.' N kOP ICFt i't I{l (;i 'WMI •'' " ST ;IL A. ,BIIEHLER, = Y iat OLltigr IX/al- • I 4f! !,+1.)", • • The J Q Inarriga, arbVitua, or'inaygoier, geows ,a• Viiiiaititliithe"l4#iiiwrrl*Ruil, and was ilowi 4: Vai greeted the 1 4 1 1 irImo idler r, sir gOrf maw. ter 7 , fad Mayfkower,l - 'watched winter stare r v Awl nursed by willter ee, , ,FA- pfdati of thellee ' 11 1" 1 / AAA hio , , elp ocfninen mile, II . • ',ASA, El= Whitlattahe in t inelbuttoed bay, 1,111414 PP wtA L thßATAl ( kw*ilo w e ro s e first' sweet Smiles of May, ~ TeLVod,b•ZpraiseiVi. the Tilgrim said, Who saw the blossoms peer • Above the .brown leaves, dry and dead, '"Belibld'Oer MaYflowar beret" if 'herd oar rest' shall be, Out:years' of ivendetirig:o'er,', • , For os the Ilayttower, of the sea, ShallSpitlid her 'sale no more." Gh I sacred flower of faith and hope! 'Artivreetly ntw' is then • Ye bloom on many a•birchen slope, In many a pintHlark glen. ' Behind a i-eiesiital's /rugged length, Unchanged your.leaves *Old, • ; "Like 'hive behind the manly strength Of the brade hearts 'of old. • So lives' the Whittle' their sons, ' Their sturdy faith be mirk, _ And ours the •lovo that overruns lie rocky strength with flowers. ape Wild and 'Autry day Its skadown round us draws.; The Mayflower of his stormy bay, Fretidont's Struggling cause. But warmer suns ere long shall bring lo life toe. frozen sod; And,, thret.ith -dead leaves of hope shall ' Afresh the ildwers of God. • ited.Jacket. the lodise Chief, Thy 'Orb; though Atriitria's bosom stars would • .`friglinsil .; • L, • , , •Tiukt metal pales as diamonds in , tho. dark And George the Enna wore in the dance at • - Brifhti ) ns, to ore coming even ing dna* than thine. Yet .!ti* a brave..one, acorning wind. slid • weather,„ And, fitteil.foithi conch on field and flood, Aa Rob Rife tartan for the Highland heather, Or forest green, for England's Robin Hood. •The tAospel Precious. • •• 0, precious Gospel:! Will any merciless • land endeavor , .to tear • away from our • best,,tbitierin find itreetest.atr4 4nue,throtigh whielr one rep of hope can titer T 2.: Would you., tear from ggod • and•in.firm .1:leer! the only,,projf on which their souls esti repose is (peace ? Would ' yorrtieprive •the dytog'olitheir only source ••of cerisolatibm? '. Would 'lsm rob the world of its. richist treasure ? Id you let loose the flood' gates of every vice, 'and bring back upon the earth the horrors of superstition er:the atrocities of atheism? Then , ' endeavor to subvert the Gospel ; throw around you the 4rebrands of infidel ity ; laugh at religion and make • a mock of futurity; hut ibe assured that for all these things Got will .bring you into judg znent. I will , persuade myself that :a re gard fol. the welfare mf their countri, if no higher •motive, will induce men to respect • the Christian religion. And every pious heart , will,sayi• rather let the light of the sun be extinguished. than the precious light• of the - Gospel.--Dr. Archibald exatider. • ,. .1 , • Rose p k r,ecteus than Rubles. Would it, not ; plows's" you, to pick up , strings of pearls, drops,of gold, diamonds and preoioue stoups, as Jou pass 'along the street t It, would_Auako you feel happy .for,a month to come., ; :Buoh happinoss you emi gipe c ,to, other*, Howl do you ask. By ilpppjug,eweet words, kind re marks, and ,pleasantsmiles as you pass ,long. :Thoecilirp true pearls and . precious stones, which can tiPver. be lest; of whioh .u9ro - CRlallePthe 39u. SP? A t 9. tfutl Iphau child :sae 13.0 pearlsdrop frim her aboolta. t.3:91(4,thu,ha04 of. the (cloudless lioy.• !Iciest diamonds sash 14. his eyes. Smile 911 the sad 44 dejected,.,a ,fUees,als ,aheelt more ; *Rant ,quip the most p.rogiuuli atone&waYa i de. amid theniiy b a din , soil at the fireside cif the.p.o9ts Ar0P,w,905, and smiles to cheer ,and wh" .restingiupon c your,pilloW at. the ...31ps of if bad 104941,a score of perishing Jiwoi• 4d4) and audtetailll4oiqi ytmp ;,,the ,former, grow ,hrightsirmillt c , ,, • • ' ,; t ;, , .1)0,;-Zhe flleveland Plain ,ltsilerestyli'litnlSEhlotiolipeoidtan 'of s: man 'froth/ called. intro - . the iooitt'ef , one of iiur River 'street He took roT his hat to Make lili`beittrbdi.' • ' ' '" ! ' top Of the - rodrning toye, Misthor - I).la'r-4i've been toldyere in viant`o'belp." #•' tsit little to replied Mr. tiitli'mefeintile gravity. YlTiit'llte 'boy' for yew!. It'd bat little I difitt"—sure it's the money that 'M t'fAlteeltlfal imp - titian prevails among the Seneca tritVe of adieus. When ar. In- Aim soeidealdhis, A imprison a young r bi f illansil it,tirst begins to try its , power ,of ,inegs:itud. then loading it with kisses and awoke, they loose its bonds over the grave ,ittithe,belief that it will not fold its wings nns close. its eyes until it has flown to the -spiritland end delivered its precious bur oiets ‘ut affection to the loved , and lost. It t ali, WO ettfrequent . to see twenty or thirty birds lot loose over one grave. le' understood that the dress making itiikeinesi is abbot to be incorporated with A number of active coopers to hoop the ladies' petti #4eall the Model of ferualit elegance being bb a mOlaitees cask or beer barrel: ri Prayer. wait dot invented ; it was born with the first sigh, the firatjay, the first rlitriosi !Oldie Imam heart. 'Trait ing4Pdlrs Provldeaam. Twe men used to work in-the fields to .letb(tr• ; One. - of them was cheerful and happy, but. the other was •always full , of fears, .and miserable. The fearful ~one would pay.to his companion, "What would become ,of my children. if I wore to dial!' And the other would try and pemaide him t o b e thankful that be was yetabla to work. and-topers bread for them; kw be could not comfort him. Now in the Acid in which • they were at work,, they, spied-two pests in one bash, and, they used to watch the old birds gold in and out alithe.thiY,long, with. food or their little Ones. And they often spoke to each other, about :the cue of these birds for theiKyoung. But one slay, just as one of the old birds wiut flying - to his neat, a hawk pounced 'down ppm) ham, and carried him away. And• now , the poor man who had hede 'Miserable before, became ten times More Miserable: ": OR could hardly aleep all 'for thinking „first firsi of the poor liltlo blide that bad;no parents to feed them, then of his own children who would have no'oue.tct work , for them if ha should dio. In the 'morning ha went softly to the bush, and looked in at the nests, for he thought he abOuld see the young birds in one of the neat dying. But he was aston• mind, to see they were alive in both nests, toad . chirping ' as merrily as if no hawk hitd ever come neat. them. He could not tell bow it could be; so he sat down close by to watch ttiem., Presently be saw the old birds, belonging to one of>the nests, fly in, and ihoy :fed the little ones in one of them, and then they went away and came back with food to the little ones in the other Emit; and'sOlbey went on all the day long. And lie called his companion, and almost weptforjoy* he slowed him Ibis thing. So they •said'to- tech other. that they would imitate the , birds. sad work as well as they could, each for his own Bunny. so long as he 'wu Side; and if either ot them shoulci.die;,or be unable to work. then the othor should go on and labor for both fain flies. What _a blessed thing it would have been for that poor, fearful man, if he bad known the kind words the 131:vionr once spoke, l'Are not five sparrows sold for two farthings, and not One of`them is forgotten before Godl Fear not, therefore; ye are of more 'value than many sparrows." Sidney Smith on Swearing. Sidney Smith,. when travelling in a slue coach ono day, long befell, railroads :Wftidreamed of, sru terribly annoyed by . o young man, who had Acquired the po lite art of swearing to such an extent that he could not help interlarding his discourse with it, as though it were a constituent part of the. language. As there was a la dy, present, the matter was doubly annoy ing. After enduring the young man's displays for some time. ti.e 'swag, wit and iioar," as one of his cockney admi rers called him. asked permission to tell the company a little anecdote, and thus commence& : , Once upon slime (boots, sugar tongs and tinder-boxes) there was a king of boots, sugar tongs and tinier boxes) England who. at a grand ball. (boots. su gar tongs and tinder boxes) picked up the Duchess of. (boots, sugar tongs and tinder boles) Shrewsbury's garter (boots, sugar tongs sod tinder boxes) and said : 4 lloni soit qui nal y (boots, sugar tongs and tinderboxes) pease, which means in Eng lish. 'Evil be to him, who (boots. sugar tongs and tinder , •boxts) evil thinks. This was the origin of (boob, sugar tongs and tinder, boxes) of the order of the gar ter." When Sidney Smith had eonoluded, the young gentleman said, . "A very good story, stir—rather old— but what the devil has boots. sugar tongs and tinder boxes to:do with it." -. will toll you, my young friend, whet 1 / 4 1..=u tay eyes; &c., have to do with your conversation. tho meantime, allow me to , savoliat's my style of swear ing."' • Benedict Arnold. The following letter we dip froni the Home ic;urnal: - : "qoi far from my,present residence yet stands the bowie wheie Benedict Arnold once lived, and in which be kept a ,drug store,the sign rot which is still, in the gar rel. Some lair eay, I shall Midaivor vilit the promisee. sod give , you . a de. .ecription- Meanwhile, I send., you this literal ropy of a letter from Arnold's moth er Abm...loil,_ohich__l,..rmapiapil : from _a _ reapeotable lady of this_ city. It overflows with Mothetii purity and,affec lintt ftir her'recreant child. It is dated , lionwicre, (Conn i t Apri112,1754. ''.'Disks CHILDI _I received loud of the 'fila instant,an,d was glad to bear you was well ; pray, trii deardet ,your fint concern be. to mah your pea c e ' with 'Bed, as it is, of 'all concerns, of ye 'gretest iMpartance, keep a steady watch over your thoughts,. word!, and actions be dutiful to superiors, obliging to equals, and affable to inferiors—if any such there be; always choose that your companions be of your bette%_that by their good examples you may learn. From your affectionate moth er, "'HANNAH ARNOLD! "P. S.—l have aent you fifty shillings— youse it prudently u you are accountable to God and your Father. Your father and aunt joyna with me in love to Mr. Cogswell and lady, and yourself. Your sister is from home. "Addressed to Mr. Benedict Arnold, at Canterbury.' "The above letter is one hundred and two years old. It is an exact copy, and confirms the (act that Arnold's mother was a pore-minded Christian woman, who performed her duty both by precept and examp:a." Advice, like enow, the softer it falls, the longer indwells upon, and the deeper it sinks into the mind. A bashful Printer refused a situation in a printing office where tamales were eams pluyed, saying he never .4et up" with a girl in his life. • ,Gli.iii f i,j).qiqi:fl.;,,F;jlj.D.A . Y , ,:E:t.ENlN G I ..JUii E... 20, - ,18513.. 41 kw blietwonilladdlair; • Budding, or inooulationi is one of the most general) and, in ibis country, by fir the • most important method of summer propagatimi.: This operation consists in removing wired from the varietY..to•- be propagated, and inserting it on another, which is called the stook. Ite Stleeetllde ponds upon the follewing Isouditiona : In the first , place there , must he a certain degree of affinity between the teciek and the, parent plant frbm which We propose tspropagate. Thus, suiting fruit trees, the apple, crab, pear, quint?), tuespiltts, and mountain ash, ,all belong to the same nat ural family,, and awl be worke.ti aPoa each other. The plum, • apricot; nectarine. peach and *lnland, ' form adotht4 natural division, and work upon each other. • The cherry must be worked, upon some kind; of cherry, and currants and gooseberries go Figether. In general practice the apple is worked' either upon apple seedlings which are called free stocks, or upon the doucain or paradise, which are dwarf growing species, and are used for the purpose of making small trees. The pear is either worked upon pear seedlings, ' which are called free stocks, or upon the quince to make dwarfs; occasionally it is worked upon the mountain ash and thorn. Bat it must be borne in mind that while all varieties succeed on the pear seedling, a certain number fail entirely ou, the other stocks we have named: The cherry is worked either upon seedling, or what is known as, the trtazgard. a small, black. sweet cherry, that form a. very large ro bust tree ; or for dwarf, on the witthafeb. or perfumed cherry, which is a email tree with bitter fruit, aboutai large as a com mon ailed per. • • -:In-the second place r the.buds-,must be in a proper state. • The shoot, or scion budded from, must be the presentseasen'e growth, and it must be mature—that is it should have completed its growth, ' , which is indicated by the formation of a. bud on the point, called the terbrinal bud, and the buds inserted should be wood buds. On a shoot of this hind; there are a number of buds unsuitable for Working ; those at the base being but partially developed. are liable to become dormant, and those on the poini, where the wood is pithy, perish. The ri pening, or maturing of the bade, must reg ulate the -period of budding, So that the time at which any given tree or class of trees should be worked, depends , upon the season, the soil. and Wier cirourostan ; Cell which control the ripmin*of wood.-- tln our climate, -plums usually ooltridite !their growth earlier then other fruit trees, and are, therefore. budded first ; usu ally have ripe buds by the middle of July. In some cases, when the stocks are likely •to stop growiug early, it beccimee necessa ry to take the buds before the entire ; shoots have completed their 'growth, : and then the ripe buds from the middle !and • lower parts aro chorea. • Cherries come next, and are generally worked a bout the first of August. The buds must be mature, or a failure will be cer tain. In the third place, the stock must be in the right condition—that is, the bark must lift freely and cleanly from the wood, and there must be a sufficient , qtiantity of sap between the bark and 'wood to sustain the inserted bud and form a union with it. Stocks, such as the common aorta of plum. , pear. and cherry, that finish their growth early, must be worked early; while such as the peach, qUince, wild or ['Witt plum, Mahaleb cherry, etc., that grow late must be worked late. If these .stocks that grow freely till late in the,autumn . be bud ded early, the buds will either be covered up—"drowned" as 'it is technically call ed—by the rapid formation of a new woody substance. or they, will be forced out into a premature growth. , A very great degree of sappiness, in 'ei ther the stuck or bud, make up, in Part, for the drYnest of tha other. Thus, lrithe fall, when plum bade aro quite dry,ive can work them successfully on stocks that are growmg rapidly. , This is a very.fortenate circumstance. too. Young stocks, with . a smeoth;clean bark, are nioro 'easily aid euecessfolly worked thin Old . tna, and when it happens that the latter have to be used, young parts of them ahould be chosen to insert the bud on. • . , In localities where buds are liable to in jury trent freezing and''thawhig •in the winter, the beds are surfer 'on the'north side of the stock, and when :exposed:to danger front wind, they should ~be inserted on the side facing, the point whore the most; dagetitis wind blows front. At tention to this point; ifur washy of tying np, which in large prati• ties is an item of some moment. In the fourth place, the man* opera tion must be performed.with,,neatuess and , despatch. If a Mid be taken off With rag ged edgesi' or if it, be 'ever 'so slightly , bruised. or if the bark of the stook be not lifted clean withotit bruising the Woad der it, the case will certainly be a failure. The budding knife must be thin and sharp. A rough edged razor is no more certain to make a painful shave, than a rough edged budding.knifo is to make an unsuccessful bud. It takes a good knife, &steady hand, and considerable practice to cut off buds handsome, well and quick. As to taking out the particles of wood attached to the bud, it matters little, if the cut be good and nut too deep. in taking out thewood great care is necessary to avoid taking the root of the bud with it. Thou when the bad is in its place, it must be well tied up. Nice, smooth, soft strips of bark, like nar row ribbons,are the beat and most conven ient in common use. Every part of the cut must be wrapped so firm as tb exclude the air completely ; and this should be done as quickly as possible, as the air soon blackens the inner surface of the new parts that are placed in contact. We have thus stated briefly, for the ben eat of beginners, the chief points that re- Oita particular attention ie budding, .or 'emulation. Amateurs who have, but lit tle to do abottld choose the mornings and everting( or 'cloudy, cool days, to do their. , gFARLESS iD,'F'RES,'• MEIMI huddiltrOmCnurstry-men moat work all 'weathers,, and in allhoura of the day ; but i f b their 'superior' ekill d quickness renders it lase bitsardous; eu only a few etocke are to be worked, s the weather happens to be dly, 'a therm watering or two will be of . great service i making the bark lift freely.—The Hortiulturist. Plums% TO Toil Potarr.—A certain 1. . lawydr, in a New °gland town, who we's noted for A his o reachings and short comings, during a val came under con viction, mid ticked or the prayers of the atits church; for the ' furl armee of his collier slim.• . His , appeal ' , responded to by one of the saints, ?eccentric but !Plod? 04 fOlien, wefl IttiOrn tor , being plain. blunt, square toed aid • flit, footed. He Went' at It thus': ' ! ' ' ' ' oWe earnestly . eireit thee, 0 Lord ; to sanctity our penitent brother, here. Fill his heart , with gootin wind grace, so that he, may uow roma Itiat evil ,ways, and hereafter follow in' e strait path. We ' know. 'good - Lord. . levee-, that it is re- I (plied of him ve - bat appropriated ;worldly goods to hi t II dishonestly,: to make restitution feu fold; but.wedu be seech thee to have , ' erey,po this erring b rother, as it would " impassible for him to - tle that, and lit hi ''off foe • the beit' ho can do without begg •nchla family entire ly, for insnce, say , his paying twenty . tA five cents on. the d ! r,7' An'honest son of , b lately arrived in Baltioore, was map eyed to, drive a cart. Not being an , adept lapin art and ,Rptory, of holing dirt, be sus ieofully`perplexed when he wished to elpty the cirt, and af ter es much mancentviritig as would luiveief bind to move:a sev ty four, be mantled up to_ the ,_liersettl &Mese& thit.,llidal with a powerful g ,and saog,put, with a hearty good wil , : aredi up 1 riim tip /:' f calculating, we 'en One, that 'hor'se would elevate hims flue enough' to emptY An hour of honer; abor will give any non a better iiiipelikee thin' all the rdcita between here and Egypt: Love—A moroititstresoi whoa, memo, ry gilds the day. ' . ' ' . A Illundred,ittsurs Ago., Where, where are all-the birds that sing A hundred rears,. ? The'Llowers thatin ty sprang A hundred yetith , ? . Lae • • The eyes that wi d In. flashes shown ' Soft, eyes upon-- • , ' Where, oh Where, are lips and e yes, The Maiden's's:Mies, the lover's sighs, That lived so long ago L• • - Who peopled all the city streets • A liundredyears ago"? Who filled the church with faces meek, A hundred tears ago ? ' The sneering tale Of sister , frail, The plot that work'd •'A brother's hurt, •• •' -• Where, oh where are plots and inters,. The poor man ' s hope, the rich man's fears,. That lived so long ago? • ' • Where are the graves where dead men slept • A hundred years ago • Who were they the, living wept.; A A hundred years ago - By other men ' That knew not "them,. " , • Their lauds are Allied „ Their graves aro filled : Yet nature then was just asigay •, And bright the pun shown. se to-day, • A hundred years ago , • . , SPEECH OF HON. E, O.OCULVER. ICP.Amoog lbw speakem at the New York ~Kausas ,Mooting. last week,. was tbo 'Hoe. E. D5.:131.1%11, who; Ibus . roper FELLOW PiTtriarra•••••twill occupy.your ettettiett. fer i a ler montents,,tor . the put poem of keeping !you still untilsomebody elie 'mines forward. •.1 stn rejoiced : to see such' nit Odeari:of Wes' . hare to:night. I is se indicitionkot•what the stale olthei poldip pglle tp,, it.ise,„counterpartof the nlorious meeting we hod herts the,.othey ight ;'#)r piu ger a fire into throtigli [Laughter: J'The , notu levee treaded' .of epestehitodtha liberty of the press .also levesthe rights. of Jiallefs,s and ,is ready,to stand up for theialCApplautte.) When 'you' see wins likii there all over the coon. yitts are led to inquire what the cause 'is and .where it lies. It is now 'two years, _f our Jigo alwarkstitrenteen days since the of this .country were told that- the Country had gone' securely to real. -The ,ptilitical doctors had told us that the five bleeding wounds of the body politia were healed and that agitation was at an end. The Conventions of Baltimore affirmed that the whole matter was settled, and one party—the Democratic—told us that they meont to hurl a political anathema at any Mail,. or any set of men, who should re new the agitation on the question of Slav erY. Although some,of us didn't , like the adjustment very well, yet it is due to his tory and to fact to say that the great mass o f the people had accepted the Compromise. The country, had gone to rest. We had 'etnbarked on board of the old ship call ed "Finality." We tvere like passengers on board of a Californa steamer out at night under the canopy of heaven—the stars keeping watch over our heads. The ocean was tranquil; but suddenly, at mid night, a cry was heard front the quarter deck ; there iti'danger nigh—the ship is in trouble. Every passenger leaps from his berth—all !mode are summoned on deck. What now is the cry? "There is a wave of agitation, mountain•high, about to overwhelm this • Finality ' and send her to the bottom. Fellow-citizens is my picture too strong ? (Cries of "No," "No. 'g Look over the fifteen Northern States of this Union for the last two years and tell me when you ever ‘siw such an upheaving of the masses—such a hustling 'out and putting in—whole regiments o doughfaces marched off and consigned to political oblivion [Applause.] They are sent off to their long homes, and "the mourners go about .the streets" [Laughter.] Out of 44 Northern Democrats who proved recreant to their trust on the Ne braska question. seven only were left to tell the story in the next Onngrcss ; in stead of 92 men from the Free &aka to hold up the hands of Franklin Pierce, as there were in*lBs2, there are but 19 to' s be found in 1855 [Applause.] Then look at the different States, and see how they have changed their entire fronts. See hoW clean a sweep there has been in Mas sachusetts, in Rhode Island, in Maine, in Connecticut; and then look yonder a mong the Wolverines, the Suckers, the Hoosiers, and the Buckeyes—roliat do you find-there? Lamest] of 12 Democrats sud 9 Whigs in the Buckeye State, you 'find in 1854 an undivided delegation— hot a Whiting 'hind 'of a Jesse left to tell the story [Great laughter and applause.] That is hot all: In New Hampshire, the, home of Frank Pierce [hisses]—how un grateful [laughter] both Houses' of the Legislature are for freedom. And, as if New HaMosbire knew what was good for store eyes in . a hot day, John P. Hale is ilirdit back into the Senate for four Years ‘itilook out for-'their' interests [Ap please.] Effects are alWays propor eon to their causes. 'Whit. was it, that started the entire North. It was that base prepoeitioo . ,to take away the ,landroarke letWeeh '`Freedom `hill' Slaiery—land. marks that had had> been , fixed by a solemn _compact: for-thirteifoor •:years.4 - to ,remote tke.in,ircuo,ll6;tto,the, 49th, parallel of north liittinle, to theborders of the . Queen's domiolons, hue it ever no-1 curred,,to, yo(l*mount of territory WS' alitiatitettdirig about t It 485,000 1 squire miles of territory-4mial to twelve Stilleiotthestize , bl New ,York, or forty. I two like the noteglorioue State of Mae- ts4tasetis [Applause.] , IWe are strugg . ling to save Freedom a great' flower gar den; situated ifildWey between the Atlant ic ithd Paelfiti—a sort: of .resting place, where - thej Anglo•Saiton in his on. ward ; treed ,over the, Western Continent can,panse and find a home in the middle tho mitteinent: The proposition is to take this fair field end , curie it with Slav ery. making it Waste and barren like Vie ,ginia, instead of • fertile ,and fruitful like New . York; to convert it • into a land of pistols and bowie.knives like Arkansas, ittsteadpf i eland ofthrirtand wealth like iii/SPopeirt;. In entivert, it into a land of whisky' ud ri fl eslike'Missouri, instead , of cUltivated fields, farina. and tailrinols. like Ohio [APplanse.] Thetis what the South propoee. It is s contest worth our gran. ple ; there. is something for us to do.— Let the ask you one question further Who wad it that aprung this measure 'upon tui Wati called for it 1 I En glad to tell you that it was not the peo ple [Applause.] And I will give the §outh the credit they deserve, when I say they , hid not dream of asking such a thing. Who then did spring it upon us t 'lf you papers at Washington to fint . the petition's for that infamous enact ment I:venture. to say• they could , all be put in a ledy!e„portfolin and carried to school s while if you will gather up the remonstrances against it they will onm up in btilk to ilie.tinntrnitude of a Connec ticut' ltay-stack [Applause.] Senators' desks groaned - with the Weight of these ielnenstrances ; and when that one, signed by pie three thousand clergymen of N6w Eoglind, wae,presented [applause] it was not :because it was signed by clergymen but because it was understood to be the embodiment of the great moral and relig. nos sentiment of the North, that they es studied a certain limber-backed Senator who presented it [Laughter.] It was becaUse it was the, embodiment of North ern aentiment that the authors of this ticheme--liketertain Gadariues in ancient times-cried out. "Why hest thou come to torment tut before our time 1" [Great laitghter.] But who was it that demand ed this, meartnre 1 I will tell you. It was three politieal demagogues I don't want to name them: It is not polite in a 'great assembly 'to call names. But 1 will give you their habitattons. One is a man that registers his name at the west end of lake Erie at Detroit—a wheezy, fat old horse. they crowded off the race in advance [Laughter. J . Another is a man that crone trom the white hills Of' New liatnpshire and the prospect is that he will go buck to the place whence, he came and take his entire Cabinet with him . ; and he will not be the first • man that went back, tak ing with him seven spirits worse than the first [Laughter and applause.] Tho third, and by no means the least of the trio, is one who wee (Mtn near the foot of the Green Mountains, but left his native home very, early and moved to the ' , Nest. And lest you should nut know whom I mean, I will tell yeti that one of his names bears a close affinity; as do his heart and soul, to that of the man who in 1779 made a proposition to betray the fortress of West Point to the British [Ap. plause.] Where are them, three men now ? [Laughter.] "When shell we three meet again In thunder, lightning or in ram:' [Laughter.] All crowded off the course, and a math put on the track in their places whose on ly recommendations are negative qualities [Applause.] As they said of one of the heathen deities, his great merit consists in the fact that he is a great bundle of nega tions. That is the kind of man ttnit has superseded all these nimble fellows that played this gamer so artfully. Nnw, let me ask you another question. what was it that startled the North and aroused this universal indignation ? It was an jukes!. tien of a .compact—a compact that had been solicited by the South and reluctant ly granted by the North. And so odious was it to the people of the North, that eve ry statesinan.who took part itt it failed to maintain himself with his constituents, and had to walk out of the political But when we entered the coinpacit,' when we bad put our hand, and seal toil,. we had too much honor to back' out from it. And when that measure passed, how watt it carried through finally ? It called to its j aid the giants of the South. I 'have their names now in my mind,.who came in at last to the rescue :Lounge, Pinckney, Mc.; Lean, and last but not least, Henry Clay [Great applause.] These men were call ed for. They carried the matter through. And where now are the men, that put their hand to it 1 I remember the celebrated letter of Pinckney, after the passage of the measure. Said . he': "Last night we carried the measure through. It will ve ry soon give the South six or eight more Senators." These allcameolong.. '`But" said he, "we agreed to prohibit Slavery North of a certain line. We did that to quiet agitation on the subject It is a fruitless and barren donation to the North: Long years must roll round before the sound of civilized man will be heard North of that line." But I tell you, fellow-citi zens, the tread of the Angloßaxon man is firm and 'rapid I When- Freedom,. with melting eye and yearning heart, was look ing over that broad. Territory, when we of the North were abOut to step in and take our part of the compact, it was sud denly discovered . that the bargain was a bad one—that it was 11880881iiilliOW 81 7* that it meet be dieievered—that it meat be . I broken down a n d trampled under lout I-want to say- one word more [O9 on l go on I] •I would like to 'draw a contrast ; and I wish I had a power of imagination adequate to the task!' You bear, a cer tain class of men paying "These settlers in Kansas broke the laws of the Territory. 'There were !awe there, and they ought to have been obeyed." . I would like to get one ofthoselgla say-eyed Locofocos who say suchthings, [great laughter,] and ask him the, question, What would they think if, this picture should he reversed 1 Suppose, in 1854, it had Chanced, among the many other things that- might have been, that William H. Seward had been President of the United States [Great and euthurk Rade applause.] Suppose - that at tine time 'there Mid been an Abolition majority, in Congress, and that in a moment unlook ed for that eccentric man, Senator Wade of Ohio [great applause]—;he knows how to pull a trigger, and that is a good deal— [great applause]---..suppose that Senator Wade had sprung a trap upon Congress and the country, by proposing that the act of 1820, which introduced Missouri as a Slave State into the Union: be repealed and, thinking there would he a little stir about it, should have taken care in hie bill to make provisiou that the bona-fide set tiers should have.a right to discuss and vote upon the question de novo, whether they will have Slavery in the ierritory of Missouri.. But S lavery that, when the day of election COMM three thousands Buckeye votes, under Joshua R. Giddings, [applause.] should come from Ohio. two thousand iutire Suckers of Illinois under Trumbull. Capplemma fifteen hurdred more from Missouri—and, then added to these, there phonic' bo a thousand Radicals under Lloyd Garrison [laughter]--eup. pose that these men, all banded together, hover round the confines of Missouri, and on the night before election! they go over, fife and drum, with banner displayed, ev. ery man armed with a pistol, rifle and dirk; •aml, marching to the polls, give every man five.minutes to comply with their re• quest or be shot; and they dgrastate the entire confines of Missouri, elect a major. ity of men residing in Ohio, in Arkansas in Penneylvnnia, in New-York. What do you think such a Legislature would be likely to, do I They would know what they were elected for, and they would do it.' They' would declare for their first act, that any man that sees fit to discuss the question whether Slavery can exist in 'Aliseutiri shall branded es crim• inal, and have seven years in the Peniten tiary. Don't you think, fellow-citizens, that for all this there would be something of a rustling down South 1 Would there not be an alarm 1 Would not the entire sentiment of the world rise up and pro teat against such a course ? Suppose if the whole people of that State should rend a memorial to President Seward, complain ing of their wronge, and he should say to them : ' , You shall have justice done to you—l never meant, anything wrone—l will call a new Governor, if you are not satisfied ;" and he'summons Fred. Doug lass to go and be Governor (applause.]— Suppose Fred. Douglass goes there and on the confines of Miesouri makes a great speech—he is aide to do it (great applause] —since Henry Clay died there is hardly a man in . this country who con do it better 1 than 'Fred. Douglass [great and enthuritts tia.applause.] Suppose Fred. 'Douglass says that he bus come to entry out the laws of the Legislature, and vows his ad hesion, to the .cause, declaring that he will l i stand by it. Let me ask you. fellow-citi zens, soberly—and here I come to a ;Mini over vvhieli humanity might wesp•—would not those fields be drenched with blood be fore, one-half that I have narrated should come to pass.? Would not the Capitol be razed 'to the 'ground 1 IVould not Pied dent Seward be driven away Irmo' thl: ci ty 1 What would not an outraged people have done 1 Is there any one among you, Soft Face or Hard Face, Soft Shell or Hard Shell, who for one moment would have said that the people ought to . have o beyed those Abolition Laws 1 ,le there a Iman, that would have pretended that 1— [Cries of No !No ! ] And 'yet hew is the matter now 1 W nen it turns out that it was your bull that gored my ox. oh what a difference that maker,: [Great applause.) That is the picture ! I never found .is Mall Whig in sober earnest would say that they 'should have been, or be rnier,.tibeyed [Great applause.] 'I don't wonder that they voted against investigation.. What a 1 picture would have been presented therel l [applause.] Now. how • does gin's; stand before us zisirksht ? lam ateuesoliw.l ed to plead owes i it - tit 2 . ls4lsettroseints ; but oh ! dim is adi fa; thatioandp Wore I me to.iiight whole - hueri&are giiiiiee,l o - ',‘;`ii-,...-: TWO'DOraiii4B - - . 4 o .o4NUNL'''''' t r fiUMBEI deed. -Shale trainer hergirrenonwhittlift dust. She is Aid iti' tbolttibiliineuta or . mourning. She has been trampled under foot and yell nigh croaked. - Whirs sr" . thnse people tii-itighil ' Ton look snow that these people have been driven out, emittered; shotfor,isthat 7 For orbit taul: Because they loved Liberty; • CApplause.) Because,' loving Liberty, they deetodoad to defend it. [Applause.] Do you w 00... der that that inimitable Quaker petri,J,Ows G. Whittier-- [ bolaWrpus applause. t 5 chtering]'-1 thank God this he Is not only puet—[terning to Williniti Da firyrant]—who has brought iloiter thy classic muses to our own age. 1 00 1 1 • 1 1 and enthusiastic applause, terothteuecite, three hearty cheers.l Judge Culver,, a(-, ter the applause had aubslded: recited _ sei• end verses from Whittier's palm.' -"TIN( Burial of , Barbetur," and took hie lieitior mid loud clapping of bandit. . : - r:.:1 The N„ T. Illereld tip the CI nail ,Cenventless. • Tho following is the pith pr," , ladiuM article in the Isi, Y. lieraWof tiro 4th '.We know of nothing so full , of wan— leg to the people ,of this Union ,as Ott, labors, the fuss and Summery, the th.tgith ting exhibitions Of corruption and ditiwie. jig, and the motley gathering of the birds of. prey and carrion crows whistbsW tend, the acc"clionent in, there knee of eamof those . modern ,political tettel, known as national conventions. Forexample, the einitinnati assembled for , the modeatporpoott of ditt. l taring to the democracy of. the, Ultima their exclusive candidate fee rrerifistd;oX. the United States, meets under the im pressive auspices of piotols .and: bowies kniveo, bludgeons .and terrorism; and is graced: by. the company of:Sve 'heeded gamblers end blaeklege, .and fees three to four buudred women of the tetra s clike ; tired' from the stews of our large int*, and all revelling together as in - the` es' tivities of a common jubilee. Snoh is the revolting spectacle now exhibited' WA*. insulted, enlightened and intelligenl4oo: ! pie by the once , venerable and high.tossk democratic party. In fact, this parity, o 6 long plpming itself as the party of t&S Union and the constitutioni' hea fillets SW length under 'the control of the niggerdiri• yens of the South, as completely se dm, broken fragments of both the old pert* of the North have sunk into the dirty schemes of the nigger worshipping dents- gognes of this section. I • • -; This Cincinnati Conference of the Idnet, drivers will, of poorest, give us a high sons-, ding platform, full of windy abstraotions and unmeaning rubbish, with which to gull and hood.wtok the honest' yeomanry of the country ; whereas, if the PriociPloo of *l* niggers drivers' convention were truly ex. prosabd, they would be given in sem IRA. plattorm as the following, to wit 1. Resolved, • That niggers, pistols, bowie knives and bludgeons are the foodateental principles of the Democracy, as mosstracted under the administration of our warlike Prank lin Pierce, by our dear tilendi, the•Setitheris nigger drivers. 2. Resolved, That the freedem of speech IL liable to abuses even in the United States flea: ate ; abases which can only be confided by the application of the grata percha to Okras lied head of thei offending party as he aim in, his chair;'and that in thus beating ai abolition - Senator we are righteously vindicating the: true policy of the "unterrifieddetarocrecy.." 2. Resolved, That the killing of S eatitakitt• ble Irish.waiter holding the p . ositioa of sittig4 ger, for neglect of ,duty or uspaleace to* democrtuic guest coming down to a late breakfast, is a proper' warning to the vilools' Irish race that they can no longer expect (o ride, rough shod over the democracy of the Un ion. • 4. Resolved, As the constitution, as inter preted by our Soutbern teachers the alggerdri.t very, has alizady. established Afriatuslavet7 all the territories of the United Stites : that "squatter sovereignty" is a hutabneonstdeni-' big behind the ago, and that all abolition or, free State squatters should be expelled f ro m Kansas, if necessary, by fire and sword, This, in whatever disguises' of high sounding .verbiage, the Cincinnati .nigger drivers' derma:sue .platform may ten—this, we dare , say, will be its vesper interpretaticin. * • • . • • a., It is a very easy thing to make plat:: forms. Tiiey , are but the trope set..l7 cunning demagogues in which to catch, aim ple and credulous noodles. It nutters little now what may be the Werbiage . of the democratic platform—it matters little , who may be the democratic nominee, so far as the policy of , the party is ocouternak It boa heoome,too much degraded and de moralized—too much the slavish tool its nigger driving managers=te' be iitif . further practical benefit to the uonnirr sot it stands. ' ' , t The Cincinnati jugglers, affect to holies'', that their nominee will be elected without ; an effort. irst there can be no doubt that ' a large majority of the American pektpli . are disgusted with the blunders ad wines of this Pierce Administration—dieosea with the bloody ruffianism - ebb:Alt hiss in; fused into the demoeratio estop, endues-% ions to rebuke and drive out otpewer hetic Northern nigger , worshippers sad Banat-, ern nigger drivers. We de not ittelndi ii this classification of nigger delimit' the vet; body of the honeit;ifigh•miesial, emsserili- - Live, Union.lairiog people of the Sootliews: The nigger"drivers are but A areallforthieo of thtlitaliern people i but they are kko, actilemecessign jugglers, by whom the wilt of the great majority le auffoested, - *Sid throtigh whom their wishes sod' tbitir pirkk I ciples are betrn3ed. A. hal(dosse 'soon% idomagogues may thus contrive to for sail !pervert, caricature end ontrO he pS., a* opinions of their party, tztt 11 lib* istski, and $ hundred jugglers it Chtioideitd aunt thus dictate the law, 006 therms. ciroutnatams.• the two•thiede vote HiCillos". public plunder, to the balker the tiglig# posy or the whole Union. ~ for'lestants. sr rint huatilittled to dor New Iv* Ititeititti lib Arab swop*: It,assitTh'sl4.ibi . :‘ l lllomitaini' thior is view of tin ei rk ~..':. r f : .:: ... ~:', - 1,,t1t, 4 :. •,.....t4