, 0 1 7 1 SVIAIIO TOW A ND.A.: , r b i ti illontinp, June 32, wag. REMARKS OF , G. A.GROW ; OF PENNSYLVANIA I ' FINALITY OF THE COMPROMISE. Tin tie Muse of Rep' sentatires,ll4 27, 1852 11, 0 e being in Committee of the Whole on lel the Union On the Indian appropriation GROW said ;.Cutisiti ..—After the indulgence of theeom. , t h e homestead bill, it was not my wen. inn snag the session, to trespass on the „, 1 t he_kbass; bat a question bas been which 1 am unwilling to pass by in %7J this being the first opportunity that I ?mlled to speak, under the rules, I take i on may what f should much prefer to es its introduction. seers: since a resolution passed this Rowse fr compromise a finality. I voted, sir. twit introduction in any form,Land against their final passage, for reasotirditated in 'loons themselves, that I regarded any fur. viol) of these questions at this time ns ci,..e un:,ecessary not being one of those Neve that discussion on one side at a goes n itati on, while tliAeu*sinn on the onar ;LI s ee no benefit likely to ticrue to titecotin nal then p.m.age. The only result, to aty trou:.l be to operNa2attz this whole :At it an element in the next presidential Au opinion which, 11 the prmeedino , rt ,u.st for the last two months is no be taken as •„tc, tr.!. iv fuqy Tel It is but tukito , winch. il leh soon hare Lathered cinders enough to !.em•etter.. e!..Ate been !e , !,1 a! 'be Noah, and believe.] - 0, VIA: peopie of the Sou.h wete,,,y6s , a 3,1 iinzmitti here of the ituhkvt n , had igiceii, in the cne.‘ln•heii pro tx - 0), th.e the Representative* ci %tete constantly n o mpr ali tt. agi a t,rt 01 :hat t•tx,lsject And wiles., ;ef , ctono ;he mom rtolorittis for the stahill • 4At Late for ear been uttered. "rite d Noch has constantly been ; to cease : e re peace and repose to the conzitry. Ili ;vs.,. !c,l 14, believe that this entreaty • was c.kme Item hearts anxious to tiee ali it, harmony at 'the altar of our c-trior. K-a4zr ae a may teem. and dta•tra!ing., 24 it ~r, .V.. 1, ZIA 1.10 qi .. l 4 !rtley of men rtfi smears nut r• 01 liar tiatiorti convened a' tts the) Lind ttirist- r',!e ere 41 4nOtliOr wild *er:Stittal .e.teilfro 4.11114 t!,:xt the fa... 1 C,n.;;rrs< spent time '4 ` , ,.... c , fi1pr1 - Int•qtk? to ii:1 .1 11. W hat linattl . .pene,l dtiscrateron torch she Repubes t: taqt., to.te , ea 1 . 1 Who is the incendiary ra. , esi ht• hat a to fire the temple a: 2 Di Oe intio,lucers of this agitation into ta:'• Zprle by, no invective, no irri- VS- 4 Joe eoncizti to damp their sere ,le.o.t.r3lna: the ashes ci their fa — Mill a pat! over man's future, for they the toundalions of the Union. e opel,lnz of the. Congress, even before this this subject was o *“:1e. Democratic caucus by a Repre- Jr'4.l tem.es.see, [Mr Pots.] and on the sess.on, into the other wing of this ty a Sea:or from 111,sisaippi,/[slr. Foote] • alto this House by taro gentlemen iron :Nittsrs Lcs. ,, os and Eitusaao.) The C,Z7 'Alta movement by its friends eras, Is a teetrog of opp,xtition in poniont pars 01 the compromise, which means rr sure law—fin that y is the only part of tven se chance, or, at least, of 1-7 r 1?? - e1ent.wit is entertained. Ca War. IS:re :1 qui awn its admission, there reach of Congressional action.-- uu ie settled, and a part of all the PAA. S. that cioestion iis beyond yoga, Tem:crial zovernments have been organi c'-_ d force for Utah and New -Mexico ; -,,it - iderstanii that any one proposes to Zeal NOt do I understand that anybody la des:crS the law abottshing the Stale e District of Columbia; but even ,7 I MS Z . i.praleti, there is an old law of if I am rightfully informed, pawed be was ceded to the General Govern v:lch, if erjameil, would accomplish the. ='=:)•-•-°- Si :La: all that remains of the com a 7441 F, 1 3 the fa.zitire Aare lair; and in City iii opstlint that may exist, is any it is theco: necessary to et ttP u . s . :lcsl%co : on the same principle, I sop: ailapa:hy practice in medicine—in or et?el &ay int:anon atom the body, it is nec LI? a counter initatine ; bat the con ''em two sometimes kills the patient but hale filth in that Lind of treat ease. especially in moral or political "inch regain, quiet and reprise for their E. 7.1 the first dory al the phYsicart; and - Ferret of hvs *caress ea, that he4thdl on -isile diseased his patient berate be f :art bete as if the Northern mina W I L 4 4ht Ctrwrottrn, and faithlem to the guar-, cf t t"ttelpsr.. Almng the en -7 4** , 11 01 *er° to-% wea n tune eine* by the gentlemen New t Mt. Sriciittes,l and much made l '°c lye Wax by the gentlemen frewi wet beied on this essnmption ) de" ezte het that di of the poniskes etti the ens taw do not meet the NIPtC 6II ° ( Ite Lek n . Pezt, sir, with hen a el 6"1121 _ . 1 , . , . . _ . , . . • .. • .._., ._. - _.:_z., - _ ,-.-..f : ', 21,r - :i . ,:::%it,w4,- , ..r . ,,, ,- :_ - ... - ' , 7t. - IY - -.3" - ; ,- --- -. . , . . . . , ... .. - . r • . . . . - •;;Zr ...s. -.4 - •\e-••4 . P"" - 1 , ,:• --- rt‘ ?' ','"•• "•• .• •••. , • - .4., ' -,- .-, , 'Nooe. 1 'l , • -•-. ...1. • '"A' - " r!:;,;: . ..VISE" - •; ". • 1 -, .....i... t r ."' • ".:,,,-, ".., :. ',....,.....”,,- .. .C . ..."7 2 .7:: - " - .;',-, .. -. - ."..... — .17,:::-.T .. ..7,..: ."' s'"1: , - t..,.',.. -, 1 , ., -. ;" 1.,...., , ,,,..4 , !.. -. ' • . .................—...---•-•-••••••••••* ---. . . - . . , , . . , : .. , ~,,, ~ i L.. .' r .. : , . :,,i. t - 1 . ;,'..',..„, - „t".'4 . ..ii" s W ... , •.0; ,c , ,oti:_;r:: ::' ."' - ; .• ,'''' ‘.' .• • A • ' - . , . , ~„ . . . . . - . . ...„, . _ . . TI • : , ' ? .. ,._...,•,..„:4,ii,„,:...„.„,.......„..;,,,,..4„,:„...• ~,.., .....,_ ~... .. _. ~., • ~....,...,:t.... 7 ,. . , .i.z.` . 5.4 .' " ' ;-,; " _ - '". • " 2 -:..: , 1.. : 5';.; Al LI 4. " . ..., , - s. 1.17 - 71•,... #l. ' '''''. -"".••-•.' <•'• 4 ' i ' ls.. l ' , :,'N., ''', -', '7, ~... .. . . . . , . • _ ... .. ... ~ . ' . . : . _ ... . .• . .. . • ~..• . . . . . _ . • individual exception, the men of the Kurth are loy al to the 'Constitution; and I 'undertake to say, in' their behalf, that all theotwaidenVintered,intn*. their latheris will be fiillifelly- °Vise - reed- try their children. Though it may not-be proper or *iv. resentative on this floor to' attempt : to 'epeak the sentiments of any 'others . than thniet whom he is delegated to represent. yet I have no had- tancy in saying that the 'entire North riCognize,- 1 in the clause of the Constitution relative to persOnS bound trisereke, the right of the integer to put. sue and peaceably retake his elave wherever he can find him, and that alargelnajority of all parties believe that that clause gibes to Congress power to legislate on this subject. But while they recognize these rights indiir t* Constitution, and believe it better to have loin tar/mutating the tirade of re. capture, in that by investigation the legal owner ifs may be distinguished from , the liOnappei, there would of course, on this as on every other subject, be more or less disagmement as toilet Iletailii of -a law. Yet, there has been no diiirmitition anib-iffts. ed in this Congress, even by the ti ens who a. er tirely opposed to the fugitive stave lasi, to re-open this agitation. Aa was well said by the gentleman from North Carolina, [Mr. YEtiseLe,j " there has been no agitation in this Congress by the men who opposed the measures of compromise." _ Because there find% Lteire unanimity of senti ment in regard to all the provisions of a law, is that any teason for declaring it a Beefily, when by such a declaration you, in effect, declare it not to be sns eeptitile vg, improvement by any alteration or amendment, and you must go before the Americas people and deem! it to the last cross.of a " t" and die of an "1" as the perfection of legislative wis then ! Thus, by a resolve, you attempt to place an act of Congress above the Constitution itself.' For that is open at all times to aeration and amend ment; and where is the man upon this door that would vote to strike pot a clause in that instrument which provides for its amendment, and declare it a littalryl Yet there are many demanding of this Naam.al Conventions of their reepeCtive pastier that they ingralt such a doctrine into there creed, in reteriewe to a law enacted under the Constitution rh-- De.to.”racy of the cotinhy 1~ a...lied to a like 40,1 I ••• t , tltOei , lit !Mil I.a, waved in triumph lot ttiOlo.l tied a century the emblem of progress - arid et great. American ideas the proudest and noblest of es eiserytinas.. that the le_islation of the country is at alt limes aria under all circumstances, subject to the control °IA maimay of the American people; allti to inscribe in its place that other new and strange device, that the laws of Congress, once pass ed, on particular subjects, become tinar The Democratic party, which ,has heretofore al ways laid down bmaif and comprehensive pnnri vies for its creed, and brought those principles to test the legislation of the country, is now taskel to ;eke a particular law of Congr!,..4 and incarcerate it is a permanent plank in its pladarvii, and make it the moots:one of truth, the test of party fidelity, and poluirat orthodoxy. i- maill. t 41 1 ., in the Law-mak . tag of a free people! What is the mend - which hosiery presents of American lelislation I The laws of today scarcely answer the *al is and condition of the generation of to.morrow. The constitutions of your Slter; change almret with each decade, and Uteri laws with the rising and setting sun. slush of the legislation of the country, however, must, of course, be anal. Many laws of your statute-books have remained unaltered from the day they were enacted. But it is the part of a wise legislator and sa,gacions statesman to adapt laws to the tabits and character of the peopta they are to govern, and to change them with their changing wants and circum stances. who, sir, in t 835, had any idea, even in his wildest dreams, that the lone .star, which had Men but just risen on the plains at San Jacinto, would, within ten years, be blended with the American constellation ! Or who : in 1845, enter tained the mast d is tant thought, that within five years an empire would spring up on the shores of the Pacific, surpassing, in the elements of natiortal greatness and power, many of the older States of half* century's growth, and destined, este long, to control the commerce of the .vrorld. In the lan guage of an English historioan : •• Before• a hook. on the subject of the raised States, has lost its novelty. those Sta:es have out grown the descriptions which it vacuums." In view, then, of the past, and of our theoty, of Government, it is tor Amerian legislators in their reprmentative capacity, gravely to resolve any act of theirs a finality, thot to remain, like the laws of the Medes and Persians, unchanged, and un changeable ! I am not one of three who believe that perketion died with our fathers, or that all legislative WWOII3 will expire with the present generation. I mew,- otte no doctrines of Enati-y in American lezislation It is not in accordance with the genius and spirit of our insitenons, nor with the true ideas of American progrfte. It may become the devotee of the past, but not a desiple of a living, breathing, prcgress. itenerancen. I follow no standard hung with the moss-eviated and exploded theories of a by-gone ice. The hanr.er that beckons me onward mu bear on its folds the imeription " Excelsior r' 'ln language of one of the pur e st of American po. Cl!— I world leave all laws on the statate.hcok, not terpraring immediate alteration, to time and the medlar of three who may Come after os to mete emit &ranee., army, as the 'rants and condition of the people at the time may requiteorithoot any at tempt in invest them with an ern. dignity or' *az, mane.* by repeating enaermeota. Nor am I willing that the time , of _Coogtersi . or any otter le4krtatire body, ahonla beton/m*4 to itakirrirm or serterseting, lama already tea theorabarr took.. It is emit& for so to cOoot two, airolleiti . attend to oax opptopnoto dada", sod rite" Mrititt perforated mom to oos bOtoao, ,- ; - 0,0 111 ,1* Pani idadwurt:r 3 pie, who Waal mecompetent 10:41opoot 'ortiMoo. - PUBLISHED. EVERY SATURDAY AT TOWIDIDA, Let de dead put tarry its dead; dot—art;si tie tor Act prelim:- Wan vrishai tad God e'es bad " ~na+.'.t ni♦ 1 EZISI . I.t an ensCraient it the lawLiniking . PO*" hike not.virtne enough in .itself tocommend it to this top. Part of the penPlisit it hes not sind* enough. to enforce itself by means of the judiciary, lam eel- . ble to see how a reenatireentby thieftmetrodyean' impart greater vigor er,More linty should not an enactment of Ore hundred and thirty4hreit Representatives its the Thirty-first Congress be as binding On thebetycienees of men end the -oblige tone of Coniti(Ointenaejment of two hundred and , - thirty three Representatives from the same distrkt . in ? the Thirty-second congress? is it the besinuit of at legielativebody to reenact the enactments of its feedecesscits Ift Meg repeal, modify, or amend, but it is a new doclrine,to rasthat any law is more efficient by two eneettiOnei bk the same legislative body than by one. - BuliOriti be the cake, are there no laws on yoir staktititOrthit need our endorse. spent save the laws relating to siaiery t Are they I privileged, so that, hereafter, at the opening of each Congress, the statutes on that subject are 16 be introduced, and each member 'called upon to 'in dome the wisdom of his predecessors and swear fealty to the institution! if it be a wise coarse in this instance, why not adopt this mode of legisiat. ingin all cases, and obviate the necestitrid con vening Congrew, save to make appropriations, only at long intervals, once, perhaps, in each generation ? Then all that it Would be necessary to do when the members assembled would be to take the statutes of their predecessors and write on them, Rest' that these acts are a definite and final settlement of all questions herein embraced, and ought to be faith. folly executed, And any attempt to repeal, modi fy, or amend will be " deprecated as useless, un- I necessary and dangerous." What, sir, is the rea son for exempting the laws relating tr. slavery from every other act of legislation! Is the danger so imminent that it was necessary far as at this time to d?part from the practice of the Government, and a proper theory of legi-laton! Almost two years hare elapsed since thisTlNv was passed, and during that time it has been in the hands of the courts and the people, and by them enforced _tad maintained. And is not that enou.th ! If the only object of the resolves was the enforcement of the law. I take it +oat would be sufficient. But whatever the teasel's ut motives may be with interested politicians it is not fur me to say. It has been urged that it was necessary to pass these resolutions, and incorporate them into the creeds of the political parties at the country, in or. der to save the Union. Save it from what These acts were passed almost two years ago for that very purpose, and it is still iri danger ? If so, will Ante be in the same danger a year hence, Bien though reenacted now ! Most certainly it with, unless the politicians of certain sections have some othet source of political capital. For so great was the danger, now, that it was necessary that a Governor elect alone of the bt,ives of this Union (NIL Foote) should leave 'his home, and all preparations for tike duties which he soon was to be called upon to diS t-harge,in order that his presence here at the Cap . ,- -tol tar twenty days might be the means of saying the Union It eras a noble object—a mission war ty a - sill-sacrificing patriot ; and if the amount the Government paid for the twenty days service - Ls not a sufficient recompense, his Excellency can look with assurance to the gratitude of coming genera tions for his reward ! For the man who in the hoer of peril shall save this Union from wreck, will for all time to come hold in the hearts of the great and the good a place second only to that of the sa ges who formed it. The Constitution and the Un ion-ol these States—the proudest monument ever reared to the wisdom of man ; and if ever folly or fanactism shall Jay it in the dust, freedom heaving her last sigh, may wing her way hack from earh to heaven. The noblest truest strain ever sung by bard, Freetkiftes bank* once been. Ilevaratbed irons bleed* sire to too, , I Montt !steed oft are ever woo: will then be but a mockery to man in his woes.— For strike out the example of constitutional liberty I as exemplified in this Govematent and you patsy the wrong arm and cout bead battling in the Old World for the conscious r.uhts of man. Then, in deed, may the crushed and down-trodden of earth, hug their chains as the only legacy they can be queath to their children White-this Government continues, with ea run: venal toleration, its home of the emigrant and asy lam of the exile, thousands will'crowd your shores, who send back to their sorrowing country accounts of a free people, who have braved the tyrant and new stand fork acknowledging no arpetior but their God, and no distinctions but those 01 moral and intellectual worth These liars mireiveri, far mote potent in shivering the throne than bristling cannon or armed hosts, find their say to the cottage and the hamlet, awakening in the masses of the downtrodden a spirit that sooner or later exiles the tyrant. It is an influence that reaches to the head of an empire. and the citadel of its power. But it ever the starry- banner of this Cnicra shall cease to float, the emblem of a united confederacy, the last hope of the oppressed will go out in darkness 'and despair, and a pall of midnight gloom will hang over his future. If ever yonder eagie, torn by fac tion and strife, shall WI, fen* and d is membered, it will be the knell of man's political rlas—rhedeath eel of liberty on eatth. The American is, therefore, booed to this Union by the glories (tithe past and the hopes of the In ane ; by the lore which he beats to his offspring, and by the sympathy that I the heart of man for the woes of his= no self= denoted victim, Cortios.like, toleap kola = - kw gulf. The Tees arm of the AMOrie2)l eittekee op the !thasasokad permit the Fluke' tel banred• Id Oft 'et+ 11"6-11111111 71 1 1 4,11 ;Pbts,4‘.r.• le;• , MI • , 1 niw=is-41 DM6iimiliox,*ii-iit Qumlm" Ea :4: , ..-J.: . - : , ..-i,:f.,-L : ‘:. : , .--:L,.. t :. MEE BY B.(PMEBA ;GOODRICH; hod one. It received its baptism at the roan era. non ol Thomas /demon, parsed hoyhood with 31itlitem thud Jackson, and to:day kande forth in vigoreti manhood, to battle for the rights of labor tttitl ol Men. The_ benncictide Party is the party of the Union, being thetpaitY of the COnstilinion. 'bier its ad nembluition and the policy Of its metsines,in three snore years And ten, this ; Republin, from a tottering infant, has Wiliam dines' at of the - world. - During liiiii•Peried a few feeble colonists, scattered along the Atlantic me-board; hemmed in by the ocean in tuint,,the.wildernese and the savage in the rear, have-become twenty million freemen in the enjoy ment of greater privileges, more personal and na: tionarindePendence, than any other people on the globe. The numerals that coiktited the Original thir teen colonies have been . reveretid, and to.day num: bet thirtyone independent Siatelipannintil whole continent and washed by two "oceans. Them - , are the trophies of the policy of the Democratic party to which the patriot can point with pride. and with pleasine: And yet still eqbal triumphs, await it in the future, if true to its mission—tme to the rights and interests of labor in its unequal struggle with capital. Thecountry needs no new party, sped; ally to save the Union.- For, if , ever the political parties of the country 'shall be erganipd solely with reference to men'svitsant of the institution- of he man slavery, it will be the west feartut.day the Re 'public ever saw. The moment that is done, she will roll and surge like the billows of,a Irciltuuter:— Then will have come the time Washington in his farewell to hilltitit For it will be concentrating sectional . fee itigs by party organization, and attempting by votes to over.. awe the swelling emotions of humanity. To vets the thoughts of man still; vote from his basso, his stem. settled convictlons ; vote Corn his bowies' the sentiments inspired by the fathers of the Republic, and taught hint infancy by a mother's lips! You might as well attempt to vote the air from his lungs the blood from his veins : yea, vote the untamed tiger docile, or the whirlwind still. , Any attempt to smother error ot . atille the voice of reason, other than by calea amMiassionatelii gement, adds but Strength and friends to its own cause. When the abolition excitement first sprung up iu the :forth, wild and ranaical as it was, instead of allowing it a free and open field of discussion, a right which belongs to freemen on every subject under a hoe' goverwrient—the South called on the people of the North to tinpprewit; and we stoned the Abolitionists, pelted their leen:dem with rotten eggs, burned their halls, and destroyed their press ezt. But in doing it, Cadmos-like, we sowed. the dragon's teeth, and like the Wow! growth of okk they sprang %maimed warriogior the fight. Of all the aphorisms of human pature, uone is more trite than that of the Sage of Monticello. " There isno danger of error where trod is 10, fteii to i II lf, then, them be an inatitatiOnin this country, the free and manly disciliftitar of mihick in its soci al and political relations to thgpo stinnteiit, endan gers the stability of the Goventafrand the union of these Sates, then mositettaittly the fri* of such institution ought lobe the last to etch and op= en such a disCussion. • . Mr. Chairman, I sand not bare' the eon* Grimy one ; nor does it becoms4uhrii my vi or .):!urri ence to abernikte, Wait* oeo+l But I teat I ma y be permined to say to the , Representatives' of the South on this Roof, that yon can give cuiet and re pute to the countrynd tomer this slavery rqita bon, without - et*: sacrifice of principle or of inter est on your pad. You have bat to cease proscrib hig Northern men on account - of their opinions of the incitation of slavery, and cease your attempts to silence the thoughts of men, and close their tips by paper resolves A Woniitsset. Man.—Richanl Married it would seem, - was note beautiful man—noromarke hero with haughty eyes, Apollo lip, and gnu:raster the herald Mercury ; a plain, almnit gross, bag cheeted, pot-bellied Lancashire man, with an air of eopions free distestion ; a man stationed by the community to shave certain dusty beards in the northern pans of F.nglarid, at a half-penny each.— To such end, we say, by lorethoogbt, oven:4th, an nidentand arrangement, had, Richard Arkwright been, by the community 6f gr,4and, and his own 'l , 6o6sent, set apart. Nevertheless w strapping =- OM, in lathering off dusty beards aml the contradic tions and confusions attendant thirecik the man bid notions in that to ug h head of his ; 'spindles, stnaules, wheels and contrivances plying ideally within the same, rather hopeless looking, which, however, at last bring to bear. Not without diffi culty.. His townikaks rose in mob around him, lot threatening to shores* wages, so that he had to fly with broken wash-pots, scattered household, and to seek refute elsewhere. Nay his wee, too, as team rebelled ; burned his wooden, model of his spinning-1140a, resolute that he should stick to his ramna ratneli4wyrbiich, however, he decisively, as thou wilt rejale:Mtti understand, packed her out of moors, 0 teatitilwhat a historical phenomenon is that ban-cheeimi s pot bellied , much-enduing, much.iuveraing txube4. Rawl revolutions were a brewing ; to resist the :tame in any memone, im perial Kaiseva we impolitotlahout the cotton and cloth of England ; and it Seint this mss 14) give P..* the powei of owtom , Eroverci.--Tbe Natio' bueirgeocec bas-a coutopoodeut .who imposes smile etiseibee coeds sebied 1. Before you bow lot bdl gl o l l l.oPenl*., Mt 10 decide wbetherlueolOt u,et MS %The talikeibocker for May hart the foßiiiing among its budget of jokes—it is a good one " A friend in SteCkbildg,e, Mass., sends us the following anecdote of Rev. Zeb. Twitchell, a Meth°. dist clergyman in fall and reviler standing, and a member of the 'Vermont Conference. At one lime he repreiented Stockbridge in the State Legislature. "Zeb," sail Our inferential, wis a man of lair tal ents; both as a preacher and a musician. in the pulpit, he is grave, solemn, dignified—a thorough, systematic sermonizer; but out of the pulpit, there is no man living more full of fon and drollery: On One occasion, he was wending his way towards the seat of Annual Conference of Ministers, in com pany with another clergyman. Passing e country inn, he remarked to his companion The last time I stopped at that tarven, I slept with the land lord's wife!" fu amazement his clerical friend asked what be meant. I mean just what I say,' replied Zeb, and on went the two travellers in unbroken silence, until they reached the Conference. In the early part of the session the Conference sat with closed doors, for the purpose of transacting private business, and especially attend to the annual exam ination of each, member's private character, or mih- . er conduct, during the year. Pm this purpose a clerk =died the roll, as was the custom, and it due course Zeb name was called. 4 Does any one know lai c * against the conduct of brother Twitchell during the itikt year?' asked the Bishop, who was prestifittg..officer..Afier a moment's silence, Zeb's travelling companion arose from his seat, and with a heavy heat, and grave demure countelaanFf, said he had a duly to preform; °nether heowedtoOod, to the church, and to ltimselL fle Must tione§;•ie di charge it fearlessly, tho4h'irith - lie then related what Zeb bad told him while passing the tavern, how he slept with the landlord's wile, etc. The grave body of the mini.ters was struck as with a thunderbolt; although a few strides, and glanced first upon Zeb then'upon the Bishop, know ingly, for they knew better , than the others, the character of the accused. The Bishop called up brother T. and asked him what be had to say in relation to so serious a charge. Zeb arose and said: I I did the deed ! I never lie ' Then, pausing with an awful seriousness, he proceeded t ith slow and solemn deliberation : There was one little circum stance, however, connected with the affair : I did not name to the brother. It may not have much, weight with the Conference, but although it may be deemed of trifling importance, I Till state it. When I slept with the landloid's wife, as I told the brother, I the racers In3rsefir The tong and troubled countenances relaxed; a titter followed, end the next name on the roll was tatted. :S Irt isms — Oh ! glorious laughter! Thlitt man loving spirit, that doth for a time take the burden fiesttifi s e weary back ! that does lay salve to the iil4; bruised and cot by flints and sharps; that takes blood-baking melancholy by the nose and makes it grin despite itself; and all din sorrows of the path doubts of:the tutors, confoundest in the joy of the present Thou makest man truly philosophic; con quetor of himself and case ! What was talked of as the golde - n chain of Jove, was nothing bat a sac cession of laughs, a chromatic scale of merriment thatAipt*firom earth to Olympus. It is not, true ProMetheus stole the fire, but the laughter of the gods to edify our clay and in the abundance of our merriment to make us reasonable creatures. Have yob ever considered what min would be, destitute of the ennobling faculty of laughter ? Laughter is tithe face of man what syncrria—l think antomists call it—is to his joints; it oils, lutricates and makes the human countenance divine. Wi.hont it outfa ces would have looked hyena-like; the iniquities of our hearts, with no sweet antidote to work upon them, would have made the facie of the best among us a horrid looking thing, with two sullen, hungq, cruel lights at the top, (kr ktreheadis would then ' have gone out of tashion,) and a cavernous hole be low the nose; Think of a babe. without laughter— as it is its first intelligence. The creature shows the divinity of its origin and end by smiling upon us.— Yes, tut its first talk with the world—smiles the first answer it understands. And then, as world ly wisdom comes upon the little thing, it crows, it cluck., it grins and shakes in its nurse's arms, or in a waggish humor playing bopeep with the breast i' reveals its destiny, declares to him with ears to hear the heirdom of its immortality. Let materialists blaspheme as gingerly and acutely as they wilt, they mast end m confusion and laughter. Men may take a triumphant stand upon his broad grins, for he looks around she world, and his innermost soul tickled with the knowled,ge, tells him he clan creatures laughs. Imagine, if you can a laughable fish. Let man then, 'send a loud ha! ha! through the whole universe. and be reverently grateful for the ptivßne. iota os litucos.—lt a court [rely bed at sheerness, on Captain Hope, the logos-in dialing= took plane between one of the witnesse and the coca. • " AK you a Cathofic ;r N o or." • jou *Protestant 1" • No sir." • What are you then re "Captain of the losetop." Q 47. A lersernan was vest sick, sod ills rot expected to mover. W hinds got mond bis bed, sod cue osysi—;lain do you feet willing we dist lota maim Ain meow his iieSni aids, istr. jos ' ilia, waved wills _llia wear sal Wide Wait **MOW! - i . ••=aa' -------""7 .1- titan 'aid! * WWI tinily esinenipiairai e l 4.._.. r . , t . srts .. .... sod wi ~ re ati moan! Ow &Welly a scppok6 4B di at theft de De, I - Sinility i s yam bees VI *Afistribek and a Wood, a pia have soesViesemo lo tie Jae MI. ism: gat Moir new* ai memisoldew for It* twit:. MI. Mr:44 elpy Ow I Irma toys"' u:to Ohba attbrdig !noir lii to 'ter'!" ' . lEEE The Ifinister's ASI 11 -".5":.- Bernie oia Man who &dal Want to be What's the use in being rich! In particular; what's the ine in getting rich - My wife, she says to me every time t get to work on a job, "Jim ; why don't ycitt . try. to layer). a little money says she. And then I try to distill into her mind they evils cif riches. There was poor Mr. Astor, worked hard to aternnalate property, and when be bad . Id up a lot of it he was pestered to death to lake . keer of it. Then there was poor rich blr. McDo.. none:4,, in Louisiana nigh abotil (Wired himself,, and only had one suit of clothes, for the sake of buying all the land that fined him. I reckon l'er eat and drank about ten tirr.ei as mach good stuff . as Mr. McDonough did in his lite, with all his pro. petty. I live kinder independent like. Nobody asks as to indorse notes or go bail for any body,. No tenth cousin comes to my house visitin, wept to live like tlin-cocks at my expense. No body asks me to subscribe a thousand dollars for Noe; shoot. Nobody asks me for money for parry pur: poses. In fact I get treated at other people's ex: penes every election. And now what is the use of my workin and scrubin amend year in and year oat just to accumulate a few %Kindred dollars! My wile would like to have me do it, I. know, sd that she might dress in silks; but calikeris good enough: (or any woman. I enjoy myself just asvuelt as if I was rich. You rich men go to a great. expense and much trouble to teep their coaches asuilotak . lazy fellow to drive them, but *hen I want iik,Xide o up to the smith end, or to ay Part ot the chic Oast beckons with my fingers and a . tour ktrwastrsam -1 up to the curb gone ; and tAtnoil-..caly to pay. N0,..tt0l you . don't Catchlitati rate of the t rich .lifen of Ussariligl air I.TheY suit - good members of society Cause why! They buy their liquor b, in and - drink it at home, and there. slat cpirit about that. They don't heap Land; ialoon keepers to pay rtzt--dont help .thinery of society. It's liable to raise a breeze, in the family circle, as I know by experi ence, for it I eery home even a pint bottle lbs. raises a blow that almost takes oft my hair oft. It I follow the example of a rich man I should lead a pretty life with Mrs. F. In fact, rich men are si humbug, nod money is a humbog, so I guess I'll carry this quarter to some grocery and invest ii where theves can't break through and algal it. Ai long as I carry it about I am rmblete have my pock et picked, but when I've drunk it up no body cad cheat me out of it , that's a tau." Eirentnr—Witsx it Does.—We love your up: -tigt.t energetic men. Pull them tibia way, and dm that way, and they only bend, but never break.— Trip them down, and in a trice they are on their tees. Bury them in the mud, and in an hour they will be out and bright. They are not ever yawning away existence, nor walking about the world as if they had come into it with only hall their soul; yeti can not keep them down—you cannot destroy them. But for these, the world would soon degen.. erase. They are the' salt of the earth. Who but they start any noble project? They build our cities, and rear our manufactories. They whiten theocean wid sails, and they blacken the heavens with the smoke of their steam vessels and /Matte fires.— They draw then treasures trona the mine. They plough the earth. Blessings on them Look to them young men, and take courage ; imitate their example : catch the spirit of their energy. With out life, what are you good for, if it is passed idly away We should ever measure thus life's em ployment Did anybody ever hear the story of two bachelor brothers, down in Tennessee, who has Lived car; and-dog sort of life to their own and the neighbor hood', discomfort, for a good many years, but who having been at a camp-meeting, were 'tightly con victed and concluded to reform. "Brother Torn," says ooe, when they bad arriv ed at their home, , "le well down now, and Eli tell you what we'll do. You tell me of all Etti fool*, and 11l tell you of yawn; and so well knoti bate to go about w.endia' of em." " Good!" says basher Tom. " Well yoi begin.'.' " No, you begin brother Joe." . " Well, in the firs: place, you know, brother Tom, you will lie." Crwk ! goes brother Tom's " paw" between brother Joe's. " bltnkers,"' and considerable al 3 7. scrimmage ensues, until in the course of ten ' rues, nei'her are able to . 1 come opts time," the reformation was postponed sine die.—/tits Spirit. ( Tar same elm Mersa —lna town a loafer was bro , A:111 before ajasix far betgdrank 1 in the greet—the fine being one &dee? "cad": ience:The fine be paid and wee arraptted the "it day No yee nia he, " ekwe tbs taw 1 . —one dollar tor each offence, anififiiis is the Wilk: old drunk!: , A gid ce weal, who ii,v3 smote tired of singli Nesseaness rhea orrze ri her intended " Der; fira.—Cans rite off Wyman cumin at all, as Johti Mimes is insAin that I shall have Ifb, an' bete* me 10 eontinnagy that I can't hold oat moth kiwi: I mat have a feller afore next winter, and I toot styAi- it any k get Tear flake, Ss= Au? yast...—l am of aid IAO mom to lam mid an ikt lady to i juncooei thaws ocime to leant *heady, vim the topli sal suite yoang man. Filo declare Sal,, yoc dew lot* pretty agent war ed. Wall &Aimee, ain't I eat es bat eta mei re, ml Sal, Ira bar - maxis' fl EMS IMMX=II MMIB 11. . =ES .5.