1:!ME=119 N_ 7 ,2 TOAVANDA: Mania!), September 11, 1852. Irlrrtrit Vortrti A LAY OF A STRICKEN HEART. AT Wll. OLAND DODDITD. Winn the world around is bright, And in scenes are glad and fair, Darkened ap they to my sight, With the clouds of mute Despair. Oncr.how bright it seemed to me ! 'World of g lorious faith and hope And die song rang loud and free. Through nip heart's expanding cape.— Then my Fancy flushed with dreams Of►labor long and hard— tbeful, holy—bringing gleams Of a precious soul-reward. pone; In hope I ell have thought eliish ends should not be mine--; Acid my guerdon I have sought to the path of life divine. Bu: the world is full of change— And its hopes how quick they fail ! Piths unknown, tin tried and strange, Or sad mars sweeping gale. SQ the world has come to me— saddening with its weight of cares, Flastm; grief where joy should be, Awl fur wheat it gives me tares. I had faith, but that is dead -1 had love, but that is past ihsd hope, but overhead All my sky is overcast. Ye vho - sing of strong Resolve! Learn ye what it is to Do ! Te vitt then the man absolve . Mho to trial comes to you. boy midnight, toiling on le !he world has gone to rest, T 4 .e morning light has come, thane sought to do my best. :he to l eoricheih nut ! And the labor bnngs no crown I ear. .hall he my lut e till in earth I lay me down. There my weary dust shall lie— May my death not be in vain ! If ;sChn , t I may but die, I shall live—yea, lire—again ! of T. H. Benton, ERED AT A PUBLIC MEETING OF THE Ini.RlC . l OF ST. LOUIS. HELD IMME TEL\ AFTER THE' RESULT OF THE - TIO\ 1% As KNOWN. ns Hor,est exultation is natural in our cir. ices insolent triumph is foreign to our na- We have a right to rejoice : we have no non m insult. Moderation, al ways respecta the crowning ornament of victory, and the hick cures all wounds We have gained a -a great one ; manfully and nobly gained ripen field our theatre—hard knocks our pro- No Ulysses' work with us; but the Ajax's cJ fAle .I)sx—hard knocks and no tricks: lan. and county of St. Louis, the Gibrattar of cal toes, has been carried Two senators represerhanees in the General Assembly— county officers, ilk enry in number—the Con :to—the state ticket—all carried ! and with ;ors of a man. A ticket of thirty carried at one beli; and !hat where no fragment of. tad been carried for years before—where tut , ucceosive defeats had eat on our ban fears An average majority Of a thousand, •ao years - ago the majority (and a good on v e) us ; and thin against a foe in possession ,e appliances of power—entrenched in pow or offices, the state bank, the city govern reretitieo, the whole system of jobs tracs, and the train-bands of a veteran city 11.1 e, no advantage of power or position ; "e great dtsadecntages : entrenched Ices in '.es in the rear, a &non in the camp. We n. 2 Naked hands, empty pockets, no !it mitiary chests : one press in a foreign lan c..ntle one, burn at the eleventh hour; Cr old enough, and big enough, to have done 'an like the lame captain, commencing its fore the fight began. IVe were empty, all except the heart ! and that was full ! full to Snmlull! of courage and patriotism.— cif ot St. Louts—l love that Greek word— bvtro of Si. Louis, in this month of Au- Monday, and second day, in the year 01 have done a deed which shall Wig ri tv the land ; which constitutes an era 4 07 of Missouri, and sets an example for state to follow. Victory' complete sits tanner. No dead no wounded, not a l el't upon the field. We have met the foe, re onre ;'and now, like generous eon re pill bind up their rounds, and wipe • tars, and give them the best we have Scull ts`the result in ihe county It the noblest county and city, in the no -19 the itlters election, in a district of twenty Ito partpt iLe combat in St. Louis; and ttti 'he other nineteen emulate the conduct of Jafay of the state. Benton was in the to late with the people.-no traitors be 't -and the question, whether they would roan whn for six Roman luetrullia had the m 1 They did stand! over a field of :dyed miles—from the Missouri river to Isas line, frock the Merrimac In the St. at.dl at he Big and Little Black, Eleven I tae Currents ; to White river and Black 4ketlCreek, Apple Creek, and . the Castes lflhe Big Swamp and up to the hills-•• fur to the Pemtacut, (twice as far as 10 Beersheba) everywhere the denim r',2 matt who Lad aL:otl by therm It was . , , - . .e . ~,, _ . . I; "Lf.',, ...; 1:1•.. .. ...., :,.....: .. --', ^...t.;, ;, ;,,,',-• !,, - . , .. f , t- : '-.'..;•..,?' '-' 1 . . ~,,.. "' 2 0 " - -, -, • 1 .- 2 ,- •• . '' - ''''F..• '- - '.- '-ya::: r.• -1--.1. .;.• ,'„ . 3 .;`-';` ,.. 4; :4 , 1 1 , t!. - - r.`l '. '2 , .,. , t",:f.r.f.‘,..1. :t1.;1. , .•._41:. .- t , ".", •,.;,t ~,, ~,.. I ,-- 1 - s: r , l: 1 ~.;::`.: •:. '-,' -• 0: .., ',..; ,:: :, ': ~.. -.:,: —.•— ...... ......• .. .. ... . .... • ,‘ . ' ~ ,-,1 ~1 , 1, :;• 1! _, I ' ,'); -- : - .;' ,- 1 E ... H. '.....-:: .--.., - '.,.i. •Ii :,_:-• ' '.... i'l -.'. ...,.• : - 1 1. ii- :4•. r .:7, ....i. • ' ~ 1. .. :. `• • :1!'l ... . ..., 1 .: . . . ' ' '•• • - . • . 4 .0 . - 4 - - 'i,' ; sr.i.tt ' 7 `-, • •• • -'• .''., ' .. 7 ~.,• -7 —• :• -• , -,.tr- ..-:::, ~ .. i I . ,• - . . . .V. .. . a long ra;ee ; and they.had pula Weight - iipOn yonr leader'e back—not very, heav y; and he,. carried it without feeling it, about in the: style that the re nowned captain John Gilpin, (oftoridon train-band memory)carned the neck and handle el. that bro ken jug,W.hich hung dangling at his hack in-that le mons ride from Lontrn town to Islington. And he did not degrade himielfor the people.— No-low arts of electioneering—no begging for votes —no appeal to old services—no bowing and scrap ing—no whining and blubbering—no confessing and begging pardon, and promising not to do so again; no cringing to foes. But right ahead, hitting right and left—‘knocking over compromises, plat forms, caucuses, Conventions, regular nominations, fugitive slave law and all; and despising every thing that jugglers contrive for the terror of timid politicians; armed with truth and courage alone; self-supported, and relying upon the people; an swering no questions and telling no lies ; that is the way it was done. And to whose honor 1 1 His own! No ! But to the honor of the masses, to the honor of the people who recognize truth and cow. age—who despise the shuffling politician, and love the man of head and nerve—the man alwaysfrank and honest, whether always right or not. Citizens ! a week before the election, I saw a letter from a perspicacious politician in Pennsylva nia, in which he said : " I have read Benton's speech at the Rotunda in St. Louis, to the electors 0/your first Congressional District. It is such a speech as no other man in the nation has the courage to make ; and if the people do not elect him they will have less spirit than they are credited for, and less gratitude than good men °Ott to have." This is what that perspicacious man wrote ; and before this time he has got the news, and sees that the people of Missouri—the twenty counties at least, composing the First Congressional District— have lull as much gratitude as good men ought to have. And these twenty are only a specimen of the one hundred which the state contains. Citizens ! The debt of gratitude is on my part. I came to this city thirty-seven years ago, then a small village, and cast my lot among you. From the se.cond year of my arrival I became the object of a warfare, such as was never carried on against any public - man, and crowned in the year '49 by a conspiracy to destroy me, both life and character, it I defended myself, the state and the Union, against a domestic ar.d national treason. You took me up five years after I came to the country, sustained me, kept me in the AmeriCan Senate thirty years; and when sold out of it by traitors, you, the people of twenty counties, (but emblem of the whole state,) restored me to the national councils ; that branch of it which erroneous ideas have placed below the Senate, but which the constitution intended to be above it—which for forty years was above it— which the reviving spirit of the constitution wi:l again place above it—and in which a seat is moat agreeable to me, because it comes direct from you. We have gamed a great victory, and one that is full of results You have rebuked treachery and conspiracy ; you have juktified courage and hones ty ; you have justified the man who will not'com promise with the enemies of the Union ; you have vindicated the character of republican government —shown that the people are neither ungrateful nor fickle ; and that an appeal to yon—the appeal di rect where there is no room for juggling—is the safe resort of every faitlitul honest public man. I can tell you that republican government was on trial in my person in this election ; that Europe and _America was looking on, the enemy of free gov. emment wishing defeat, that the stain of ingratitude and fickleness might rest upon you ; the friends of free government wishing me success, that this stain might be effacer,. You have effaced it ; you have rebuked treachery and venality, and vindicated the honor of republican government. This is a grand result of your victory—moral result ; but we must have material results also. We must have works, and that will depend upon the elected men whom you have elected to state and federal offices. But I am astonished at the amount of the whig vote—above lour thousand in this county, and near ly as many more in the remaining nineteen. This is impossible. If they mean whip in the revolu tionary sense of the term, granted. We are all whig,s in that sense; and the term so used is a na tional, and not a party designation. But if they mean whip of the United States Bank war—the whip who quit Jackson and the democracy to stand by the Bank—it is all a mistake. They went off from their old friends under the belief that a nation al bank was necessary; they now know it is not— now know that it is given up and abandoned by its former champion who induced them to join it—call ed an "obsolete idea ;" that is to say, a dead and defunct idea. Now, would it not be "obsolete," in any of these mistaken democrats to remain mistak • en 7 to remain a United States Bank whig upon a dead idea 7 to consolidate with the old federal par ty under its new name 7 and' thus becamecommit• ted to all their principles while only joining them upon one, and that one now exploded Impossible ! They will correct this mistake-,-return to their old friends—and leave their federal whips at thri election with a fraction of the vote which they have now received. - The same of that party who take a name which implies hatred to one man. They have voted above two thousands ! Can there be that number of men in twenty counties of the•state, or of the world, who take for their distinctive political principle, the feel ing of hatred to one man Impossible ! 11Yine4enths of 'these voters have voted under mistake', and will rectify themselves the first lime they vote again. Citizens ! Direct voting has made this great re sult; and it is the only kind of voting which ought to be tolerated us a republic—the only kind which can save to the people any share in their own elec tions. No intermediate body, self constituted, in otherwiseno caucus, no convention, no electors, no house of representatives, no general assembly— should ever be permitted to stand between the votes and the object of his choice—too often to juggle him ~• • ' • PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD- COUNTY, PA., BY E. O'4EARA GOODRICH. . _ ,")izeiinass oi,ziwniNclAT!ort raont AsfquaTint." . and cheat him of hie choice... Who ever heard-of theskinterlopers in the election of - a • Runner con sul,priietot, quaestor, tribune or - anything else t No one ever heard - of such a`thing ; and if ikhUtibeeo, Rome herseli would never have been heanl of.— ?i Regular nominations? •were , there tinknown.-i- The people nominated, and nominated at the elec , lion, never failed to choose the Most ilhnetiOns men which the Republic contained, not one of whom ever failed toeing the grandeur of Rome beyond the point at which he found it Cicero bad Six competitors when he was elected consul; and noon thought of a cants—l wonder how the word would sound in latin—to snake a 4, regular nominee."— Neither Rome, nor Greece, nor and other elective government that ever'existed, or raiw exits could or did endure such lawless and fatal inteireention. The-United States alone are the only exception ; and if it continues, her name will be " lchabod ;" which, being Interpreted, signifies,""Thy glory bath departed." I have been an advocate for direct voting 'all my life.a-have proposed it in Congress many times, and as tar back as more than twenty years ago, in the case of President end Vice-Presi dent; and deemed it indispensable in all elections, state and tederal, it our elections are not to degene rated into empty k form and criminal substance. The Congress election in this district is an illus tration of the difference between direct and indirect voting. A convention was held, and delegates and proxies—impostor delegates and forged proxies— made a regular based upon upward of ten thousand votes to one, and next to none for the others; this was the indirect vote of the people, transmitted and transmuted through the interloping convention. The election followed, and direct vo ting after the indirect ; and the basis of the nomi nation was exactly reversed—toward ten thousand for him who was to have next to none ! and next to none to him who was to haveten thousand ! and that is about a fair specimen of all such indirect vot ing—all such delegate and proxy work—all such interloping conventicles, from Presidential nomina tions down to thimble.rig•piggling for state and county officers. But success has its duties as well as its enjoy ments—its responsibilities as well as its exultation. W or k s are t o follow—wise and good works, for the benefit of the country. This noble county of St. Louis sends twelve democratic members to the Gerieml Assembly ; this grand Congress district of twenty counties, fronting three hundred miles upon the father cif floods, sends a democratic member to the national councils. To do what ! Go and feed at the public crib, and then come back with thiir fingers in their mouths ! No ; never ! They are sent to work ! and to bring back an account of good work done ! or, at all events, of faithful endeavors to do it. This is their mission ; and the election is a mandate for labor, and a bond for responsibility, as well as a call to honor and distinction. State legislation, is not for the adoption of good measures, at least for the prevention of bad, must fuel the influence of this election. A serious re sponsibility rests upon the next General Assembly ; and the democracy must bear its brunt, and the St, Louis county delegation above that of all others on account of its numbers. With the rest of the de mocracy they will be formidable, but not the nu merical superiority—but enough to do much. A good cause, and courageous hearts, should be an Overmatch for numbers. The whige and the anti- Bentons wall be in the majority in the next Genera; Assembly. The anties alone will outnumber the democracy—thanks to that fatal Jefferson City con vention of April last. That convention has resus citated and rebabitated an expired and defunct far- Lion—has brought the dead to life—and made it, with the whigs, the controlling power in the next General Assembly ! to which it could not have elected one single member in any one county in the state. Yes, that convention has done this, and has given me two years more of labor to get the de mocratic party back to what it was on the sth day of April last. The democracy will have to make up in courage and vigilance what they lack in num bers ; and may prevenl bad measures from being "passed if they cannot procure the adoption .ot good ones. They must take high ground, of principle, dal, honor and Courage if the prostitute political machine, the State Bank, is bribed through the two Houses—(the only way it can get through)—the democratic ground must be taken of APPEAL to the people, and REPEAL of the purchased charter. In the national legislature there are many things to be done, for the. failure to do which, or to try, I shall admit my own responsibility. A system of roads from St. Louis to Sin Francisco; the closet opment of the iron resources of the country; free trade in salt ; the rectification of the vagary of uni versal advalorems ; liberal disposition of the public lands; improvement of our national rivers; the preservation of the gold currency ; the acquisition of the arsenal ground for a public promenade in St. Louis ; the completion of the marine hospital.;, preservation of the city harbor; theen will be some of the measures of a more borne diameter which I i shall press. In my more extended character, as acting for the whole Union, I shall in the first place, join all the good men of all.partiee in restoring the decorum of the House, and confining it to its proper duties— important enough and various enough, to exhaust the whole measure of ally man's ability ; and exal ted enough to furnish reputation to any amount of honorable ambition. I shall be a party man where party principle is concerned,but shall never mistake for principle tl.•e trick and intrigue of slang politi• clans. I shall act with the good men of all parties when the honor and the interest of the country is concerned ; and act with such in all those questions which is either above or below party. I shall be opposed to all plunder legislation, In all unnecess. try expenditures, to all extravagance; and endear/. ur to return to that economy from which it has so frightfully departed. I shall be in favor of peace, friendship and cum• merest with all uations, - atul war with none, except for groat national causes ; and that alter exhausting all resources of honorable adjustments. The last arguments at kings • - • —the ultimo ratio. regin, so; proudly inscribed on laiscannon by,Lonis the Four teenth—is not to, be, with me, the first argument of the flepublic ! especially , in this_ age of . advanced • civilization and social international communication ; and when reason and justice, not force and. arms, should settle, as far as possible, the controversies of nationtas_well as inditidttttis. . I shall not be in iilVof of a. war with Mexico to en force her revive! of the"GamY ' Tehnatitepeis grant, twicedefunct ander the laws of Mexico; once up on the limitation of time fur the fulfilment of its conditions ; ind ; once upon a decree in Congress for bribery in its inception: and which double de funct grant is now held by , some of our ‘ roillionaire citizens who call upon the American goternmen to bully or whip that teeble power to submission to tbeii demands. That grant is for a monopoly road across the Isthmus, end is a route upon foreign territory. Justice, as well as charity, should begin at home ; and the good book says, that man is worse than a heathen who does not provide for his own household We have territory of our own for making road to the Pacific ocean; and have been four years beg ging the means of making it—for making even a common waggon and horse road—but all to no pur pose. Not even a bridle path marked out yet from the frontiers of Missouri to the State of California, or the territory of Oregon; nor any road to New Mexico, except the one I got marked out twenty five years ago. I should not be in favor of bullying or whipping Mexico into the establishment of the foreign monopoly Tehuantepec route at all, even it the grant was yet alive: and much less when we can get nothing for a free national road, for our . own citizens, upon our own territory. I am against rushing into war with Great Britain, to settle with cannon the meaning of some words in the fishing convention of 1818. The settlement of the meaning of that bevy, and of all treaties, is a proper subject for arbitrament—•for reference toliome disinterested authority ; and for submission to the decision of that authority. We want no new con convention ; that might be as difficult to understand the present one ; for the diplomatic art is very suc cessful in depositing the seeds of a new contestation in every settlement of an old one. We want the present treaty interpreted, and the interpretation depends upon the meaning of mime hall a dozen lines of English writing, done by eminent scholars and statesmen, and surely susceptible of explica tion. Let us get an interpreter, any fait man in the character of an arbitrator, to tell Great Britain and America what the wilds mean. This is a usual proceeding among nations, even in the cue of un adjusted and complicated difficnhies ; and much more so in the case of disputed construction of ex isting stipulations. It is the course we followed with Great Britain herself, in the case of the slaves deported during the war of 1812. The first article of the treaty of Ghent stipulated for their restitu tion, or indemnity. - The two powers could not agree upon the classes of slaves which the stipu lation• would cover. Twelve years were spent in verbal disputation ; and then the point was referred by mutual consent to the Emperer Alexander, who decided it in favor of the United States. And then a million mid a quarter of dollars, withheld to the damage of the owners for twelve years, were paid and the controversy settled. The treaty of peace of 1783 with Great Britain contained a similar stipulation in relation to the slaves deported during the war of the revolution ; and the same disagreement as to its construction. Twenty years were consumed in its negotiation ; no arbitration was proposed, or, if proposed, not accepted, and, the value of all those slaves lost fo the owners. Arbitration procured under the trea ty of Ghent what twenty years of negotiation, be ginning under Washington, could not obtain under the treaty of 1783 ; and, gain or lose, arbitration is the right way to settle the meaning of the words in relation to this fishing privilege. We want no new treaty, and it we did, would admit the defect of the present one, and the new one might give rise to the same double interpretation. War, does not construe treaties, bnt abrogates them ; and by war we shonld lose the present stipulation, and possi bly not get another. I 'am for proposing arbitra tion ; and in the meantime, do nothing - to alarm the country, or to bring on hostilities. ' I am against alarming the country with a talk of war, when there is to be no war—at least none constitutionally made. No Ministry in Great Brit ain, and no Congress in the United States, can make war out of this question. Thirty-two mill ions of people one Wes, and twenty-four - on the oth er, speaking the same language, professing the same religion, dividing — blood, engaged in active commercial and social communication, with no , rivalry, except in the main' ads, and which thirty. two and twenty-four, the cause of liberal govern ment throughout the world requires to stand to ,gather ; no such fifty-six millions of people can be •set to fighting, (with their own consent) to settle the meaning of some words in a fishing treaty, and they would smash, each part for itself, any Minis try or Congress that should set them at it withou• their consent. The Derby Ministry, which has given practical consequence to this verbal dispute, is'already disposed of: the late elections have al ready disposed of it—thereby proving that it was Clot a " stable" ministry, taking the word in what ever sense it may bear. There will be no war , — none constitutionally made; and it is wrong to alarm the country with the fear of such a calami ty. Such alarm does mischief to the business o 1 the country—to,commerce and stocks, and enter prize of all kinds. Property is timid ; and it is a cruet sporting with the interests of individuals to raise this alarm ; nut the lees so because the dan ger with some is magnified, to magnify the glory of averting it ! with other's, the war talk is nothing but ranter - made, to purchase cheap popularity ; with the, others, again, mere gab, without any thought. I am against sending ships of war to tbe Scene of dispute. It is the way to bring on hostilities, and MM SIM not to prevent them : and to bring them on by an Executive order, instead of is law 01 COMPS.. PAO two men face tolsce,:with s quarrel in their bo soma, and arativin their hands, and how long 'will it be before they will use thine arms t before acci dent or design brings on conflict l It is the same, on a larger scale,. :with fleets and armies. Con front them—tellthenn to take care of the national honor and interest—end they will •do it ! do it in the only way known to arms !the favorite way with all to whom war is a profession ! And when blood once flows, there is an end to any argument but that of the cannon, mild blood is avenged.— "American blood has been shed on on American ship," will be just as potent over the passions as the same words were in relation to American soil, and brought about in the same. way. The march of the American troops from Corpus Christi to the Rio Grande made-that shedding of "American Wood on Arnericin soil," which put an end to all peace ful negociations, fired all l passions, and extorted from Congress the declaration of war against Mex ico. A similar shedding of" American blood_ on an American ship," on the coast of Labrador, or in the bay of Fundy, may bring on a war with Great Britain,• the result of accident, or passion or mid construction of orders ; but not the lest calamitous to the country for such a for.uitous beginning. I therefore look aim this movement of ships to the disputed fishing grounds as unwise and danger ous—more apt to bring on a war thail prevent it— and to bring it on suddenly and unconstitutionally ; and- in the midst of the active commercial and so cial relations of the two countries. Aibitration is the remedy, and it will be the successful one ; for no ministry in Great Britain, or administration in the United States, could stand an hour against the indignation of fifiy.six millions of people, which ministry or admiristration should refuse to accede to that peaceful mode of settling the meaning of a few words in a treaty. Let either make it and the other will be bound to accept it, or to give way to those who will. Citizens : this is no time for didactic harangues —no time for elementary discources on politics ; but there are two points on which I wish to speak' and to become somewhat of a political teacher.-- The first is upon the difference between a League and a Union ; which is, in fact, the difference be tween the present government of the United States and the Federal Confederation ; and upon the ef fect of Congress " compromises," in unhinging the present form of out government, and,.semining the States to the condition they were in under that 4, rope of sand," the Articles ol . Coufederation This is one point I wish to speak upon, and should have done it if President Taylor had not died so suddenly. The second point is a view of political parties upon principle, with the design to present politics as a science, and to show that political par. ties are sadly confused at present in the United States —sadly debased by excrescent questions—sadly degraded by unworthy Or Unskilful teachers; and that many on both sides, are sadly misplaced; and to do this without reference to either party in par ticular, but to both, I would not speak to these po:nts before the election, because I would not sub. ject a discourse' purely didactic and disinterested, to the suspicion, however erroneous, of a selfish or temporary object ; end I cannot do it to-night; because the time is unfit, the occasion adverse, and the audience one-sided. It has been supposed by some—by a few who received some blows in the late contest—that I bit too hard. Let all such complainers remember that I had been hit myself for more than thirty years before I returned a lick ; and that it is my nature, being forced into action, to do nothing by halves. But enough of this. Bygones are (with me) bygones. Let us forget the past. I offer child's bargain toall combatants : let me alone and I will let you atone. And 1 believe I will let them - alone any way whether they let me alone or not. Let us look forward. We have a noble city and a noble state, with those aggrandizement any man may be proud to interweave his name. Rivers, soil, minerals, geogr, aphicri centrality, and 'the ter ritorial extent for a great kingdom : anCfr . is the state. Geographical centrality again ; topographic cal pre-eminence; absorbing capabilities; anten u le, to reach out ant! rake in the commerce from . the gull and the lakes, the plains, and the Mount ains, the Atlantic and the Pacific, all Western America and all Eastern Asia ; such is the city The golden horn of p:enty--the cornucopia of heti ficent Providence...has been filled to the brim with all that was rich and bounteous in the stores of nature, and emptied lull charged upon this city and state. They ask nothing more from nature— , nothing trom man but fair play to nature's work Roads, bridges, safe rivers, safe boats, hardmoney currency and democratic government on principle ! is all that is wanted to give to this state and city, the full developinnt'of their magnificent aggran dizement. Federal and state legislation merit help, and not mar, the designs of nature. Fair play to their own resources, and no detriment to others, is all they ask. No , ,shutfist when national roads are to be made, or national rivers to be improved. No dog in the manger, when the public lands are wanted for their own beneficial development, and for national and agricultural benefaction. I have been through a contest to which I had no heart, and into which I have been forced, solely against my wilt. I have not conducted it like other men. Who, since it began, has seen me walk the streets of the city in which I live I stand at a corn. er ?or visit a public place Who has seen that ? No one. Who has seen me.talk to any individu• al to conciliate his vote? No one. What have I done I Gone forth, when too much assailed to speak to the masses—those masses always honest, some times mistaken, but always ready to do justice.— I have spoken the same language to all, kindly and deferentially to the good and mistaken.rprood: II and defyingly—to the false and wickesluid from the masses, and the repulse. of assailanta,l have always returned to the seclusion of my btu house. My work has been that of a sick hoe... _ _:..::~_ r~.. , ;::1 , %',- - .: 1 -1.1;,:i;,,,1:,;,, :~~:_ ~..__. IKE -17: , -'.. - .;: - . •-: ',.- V' ;:-;'-•,'' ..;',1 , ..1. /..... sick at ,the heart✓-reposing in his lair, onlyfinseftig it when the Minters and their pack bayed too close ly ; ani then ,to slaughter, or disperse, the assailants, and thed Warn again to the sick bed. I have gone through the contest to which; I has) no heart, and inio which I was forced hyr - cieuhin alions against life and honor, and from which gladly escape. What is a 'seat in Congress tome?' I have sat thirty years in the hightst branch et" Congress—have made a name to which I can ex. pect to add nothing—and I Should only be anxious to save what has been gained. 1 have ehamesiicr affections, sorely larcerated in these latter'tiMeS; wife whom I have never neglected, and who needs my attentions now more than ever--=ehildren,somer separated from me by thSwidseepanser of oceans and continents, others by the slender bounds which separate time from eternity. I touch the age which the - Paalmist-assimis for the limit'ormanly life; slit!' must be thoughtless' indeed ►f I do not think of something begone the fleeting and* shailoal pur suits of this life, of all which I have seen the vani ty. • What is my occupation I ask the undertaker, that good Mr. Lynch, whose face, present on so many mournful occasions, has become pleasant to me. He knows what occupies my thoughts and cares, gatheringthe bones of Jeath-.a mother—a six• ter—two sons—a grand chili—planting the cypress over assembled graves and marking the spot where I and those - who are dear to me are soon to be laid; all on the sun-set ails of the Father of Floods, the towering city of St. Louis on one hand, the ,rolling stream of the Missouri on the other: sal where a cemetery of large dimensions is to be ''lie future necropolis of-unnumbered generations. These are' my thoughts and cares, and the undertalter knows them. I have been reclu-w for many month, and was called proud because I was so. If by the term if was intended to say I hadvnlgar pride which treat"' with, contumely honesty in rags,. it is !aloe; it, the lefty pride is intended- which despisei tirearniele though plated with gold, it is true. I have that pride. I never saw the poor honest man that I did' not 'respect, nor the rich mean one that I did riJt c'espise. Of that kind of pride I have something from it to be proud of within myself ; and more to be proud of from the people. I am proud of tbs . thirty years in the American Senate which the free voice of Missouri gave me, and feel nodegradatiors at being sold out of it by traitors to the people. I am proud of the five thousand two hundred and ttr.r ty votes this city and county gave me Monday be. lore last; proud of the twenty counties which have me their representative ; proud of the acres' of men who met me at the grand rally the Satur: day night before the election ; proud of the thou.- sands upon thousands who are here at this grand• celebration to honor-me this night. And I hem again to be proud of the state of Missouri ; but se cannot be with she has purged herself of (lon a high treason, vagabouti and paper money. Ott— " HMO ; little boy, where am 1 I" said a' superannuated gent who was standing at the infla tion of three post roads in the country. " Why, yer on your feet, ain't- yet r' Pshaw ! I mean where does the roads go to !". " Them lOWA doesn't go anyvers; they've leers a layin'still ever since know'd em." . " You young rti.,, , mmufffn ! I mean which of these' roads will lead me to blargburg I". " Well, it doesn't matter which ; they all lead into Margburg, but they've not traveled none." "Not traveled oone What do yon mean young? bier r Don't call me a young stir !cos I'm not a stir an' the reason they doesn't travel these 'ere reader now are this : '• They is so cussed Crooked, that they isn't drib account. Why, there was a traveler started from these 'ere folks mor'n a year ago lur logo to Marg./ berg, an' he ain't got there yet, cos as last as he giis on the bee litte for the uto, he finds himsetf goin' on the wrong 'uti." "Pd advise yer to man' still, on' wait tits the roads bring the town round to yer." " Good-bye to yer "Father, look ye here. Woes the reason goer and mother is alters a quarrelling 1" " Silence r my son. Do you know *hat you're talking about I" "Yes siree, I do. I was list a wonderen' wot you'd do et you had es many wives as otd Selo. mon." " Bah ! go to bed." " Yes, it's wens well to say go to bed. Solo: mon had morn a hundred wives, all on 'em a lip. in' in the same hens°, a eatue together and never a fight." • " Now wot a time you'd hate of you tranalf as many. Why you'd kick up sich a rumpus as %A fetch up me police—end knock things to thunder." A broomstick interrupted the tequations youth, and very suddenly 'upaled to him the idea of traveling—which ha did En.:7- A sensible cotemporary says : " The wo. meat ought to make a pledge not to kiss a man who uses ipaceo ; it would soon break np the practice" A friend of ours says they ought to make a pledge to kiss every man that don't use it--aud we go for that too. Ditto as. trig toe' at Plymouth rock," said an elognent stump orator in Mississippi, a down there its old Virginia, end weep!" Tim Whigs hare adopted the soap bital ati au emblem. The Democrats will cool their broth k•r them. 01.',A little boy going to church for the firs; time with his motherpiwas mightily pleased with die'performance of the organ, and cried oat blhther; mother !'whore's the meehey.'s , atrslanderers arc the Devi,'s bellows, lo blow up contention, 4 2% IMI BEE i ( 4 ~" A 3 a. ~l VI=M t,63