11 C. F. READ H. IT; FRAZIER, EDITORS. cfoet l s OLD CRIIRCWIEL.Tii. - Ring outinengy, Loudly ,elieerfly,.. '- Blithe old #ells from the steeple toirer, • ilopefullY, fearfully, . •. • Joyfully, cheerfully, .• . Yoseth the bride From her maiden busier. Cloud there is none in the fair summer sky; Sunshine flings benison down 'run .on high ; Children ring loud,as the train moves along, llapfy the titide:that the sun•shineth on." •• • • ' Knelt' ont'drearily, . • Measnred and wearily, Sad,ohl bells from the steeple pity. Priests Chanting rawly.; - golettinly, Passeth the conWfrorn the portal to-day. ,Props from the leaden clouds heavily fall Nippingly orer the phone and the pall ; Murmur old folks,as the - train mores along, Happy the deadihat the rain raineth on." . . - • Toll the hourof prime,' " • - 3fatin, and vesper.ehime,.l . • Loved old bells (kiln the steeple high- 7 . Rolling like holy waves, Over the lowly graves, Floating up, Prayer-fraught, into - the sky. . • Solemn the lesson Vour lightest notes teacii; Stern is the preaching yotiriron tongues preach; Ringing in life from the bud to the bloom, Ringing the dyad to their irest in the, tomb. . . • • : . • "P. .• . •' 3 , 4 out r eveinioir 7 — - •Peal as ye pealed of role,: Brave old bells, oo,each Sabbath .day, • • . • In sunshine and gladness, .. . .4' Through elotids and through sadness, Bridal and butial have passed away: . .: Tell uslife's'Pleasures with death tue still rife ; Tell us. tbutPeatti ever leadeth to Life; Lifeis our Labor, and Death is our rest, II !lap& the fivirii; the Dead ar.e thc,blest. The Coral Grove- r.Y JAMES G. rERCITAL. • • • Ali ep in the v are is a coral grove,' • Where the purple mullet mid gold fish rove,' •, Where the sea4lower spreads its hares ofbluo, That never are.'wet with.tilten den ' • hut in bright Ana thang•eful beant'y shine • • Par dozen in the green and glassy brine. The floor is of sand like-the mountain du Ct, And the pearl-shells spangle The flinty snow; From coral rocks the sea-plants lift • Their bonds where the tides 'and billows flow. The water is call]) and still below ; For the winds and the waves are absent there, And the sands are bright as the stars Thai glow • In the motionless fields of upper air; • There, with its waving blade of green. The sea-flag qreams through the silent water, And the crimson leaf of [ the pulse is Well To bluA like a banner bathed in s&ughter. There; With a light and 'easy Motion, _ • .Th e fan coral sweeps throne! the clear, deep ' tea, And the yellow: and scarlet tufts of dip ocean, :Are bending like corn on the upland lea ; And life, in rare and beautiful forms, - Is sporting, amid those bowers of stone, And is sale a - hen the wrathful Spirit:of storms . Has Made the top of the waves•hiS own. i ~j Y~zjl~y~e~c~~s.. From Life Illustrated.t' PHYSICAL CULTURE. lEEE MAN' is the nublest - uork cif Gor considered-lt;l4.ago became a truism. Think Of it ! Of Godisglorioui works the most' glorious—the la4t, best', work—the master picee Orrinilxifenee ! Whit philosopher has not . told - us—what poet his tot sung of the beautiful perfection of the natural creation ! • ',,lyith•wondering awe and ebild-like eon& deifeehave w taken the guiding hand of Galileo , ,, a Newton, a !llergehel; and by them have we been led forth ton contetupla :.tion cif the wisdom, the ppwer, and the:glory GOd as displayed in the heavens above us. . The geologist has revealed '-toour eager gaze the history ot our own - globe as inserib red6cik:. eternal , characters upon the primeval •• . _ . Weltave wandered over sunny plains and climbed snow-capped mount in 4 : with • the gentk.and genial Linnwns. e'kly and rev erently as little childo.n 'ha t,,e ' , we bowed - down, to. the . transeendent gc ns of those . f l. I Child ien of song who have 'token to out hearts of earth's varied and (• angeful beauty: of slier sounding seas-,--o her mountains toweling above the clouds—of her grand old ,t''restii- and her illimitable plains---even of the singing broOks and opening bud i of spring have They sung in strains that luiv'e conferred inirnortalit . ti ;- i • . , . .1 If Mika.% like these, !hell, so- procuundly . interest us by their eontplekily of Structure yet harifiony of Movement, by their subliini: ly, or beauty,- or, rarest 'grace and excel hilee, :what fslial I we-say -of ,m4N- even , speaking of his { Material' part alone ? Of Tull created thing,' the most. cotnplex in structure, yet iharitionious in action-4he most 'noble and . i leap kiful—encluwed with surpassing dignity •apkgraeo—and more them all thirz; the (1 , 4; 7 .e; that bolds that 'priceless , In aeni 1 the , 1113,101:TAL • 3ar:l).. ~- Ii Uot the study of this. perfect piece of mcelizinistri worths- the iiine and attention of , cvery intelligent fteing True it is, that -- inastneeh as the. pearl is of more value than,: the casket which "contains it, se IS the mind tof more value than the temple in 40: it dwells ;: - but - when ,reflect that, ft-nlez tho ca4et, though thrown from -onek.treless hand to another, still eentains its precious gem tinditnnied - in brightness, unallkied . by, the shattered and worn-out shell to whieh'it is encased; unlike this, the ruit:d is greatly influenced by the condition t%16 bt•dy whose guest it is. Then is subject invested: with new interest— " E'en Bonn the body's purity the mind • Receive:4 a Secret, sympathetic aid," as truly—as beautifully says one of the, gen tlest awl . best of English bards. - That there .is an intimate cormeetion be tween-the mental and physical 'development none d env. That the free and healthful action or the is somewhat dependent up. on Ilich'VAlthy action of the body- is conceded . by ail. 'Who - does not know that even a l eoporgry derangernent, of the %system ince pacttates 11< fur, severe mental' application . ; that when theindes bent languidly, and the blond Rows sluggishly• in our Ve:121 , , a carte spending languor pervades the intellect! .4d yet are-me fully aware how jar__ this 'efrce extend, and how completely within our Own control 'hes • the remedy , or rather the preresattee,• for much Of the physical stiffer inglto which we are subjected? ' 4herl yoar higlshrowed boy that pale; thin cheek and drooping- figure? YuLi say that heisn t'' t dereate ,(.0 h UlO ht and that he appliesi-hitnself fix/ elosely• to his studtes, and precisely because he_hos luelicate and susceptible organization . ' .. ... • . - " - .... . .. .... .. .. . . .1 ." . ,—.., . 1 . " ."' .i, . , —, . ... . .: • . . ._ „.. . .. i ~- ,'. -4 ., . . . . . . .. s' .. . • - • ' - ; • ~. r , . '... ••.".• . ' : • - .'- . -- '''-*. , , - ...I . . . 41. , • . • .._ . . ' . . ..: . • . . . t - -"., •1•„-'-- ' . - . ' ".- :*•'• , ~ --•-•." .•._ r .. • .... ' . . . -• , Ipit .. / It - .i , ~. . , . • =• .- ‘, . - I '7•• ..f , - ' - •?T 1 ; •.. • '...--- -,•" ;., !; - ',-61!".1 'l':. r I , ~. . -. •ffi f ; tt - , • c. , : 1 - i. - . -1. 1- 41 I. • *i f '' „ .. ~ . .. 1t 4 I 11 , 4 . . - • . .... • ' . . . . .. .-.1 ..... . ..r. , ... ........, .',T. -...: .:- 4 41., 0 1y,k,... , 4... 4. _ e, • • . - . - . -• • ...-.... . ; • ' -: ?. _ • , '., ..' --?,-. .., _, ..,, ,!-: .t : :1 -;', ..r., - : ,T.. - ....--..,;.z.....: • - •:, - ;i1; , ::.; ~ ~, . j.:.• ; •••.7 ; rt.3• 4l in I • . . - . • , ' ... . . - . - .. • • • : •-•'• .. ' •• ' ' ' -, t '': I. T- - -I . "'f. ;.',-,*- -,.. :1 ,, ,- ~.. .... 7 ,- „ ,-, •••,: • ~..,,ila i,fild'atirt:.ii;,.) should - PM net be shut away - front the.sunshine 'and trlttffree' o fresh air'of heaven,and'debarred from. life-giving exercise for six or- leven went* houra.of each day by confinement ,in a small, illsventilated school room precisely. for this reason: should his physical training receive the greatest possible care. Mother:why .has your - fragile ;daughter that narrmir chest, that right shoulder thrown upwatd and' enlarged so . much beyond the left nne Why is she pale and spiritless, and 'almosVecitain to victim to con sumption.? i . Not wholly becanse her. frame is slight, and tier whole organization so cup!, itely delicate.' - This should be 'a reason tier };reader caution On your part, for More Judi idous and Careful - training, but it 'does not necessarily (follow that she should suffer snore from ill health.' Glance at her school-room. PerhapS the desk at which she sits is ill suit ed to her stature, she if. forced to lean teo tar forward; or it may be, - to raise her arms too high, - Perhaps she has at home -comma ed a habit of sitting or standing that i ptay re sult cn such Iccrosequences as 1 have described: Eariy and careful training might have pre vented, or at- least overeotre this habit, and even now it is not foo late to mcaintrably repair the Let her istudy the laws that govern her physical being. Let her fully realize that,by 016 - course sho j is pursuing, she is destroying health and beauty, and thus, comparatively, disqvalifying herself for future usefulness and enjoyment, and the work of rehirin is already commenced. NV Ilyn I urge Upon your consideration the more earctud ph sietl eduCatiOn of your chit- • d ren, I do Tait nt the least undervalue the ad. mirable.mental dnt r to w: ic't you have aCciistothed them. The •intellect can not - be tot quick and clear nor the moral perceptions too nice; but it is quite possi slide for that honored embassador, t he body-, to become incapable of obeying the behests of its royal ina,ters and prompter; the heart. and mind. • : - You .gtory, - and justly too, in the intellect- . nal achievements of your ch'ld. You think with pride - Mid pleasure ofeach noble toaitcif character, ofitis love of truth and Justice, and-..his scorn of wrong and oppression , you dwell upon' is filial tenderness, his benevd: 11 , lenee, his re -erent meekness, his - passionate fondness for; all that is .good or beautifill in art or tiatut4, and vet you do not reflect that a diseased I.)ttly is . but - the robe of Net' us ta. - 1 this uoble acid aspiring:spirit. . . • Let hitridsf m niggle tam-;(1 and uotkird with , 'MI the strength of purpolZe and . earnestness of design ; thnif i rail :Oil - sic-al organism refuses • to carry out; the_ vast. designs_and noble con : ceptions of 'that lofty intellect. Let hint eon tend ltravel as he may. he is fast fetter, (I.— ! Let him entiCavor to f tr(7e his onward way, his fOotsteps',are clogged, the• path is a w envy . ' 1.., and he inks at last—the gloriOus goal to which he r spired still unattained. - ' . It. does not so much disprove rsprore the truth of any position I have taken to sad= that giant intellezts have dwelt in disease d' and defornied 1i ,dies; that many: a child cur gen ., ins has early, " gone dOwn ..mnong the sleeps a ers," yet With the wreath of Immortality up on his brow; and that some.of the greatest benefactors ,:hr mankind have stiffered a lit,- ' long torture.• A deiiattYly-tnottlded, or even a deformed body may be a comparatively healthy one; and is- it not , perfectly reasonable td suppose that, tmencambered and uninfluenced by any of then phYsical ills, those gifted one,' i s- might have attained to Sstill more daizling heights? • Who eandonfit that, with a straw , and healthful phYsicar organization, those, noble 'benefactors of mankind Would have been en aided 'to pro'pOrtionably increase their useful- MSS 7 . • Happy they doubtless...were in the con sciousness Of their own intellectual power,and in the assurance that they were.the hon o r e d messengers ;of good to humanity—but might . - they not ,haVe 'been h tppier ? • . ' Says Sir Thonias More in his ",Utopia" (r work in which he sets forth his idea of those social arrimgementshy which the hap piness and 4nprovelnent of the ix.ople may be secured to the utmost extent of which bu s man nature iis susceptible :) , 5 " Another sort of pleasure is thatl,whieh consists in 4 q uiet ands go a d Constitution of body, .y b - whieh there: is an entire Ilea lthincss spread over 1 all parts•of the Upfly,, not. alli.y ed with discase: This, ',am ;it' is free from all inixture;of pain, gives an inward pleasure. of its6lfeveir though it should not be excited • by any -exttfrnal and delighting objects ; and although this pleasure !does not so vigorously affect the sense. yet, as it is the greatest of all' pleasuts, so almost all the Utopians : reckon it th ' foundation and , basis of all the tither joys of life, since this alOne makes one's state of life to be easy aid desirable, and when this is i. wanting, a man is really capable , ci Ito other pleasure." \ While we may not fully coincide with the worthy Sir Thomas •in his "Utopian" opin; ions, we hate all experienced tbe:pleasut-able. sensation ari l singfront the healthful action • o f the Whole s . -stem. Have you' tweet'. risen., rafter a -refr .shing slumber with body and 1 .; mind invOr P o.nted, 'and strengthened, and ca. : ..irer for action.? tft Have y o no thronli .open your windt...y to : - • ' ;admit the yory light, and sweet, soft breath .6f a suMmer, dawning; or the more bracing ?air of aespring or autumn morning? • Have - you' never gone into the' forest,while the dew wastyet tinklitor from :leaf" to leaf, .. filling the air with a low melody!? ' have you f not .drank in with titilgltt, the 'roma of vyet and arbutus : ',or 'the fresher, more exhilarating fragrance of the pine ? .. Have youl never, while the mist liras yet wreathingupward from the riVulet, and river,, ascended the I hill-side or to the mduntain-top that your rar r ?tured - vision might take•in mere of earth's loVeliness? 7- ~ . ' . . Or, carried onward by notoble home, that to sPurn the ground - beneath his feet,. have you: nut sped on-r—on- 7 in the fade of 'a frei..i3ening b reeze that sent the glad life bounding aweigh your veins? s • - Mras7there nut a positive pleasure in the moue seise oi,ezistence? Did you tibt a from. your inmost: heart, that* -God for life and a home upoa . this beautiful earth?. - And, when aftervard you entered upon tln business Of the day, .was not die mind better pr pares fur action'? .'• • Did not the body's activity and elasticity seem, by souse mysterious sytnp . athy, coin 'intuit:mud tO the brain? ' • • As there bad -been a- positive pleasure in :the healthfallaction of the body, so was not ,The exercise of the mind less - a tusk_ than a . :pkasurif ' • . • ' 86 LFETECenarffl g,oair_n) EriONT m. , atav - . A@LLIJ wgZbril]icel.g9 . .. . . . . • . . . . . - , . . . • . .. . - . ..7:1..4a,...1::,:•:71'.. , ..i1. , -IFX - - •,' . i . . _ f t IAT rir D (Ari l -- .1 • ril . I , • - c 2- -,..-) ,b , Pr' . • • . ' • . .- : . .' ...i., .1 i. ‘..1 .. 1 .1 ~IA 1.110-1 1 . iii 'l . -___ ..' .‘`J.. , • ~, .:... • -.. • 4,,i-- 1 T 3 : ... -___lir. I• -9 0 .__. , ../ - 00 - 1 -;.-,-,---.,.... „i, .1.. - - .-1 - 14 1-f.,..„ERAZ1.F.11, -7P U BLISI-1 - kR,". , Nr: 0 t .8:,--NO:e 8-. 1-1.T 1 r . 4)4_1 7 "-4AN AP _ _.. ....._ .. ...... _ . .. M You 1110 no litutruor, no silting. head, no weakened nittscles, nor morbidly • Sensitive nerves: but each part beautifully pedirnied it-s own appropriate' . familia) ' and all the parts acted in perfect ',Her and harnioni?- • If health, then, is not only Such' a delight in itself—but more than thiA, such an:aid to mental . development and progress—such - an almost indisr amiable :condition (,f ' g! eat usefulness, should it -not receiva from the utmost care? • Should we not fili-egOviery grat ification thnt tends in the [exist to inipair it 7 Is it not, indeed, - our Imperatiye duty to do so If we ittringe any of !Ito laws of Itenith throng!' ignorance of those we are not altogether blamable- hut, nevertheless, we /mist,•ufrer•tb.. /mist ,•ufrer•tli.. penally; .and it is not only our_ privilege hut our duty to, as fir as pos sib'e„ aerptaitit•ours-IveN with those . laws.- Let physiology he more g(terally taught in our sehook Pat. into 'the hands (J....your chiidren hoof N Upon this subject L-hooks di vested of the dry teelmiealitios ofseielice, and teaching in an easy and familiar manlier truths so; necesary to their happintss and usetniners. 'Slott will Anil few children of ordinary intellige(iee that kill not be delight ed with the study. . . Attend and utteinteag,e. worthy - lecture, up on this suljciet, and gather int'orMation upon it from every avaikble stinreit. I lIMY Un dertake, at some future time. to aet'inaiiit you with the rules of health and unfold to you the laws upon which they. are !minded.. .1 have already extemled this address beyond its as,irmed limits, and will close it witli!:_a single additional, remark. • . - While I have spoken of the - vahteof health and the necessity of presetving it, I do not wishj.t be understood as saying that any amount of care will altrays exent us from pain-or sickness : but Ido ass-ert that by a proper attention to the study of our phrsieal tanure, and lty a protopt obedience - to the laws that govern it, a vast amount of suffer ing might-be,avoided—evils that we consid er the inevitable lot of humanity might be obviated, mol man •night twonne what a God of wisdom and goodness designed him to be, comparatively exempt Item those physical ills; happier in himself, and the means of greater g. 4,041 to his'relllnk?z,, • . Many a tortured • and weared bOily, now driven . to almost supediuman exertions by the restless and aspiring spirit—overtasked, overburdent . d, and sinkirg by degrees. into a pitible min —might become a noble jug, a glorious temPle, - worthy of fits more ghrions guest, the Lioniterm,ll-111-M Grcat Boid, Census—For ev e ry Mile that We leave the surfaee of tel earth, the temperature fills 5 deLt . rees. At tarty-live miles' distance from the glidie we get beyond the atmosphere, and enter, sti telly speakin'r. Belo tile regions of ,pave, whose temperature is :225 &gives. be. low zero; and here (-old reigns in all , ii,epow. er. Some idea of this - . it.ten , e Clld may be formed by stating. that the greatest cold ob. served from. the Arctic -Circle is from 40 to 60 degrees below zero ; and here many stir. prising eil'eets are i.roduced. Jo the ei ,, einieal laboratory,lie great&4 (*l'd that me em pro. dueels about J5O degrees helm% s ui. At this temperature; carbonic av id becomes a solid substance like snoW. If touched, it pro. duce; Just the same Oil-et - on the skin asa red•hot cinder ; it blisters the finger like :i burn. Quicksilver or inereury freeies at. 40 degrees below zent; that 'is. 772 de f , rees be low the' ten4ieratil re - at mh.rli water freezes. The solid mercury nay theti be treated as other metals,hatimicrod into sheets, or made into ,spoons ; such Toon: wotdd , howeVer, melt in water as warm :Is iee:. It is pretty certain that every liquid awl gas- that we are acquainted with would hyounic solid if expos. ed to the cold of the regions of space. The gas we light our streets will, would appear like was; oil - would be in reality "as hard as - a ;wk.?' pure .spirit.. Melt we haVe never ye% solidified, would appear like it blork of transtkarcut crystal. 'hydrogen ga.• would-be come quite solid, and resemble a metal ; We should be able to turn butter in a lathe like a piece of ivory ; tumid the fragrant odors o f flowers would 11:IrC: to be made hot b e for e they would yield perfume. These are a feu— of the astonishing i treCtS of Piesse. STI: ELT I sci - full-r:gued maid . ft.hion, with h o , ,m all • boldly set, toovr7d up the side-wall; g:jilv dbited 411 she met.: The wa!k W7l", very wile, hut th?. hoop. -ed skirts were ottolt wider, :Ind 't were n. , eless e'en to think - of wa!king up beside her. Iler cheeks were " Jed as roses," her Ewe was all wsmile ; awl her . tread it was as d a i n ty a s 'though earth was :01 too 'lt was het hour of triuMpli.::::d she didn't seem to know that a coasting, sleigh. was 6/Ming ht a speed . not very But. it came, and ere she knew it, her - Prop , " were knocked .away, and, she era; going &WI: street. with a boy Upon ISIS kill4h. The i. tl it LIM quite roughly, turned • ali the hoOp4 aback, and of partly smothered . sereatns there warner any lack ; while the trohlets kiioW what sh e was or wat'l ilhour her person much resent:. ',hug an unilrreila inside out. The passers stopped turd Wondered, as the swiftly speed ing devoutly kept onward, ruAting past and fast away ; the boy eri , :d Top,' and like i it, and safely shied" his sled,'w•ith his own feet pointing -back waid , ,. and them:aid% thrown out ahead. They gained the level safely, ind thu maiden, full of wrath, looked back - in angered silence upon their travelled " You good-for-nothing scamp," She said, " I've a :mind -to shake you " Your face was covered op .mein, and you (thou; inever'll - tell," said the coasting tad, quite boldly, and in ajorial mend, he homed and said, " Goa morning, !them ; you /aid your feet ri . p Republican. • " Alsortous.--,The following is the latest emanation from Terrell, the imeterate pun. ster of.the Lafayette (1114.) Journal: • A tittliug eorrt.spondent of the New York Herald, writing from haneaster,:pretends to give the gauge ot it drink he had witnessed the President elect take, one frosty morning at the sideboard •at Virile:Aland, recently.— He irreverently estnnates it at couple of inches:" and expresses the . opinion that the depth 'of the " Sage's" potations . visibly in. creasta sigh hls years. There is nothing won derful in -this, for hasn't it passed into a prow-. erb i . %The older the Buck the etifer the horn ? Du. J. 11. l'nomAs s 's. ... Gnizot on Cioinicelt, Wil)irt 111. and • • • - Washingtonz- • . Guizot, the.pell-kiitiwil French slat Oman . and historian 'bits publiihed..4 work Which Juts recently beesl translated In ',l7.ltglantl, t 4, 90 the Causes of the of rte - Engksh and American Beit.ilittinnS'i n . - fie, One of Our ri!..' cent London ippers We find tbe folloWing, ex tract, giving porfriaits'Of theleading bien 9f three reiolittlotiSi ' -- -. ' .i, ' ' -'' i -.N ~ • • ' . Three great men,•Cromwe 11, Willuunlll, --, and WAS' hitiglOn, retnain 'hi j history.lis• Aid leaders,imd repr'eantatives 14 . thilg' . triliell I ciettirieneea::,whith - deideit the fatO.Of two' great nations .. For extent Mill 'energy ofnat ural-talents,- Cromwell jA; peritnps,' . .the"most remarkable attic' three. liisinind,'Wit.4 mar- . velousli prompt, firm, supplecifit'efitive, and perspicacious; he possessed a 'vigor of char:- acter which tin obstacle could disciufrage; and no conflict could tire. lie pursued his: ilans with an ardor as inexhaust able 'us hispafielice, traveling sometimeS by the 14'91:test:and most •eircuitons riunis, sometimes SY rho shortest and Most precipitous paths. 1 . lie excefied equally in gaining and in . ruling, metiin per sonal and familiar intcreours4 ; anti he was equally skilled in organizing aiul eiinduCting an army or a party. Ile ltd . Op instinct of popularity 'and the gift of authority, .and he wns able * oith the same boldnUss. to let loft-se or to quell factions. But borii :iii the midst of a revolution, and earned by iinceessiee con- . .vulsions on-to supreme power, iiikgeniUs was by nature, and always .- remained, - essentially revolutionary ; he had learnediOrinderiitand ll:e'netiessity of order and , ;,(Oiernment, but he ty;is Jmble- to either resiseet or practice moral and permanent laws. it) constvpll c e: of the defectiverzess of his nature, ot . the vi: . cionsness of-his situation, he Winned r4ll:tr. ity and serenity in the exerei4C ir;f power: had immediate renourte to extreipe measures like a man continual fylissailet! 14 Mortal dab: gers ; and. perpetuated and agravated, by, the yiiilenee of his reit - reales, thd violent evils .that he o kited to cure. Thefiftindation Atli Government is a task -that risitiires proceed ings of a more regular character, and more in eotifiarinity to the eternal laws of morel order. Cromwell was able to subdite the revolution he bad made, but he-could not ueceed in es.. falitishing it. •,. . . . Less powerful, p laps, than Cromwell, by natural gilts, William . 111, rind: Washini , ton. sueeeeded'ili the enterprise in which he failed ; they fixed the• destiny and established the Government 'of their country.. :This may be accounted Or by the fact that, even in the mid 4 of revolution, they . never accepted tr ' practiced a revolutionary itoliey ; they never were placed in the fatal sitnation (4 hav ing at' first anarchial violence ?.;the stepping stone, and their despotic violoicii as a nucessi ty of their power. They fotind . -themselves placed, or eke. placed theinselveit, at the very outset, in the regular way, 'MO under• the permanent condition% of the.Gorernment. • William was an ambitionS Prince: it Is. puerile to believe that, until the appeal was suede to him it. Iti*itit fuuk-rfetrunned freer (ruin, all desire to ascend the (brittle of Eng: land, and ignorant of the sela4oes which . had long been on titot tit raise hini to it. W hat:i followed, step. by :ter,, the progress of the scheme,without taking any - part in it, but without discountenatteing• it ; ill"; its au thors no eucouragement, but titfordmg them all the pruteetten in his power.. I :His Ambition had also the characteristic of being associated with the triumph of a great and just cause— the cause of religious liberty mid of the En-. ettpean balance of power. No man ever made a great political design more AbOrmighlyjhe the exelusive.objeet of his life OA did Wil liam. Ile vas ardently devotO 'to the work which he was acciunplishing, and he merely considered his o wit aggrazi,lzem en t as a means of that end.' In 3 his•desfgas' upon the crown of . Eilgland he did not attempt; u succeed by . violence' or disorder; his mintl-was too lofty and too well regulated to be ignorant of the - incurable Viciousness of 'such success; and to sabinit to the yoke. _But le . vlieft the career way opened by England herseff, he gave no more heed to the s , :ruples of the private ;'he was anxious ;Nit his cause should triumph, and that he should ret:lve the hon or of the triumph.• ' • A.glurious mixture of faith fand ability, of ambitton and devotedness. . IVashington had no ambition ; country had nimu of him ; • be became great to serve her, from duty - rather than from choice, and sometimes even with a painfill _cflifit„ ilis experiences of public life were;bitter ; r and he preferred the independence Zfprivito life and . the repose of the mind to the eXcreise of pow. er. But he tinlaisitatingly aceppted the task imposed upon him by his ethintry, and, in perforining it, he allowed no cottcessions to be made, either towards the country or him,, self, tor the purpose of lightening its burden. liorti to govern,though he took!,-no pleasure in it, he told the American people what he thought was the'truth, and maintained, in goy ernitig Item - , what he thought *as wise, with a simple but immovable firmness, and a sac rifice of popularity, which leas all the more meritorious because it--was edmpensated by the joys oldominion. The sekvant of a-nas cent republic, in which the democratic prin ciple prevailed,-he obtained it.S , confidence and second its triumph by stistainulg itsinterests against . its inelination,-and by ;practicing that modest and severe, reserved andindepetafent which seems 'only to below , - to the leader of an aristocratic Senate piat:d at, the -head ofan ancient Mate. Its success was remarkable, mid doett equal 14mor to Wash ington andtu his country. * CLEAN Sat t..---A , shrewd countryman was in town the • other day, gawky, uncouth and innocent in appearance, but in reality with his eye teeth cut. Passing up Chatham street, through the Jews ,quarter he Was continually encountered with importunities to buy... 7 z-- From almost every store soine pne rushed out, in accordance with the annoying custom of that street;to Seize upon hint and try and l'Orce him to purchase, At list, one dirty looking, fellow caught him by the arm, and clamorously urged him to lieeotne a customer. Have you got any shirts 1 inquired the countryman with a very iniMsvnt " A splendid assortment, sir. Step i'n sir. Every price,sir, and every style. The cheap est in the street, sir." "Are they clean V' • • "To be sure, 'sir. • Step itt,liir." " resumed the countryman, with perfect gratify , " p - di uh onei fur you need it. • - • The rage of. the shopkeeper; may be imag ined as the countryman turned upon his heel, quietly pursuing - his way. . • cjoi;iiefti ideB. ?ASS AG-ES PROLE HON. MR. WILSON'S SPEECH. [We pineal:a - few 'of the most' salient pasi:agel front the Speech of. Hon.. Henry ,Wilkon, of Massa chwettA, upon the Prettident's Message, delivered itk the Senate Dec, 19 '• " ' ' • . A.WOB.p- ; ,IpR • ' • - Ttpre it *Ake! Aktoilljr ut - the Cabinet whose' handsome think the). see in..the-,ilessage, .wkwigiow# NvAtkiehargeter of this prc duetkm. 1 - mean the learned Attorney-Gen- His vast.,aequisitious mid tireless dustry, his catly,associations and enrrespon deuce with the Abolitionists- a_ New Eng land, all teach him-that tlwve amsations a gainst the people.of•lhe North are without toundation, For years he, was In a'‘rres , poilenee. with the -leading , Abolitionists of the North. I remember, sir, the public let . An. penned in his 'riga-tin:Ns, dictated, by the poet NV hittii r, which lie wrote to secure ,N.b . /litiOn Votes. I remember too,sir.that'when Wise Made hisident threat thats they would introduce slavery into, the, North, he indig nantly answered that before,. they..could in; troduce shivery into the. North, her cities and villages would be Imlled in the dust, so that scpindrons of.eavalry could gallop. over them unimpeded, as the steeds sweep over ;:the bouudles prairies of the ‘Vesr. • lie sluxlld_ha%e restrained the pen, which libels more than one hundred thousand sons of his native State, whose only offence is that they have resiilvedthat slavery shall never be in 7 trodneed "into the North,'' •• 711 E 11EA1. DISt:NIONISTS ThiS charge of disunion made against the Republican party by the 'President 'comes with an.ill grace trom.the chief of a party which has in its ranks every political distm ioni4t 'of the United' States. The Senator front GcorLfin (Mr. Toombs.) not: now here, .detlared : "if Fremont were elected,. the Union would be dissolved, and ought to be." The Senator front I.oui 7 4ana (Mr, Slidell,) time organizer. of - Mr. 13ucharan:s wing of the Democratic . party, . nntl . its fieknowl .edged leader dorit, the canvass,-avowed the saute sentiments. Gor. Wise, whose inde _wit assaults upon Col. Fremont-and 'big . moth er shocked the feelings of every gentlemao in Ameriea ' threatetied to Aisia,.ve the IZnio. t. 'l le was ready to orgiutizt! the militia of Yir giiiia, to place them upon a war footing, and they were ready, he said, to " hew their bright way" through all'opposing legions..— We. tire.noW told by 'The 16rhmond.Eartir 7 17 that Wise : --st ho made the tour to Raleigh, who called upon the grand juries and courts to indict Botts . tUr defending . tbe.Voion in his dominions 7 -that he only made these threats to preserve the Union. The RichmondEn piirer. of the Gth of October last, -declared that if Fremont were elected, it would be the duty of the South to dissolve the Union and form a Southern Confederacy ; awl we were told, furiken s,ttAth that- if Fremont - were. eieeted,lt.*Mld be their duty ..i-toLtuarch on Washin! - ;toti and take. possesl;ion of the arch ives and Treasury or the Uoited State," for getting 'that the treasures° the _ Treasur y were at Roston, New York td Philadelphia, "in the enemy's country" the North. ' . - TILE OLD LANDMARKS The Senator from South Carolina . told us, some days ago, that in the Revolution, when' the Government was first framed, they were all patriots—they did not quarrel over these sectional questions.. The Senator from Tex as, I think, held the same language, that We of this degenerate age were raising these sec; tional questions. I would ask these .Sena-• tors who forced these issues upon us ? In . 1774,• when the old Congress met and framed the Articles of A SSOCiatilll, 'the second aril, ale was a prohibition of the agave trade which . had been ti,rced upon the ;Colonies -by the policy of the British Government The pro hibition of the slave trade was -sustained by the North and .1)) ' the South t even South Carolina indorsed it. In 1.7 e r, *hen your Constitution' was framed, we of North . were not responsible ti!r the existence of a slave anywhere under the authority •of Con gress. Most of the Northern States had tak- en measures in- favor of, or tending to, einan-• eipation in their States.: When the Consti tution was framed there was not - a man in America Who believed that the idea of prop- • city in man, to use the Words Of Mr. Madi son; was embodied in that Constitution.— When Washington entered upon 'lts duties as President, here was no. action of the Na tional. Government which made the • people of Massachusetts, or of Any State, responsi ble for slavery anywhei e Nutside of• their own jurisdiction. Were men proscribed then who held the views that men on this side ot the Chamber now hold? No, sir ; the men :who promulgated the beelaration of hide- . p e ndence, who carried us through the Itevo--; lution, who framed the Constitution-of the United States, and - who held first oflices,were all . men opposed tjiat" slavery. .Washington Was President. Ile had declared that .no man in America was more in favor of the a b o liti o n o f shivery than himself, and his vote should never be wanting to effect that object. John Adams had declared that con senting to 'slavery ''istts a sacrilegious breach of trust. Thomas Jefferson had proclaimed, over and over again, his views in favor of eniancipationl that " the abolition of slavery was the first Object of desire." • Alexander Hamilton Was removed: from ,the Presidency of Abolition Society in fNew - York to-the head M . the United States Treasury. John Jay was taken from an Ab olition Society in New York and made Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States; yet he had proclaimed to the world that bur " prayers to Heaven would be im pious" until we abolished slavery. Iredell, of North .Carolina, had declared that when the abolition of slavery took place, it, would 'be an act'pleasing to all generous minds,and he was made a Judge of the SupreMe Court. Wilson,Of Penusylviinia,itt the Convention for • the adoption of - the Federal Conatitution,laul, avowed the doctriue tlirit the new States We're : to be under the authority of Congress, and that slavery would never go them;; and yet he; too ' was placed on the Bench of the Su preme Court. Gouverneur Morris, who was sent abroad to represent this country, de : clirtxl slavery to be it netiaious institution.— Madison, Sherman, Ellsworth, Gerry, Pats rick Henry =allthe great men of. the coon, try,-,North and South, With the exception-of a few fire-caters in South Carolina and Geor gia—held the . doctrioe - then that . slavery was a - local institution, existing only by the. form I of local law; that the sational Government , . l•had no Conoection ~with it ;-alid tluit it Wes an institution, which would 'pass . away , hefore our,higher?eivilization dud our „ purer Chris tianity. - All We ask o(y ou is .tiv carry us back - and place us W=here we stood: ' wheifwe: made the constitution and inangtirated - the - Govermitent. : Then we were not !rtisfionSi. , ' hie fur, the existenee.of slavery,.anywhere,on earth outside of our own COmmonweelths.- .... WHO 41tE YO,tvlcs l' ' Cast your eye over :the North..;, take New England, with her one hundred andfifty thou:' s ind popular inapirity ngainst yeurearididatf'; take the. tre it State of 'Near•Yti le; takelk ._.• wilt Ile : line of Northern:States ;- anti When 7iitt . look at them, remember thatwe have a.large plurality in all of them; except : in a small par=' . tion • inehultsi • within about forty thousand -. ' ,:•••• '- lily lur 0 : 13 -9K44 18 r..' ::• - 2 :'' 4 . --. square miles of territory, and that it-0 intend 1 Senators an. see nothing,ReetiotalLitr'! to burn over in ti e next lieu; years. '• I al- cnnititution of the-coMmitteca ofthli-601},t,..: lode .to ll:astern • and Central I'ennsylvatiiii; -yytkin'thi.t i sithjea iraiii•ferredli)* Oilifip , ,,,joki Southern lndiana, Southern Illidolei and - a since, the Senator frainvAlithattittllitritlktyy small portion of New Jersey. ; '`here • we, i t .td i t s that: in the;litaatititepttlentailiTai , .„,,..._. ~4 , ...„. .... ... .. Mean . tn disepss the question, innidnive. it well - where, ,the. _ Ilepubliqata,o4o)-4"-we..- arid clearly th. fi n. il and - undelilliioil. • The there the Sonth,'WeS,prosCri . , Cat' - ••• bti rest of the North is ourS. If von believethat Mittees; I have extunint.4ll ,elk,..altiYi. -,....'.. the, peopte . are hinaties i • or. tat • their leathers tees,- MO I fi nd that oft' h't*eliCiint's:4*. - ',' dt;eeive them, remember one thing, - : - that in committees; etisisting„o„Mte - ...,ktindrialt.,:attt.- '. 1850 theretv , re in the U'inted St:ltes . nearix eight nieniliers _fifty - .. - tif theni arelOtti r thetrit•-. • . eight hundred -thousand ho persons above . melt , or ..-NOrtherif - 'ineitWhe 'llfliiiiiitii:Vth': - ' twenty years of ag e • who could not read s i r them; i have lot at •the - eleVe - iflinlititte write. TOnly ninety-four thousand out Of this ant committees of: this•-lody,f, and I final ,*''•:' eight-hundred thousand happen to live hi the . the Reptit.ticiins have nian.vat ! -.of, tke. , .ol,it- , ; : States•w hid' Freinolit etirried, Reinember s i five members. k . .di4 not . rxprpt.-41nyttOts. another thing, that the State of Massachusett- , , I Very liberal in the formetionnf the commit. • w hall .you- consider so - nitra—a .people so tees. , The Senator from i'lltarvlstiid.llStr..• easily deludetl-prints, within a few thousand, Pearce) brought in thtiliat -'-‘-llait'SerietkirA . . and circulates inure newspapers' within the a published addiess to the coontry,s4eArred .' _Suite, than till the fifteen Southern Stiite;i•of to the Republic;in party - aS 'ti - :'" nteileYaltir the Union. Bernember•they have iiiii7v cot: '-iniee " a s a . I ' l pernietoiii .liiiiitY" - `f ' and., 4 116,- . times in, their public . liltraries than .all the .poke of iteleaders ai 7 4maCagitatottir-iNett ,- 1' slave States. Remember they . give. , a way I of" inflamed passiong.t.strid."! pervert* -. %-- more money to the Bible and Itlissionary..nil4 ment.7: - , Ile classed,the .Senator_ ; •** other Benevolent Societies every year, then York and myself Ittnting. thel ce W.,,_ -_. -V th e entire slaveholding States; and they ':have tertaining this opinion 'of the party an 4 of ft2i . done so during the last.. quarter of a,centery. - lenierit,' it •etibld ' not"be eipeefed . that he KANSAS . AS .t SLAVE STATE. :V. Id ho : river - • - generotn' • • - .A.ki . the'fietaittir s - ri tiii bar naid- ittle Senators desired • to know how we would " 11 81141 e. 'Seel ''''' - - e'. 14 - . -*IS t" vote-on tin: - admission of Kansa.s as - a slaye- ' 143 d ! hu !" .4 4 l `!"- ° k- t4- - 44 4 41144u ki . OW" and itsleade i inn s i nre ~. holding ,State? I ansiver, - for • myself, if indiffqpnitt; rs, hiS ,Cerisoketi.we can isa. „ rititally . . t, ' - ... ~ , . ~,, Kansas applies for admission as a slave State, !will reply 'in th e words of Caleb CtShing, .' .. raorEssoit nataticti.'. .. 'f• ' the law officer of this gOvernment. ,In ar- .During the erinvais,...rieft..4ser lledrielt,:i4 guiug the question of ihe aqlnis.sion of : Ar- North Carolina; waS'aenouneed by 'theSett*. . kansas, he said, speaking tar regard to the ern 'press for intenditig • ie. vetetor.'restiont. power of-Congress - over the subject': • Tie came Out in. a . int erate, .earefully writ.: .. • "The Constitution confers upon us the di s . ten letter, declaring; liiihelief -that' . it Gould cretion to admit new States at will. It . line be for thm)itterest of North:Carilline t o kitep its; in certain respect. our poWers to act of- • her slav4 at home; ter-develop-liiiiistin 're- firmatively ; • art'it does not !adinit,, in any sou rqs, - and, - that ! KanSas should, he •ts f. tree respect ; our discretion , on the ne;.r,ati ve sid e, State. lA,r that; . offenie, - ii*,proiesior,* , of of a refusal to admit new States." ' . the North Carolin University -came together . Resting upon .this atith , irit i rof the disan. 'and ilisavowed'any • sympathy•Willt; hini...--- ' s, theecembled a -fid-.:recittived: :him. ~ guislied legal adviser of the -Adniinisiration, trustees n ; The . initliTasziembled .and insulted-him. •' ..11i: ~ I will answer vim question Whether . ' will left, or rather was driven= from hiss-, astir' State ; the admission of Kansas .as-a ,slave 1. : State. Ile held a little_ Ttimolntromt as 5 . State : in his words.: .. ' liberty '• - scientific turni, - contideted Wit - lithe - Publkvitiort ~ I d o not persuade myself that iin i 8 iof your ' Naiiiieel Almanac,' - :worth ssooa An 'evil, or that slavery is a blessing.. •IV hen y ear—an . appointment, given-,hina. by -Mr, e a ll e d upon to aciortl rely official sanction 'to_ ~--..• €becretary..,Q,Eal4m....„._lle ,treat to Cambridge, . a form cf government which nofnit.re y per- , • where the Nautical. Ainiannii. is niedirtipilbut mits hut expressly :-perprtnates slavery, i has' been renewed • freas . hitt - - position In tin. should be false to all opinions and principles 'Government Service fts -a - -. computer,' Op( -the_ of my life if I did not proinptiv return a pi r . 1 crime of having :deelared 4 •-• in .his ovrts•aatlare - etnptory and •elnph 'tic '.NO2 ' • I State,-that he helieved-fizeinieret•. ft(Nortli ... WHAT TUE REPUBLICAN SENATORS WILL no. .•i-olina reqeired that Knnsisi shoruld,' be fret. „ ... ~. The Senator from Texas .commends our ' Let it - fro abroad over the. worl d etutra native 4 evot ion •to the Union. We have ever sup- of Nor th Carolina, a: seholar,. a.rnitit ._aftsoen ported the Union, and I tell you, sir what we title attaininentS, has heen - removed from: bus t... do in regard to its.support., The pro fessteship, _banished: from- his.: tatelor Senator from Pennsylvania, tho other dey smell an Offense.: that this Administration kis - - denounced the Barnwell, Ithett'sehool of poli„. removed him .'trout ' the little -iniffee-'• WM* ticians. I suppose he thought. it 'safe to at- - -. $5OO hs a computer on the -Nautical Maio& tack di:it little_ squad. of fanatica; .as he eaks ac for the same - reason. Let it .go . ;.abrOut them, in South Carolina ; bLt, sir , .we, - the over the wcirld:' Let :the - selentiflo - Mtn - and : Republicans, do not entifine .our .ilentincia- literary •Menof the7Old • World_ iunderatiatuV tions to that .little faction. ~; W e :denounce that We barna party-in , power,:in repibliCatt your Governor Wises—ail your chosen lead- Amerieictehich hays ita ironjtand, upon 2a era, who have' threatened to destroy the Un- man; even front the sieveltoldingStatee,. Who' long the fortuneti of the Cleetion went against. 'breathes .the; .word “liberty.” The act ii . ,a them—the inen.voo have 'your confidenee•-,- black and dainaing diagftied to this country; the men who go to Wheatland, and have ,the and there is not nn , Atiterictuti', it :-itentivor tarot your incoming Executive: _ . ,1 give you : broad, "who-•...earries.- a:, Madly heastr. ,. . , *. ! bits notice - to-day, : gentlemen, Whut we . intend to bosOtn i tt hut. duce n0t , .., look epott;A:aa- . •st der dn. It .i he incoming -Ad ministrii . ticin sends' I-011411mi ,to his couttery, Sir, the . tyrants : of m • into this body the nomination of it single an :the old 'World Will seolTat,it ; and the - friends - who ever - threatened the dissolution *Of '.the - - of liberty,i Itt - itiirti - theit-'(tyeihopetol6.lo 04. Union, we intend to camp on this flour, and will hang their beide in very shame Itirithe.. to resist his confirmation to•the bitter end.'--:-. infamy your Administretlen- has - brettgb( up; I give you notice now that we shall resist : the on the Republit» coining into power of all _that (dais of men. as eneinies °fill e Constitution and ,the Union. 1116 - go further. We mean tZi;led& the' incoming administration responsible, 'if it gives confidence or -„,atrenage to yOuißidt mond _Enquirers and Examiners, your Charleston ifercuries and. Sltoiciard.r, your .New Orleans .Deltas, and your Seethe-Side, Democrats, or any :Derifocratie. joUrnal in the . United States which threatened the - dissOlii:- tion of the Union j 7 .the event of .olzr success.' We intend here in .our places to defend that Union which makes Us one 'people, .apiinst .the _Men of your party who . have threatened -to subvert and destroy it. We intend to go a little further„ 4 Your slave propagandist journals haverdetionneed the independent. la •boring 111.-11A,f the North as " greasy mechan ics.," "filthy operatives," "small-fisted farm ers," " motin-struck - theorists." We; mean to held. yen responsible, if you bestow your confidence and .pataxmage, upon journals that maintain that:" the principle of slavery is -it self eight, and .does not depend upon differ enee of etimplexiOn." . DO YOClttiellthl P.0.4CE1, • Senators have told Ili they want &acts-- they want repose. Well, sir; I. want peace, and twant repose. The State 1 represent wants it. • Tens of millions of our property are scattered broadcast. over. the Sonthern States: The business, men, the . merchants, the manufacturers of my State want ponce as much as you can want it. Neu can:haVe But you cannot have it if you want to extend slavery over the free Territories. You can. not have it if you continue your offintS to:t bring Kansas here us- a stave State: . •-• If-you want . penee ' abandompetr pidiCy of slaVery extension. Cease .effurts to um, trul the political destinies ;of the . country _through the expansion of slavery. as "an ele ment of political power. Plant yourselves upon your reserved constitution4rights,and we will aid you in the- vindication . those rights. Turn your attention from the forhtd!- den fruits of Cuban, Central. American or Mexican actiaiSitions to 'yotlV,owul dated fields,,.-where the revegetating forests are springing , Up, and where - ' in the language: of GoVernor , Vise , "you have ,:the.,owaers sktunitrg the itegroes,.. the negroes skinning the land, until , all, grow pour together."— ' Erase from your statute-books .: the cruel_ =IC=M 11 . 1 , sk EMI ~ L lawsswhich :Am* the .teneibilith4 of isish !kind. Place - thlrrittlilaPet:l l o - Aggeritgi*' lation; wititth, Atito:..Projget, Atm) ra1,d64034" of lotltiNtlti *lid - W110; lOTA lina'34 ll ,lf - wilinb A sa Ahlir iii*nf 416.itenid . filihtte' UN .401* ' 1 vating indifettee - - ot:Clitistian-: ri;, -- ": - Zitt, Huai thetrhavi-thelimaeititiolt: ''. ' ''' " 14* - ..- ...„ .. "temell#-PM-Yer 41441131,111tiPtreV414* a. to.,Jiitp WilthstAitA Eiploi tuk l : t , • or: 'tint world. - VOA will have ibeibesf i ii 4 the friends of liberty . at! over *4 k 0 L.,;-. . . Huntaniiy utid,Ort.stioity,ioll-sanutinit *n4 , 14 eityotfr _tfli?t•ts,„tu.:it t atAV 1: Ott ;Are :Apr* though it inny be diifuni,when:froadAni*ll _ be the -inutiendite: birihright-or ii " ,isi who treadi suit. of-thei Ninth --AritiOtim CAwtinent. - 1- .- ", - .i ~-. -s,-.z.e.- ,-.,--,,. , TOE ROPE. i)suesa.—lt is in the humbler classes of society that. the ,intist hOO,tithl sparks of virtue . often shine. A tie :fire out at AleneOn, Whfeb prittbieeadreadfut ray; ages. : An entire family wni saved by arnill• - kip) W n man:4bn scaled the ivalli with a won . derful ng dity, : treading the-.burning and who extricated victim idler v,teliK in . , the midst of acelantation.: ..1 1 14 .. tniic'ittits Joseph Plecge, 'who exercised . the4iitie,*l4 of a rope.daneer; "and it was the p . kility,iiad, dexterity' developed by his oceupaiinn thit - enabled - lion to save a whole &Mit}, by - ist. turing on narrow and moving- surfneo*tit snatch them from the !tames: The company to which worthy liege belihttied were pre, paring to quit Altsteon, hut 'their departac was - delayed to givet hint a benefit. The'the; attar was crowded ni every part, and tbinidatii of . . applause greeted' theroarog i enus T'Opi.4llll.' ccr, who, covered Withburna andXquises,o4. : deavored,. to merit. the: enthusiasm hy, Which he was overwhelmed. „When,. the,. ireeeipog,. which were, eonsiderahlt!, were 44.4410 lar, . ' Plege: presented the , allele, oi9ourk . lo -the' funily he hail saved. These PoOr pooPiOr Said.he,,ere ruined 3.. what goodshall I have done to have ,sa yell. them -Rem the,- . tianues if I leave theta to,ihe..horroea of.T4t r itrvatiool l .' The authorities peg . * ritedOl7ot , honoi to the brave pan who 44. illoPkred.s.o much day" tio t i.and virtue: „--.. , i THE vittalkiA, to (Noithera: Wien): are . ripening the Southern mind, for _We' ahem, five of reducing again to.hoMa tip gives ge the, frop gives whom we 4no:taro etiOipated.. in takeo Ikeling of huMitnity,''. Disagreeable this; alternative may ke tO . the rapidly beciaming more 'and inure tcmeasttri of necessityand,,t ampering proteetimi. ivain4 - the' eft* Of Abol:tionist,t ampering With, thiitillicks of the Sunth'.. Thare'are N'irginitt alone ttp• ward of 64,000 Tree ,itegtoowhe are for the ,nrost part drones on Our iiiClety,WlM, played e!tothwakil in - the culchlition out.. ton, would add many iffiillkins, of dollnra . Prinluct of national wealth, 'end who,-if sold, at the Moderate sum. of 11400'a head, :or the benefit of the State -.TrelnittrY. would product) a fluid of 420,000,000 forth prosecution of internat improrometW.-744. ntondfVir.) &amine.; - 9119 cza - *-4 ' s • - s c • t • .-,;-••" frp, - • trir • .430.,,tit. ii;4lJl - t—L MMMEMMIIIM HEM 31, '--k.,;-..-_-...-z.-..-:.t.,.,t.7......i.:„.. _~tk~l~~ihi~t.fi iE 74 T M