grievous wrong, not only done to the dead and wounded, but to all those whose lives have thus been periled.-Tribune Feb. Is. Tribute of Respect The following preamble and resolutions were adopted by the Penn'a Association of I. 0. of Phil ogatheans, No. 38, of the city of Lancaster, on the death of Sister Mary W. Swentzel : Whereas, it has pleased Divine Providence to call from our midst, Our beloved Sister Mary W. Swent. ref, Worthy Associate of our respective order we are called again to mourn our loss which we shall ever hold in remembrance. Therefore be it Resolved, That we will forever cherish and hold in future rememberance the social meetings we held with her in our respective AssOciation. Resolved, That in the death of Sister Mary W. Swentzel, our order has lost a good and true mem ber; that the charter of the .Penn'a Association be hung in mourning tor the spare of thirty days. Resolved, When - 'those we love are snatched away by death's resistless hand, our hearts the mournful tribute pay that friendship must demand: Resolved, That we sympathise with the bereav ed husband in his loss of an affectionate and be loved wife, kind and affectionate mother, worthy and beloved sister. Resolved, That a copy of these resolutions be sent to the family and published in the city papers. ELIZABETH HAMM-BACH, MARIA COYLE, SUSAN OKABON, ELIZABETH KENDIG, MART ERISMAN, Committee. Feb. LBth, 1852 lEr At a meeting of Lancaster Council, No. 25, Order United Daughters of America, the following Preamble and Resolutions were adopted Whereas, An allwise Providence having called Irom our midst our beloved sister Mary W. Swent zel, Ex-Gov. ol this Council, we are called to mourn again the loss of one of the most useful members of our order. Her zeal and useful devotion has en deared her to us and is well worthy our future re membrance. Therefore be it Resolved, That we will in future cherish and hold in remembrance our late sister Mary W. Swent zel, for the many virtues rendered to our Order, and the many social meetings we held with her in our Respective Council. Resolved, That the hall of the Lancaster COUR CII, No. 25, Order U. D. of A., be hung in mourn• ing for the space of Thirty Days as a tribute of Respect for our deceased sister. Resolved, That we view in the character of our deceased sister, a virtuous and kind wife, an affec tionate and beloved mother. Resolved, That we sympathise with the bereaved husband in the loss of an affectionate and beloved wife, a kind and affectionate mother, and a respected and beloved sister. Resolved, That a copy of these resOlutions be sent to the family and published in the papers of this city. SUSAN S. HAMBRIORT, ELIZABETH KENDIO, SUSAN . OELSON, SUSAN A. SELLAIIO, MART YACIILET, Riot at Cleveland. A serious disturbance occurred at Cleveland, CO., on the 16th inst., in consequence of the discovery near the Homeopathic Medical Cojlege of several dead bodies obtained for dissection—amongst others that of a young lady who had died but a few days previously. The excitement ran so high, that the military companies of the place had to be called''' . out to prevent the destruction of the College build ings by the mob. The ringleaders of the rioters were arrested. !Er Mr. BUCHANAN reached home, from his vis it to Richmond and Washington, on yesterday Committee.