== 75100.2 21[710 TOWAND , A4 fiataraap lUorninp, :febtnarg 25, 10544 ir , titto Vottrv. PADDLE YOUR OWN CANOE ST XIS. SARAN T. 111:1.TOS. Voyager upon life's sea, 'yourself be true, And wbere'er you lot may be, Paddle your own canoe. Never, !Gough the winds may rave, Falter nor look baek, Dot upon the darkest wave, Leave a shining track. Nobly dare the wildest storm, Stew the hardest b ale. Drave of heart and strong of arm You will never fail. When the world is cold and dark, Keep an aim in view, And toward the beacon mark Paddle your own canoe. Every wave that bears you on To the silent shore. From its sonny sannee has gone. To return no more. Then let not an boar's delay Cheat you or your due: Bat, while it is called to-day, Fiddle your own canoe. If your binh . denied you wealth, I.ofly state and power, Honest fatntaud hardy health Are a betteP 4 Anwer But if these will,not snlßee, Golden gains pursue. And to win the glittering prize, Paddle your own canoe. Would you wrest the wreath of fame From-the hand of fate; Wanld you write a deatblen name, With the good and great; Would you bless your fellow men. Heart and soul imbue With the holy talik. and then Paddle your own canoe. Would yon crush the tyrant Wrong. In the world's free fieht. With a spirit brave and strong, Bsi tie for the Right; And to break the chains that bind The many to the few-- To enfranchise slavish" mind. 'Peddle your own canoe. Nothing great is lightly won, Nothing won is lost—, Every good deed, nobly done, Will repay the cost. Leaving to Heaven, in bumble trust, All you will to do; Dot, if you succeed, you must j Paddle your own canoe. glitiral. BUSINESS IN CONGRESS. following article we copy from the Nation. larditgenter, of the 6th inst. That paper, as is n known, is, an able, candid but conservative lee, moor's(' the passage of the Compromise 'f.sure+ of 1850, and certainly cannot be charged LI any hostility to the "institution." The vete. eiltiors occupied their present positions -at the Ttot the adoption of the Missouri Compromise, vete par!cipators in the discussions of that day. Dahling solemnity of the compact then entered hey do not feel at liberty to repudiate] ,e week's haring elapsed since Congress as somprehemling nearly one-third o 1 the .ti darelion of a First Session, we may now for a moment Incas, a glance back upon what :a done, and lin* forwent Jo what it promises Barr. LP, 4 than a dozen,acts, of comparative-. I z.,e. Kniticance, comprise the whole body - of ;lotion to the present day. A vast deal ot bust ts has teen regtslerid on the calendars of both 0, and much other of equal importance with nhat has been reported upon is still before the !unreel of ho'h Houses We Jo not know, how. :hat in this apparently -qato:y action any in• shco!d be drawn ;against the present Con ,. for in this particular it has not fallen behind :Tit predecessors. The'disposition of both n i .i: will )3e allowed by all calm observers, e as favorable to an intelligent and .dispitt4 discharge of their thatras of any.Congredf last fifteen or twenty years, and until within day* past there hays been no reason to antici. 'flY thing like cmdttlyi exce chscustrions of iesiione to be brought before.daem• mu; pobinhe4 the proceedings from day to needles* for us to particularize or to dwell even the leading measures already befote ','"" An exception to this remark might per. , 0 be made-of the bill for-establishit.g.Territo nernments in the country designated as the ',„ "l ' 4 '"'"orY To abeititablishment of a re unvemment over a vast territory - Which * rent nn Government, except SuCli . ita is gerier plieahla to all the coatury,itill itt,pWmigolian Indians, there wunkfte no objection, dtnehne '-of, tvere 1: not for ati important principle, :elm:11'1y connec:ed with the queition, which ' l l toeidentally,"brougha;litto Oetri v iltit in the The cireuistittinee to Whieh'irtit4fer nip( .the feature proem:l-I , Mo committee on nies of tliit body , OlielT W soety alter to repent the MitsouriCievertiniifi4:#Vil• lice in limi of it a provision extendiPit-1110 lion and all the laws of the United Statile le Territories exile teept the eighth seefieth of theactprettarilo• the admission oT Missouri into the Union '"ttl Match 6 1820 which was sopereetled tle - ,•latticipthe cum the legislation Of 1850, cent. n'Ytalled SO. inea llfne; and 'zed ionperativie , * • • tomm wise here in feet propose where!' bon. Ifor from Missouri, at the lid session _of ispressda his belief atitthore ins no Jr any hope of, to wit, la repoisref Compromise., _ .... . -- . -....- ...,--..-. : ;.,.. . - 1.,..:' , ,- . ,- 1•'. ,^.,- •,. .r:. - .E... ,-, :-.^. - _.17,11rr... .. t...-, - ,...4, -- 4...., ,v,;-;.;:i -. 4:::7.--_,riyz. -.7.,-,.-74.-.;.:,.- ,---4 7,7. , 773.r...... :, 7i. , ..1 -- .... , .:t - 7 V:ricaaataYMP•ail - ' 447 , gMTIPW:ICY:X!r ?erg* ..Vr. . .2.4=r . 4 ..:4..,.,....": 7.7.",,,,k0rAtA1M-7:""" ' , 'lar. spar. : . , ~ . . _ . . . . • , . . . . . qq - , • .•,.,_ ..J •,..., .:.., TH R ~ . I •, I ' - R. . . , .. .... _ . .. • ..„- 'TE ,! .:.._ , ....si, I • .... . _ . _. .. $ . • .._ . . , . . .. . . . . We aball'unt nob► enthrinto a consideration of the motives, apart from the intereits of the Territo ries in question, which are supposed by many of our contemporaries to hive - intluenced the intirduc• lion of this proposition' at this time into the halls of Congress. Whatever considerations may have jus tified the measure in the minds of its authors, it is not possible that they could, if we Were made Tully aware of them, be such u to obviate the decisive objections that - we have to this part of the bill date commiltee. The fundamental objection to this proposition which must strike , every mind—the mere sugges tion of which, indeed, is enough to startle the tree friends of the Constitution in every quarter of the Union—is that it proposes, Without circumlocution, the abrogation of s comrscr hardly , less formal than that of the Constitution itself, and which can hardly be deemed of less high obligation than that Instru ment. And this nullification of a solemn covenant between the United States and the State of Missou ri—between the South and the North—is proposed on the ground that this compact was " superseded" and tendered "inoperative" by the "compromises" of 1850. There is no one in the wide circle of our readers who can hold *lib more peninacity , than we do to the policy as well as to the durability of the Com promise of 1850. But no one, we should think, would seriously pretend that it is of higher oblige lion, in any part of it, than the compact which is unially known as the Missouri Compromise. The bare recurrence to the circumstances under which the Missouri Compromise was ratified will show with how much greater solemnity the termi nation of that alarming controversy was attended. The discussion and the excitement of the Missouri question continued daring the terms of two Con gresses, and during of course an equal space of time in the now State of Missouri The crisis of 1850, on the contrary, broke out on a sudden upon the opening of the Congress of 1840-50, and for • lime hatUcertainly a threatening aspect. Sot, after all, the Nashville Convention, the product of that excitement, was but :the creature of an hour.— Within a very few months, mainly by the exertion of a spirit of puns patriotism, animating a few dis tinguished individuals on both sides of a certain geographical line, and the good fortune of the na tion in its having then at its helm a wise and op right Chtef Magistrate, the question was. amicab:y settled, tB,the nearly universal satisfaction of all good citizens. Of the leaders to this great scheme of conciliation, without citing the names of the living,. the nation yet mourns the decease of two great itilesmen, Cur and *trawrza, the termina tion of whore earthly career, it can hardly be doubted, was hastened by their almost snore than mortal e fforts to bring about that auspicious result. Nor in this connexion can we forbear recurring to the closing scenes of the hlissomi controversy more than thirty years ago. Who that witnessed them can ever forget them? Whatever the reader may have happened to think of the political char acter of Mr. Clay, the chief actor in that scene, no one of any creed in politics can but remember, with respect and even admiration, the fearless indepen dence, the total disregard of party or of self-interest, with which he threw himself into the breach on that occasion, and by his energy and influence restored quiet to a distracted country. Nor shonld we omit due honor to those fellow-members of Mr. Clay in' the same House of Representatives, who, , resisting the current of pnblic feeling in States which they represented, assisted him to breast the storm and steer the ship of State into' calm waters. The col leagues of those gentlemen, who took a diflerent course, and persevered to the end in resisting the compromise, we have never doubted, acted under a sense of duty which they could not conscientieus. ly disobey. So much greater the merit of those from the same part of the country who dared to differ, from them. The Representatives from Northam &Pee who stood by Mr. Clay on this day of Kral of the strength of this Government did not exceed twenty in number. To show of what character they ware, it is enough to renalf to memory the names of Henry Baldwin, late Justice of the Supreme Conn ; of Joseph Bloomfield, from New Jersey, an officer of the Revolution and of the War of HUI of straightforward Ephraim Bateman, from the same State; of Henry Southard, that taithlul.Jersey Blue who carried arms through the:whole of the RevAlu tionary war, arid had been in Congress almost ever since; of the respected Sanaueltddy, of Rhode Is. land ; of Langdon fill and Henry Shaw, of Massa chusetts; of Henry Meagre of New-Yorke of Henry R. Storrs, the distinguished member of - theltar of the same State; and of honeit Hantirllldreis, of Pennsylvania. It is small honor for those name. to be recalled :in this manner trixemen l einane i n these columns, but it is great honor to them, and those who, uniting with them, Contributed to the id. timate deCision, to be remembered in connexion with an event which, in lire apprehension of some of the wisest amongst us, saved the country from an intestine war. We cannot dismiss this bitef historical, reference without inviting the earnest at tention of all our younger medals to„the fact that Mr. Clay4litl not tote; by his steady opposition to the restriction upon Missocni il any portion of , the public'esteem and 'confide/ce which tie' had:ine. seemly commanded. His lofty independence was recognised and appreciated by the world. By the fist President sobiet4oentlf elected from ri North ern State, he ' horn all .his zees to be the fiecretarrol State, and ere.after: . wards enjoyed-I. Isrp portion of cixtfidencrs of his ceuntrymen, Nerthees Well ill Sortili3Of Mason and Dixon's line. , . As regard's the Territorial bill now under eon ; indention in Cangruse,We at* inhumed by sower• tide copied etraspineonalY into Government pa = ; per ol yesterday that it is an" AdminisCnition rota: sure,;' any. ME, every t iroeDeMocrat and every patriot in Congrese will vote for it.'!- .14lueb es are regret-to see am important a statement put feta Su thenitatively, we shmail relr , st it the more contd.We PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY 'AT:TOWANDA, BRADFORD 'COUNTY, PA., BY E. O'NEARA....GOODRCH. " EZESARDLESOI OP ,DENIINCIATION - PiOX, Ailr QUA:ItTEtri." believe it. We should regret it as well for the Pre. sident's own sake as for the peace of the country, But his Message at the opening of Congress forbids os to believe it. lie saw, we eremite, with patri otic no less than personal pleasure, that the Con gress which assembled here two months ago met in a spark of harmony towards each other, and of kindness and liberality towards the Executive, rare ly witnessed during the last twenty years. The on ly drawback to this state of good feeling was the feud which hail arisen among the New•Vork mncrats ; but that very partially, rippled the surface' of the calm which pervaded the great body of the -Representatives; and every one seemed disposed ,to give to the new Executive all reasonable sop port and confidence. Surely this was not a state of things which the President woeld desire to die turb, much less destroy, by conjuring anew the de mon of sectional discord—moredistinctly sectional, we fear, iii its present shape, than it ever was be fore. There existed no adequate motive for such a step. The country had not called for it; there had been no expression of public opicion on the subject ;, it was neither asked for nor looked for. So far front; it, indeed, that it took the public entirely by surprise.: The country, North and South, was reposing in en= tire acquiescence and confidence in the great heal ing act of 1820, and the strife'which accompanied its enactment had been long forgotten. It therefore surpasses our ingenuity to discover any motive which could induce the President to disturb this happy quiet. • We are aware that our esteemed neighbor, the Sentinel, gives as a reason for the measure, that it will compel certain politicians to 'show their hands;' and the Union alleges that " it is time these com promises were settled forever." What is meant by the Sentinel is not elear to us, and can only be con jectured. Whether it is designed to present an is sue to the Soft wing of the New-York Democrats, which, obeying their anti slavery instincts, shall drive them to oppo.e an "Administration measure," and thus place them in the attitude of antagonism to the President now occupied by the Hants, or by the same operation replace these latter on the side of the Aministration, we do not know:; but, be it one or the other, the object sinks into insignificance compared with the magnitu.le and mischief of the means adopted-to effect it. As for the reason as• signed by the Union, that it is time to settle forever the slavery compromises, the argument is puerile. lf a compromiie which has stood a third of a cen tury, and answered the most beneficent brims of its wise and patriotic authors, is to be broken for the purpose of making another which is to endure lorever, where shall we find the guaranty that it will last even as long as the one which is abroga ted? The sage and patriot William Lowndes (in common with all the statesmen who united with him in the Missouri compromise) yielded to it his support because he said it would .6 give permanent tranquility to the country in regard to slavery."— %Vete he now in life he would stand by his own good work. Honor no less than regard for the pub lic weal wuul,l bind him to it, as if should, we hum bly but firmly assert, every Southern man who has ever given it his assent and upheld it as a barrlbr against fanatical or ambitious encroachment on their constitutional rights. Let or then, in good faith, STAND BY -rut OLD Coxraoastag. Nebraska 16111 We cannot be wrong in saying that the country didnot dream at the openin4 of the present Congress that before 8 weeks of its session should roll around the exciting ana dangerous question ol Slavery would be opened upon it with all the bitter anger and sectional jealousy which it is calculated to arouse. It has come like a thunderbolt front the Heavens at mid day, thrilling the great heart ol the American people, North, South, East and West.— It has come when all was peace within our bor ders—when the country was jus recovering from the unhappy contest of 1850, and when fanaticism and faction had weared of strilodnd were reposing in hon orable acquiescence. Not slime are we in asserting that all was peace and quiet without and' within.— Assurances high and manly gave promise and com fort to the people of these States. We extract the following paragraph from the Message of President Pixece:—L " It is no part of my purpose to give prominence to any subject which may properly be regarded as set at rest by the deliberate judgment of the people. But, while the present is bright wait promise and the future full of demand and inducement for the OZEI4CISO of active intelligence, the past can never be without uselol lessons of atlm3 ll ill °nand instioction. If its dangets serve not as beacons, they will evidently fail to fulfil the object of a wise design. When the grave shall have closed over all who aro now endeavoring to meet the obligations of duty, 1850 will be lectured toss peliod filled with anziottsapprehension. A successful war had just terminated. Peace brought with it a vas) aug mentation of territory. Di►turbing questions arose, bearing, upon the domestic institutions of one por tion of the Confederacy, and involving the (Tonsil rational rights of the Sates. But. notwithstanding difference of opinion and sentiment which then ex isled in relation to details awl specific provisiOns, the acquiescence of distinguished citizens, whose devotion to the Union can nevek be ,doubted, has given renewed vigor to oar institutions, and restor ed a sense of repose ,and ire,cunry to be public mind through the Confederacy. That this . repose is wordier no shock dewing my official term, if I have power to avert it, those who placed me here may be ensured." • Thieverwer then waste sutler no shock." if the President could avert it, from Which we may ma . sopably conclude that, the of songht to be ae• entiplished by the. inurdoction of Demirel. Bill a t triultinior to and halve noettenettlim , With the pa of the present Ade►initifisiibn.. As inch lit may lai;ly'treiji loam pr"egent,.., , • . The Bill contains Abe stual,provisions of Territo rial Bills, and extends the Constitution and Laws of ale United Statesover the Territory of Nebraska (="Ass follows:" sr pace tike eighth st:tfoil of this act prepirito ry to the edmission of llrsnitrilntothe,Union, ap ; rrovi.tl *nth' 6, 1 cm, .bleb yeti everitd*,3 the 'principles of the legislation of 1850, commonly called the compromise measures, and is declared inoperative." • Thus it will be seen that the solemn compact of 1820, known us the Missouri Compromise, is pro posed to be repealed. That Coinpromjse forever excluded Slavery North of the line of 36° 30', con secrating the soil to' freedom and its society to free institutions; and we may, in this connection, pre sent the significant fact that the adjustment of 1820 now proposed to be repealed was the crowing mea sures of a Southern Administration, Mr. Monroe being President and Mr. Calhoun Secretary of State Moreover, it was supported as a Southern measure in Congress, opposed by northern men as such, not more than twenty northern members voting for it. But one Member of the the delegation from thin State dared vote for the Bill, and he, Mr. Unsee, was burned in effigy in all parts of his district, fur the act. But the country then as in 1850, wearied with contention and fearful of its consequences, acquiesced in the settlement and sought repose in its shadow. Almost thirty-four years bits that Com promise been recognized North and South, no man or party of men daring for a moment to propose its repeal. AU seemed to understand and feel amidst the Anti Slavery excitement since that time : that Constitutional obligations, and national faith de manded the faithful observance of that Compro mise in all its parts and to its very letter. And yet now this solemn covenant between the North and the South is proposed to be broken on the ground that it was superseded by the Compromise of 1850 ! This position we deny, and, planting ourselves up on both the Act of 1820 and 1850, would defend them from misconstruction and violence. If the Act of 1850 superseded the other it was a fraud—a flagrant fraud—upon the whole country . The preposition was never announced to the peo ple not diseirised in Congress. Tke Act of 1820 settled the whole question of Slavery in Territories belonging to the genera I government at that time, and would have been a final settlemejt of the question, for alt time to come, had not more Terri tory been acquired. The question then to be set tled by the Act or 50 had no reference to other than the territory acquired by Annex:lion and the Mexican 'war; and though it might have made a Gee territory South, or left Territory north of the Missouri line open for the people inhabiting it to say whether they would have Slavery or not, still it did not interfere with or supersede the Act of tB2O in such a manner as to abrogate it as is de clared in the Bill now before Congress. At most it left the Act of 1820 to apply to all the Territory for which it was originally intended, and to all other not specially excepted from it Indeed, the Act of 1850 was founded upon that of 1820, and certain concessions were made by the Norh in the former in consideration of others obtained by the North in the !atter. The - two Acts thus bccorne one great scheme of Adjustment, each demanding good faith from the other in order to the preservation of their vitality. Is it any marvel then that the friends of the Constitution and itd Compromises, should he startled at this attempt to abrogates Compact which can hardly be deemed of less high obligation than the Constitution itself? May not be fair, open and frank, and declare that both these Acts are radical ly wrong and unconstitutional, and then at one bold dash sweep them from the Statute Books, and bring the whole question of Slavery in the Territories be. fore the country for a definite arrangement? We want a Compromise that shall be sacred on both sides,—such an one we can support,—we will sup port no other. We regret exceedingly that the country has been precipitated into this feat tul contention. We have heretofore labored to quiet public apprehension, to allay faction and strife, and in common with nation al sentiment everywhere, were rejo ic i n g th a t ih e angel of repose seemed guarding our country's destiny wilt hope and promise The voice of fac tion was hushed, the howl 'of fanacticisrn was si• lent, the waves of sectional discord has pent theb Jury and subsided with the anger of the storm Why again gather up the elements of the tempest! Why again send the nation adrift on the merciless billows of agitation and strife? Let him answer who car.—Montrose Democrat, Feb. 16th. John Tan Buren and Col. Clemens. The following correspondence between Join t VAN &Jaen and Col. hat Ct¢attt•s, has found his way into the newspapers.. It will be read with in terest tit the present time. lift. VAN BURV.N . S LETTER. MY DEAR CLEMENS: * * * The position I took on the Baltimore platform lost me the respect and esteem of some of my truest and best friends, but so long as I knew it to be wise and just l sub mitted to this loss without a marmot . , or even an explanation, which would have saved me but in jured our cause. The covenant of peace on the slavery question entered. Mop at Baltimore I thought wise for the country. and indispensable for the de, mocratic party. Northern and southern ilemscims differ, utterly differ, on the whole subject of ala very. What, then, can be dope? Why, drop the subject, it is the only way to avoid a quarrel. This was agreed to be done at Baltimore; and now, in open and palpable violation of this agreement, it is proposed 1p repeal or supersede Abe , prohibition of slavery Kiln, #Missourtterritory ; and to repeal it on the ground that it is either already repealed, or never existed, that it was sopereeded by the coo t prothise 01.1850, or is ,unconstitutional. It either cif the,reasoris be true, the act is a, flagrant breach of party faith, for the absurd reason that the act it. aeLf is entirely unnecessary. Could astAhinA . ttot,s desire to buy, he South at the fresideriff9 I;tirts dictum such ,au outrage.? No r - t Amie„ ire hid two,men,, who can do any, good lo this ne le Peneral Cam, ihe,other younselc h fop will agree to the Nebraska bill of lasi year, it, will be promptly ond-,trinmphantly passed. I know Gen. Cuss is cam m ined loam theory olnon-intervention; karrt Ratty fur , tt—l think the theory unwind. It is an idea of self government., and Itrexpresaingibe idea yon overthrow the whole theory by imposing a sell government on thetrritory. Staten have a t— e right of self government have not; bat 1 don't want to argue this.' General Cass can sure ly lake this ground, i. e : Mat me - Baltimore plat form forbids the enactment or repeal of any law upon the subject of slavery ; and the repeal of the Miissouri prohit ition is unnecessary, because Gen. Cans thinks it 'anconstituticinal, and will leave it to the courts to hold. These l views, and the fact that the people of Nebraska want the old bill, and that the House by two to one passed it last ynar,and that Atchison, of the Sepate„, lent for it, would. give Gen. Cass lair standing ground in doing what I am sure hesees to be right. You, as a Southern man, coulJ advocate it in insure peace and good will for the South. It is %Rai to them to live up to their agreement iihey would be Worse ofi to beat us than to be beat; the sting left behind would be fatal isereatter—do you not think so! * * * * Yours, truly, 1. YAK RUBLE. There is one idea in my , head which ought to have put in my letter—the theory of non•iuterven lion, as applied to the Nebraska territory,, demands the repeal of the law prohib i ting slavery in Nebras ka. The same theory, of course, requi;es the re. peal of all laws of Congrei4est.rblishing slavery Now, slavery in the District of Columbia exist? by the laws of Congress alone. The Maryland and Virginia laws upholding it are repealed. The non intervention theory, as now construed, abolishes silvery in the District of Columbia. Urn strict state rights doctrines, too, it would repeal the fugi _ ive slave law. J V. B. February 3, 1851 LICTTrit PROJI WAeHieerroN, Feb. 4 1854 To lion. John Van Buren. My Dear Sir:—four letter of yeverday has just been received, and I agree With you in most al its inggestions. The lese that is said optm the subject 01 slavery the beer will it be for all parries, ant: ouch I am sure is the general Sentiment of ihe South. We want nothing but to be let alone. We do not expect or desire that the people of the North should tall in love with slavery. We believe the in"rirn• [ion to bas good one-- you think differently. Let each enjoy his own opinion ; and refrain from any interference with the rights or prejndices of the other. The sentiments which you have heard me express on the Ftnmp were not mine only - , but those of the Southern people, almost without exception Agitation in any,. form is whim we object to; and the politician who rear imstes a subject which we fondly hoped was buried for ever, mtscalcnla•es sad ly if he expects to be received with favor by us. All that I considered necettOary in the Nebraska bill was, that it should be an exact copy of the New Mexico bill,exeept. of course the name tin.? deQc: ip iion of bouridarieo. Too are aware that lam fully committed against the •tloctrines of Gen Cass's Nicholson lett .r, yet we both voted cheerfully for the New Mexico bill. It seemed to me to be com mon ground upon which all reasonable men might stand. It felt the sutieet of slavery where the Con stitution left it, and did not invade the province of the Courts to decide in advance what that Cernstitu lion meant. am too much engaged in prole. , ional dutieo to pay much attention to piditics, but I think I have seen enough In be (Train :fiat the Nebraska bill, a. reported by Mr Dougl.c., willip.ws, and I think I can foresee the enn.orpienreA I Th a t 'hay w ill b e anything but Agreeable, ferrrs lnn clear to admit of a doubt. A flood gale wilt he i pened, and a torrent turned loose upon the country which will sweep away in its devastating cou , sie every ves'ige of the compromi'e of 1850. I do ai speak of its im mediate epee's—l took beyond. For the present it may be looked upon at the South as a boon, and by a portion of the North as triumph over fanaticism The word peace will he upon the lips of its :him cafes every where. Like the Angst of the boot win Mood among the Myrtle !trees and said, " We have passed to end fro through the earth, and behold all the earth sitteili still and is at -est"—evert So we have it proclaimed that country 14 at reie—ghat all k peace—but I greatly fearrlthat they will soon find they have 'aloft! a spirit which will wing its way through storm and tempest to the funeral pyre of the repnblie. To at iide in good faili by the Compromise of IBM and the platform of Baltimbre, is both the post of safety and poet of honor. rrepeat. We of the South ask nothing but to he left alone • We 'have not moved in the matter, but it is we who 7 must suffer, unless Northern men whO see snil ppreciate uur position, will do us jestivehefore yout own pea pie. You can do this prnhapa more effectually than any man at the Noi , h. and if it did not imply en unkind suspicion I would a-r you to do it it is, I do not doubt you, and cOnsider the request mmecessaty. Hoping to have the plemure Of meeting, yoniver3 soon, 1' remain very only, 3 mil. &'. !icor. C1.V.5tr.244 CHIN CM LI Di go —l)r. Buw.rist• said, at Liverpool the other day, that there ia no I tly in China who a-pires to a high position, vt bo doe]; not look upon it as a great accomplishment not to be able .to walk •, I have seen beautiful women carried to their marriage ceremonies on the backs of their slaves, wholly unable In walk horn oneiend of the room to the other. Not long agn an, Englirth. tidy, a friend of mine was introduced into high society in Canton, and the Chinese ladies, not bavittg tieen, : an griii• lishwoman before, were very curious to lock at her feet. They said, " Itis very strange . she .has very good manners; what a wonder, p t li 9*,sac* a wage as that should be able to, el l avo . 1 4 01 ,0.4; ;OW society ; look bargreat fegl, 'oat cßoal t her lather and mother be thinkingpo I:Sher . , 01 hi his size, and to let her lent grow ith her person?" One of the Chinese ladies observed, "Te he aura, 00 It4o,ws bow to behave herael4 but you know she has been in our co any ftir some time in Canton."" r2M:!,= glisrtilantous. CT The Seientific American is responsible for the tollovring nn Barbers often tell us that razors get tired of shav ing but if laid by for twenty days, they will then shave well , By microscopic. examination it is bound that the tired razor, from long etroping front the same hand, and in the same directiime, has thetv ultimate particles of fibers of its surface or edge ill arranged in one;tl.rection,like the edge of a piece of cot velvet : but after a month's-rest, these fibres re arrange themselves heterogeneously, by crossing each other, and presenting a saw )ike edge, each fibre supporthvg its fellow, and hence cutting the beard, instead of being forced down flat without cutting, as when lain by. These and many ether instances are uttered to prove that the ultimate par cels of matter are always in motion; and_ they say in the process of welding, the absolute mementum of the hammer causes an entanglement of orbits of motion, and hence a re-arrangement, as in one piece ; indeed, in the cold state; a leaf of gold laid on the polished surface of steel, and stricken amen ly with a hammer. will have its particles forced into the steel so as :o permanently gild it at the point uf contact." A ToccitiNo nom:cm—Mr. Prentice, of the Louisville Journal, thus touchingly alludes to the death of his associate, Mr. Shreve: " We, the surviving editor of the journal, feel that the prime of lire' is scarcely' yet gone; Yet ec we look back upon nor long career in this city, we seem to behold far-and near only the graves of the prized and lost." All the numerous journeymen and apprentices that were in our employ when we first commenced publishing our paper, are dead ; our first partner, our second partner, and our third part ner are dead ; our first assistant and our last assist ant are also dead. When these memories came over us, we feel like one alone in midst of a church yard, with the winds sighing mournfully around him through the broken tomb., and the cokes el the ghosts of departed joys sounding do'.i.fully in our ears On r prayer to God is that such memories may have a chastening and put Eying and elevat ing influence upon us, and fit us to discharge, better than we have ever yet done . our duties to earth and to Heaven `..7 V . "— A gentleman passing near the meeting house' of the colored people in Whitestown, New-York, heard what he describes below : "A long•favored gentleman from Allies was closing np a prayer, and some while boys in a car• ner hart the ill-manners to laugh, so that the pray ing members heard them. He had a moment be fore said very earnestly—" we pray dat de Lord will bress al, dat k human," when the laugh occur: ed, and commencing again, just before the amen, the pious old negro said: "Oh Lord, we is n9l-to de habit of adtltng postscript to our prams, bat if the • spression" " bress all dat is human," wouldn't Tile in dose while fellers "dal., den we pray dat you will t. r..!ss some trot ain't human also, besidee A w n - L -11 e sat befilre a low table, and his pale fingers clenched with convukire energy, the ban. dle of a knite. His brows were knit, and his lips filthily compressed, while the wild and unsettled expression of his eyes seemed to indicate the des pera e purposes that was flashing through his ex. cited brain. Suddenly he held the glittering blade to thy light; he telt its edge and tapering pointohen with startling energy, he raised the fatal knife on high and plutigcil it into the breast of &----.41311.1n !Zoos?, tie gravy ran out in torrents, and the halt tarnished young gentleman left behind him, as the only monument of his powers, a pyramid , Of bones (gy- The Buft.do Commercial says:--'r Thew. tom of males wearing shawls, adopted to some,' ti tent in ) this region, as well as in other part,. of the' , • country, is thus accounted tor. A fellow attending a party, accidentally got drunk, and in retiring, mistook a lady's shawl for his cloak, in which hi biliment he was seen upon the streets. This W•si immediately taken as an introduction pi.a "new fashion." This is not the only fashion which , has originated in a manner nearly similar. (Jr A lady was once declaring that she couldn't understand how gentlemen could smoke. "It cer tainly shortens their lives," sa:a she. " I didn't know 144'; replied a gentleman. " There is my' father who smokes every blessed Jay, and he is now seventy years old. " Well," was the reply, " if hg hir.l never smok ed he mi=n have been eighty," To P.t:)triVC MARK.% rartm TAa.cc —Rot di - sheik so - petit-nes tease w hith=li roarka on varnished tables. 0;11011 4 1e,, a. hey should noi be eateleisly upon them , To remove it, pour scoris . lamp oil oriTilier epos, and rob O with a sot cloth: Then pour on a little spirits, and rub it dry %fedi another cloth and the white maul wilt disappear; leaving the tattle as bright as briore, Otr A ente for the gont—a lon of , . anthracite To be taken in doses of fifty pound, each, apyifiel toihe iihoulder, truiing,a journey`over than INCA, Of sta.rs ts'Vaarn.—Ftederiek There, note host Very provoking! Fve fet the prayer-book at homer, Maria—" Well, debt's . n ever Mind ;_ bpl do islf me, is my bonnet straight," "tru Aro rtiyeitesksrliatly, far w;'! , Fliavrled boCIt of sn f;:iir;i t ha646: 4, No," repliedlhe ter, " but I perceive your chops are.'' iltr" Know oot wistlem ;,,it is only the mw material from which the beautiful tatrio le reduced: WENIZIS 0 t ; ME ? ErIEWIEED era