ONE DOLLAR PER ANNUM, INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TOWANDA: Satnrban fUornmn, JJnln IV, 1555. Sclertcb SPARKING SUNDAY NIGHT. Sitting in the corner On a sunday eve, With a taper finger Resting on your sleeve ; Starting eyes are casting On your face their light; Bless me ! this is pleasant— Sparking Sunday Night? How your heart is thumping 'Gainst your Sunday vest— How wickedly 'tis working On this day of rest. Hours seem hut minutes As they take their flight; Bless me! AIN'T it pleasant— Sparking Sunday Night? Dad and Mam are sleeping On their peaceful bed, Dreaming of the things The folks in Meeting said— " Love ye one another," Ministers recite ; Bless me ! DON'T we do it— Sparking Sunday Night ? * One arm with gentle pressure Lingers round her waist, You squeeze her dimpled hand, Her pouting lip you taste ; She freely slaps your face, But more in love than spite ; Oh thunder! ain't it pleasant— Sparking Sunday Xiglit i But hark! the clock is striking— It's two o'clock, I snutn, As sure as I'm a siuuer The time to go has come ; You a-k with spiteful accents, if •• that old clock is right," And wonder if it ever Sparked on Sunday Night ? One. two, three, sweet kisses, Four, five, six. you liook— But thinking that you rob her, Give back those you took ; Then as forth you hnrry From the fair one's sight, Don't you wish each day was Only Sunday Night ? COL BENTON'S HISTORY. Calhoun's Approval of the Missouri Compromise. ANNO 1838—MB. VAN BCREN PRESIDENT. This portentous agitation, destined to act so seriously on the harmony, and jiossibly on the stability of the Union, requires to be no ted in its different stages, that responsibility may follow culpability, ami the judgment of history fall where it is due, if a deplorable ca lamity is made to come out of it. In this point >f view, the movements for and against slavery in the session of I*3" '3B deserve to be noted as of disturbing effect at the time, and as hav ing acquired new importance from subsequent events. Early in the session a memorial was presented in tlie Senate from the General As sembly of Vermont, remonstrating against the annexation of Texas to the United States, and praying for the aliolitiou of slavery in the Dis trict ot Columbia, followed by manv petitions from citizens and societies in the northern states to the same effect, and further—for the abolition of slavery in the territories—for the abolition of the slave trade between the states —and tor the exclusion of future slave states from the Union. 'J here was but little in the state of the conn try at that time to excite an anti-sluverv feel ing, or to excuse these disturbing applications to Congress. There was no slave territory at that time but that of Florida ; ami to ask to alolidi slavery there, where it had existed from the discovery of the continent, or to make its continuance a cause for the rejection of the state when ready for admission into the Union, and thus form a free state in the rear of all the great slave states, was equivalent to pray ing for the dissolution of the Union. Texas, i! annexed, would be south of 3D degrees 30 minutes, and its character, in relation to sla-! * ry. would he fixed by the Missouri Compro- i rn.se line of 1820. The slave trade betweeen the states was an affair of the states, with Aoiidi Congress had nothing to do, and the coiitinuauce of slavery, in the District of Co uaojoia, so long as it existed in the adjacent "i-°f hlia and Maryland, was a point ! olny in which every Congress and every had concurred, from the for ~at;on of the Union, and in which there Bas 111V *-T a more decided concurrence than at present, Ihe petitioners did not live in any territory, ' s.e or district subject to slavery. They felt ~ jrie of the evils of which they complained, *'. C' answerable for none of the supposed sin M - .1 they denounced, were living under a go ' • DLieiir which acknowledged property in ; and had no right to disturb the rights ' 'y Uie owner, and committed a cruelty upon •ave by the additional rigors which their * , : i "' lo| i> interference brought upon him. subject of the petitions was disagreea 'j 1 itself; the language in which they were was offensive ; and the wantonness of • Pr< • i t. .Con aggravated a proceeding suf "y'tt; . provoking in the civilest form in which "t"i be conducted. Many petitions were -line words, bearing internal evidence of * j aaj ong tbeir signers ; many were sigu- women, whose proper sphere was far torn ! " 'Delation, all united in a '"" purpose which bespoke community of i! he su P er ' ,)ter| d ence °f a general di