the dinner, rowed lusl.ly away, to avoid re ceiving any more person* on board. A do*- ea only regain** the alftver; ortiortg them were Tomarigo andAyche. As iho eua set, they saw the jolly-boat disappear m ine bright hate of the horlton. . Why fatigue and disgust the reader with a description of the tortures of hunger and thirst? Twbnty persons now tossed about in a raging sed-rtow burnt by a raging sun, struggling every day for the scanty reiriaihs of their provisions, Each <™rsel or h.scnit is disputed by combat, and the feeWt die first, because the strong kill them by shhtoh.ng their rood from their lips. After a few days none remain alive on board the Hope but Tomango and Ayche. . . One night the aea was high, the gale in creased, and the darkness was so great, that the forecastle could hardly be seen from the quarter deck. Ayche was lying on a mat tress ib the captain’s cabin, with lomango seated at her feet, gaunt as a famished wolf. Tomango I" she cried, “all thy suffer ings are on my account. ** I do not suffer,” replied he hastily ; and ho threw on' the mattress the half biscuit which remained on board. .. «• lam not hungry. My hour is come, replied the poor girl. Tomango rose without replying, and totter, ing up on the deck, seated him-ell'fll the foot of the broken mast. With his head bent down upon his breast, lie murmured the song of his tribe. All at once a loud cry was heard above the din of the wind and the sen ; a light appeared and a large black ship glided rapidly pas*, so near that her bowsprit pas sed over Ins head. He caught a glimpse of two human forms lighted by a lamp hanging to a masi. These figures uttered an other cry and then ilieir vessel hurried on by the gale, disappeared in the dark. A moment nlier wards Tomango saw a flash, and heard the booming of a heavy gun ; soon afterwards another' fljsh. and anoiher detonation still more distant and afterwards all wu# dark blank. Next day, not a sail was visible on tlurhntir.on. Thai night Ayche died. 1 do not know how long afterwards that the Brit ish frigate Allann discovered the bull of a dismasted brig apparently deserted of her crew. A boat having boarded her, a dead impress was found in the cabin, and a negro sb lean and shrivelled that he resepabled a mittnmv. He was senseless, but appeared still alive. The surgeon took charge of him, end with such success that when the Bellona reached Kingston, Tomango was in perfect health” Thev asked him for his history, and he told them all he knew. The planters of island considered he ought to be hung, but the governor who was a humane mao, look his pan, considering him justified a* having acted in the defence of life and liberty. Be ind a very fine man, the Colonel of the 75th, regiment engaged him to play the c\ mbnls in in the band. He learned a little English, was very taciturn, and drank rum to excess. He died in the Hospital, of delirvm Iremnu. Bombardment ol PclropoJogki. Qn Thursday, the 3d of October,* portion of the allied fleet, ccr,i-istiiijr of the French ■hip Forte, 60 gf/aa. Admiral Det Poinles ; the Frenr h frigate Euryd'k-o, 30 guns, Gnpl. A. L» Graorfler. and the French brig-of-war Qbiigadn, 16 guns, Cipl. De Rorgnoourl, nn• choreJ off Noryn Bench, and bv them lh<- new* a as brought of the bombardment of the Russian town of Peiropoloaki, stunted on the western shore of Kamscbalkn, by the above jneiilimwd vessels together with tho English vessels of war President, Pique, and steam er Virago, on the Ist of September. Pelro poloski is situated no n kind of inner hay, formed by a sand-bar running across Ihe bar- behind this bar were anchored the Russian frigate Aurora and the armed trans port .Dwinn. The allied fleet uere unnble to approach nearer than three miles to Ihe city, in consequence of a strong current from the Northward, The bombardment continued for four days.. On the second day three of the forts (the town is protected by eight strong batteries) were silenced, nnd a detach ment of 600 mariners were sent on shore for the purpose of dismantling the abandoned forts and spiking the guns. They were sur prised by nn ambuscade of the Russians, and great slaughter took place. The fortress of Polropoloski hod recently been reinforced from Siberia, by way of the Amour River, nnd wos defended by 120 guns and 1200 men. The allied fleet sailed away on the 6th of September, in a very disabled condition, and afterword captured the Sitkn, a vessel mounting three guns, nnd belonging In the Russian .American Company. Tho British Admiral, frier, previous to the commence ment of the, action, shot himself with n pis loi—somfl say accidently. The English ships pul into Vancouver’s Island to refit.— The French vessels sailed fo* this port.— The following is a list of the killed. The loss of the Russian side could not be nseer lained. Frenchmen, 12; lefl on lanr. M.-OJ4. . p* The -Wellshota 1 -Lyceum, will -hold JU -faMte Session’in the Court House on Friday eveoiog, Nov. rn. 1854. .After, t Tbe Beamy pf (tftnf lty. Ftanm it may eeem out of.plaoe-Jor j«,. who h«se «o little to bestow, to descant upon beau\ypf giving. Perhaps an ermy of stingy* bwmddgaoh* will conwdpgp uppn us,gnunbling—“ll> mighty ees; for poor folks Ip see how forehanded folks ought to diaposeof their surplus gettings!" Well, why sTioiild’nt “,we poor folks" find It easy to point out a better'u»e fof the sprplijs getting*' of yon rich one*, than letting them rq*t id yddf tills Slid old stockings! lim‘t It "we poof fclka” that dwell in the republic of tVanl, ieparated from yours —the kingdom of the narrow filth of Selfishness, whose fide is foretef’ingoing ? It is not strange then, that poor ftflk* become' good theo retical financier*, living in the contrast of your Mach and their Lillie. There are a good many "foot-bridges'’ from ode land' 10 the other, but no common highway. Some of these are toll-bridge*, and those who cross from your side somehow think that they pay down 8 few pennies' worth of conde scension every time they.cross. Perhaps tltey.really do; but “we poor folks don't eaaolany such fee. Come over free, or stay el home, It tho motto..' We do not purpose to meddle with the silversmiths of Ephesus, or their concern*, very extensively, in this article. Charily has a multitude of definitions, and the doling out of sixpences to blind beggars, nr dollars to Foreign missions, See,, does not seem its only signification- Such, are but too often peace, or bribe-offerings laid on the shrine of Conscience with gloved fingers; but sometimes they are given with pare intent, for which, the Recording Angel jots down an item on the credit tide of tho great Ledger. The bounty of Charity lice in single-heartedness. There are spme who aatoDiali tho world by the mag nitude of their donation* ; and somehow, when wo ace their charities ostentatiously paraded in the pub lic journals, the simple story of the “Widow’s Mite” glides into sweet remembrance, and the trumpeted and blazoned gifts of millionaires Tike stars in the clear light of morning fade away. It may come of perverseness, but sp it is—and when wo ■ recall the moral of that story, wo would rather bo the legatee of that mile than of the golden millions of a Girard or «n Aslor. The one would bring perpetual divi dends of sweetest recollections, but the other Would only declare semi-annual dividends of yellow dross at the terrible sacrifice of millions of loaves that otherwise might have chased hard-featored Want from tiie bare cupboards of a million homes, besides, an hourly interest of cares and anxieties. With the mile, wc should grow tender-hearted and sympathet ic ; with the other, it might be, hard-hearted and selfish. For sudden wealth sometimes makes men forgot their manhood, while a little discipline in the ranks of poverty, has, erenow, revived the cmbOrsof humanity that the pride of prosperity had well-nigh extinguished. .. The charity of mammon consists not in giving muck, but uelL There is more real charily in giv. mg a loaf to a starving family, than in donating a thousand dollars to any enterprise whatsoever, of a popular nature. It but one is to be done, let it be tho first, by sll meant. If both ore done, so much the belter. U is a mockery—bestowing thousands upon the Remote while the Immediate glares up in to our faces with the fierce energy of unrelieved Wont. T-tu,, itiorc ere iliuu-swJ- moral or spiritual food; but no bad man or woman ever grew better on garbage and scant raiment No, never. Man’s physical oravingt arc first in the list. You cannot teach him a moral lesson, silting at your groaning tables while ho starves. Satisfy the de mands of the body, and then the higher natures will huogcr nnd thirst, and you may feed them. Kor is Ibis a new view of the mailer; Howard end many other eclebraled philanthropists lived op to this belief,.and later, wo behold the'Five Points’ Mission foundod and conducted on the very same principle. What docs Mr, Peose with the miserable children ho picks up from the recking dens and got ters 7 Does he, with all their filth cleaving to them —with ravening Hunger consuming there, sermon iic, or expound morality to them 7 Oh no!—die first cleanses them of their filth, clothes them and gines them wholesome food. Ho lifts them from filth up' to purity, from hunger to satisfaction, and then, op from the cheerless pits of Vice 16 walk in the plena, ant fields of Virtue. Step by step, heaping charity upon charily, he leads them up front that society whose religion is Hate and Dissension, and usher# them into a congregation where all is Love and Har. rnony. i How sublime is tlic bcauly of Qbarity 1 How strange that men should gaie across oceans and continents till vision is reversed—until the Re mote becomes magnified and the Immediate belittled. Alas! that Nature should'be forced to beg even at her own gate. Let Africa be tfll to men it was to Mrs. Jcllyby, but let them not like her remember Africa only to forget borne duties. Would that, Dickcna might bo placed side by side with Judson in every book.caec in the land. The ode is a pow erful helper in the cause of Home Missions, and the other, actuated by a high sense of duty, left all to encounter dangers and difficulties on a savage shore, and died in hhs harness, flrilbfiil to the last gasp. To digress. Calumny has tried its worst upon Dickens. It has gnashed its teeth among lilt heart strings, end pursued him eves into the sanctuaryof the closet with Its envious hiss. But he will live when Ids detractors have passed from the memory of men now living, for hi* monument is reared in every heart that ever trembled at the touch of aor. row. Nor is he a writer of fiction. Truth ii open the forehead of his every hero and heroine. His characters are pen-pictures of living men, women and fiends In human shape. He arrays vice of ev. cry hue nod farm in its appropriate habit, makes it hateful to the beholder, and a terror to the guilty,, On the other hand, he afnya Virtue in robes of. light and surpassing loveliness, and pictures her with op angel’s lace beaming with such benignant smites as we rosy hope that angels wear. There is a moral grandeur pbent Jus pictures of good men and women that no one susceptible of elevation can contemplate without being irresistibly drawn into the charroedcircioof its influence, Bis-life pictures have attracted the sympathies and,active charities of thousands. yV)ierever his heart-lessons aro resd, there will bo found hearts with .their sunny sides turned towards the victims ol Misfortune. Thus, ho is the benefactor of the poor. ' Calotnny and abuse have been heaped upon the pi. oritor of the Five! Points' Mission. Mr. Pease has beeri callcd a mercenary. Why 7 Simply' because he ir an apostle Christianity, This practical Christianity is a sWOsn foe df ostentatious giving;■» For I waV kn hungered and ye gave me meats naked, end ye clothed me,sick; and in prison and ye Visited me "-‘-is its teal, and the daily-walk of its posse mors must be no many living sermons flawing out of it. Ita pbarily is luvely beyond des. cription; so chaste that Vainglory perishes like stub, bio before its foivc-nt burning THE TIOGA COUNTY AGITATOR. kind pf, charity whose'-left fund babbles of ike rlßhU■’ And this hind of dpgfity hat Rnmento good to tofiering Ha ropility. But Baymoßv* power ia\Approbal|;tene** sllfekily diseased;,. Chtrjly in thAßlfoeis of Jtabeau ty and excellence, both - - *-Bleaaea'binrwbo give* and tilm who take*." Wwho takes—thus (ailing alt'drl of flie good of ir'ue 'Charity, it (a generally impolitic to creep behind a good action to acrhtiiiiie its parent motive i.btt).il.-cao do.no wrong to say Utsl the motive of a generous act, mast in notne sort beautify, or disfigure the act itself Yet lore of ap pellation lick at Vl» bottotn, Qi forms the capital nf : seven-eight* of the charitable enterprises now be ing proieculed in the civilized world. The cool and calculating may' inveigh against the charily born of impulse to their hearts’ content; yet anoh ls charity in Us.beauty, For,- Iboogh it some time* subject* the giver to groaa impositions, it al ways Weave* him who gives—.generally, him who tikes, Whoever doe* a charitable deed from im pulse, only pe/mit* sympathy to guide, instead of cool-hloUded caittion. Even if it lead men to be. stow t))eir bounty unworthily sometimes, * good mo tive never loves Us merit. So much for the charity of Mammon. Neat week we, may la(ie up the subject under a different sig nification! California.—A Noble Woman. Tip now* .from the land of gotd, It, u usual, apiced with mordera, slabbing aflairs, robberies, for. gcriea and shipwrecks. Wo cannot afford to give (Ten a reepcclnblo (7) digest of the various villain ous-accideota and incident* related of that bright, particular star of our union. By so doing, we should only lurnish material for frightful dreams to our readers, without amusing tiicm_jn the slightest de gree, unless they possess dispositions akin to the South Sea cannibals. Were we publishing a dail/ journal, and bound to publish the infinilcsalmal items of news from the golden State, we would have a stereotyped farm something like the following : Murders, Usual quantity. Affrays, Innumerable. Robberies, 1,000.000,000. General Villainies, 999. Unparallelled Atrocities 1 10. This would be an average summary of events, which, stereotyped, would save a heap of labor, besides tho trouble of readings six columnpago of fine print to induce a fit of the horrors. The most important item of news by the last steamer, is the wreck of the steamer Yankce Blade, two day’s out from San Francisco. She had on board 800 passengers, some 40 of whom are thought to be lost. Tho circumstances attending the wreck of this'vessel are suspicious, and the baseness of the captain in abandoning his vessel soon after she struck, deserves, and must receive the severest con. dcmnalinn of the public. The facts go to show that this perilling of some 800 lives, was a thing of dc sign. A band ol cutthroats were shipped as bonds previoud Id the vessel's leaving San Francisco, and their refusal to do duly, may be considered the im mediate canso of the disaster. The captain pul off for the shore, about a mils distant, amid the wildest 1 confusion, and listing gained il. like a poltroon as he was, never attempted to relieve his passengers on * the -wreck. There,. deed* 1 of violence were being perpetrated, at which the bravest may well shudder. No sooner had the captain departed, than the ruffian crew before alluded to, armed to the teeth, began a work of robbery aod death. More cruel Ilian the threatening tea, these desperadoes look possession of the vessel, and murdered every one that opposed them. Ripping open the baggage, they took poa session of the money and valuables, and with their Knims dsktro/vd Hie witnesses of their fiedillsh sets. Meanwhile, some truer hearts than the captain, manned two boats and assisted many pf the unfor. Innate* to the shore. Before they were all landed, (he steamer Goliah hove in sight and setting out her boats, took off the survivors. A steamer was des patched to the relief of those on shore. And-now you who are forever rating woman at inferior to man, ponder this fuel and repeul in sack cloth and ashes: While this dastard captain, one of the race superior, remember, was skulking man fully among the rocks ashore to escape his duty and preserve a life that a decent dog would disdain to live; While a band of cut-throats—lords of creation also—were murdering and robbing the shipwrecked passengers—a woman—one of the inferior sex—was disputing with the mad sea for (he possession of the bodies of drowning mchend women! Many a stal wart, but strangled loid of creation did she rescue from (he jaws of death and bear away up into tliq sheltering rocks. Her labors were indefatigable; to and from the shore she went, returning {each lime with a half-drowned burden. Nor she alone: the rescued women atifippcd off every garment that de cency could spare, anti Wrapped them oround the bodies of half naked and shivering men. Thus, as usual, woman, played the Good Samaritan, while thingt of the raarfyjiae gender played robber tod murderer, and priest and Lcvito 1 A monument in honor of the heroine of the wreck of the Yankee Blade 7 Folly-! Her deeds are more durable than marble piles ! I , Starvation. —Wo take the liberty to (oppose that an honest man may starve considerably boloro he snuffs obt the eighth commandment by acme rash act. We try to b^.honest,but are awful thankful that our neighbors' “ porta ties” are carefully stowed in their respective cellars. We do hope, they will see that their hatchways ate secured every night. There is no telling what a dcsp'ut man m\ght do. Yesterday, nc went homo to dinner in tolerable good humor with mankind generally and womankind particularly,. We expected Mrs, Agitator bod fixed up something nice. She met us at the door,looking as stniling ss a basket of chips, and announced that the vegetables were in order for dissection. We look a look at the table, and (bit something very like a chunk of lead thumping away at our left ribs. The fact was, rile vegetables—potatoes were invisi ble. We hinted this in a very gentle manner lb the lady aforesaid, when she bridled up and very pertly informed us that potatoes were non ret incen tue; adding, indirectly, that—that—well no matter. That' night we dreamed a troubled dream. In a fit of desperation we thboghl that We bad felonious, ly entered somebody’s cellar in search of potatoes. We carried an ample bag, and groping shoot, fbund the object of ouf search, and filling our bag, hastily tamed to escape. Alas! the precious loud Wts too plethoric for the breach through which we ehlercd. Vainly wo tugged—ai for dear life—heard: a step full ■ hand laid heavily on our shoulder. Oh, shame! caught in the very act! Hope shrieked and fled as a strong hand-hurried us into tbb august presence of offended Justice. Overwhelmed with the conscious ness of,guilt, wei plead guilty,and stood tremblingly up to receive sentence, ,Dfawing on his. black cap, the solemn looking Judge delivered himself as follows: “Misguided man! You, ere .brought before this ffugaft tribunal, charged wilh invading the sanclu sry of your neighbor’s eelUr with felonhins intent, and stand convicted, by confession. The heinous* nessoT your crime is manifest. In ■ vainglorious moment,_irrogatipg to the right to appro priate to individual use certain necessaries of life which to man of yonr calling are interdicted. The ■Qbalshinlitiet are not for you sndyour*. draybemed Coi|ortt ha« decreed for the prink* fbod leapexpensiAy.wtlioh untoward aeaeonf cfiuw aß|ct, Flinty being graven on its seedtime! im ia'Eromiseai .Hadyos been content wvthlhem and coveted not your neighbor’s potatoes, I bad not •had tinsenteime'of-the lawto ptoouunee,whicbT«r that you he taken-fcoqi hanca, utd fkLwßb promt*- «to flay’the piflnter, until ytfUr ey«* Eirilstick out with fatness, your heart expand to the capacity of those that beat under the mailed shirts of the knights of the Round Table, and your waist equals in girth, that of'the gallant FalstalTj'ahd msyyoar patronl . ;.■■■ We awoke! Literary Bccerd. Wana.Cos* Journal—Fowlers &. Wells, 308 Broadway, New - York;—The November No. is on •our table, brimming with practical, truth* and useful information. Every family altould take this Jour nal and less medicine. The kw* of file end health are rendered so plain that he,who reads, cannot fail to understand. . PnaiNoLooicst. Jousnst- (published by the tame.) This monthly is a mine of knowledge in it self. No htati can keep thoroughly posted in the progress of science nhd art unless be reads this pe riodlcsl. The publishers offer theke two Journals and Life Illuitrated—a new paper, and the most splendid paper we ever saw—all, fbr the low price of 83 per year ’. The ■ reading matter in either of these works wonld make, in one year, a 93 volume as books are aching. There can be no more profita ble investment, both for mind and purse. Subscrip tions received *t this office. Pktxkson’s Msosrwt—The December No. is al. ready on our tabic, and is oue af (he best number* that bos reached us. Important improvements are promised by the publisher for 1855, The reading matter will be increased to 900 pages. Mrs. Ann S. Stephens, the gifted author of "Fashion and Fam ine," is one of the editors, snd writes exclusively for it. It is afforded at the low prise ol[ (3 per an num, single copy, three copies 85,5 copies $7,50 snd eight copies fur $lO. The January No. begins a new volume— subscribe now, ladies. The Lectures. —We ere happy to announce that Mrs. £, Oakxs Smith lias agreed to lecture in Wclla borough early in December. Mrs. Smith is one of Ihc roost engaging lecturers in the United State*. She is the author of several popular works, aod ranks among the first female Poets in America. One of her poems, “ The Sinless Child," has been pro nounced a msslcr-piecc by the best English anp American critics. Her lot baa not been all sunshine; and whoever looks into her face will sec there the unmistakable traces of Care and Sorrow. She has been tried se. verely, and her reverses have only served to develop in her a true Womanhood. She is a worker, and as such, intolerant of idleness. She has liberal views of Woman's sphere and woman’s duties, yet can not be called an ultraist. , She will probably lecture two evenings. Subjects; “ Woman Considered ss Inferior to Manand “ Madam Roland and the French." Timely notice will be given when (he day is fixed. Glory Enough sSlM'icois, once the home of Doug las, has gone anti-Nebraska by a rousing majority. Tliia sweep* the last plank from nailer the traitor’s feet, and bo swings suspended by a rope that never breaks—Public Opinion. Michigan has likewise elected a Republican Congressional delegation and Governor. Huzxa! < IT We can get no certain new* as to who is the Governor elect of New York, np (a date. The Tribune gives Seymour 3000 ahead, while the Times and Herald, also two of the Albany papers make Clark some 2UUU aneau. -Putt retara* act week. U - Gov. Bigler has proclaimed Thursday, Nov 23d as a day of Thanksgiving.and prayer. Eiciliiig Times til Italian*. We nmke the following extracts from n loner published in the Boston Atlae, doted Lawrence City, Kansas Territory, Oct, 13: Our party is expecting Ui he compelled to fight, this afternoon, several Missourians, who are coming up hese, os they any to drive us into the river. They make pretensions to be strong enough to do it; About a week since they were hero for the same purpose, but our party turned out armed with guns, pistols, etc,, and showed the Missourians how strong our party was. No fighting was done. The Missourians retreated, and ever sinre that lime they have been laboring'to get all their forces together to destroy us ibis. P, M. Our party have been busy nil this morning clean-' ing their firearms, and practising shooting, etc., and if ae are shot home this P. M. to Massachusetts, at the point of bay oriel, you will probably see os in Boston soon. Wo will march in as ihe soldiers did, a.few years since on their return from the bloody fields of Mexico. ■ I Considerable excitement was manifested to-day by sonic members of our party, who hod been nut to lonic at ihe country and were successful in finding an abondnnee ofconl,.in mines along on the banks of the Kansas river. Some of this coal, (and nearly a bushel is on this table where I am writing, brought in to day by some of the exploring parly.) appears la be of the best quality of -coal used in this country, (United Stales.) The great battle is over, (he smoke has cleared away and the city is qiiiel.uiuisually so, considering the circumstances.'of the day. Our expectation* are oyer, as' far as danger is concerned', ny one dead, nd one wounded, all are well. The brave and Would be con sidered fearless Missnuriaas, have retired' from the field of action. They came b«vo this noon, and their number was so-small that they considered if of no use to any thing desperate. The People’s Victory, The Philadelphia bulletin complains that some of the Whig papers claim Jydge Pol lock’s election as an exclusive Whig victory.. We are not of that number. Although Judge PoLLoett is a Whig iq principle, and was first nominated by that party, his election was (He result of a fusion of all (he Oppon ents of l he present Sin (din'd Nations! Admin istrations, and is, t Here (ore, a victory of the people ! ,We announced it as stich in our, firsi.'issue After the election, and Judge Pollock fiimse.if, in a speech at Mil '■>ri, on the evening of the 11 th inst., said, “he wished it (0,,1ie distinctly understood, that although he Wqs ! ’noW,' arid had been for years, identihed With the Whig party, hie djtT not claim his election'a? a 'Whig victory, Hut as 'a tfiumjih nf'TftE People otter (He advb cates of,principles which they could pot Sane tioit of spppori." "’Ant} Having bden!elec(ed, by’lhe Judge Pollock 'Will be (he People's Gbvdrqbr,,instead of a, mere tout in the bands of a cbfrupt partizan faction as (he present Executive has been.— Telegraph. - Balkon*! them. T|S Chttbkee 'Georgian, published at Ma- discourses sensibly on the ■tate’Wid cwses of public feeliog, North and South; there is a want of reflec tion in many of the positions taken in regard toNonhef tt'semimenr, and thanha Southern truely -adviaed in reference to tfb * does hot admit that a majority of the Northern people | are Abol. ilionisls. It says : - “ With no sort of justice can it be said hat' opposition to the Nebraska territorial AholiVion movement. In nine ca ses in ten it has resulted from what was re garded ns the impolicy of superseding a long established liw, Ihe terms of which had set tled the legal rights of the free Stales with regard to ihe territory in question. “We have no doubt of the fact, that all the people of the free Slates are Free Sail ers, and just as naturally Free Soilers as that we are the friends of the institution of slavery. It Is a question of interest with both, and, though it has been differently de cided North and South, we are as far from believing that the Norjh decided wrang— lhut slavery would be .profitnbto, beneficial (here —us We are from' bsievqtng that it is hot peculiarly a’daptedlo ‘the climate, soil, ant} productions of the South , This is the trite basis of public opinion it ihe North on the subject of slavery, "hat such nn opinion can ever produce a crisis between the free and slave Slates, invol .ing an aban donment of the Union, we dc not believe, and as an illustration of (his view of the subject we submit the opinions pf two prom inent men at the North, who mpy be proper ly regarded as expressing the Free Soil sen timent of their section. We cannot see why the South may not tolerate the freedom of such opinions, especially as they are strictly, compatible with the protection which the Constitution affords us, and with the princi ple of non-intervention,” The opinions of Gen. Cass' and of Judge Bronson are referred to show that men may think " slavery a great social, and political evil," and yet be in favor of Ihe South en joving every one of her constitutional rights. The “ Georgian” then asks, with much force:— “ Why will the Southern Press persist in misrepresenting Northern sentiment lo ihe Southern people 7 What more does ihe Souih ask then Freesoilism concedes, 1 respect for our rights in the Union and equality of rights in the Territories 7’ We know there ar people ol the North who hate slavery as much ns some of our Southern friends re renlly lulled the Union ; hut we should also know Dial they possess just about as much ability lo give effect to their hatred. They talk of not admitting any more slaves S'-ucs, of moving the repeal of the fugitive slave law ; but their efforts are utterly powerless. The great mass of the Northern people will, on future oecnsions, ns they have in the past, prove themselves true and loyal to the Fed eral Constitution of our fathers, and it is wieked, even in demagogues who live upon sectional excitement, to wilfully abuse the minds of Southern people with a contrary impression.” The “ Georgian” then wisely refers to the past m show that most of the " specula rive cvuictiisinns ns to what the North will do on the subject of slavery” are idle, and that we should gather rhariry enough from the pa